City College of New York - Microcosm Yearbook (New York, NY) - Class of 1938 Page 1 of 168
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'i rr mmMiitfilMiMMI Howard A. Rieval Editor-in-Chwf Irvin I. Andcrman u s in ess Manager % m eS { 7Ae Gitq, Gollexje, J. (I r )c loL iIX we rciippd liim s .1 teaehcr. we revere him As «i friend, we love him s a erili 1 and judge. we fear him Itul above all. we irnsl him To loxxis J ajplaet C yoL alien lliih 19118 Microeosm i gratefullv ledieale«l 44i C .s'V LlCTCC M'l lias a point of view. It seeks to show life at City College as students live it and see it. Alter- nately it is noble and wretched, funny and pathetic, stimulating and dull to an extreme. W e are candid, we are blunt, bill we are true to our e and its tradition in our portrayal of the past four years of campus life. Frcdrrick li. Koiiiiison V resident Morton («ottsrliall Dean of the Faculty John K. Turner Dean of Men T II E i O O K O F drawling ami fainting in coils I II E I) E A I) Biolog} Four-sixteen . . . studio, workshop, ami depart- mental office of our rt department . . . den of the trinity, Eggers, dWndrra, and Haskell . . . masters of line, form, and color . . . Professor Eggers of the inevitable white cravat and the dichotomous moustache presides over a newly revised art curriculum . . . how to ply the lithographic crayon, sponge and ink the stone, ami roll the press . . . Little, dark, dynamic d Andrea rules a class in the techni«|ue of the woodcut . . . Students on high stools, with conti and charcoal, beneath the fourth (lour skylight . . . under the shelved scrutiny of white plaster casts, St. Jerry and the Slave . . . Professor Haskell in gentlemanly brown tweeds, in and out among the palettes, daubing an occasional canvas . . . and oh! that handsome white comb of a moustache and van dyke over the portly frame . . . and oils and turpentine . . . and art. and adam begat cain Turn left at the third floor and you are in the Biology department . . . Known best for his color photography and lowdown on the king's English is Professor Melander . . . also head of the department . . . Smack in the middle of the floor. Comparative Anatomy lah . . . Professor Sayles is king . . . he of the New England twang and ‘caalilage’ fame . . . Next, to Histology anil Kendall . . . most good- natured instructor in the school and a D.Se. from, of all places, Bulgaria ... He takes a sadistic delight in taunting cluss big •mouths during practicums . . . From this citadel of the microsco| e into ‘Little Caesar Coldforb's office . . . Coldforh illustrates his iconoclasm with choice hits like Man makes a wheel go around maybe a bundled times a second . . . but a little fly flaps his wings three hundred fifty times a second, and without a B.S. degree . . . Then impresario Johnson's Embryology course given in the approved Barnum style . . . voted the most popular course by tin Bio men . . . Bacteriology proclaims its virtues through Professor Browne . . . stout, gray, and candid . . . who warns the boys of the germs insidiously lurking in cake and milk. liquids and gussiug The Chemistry Building always shocks you with its variety of smells as you enter . . . you may get perfume or horses . . . sometimes both . . . Prof. Moody, like isolated heavy hydrogen, sits at the front office . . . Professor Prager's lectures are famous for textbook completeness and invariability ... lie amazes and astounds students by his speed and accuracy in drawing benzene hexagons . . . usually two boards ahead of the class . . . The Quantitative Department . . . not recom- mended for nervous individuals . . . students walking around on tip-toe . . . reason: the quantitative balances . . . the latter turn the steel-nerved into psychiatric eases wliencver someone slams the door or sneezes . . . Professor Curtis, the sound effects man, s|ieaks very, very slowly and monotonously . . . but some of his lectures . . . Oh boy! . . . Receptionist Estabrook . . . Woodsman . . . gives ele- Cliemistn fessor Sigsbcc . . . insiders swear he omr apologized for flunking a student ... Cemmill .. . Ivan the Terrible . .. fearful and fearsome . . . midwestern farmer boy who made good in the big Lily . . . Mr. Spero promises two pots for every chicken with his money juggling plan . . . Fin-stone, TalTelt, and Cohen . . . dignified and austere”, but young yet . . . they will learn. tin children. Cod Ides ’em ‘Ihe Kdueation department, like all Caul, is divided into three parts . . . Lincoln Corridor, room four-ten, and a den on the second floor which no student has ever been able to crash . . . Professor Heckman is a shining light from top to bottom, especially at the top . . . Professors Rivlin and Mankiewicz are among the most gracious men on the staff . . . Advocatus diabolis . . . Hr. Mallon . . . drips with derisory quips about the problematical student mind . . . Mixture of the old and tin- new . . . Professor Bell seasons his brand new education theories with good old exams, frequently . . . Professor Tuttle . . . an altruistic gentleman grown weary of applying idealism to the unbelieving souls of his students . . . Pleasant and surprising .. . Dr. Weaver ... pleasant the whole term ... surprising with his grades . . . Department’s greatest achievement ... its super- Classical Languages menlary chem lectures in vaudeville fashion . . . Rabor divides his time between puzzled lab-coalers and I Ik Student Council . . . Tough- est department . . . Physical Chemistry . . . Cod” Stevenson bowls them over in lectures . . . and Marlies is his prophet . . . the real lough guy in the department... has blighted more potential chemists than Jim Louis heavyweights . . . but the suckers keep coming . . . and going . . . Physiological Chem . . . F.dible Blood . . . and Harrow . . . and famous Knglish accent . . . but away on leave ... so the sex hormones are taking a rest for a while . . . but he will In- back. brave new world Dust-shrouded bookshelves and students anxiously reviewing the pony” before class . . . Professor Newton, fatherly and genial, is head of the department . . . Adept at undermining foundations . . . Professor Jones . . . an archeologist, you see . . . Professor Quackcnbos, whose students can name the «lav, hour, and minute of their next ordeal . . . Professor Ball, nice old chap . . . sample of sartorial elegance for the Nineties . . . Professor Bridge gives evidence that the department is concerned with things closer than the age of Horace . . . Popular Dr. Wheelock, who does not want to In- addressed as Doctor” . . . No need to memorize the pony” for his sessions . . . Professor Brown, wlu has the most brilliantly polished skull ever . . . and who caresses it tenderly . . . with an air of wistful remembrance . . . Professor Burke . . . Bulldog Burke” . . . gives ’em the horrors during exams ... as though one Mars were not enough . . . Oh, Latin is a rather nice language, but ... so many professors ... so much grammar ... so many quotations . . . so-o-o-o much Latin . . . too much. old incdonuld had u farm Land of cotton and business cy- cles . . . the Kconumics depart- ment . . . presided over by Professor Edwards, a big shot in this ticker ta|K- crazy world . . . foretold the ‘recession’ in ’37 but does not run around yelling “I told you so! . . . Snider, expert in foreign trade . . . awes bewildered and bankrupt collegians with astronomical totals of foreign trade and such ... Picturesque, Dutch, and esoteric: Professor Hastings and his maps ... a walking compendium of rain- falls and altitudes . . . Labor i taken care of, more or less, by Pro- •) colossal filing system . . . pink cards, blue-green cards, tea-rose yellow cards ... a rogues’ gallery of pros| eclive |M dagogucs and secret character vouchers . . . all are safely stowed away with the prospective teacher for the strawherries-with-sweel- cream post-revolutionary era. Il dec over the hronx The faculty of Technology, many of whom an doing some sort of research at Columbia, is largely not appre- ciated insofar as their activities outside tin- college are con- cerned . . . I pon entering his class the first day, the head of the Mechanical Knginecring department. Professor K. B. Smith makes certain to impress the importance of remembering his name. ”in case I should become famous” . . . his awed, humble hearers not suspecting that he designed the ten million pound testing machine used by the Bureau of Standards in Washington . . . the largest «if it' kind in the country. Professor Mien always recommends elegant solutions to the student who has spent hours vainly trying to w«irk out a problem . . . Pro- fessor Willig executed the steel designs for the Pulaski Skyway . . . Dr. Manstein is working with a cyclotron . . . Professors Henry ami Baum an busy building Queens College . . . I)r. Seely delights in befuddling his students with intricate nuclear physics . . . Professor Creenshi« lds was once a traffic «lirector . . . that is. he was employed as research traffic «- |H-rl f«ir the Ohio State Highway Department . . . Mr. Weiss’ knowledge of chemistry causes untold suffering and severe cerebellar contortions to many (h. K.’s . . . Dr. Carbone of the difficult yet interesting Drafting department not only possesses engineering degrees but is the department aesthete with an M.A. . . . and many still remember the gassing lie re- «rived while making artificial diamonds . . . Professor Marlies. the stumbling block of Ch. K.’s ... Mr. Pope who relies on telepathy for the transmission of ideas—assuming the latter . . . Mr. Hartman, whose roster of brothers-in-law causes students much pain ... so much engineering ... so many engineers . . . the landed gentry Behind the lectures and reading that comprise many a college Knglish course lurk the profs and their associates, some gray-haired, some vibrant, some less so . . . Professor Horne first, of the kindly face and downy white goatee, a master histrionic, of roles ranging from Shakespeare’s swaggering Kalstaff to the villainous lago . . . “Father ’ Dickson, at home in Chaucerian Kngland yet happily striding the centuries to play paternal host to Bowker ’38 . . . That mcrican goodfellow, Professor W illiam Bradley Otis, who plays a mean game of golf and will probably never grow old . . . also “gives” the meriean lit course . . . Whilst the scholarly, genial, and gentb-manly Pro- fessor Bird Stair, fluid, never gauche, stays strictly on the Bight . . . 'The mighty mite. Goodman, monarchizes over a narrative course that is less a course and more a Weltanschauung . . . but beware, thou aesthete! . . . Bather seek out the tender scholar-poet Gordon, who knows a dactylic ihromhaic from a hcdripicular trithyramb, ami yet can roll a not too sly eye at some bawdy Bcsloration play . . . Big names include the tone sonorous, the voice ventricular, Mr. Roberts, droning Paradise Lost , and mumbling occasional comments on same . . . nd the very white-haired Professor Tynan, part « f whose notes on the drama, ancient and modern, have been declaimed by said prof to many an Knglish major . . . for many a year . . . For the under-prof lesl-we-forgcts, here are some fingerbows . . . Checked shirt, natty suit, and polish for “Young Dickson ... a bishopric for the Thirlwall scion . . . permanent seat up- town for Doc I.effort . . . and to the lessor lights, Johnson, Shipley, Burl, Copslcin, el al., here’s for a place in the professorial sun. 10 Knglish German llii good earth Small Imt compact . . . the Geology de- partment consists of om office . . . two recitation rooms . . . ami a couple of museum cases of assorted rocks . . . Probably the most exhausting course in the school . . . Mention (Geology to a lie.illlix-looking science major . . . ami you have a quivering weakling on your hands . . . reason: field trips . . . Professor Butler, the perennial lecturer, is on leave . . . so Dan O'Connell . . . Gary Coojier type . . . amazes the hoys with the geological Who’s Who of New York (lily . . . Brooklyn is dismissed with a casual, Just a terminal moraine, that’s all” . . . dams, the hard guy of the department . . . Ilis field trips! . . . always a hill ahead of the class, Ik is a living refutation of the decadence of man . . . Manhattan Island has some power- fully large parks . . . with some powerfully primitive spots . . . Kindle, Kosalsky . . . both easy going and as violently athletic as the rest. .. so-o-o-o much walking. sturni iiinl draug The German department . . . where culture reigns despite the propaganda of the Fatherland . . . where art, sculpture, history, sociology, music, philosophy, etc. are themes of classroom discussion and one doesn't worry loo much about final grades . . . as a matter of fact, one doesn't worry . . . The kind and learned Professor Roedder with his salt and pepper goalee, his high snow while collars, and his ever cheerful guten morgen characterizes the department . . . Dr. Selltur, a cynical sociologist turned German instructor, quite happy about it because it entails less work . . . The brotherhood of man is truly embodied in Doctor Peterson, soldnl dr Legion tFHonneur, no failures, no assign- ments, and generous marks are his outward manifestations of |K ace on earth and good will to men . . . Herr Susskind, a past Yeshiva student with a pachydermic memory expounds the true Nordic tongue with a Talmudic intonation .. . Herr Frazier clad in continental styles . . . The philologi-t of the department . . . Professor Dili will lecture in his typical soothing manner . . . Iiecomes lost in silent reverie for five minutes and tlu-n lock- up where he left oil . . . esiivius erupt-, wild hull- bellow, windows shake, students quake! Profes-or Kinkcldey lecture-. Imlli our houses The Government department . . . off- shoot of the G.O.P. . . . shelters the last of tlie rugged individuals ... a Phi Beta Kappa key hanging outside a rather large man belongs to Professor Guthrie, the booming czar of the Townsend Harris auditorium ... a supreme court decision is sanctus sanctorum to him . . . Professor Haley is still trying to figure out why Landon lost in the last election . . . keeps a copy of the Constitution under his pillow . . . adept in suggesting a heated discussion be shifted to another depart- ment in the college . . . Mr. Arm, Professor Guthrie’s man Kvery-Day , works on a seven day basis and looks as though he might carry about forty pounds more than he does . . . Mr. Buekvar, liny Beau Brummel, is foremost Defender of the Faith . . . Mr. Barlier keep- his chain gang moving double-time . . . they move at a brisk pace with little of the wrangling seen in Government 1 sections, but his extra-classroom iconclasm is often interesting . . . Mr. Bishop, late of KhoDisland, boasts of the fact that it’s worth a dollar to leave his class . . . the price goes up as the term progresses ... Mr. Fisher ... a new man II like Robert laylor but acts like tin proverbial absent-minded pro- fessor . . . An you-all must know Hailey Y. Diflie, who hails from down Texas way . . . A oluble Milton OITutt dresses like Joe College in the 1890 ' . . . you can make him happy by admitting that the Germans really won the battle of Jutland . . . And this man Rosen drives a Buick that would delight a plutocrat, but according to docu- mentary evidence he has never worn any tie but that ancient rag he now sports . . . Two years ago an admiring class presented him with a new silk cravat, which he wore at the final exam—and never again . . . Baltimore’s Louis L. Snyder is the gentleman with the small black moustache which gives him a deceptively sinister appear- ance like that of the old-time nickelodeon villain . . . Towering A.C.F. Westphal, of the basso-prof undo, i' never more happy than when immersed in an incomprehensible muddle of diplomatic documents and official statements . . . Big Joe W isan, easy and affable outside of class, is also a demon on the handball court . . . Phil and Jack Loner, identical twins, have been the cause of a Comedy of Krrors among their innumerable NY workers . . . lucky they aren’t both uptown . . . That braw Scotsman, Gorham Sanderson, is glad lie is a doctor because his girl tells him about her operation. lar an's mates t the south end of the quadrangle stands the Hygiene building, inhabited by its own set of inimitablcs . . . Professor Woll, the chief, keeps to his office on the second floor . . . Near commencement time seniors get to know him well . . . he is chief marshal . . . Judge Williamson, who keeps a stern visage to insure smooth running of the difficult athletic program, is the most gentle personality in the department . . . Professor Dailey supervises the Hygiene majors ... is another man with an officious manner and a soft heart . . . On tin- gym floor Hygiene One classes sit back in awe gazing on Mr. Mendelis' human pretzel tricks on the bars and skeptically hear his Nothing to it! Now you do it! . . . With Mr. Khrlicb’s fencing proteges lunging about, it is not safe even in the corridors ... Mr. Djorup, a great guy, is a quiet little fellow . . . but he will tell you all about that new craze, s|K edball ... Mr. Lrankle bats little feathered balls across a net and calls it all Badminton. . . . promises to be the white hope of the department . . . Ogg Kay, that outmoded text for required government sections is their holy bible . . . the sociology appendage shelters the dynamic little Prof. Joseph, who raise’s missionary work to a humanitarian plane . . . Mr. Tomars is the diamond in the rough . . . supplies real brain-food for the profound sociologists-to-be. much ado about nothing little cubbyhole and a some- what larger place where bedlam is the rule house the offices of tin- History Department . . . 'fable- pounding Professor Mead . . . an unapologetic liberal . . . Young man, don’t ask me to explain the decisions of the Supreme Court on a logical basis. It can’t be done! . . . Shut-eye Professor Thomp- son . . . ’’Gentlemen, as I hope you are, the most important thing in the world is—harrrumph manners.” . . . knows something about everything, and wears that lovely cherubic smile, especially when sjK-aking of the successes of history men after graduation . . . Pro- fessor Schapiro modestly admits his own colossal ability . . . Likes to converse in French with the members of that department . . . Suave, punctilious Professor Janowsky . . . Perpetually hustling Professor Morris wastes less time in speech than Floyd Gibbons . . . brisk, brush, and cheerfully cynical . . . Professor Kraus, who looks Hygiene 12 Government ambition and distraction Curves make the women . . . am! the Math Department . . . bossed by Professor Reynolds, possessor of a mysterious vest with an even more mysterious white border . . . the budding genius i Professor Gill ... a rare individual who despite stern marking attracts flocks of students . . . the secret: his unrullled disposition and Spartan endurance explaining stuff to harass'd studes . . . Tough ami exact . . . Professor Hubert who has his roll Itook out before the echo of the bell has «lied away . . . Large, slow, and gray is Professor Turner, a majestic sight to see, plodding along in the halls . . . Popular Dr. Fagerstrom makes the boys wonder how they failed to solve that last problem . . . Linchan makes life a breeze f« r p«Tspiring under- grads with “You boys are the best box- in New York” . . . Conserva- tive, tall, and white haired is Professor Pedersen, a City grad who won practically every prize in his remote «lay . . . Mien, sharp featured and clean-paled, teaches the history of Mathematics ami woe t« the student crossing him! (Quaker liberal with the patience ami endurance of a Job . . . right ... is distinguished by his green eye-hade . . . perche«l precariously on the swivel chair in back of hi- desk, he discourses U|«on the very esoteric “Theory of .Num- bers . . . Fast talker and thinker . . . Wirth . . . who, despite a strong aversion t« Tech men, is lik«’«l by the boys . . . gels red when solving problems, in a very colorful fashion. successor . . . we don't know if he bellows yet . . . the band, under the direction of Captain Horton inspire our team- to victory . . . Non-Coms . . . Sergeant Siemion of the -toreroom ... a fixture at the College . . . Sergeant Still . . . the Kriti-h Navy’s gift to the I . S. Army . . . backbreaking Sergeant Holton of rifle range fame . . . lighten llm-c -lings” . . . Sergeant Hide-law . Horodeczki . . . what’s the “W” for, Sarge? -wing is here to stay The Music department i- the only one in school that cannot ««tmplain about lack of space for elementary courses . . . bored lilth- aesthetes rattle around in the front of tlx- ( real Hall while the organ booms Haeh . . . standing under Hlashfield'.s mural, white haired Professor Hein- roth directs the department.. . s| eak- gently with many charrumphs, but makes up for it with hi- organ playing . . . Professor Wilson, co-second in command with Professor Neidlinger, teaches harmony ami counterpoint, interspersed with innuendous tales and Cheshire eat smile . . . famous in hi- repertoire is the story of the wedding he attemled where he was asked t« play Last Sleep « f the irgin” by Massenet . . . he is the College bid for llollywoml whenever Kric Blore resigns . . . l.eath«-r-lunge«l Neidlinger of the snow white hair has no truck with fancy musical verbage . . . pronounces “comvrto” to rhyme with potoilo . . . the pale gentleman at the side of the stage who changes the records ami takes attendance i- Mr. Arie—ohn. Military Science de gustibus . . . Colonel 0. P. Robinson, Professor « f Mili- tary Science and Tactics, presiding . . . when belter cadets are made, the colonel will make them . . . Major Moore—once taught his class the salute and other soldierly etiquette . . . honest . . . Major Schwinn . . . quiet and dignified . . . married recently, then look sick and was absent f« r a term . . . Major Macafferty . . . stern and straight ... a disciplinarian . . . Jovial Major Smith . .. when he bellow- Attention, the Japanese probably stop their war ami wait for the next command . . . the corps lost it- be-t relator of overseas stories when lie was remove«l to a command upstate . . . Scholarly Major Holton ... a cadet’s be-i friend . . . sometimes called professor . . . Major Gib-on . . . Major Smith’s Music 13 I« l then In li ;lit Harry Mien Overstreet . . . genial de- fender of social philosophy and favorite of ilie lecture platform (where lie act a much as he talk ) . .. big hole where Morris K. Coltcn useil to In . . . the lobislic superordinate who «lellated a many student egos with his acid wit as with hi encyclopedic knowledge anil telling analyses of condicting theories . . . what In-fuddled object will forget the innocent smile and jesting remark You don't agree with your own conclusion, do you? . . . A hit absent-minded hut always kind to the theories of budding phil- osophers . . . krikorian . . . lazy guys had In-Iter keep away from required courses though they can rest easily in his electives . . . age I . . . more positiv istic than Cohen and Nagel ... is always two steps ahead of his critics . . . Aaronson . . . lost In-hind a massive moustache and the pages of hi Journal of Social Philosophy . . . thinks he ha logically refuted logic but it may only In- his French training . . . Bronstcin . . small and modest hut somehow manages to keep his head through the mazes of symbolic logic . . . students always surprised to find he’s quondam coach of the tennis team . . . Kdel ... an Aristotelian become enamoured of dialectic . . . finds the point in what you say even when you aren't aware there is one . . . threatens someday to be famous as reformer of the methods of the social sciences . . . Marsh . . . patriarch of the psychological half of the department . . . many a student has found out, too late, that lie's not quite as guileless as he looks . . . John Peatman . . . 1 1 all around man in the department, having learned much from hi philosophic colleague ... a smiling indication that psychology may yet In-come a science . . . “G. Milton enlivens the majestic name of Smith . . . think up the most ambiguous examinations hut par- tially atones with dry humor and a liberal attitude . . . Ih-rtzrnan . . . a analytic as they come, how lie manages to keep in touch with so many of the latest developments is a dark mystery to envious students. an atom begat cain hen bettor students are made, it’ll break them . . . Heading the department is a truly Barnuniesque gentleman, tall, while haired Professor Corcoran, patron saint of the freshmen . . . lectures amusingly in Science Survey, but the boys in the advanced courses «luck when he looks at them . . . Zemansky, in a gentle way leaches the toughest advanced course. Thermodynamics . . . lily College grad and though a big shot in his field, is not t« o tough on the boys . . . Professor Marcus, boss of the labs, short and paternal, puts on the naive a« t . . . Pro- fessor Sennit, teacher in modem Physics keeps the boys stepping with his serious class attitude . . . Gently smiling, cherubic Professor Sonkin lectures t«i the unhappy students in elementary Physics . . . Doe hi best to translate the t« t into Knglish, but usually has to wake the boys up with the tremendous ele«-trostatic machine that stands forlorn in the corner . . . Nobody thinks it’s very funny . . . I llimate heavenly authority of the College is Professor Wolff, - trollouty professor who hang out in the tower of the main building, and aims at the stars with his trusty telescope . . . Positively the only class work at City (Adlego that is liiglirr education . . . Scan- dinavian, blonde, and easy g« ing is Professor .Null who teache advanced physics to the prc-meds . . . Sounding like a young Lochinvor out of the West is lanky Mr. Williams, who «-an discus anything concerning physics, as long a you can ask questions . . . Mr. Gray of the easy going voice. Dr. Shea, Mr. Taylor, Mr. Rose, and others «!« their hit . . . The departmental hangout is the physics library and the lab on the first two floor , where introverted maniac play hide and seek with electrons, and tin- Gr«-ck alphabet. Pliysies 14 whuololr my heart away? The (lily College student i' a pro- found sceptic, but one U| crsti- lion that survives even Cohen and Nagel i- the firmly entrenched l-elief that no Romance Language instructor has a heart . . . when lie gives final grades . . . Standing at the head of the department in gray spatl-ed splendor is “Pupa Weill . . . When he is not directing the summer session, Professor Charles I pson Clark amuses his class with litanies of Romany in well chosen Knglish . . . There is a certain hoot shaped country in the Mediterranean whose ever living literature is expounded by Professor rbib-Costa . . . Not content with shedding his light in City College, Professor Knicker- liocker also enlightens high school students w ith his text in Elementary Trench . . Suave and contained, Professor Rergeron runs his « lass with machine-like precision, hut to speak to him outside is an intel- lectual exercise . . . Teaching his elementary « lass in li«|ui«l French, and his advanced classes with humane intelligence is Professor aillant . . . Together with Professor Bergeron, Messieurs l.e Ridois, l.uciani, ami Travers, constitute the Four Horsemen’’ of blessed lame . . . Although slightly emotional in his class teaching methods. Professor Waltman is one of the few R« mance Language instructors who has some consideration for his students mothers . . . I)r. Cille devastates the uninitiated with brilliant barbs . . . Other members nf the department are ullra-N ictorian Professor Muller, cosmo- l olitan Professor Panaroni, ami Professors Rhodes, Holmes, and • Iross . . . au re voir. how to win friends and . . . High muck-a-mucks f rhetoric and oratory, men who dream vowels, eat consonants and grumble vocules . . . the men of the Public Speaking department . , . Chief Clansman is Professor Schulz ... an older (though not much) edition of Kdmund Lowe . .. •■ompletely poised and always tlx gentleman . . . Master of the debate Dr. Thonssen . . . the man with the prominent laryngeal cartilage and «lark conservativi- clothing of a New Kngland minister . . . metaphysician, concerned with the elevation of the longue and lh«- salvation of th«- low s” rather than the Soul, i very affable Mr. Kleinfeld, patron saint « f the S|K cch Clinic . . . Saturninely be- moustaehed Mr. Meyer stands out as the undefeated “riiall«-«l” ehampion of the department . . . and as one of tin most iuter« stiiig men in the group . . . Tmkel . . . side-kick of th - Mcphistophelian Meyer ... a man, moustached, erudite, an«l tough on tin- hoys in his scientifically exact debating courses . . . Guardian of the AH Class and owner of a very broad shoulder for weeping Seniors is J. Hailey Harvey . . . tall, handsome, and jwissessor of a very deep barber shop (sic!) barytone voice . . . Somewhat different from the usual run « f Public Speaking educators i- that debonair cosmopolite Riclianl Ccougli ... is a little difli«ult ! g«-t along with at first but students warm up about him by the end of the term . . . Francis J. Idiom pson . . . Sim 88 anil a connoisseur of tilings Irish, the Black and 'fan tangle among other things . . . Rase of departmental operati« ns is the second floor south wing, a half pint room on the ground floor and two victrolas hid away in a garret on the top floor of T. II. 11. Romance Languages IN MEMORIAM Maurice P. Dciclicx Arnold J. Malkan 1881 — 1988 1905— 1988 15 suti is a a i i i58 DU ©IF The turbulent state of the world has been reflected on a small scale by a stirring series of events at the college. Free of the stultifying atmosphere of many scholastic institutions, eagerly aware of the external environment the students of City College have, through their | crsistenl efforts for reform both within and without the College, demonstrated the truth of the dictum that knowledge com| els to action. And yet this class has preserved the collegiate tradition. We have had our polities, our fun. our functions. The first half of the class entered the College in February of 1934. We went through hectic days that all freshmen must endure. Nervous and naked, we coughed and bent ten times, had our chests tapped and our blood-pressu re taken. We underwent a psychological test that asked us to fill in without thinking the space after “My stomach—.” W e waited in a long line to present our prayerfully marie programs to supercilious Phi 1 fetes who, their foreheads bulging with erudition, hojied to stun us with deliberately intoned “two triple epsilon” and “one double delta.” nd at last our college careers began. Hut events of far greater importance were occurring. That spring term saw the feverish activity of the first anti-war strike. On pril 13, eight hundred students gathered at a flagpole meeting, which w as led by the passionate, deep-voiced Kddie Alexander. The College authorities had previously declared such a meeting to lie illegal. The meeting was broken up by the intervention of aeling-Dean Morton I). Gottschall, who was aided by the fists of Sergeant Huccarelli of the Military Science Department and the police. s an aftermath of the flare-up, Alexander was drop| ed for an overcut in French. The athletic fortunes of the College took a decided upturn with the installation of the great Benny Friedman as football coach. A com- mittee, headed by the late Maurice Deiches, member of the Board of Trustees, guaranteed Friedman’s salary. AA cigliing in 8 Tin «-lass look ils firs! tentative steps. Klections for the « lass council made Robert van Sanlcn president, Joseph Brody, vice-president and ('lilT Sager secretary. The class sponsored a newspaper, the “Re- corder,” which was to In issued only once more till its reappearance as the “Jester in the senior year. Hut by far the most important event of the term for Us was our victory over the Sophomores in the annual Frosh-Soph activities. The Hag rush was a hilariously mad conflict. Jollies were ripped, shins barked, and the defeated Soph- omore- torn asunder. Joe Brody exceeded Shipwreck Kelly’s miracu- lous exploits, when lie clambered up the greased Hag-pole in nothing Hal, and “Chick Chaikin foiled the best detective efforts of Sophs by concealing the white Hag in his pants. Triumph in this final contest prov ided the w inning margin of one point. In September the second half of the class poured through the |mrtals of the College and filled what President Robinson once called “these cloistered halls. We elected Solomon Chaikin to the presi- dency; Amberg and Besansky occupied the offices of vice-president and secretary. The Recorder made ils last appearance, in printed form this time. The Minstrel Show was a completely “whacky suc- cess, as the audience joined in the fun. The boards of the Townsend Harris Hall stage resounded daily to tlu measured tread of students being trained in the waltz and the fox-trot. On December 7, Mr. Mortimer Karpp, then advisor to the freshmen class, introduced the House Plan idea at a free cigarette” smoker. mimeographed announcement outlined a House Plan modified” in that the Houses were intangible, and many became charter mem- bers. From this small beginning has developed the House Plan of today. While class affairs moved forward pleasantly, a feverish period of activity engrossed the attention of the entire student hotly. The fall semester began quietly enough. The chief items of interest were Presi- dent Robinson’s return from an incognito” voyage as a sailor” on a Norwegian freighter and Prof. Morris R. Cohen’s reappearance in the College halls after his sabbatical leave. Seventeen of the twenty-one students who had been expelled for their activities in the “Jingo Day celebration of 1933, marked by the famous incident of the Hailing umbrella, were reinstated. On the fifth of October the first spark of a roaring fire was ignited, when there appeared in the Campus a small news item to the effect V) dial a group of touring Italian students were to appear at the freshman eliapei in the Great Hall. The Student Council planned a protest meeting anil sent a letter to President Robinson: this letter called for a cancellation of the official College welcome. On October two thousand students jammer I into the Great Hall. President Robinson's speech of welcome was greeted with boos and hisses by the College students, to which he replied with the angry remark that the conduct of the audience was “appropriate to gutter- snipe.” hen Kdwin Alexander, speaking as a representative of the Student Council, liegan with a message to the enslaved, tricked Italian students, laboring under Fascism, Professor Arhib-Costa attempted to drag him away from the microphone, while students roared out, la-t Alexander speak! The meeting broke up in con- fusion; it was immediately followed by another, held in lewisohn Stadium and attended by fifteen bundled protesting students. Events followed in quick succession. The conflict between students and the administration became intense. On October 11, the Student Council was sus| eiided for its part in the activities. To this move the student body retaliated with an Oust Robinson' week; ei ght ecu students were arrested for picketing the President’s home. At the requst of Dr. Robin- son, the magistrate referred them to the College administration. The Faculty, at its next meeting, expelled twenty-two students, suspended four, and put twelve on probation. Shortly after the meeting, former Dean Redmond died of a heart attack, while traveling to his home. The Faculty’s disciplinary action was greeted with a deluge of protests. Fifteen hundred students massed on the campus and in Jasper Oval, and in jeering chorus burned a two- headed effigy of Mussolini and l)r. Robinson. ml then the Faculty reaffirmed its decision, refusing to yield to mass-pressure.” The Phi Itela Kappa chapter of the College passed resolutions urging the reinstatement of the Student Council and the disciplined students, and the removal as unfit to Ik the head of a lilicral institution’ of Presi- dent Robinson. Charter Dav group of Campus editors quit the staff in protest against the alleged censorship of the Campus Association and the resultant con- servatism of the newspaper. With the permission of the Faculty Committee on Student Affairs, they edited the Student, which was s|ionsored by the Student Council; its financial sup| ort was meager: its life was short. Affairs at the College quieted down with the advent of exam week. During the season the Beavers won four games and lost three. The Dram Soc presented The Last Mile. With the new semester and the Student Council elections, I-ester Rosner became president of the undergraduate governing body; Rob- ert Brown, vice-president; and Julian Lavitt, secretary'. A new class council was chosen: Jack London, president: Jack Besansky, vice- president; Marty Singer, secretary. In conjunct ion with similar groups from other colleges in New York State, the Student Council helped to block the passage of the super-patriotic Nunan-Devany bill, which 20 Exercises provided that all students in educational iii'tilutioii' of higher learn ing supported in whole or in part l v piddir fund lie required to lake oath' of allegiance to Slate and Federal institutions. In 1936 the jame bill, reintroduced, again surcumlied. Karly in the term the Facility censured Milton Kaletsky, editor of an allegedly obscene issue of the Mercury. Four of the Jingo I a students wen reinstated. The instructional and oflice staffs of the id- lego organized to form the nli-l'ascisl Xssociulion. On pril 22, an anti-war demonstration, sanctioned by the College authorities, was held in the Great Hall. Thirty-five hundred students were present and voted fervent ayes” in favor of the Oxford Pledge and resolutions urging the removal of President Robinson. a boycott of German and Italian goods, ami the abolition of the ROTC and CCC. The