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Page 186 text:
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M.i ' J.l.ii ' ' -y i ' U ' t J ' . J Lj tt I . Phuto,e,ruph) Ediliji f) ' Coiiikji . AXjnjgiu Editor Eiautrjn. pus were ery anxious to pnmde us with informal snapshots of the campus, espe- cially with him. plates, and flash bulbs scarce and expensne. While we were tryint; to conMnce them that they should be t;lad to put forth time and money for the glory of seeing their pictures appear in the Man- hattanite, we had other troubles: a) Finneran ' s girl returned from Florida, b) Malley went to work in a drug store, c) Thompson graduated, d) No one would turn in anything. e) No one would ha e his picture taken, f) There is more to graduating than meets the eye, g) Time marches on. Art Editor joe Kiersky, the mad Bohemian who has a studio in the attic of Cniribaldi ' s House in Staten Island, sas the only one who started to work early. He was turning out colorful title pages like Ford rolls out V-8 ' s until one day he iips and leaves for Fordham. Can vou imagine a Fordham man as an Editor of a Manhattan publication.- ' Worst of all, he had not completed all the title pages when he got caught in the toils of the Maroon law school, and Fitzgerald broke down and wept bitter salt tears until we dug up Sophomore Jim Bangert w ho also dabs a mean canvas. Photography Editor Joe O ' Connor organ- ized an enterprising crew to take informal photographs of activities at Manhattan. The Termini Brothers, John and Al, did yeoman work by turning up at all hours and in all places with their trusty cameras. Of the thou- sand-odd prints that appear m this Md)!- hattiUiite. It is safe to say that Al Termini alone is responsible for at least a quarter of them. Quadrangle Copy Editor No. 5, Charles Cdiuck Riker. proxed to be a find when he prox ' ided Fitzgerald, Malley and Co. with excellent prints of such e ents as the May 1 Pray for the Russians meeting on the Quadrangle, and Graduation Day. Among the others who contributed worthy material 182
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Page 185 text:
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THE MANHATTANITE IF It IS kinds the 1947 traditional that pubUcations of ail have trouble meeting a deadline iVIanhattanite must hold the record The EJi ur relaxes. for missing a deadline by more time than anyone ever dreamt of. Editor Fitzgerald planned on having the book completed by January with just some odds and ends to finish up in the Spring. Now the Narm August sun beats down upon our weary heads, and the end is not yet in sight. There are a number of things that might enable us to explain. First of all, class schedules precluded any possibility of getting any more than three individuals together at a time for a group picture, hi the first semester we strove mightily to have some pictures taken, and found ourseh ' es with snapshots of a few f )rlorn trios representing such mammoth organizations as the Manhattan Engineers or the Commerce Club. By the time we had worked out a suitable arrantrement it was nearly April. Now we ' ll get started, said Fitz. We were started, but we soon came to another batch of hurdles. First of all, the only start photographer quit school and went to work in the Stork Club muttering, No cheesecake in Ri erdale. He took his flash- bulbs, too — the rat. None of the other cameramen on the cam- Aiuii ' ule Ediloi jiid Editor collier. 181
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Page 187 text:
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were C. Bernard McCartan, Dave Maloof, John Bird, Romeo Sterlini, and William Burns. Lauer and Fleenor teamed up on the busi- ness end of the annual. Their slogan, Let ' s make the Maiihattanite a credit, not a debit to Manhattan! inspired them to browbeat the local merchants and anyone else who had some money to spare into buying those lucrative advertisements, hicidentally, please do patronize our advertisers. Art Bunce of the Sports Department went along methodically piling up pictures and copy until the baseball season sneaked up on him and knocked his nice schedule into Van Courtlandt Park lake. Among his major difficulties was getting pictures of the base- ball team in action in a blinding blizzard. But he did get the pictures. Copy Editor Joe Price had so little to do in the early Spring that he was begging for some work. His cries turned to moans, how- ever, when in early May he found himself literally snowed under ' with copy. However, Gerry Fitzgerald managed to get things fairly well organized along about 183
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