New York University - Violet Yearbook (New York, NY)

 - Class of 1963

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New York University - Violet Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1963 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 229 of the 1963 volume:

-,,, X, ,, f Q H, MW. , , f V' n.,M.mf42W'0f if w!fvf2.L',, ' f IMP :gf--ff4bEfZ2i24lQr-'-ff1:42fL13Z',Z?:a:Q:Q:1 iSg:::1:c,L!!3f?'Sf 'iiWfff2?f f', www 1 : ,MM-ff . ...,,.,...- 'va Q.,-as-M W .1 3 M . 55 v,-f,'4 3'9', V :QM 1 A,.LI,.55., .Ji 1-,gy - 532 .'., 5:91 ,I Sf -fi' ' - sg - - . 51 :f.5.::jf 5325: 'iff' 'PE4fRS1fP?R?E1f.hP'f?4?ST4N'!-E f.E5:iMwgcQz2i:gu1-I -su.. 1963 VIOLET VOLUME LXXIII Q f X 4 M' 4 'Q gf! 4, f .mf'f ' , 7 5,4 5 i I I 5 ,,., ,, ,Q Q ,K ..::2-7 -:J f ay- fy H f . ,f - ff 'x ' Y ,'3 ' w fa: - ,,-., Ea .mx yi A if ,S 454 .Q f 0 ' ' ' ' , - 5 X Vi' Q fs i .M 'X ' 4' ' f ,l .. '35 N Q .5 5 fl 'X 4 ' f if X X .,A,. -Q' 1 Hd X 1.1 -wxzafii' Ff ww, XNW gk 963 VIGLET Sandor Frankel Dan Steinbrocker Editors CONTENTS Academics ...... .... 6 Views .,,,,,,,,.,.,,,,., ,,,, 3 2 In Retrospect ,.....,.. ,,., 4 4 Activities ,.,.,.,.,.,.,,.,.,,,A,. ,,,, 6 O Organizations ........ ,.,. 7 4 Anthology ........ ,.,.,.,., 1 O6 Honoraries ........ .....,... 1 16 Fraternities ........ ......... 1 22 Sports ...,..... ......... 1 36 Seniors .......... ......... 1 62 Benetactors ........... ......A., 2 17 The Violet is published annually by the undergraduate students of the University College of Arts and Science and the College of Engineering of New York University. The editors ofthe 7963 Violet respectfully dedicate this yearbook to WILLIAM VORENBERG for his contributions to the Heights campus as educator, director, and friend. FOREWORD The past four years have filtered through our lives taster than any previous ones. We dreamed our dreams these four years, but our tenure here is over and we leave our make-believe reality for more hard- ened pastures. Some ot us buried ourselves in books, some in cafeteria bridge, and some in love, but we were all a part of this campus, we were all a part of its mall and its classrooms, we all breathed its air. This yearbook is not designed to relive the past four years, it pictures the Heights as an obiective backdrop, as a picture uncompleted until you bring your personal reactions to play in the foreground. The 7963 Violet is a success it, after tive, ten, twenty years, you can recreate your own lite here with ref- erence to the college experience. DAN STEINBROCKER SANDOR FRANKEL 5 x Maki ,xx K' - Tff 5 gl ? AA!!! S 'iiglg .4 'C -sn 4 V NX ' 444Qf, '2Q.'N '- X ,TQ ' n V X , ...ga ,. '-7 l v 5' X ' D ' X -li-1? -Lf: W X' -.X 5 ' ,, ' -4,f xx K 6 U ,p vt? -bf XX 1 . - fr. S S . 5? Zvi L 6 Q I+ :JW T A 4 W , l , Z I ,'-, - l,ff- I ffl '45 ,Qu UQ IL- Q14 5 'nh-'Tl 'R ' J 6 -I X H xv ,U A h 'lr xy I 3' 6 5' I K lf' fir- vi QB t X -' 1 u i. F V .'.6..ug ' r f - I fl 1 ff r ..l ,1 I H ' , I -:lag f ff Q, 2 f ,4 4' 4. .5 L Il iff ily' ,lfgifl , I ' f + M: A I f K , ,f Z. -lqafx 2 ' I' 1 yi 'Q Q T -I W Nl w!. f 1n ,fl, Q: u J ff 31i 'ZQLA4' TVN 0-' ' W -- - Wwl' 1 if 1' ' 3? - 'f J 'WV i uf X A H- A 'Q ,,-.1 f WA 4, - l 1 L, '- wif xv Q, I.: f, la ff X f 'Qt x y W , I ,.:. Y .-7 ' f QQ - - 0, W 1 A + lf w ' . HW Q f 7.1593 1 'E W W V, W1 -. 1. I I ,, 1 ' mf-,Q G l 1 N V L' iq 1 X L ml. il ggi ggi .:- , , '.-.' -f W 122255: X ' y , ' - f , 2293 1 4 4f15T Tf'-- - 1'5 H A t vi' - 3 : Y X' rg , n 1 I ,fix xx ,F , -- , ' A+ ' ffg1Nji.l555 dr HW 4 Ay ff, ,Q E gn , in F ,. gs 41-f , ,EK V, - -' f -ikl - I 1- 1-1, if , f - A ik-7 'g-gmldf W- -L X ii'Q l- .fk pizzlj A JAMES M. HESTER Pffficient New York University 1 8 NEWVYORKKHHVERMTY WASHINGTON SQUARE NEW YORK 3. N.Y. OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT To the Class of 1963: By your graduation from the University College of Arts and Science of New York University, you have successfully passed an important milestone in your life and I congratulate you on your achievement. It is my hope, however, that you will also consider your diploma as a qualification for con- tinued growth. As undergraduates you have developed interests, abilities, and attributes which will stand you in good stead in the years which lie before you. The life of the mind is one of man's greatest adventures and you have qualified for further pursuit of this wonderful experience. May I make a suggestion - continue your association with your alma mater by taking an active interest in alumni affairs. You and your ideas will be welcomed by the Alumni Federation. My best wishes accompany each of you. Sincerely yours, 22, xml, James M. Hester 9 JOHN W. KNEDLER Dean University College NEW YORK UNIVERSITY LWUVERMTY COLLEGE OF ARTS AND MHENCE UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS. NEW YORK 53, N.Y. OFFICE OF THE DEAN 1 TELEPHONE: LUDLOW 4-0 To the Class of l963: Following the excitement of your final final-examinations and of your various festivities centered on Commencement, you will find a little pause before you settle to your summer occupations. Now you can examine your Violet. Its pages will recall striking events of the last four years: some few of them memorialized in pictures of teachers and college officials you've known at University Heights: some other few in pictures of buildings and campus spots: most, in pictures and accounts of your classmates. Ten or twenty or thirty years from now, not many of the tiresomely familiar professors will still be on campus: some buildings Qfor example, State Hall and Green, will be forever gone: classmates will have developed lines in their faces, width in their waistlines, maturity and authority in aspect and demeanor. At that distant date, you may read the Violet of 1963 with mirth or with nostalgia. Right now, however, the perspective is short. You will groan or snort or laugh over events re- called from the recent past much as you did at the moment of actual occurrence. Then, you will close your book, to let sentiment