Student Council decided to boycott the Charier Day exer- cises, for although a victory had been achieved in the transfer of the annual HOTG Review from Charter Day to another occasion, students of the Military Science department were appointed to serve as the color guard. n attempt to substitute members of Lock and Key was fruitless. One of the twenty-one students of the October 0 affair was reinstated. The faculty said that he had shown contrition for his actions.” Holier! Brown, Meyer Ranged, and Herbert Rob- inson. all of the Independent Student Rights Party, were elected president, vice-president, and secretary of the Student Council for the fall term. Our own new legislature was headed by Mill Xaslow, presi- dent: Jack London, vice-president; no secretary was in sight. The genial Dr. John R. Turner, who until 1028 had been at New York I Diversity, and then bad served as president of the University of W est irginia, was appointed to a new office created by the Board of Higher Education. s Dean of Men he was to coordinate extra-curricular activities. Later he assumed full disciplinary power. Two more students who had participated in a demon- stration against “Jingo Day” on May 20 of that year, were suspended. During the term, under the sponsorship of the newly formed fresh- man and sophomore Houses, Houseboat Dance” was held in the gym. This was the first of a successful series of amusing, easy-on-lhe- purse monthly House Plan dances. The class of ’38 ran off a Spring Dance of its own. On May I, the House Plan, six hundred strong, signed a year’s lease on 202 Convent venue. In the fall of 1035, men in overalls, seemingly obsessed with the ma«l desire to burrow deep into the bowels of the earth, started blast- ing out huge chunks of rock. WPA workers were on the dig. Today a new library is in the slow ami painful process of being transferred from the architect’s drawing board to actuality. The campus has a reasonably clean appearance after being a shambles for so long. The Campus, under the editorship of Irving Neirnan sponsored a v igorous Boycott the Olympics” campaign. At a meeting in the Great Hall, Judge Jeremiah T. Mahoney lashed out at Germany and called on the athletes of America to stay away from Berlin. He was opposed by a few of the college athletes. In 1926, Felix S. Cohen’s brilliant editorials helped to make the 21 military -ciente courses optional. In September of 193. undergraduates won a further concession when tlir Faculty voted to make Hygiene five and .six elec- tive for all. Thus the ROTC courses lost any added inducement that they may have had and became pure electives. At the same time Colonel O. I . Robinson became the new head of the department. Two students who hail been suspended at the close of the spring term were reinstated ami thirteen of the fifteen who had been ex|M lled in the welcome of the Fascist students, were | ermitled to return to the College on probation. Julian l.avitt, Herbert Robinson, and ictor xelroad became president, vice-president, and secretary of the Student Council for the following semester. On November 8, forty-five hundred students packed the (ireat Hall to the rafters at the greatest |x ace demonstration ever staged at the College. Students and faculty had cooperated in making plans for the meet- ing, hut the cooperation extended only to a certain point ... to the Oxford Pledge. The students favored its presentation In-fore the assembly: the Faculty un- conditionally opposed it... and the Faculty prevailed. When President Robinson and Charles II. Tuttle, tin- chief speaker had finished, Student Council president Robert Brown, arose to deliver his message. With his concluding statement, the tension of the meeting be- came manifest. He said that, although the Oxford Pledge was banned, he was sure that hud it been introduced, it would have been approved unanimously. A roar went up from the audi- ence. Students stood up and cheered for three minutes. Presi- dent Robinson, advanced to the front of the stage and pointed out that an oath not to defend one’s country in any case, was in direct contradiction to the spirit of the Constitution; it was, lie said, The essence of bad citizenship. The excited boys were in no mood for a rebuke, and they replied appropriately to the President’s words. Shortly afterwards, the City College |w t of the merican Legion announced an eight-point plan, im- mediately submerged by the attacks of students and in- structors, to mericanize the radicals. The meri- can Student I nion, a student organization, encom- passing all shades of political opinion from liberal to the extreme left, was formed in Columbus, Ohio, during the Christmas vacation of 1935. The Student Council of the College chartered the first unit of the newly formed organization. l once the administra- tion stepped in to block this action. The charter of the Sl was referred to the Board of Higher education by the Faculty Committee on Student Affaire. This procedure was extraordinary, ppeals to the Board met with continual |H stponement of action. renewed impetus was given to the oust Robin- son movement w hen, on January 27, 1936, there was issued the ssociate Alumni re| ort on its investigation of the President’s administration. The President lacks the human qualities necessary to achieve the w idespread confidence of his faculty and student body, and to provide genuinely inspired, resourceful, and socially imaginative leadership. recommendation was made to the effect that the Board of Higher edu- cation take appropriate action. It was a relatively small group of students .. . who has seen fit to engage J. B. Harvey The I.iuli Creat in an utterly reprehensible course of conduct char acterized by breaches of College discipline and of (-ommon decency,” which was responsible for all the trouble, said a minority report read at the same time. The majority report was adopted by a vote of five hundred nineteen to two hundred seventeen. In the spring term of 1936, the Student Council and the Campus hastened to press the advantage of- fered by the ssociate Mumni report. They proposed a school-wide referendum on the issue, but their at- tempt at its execution were halted by Charles II. Tut- tle, chairman of the City College Administrative Committee of the Board of Higher education, which was investigating the Mumni's charges. He warned the Council that any attempt lo hold such a vote “would be regarded as gross insubordination and a serious breach of discipline. The Student Council then voted to conduct a six point referendum including the proposition: The Student Council shall hold a referendum on Frederick B. Robinson's fitness for office. letter from Mr. John T. Flynn of the Board’s dministralivc Committee declared, even a refer- endum on whether a referendum on the President should be held, would be gross insubordination.” On April 22. thirty-five hundred students massed into the Creat Hall for the anti-war strike. The stu- dents enthusiastically passed resolutions advocating the Oxford Oath, the removal of President Robinson, a campaign against the government’s propo-ed mili- tary expenditures, and the unconditional reinstatement of the twenty-nine students ex|N lled since 1933. Mr. Morris I . Schappes, popular young instructor of Knglish, delivered a fiery address against the war- mongers and the forces of reaction. In less than twenty- four hours, a storm of controversy was raging on the campus. It began when Mr. Schappes received from Professor Horne, Dr. Krowl’s successor as chairman of the department, a letter informing him that he would not be reappointed to bis position, since his efficiency as a teacher of Knglish had not been sufficiently notable. Student-faculty opposition to Mr. Schappes' dismissal was brought to bear upon Professor Horne ami President Robinson. The modern technique of in- dustrial conflict was adopted by twelve hundred stu- dents who, for six hours staged a sit-down strike in front of Dr. Robinson’s office. Requests for an ex- planation of the President’s stand were made by the group, but in vain did they sit, for no word came from the office, and the President left without making any communication. The situation was considerably sof- tened, however, when Dean Turner had a rug laid on the floor for those seated there. The Board disposed of all cases like Mr. Schap|M s' by resolving that all tutors who had served for three years or more be re- tained unless there exist strong compelling reasons based on teacher-qualifications for their separation from the service. Mr. Schappes and six other tutors at the College were retained. The close of the term was near, but peace was not yet. The Campus Xssocialion forced the Cum pus to suspend publication because the latter refused to ac- cept the Xssociation's choice for editor. The suspen- sion lasted for two issues because of flagrant flaunt- ing of authority on the part of the staff.” The Student Council seized U| on the occasion to edit the Student, perennial symbol of revolt. The difficulty was short- lived. and the Campus soon reap|R ared, victorious in the right to select its own editor and editorial policy. 23 Tilt ( lass Council approved the majority report of the Mumni, ami passed a resolution urging '38 men to join the Sl . Once more the Spring informal yielded a magnificent profit when a fifty cent balance wa discovered by the ferreting Student Council auditors. The Student I nion parly swept elections for the fall term, when all its candidates but one gained office. Herbert Kohinson. Louis Burnham, and vra- ham S«dle became president, ice-president, and sec- retary of the Student Council. The class voted a straight SI ticket electing Jack Besansky, Lewis Zuckerman, and Joe Brody to do our worrying for us. For the first time in several years, Jingo Day passed peacefully. With tin- permission of the Faculty an orderly counter-demonstration was held on Convent vonue and later in the Croat Hall, where Professor Morris B. Cohen spoke on the history of the anti- ROTC movement at City College. In refuting the arguments of the proponents of military training, Professor Cohen pointed out that if it were educa- tional, it probably would be taught by educators and alized when, on the night of December 12, members of the class and their best dates danced and dined in the French, Colonial, ami Arabian rooms of the Hotel Park Central. Robert Burke, who had been expelled from Columbia the previous spring for having been a leader in an anti-Nazi meeting there, was forbidden to speak here by Dean Turner. The troubles of other colleges must not 1r- made the troubles of City Col- lege, said the Dean, in explaining his decision. Not long after, the Student Council launched another of- fensive for the removal of Dr. Robinson, lie was labelled as one of the most dangerous enemies of academic freedom in the I nited Stales. On October 27. delegates of the nation's four polit- ical parlies addressed the student body at a sympo- sium in the ( real Hall. In a poll conducted by the Carn nis. the student body voted its opposition to the military science courses by a vote of fifteen hundred fifty-one to five hundred sixty-seven, and its support of the American Youth Act. President Roosevelt was iwleclcd’’ by an overwhelming count in tin straw vote. Aid Spain ” booths were seen in tin- alcoves all term long. Both undergraduates and faculty members joined in an effort to contribute money and medical supplies to the legitimate Spanish government. fac- ulty committee to aid Spain was formed, under the chairmanship of Mr. Mumford and Professor Over- street. Several student- left tin- College to join the -truggle against Fascism: Ben ladder and Kugene Bron-loin, two alumni, lost their lives in battle. Peace Week was celebrated from Xovcmlier 16 until No- vember 20. College politics were marked by internal dissension in the Student Council. President Herbert Hohinson, in an effort to counteract the laxness and indifference of many Council members, led a drive toward a thor- ough housecleaning”: the chief victim of the purge was vice-president l.ouis Burnham, who was removed from office for non-attendance. Simon Slavin was ap- pointed to tile post. I h«- House Plan celebrated its second birthday, amidst messages of congratulation from Deans Cott- seball, Rlapper, and Turner, Professor Dickson, and the Student Council. Men of ’.'18 who had been among the charter members were observed to bear themselves w ith unaccustomed pride over the success of their twin brother, and their ability to make their stay at the College more than an interval between subway rides in tin- morning and at night. The celebration was capped by a gala Carnival in the Kxercising Hall (gym to you!), featuring several booths, dart games, magicians, fortune-tellers, ami a marionette show. Miss Hazel Horowitz of the Commerce Outer was crowned Queen by Russell Paterson, prominent mag- azine illustrator. The legality of the College chapter of the ASl was left undetermined, when at one of the stormiest ses- sions in years, the Board of Higher education, by a lie vote, defeated the McGoldrick resolution. Mr. John T. Flynn, a Board member, staled, “The old rule of suppression, which has ruled the City Colleges for many years, has been supported. . . . This is a com- plete victory for President Robinson.” The elections for the coming Spring term saw a leni|K rary diminution of the supremacy of the Student I nion party; the two important positions of president and secretary went to Victor xelroad and Jack Lon- don of the Progressive Student party, while vraham Soltes of the Student I nionisls was returned to the position of vice-president. Vnd suddenly, as they al- ways do, exams descended upon us. In February, 1637 we were lieginuing to anticipate graduation, with one-half of the class lieing lower seniors and the other, upper juniors. The new class council, which showed astonishing signs of activity, ran, in the accustomed order, Bernard Rolhenberg, Joseph Sol-ky, and illiam McDonald. class paper, the Jester, made its appearance, the first since the days of the freshman Recorder. not her set of reso- lutions favoring the passage of the merican Youth Act and endorsing the pilgrimage to the national capi- tal on W ashington's birthday were passed. It actively sup|M rted the anti-war demonstration in pril, and w hen the time for Charter Day came around, the coun- cil vociferously condemned the u-e of a military color guard at the exercises, and voted a boycott. 11 the student' who had Item wrangling over Presi- dent Roosevelt’s late lamented plan to reform the courts, filled room 306 to overflowing, when Professor Cohen spoke on the subject, and declarer! himself to he heartily in favor of the plan. I)r. Frederick IS. Robinson completed a decade of serviar as president of the College in the spring of 1937. Rut the spirit of good will that might have liecn expected was markedly absent, for an o|ien letter in the Campus attacked his alleged inspiration of the Board’s rule against the Oxford Oath at the anti-war meeting, slating that it is presumptuous for President Robinson in ruling on the Oxford Pledge to declare that it is unconstitutional.” On pril 22, four thousand students crowded into the («real Hall to hear student and guest speakers, chief among whom was Congressman Vito Marcan- lonio. “Insipid pacifism makes for wars; militant pacifism makes for | eacc,'’ shouted the fiery little legislator, while the assemblage roared approval of his sentiments. Mr. Sohappe . smilingly avowing his delight at being able once more to address a Cilv Col- lege |icace demonstration, emphasized the importance of collective security in prolonging |ieace.” s it had been done previously, the Student Council urged a boycott of the Charter Day exercises, because of the ROTC color-guard. Its efforts met with success when only one hundred spectators attended the ceremony. Throughout the term the Campus conducted a drive for the ouster of Dr. rthur Frank Payne, director of the Personnel Bureau. Fach issue of the pa|M-r carried an amusing dig at Dr. Payne, who had written for popular psychology magazines and hail used another psychologist’s material without giving the credit duo him. Dr. Payne issued a statement answering the charges of the Psychologists league in which he pro- tested that the Teacher’s I nion, the league, and com- munists were united in a Triple lliance” against him. 'Ihe Board of Higher Education removed Dr. Payne from his office and did not reappoint him in any capacity. Dr. Paul Klappcr, Dean of the School of Education, was promoted to the presidency of the new Queens College. The Student I nion party related it- sweeping |n r- formances of other terms. In the student council. Joseph Janovsky and Jack London, both of the ’.‘18 class, were elected respectively president and vice- president; Stanley Silverberg liecamc secretary. Our new class council was Hobart Rosenberg, president: Irving Nnderman, vice-president; Joe Solsky, secre- tary. The House Plan received its hardest blow and its greatest boost. Mr. Mortimer Karpp, founder and di- rector, resigned his | osition; to his place was ap- pointed James S. Peace, who had previously gained recognition for his work in developing intramural activities at the College. In June, the House Plan as- sumed its place as a permanent organization at the College, when a donation by the family of the late Edward M. Shepard made possible the purchase of the building as its properly. September of 1937 saw the ’38 class in its Senior year at the College. The Prom Committee, under the chairmanship of Jim- Sotsky, had contracted for the affair with the French Casino. But when that den of frivolity closed its doors, the locale was shifted to the Essex House, where on the night of December 11, more than one hundred and fifty couples swayed and dipped to the music of Eric Correa and his Hotel St. Moritz orchestra. Freshman caps reappeared as thi Seniors adopted them for their own. Bernard Rothenberg, who had charged the class council with mismanagement of the Prom was censured by the Student Council for misrepresenting and ham|M-ring the aetivilies of the class of 19.38, but all friction was forgotten when the class realized it was promoting a successful affair. During the prev ious term the Campus had twice car- 26 ried 'lories concerning a shortage in tin; (!o-op Store' ' accounts. The first reported a deficit of $1000: (lie second of $8(MX)-$13000. President Robinson al tin time staled that the only shortage he knew of was one of $4.38 incurred through an error. A special investi galion of the stores' finances, conducted by a staff of accountants attached to the office of the Commissioner of Accounts, Paul . Blanshard, revealed in ugu-t that the Co-op Store had incurred a loss of $54,000, which was attributed to misappropriation and mis- management on the part of Samuel S. ilkie, the man- ager, whose contract expired during the investigation. In a letter of December 9 to Professor Harry Overstreet, chairman of the Department of Philos- ophy, Professor Cohen announced his intention to re- sign, offering poor health as the principal reason. Professor (adieu's retirement came after thirty-five years of distinguished service at the College. The Student Council cleaned house, destroyed its charter and received a new one from the Faculty. Its main function being to supervise extracurricular activ- ities, the Council's new constitution gave greater power to the clubs and organizations of the College. On December 7, the Campus printed an anonymous letter received from a few anti-semites of unde- termined number. It read in part, “these are the o|ieti- ing guns of all Christian anti-semites (white people) to bring about the ultimate destruction of your de- signs for world determination under the sickle and hammer and the six-pointed star of Judaism.” The Campus put out a burlesque issue in which it lam- pooned Fascism; the Fooshist forces were led by Oswald Foozle, under-Foohrer Frank ague liecanie the new president of the College. I.ater in the term a permit to meet at the College was given a group that called itself the “American Guards.” I poll receipt of numerous protests, the Board conducted an investigation of the purpose of the organization. The permit was revoked when the Board discovered that the group was not patriotic but anti-semitic. Mayor LaCuardia won the Campus poll by an 18 to 1 margin over Jeremiah T. Mahoney. Three quar- ters of his votes were garnered on the A.I..P. ticket. As a result of the Board of Higher education- warning to the College Faculty to “lake adequate ac- tion to prevent offensive articles and stories such as have appeared in the last two issues of the City Col- lege Monthly, a warning also directed at the Mercury of January, 1938. Dean John R. Turner announced a policy of Faculty's “government through influence not censorship over all student publications. Sale of the Monthly at the Commerce Center was forbidden. The term ended on a happy note with the passage of the McGoldrick amendment by a vote of 17-2, which had the immediate effect of making the Ameri- can Student Union a legal organization of the College. The success of the amendment was assured when the Fusion regime took over control of the Board. Mr. Maurice Deiches, who voted for the resolution, died suddenly at the opening of the spring term. The Student Council again elected an all SI slate, which was concurred in by the College Labor Party: Jack London, Harold Both, and Jack Fernbach were elected by overwhelming votes: and the class valedic- tory semester was led by l Wallenberg, Irving n- derman, and Bobby Sand, in the usual order: Howard Kieval, historian, and Dudley Green stein and Lionel Bloomfield, our delegates in the Student Council. The rnerican Student I nion protested, along with the Student Council and other organizations, against the Faculty ruling that all extra-curricular group- must submit complete membership rosters in order to be legalized. It was claimed that this was in violation of the spirit of the McGoldrick resolution. t the time of going to press, the dispute had not yet been settled. The senior term is always a hectic one, and this was no exception. The climax was reached with the tradi- tional Senior Week activities, built around (iommence- ment. In a brilliant blaze of glory the curtain was run down at the Farewell Dance at the stor. For four years we were nursed, and occasionally angrily paw ed, bv a kindly lma Mater. What the future holds we cannot know, but we close on a note of strength and optimism, ve atque salve —Hail and be strong! NORMAN A ARONSON. B.S. Zeta Beta Tau; Biology Society ABRAHAM A MOW IT . M.S. Baskervillc Society MKYKK ADAMS. .A. MORRIS ADKI.MAN. B.S„S. President. Sim ’38; House Plan Council; Student Council; Senior Class Council GKRAl.l) AI.MKRT. B.A. Cditor. Mercury; editorial Board. Microcosm; Co-Author. Varsity Show HERBERT ALBERT. B.S. Ed. Dean 38: Physical and Health education Society SEYMOUR Al.WeiS. B.S.S. IRVING I. ANDKRMAN. B.S. Major Insignia; Lock and Key: Bowker 38; Mercury Cold Key: Kami Silver Key. Medal: Business Manager. Mercury. Microcosm. Lavender, and Masker ille Journal; Vice-President. Senior Class: Vice- President. American Association College Comics IRVING ANIK. MS. Bowker '38; Assistant Business Manager, Microcosm IIKKIIKRT ANNIS. B.S.S. History Society; Camera Club ALBERT ARONOWITZ. B.S.S. NATHAN ARONSON. B.A. IRVING II. ASe.NOESKY. B.S.S. Minor letter: l.aw Society PHILIP ASII. B.S. Secretary. Psychology Society L'X SUKI.DON ASIIEK. II.S. Harris '38; Caduceus S riety IIAHOLD HANK. US. IRVING BAUMAN. It-S. Film and Sprockets SEVTON C. IIENTIIAM. Douglass Society JQSEPH ATTIE. B.S. Vio-Prwidcnl. Ilarri?- '38; Biol- ogy Society NORMAN IIARSEL II.S. President. Ba kcr illc Society; Gibbs '38: Sports Staff. Campus EDW ARD IIEAHMAN. II.S. Ila'kerville Society HAROLD BERGER. B.S.: Social Research Seminar ELLIOT II. BADANKS. B.S.S. Major Letter; Sigma Alpha Mu; Manager.Varsity Fencing; Student Council; Athletic Association; Treasurer. Officer's Club ABRAHAM HASS. II.S. Ba kcmllc Society DAVID HEAVER. H.S.S. Intramurals CAUL IIAkAL. II.S. EDSON C. HATES. II.A. Orche-tra; Secretary. Dictopia SAMUEL BENJAMIN. B.S. 29 STANLEY BERGER. B.S.S. Intramural LEON H. Ill KNSTEIN. B Epsilon Phi Sigma; Geology CIliil : Yarsity Ba-ehall Team HIVING I. IIKZMAY US. Ihukcrvillc Society JACK UIKNSTOCK. II.S.S. Intramural HERBERT UN.Fold). U.S. SIDNEY BIKNBAl M. U.S.S. Dean ‘311: law Society: Business Manager. Co-Editor. Barrister: Intramural Basketball JOSEPH HISACCIO. U.S. Phi Beta kappa; Second Year Honor : Biology Society KM M I I. BIZZAKO. U.S. CARL IILACIIAKSCII. ILS. Second Year Honor : Trcmain Scholarship: Biology Society JUJUS UI.ANKSTKIN. U.S. Efisilon Phi Sigma: Lacrosse Team: Varsity Club HIl.l.El. BI.ONDHEIM. B.S. Baskcrvillc Society LIONEL . BLOOMFIELD. B.S.S. Minor Insignia: Harris ‘37: Asso- ciate Editor. Microcosm: Chair- man. Commencement Committee: Student Council: Senior Class Council; History Society SEYMOl H Bl.l’HM. BAS. HAROLD BU M. II.A. Phi Beta Kappa; Second Year Honors; Trcmain Scholarship: W eir ‘38: Dcutchcr Vcrein 30 Ml I.TON IIU MKMIIAL H.S.S. KTIU i: L RLL’MKRT. H.S. liarlrriology Society OSCAK HKKGMAN. H.S. Gibhs 'TK: Hiolopy Society; K li torial StalT. Campus ARNOLD K. HHKSKIN. H.S.S. HA M AN HHICKMAN. H.A. Menorah Avukah IRVING HHII.I.IANT. H.A. I’lii Hela Kappa; lau Society RORKRT K. HROADWKLL II. Gil ! MR; Social Itwarcli Sem- inar SIGMl NI II. RKONSTKIN. H.S. Slicpard MH; Racteriolojjy Society I.KON RROWN. H.A. 1 1 1 Heta Kappa: lx Cercle Jia- srrand MARTIN HHOAAN. H.S. SALVATORE RRUCATO. H.S. Alpha I’lii Delta A II.1.1 AM A. HRA AN. H.S.S. El Circulo Fuentrs; lx- Cerclc Jusscrand; Circulo Dante Ali- ylieri: Neuman Club RICH ARD RKZl STOW IC . H.S. Schulman Art Society Jt'IJUS HU( KW Al l). H.S.S. AA eir 38; History Society 31 Z£ v. |ii.)ii o|IUJr) I | VII AHIIO N (I'lOHV II UY. U,!S vu siaiio:) ‘s (iiavci VII MIIO) WI.UIVH (I j-| : Iii| ji:|oi| miiho(| :-i' u..|| iu puoj :inl lir j ri.ij| m(| VS II MIIO!) SMIJIVII) i. |iu.t i' | •-ii.liuir) s|iod£ VII WIVH riD VOJ.IIOK Vil ANSIIMIIOMII ) VI AI ji aog . | 11 | vii uihhii:) ji ii.usor s si wssvip jio: vr a. ll!uiuicK) iiioi(| joiiiuf -Iicuiili'i|;) :|IJUU0 ) |u. | fi| : |||. | ; •mi,| . «| ) mm |i mio j-iio|| fit jj.Mri •jo||. juii| )-. ji :n;ui(ikii| joIb|y sva ‘mnivii: ui oios 11101,1 jo;u..S vsii '.■MOMvovm hoimho ] !'M S oi |nl l.i| )I'J| vu oj-low iviv ) m:uh«i «Uipoiil l m? ■■ 11 | ;iloi|s jo Xii?j. ii'| Vil IIOI.W ) MMO(K) Mi l. A|. ! oS A o|OI JJJ.trjl VII AN IVY!) I )Y I 'vu v.u.:n f wdKiw ISIDORE CROSS. B.S. Varsity Track. Cross-Country Teams; Varsity Club RORKRT B. COHEN. R.S. Menorah-Avukah; Boxing, Fenc- ing;. Wrestling Squads; Modern Dance Croup MORRIS M. COHEN. B.S. Weir ’38 IRA COHEN. B.S. Bimker '38; Band; Orchestra BERNARD COOPER. B.A. Major letter. Numerals; Varsity Track Team RICHARD CARTER. B.A. Major. Minor laMters; Manager Boxing Team MILTON COHEN. B.S. Phi Beta Delta; Psychology. Edu- cation Societies I.EO.N COHEN. B.A. THEODORE COHEN. B.S.S. Phi Beta Kappa; Second Year Honors; Editor. Chronicle: His- tory Society; Student Council; Delegate. Model lx-aguc of Nations PHILIP COHEN. B.A. MARTIN COHEN. B.S. Belden Prize in Mathematics MORTIMER W. COHEN. B.S.S. Zeta Bela Tau: Bowker '38 LEONARD COHEN. B.S.S. Dean ‘38; Theatre Workshop 33 SAMUEL COHEN. B.S. SIDNKY CUTLER. M S. AM 'Mi IX)(JIS CZUKOK. M.S. President. Mowker ‘39; House Plan Council; l«aw Society HECTOR O. I)K MKO. M.S.S. Numerals; J. V. Pool ha II PACI. DI MANCO. M.A. Newman Club; Circulo Dante li gliieri JACK (ANN. M.S.S. History Society; Politics Clul CKOKGK H. DAHliY. M.S. VICTOR DK SANTI. M.S.S. Newman Club; Y.M.C.A.; Secre- tary. Ij w Society; Kl Circulo Fuentes ALBERT DII.I.OF. M.S.S. Numerals. Minor letter; Varsity Swimming Team; (Captain. Water Polo Team; Varsity Clui Sim ‘38; Secretary. History So- ciety Kit NEST V. DAUKKK. M.S. HENRY DKUTSCII. M.S. JOHN Dl LORENZO. M.S. DAVID DAWSON. BSS. Varsity Shows; Dramatic Society; Kditorial Staff. Mercury JAMES DEVINE. M.S. PAUL DOMIN. M.A. President, I.aw Society; Editor. Marrister: Delegate. Model la'asuc of Nations 31 JAMES S. DONOHUE. B.S. Kd. Tlirta Kappa Phi: President. New- man (Huh MARTIN I. DOUGLAS. B.S. Monorail Atilkall FREDERICK DRIMMKR. B.A. Phi llrta Kappa: President Prize; Literary W ork-hop W ILLIAM DRUZ. B.S. ABRAHAM Dl BIN. B.S. Shepard 1B; Kducation Society ALEXANDER EIIBENBEBG. B.S. Major Iaiter. Numerals: Varsity Fencing Team ALBERT EHRLICH. B.S.S. la Society: El Circulo Puente ; Seluilmaii Art Society: Social Re- search Seminar SIMON EISDORFER. B.S. BERNARD EISENBERG. B.S.S. Ijiw Society HARRY EISENPRESS. B.A. Second Year Honors; Mono rah- Av ukah MEYER ELKIN. B.S.S. ARTHUR KELENBERG. B.S. Sim ' WI LEON ENGEL B.A. STANLEY ENTELIS. B.S. Bacteriology Society: Intramurals 35 JOS mi EPSTEIN. B.S. DAVID FARBER. II.S.S. Major. Minor Ixtlm; Varsity Law Society Swimming. W ater Polo Teams BERNARD A. FEUER. B.S.S. Compton '.iB; Social Research Seminar; Economics Society LEONARD FISCIILVR. It.A. History. Psychology Sne’et’es: In- tramural Baseball. Basketball ARTHUR T. ESPOSITO. B.S.S. Prati dent. Briggs '38; Vice-Presi- dent. Uw Society PHILIP KEIGKR. R.S. Mcnorah-Avukah ROBERT FEIGIN. It.S. LAW RENCE I ELS. B.A. VLDW'VN EIALKOEE. R.S. Harris ‘.‘IB: Biology Society ARNO FINKELDEY. B.A. President. Deulschcr Vcrcin SIDNEY M. FIRESTONE. B.A. Lxk and Key; President,Sim'38; Varsity Track Team; Varsity Club: Senior Prom Committee: Metropolitan Intercollegiate Broad Jump Champion DANIEL FISCHMAN. B.S. Briggs ‘38: President. Bacteriol- ogy Society GEORGE FISHMAN. B.S. MYER FISHMAN. ItS. Bowker '38; Advertising Manager. Mercury. Microcosm: Class Ath- letic Manager; Buskervill Society 16 THOMAS A. FORTE. B.A Newman. Education Clubs ARNOLD It. FOX. B.S.S. Debating Team DAVID J. FRAADE. B.S. Major Letter; Harris '37; Pres.. Secretary. Dramatic Society; La- crosse Team; Dcutscher Vcrein; Varsity Club A ARON FR ANK EL B.S. JEROME FREIR. It.S. MAURICE FRESHMAN. B.S.S. WILLARD FRIEDI. ANDER, R.S. Baseball Team EMANUEL FRIEDMAN. B.S. Bacteriology Society IRVING FRIEDMAN. B.A. Editor. Managing Editor. City Col- lege Monthly; Sim '3ft; Wrestling Squad IRVING FRIEDMAN. B.S. ketrhum Prize in Philosophy; Weir '38 ISRAEL FRIEDMAN. B.S.S. Menorah-Avukah; Social Research Seminar THEODORE R. FRIEDMAN. B-S.S. Itowker '38;; Law Society; His- tory Society BENJAMIN FRIEND. B.S. Second Year Honors; Weir ‘38 IRW IN FRIESNER. B.S. 37 VINCENT J. FMGUGLIETTI. M.S. President. Y.M.C.A. LEONARD FRISHMAN. 1S.S. Werner '88; Law Society MILTON FUTTERMAN. MS. Harris '88; Maskervillc Society: J. V. Ijierossc: Student Council AARON GALUTEN. M.S. MORRIS CARELICK. M.S. SANFORD GARLAND. M.S. JOSEPH M. GAVRIN. M.A. Keiehum Prize: Philosophy Soci- ety; Psychology Society MURRAY GKISLKR. ILS. Tremain Scholarship; Major I art- ier; Harris '38; Manager Wres- tling Team: Mathematics Cltilt DAVID GELBART. M.S. Mcnorah-Avukah CHARLES GELDZAHI.EK. MS. Lock and Key: President. House Plan Council: President, Rowker '.{8; Chairman, Farewell Dance Committee PHILIP GKLFAND. M.S.S. Phi Mela Ka| pa: Trcmain Scholar- ship: Treasurer. Economics Society 1.01 IS GELLER. M.A. El Circulo Fiicntes CLIFFORD F. GERMER. M.S. Gild '38 MORTIMER GETZELS. M.A. Shepard '88; City College Month- ly: Literary Workshop; 1-a Cliron- ique du Ccrcle Jusserand 38 HYMAN GINSBERG. B.S. Compton '38; President. Caducru Society MARTIN CLASS. B.S.S. STANLEY GLASSNKR. ILS.S. Shepard '38 IRVING W. GLAZF.R. B.S.S. Numerals; Orchestra TIIAN CLICK. B.S.S. Orchestra IIKKBLRT GOLDBERG. B.S.S. SIDNEY GOLDEN. B.S. Baskervillc Society KARL COLDKNBERG. B.A. I’hi Gamma Kappa; Inter-Frater- nity Council: Secretary. I.aw So- ciety EDWIN GOLDEARB. B.S. ROY C. GOLDIN. B.S.S. Social Research Seminar: Mer- cury; History Society AVKL GOLDSMITH. B.A. JEROME M. GOLDSMITH. B.A. Second Y ear Honors; Bowker ‘38; Editor. Chronicle: Assistant Edi- tor. Mercury: Associate Editor. Mi- crocosm ; History. Dramatic Soci- eties; Mennrah-A ukah JACK GOLDSTEIN. B.A. Dramatic Society; El Circulo Euentes l. W RENCE GOLDSTEIN. B.ILS. Briggs 38; Manager Swimming Team 39 LEON GOLDSTEIN. B.A. Politics CIIul ; Orchestra I.EON GOLDSTEIN. B.S. Bacteriology Society; J. V. Swim- ming Team EFRIM COLLIE B.A. Sigma Delta Pi; El Circulo Fuentes BERN MCI J. GOODMAN. li.S.S. (trohcslra EUGENE GOODMAN. II.S. Epsilon Phi Sigma: Sim '38: In- tramural Championship Eoothall Team HOWARD K. GOODMAN. B.S.S. Itouker '.iM: Orchestra: liaml; Editorial Staff. Campus CHESTER CORDON. II.S. ARTHUR GRAD. II.S. Orchestra IRVING GREECE. II.S.S. Sim'.W!; Intramural Hoard; Sports Staff. Campus; Sports Editor. Mi- crocosm RALPH GREEN. II.S. Major I .otter; Sigma Alpha Mu: Manager. Varsity. Junior Varsity Eoothull Teams; Vice-President. Interfraternity Council; Varsity Club MILTON GREENBERG. B.S. Gibbs 38: Caduceus Society: Mon- orail Avnkuli: lntramural SAUL GREENBI.ATT. II.S.S. Harris .‘38; News Board. Campus ARTHI R GREENFIELD. II. V DANIEL GREENFIELD. II.S. 40 SAMI Kl. W.GREENHOUSE, B.S. ROBERT GKF.ENMAN. B.S.S. Abbe 38; Law Society FRANK GREENSPAN’. B.S. Second car Honors: President. Gibbs'itii; Haskervilie Society; In- tramural Basketball. Foot I tail MELVIN GREENSTADT. ILS. President. Gibb '38; Secretary. Baskerville Society; Intramurals DUDLEY GREENSTEIN. B.S.S. Minor Insignia: l ek and Key; Major letter: Tail Della Phi; Manager. Intramurals: Student Council; Varsity Track Team IIIWIN CREKNWALD. B.S.S. W erner ‘.'i8; Zcta Bela Tau: Trea- surer. Law Society: Student Coun- cil MURRAY W. CRI IF. B.S.S. Law Society ROBERT GRILLO. B.A. SEYMOUR GRISS. B.S.S. Phi Beta Kappa: Second Year Honors: President. Weir '38; Psy- chology Club PIIII.MORE GROISSKR. B.S.S. Vice-President. History Society; J. . Fencing ALEXANDER S. GROSS. Jk.. BJSS. Main Events MORRIS GUNNER. B.S. Advertising Manager. Campus; Education Society; Metro rah-A vu- kab IRVING GUSS. B.S. Biology Society JULIUS Gl TTKNPLAN. B.S. Giblrs '38 Ml KRAY GUTTKNPLAN. ILS. Ranker il Ic Society LFO HARMCK. ILS. JOSEPH HKIKOFF. ILS. Biology Society MORTON HEKFIKLI). ILS. I.OLIS HALL liSJS. Major letter; Varsity Baseball Team EDWARD IIART. R.S. President. Secretary. Physics So- ciety SOL HKI.I.KR. B.A. ROBERT HERFORT. ILS. Sigma Alpha Mu; Werner '38: Bacteriology Society ABRAHAM HKCHT. B.A. STANLEY II. HELLER. B.S.S. Varsity Show; Intramural Basket- ball. Swim min ARTHUR HII.LINCER. B.S.S. Harris ’38: History Society: In- tramural Basketball HUBF.KT B. HKCHT. B.S. MORTON J. HEI LMAN. ILS. Second Year Honors; Tremain Scholarship; Captain. Tenn is Tea m MILTON M. IIIMMELFARB. B.A. Phi Bela Kappa; Second Year Honors; Vice-President. Mcnorah- Avukali 42 MORTIMER I.. IIIHSCH. B.S.S. Ili-lory Society MAX . IIIHSCH MAN. B.S.S. History. I .aw. Philosophy Societies ISIDOKK IIOCIIMAN. B.S.S. A A HON HOFFMAN. B.S. Shepard i)8; IVycliology Society JOSEPH 0. HOFFMAN. B.S. Harris '38; Baskervillc Society; Mcnorali-Avukali PAUL It. HOFMANN. B.S. Gildis '38; House Plan Council; Kaskcr ille Society; Chairman. Junior Prom Committee; Dculsch- er Yercin: Y.M.C.A. IKYING A. HOROWITZ. H.S.S. MYRON HOROWITZ. B.S. Zeta Beta Tan: Circulation Staff. Mercury; Intramurals SIDNEY HOROWITZ. B.S. Rowkei ' RAY MONO III BEIL ILS. Senior Prom Committee MORRIS IU DIS. H.S. Gild 38; Baskervillc Society; Senior Prom Committee MARTIN HUNT. I5.S. l|dia Beta Gamma; Neuman Clul HERBERT HYMAN. B.S. liaskerville Society ABRAHAM INKELES. BSS. Social Research Seminar •W AltICAIIAM ITSKOWITZ. BAS. History Society MARTIN L JACK IKK. B.S. Harris 38; Raskerville Society MEYER JACOBSON. B.S.S. I.aw Society JOSEPH JANOYSKY. BAS. Major Insignia; Chancellor, lank ami Key; President. Sim 38; President. Student Council. Junior Class; Captain. Cheering Squad JULIUS JANOWITZ. R.S. Kp'ilon Phi Sigma; Sim 38; Yar sily Baseball Team MYRON JOFFE. B.B.A. Gibbs ’.38 SAMUEL JOFFE. B.B.A. Gibbs ’38 BOY A. JONES. B.A. Secretary. History Society; New- man Club; Dcutscher Vcrein LEONARD JOSSEM. BA President. Vice-President. Badio Club; Physics Society; Film and Sprockets JULIUS JUSSIM. B.S. Secretary. Biology Society MELVIN W. JUSTEB. B.S. Tan Alpha Omega: Inter-fraternity Council; Biology Society; El Cir- culo Fucntcs; Intramurals MORTON KAHN. B.S. BERTRAM KAISER. B.S.S. Bowker 38: History Society: J.V. Baseball BERNARD KANABEK. B.S.S. Business Assistant. Microcosm EI)GAK A. KANTERMAN. B.S. Harris '38; Caduceus Society 1 1111.11 KANTROWITZ. B.S.S. President. Dean ;$8; House Plan Council; Law Society; Editor. Barrister EPHRAIM II. KAPLAN. B.S. Second Year Honors; Boskcrvillc Society HAROLD N. KAPLAN. U.S.S. l-aw Society; Editorial Board. Barrister HERMAN KAPLAN. B.S. Ba kcr illc Society SIDNEY E. KAPLAN. B.A. Deutscher Verein HENRY . KABPE. B.A. Psychology Society EVERETT M. K ASSAI.OW. B.S.S. Intramural Basclmll IRVING KATZ. B.S. Trcmain Scholarship EDWIN KAUFMAN. B.S.S. Rowker '38; Social Research Sem- inar: Psychology Society; Swim- ming Squad JOHN KEARNS. B.S.S. A ARON K ELM AN. B.S. Phi Beta Kappa; Highest Second War Honors: Harris 38: Presi- dent. Biology Society: Campus FRANK E. KENTON. B.S. Briggs '38; Bacteriology Society HOWARD A. KIKVAL B.A. Major Insignia; Lock and Key; Sim 38; Editor. Associate Editor. Microcosm; Secretary. Eacully- Studcnt Discipline Committee: Sc nior Class Historian; Senior Prom (Committee; Student Council 45 Ml Kim KIMMKL ILS. ISIDOR KIKSCIIENBALM. ILS. Phi I{«■!.! kappa: 'I remain Schol- arship; Baskcrvillo Society GERALD I . KITAV. ILS.S. Major loiter; eta It«'iji Tan: In trrfraternity Council: Varsity Fencing Team: Croqui Sketch (Jliil : Varsity Clult ALBERT KLAUSNER. ILS. GEORG FI S. KLEIN. B.A. Sim '38; President. Secretary, Psychology Society: Intramural Basket ball ISKAEI. I. KLEIN. IIS. I’lii Delta Pi; Literary Workshop: lioxing Squad MARTIN II. KLEIN. ILS. MILTON B. KLEIN. B.A. Phi Beta Kappa: Second Year Honors; President. Is- Cercle Jus- serand: Editor, l.a Clironiquc WILLIAM II. KLEIN. ILS. Second Year Honors; Harris 38; (aidiiceus Society EMERY KO.MLOS. II.S.S. Law Society; Co E litor. Mating- in Editor, Barrister; Inter-Club Council ALEX KORN. ILS. ARTHUR KORN. ILS.S. SOLOMON L KORNIIH II. ILS. President. Secretary. Bacteriology Society SIDNEY KOROW1TZ. ILS. 40 J AMIS KOVEL B.A. Si”ma Delta Pi; I’midfnl. HI Cir- ciilo Kiirnlr SEA MOt It KR AKOW Kit. It.S. ARTHUR KRAMER. ILS. Dean '.'tK; Intramural Handball DAVID KRAMER. It.S. Minor letter. Numeral ; Delta Iheta Epsilon; President. Dean 'Ut; Intramural Hoard: Aarsity Football Team HERMAN KRAMER. It.A. AI.EX KRAUT. ILS. Werner ’38: J. V. Basketball; Intramural- SAMUEL KREINCOI.D. It.S. Biology Society CHESTER KREISW IRTH. It.A. Gild - ‘38: House Plan Council: Eilm and Sprockets BERNARD H. KRESS. It.S. President. Itaskerville Society THEODORE KRIEGEIt. It.S. ISIDORE KIGLEK. It.S.S. President. Philosophy Society: Faculty-Student Discipline Com- mitter: Student Council: Vice- President. History Society: Class A ice-President HOW ARD Kl UN. It.S.S. Economies Society: Deutseher AVr- « i 11: A .Ml .A. SOLOMON KLNIS. It.S.S. Alinor Insignia: Lock and Key: Sim ‘38; Managing Editor. News Editor. Campus: Cla-s Council DAVID KUSHEI.OFF. It.S.S. Alinor Insignia: Managing Editor. Copy Editor. Campus: Handbook: Class Night 17 JACK KUSHNEH. B.S. Tau Alpha Omega: Marris '158; Vice-President. Caduceus Society: Microcosm MAX I .A DOFF. B.S.S. KDW AIM) F. LANDAU. I5.S. '158; Baskervillc Society SIDNKY I.ANDAU. B.S.S. GEORGE I.ANFKANCHI. B„S. Circolo Dante Alighieri KENNETH I.ASNIK. B.S. Kl.l LAZAUUS. B.A. Phi Bela Kappa; Second Year Honors JACOB II. LAZAUUS. B.S. Caduceus Society; Camera Club GKOUCK LK BOKK. B.S.S. Psychology Society SIDNKY I.KKS. B.S. Uemsen '158; Caduceus Society CUNTIIKR LKINKWEBKU. B.S. Minor Insignia; Business Manager. Circulation Manager. Campus; Business Manager. Handbook; Dcutscher Ycrcin EDWARD I.KUNKU. It.A. J. V. Track Team LEON LEVEY. B.A. Phi Bela Kappa: Second Year Honors; cs.' Board. Campus; Menorali- Avukali SIDNEY I.KVIE. B.S. Phi Della Pi; Baskerville Sjcirly: Mercury; J. V. Swimming 48 JACK LEVINE. 