Long Island University at Brooklyn - Sound Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY)
- Class of 1941
Page 1 of 104
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 104 of the 1941 volume:
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' yrwrmrmxavgg-erym A - w ..- ,Hw-tam. um. i 7r 7a: 7- Ii b. 7, 1941 8WD LONG ISLAND UNIVERSITY FOREWORB The sound of class recitations, of wildly cheering Garden crowds, of table-tcdk at the Dutchman's; the sound of music at proms and dances, of explosions in the labs, of earnest debate and discussion; the never ending sound of the eleva- tor; the sound of tea cups and of jukeboxes, of band and glee club, of football cleats; the crack of but against ball, the clatter of type- writers, the silent sound of exams, the sound of bells between classes, of tumult at frosh-soph rushes-these form the pattern of four years of collegiate life; this is the symphony of mem- ories that is your SOUND. .1 h... ' . . .. .... -- w, l; . . :4 - 4 In I ' WWW ummiwwwmmg- m-;...:99;::2.-94:mmpu-'nii'amquwv-mz. imzikm Amma-BW-Mnitgu DEDICATIGN 19-11 SOUND is affectionately dedicated to one who as Dean of Women, and Professor of Eng- lish, has guided us well, and GS friend, con- fidante, and adviser has been indispensable. Mildred L. B. de Barritt has earned Q place in our hearts with her sincere friendship, her un- flagging school spirit, her gift of making this university Q friendly place, her sense of humor, and her inspiring belief in us. She dispensed English notes from Chaucer to Saroycm to those who came as students; she dispensed help and companionship to those who came 08 friends. .., .,, u;:::nn:rn.-: ' . 5'va '1 mrfff'f'lriti 51 liaism . E o ; :ch-f 5111:! r. r'r .4'lh 6935:?! a .19. 1 , I-I'.':5r I Rd '13. 'smlflh ;g$zlr ' 4 1,5 ' ;.;.:,.' , g ,- V Hdthhjrira'n'fhn A v J'- h , k: v .n' 1chqu 1141 um am up. fiBlLameEtEwid'ia. 2m; L. RCA Victor His Master's Voice i z-v-nmup. . .: ? L-i-i: '5: I 3495151135m53 I'Hiiii ADMINISTRATNN 3 I Iii iii??? ! i r 3 IBM i '. 39's. 3: J RALPH P. JONAS Chairman of the Board of Trustees BOARD OF TRUSTEES Henry Neumann Murray Beam Edward Lazansky Harry E. Lewis Mitchell May Lewis H. Pounds $??K- 4t OFFICERS OF ADMINISTRATION Officers of the Administration from lei: to right and top to bottom include Frank A. Fall, Assistant to the Dean,- Tristram Walker Metcalfe, Dean; Rob- ert Calvin Whitford, Director of Stu- dents; Lillian Gunning! Bursar,- Mildred L. B. De Barritt, Dean of Women; Veronica C. Gurin, Secretary to the Dean. 1. Machiiuainm' $umyadagliaiqtgw John M. Addison B.B.A., C.C.N.Y., 1934; C.P.A.., N. Y. State, 1938. Instructor in Accounting Balancing balance s h e e t 5 causes unbalanced students. Clair F. Bee 3A., Waynesburg Co11ege, 1925; B.C.S., National Business University; 1926; B.S., Waynes- burg Co11ege, 1928; M.C.S. Rider College, 1929; M.A., Rut- gers University, 1933. Director of Physical Education and Athletics Associate Professor of Account- mg Maker 01 Champs. Gino Bigongiari Instructor in Italian The most distinguished beard on the tacu1ty. Mi1ton 1... Burton B.S., Long 131cmd University, 1936; M.A., Co1umbia Univer- sity, 1937. Assistant in Chemistry Locod boy makes good. And he's pretty, too. Redph 1-1. Cheney BS, Boston University, 1918; MA., 1919; M.S., Harvard Uni- versity, 1922; SC.D.; 1923. Professor of Bio1ogy A moustache as dipped as his speech. Claire Corbin BS, New York University, 1923. Instructor in Retail Distribution She's the 1QdY you see When you want to get a job. Nathan 1. Comfe1d 3A., Long 1s1and University, 1931; M.S., New York Uni- versity, 1935. Instructor in Physics Another 1OCQ1 boy makes good, but this one's got a pretty wife. As a Matter 0 FACULTY Henry Madison Davis B.A., Wotford College, 1916; M.A., Columbia University, 1930. Assistant Professor of Physics, Education I Such a lovely southern accent. Mildred Loxton Barritt de Barritt 8A., Elmira College, 1914; M.A., Columbia University, 1918. Dean of Women Associate Professor of English She has knitted enough for the B.W.R.S. to have socked CI Whole regiment. Leon Feraru Bachelier en droit, University of Montpellier, France, 1910; Licencie en droit, 1911; PhD, Columbia University, 1929. Professor of Romance Lan- Guages The Romantic Professor. igu.A.: :I-hunq.s f 'vuuu .-flw'u .. :rhndfjuilff'NQ-LZryq : Mn ..,:'s-w-nA.-':!f-..c.11-.I.gj:'f-31. 3-b-a .' f uxr;!ryu..u-.gn . g... WQar; -N.. '1 i . .. - 3f . . . . .xi ? .'ii'5;5ri-.'5'3E5l6fi!i.' v131111'11'3'7'4, 9 :1 ilirf.'l'f.yf;'.':lt- 5 f I . 1 '-' n . 233.014.413.43 ' :wr E11en Co1e Fetter BL, Northwestern University, 1925. 1nstructor in Speech Correct breathing for correct speaking starts in the dia- phragm. IGmes R. Foster BA, Drury College, 1913; M.A., Kansas University, 1916; PhD, Harvard University, 1926. Associate Professor of Enghsh The man has no shame, and his jokes are funny. E11101 S. M. Gainer BA, Long Island University, 1936. Assistant in Enghsh Gone with the draft. Marie Hartmann Assistant in Music Her c1assroom has the most comfortable chairs in school. Iacob 1. Hartstein BA, Yeshiva Col1ege, 1932; MS, C.C.N,Y., 1933; M.A., Cole umbia University, 1936. Lecturer in Education, Psychol- Ogy William Marion Hudson B.A., Baker University, 1906; M.A.; Yale University, 1910; LLB, St. Lawrence University, 1933; I.S.D., 1934. Professor of Economics and Socio1ogy A paradoxeq very punctual professor and cm exceedingly well-liked one. W. Robert Irwin B.A., Grinnell College, 1936; M.A., Columbia University, 1937. Instructor in English Que swe11 guy-Qlways smil- mg. Forrest M. Keen B.A., Heidelberg College, 1925; 111332101110 State University, 1 m- 11' l-kiQi'JL'lQJ:Lud-S:J'-U11.2'13;:'..'i. x .; -4.. n4 - n... m x .. a . 3 . 'n... f'a..3'uiu nu:- .Qchhwnnwanijmnaw49$ 1.,W n Instructor in Economics and Socio1ogy They G11 ought to be like him. Dr. Keen, we love you. Iohn Yak Keur B.S., Haarlem Co11ege, H011cmd, 1922; M.For., Ya1e University, 1925; PhD, Columbia Uni- versity, 1933. Assistant Professor of Biology A good heart and. Ct waxed moustache. Paul Kosok B.S., C.C.N.Y., 1918; PhD, C01- umbia University, 1933. Assistant Professor of History, Music Right now he is in Peru inves- tigating irrigation systems! Hugh Gray Lieber B.A., Ok1ahoma University, 1919; M.A., Co1umbiq Univer- sity, 1923. Assistant Professor of Mathe- matics Maybe constant dealings with 1nfinity give him such 01 disre- gard for Time. Raymond Earl Lovett 8A., Co11eqe de St. Laurent, Canada, 1915; M.A., MCG111 University, 1917; P1111, Oxford University, 1921. Instructor in Secretaricd Studies His homework assignments set cm unbe1ievab1e new high, and therefore a new low. Gaynor Maddox B.A., University of Ccdifomia, 1918. Assistant Professor of Journal- ism Gee, CI real live newspaper- man. Garrett Mattingly B.A., Harvard University, 1923; M.A., 1926; PhD, 1935. Assistant Professor of English, History SHAKESPEARE, 'nuf said. Haro1d Madison Messer Ph.B., Brown University, 1916; M.A., Co1umbia University, 1925. Assistant Professor of Biology Blue for venous systems, red for arterial. Richard H. Paynter 3A., Columbia University, 1912; M.A., 1913; Ph.D., 1917. Professor of Psychology Music and poetry for footbcdl- ers, yow. 10M WW. 0 Uni- George Norman Quam B.A., University of South DQ- Eology kota, 1916; M.S., University of W Wisconsin, 1922; PhD, Iowa State College, 1924. ' Associate Professor of Chem- istry WDCOL He wrote the lab book. . Chester L. Reiss HWY, BA, Long Island University, n - 1931; M,A., New York Univer- gnffm sity, 1932. . 1nstructor in Philosophy in: . 0110 E. M. Ruhmer mmw' , Arbiturium, Rea1gymnasium, : umm' Filenburg, Germany, 1919; u SC.D., Universitat Halle, Wit- .mhe- tenberg, Germany, 1924. h 1nstructor in German 1:35 wit. .'. 3 disre- DQVId 1' Nelson . , E1mer Lawrence Sargent BA, Come11 Unlversny, 1915; BS, Colorado State College; LLB New York Law School, 1917; M.S., Rutgers University, 1932- . 1 1922,- M.A., Columbia Univer- '-.:e?.t, 1nstructor 1n Accountmq S11Y, 1925- u :11 A ' 1 - - 51:3 Andre Nico11e istsrsgfacwte P ofessor of Chem , V ' Bachelier es 1ettres, Paris, 1920; He knows some good chemical ' m'ies Diplome d'etudes superierures jokes. .22??? d'histoire, University of Paris, ???;.czd; 1927; Docteur de l'Universite de Dwight L; Scoles 71-93 1. P0118, 1929; 13.3., BereCI College, 1914,1715, 2 Instructor 1n French Towa State CoHeqe, 1920; PhD, 81110111, dapper GUd CI 90001 Co1umbiot University, 1926. - 'M base-runner 100- Professor of Chemistry . Ransom E. Noble 1r. Fritz Semm1er - .fxf-SL' B.A., prlnceton University, 1.932; Erstes Lehrerzeugnisl Lehrer- M.A., 1933? PhD, 1937- seminar Herdcke. Westfcdia, al.5333- Instructor 1n Hlstory Germany, 1922,. M.A., Colum- He was once a Realsilk sales- big University, 1928; PhD, man but hes C11WCIYS C1 gent New York University. 1939. and c1 scholar. Assistant Professor of German Looks cute in CI fencing jacket. Coleman 0. Parsons '.'f,::'.sh. 8A., Columbia University, VViHiCIm 1. Taylor 71' 1928; PhD, Yale University, BA, University of Nebraska. -4 1931. 1891; MIX; 1898; PhD, Yale '7 Instructor in English University, 1901. You never recognize his jokes Lecturer in Education W157 .319 because he keeps CI perfect A shock of white hair and CI poker-face. Lincolnesque Visage. '1 sumfw9ev--$'12 Ww 3..-. an . . Anthony Tudisco BA, Brook1yn Co11ege, 1930, 1AA, Co1umbicx University, 1937. 1nstructor in Spanish VVhCIt CI softbCIH p1qyer, and what a b1oc1: 1911 sombrero! Gregory Dexter chcott 3A., Brown University, 1897; MAW Co1umbia University, 1899,- 13.13., Union Theo1ogiccx1 Seminary, 1900; PhD, Colum- bia University, 1904. Professor of Phi1osophy How de' C1000. Curtis Linvi11e Weathers BA, Wake Forest C011ege, 1920; MAW University of North Carolina, 1925; MA., Co1umbia University, 1927. Assistant Professor Of Bio1ogy Ended his bache1orhood during our four year sojourn. H0ro1d VVeinberger BS; in Chem., Polytechnic 1n- Stitute of Brooklyn, 1931; MS. in Chem., 1933; PhD, 1936. 1nstructor in Chemistry What Ct grand guy. Hugo C. M. VVende1 BA, Princeton University, 1910; Ph.D, University of Pennsy1- vanid, 1918; Professor of History Mapmaker de 1uxe. 13'. :3 g Sir $3 ug- rxr 1: Robert Ca1v'm Whitford BA, CCNY. 1912; M.A., CO1- umbia University, 1913; Ph.D., University 01 111111013, 1918. Professor of Enghsh Life without term-themes is we11 worth 1iving. A word to the Wise is su1iicient. Imwim? 9W I y. 1 Sr Arthur Yates BA, MCG111 University, 1908; 13A,, Oxford University, 1911; Ed M., Harvard University, 1931 Associate Professor of English Democracy's best friend. . ,v 2 Ar ,1! 2'? 1 3 1 4.31;W67;K?ilinhyidmrggpggmfgk1r . , 1. '19; .1 . . 3 ' ' 4, .. 1 . Va. 35451; n . X. l-N Yiimhv KI M ujmln 3 2 T'hh'i' 0 , WVNW wwwww HELP WANTED VASHIER 7N'ig ht cashier in retail men's clothing. hours 4 P.M, 10 1 A.M. daily Hive nightw and all day Sunday; must he I'zht with cash register, mention I'Cl'cr- cncm, t-xlwl'icnrc, education; Salary 5,411; mi 'anccment. YTG Annex. ?NA'. Times mg Semici; r. .1 making years hGS ' ' reg It came :2 1., I . IA . -: ttgeofthe W . ed all other ::.'.- - Forty-crers :19: don the 03;: 1V : beaten :3 It -: .v queramn; 4,: A ! kw; p HM. .t' the tust .753: k presidency to hold it: : ff: anthrax; ?75: :7 class :::;:5: ' N f Shohet. though Harold had been stripped of his sharpie many-colored lab coat, and kid- napped by a soulless FrQ-Temity and CI tribe of degenerate Sop-Omores. Forty-one t u. t 3:31: :75 was thereby the first to win said event W553? , without its chief. The other officers were an, 3:7 t Murray Tassens, Vice-president, and Irene tiersf; Shechter, secretary. . Once upon CI time . . . Tribe members crashed extracurricular i: 9733? there dwelt in the Lomd ot Seawomhakq activities With no hOIdS barred. Whenbthe QT CI small but powerful tribe Yclept Forty-one, emoke cleared ctwcry, there were mem ders Sflder- The class of Forty-one, being the first class In. every concervable actlvrt-yfcdl. reCI y, Were; :.:. 1n the fltth decade of the century, lived up wrlhng, and able Further drstmctlon WC: It 3: to its unique positionwdding numerous added by a Fortyeoner becommg the trrsd tucgjmi 55: Famous Firsts to university history. Student COUHCM representqtrve electef QED; j: During the Reign of the th H under me new communal; trwhheld Od- t' Frosh, the FOFTY-Oners we N? ICIrOId the trces for the ttrst time on pubhcatrons cm .- Men ever to . re t e flrst Fresh In several important clubs Other members . ; Wm the Great Rush, even Of the class were instrumental in persuad- :3:- Lttim'm x -rtlz-. W .. . . . x .244t14m .mhvy . mg, t . e x t, JEEJ'J' - .t,'.'t3!'.K-r.gt+ 1- Jim; .xI-W'Hq 1, H 9 H3 13., gym.l;xuusj.li;ggw Jittv47-r-.L,.'A, ing Seawanhaka to take up an anti-map- making campaign, which over a period of years has been more or less successful. It came to pass in the Year One of the Age of the McCormick Reaper twho thrash- ed all other candidatest, Kate, that the Forty-oners under the generalship of Shet- don the Soph who was vice-president, were beaten by football playing Ringers, mas- querading CtS..,FTmh Men. Our Kate was the first Island woman to win the class presidency, She also was the first Islander to hold that office for three terms, even anticipating President Roosevelt. it he other class officer was secretary-treasurer Ethel Shohet. The Passing of the Pigskin was mourned so loudly that, at the instigation of the Forty-oners, they were again given a sect of priests called Varsity, who worshipped the great god Bat, yclept Foot au, whose high priest is Clair B. Many Forty-oners were stars on the football team from then on. Dolly King made most of the All- American selections the next year. King, by the way, was the first Islander to make the grade. His teammate John, of the never-say-die Yengos, was the first Islander to play on a varsity team and hold a high student government office Forty-oners were the mainstay of the rugby team when 11 gained second place in the Eastern Rugby League, beating Princeton, Yale, Cornell, and yielding only to Harvard the Champion. Forty-oners on the basketball team garnered two national championships eanother Famous First. Placing on basket? ball AH-Americans were Ossie Shechtman, Bill King, Si LobeHo, Maxie Shart, and Butch Schwartz. Forty-oners organized the first rifle team in school history, and kept it going even though they hadn't one ritle. Nor were the fairer Forty-oners idle. They organized the first girls' intercollegiate basketball team at LI. and completed a very tough sched- ule in true Island spirit. Their spirit was unbroken and so was their streak, but you can't win all the time. In the realm of side-line activities, Forty- oners organized the first band to play at gmmw ail university functions. The very first Var- sity Dance, honoring the teams representing Long Island, was planned and operated by Forty-oners. The tribe-rnernber chiefly re- sponsible was Andrew N. Borno, who saw that it grew bigger and better each year. We have had three of 'em so far. A follow- the-tearn campaign was put into action when Forty-oners started the annual occur- rence of trips to see their teams in action in off parts of the country. Our football and basketball squads were among the very first in the country to fly to games. In other words, de Biackboid is on de wing. 'iiiyi;i;n-:4;;n1:ad'asizimlgmmr idn' Iii: v I The class had its share of Just Plain Prize Winners too. Some of our dialec- ticians, meaning one Ikkie Feigeirnan, won commendation from Waiter Winchell for their particularly adroit manipulation of Wincheilisms, a contribution to the English . . . , language of no small worth. V 1 V f ' ' .i Namasm one expec- 1:113:83! h . 