ripen. This letter thanks you for your participation in the last four years, wishes you well in the years directly ahead, and blesses for you the more distant future. It commends the Violet to you not only for your immediate pleasure but as the stimulus for your future recollections. It congratulates you on your graduation, foresees your success in a far-reaching set of ncom encements,u and offers you personally the lasting bonds of your Alma Mater's affection. Don't forget heri J John Warren Knedler, Jr. U JOHN R. RAGAZZINI Dean College of Engineering NEMTYORK,UNTVERSITY COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING uxrvnusxrx ullours XIX 'IORH Graduates of the Class of l963: Having successfully completed four or more years of study in the College of Engineering, you are now entitled to the bachelor's degree from your Alma Mater. These past years have been demanding on you and the fact that you have successfully completed your studies should be a source of pride to you as it is to your professors. I hope that you have made lasting friend- ships among your classmates and members of the faculty of the college. In becoming a graduate engineer you are embarking on a lifetime of service to your community and to society. The engineer is dedicated to this purpose and he must create from the sciences, his ingenuity and the economic and human resources available to him the many things urgently needed by his fellow man. As one who is on the verge of joining our profession, you will experience a feeling of pride and responsibility which cannot readily be described. I hope that the future will bring you many satisfactions, that you will not forget your Ahna Mater and that you will come back to us as loyal alumni. We of the faculty of the College of Engineering want to share with you your many accomplishments to come. Let us hear from you often. Sincerely, f John R. Ragazzini Dean 15 HAROLD E. HAMMOND Affociate Dean University College of Arts and Science Q, , . FREDERICK C. SCHULT, JR. Arfirmmf Dean University College of Arts and Science DOROTHEA HUBIN Affifmnt Dem University College of Arts and Science ---if GEORGE B. SARGENT, II Acting Asfismnr Dean University College of Arts and Science FREDERICK K. TEICHMANN Awmznt Dean HAROLD K. WORK Affociate Dean College of Engineering College of Engineering 4 4 ROBERT C. GELDMACHER Ayyociate Dean College of Engineering EMANUEL A. SALMA Asfzmznt Dean College of Engineering GLEN N. Cox Affiftmezf Dean College of Engineering wg JOSEPH C. O,CONNELL Bzzrinefr Manager University Heights MQW, ff, DONALD M. MYRICK Cbairfmzfz of Admifriom University College of Arts and Science LAWRENCE J. HoLLANDER A.f5j.mz1zr Z0 the Demi College of Engineering H. FREDERICK HOLlN'IES Cbfzizwmziz of ACf7lZi5fjOl'25 College of Engineering X PHILIP PRICE Director of Slzzdem' Aftiritief University Heights JANE SHIPTON Afsismmf Director, Student Activities University Heights ASHLEY T. DAY Librarian University College of Arts and Science HANs E. HOPE Assistant Director, Student Activities University Heights ROBERT LESUEUR Libmripzn College of Engineering UNIVERSITY COLLEGE AIR SPACE Cbaimzrzn-Lieutenant Colonel Arthur F. Nicholson. I joined the Air Force Qthen Army Air Corpsj from my native state of Indiana in November, 1942, and a year and a half later was flying combat missions over Europe in a B-17 Flying Fortress. One of the flights I remember best was my D-Day bombing mission. My group had targets behind the landing beaches and I had a birdseye view of the invasion forces on Normandy beachhead. Another memorable flight was a shuttle mission to Russia. The mission to Russia was con- ceived to enable my B-17 group to bomb important targets too deep in Germany to enable the aircraft to return to England without refueling. Because of battle damage to my own B-17, I spent three weeks in Russia and had an opportunity to watch Russians and the Russian Air Force in action. Prior to my assignment to New York University's Air Force ROTC, I was stationed at Vandenberg Air Force Base, Cali- fornia, as the Base Transportation Oflicer. Though I was pri' marily concerned with supporting the ballistic missile program there, I managed to get involved in some unusual jobs in my transportation work. One such job calculated to make the life of a Transportation Olllcer anything but dull was the moving intact of a huge F-102 Delta Dart Fighter plane, which was incapable of flight, but which could not be dis- mantled, from the base to Santa Maria, California. 25 miles away, for display in the town square. I had a lengthy session with the California Highway Patrol, the Santa Maria Chamber of Commerce, and 'other interested agencies to work out a plan to tow the aircraft on the highway. The plane was so large that the telephone company had to move telephone lines. the power company had to raise their power lines, highway maintenance crews had to cut brush and move rocks, and the State Police had to reroute traffic. Arroriaie Professor-Major George F. Drury. Arrirffzzzf Proferror-Captain Bruce Peterson. BIOLOGY Cbfzirfmzn-Professor H. Clark Dalton. Interest in the living things of the world seems to be built into every growing child. Some of us never get over it and become biologists. In my own case enthusiasm for animals and plants was nourished primarily by an encouraging grandfather, whose avocation was natural science, and by summers spent at the seashore, where exploration of the beaches brought daily contacts with the life of marine organisms in fascinating variety, More formal training in school and college left me with the impression that biologists have more fun than anybody. an opinion which I would change on maturer reflection only to the extent of rephrasing to say that for me biology is more fun than anything. lwfy hrst faculty appointment after finishing the doctorate was interrupted by an invitation from the Draft Board to spend one year in military training. Five years and a world war later I resumed an