15.A. Menorah-Av ukah NATHAN LEVINE. B.S.S. Secretary. Social Research Seminar MORTON E. LEVITAN. B.S. Bonier '.«5 JESSE LEVITT. B.A. Phi Beta Kappa ROBERT LEVITT. B.S.S. Weir '59: Law Society; Mercury; Mcnorah-Avukali LEONARD R. LEW. B.S.S. Bowker 38: J. V. Baseball SIDNEY l.lEBSTEIN. B.S. Harris '38: Biology Society SAMUEL LEWIS. US. LAWRENCE LIEBERMAN. B.A. ELIO LLSCIO. B.S. Ed. Vrice • President. Newman Club: Physical Education Society; J. V. Pool ball AUSTIN LODATO. B.A. JEROME B. l.OEWY. B.S.S. Phi Beta Kappa; Second Year Honors; History Society; Deli- pate. Model 1-cjgnc of Nations JACK LONDON. B.A. Major Insignia: Vice-Chancellor. l.ock and Key: President. Zcta Beta Tau; President. Vice-Presi- dent. Secretary. Student Coun- cil; President. Vice-President. Class; Editorial Ibtard. Micro- cosm: Delegate. Model league of Nations JULIUS LOUT .OFF. B.S.S. Compton 38: El Circulo Fuentes; Psychology (Tuli: Radio Club 49 HERMAN LOWELL US. Weir 38; Physio Society JOSEPH I.UBANSKY, U.S. Captain. Varsity Boxing Team; Varsity Club; Bacteriology So- ciety Sxlvatore lutri. u.a. Lc Ccrcle JiivM. roml MARTIN I.U17KR. US. JOHN L. LYNCH. U.A. HKNRY MAAS. U.A. I’lii Ur I.a Kappa: High Second Year Honors; Bowkcr 38; Fea- ture Kditor. Tlie Campus; City College Monthly; Mercury: Kdi- lorial Board. Microcosm SAI L MAIDENS. U.S RALPH MANDEL B.S.S. Dean ’37: Managing Kditor. Mi- crocosm: President. Vicc-Prrsi- rlent. Technical Advisor. Camera Club; Photography Kditor. Mi- crocosm; Commencement Commit- tee HOW RD MANDELBAl M. U.A. Compton ’38; Business Manager. DramaticSocicty: Kxecutive Board. Main Kvrnts: Business StalT. Cam- pus ELI MARCK. B.S. rl Kditor. City College Monthly: President. Schulman Art Society PHILIP MASI.OW. U.S. ARE MAST. B.S. Harris '38; Biology Society MEYER MATHIS. B.A. History Society SIDNEY MATHIS. B.S.S. History Society; El Circulo Fu- rntrs: Intra murals HO MEYER MATLUCK, B.S. Harris 38; Raskerville Society IKVINC MAY. B.S. Harris ’38; Boskervillc Society william McDonald. b.s. President. Douglass Society; Clut Secretary; Student Council JOSEPH MKDACLIA. ILS. Harris 38 NEWTON MKLTZEK. B.S. Bowker ‘38; Dramatic Society; Varsity Show; Kditorial Staff. I-avender. Mercury. City College Varsity Show; Kditorial Staffs. Monthly. Microcosm; Camera Club WILLIAM MKLTZEK. B.A. Bacteriology Society HARRY MEN AKER. B.S.S. Major I-etler; Varsity Football Team: President. Dean 38; His- tory Society; Varsity Club MILTON II. MENDELSOHN. B.A. President. Compton '38; Business Manager. City College Monthly; Dramatic Society; Varsity Shows; Microcosm MILTON MESIBOKF. B.S. HERBERT MKSCON. B.S. Compton ‘38; Biology Society; Varsity Tennis Team SHELDON 0. MEYERS. ILS. Minor larlter; Numerals; Harris ’38; House Plan Council; Var- sity Swimming; Varsity Club LESTER MICDAL B.S.S. SAMUEL MIKANOWSKY. B.A. DANIEL MILLER. B.S.S. Vice-President. Psychology Society 51 1 1111.11 MILLEIL IJ.A. Mcuorali-Aviikali A II.1.1 AM MILLEIL IJ.S. President. Harris '38; Secretary. IJiolo y Society: Caduceus So- ciety J ACK MIHONOV. IJ.S. Harris '38: Camera Club MILTON MISHKIN. IJ.S. President. Sim '38: Student Coun- ciI: J. V. Football AAIIO.N MODANSKV. IJ.S. ire-President. I Jactoriolojry So- ciety; Student Council ISIDORE MOI.OKSKV. IJ.S.S. SIMON MOKKIS. 15.A. Second Year llnuors THOMAS MOSIIKIt. IJ.S. Gild 38: llaskcrville Society; IJand SIMON MOSS. It.S. Ed. Gymnastic Club KAPIIAKI. Ml SICI S. IJ.S (.' m| ton 38; Education. Law So cietics IIAUOIJ) Ml I NK K. IJ.S.S. Dean '38: Ia w Society: Editor. Itarrisler MYIION NAGI.KIJFUG. IJ.S. JACK NAIM Ell. U.S. Gibbs '38: IJjL'kcrvillc Society; IJiisincss Hoard. Campus. Mercury. Clionimi HENIIY J. NATHANSON. IJ_S. Harris '.‘3JI; IJioloj-y Society: In- tramural Swimming HECTOR NEGRON. B.S. •Sigma Della Pi: El Circulo Pu- entes; Social Research Seminar CIIARI.ES NEIDER. B.S. Literary Workshop: Editor. City (College Monthly JEROME NKtSTADT. R.S.S. BENNETT L NEW MAN. B.S. Tan Delta Phi; President. Bow- ker 38; Business Assistant. Micro- cosm NATHANIEL NITKIN. B.S.S. Varsity Water l olo Team; Var- sity Club MARC A. NUCERINO. B.S.S. Alpha Phi Delta JACK OBERMAN. R.S. JACK OCHS. R.S. President. Bowker '.'IB SOI. NEIDITZ. R.S. Bacteriology Society ROBERT NEM .ER. R.S. Phi Beta Kappa: Second Year Honors: Intramurals BERNARD NISENSON. R.S. SIDNEY NISGORETSKY. R.S. Ra kerville Society DAVID A. NOVACK. R.S.S. Major letter: lawk and Key: Captain. Varsity Bass-hall Team; Varsity Club Ml RR AY M'SSR A I'M. R.S. 53 NORMAN OLSEN. B.S. Baskervillc Society; V.M.C.A. IRWIN OILMAN. B.A. I.EX OPOC.HINSKY. B.S. JOSEPH OKENSTEIN. B.S.S. SIDNEY OKENSTEIN. IlSS. H A KOI.D ORR. H.S. IIERREKT I. OSHKAIN. K.S. Harris ‘38: Bacteriology Society IIAKOI.I) I'ADOW. B.S. Manager. Varsity Basketball Team GEORGE PALMER. B.S. Bowker '38; Bacteriology Society; Business Assistant. Microcosm ARTHUR PAN.N1TTI. B.S. Prcsirlent, Briggs 'lift; Bacteriol- ogy. Dramatic Societies; President. Y.M.C.A.; Newman Club DAVID G. PARIS. B.S.E I. Lock and Key: Major l.ctter: Var- sity Basketball Team: Vice-Presi- dent. Athletic Association: Varsity Club SIMON PAR NASS. B.A. History Society SOLOMON PASICIIOW. B.S. Harris ‘38; Baskervillc Society NATHAN PEAR I.MAN. B.A. 54 HAROLD B. PERLMAN. B.S.S. Ir (irrrle Jusscrand BKRT PEI.LER. B.S. BERNHARD PEPPER. B.S. LOUIS PESS. K.S.S. FRANK PETREI.LI. B.S. President. Circulo Dante Ali- ghieri; Student Council DONALD PHILLIPS. B.S.S. Treasurer. Economics Society: Co- Editor Business Bulletin; Statis- tics Society CHRISTIE PHOTIADIS. B.S. Baskerville Society MORTIMER PODEI.L B.A. Shepard 38; Managing Editor. City College Monthly: Associate Editor. Microcosm; Campus Staff HERBERT POLLACK. B.S. Intramural Basketball MAX POLLACK. B.S. Camera Cluh ISIDORE POLLAK. B.S. SIDNEY POI.I.NER. B.S.S. JEROME POPOKSKV. B.S.S. Compton '.‘US; Business Staff. Cam- pus; Circulation Manager. City College Monthly 55 CARMINE PERROTTA. B.S. VKRNON POUTER. B.S.S. SAMSON POWSNKR. B.S.S. IRVING PUTTER, H.A. LEON RECIIT. H.S. Phi Beta Kappa; Second Year Honors SIDNEY POSIN'. B.S. HENRY S. PRESSMAN. B.S. Numerals; Harris '.’IB; J. V. la- crosse Team; Huaiiicss Assistant, Microcosm IRA RASIIKOI'F. B.S. Compton 'ii?!; Business Hoard. Campus; MenornliAvuknh; Biol- ogy Society IRVING REICH. B.S. Baskerville Society 11.1.1 AM RASSICA. B.S.Ed. MURRAY PROJECTOR. B.S. Varsity Swimming Team; Varsity Club GEORGE REICIINER. B.S.S. AI.EREI) PROMUTO. B.S. LEONARD RATNER. H.S. Cirenlo Dante Alighieri (diducens Society SEYMOUR REIMAN. B.S.S. 56 HKKRKRT 15. RK.ISM AN. I5.S. AI.F.X ANDF.R ItF.NKO. IIS. MAX M. RICHMAN. R.S. MORRIS RIKGKR. R.S.S. I DU ARI) IUESKNFKLD. I5.A. I AMKS . RINALDI. R S.S. I psilnn Delia Sigma; Social Re- search Seminar: J. V. U resiling. Rasehall Team MM RICK RORRINS. R.S.S. KUGKNF. II. RORKRTS. R.A. I-m Societv MURRAY RO KOWIT . R.A. ARTHUR ROLFO. R.S. N ice - President. Geology Clii! ; Raskerville Swiety; Newman Club ARNOLD D. ROSKMAN. R.S.S. Numeral : llarri ”15.'!; Varsity Fencing Team; lam Society H AROLD ROSKN. R.S. RICHARD ROSKNRAUM. R.S.S. ARTHUR J. ROSLNRF.RG. R.S.S. l rk ami Key: Major la-tter: Var- sity. J. V. Ha kctl ull; Intramural Raschall HAROLD H. ROSENBERG. B.S. Minor Insignia; l-Ock anil Key; llowlcr 'Si; Managing Lililor, Mi croroum; Editor. Mercury; Bas- kerville Society HAROLD I . ROSENBERG. B.S-S. Treasurer. Zrln Beta Tan; Iji Society; J. V. lacrosse Team: Numerals HOBART ROSENBERG. B.S.S. Minor Insignia: Lock anil Key: (’resident. Tail Della I’lii: Presi- dent. Senior Ola . ; Senior I’roni Committee; Associate Editor. Copy- Editor, Campus; Managing Edi- tor. Handbook; Microcosm CARL ROSEN BLUM. B.S. Weir '37; Baskcrville Chemical Society; Editor, Baskcrville Jour- nal ; Business Staff. Mercury NATHAN ROSENBLUM. B.S.S. History. Psycliology Societies JOSEPH ROSENEEI.I). B.S.S. Mercury. Campus. Ilandliook. Bus- iness Staffs SEYMOUR ROSENSTEIN. R.S. Ilowkcr 38 ABE ROSIIINSKY. B.S.S. HAROLD ROSINI. B.S. AVRON H. ROSS. B.S. Second Aenr Honors; Compton '.'Ui; Caduceus Society: El Circulo Puentes; Theatre Workshop HERBERT ROTH. ILS.S. BENJAMIN ROTHBERG. B.S. BERNARD S. ROTHENBERG. B.A. ALijor Insignia: l ck and Key: Kditor-in-Chief. Managing Editor. Campus; Editor-in-Chief. lavender llandhook; Class President; Band; Student Council J ACK ROTHSCHILD. B.S. Bowker 38; Alanaging Editor. Mercury: Associate Editor. Micro- cosm; Baskcrville Society 58 JEROME KOTIISTKIN. B.S. Secretary. Physics, Chess Clubs; MenorahAvukah ERWIN ROZRAN. B.S.S. IIKRHERT RUBIN. R.A. Minor Insignia: Lock and Key; President Compton '.'Ui; ItiHinna Manager. Campus, City College Monthly; Business StalT. Mer eury. Varstiy Show IRVIN RUBIN, B.S. MARVIN III BIN. B.S. Itouker 38; Raskcrville Society; Editorial Board. Mercury. Micro- cosm. Baskcrville Journal CURSEM. RL’DERM AN. B.S. Business StalT. Campus ARTHUR L RUDNICK. B.A. History Society HECTOR RUSSELL B.A. GEORGE RUTKIN. B.S. ROBERT SAFFIR. B.S. JULIUS SALT MAN. B.A. HARTLEY L. SAMUELS. B.S. Dramatic Society HARRY SAND. B.SS. Lock and Key; Major letter; Sim 38; J. V. Basketball; Varsity Basketball; Class Secretary WILLIAM SAVCHUCK. B.S. 59 STANLEY SASLAVSKY. B.S.S. JEROME SCHATZBERC. B.A. HERBERT SCIIENKER. B.S.S. Varsity Show SAMUEL SCHNEIDER. B.S.S. ARTHUR K. SAZ. B.S. Harris ‘38; Secretary. Bacteriol- ogy Society; Student Council HAROLD SCHECHER. B.A. SAMUEL SCHER. B.A. Shepard 'IIH; History Society; Ed- itor. Chronicle HAROLD SCIIOENHOITZ. R.S. Caduceus Society HENRY II. SCIIECIITER. B.S.S. J. V. Football; Intramural Bas ketl.nl 1 ARTHUR SCIILIFFEN. B.A. EMANUEL SCHREIRER. R.S. MURRAY SCHEFER. R.S. IRVING R. SCHMOI.KA. R.S. Chess Team: Education Club BERNARD SCHWARTZ. R.S. CHAKLKS M. SCHWARTZ. It.A. I’resiilent. Secretary. Neuman Club; History Society DAN ID II. SCIIW ARTZ. It.S. HKRBKRT SCHWARTZ. It.S. Ilouker ‘37 JKSSK SCIIW ARTZ. It.S. Abbe :t8; Dramatic Society MORTON II. SCIIW ARTZ. It.S. Ml mm SCIIW ARTZ. It.A. SKA MOl It SCIIW ARTZ. It.S. Math Club STANI.KY SCIIW ARTZ. It.S. MILTON II. SCHW ARZ. It.S. Rcnwcn 38: Ituskcrvillc Society HAROLD SCIIW AKZRKICII. It.S. JACOB SKOAL It.S. Harris ‘38; l!iolo” Society; Cites Team M ARTIN L SKOAL It. A. Ca lumi« Strictv AI.KX SKLIOMAN. I5.S.S. Stcial Research S'mitiar SAMI Kl. A. SH AIjOIM. It.S.S. Compton ‘it.’!; Student (Council; Business Itoar ). Campus f.t ABRAHAM M. SHANES. B.S. Physic Club ABRAHAM SHAPIRO. B.S.S. Social Research Seminar; lx; Or- cle Jusserand IRVING SHAPIRO. B.S.S. IRVING S. SHAPIRO. B.S. Campus; Literary Work-hop MARTIN SHASSOL B.S.S. LEON SHERESHEESKY. B.S.S. ISIDOR SIIERER. B.S. WILLIAM J. SHERIDAN. B.A. Campus; Newman Club; Y.M.C.A. LESTER SHLI.MAN. B.S. DAVID SICA. B.S. MAX SIEGEL B.A. Tau Delta Phi; President. Rem- sen 38 62 EREI) SHELTER. B.S. Ed. DAVID SIIOCII. B.S. Economics. Ili.-tory Societies MAX SIEGEL B.S.S. NATHAN SIKGKL B.S.S. Dean ‘.'Ml: Varsity resiling. Swimming Team ixh is silbekschctz. ila. History Club JOSEPH SII.BERSTEIN. B.A. PERKY J. SILKEN. B.S. President. Sim ‘iH; Student Coun- cil; Class Council MAI KICK LEE SILVER. ILS. Varsity Swimming: Chess Team: Caduceus Society SAI I. SIXER. B.S. Fencing Squad l-llll.ll SKKI.L. B.S. Gilihs ‘38; Biology. ILi kcr illr Socict ies Jl I.IIS SKOI.XICK. ILS. MORRIS SMITH. ILS. Biology Society THOMAS F. SMITH. ILS.S. GERALD SMOLIAR. ILS. American Institute Electrical En- gineer CHARLES SMYTH. ILS. Delta Alpha: Major. Minor let- ters: Manager. Varsity Wrestling Team: History Society; Intra- mural HARRY SOBKU ILS. Biology Society HERBERT A. SOBER. ILS. Harris 38 AJ lit A SOLET. B.S. Biology. Dramatic Societies LLOYD GEORGE COLL US. IKYING SONNENSCHEIN. B.S.S. Law Society; Debating Team JOSEPH N. SOTSKY. U.S_S. Minor Insignia: I-ork and Key; President.Sim '3B; Vice-President. Secretary. Glass; Chairman, Se- nior Prom Committee: Intramural Football JACK SOIDAKOKF. K.S. (ihess Team HO D SPANK.IL U S. PKKKY SPIIM). K-S-S. Dean '.'if.; History Society; HI Circulo Puentes PHILLIP SPIVACK. K.A. Gild - '38; Intramural Baseball ABRAHAM STKIN. B.S. ARTHUR STKIN. B.S. Second Year Honors; Kenisen '38; Kdiiration. Psychology Societies; Chess Team: la Cercle Jusscrand; Intramurals ISRAEL STEINBERG. B.S.S. SAMUEL STKINGISKK. B.S. JACK STEINM AN. B.A. Abbe '.'ti!; President. Law Society CLINTON P. STEPHENS. B.S.S. 64 CLIFFORD N. STERN. ILS. Rowkrr '38; Gaduccti Society EDWARD STERN. B.A. Harris 38; Dramatic Society EMANUEL R. STERN. ILS. Dean '38; Gaduccu Society; J.V. Football MORRIS STERN. ILS. Dean ‘38; History Society; Rand; Varsity E'ootball Team HERE STERNBERG. R.S. Shepard ‘38; Intramural BERNARD STICKNEY. R.S. HAROLD STORCII. R.S.S. BERNARD H. STOWENS. R.S. Associate Editor. Microcosm; As- sistant Editor. Mercury; Varsity Show ; Physics Society ALEXANDER STRASSER. R.S. Physics Society BERNARD SUESKIND. R.S.S. IRVING SVERDI.IK. R.S.S. I .aw Society SE MOUR TARACHNIKOFE. B I Student (Council; Menorah • Avu- kali: Le Gercle Jusnerand IRVING TANNENRAL M. R.A. NORMAN TANZ. R.S. Tail Delta Phi; Gihbs 33 JACK TAUBER. ILS.S. President. Menorali-Avukali HAROLD TENNEN. ILS. Harris '.’Ui; Mercury; Microcosm; Itiolojiy Society CHARLES TEPEKMAN. B.S.S. Scliulman Nit Society SANFORD S. TEPPER. B.S. Itowkcr ’38 SAMUEL TEPPER. B.A. El Circulo Fuentes ISRAEL TEW. B.S.S. MORTIMER TODEL B.S.S. Dean ‘38: Social Re earcli Seminar ROBERT TRAUR. ILS. I’lii Beta Kappa; I.e Clour Ward: Harris ‘3ft: President. Biology So- ciety HYMAN TRESS. B.S. Ed. BENJAMIN TRICIITER. B.S. HARRY TROPIXSKY. B.S. Baskervillc. Dramatic Societies JOHN TUOMEY. B.A. JULIUS UIILANER. B.S. President. Weir '38; Vice-Presi- dent fi Secretory. Dcutsclier Verein 66 JACOB R. TESSMAN, B.S. GEORGE UNDERBERG. R.S. PAUL R. UNTERMAN. li.S.S. M arsity I rack. CfOM- Country Teams; ltiirarniir.il Hoard: Psychology Society: Social Re- search Seminar: Band SALVATORE VASII.lv. H.S. Newman Club; Physics Society DAVE A. VIKZI. R.A. Officer Club DENYS VOLANOPUI.O. H.S.S. HERRERT W AG.NEIL B.S.S. MAX M. WALDGEIR. H.S. CARRIER E. W Al.DMAN. B.S. Helden Prize in Mathematics; Rem- sen ‘W; Education. Psychology. Societies ARTHUR . WAI.OWITZ. H.S.S. W ALTER A. WANNERSTRAM. R.S. Interfraternity Council HAROLD E. WARSHAW. R.S. How ker '38 ALBERT WATTENRERG. H.S. Major Insignia: lx ck arol Key: Phi Delta Pi: Rowker 'IMS; Senior Cias President: Secretary. Phys- ics Society: Student Council; President. Interfraternity Council MORRIS W ATTENBERG. H.S.S. History Society BROM WEBER. H.S.S. Associate Editor. Lavender. Cli- onian: Literary Workshop 6? CAM. WEINBERGER. MS. Ed. Tan Della Phi; Varsity l-acrosse Team; Varsity Club IKVINO 1C. WEINGAKTEN. IC.S. Phi I Cel a Kappa; Vice-President. Baskcrvillc Society JUl.ll S W KIMCKU. IC.S. A ICE WEINSTEIN. IC.S. Baskcrvillc Society ABRAHAM I- WEINSTEIN. IC.S. ICacteriology Society MILTON WEI.NTRAl Ik B.A. STAN LEA UEINTRAl 1C. IC.S.S. Varsity Show GAMI.IEI. WF.ISll.ACH. IC.S. Math. Camera. Croquis IIul s UEKNAKI) WEISSMANN. IC.S. Shepard ‘.'CB; Baskcrvillc Society ROBERT WEITZ. IC.S.S. J.V. Football; Intramural Swim- ming SKYMOl'R WEXI.ER. IC.S. 68 SAMI EL WEINSTEIN. I5.S. Ed. W eir ’:C8 HARRY COOPER WEISS. IC.S.S. Tau Della Phi ERNEST WIDMAYER. IC.S.S. Hoving Team; (Mirer's Club CHARLES WILFORD. B.A. Major, Minor I .Titers: Varsity Football. Wrestling Teams; Var- sity Club MICHAEL WILLIAMS. B.S. SIMEON V WITTENBERG. B.S. Major Insignia; Lock ami Key; Major letter; Student Council; Varsity Debating Team; Weir '38; Treasurer, Athletic Association; Manager. Intramural Athletics; House Plan Council: Microcosm Editorial Board: Varsity Club RAYMOND WOLF, B.S.S. Tau Delta IMii; Remsen 38 MILTON WOLFSON. B.S. Baskenille Society; Dramatic So- ciety JOHN ZAPPULLA. B.S.S. NORMAN ZAKIN. B.S. EDMUND M. ZASLOW. B.S.S. Abbe '37: Vice-President. House Plan Council; President. Econom- ics Society STANLEY ZEI.MANOVITZ. B.A. Sim '38; Caduceus Society LEONARD ZIMMERMAN. B.S. ARTHUR ZITRIN. ILS. Caduceus Society ARNOLD V. WOLF. B.S. JACOB L. ZAR. B.S. Biology Society Physics Society JOSEPH ZENEW ITZ. B.S. 69 TECHNOLOGY School of Technology Protagonists of a technocratic civil- ization arc tin men of Compton Mall ami tin lech- nolog y Building. Life to them is a progression of mechanieal | erfeclion leading to an extroverted Utopia of friclionless machines and push-button phenomena. Men who swear eternal fealty to the slide-rule and the logarithmic curve have no time for things unrnalhemntical and mundane—so they live in their temple of precision, a race of men apart. such, they can always In distinguished from their fellow-students by (as they would pul it): (a) a com- plete oblivion to their surroundings; (b) a remark- able and esoteric vocabulary; and (c) a fanatic belief that two times two approximately equals four. Plus their extraordinary philosophy they can boast of a more extraordinary program. To them such things as weekends mean nothing—outside of an opportunity for catching up on their eternal labors. Their school days, were it not for the necessity of sleeping, would Ih- twenty-four hours long. However, insiders report that the honor students are trying to develop a forty- hour day. Within their cloistered halls, the quasi-engineers have huilt a complex organization of honor and tech- nical societies; of ruling councils and publicity organ- izations: and even a publication of, so they say, no mean caliber. The ruling body in Tech circles is the Tech Council which, contrary to the usual conduct of such organizations, has actually accomplished some- thing. For, finally realizing that an unaccountable difficulty (to say the least) exists for Tech graduates to get jobs in the engineering profession, the Council, during the past year, concentrated on remedying this problem and accomplished much which will benefit both present and future College engineering students. t the beginning of the Fall term, emphasis was placed on the drive for an Kmployment Bureau which would find jobs. Ilarrassed Tech students packed Dorcrnus Hall to hear Professors Baum, Brophy, Marties, and Smith, and Mr. Withrow discuss this problem. After this meeting, agitation for the Bureau marked time until it was incorporated as one of the functions of the Tech Seminar. The formation of the latter, which seems to Im- the most lieneficial and lasting contribution of this year's Council, was the main activity during the spring term. This organiza- tion, which, it is hoped, will soon comprise all en- gineering students, plans to afiiiliate with the meri- can Vouth Congress to strengthen their position in agitating for the abolition of tuition fees and for free hooks, along with the demand for the employ- 72 ment Bureau. The Seminar soon proved its value by conducting special classes to prepare students for the Civil Service Junior Kngineer exam, the first given for this position in several years. Between terms, the Council sponsored Tech “Open House attended by some five hundred alumni, stu- dents, faculty, and engineering leaders. To amuse the visitors, the boys set up apparatus which brought cynical smiles to the old-timers and amazed awe to those dilettantes who dropped in just for the ride. The general consensus was, however, appreciative for the thing-amajigs which the techmen so valiantly set up. Social activities, which prove that perhaps the human calculating tables are really human, hit a horrific high when a blind date dance, which was optimisti- cally held with the Hunter gals, was attended by circa 250 couples. The publication “of no mean ability (cf. above) is hut a babe when placed along some of the other and hoary school periodicals—but a lusty bain never- theless. The infant is Vkctok, a semi-annual maga- zine, which made its debut during the past year a the official undergraduate publication of the School of Technology. Some forty pages of original research pa|M rs, a few essays by members of the faculty, and several general articles concerning the extra-curricu- lar activities of the Tech School found their way into the metamorphosed wood pulp. The publication has a two-fold purpose: first, it serves as a medium for obtaining a closer faculty- student relationship: and secondly, it favorably pub- licizes the excellent facilities and the high calilver of the students of the Tech School with the engineering profession. The latter, by far the more important of its functions, was achieved by forwarding to the larger industrial organizations providing employment for engineers at least 1000 copies of KCTOK—free! Maybe it will In- bread upon the waters. The four A. Blank Blank K’s had by no means a pacific existence this past year. W hat with parties, speakers, and conventions, it's a wonder their log- logs didn’t dry up and disappear into a parabolic dusl. The boys probably bad lo make heap much medicine in their mechanized tepee for last year’s lapse to great pod Machine. In alphabetical order, the first of the AK’s is the meriean Institute of Chemical Knpineers. To the College chapter fell the job, this spring of playing host to the Conference of Metropolitan Student Chapters of that organization, and naturally, (lily College’s good name had to Ik gloriously upheld. Ten College branches, including those of Yale, Columbia, Princeton, the I niversity of Pennsylvania, New York I niversity. Cooper I nion, and Drexel Institute sent approximately two hundred and fifty delegates to this meeting, the second of its kind. However, despite all the necessary preparations for making a royal welcome for the sons of Old Nassau, among others, the Society did not neglect its weekly programs. Early in the year, in conjunction with the local chapter of the X.I.K.E., the club sponsored a meeting at which Messrs. Withrow and Eisenberger, faculty leaders in the drive for a practical and effi- cient Employment Bureau, presented their views. Many other sjieakers on technical subjects amused the members. The chemist-executives are: Kcli kins- , president: Sidney Blall, vice-president; Norman I.idles man, secretary; Isidore Kriedland, lica-ufcr: Mr. Withrow, faculty advisor. The makers of bridges, the extreme protoly|K-s of technocracy, band together in tin- merican Society of Civil Engineers, of which the College chapter i- the sixth largest in the country. Their very varied pro- gram, besides having speakers at the weekly meetings, included a trip lo Bulgers I niversity, where .1 joint meeting of the two branches was held. 'I he vi-it was returned by the provincial- who accompanied the College chapter on an exciting inspection tour of the Sixth Avenue Subway, which, in case you don’t know, i- being built under the very bothersome board- walk beneath the old El. In January, the Society participated in the Metro- politan Conference of Student Chapters, which was Vector held in conjunction with the annual meeting of the parent organization. On the social side the boys held a dinner dance on Thanksgiving Eve and sponsored a smoker in the Armory. There was a great oppor- tunity for someone to get back at somebody at the smoker, for a basketball game was played between the students and the faculty. I nfortunatelv however, the faculty, wonder of wonders, won. The only rea- son for that upset, insiders report, was the presence of a spy on the student team. The traitor has not as yet been captured. The board of directors is: Henry Sawcliuck, presi- dent: John llastilovitch, vice-president: Harold Wild, secretary; Kred I .oilman, treasurer: and Professor Mien, faculty advisor. The live wires of the Technology School, when they go to heaven, lielong lo the merican Institute of Electrical Engineers, now in its fifteenth year of a very shocking existence. During the past year, the Society inspected the New York Central Power House and an I.H.T. substation, while a large part of the Tech Council 73 the parent organization was discussed at several meetings of the Society. The social peak of the year was the Laboratory Dance with refreshments, although the aforemen- tioned smoker for the Metropolitan Societies was a close runner-up. The officers for the present semester are: Arthur (Tiger, chairman; Herbert Slcinman, vice-chairman: Herbert Runen, secretary; Joseph Braverman, treasurer; and faculty advisor, Professor Smith. Boy geniuses, with the accompanying character re- quirement , who have given their all to Alma Mater find themselves elected to Chi Alpha Pi, the Honor Society. Since its founding in the fall of 1936, tin organization has carried on a very active program both intellectually and socially. Perhaps Chi Alpha Pi and all the other organizations will have opportunities for even more social activity, for 1938 saw the his- tory-making entrance of Miss Cladys Lovinger into the Tech School through a legislative loophole. What- ever the reason, though, the class of 1938 for the first lime in College history leaves behind a College Sweetheart, and we don't mean the gal in the murals, either. group visited, during the Christmas vacation, the Celle I.d Electric plant at Schenectady. General Klee- trie further aided the club’s program by loaning several sets of films, as «lid the (Consolidated Edison Company. One of tin most int« resliug on the list « f |ieaker wa a student, Edward Lohse, who gave the fir l public demonstration of a new game. Hexagonal Jies-, whatever that is to an interested, if bewildered, audience « f engineer . Noted E.E.'s who addressed the Society were Dr. Seely, who discussed Thc De- velopment of the Electronic Theory, ' Mr. A. Sitkin, whose topic was “Illumination, Mr. A. Abromowitz, ami Mr. J. E. Kay of the National Broadcasting Company. Air. O'Karrel « f tin Tech library gave a talk on the uses of the library (a if they didn't know). On the lighter side, an enjoyable smoker with tin usual fixings in the way of refreshments and enter- tainment was lu ld. The board of strategy is: Stanley Kich, president: Horace Joseph, vice-president: Her- A. I. E. E. bert Aflias, secretary; Henry R. (Then, treasurer: and faculty advisor. Professor Baum. Last of the A. Blanks, hut last only alphaln-lically, is the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, lake their brother engineers, the A.I.Ch.E.'s, the me- chanical marvels played host l« the other Metropoli- Ian Mechanical Engineering Student Societies and did that, it i said, quite successfully. lectures, which formed an integral part of the chapter's activities, were supplement« d by movies- hut not of the famed rodent. Such film a those on “Mining and Metal- lurgy of Steel, The Refining of Clipper,” and Boiler , were featured. Some speakers a Mr. Arthur AAei , who discu sed Time ami Motion Study, illu lral« d their lectures with film . Other sp« akers during the year were Air. C. M. Schwilzer of the International Nickel Co., Dr. A. B. Kinzcl of tin I nion Carbon ami Carbide Co., and Air. Stephen J. Zand of the Sp« rry Gyroscope Co. The d« irahility «if closer o meet ion between llte student chapters and 74 CHI ALPHA PI FALL 1937 President............Joseph Braverman Vice-President...............John Ruze Secretary.................Fred LEHMAN Treasurer................JOSEPH I'lTAI. SPRING 1938 President........................Frei Lehman Vice-President ... HERBERT STEINMAN Secretary...............ARNOLD JUDSON Treasurer..........VlNCKNT SlIAMAMIAN Irving Artias Stanley Anlell Herbert Benowitz Ralph Goslanlini David Brcitzer Joseph Bravcrman W illiam Karlx-rman Isidor Goldman John llaslilovitch Morris llandelsman Sidney Hersh Arnold Judson Seymour Hyman Felix Klass John Kuek Solomon Lapidus Frederick lx hman Ira Levy Kdward I-ohse Morris Markowitz Ja | cr Ok rent Reuben Pinnes Herman Rav John Ruze ili Lorenzo Salerno Bernard Sallzman I lenry Saweliuk AIdo Seandurra ineent Shamamian Herbert Steinman Morion Stollcr Henry Shoiket Joseph L’ttal Francis ecchiarelli ?a August R. Winstcin GKOKGK ADIJER. B.M.E. American Society Mechanical Kn- pincers IRVING AKKIAS. II.K.K. Oii Alpha Pi; Secretary. Ameri- can Institute Klectrical Kngineers; Tech Bulletin: Tech Council FRKI) AGI.I. II.C.K. PKTKR ANGKI.OS. B.C.K. American Society Clival Kngineers WILLIAM J. BACHMAN, II.K.K. Delta Kappa Kpsilon; Y.M.C.A.; Newman Club; Water I'olo. Swim- ming Squads IRVING BARON. B.M.K. Aim-rican Society Mechanical Kii- pincers IIKRIIKRT IIKNOW liy. II.K.K. Second Year Honors; Chi Alpha Pi; American Institute Klectrical Kngineers I.AWKKNCK IJKKC. II.K.K. IIKRIIKRT BRANDSIIAKT. B.C.K. American Society Civil Kngineers jOSKPII II. IIRAVKRMAN. B.M.E. President. Chi Alpha Pi; Trea- surer. Tech Council; Ghairman. t)jmmi House Committee; Ameri- can Society Mechanical Kngineers; I ilitori.il Staff. Vector KFREAM I. IIRKNSII.I5KR. II.Ch.K. American Institute Chemical Kn- gineers AMOS BRODSKY. II.Ch.K. American Institute Chemical Kn- gineers; Varsity Track. Cross- Country Teams; Varsity Club HKRMAN IIUTTNKR. II.Ch.K. Gihlis 38; American Institute Chemical Kngineers; Y.M.C.A. PKTKR N. CAMP. II.Ch.K. Vice-President. American Institute Chemical Kngineers 76 FRANCIS CARLIN. B.C.E. WILLIAM COHEN. B.Ch.E. STANLEY 1)1 DZIENSKI. B.E.E. ALEXANDER F ARK AS. R.M.E. American Society Civil Engineers American ln«tilutc Electrical En- gineers: Vector; Tech Rulletin: Newman Club American Society Mechanical F’n gineers EDWARD CHALOMONSKY. R.E.E. WILLIAM DANZIGER. R E E. MAX ELITCHER. R.E.E. ARE FEDERING. R.E.E. American Institute Electrical F.n gineers American Institute Electrical En- gineers American Institute Electrical En- gineers; Vector; Tech Rulletin American Institute Electrical En- gineers ERNEST CIIESI.OW. B.Ch.E. American Institute Chemical En- gineers PAUL S. DELL'ARIO. R.C.E. American Society Civil Engineer ABRAHAM EMMER. R.E.E. American Institute Electrical En- gineers; Editor. Tech Rulletin; Vector; Varsity Wrestling Team STANLEY S. COHEN. R.Ch.E. American Institute Chemical En- gineers MAURICE DISTEL B.E.E. ALFRED ENGEL R.E.E. American Institute Electrical En- gineers; Tech Rulletin; Vector 77 LEONARD A. FRIEDMAN. II.Ch.E. Bowkcr ‘38; House Plan Council; Microcosm; Vice-Chairman. Com- mencement Committee JAMES A. CALM CCI. II.Ch.E. American Institute Chemical En- gineers HIVING I). GESSOW. II.Ch.E. Harris ‘38; American Institute Chemical Engineers LEO CLICK. B.C.E. SOLOMON CLICK. M.C.E. American Society Civil Engineers; Boxing. Swimming Teams SAM COKELICK. ll.Cli.E. American Society Chemical Engi- neers; Chess Team ELLIOT L. GRUENBEKG. B.E.E. Associate Editor. Tech Bulletin; Advertising Manager. Vector; Am- erican Institute Electrical Engi- neers HIVING MEITNER. II.Ch.E. American Society Chemical Engi- neers; Chess Team HENRY HELLMAN. II.E.E. American Institute Electrical En- gineers INCVAII JENSEN. II.E.E. American Institute Electrical En- gineer HENRY II. K ALMUS, II.E.E. American Institute Electrical En- gineers; Engineering Societies Council: Associate Editor. Tech Bulletin WILLIAM KAIITIN. II.Ch.E. THOMAS KEANE. II.C.E. American Society Civil Engineers; Tech News; Newman Cluh SOLOMON LA PI DUS. II.M.E. Chi Alpha Pi: American Society Mechanical Engineers 78 FREDERICK LEHMAN. B.C.E. Second Year Honor ; Chi Alpha I’i; Boxing Squad: American So- ciety Civil Engineer SAMUEL LKIIIL B.Ch.E. American Institute Chemical Engi- neer SAMUEL LEVINE. B.E.E. Treasurer. American Institute Elec- trical Engineers; Vector THEODORE MANZAX l ()S. B.E.E. Y.M.C.A.: American Institute of Electrical Engineer ; Boxing ARMAND MAZZOLA. B.C.E. ISRAEL METII. B.E.E. American Institute Electrical En- gineers; Tech Journal GOODW IX MEYEROW 117. B.E.E. American Institute Electrical En- gineer EREDRIC MEYERS. M.Ch.E. American Institute Chemical En- gineers; Tech Journal MONDEL MOKKIL. B.Ch.E. Numerals; American Institute Chemical Engineers MAX MORRIS, B.C.E. Managing Board. Vector: Ameri- can Society Civil Engineer PAUL MOSHER. B.Ch.E. American Institute Chemical En gineer JOSEPH A. MURPHY. B.C.E. American Society Civil Engineer ; Tech Council LOUIS NELSON. M.Ch.E. American ln litutc Chemical En- gineers ABRAHAM NEUMANN. B.Ch.E. Compton 'M‘ : American Institute Chemical Engineers: Business Manager. City College Monthly 9 SEYMOUR OLICKKK. B.Ch.E. ISADORK ( l KM LAM). M.CIi.K. MAC I’ATASIIMK. M.Ch.K. American Institute Chemical En- gineers; Boxing Sipi.nl MAKIA.NO PERI. K.C.K. American Society Civil Engineer ROBERT . PINNES. H.M.E. Chi Alpha Pi: American Society Mechanical Engineers; Vector PAUL PKONSKY. B.M.E. Business Board. Vector; Ameri- can Society Mechanical Engineer HERMAN II. KAPPA PORT. B.Ch.E. Major Ia-lter; Compton '.'Ml; Var- sity Track Team: Varsity Cluh; American Institute Chemical En- gineers MURRAY KESSLER. B.M.E. American Society Mechanical En- gineers STANLEY R. RICH, B.K.K. President. Tech Council; Presi- dent. American Institute Electri- cal Engineers; Boxing Squad VICTOR RUSSO. B.Ch.E. Major letter: J. V. Ba cl all; Var- sity Baselutll JOHN KU'ZE. B.E.E. Chi Alpha Pi: Ciblts 38: Amcri- can Institute Electrical Engineers VITO SALERNO. B.C.E. Chi Alpha Pi; American Srriely Civil Engim-ers BERNARD SAI.TZMAN. B.Ch.E. American Institute Chemical En- gineers SOLOMON O. SCHAHK. B.M.E. Secretary. American Society Me- chanical Engineers: Art Editor. Vector. Tech Bulletin 00 STANLEY S. SHELDON. BALE. ALFRED SISKIND. B.C.E. Bowker 38 FREDERICK SPITZ. B.C.E. Major loiter: Zeta llela Tan: Var- sity Football Team; American So- ciety Civil Engineers; Officers’ Club HERBERT STEIN MAN. B.M.E. Chi Alpha Phi; Vector; Tech Bulletin; President. American So- ciety Mechanical Engineers MORTON STOI.I.EK. BALE. American Institute Electrical En- gineers; Physics Society MELVIN TAXCHEL B.E.E. Harris ’.'Wt; Tech Bulletin; Tech Open House Committer': Ameri- can Institute Electrical Engineers; Tech Council; Student Council JOHN 'LOOKER. R.CIi.E. Newman Club GEORGE LSTIX. BALE. Business Manager. Vector; Ameri- can Society Mechanical Engineers I.ASKAR ECHSI.ER. M.M.E. American Society Mechanical En- gineers; Vector JULES W ISE. R.CIi.E. American Institute Chemical En- gineers JASPER WOLKOEE. R.CIi.E. Rowker UR; American Institute Chemical Engineer NICHOLAS WORONA. R.E.E. American Institute Electrical En- gineers; Officer’s Club MARSH ALL V. YOKELSON. R.CIi.E. Harris U!; American Institute Chemical Engineers BENJAMIN Zl t KERMAN. R.E.E. American Institute Electrical En- gineer 81 Officers’ C I n I) Mori than seventeen years ago, a group of fn ambitious undergraduates ougl)l to foster a spirit of camaraderie and good fellowship among the officers of the R.O.T.r. by establishing the now nourishing Officers' Club of C. C. N. V. Toilay, this organization contains over a hun- dred members, and nearly five times that number of active alumni, while its varied activities provide the focal point for the social life of the cadet officers. Membership is strictly limited to Junior and Senior students in the ad- vanced course offered by the Military Science Department of the College, admissions lieing further limited by the ne- cessity of securing the approval of the Board of Governors of the club, a su|H-rvisory group elected by the membership. In a season of sparkling events, this year, as in the past, the most brilliant affair of all was the traditional Officers’ Ball, held at the Hotel Roosevelt last December 17. Scat- tered among the flashing uniforms and clinking formal sabres, celebrities, both military and civilian, were plenti- ful, including such personages as President Robinson, ex- head of the Military Science Department, Col. George Chase Lewis, and Col. Robinson, the present incumbent in the same position. High [mint of the evening was the always impressive (fraud March, which brought to focus all the resplendent color and glamor of military tradition. But the club’s season included numerous other «•vents of almost e«jual splendor. On November .