'i . .1, 5.55430. 3 Other prize winners were Pauline Aug- Senior officers above are Catherine McCor- . lera for her plan to remodel the college mick, president; Lewis Sheldon, Vice-presi- eHortsicr:?-'9:E '1'? 5M Yard into a park-like campus, and Herb dent; NW Gruder, secretary; and Anne But W341 7'3 1: : g . . . . Grabowsm, treasurer. t After, who took first prize in a national d0 1t... advertising campaign for midget radios. ThereiSCZE 11mg: . 2 ing for their contributions of permanent thatnosucceet: :3 - worth to the university. Fraternities and - .. top. Intte :11: 1 y : y sororitles added power and resti e to the - i . 1nto the next three ears, tern . . . p g ciudm he 3:3 1:: Y pered Of flourishing GreeK letter world. 9 ' course, by added wisdom and experience. tendcnt 31 ice K9751! bit This situation brought forth a rash of new When the Forty-oners metamorphosed Pennsylvazz :e 51 San Clubs and other permanent innovations. into Iun-y-ers, they found that they had 131mm? V333 m . -- placed members in many high and exalted I :g. , fnlw5. t 3' '- v 4'? O 1' As a whole, the class was the first ever to continue the frosh spirit of enthusiasm ' . wusbec$4mmnh , posrtions, Andy N, of the Borno becoming meal, a; L Among the new clubs that were formed, the American History and Government So- iC.'..d:; 7.15 n a ciety and Publicity Unlimited are outstand- i editor of the newspaper. Again the Forty- oners made a Famous First by holding the first Junv-y-er Promenade and thereby set- ting a happy precedent. Topping this, in the class' senior year, Seawanhaka itself won new and greater laurels by being awarded All-American rating in the Associated Collegiate Press. The editors were Forty-oners Irving Feigel- man and Arnold Hano. Other Forty-oners holding important positions on the staff included Sheriey Abrams, Ethel Shohet, Andy Borno, and Herb Rothman. Led by Forty-oners, the football team, between games in a pretty tough schedule, donated their blood to Britain, naturally .. , n4 .. u gin; ruin: 25:5 TIM- :r. ttce-prest- 3' 3:: Ame :: petzment the first grid stars in the country to do so. Class officers in the junior year, not to mention Kate again, were vice-president Lou Sheldon and secretary Frances Kru- Vand. The first two, reelected in their senior year, plus new secretary Al Gruder went on to plan a senior prom to top their junior prom. Class night stood out mainly because it did not harp on the well-known idiosyncrasies of faculty members, a cause celebre with other c1ass nights. Chalk up another pioneering first. Due chiefly to the efforts of Forty-oners, Student Council! headed by Forty-oners John Yengo and Fran Kruvand, passed a resolution recommending service awards for extracurricular activity, presented at graduation to the most active seniors. Now it is HAve Atque Vale tEnglish translationeGet to hell outa' herel. Naturally, as Long Islanders, we of Forty- one expect lowerclassmen to better our efforts for a greater Long Island University. But frankly, we don't see how they can do it . There is one achievement of the Forty-oners that no succeeding class will ever be ab1e to top. In the opinion of everyone present, in- cluding the faculty and the checkroom at- tendant at the Keystone Room of the Hotel Pennsylvania, the 1941 Senior Prom was unanimously voted Utops in hops. The room was beautiful and exactly the right size. The meal, including turkey and all the fixings, was delicious. The nine-piece orchestra was so good even the skeptics were satisfied. One hundred and twenty-six people had a wonderful time rhumba-ing, waltzing, jitter- bugging, conga-ing and Farmer-in-the-Dell- ing. All the boys looked simply wonderfule in fact, Eddie Elkins' mother told him he looked like a gentleman; all the girls looked beautiful. Everybody enjoyed Sheldon and Gruder's kaleidoscope of four years at school. Those two worked so hard for the prom they're still in a daze. The favors, gold keys in- scribed with the university seal and the class numerals, for both boys and girls, couldn't have been more appropriate. Dave Schwartz started with a bang by winning $220 at Ben Bernie's L.1.U.ededicated program just before the prom. George Bock, by popular request, gave out with his prize-winning stories and started the crowd off on a terrific evening that wound up for most of the celebrants early the next morning. As a matter of fact, I'Lover Bock turned up at the baseball game the next afternoon wearing his tux and a derby hat. Dot Ludwig champagned at Leon and Eddie's, Ethel Shohet saw a strip-tease act for the first time in her life at the same place, Andy Borno had a $2.50 steak sandwich, Fran Kruvand, Sy Greenbaum, Sheldon, Gruder and their dates indulged in hamburgerseeand so on and on. To be trite but truthful, the night of May 2, 1941 can't help going down in Long Island University history as the mostwsupply your own adjectiveswprom ever. . v Muiaf.'f 'uuuq.ffl. -G. 7--.. . ??....tL-Vquvnkf-ug:f;-u.gy-snt..;- -s..r...-'j-...Th-ncrn-mffna r-u..r.-f-ju.;;-:-- . .;.;:-w..':f. m - . s: .. ,, Remember the first time we sow the sign ond didn't believe it . . . and how we wondered what the Co- lumbia House wos because it fooked so genteel . . . the first day of school, when we met the upper doss- men and the big shots were distinguished in the con- fusion by the tags they sported . . . but the biggest shots of off were the bosketboff teorn . . Remember Irv Torgoff exuding glomor ond Donny Kopfowitz ex- uding Donny Kopfowitz . . . How can we ever forget Dutch Newman's doubfe-tolk ffortestot ond sconofront and his ontics in the Dutchman's . t . ond fohnny Bromberg's classic substitution in the GardeneffHeigho Bromberg for Stinky Kopfowitzw . . . and Mike Se- witch's magnificent job on 69', Mike Novok of Loyola in the final of the first tournament we won in MSG . . . Do you remember the thrill of the first big Gorden gome, and the indescribable atmosphere of the Pharmacy court . . . It's hard to forget Ben Brecher's outlook on like, otnd George Rothmon running Seowonhoko with Hudes Ullmon ond firnrny Sherman kibitzing ire the new long CigoretteseffVJhot are you smoking, baseball bots? t . . . Two tourney championships . . . Those were the years we hoot Abromowitz on first base and Morty Nosh on o soop-box . . . ond Honnoh Ziering fording it over the Athletic Office . . . and the two slowest operations in school, fulie's elevator and Pete Simpson taking attendance in sophomore Philo We've never ceased to morvel over Julie's phenomenal memory . . . whot o cfeotring-house; he never forgot 0 message, o force, or or ffome . and our first froshe soph rush, with Lenny Kotin co-storred with the girdle that mode his foureyeotr reputation . . . and Bob Taylor putting Morgieis gym bloomers on the flog-pofe How can we ever forget the annual focufty-coed soft- ball game, with Deon de Borritt serving tea in the in- field! Sid Kotz imitating Mr. Burton in the outfield, and Dr. Nicolfe's stond-out performance between third base and home . . . Milly Eichef, the senior most likely to succeedwshe ofreody has or job A . . Andy N. Borno's insistence on the middle initial, and Hetto 1o Yopchik's new name for him . i . frv Feigelmctn's cfossic Bubblesw in o Student Council meeting, and Hono's HOrder! . . . Beer . . . fdot Volentes stocks and Marie Fogus' red knee socks . . . Two Tourney championships and Dot Ludwig's efopernent during Christmas vocation and explosive pers:..,.. Abrams' peril?- r: Street . . . TV : i: Dr. Keen'S 5759 out the rchwr: Shohet's 39531:: tffCopy, cop's 53? money, money Squeeze and W313 versus ASU . . Y . . . Yengo versus the library . . , W- freshrnen kidnaps dam and paraded wear and merchurc wrecked the Ten E Kuhn from scchurj . . . The contrcve stands for in frcn: Liam: mtick-mk . . . The b3; rnent in MSG Indigestion , f I nineolcfock cl Bulbul Josie Pincus' hats and the HPincus is in Town pin she got from Leon and Eddie's after the Senior Prom . . . what a Prom; we'll never forget that . . . Bob Resnick's rushing business in Philo 22 notes, and the hissing and toot- stamping that went on when anybody tried to sneak out . . . Laurel and Pat . . . Levy versus Yengo . . The gridders' blood for Britain, and the American Way dance that never came off . . . Buck Lai and Mary Ma- neri, Mimi Dressler and Gene Lore, Sy Green- baum and Franny Kruvand, Bob Taylor and Sidley Marks, Lou Sheldon and Doris Schu- pak, Shirlee Feld and Ollie Scharf, Shirley Golden and Elliot Gatner, Marie Fogus and Chris Papianou, McCormick and Callahan, and Shechtman and Elkins . Waxman's explosive personality in the labs . . . Sherley Abrams' perfumes . . . Rushing to make the movies before the prices changed at five . . . The mad scramble getting enough program cards to get basketball tickets for all your friends . . . Butch, Maxie, Dolly, Little Butch and all the boys pitching pennies on Pearl Street . . . Two tourney championships . . . Dr. Keen's classes on the root! and even with- out the roofewhat a swell guy . . . Ethel Shohet's HDetarnation Pleasel' and SOUND lHCOpy, copy, copy, cuts, cuts, cuts, money, money, money . yowll . . . Information Squeeze and Walcott's limerick . . . Yengo versus ASU . . . Yengo versus Seawanhaka . Yengo versus . . Freshman maps in the library . . . We'll never forget when our freshmen kidnapped soph president Don Gior- dano and paraded him around in long under- wear and merchurochrome; and George Bock Wrecked the Tau Ep frat house to rescue Hal Kahn from sophomore-administered tate . . . The controversy over what the S. l stands for in front of Pic's name . . . Albro T. Gaul's muck-raking campaign in Seawan- haka . . . The ballet-cheering squad excite- ment in MSG . . . Four years of monotonous indigestion Futile attempts to avoid nine-o'clock Classes making out programs in Bulbulian's office . Number 19 reserved for King . . . The day of the Great Draft when we all sat in the Dutchman's waiting to hear the numbers calledeand Butch Schwartz yelled, HThey got me! . . . llWhat time is it? every time a basketball player walked in holding his wrist out at a 90-degree angle lean Collins and Eugenie Coxls sister act . . . Ann Posner calling Sy Levy Huncle . . . lune Birkins' pink cheeks giving her a perfect Dutch complexion . . . Marty Bloomls dignified mien and jitterbug soul . . . Tommy Valinoti's grey telt homburg . . . Dr. Paynter's ties shrieking out loud . . . and his punching-bag exhibition at the Carnival Arnold V. Goulding's horn-rimmed spectacles . . Iohnny Gurka with a loud plaid shirt . . . The to-do over Helen Pause's haircut when we were fresh- men . . . Those days at the beginning of each semester when we came back to school to find the '.stairs painted bright red . . . The mob in front of the tirst-tloor bulletin boards when everybody tried to get their room numbers at once . . . Cries of HRinger', when Milly Wilson played for SOUND in the three-man basket- ball game with Seawanhaka . . . Pete up on a ladder ringing the bells for classes Free pretzels in the Dutchman's and the days way back when there weren't any booths in front and we all sat at tables in the back . . . Dicky Isaacs, a tour-star manager . . . Selma Rubin's executive appearance . . . Anaphy exhibit nights and all the old grads coming back . . . Prof. Yates' propensity for Aristotle's Cave of Shadows on freshman English themes . and the cheeping of new-born chicks in all the third-tloor labs , . . Doc Cheney's fresh! starched, white lab coats, a new one for each day . . . The crap-games in the tourth-tloor men's room . . . Decorating the Men's Lounge University's Hall's yearly Christmas tree, and the time everyone had for dances decorating it and singing carols . . . Prof. Kosok swearing at the Chorus members when we were freshmen . . : And how worried we all were when we were yanked out of classes to be photographed by Davidlee von Ludwig tor the Handbook that never came out . . . The heavy traffic in bio plates; more people copied those than Klein's copies Paris styles . . , Attempts to sell freshmen lined up in front of the bookship the used books we didn't need any more . . . Two basketball champion- ships . . . Senior Week . . . Swell guys and gals and profs . . . GRADUATION. Hamid 1. KW 7y Mywv y N yy ,2in 1-H. 5. ' t - .' M 1 N-....;;;;. Ctrb, LL .h... .tngatatw $3112335$ meme . 1M9Mumw mp... iNIiIfuu :1, M1..1..u.-:5m .-'U;mv..un.h:h .1. 1.1 Sherley Abrams 10w Alpha Pi Journalism Newspaper Seawcmhqka 1, editoria1 board 2, 3, managing editor, 4; SOUND 3, managing edi- tor 4; RLHS. 2; Psych HS. 3, 4; Board of Pub. 3, 4; Pub1icity Unlimited 3, 4; Dean's List,- Senior Prom Comm.; Optimates 4. Harold L. Augenstein Anthony Barbaccicr A1phq Gamma Beta Science Medicine Anaphy 4; Catodyst 4; Inter- frqtemity Council 4, Spanish Club 4. Seymour Bier Accounting C. P. A. Accounting Society 2, 3, 4; Three-mcm basketbQH intra- murcds champ 2; Five-man basketbaH intramurals Champ 3. Walter Astor Accounting CPA. Accounting Society 1, 2, 3, 4; Romance Language Hon- or Society 1, 2; Intramural Basketball 2; Intramurd Handball 1; Wequctrrcm 4; Rifle C1ub' 4. LIU 1941 Elmore Baber Science Research Carver Club 2, 3, 4, Librar- ian, Brook1yn Civic Orches- tra 2, 3. Pauline Auglera Iourncdism Advertising Psych. Honor Society 4; Glee Club 4; Editor Review 4; Seowanhaka 4; 1. R. C. 2; RLHS. 2; SOUND 1. Samuel Bergholtz Alpha Gamma Beta Accounting Accounting Jerome Elliott Bates Psychology Psychiatric Social Work Psychology Honor Society, Vice-president 3, president 4. Seymour Bimbach Science Medicine Catalyst 4; Band 4. June Birkins Physiccd Education Teaching B1ackbirdettes 2, 3; Grid's Athletic League 2, 3. LIU 1941 Claire Blumenreich Phi Gamma Tau Menorah 1, president 4; Chancellor Phi Gamma Tau 4; RLHS. 4; Ed. Honor So- ciety 4; Sec. Studies Club 1; Student Council Rep. 4; Glee Club 4; Women's Ad- visory Council 4; Optimates 4. Miriam Bortniker Journalism Newspaper Romance Language Honor Society 2, 3; Secretarial Studies Club 3, 4. lean Maria Collins Sigma Omega Phi Economics Business Sec. Studies Society 1, 2, 3, 4; Accounting Society 2, treasurer, 3, 4; RLHS. 4; Psych. Honor Society 3, sec- retary 4; Le Cercle Froncais 3, 4; Glee Club 4. Minerva Gloria Blaustein Psychology Research Charter member oi Dentahs, Dramatics Socieiy. George Edward Bock Chemistry Izledicme Varsity baseball 1, 2, cap- tain 4; Catalyst 3, 4; Dru; matics Society 2; FOX Ama- teur Hour firsbprize winner 4; First prize, Catalyst Ex- hibit 3. Samuel Iason Budowle Biology Teaching Biology Josephine Comunale Sigma Omega Phi Economics Teaching Varsity Dance Queen 4; Chancellor, Sigma Omega Phi 4; Pan Hellenic Council, secretory 4; Newman Club; Circolo Dcmte. Martin Bloom Biology Research Teaching Optimates 3, 4; Anaphy, treasurer 3, 4; Educational Honor Society 4. Andrew Nobile Bomo Economics Economist Seowonhakq editor 3, busi- ness manager 4; IRC. Vice- president 3, president 4, Manager Rugby Club 4. Seymour Cohen Accounting C. P. A. Three-mcm basketball Championship team 2; Five- man basketball champion- ship team 3; Accounting Society '2, 3, 4. Noel Comade Chemistry Chermst Catalyst 2, 3, 4; Brooklyn S y m p h o n y Orchestra. 2; Lancet 3, ; LLU. Strmg Orchestra 3, 4. 'Ertwmu-Gi dtunnthiamwi. ' ' . , . V . iv a . V f -313. N :LCEWPWEP . , .. MM, . -- . u. -x .. ....a-.. . --.. Aa-:.- r- vm-.w.m rv-u- -.. y. r F. .;3.v.. W w 'v S 90' O f .I. dun: L's Lm .