academic career, having meanwhile met a host of vivid characters and engaged in a number of improb- able and somewhat biological pursuits ranging from the operation of a VD prophylactic station in the mayor's office of a New England town to commanding a cooks and bakers school in the jungle of New Guinea. The potentialities for growth and development are to me the most intriguing and the most puzzling aspect of living systems. viewed in the span of a lifetime or in the scale of evolutionary progress. My research interest concerns the action of genes in controlling developmental processes leading to hereditary patterns of pigmentation in salamanders. Recognition of developmental potentials is at the bottom of my enthusiasm for teaching and my conhdence in the abilities of students. Proferrorr-Richard P. Hall, Charles H. Willey. A5- rnciale Pl'0f6,l'J'01'-OffO M. Helf. Arrirfzzzzf Pr0fe,rr0rr- Helene N. Guttman, Douglas B. Webster. ., aw, www-A .413 i inn-ma CHEMISTRY Cbnirnmn-Professor Thomas W. Davis. Like everyone else, I am fortunate to be living in the period of the most rapid growth of science and in the period of the greatest accomplishments of science, Among all the sciences, chemistry is marked by the complexity of the phenomena with which it deals and the profundity of the changes that give rise to these phenomena. In a sense, then, chemistry is the first of the sciences. During its existence of thirteen decades, New York University has been constantly concerned not only with the task of helping students to understand the existing store of scientific knowledge but also with the need to extend that store. Beginning with john W. Draper, the University's hrst professor of physics and chemistry and the first president of the American Chemical Society, an unbroken succession of faculty members has maintained and strengthened the University's ac- tive role as a source of new chemical knowledge. During the past forty years, I have been privileged to witness these things at lirst hand and in a small measure to be part of them. The rise of physical chemistry, the rejuvenation of organic chemistry, the availability of a startling array of instruments, many of them undreamed 'of forty years ago, have changed our science most notably. Changed too is the relationship of science to the non-academic world. Chemical companies are among the largest and most important in the country. Even banks take names that suggest a kinship to science. Governments have become interested in science in a major way and now more scientists are employed by governments than by any other agency. The national government, furthermore, has come to be an essential source of funds to support research in the universities who have found the costs otherwise soaring far beyond their ability to contrive. Despite the great changes, the purpose of science re- mains the same, viz., to understand more thoroughly the nature of the world and thereby, the better to understand ourselves. To witness these things and to be involved in them even in a slight way has been the chief feature of my life. Professors-Kurt M. Mislow, john E. Ricci, H. Austin Taylor. Armrinle P1'0fe5.r01'r-S. Carlton Dickerman, Edward Durham, joseph D. Gettler, Edwin S. Camp- bell, Henry M. Hellman, james N. Sarmousakis. Amin?- cznzf Professor-David I. Schuster. InJ1f1'nct0rJ-Ricliard Narvaez, Frances Yablonsky. CLASSICS Cfariirznmz-Professor Richard M. Haywood. I was born and grew up in Lynn, Massachusetts, and went to Dartmouth in the class of 1926, the first college class which was chosen by the consideration of personal and other factors in addition to scholarship, the method which is now the usual one. I took my Ph.D. at johns Hopkins in Latin with Tenney Frank, a man who liked to combine historical studies with his literary studies. Not only did I write a historical dissertation, on the elder Scipio Africanus, but I also was invited to join the group of scholars who produced An Economic Survey of Ancient Rome. In the first six years of my teaching at johns Hopkins, I wrote my section of the work, on the economic life of Roman Africa. Since then Roman Africa has been one of my steady interests, and I have written articles and reviewed books on the subject. In 1939-40, I had a Guggenheim Fellow- ship for further work on Africa and my family and I had gotten as far as Switzerland when the war broke out, my younger daughter was born in Zurich that October. In 1950, Washington Square College offered me an appoint- ment, and in 1952 I came to the Heights. This is a good place for a scholar and teacher and writer, and I have thoroughly enjoyed my work. The Mylh of Ronzeft Fall came out in 1958, a volume on the Near East and Greece is in process of publication, and the companion volume on Rome will soon be ready, During 1960-61 I had the Research Fulbright for Italy and made progress in Rome on a study of the Senate in the late Roman Republic and on an attempt to describe the city of Rome around 100 A.D. as a working social organism, a pair of enterprises which will take a little time, especially with the chairmanship of the Heights depart- ment and the post of adviser to the graduate students. Teach- ing and scholarship, with a little administrative work for duty's sake, is a good Way to live. Afyinfnzzf Profeffor-Charles W. Dumnore. Inm'nrt0r- Rita Fleischer. ECONOMICS Cbriirman-Professor Walter W. Haines. Arfilzg Cbrzirvzazzz-Associate Professor Benjamin Katz. I was born in Brooklyn in 1923 and raised in a quaint section called Sheepshead Bay. This area still retains some of the flavor of an English fishing village at the same time as it harbors tarnished vestiges of the Gay Nineties resort it once was. My teachers alerted us early to the signilicance of history and the turbulent course it was following in those cataclysmic years of the Thirties, I recall vividly the parade of alphabet agencies of the New Deal which we school children memorized and joked about, our family gatherings around a