“ , the inauguration of new members provided the excuse for a not lie r gala oc- casion, this time a formal dinner dance at the Ivssex House, with the serious as|M cts of inauguration providing a «Ira- malic contrast to the otherwise gay evening. Tinged with a spirit of sadness, inevitable after two years «if close com- panionship, the Farewell Dance of May 20 provided the last flash in a brilliant season of social activities—a season which included not only the spectacular formal affairs, but the eipially enjoyable smokers and informal gatherings in the «-bibrooms on the top floor «if the rrnory. In fact, it was these club rooms which were the chief 82 v'vfe boon lo the tired cadet officers. It was here on I 10th Street that they found relaxation after their arduous duties of marching none too responsive rookies through complicated military maneuvers. Here was sweet oblivion, in the arms of the overstuflfed chairs, in pleasant conversation with fel- low members, or in the rigors of a snappy game of ping- pong or bridge. But the activities of the club were far from being re- stricted to only the social gamut of activities. Whenever there was an official College ceremony such as Charter Day or Commencement, it was the members of the club who re- ceived tin- responsibility of acting as standard bearers. During rrny Day or Armistice Day Parades, and other civic functions, the club members found similarly serious duties. The officers for the fall term were: Joseph Porch, presi- dent; Gori Bruno, vice-president; Ralph Masters, recording secretary: Harold Sklar, marshal. For the spring term the Board of Directors reads, in the usual fashion, Valentine Bauer, David Finklestein, Thomas Moran, Camillo Bal- dassore, and Richard kroe. Successful offspring of the Officers Club was that group «if students that the campus saw wandering about with heavy rifles that seemed, somehow, just a bit more utilitarian than It a ii (I tin- brand w ielded by the rookies who march about in the «lust «if the playing fi«-l«l alongside of the school. These were the members of the College rifle team, the sharp shooters who valiantly set out t«i defend the C. C. N. V. laurels in inter-collegiate competition. The College military band too, led a highly successful season. Replete in new uniforms with spectacular white hats, playing in tune more often than ever before, this group showed up promptly at the college athh-tic games, and on numerous other occasions, b«-guiling the students with rendi- tions «if ”l.aven«ler‘ , and anything else which might have happened to pop into the mind « f the conductor. «J I.KOWIII) A ARONSON. B.S.S. Officers' Clui A 1)01.1 11 BA K Kit. B.A. (title Team; Officer' Club It N MO l) C. BAl.DASSAItliK. HS. Bacteriology Society: Officer.- ' Club; Commanding Officer. Persh- ing Hi lie VI.KNTINK I . HAI Kit. H.C.K. Varsity- Swimming Team: Varsity Club: Y.M.C.A.: Officers- Club: iiicrican Society Civil Kngineers com III NO. IKS. Major Kcltcr: Varsity Swimming Team; Officers Club; Varsity Club IIKNKY C. BlJSKk. B.C.K. American Society Civil Kngineers: K.O.T.C. Hillc Team: Officers' Club JOSKPII It. CONTK. H.S.S. Abbe '10: Alpha Beta Gamma; Vice-1'resident. Newman Club; Student Council; Officers’ Club: J. V. Football; Kconomics Club JOSKPII K. FOHCII. B.S.S. Numerals: President. Briggs ‘ !!: Varsity Sliow; Newman Club: Y.M.( President. Officers Club MARTIN G. FOX. B.S. Gibbs Officers Club ANGKIX) GKKARDI. H.C.K. Newman Club; Y.M.C.A.: Vmcri- can Society Civil Kngineers: Offi- cers' Club IHVING KATZ. B.S. Officers Club RICHARD J. kltOC. H.C.K. Varsity. J.V.. Baseball: N .M. : American Society Civil Kngineers: Treasurer. Officere Club; Cadet Club STANI.KA Kt BI.IN. H.S. Officers' Club RALPH MASTKHS. H.S.S. Officers' Club HKRN.ARD MKI.TZKH. H.C.K. American Society Civil Kngineers; Kditor. Target. Officers' Club HI IICW IN C. MKMMY . B.S. Harris 38; Oficcrs’ Club THEODOHE MILLED. B.S.S. Phi Della Pi; Dramatic Society: Varsity Shows; (‘.la - Night; Offi- cer: ’ Club; Cadet Club THOMAS MOHAN. U.A. Officers (Hull IK INO I. MOSCHEL. B.S. Officers’ Club CHMILES PAPPALAHDO. 15. . Officers'. Cadet Club: Intramural Itoxing AHNIKN 1 011 AN. B.S. CIIAKI.KS KAVITSKV. B.S. Tremain Scholarship: Weir '38: House Plan (Council: Officers' Club OLIVEH K. HKYNOl.DS. B.K.E. Dramatic Society; American In- stilule Kleclrieal Engineers; Offi- cers’ Club COKNEI.il S V. HOCIIK. B.S.S. Officers’ (dub MAN! EL HI« HI I B. I Officers Club KI)W IN G. SCIH CK. II.A. V.M.C.A.: Officer-' Club MAHCIS SITTK.NKIELD. B.CIi.E. Phi Delta Pi; American Institute Chemical Engineers; Cadet. Offi- cers’ Club WILLIAM II. STEIN. B.S. Officers’ Club LESTEIt W EINBEKGEK. B.S.S. Weir '38; Economic- Club; Offi- cers (dub 85 O R G ANIZATIONS Student Council Its mentors hud delusions of grandeur, and set out to make the student council truly representative of our entire student body. Thus when Joseph Janovsky pounded upon the rostrum to call the first meeting of tlii' Senior year to order, he was confronted with a council vastly different from its predecessor; the room was filled with selectmen, spectators, and smoke. Spe- cimens of homo sapiens sitting on the tip end of their respective spines, bent around towards their noses in an effort to look relaxed, gave evidence of a riproaring council. These meetings were different . . . there were more seals occupied. For the first time clubs were represented, not only the bourgeosie and the prole- tariat but the Newman Dub, the Law Society, Ia Ccrcle Jusserand ad infinitum. Frustrated club members could now wrangle over another office. For the first time all would be able to help railroad the steam- roller legislature. Meal democracy . . . nothing was too good for the student council. The complexion of the elected body was predom- inantly Student-l nion, stained here and there with a liberal of no affiliation. This had never happened Ik-- fore either, but '38 was such a different year. Quietly tucked away in some obscure comer, a representative of the Cadet Huh would emerge unobtrusively to voice his brass-buttoned opinion, file council's traditional program had kept them working vigorously for recog- nition of the mcrican Student I nion. hen the Hoard of Higher education upped and frustrated their Iirosrlyting activities by passing the McColdrick resolution recognizing all organizations, they re- warded two years campaigning for the .S.I . but why couldn't it have come in '30! The council was faced with a desperate situation—the dilemma of being without an active program. Itut no sooner looked for than found. Out of nowhere a group of evening school students whose mothers had probably inhibited their artistic lalenls decorated the locker rooms and other walls w ith slickers calling for the extermination of all Jews and other (iommunists. The 'Indent body liecame con- siderably aroused. ith the council hot on their trails the sticker-uppers disappeared and no more was heard from our light-headed Aryans. The Student for the successful recall of the merican (iuard' char- ter by the Board. The semi-annual nti- Var strike was held as per schedule in November. Spanish and Chinese consular representatives gave the meeting an international flavor, while the ap|iearanee of a delegate from the American Labor Party was the signal of considerable applause from a large and sympathetic audience. Councilman Quill’s brogue was appreciated by his Caelic listeners. Successfully administering the planning of social affairs at the College, the Council performed a series of remarkable out of the hat” tricks by managing I balance its own books at the same lime. The in- herited debt of the abortive attempt to edit The Stu- dent had hung over the collective neck of the group for some time. This tremendous debt has been lifted, to the consternation of all, particularly the Council's financial advisor . Professor Bailor. ( Angel” tie- scribes his function more clearly.) “I ncle Joe”, whose patience at meetings makes St. Simon the Stvlitc look cranky, heaved a sigh at the disap| carance of the debt. It is not known whether the sigh was of relief or |M rplcxity. elections for the Spring term saw a coalition of Student I nion advocates placet! in oliive, with but one ollice unopposed. I he College Labor Pally made it' appearance as a factor in our political life. President Jack London presided over a Council reflecting unani- mity of opinion, but he continued to pound away at the rostrum for order, anil got no lietter result' than his predecessors. Incidentally, the election represented one of the largest voles ever cast in a student-wide bal- lotting . . . and only one vote was for Mickey Mouse. The high point of the activities of the Council was it' part in inviting the State Council of the American Youth Congress to hold its model legislature at the College. All arrangements were made for the series of panels which t |M ned on January 28, with twenty-five hundretl |ieople in the Great Hall. Mrs. Franklin I). Roosevelt was the principal speaker of the opening session. The White House math- its first representa- tions on the City College campus. Her message gave moral support to the Congress in it« constructive pro- gram. The dominant note of her s| eech was a [ilea for collective | eace action. She emphasized the futility of isolation as a long-range policy. The rest of the Model Legislature was devoted to a series of panel discus- sions on housing, recreation facilities and juvenile delinquency, unemployment, peace, and other subjects on the program of the Congress. The panel on | eacc adopted a program of collective security, which is being debated the world over as we go to print. In a practical way, the boycott of Japanese goods was decided, and the passage of the American Youth ct was urged, ction at the convention was followed by a conference with Governor Lehman to secure his aid in the passage of the Youth Service Council Act. As we go to press, the Council is engaged in a I eace campaign, climaxed by a demonstration on the Campus on March 2-1, followed by the tradi- tional anti-war strike in April. The Council was alse the 'pearhead in a fight to have the Faculty reverse its stand requiring all extra-curricular organizations to submit membership rosters to the Dean of Men. It was the student claim that this was clearly not the original McGoldrick resolution, and was contrary to its purpose. 89 lor lilt pale pm-pedantic, ami yet unromaiitic body in thirty-eight. liu 11 ii Illi 41 a laugh t4i ilii' l ir l mi (In staff win'll they ground over Mike galleys lalo. W e V 4' llllinillil’ll tlllS 4 4 11111111 in which we shall solemn- ly drag big shots over the humps. ml prove in dii roughing (hat niiieli is die shilling dial's pulling our politic stumps. hirst ilii' S. (!. electeil are always stispcele«l of eoiijliriug sehisinalie faetioiis: Kill all they tin's ea il ami outshoiit the gavel. ami prove words speak louder than actions. The lug chief of Mere can he any old hlerk — (we excoriate him without tears): l or lie need know no gags, hut nw n lots of mags. and a much overworked pair of shears. If you would strive w ith the basket five. all that you have to do The Achilles Heel of the iconoclastic (lily College Senior is the Microcosm, the private hope chest, smelling of lavender and a last pace, the hook wherein the four- or-so-year man tries to find his sugar coated capsules of sweet by-gone memories. For once, however, this carrier of order-made sentiment rises on its already world-calloused editorial heels and shouts in its deep mature voice—I'hooev! fler a hectic decade-long year of preparation, we have come finally to the weary conclusion that the most important thing in the artificial sentimentalism of the average senior is seeing, ad nauseum. his name in print. He, no doubt, is keeping it for the time when his hypothetical grandchildren will sit on his aged and rheumatic knee. Hut who are we to complain: they're the hoys who pay for the pages. We haven't laughed so much, since the editor kept an almost eternal vigil reading the service records of some of the hoys. Ky notarized count there had Ireen discovered already 13,000 publications when we finally gave up. Kacli publication had at least 21 editorial hoard positions. We bore this bravely, hut drew the line when one beaming senior wrote in capital letters that he had served for two years as clerk in the F.vening Session Office. W e were also sure that we were sheltering gold hoarders in our midst when we read of three keys that a prominent me miter of the class casually mentioned having received. n enlightening experience to the Microcosm's already harassed soul was W ilii- photomanin dial so many of I In hoys acquired. Urn was a group dial before reaching scniorhood, would shake dirir lists with dir lie-l ol diem al die earner a era .y rolo- gravureis, Middcnl) he having like virgin prima donnas in die love scene Irom Carmen, lo the stillcring |ihologra|iher, taking shots ol senior groups, was a phantasmagoria of lakes and retakes, complaints and more complaints. The inner, if not very spiritual soul of the school's rnmk-a-mmks were glaringly exposed by the kandid camera shots. Like fillies on a Derby day these temperamental, high strung (if out of tune) individuals, attempted to develop a forced saroir faire before the poker faced negative in the gloomy camera. Now that we have unburdened our waqied souls, we will mumble in our beards a bit, and nostalgically reminisce. AIhiuI twenty years ago, pril 1937 to l e exact, the little juggernaut slurled rolling. The first roll was only a short one, to la-wisolin Stadium to get hu'chnll pictures. W e an indebted to the coach for his cooperation and to many a first baseman whose glove saved the ego-bloated editor from a premature death. Summer found the I nited Stales mail carrying urgent messages from editor to designer and back, arranging for a book so large that suscribers would need a bicycle to carry it home. The net result was a tremendous tome 11 by I J inches that was presented to the jaundiced eyes of the senior «-lass Is simply to score about ten points more than the aggregate Y . I . Now lie Cam ais ed. when lie raises his head iiiiisl only fight with light. lb overeinphatic, and yet diplomatic. and always in the right. nd Friedman's squ.nl that pounds the sod - all lads of the pigskin ilk plucky eleven, for five out of seven still need a good quart of milk. Can you quiet the mob. but not redact the job? can you pacify cadi tribe and sect? Drill! all your own stories bog all the glories. and you're Monthly's be-ragged ed- elect. nd that is the saga of four years of ga-ga. inanity, madness, and mirth. We came here to college to study for knowledge: we've got it—and 91 Now wbat's it worth? at registration the following September. Nothing daunted, the little Mussolini of a business manager chewed on an imaginary cigar, and officiously Indldoscd the summcr-laxed seniors into signing their names to pledge cards. Having thus exhausted his complete knowledge, he then started burning the telephone wires to former business managers, at Microcosm expense, to find out what next.” Meanwhile clubs were solid Ic'd and photographs were taken (c . above). During the term layouts were planned and replanned, and deadlines set. and not met. Ill the office, politicians plotted the school destiny, secretaries to assistant business managers ate their lunch, and amid the general hubbub, in a very obscure corner, the editorial staff wrote the book. We recognize that there is a regrettable tendency to view everything in a yearbook with a paternal, patronizing air. It seems to he a tradition that a yearbook can take no editorial stand or say anything constructive. Now it must lie admitted that a yearbook is a yearbook, with all the attendant implications, lint wo feel that midst all the sentimental tripe then' is an individual note that, in the future, will spot this as the 1938 Microcosm. We know that a yearbook is forgotten when the year ends, but we hope that this one will at least stand as the definitive of 1938. 92 IU) AKI) . KIKVAI..........EDITOR-IN-CHIEF IRA INC I. ANDKR.MAN......BUSINESS M AN AGER MANAGING KDITOKS Ralph Mandel Harold II. Rosenberg SPORTS KDITOK lr ing Orem ASSOCIATE KDITOKS Lionel Bloomfield Jerome Goldsmith Mortimer IVxlell Jack Rothschild Bernard Slowens KDITOK I l. STAFF Morris Adelnian Jac k Kuslmer Man Olten Gerald Allrert Harold I a-vine Chester Kapkin Robert Cantor Leopold Lippman Marvin Kuhin la-on a rd Friedman Jack London Harold Segal Joseph Gavrin Stanley I.owenbraun Charles Smyth Joseph Janovsky Henry Maas Simeon Wittenberg BUSINESS BOARD Irving Anik.....................Assistant Business Manager Myer Fishman...........................Advertising Manager Bernard kanarek...........................Business Assistant Henry Pressman............................Business Assistant Bennett Newman............................Business Assistant George Palmer.............................Business Assistant BUSINESS STAFF Harold Sheiner Joseph Sotsky Sidney Stolberg Harold Tennen Solomon Chaikin Norman Freed Leonard Friedman Alfred Goldman Irving Greenberg Burton Jacobson ieonard levy Jerome Popofsky PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF Irving Elkin Edward Lang Seymour Rosenstein Harry Shpuntoff Jerome AA'alsky W The Campus Ably headed by Bernard Rothenberg, I lie perennial Campus has weathered another year of college journalism—a year teeming with events, fraught with issues both old ami new. and livened by the multifarious activities of a student body going through the process of becoming civilized. It was a task that had its problems. Kvcn the process of grind- ing out more words than all the other student publica- tions put together is something of an accomplishment. fter all, mass production is one criterium. But there are other standards. Dearest to the hearts 91 of tin staff itself is always the memory of a scoop, a particularly difficult tiick for a paper which lias no immediate competitor to which il can apply the transi- tive verb. Nevertheless, there was one bold, black headline composed in a secrecy which even excluded most of the staff. That headline was the announcement of the resignation of Professor Morris R. Cohen, and it gave this year’s Campus the distinction of being the first paper in the world to carry the story. Scoop too was the Campus expose of the dangers from silicosis being run by the W . P. . diggers of the tre- mendous hole that now supports the library. Next to scoops, newspaper' seem to thrive most on issues. They fill the news columns with lively stories and the inside pages with eloquent editorials. - per usual, C. C. V V. obliged with a wealth of raw mate- rial. The first issue of the Tail carried corroboration and amplification of tin previous term's Co-op Store expose streaming across its first page. concurrent editorial outlined a reorganization plan that was later adopted in part. Kditorial support was gathered in back of the demands of the recently C. I. O.’d cafe- teria workers in the college's most frequented if not most popular lunchroom. Kditorial guns were leveled at the chapter of the Hitlerian meriean Guards which had been meeting in the school, and were at least partially responsible for forcing its eviction. Perhaps closest to the hearts of the students was Un- successful editorial campaign for ten minute intermis- sions between classes, mainly for the benefit of weak- hearted frosh who always have to rush from top floor T. II. II. to top floor Main. Nevertheless, it gave tin- rest of the students enough time to bolt the rest of their sandwich or to finish that cigarette. Many thanks. In broad outline, the editorial policy followed a tricky course well to starboard, but further from tin- reefs of objectional bombastics than it has ever been before. Rarely was the student rushing to his first period accosted by mimeographed leaflets denouncing its latest stand. The letters to the editor were refresh- ingly free from complaints, although the department was well filled with student opinions on all 'orl- of things and stuff. For the rest, the “Campus” stuck to its now ancient campaigns against President Robinson, the R. (). T. .., and any suspicion of suppression of academic free- dom that could be rustled up. Constructively, tin- policy favored such things as increase of Y V. ., passage of the merican Youth cl, free Inioks, and, on the international side, support of China and Loyal- ist Spain. The Case against Robinson aroused con- siderable comment both inside the college anil out. It was one of the outstanding examples of organized student attempts to effect the retirement of the Presi- dent. Il served as a valuable summary of all tin- activities of l)r. Robinson wbib- in hi' present position. Mthough the pasting of several anti-Jewish slickers on the walls of the buildings brought forth some pretty strong editorial talk against racial discrimination, il was on this very subject that the worst slip of the year was made. 'I he paper was eauglit completely unawares by the Jerome Weidman story printed in tin- first issue of the College Monthly. storm of protests, based on the claim that the story was anti-Negro, followed its , , erg's favorable review forced the “Campus into eating some pretty meek humble- pie. Kven editors are not infallible. The pa|ier was also officially censured by the Student Council because of its criticism of the Senior Prom Committee, but all this was soon forgotten. These were the worst of the slips though. Otherwise things ran along smoothly and neatly, fter the first thrill of newly acquired (tower had died away, tin- editors were satisfied with such minor innovations as changes in ty|K--face, a “News in Brief’’ feature, and a series of freshmen orientation articles. The only personal element that slipped through was the printing of an occasional w himsical editorial or two. The busi- ness staff reported increase in circulation, the proof readers a decrease in errors. Copy! 9.5 When I he hug-house keepers finally catch up with Cily Col- legi , there is no doubt that the first plan they'll lu ad for will In room I, Mez- zanine. For it is here that the winged-helmeted little god of humor rules his domain. From this office is issued eight times a year the City College “Mer- cury , the student publication madly dedicated to the difficult proposition of making Mr. Student laugh—at so much |K r snicker. Cayly covered, pro- fusely illustrated, ribald and satirical by turns, this magazine completed it fifty-seventh uninterrupted year of publication, proving that there is nothing that can lx done about it. But even the impudent business of turning out the Mercury” has some serious aspects. Koch newly incumbent editor has to decide on such details as make-up, degree of degeneracy, anil problems of general policy. This year, the movement was still further away from “Captain Billy’s Whiz Bang”, but with enough straying from the straight and narrow to keep things humming. Chief innovation was the introduction of a definite theme for each issue— a policy not exactly unexploited, but in the past the idea seems to have been 96 Io ignore llu' I hr imr as iiiurli as possible, while this year, the allem| t was exactly the reverse. lienee, I lie first I hr me that tall, bespectacled editor-in-chief, Harold Rosen- berg. and the rest of his merrily reerntrir stall set to work on was entitled Had Wonderful Time”. They liedecked the cover with snapshots of summer romances tastefully pasted up into a broken heart, and loaded the interior with all the reminiscent humor the staff could rescue from memories of sun- burns and vacations. White Hope” Jerry lbert applied his poetic talents to ty|M s of vacationers, Allen contributed a cartoon full of luscious beauties, tin departments were duly filled up, and the season inaugurated. It was not until the second issue, however, that the ball really started roll- ing. Then the staff, eyes on the annual country-wide competition of the Inter- collegiate ssociation of llutr.or Magazines, set out to better last year's sev- enth place ranking. This time, the excuse was the House Plan Carnival, fieri- terspread tradition was established by The Kpic of Horrible House , a Miltonic effort by lbert with decorations by Glaser. Cover tradition was wrecked with a photographic attempt which its creators still consider the most magnificent failure in the history of the magazine. More traditions were discarded with the adoption of a new cut for Mercurochromes and the discarding of the old stall page as part of Rosenberg’s smart, professional looking page layouts. Your Crade Professor dedicated its faculty evalua- tions to the advisors of the various houses. Humor of a sort was built up around the House Plan, and the issue was turned over to busy business man- ager, Irv nderman, to do with as he wished. Rut more was yet to come, this time in a bright orange jacket by Glaser that bore the announcement Sophistication Issue”. Tongue in cheek, the humor god's disciples wildly threw together some ultra-blase playlets, some ultra-bored poetry, some cartoons for spice, an extra ultra for good meas- ure, added them all to the departments, and let the editors jig-saw it into a magazine. The only new hioken tradition was a written story by the art edi- tor, but excellence was far above par. Then came January, with exams pushing extracurricular humor into the background, until suddenly, on the night of the deadline, the editors heard the printer yelling for dummies when there wasn’t even copy. In a fit of frenzy they prayed to their patron saint. Then they took a cartoon’s worth of nudes by that ancient master Dun Roman and slap|x-d the word censored” over it for a cover. At the same time rigging up a ccntenspread of still more Dun Roman -- Mercurochromes were hastily recalled and typed. Sizzling nudes by Mien were adder! for decorative purposes. A full page |mh-iii and a “Diary of a Ijerher by the invaluable Mberl, A Sexceptional Case”, story by Rrode, an oversprinkling of gags culled from ex- change publications, and the maddest of all Mercs went thundering to press under the title of the Sex Issue . In due time, its cover was added to the long line that now almost encircles the office. The student body gobbled it up, the lechers. Kdilor Rosenberg, still shaking his head at the wonder of it all, resigned in favor of quieter Jerry Mbert because of other respon- sibilities, and Mercury”, as always, carried on. Carried on with a M-M-Mercury M-M-Mystery Issue , and It Can’t Happen Here” theme, a ild West Issue , and a final “Alumni Issue . Carried on with its Mecurochromes, described by one reviewer as Woollcottian , with its “Professorial Piffle of the faculty attempts at humor, its satirical “Lighter Side , its stories, its gags, its cartoons. As was said before, there is nothing that can be done about it. Deorum Maxim ■ Mercurium Colunt.” 97 Tin college's society of optimists was sel up in 103. by a group of pre-medical hopefuls who had decided to look into their common problems for themselves. Spurred on by the loud and long laments of the many City College students who failed to be admitted to med school, the founders established as tin- prime functions of the organization the study of ways ami means to aid these and future undergraduates in similar plight. For its name and symbol, the group adopted the Caduceus, the snake- entwined staff of Mercury which serves as the emblem of the medical profession, and as its motto the Hippocratic Oath. s organized today, the Caduceus Society aims to provide students inter- ested in medicine and allied professions with an opportunity 1« hear outstand- ing speakers on scientific subjects of timely interest. In addition, the past year saw a great emphasis on the social function of the society, and also, on the informal discussion of the achievements of recent medical research. During this academic year, while Professor Dawson was on sabbatical leave. Professor II. II. Johnson, popular professor of embryology ably served as temporary faculty adviser. • H ...xl -• The program for the past year included a wide variety of topics and s|H akers. Professor Melander o| ened the season by showing his now-famous kodochrome film on insect life. Professor Dawson followed with more movies, showing the recently discovered protozoa, Limas (for those who understand), w hich looked like well fed amoebae to the uninitiated. Columbia's College of Physicians and Surgeons supplied the next lecturer when Dr. Samuel Detw illcr addressed the group on Experimental Kmbryology.” The spectre of diabetes was next seen (lilting across the mind of the Caduceans as they listened to the grim details given by Dr. Preston of the New York Diabetes ssociation. Some of the boys were painlessly eased out of their misery with a talk on “Anaesthesia” by Dr. Rovensline of the Bellevue Medical School, a talk illustrated with slides showing the development and present uses of anaes- thesia. Dr. Eric Matsner, president of the American Birth Control ssocialion, dwelt on The Bole of Birth Control in Preventive Medicine. One of the outstanding woman doctors made her debut at the College when Dr. Laura Florence of the department of Tropic Medicine at Flower Hospital, gave a talk on her specially. After venturing afield for so long, the group decided to look over home talent, and invited Professors Prager and Johnson to show their wares, and the year wound up w ith an illustrated lecture on The Living Blood Stream by a member of the research stall of the Kastman Kodak Company. Determined I do things in a big way, the Society carried on an expansive (and expensive) social program. It affiliated with the House Plan, assuming the name Harris '38. ami the meetings alternated between purely social affairs and discussions and talks led by our neophyte doctors. The annual dance, held on December 30, in the House Plan, served as a welcome prelude to an equally hilarious New Year’s Eve. successful theatre party, avec femmes, may have significance in the future. A distinctive feature of the activities of the Society is its record of the doings and whereabouts of alumni members, and many of them return to attend outstanding events sponsored by the group. s a parting gesture to the student who makes the most outstanding record in his science courses here, a scholarship is offered annually. A file of bulletins from medical and dental schools all over the country is of great assistance to the student per- plexed as to where he would prefer to have his rejections come from. The Board of Directors: Hyman («insberg, president; Bert Peller, vice- president; Edgar Kanterman, recording secretary; W illiam Stein, corres- ponding secretary; and Jack Kushner, treasurer. 00 Journal •4 «V Katkrrtillr C'.lirmiral Society rUAM«iC( lrW. it (k,W 1 OlMW M Ml' III! Oil Vt'tfcX 'H «'M K a • t e r i o I o g y Societ v For almost a hundred years, the little bacteria have been gaily romping through City Col- lege, hut not until a couple of years ago had they ever done a good deed. At that time all the boys who had In-en chasing them, got together and proceeded to form a society. Quaintly enough, they called it the Bacteriology Society. It also emulated its little friends by trying to get along in its colony and by attempting to live socially in its environment. But here man and bug separate, for the boys have not been parasites. Probably their greatest contribution to school society has been their policy of trying to socialize the science men. Instead of concentrating «in pure Bacteriology, they have socialized in field trips to such places as Sheffield's Farms and the W ard's Island Sewage disposal plant. Not that they have neglected the bacteria, for many important sjieakers have appeared before the club. I.ast term the boys bit a jack-pot when they were addressed by one of Xmerica’s outstanding bacteriologists, l)r. Jean Broadhurst of Columbia, who has done wonders upon the ever-mysterious filterable virus. Commissioner of Health Bice spoke before the society during the Spring term. The boys are out to change the school world by having a Municipal Sanitation course added to the curriculum. Directing the Society are Daniel Fiseh- man, president; aron Modansky, vice-president: Solomon Kornbluth, secretary-treasurer. The amiable Professor Browne, like the bacteria, is always with them. Biological Society Conceived in formaldehyde, and dedi- cated to the proposition that all bugs are created un- equal, the Biological Society carried on valiantly this year. Determined not to stick in the mud, despite their preoccupation with such objects as earthworms, the Society bore ahead in an effort to keep up with the Joneses of the biologic world. In accordance with such aims, the meetings were devoted chiefly to student speakers who found their material cither in original research, or in the very latest papers by the most advanced thinkers in the field. An air of adventure was lent to the Society’s activities by those dashing young men who wandered about clad in biking boots, britches, and mackinaws. Haversacks slung over their shoulders, they set out on field trips to gather material for the advancement of science. I nder competent leaders, these trips pro- vided one of the few touches of progressive education that has blessed City College to date. 100 I lie Cily College BARRISTER i.mifw p- cwi ■-1 1 wrangling , Baskerville decided to utilize the power of it voice in advocating a downward revi ion on the price of chern kits, and succeeded in effecting a sub- stantial reduction. More important, the Society at- tempted to obtain employment for those of its mem- bers who are interested in chemistry a a profession. Steps were taken to make a survey of employment in the field of chemistry. symposium was held in conjunction with the Tech Council for the purpose of establishing an employment bureau for chem and tech students. Socially, the Society entered enthusiastically into the bedlam of events that attracts the rest of the school. It joined the House IMan as a group, had its representatives in the Student Council, and partici- pated in the Model legislature of the American Youth Congress. To Professor Goldforb and Dr. Weissmann fell the dubious honor of being faculty advisors. aron Kelrnan, W illiam Miller, Jacob Segal, and Herbert Mascon, were keeper of the gates, seal, records, ami money, respectively. Cuest lecturers contributed greatly to the knowl- edge ami enjoyment of the Society. Professor Marlies spoke on “The Consumer and the Chemist.” mem- ber of the medical staff of the College addresser! the group on First Aid in the Laboratory.” The evolu- tion of the Baskerville Journal from a flimsy collec- tion of mimeographed sheets to a neatly bound, well written book is largely due to the efforts of Carl Hosenblum, the editor. For the record, the officers were Bernard Kress, president; Norman Barsell, vice- president: Kdward Landau, secretary: and Chris Photiadis, treasurer. liaskcrville Chemical Society Law Society Amid the debris of a year of dutifully attended business meetings, two accomplishments stand out against a background of parliamentary IVhen I if as a lad served a term. As office boy to an attorneys' firm 101 Dents e Ii e r V e re i n The gentlemen of the Supreme Court may have their prob- lem?, but that’s their own fault. The incipient lawyers of the College Law Society could easily straighten them out if the honorable gentlemen had only tin- sense to ask them. From modest beginnings back in the boom «lays, the Society has been relegated to a position of competition with the Philadelphia Lawyers. Lectures have been drawn from the best contemporary legal brains. Such prominent men as Morris H. Cohen, I)ean Marshall of the National ssocia- tion for the dvancement of Colored People, Robert K. Strauss, a member of the three ring circus at City Hall, George Hart, father of p. r. in New York, ami speakers from the International Labor Defense have addressed the Society. Field trips have assumed an important role in the club's program. Members of the Society paid a visit last spring to Sing Sing and some are anxious to return . . . on a visit. The smash social event of the season was a boat ride on the Hudson. Legal ex|ierls are still trying to correlate that ride with the cultural functions of the Society. It first journalistic attempt was quite a success. The barrister, literary child of the group, featured articles by John L. I ewis, and Felix S. Cohen. The perspiring legal aspirants who worked as officers were: Paul Dohin, president: Daniel Stein, vice-president; Robert Greenmail, secretary; Irwin Grcenwald, treasarer. The Deutscher erein, Meine llerren, is tin- German society of our fair I niversilaet. It seeks to propagate interest in Kullur, without attempting to justify or ex- plain the lack of it in present-day Germany. It urges upon students s| ccialmng in that language an active interest in German litera- tim-, music, and broad cultural forms. More- over, it lias extended its activities to the mun- dane by acquainting prospective teachers of German with the op| orlunilies in the field. Typical German song-and-l ccr-fcsts have not been missing from its halls, and the group has s| onsored dances and hikes. Discussions and lectures by people prominent in German liter- ary circles complete the scope of the Ye rein’s program. In a most uncomfortable {msition because- of the state of affairs in the Yater- land, the group nevertheless hopes that tin- value of German cultural contributions will not Ih disregarded. The officers of the Society are Gunther Leinew«-ber, president, Julius Lhlaner, vice- president; l.