-. v KL ,u ,a. m. w m w n L 5 .JL kLLm- . . .. ; -- ,.;4 u m ... WM... .m;,; . v . , a p . n ' V 7 1 l . g I ?;wgtw . V , : . . . , H i .. . . .1 2.3 .wnmvwgkr. . L . . . . ,. . . , .u. A? . . . JV - Wmv 1.-. Irving Cowcm Chemistry Teaching Secretary Catalyst 3, 4; Edu- cation Honor Society 4; President Metropolitan Inter- collegiate Chemical Coun- cil 4. George H. Cronn Biology Medicine Fencing team 1, 2, 3; An- aphy 4. Mildred Eichel Sec. Studies Teaching Secretarial Studies Club 1, 2, president 3, 4; Student Council Representative 2; Optimates 3, 4. Irving Gordon Feigelman Tau Epsilon Social Sciences Teaching Seawanhakq 1, 2, 3, Co-edi- tor 4; SOUND 3, 4; Review 1, 2, 3, 4; Board of Pub. 3, 4; Psych. Honor Society 3, P. U. 3, 4; Wequarrcm, pres. 1, 2, 3, 4; Tau Epsilon, chan- cellor 4; Rifle Club, pres. 1, 2, 3, 4; 1. R. C. 1; Am. Hist. 0nd Govt. Society 2, pres. 3; 1. F. C. 2, 3, 4; Writers Work- shop 3; Band 2. Eugenie M. B. Cox Sigma Omega Phi Secretarial Studies Teaching Secretarial Studies Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Accounting Club 2, 3, 4; Deutscher Verein 2; Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 4; Gaelic Club 4; Soph Vigilantes Committee. Andrew G. Crowley Economics LOW Optimates 4; Gaelic So- ciety 4. Edmund Ioseph Elkins Rho Sigma Delta Science Medicine Seawanhaka 1, 2, 3, 4; R0- mance Language Honor So- ciety 2, 3, 4; Rugby team 1, 2, 3, 4; Vice-president Rugby Club; Varsity Club; Spanish Club Play 1. Shirlee Hope Feld 101a Alpha Pi Secretarial Studies Business Circulation manager Sect- wanhaka 3, 4; Head secre- tary Athletic Office 2, 3, 4; Secretarial Studies Club 3. LIU IMI: Kenneth Ehlers Phys. Education Teaching V arsity football 3, 4; Varsity basketball 2, 3, 4; Freshman basketball; Varsity baseball 1, 2; Varsity Club; Evening Session 4. John Evanauskas Accounting Accounting Accounting Society 4; New- man Club 1; Intramural bas- ketball champonship team 3. Dominick Florio Biology Medicine Evening Session student. Patrick Florio Chemistry Chemist Evening Session student. LIU 1941 William Forman Chemistry Medicine Deutscher Verein 3. Dorothea G. Foster Mathematics Teaching Blackbirdettes 2, 3; Girl's Ath1et'1c League 2, 3. John G. Fuhrer Biology Research William A. Fuchs Ir. Philosophy Teaching Dentistry Newman Club 3, 4; Interna- tional Relations Club 3, 4; Dentalis 3, 4. Joseph V. Giglio Phi Tau Lambda Shirley Valya Golden Iota Alpha Pi Secretarial Studies Teaching Executive member, Drama- tics Council 2, 3, 4; Review, editorial staff 1, 2, 3, asso- ciate editor 4; Seawcmhctka 1, 2; Ed. Honor Society 4; Chorus 1, 2; Secretarial Studies C1ub 1, 2, 3, 4. 310109 Y Dentistry Marie L. Fogus English Librarian Optimqtes 4; Review 4; Stu- dent librarian 3, 4. Clarence Robert Freundlich Sigma Phi Delta Merchandising Buying Psych. Honor Society 3, 4; Merchandisers 2, 3, 4, vice- president 2, chairman Mer- chandisers Dance Committee 3; Intramural softball 3. Bamet Benjamin Gelber Phi Tau Lambda Accounting C. P. A. Educationod Honor Society 4; Accounting Society 2, 3, president 4; 1ntrc1murc11 5- man basketball champions 3; Freshman basketball. Ruth Roslyn Goldshine Iota Alpha Pi Secretarial Studies Office Management Iota Alpha Pi, corresponding secretary 3, chancellor 4' Pom Hellenic Council, pre51- dent 4; Women's Advisory Council 4. 't'nbu-hk , , , -4. , $1.. 'LKJ .HLxud-J. IA xmugmmaicSrarrearz... Sp... :2. ,. '1 . mum: muhaxhwiagg ERNQ , .-. n;x4w x J'JMI :2. . ww. Louis Goldsmith Accounting Accounting Accounting Club 3. Sydney Goldstein Ivy Club Chemistry Graduate Research Evening Session student. Seymour Greenbaum Phi Tau Lambda Science Dentistry Spanish C1ub 1, 4; Chan- cellor, Phi Tau Lambda 4. Jacob Gross Chemistry Research Evening Session Student Counc11 3; Deutscher Verein 1; Catalyst 4. Ira Goldstein Science Lancet 3, 4; Catcdyst 3. Arnold V. Goulding Psycho1ogy Medicine Band 3, 4; Psychology Honor Society 3, 4; Glee Club 4; First Aid Instructor 2, 3, 4; International Relations Club 1. Emanuel M. Greenberg Rho Sigma De1ta Science Optometry SOUND Staff 4; Dramatics Society 4. Ruth Mitzi Gross Iota Alpha Pi Economics Economist Romance Language Honor Society 2; Iota A1pha Pi, chancellor 3; Psychology Honor Society 4; Secretarial Studies Club 4; Chorus 1, 4. Medicine L111 194lh; I W 1 t l 4' 1 1 Anne Marie Grabowski Sigma Omega Phi ; History Teaching 5 Chorus 1, 4; Ed. Honor Soc. ' 4; 1. R. C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Am. Hist. and Gov't Soc. 3, presi- dent 4; Newman Club 3, 4; Senior Class treasurer; Co- chairmcm Social Committe. 4:77: 4 Jerome L. Greenstein gm, Science Teaching H Psi 2, 3, 4; Catalyst Treas- 1.; urer 3, 4. f? 5'. Victor Gross Economics Teaching Educational Honor Society 4; Chess Team and Club 3, 4. Q . ... L NJ 1941 James George Halulakos Science Medicine Intramural basketball 1, 2; Intramural football 1, 2; Chairman, Greek War Relief Drive, L. 1. U. Chapter 4. Irving Herschcdt Philosophy Business Table tennis team 3, 4. Richard Isaacs History Business Manager, basketball team 2, 3, 4; Basebodl 4; American History and Government So- ciety 3, 4. Alvin Gruder Phi Tau Lambda Biology Teaching Anaphy, vicepresidem 4,- Senior Class secretary; Sen- ior Prom Committee, chair- man; Varsity Dance Com- mittee. Lillian Hannah Hammond Phi Gamma Tau Retail Distribution Merchandising Psycho1ogy Honor Society 3, 4, secretary 3; Merchandisers Club 2, 3, president 4. George P. Holtie Evening Session Psychology Social Work William Kagan Science Medicine x. giscl-liiQ'QA-QLRL 13.13;de 1 3'. man. , .3 1. 3.1-4 Iohn Gurka English Writing Tennis team 1, 2, 3, 4,- Re- view 3, 4. Arnold Hano Tau Epsilon English Newspaper Seawanhaka 1, 2, 3, co- editor 4; SOUND 4; Board of Pubhcations 3, 4; Student Council 3, 4; Psych. Honor Society 3; Publicity Unlim- ited 3, 4; Wequarrcm 3, vice- president 4; Rif1e Club 4; RLHS. 1; 1. F. C. 3, 4; Tennis Team. Iack Benjamin Hosid Chemistry Chemist Psi, secretary 3, 4; Catalyst 3, president 4; Optimates 3, 4; Seawanhakct 2; Student Council Representative. Milton Kaplan Science Medicine Catalyst .. Chemistry Honor Society 3, 4. .L' V1k S1. Ugh; umaysh'u' x m m an .... nus. nu huh Nt- - u .. h'w w-. .annix .A. .mmemmy? Jwgww$3g$3J.w.....$ ., , ........ .... . .. . .. ,. . .m....:. 3 y . baa Ethel Ann Katz Physical Education Playground Director Graduate of Savage School for Physical Education. Gerald Kaufman Phi Tau Lambda Biology Histology Lancet 3, president 4; Cata- lyst 2, 3, 4; Psychology Hon- Zr Society 4; Seawanhaka Leonard Kotin Selence Medicine William Buck Lai Ir. 1ournalism Air Corps Varsity baseball 1, 2, 4; P'ubhcny Unlimited 4; Var- s1ty Club. Olga Kauifer Secretarial Studies Business Deutscher Vere'm 2, 3, 4; Secretarial Studies Club 1, 2, secretary 3, Vice-president 4; Women's Advisory Coun- cil 4. Iames Kennedy Retailing Naval Air Corps Merchandisers Club 1, 2, 3, 4. Frances Kruvctnd Iota Alpha Pi Science Research 131.115., secretary 1, vice- president 2; Lancet 2, 3, 4; Span. Club Z, 3; Social Com- mittee 2, 3; AMS award 3; Varsity Dance Committee 3 4; Anaphy 4; Woman's Ad Council 4; Vice-president SSGA. 4; Awards commit- tee 4; Optimates 4. Moe Lehrer Dentistry 2, 3; Science Dramatics Society 1, Anaphy 2. LlU 1941:: Marguerite T. Kilcourse Physical Education Teaching Newman Club 3, 4; Psychol- ogy Honor Society 4; Gaelic Society 4; Chorus 4; Wo- men's Advisory Council 4. Angelo Antonia Labbate English Teaching Circolo Dante 1, 2, 3, 4; Newman C1ub 1, 2, 3, 4; Spanish Club 3; Romance Language Honor Society 3, 4. Max Levinson Alpha Gamma Beta Science Dentistry Dentals 4; Intramural soft- ba11 2; IntramurQI football 2. -ZLIU 1941 Saul Likofsky Chemistry Research Catalyst 3, 4. Edmund H. Lustgarten Biology Dentistry L. 1. U. Band 2, 3, 4; Psy- , chology Honor Society 4. Henry McLin-den 1 Alpha Gamma Beta 1 Merchandising Business 1 Merchandisers Club 2, 3, 4; Varsity baseball 4. Bernard E. Lewis Alpha Mu Sigma History Teaching Handball Team 1, 2; Am. Hist. Club 2, 3, 4; Intramurcd boxing champ 1; Intramural doub1es handball champ 1; Dramatics Society 3; 1RC. 2. Eugene Lore Aviation Iournahsm CAA. student pilot 4. HistCry James I. Mack Alpha Gamma Beta Journalism Radio David Mendelson Chemistry Plastic Chemistry Catalyst 2, 3, 4; Psi 3, 4; Student Council 4; Brooklyn Civic Orchestra 1, 2; Glee Club 1. Pearl Lifschitz Secretarial Studies Business Secretoricd Studies C1ub 1 2, 3, 4. ' Dorothy Ludwig 101G Alpha Pi Enghsh Teaching Brooklyn Civic Orchestra 1, 2, 3; Chorus 1, 4; Dramatics 2; Psycho1ogy Honor Society 2, 3. Catherine B. McCormick Sigma Omega Phi History Teaching Varsity Queen 3; Class pres- ident 2, 3, 4; Blackbirdettes, captain 3; 1.R.C. 2, sec. 3, vice-pres. 4; Am. History and Gov't Club 3, vice-pres, 4; Ed, Hon. Soc. 4; RLHS. 1, 2; Student Counci1 1, 2, 3, 4. Franklin W. Morton Ir. Pohtical Science Law Freshman basketball; Carver C1ub 2, 3, 4,- Spcmish Club 3, 4. r . , . . 4 3.: .A .. . . . x. A . m C m lib... -?Lihlr ? in uh I t. . 7L :FII W m 51; :st 1-2335 w. w m m ,m m m 4 .m 5352?: $333? . . . Iml ..1.ws.....,.$..E: Accounting Economics Accounting Society 1, 2, 3, vice-president 4; Deutscher Verein 2, 3, 4; Education Honor Society 3, secretary 4; Optimates 3, 4. ' --u--m 3... 3....- Elizabeth Neuschaeier Sigma Omega Phi Teaching Milton Leonard Oretsky Accounting C. P. A. President Accounting Society 2, 3, 4; Student Counc'11 Representative; Educationd Honor Society 3, 4. Evrigle Petrakos Chemistry Laboratory Assistant Robert I. Resnick Accounting counting Society 2, Student Counci1 Representa- Society 4; tive 2, 3. Accounting Charter member of the Ac- 3, 4; Seawanhaka 4; Henry Neuschaeisr Accounting Teaching Economics Business Accounting Society 1, 2, 4, president 3; Deutscher Ve- re'm 3, 4, treasurer 2; Edw cation Honor Society 3, Vice- president 4; Optimates 4. Wanda Pacwa Sigma Omega Phi Merchandising Business Blackbirdettes 2, 3; Girl's Athletic League 3; Seawcm- haka 2; Review 3; Merchan- diser's Club 1, 2, 3, 4. Iosephine Pincus Iota A1pha Pi English ciety 4; 2, socia1 chairman Herbert Rothman Rho Sigma De1tot Science nationa1 Re1ations C1ub. Teaching Chorus 1, 4; Ed. Honor So- Sec. Studies Club 1, 2, 4; Pom He11en'1c Council 2; 10th A1th Pi, chancenor Lcrw Dramatics OUND 4; Inter- L111 1941 Helen Ottilie Pause Phi Gamma Tau Mathematics Teaching Deutscher Verein 2, 3, 4; Ed. Honor Society 3, 4; Psych. Honor Society 4; American Hist. C1ub 4. Thelma Pincus Ups'11oh Phi Merchandising Buying Merchandising C1ub 2, 3, 4. Harvey Rothstein IU 941 Sidney Schachtmeister Doris Schupak Upsilon Phi Secretarial Studies Teaching Secretarial Studies Club 1, secretary 2, 3, treasurer 4; Chancellor, Upsilon Phi 4; Pan Hellenic Council, Vice- president 4; Women's Advis- ory Council 4; Ed. Honor Society, Vice-president 4. Lewis Sheldon Phi Tau Lambda Chemistry Chemist Class vice-president 2, 3, 4; Anaphy 4; Senior Prom com- mittee; SOUND; Junior Prom committee; Seawanhaka; Chairman class night. Selma Rubin Upsi1or1 Phi Merchandising Merchandising Merchandisers 2, 3, 4; B1ack- birdettes 2, 3; Optmqtes 4. Charles G. Scheurenbrand Mathematics Teaching Vocationcd Guidance Psychology Honor Society 3, 4. Maxwell Shari Accounting Army Freshman basketball; Var- sity basketball 2,-3, 4; Mem- ber National Championship Team 2, 4. Ethel I. Shohet Iota A1phc1 Pi Ioumcdism Newspaper SOUND 2, managing editor 3, editor and business man- ager 4; Sectwcmhaka 1, edi- torial board 2, 3, 4; Board of Publications 2, 3, 4; Stu- dent Council 3, 4; RLHS. 1, 2; Secretary-treas ure r sophomore C1CISS; Publicity Unlimited 3, 4; Psych. Honor Society 3, 4; Anaphy 4; Sen- ior Prom Committee; Dean's List; Chorus 1, 4. Philip Samuels Ralph Leo Schuman Phi Tau Lambda Biology Teaching Anaphy 3, 4; Lancet 4. Oscar Shechtmcm Psychology Army Freshman basketball, cap- tain; Varsity basketball 2, 4; captain 3; Member National Championship Team 2, 4; Varsity basebaH 1, 2, 4. Lawrence Siegel a.?.waber. QxMXJJ -rr -...... -p .V. wk. ix Fry $5,. Gollvx. 1w: ' ' - 'L inky , ! W3 -, Pt g$g 437-4 :k-.q, evuk . ugkagag gwmmwwgmww, g h x I Nnhzmwwnwbam Murray Silberberg Arthur Silverman Biology Bacteriology Accounting CPA. Anaphy 3, president 4; Lan- Accou t' S ' cet 2; Catalyst 4; Seawcm- nmg OCletY 3' haka 4. Mildred Silverman Robert Simpson Upsilon Phi Secretarial Studies Woman's Advisory Council 4; Pan Hellenic Council 4; Carver Society 3, 4; A. S. U. 1, 2, 3, president 4; Secre- tarial Studies Club 4. Bernard Sokol Irving H. SokoloH Accounting Accounting IVY Chlb Accognting Society 2, 3; Psychology Social Work ?mencan. Student Union 1; Freshman manager, basket- , 3? Rev1ew 1, 2, 3; SeCi- ball; Evening Session. quhakcx 2. Ruth Jane Strauss Ecopomics Business Sec. Studies Business gsmstqnt Manager, basket Secretarial Studies Club; ' all team 1, 2, 3; Assistant Glee Club 4. Manager, baseball team 2, Manager 4. Ira Stieiel Isidore Sohn Seymour Steinberg Sigma Tau Phi Science Dentistry Dentalis 3, secretary 4; Fencing team 4. Robert Taylor Alpha Gamma Beta Merchandising Army Merchandisers 2, 3, 4; Intra- mural football 3, 4; Band 3, 4,- Intramural boxing 4. 1111 1941 Thomas Louis Valinoti Biology Research Newman Club 1, 2, presi- dent 1; Glee Club 4; Table Tennis team 3, 4, co-cap- tain 3. John Yengo Alpha Gamma Beta Economics Business Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Cir- colo Dante 1, 2, 3, 4; Alpha Gamma Beta, chanceHor 1, 2, 3; Student Council, treas- urer 3, president 4; Intra- mural boxing champ 2, 4; Chairman Varsity Dance 3, 4; Varsity football 3, 4; Var- sity baseball 2, 4. Jose Suez Sc1ence Medicine Evening Session student. Chemistry Arthur Ticker Chemist Monroe Waxman Chemistry Research Optimates 3, 4; Education Honor Society 3, president 4; Catalyst 2, 3, Vice-presidem 4. Irving Zeitlin Accounting Accounting Varsity basketball 1, 2, 3. Ida Valente Technician Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4, Circole Dante 1, 2, 3, 4, Biology Herbert P. Weisel Accounting CPA. Accounting Society 1, 2, 3, 4, Saverio Maidu Alpha Phi Delta Chemistry Graduate Research French Club 2; Evening Ses- sion student. . -- '. Wimp ' . . . a 3?- 3331.. hat. .5 M. Na .. W hh- Na xyw7 z W 1;? CV? . 9??! Signi want Seniors jj LJ'I We give you the champs, the big-shots, the Winners , of your Senior Celebrities p011; Oscar Shechtman, Catherine Mc- Most popular: Cormick Best looking: Robert Taylor, Frances Kruvctnd Most likely to succeed: George Bock, Ethel Shohet Best all-ctround: William Buck Lexi, Sherley Abrams Most ambitious: Iohn Yengo, Wanda Pacwa Best dressed: Maxwell Shari, Iosephine Pincus Most athletic: Oscar Shechtman, Dorothea Foster se of humor: George Bock, Sherley Abrams f?frir'itlnih7 : : .,-'7? ' '. -7 iriWifiI 34,31? Best sen Best disposition: Irving Zeithnl Ruth Goldshine Most sophisticated: Clarence Freundhch, Josephine Pincus Friendliest: Alvin Gruder, Ioseph'me Comuncde Most intelligent: lack Hosid, Mildred Eichel Did most for LLU; Lewis Sheldon, Ethel Shohet t5m a v y. .1 x. 2? . n,- 3? -. u . . . Class politician: John Yengo, Catherine McCormick Class scientist: lack Hosidl Frances Kruvand A 4. a. .. ., m I I I Thereiore thou sleep st so tomes h busy care draws the brains 01 men fan W hic in Thou hast no figures or sound. -Shakespeare 4 A. ' ' I 0:, lzt. th'n -.. I . . .. War Auttrnuwawm-'-w--u:.:.u..r::..-.,'M mm - t .;. ' w....; . .. r . . , h .. u-.. A rah . , v- t Nugw. - u; .nnn. m; m...;1---. , , ,; A . v . , m- 7 7 s3 n um ' - ..... ngsg..-.m-';..v-.b'ugraham?4argsxxmna;ao, .n-r .. . MT M: 7-; - tw-h ML-. 