huge radio to hear a presidential fireside chat which sounded solemn and hopeful to my ears, and the bitter, often violent, economic strife of the mid-Thirties filling the local moviehouse screen with newsreels of angry men clubbing others on picket linesg farmers spilling milk on the ground rather than sell it for a pittanceg and barely clad, skinny babies crying for food. These impressions fashioned my initial interest in economic issues and spawned a desire to contribute in meaningful measure toward a more stable and wealthier society. At James Madison High School, I had several unusual instructors whose imprint I hope I reflect in my own teaching. One marvelous lady taught us European history by means of assigned books, term papers, daily reading of the New York Timer, and the Socratic method. In that classroom, Hitler was a living hgure-and a frightening one. Three undergraduate years at Brooklyn College flew by in a swirl of exciting courses and changing plans to major in first one and then another department. After three eventful years in service. half of them spent in Europe, I began graduate study at Harvard, This was the busiest time I have experienced, as I devoted myself to acquiring technical proficiency and to earning a doctoral de- gree in preparation for a career in research and teaching. Arrirtazzt Proferrorr-Robert L. Hatcher, Bruno Stein. Adjmmf A.r.rirla17! Proferror-Bernard Hallote. Izz- rfrzfc1fo1'r-jonas Prager, Patricia F. Bowers, Pamela Kacser. ENGLISH Chrziwmzfz-Professor Edwin L. McAdam. I was born in 1905 in St. Paul, Minnesota, where I at- tended public schools until my graduation from high school. I worked two summers on a farm and two or three more in a real estate office. I went to Carleton College in Northville, Minnesota, from which I graduated in 1927. The following year I taught in a two-room high school in a small village in South Dakota. There I learned trigonometry for the first time because I had to teach it as well as a number of subjects which I had studied before, such as Latin, English and His- tory. The following year I went to the University of Minnesota and received an M.A, in English in 1929. I then taught for three years as an instructor in the American University at Washington, D.C., taking two graduate courses evenings at George Washington University. In 1932 I went to Yale and finished my doctoral work in 1935. I was an instructor at Yale from 1934 to 1957. In 1937 I came to New York University as an assistant professor and, except for four years service in the Navy as a Lieutenant and Lieutenant Com- mander during the war, I have been here ever since. As a doctoral thesis I have edited the Poemr of Samuel johnson and this was published in collaboration with Professor Nichol Smith of Oxford in 1941. I spent four summers doing re- search at Oxford. which is an ideal place to do research since when one gets tired of work he can go swimming or punting on the river. Since coming to New York University I have taught both graduate and undergraduate courses. and I have always found both types of work exciting. Since 1950 I have been Chairman of the English Department at University College and for two years I was Acting Dean of the Graduate Schools of Arts and Sciences. In i'ecent years I have published a book on Dr. johnson and the English Law and have edited two volumes for the Yale edition of Dr. Johnson, one of which has been publishedg the other will appear in a year or two. In March of this year I published. with a friend, a modern selection from Johnsons Dii'fio1mry, which cost a great deal of work but provided also many hours of entertainment. I have one more book in my head which I hope to do within the next two 'or three years. I am unmarried. My hobbies are music, gardening and travel. My favorite spot is Puerto Rico because it is always warm and I can not be reached by telephone. Proferrozzr-Gay W. Allen, George L. Anderson, john W. Knedler, Edwin H. Miller, Elkin C. Wilson. Arroci- nfe Proj'e.r.ror,r-Dan H. Laurence, Richard D. Mallery. A,1iJ'f.l'ftIllf Proferror-Gaynor Bradish. In.i'fi'11rfoi'-Mar- tin Grief. GERMAN Cbairzzzfzfz-Professor Robert A. Fowkes. As an undergraduate, despite too many campus activities, I was on Dean's List and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. I received the Crisi medal for Italian, and played loudly in the orchestra fdouble bassj, sang in the Glee Club, ran cross-countryg the present coach, joe I-Iealey, was a classmate. I also dabbled in campus politics and was senior vice-presi- dent. I have taught full-time at NYU since 1938, and had previous part-time experience here and at Columbia College. I have been to Europe four times for travel and study, and am not, despite campus rumor, speaker of a great number of languages. I do speak a few, but have as a chief interest linguistics, the systematic study of language relation- ships, development. and structure. I am a bit of a fanatic on things Welsh tiny ancestral language,-language, literature, music, and am active in Welsh-American societies. I have taught the NYU Glee Club to sing Welsh and a few other languages: I taught Welsh at Columbia for four years, and was also a lecturer in Sanskrit there for fourteen years. -I was the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship for re- search on the Welsh language, and went to Aberystwyth fsiclj for work in the National Library of Wales. I am completing what will be the hrst etymological dictionary of that language Cand probably the lastj. I am a member and have held offices in several national societies, and am the author of between thirty and forty articles on Germanics, linguistics, etc. I have also written four small books, including no best-seller. A graduate of University College, I am still proud of the school, and hope to see it continue to flourish and improve where there is room for so doing. Izzrirzzctorr-Guenther Gerlitski, John D. Barlow, Fred Ulfers, Constantine Michos, Esther Schneider. GOVERNMENT AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Chaimzazz-Professor Ralph A. Straetz. Friends often suggest to me that being a college teacher must be a wonderful and rewarding experience. And so it is. But the picture others have 'of the professor peering over his spectacles in a study, paneled on the inside, ivy-covered on the outside, and venturing out only to teach a class or two before returning to the purity of scholarly contemplation, is somewhat removed from reality. Books, classes, and study are certainly central to our lives, but surrounding and complementing them are such essential activities as faculty committee meetings, departmental meetings, conferences with students and colleagues, 'or with administrators, some sessions take hours, and other matters are settled during a five-minute walk across campus. These activi- ties only deal with my professional life. The effective college professor is usually also an effective citizen in his com- munity. Party politics, educational problems, church and re- ligious interests, promotion of the arts-such demands on one's time and energy are, or can be, enormous. Not all, but many college professors are thus involved. Many of our students come to us knowing where they are going professionally. Our task is to help them make sure that their original choice is correct from the point of view of aptitude, interest, and temperament. Sometimes we assist in gently dissuading a parent from insisting that a son or daughter must enter a profession where money and prestige seem assured. Increasingly, undergraduate training is not suffi- cient, so that students look to the college teacher for advice, suggestions, and recommendations about graduate schools and specihc areas of specialization. In general, if we have a guidance role, it is to encourage the student to reach academic decisions by himself, After consulting with others, he alone must select the area in which he can contribute most to the community. The spirit of an institution is something one senses and is not subject to clear and accurate description. Its most im- portant ingredient is the manner in which the pursuit of knowledge is carried on and complemented by a yearning for the creation of a better world for those who come after us. This ingredient I hnd in full force at University College. Profermr-Edward C. Smith. Arrorifzfe P7'0f6JJ01'-H. Mark Roelofs. Arrjrffmf Profermr-Irving L. Marko- vitz, James T. Crown Con leavej. Izzrfrzzclol'-Robert Burrowes. l HISTORY Cbairmfzfz-Bayrd Still. At the risk of making these biographical comments sound like a testimonial for the admissions ofhce, I will say that I count the chance that brought me to New York University, and hence to New York City, as the most noteworthy develop- ment in my career. To that date, with two exceptions, I had admired big cities from afar: from Woodstock, Illinois, where I was born and grew up, from the campus of the University of Wisconsin, where I earned the B.A., M.A., and Ph,D. degrees, and from Durham, North Carolina, where I was a member of the History Department of Duke Univer- sity. The two exceptions were a six-year sojourn in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on the history faculty of the University of Wiscon- sin-Milwaukee, and a period of more or less enforced residence in Washington, D. C. There I fought the battle of the Potomac, not in the Civil War, but in World War II, emerging from a three-year tour of duty at Gravelly Point fan annex of the Pentagonj with the rank of lieutenant colonel in the Army Air Force. Throughout these years wherever I lived, the big city connoted intellectual excitement and cultural richness for meg and I was giving increasing thought and study to the history of urban growth in American life. To my good fortune, New York University had the foresight in 1947 to project a program of studies in urban development and called me, from Duke University, to pioneer in developing them. This has proved to be a continuously rewarding .ex- perience. It has given me the opportunity to offer courses in urban history both at University College and in the Graduate School, to do some writing on the history of American cities in general and of New York City in particularg and to become acquainted with the metropolitan-molded students of New York University. Most important of all, it brought me to New York City to live and work. Who could ask for anything more? Profeffoza-Marshall W. Baldwin, Harold E. Ham- mond, Carlyton Sprague-Smith. Arrorifzzfe Profermrr- Chester C. Tan. Arfirlfznl Pfofermrf-Edwin G. Olson, joseph Reither, Frederick C. Schult, john W, Wilkes. Imwmtoi'-Lawrence Oliva. MATHEMATICS Cbairmmz-Professor Frederick A. Ficken I had little to do with my birth, The same relaxed acceptance of the inevitable marked my early years in the Middle West. Depending shamelessly on my parents, I earned absolutely nothing. Shortly after my fifth birthday, it is true, I was in- stalled on a street corner with several copies of the Sazuwiay Evening Party they brought Sc each. This enterprise Hourished only briefly, however, and cannot be construed as a genuine breach of driftsmanship. Only years later, during the summers, I rather incautiously became involved with camp counseling, pumping gasoline, keeping books, clerking in stores, and peddling vacuum cleaners from house to house. This last indis- cretion confirmed the attractions of drifting quite conclusively. Meanwhile, back at the schoolhouse, my gift for drift led me into the classroom of a stimulating teacher of geometry and then brought me, two years later, under the influence of a teacher who believed that high school students could learn calculus. Thus nudged, I drifted as a college freshman through the sophomore course. and kept on drifting, ever since, with no essential change of direction. The usual sort of thing, you know-degree by degree, Then teaching, here and there, a frail bark battered from one beach to another by seas of