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Page 92 text:
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,--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'.
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Page 91 text:
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'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,
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Page 93 text:
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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
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