«-o Siebcrt, secretary-treasurer. Dr. lians Frese served as faculty advisor. II a ii (I I) oo k Since everything else in this modern age from locomotives to your Aunt Sophie's turkey is streamlined, why should the Hondhook be as old fashioned as Klla, that famous Bella? Krgo, the HamUmok went ultra-modern and ultra-neat .. . ultra-stream- lined and ultra-terse.” Gone is the gloomy black cover with its three hea«led seal supposedly stamped in gold. In its place is a soft cover with a real carica- ture of a typical freshman. nd the color is lavender, of all things. Besides the keynote of modernism struck so stirringly by the cover, there are other up-to-datisms. Most « f the copy is rewritten in a crazy Time-Variety hybrid: Bub Speak for Public Speaking, and Buro for Bureau are among the choicer bits. The boys have tried to be funny, even. Their attempts, however, have not given the Mercury staff any worries, es| ecially with cracks like this: (in re Geology) . . students conduct field trips which are said to be gneiss. To Fditor Bernard Rothenbcrg is due a good «leal of the credit for this successful publication. The real surprise is the Hand- hook's stand on issues within the school. DRAMATIC The lime hallowe l boards of the (lily College theatre have been practically worn out in the fifty years that the Dram Soc has been in existence. Hut the boys are still going strong in the tradition of Prof. Horne, our first female inijiersonator, Hen Grauer, and Kdward G. Kobinson, the Hollywood bogey man. SCCIETy Traditionally, the Dram Soc has worked hand in hand with the Public S|ieaking Department, it' director usually being a member of the P. S. staff. Recently Frank Davidson was in control and probably reached the up to the present high spot of the Society with his musical production ‘Don't Look Now.” Don't Look Now, by the way, was so good that backers wanted to semi the show on the road. Hut sex reared its ugly hear! and tin girl couldn't make it. The Dram Soc members will swear with their collective last breath that they did Orson W elles one better in their song of songs Don't Look Now, Resides making use of the backdrop almost all their scenery was painted on detachable chi nose-screen sort of things that were trudged out before each scene and set up by the (icrspiring tech staff, not always with great suc- cess. The most amusing little interlude was when one of the chorus broke her shoulder strap during a number . . . but the show must go on. We haven't sent anyone to Holly- wood yet besides Fd Robinson, but Klliot Blum, juvenile lead of “Don’t Look Now” is plodding around w ith a spear in the Mercury Theatre Production of ‘‘Julius Caesar, and Kddie Goldbcrger is wasting his talents in the publicity office for the same group. The grey hairs on Gil Cohn, the business manager’s head are due to Frank Hilly Rose” Davidson. Dur- ing the dress rehearsal last term he suddenly decided that a little tropi- cal atmosphere was needed and sent for a set that just beat the first night customers to the theatre. We don't know if there’s any significance in it but Rernie Rerkowitz, the president, ami Stan Graze, the vice-president are both w restlers. Last term's production of Peace on Karth,” starred pretty boy Mill Tittler, Stan Weintraub, Seymour WorobofT, and Newt Meltzer. Hazel Okilman lost 10 pounds directing. 'Ibis term's musical is already in production, and it’s tentatively called “In the Groove. Casting is practically done, and everything is arranged except for the slight matter of writing the play. The first act is done, but at present count a positive slue of writers are working hysterically on the last two acts. If theatrical traditions mean anything, the play will probably be a wow, they're starling out with just the right handicaps. The curator at 23rd St. is also getting prepared: he has built three or four lovely little padded cells, and is nailing down the furniture. 103 Tlie City College Mumnus is a monthly magazine issued by the Associate Alumni of the College under the direction of the Publications Committee. It serves as a news medium for graduates and former students of the College, keeping them informed of the activities and interests of fel- low alumni and of hap| eiiirigs among the undergraduates and faculty. It is also the official organ for the publication of the re| orts and documents of the Associate Murnni and for the expression of the attitude of the alumni toward the affairs of the College. The magazine appears each month except July and August and contains about two hundred pages of text each year. The Alumnus enlists the services of a large number of graduates ami of members of the teaching staff in the building up of its content. In addition to many articles of general interest to its readers, the publica- tion contains a number of regular departments devoted to fields in which the alumni maintain an active and steady interest. These divisions concern them- selves with the activities of the student body, personal doings of the alumni, accomplishments and prospects of the various teams of the College, and pub- lications by members of the alumni and tin- faculty. I p until 1904 when James Walter Sheridan 99, a member of the English department, established the City College Quarterly, the College had no alumni publication. Hut Mr. Sheridan lived to edit only three issues, and the late Professor Thomas Taafe, also of the English department, was called into service to publish the remaining issues of the volume. In 190. Professor Lewis K. Molt '83 was elected editor and continued in that capacity until 1924 when he relinquished his |M st because of advancing age. At his sug- gestion the Publications Committee elected Donald A. Roberts '19, an instruc- tor in English, as the next editor. Mr. Roller Is continued the periodical as a quarterly until January, 1926 when lie expanded the frequency of issue to ten times a year and altered the title. 104 The Associate Alumni of the College was organized by the first class grad- uated from what was known, in 1853, as the Free Academy. I bis date has special significance in view of the fact that the oldest organized alumni asso- ciation in the Tinted States, that of Williams College, was founded in 1821. This unincorporated body created in 1853 was reorganized as a membership corporation in 1913. The influence of the Associate Alumni has been exerted largely in an effort to perpetuate and intensify a spirit of College loyalty, and to give moral sup- port to all efforts for the betterment of the institution. In addition, the alumni, on several notable occasions, have shown their desire to play an active part in the upbuilding of the material resources of the College. Particularly was this so in the days when the institution had outgrown its first home on Twenty- third Street. Led by Edward Morse Shepard ’69, Alexander P. Ketchum '58, and Edward Lauterbach '61, the alumni made a successful demand for more adequate quarters upon the City of New York. More recently the alumni have made further achievement in this field through their large contribution to the building fund which made possible the erection of the Library building. A s s o • i a I e A I ii in n i All activities of the alumni center in the Alumni Office in Room 106, Town- send Harris Hall. Here are preserved various records and files necessary to the maintenance of an effective alumni association, and here also are issued the various numbers of the Alumnus and the several publications of the Asso- ciation. This central office has been in operation for sixteen years and during that time has served to coordinate the activities of individual alumni and of the several classes for the creation of truer sense of alumni loyalty to the College. Membership in the Associate Alumni is open to all graduates of tin- several schools of the College and to former students who have completed at least one year of academic credit. Annual dues for the first five years after graduation are one dollar a year, three dollars until the fifteenth year after graduation, and for each year thereafter five dollars. Life membership is open to any alumnus on the sum payment of one hundred dollars. Membership includes a subscription to The Alumnus. III CKK S President...........................Waldcmar KaempITert 97 Kirs I Vice-President...................Henry Neumann ‘00 Second Vice-President...................Klias Lieberman 03 Third N ice-President...............Morton Gottschall '13 Secretary...........................Donald A. Roberts 19 Treasurer...............................Arthur Dickson 09 Historian...........................P. Max Apfelbaum ‘23 Associate Historian.............Charles K. Angrisl 2.’ , 3IK I-IKK Dikkctoks: Charles P. Fagnani 73, Lewis S. Run hard 77, Joseph L. Buttenweiser '83, Samuel Schulman 83, Stephen P. Duggan '90, George II. Taylor '92. W alter Timnie 93, Clarence G. Galston 93, Robert F. Wagner '98, James A. Foley 01. To Skkvk Through 1938: Harold Nathan 83, Jerome lex- ander 96, George W. Whiteside 99, Nathaniel Fleischer 08, Morton Gottschall 13, Milton K. Schaltman 17, Arthur M. Moritz '19, Leo Klauher '23, Herman I.. Weisman 24, Pineus Sober 26, rthur G. Ro-enhlulh ’27, Mortimer Karp| 30. To Skkvk Through 1939: S. Ogden Woodruff 00, Henry Neumann 00. Louis I. Dublin '01, Klias Lieberman 03, Ber- nard I.. Shientag 01, Paul T. Kammerer 06, Leon Coo|H-r ‘10, Frederick Zorn 10. Jacob Schapiro 11, James W. Don- oghue ‘1 I, Donald . Roberts 19, Manuel Leibowitz 28B. To Skkvk Through 1910: Charles A. Klsbcrg 90, Charles K. I.ucke '93, William K. Grady '97, Waldemar KaempITert 97, Herbert M. Holton '99, Arthur Dickson 09, I,eo Kisen 18, rlhur Taft '20, Howard W. Fensterslock 28, Abraham Ra kin ‘31, Joseph L. Frascona '32, Ralph M. Jersky 31. m The smoker at which Mortimer Karpp spoke of a modi- fied (i. e. houseless) House Plan is now legendary, and overgrown with a good ileal of undeserved romanticism. But in the actuality of a dynamic or- ganization at 292 Convent, stands a lasting tribute to a single individual and a group of enthusiastic, socially hungry college youth. In the calm of the winter of 1934, instructors in Townsend Harris Hall found their rooms stormed hy small hands of enterprising freshmen, eager to he the first to set up active House sections. Frequenters of the faculty lounge were no end disturbed with the presence on Thursdays, at 4, of noisy neophytes, consuming cake and coffee (sometimes with sugar, but more often without), and generally making that section of the campus appear to be inhabited by normal human beings. It was the plan of Mr. Karpp to set up small groups of from twenty-five to fifty freshmen, chosen at random, and observe bow they would acclimate themselves to each other, and whether they would present a more integrated ap| earance to the College community. Houses were to In- named after promi- nent alumni and others who had made noteworthy and desirable contributions to the College ... in a conscious at- tempt to develop a spirit of loyalty and tradition which most highly ur- banized colleges lack. Out of the mad scramble for names first appeared Sim, Bowker, Bemsen, Werner, Weir, Dean, Harris, ami Shepard, with Briggs, Gibbs, and Abbe following at a later date. Thursday afternoon coffee hours be- gan to be held in shifts as the House Plan membership lists increased; and the participation of I'lannitcs In-gan a very successful revitalization of a moribund system of intramural ath- letics. Faculty members were ensnared by the boys, and the unblushing pres- ence of such men as Professors Dick- son, Wright, and Otis, and Messrs. Seliger, Harvey, Weissman (now at 23rd Street), along with Mr. Karpp, was a tradition-shattering phenomenon. Through varying shifts in |M rsonnel and cleavages from the original system of chance-selected groups, about two hundred and fifty students were pleas- antly surprised to find themselves housed in a furniture-less dwelling at 292 Coment in May 1933. Attacked on the one hand as radical, and on the other as an administration dose of sugar coated purgative to the dis- gruntled ami disillusioned students at the (College, the new organization at- tracted the attention «4 the Class of 1910, and that group endowed the I lous« Plan with a gift of one thousand dollars, which was used to buy much needed apparatus on which to rest one's weary posterior. The House Plan Association, a mem- bership corporation, was set up under the presidency of Dean Cottschall, who hail been, and continued to be, a hearty sympathizer, and active worker for the social fiedgling. The first bequest was followed in turn by others from the Bowker family, from the Class of 19().‘ , from the Class of 1911, and from the College post of the American legion. Mrs. i-cflingwcll, nice - to the late Kdward M. Shep- ard, presented the building at 292 to the House Plan Association in the spring of 1937, and the gift was marked by simple, yet impressive cere- monies the following November. The day of homemade benches ami seats improvised from piles of books has passed . . . and some regret it, for to them, the pioneer spirit has gone, too. Among the proud |H ssessions of the Plannites is a modest but growing li- brary; a well-equipped music room (with its six hundred dollar radio- victrola): the 1910 Hoorn, among whose great claims to fame is the fact that it is one of the extra-curricular stamping grounds of Professor Morris 108 R. Cohen (al Honors meetings, which often run beyond the conventional hour of retirement of Maid (.onvenl Avenue dwellers): and the combina- tion name-dining room. Arts and Crafts, photography, and the Megaron, ne Plan-el, have cubby holes on the third floor. The fall of 1935 saw the beginning of a new era in the social lives of City College men, when the gym dances made their first appearance under the sponsorship of the House Plan, “ . . . a dance to he held in the Kxercising Hall ...” became a familiar phrase around the campus. Other organiza- tions soon followed suit, and these af- fairs became frequent, enjoyable, and financially successful. The winter sea- son of the next year was capja-d by a novelty Carnival, run in the best three- ling fashion. Miss Hazel Horowitz of the Commerce center invaded the male domain for a one night stand as Queen. At the same time that this great social gap was being filled, the Houses di«l not forget their educational func- tion, and 292 was a meeting place for College intellectuals, come to hear speakers on topics of varying natures. There arose the Theatre Workshop, under the direction of the amiable Dr. Richard Ceough, which featured a series of performances at the Roerich Theatre; J. Hailey Harvey's glee club and listeners’ hour: and although they are not strictly cultural, hut often ac- company these profound sessions, the many dinners of varying degrees of edibility. Hut perhaps the institution for which 292 is more famous than any other is that of afternoon teas. Often just for the boys themselves or for an entering group of freshmen, occasionally for the deans, individually or collectively, and even for persons or groups im- portant extra muros, these social hours provide an admirable medium of so- cial intercourse among students, and between members of the College stall. Discussions which started over a cup of “tchai” sometimes became stormy, and threatened the raising of barri- cades in Convent venue, and mayhap have contributed to more than one doc- toral thesis written by a College in- structor during the past three years. More and more the House Plan Council, a federated body of House section representatives, assumed con- trol of activities in the building. Hut whether the system was one of Hoards of Managers or of functionally-named committees, the hulk of work centered in the amazingly efficient bedlam of the first floor-front room, which served as the office of Mr. Karpp, after the intrusion of the ping pong table down- stairs. Here, between a “timeo Danaos ...” and a discussion on the “practicality of idealism,” the grow ing pains of the sometimes dys| eptic babe were soothed, and its needs miracu- lously taken of. Heated arguments on progressive education, and interesting comments on the social value of such estimable gentlemen as George Wash- ington, Plunkett, of “honest graft” fame, impinged on the ears of the freshmen busily at work on bs—2b ? in the library at the rear. From the sheen of superficiality to the depths of profundity, social philosophy was plumbed, and combined with a soul- satisfying if not minutely accurate administration. Rabies love to play with fire, and in its sponsorship of the Charter Day Hall, celebrating the ninetieth anni- versary of the founding of the College, the House Plan suffered its first burns. However, these scars were soon healed, to bo followed by an occurrence of fundamental significance. The first | e- riod of growth of the House Plan came to a close with the retirement of Mor- timer Karpp from the directorate. Stu- dents, Ixttli inside and outside the Plan, received the news with consternation and more than a little unbelief. Hut their fears were confirmed with the IW publication of the Dean's regrettingly written note of acceptance of Mr. karpp's move. The father to the child pa■ •«I from the scene, and popular Janie.- Peace of the Hygiene department was chosen to succeed. Mr. IVace was known and liked for his supervision of intramural athletics. The new era ha brought w ith it a female secretary, and precision somewhat strange to the former haunts of a daring informality. Some returned healthy, and others weary from a summer's vacation in September 1937, and started on a new whirl of activities. The dedication of the building in the name of Mr. K. M. Shepard as the Student House of the City College:” tin- Carnival, which reached a new high in originality and re-ourcefuluess (thanks to Frank Davidson and lar to our own and the Commerce Outer ha- finally procured a | ermanent domicile . It would seem that the need for a broader social existence than the City (Colleges have supplied in the past, is now a recog- nized need. - the (lass of '38 is weaned from its Mina Mater, its own twin is growing out of swaddling clothes. The Four Year Plan which saw the diapered babe survive the precarious days of Townsend Harris Hall, and the -uhsequent removal to 292 Convent, now draws to a close anil the time for critical analysis is at hand. The House Plan started with dual purpose: social and educational, the one inextricably intertwined with the other. It would indeed lx disheartening to those now leaving the campus to feel that what they bad Briggs ’38), were the social highlights of the season. Factional strife was rampant in the Council, which was characterized as a group of peanut politicians.” The astounding growth of lower-class units, and the establishment of the Committee for (Graduate Organi- zation (on a broad industrial basis), and the Faculty Wives concert for the ! cncfit of the House Plan, are indications of the general cultural development of the groups. It is particularly interesting to note the increasing desire of alumni Houses to perpetuate themselves, and the efforts of many ’38 groups to sustain their activ- ities beyond the campus. Hunter and Brooklyn have set up House Plans -imi- worked for, and played in, during the past four years, is now degenerating into a glorified social or fraternity house. Its aloofness from College affairs, nothwithstanding its somewhat different position, is not always com- prehensible to the student who has been taught to view his microcosm as an integrated whole, rather than a series of disjointed parts. That the House Plan has freed itself from worry about immediate financial needs, and that its memlier- ship is constantly increasing, is indeed commendable and encouraging, but it stands at the crossroads as regards its position as a molder of progressive student opinion at City College. IW Sim 38 i no exception. It, loo, claim to Im- a sort of 10 Downing Street for the Class of '38. functioning in somewhat the same way a the Northern Securities (!or|toralion or the Insull I tililies Kmpire. It controls the faculty through member Frank J. Thompson, Public Speaking Department. Siutlcni so- cial affairs were completely dominated by securing the appointment of Sim men as Junior and Senior I’rom Chairmen. Similar designs on tin College publi- cations put a Sim man behind the editor’s desk of the Microcosm. Ml this has been accomplished and |M-r- |m‘Imated through J. P. Morganatic political juggling. Trusted agents have Urn presidents of the '38 Class, S. C. leaders, and numerous other class and student council officials. Strange to say, though. Sim '38 started out like almost any other house. Little did the boys think four years ago that they would In-come so terribly famous. W hy, it even held parties, teas, and lectures like all the other houses, but there must have been something different. Sim Compton '38 was organized as “House 4” on December 20, 1934. It immediately set to work drafting a constitution and did little else for four months. It still has no constitution. When 292 was leased, Compton '38 left its room in Townsend Harris Hall. It has had the usual run of teas, dances, theatre parties, and basketball teams, hut it insists that it has had the best dinners ever pre- pared at 292. The Masters-of-lhe-Cuisine are im- mortalized by their grateful devotees. Compton has given the House Plan several executives—president, vice-president, and publicity manager, among others. Included among its guest s|ieakers were Professor Compton's son and daughter. Dr. Lewis Balamuth, faculty advisor of the Douglass Society, is the faculty member. Compton '38 ranks as a typical House unit of the Plan. It has excelled in some res| ects, and has been mediocre in others. In all, however, its members claim to have had an enjoyable time and to have made some valuable associations at 292. Compton Dean From a group of friends meeting in front of Till! every Thursday way hack in the winter of 34, arose what men now call Dean '38. When the House Plan was instituted, the boys feeling that it offered a splendid opportunity for (icrpetuating their friendships, joined up. And under the guidance of R. C. Pennington of the Public Speaking Department, Dean ’38 aged gracefully w ith the years. t the first annual Carnival. Dean '38 introduced the novel idea of conducting a Screeno contest, re- sulting in an unparalleled financial and entertainment success. W ith their usual ingenuity for the unconven- tional, the boys maneuvered a unique coup in letting loose a swarm of turtles on the Moor of the Rainbow- Room following the second Carnival affair. To prove that they do have saner moments, four dinners wen- held. at which “Chief Miller (saner moments), Pres- ident Robinson, and Deans Coltsehall and Turner were feted. Dean ’38 has made plans to keep the group intact by I Ik- formation of an alumni house dedicated to continue and uphold College ties and friendships. During those busy and hectic days in which Briggs 38 was originating, planning, and run- ning the first House Plan Carnival, a Campus reporter after disentangling himself from the merry bunch came back with a story about a “Kentucky Colonel and hi two mildly mad gentlemen.” The boy’s only com- ment was “mildly?” it all began in the spring of 36. All was quiet, and things were just beginning to return to normal when Briggs '38 started. It was only the beginning. They till are going, and where they'll slop nobody knows— least of all Briggs '38. The first House Plan Carnival was given the next fall and grew from an anniversary celebration of the House Plan to the biggest social event in the history of the College. During the next term came the revolution, and the resocialization of the college look place, Mmost two hundred students look advantage of the classes in bridge, dancing, and social forms, all personally conducted by the lioys. That term Briggs also went athletic and ran away w ith the first House Track ami Field meet. The fall of 37, the second carnival, now an annual event, ex- ceeded it predecessor in attendance, entertainment, and brilliance. II? Beading from right to left, upside down, or in fact in any position you can catch them, the hoys are in- deed a varied crew. They’re scattered over four bor- oughs. They’re getting five different kinds of degrees. One more of them and then there’ll be an even dozen, but probably eleven is best—they're odd. GIBBS '38 In the Spring of '33 a group of students comprising part of Prof. II. N. Wright’s Math 7 class met in a T. II. II. classroom and organized one of the first house of the House Plan, fter considerable discus- sion the group adopted the name Cibbs in honor of Prof. Oliver Wolcott Oibhs, pioneer merican chem- ist ami former professor at the college. Prof. Wright became the first faculty member. With the subsequent additions from the ranks of the Social Science, rts and Technology men the group liecame more represen- tative of the College. I.ater. Mr. II. II. Culdsmith of the I he House Plan, college look on a new meaning. A drab freshman year blossomed into three fruitful and enjoyable years. BOWKER '38 Physics Department became the second faculty mem- ber of the House. Throughout its existence Gibbs attempted to estab- lish a happy medium of cultural, social, ami athletic activities. In the line of cultural development discus- sion groups and lectures played the most important roles. Parties, leas, dances, dinners, theatre parties and the general sup|H rt of the House Plan and Col- lege functions formed the basis for social activities. Tho e social activities! Among the fondest, if not the most comfortable, memories of Gibbs members is that wild and just a Irillc woolly party one Saturday night. The wild carousing was quite suddenly stopped when in walked the gendarmerie! Mas! On the athletic field Gibbs was a three-letter House producing topflight teams in touch-tackle, swimming, ami most prominently, in basketball. House Plan grew, so did Gibbs and unusually strong friendships were formed. And as graduation neared the members took steps to maintain the strength of these bonds by forming an alumni group. Through Pack, almost in the days when women wore hustles, Bowker '38 was just an ex| erimental unit of fifty freshmen. It wasn’t long, however, until the waif procured both a name ami an adviser—Bowker being the name and Professor Dickson the guardian of the keep. But Professor Dickson soon became “prof and the keep alternated between 292 and the Dickson domicile with its Hudson exposure. Thus Bowker was started on its four year plan of parties, bridge and the Professor’s beer, which last was extremely satisfactory to the usually irn| noeri shed Bowkerites. Bridge—at the very steep slakes of about nothing per point—probably reached its peak Friday evenings at Bowker’s caucuses. But the boys are famous for the more manly forms of diversion—to wit: Bowker parlies are traditional for, among other things, their spatial extent. The fun usually Itegiiis at 2‘)2 but ends at most any place— often at Times Square. Two members really went to town and ended up at the First Institute of Podiatry where among assorted 113 heels ami soles they hearken hack to their more foot- loose «lays. Even with the departure of many of the original fifty then' are still about thirty members on the active list. One tradition which the four year old Bowker and the 58 year « 1 1 Mercury have in common is the same membership. At times, though, it's hard to say whic h gained or lost—by the exchange. After four years of House Plan, Harris 38 can boast most proudly of a very hectic life. Al- though it was one of the first organizers of the House Plan back in the dim days almost beyond recall, Harris did not lead a continuous existence. It was broken up, and for a time wandered in the limbo of forgotten organizations, and then revived. Since its renaissance it has been quite active in College and House activities. Perhaps Harris can best Ik called the House of Science, for a majority of the members will receive their B.S. degrees at the usual exercises on, no doubt, a balmy, lazy night this June. Even their faculty ad- visor, the curly-haired, ever-smiling Dr. Elkin, is a biologist, who despite his humane tendencies, teaches Comparative Anatomy up in Room 300. Dr. Elkin, incidentally, was the subject of much ribbing recently, on the occasion of his becoming a very, very, proud pappy. The new Harris 38, despite its comparatively re- cent organization, still gave its all in the shape of a very sumptuous booth at the last Carnival. Cnlike the '37 House « f the same name, the 38 group has not given the school a large quota of big-shots in extra- curricular affairs. 'ITu-ir accomplishments lie in the somewhat unique fi« l«l « f scholastic achievements. Several of the mental giants are Phi Betes, several others are going ! mod school, and one has been doing research in the Biology Department. STUDtm COUnGIL msiGnifl M ijon i sk; i r IKYING I. A.NDKKMAN SOLOMON S. CHAIKIN JOSEPH JANOYSKY HOWARD A. KIKYAL ARNOLD J. MALKAN ALBERT WATTENBERG SIMEON WITTENBERG tli OK INSIGM I UOMKl. niAHfMFIEU) MYER FISHMAN DUDLEY CREENSTEIN SOLOMON KIMS DAVID KUSHELOFF HAROLD II. ROSENBERG HOBART ROSENBERG HERBERT RUBIN JOSEPH N. SOTSKY (;i vnih.u leinewehek Os Lock and Key Fall Spring Joseph Janovskv.... Chancellor . .. .Joseph Janovsky Solomon Chaikin. .Vice-Chancellor......Jack London Bernards. Kotiiknbkrc Scrire...........Harold Both Irving I. mlcrman Solomon S. Chaikin Sidney Firestone Charles Geldzahler Dudley Creenstein Joseph Janovsky Howard A. Kieval Class ok 1938 Solomon Kunis Jack London David A. Novack David G. Paris Arthur Rosenberg Harold II. Rosenberg Class of 1939 Hobart Rosenberg Bernard S. Rotlienberg Herbert Rubin Harry Sand Joseph . Sotsky Albert Wallenberg Simeon Wittenberg Jack Fcmbach Harold Roth Leopohl I.ipprnan Stanley Silverbcrg Bernard W'ulpin 6 Delta Alpha I ewis Freeman Molt '83 Kdwin van Rcrghan Knickerbocker (M) William Kdward Knickerbocker 01 Kdward Walmsley Stilt '13 Harold Yandervoorl W alsh '13 Kdmond Alberi Meras 17 Fratrks in Facultatk Walter l.alidon Foster ’17 Donald Mfred Roberts 19 l.iha Harold Studley '21 N ance Roger Wood '22 llamld Kllsworth Smith '22 Howard W illiam Hint . '23 Georg ? Bowen Dickson '27 John Kenneth ekley '28 Howard Alf Knag '30 Samuel Thompson Stewart '33 Carl Horn I (singer 33 Kdmond Paul Kurz 33 CLASS OK 1038 CLASS OF 1910 Charles Robert Smyth CLASS OF 1939 George Bonnett Dudley Dean Fuller Donald W ain McKihhin Richard Mitchell Robert Herman Neisel George Kdward Oeltinger Warren Wenk Oiva Armas Wienola Kinar John Wihera Richard Calvin rcher William Calvin Burrell Alfred Hotvcdt Robert Moser ip Mitchell Charles Richar ! Ro -ks Boni fan Thomas Ramundo CLASS OF 1941 Kenneth Anderson J seph Russell Roycc W alter Sayers 117 DELTA PH Frater in Facultate Dr. Uo Lehrmcn Class of 1938 Class of 1039 Class of 1910 Dudley Crmiitein Milton Alperin Dennett Newman Sanford Cohen 1 Inhart Rosenberg Frederick Gelberg Max Siegel Harry Cluck illiarn Silverman Kmanuel Gordon Norman Tanz Yale l.aiten Carl Weinberger Stuart Larick Harry Weiss Seymour Moritz Raymoml Wolf Ray Rein Kli Rosenzweig rlhur Siegel Jerome Siegel lfred Ilanfling Mbert Sackler Irving Reiss William Wallach Class of 1911 Richard Siegel UH ZfTfl BETA TflU Fkatkks in Facui.taik Maximilian Phillip '98 Mark Waldman '98 CLASS OF 1939 braham Goldforb '00 Mark Zematisky '21 Robert Dinerstein James Kreuzer 3 1 Robert h leek Marlin Gellman CLASS OK 1938 Norman Grossman Nat 1 lentel Roln-rt Loweiistrin CLASS OF 1941 Norman aronson Mortimer Cohen Arthur II. Lucas Ia-oii W . Salk in Stanley Mberl Irwin Greemvahl rmand Arc herd Myron Horowitz Gerald B. Kitay CLASS OF 1910 Lawrence Falk David Goodman Jack London Howard Isaacs Martin Metz F.ugenc Aleinikoff James Poliak Harold P. Rosenlrerg Zachary Buchaltcr Milton Rudnick Martin K. Singer Myron Cohen Theodore Schein Frederick Spitz George Nissenson Barnett Tamienbaum A THLETICS • v BASKETBALL A mere two points—just (hat one elusive basket—kept (he bas- ketball team from its greatest season of the last four. It wasn’t enough to have lost a mere three while winning I-I. It lacked (he championship on that last Iwo point loss to . 't. I . Before that (here had been plenty of glory. Tin- glory of defeating Manhattan, Fordham and St. Joseph's and the glory of a game comeback against Stanford—that almost carried the day. But one game short of a championship goal the boys ran up against a iolet team that was just hot. Too hot. 122 The leam started the season by i ing plenty of speedy evidence by taking over St. Francis (for the seventeenth out of seventeen); Brooklyn (opening the Maroon gym): Scion Hall (a swell fight): St. Joseph's (the hoys playing a typical Holman style); then Illinois Wesleyan (Kl iegel making a scor- ing record with 22 points): then a loss to Stanford (just one more minute was all we needed); uyne was our next victim (Happy New Year); St. Johns gave us our second treating (we should have never played that second half): then came the exams and the hoys came hack on the victory trail by defeating Manhattan (hut close): I nioii (ho hum): Fordham (who was watching llasmuller?); I .a Salle (didn't do one wrong thing): St. John's of Xnnupolis (surprise — it was plenty close): VUlanova (we ain’t scared); and the last vie lory over Providence (what did you expect?); then the cur- tain (hut curtain) with N. Y. I . The first three games served their purpose—to warm up the team—and then came the first serious hit of work. St. Joseph's, who had beaten us decisively last year hove into sight on the Garden floor. ith them came the famous Mall Guokas, rival to our own Bernie Fliegel. Guokas had been outscored only by one opponent in three years—Fliegel. But Captain Bernie proved that it was no accident by doing it again, while in. Bed Paris threw in a cut shot and Bernie i.trig the hell with another. L’p in the gallery there grew a wailing fight, City, fight . The hoys kept on coming. Then it was only two points behind. Bed came cutting in again, two Stanford men threw themselves at him. lie let go a desjrerale one hander. It hit the rim . . . balanced . . . then fell out. The game was over. Wayne came and went its way and then our next Garden engagement . . . with St. JolmN. The Iroys started had and it was evident that something was wrong. Midway in the fir-l half Holman yanked all tile hoys, took iIh-iii aside, spoke, and then sent them hack in. They had a nine point lead at half lime, directly traceable to the lip lashing they had received. But St. John's came to. Bush threw one, then DolgolT threw one and then it was Bush's turn again. In the meantime City missed from underneath, threw away passes, missed men on the defense, and played a ragged, miserable game. Slowly the lead crumbled, and then quickly turned into a tremendous deficit. From great beginnings things looked black. The hoys came hack from the exam lay-off determined to defeat Manhattan for the first time in the Garden. n f well did they need to he determined. It was a hitter contest. Both teams relied on a hard charging defence. After ten minutes City led 4—3. No field goals were scored as yet. But City an- City gave the best exhibition of the year. Bight from the first play the College stepper! out and took the situation in hand. The hoys cut, they shot, and they handled the hall to perfec- tion on the offense, while the switching zone kept the fast cut- ting Hawks in check. Whitev Katz set them up and feinted them out. It was a well deserved victory. In the breather that follower! Fliegel scored 22 points for a new City gym record while we had an easy time with Illinois Wesleyan. Then the giant Stanford team came into town. There was that tense second when we lined up for the first jump. Then the slow breaking of hearts a' Stanford's size kept pulling them out in front. The score mounting against us. Every jump- hall going to the visitors, the backboard surrounded with retl shirts and Stoefen’s big hands dominating the scene, and l.ui- setti stealing halls and baskets. But always the little fellows kept fighting. Fifteen points behind. Ten minutes left. Then somehow the flickering flame grew stronger. Katz dropped one swererl fight w ith more fight anil in the end hail outfought Man- hattan for a well deserved victory. And an honorable one. I nion provided the next rest and the hoys roni|ierl through them. Back to the Garden went the team, this time to take on Ford- ham. After taking a slight lead at half time, City came hack to spring a sudden scoring surprise and to considerably in- crease the lead. The tenseness relaxed. City was well in front. Husmullcr measured a long shot for Fordham and it went in. Shortly thereafter he measured another one. Not long after he scored another. This was had. Fliegel scored with a long shot. But hack came llasmuller. Fliegel equalled it. Again it was llasmuller. Minutes remained, llasmuller trierl again. This time he failed. n immensi sigh. City took the hall and kept it for the last two minutes. City hit the road and came hack with the (relts of l.a Salle and St. John’s of Xnnapolis. In both games the boys had 123 played close to perfection with KliegelV scoring leading the way. illanova, with a great record, caught City on a licit night and was completely swamped. The Holman defence worked to perfection and the Wildcats could not break through, while on the- offence City passed the visitors dizzy and appeared to be scoring with ease. Then followed Providence. Klicgel tied hi own scoring record with another 22 point game. “Heat X. V. I . swept the school. Huttons were sold, meet- ings were held, and at game time banners carried the legend “beat X. V. I ’.' The iolets started with a four man defence and a basket hanger but came hac k to man-for-man when City went ahead. It was the only time City led. After that X. V. I . slowly drew away. At half time we were losing by six points. el, somehow, we were still even. The second half opened and the iolets again drew ahead. There was only nine minutes left. Kleven points back now. Goldstein got set. It was nine behind, gain he shot. It was seven. Rosenberg shot from the side and it was only five. He then made a foul. Katz threw in a foul. I hen Paris, with two fouls, drew us to w ithin a point. . . I . went back to a two point lead. The ball shuttled hark and forth. X. V. I . blew a shot. City lost the- hall on a had pass. Time was flying. Paris threw one last desperate shot. It failed. X. Y. I', had won again. This season marked the end of a long basketball trail for four of the- varsity five. This group had started together four years ago on the- jayvee and since that ancient time have con- tinued their triumphal marc h as a unit. s jayvee- they compiled one of the- best records ever made at the- College. The next year they mingled with other men and helped out a the team won twelve while losing four. Next year they took over most of the starting jobs and won eleven while being Ireaten ix times. In this, their last attempts, they made the best record since the “Goldman team.” First of the quartet (by dint of size and gen- eral affability) in scoring, and defensive play is Hernie Fliegel. Bcrnic compiled the best scoring average |rer game in the- Metropolitan area with a record of 13 points for each game he played in. He made every all-Metropolitan team and easily stood out as the best man on the court in each game he played. Xcxt (still in size place) comes Ace Gold- stein. cc will he remembered for his shift, and for his up-and-undcr. His hard driving made plenty of baskets and paved the way for Iris team mates to come cutting around him. Red Paris, whose flaming hair and temper made him a favorite, w as the brains of lire com- bination. Red just knew where to be and what to do once he got there. He set up the plays and generally held the team together, lie of- ten started the pass work. His aggressiveness in the Manhattan and Kordham games were high lights of the season. Last we have Whitey Katz. liitey was the trickiest of the players. He could do everything with a hall hut make it talk, and there arc those who contend that he even achieved that. He could feint belter than any man on the court and in the pivot the hall seemed part of his body. I he last two baskets lie- made against Wayne will long be remembered for their sheer individual brilliance. 