students. I did one thing that might be called undrifty. but there is some doubt that it would constitute a true violation. In college days I earned my board by waiting on tables in a girls' dormi- tory. There was always cream for the cereal, however, a second slice of pie, and lively humor. How else, moreover, could one arrange to drift frequently into a room of pretty girls? It was not until years later that mid-century driftsmanship coined a term useful in recognition of these redeeming features of my hoard job, The word is serendipidity : it means finding good things in unexpected places, which is one criterion of an accomplished drifter. ProfeJJ'0rr-Marek Fisz, Horace A. Giddings, Arthur S. Peters, Irving F, Ritter. Adjunct Proferror-Richard W. Hamming. Arforifzfe Profefrorr-Salvatore Bernardi, Albert Bland, Claude W. Burrill, 'lack Heller, john R. Knudsen, Edward I.. Reiss, Martin Schecter, Leopoldo V. Toraballa, Martin Zuckerman. A.r,ri.rta11t Proferrorr -Ira A. Carl, Malcolm Goldman, Morris Meisner, Richard Pollack, Peter A. Rejto, Norman S. Rosenfeld, joseph G. Stamptli. Adjzmrf Alprimvzt Pr0ferr0r.f-Ro- muald Slimak. Izzrlrnrlorr-Arthur Babakhanian, jacob E. Goodman, Daniel Kocan, Cornelius W. Langley, Arnold Lebow, David Nebeker, George Riddle. METEOROLOGY AND OCEAN OGRAPHY Cbaiwmzlz-Professor james E. Miller After two years in the US Weather Bureau as observer and forecaster, I came to NYU in 1940 to assist in the training of weather olhcers for the Army Air Corps. My temporary ap- pointment has stretched out somewhat longer than was antici- pated. Since 1940 I have acquired four daughters, one step- daughter, and one stepson. These years have been productive in other ways. I have found teaching a most satisfying career, at least equal to making a fortune. Along with teaching there has been the pleasure of research work in a number of the atmospheric sciences: east coast storms, turbulence, energy trans- formations, and most interesting of all to me, tornadoes, the small but utterly deadly twisters. ' I graduated from Central College in 1957, took some courses at the University of Tennessee while working the night ob- server shift at Knoxville, and finished the Masters degree at NYU in 1941, Between Central College and the Weather Bureau, I spent a year with an exploration crew in Illinois for the Shell Petroleum Co. The best part of that job came during wet weather when the trucks could not operate on the back roads. Our custom then was to play non-stop poker until the weather cleared. Pr0fer.r01'.r-Gerhard Neumann, Willard Pierson, jr., Jerome Spar. Afroriafe Pfvferforr-Ben Davidson, Richard M. Schotland. Adjznzri Airoriazfe Pl'0fE.l1l'0i i Silvio G, Simplicio. MILITARY SCIENCE Chnirmmz-Lieutenant Colonel Albert R. Houghton. On October 4, 1910 I was born in Boston, Mass. I completed high school in 1928 at Winnwood High, a private institution, located in Lake Grove on Long Island, New York. In 1932, I graduated from the College of Business Administration, Boston University and also attained through the Army ROTC program a commission as a 2nd Lieutenant in the Army Reserve. For about ten years, until World War II, I travelled exten- sively throughout the northeastern and middle western states representing sterling silverware manufacturers in No. Attleboro, Mass, and Meriden, Conn. In February 1942, now a 1st Lieutenant in the Army Reserve, I was called to active duty and served at Fort Benning, Ga., Camp Shelby, Miss., and Camp Claiborne, La. I fought with the 65th Infantry Division under General Patton's Third Army in Europe and at war's end was waiting in Enns, Austria to meet the Russian Army advancing from Vienna, I was promoted to Battalion Com- mander in May 1945. In july 1945 the 65th Division was withdrawn from duty in Austria and I was transferred to G4 duty in the Traffic Division of XX Corps at Starnberg, Germany. I transferred in 1949 to japan, where I participated in a number of intelligence operations in Fukuoka and Tokyo. Throughout the Korean War my duty station remained in Tokyo with a special support unit from GHQ for the intelli- gence effort in Korea. In 1952, my wife and I left Tokyo for my new assignment, Counter Intelligence Division, GZ, in the Pentagon and completed courses in the Strategic Intelligence School and Personnel Actions Division. From 1956 to 1959 we were stationed in Heidelberg, Germany with G2 Division, USAREUR Headquarters. During this assignment, time was permitted for occasional visits to many European countries including Austria, Switzerland, Italy, France and a visit to the Worlds Fair in Brussels, Belgium. Aifimzmf Proferrom-Major Norman I-I. Trede, Major Roy E. Reed, jr., Captain Carl F. Snyder, MUSIC Cfmirmmz-Associate Professor Harold I-Ieeremans. Born in Bristol, England, I soon decided to avoid work if possible. Seizing upon music as the most playful way of divert- ing oneself through life, I studied the piano: then, to increase my statistical chances, the violin and organ, singing in a boy choir for cash on the side. Upon leaving school, I practiced until I was 16, when I entered the profession as a violonist in a movie theater. jobs in legitimate theaters. cafes. a zoo, and symphony and concert performances, followed. Because of an increasingly aggravating situation across the English Channel, a pressing invitation to join the British army was accepted. The news of this apparently travelled swiftly, for the overseas argument was won before I had a chance to make a point or two. As an infantryman, I joined an army concert party in Cologne, Germany, this was my most active service. Returning to England in 1920, I emigrated to Canada. In Canada, I broadened my experiences by playing piano in a stock company orchestra, organ in a movie theater, and con- ducting vaudeville. Emigrating to the United States in 1923 I acquired the right to vote-usually on the losing side. In 1924, I was organist of the Rivoli and Rialto Theaters, Times Square, New York, In 