0k... -- r-r... The Class of 1942 possesses the distinc- 1836 tion of being the last class whose fresh- b man president was kidnapped the night it before the trosh-soph rush. Phil Wein- W feld didn't know it then, but he was the be last of the dynasty of freshman heads yp T h r e e D 0 W II to feel the clutches of Mann Act evaders. th . . . At the end of that first year though, Mr. 111 Weinteld was replaced in ottice by a a th comparatively new Feb-Sept treshwo- ct man, Mary Maneri, who since has de- br veloped into an outstanding figure in m AND one t0 Go LIU news. Together with her in office w the second year were Peggy McCormick, gr Violet Murphy, and toe McCaul, as vice- th president, secretary, and treasurer, re- A: spectively. The first football team in th eight years represented LIU that fall, ec and the majority of players were mem- th bers of the then sophomore class. Tt Not to be outdone, one of the newest th additions to the varsity basketball roster, Bi Hank Beenders, made LIU tans forget th for a while some of the outstanding wt players from years back. ke When elections came up again in the de spring, '42 was prepared to select two 1 AI of its members to hold the offices of Wm Ms ,, NW max V ' 3 I an; Ldv ' 4K'Rx . 4; --.v t u . wt . - ..u.;.n. a h 4., $1, AxA LLuA'JxA Lt,th $21!; UL'h-inzuvKLKKVifULLJLUKMALJ.L'gem. .,;'g .s .JJLVV h ...; . , .t, . h AI! 'J:: r ar'w a lo 4' M' i; ,, '93,; n U fr A7 ,9! ,' ' If 1', ' :4! secretary and treasurer of the S.S.G.A. phylhs Bob and Mike Rizzo, varsity toot- baller, were the chosen two, and in the class elections, all the former officers were re-elected except loe McCaul, who, because of illness, dropped out of school for one semester. Hal Fuchs became the new treasurer. In this, their junior year, 42 really came through. Not only did members of the class shine on the football field, the basketball court, and the baseball dia- mond, but led by Mary Maneri, they were instrumental in bringing about the greatest junior prom in the history of the school. That attair was held at the Astor Hotel on March 14, and it is to the credit of the whole Class that it eclipsed the success of the junior prom the previous year. The Class came through again when they started the movement to present Bill King with a trophy at the close of the football season, and With another when he concluded his collegiate bas- ketball career at Madison Square Gar- den against Butler University. Another gift of the junior class hangs on the wall of the BC? home basketball court. On it is written: llLong Island University e- National Basketball Cham- pions . 1938-39. Presented by the class of 1942. But back to the athletic conquests, it was Hank Beenders again, now a junior, who was one of the two LlU men to be selected on the Madison Square Garden All-Metropolitan quintet, together with Ossie Shechtman. Beenders also set the individual scoring record for the season at the Garden when he hit the cords for 23 points against Canisius. h their service for their ent out and helped the Varsity Dance committee make this an- nual all-university affair, held this year at Manhattan Beach, the success it was. Not content wit class alone, '42 W ol of achievements speaks for The recor itself. I t , . . my-..- 4+Aw4w- - .ah '. PHI ... -K , t .. Wm , s... :..-....,,..wg.. v -. ....- . y umm. suw-aahwarna- 'u. - ,, - w w-m.--..JL Efwh 7' W9: -. mi ... :JEalm u... mi 1..i.gu :. a In a. .- , ,w H ,- v, . h I- .i a . 'sxt- n is? 16m t 3313' ' . .. r m I Z; 'iipi-uu't u, To every undergraduate there comes a day When he feels that he is one of that group than Which there is no which- er. Generally, this spring-feverish atti- tude prevails throughout his sophomore year. Taking everything into considera- tion, we find that this attitude may be partly accounted for by the fact that Tuesdays and Thursdays find every se- cond year man and woman in a par- uar'. 'o Irwrleuh'v-u...rru;mv' .yy -.... e , - . , . t '- Huh 9-??? WF8urJVmJI f , tHWmPFI-W'QMCQ u . k'm'mh$ FE; a NEIL. .4 mmHJ-HKFK.,,, 1;an ticular class. Add to this the relief of the escape from the stigma of freshman- hood, and the knowledge that they are not yet caught in the toils of upperclass dignity and world-weariness, and you Will agree that the sophomores are in- dubitably the happiest lot in school. At the start of the new academic year, Mike Kozonis, scholarship student, Dean's List-er, and trash basketball player tun- .- 4.; : m.g' w; V9 , - ngn...'.:u-uu....-; e interfered with his studiesl fill Jules Bernhard's place til practic was elected to dent of the class of 1943. As as presi his associates for the year, Kozonis was blessed with Marcia Bosniak, serving her second year as Vice-president of the class, Ann Cappie, a new secretary, and Honest Bob Spielberg, as treasurer. A versatile quartet indeed. So-the new sophomores went to work with a vengeance, prepared to leave their mark in the history of Long island University. HLet's break a precedent, quoth they, Hand Win the rush as sophs. Well, they left their marke-all over the University field, and the only thing they broke was their aspirations, as the trosh won the annual mass murder. MForget about it, quoth they, Hit can land doesl happen to any sophomore class. And to show that they forgave their tormenters, the second-year-men tendered a peace offering dance to the irosh, and did their utmost to establish unity among the classes. What was a pair of pants or a little bit of hauteur When there was fun to be had. And, anyway, we would've licked 'em if . . . That was only the beginning, folks, of a sophomore social season that saw the Class toss its collective head and spirit into work for the annual Varsity Dance, and culminated in the first Frosh-Soph prOm in the history of the Blue, at the Coconut Grove, May 28. Combined class meetings, under the joint leadership of presidents George Syby and Mike Ko- zonis, laid foundations for this show of initiative. Buddy Clark's band put the finishing touches on any sore spots caused by rush rivaer- - . M 9 Visiix'ffu- Jar..- u a 571-? 333' 53,-: ::hn::3 i. . . . u . . h a a u... L But this was only the social facet of a multi-sided sophomore class. Athletical- ly, it did more than its share. The foot- ball team was graced by the playing of Joe Zucconi, Johnny Gitsas, Lou Cap- pola, Vic Rosenblum, Rush Metling, Alex Fleishman, Dizzy Dean! Bill Byrnes, Tom Kretz, Randy Iohnson, and Irving Price. Long Island's national championship bas- ketball five also used material from the versatile sophs. First string Saul Cohen, and Frank Fucarino, Dick Holub, Artie Gurfein, Chico Perez, Bob Kane, and Dean all added to the glory of the uni- versity and to the prestige of the class. Dean, who toted number 13 on the grid- iron, is the university's only three major- letter-rnan. You'll find them everywhere, these sophs. At frat and sorority affairs, Student Council meetings, the Men's Lounge, on the Deans List, in the Dutchman's at LlU. And listen! that ain't hay. t'-.. 7W..-- 1- .. 'lh... 'e M-zr u--..;'1 -' it . EN i' 'f -. V. .. .uwmmmwxu rub; ' ; - -. J'th-a. M' , .5 ,-,er., 7 t , h ' I t 'k t I h 7 L7 h 7 ' V H '5 t wh'tFw-JL L!' N-$ o'o'. '9 . . .. o . '1!J .'e Its 0nly the Beginning, m g, l olks... t We dont know much about what the officers for our first year at Long Island With other freshman classes at LIU accom- University George Syby, a member of launc plished before us but it they achieved the basketball team from Jersey City, eoh half of what we did, they were all right. president; blonde-hatred Arm Tonnesen, projet And we are not boasting. vice-president; Shirley Williams, secre- tor tlr t ; and Marie Lisbona, as dark as Q the We, the class of 1944, stand on our CITY . . th Ann Tonnesen rs hght, treasurer. r rou record. thecm F h f f h b1 The annual Frosh-Soph rush, held on t , s ens Orombt e2 r: res men assem :1 in October 18, turned out to be a V1ctory IV? e Qur: DCtO er; j: enD we :ivereB greets; 1: for the class of '44, the real glory come Bean dew? : e:n e arrrtt, , OGCf ing in the failure of 011 sophomore The ee, cm at t e ot errepresentqtrves 0 attempts to kidnap our president. Even socrcd the faculty and admmlstratron, we have , t Of and ' k d t d'l t k th' h b t the srx mart football game, that par :xvorhe1 sea 1y 0 me e rs t e es the program we were told the uppere ber c rres coss ever. - ' classmen generally excelled m, was WOr1 fifth 1 rs To accomplish that aim we elected CIS overwhelmingly by the fresh. ' .' II JV lt.,i!lnm Q e; . 'VV e'ua P18! Lupi,,0 I i 8...; w .w XX tnly the Beginnin With that piece of pie in our grasp we launched our campaign to set the world eoh well, Brooklyne-on tire. The first project undertaken was a skating party for the entire school, to be followed by a theatre party. The skating party went through as planned, but the visit to the theatre was merged with the university- sponsored party to see Helen Hayes and Maurice Evans in Twelfth Night. The Varsity Dance was the next big social event an the university calendar, and '44 led all other classes in the num- ber of representatives on the honorary football eleven selected for that affair. This aii-ieminine team included fresh- women Ann Tonnesen, Marie Lisbona, Tonia Senia, Doris Weiss, and Marjorie Bogat among those honored. By far the outstanding achievement, athletically, that the class of '44 can point to is the record of the freshman basketball team, hailed by Coach S. I. Picarieilo as the greatest in the history of LIU. F or the entire first semester there were only eight men on the squad but they were sufficient to maintain un- defeated status, and when reinforcements came after mid-year examinations, the larger group breezed through the re- maining part of the schedule. Four men from Madison High, Brooklyn, were the nucleus of the team. Stan Waxman, Lennie and Howie Rader, and Freddie Lewis, teaming up again after great high school careers, found Irv Rothenberg, Luke Sapan, George Syby, and Bernie Lenowitz as their new co- horts in the start of their collegiate careers. At the beginning of the Febru- ary semester, George Veyosovich, Stan Fronscak, and Hal King, the younger brother of Bill HDolly King, also joined the squad. That is the beginning, and like the Brooklyn Dodgers we can say, Iust waitiil next yeart' Then you'll really see something. FRESHNHN 00's 3:10 OONT 5 ., n '. t- bk: H. k n... -...... 7---- 44.,e - , . .mti-ul'tfhf'muu ?:ngMuHrt-w; ' . .A . - w.. 'k-N e-uu. uni ... . Mgr. .,.u.., . wh- NNb ; Mk n .4137 , xo' rru-L-yu.r .i my- p33.- 1'qu h u... u ngc: m;- . . - , - As; Ms ..- M. . w ; . .rranmaga- . m, ., V NA , -- '44; 1. Tradition had Ct field day as the freshmen won the annual mud- slinging, flour-bombing, hair-pulling and What-have-you contest in the back yard last October 18, as thoue sands cheered. After the rush, Mike Kozonis, soph prexy, Whose slightly muddied likeness you see above, and George Syby, newly-elected frosh president, led the festivities at the annual Welcome Dance in the Men's Lounge that evening. 1n . . . vociiemtion out- vociferize Even Sound outself. -Henry Carey , ; .. 1- ......Hyu- .1 g... nu. w:-..h-:J1V 9..;.m .. .,. u$n:hm.. MM? 3'2:- ni'ttrh rmrra':35-3:r-t:rt-r - . .. . . :1, .uer -4- ; ' M ?:?:4h' .4. v'; 35: 59mm ?iie'ii: ...RAUCOUS CAUCUS Student Council is a coordinating body whose functional purpose concerns the promotion and integration of undergrad- uate activities for the best interests of the university. It is composed of three main bodies, the Executive Committee, ail Chartered organizations, and the class officers. The Executive Committee and class officers are elected annually by a student election. The Executive Committee, consisting of four members! has as its duties the desig- nation of Council meeting dates, presid- ing at those meetings! appointing com- mittees for carrying out various under- graduate activities, appropriating funds to organizations and classes for social affairs, and chartering organizations. Class officers present the activities of their respective classes at meetings and must obtain Council's sanction for the enactment of any new proposals benefit- ting their Classes. The four officers of each class have voting power in all Council activities. Each Class yearly has its own prom and Councils support is extended for each. Chartered organizations receive voting power in proportion to their membership, the larger groups receiving a full vote, the others a half vote. At present ap- proximately twenty-tive such bodies are in existence. Attendance is taken at all Council meetings. Organizations are temporarily suspended it representatives are absent three times in succession. The Student Seli-Governing Association had a full calendar this year. Social highlights included the Frosh-Soph Rush, two Fresh dances, a Sophomore dance, the annual Varsity Dance held at Man- hattan Beach Casino, a Christmas Social, the class prams and an Intramural Sports Tournament. 1n the business line, a new Club Directory was installed, a baseball schedule was worked out with the Ath- letic Department, yard and building alter- ation proposals were discussed with the Administration, and a Student Council Panel Discussion at New York University was participated in with representatives from twenty-iour other colleges. Executive Committee Officers were John Yengo, president, Frances Kruvand, Vice- president, Phyllis Bob, secretary, and Michael Rizzo, treasurer. r...,;v....,,-x- n... wmw - . . t - m. ,H...v wet. unry-.r4-1-'3'.'-u':wuqsum:huh Jrrsr-u..--m...m'w .3mu. K - .Hmlknri,iir13ny t e T ' t v ,Jmumkwx-u liiunys' wanynqnn ..au3rv r! ,- n r .xr :11 w: 93.9117 Optimates is the scholastic honor society. Each year a limited number of seniors and juniors Who rank highest in scholarship are elected to mem- bership. Professor Gregory Dexter Walcott is president. Martin Bloom, Mildred Eichel, Jack Hosid, Elizabeth Neuschaefer, Monroe Waxman are the seniors elected in their junior year. Seniors elected this year are Sherley Abrams, Abraham Berger, Claire Blumenreich, Andrew Crowley, Marie Fogus, Olga Kauffer, Frances Kruvomd, Henry Neuschoreferl Selma Rubin. Iuniors Who were elected are Phyllis Bob! Emanuel Friedman, Julia Weinstein. Anaphy is the honorary organization sponsored by the Biology Department. At regular meetings papers of interest to the group are presented by members. Its outstanding function is the annual Andphy Exhibition at which students compete for awards With their biological exhibits, A formal dinner party is also held each year. The officers in 1940-41: Murray Silberberg, president, Alvin Gruder, Vice-president, Ralph Schuman, record- ing secretary, Arthur Murott, corresponding secretary, and Martin Bloom, treasurer. The other full members are Anthony Barbaccia, George Cronn, Frances Kruvcmd, and Ethel Shohet. Lewis Sheldon is an associate member. Brain Trust Optimates 7,1, M ... .. hw;m.. V 3.1... The Wise Members oi Catalyst, honorary Chenm L: istry society, are students who have CK maintained 0 high scholastic average 0. in Chemistry, and whose pnmary 'm n e 'm Unis held. The highhgm E is us terests 1'1 7 JuJuvuJJxkuwli u Mu 'V- -Ay'L .- .. m .. ' A v 0 . Vxl'k1'-- V Vb'yu... v F... 1'W H... n- .4 uuw-N'w'wl'v..h 'w15 41' 'k wwa . Lh'ip, lr ; P .. '1' .f.;r - 'L-VHM . i t ' aha- q . ' an- , e gamuf. - Warn. .. W'f'tnnv-w t' ' tn. 