124 The one non-Senior of ihe starter was Manny Jarmon. Manny plugged and turned in a capa- ble dependable game each time. He carried out his assignments well and next year along with I.ou l-efkowiu, John Foley, Hal Kauf- man. AI Soupios and Babe Adler he should have a good year. This was not a championship team hut cer- tainly it was a great one. Wrestling Once again it has fallen to the lot of the Franklin and Marshall matrnan first to mar the record of the City College Wrestling Team. The early part of the season brought out an unusually good crop of newcomers and pre- season ho|H's wen? high. But the injury jinx cast an evil eye on the team as it travelled to Lancaster, Pa., minus Co-Capt. Harold Sklar and Mian Scherer to meet the K. M. squad. Despite the capable work of Kd Robins and Philip kornfeld, who replaced them, the City grapplers lost by 22—8, a score which was not indicative of the hard fight put up. Just before the Fall term closed, the team de- cisively defeated a very strong Columbia team on the 23rd Street mats by a score of 19—9. Last year's captain, Ben Taublieb, concluded an excellent wrestling career at City College by pinning his opponent. In this same match, Stan Graze defeated Columbia's hitherto un- defeated Robert Taylor in the 173 lb. class. Then followed exams and a long lay-oil. Re- turning to the wars. Coach Joseph Sa|H ra s boys took on a surprisingly strong Slroudsherg Teacher's College team at the 23rd Street cen- ter. The City team was losing with but two bouts remaining, when up | op| ed “ llas” Wittenberg. He had come down from the Met- ropolitan championship meet in the Bronx, where he was wrestling and, having pinned his Slroudsherg man, he returned there and won the 173 lb. Metropolitan championship. The night before, Co-Cupt. Ralph Butch” Hirsch- trill won the 118 lb. event in the Metropoli- tan'. lie also pinned his Slroudsherg opponent and greatly helped the team to its 19 13 vie- lory. Others helping the team to its great sea- son were Im- Marcus. Robert Dinaburg, “Doc” Krulewitz, Leo iznitzer, and ex-Cily Capt. J«k- Warren, who coached the group at the Commerce Center. The Commerce Gym was a! the scene of a 13—II Beaver victory over the Brooklyn College matrnen. Falls by Stan Craze and Charley Wilford materially aided the team to come out on top. F c ii c i n g Over on the fencing strips we found a new coach this season. James Montague was promoted from his former position as assistant mentor when Joseph Vince re- signed. At this w riting the team has compiled a greater number of victories than it has for the past three seasons together, having defeated I'urdue, Princeton, St. John's, the Saltus Fencing Club, and M. I. T. Remaining to lx- met are Colum- bia and the powerful N. V. Li. squad. The team has overcome the obstacle which seemed to Ik- in its way at the o| ening of the season, in the form of a ruling that each man may fence w ith only one weapon, and a well-balanced squad has evolved. Co-Captain Dan Bukantz heads the list of foilsmen, with Max Goldstein and Dave Mtman completing that section; Gerry Kitay, Bukantz, Berwin Cohen, and Jerry Schatzberg are the epee men, while the other co-captain, Bernard Marks, John Sieck, and Al Ehrenberg compose the sabre team. The first meet of the year was against Purdue, and the mid- westerners succumbed to the tune of 11—6, Marks and Bu- kantz winning all their bouts. At West Point, the tables were turned, ami the College went down to a moral victory, 13—12, but Marks and Bukantz again held the College colors aloft, piling up the greater part of our score between them. The other l oys were afilicted with single-pointitis, losing seven bouts 3—L Revenge was gained against a St. John’s team which had previously whipped Army, when City College beat their opponents by the identical score. 13—12 seemed to have become jmpular with the team, for they went on to repeat against Princeton by the same margin. In the splendor of the Nassau gym. Bukantz, Marks, and Kitay garnered ten points of tin- team's score. The foilsmen increased their pace against the Saltus F. C., winning easily by the lopsided score of 17 10. In the competition for the Washington Square Cup, the Beavers finished midway down the lists. IIojm s run high for at least one ehampionship in the Intercollegiate , with Marks, Bukantz, and Kitay hitting (op form a this i' written. The team i- out for Y Y. I . blood (they are defending champs): maybe we’ll lieal them in one thing. For the first lime in years, we were conceded a chance to win the annual V V. I . • C. C. N. Y meet. Our opponents, with one of the strongest intercollegiate foils learns, expected to pile up a comfortable lead by a vic- tory in the matches in that weapon. On pajier (where have we heard that before?), City’s e|we and sabre teams were stronger. However the busy I {cavers turned the tables upon Y V. I’, by taking a 7 —4 lead at the close of the foils competition. Then the old front-runner complex seems to have taken hold of the Imys, and they promptly handed the meet over, losing sixteen ami one- half to ten and one-half. FOOTBALL With the advent of the class of ‘38, way back in 34, then was also a notable first in the history of City College football. It was then that Benny Friedman took the helm and the football team came out of the depression and started winning games. Kvery season thereafter the teams im- proved. But in this, our last season as undergraduates, the Beavers won five games while losing a mere two to tie the best record heretofore made by a Lavender eleven. The Beavers defeated Brooklyn (easily), Susquehanna (by a whisker). Providence (for the first time, by act of), St. Joseph’s (another first) and finally Moravian (for the record). The first defeat was administered by Al- bright (and how!) and the other by Hobart (thirteen fumbles by the very busy Beavers). 126 Brooklyn’s eleven was met in tin- season’s opener ami City o|iene l up. The game was only five minutes under way when Waller Schimenty went 2. yards in three plunges, and Mike Weissbrod crossed for the first touchdown. Brooklyn kicked off and Harry Stein «lid some very fancy running on reverses to take the hall ( • the four yard line. Vale Laiten then scored. The second quarter had hardly started before City ha«l a third score. Charles Wilford blocked a kick and Artie Jacobs fell on the ball over the g« al line. Artie scored once more in the last peri«xl on a pass from Weissbrod and that was the game. Albright, led by All-American l)i«-k Billie, next invaded Lewisohn Stadium and demonstrated exactly why they were to remain undefeated for the rest of the season. Billie, in per- son, scored three touchdowns, one in particular breaking City hearts. The score was 20—0 ami the Beaver attack started clicking for the first time in the game. From its 35 the Beav- ers mar«-he«l right down to the one. Weissbrod threw a pass far into the end zone, Billie cut in, took the hall ami ran 102 of the longest yards a Beaver rooter ever saw. Final score Albright— 34, City—0. The Lavender eleven came hack into the winning column the next game by squeezing « ut an 8—6 victory over Susque- hanna. Going into the last |ieriod City was on the short end of a 6—2 count. Weissbrod and Budoy start« «l to arry the mail from way hack on their 28 and emle«l only when A! Toth caught Weissbrod’s pass for the very necessary touch- down. The next opponent was Hobart. Here City did everything but win. The College eleven rolled up first downs and yard- age galore: hut then again the Beavers fumbled thirteen times ami so lost 13—7. The lone City score came after Weissbrod recovered a blocked kick. Football history was made in the next buttle with Provi- dence. City had never defeated the Friars on the gridiron and it looked as though the record would Ik kept intact as the Bluxle Island eleven came with mighty reputation and might- ier mien (they had given Holy Cross a great battle). But a spirited Beaver eleven hummered out an 8- —6 vic- tory on sheer fight. City drew first blood when Chuck Wilford hlocke«i a kick and then fell on the hall for a touchdown. But three minutes later this margin was nullified by a Providence score. From there on the game settled down to a hitler line battle. Both teams were on the march hut touchdowns ju-t were never made. The game was slowly «lying when Provi- dence went hack into kick formatum on its 8. Providence back faded to pass—a swarm of Lavender shirts, and when the pack was cleared, Slaboda had the man pinneil for tin- precious safely. Against St. Joseph’s, City again saved its scoring punch un- til the last [x-riod, but finally came thr«iugh, winning 7- 0. For three perimis the College eleven could do nothing. Again it was Wilfonl who broke the ice by slicing through to block a kick. City recovered on the Hawk’s 35. Weissbrod heave«l a pass to Weiner and City was on the 12. Again Weissbrod passed, Marsiglia made a circus catch, evaded two backs ami scored standing up. Then came «me of the miracles of the season. After the «core, Jerry Stein stepped hack and drop kicked the extra point! It was a real . . . drop kick. Ihmest! With the record hanging in the balance, the Beavers met Moravian on a sea of mud ami swam in ahea«l, 6—0. This time the Beavers did not wail until the spectators l« vclo| c«l insanity hut scored in the o|tening session. Marsiglia inter- cepte«l a pass and ran 37 yards to Moravian’s 18. Weissbrod swept once around left end, once around right end ami there was the record. But safe only by «lint of some of the best punting ever seen at City, from the toe of Marsiglia. The strength of this eleven lay in the fight of its line. A glance at the scoring record «hows that the backs only scored two points more than the line, a tribute in itself t« Paul Bib- I« lt (Benny’s nol-so-silenl partner). The best performer there was the unsung Chuck W ilfonl, who was a sixty minute man in nearly every game. It was his defensive ability that checked many of the visitor’s attacks ami a swift perusal of the Beav- er’s attack would show that Chuck’s blocking of kicks was City’s best offensive weapon. Wilford certainly ended his three year career in a blaze of glory, nolher line hero is Jerry Stein, who was placed on many All-Metropolitan teams and made the second All-Jewish team for his center play. Shortly after the start « f the season he was made commander- in-chief of signal calling and did as good a job there as he IHff-bLUi 127 lid in playing liis regular position. Next we come to Bill Silverman, co-captain, who was a rock on the de- fense and played a level-headed game at all times. nolher man to graduate from the line is Gus Garber who toward the close of the season turned in some line games at tackle. Sehenkman, who was injured early in the season and so ended his career on the bench, will always he remembered for hi- fine spirits. The other linemen, who will be returning next Fall, include 1 Toth and Al Weiner, ends, and Gabarsky at guard. W alter Schimenty, our other captain, played a con- sistently fine game but was handicapped most of the season by a leg injury. Ilis three baekfield comrades, Mike Wei'sbrod, Harry Stein and Clancy will all he returning as well as Joe Marsiglia, Vale l.aiten, and Burt Rudoy. Gone from the rank in our class is in- nie Marchetti who w ill In- recalled for his fine punting. 1! in all, Benny should lie ready for anoth«T good year and we will he «nit clieering for him to heal the record of the year of 38. Swimming tradition of fine teams in the field f minor spoils has long existed at City, lways true of the W inter squads, this year is no «-M-i-ption. The swimmers appear destined (at this very early writing) to achieve their best record in several years: the fencers, having been foiled of late, «x rtainly are headed for a better season (we hope); the boxers and wrestlers will lie all right if they do as well as they di«l in the past three years. (Ed. .Vote: The wrestlers lost three out of their last 21 meets while the boxers lost once in three years.) To date the swimmers have defeated Fordham (and how), Manhattan (with ease) and New York Cniver- sity (at least we beat them here) while losing to St. Francis (boy, was it close) and to Franklin Mar- shall (what did you expect?). The strength of the team lay in its balance. In fact they were so good that Coach Radford J. McCormack (the best tear jerker among the coaches) almost waxed enthusiastic. There was Captain Cori Bruno who did the work in the 220 and 440 yard free style; and in the 50 and 100 there was Stanley Thomas, whose limes in his events more than favorably compare with others made here in New York. At this writing he is undefeated at 50 yds. These boys adequately took care of the sprints, consistently scoring first or second. Sam O’Reagan and Sam Wexler did the work in the 150 vard back stroke with Conrad Dalman and Harry Sober swimming in the 200 yard breast stroke. The only weakness was in the fancy dive. The high light of the season occurred «luring the Manhattan meet when the boys set a new City College record in the -100 yard relay. Samuel Wexler, Cori Bruno, Milton Margolin, and Stanley Thomas com- bined t« set a mark of 3:52:2. The ol«l mark, also set against Manhattan by the 1936-37 quartet of Zaner, 'Thojnas, Sober and Bruno, was 3:53:3. hvidently an- other best for the year of ‘38. 129 SPRING SPORTS BASEBALL Spring and graduation are still a long way off but tin- athletes concerned with that season have ju-t started to swing into action. Rumors aplenty teem out of both gymnasiums and we pass on the dope about the track, lacrosse and baseball outfits. Generally s|ieuking, an air of pessimism (spring is still far away) pervades the indoor atmosphere. Over with the batters ami pitchers we find a new coach for 1938. Coach Spanier had resigned and in his place we have the likable Sam Winograd, former College star of the diamond ami basketball court. Only five men with any experience are left. Bernie Fliegel and Ace Goldstein of basketball fame, and Julie Janowitz (all ’38 men) will be finishing off their careers. Wcintraub and Soupios are the other two varsity men. s for the rest (sobs and tears from the manager, Sy Chipkin)—Novack, our center fielder left school logo into business—our star shortstop, Don Franck, has become a fireman of all things (so we are without both our co-captains)—l.en llubsehman is going to leave school. The other starting lierths will be filled in by former Jayvee men. rky Soltes, who exhibited an amazing fast ball and an amazing lack of control at one and the same time, is scheduled to be the mainstay of the moundsmen. After him what? Meister, who caught on the junior varsity last season, will attempt to do likewise w ith the varsity. Pat Brescia, also of the juniors, is slated for Frank’s shortstop job. The veterans will be found as follows: Soupios at first; Wcintraub at second; Gold- stein at third: Janowitz and Fliegel in the outfield. No one seems to know just who will play the other out- field position. The schedule is nothing to bring sighs of relief either. The boys will play 18 games this year. After starting with Princeton they go on to meet illanova. Temple, N.Y.l . (gr!), Providence, Springfield, Up- sala. Panzer, Brooklyn, Manhattan, Columbia, L.I.l ., and St. John’s. Fordham and Brown are not on the schedule this year. In all stormy days ahead. TRACK Over on the the indoor track we find Mackenzie and Tony Orlando knee deep in tears. The cross-country season has been the worst in history. The team bereft of real stars could only plug along, going through their gruelling training not in the ho| e of victory but just for some innate fun that they get from the competition. The boys lost all four of their intercollegiate meets, bowing to R.P.I., N.Y.l ., I nion and Ford- ham. The one consolation came in the form of a victory in the road run sponsored by the Bronx F.lks Club. s for the track season ahead, things look black. The team will com| eet in only two dual meets. Ford- ham will supply too much opposition in the first. In fact Fordham is considered an -l outfit. The other with R.P.I. is not to Ik considered but in the terms of a stark upset. Only two men will be entered in the indoor meet. Captain l.eo Silverblatt 38 will be entered in the high jump ami Sy Abrams, another senior in the 600. The only other senior on the team is Herman Rappaport, who competes in the pole vault. Hopes are held for Jim Clancy, star backfield man. in tlie weights, and for George Gittcns in the broad jump. Some of these men will see action in the other two events scheduled for the track team. There is a possibility that a relay team will he sent to the Penn Relays and that the seniors will see action in the Inter- collegiates. All of the aforementioned men will 1m- entered in the Metropolitan Intercollegiales. .? in mid-field work. Besides these two there are Hal Kaufman, M Hafling, Frank Curran and Bill Fogelman. The defence looks big and strong. Chick Bromberg ami Leon Carbarsky will do much belter now that they have experience. 11y Silverman did well last year and much more is exacted of him for '38. Vale Laitcn who was just learning last year can now catch and throw, so he looks slated for a starl- ing job. Now comes the whole story—the goalie. Herln-rt aldman played last sea- son and will be available again. If he goes belter the team will, if not-! So right now the boys are throwing shots and hoping that Waldman will be- come a goalie. Ten games will again comprise the schedule. The boys meet Johns Hop- kin , Stevens, Bulgers, St. Johns of unapolis. Palisades I.. C., Lafayette, la-high. Springfield ami lumni. We arc looking for a banner season in at least one Spring sjiorl for ’38, so hop to it boys. Lacross e Boxing r Over with the lacrosse players (they are also called Indians, and for good reason) the atmosphere lifts perceptibly. Hen- optimism rears its lovely head. We actually havc a raft of veterans and some good prospects up from last year. In the 37 season we won five while losing five. Our defeats came at the hands of the Ix-st in the country. For co-captains we have Norman Block and George Lem lmer, who are All- merican pros- pects. Lemliner will he remembered from last season for his high scoring, while Block stood out With a record of one loss in three years the boxers have a load of tradition to carry into the ring with them this year. But they seem prepared for the lough schedule ahead. Mnedeo Bea, Co-Captain, undefeated in collegiate competition and win- ner of Eastern championship in the 155 class last year, is set to continue his siring and there is no indication that he won’t. Co-Captain Joe l.ubansky, the 115 pound man. has his eye on an Eastern Crown this year and (loach Sirutiis deems this more than possible. Another outstanding man i John N'emth, 175 pounder. He boasted a string of six straight knockouts. The rest of the start- ing team will include Murray Sanders, 125 pounds: Marty Klein, 135: Her- lx-rt Grojenski, 155; Allan bidon, 165: and Sid Kmmcr, heavyweight. The schedule includes illanova. State Teachers College and Temple, be- sides the Mutual Inlrcollegiate Champs. 132 INTRAMURALS Even in City College, notorious for its lion-sparkling teams in most sports, everyone can’t be a varsity hero. Outside of the diligently cut Hygienes I-1, it would seem that the average student releases most of his pent-up athletic inhibitions pushing old women during his two hours (aver age) of travel to and from classes. Designed to relieve this situation, the intramurals met with overwhelming enthusiasm and support from the student body. Over a thousand students (more than participate in any other two school activities together) took part in the tournaments on tin replete roster of the board, a roster which included almost any form of athletics you might or might not care to think of. Manifestations were evident. Every so often, the alcove lounge lizards were treated to the sight of an official ping-pong tournament, replete with heads which turned in unison, applause for the tricky shots, and handshakes at the end of the matches—everything but jumping over the net. In one corner of the gym there could always he found a group banging a badminton shuttle- cock over a net, an occupation whose popularity is threatening to overwhelm every one but the kitchen help. The iutramurals revived many of those old favorites w hich had Inren almost forgotten in growing up to be college men. Volleyball was rediscovered to be no sissy sport, and a hard fast game of touch-tackle became the most popular of all. Its tournament was the high spot of the season. For those with more orthodox tastes, the Board sponsored many tourneys along more mundane lines — swim- ming, track, and road races for the speedy; wrestling for the handsome brutes with a physique and a taste for blood; fencing for the graceful with similar leanings; soccer and basketball for those with a taste for team games. Even that old standyby, the handball, was gleefully bounced around the four walled courts. Rewards for the valiant were plenti- ful, as per usual. The Athletic Asso- ciation again gracefully tossed numer- als and several pounds of medals to the top rankers. Most sought after of all awards was the title of “All- Wound Intramural Champion, involving as it did the engraving of the designated one’s name on the permanent plaque which hangs in the hygiene building’s hall of fame, l he various teams, when the going seemed to slow a bit within- the-walls, were treated to some extra- mural activity by being allowed to compete with similar teams from other New York colleges. Wording to the best of C.C.N.Y. traditions, the basket- ball team ranked tops, sharing the honor this year with NA .l . Aside from the fun and exercise in- volved, the Whletic Association found the intramurals to be a profitable in- vestment in other ways. new path to success w as opened to those who sought more permanent athletic laurels. I n- der the competent eyes of the hygiene instructors, many beginners developed to the point where they became worth- while material for the Frosh and Jav- vee teams. The revived interest in ath- letics in general even proved to be something of a boon to the ticket sales and incomes of the varsities. The most important developments in College athletics, since somebody hi ml Nat Holman, the intramurals can call themselves a very definite success, w ith plenty ol growth still ahead. Ml due credit to the hygiene department, the Whletic ssocialion. and 1« Manager Dudley Greenstein with his assistants Tabak and Goldberg. 133 MOVING FINGER ’Tli Moving Finder writes; and having writ. Moves on: nor all tliy Piety nor Wit Shall lure it hark to cancel half a Line, Nor ail thy Tears wash out a Word of it. Hio. ehem. and engineering; Dialectics. flags, and cheering. laths are dull, and often stink. A rally's more healthy. Marxists think. Science yields knowledge, highly touted. Meetings yield knowledge, loudly shouted. One’s exciting, the other terse: Whichever you like, the other's worse. ivir IaGUARD STRAUS KNOW YOUR NLW YORK TOUR 136 Li.7 mi os iSW 3« WWO0W3O HSINVdS ON3J3Q Clevordnn Hall Vsleep in lli«‘ Drop Xeandertliallis I KNOW Inipicst Om t learning i uohle. learniu's divine. Library opens eaeli ninrniiig at nine (Kxcept when the strident eaeophony smashes Our car-drums with dynamite blastings and erashes. At wliieli time the powers-thut-be lind the cpiaking Distracting to students and even awa king!) Learning is nohle. learniu's di ine . . . rm ell. anyway, sleep is. eaeli morning at nine. Book' for tin- hookworm. to stn l ;it home: 'I lii' hrauclocimilaliou-contains c ery tonic That the good student needs except when In- .' needing it; Then—without fail someone else will he reading it. Books to the right of you. hooks to the left. plague, say we blithely, on all this Gesehcft. I.esl we forget: there's a lady named Brennan ho works in the office of the Dean of Men-en . .. LEDGE Bequest Conquest Kally round the flag, hoys, Kally ‘round the pole. Scorn attempts to flags, hoys. Shout tin truth the whole. Out there on the Campus Heed not the grassy lane. For time shall remind us. Sueli “beauty” is in vain. Meeting Postponed A l l.it in Manhattan Oil. they dig ami they dig. ami they dig ami they dig. ml the library pit grows higger than big. ml the dig and they dig. and they dig still more. ml we wonder what on earth they’re digging for. They’ve been mauling the earth for years now. it seems. In pursuance of high-flown and grandiose schemes. Oh. they work with a zest and a zeal we extol. Still they work and they work. The result: it's a hole. dab of paint here and a dal) of paint there. dah on the walls—then a dah on your hair. The Federal worker are working again. nut here, a holt there, a srrew elsewhere. Then well-won siesta. nd so it goes on. hen our grandeliildren enter, long after we're gone Tw ill he still a dah here and another dah there. dah on the walls—then a dah on your hair. . . Kremlin You Don't Say! Bourgeois They Use a Net 142 Silver Threads mong the (odd Political lorum and study hull. Kccrcation resort ami buddy-hall. Cult Test and gatlicr-tlie-buncli-room. nd. oh yes, of course—(lily’s lunch in. The mezzanine, mad bailiwick Of newspapers, mags, clubs and sic. I'Atends o’er (lie strife and the din That swells from the school's own Kremlin! food for Thought Look at the Itirdie 143 . . . and His Hrother I’ithiranthropii So I Said . . ADVERTISEMENTS DIRECTORY I ronaral Xarniison.......................................li.’O (Krill Xvrmir. Brooklyn Norman Xarniison......................................... 630 V•— 173 Slirrl, Manhattan 'X rlll.lBI Xlirl . ... ............................... I'M) II.irfa'll Mra-ai. Brooklyn Harry llrlfu.............................................V.M HVm I.U Stml, Manhattan Xhrjhjin l«i il ..................................... 1775 TnHiiwml Xxrnur. Ilrmn l.mrpr Xhraham ................................................Xalriitinr Xifinie, Krone M.imirl Ilium-............................................21KI W alla, r Xxrnur. Bronx IVlrr bniw......................................... 011 • 0 Si ml. Manprlh. Qurrn Nr. hold ft . Xd.imo.....................................65 Ka-I Iaimliitl Knud. Bronx Mryrr Adam ..................................................'iXi Kilim Slrrrl. Iltiaiklin Moni kdrlnai...................................................3151 Gilro Plitn Brans In-orpr Xdlrr ............................................. 100“ lx l ITI Slrrrl. Bronx Irxanu I. flia- ....................................... 1017 l.nitflcllow Xxrnur. Bronx Krnl Xpli..................................................150 Ka t 82 Slrrrl. Mjnliall.ni S'liaalijn piir «-.........................................501 I oilfI Slrcrl. Brooklyn (•rrali! Vlliril .... .............................. 15 XX ad w«rth Trrrarr. Manhattan H r|aa-rI Mlwrl ................................................ ‘Mil • 51 Slrrrl, Ri.tnklxu N-ymour Xli.krr................................................ I 8S Rowton Komi. Bronx Srymorr Xlwri, ............................................. 2 1 Floyd Slrrrl. Brooklyn lr inc I. Xndrmian.......................................... 700 lj l 139 Sira-rl. Bronx D.ixi.l Xndrrw .................................................3 7 Kill IKl Slrrrl. Bronx IVlrr Xnprln........ HI -K.X On hard Slrrrl. Manhattan Irxinp Xnik....................................................51 1 Knox l’l;n r. Bronx llrrU-rl Anni .....................................W M IjMliw Avrnur. Aixrmr. Qurru John Xiiwlmo........................................25-49 - 36 Slrrrl. I_ I. City. Qurrn« Sultirx Xnlrll...........................................80 X’an Corllandt I’.irk. Bronx Kuprin- Xntonar.-i..........................................593 K.i-I 187 Slrrrl. Bronx Xllx-rl Xronowitz.......................................... 10 Bryant Avrnnr. Bronx Xrlhur N. Aronson........................................510 I lijunrrx Slrrrl. Brooklyn Nalhan ron on ......................................... 1191 Si. John's I’larc, BriMiklyn John Arrigo 261 Ninth Xxrnur, Mnnlmiion Irxinp Xirrml-kj .......................................... 1231 Fulton Avrnur. Bronx Philip X h ...................................... I .MS Si. Ni.liola Avrnur. Manhattan Sheldon Anber........................................Kill ■ 3 Koj.i. lo t Park. Qmai Jo.rph V Xllir..............................................21 5 - fil Slrrrl. Brooklyn Alirahditi Axrlysd........................................... 250 Hart Slrrrl, Brooklyn Nalhan Axrlrod.......................................... I«ll Sra-onal Avrnur. Manlialtan Philip Axrlrod............................................. I3IA Morris Avrnur. Bronx Harry ll.n l ............................................... 155 llrnrl Slrrrl. Brooklyn XX illurn J. Ha- liman...................................54 Hamilton Pluar. Manhattan Kllmtt Bailanrs ............................................ 3X42 - 156 Slrrrl. Flu-liiuc • arl Baku I................................................... 3871 Srdpwi. k Avrnur. Bronx Adolph Ikakrr ........................................ 497 l.imlrn BoutrxariJ, Brooklyn Raymond C. Baidas.am- I irtahl X. li.iiij. h... Harold N. Bank Irxini; Baron............ Daniel B.irkit............ Joel Barr................. Sidney Barrows............ Norman Bar«rl............ Xl.rnliani S. lias ...... K'hon ('. Bairs.......... X ulrnliiH- Baua-r........ Irvine Bauman............ Xlarlin Bjmnw.-ll........ Jrrornr J. Itaxlr........ Mom. Hay Ia n............. David Braver.............. Kdward Brarinan.......... Xhraharn Hok............. Jaihn Ih-dnaiski.......... UoImtI XX. Brlxirt ....... Saniua-I Benjamin......... I hr Ur t Brnowilz........ Sryion (i. Brntham....... I.awrrnir Brrp........... Ihirohl Rrrgrr............ Stanley XX , Brrprr....... (rfxirpr Herpinai......... Marans Itrrmak ........... la-on II. Itrrn.lrin..... Melvin K. BrrnMeiti....... Harry Kern t irk.......... XIonirM- Ba-rrinian....... Solomon Iter oii........... He. hard BrnuMowiez .... Jiiliu Briiincrr......... Juliu Bexar .............. Irving I. Herman ......... I.ouis Bidrrinan.......... Jj.k Bim.tork............. Ilerlwrl It. BiKuril...... itia-hard Birnhaeh........ Henry S. Hiruhauin........ Mryrr itirnhauni.......... ....................552 Union Xvenue. Bronx ...............2855 (hand Com imr-r, Bronx ...................... 937 Fade Slrrrl. Bronx ............28 Ka l Second Slrrrl. Brooklyn ..............2JH Xii IuIm ii Avrnur. Manhattan .............-553 llopkirison Avrnur. Jlrnoklvn . . 115 Fast Moshnlu Parkway North. Bronx .............. I ) Kas| Kroaalwjy. Manhattan .............. 396 Si hmrk Xvrmir. Rrooklyn ..................... MM7 Si-Ion Avrnur. Bronx ................... 379 Kas| 1 2 Slirrl. Bronx ................. 1361 4 V.llrpe Axrimr. Bronx ............421 hii tnphiT Xvrmir. Bn« klxii ............... I27n Nrhhin Avrnur. Bronx .............592 Hopkinson Avrnur. Brooklyn ................131 Madison Sr reel, Brooklyn ....................3KX1 Bmadwax. Mjnhallan ......................KW llra-k Slrrrl. Bronx ................ 633 Ka l 6 Slrrrl. Xtaiihalt.in ............... 357 Srvrnlh Avrnur. Broaiklyn .................381 l|iMi|wr Slrrrl, Broaiklyn ................ 1515 l.afavrtlr Avenue. Bronx .............. • XXr t 175 Slrrrl. Manlialtan ...............2lt2 Mliriiiailr Ko.nl. Brooklyn ................ 1328 Ka.| 9 Slrrrl. Brooklyn ............... 21(1 I rolona Parkway. Bronx .................I Ka l 103 Slrrrl. Xlardiallan ...............2000 XX .ishiriplon Xxrnur., Bronx ...................21 6 - 71 S rm. Brooklyn .............. 289 Convent Avrnur. Xlanhallan ................ 2075 XX a lion Avenue. Bronx .................... 253 Kane Slrrrl, Brooklyn .....................2112 Avrnur K. Rrooklyn .................... 233 - I Slrrrl. Brooklyn ..........9-21 Brighton Kirsl Itoaal. Brooklyn ............. 1760 Washington Xxrnur. Bronx ............... 1552 Kasl I I Sum. Brooklyn ................9 Northern Avrnur. Xlanhallan .................. 1487 ollrgr Xxrnur. Bronx ...................150 Kasl 182 Stra-et. Bronx ............... 1223 Wheeler Avrnur. Bronx ................ II Kodm-y Slrrrl. Brooklyn ................... 2856 Wrhh Axrnur, Bronx nVuer itH SCHOOL OF LAW Provisionally approved by American Bar Association Three year morning or afternoon and four year day or evening courses leading to degree LL. B. Students admitted June, September and February One year post-graduate course leading to degree LL. M. or J. S. I). SUM MLR SESSION JUNE 20th 96 SCI I HR MLR HORN STREET BROOKLYN, N. Y. in, JOIN HOUSE PLAN ASSOCIATION A MEMBERSHIP CORPORATION) REGULAR MEMBERSHIP One Dollar per Year CONTRIBUTING MEMBERSHIP Three Dollars per Year SUSTAINING MEMBERSHIP Five Dollars per Year Open House for Alumni Fourth Sunday Afternoon of Each Month HOUSE PLAN CENTER 292 CONVENT AVENUE New York, N. Y. Mom Kimt'jum .................................... 247 AiicIuImmi Avrntir, Manhattan Sidnry Birnhaum...............................................8-46 FWk Slrrrt. Bronx Jo 4-|-li It. B! accio......................... 102-42 Al«tynr Avrnur. lorona. Qurrn. Sol Bitko.............................................SS7 Snrdikrr Avmur. Brooklyn Kmalturl Hiuaro.........................................2171 4'rotona Avrnur. Bronx 4 jrI Ilia- har li...................................... 160 South I Slrrrt. Brooklyn Mom A. Blank........................................... 180 Snond Slrrrt. Manhattan luliu Blank lnn ................................... 1-449 Prr Hirnl Slrrrt. Brooklyn Sidnry Hiatt............................................ 4788 Bamr Avrnur. Bronx lull.HI Ilian........................................ 200 Went 108 trr-rt. Manhattan Harry Birr liman........................................241 4 rran Parkway, Brooklyn llillrl S. Blomlhrim ..............................22X AAr | 71 Slrrrt. Manhattan Seymour I. Ill--or .................................... 2112 - 79 Slrrrt. Brooklyn l.iniu-l N. Bloomfield..................................2805 I.rr ton Avrnur. Bronx Seymour Bluhin .................................... 280 Ka t 10 Slrrrt. Manhattan ilarohl Blum ........................................... 1001 Sini|i nn Slrrrt, Bronx l.r trr Blum ........................................... 1771 4 Jay Avrnur. Bronx Max Blum ............................................... 1014 I Cor .Avrnur, Bronx Mrlvin Blum......................................... 309 We t 101 Slrrrt. Manhattan Saul Bhnnr ........................................ I.IS Wr l 225 Slrrrt. Manhattan Milton Blumrnthal ...................................... IWi Hull Avrnur, Bronx Arthur I.. Blnnirrl..................................... 1240 Franklin Avrnur. Bronx lfrnl Br.hmw.ky .................................... 583 Mi lv uml Slrrrt, Brooklyn John lloju ....................................... 522 Nrvr Jrr ry Avrnur. Brooklyn llrfhrrt Brand ! halt............................149-1 • 17 Koarl. WhiliMmir. Qurrn Mrlvin Itraun .......................................... WW Broadway. Manhattan Aaron Biaurrnijn..................................... 119 r| tunr Avrnur. Brooklyn JoM ph II. Bravrrinan....................92 Jrwcll Avrnur. Pott Kulimoml. Km IirioimI Ouar Ilrr(nuii .................................. 3150 Korhamlirau Avrnur. Bronx David Brritzrr ....................................... 186 Tompkins Avrnur. Br M klyn kin.im I. Brrn illirr .................................. 19.14 • 77 Slrrrt. Brooklyn Arnold E. Brr kin ............................... 3745 - 64 Slrrrt, U noikidr. IJiiwi II man Brirkman...................................... 146 Shelhrld Avrnur, Brooklyn Irvini: Brilliant....................................... 1010 l.ini-oln PlafT. Brooklyn Itiilirrt K. Br-ia-lM.il ........................22-18 12 Slrrrt. I I. I ily. Quern Amo BrniUky ..................................... 2 Hamilton Trrrair. Manhattan Sipmuud II. Bron tein ....................... 16 Port AA ,i hini-t- n Avrnur, Alanhaltaii I.ron Biomii............................................ 15416 Walton Avrnur, Bronx Martin Broun ........................................... 