1931, the time had come to close my education. Taking the easier way, I joined the faculty of the University of Washington, Seattle, as teacher of organ and music history, An invitation to join the faculty of New York University in 1936 projected me into the hustle, tussle, and bustle of the life of a musician who becomes mixed up with the local artistic machinery. As National President of the Amer- ican Guild of Organists, I fly away from it all upon occasion to tell local chapters and national gatherings how pleased I am to be with them. My hobby is resting-a commodity peculiar in that its rarity is dependent upon its expense. Profefror-Alfred Greenfield. Adjmzrf Arrirlmzl Pro- ferror-Stephen lay. PHILOSOPHY Clmirnzmz-Professor Harmon M. Chapman. Although there is no record of it, my birth took place shortly after the turn of the century. According to one account, the notorious james brothers burned the local courthouse where some official records of their misdeeds were held. There is no evidence that they had further designs against me, or my nativity. But others did. I was submitted to an upbringing which has left a permanent stamp on my character and on such other parts of me as were susceptible to formative influ- ences. Several schools in as many parts of the country suffered my presence and labored diligently at my improving. Their efforts were only moderately successful. yet sufficient to gain me admission to college, Fortunately, at this time college ad- mission did not require much more than a declaration of intent and the ability to pay fees. My college career began rather spectacularly. for other than academic reasons, at Annapolis, was resumed at Ohio Stateg was later transferred to the Uni- versity of Oregon: and then came to a head at Harvard University. This was followed by three important events: two and one-half years of study abroad, and the great depression, and my marriage to a lovely little English teacher at Wellesley. In 1934, NYU, in a moment of despair, sought my services as a teacher of philosophy, confident no doubt that so many institu- tions of higher learning must have left some deposit. The next fifteen years were the happiest of my life. Indigent though they were. they brought me four priceless blessings: three chil- children and the opportunity to teach. This idyllic period expired with the close of the war. The specter of committees then reared its ugly head: it stalked me, laid siege to my time, and ravished my energies. It also taught me two salutary lessons: to regard retirement as a release from bondage and to avoid speaking of oneself at any cost-someone may be looking for a chairman. A.r.ri.mmf Proferfor-Raziel Abelson. I125Ir11cfor.r-Phe- roze Wadia, Stanley Malinovich. . PHYSICAL EDUCATION Cbnirmafz-Associate Professor Daniel E. Quilty. A resident of Yonkers, I graduated from NYU in the Class of 1949. I served two and one half years with the Navy in the Pacific area during World Wzir II. I was a member of the NYU basketball team for three years, a team which played in three straight National Invitation Tournaments. Immediately after graduating NYU, I was appointed director of intramurals and instructor in the Department of Physical Education at University Heights. I later took over the duties of freshman basketball coach and assistant varsity basketball coach for a period of seven years. Eventually, I became chairman of the required physical edu- cation program at the Heights. I revamped the entire program, building it up to the extent where I now consider it one of the finest in any institution of higher learning, My objective in the program is to give the students exposure to dif- ferent sports which they can incorporate in some way into their later lives. I feel that it makes more well-rounded citizens out 'of them, in addition to improving their physical condition. Arroriate Professor-Salvatore F. Variello, flriirfmzf Profermrr-Esther V. Foley, joseph F. Healey, Lucio A. Rossini. I72J'f7'ZI6l'07'J'-DOI'19.lCl A. Newbery, Mayer Rossabi, Franklin I. Russell, Margaret E. Schlichting, Arthur Loche, Jerold Monkofsky. PHYSICS C bfzirnmzz-Professor Sidney Borowitz. Becoming a professor has satisfied a childhood ambition of mine, Becoming a professor of physics is a goal that I have had since high school days. The route which I took in attain- ing these goals, however, has been a circuitous one. I was born in New York City in 1918. Having completed my elementary school and high school education in the New York City schools, I entered the City College of New York in 1933 and obtained a B.S, degree from that institution in 1937. Since I could not obtain any support to go on for graduate work, I took advantage of the night school arrangement in the Graduate School of New York University to study while working as a statistical clerk in a wholesale fur establishment in New York City. In 1939 I had completed the course work for a Master's degree. At that time I decided to go to the University of California in Berkeley, The attraction at that institution was Professor J. Robert Oppenheimer, who was part of one of the best departments of theoretical physics in the country. I was forced to return to the East for personal rea- sons in 1940 and had to abandon my studies. From 1940 through the war years I was employed first by the U. S. Gov- ernment as a glassmaker and junior physicist. Later I moved to Western Electric Company first as a junior engineer and then a section chief in engineering at the Kearny Works. In 1946, I became a production manager for a small instrument firm in New York City, and shortly thereafter went into business for myself as a publisher of a magazine called Public Domain. This magazine gave a summary of all patents which were ex- pired during the years in which it was published. The business was unsuccessful. A chance encounter with Professor Hamer- mesh of New York University while my business was about to be liquidated brought me back as an instructor of Physics