't Vrtn-MW nu $t 7a., H. .1M-. .7. - dNI-v-xa -d t, rTYvEtppng- V -! ,lhnXJ-N h e- 113?: , n. ' T'tfrit 7. . , . Lancet was to the purpose acquamtmg its members with the principtes severed year and practices ot the medicat protesston by mg extrct-curncutar guidance LO pr means Oi 1 ctures, tours, and tttms. The students, Lectures, ttetd taps, and exhtbtts tttms proved ot great interest to the under comprise the ctub program Atthough pres graduate body in general, and consistehtty V . . . attracted large audiences. Otttcers 'm- eht membershtp ls smatt, Dentahs prou Y ctudeot Gerald Kautmotnl president, Oscar asserts that c111 past members have been Camponescht, vtceepresident, trw'm Tame accepted. by registe d dented SChOOXS hdus, secretary, and Arthur Murott, Hedge throughout the country thbur Ross '15 urer. Dr. Ralph H. Cheney is the tdcutty ptestdeht 0t the organization, and SerOUT E. Levy ts vtce-prestdeht adviser. :x, t to momma a tettOWShtp and honors, 1h 1te t r. Cichtevemente 'm educct'tonqt wort; The Qihcers were Monroe Wexmcm, resident Doris Schupok, vtcespreetcteht, o. Heteh recxsurer Pause, eecretmyzt In The Halls The Board of Publications is the governing body of Sound, Seawanhqkq' and Review. It is composed of three faculty members, two members from Student Council, and representatives from the publications. Dean Metccdfe acts as chairman. The Board votes on appropriations for publishing costs, assists in solving technical problems, and elects new editors and business managers at the end of each academic year. This past year the Board established subsidiary boards to deal directly With each individual publica- tion. Left, Board of Publications; be- low, left to right, Review, Sea- wanhaka, Publicity Unlimited; and above, Sound. . Wajwfx ! w d Var tip. f '71 Puk iou: the Soc ing nun rec1 $th is pmi dub mes eve. is re ent are: geln Abr Bori imo: ,lOuUl-Mxldsxs 4 The Galley Gods AQMQQS a: l: ; Publicity Unlimited, known var- Rim iously as PU and Hey You is .. e303: the unofficial Journalism Honor 42' Society at Long Island. Accord- ing to its members, it proudly numbers the most creative brains recruited from the publications' staffs on its roster. Its purpose is to disseminate Pearl Street propaganda, Which it does in- dubitably. The society holds no meetings and changes officers at every one. The membership list is restricted because of the string ent entrance requirements, which met. Members include Ikkie Fei- gelmcm, AP Hano, Shohet-cmd- Abrams, Fried Friedman, Literal Borne, Blob Kolb, Sexy Bob, Fen- imore Fuchs, and Sleepy Sedge. g 1......th , ' k maul: f. 'C:JL 7f e A .7' 17ch- 1-... --F. 4-:.7V; - --.A ., t V .n; eh. -. an u,. --.,7,- -.. uge h has u..,, t - . i . -. e '- ' 0: 'Mn a.g' .. .. -.. - . .- .. u a ' -... - - , ,. t i. Jn c... n . unhm N.. ura. an. ' nf'ui N' , 77 t - .. 'Mu n. e... X.- ray ' , , 00 A- N , n... -uu 4 ,. n 91 ., III'T'TE 6-13 W vwwm wwmmmmv , , , The seene: Sound oitice, room 420A, Miss Shohet sits at one end of a round table. Also about table is staff: iedShertey Abrams, Helen Hilton, Marion Medctisky, Marion Peters, ,, 0 ' . , e Heme, Irv Feigelmcm, ' g W ' , ' S E A u 7 I . - me ' 9 and the men, Ami t3! irffih Manny Friedman, Manny Greenberg, Julie Bernhard, and Andy Bomo; and, at the tar tum, Herb Rothmcm and Lou Sheldon. poses of deep Heads are buried in arms in ten reflection. There is not Ct sound as brains and Rothmcm grapple with the prob- lem of putting out. They are all asleep . In the sub-conscious of each is the thought that he or she is editor of Sound. The sub- ized in the form of several conscious is symbol e the staff members. pixies Who resembl They speak: TtSoundl . . . The living yearbook! Ten stories high! 150 Long Island blue horses to pull open the cover! Clair Bee rides in on the back of ct Blackbird. Dr. Whitford Gp- pears carrying many mirrors, labeled Director of Students,' Head of English Department,' xDoctor,' Professorf iMEX 60,000 students . 50 buildings . . . 3 campi . . . 6 stadici and Ci football team . . . just one little toot- II ball team Sigmund F. Rothman: HSEX. WiredFor SOUND The Mcmnys Iulie Blowhard Andy Boreknow A. P. H . ,, Shohet-and-Abrams Indubitably. Tovarich Hilton The Marions Louis Paul Sheldon Ikky G. Foogetman snores. The printer, also pixie-lated, dashes in, simul- taneously pounds typewriter, does three mad leaps around table, makes a few weird gese tures, and drops a thousand yearbooks on the table, cts he departs in CI cloud of printer's ink. When last reported, the stuff still slumbers. College willing i last wor ics, wort moral 5 men, to. ketbaH, Nazism, AFL, lib thing e1 in the Cl issue ou cm opin ditch. 1 wrong. THEY N Arid Sec Amie H. include are She Friedma. 098T, a staff me Bernie E baum. Seqwan ing nee. they ca words to .uUquuih-s . - , SEAWANHAK College newspaper editors are willing and ready to speak the last word on education, econom- ics, world diplomacy, ethics, and moral standards of their fellow men, football, baseball, and bas- ketball, the doings of the President, Fascism, Nazism, Communism, Socialism, the C10, the AFL, liberties, privileges, women, and. any- thing else that may call for expert knowledge in the course of an issue. They can make an issue out of anything, and once having stated an opinion, they will defend it to the last ditch. College editors never admit they are wrong. THEY NEVER ARE. And Seawanhaka editors Irv Feigelman Chi Amie Hana are no exception. Their yes-men include an editorial board whose members are Sherley Abrams, Ethel Shohet, MODDZ Friedman, and Andy Borno, Business Man- ager, and. a flock of guys named Toe for staff members. Oh yes, Hal Fuchs, Bob Kalb, Bernie Bob, and Dave PVewy sowwy' Buxe baum. Seawanhaka, in answer to the students, cry- ing need, appears once each week, whenever they can find publication money and enough words to fill four pages. . 41 11W vs y J FLYWJ'JZ . yiiw'ilb LH'P J9- REVIEW Review is the aesthetic member of Long Island University's journalism trio. That is, it is a mixture of serious reading matter, trivia, poetry, and music. Pauline Auglera heads a cast which includes Shirley Golden, Robert Deaves, Geraldo Guirty, Yetta Hopchik, Marie Fogus, and Arnold Goulding. The format of the monthly has been some- what Changed this year. The magazine was divided into departments such as HHeavy Reading , HLight Readingn, etc. The material is the work of staff members and under- graduate contributors. Review was also the tield of battle for Drs. Wendel and Keen, who held a hot and heavy debate in writing over the space of several issues P W WP V; ' . f 'l .u' MPM W P P I :3 v P WPM W w t . X- . m-.. ,. wt . u... - I ,, h M'...'frw:7i 51:5 f:- 7333P hi TIL- METKFng-Mnuu. P . ;J:g.:::r.'u. 2w nab Retahons Club pru- gh Which stu- etgh chairs and I express their ideas 7 t ,t This past year med ttctty at the Model the ct hetd at Lehigh Um- two detegates to the Um- Qt Georgetown . N. Borne, pres- ormtck, vtce-pres- retdry. tRC Co versity. O idem, Catherine t, and Btdhche thcers are MCC tdeh Emhome sec ttttt h r. F ff;f':i!,; ' 'J' V- Thief: 3' fi herds otters a varied ts interested ercte Ftattew . pee studen I I at activities and plays given in ding this year was tack Chatk'm, Crihcers: Yetta Hope Susan Gthbertt, Rostyn Berg, i!?3igi?ff$; recital by noted pidhtst. chit: president, Vtceeprestdent, Ghd secretary, .u v e A: . - .. V V'gitwii ; o 53 - 551 ru': Jr'y . . agfxmzwm VEDW IXCISCW, wcmt, mud dtscussto e history hton ttmv m . mchtdo Mtntvn tt tutu Nt mchc Hm -, KMW tux vntttttvo. Xttt hit 'XH Luv nut th-w ackground and its 1 ons to civilization were teae e activities oi the Spanish Club. Led by Anthony Tud'rsco, tace n B h e ut'ty adviser, the organization conduct 3; ed ct series of special lectures which 11 highlighted old Spanish customs, art, the finer points ot the literature and Spain, its cultural b contributi tured in th JIM msh language. M. t a Spa '7 . organization of xtrcctton, tune- ss hahan arts 5 weekly tor Dante, 0h 0t hahom e trons mainly to discu and culture. it meet torums cmd social activities. Cir- coto Dante holds skating, swim- th'mg parties during Circoto students 13:16::gw , :: -.. m'mg, and d the year, and represents LLU. Cit other colleges and universities. oreigh policies 0t eht were studied r1 History and Potts Were vital issues to opinions. ntiat come de vote on held. Ot- Ahhe Grdbowskt, herme McCormick, and Yetta Hop- Domesttc 0nd t the US governm by the America Government Club. taken regularly on determine students' the preside untverstry-wi ' ates was vice- Chik, secretory. t 4r? W 353;; 'f9f1 ,: , I w l o 152 .34- I 5.155;,73; '37 fit ' ; Yb .3 -; $$$sz Wmffif ii g: x 5'1; the mam imep neum Society. siud'xes customs, d htewmre o Specializing Uciborcmo Society oi Cohen Close co , w.'.- K .4. ..:W deu' v4. t t W'Wr: -hh t r Mung Eamest The Writer's Workshop is the r the budding story writer, 1t '15 con- tn that organization to novelist, short dramatist, and poet. nected with Review the best material is printed in that magazine. Pauline Augtero. is president, Yetta Hopchtk, vtce-prestdent, 0nd Geratdo Gutrty, secretary. The purpose ot the Debating Club '15 turther'mg the torehstc activities 0 L.1.U.students. tts schedule included ct debate over station WVFW with St. tohn's Untverstt matches against h Cotteges. tr v tn g Brookty Hottzman ts president, Murray Koen, vtce-prestdeht, and Bure ton Gussow, secretary. t' . i t 4.- RNA: ?JZW r t. . --Pffflf':y:...,: x... t ' h 1;,u n. h Hn 7 . . .. . WJWI-qq mam k, The ! Menorah, known generally as a Jewish society, is open to all students. Its :3;an fundamental aims are the advance- The V ment of Jewish culture and the pro- guesT motion of harmonious relations be- promi tween all language groups. The or- inspec ganizqiion has sponsored c1 variety of Chang functions ranging from informal so- presid ciods and freshman tees to academic presid discussions and debate. The officers and I are Claire Blumenreich, president, Victoria Bloom, Vice-president, Marion Medaisky, secretary, and Norman Bleach, treasurer. The Newman Club was organized to foster a closer relationship among Catholics in the university. It is Q member of the Newman Clubs Federa- tion active throughout non-sectcxricm i colleges and universities. The club T sponsors varied activities, including numerous socicds and dances during the year. Officers: Io Comunale, presi- dent, Eugenie Cox, Vice-president, 1 Doris Bell, secretary, and Jerry Gian- T grossi, treasurer. T w, ...Hegardless of Race, Creed 01' Color... ng Club was omnnixcd The Accoumi among accounting open to undergraduates in general, The year's activities included TOWS by st speakers, field trips to several inent brokerage firms, cmd an inspection of the Stock and Curb Ex; changes. Officers: Barnet Gelber, resident, Elizabeth Neuschaefer, vice- president, Julia Weinstein, secretary! and Iean Collins, treasurer majors but is 015:0 gue prom '1 --x v -.V val... 1- , r. A . - ndtftnyhg-cm. :- v d! -1' ?4? :5 . 4 ,6- I r- eff 1o '0 Mr I ?kifiit in ,5. a :35: 539;! Win, . . .The Man Cah . . . RhumeBoogie . . . mbrehct Man T . . and Lose Tt At The Astor . To The Bar T . Mexicali . Toseph, Tuxedo Tunction . . Sunrise Serenade ,M f! $' :5 ii Perhdia T,- 1. a: ?;f . fa? Eoseph 157331? 2.6;, 2 Angels Sing O'Clock Whi . . . Beer Barr Street Bhles Tn The Mood . . . Down Argentine Way Mir Bist Du Schon . stle 3?;ka w W EWJTr-WT;R .117 2 u W wig, . . . What a torrent of sound. Pledgees invaded. encom- pass'd and-drown'd. -Hobson. Boxer, Press f3 1 .7'. 9W? 193: r; A 4'1 ' l ' WV unu- , --' wr-m A -.. 7 ?.- '-.'i W-n. .30 . 3-fC'..'L.u.f:5 MW -1-n., - 'fku..'Q'-J7.f u-. .7ru.. f . . , As in oil other colleges, so at Long Is- land University, sororities ploy on import- ant port in the lives of undergraduate coeds. Besides formols, theoter parties, dinners, omd other festivities, charitable functions and various projects for the University's benefit are regular items on each sororityis agenda for the year. Iota Alpha Pi, whose Ioto chapter at L. I. U. was founded in 1929, is the oldest notional Jewish sorority. Officers are ,x - n w ' - V. equb-nruth-h. huh; $- . The Face That Launched A Thou '-..L, 'e , ' ' .. ' Ruth Goidshine, chancellor; Helene Si- Morcio Adel- berg, recording secretory,- Celio Lonzet, monson, vice-choncellor; corresponding secretory; and Phyllis Bob, treasurer. Other sisters: Sherley Abrams, Vicky Bloom, Marcia Bosniok, Shirlee Feid, Shirley Golden, Mitzi Gross, Selma Hurwitzl Frances Kruvond, Helen Longert Dorothy Ludwig, Marion Peters, Josie Pincus, Ethel Shohet, Sylvia Tigier, and Claire Weingort Sigmot Omega Phi is the only Christian sorority chartered at Long Island. to Comunole is chancellor; Elizabeth Neus- choefer, Vice-chcmcellor; Harriet Dohl, secretory,- Koy Levoy, treasurer; cmd Peggy McCormick, historian. Other SOP sisters are Cioro Alverson, Eugenio Cox, 1 Agnes Eschenfelde: mick, Anne Grabs: Wanda Pacwo, Do: Bardsley, Roth Boje: celli, Jean Collins, 3.: Corrigon, Julia Gere Jone Meyer, Harriet : and Anne Tonnesen. Gamma, the L. 1. U4 Phi, was founded i; are: Doris Schupok Rubin, Vice-chonceii treasurer; Edith GIGS tory, and Florence secretory. Other :2 Silvermqn, Flora He: Pearl Feller, Ina Are: Lee Goidstein, Eilee: Hopchik, and Anita Wurlltww A Phi Gumm ??:r :easmer; :1 .1321: OtherSC: '. Eugenia C1. A Thousand Ra les Agnes Eschenfelder, Catherine McCor- mick, Anne Grabowski, Mary Momeri, Wanda Pacwa, Dorothy Tucher, Peggy Bardsley, Roth Bojenskil Marcella Cami- celli, lean Collins, Muriel Connery, Doris Corrigan, Juliet Geremia, Marie Lisbona, Jane Meyer, Harriet Morris, Anne Palmer, and Anne Tonnesen. Gamma, the L. I. U. chapter of Upsilon Phi, WCIS founded in 1930. Its officers are: Doris Schupak, chancellor; Selma Rubin, vice-chcmcellor; Thelma Pincus, treasurer; Edith Glaser! recording secre- tary, and Florence Katz, corresponding secretary. Other members are Mildred. Silvermdne Flora Heller, Pearl Finkelstein, Pearl Feller, Ina Aronstein, Esther Small. Lee Goldstein, Eileen Sheinhouse, Yetta Hopchik, and Anita Fruchtbcum. e. -9 , Phi Gamma Tau, founded in 1937, is one of Long Island's two non-sectaricm sororities. The sorority's affairs were headed by Claire Blumenreich, president; Helen Pause, Vice-president; Laura Mag- istrate, treasurer; Aranka Gozner, corres- ponding secretary; and Shirley Kopolsky, recording secretary. The roster: Beatrice Abramowitz, Doris Bell, Roslyn Berg, Martha Diamant, Sylvia Elbaum, Lillian Hammond! Helen Iabilsky, Jeanne Kap- lan, Daria Muzyka, Katherine O'Malley, Harriet Schlussierl Lillian Schrieber, Iulia Weinstein, and Marie Williams. q a- 7 arm me 'r'n-ng-n-.. 7 - - e ' I' n , eva- 4- rvvv. .. e1 -- ei u e'H-- '- e -n . .., . ae Ween no u. . A .4 e n ., u -.. . el'vq. eu'xwuibffugqu ....-p....,-M rx-:v-..r u..,u,e ... - hen .A M e V ;-.