592 Beei-h Trrrair. Bronx Billiard Bro«in tonr.................................... 749 Ta l 175 Strn-l. Bronx Sakatorr J. Itni-ato.............................31-78 36 Slrrrt. I.. I. t ily. Quren John Brunrlly ..........................................21 15-32 Slrrrt. Qurrn liori Bruno .......................................112-11 38 Avrnur, f-'lu hin|;. X. A. William A. Bryan........................................50K Wr t III Slrrrt. Manhattan Kirhard RntMtwkt ............................................ 233 - 16 Slrrrt. Brooklyn luliu Burkuald..........................................3965 Srdgwirk Avrnur. Bronx Danirl Bukante ......................................... 1955 lirand 4 onrogr «. Bronx Jaik J. Bullo IT........................................ 144 Ka l 15 SlrrrOManhatlan Monror Burk ............................................ 556 4 town Slrrrt. Brooklvik llriiry 4!. Bu rk.......................7911 Wnodliavrn Itoulrxar-i. lilrrnlalr. Qurrn llrrman Biiltnrr........................................5416 Kairxiew Avrnur. Brooklyn Jo r|ih 4 an ia .......................................63 Hamilton Trrrair. Manhattan Altdrrtv J. I! art la ....................................... 254 Avrnur T. Brooklyn Dominirk 4 a fu-no .................................28-15 • 33 Slrrrt. Avtoria, Qurrn Paul 4!amky ............................................ 1742 Balliycalr Avrnur. Bronx Thmdnrr 4alitor ........................................ 2512 l nivrr ity Avrnur. Bronx Trail- i tarlin........................................ Ill St. John Piare, Brooklyn Aldo I a|-|-rlar i .....................................210 East 124 Strrrt. Manhattan I'rtrr I), lialalnnotto.................................901 llanroi k Strrrt. Brooklyn I'rtrr ...............................................2165 Parifir Slrrrt. BriMiklyn lirorcr l.hadakolT ..................................... 329 4 immin Avrnur. Bronx Solomon S. 4 haikin .................................... 3X81 Snlcwirk Avrnur. Bronx Edward 4 lialamoivky......................52 Woodland Avrnur. lirrat kill , ttii hmond Jaioli D. 4 hanlry ..................................... 237 Wr-t 74 Strrrt. Manhattan Jr« r Jiarnry ......................................... 342 East K Slrrrt. Alanhaltaii Jai-oli I h............................................. 1744 Bathyatr Avrnur. Bronx Briijamin (.Iwikanow ...................................600 Ka « 178 Strrrt. Bronx lo r|.h tihrrrx ............................... 1364 S«. .Nuhola Avrnur. Manhattan kiin-'t 4 hr low ....................................... 34IB Sterling Strrrt. Brooklyn I’rtrr . Ovmrlnit ky ..................................2l4 S Paritu- Strrrt. Brooklyn |toli- lan 4 Jioi u u ki ................................... 208 • 32 Strrrt. Brooklyn M.iv i hrobrraky ....................................... 1492 Park Plarr. Brooklyn Kufrnr J. 4 In «or.................................. 3335 • 167 Slrrrt. Tlu hinc. Qurrn Morion 4 human.......................................... 1245 4.rau.lvin I’larr. Bronx Bi-mar-1 t ohm ......................................... 910 Kixrr idr Drivr, Alanhaltaii Bi-rnard 4 ohm.......................................... 17.35 l avid ou Avrnur. Bronx 4 hath- 4 ohm................. ........................135 South 9 Strrrt. Brooklyn |), llarlln ( ohm ...................................... 305 Maitrfix- Strrrt. Brooklyn David S. 4 adieu ....................................... 1524 S.-alHin Plarr. Bronx Ilarohl 4 ohm ..........................................2-81 t.r.in.l 4 am- oiir r. Bronx llrnry K. 4 .dir........................................ 67 Ka t 107 Strrrt. Alanhallan Ini (ohm.......................................... Kl r| it|r Dritr. MjlkK.ilt.iH C oltrit .............................................. IX Klliot I'li4f. Bronx lan.l. 4 ohm ........................................... 631 Powell Slrrrt. Brooklyn Jacob Cohetl ......... I.roii Cohen......... I «inani Cohen ...... Martin (5 hen........ Milton ohrn........ Morris M. (xihen .... Mortimer W. Cohen . Philip Cohen.......... Richard Cohen........ Hubert B. Cohen .... Samuel Cohen ......... Stanley Cohen ....... lliroilorr ohrn .... William Cohen......... Murray G. Cohn .... Xaron Coleman........ Joseph K. Conti .... Bernard (5 opcr...... John Conjier.......... William Cno|.rr...... Philip Owfirrman ... George ‘order....... Kaljih Constantini ... Isidore Oo ........... I hili| Cummcrford . Sidney Cutler......... Dominii k F. (aitrone Jaek Cypin .......... louis Czukor ........ Frank Daehrllr ...... Harry Danton.......... W illiarn Danziger .... Amerigo D'Arnhrasio . (Worse K. Darby .... FIrncst . Dauhrr ... Sam Davidson ......... Dio id Dawson......... Meyer Debhowitz_______ Paul S. Drll'.Xrio .... Heitor G, DeMeo ... Inuld Deirnheld ... DeRostaitig .......... Vietor Drsanli ....... Julio DrSanti ........ Henry Drut‘eh........ Janies Detine........ Paul K. Dillianeo .... Alfred Dirtrirh...... Albert Dillof......... John Dilorrnxn ....... Milliner Di tel...... Paul Dohin........... Theoilore Dnnalh .... James S. Donohue ... Martin Douglas ....... William D. Downs ... F’reslerick Drintmer .. William Dtuz......... hraham Dill.in....... Stanley Dud .irnski ... Seymour Keker......... Lloyd M. Edetndc .. Alexander Khrenberg . Alliert Kbrlirb....... Fiugene Khrlirh ..... Simon Fiisilorfer..... Bernard FLi enl erg ... Harry Fasenpres .... Max Klitfher.......... Meyer Fllkin.......... Arthur Fdlenherg...... M.raham Kmmer .... Alfred Flnrrl ....... l-ron Flngel ......... Stanley Kntcli ....... David Fipstein ....... Jivseph F'pstein ..... Arthur T. E | o ito ,.. Samuel Fluteli ....... Solomon Flvrio........ Salvator F'anale ..... David F’arlier ...... Mexander S. Fatkas . Maxwell F a ler...... Abraham F'rdering .. ...................... I SI Bristol Street, Brooklyn ...................... HO Stanton Street. Manhattan ................... 220 West 93 Street. Manhattan ..........8262 Austin Street. Kew Gardens. Queen ...................... 189.1 Andrews Avenue. Bronx ...................... ITTO Fia t 172 St reel. Bronx .....................801 West Find Avenue, Manhattan .................... 850 Southern Boulevard. Bronx ......................6 West 75 Street. Manhattan ....................132 Sherman Avenue. Manhattan ...................... 1869 W alton Avenue. BfODX ...................... 1911 Avenue L’. Brooklyn ...................... 1650 Topping Avenue. Bronx ...................... 1450 M inlord Place. Bronx ...................... 97 Varet Street. Brooklyn ...................... 1680 Prosper t Plare. Brooklyn ...................... 315 FU t 151 Street. Bronx .......................2035 Crcston Avenue. Bronx ................... 112 West 77 Street, Manhattan ....................... 1581 F'ulton Avenue. Bronx ........................ 67 F!a i 175 Street, Rronx ................... 460 We l 142 Street. Manhattan .................. 1232 Castle Hill Avenue. Bronx ...................... 1679 • 66 Street. Brooklyn ................... 328 West 20 Strret, Manhattan ......................... 1027 Hoe Avenue, Bronx .................... 137 North Fllliol Place. Brooklyn ......................... 1271 Hoe Avenue. Bronx .................... 1161 Stratford Avriiue. Bronx ...................... 530 F!a l 188 Street, Bronx ...................... 1607 Tilihrtt Avenue, Bronx .......................... 699 Beck Street. Bronx .......6012 Metropolitan Avenue. Bidgeway. Queens ...................... 2706 Heath Avenue. Bronx ...................... 140 Wil on Street. Brooklyn ................... 379 Vis-tory Boulevard. Richmond ....................551 Montgomery Street. Brooklyn .................... 269 Albany Avenue, Brooklyn ....................231 F!a t 105 Street, Manhattan .............. 1649 Bay Bulge Pathway. Brooklyn .................... 1087 Blake Avenue. Brooklyn ................... 133 West 13 Street. Manhattan ........................ 35-51 - 11 Street, Queens ...................... 831) Ka-I 222 Strret. Iltonx ......... Hotel Regent. West 101 Street. Manhattan ...................... 655 Em 163 Streets Bronx ...................... 240 F!n t 191 Street. Bronx ................... 640 Wrst )7I Street. Manhattan ..................... M 6 Fast 55 Street. Brooklyn ...................... 1021 ■ 58 Street. Brooklyn .................... 2700 Bronx Park F .a t, Bronx ....................... 790 Grand Concourse. Bronx .......................... 665 Reck Street. Bronx ....................178 West 94 Street, Manhattan 121-16 Washington Avenue, Rm-haway Park, I, I. .. 117-23 • 220 Place. Springfield Carden . Queens ...................... 1571 Ea l 9 Brooklyn .................. 4502 Clareiulon Hoad. Brooklyn ....................615 W est |36 Street, Manhattan -..................... 1711 Dahell Road. Brooklyn ...................... 1470 Carroll Street. Brooklyn ...................... 1109 Btyanl Avenue. Bronx ....................418 Mnntauk Avenue, Brooklyn ...................... 409 Third Avenue. Manhattan .................. IHI6 White Plain Bond. Bronx ......................712 Ku t 6 Street. Manhattan ...................... 1004 Freeman Street. Bronx ...................... 16 Crafton Street. Brooklyn .............. 1571 Lexington Avenue. Manhattan ......................2(187 Crcston Avenue, Bronx ......................2111 Wallare Avenue. Bronx ................... 389 Itiverdale Avenue. Brooklyn ................... 177 Chrystie Street. Manhattan ...................... 1619 • 43 Street. Brooklyn ...................... 1515 Crand (ioncourse, Bronx ......................2.11 Amlioy Strret, Brooklyn ...................... 81 Fia.t 40 Street. Brooklyn ...................... 1579 W est 6 .Street. Brooklyn ...................... 1515 Crand Concourse, Bronx ...................... 126 Cannon Strret. Manhattan .............. 191 Singir Street, Astoria. Queens .....................437 Crand Street. Manhattan ................... 2.157 Davidson Avenue. Bronx ... 110-16 Jamaica Avenue. Richmond Hill. Quern ...................... 1479 MrComh Road, Bronx Philip F'eiger ......... Roliert Feigin ......... Max F'einsilver......... Laurence C. Fels........ Luigi M. Ferrari....... Charles A. F'errie, Jr. .. Bernard Feller.......... Aldteyn H. FUlkoff Joseph Kindling ....... W illiarn F'megold...... Arno Finkeldey ......... Sidney M. Firestone ... Martin FI. Fisch........ Joseph F'iM-hback........ I ranard F’i ehlcr...... Daniel II. F'isthman .... George F'i hman......... Myer Fishman ........... Samuel F'latow ......... Andrew F'odera ......... Henry Foley............. John J. F'oley.......... Joseph F’. F'orch ....... Jacob Forstot .......... Thomas A. Forte......... Arnold B. Fox .......... Marlin C. Fox .......... David J. Fraade......... Frank O. F'ranco ....... Aaron A. F'rankrl....... Jerome F'rmhnan......... Jerome II. F'reiee....... Leonard Frcinkel ....... Maurice F'reshman........ Nathan F'ried .......... David Frirdhrrg.......... Isidore F’riedland...... Max F'riedlander........ Roliert F'riedlamfer .... W illard Friedluder ( liarlrs Friedman ...... ( larrncr Friedman....... Firuanuel Friedman .... Irving F'rirdman......... Irving F'rirdinan....... Israel Friedman ......... 1-o.m.ird A. F riedman .. Theodore Friedman lien Friend.............. Kli F’riend............. Irwin S. Frirsner........ inceni J. F'riguglirtti . Leonard ................. Raymond F'uleihan .... Milton F'utterman....... James A. Calliirci...... Aaron Galuten............ Morris Garrlick ........ B«-rnard Gartmkcl....... Iasi Garlinkel ......... Sanford Garland ........ William M. Garvin........ Joseph Gavrin........... Murray A. Geixler....... David Gelbnrt........... Isiilore (irlil.......... t liarlrs Crldzuhlrr..... Abraham Grlfand......... Philip Celfand .......... Iziuis t .el ler ....... Iron Geoffrey........... Anjrlo P. Gerardi....... (lifTord F. Cerlicr..... David Grrstrnzang .... Irving A. Gessow......... Mortimer Cetiels........ David Cilharg........... David W. Gilbert ........ Hyman (iindierg.......... Jerome Cin !iere........ Martin Cinshurg.......... Carl Class.............. Martin Class............ Stanley Gla ncr ........ Irving Gla er............ ....................... 1518 Rivant Avenue. Rronx ........................ 2105 - 73 Street. Brooklyn .................... 1467 Washington Avenue. Bronx ................... 478 Wr t 145 Street. Manhattan ..................... 3750 Olinville Avenue. Bronx .......158 Davis Avenue. West New Brighton. S. I. ................... 3091 Brighton 5 Street. Brooklyn .................... 1075 Grand Concourse. Bronx ..................... 921 Whitlock Avenue, Bronx ....................... 2318 lairing Place. Bronx 179-08 Mayer Avenue, Springfield Garden . Queens ...................... 555 Crown Street. Brooklyn ....................... 1237 College Avenue. Bronx .................... 1267 Sheridan Avriiue. Bronx ....................... 1655 Monroe Avenue. Bronx .............. 9440 • 77 Street. Ozone Park. Queen ..................... 887 I sing wood Avenue. Bronx -....................... 881 Tiffany Strret. Bronx ....................... 1129 Grant Avenue. Bronx ...................... 307 Reap Street, Brooklyn ................ 88-25 • 173 Street. Jamaica. Queens ...................... 1085 Nelson Avenue. Bronx ................... 725 Fourth Avenue. Brooklyn ................... 330 We ! 85 Strret. Manhattan ....................... 251 Cypre Avenue. Bronx ....................... 276 Fast 169 Street. Rronx ....................... 314 Fast 206 Strret. Bronx ....................6S2 West 189 Street. Manhattan ....................215 West 10 Street, Manhattan ......... 8806 Parsons Bouleiard, Jamaica, Queen ................. 1830 Washington Avenue, Bronx ....................... 1107 Prosper! Avenue. Bronx .................. 2M I University Avenue, Rronx ..................... 379 Alabama Avenue, Brooklyn ....................... 152 Utiea Avenue. Brooklyn ........................ 868 FU t 7 Street. Brooklyn ....................... 2254 Davidson Avenue. Bronx ........................ 19 Henry Street. Manhattan ....................... 1910 F’.ast 8 Street. Brooklyn ................... 1930 Crand Concourse. Bronx ....................... 1676 F'ulton Street. Brooklyn ................. 121 Madison Avenue. Manhattan .......................8801 Liberty Avenue. Queen ....................192 Alabama Avenue. Brooklyn .............................660 Dawson Street. Bronx ................... 247 FIa t Broadway. Manhattan .................... 3958 Paulding Avenue, Bronx ................. 620 West 171 Street. Manhattan ....................... 3039 Wallare Avenue. Rronx .................... 2504 Bronx Park Ka t. Bronx ..................... 41 West 96 Street. Manhattan ....................... 1161 - 70 Sweet, Brooklyn .................. 48(12 Twelfth Avenue. Brooklyn ............... 296 Central Park West. Manhattan ............16001 Sanford Avenue, F'lusfiing. Queens ................ 1618 Bay Ridge Parkway. Ilrooklyn ........................ 2908 Heath Avenue. Rronx ...................... 929 F ast 165 Street, Bronx ..................801 llopkinson Avenue, Ilrooklyn .. 102-55 Jamaica Avenue. Rich mom! Hill. Queen .................. 325 West 86 Street. Manhattan ................... 1945 Seventh Avenue. Manhattan ................... 1220 Flu t 8 Street. Ilrooklyn ..................... 4608 Tenth Avenue. Brooklyn ........................921 Ka l 179 Street. Rronx ........................ 1779 F'ulton Avenue, Bronx ..................... 2078 Crotona Parkway, Rronx ......................... 17-44 Clay Avenue. Bronx ..................... 2159 Morris Avenue. Bronx .................. 252 Madison Street. Manhattan .................. 652 West 189 Street. Manhattan ................... 1782 Wrstrhester Avenue. Bronx .............. 64-44 - M) Avenue. Ma | eth. Queen ..................... 86 Fast 94 Street. Brooklyn ...................... 226 Barrett Street. Brooklyn ...................12) Slirrman Avenue. Manhattan .................... 788 FIa tern Parkway. Brooklyn .................. 233 West 99 Street. Manhattan .................. 2297 Bedford Avenue. Brooklyn ..................... 1742 Monroe Avenue. Bronx ................... 907 St. Mark Avenue. Brooklyn ...................1070 Bedford Avenue. Brooklyn ...............3111 Brighton F'irst Place. Brooklyn ................ 245 West 101 Street. Manhattan ..................... 147 Pulaski Street. Brooklyn 118 CROSSROADS OF THE WORLD You’re there at the Astor—directly on 'l imes Square — right at the very heart of the theatrical and amusement center of the world. More than a million dollars have been spent in redecorating and modernizing the Astor. You'll be aware of it the moment you enter the smart, new lobby. Rooms are spacious and comfortable with modern appointments. And the Astor cuisine is world-famous.. . four pleasant restaurants to choose from. The rates are very reasonable, too . . . from $3.00 a dav. HOTEL ASTOR F. A. MUSCMFNHFtM. JW.Wni R. K CHRIS!BNBFRRV. G iwr«l Mmmi U'J SOLD IN YOUR SCHOOL SOLD IN YOl'R Nl IGHHORHOOD B R E Y E R ICL CREAM COMPANY. INC. ill Si and Queens Blvd.. Lonjj Island City STillwcll d-5000 Motrin (ilawi ............. I... Clide................. Nathan (.li. k............. S,l Click.................. Ft HI I t.lu.l. .......... Harold I . («1.1........... Herbert H. GdAmt .... Mailliru Cokllwtn.......... Mortimer (Wddlieti: ....... Kill.in t ...Min ik........ Sidney «loklen ............ Karl (lnlilenl erf! ........ Jiwph (miIiItiiIm-ik ....... Samuel («Idenlier .......... F.dwin (loldfarl .......... Nathan .i.I-i'iiii'.'i .. I ‘«III ( ldf I W l ... Boy O. I«i|.llll........... Avel (•olihniith........... Jerome M. GtUmilh .... David (eild-triri ......... Irwin (Wild-trill ......... Jaek ColdMrin ............. I jurmrr ...M-i. hi....... I «in (lold-tcin............ I .eon (lold«tein.......... Almri (ailihlrin.......... Sidney (Wild-tcm ........... Ffrim («lui ................ Milton (.iki.I|tI.i—....... Alie (IihhIiikii........... Bernard J. («oilman .... Fugrae I- Coodinun.......... Howard (loodinaii.......... Irvine («uijniiiii ......... Meyer (irwidmnn ............ Solomon (loodmoii .......... Ki-riiaril (Innlftii ....... ( lie |er Cordon........... Sam J. (.onion ............. Samuel Corrib k............. M« Cottlieh ............... lark Craliel-ky ........... Iternanl ft . Cralioi ..... Arthur C.rad............... Irving Crrece.............. Donald (Week .............. Kalplr (Ween............... Mil Ion (ireenliaum........ Marlin Crrmlierg........... Millnn (ileriilierc ....... Saul Crrrnhlatl ............ I «inan! Crrrnr............ rlliur A. Crrrntield .... D.lllii-I (Wrenllrlil ...... Samuel Crrrnhmi -.......... U..l..rl It. Crrrtiman .... Frank I . (Ween pan .... Alehin Creeti ladt ........ Dudley I.. (Wren.Iriii ... Irwin I . Crrrnwald......... Myron Crrrnwald ............ Murray Crril .............. .................579 Fa t 7 Si reel. Krooklvu ................... 1.360 llo -t..n K-..I.I. Bronx ................... 1360 It ..inn Koad. Bronx .................. 1360 Hoi-ton Koad. Bronx .............. 3l .i Alotri Avenue. Bronx .............909 Si. Mark Axenue. Brooklyn ............... 2095 Crr t n Avenue. Itfoiix ............. 2 195 Crr-tnn temie. Buinx .............. 153 Fact I6S Street. Bronx ............. I IB Neptune Vxrriur. Brooklyn ............... ‘BIT WliitliM k Axenue. Bronx ................. 2151 (.rami Axenue. Bronx ................ 2563 Deratiir Axenue. Bronx ...............221 tt’r.1 13 Si reel, Manlmllan ............. 1975 Bathgate Axenue, Bronx ............... I128 Alorri Avenue, Bronx ............ 772 Saratoga Axenue. Brooklyn ..................852 Fa«t 172 Street. Bronx 8909 Sutter Axenue. Ozone Park, Queen ..............9 Northern Axenue. Alaiiliallun ............ 233 Kixl 12 Street. Al-inhallati ............. 170 king 111 1«V.-IX. Itr.Miklyn .............. IKI2 Anthmry Axenue. Bronx .... 9138 • :: Street, Omni Park Q .......... 1585 Si. Alark Axenue, Brooklyn .............. 207 Kant 39 Street. Brooklyn ..................... 770 Failr Street. Bronx ............. 18 AlevM-roIr Street, Brooklyn ................. 230 fau 196 Street, Bronx .............3120 Baioliriiliie Axenue. Bronx ............... 1565 Full Avenue. Bronx ................ 181 Kant 91 Street. Brooklyn ..........316 Montgomery Street. Brooklyn ..............1810 laingfclln Avenue, Bronx ................. 3010 Hull Axenue. Bronx ........... 1120 (rritona Park Ka t, Bronx ............. 363 South 5 Street, Brooklyn .............. 2921 Bunt- Axenue. Bronx ..................... 680 Be k Street. Bronx ................. 923 Form! Axenue, Bronx ................ 293 Ka«t 51 Street. Brooklyn ............ 727 Howard Avenue, Brooklyn .............. 1326 College Axenue. Bronx ,............ 131 Maxell Axenue, Manhattan ............... 823 Ka t 173 Street. Bronx .............. 17.38 Pnion Street. Brooklyn ............... 2201 Walton Avenue. Bronx ........... 700 ftnl 178 Street. Alanhattan ...................8508 . 89 Street. Queen .............2(ilKI l’iiixer ity Avenue. Bronx 2330 Mealy Axenue. Far Borknwoy. Queen ............ 8511 Bax I’arkxray. Brooklyn ............ 161 VA’r t 75 Street. Alanhattan ........ 65 Wad-worth Terrace. Alanhattan ................. 581 Timpiuin Plate. Bronx ............718 Ka t Treniont Avenue, Bronx ............ 1109 Italior.I Avenue. Brooklyn ............. 1987 I tax nl—mi Avenue. Bronx ................ 2075 VA altmi Avenue. Bronx ............. 125 FiM 9.1 Street. Alanli.itt.-in . .............. 1711 • 12 Axenue, Brooklyn .............. 1620 0,1.111 Axenue. Brooklyn ............. 251 Vernon Axenue. Brooklyn Kolieit t.nllo .......................................... 320 Fountain Axenue, Briaiklxn Seymour t'.ri ......................................... 15 F.a t 171 Street. Bronx Pliilnxorr I. t.roi er................................31X30 Brighton 12 Street. Bnuiklyn Alexamler S. tan ........................................ loll (W-runi -Axenue. Bronx s t C...........nun 1560 Anutrtdam Axenue Manhattan Klliot I (W urulieri ....................................3011 I brriiiloii Boail. Bronklyn Alorri (.uiiiirr ....................................... |75 Itivinglon Street. Alaulialt.iii Seymour Currhiii ky........................................... 2081 Ayv Axenue. Bronx Irving (iu«.............................................. 1.58 Nil!..Ik Street. Manhattan Juliiin tlutlrli|ilail................................... 142-07 ( In-rry Axenue. Fliidong Murray tiuttenplan ...................................... 991 F.u t 177 Street, Itnuiv Allierl t.iillirre ..................................... ( 13 ( aiildwrll Axenue. Bronx I «adore Hade .......................................... 719 Maliama Axenue. Brooklyn lamia Mall .............................................. 1127 Kilwn Axenue, Bronx Max id Hallow ! ........................................ Hot Clinton Avenue. Itnmx Ji e| h llal|iern ...................................54 St. Nicholas Axenue. Bn-oklxn Samuel llalferl ......................................... I'm Clcawn Axenue. Bronx MerU-rt llaniiurrman.......................................... 1317 Park l lai-e. Brioiklyri Paul Manania ...................................... 631 Ae t 157 Street. Manhattan Sain llaiii-li .......................................... 1589 Lincoln lloail. Ilnaiklvr Henry Al. Ilarlin .................................... 3601 Bronx Boulevard. Bronx l« llariii- k...........................................59 llartforii Street, Brooklyn Fiixxan! VA. Mart ................................... 110 Vermilyea Axenue, Al.inhatt.in Morria Hamlil-man ....................................... 571 F t 170 Street. Bronx Morn Hangman............................................ 132 Ludloxr Street. Manhattan llerliert linker ........................................ 1245 St. John’ Place. Brooklyn Ahraluin Ilex lit ....................................... 126 A'errxon Avenue. Brooklyn Hubert B. lie. hi........................................ 1111 Prr-iident Street. Brooklyn |o r|ih A|. Ileikotl .................................... Ill) Fa«t 35 Street. Brooklyn Dougla lleilhrun ....................................... 325 Went 9.3 Street. Alanhattan J lin lleimayer ........................................ 819 Cauldwcll Axenue. Bronx Irving Meitner .......................................... 202 Ka-I 91 Stl H-l. Brooklyn Jark lleller ...................................... 128 Ft. VA a hint!ton Axe. Alanhattan S l Heller .............................................. 113 VA r t III Street. Alanhattan Stanley II. Heller ...................................... 1675 Went 9 Street. Brooklyn Henry I. Heilman ........................................ 1000 Ka t 173 Street. Bronx Henry Heilman................................................. 1515 Hoe Axenue, Bronx Alorton J. II liman .................................... 2106 VAaltmi Axenue. Bronx Koliert llcrfort ............................. .395 Ft. VA aMiington Axenue. Manhattan Morton llertH-lil ....................................... 1711 l)axi l i n Avenue. Bntnx Sidney Her h ............................................ I III Stoeklon Street. Bnviklyr Billiard J. I_ llernon .................................. 15007 • 81 Drive. Jamaica. I.. I, Arthur llerljrlH-rc .... Victor Her . Ilia)! .... Harry J. liiiililjiiil ... Stanley lleller........ Arthur llillinprr...... Milton 11 irumrlfarli .. Mortimer llimeh......... Mux Hirxchman........... I «adore llo. liman .... Aaron Il'ilTinan....... I«a«l re llotTman...... lo '|ih 1. Ilotlmaii ... Otto VA. Hoffman .... Paul Hoffman............ Phillip llolrer........ Irxina A. Ihirouit ... Myron Horowitz......... Sidney Hornwit ........ Alfred Horn ........... Kaymond . Ilulo-r ... ......................... 989 Tinton Avenue. Bronx ...................... 201.3 Bryant Avenue. Bronx .............. 1512 Cociinumxtralth Avenue, Bronx ........................ 1505 Alct'onil Hoad. Bronx ....................... 1792 Anthony Axenue. Bronx ........................ 1967 ■ 81 Sired. Brooklyn ....................... .325 VAo t 9.3 Street, Manhattan ........................517 A'r l 157 Street. Alnulijllan ......................... 751 Fa t 178 Street, Bronx ....................... 355 Ku t 49 Slrr-et. BoHiklyn ......................... 827 Home Street. Bronx ....................... 1289 Fir l Axenue. Alanhattan .................... 2114 Davidwin Axenue. Bronx .......................1921 Andrew Axenue. Bronx ............................. 927 Fox Street. Bronx ........................ 587 Ka«t 110 Str«-t, Bronx ........................ 50 Itiverciile Drive. Alanhattan .. 51 AA elliri|!t in Street. Ia ti|; l-l.md taty. Qui-i-n ....................137 Aluliania Avenue, Bmoklvn ..............10510 • 90 Street. Ozone Park. Qnr-eri ISO Iritcnvivc Pcivonati cx Civil Set vice Coaching (riven Daily 9 A M 1 P M . Saturday. 9-A JR. ENGINEER (FEDERAL) Atn-nautical. ClHxniv.il. Cixil Electrical, Mechanical. Mining, Naval Architexturo. SttucUiral. Stex-I ami Concrete Cooper Union Preparation Clerk. All Grade Pnrfcvxional lingr. Licence Cuvtom Ex.un me i Aid Mechanical. Electrical Diaftv- Student Fingerprint Claxvihci man. (Jr A Eire Telegraph Dnp.ililxi Jr. Architecture Diaftxrnan Eire Prevention |r Topograpliital Diaftxnun Revident Building Supt. Stativtical Diaftxman Eight A Power Invpccloc Stationary Engineer l.iccnve Heating Ventilating Incp Electrician License Superviror Park Operatione Foreman Electrician Promotion Pipe V Carting Invpcctm Stationary Engineer. Electric Stcd Inspector Promotion Tcjchcr-in Training Exams, Engineering Inxpeetor. B W S. Jr. Civil Service Examiner Engineering Avvictant Actuarial Matlienulician Policewoman Special tutoring in Arithmetic. Algebra. Geometry, Trigonomerry, Calculus Slide Rule, PlrySiCS. Chcmivtry, Hydraulic . Drafting, Surveying. Blueprint Reading. Building. Plumbing. Estimating. preparation High School, College. Englivh. Mental Text Report Writing MONDELL INSTITUTE 112 WEST -12nd ST., N. Y CITY Td. WIS. 7-2087 Clifford Hu ............................ 119.12 Boardwalk. Koekaway Bead . I- I. Wr.lry llu ............................... 11912 Boardwalk. Rm-kaway Bcarh. I. I. Alurray A|, lludi .............................. 3200 Knchaiulw-au Avrnur. Bronx l-awrence W. Iludtot................................ Sr. Ni.h.da Avenue, Manhattan Marlin C. Hunt ...................................28-OS - I?. Street. Fludiing. Queen. Krnilr llnvar ....................................... S32 Kart IB Street. Manhattan Mfrol K. Ilune .......................................... 119 Eiart 157 Street. Bronx llrrliert II. Hyman ................................... 1252 Manor Avrnur. Bronx Abraham inkel - .................................... 5.101 Tildeti Avrnur. Brooklyn M-raluirn lt kowitz..................................201 Columbia Slrrrl, Brooklyn Sr iiH,u, Jahlon .................................... 200 Wert I0B Slrrrt. Manhattan Nut J.i keinlnlT ................................... 16S2 lJriiver ily Avrnur. Bronx Martin Jarkirr ...................................... ISM Kart 3 Slrrrt. Brooklyn Milton laioliowilz...................................Wl Snithrrn Boulevard. Bronx Meyer Jarolmon ...................................... 27 Mrkrr Avrnur. Brooklyn Jaml. Jammituky....................................3211 • 100 Slrrrt. Corona, Qumr. Joseph Junovky ...................................... 279 Brrriinan Slrrrt. Brooklyn Jiiliii. Janowitz ....................................... 9SS • 47 Slrrrt. Brooklyn Intivar Jrnvn ....................................... .1211 ItaiMry Avrnur. Bronx Myron Joffr ......................................... 1117 (irranl Avrnur. Bronx Samurl Jolr ............................................ 1117 (ierard Avrnur. Bronx Itoy A. Jonr-v........................................ SWl'nl 11 Slrrrt. Manhattan I .eonard Jouetn .................................... 2327 Grand (zini-iMiree, Bronx l.ionrl Jilgo ....................................... Nlli Ucl III Slrrrt. Manhattan Julill. Ju im .................................. 17 11 IB Slrrrt. Woodvirlr. I I. Simon liirtmaii ..................................... 2515 Olinville Avrnur. Bronx Mrlvin A. Ju.trr....................................2255 Grand ( wimurv. Bronx I .aw retire Kahrnr..................................2013 E'-art 23 Slrrrt. Brooklyn Morton Kahn ......................................... 1095 Kart IS Slrrrt. Brooklyn llrrtram S. Kaiwr ................................... 255 Wert 9K Street. Manhattan Danirl k.n ei .....................................3130 Brighton 6 Street. Brooklyn Martin kallirh ......................................... 2149 - 79 Street. Brooklyn llrnrv B. kalniii .................................. 7 Ka l 107 Slrrrt. Manhattan Bernard I). Kanarrk .................................... 1500 Ay- e Avrnur. Bronx K.lirar A. Kantrrman................................. 1350 Kart 13 Slrrrt. ItnMiklvn Philij. Kantrowiu........................................ 965 Sitnp«on Strrrl. Bronx Kfhraim II. ............................................ 1725 Morri Avrnur. Bronx Harold N. Kaplan .................................... .112 Suttrr Avenue. Brooklyn Herman Kaplan........................................ 122 AVert 103 Stm t. Manhattan Kaplan..........................................WM king-bridge Trrranr, Bronx Stanley Kaplan.............................................11 IB Avrnur K. Brooklyn Sidney K. Kaplan........................................ .11 IB Avrnur K. Brooklyn Alilton A. Karp...................................... IHKM Crotona Parkway, Bronx llrniy K.II|«- .................................... 9.13 Nrw Vurfc Avrnur, ItnriLlyn Hit Kat|«l ........................................ 1175 AVert Farm llo.nl. Bronx William Kmmon ................................. 2139 lir...............I A ...., Bronx William Kaitui ......................................... P 75 Mapn Axrnur. Bronx Waller Kao per ......................................... 191 Ko l I Stmt Manh it Kvrrrtl Ka alow ....................................... Ilii Popham Au ink . Bronx Irvine H. Katz.......................................... I.111'. Wilkin- Avrnur. Bronx Irvine KaU ............................................. f.5 Featlw-rlir.1 l am. Bronx liviny Kali ............................................ I til. AX ilk in- Avrnur. Bronx Sidney Katz ............................................... .11IX tiatrs I’larr. Bronx Kdwin A. Kaufman.................................... 675 A . t Kml Axrnur. Manhattan Thomm Krjiie ........................................... 10 Wert K9 Sum. Manhattan John keurtl- ........................................... J27 Ka l I5H Slrrrt. Bronx Seymour Kr.|ol ky ...................................... 175 llewrw Strrrl, Brooklyn Aaron Kt-lnian ........................................Ill Mrrmaid Avenue, Bmaklyn Puttn-hl Knit........................................ 33 05 82 Slrrrt. J.n k-m llrielil liarik krnton ............................................. 1257 Brook Axrnur, Bronx Harold kir-liruldit..................................... 928 New lail Avrnur. Brooklyn Kiilor Kir-henhaun......................................... I IX I lor Avrnur, Kronv llowarrl A. kievul ..................................... 1130 Amlriwin Avrnur. Bronx Murray Knnmrl ............................................. I46X line Avrnur. Bronx Kdwin A. Ki .............................................. 30 33 • 89 Strrrl. Quern Gerald B. Kitay ........................................ nat (.rami t nmiHir-r, Bronx ■Abraham Klainhard......................................... 15.11 Kullon Avrnur. Bronx Alltrrl klau ner........................................ 2306 Qurntin Plarr. Brooklyn Marvin Klor ky ............................................ 623 Avrnur XV, BriMiklyn frlix Kla ............................................ 2107 Daly Avrnur. Brooklyn Allirrt Klau nrr ....................................... 2306 Qurntin Koad. Brooklyn Allirrt Kirin .......................................... 7BI9 . 19 Avrnur. Brooklyn George Kirin ........................................... .102 fUrt 46 Slrrrt. Brooklyn l rarl I. Kirin ................................... 90 38 Par-on. Boulevard. Queen. Martin Klr-iu........................................... 2061 David-on Avrnur. Bronx Max Kirill ................................................ 1280 • 39 Strrrl. Brooklyn Milton klrin................................... 2079 Daly Avrnur. Bronx Alilton Kirin ................................................. IWI Fox Slrrrt. Bronx Paul Kirin ................................... 56 Ft. XVa-hington Avrnur. Manhattan AA i Ilium H. Kirin .................................... 2690 Alorri Avrnur, Bronx Juliu klrinrr ....................................... 1511 Shakr pr.irr Avrnur. Bronx Leonard kloinmnn ....................................... 1017 Teller Avrnur. Bronx Benjamin Koeivar ..................................92-17 - 17K Slrrrt. Jamaica, Qurrn Irvine kohn............................................. 1317 Pro |H- I Avrnur. Bronx Kmrry konili .......................................... 3IS Ka t 6B Slrrrt. Alanhattan Alex Korn............................................... 2858 Wert .30 Street. Brooklyn THANKS AND BEST WISHES From the Makers of the Official Senior Keys THE DUROCHARM CO. 1261 BROADWAY NEW YORK CITY Arthur k iri ... .................................. MIX • 10 Avenue, Brooklyn Sdomon I . kornbluli......................................WO Belmont Avenue. Brooklyn 'i.ln.-v korowit ..........................................305 ■ If Street. Brooklyn Ttiruilorr Koslofsky .. 1571 St. 'lark- Avenue, Brooklyn Abraham KMkk .............................................ww Em WO 'imi, Riwk lame k« rl ......................................... If Ea t ITT Street. Bronx Kiixl kraft ............................................. ITOI Park Avenue. Ilrnnx ey mour ktakouer ................................ 'll «' 1 I SI Street. M.inli.ni.m Xxlnir kriinw-r ................................... 'WI Bronx Park South. Bronx David Kramer .............................................. 11t52 Fox Street, Bronx Herman Kramer ........................................ 1357 55 Sum. Brooklyn Alex kraut ........................................ BIO Hunt Point Avenue. Bronx Samuel J . kreingold .............................. 2925 Mat thru- Avenue. Bronx t.lirrirr krei-wirth ............................. 3312 • 99 Street. (iniuij, Queen- Bernard Km ............................................... ui Tot ixi Sum. Bronx TlKxHkirr J. kricger ................................. T20J • 20 Avenue. Brooklyn Morris krippel ....................................... UM9 Bryant Avenue. Bronx Bn liar.l kr M .................................... 510 We-l 190 Street. Alanhattan Stanley kuldin .................................................. 1022 llo ' Avenue. Bronx John II. Kuck ......................................687 Wot 201 Street, Manhattan Isidore kugler ........................................ 19(15 Bitito Strret, Brooklyn IIomar l kiilm ......................................... 201-19 lloll,. Axrnur. Quern IlnlHTt kunrn................................ -IBB • 13 Slti-et. Far Kockaway. Ourni- Sol ktini.............................................20T5 East 26 Street, Brooklyn Morton kupperman......................................... 1113 ('.rant Axrnur. Bronx David kti-helolT .....................................881 AA hillock Axrnur. Bronx Jack Kushtier ........................................ 3657 Broadway. Manhattan Max I ..■•loti ................................... 1360 Eastern Parkway. Brooklyn rxo l.ahti........................................ 1187 Woodyerert Avenue. Bronx K-|naril F. I jii.Ijii .................................. I2T Hoyt Street. Brooklyn Shi I.anilatt ........................................ |M)I • II Avenue. Brooklyn Rolrcrt M. I.jii'le ..................................28 Wot 89 Street. Manhattan Qeorgc l.anfranrhe ................................... 