-,--.T.,.:m 3731' pin O l 4 ,1- 3.x v n! 4.. lllll Frater Chatter The oldest non-sectarian fraternity at L.l.U. is Tau Epsilon, founded in 1929. Indigenous to L.l.U., Tau Ep has always boasted that it numbers among its mem- bers some of the outstanding men in the school. This year, co-editors Arnie Hano and Irving Feigelman ot Seawanhaka, and sophomore president Mike Kozonis wore Tau Epsilon pins. That, however, wasn't everything. Tau Ep was instru- mental in the formation of the Committee on Student Awards in Student Council, when Manny Friedman initiated the plan in an issue of Seawanhaka. It also worked With the lnter-Fraternity Council on its Thanksgiving Day drive, and par- ticipated in the arranging of such all- university functions as the Varsity Dance. Officers: Irving Feigelman, chancellor; Arnold Hano, Vice-chancellor; Emanuel Friedman, scribe-bursar. Members: Iules Bernhard, Michael Kozonis, loseph Chall, Bernard Schwartzbach, Stanley Remezy Charles Appel, and Philip Weinteld. There were supposed to be two pages devoted to pictures of the fraternity groups, but only one was able to tax its members enough to pay for the picture according to the laws governing the publication of SOUND. So all we can do is talk about them. There's lohnny Yengo's Alpha Gamma Beta, the youngest fraternity to be recog- nizecl by the lFC. lncluding among its members Student Council treasurer Mike Rizzo, AGB. is famous in L.l.U. history for its annual Hobo Hop, the largest dance, aside from the Varsity Dance, held yearly in the school. Its members also came through in droves in working hand in hand with Yengo and Student Council, and the lFC. tor the benetit ot Long Island University. Then comes Rocco Natale, Rocco Pap- pa, and Alpha Lambda Upsilon, the tra ternity that hobnobs with the elite. ln- cluded among the honorary members of this, the only all-Christian group in the l.F.C., are S. I. Picariello, lord of the gym, and L.l.U.'s most famous athlete, Marius Russo. Don't forget that l.F.C. Chieftain Natale, who is responsible tor that organization's high rating, is one of ALUYs white-haired boys. Phi Tau Lambda, the scientists tra- ternity, is noted for two things, i.e., Lew Sheldon and Al Gruder. But even they can't overshadow the rest of the mem- bers, including Murray Silverberg, presie dent of Lancet. Sheldon and Gruder have made their mark as the best prom Chairmen ever to grace L.l.U. besides being vice-president and secretary ot the senior class, respectively. It was Sheldon who led the l.F.C.'s Thanksgiving drive, Alpha Mu Sigma, sole Jewish traty is again one of the predominant organiza- tions in the school, even though, for the first time, they cannot boast of any high ranking senior officers. Their strength lies in the lower classes, including among their members, Bob Spielberg, sophomore treasurer, and SY Levy, ex- secretary of Student Council. 59 eEte. L1. t 395065 of mu; L . be 53d C the :35 c'blete. ?? i'lct IEC. Wile tor 3; 25 one of :1 ever. hey :5 Lie zem- arterg, presi- xi Grader .5 best prom nh m n Greek Letter Heads PQIi-Hellenic Council is the national organization which acts as CI governing body for sororities. The three member sororities at LIU are Iota Alpha Pi! Sigma Omega Phi, 0nd Upsilon Phi. The Council aims to encourage friendly relations CImOl'lg the women's organizations, and to stimulate interest in college activities. It sponsored a fresh- man welcome tea at the beginning of each se- mester, and has promoted cm aid to Britain drive. In conjunction With IFC, it held two Charity bet- zacxrs, Officers: Ruth Goldshine, president, Doris SChquk, vicepresident, and I0 Comunale, secre- tary. H i... o -..i no. .' eKIJJTJ t ,.U ;;'.:'. -i--.. I'F-$.2.Q-J.'?t--1'trr-u'- f . .iuun mm M u r. f .L... . k-.. Intertratemity Council is the coordinating body for the university's fraternities. In addition to its as- sociation with the separate organizations, it acts CIS an independent group, functioning on its own in school affairs. Alpha Lambda Upsilon, Alpha Gamma Beta, Alpha Mu Sigma, Phi Tau Lambda 0nd Tau Epsilon are the member groups. Officers are Rocco Natale, president, Stanley Molnick, Vice- president, John Yengo, treasurer, Alvin Gruder, secretary, and Seymour Greenbaum, historian. The membership board is composed of Lewis Sheldon, Irving Feigelmcxn, and Arnold Homo. 'h-'-'. '--.... 3LT: ,irnyw 1:: - e , y t it J'JH't'a-u! 1mg : 1'! '7um.. 5. ti'E'i'A . .15 l i Mn; ',,'.2 . .. '3' H .i k t--'-'-tlr .-Qf14 ','..'ff 'th'rwln ? u. .4. - U ml I I In case you weren't sure about it, heres how you felt about life in general and Long Is- land University in particular when you were a senior: Your favorite morning newspaper was the New York Times, and your favorite evening ditto Stan McGovern and the Post; Seaawnhaka, your favorite L.I.U. undergrad- uate weekly, got votes too, but not enough to: win. You liked almost all your profs, but Dr. Hudson best of all, with Keur, Keen, Foster, and Noble giving him a lot of competition, Dr. Foster's phenomenal Novel course made it the umpteenth time in a row. Dinner, how-w ever, came in for some of the gravy in this category. You didntt enjoy sophomore Philo very much. When you think of L.I.U., you think of basketball; when you were asked your favorite sport to play and to watch, you answered, very loudlyebasketball. Some of you, more frivolous than your confreres, pre- ferred the following games: bathing the baby, bundling, coffee and couch. You liked to listen to the music of Glenn Miller's orchestra, but you liked him best when he was playing Stardust. Some of you, however, thrilled most ' palpably to the strains of your own Alma Mater. Personitying the spirit of inquiry that everybody expects youth to personify, and in common with Baby Snooks, your favorite question was Why? Because the proportion Senior Soundings of males to females in the voting population of the class was preponderantly in favor of the former, your favorite answer was Yes. The Bible and SOUND beat out For Whom The Bell Tolls for honors in the literary field, while Shakespeare, Hemingway and Sinclair Lewis shared the glory of being your favorite author. Shakespeare and O'Neill were your favorite dramatists, but Shechtman Through Center was your favorite play. He even beat Hellzapoppint, which came in a close second There was a three-way tie for your favorite actor, Cary Grant, Iames Stewart, and Paul Mum; your favorite actress was Bette Davis. None of the tour, however, appeared in your favorite movie, Gone With The Wind. Your favorite diversion, politely termed on most of your ballots, was You Guess, but you weren't averse to dancing or sleeping, either. You liked to eat steak best of all. Bob Hope's pro- gram ran away with the vote for your favorite radio show. FDR, Pres. Roosevelt, Franklin D! Mr. President, however you worded it, was your overwhelming Choice for the out- standing figure in the news. He beat Adolph by forty votes. thatever your reasons, you liked your sophomore year least of the tour, and your senior year the best by a large ma- jority. Thats all, brother . . . :2; population :13' : favor of me: was Yes. :'. : ?3: Whom w e Lterary field. ' w :zxi Sinclcm I ; 1:32;: favonlie 9;; were your l :33 Though rie even beat : clgse second. , Mu: favome 'u .; mam ' r-Aol 19 DOW Those claimants for a Rose Bowl bid. The Texas Aggies, Ten- nessee. Are of a dangerous rival rid. Old L.I.U. has bent the knee. Tim Cohane mafmvmwvmrrv WMFWW Mxtwww W W merawwwmmiti You can talk about your Benders, your Torgotfs, your Kromers, but for thri11 ond ch1111 tight and guts, we'11 toke our 1941 BosketboH Writers' Tournament champions, L1U,s Shechtmcm, Schwartz, Lobe11o, Beendersl and Cohen. The Blockbirds gained their place in the tourney otter winning twenty-two and 103mg two during the 140541 come poign, triumphing six times at Madison Square Garden and four times on the road. Once in the exclusive Morch play offs, he1d ormuodly for the post four years, L1U blasted in quick order Westw minster, Seton Ho11, and Ohio. Thus the Beemen repeated their 1939 victory, cope tured o second leg on the coveted tour- ney trophy, and won or place on every motioned championship hst. We hove seen this squod grow from on owkword but promising freshman dub through three later stages of team play and cohesion. The first wry .n D nil; - , t W V Remdeer .rve that ptafed second-strirrg to the 1938-39 undefeated Torgatt and squad, lacking poise and handica::le: by weak reserves. And finally, the 4C: 41 unit of Oscar Shechtman, Si Lobeltg Sol Schwartz, Bill King, sophomore Saul Cohen, and junior Hank Beenderge Beenders replaced the great King when Dolly finished his athletic days at perm Street in January. Ready to go mtg action When the fourth personal Would be called against Beenders or Shecht- man, or when Lobetlo could not find his dime, were the surprising A1 Schneider Frank Fucarino, lanky Dick Holub, lank- ier Artie Gurfein, Max Shari, Alex Wal- terson and a host of others. The squad numbered seventeen, stood a fraction of an inch over 6'2 , and hailed all the way tram Chico Perez's Porto Rico to the sidewalks of Brooklyn. Ca. Next, it was on its own as g It was a gruelling campaign, prob- ably the toughest schedule any Long island team has ever played. Twenty- four opponents, excluding the Alumni and post-season toes, came and saw the Beemen, and only two conquered them And one of the LIU defeats was erased When the Blackbirds flew to East Lansing to outpoint Michigan State 24-23. The other blot on the record was recorded by Duquesne, a 36-34 thriller at Madison Square Garden. The highlight of the regular season spread itself over a period of ten days, and. covered 3000 miles of travel. In that space of time, LIU won five games, enjoyed the longest rest of three days, and played in the stadia of five different states. Wednesday, February 19, the Black- birds stepped from their airliner onto the court at Michigan State to beat the Spartans. One down, and tour to go. The next night, DePaul fell before the literally high-flying Blackbirds 44-40 at the Chicago basketball hall. Before you could say Stutz Modzelewski, the Long Islanders were in Maryland to bowl over previously undefeated Baltimore U. 44- 37, to celebrate George VVQshingtOnS .F, m '7 u- 0 .d' - 5: r- O m D Q-f'l' $5 pun. 4v W075..- ,3va .4 93E. : birthday. Back to the old stamping grounds, Madison Square Garden, Mon- day, the 24th, and a tired but scrappy quintet edged Canisius 55-53 in the final three seconds of play. The fifth obstacle was hurdled in snow-swept Philadelphia when LIU turned. defeat into victory with an overtime 42-41 win on the last night of February. There were individual as well as team triumphs tor the Long Islanders. The tireless, driving Shechtman, probably the greatest play-maker in the nation, led the way offensively and defensively. You won't find Ossie's name up there with the point-leaders but he sparked the at- tack He set up Lobello's pop shots, screening perfectly. He fed King or Been- ders in the bucket, and found the weak SDots in an opponent's defense through which Schwartz or Schneider would later drive. The one and only Bill King, acclaimed not only as the greatest athlete ever to YWear the Pearl Street institution's colors, GM as a tine team man, a gentleman, and a sportsman, concluded his play for Walterson, Shechtman LIU against Butler, Ianuary 19. Along with accolades and Have atque vale's from the press, Dolly received a hand- some trophy from his classmates. Bill capped the day by scoring 19 points against the hapless Indiana outfit. It was an in and out year for Si Lo- bello, whom the New York Post once called Nthe greatest set-shot in America. Si began the season with sixty points in the first three games,but,1osing con- fidence against close-guarding Michigan State and Duquesne, ended second in the metropolitan scoring. When Si's pops were not dropping, he was a lost boy, and the Blackbird attack moved without him. However, Lobello im- proved tremendously underneath the cords and his soft passes to Shechtman more than made up for lapses in out- side shooting. It was tlite-saver' Lobello in those hectic five games toward the end of February and rave notices from the mid-west, south, and Philly proved. Si's value to the team. His greatest in- dividual performances were his twenty- point total against Rice, five tallies in the last four minutes of the Canisius struggle, and clutch baskets during the LaSatle second half and overtime. Sol Schwartz was the same old Butch- er Boy, flinging in a screwy lett-hander, popping his peculiar arcs that begin Schwartz. Now What time is it? Starting at 12 o'clock, read- ing counter-clockwise, we see Shart, Beenders, Lobello, King, and from the knees, or teaming with Shech ' ii; man in the famous LIU system around the foul circle. But Butchs torte was izir- defensive play, not his paintescorin: Cleanly and flawlessly, Schwartz dogge: his man, intercepting passes and leaiti; matety blocking the attempts of the dop- position to tally. Butch was the closest thing to the now legendary John Br i berg. 0111s When King put his jersey away, the question was HWho'tt till his shoes? Not only did Hank Beenders tilt Bilts shoes, but, at times, outgrew them A rock of Gibraltar against Oregon in the: opening Garden game, Beenders was soon lost in the limelight 0t Lobeiias shooting and King's aH-arourid play. However, someone was needed far the King-less Blackbirds, and Hank titted the bill. Powerful underneath, dead-eyed from outside, and suddenly proticient a2: a pivot-man, Beenders kept LIU in the game against Duquesne, and almost singiewhanded won the Canisius 5563 encounter. Hank set a 1940341 Garden scoring record against the Buffalo Grite tins with twenty-three points. The attie tudihous junior has clinched a spot on next years starting five. Saul Cohen came up wrapped inside a few thousand picas of publicity, here aided as a potential great, it . . . The tit, revolved around Saul's refusal to shoot, despite the accurate eye he had displayed as a freshman cager. How- ever, a column by Richards Vidmer smacked Cohen out of his trance, and the point total surged With nearly every attempt from the floor. In the eyes of many, the iSpider' developed into a bet- ter shot than Si Lobelio. Cohen, slow of foot and therefore unable to go ON the way on a drive, learned to teint or stop and shoot from beneath. Increased confidence Will make Cohen an out- standing basketeer in his next two sea- sons. Next year's squad may be the most formidable in LiUis history. Besides Beenders and Cohen, there'll also be Schneider, Fucarino, VVaItersori, Hohlb, and the great undefeated trosh tive. Oh, yes, Clair Bee'll be around, tOO :ti': dead-eyed LE; uidcient cs :ept 1411 in the a 3nd almost Crisius 55-53 343-41 Garden :9 Buffalo Grif- vvt, The alti- .g... :9: a spot on ..-.o::oed 1.1131419 :chsitYr her- -. ;f , The :5 refusal 10 1.: eye he had .Mggler. HOW' 1.; Vidmer gxce, an d v 1935' every - the eyes 01 I ' 1'19 0 bet- :en s1oW -: r 1x. a .4 n '3 90 OH '2'? L 1k ' 56'429 1 The Pearl Street Five opened the MSG year before o record house of over 18,000, trouncing gigantic Oregon 43-31. Next come a thriller against Rice in which the Blackbirds ridiculoust ort- tempted to run With the mercury-tooted Texans and were pulled out of danger by the slow but deadly Si Lobello. Si connected With nine for eighteen, to spark a 61-57 Win. Long Island's Winning streak come to Q rude end on the fourth night of the new year When dehberote Michigan State played possession and nosed out the Beemen 31-26. LIU led at half 14-8 1n o s1ow-motion nightmare. The Blockbirds ro11ed all over DePaul and Butler, but come Ct cropper to Du- quesne's tive smart boys, who stoved off G second hcdt rush to triumph 36-34. This Was the first Garden appearance of the Ktng-1ess Blockbirds. Two nights 1oter was the Roll over Brook1yn' festival, and the Kingsmen Were crownede-but good! Then come n Final 0 6-1-11 -j . Invitanon . y',,-' , 21'. .xe0 3 gm X93 005 tact A5 v13 gen , 5 $395 1 Com? 61W. mg 505111011311 MN, dd! 5 011 , 90? X5 4N as a 590 a ea 4:5 .1 QWL W115 Ge 4 e, 311:3st the deluge of LIU Wins on the road. Trailing 11-2 and 17-11 at East Lansing, the Beemen surged through 24-23. Again spotting c1 foe a hodt-time advantage, Long Is1ond beot DePaul 44-40 in a se- cond stanza that saw the lead change hands six times. Baltimore odso grabbed c1 mid-time 1eod but succumbed 44-37. Leaden-1egged but fighting, the five spotted Conisius eighteen points with eighteen minutes to go, and inexorab1y crept up on the Griffins, triumphing 55- 53 in the final three seconds. LIU concluded the regular season's p1c1y March 5, beating To1edo at the Garden 49-43 to receive the first bid to the fourth annual Metropolitan Basket- boll Writers' Tournament. You know the rest. EXTRA! The lowinq herd winds Three lines from NGUnqa Dmnand 3 BmmKLYN-L. l. U. slowlq o'er Hue lea r Brahms concerTO ?or q00d 0'6 psyrhologisl would use J ' '9' a o 00 GObllf-SROUJSRLI ! t t O ,. o .2 , sail music and poetry Where was 6 thaT's noT qounq Iadq Tram QUITE +he Yon hers -. who thouth Shea. gr lzowskw So Ends 0ur Fight... The Blackbird eleven opened its 1940 and possibly its last season Ctt Brooklyn College, September 28, under a warm Indian summer sun and played to CI slow-motion 6-0 Win before 4000 fans. . It was a distinct disappointment, both The red, Whlt? and blue Ibusf-erexttlers financially and competitively. The Bee- from Sen Antomo, St Marys 0d dextis, men were sluggish, and handicapped by drove m.to New York. and HOG e th e lack of practice. For fifty-four minutes mettopohtan pgpers Wlth blurbs on. en the Kingsmen's little Lenny Raff punted ablhty and thelr-c-oach, Ole Mose Slim?