3818 Tililx-t Xvrnue. Bronx Sanford l-ank......................................22T Linden Boulrxanl. Brooklyn Silotnnn Lapidus................................... 3039 Ocean Parkway, Brooklyn Kenneth l-a-nik.....................................365 Tonapkinw Axrnur. Rnaiklyn Seymour Lnuner ....................................... I4TK Bryant Avenue. Bronx Kli Lnzaru ........................................265 Montauk Avenue, Bnaiklyn Jamli l.arariH..................................... KM Stockholm Street. Brooklyn Sidney S. I a aru ................................... 1856 West 4 Street. Brooklyn Klmer Irar ...........................................2765 Sedgwick Avenue. Bronx tieorge C I a-Bo IT................................... 1230 Sheridan Avenue. Bronx Vllirrt larnnA .................................... 3313 Sedgwick Avenue. Bronx Sidney l-cr ..........................................1311 Poster Avenue. Bnmklyn Varon Ulwrn ....................................... 534 Went I4T Street. Manhattan Fred la-liman ........................................ Mil Lincoln Place. Brooklyn I h.irlr Irhiier................................. 3911 ■ II Street. Snnny iile. Quern- Samuel X. I.rhr.......................................34 Barrrlt Street. Brooklyn tiunthrr . l-rineweber .............................. 2806 (’rcston Axrnur. Bronx Alexander l-eirtchy................. 130-411 • 127 Street. South Ozone Park. Queen W illiam l.rnkow-kv...................................2T2 I..i-t91 Strret. Brooklyn Edward l.ernrr ....................................... BOS East 182 Street. Bronx linirpr J. Iexandu ky...............................IT2 Chandler Avenue. Richmond I Ton la-xey .........................................2716 Eruger Avenue. Ilrnnx Sidney A, Irvie ................................... 1WI Wot 85 Street. Manhattan Alvin levin .......................................... 1236 Ward Avenue. Bronx Kohert Levin...................................... 1656 Montgomery Avenue. Bronx Bernard la-vine.................................... I HI Waverly Avenue. Manhattan Jack Levine........................................... 637 Snediker Avenue. Brooklyn l.otrr Irvine................................2511 F’ar Kmkaway Boulevard. Queen Muni- l.rvine ................................................... 1161 Fox Strret. Bronx Morton E. Levitan....................... 236 Wat jean Eourl. Far Kockaway. Queen Nathan Irvine.......................................310 Koi kaway Parkway. Brooklyn Samuel Levine ........................................ 1136 Metrall Avenue, Bronx Sidney Levine ........................................ Ill llcrzel Street. Brooklyn Jr «e Levitt ...................................... 981 Bronx Park Sijuare. Bronx Bolirtt Irvitt ..............................35 Fort Washington Avenue, Manhattan Ira levy..............................................91 llumont Avenue, Brooklyn Jaroh l evy .......................................... IS Birr, her Strret. Brooklyn Jerome I-rvy.......................................... 328 Ea t 197 Strret. Bronx lawrrncc l evy ....................................... HI 15 Jamaica Axrnur. Queen Ironard levy ...................................... 16 West 91 Street. Manhattan Samuel It ! .......................................... 2fl2K |)avid on Avenue, Bronx Domrni k l.ihrralorr ................................ W.l Ea t 1 K Street, Bronx Miruham l.ii hten«tein.......................................... 1713- 71 Street, Brooklyn Jmrph Iuhtm.111 ...................................... I4KI Morris Avenue. Bronx laiwrenre l.iehcrman............................... 1510 Oeran Parkway. Brooklyn Martin l.irher-ou.....................................201 W« t 89 Street, Manliatlan Abraham l.irhnwiu .................................... 1121 College Avenue. Bronx Sidney I. I.ielotein ................................. I We t fill Street. Manhattan Manley W, l.ieth......................................... 1777 - 60 Street. Brooklyn Victor Lindner............................... ......'Ill Ea t 79 Street. Manhattan Hyman l.i| hiu ........................................... 915 • 19 Slrert. Brooklyn I lit I l cio ........................................ 1K2I Palisade Plare. Bronx Jo-cpll laxker ...................................... 2 4 Ludlow Street. Manhattan u-liii I «dato..................................... 320 Eastern Parkway. Brooklyn Jrntme lavewy....................................... 1822 Badeliff Avenue. Bronx Ednard laili ......................... 6123 (late Avenue. Ridgewood. Queen Jack I on.Ion ...................................... 50 West 72 Street. Manhattan William P. Ixionie.................................. 256 Seaman Avenue. Manhattan A'ineenl Loizman ................................... 901 Trinity Avenue, Bronx Julius l.oiilol! ................................... 177 .Alonroc Street. Manliatlan Herman Ixiwell .......................................... 42611 Broadway. Manhattan |o-e|ih l.uharisky ................................. 17 Ea t 105 Strret. Manhattan I. hllles l.una ................................... 510 Ea«t 1.36 Street. Bronx Nathan Luskin ........................................... 1781 Bryant Avenue. Bronx Salvatore l.utri ................................... 182 En«t IDK Street. Manhattan Martin l.uuer ........................................... 1107 - 51 Street. Brooklyn John I- Lynch....................................... 1716 Park A icw Avenue, Bronx Jo-e|4i Lyons................................... 123 Wad w rlh Avenue. Manhattan Henry Max .............................. 250 Fort Washington Avenue. Manhattan Pat«y MkiIik........................................ id Bay 23 Street. Brooklyn Joseph Maher ............................................ 89 79 • 215 Place, ....n- Saul Maii|« n ......................................KM Writ 176 Street. Manhattan Harold A. Maixner.............................. till • 18 Street. Sunny ide. Queen- Joel Ala lino ........................... 353 Fort AAjisliingloii Avenue. Manhattan II, ill'll Alaudel ................................600 AA'est 161 Street. Alunhnttan Lmauurl Mamli-lliaum ............................... 375 South I Street. Brooklyn Howard Marnlelhaum .................................515 We t 151 Street. Alanhntt.in (•rruid Mangone..................................... 126 Ea t 188 Slrert. Bronx Theodore T. Manz.ixirio- ...................... 523 Wr-I 135 Street. Alanhattan Eli ALii'k.......................................... 3280 Koch ami m«u Avenue, Bronx Aristide Marcoviei.................................. 328 West 8.3 Street, Manhattan Alelvin Man u ......................................511 Wr-t 158 Street. Manhattan Alorri Alarkowitz ......................................... 245 Echo Place. Bronx Nichola- Maruk......................................571 S utlM-rn Boulevard. Bn uv Harry Ala ar ky....................... 153 Bearh 86 Street. Koekaway Beach. Queens l’hili|i Mas low ................................... 50 last 98 Street. Alauliatinn Abe It. Mm.......................................... 1332 Em l StrvN, Brooklyn Kal|'h Masters ..................................... 873 En t 91 Street. Brooklyn Meyer Alathi ...................... 108-23 Jamaica Avenue. Ki hrnonii Hill. Queen Sidney Alathi ..................... 108 23 Jamaica Avenue. KiiTimoiid Hill. Queen Meyer Alatlurk .....................................618 Wntkin Street, Brooklyn Joseph Mausner...................................... 1130 Eastern Parkway. Brooklyn Bertram May.............................................. 820 - II Street. Brooklyn Irving May ......................................... 626 Harliry Street. Brooklyn Milton Alayelsky.................................... 427 Van Sielen Avenue. Brooklyn Stuart A. Mayper ...................................316 West 79 Street. Atanhallau Alfred Alazzei......................................2121 Honeywell Avenue. Bronx Armand Maxzola........................................... 1957 I Avenue. Manhattan William P. McDonald..............................416 Manhattan Avenue. Alanlialtati Joseph Mrdaglia.....................................561 West 174 Street. Manhattan Ixmi AlcdwcdofT ................................... 1000 East 181 Street. Bronx Itcrnanl Meluer .................................... 278 South 4 Street, Brooklyn Newton E. Mellzer .................................. 671 West lf 2 Street. Alanhattan Theodore Meltzer.................................... 1789 Bathgate Avenue. Bronx William Mclt cr .................................... 462 East 52 Slrert. Brooklyn ILirry Alenak r ......................................... 875 East 163 Street. Bronx Samuel Menrher .......................................... 1405 Teller Axenue. Bronx Avner Mendelsohn ...................................2M 5 (iian l (xineoutsc. Bronx Milton II. Mendebolin........................ 106 24 • 97 Street. Ozone Park. Qucco Sheldon Mendelsohn..................................«H 7 Putnam Avenue. Queens Alexander Mendes.................................... 556 West 110 Street. Alaiihattjn Irwin C. Mendoza.................................... 1760 Andrew Axenue, Bronx Herbert Mew-on....................................75 West MotJiolu Parkway. Bronx Milton J. MfsiholT ................................. 571 (irrem Avenue. BriM klyn Israel Mrth ........................................ 135 Aertiou Avenue. Brooklyn (irftrge J. Meyer................................... 707 Wr«l 180 Street. Manhattan (ioodnin Meyerowitz ................................ 1140 tjilgate Avenue. Bronx Fredric Meyer ........................................... 1531 - 42 Street. Brooklyn Sheldon (J. Mr vent ................................ 1489 last 8 Street. Brooklyn Lester C. Migdal ...................................851 En leni Parkway. Bnsiklyn Sam Mikanowsky................................. 1492 Montgomery Avenue, Bronx Nichola Alilona ........................................ 65-26 - 38 Avenue. Queen Daniel Aliller......................................3037 Brighton 2 Street. Brooklyn Philip Aliller ..................................... 1012 Sim|i on Street. Bronx Theodore Aliller....................................501 AAe t 11.1 Street. Alanhattan William Miller......................................2822 West 29 Street. Brooklyn Nathan Alilstein.................................... 191 Snediker Avenue. Br siklyn Waltei Mlakowieh........................................... 1118 Avenue R Brooklyn Raymond Minkowsky...................................37« Bedford Avenue. Brooklyn Dominick Alinoto ................................... 158(1 Edison Avenue, Bronx Jack Mironov ............................................ 19.5 Ka l 174 Street. Bronx Alilton Mishkin .............................................651 Fox Street. Bronx Aaron Modansky ..................................... 2825 Eruger Avenue. Bronx Jaeoh Alofsen ein ................................ 1363 • 1 Street, Brooklyn Koliert Molloy......................................628 W est |J7 Street. Alanhattan GOOD LUCK C.C.N.Y 1938 the wish to you from COX SONS VINING, Inc. Established in 1837 131 EAST 23rd STREET • NEW YORK Headquarters for ACADEMIC GOWNS CAPS and HOODS Authentic Styles and Colors JUDICIAL ROBEMAKERS KOOKLYN LAW SCHOOL of Si. Lttwrenec I iiiverititv inviU-8 in- |nirit'X from llioxc sliulciilx wiio wisli lo licyin ihcir law study in June or Sr|ili tnl cr of I DUN. I-or informal ion. address I he Registrar. ST5 Pearl Street, Brooklyn, New York ( ily. Isidore Alololskv ... John Moniek.......... Reno Monti.......... Thomas I’. Moran .. Hyman Mmum hni« li . Alnndel Morril....... Ma Morris........... Simon Morris......... I’aul Mo.lirr........ Tlwinn K. Mishn ... Jrromr K. Alnskovit . Marlin Mo k««in .. Samuel Mo ........... Simon Moss........... Salvatore Moll ...... Nathan Alurlmirk .. Pd ward Alullowney .. .Mm J. Mni|.hy ..... Joseph Mur| hv....... I liar lev M ms...... Raphael Mu-n g. .... Harold Miitniih _____ William lutier|ierl .. Myron M SacrllierK Jark Nairner ........ i tor Na.«y ...... Henry J. N.alh.wison . Ilrslor Neitrnn ..... I harle- ri.h-r .... Sol Nriditt ......... Ia uis Nelson........ |{ol rti Nrnutrr..... M.rahain Nrumaiin . Ii-romr Nrasladt loin. Newkirk ....... Bennett I Newman . I‘hih| Newinark .... Jifse|ih Nirhols .... lUrriat.I Nisenu n ... Sidney Nisyorel.kv . . Harold .............. Nathaniel Nitkin ____ ...............7?« l ri|.’t;s Avenue. Ilrooklyii .............. Ill Fa l I Street. Manhattan ..............IVr Ursl 26 Street. Manhattan ............. 769 St. Ann's Avrntie. Bronx ..............Ml) laietnolit Parkway. Bronx ............ 17V Madison Street. Manhattan ................892 Fairmont I’lirr, Bronx ............... IIKI 16 Street. Brooklyn ..............35 llurnilton Place. Manhattan ..............35 Hamilton I’lare. Manhattan .............«20 Nostrand Avenue. Brooklyn ....... 22-51 • 35 Street. Astoria. Queens .................106 Ka t 171 Street. Bronx ..............69 Manein Street. Manhattan ............ 123 hrystie Street. Manhattan ............ 171 Ashford Street, Brooklyn ............ 1112 Olnr-tead Avenue. Bronx .............. 605 Fa«l 135 Stiret. Bronx ............. 1770 Fast .1« Street. Brooklyn ............... 29-25 • 30 Avenue. Queens ............. 2542 Fast 22 Street. Brooklyn ........... |6l! St. John' I'lare. BrrMiklyn ............... 834 Berk Street. Brant ............. 160V I nion Street. llriMiklyn .............- . 136 Fast 20H Street. Bronx ............. 1161 llarriMl Avenue. Bronx ............... 153 Fast IfiK Street, Bronx ................. «53 Marey I'lai-r. Bronx ............ 17 Drlanrry Street. Manhattan ............ 6(t2 St. Anns Avenue, Bronx .............2312 Prosper! Avenue. Bronx ...........Wtt St. Alarks -Avenue. Br M klyn ............... 1451 17 street. Brooklyn .................. 5V2 Oak Terra, e. Bronx .............. 5107 • 20 Avenue. Brooklyn ............ IV27 I niversity Avenue. Bronx .......... l-t-’T Intervale Avenue. Bronx i0 Slate Slrer-I, West Brichton, Knhmnnd ................ 7.10 Avenue Al. Brrroklyn ............2S55 oitlurult Street. llriMiklyn ............ 155 « resrent street. Brooklyn .............1710 I ri•tun,i I’ark Fa !. Bronx Mare A. ................................................. ton Dooclass Strrrt. Brooklyn David A. Newark......................................... 260 Convent Avenue. Alanhatlan Aaron Novikoil ........................................ I Ml Fast IS Street. Brooplyn Alurray Nu-diatim .......................................... 1613 Craml Avenue. Bronx Jark 1« Ohrrman ........................................97 Sherman Avenue. Manhattan Jark I- Oku ............................. lfi( Bear li 36 Strrrt. Far Rorkaway. Queens JasjM-r Okrrnt ............................................. 1 IMi . 52 Strrrt. Brooklyn S-yriioiir Olrikrr............................................ 1685 Boston Koail. Bronx Norman Olsen ............................................«715 Atlantis Avenue, Queens Irwin ................................................34-06 • 45 Street, I, I. City. Querns Alex Ojmrhinsky ...................................... 1773 l-oiiKfellow Avenue. Bn nx Isidore Al. Oremlnnd ................................... 2845 VAe t 23 Street. Brooklyn Joseph Orenslein ........................................................ 153 Km- Street. Brooklyn Sidney Orrnstein ........................................... «0.16 . 21 Avenue. llriMiklyn Svlomon Orlov,it ......................................... 1350 I’ark I’lare. Brooklyn Harold Orr ................................................... 1425 Wythe I’lare. Bronx llrdM-rt I. Oshrain ...................................... 456 Chester Strrrt. Brooklyn Angelo Fare.............................................26S I'leasant Avenue. Alanhatlan Meyer I’arker ............................................. 273 Cypress Avenue. Bronx Harold I’anlow ............................................... 131« Avenue J. Brooklyn Kalph I’. I’alr-se........................................ 2938 Wallare Avenue. Bronx Cenrce I’,rimer ................................ 47-07 • II Street. I.. I. City. Querns Arthur J. Pamtilli...................................... 600 West 174 Street. Alanhatlan Jvarlrs I’appalarifc..................................... 505 Fast 182 Slr«-et. Bronx (b-orpe I’. I'apps...................................... 302 West 10 Street. Manhattan David C. Paris............................................ 1516 Union Street. llriMiklyn Raymond Parker.......................................... 206 Fast 103 Street. Alanhatlan Simon Paronss ............................................. 1631 tirainl Avenue, Bronv Philip Barren ............................................ 1517 AAalton Avenue. Bronx Solomon Pasiihow ....................................... 501 Sutler Avenue. Brooklyn Alax I’atashiiik ........................................ 1895 Belmont Avenue, Bronx Sam-on Pauxn-r ........................................... «7 Fa.t 35 Slrr-rt. Brooklyn I-ester I’earlman.......................................540 West 163 Street. Manhattan Nathan I’eurlnvan.................................... 1053 New York Avenue. HriMiklyn Bert I’eller ............................................«71« Buy Parkway. llriMiklyn Bernard l’ep|ier .............................................. 1301 Hoe Avenue. Bronv Henry .................................................. 713 Fast 5 Street. Manhattan Alartano Peri..............................................6.16 t ever lit Avenue. Bronx Harold II. Perlman .................................. 1131 Aladinn Avenue. Alanhatlan Airtnr I’erlmuttrr .................................... 151 Fitthth Avenue. Alanhatlan Fdwaril Perot I i ............................. 89-05 ■ 63 .Avenue. FludiuM, Qumi- t armiue J. Per roll a...................................... 15« Moll Street. Alanhatlan I miis IV ............ David Prmin .......... I'mik IVtrelh .. .... Mi Cfellrr bantu ... Frank I’f rrund'.huh .. Donald Cl,illi,- ...... • liri ln- J. I’hotiadis . Imut I’ilK,!' ........ K.iIm'M W. I'inties . ... Carmine Citiln ........ Mortimer I’mlrll ...... I IIH Il I'oll.lll . II.rbrft Poll It lolin Colin ti ....... Max I’.dla.k .......... Isidore M. Poliak ... 'y.lni'i ft. I'ollnrr ... Arthur Poluvky ........ Samuel I’omrruntr . . Irninir Ci,|i ifsky.... Mill. , CojNiu.kx...... Uniore Coppi. h........ Aernnti 0. Porter .... Sidney Co«iil.......... William Co.hit......... S. Powanrr............. Caul Cror-hy........... Henry S. Crr-nuii . . Alaxmilian Cri«e....... Murray Projeetor .... Allred I’roimiU....... Chili,. I. Cryzant .... Irvin Culler ......... Ijwrrim Kirkoa .... Isidore Itader ........ Joseph li.lll.lrlr..... Ilrrmau Ran............ M.mrire Kapktn......... Herman II. Kappa,nut Ira A. RathkolT........ William Ka i j......... Leonard Rainer......... Charles. Kavit-ky...... I.eon Krrlit........... Sidney Re, lit......... Irvin : Keieli........ Irvine Kei liman...... Caul Kriehraan......... I.eoree J. Keirhner .... Seymour Keininn........ Ilrrlirrl R. Keisinan .. Alexander Kenko ..... K.lnard Kralrr......... Murray Kessler......... I Mixer K. Rrynol.ls ... Stanley Kiel........... Max Kiehinari ......... Morris Kie rr.......... Fdward Kirseiifeld ... .Ni hula Kilik ...... Janes . Kmatdi........ Anthony Kinaldini ... Frank Henry Kineler . Mauriee Kolduns........ Kugenr II. Koliert ... Samuel Rolens.......... Ralph . Kolaerlson .. Cornelius F. Roche ... Murray Koekovritz .... Arlliur Rolf ......... Boris Rose............ Sydney J. Ro e ........ rmdd I). Roseman ... Kdear Rosen ........... Harold J. Rose,........ Hymen Rosen............ R it hard K. Rosenlsauni Arthur Rosenlo-re .... Arthur J. Kox-nhere .. Ilrrijamin Rosenlsere .. Harold II Ro.rnlirre .. Harold C. K-.-eider . . Ilohart Rosenlierp .... Isidore Rosenliloom ... ................ .1 Fox Strrel. Bronx ............ . 41.5 Fa t IK I Strert. Bronx ............ Ill Molt Street. Manhattan ............TSICj I nion sraur. Bronx ......-A60| . 21 Avenue. I- I, « ily. Queen ............. 230 B..Iiel Cla.r. Bronx .... . silt West 1.11 Street. Manhattan ............ 1161 l-rivox Road. Bronx ................ 1251 Filler xriiur, Bronx .............«711 2ft Avenue. Brooklyn I : 10 Rant I Street. Brooklyn ............ I”.1 Host 151 Street. Bronx .1022 - HI Street. Jarksori Heights. Queens ............ 1396 Furman Avenue, Bronx ............ 1071 ■ 51 Street, Brooklyn ............ 201 l.er xrnur. Brooklyn ......... Ill Fast 86 Street. Manhattan ...... ... I fa IS Fast II street. Brooklyn ............. 795 Court land Axenur. Bronx ......I2KH ft asliinrton Avrnur. M.inhallan .........I ISO Crrsident Street. Brooklyn ......... 166 Shrflarld xrnue. Brooklyn ............ 2387 Moms Avenue. Bronx ............ 1742 Union Strret. Brooklyn ............815 Steldiiiis Avenue. Bronx ..............895 Brlnxont Avenue. Bronx ............225 Fast I Street. Manhattan ............ 1221 Manor Avenue. Bronx ............ 25 Fast 177 Street, Bronx ............ 137 W’rst 176 Stret. Bronx ..................3131 Sand ciaer. Bronx ................ 1711 • 7ft Strret. Brooklyn ..............710 Fast S Strret. Manhattan ...... 1070 I.i-viii tnii Avenue. Manhattan ............. 711 Fast S Street. Manhattan ............ 108 I'nion Street. Brooklyn ............415 Fa«t .V Street. Manhattan .........511 W«M |50 Street. Manhattan ............ 2502 Fast 21 Street. Brooklyn ............ 1191 Steltliin Avenue. Bronx ......2500 ■ .17 Strert. I.. I. City, Queen ................. 12 Fast 213 Street, Bronx ................ 1729 Fulton Avenue. Bronx ......... 130 Fa«l 67 Street, Manhattan .................. 1307 Mix' Avenue. Bronx ............ 2957 West 33 Street. Brooklyn ............ 1855 Koirart Avenue. Bronx ......... 602 West I Kit Street. Manhattan .................IWt Fast 1X2 Street. Bronx ................ 995 Aldus Strret. Bronx ......... 226S Davidson Avenue. Bronx ..............hVi Fast 52 Street. Brooklyn ......... 334 Fast 15 Street. Manhattan .................. 1472 • 47 Strret. Brooklyn ................ 624 Fast 220 Street. Bronx ............-30 Co t Axenue. Manhattan ............ 1138 A vse Axenue. Bronx ............ 2925 Matthews Avenue. Bronx ............ 2240 W allaee Avenue. Bronx ...... IX Christopher Avenue. Brooklyn .................... IS Avenue O. Brooklyn ............ 44.18 Fdson Avenue. Bronx .......34-15 . .17 Axenue. I„ I. C.. Querns ............ 1165 Oerard Axenue. Bronx ............2810 Bailey Axenue. Bronx ............2 Him kley Clare. Brooklyn .........3019 F. Trenvont Avenue. Bronx ................. M Fast lilt Street. Bronx ................ 1562 • 44 Street. Ilrookylii ............ IWSS Fast 227 Street. Bronx .........211 Fast 15 Street. A|jnhatlari ............ I« l I Hindu Clair. Brooklyn ............2FI0 ■ 76 Street. Brooklyn ......... 60 Clarkson Avenue. Brooklyn .........951 Flatlui'h Avenue. Brooklyn .........2106 Oopsry Avenue. Brooklyn ...... 1120 28 Avenue, lam Island City .............3265 Bainhri l e Avenue. Bronx .................915 Fast 178 Strert. Bronx .................918 l.e rti Avenue, Bronx ................. 182-1 66 Street. Brooklyn ......817 W r t Fnd Axenue. Manhatlari ......... 520 Wr,| DO Street. Aljrihatlan ...............22 Norfolk Street. Manhattan « jrl ................... 11 vv ill K.i-ellhllllll . Nathan Rosenhlnin .... los. pl, Roseiifehl....... N-yiuoni Rosrnslriii . Alauri.e Ku-.nth.il .... Milton Rirsentlial........ Hairy Kosenzvvei .... Nathan Kosen wri ... Abe Ro.hn.sky .......... Harold I. Rosini . . , Seymour Rostirr.......... Avroti II. Ross........ Ih’I hrrI Itolll......... Benjamin lti.llil.ere ■ Kernard Rotli.-nlirr .. Bernard S. Rothenlier In. k Roths. Iiild...... Irromr Rothstrin......... Joseph .................. F.rvrin Ivo ran ........ 1X21 • lint, h Avenue. Brook I vn .. . 17 Fast XX Strrel Brooklyn ---- X ft Fa l 169 Mfe.-t. Bronx ... 115 W.'t 172 trrrl. Bronx 95ti Bronx Park South. Brn-.x .Via W. -t 17.5 Strert. Manhattan ... IIIHI Benson Mr.-et. Bronx 560 Alal.atna Avenue. Brooklyn . 211 Oiran Parkway, Bror.klyn .... ISO F.i-t 17.5 Street. Bronx ,... IftIK Alnhati Avenue. Bronx ... 23X0 I n- lon Avenue, llronv . 2ft5 W --t XI Street. Manh.ittari . .15-37 • 2X street. A-loria. I . I .21 Fast 99 Street. Alanhaltaii .. 1260 Fast X Street. Brooklyn . 1260 Fast 8 Street. Brooklyn ......312 Avenue C. Ilr.s.klyn . W 137 Street. Manhattan ,. .1151 Crarid ownurv. Bronx .. 1660 I nion Street. Brooklyn Com pHmenK of EMBASSY GROCERY CORPORATION 107.0911 GREENWICH STREET NEW YORK WAIkcr 5 8270 Venturing LUCKY HOY Brand Foods Herbert Rubin.......................................... 691 Fast III Street. Bronx Hyman Kuhin ........................................... I SI I Morris Avenue, Bronx Irvin Kuhin........................................ 1175 President Street. Rrooklyn Irvm Kuhin........................................ 1210 Sherman Avenue. Kronx Marvin Kuhin ......................................... 1011 Findlay Axenue. Bronx I XI Rubinstein .................................... 306 West 88 Street. Alanhallan C.ursell Kinlerman...................................... 320 Fast 180 Strert. Bronx Arthur I- Kudnirk.................................. 201 l.imlrn Boulevard. Brooklyn David ................................................... Hinsdale Strret. Brooklyn l.ron KussianoR.....................................3IK Ro. (tester Avenue. Rrooklyn Vi, tor Russo........................................ 9222 Foster Avetiue. Brooklyn Ceorge Kiilnivk ................................... 610 Fa l 12 Strret. Manhattan John Ru e.......................................... 1363 F'ir t Avenue. Manhattan ( arl Saalbarh ...................................... 322 Fast 56 Street, Brooklyn Aimer Sael, ........................................815 West 181 Street. Manhattan llrrliert Sadkin........................ 8909 - .17 Avenue. Joek oii llright . Querns Alex Saiinwsky..........................................215 Axenue A. Manhattan Daniel Salrr............................................613 Fast 170 Street. Bronx Kolieit Sallir ................................. 875 West Fnd Axenue. Manhattan A ito I. Salrrm,................................... 417 Fast I IK Street. Alanhallan Mill.,i, II. Salit ................................1514 Hothainlieau Axenur. Bronx AUdubon 3-0460.1-2 The B«t Since 1883” GEORGE SCHAEFER SONS, Inc. Hudson Valley Farms Products” MEATS — POULTRY — BUTTER EGGS Personally Owned and Conducted Servicing Schools. Camps and Institutions Our Specialty 2291 TWELFTH AVENUE NEW YORK CITY OVER FIFTY-TWO YEARS OF SUCCESSFUL SUM HA. s MEN OF 1938! 15,000 ALUMNI GREET YOU • In your graduation you become members of a dis- tinguished body, and you enjoy your first opportunity to have a real part in forming the C. C. N. Y. tradition. The Associate Alumni has been the support of Alma Mater since 1853- They bespeak your aid. Come to the Alumni Office in the Library Building, and receive a sample of THE CITY COLLEGE ALUMNUS. Ask the Secretary, Donald A. Roberts, T9. Murray Nra-lient......... Xlev.mder S|ri n......... Samuel S|roii iii....... IU maid K . . . . Xllwri ........ Nathan ii—man........... Itxill Sverdll. Il ..... Kniery ene............ n. it .it i r,i,.„ hni.k .... Seymour I aha. 4mik tl . Irvin Talwhnikov........ Xn rlo Tjhit.i ........... Xl.rjlijin Taller........ Mi-1 in TaikIm-I ....... In lilt Tjilllriili,iiiin. Jail. Tanker ............ Niiiiiijii I any............. Jj.l Taulo-r ............. II.uhM Trfinrii........... i luilr. Teperman ........ jn (on! . Tepfer........ jnmrl Tepprr ........... Jonili K, Tr—mjii ....... l-ijel J. lew ....... Jerome Ihoma-e-........... Thor 'IhorMMi ........... • Irmrn Tiekman ......... I Illlll Tllfotll ..... Mortimer Tmlrl ........... John S. Tookrr ........... Kolieil 11 jiiI' ......... Ilyman Y I nw ............ lien | a mi n Trirhter.... Kdward Tri-tram ......... I .an rente I . Troiano .... Harry Tropin-ky ......... John J. Tuomry .............. Mjllliew Turet-ky ...... Jnliu I'hlaner.......... Jnlin I hr............... Paul I'merman............. (Inircr I 'I'n ........... |o eph I Hal ............. Salvature a ile ......... Kraiwi Vexliinrelli .... K-lear Yill.hur .......... Dave ir i ................. Deny Xolanopulo......... XX illiam VYaillrr........ Ilrrlierl XXaener ....... Ma Wald eir............. Cahrirl K. Walilni.iii ... Ilerlierl XX aldman....... Morton . XX aldman .... Mover NX it lin k. ...... itliur Wjlowitz ........ Howard Walrer ............ NX ulter W .mu k ......... Xalter IVaimemtrom .... Harold K. XX jr-luw ......... Mill'll tt Jttelllier ... Moiri- IX at ten I wits.. ............... 7521 . PI vnmr. Brooklyn .................. I.YtO Hill Xvenue. Itn.nv ........7' Bri lltou II Street. Brmiklyn ........... Ill XYcrt Stirri. M.inliattan ................ 2718 Morii vmur, Itn.nv ........... 275 Broome Street. Manliattan .......... JilT.'i liraml tonmur-e. Itn.nv .............21X10 I’m-pe t Xveime. Bronx ............ 1130 Steliliin Xvraur, Bronx ...... ... 3 lr 3 Davidoiii Xvenue. Bronx ............ .XltTh Kenton Xxviiiie. Bronx .......... IIW Ijinjrfellnw Xvenue. Itmnx ...........91 19 Koo-evelt Xvenue. Queen .............. 1625 Fulton Avenue. Bronx ......7.r l Xni terdain Xveime. Manliattan ............ IS.1I XXrl ter Xvenue. Bronx ............. 11.5.5 Slieri.lan Xvenue. Bronx ............ IS.1I XX rioter Avenue. Bronx ............... IK7x • hi Street. Brooklyn ....... 113 Kart IS Street. Manhattan ............. 1354 Kart 19 Stieet. Brooklyn .............. Mi Kart 173 Street. Bronx .............. 1139 • SS Street. Brooklyn ....... 1511 Southern Itoiilevaril, Bronx ........... I IKS I.land (iinnairie. Bronx ............ S7II • K Avenue, Brooklyn ........... 1.10 South 9 Street. Brooklyn ....... 147S XX liitr Plain Itoad. Bronx ..............953 Simpson Street. Bronx .......'209 XX ad-worth Xvenue. Manhattan .....156 XX ad-worth Avenue. Manhattan .............. B71S Bay Parkway. Brooklyn .................30 Clara Street. Brooklyn . 7KI 3 • 97 Xvenue. O one Park. Queen .....50'47 • II Street. I„ I. City. Queen ............ 3078 lohr au Xvenue. Bronx ........ SI I XXr-t 111 Street. Manhattan ........... 708 Kart SI Street. Brooklyn ............. 1368 Stationi Xxenur. Bronx ...................80S Avenue U. Briniklyu .............. 17 Kratherhed Pane. Bronx .............. 1763 lay Avenue. Bronx ......... 500 XXert H0 Street. Xlanhnttan ............. 1902 59 Street. Hr...,klv,. ............ 70 linton Avenue. Brooklyn ..........610 XXert |S3 Street, Manhattan ................ 1816 • 51 Street. Brooklyn ......... 711 XXe t 180 Street. Manhattan .............. 795 Kart INI Street. Bronx ................ 303 - 3 Street. Xlunliatlan .............. 366 South S Street. Brooklyn 11 VXr-t Xlo-lwdii Parkway North. Bronx .....29-15 - .16 Xvenue. I. I. City. Quern- ................ 31 Wert Xlo-lwilii, Bronx ........... 618 VX.-itkin- Street. Brooklyn ........... 1611 Carroll Street. Brooklyn ... 8920 • Ik Street, Jamaiea. Queen .... 7KII • 10 Avenue. Brooklyn ............. 1062 Ka-t 18 Street. Brooklyn ............301 XX r t 81 Street. Manhattan ........... 121 XXe-t 91 Street, Manhattan ......... 2057 Sceotid Avenue, Xlunhaltan Xhraham XX'rlier .......................................... II XX'e t 51 Street. Manhattan Krrdrriek XXelier .......................... 6636 (.ray Street. Middle Xillacr, Queen It'in XX’ei h-ler ....................................... MtO XX ert 190 Street. Manhattan l-a kar XXreh-ler.............................210 Fart Wa hiii tori Xvrmir. Xlanhaltan Joel S. XXrinlw-r ...................................... 9.W XXoodyerrrt Avenue. Bronx la'-ter XX rinl rr rr ................................... 1016 Xlanor Xvenue. Bronx Carl V. Wthtbnyn .......................... 10106 • 116 Street. Ridmoitd Kill. Queen Jamh XXeiner ...................................................... 152 Ka t 171 Street. Bronx Irvin K. XXeiii atten ................................. 21X12 Ka t 177 Street. Bronx Juliu- XXrinrel.................................................... Kart 115 Street. Bronx l e XXein-trin ......................................... 21 Bay 33 Street. llr M klyn Xliraliam I. XXein-leiii ................................ 2715 Clallin Avenue. Bronx Samuel Wrinrtein ......................................... 608 XXrM 117 Sire -!. Xlatihatlaii Sydney XXeinrtein ....................................... 2751 Wallare Xvenue. Bronx Vrnold XXeintraill ........................ 5116 Koit Hamilton Parkway. llriMiklyn Milton XX'einlraiili .................................... 20 Jerome Street. Brooklyn Stanley Wrintraul................................ Fort XX a hin ton Xvenue. Xlarihallan liainliel XXei-ha.Ii .................................... 1659 . 17 Street. Brooklyn David XXei-enfeld ....................................... 331 Ka t 1 Street. Xlanhaltan Harry Wei . ............................................ 1126 Fulton Avenue. Bronx lUrry I Ill Riverdale Avenue. Brooklyn Xlorton Wn— ...................................... 1639 Saint Mark Avmue. Brooklyn Bernard J. XX'ei—man .................................... 1051 Park Plate. Br.-.klvn Irvin XXei—man.......................................... 2056.83 Street. |tn-nklyn Sidney XXei—man ............................................... 1531 Hull Avenue. Bronx Kolierl XXeil .......................................... 1070 Walton Avenue. Bn nx Arthur Welter ........................................... 1592 Jr—up Avenue. Bronx Seymour XYexler..........................................H95 Kairmount Plaee. Bronx John Whitney ............................................. PI9 Aiidul-oii Avenue. Xlanliattan Krne t XX idmayer ......................... .1149 • 85 Strrrl. lark-on llei ht-. Queen- t harle XXilford ....................................... 125 P l Avenue. Xlanhaltan Jr w- XX illiam- .......................................... 51 XXe-t 115 Street. Xlanhaltan Xliehnel XX ilium-....................................... 3328 ■ 7 Avenue. Xlanhaltan Au urt B. Win-lrin ...................................... 1156 Wilkin- Avenue. Bronx Jule- XXi-r ............................................. PS50 Ka l 8 Street. Bn iklyn Yinernl XX ilrii ................................ 6119 Craml Axrtiur. Ma prlli. Queen- Simeon X, XX itlenlier .................................. 2-57 Brooklyn Xvenue. Brooklyn Xruold V. Wolf.............................................610 Rivrr iile Drive. Manhattan Kayrnond Wolf............................................ 750 Crand CiMieonntr. Bronx Xlilton I. Wolf-on ....................................... 1185 Ander-on Avenue. Bronx David A. Wolflhal ........................................ 1027 laingfrllow Avenue. Bronx Nolan XX oik ............................................ II Kart 91 Street. Brooklyn Ja per XXolkoll .................................. 1613 Crandvirw Avenue, F. K.. Qucrn- John C. XX’on ........................................... 517 l-eimx Avetiue. Manhattan Nir-hola- XXomna ......................................... 277 Kart 10 Street. Manhattan ieor r N. Wo-k .................................... 1369 Collr r Avenue, Bronx David XX'rultel .......................................... 559 WilloiiyhliY Avenue. Brooklyn Mar-hall V. Yokel-on ............................... 2511 Ka-t 22 Slim. Bn .klyu Kd ar alorto ............................................ IMi XXe-t 2-5 Street, Manhattan Ijnmi Za| ih'i« kv ...................................... 1.156 Clinton Xvenue. Bronx John nppulla ................................ 99 19 Northern Boulevard, Corona. Queen- Jaiol I. air ..................................... 115 ChrMrr Avenue. Brooklyn Norman arin ...................................... .181 South .1 Street. Brooklyn Kdmuiid XI. Aa-low ...................................... 971 Home Street. Bronx Fred A'ller ............................................. 81 Fealherlied Pane. Bronx Stanley Zelmanovit ....................... 118 21 - 225 Street. Paurelton. Qurrn- Jo-eph A. a-newit ...................................... 515 Kart 5 Street. Xlanhaltan PiHin.ird iminerman .....................................8)lft New lot- Xvenue. Brnoklyi Morri- it ......................................... 19.5-19 ■ 45 Xvenue. Queen- Xrtliur Zitrin .......................................... 2016' 80 Street. Bnxiklyn I.nuretire in ker........................................ PI1) Kutl«l e Avenue. Brooklyn Benjamin urkerinari .................................... 1509 Ka t 172 Street, Bronx A product of MARLIN PRINTING CO., INC. •15 rosi: stri: l:T «09 BEckman 3-0138 MAJESTIC COLLECiE AN NUALS, INC. 50 WEST 17th STREET VAtkins 9-4-180 A R T H II R -S T U I) OS, INC. HI WEST 42nd STREET HRyanl 9-7342 IV: ACKNOWLEDGMENT To I nele Joe llaltur, tlu- watchdog of the Treasury, who has done his jolt of advising with thoroughness and tael that sets a new high. To Mr. Ralph Ccrshaw and Miss Beatrice l urk of the rlhur Studios who went out of their way to please us, and to make the Micicocosm an example of photo- graphic excellence. To Mr. Henry llahcrrnun for mounting many a pre- carious perch to get our candid shots. To Mr. ndrcw Lessin of the Majestic Photo Kngrav- ing Co. for his ingenuity in layouts and humor: and to Mr. Irving Nachhar for his soliering effect on our giddiness. To Mr. lhert Kaplan of the Marlin Printing Co., teacher and critic as well as printer. To Bachrach Studios for the use of tin portrait of Professor Cohen: and to the peda Studios for the view of the College appearing on the dedication page. To Miss Cenevieve Brennan, who loaned us stencils and ty|M d notices, and even served as an excellent portrait subject. To Messrs, latmhardi and Fuller, and the many others oil the custodial stall who extricated us from more than one tight spot. To the gentlemen of the faculty, who faced our flash- bulbs and I.cieas, hut did not bile the cameramen. To II. J.. J. V. and M. S., who supplied the inspira- tion without which the courage to execute such a task as this would never have Ireen possible. . • r
”
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1948
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