- and rcm the legs Off his heavier foese BM Q11 the'pubhc1ty was to no m.fw' Sr then blitzkrieg struck in the shape of C1 the ,BlGCkblrdS were red hOt behmd t1: spread formation, Bob Trocolqr's pitching tossmg Of Tr-ocolar emd LOU cagpfeo arm, cmd Bill King waiting on the good and. the CGtChmg Of DlZZY Dean cm ored line for the lazy pass that resulted in RQVlnSkY' The Pearl Street gangdSC tter six points and the bcdl game two qu1ck tOUCthWDS, converte CI ' both, and won 14-7. ' Y Q ;,. .1 z b . '3: W e. . . s. .- u . . 2. ha: a 0 3.. Q .N .3 T V. . x hN .97 .9: Q . t . Q; ti 5; 1T; 1. k00 6:. n .. i 13 l c: t 3.1 W- 'V .. v ' ,?,t,g-:.4 0. . o,!,n'2n.1 twinkling feet of sophomore Johnny Git- sas and the powerful line play of another second year man, Rush Methng, and repeated its 1939 win, 6-0. 'l'Jl'f..,,'.'ln... ? T4 0' ' e'P I A ' .fg'ofvlv. ' v! u; - 4 Ida'ff'h. A week later the eleven faced CI sup- Came the soft touch of the campaign, posedly sterner task When the Providence F . . Canisius College. The Griffins from Buft mars moved mto Ebbets Field to battle fglo had dropped c1 few, and were OUt' Long Island. However, LIU unveiled the manned by the Rose Bowl bound Black- 1 1 .IA 04 11W?- Y: ' ' t ' . . . . .. ..... .t. . . , , ., . . . , . , -.'A,, - .,- . --.., .. t , gr. ..A n. 1 LLttc . t . ml :qu. v .' r 1.; v.-.. mum. .mxthquznt-afnce$ceo cM.-L$r.u g-.J-uL;-, -ru. L t n - Thu: 1.3g Q... n? - birds. However, C111 your comparative scoreSt and all your opinions were so much trash When little Tom Colello grabbed King's opening kick-otf on his own 15 yard line. The hot K'nish bock twisted omd turned and spun through the entire Long Island defense to register six points. At least five Beemen had clear shots at the flying Colello. The Blockbirds quickly tied the count but Colellct went to work again, intercepting 0 pass and throwing CI thirty yord touch- down toss to upset the dope, 14-7. LIU's nineteen first downs to the victors, three failed to equalize Colello's scintillating ploy. Dizzy Deon, who spearheaded the Blackbird attack, suffered a severe neck injury in the second half omd wos cotr- ried from the field. A three week rest sent the Beemeri into the Louisville tray in perfect con- dition, and the Kentucky eleven never was in the boll gome. Another sopho- more, speed-boy Tom Kretz, mode his debut by streaking forty yards on a touchdown jaunt to leotd the offensive to o 29-6 victory. The tinole-ogoinst Toledo University, 0 rival of long standing both in basket- ball and football. The Blackbirds out- pointed the Rockets, 13-12, in their first meeting in Ohio, and staged c1 repeat performance at Ebbets Field this year, winning 19-7. Bill King, great end, took two flott posses from Trocolor and went titty omd thirty yards to tally twice. Lou Coppola added the final score in the lost minute of play, intercepting c1 desperate Rocket pass and going twenty yards to pay dirt. Toledo has never beaten LIU in five tries on cage court and gridiron. But the football season cannot be passed over by merely mentioning the six games played. There was the in- imitable Took Miley's annual HBlockbirds to the Rose Bowl column in the New York Post otter LIU had won its first Here's the squad: First row, left to righte-Anthony Colonori, Alfred Lout, Louis Coppola, Iohn Gitsos, Iohn Decker, Bill Byrne. Seoond row-Dizzy Deon, George Powell, lorry Cooper, Allie Goldberg, Dick Skwuor, Leo Loinott, Bernard Kopitonsky, Mike Rizzo, Louis Friedenthol, Victor Rosen- blumt Third roweloe Zucconi, Bob Trocolar, Dick Shellogg, A1 F181SC'hmGITI, Bondy Iohnsen, Albin Zdonevich, Rush Metling, Tom Kretz. What time 1s it now? , .. , rv: v1- i a'.'i.. a 1'.'. ' Ti 0 9.! 3 J3. 'oq 5-1;: 4 .i 24.97 1r. L. L: t? ht In. 3:? q- .. . 3 J t 1.115;: t, ' :03 :an A five yard gain for first down. three times out. Miley termed the Long Island squad Hundeteated, untied, un- sung, unbelievable, and unconscious. Then there was the long awaited air- plane trip to Loretto, Pennsylvania which would have made the Blackbirds the first metropolitan eleven to fly to a ball game. The trip is still long awaited. Probably the highlight of the season was Dr. Richard C. Paynter's poetry and sott music conditioning process for foot- ball players. The good doc proposed that the pigskin toters, to enter a game relaxed and unworried, be steeped in the strains of Classical music and soothed ' by poetry reading. We don't know the actual psychological value of such an experiment, but we acknowledge the publicity value. Every paper picked it up. Stan MacGovern, Post, turned it into a comic cartoon, and Jack Miley tossed off another gem. And the news reels grabbed a few hundred feet of A1 Lauf's poetry recital added to shots The head man. of the Blackbirds, inspired by HO blithe newcomer , mauling St. Mary's. Individually, the Long Islanders were no All-Americans, but there can be no denying the brilliance of King, Ioe Koons, Trocolar, and Cappola. King, possibly the finest pass receiver since Don Hutson and a deadly open field tackler, rated and exceeded his rave notices. Koons, shadowed by the glory of Ford- ham's Lou DeFilippo and Columbias Don Snavely, was the proverbial tower of strength, Rock of Gibraltar of the line. It would be a poor day for Joe it he didnt make a dozen solo tackles and intercept a couple of passes. Trocolar, for the second successive year, was the standout back, triple- threat, and signal caller. Troc completed over 5070 of the passes he threw and punted over 40 yards per boot. Lou Cappola, sophomore, who under- studied Trocolar at the start of the cam- paign, came into his own as the season progressed. t ball player, CZ: excelled in his quick kick, w: powerful offer Italian lad me: Add to this the DIUCkY dTiY mg and place and the line p; Zdanevich, cm The Blackb; ' seasons, Were . the upper strut been planned . chided Comes: I - mm St Y's mom and St .t Was here With a. Was gone. 11! :thletiq eCisi . ' sionqtzn' and n L3... Trocolar progressed. Lou, a staunch defensive ball player, and fine passer and runner, excelled in his forte-quick-kicking. The quick kick, when performed well, is a powerful offensive tool, and the squat Italian lad met no equal at this art. Add to this list of personal triumphs the plucky drive of Diz Dean, the block- ing and place-kicking of Leo Ravinsky, and the line play of Metling, Shellogg, Zdanevich, and Decker. The Blackbirds, after two successful seasons, were definitely on the way to the upper stratum. A 1941 schedule had been planned, even released, which in- cluded contests with Brooklyn College, Canisus, Albright, South Carolina, Fur- man, St. Mary's of Texas, Hardin-Sim- mons, and St. Anselm. Big time football was here with a bang. And bang.I it was gone. The Faculty Committee on Athletics came out with its momentous decision, and it stood up, despite a pas- sionate appeal from Seawanhaka and strong student pressure urging the return of the sport. Well, maybe when world conditions stabilize Long Island's record of five wins and one loss led all metropolitan schools, and comparative scores proved the Blackbirds eight touchdowns stronger than Rose Bowl winner Stanford, eight stronger than Texas A. and M., and seven better than Boston College. Ioe Koons, who staged a walk-out early last fall, gained center post on the Little All-Arnerican eleven. Bill King also was honored, placing on several aH-met squads. The Blackbirds, against Providence, St. Mary's, and Canisiusl actually outdrew Manhattan at the gate for the same three week-ends. LIU's 17,000 plus against Canisius doubled N.Y.U.,s attendance of the same week. However, over half of that crowd was composed of soldiers and sailors in uniform, admitted free. It was all part of the Armistice Day com- memoration. a I o v H: H! lfii-gg'o us: '14' 4.4fq; Headlines, 800 Lines... A u .. -V n. . Jalikuu Dun n. K H L 3AILD 14'7, as Visitors Tally 0n . I a ' l, m I t 2 an Poetry Are Added Ks ootbhll Curriculun 1., i. 5 X220. Bka' L M1 Conditionin a - mm. :MIac .N.E,W 3.0.3, 'le 1 u u n P, Iands L. I. U. First Defeat, anisius .1 4f ' ,l I2 '. Canisius 5 L ; terc I 1 Vfu l. - 2 x, L . n1: wu- ball com, Blackbird ' right on Square Girde funeral 113:: girls were i:: were too 2,; use their :3; il'rni. , . v 'I','v;'. . . 2 X0 $2202 9 $9de 0:23 . QC Xx cow 56x9 Cy? X200 2 x9 .93 . l .m- ck MM! ckSImx k0 COW X0! 01 m anon Guy: CW x2006; e e: 1? ' N d 9 a c c x en x 2 6x $ . ' I on T 5 ave a adLI x00 ' vy'if 7 . :' Q6 Fwd: 15$ g a. $ :0 mix and he suggcsI . v: v. .. - s .. ca ' 2 e 02 22 2 I I m S ' 2 5.3:. 2V 2c w 3 x ' I w: Q w'mnmg game , . . 91C xyh :39 gram c 1f 2 6'96 x360 ' an 0 . to teach an $eooww x0 2 r2 ' 2 2 I 2 c062 $ 2 my 0an .y. r $9 gum wk 4 wa 32 cc B2 . $3 $5. V .ngnW- .. 5; S11Lf4i72doago2m2ex- v ' Q Vb: 20 $10 I xx- , ' ?,?ch W woxawxc$ $$$$va 25v 5 a '2 NW w Jo $9 02 3 c ' W QB , ,r 7.6 16- 3 50 '26! ' Q xxx cc? $923 409 m w ' I0 ?Ing 20; : xq x I 3 Ann 011' unuAY, OCTOBER 28, 1940. 1 JG aacsk'! l. '1; ' ; ' 1'55 . Y 2 w 6-0 . . , m yw ? c hmmm'mn 1 : . c 2 r : v U Eleven 202.2122: mas as w W n :2 , v I y 10 :3ka In, 2 3: xx .9 lo C v2 v x0 q: nowhere . .1 I ' llmhle h'y , .Jnlversl 16 2 ' x c, 22$ tiers. mu .2. 2 m on mu mrdm 00k cum I 1: 2N 22$ 0 V . 5 2 ' elm lost pm. . cc '0' V5 E: + 6 o : S . weur, 7. m .10 r ovrr 10,- 'he Rn. xv x; xt S o b emined unbeaten. 6,09 . . 4. 25 95c . , ' C ' r. 2 xx . W2 In on; n. .Mu x n ea en 9' . ootball, Blackb' lrds Unbeafen 2 2 g g 2 2 'S 40 6 3 I ' - r tne uroppmg 0; r mIEBB-Mass Meeting in an Effort to Sway College 0ff higher H! y 0 deman 2 L ' d 'IX On I 2'22 2M3n33c n- ' Psek 5+. Mar'y-s of Tex , . . . . a I n lsl.nd Univeysny.s 001:; S I B 35 s 4x 6 $0 o3 ;; ,1 . , . , . EMS: PCJI Will hane uenls ms . s u- .- docsnK know xxhat CHECK the studcnts' npv pO . The young, tired-ooking .Illow. AJ' ,. . u : lax I Iuld lumbyw , . l .. 0x, NTOBEE'; , 7h Rec Cheerleaders You can't squeeze blood out of a stone. It was CI mighty depressing year for the cheer-leoders ort LIU Who wowed and roh-ed, to no avail. Coached by the astute dancing master, Gluck Sandor, the Blackbird yellers were as proficient crs any in the metropolitan area, and their vocal cords as strong. But G8 the squad shivered and screamed through the football season, the students laughed up their worm overcoat sleeves. Not only did the cheering squad cheer, but it also danced and marched. The minds of Clair Bee and Sandor rigged up a corking ballet Victory formation which featured titty gorgeous Long Is- tond coeds strutting about the basket- ball court, marching to the music of the Blackbird bond. But the students kept right on snickering, omd the Madison Square Garden debut proved to be 0 tunerod march, not CI victory. Either the girls were too pretty, or the students were too busy mooching cigarettes to use their mouths to cheer. L-I-U, Hear their cry! Band It's taken o long time, but it's finally happened. LIU has a bond What am! Under the guidance of Raymond Shon- non, boton-wielding graduate of Okto- horno A. and M., the HOver the Rain- bow', mess of 1939 has developed into a rootin'-tootin, college troupe thott plays the Alma Mater ors though Long Island boosted of a campus and traditions. The highlight of CI bond season that spread itself over football, basketball, and baseball campaigns, omd at student- wide rallies, wors achieved the last night of February Cit Convention Holt, Philly. Leaving 300 Pearl Street ort four that afternoon, the band's bus trudged ninety miles in srx hours through a blinding blizzard to arrive two minutes after the Blackbirds hod outpointed LaSodle 42-41 in overtime. Disappointed, but eager to serenade or new crowd, the fifty piece bond put out-ond tore down the hodl with the swellest musical show of the year. Through snow and sleet and block of night, the band came through. :2 n z beate Vegft rWtCollcge OHW , ya J tV W p .nlw' J 5 i 13 ylllg h Mi t0 W w '1 Mt , u e...- BasehaH: Read itand Weep It's in again, it's out again, its base- ball again. Out of the mothbcdls after a year's lay-off, baseball equalized the loss of football by turning out one of the strongest teams in Blackbird history. With c1 nucleus of seven veterans, George Bock, Buck Lat, Iohn Yengo, Walt Callahan, Ossie Shechtman, Jack McGowan, and Nick Scdcito, and coach- ed by Ice LaBate, Brooklyn Dodger scout, the Beemen swept through Q for- midable tifteen-gome schedule at CI tor- rid pace. Toeing the mound were southpaw Cod- lahan, Dick Skwircr, Bob Trocolcxr, and Lou Cappolcx. Receiving the slants of the above Big Four crouched Jack Mc- Gowan, heavy-hitting catcher. Bock, senior glamour boy of the in- field, patrolled the initial sack, With Yen- . mmseog'mmiludtx-ximi trailer: . . v; Lw' . go, Scdcito, Johnny Gitsczs, 0nd Dicky Isaacs constantly scrapping for the re- maining berths of the inner garden. Shechtmcm and L01, mercurial outfield- ers, gave the 1941 nine the fastest, hard- est-hitting outfield in metropolitan circles. Gabe Destio, Vic Rosenbloom, A1 Fleish- man, and Dizzy Dean completed the ros- ter. The Blackbirds were managed by Dave Schwartz, aided and abetted by Ira Steitel. The schedule: April 5 ...Penn AC. May 3 mSeton Hall 7 ......... Brooklyn 10 ...... Brooklyn 9 .................. Rider 14 .................. Rider 12 ......... C.C.N.Y. 17 ...... St. Peters 15 ......... Fordham 24 .USeton Hall 19 ..AN.Y. Exch. 25 ......... N.Y.A.C. 20 ...... Penn AC. 30 ...... Penn St. 26 ...... St. Peters 31 ...... Penn St 12 ta; 1 r , h t l. t 11 hi K1; 1' . y y! x X 'HM -5'i We first came across Rugby with its peculiar scrum in HTom Brown's School Days. The actual passage ran this way:e The two sides close, and you can see nothing for minutes but a sway- ing crowd of boys, at one point violently agitated. That is where the ball is, and there are the keen players to be met, and the glory and the hard knocks to be got. You hear the dull thud-thud ot the bail, and the shouts of Off your side,' 'Down With him,' iPut him over,' iBravoX This is what we call a scrummage, gen- tlemen . The author could have added that that is where the elbows fly, the legs kick, the ball is hooked back to a flying rugger who runs or laterals or boots until he or the mass has dropped the sphere over the goal. in that scrum, Long Island University is represented by one of the finest com- petitive teams in the Eastern Rugby 80er of the Earth League. Captained by A1 Lauf and Tony Colonari, and coached by Rhodes Scholar Arthur Yates, the LIU fifteen met this year the academicians of athletics, the Big Three's Yale, Harvard, and Princeton. Here, in a game built for sportsmen, where the only rules are the codes of sportsmen, LIU is acknowledged. Squad members include: George Raupp, Bill Oliver, Tony Coionari, A1 Lauf, Bernie Kapitansky, Arthur Trozzi, johnny Decker, Jerry Brown, Albin Zdan- evich, Eddie Eikinsl Oscar Camponeschi, Joe Zucconi, Dolph Mascari, Lou Fried- enthal. Andy Borno is manager and Jerry Brown assistant manager. queile heure est-ii? in line with innumerable pre- decessors we read from left to right; in the first row, Co- Captain Alt Laut, Coach Arthur Yates, Co-Captain Tony Colon- ari, and Eddie Elkins; second row, A1 Bruno, Oscar Campon- eschi, M u r r a y Lieberman, Charlie Berkowitz, and Mana- ger Andy Bomo; third . Johnny Decker, Jerry Goldstein, Tom Cardaci, Bill Oliver, Walt Cohen, and Assistant Manager Jerry Brown. Et maintenant, ,--n-:......-- ...'..-... .- .n. .. - : --5..:1... . 'M-w? .. ., m- . .,.,, .. n... .17.. . W . Women's Fencing The women's fencing team did not enter intercollegiate competition this year, c11- though it held intramural bouts through out the season among its own members. The team plans to engage outside teams once again GS soon CIS plans are com- pleted Members include, left to right, Phyllis Bob, Captain; Anne Palmert Anne Coppiet Ethel Katz, and Marion Cooper. '51'iT:f;.l'.' ' fir: qnfx'a' l GIIIIIIIIIIII! Men's Fencing The Long Island University fencing team boasts of the fifth-mnking intercollegiate fencer in the person of Ralph Leidermcm, its captain. Coached by Professor Fritz Semmler, it practises under the watchful eye of Maestro Greco of the Greco Acad- emy. Other members include, John Salop, Sandy Kirschen, Burt Winter, George H. Cronn, Don Krawitz, Harry Lipner, and Meyer Butler. :.f;fi,'l i ;;!f mdmin 1E a ..' ' I 4'250. at iyx'.'; ' 1'7! Ping Pong Winning eight games out of eleven in the 1940-41 season the table tennis team 3 . ' y! ,Wva C shows one of the best records in Eastern Intercollegiate competition. The capable squad mowed down John Marshall three times, Savage College twice, Pace Insti- tute, Queens College, N.Y.U., cmd suc- cumbed only to Queens, lOel, N.Y.U., 4-3, and Brooklyn College, 7e0. Tom Valinoti and Ken Collins share the spot- light crs the outstanding players. Captain Abe Sewelson, player-momctger Marty Srebnik and Len Silberger supplied the extra punch. 2: vi if; I 7v i I My? ntAutx i: $5 e VT V TV V'LUT--T - f r V. TI. x V VV'VW -Tt'q-T V ' ' TN'VT'. , 4 MTSA VL'A'1 L1K:'u-D-'A T' tL'i'. xH A W ' DVERTISEMENTS Id WWI? feno'ngta: ! :fth-mhng intercoleg: ' W 32' Rniph Leiden: W b? Prefessor 3:: pm under The wait: L : Gm: 3f he Grams ' 352595 include ,: KISSES Bur! W5 ' .. 10mm . . Money Talks . . . Dunn 6: Bradstreet MID-BLOCK RESTAURANT 30I Pearl S+ree+ Brooklyn, NY. T L.l.U. STUDENTS ENJOY OUR SANDWICHES AND LUNCHES FOR PARTIES AND OUTINGS WE SPECIALIZE IN SANIPAK SANDWICHES Tel? ' For Delivery on Shorf No+ice Call TRiangle 5-286I The Marshall Fluency Shorthand Reporting Course offers you a booklet about the official stenographic reporting of court proceedings . . . Thoroughly trained in shorthand, English, and essential legal and medical subjects, the Fluency graduate enters the profession at once, to earn from three to eight thousand dollars a year . . . For information call TRiangle 5-7386, or write the Registrar, Post OHice Box 153, Brooklyn. W PRINTERS AND PUBLISHEEg HSIE N INIINIi e33 MPHN ELHTBUSHDVE. HUOHLYN, NtY. STERLING 3-0500 1m 0-: 4 x k EY Wk LONG ISLAND UNIVERSITY BOOK SHOP Tex1L Books. S+a+ionery and Supplies NoveHies Wi+h L.I.U. Seal Orders Taken For Senior Jewelry Rings and Keys SIXTH FLOOR Abr055 . : 215! 5766 Y sherle 21 E05 Brooldan I'I' , Walter AW Cweef dison W 731Ma N Y Broolenr V 1d L, Augezsfe; ggJIZOAvenueYB CHIDNOFF STUDIO l'ne Anglera gaggzlgznd P1059 jamaica, 4 Elmer6 1 BOW c 141 McDonguy .- 550 F ifth Avenue Brooklynw. Anthony Barbacclc 761 East Z33rd 5266. New York 3 N Y 1'0le, A ' Ierome Bates 85 Lefferts Place Brooklyn, N. Y. Abraham Berge: 2029 East 37th 5256 Brooklyn, N. Y. Samuel Berghcl: 7513 F1. Hazilfs: F; Brooklyn, N. Y. Seymour Bier 986 Leggett Avenue New York, N. Y. June Birkins 92-36 761h Skeet Woodhaven, N Y. Sercm Bimbm'. 5?3 West 1515: 5:... MW York, N, Y. -... Minervq G 3, , . 485 Grove 333-62 Jersey City, N. I. Official Photographer for the Marti; Bloom 1941 Sound 245mmy AVenue BIOOkIYn, N. Y Sherley Abrams 21 East let Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Walter Astor 731 Madison Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Harold L. Augenstein 9302 Avenue B Brooklyn, N. Y. Pauline AugIera 90-03a182nd Place Jamaica, L. I. Elmore I. Bober 141 McDonough Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Anthony Barbaccia 761 East 233rd Street Bronx, N. Y. Ierome Bates 85 Lefferts Place Brooklyn, N. Y. Abraham Berger 2029 East 37th Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Samuel Berghohz 7513 Ft. Hamilton Parkway Brooklyn, N. Y. Seymour Bier 986 Leggett Avenue New York, N. Y Tune Birkins 92-36 76th Street Woodhcwen, N. Y. Seymour Bimboch 628 West 151st Street New York N Y. Minerva G, Bloustein 485 Grove Street 1ersey City, N5 1' Martin Bloom 246 Liberty Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. Claire Blumenreich 1515 St, Marks Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. George E. Bock 2750 Cruqer Avenue New York, N. Y. Andrew Nobile Borno 4426 Park Avenue 11ew York, 11. Y. Senior Directory Miriam Bortniker 105 Willow Avenue Hoboken, N. 1. Samuel Budowle 664 Pennsylvania Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. Alphonso P. R. Celentcmo 12 Bellman Street Fairview, N. 1. Manuel M. Cherry 9502 Kings Highway Brook1yn, N. Y. Seymour Cohen 975 Avenue St. Iohn Bronx, N. Y. Ieom M. Collins 1880 Atlantic Avenue BrookIyn, N, Y. 10sephine Comunale 82-42 St. Iames Avenue EImhurst, N. Y. Noel Comrade 115 Vernon Avenue Rockville Centre, L. 1. Irving Cowcm 1872 EQ5126th Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Euqenie M. B. Cox 1927 Ryder Street Brooklyn, N. Y. George Cron 119 Elm Street Elizabeth, N. 1. George H. Crorm 37 Crescent Street Brook1yn, N. Y Andrew G. Crowley 263 Ridgewood Avenue Brook1yn, N Y. Edward I. Cuneo 232 VVQshington Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. Gabriel M, De Stio 133V37485th Street South Ozone Park, N, Y. Kenneth Ehlers 9315 02nd Street Hollis, N. Y. Mildred Eichel 75-51 67th Drive Middle Village, L. 11 Edmund Joseph Elkins 406 Tompkins Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. Iohn Adam Evancuskas Coach Road East Setaucket, N. Y. Irvinq G. Feigelmon 403 A1bermc1r1e Rood Brooklyn, N. Y. Shirlee Hope Feld 1217 Avenue S Brooklyn, N. Y. Dominick Florio 33 Ellery Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Patrick Florio 33 E11ery Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Marie L. Fogus 133-18 118th Street Ozone Park, N. Y. William Formcm 314 East 6th Street New York, N. Y. Dorothea G. Foster 848 East 14th Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Clarence R. Freundlich 22 Hedden Terrace Newark, N. 1. William A. Fuchs, Ir. 434 Closson Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. Iohn G. Fuhrer 19 Lehiqh Street Midland Park, N. I. Bomet G. Gelber 936 East 178111 Street New York, N. Y. Ioseph V. Giglio 2043 Creston Avenue New York, N Y. David Ginsberg 95 Weberfield Avenue Freeport, L. 1. Julius Go1dberg 3023 West 23rd Street Brook1yn, N. Y. Shirley Volvo Golden 101 East 116111 Street New York, N. Y. Ruth B Goldshine 645 Hamilton Road South Orange, 111. Louis Goldsmith 1242 East New York Avenue Brooklyn, 11. Y. Ira Goldstein 663 Manhattan Avenue Brooklyn, 11. Y. Sydney Goldstein 152 Goerck Street New York, N. Y. Arnold V. Goulding 1349 Lexington Avenue New York, N. Y. Anne M. Grobowski 264 Iericho Turnpike Floral Park, L. 11 Seymour Greenbaum 1930 Grand. Concourse New York, N Y. Emanuel Greenberg 2942 West 2nd Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Ierome Greenstein 1049 Broadway Woodmere, L1 11 Iacob Gross 842 Eastern Parkway Brooklynl N Y. Ruth Gross 42 Sherman Avenue Yonkers, N. Y. Victor Gross 495 Hopkinson Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. Alvin Gruder 985 East 174th Street New York, N. Y. John Gurka 7412 65th Street Glendale, L1 1. Iomes G. Holulokos 9106 Jamaica Avenue Woodhaven, L. I. Lillian H. Hammond 317 Rodney Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Arnold Homo 41 West 83rd Street New York, N Y. 13:1: 3 Hosid 720 Pennington Street Elizabeth,11. 11 Richard M. Isoocs 910 West End Avenue New York, N. Y. W111iam Kogcm 3092 Brighton 4th Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Milton Koplon 851 East 49th Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Ethel Katz 344 East 17th Street New York, N. Y. Olga Kaufier 426 East 79th Street New York, N. Y. Gerald Kaufman 105 Hawkstone Street New York, N. Y. Iames P. Kennedy 299 14th Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Marguerite T. KiIcourse 2351 2151 Street Long Island City, N. Y. Arthur Kletter 1034 Washington Street Hoboken, N. I. Leonard Kotin 195 Pulaski Street Brooklvn, N. Y. Frances Kruvctnd 3506 Newkirk Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. ' Angela A. Labbate 25-30 34th Street Astoria, L. I. William Thomas Lci, Ir. 8958e212th Street Queens Village, N. Y. Moe Lehrer 2185 Bolton Street New York, N. Y. Max Letitia: 375 C:mr::w.1 1ersey C113', 1: SCYKIOUT1 Lexm 20 Bennett Avenue :ew York 1: Y, Bernard E 1.0121: 349 Crown Skeet Brook1yn 1? Y Peor1 Lifzichlt: '71 P1020 Stree4 Brooklyn, 1:. Y .55 $3111 Likofsky' 1191 31st Avenue Jackson Heights, 11 Y Eugene Lore 243 55th Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Dorothy Ludwig 527 Hendrix Street a Brook1yn, N. Y. Edmund H. Lustgorten 1517 Iesup Avenue New York, N. Y. Iomes 1. Mock 25-45 47th Street Astoria, 1... 1. Saverio Maida 65 Stone Avenue Brook1yn, N. Y. Catherine B1 McCormick 248 Wadsworth Avenue New York, N. Y. Henry E. McLinden 157 Lincoln Avenue Soyville, N. Y. Arthur Meadow 2184 East 29th Street Brooklyn, N. Y. David I. Mendelson 31 Academy Street Patchogue, N. Y. Franklin W. Morton, Ir. 446a Hancock Street Brooklyn, N. Y Elizabeth M. Neuschoefer 664 Manhattan Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. Henrv G. Neuschoefer 0 664 Manhattan Avenue 2 Brook1yn, N. Y. 2 Milton 233 W6 New Y1 W anda 41-01 11 Long 15 Theoda 1629 EC Brook1Y3 Helen C 64 High Hunting Louis Pg 5908 1411 BrooleI Evrigle 2907 Ea: Brooler Iosephir'l 3321 Bali New Yor Thelma I 9542 F lat BrookIyn. Ravmond 764 57th Brooklyn, Leo Price 8784 23rd Brooklyn, Robert I. 1 107-20 1091 Richmond Herbert S. 1680 Oceox Brooklyn, 1 Harvey I. F 114-02 Libe Richmond 1 Selma Rubi 26 Butler P11 Brooklyn, N 1056: Suez BrOOlen, N1 1763 71st 311 Brooklyn, N. Sidney C 643 Essex. :1 BTOQkIYn' N. Charles G E 249 East 3 BroOleH, 11.11 mun Hun Sm Wyn. N. d 2 1! 3 st Avenue in Heights, N. Y. Ian 5. 7-4 5 1m 3 556 Skeet :o'dyn 11'. Y. r321 Lucivig 7 Bath Street 30km: N Y. 1:22:01 H Lusigurten L7 Luz; Avenue a Hi 11. Y. 1:151 35! HS 47:: Sreet mm. L 1 39.1: 3150 : 3539 Avenue r7133 31 Y' 'v'f'we B MccormiCk 121314-158 Avenue , m ;- Mclmden .. , .. 1 :04:- Avenue t Vendelson 7 . , 55961 .aJaZ'v u Milton L. Oretsky 233 West let Street New York, N. Y. Wanda Pacwa 41-01 10th Street Long Island City, N. Y. Theodore W. Paris 1629 East let Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Helen O. Pause 64 Highview Court Huntington, L. I. Louis Penque 5908 14th Avenue Brook1yn, N. Y. Evrigle Petrakos 2907 East 7th Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Iosephine Pincus 3321 Bainbridge Avenue New York, N. Y. Thelma Pincus 9542 Flatlcnds Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. Raymond Poplawski 764 57th Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Leo Price 8784 23rd Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. Robert I. Resnick 107-20 109th Street Richmond Hill, N. Y. Herbert S. Rothman 1680 Ocean Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. Harvey I. Rothstein 114-02 Libertv Avenue Richmond Hill, N. Y. SeImQ Rubin 26 Butler Place Brooklyn, N Y. 1039 Soez 219 Varet Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Philip Samuels 1763 713i Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Sidney C. Schachtmeister 643 Essex Street Brooklyn, N, Y. Chgrles G. Scheurenbrond 249 East 37th Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Alfred Scihneider 1189 Sheridan Avenue New York, N. Y. Ralph Leo Schumcm 105 Pinehurst Avenue New York, N. Y. Doris Schupak 390 W'Gdsworth Avenue New York, N. Y. David Schwartz 575 West End Avenue New York, N. Y. Seymour Shapiro 940 Grand Concourse Bronx, N. Y. Maxwell Shorf 1918 East 9th Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Oscar Shechtman 130-16 2351b Street LaureIton, L. 1. Lewis Sheldon 615 West 183rd Street New York, N. Y. Richard SheHog 282 Corbin Place Brooklyn, N. Y Ethel I. Shohet 139 Livingston Avenue Yonkersl N. Y. Lawrence Siegel 82 Grafton Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Murray Silberberg 1939 Vvse Avenue Bronx, N. Y. Arthur Silverman 48-35 38th Street Sunnyside, L. 1. Mildred Silvermon 1555 Eastern Parkway BrookIyn, N. Y. Robert Simpson 233 Clifton PIOce Brooklyn, N. Y. Milton Sobel 2134 78th Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Ieidore Sohn 679 Waring Avenue Bronx, N. Y. Bernard Sokol 422 Avenue C Brooklyn, N. Y. Irving H. Sokoloff 8645 23rd Avenue Brooklyn, N, Y. Seymour Solomon 8201 19th Avenue BrookIyn, N. Y. Vincent Spadafora 133 Hudson Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. Charles Henry Stagg 144-40 32nd Avenue Flushing, L. L. Seymour Steinberg 118 South 13th Avenue Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Frederick Steier 2823 Avenue M Brooklyn, N. Y. Ira Stiefel 1462 President Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Ruth 1. Strauss 1396 Bushwick Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. Robert A. Taylor Box 143 C Rahwoy, N. I. Arthur Ticker 4204 13th Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. Ida Valente 80-21 Penelope Avenue West Forest Hills, L I. Thomas L. Volinoti 5440 65th Place Maspeth, L. I. Uao P. Viggiono 8221 19'th Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. Monroe Waxmon 12 Shonley Avenue Newark, N. 1 Herbert P. Weisel 7507 67111 Drive Middle Village, N. Y. David Woogen 2333 Creston Avenue Bronx, N. Y. Iohn Yengo 361 Montgomery Street Jersey City, N. I. Irving Zeitlin 1431 44th Street Brooklyn, N. Y. t - -. 't - -. ' ' ' .- V . -. v t . . , ' ' - tim'Qifttzr-t, 7-1W:2:1:2113i35ii21-13cwi3m:- V- 5.1.: 553:..- -- aewa-m , , e , . -, e I' t t t 1 Acknowledgments Caesar had Anthony, Adolph had Rudolph, Mac- Phail has Durocher, and SOUND had Boxer and Press, for Which we, the editors, and they, the staff, offer hearty hosomnahs to heaven. Harold and Paul, of the engraver's and printer's respectively, are the answers to cm editor's prayers for ideas, confusion and help. They couldn't have been sweller. Friday Magazine comes in for CI cut, While we're dishing out gratitude in large handfuls, tor the pictures they generously let us use on pages 74 and 84. If you like the pictures, Renee Carroll and Sherman Randct are the boys to thank for most of them. Now it's your turn to thank us. You're welcome. 1 -ln. vi, 1 147' k a
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