at New York University in the fall of 1946, During the next two years I was an instructor and a student, and obtained my Ph.D. from New York University in 1948. From 1948 to 1950 I was an instructor of physics at Harvard University. In 1950, I returned to the University Heights Campus as an Assistant Professor of Physics. I have been associated with New York University ever since. In 1957 I moved to the Washington Square Physics Department of New York University and also to the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences in an admin- istrative capacity. In 19-61 I returned to the University Heights campus as Chairman of the Physics Department. Pmferyorr-Benjamin Beclerson, George E. Hudson, Serge A. Korff. Armriate Profefmf'-Lawrence A. Born- stein. Airiilam' P1'0f6JJ01'I-TCfSUC Arase, Kurt Haller, Harry H. Nickle, Kenneth K. Rubin, I22lrzzci011r-Ed- ward Pollack, Thomas E. Suttles, Edward Robinson, judae Schwartz. PSYCHOLOGY Cbazirmmz-Professor Robert E. Silverman. I am a behaviorist. I am not sure how I developed that viewpoint, but I feel that it may he related to the rewards and punishments I received while an undergraduate student at Brown University and as a graduate student at Indiana University. Whatever the reasons, I would not have it any other way. I chose to study psychology because I was intrigued by the opportunities to work in a held that was challenging and underdeveloped. While I started with an interest in clinical psychology fa sheepish admissionj, I insist that this was because I did not know any better at the time. Perhaps this is a rationalization for the circuitous route I have followed in becoming an experimental psychologist. Perhaps I have repressed the four years I spent as a clinical psychologist in a Veterans Administration Hospital. four years which have provided me with interesting anecdotal material which I freely employ in my classes. My interest in the experimental psychology of learning spills over into my function as a teacher. I enjoy teaching, or as I prefer to put it- arranging the conditions for learning. I see the role of the professor as one of stimulating students to study and to think. Probably my own reinforcement history has shaped these attitudes, but I am virtually convinced that the University is primarily a place to provoke the intellect and to shape intellectual behavior. I would not be surprised to discover that my students believe I have strong convictions, for I feel that a professor should have a point of view and be willing to express it. My own point of view allows little sympathy for the tender-minded approaches to the study of psychology. I even claim to be a tough-minded parent, but I must admit to discovering that my two children fages 10 and SQ can be even tougher-minded. They somehow fail to acknowledge Conly as children canj that their father is a behavioral expert, Perhaps I can have the last word on that, for I might say they have been conditioned to be that way. Proferror-Howard H. Kendler. Auofinfe Pr0fe.rr0r- Michael R. D'Amato. Arrirfrzzzi Profarror'-Plailip G. Zimbardo. Adjznzrf Arrirfmzi P1'0fe.r.f0r-Rita Rudel. Ifzitzwrforr-Alfred Cohn, Charles Greenbaum. ROMANCE AND SLAVIC LANGUAGES AND LITERATURE Cfafzifwzazfz-Richarcl A. Parker. During my 33 years of teaching at New York University, I have frequently been asked by students how I, with such a typical Anglo-Saxon name as Parker fmuch more suitable for an English butlerj, came to be a Professor of French. It's a fair questiong and now on the eve of retirement, I feel the urge to offer an explanation. In the hrst place, the name Parker is not Anglo-Saxon, but Norman-French: and bearers of it are to be found among the companions of William, Duke of Normandy, in his plun- dering expedition of 1066. It seems likely that an early mem- ber of the clan was the keeper of some nobleman's deer-park, since the family coat-of-arms contains deer upon it. Obviously I was following an old family tradition when I concentrated on French at the undergraduate and graduate level in the johns Hopkins University. Actually my undergraduate major was English, but I was gradually attracted from it to French literature by what seemed to me to be the superior qualities of intellectuality, critical spirit, psychological insight, and sophistication of French prose. However, I still prefer English poetry for its lyrical spirit and the wondrous melodic form of its versilication. As in the case of most peoples choice of a career, mine would seem to have been directed by a sort of inevitability. I slipped easily into what was almost a prepared niche. When still a senior. I was picked to be an assistant in French at johns Hopkins. Once in the graduate school, I won a fellow- ship Cfellowships were much scarcer in those days than nowj. and shortly afterward was appointed instructor. Already as an undergraduate, I had started to write book reviews for the weekly literary section of a local newspaper. and I had the difficult decision of renouncing a journalistic career for that of a professor. I have never regretted the choice and have found my greatest joy in the daily contact with burgeoning young mindsg and my literary flair has been cultivated too by the publication of three books ftwo more are in preparationj and of many articles and reviews of learned books. PI'0f6.i'.l'0I'lJOZ1ClL1lf1 Casalduero. Afmrinfe Proferrorr- Georges I, Brachfeld, Humberto Pinera, Alice M. Pol- lin, Floyd Zulli, lr. Arrirlfml Proferrorr-Bernard Garniez, Aldona Slepetys. I11.rf1'1zrl0r.r-Robert Donn, Margaret L. Eberbach, Zora R. Essman, Raquel Kersten, Amado Ricon, Richard L. Tedeschi. SOCIOLOGY AND ANTHROPOLOGY Cl7dj1'l11d711ASSOCl8tC Professor Eliot L. Freidson. I was born in Boston and raised in Brookline, Massachusetts. I attended the University of Maine and the College of the Uni- versity of Chicago, entering the Army in 1943, and served as an enlisted man in the 88th Infantry Division in Italy. Re- turning to the United States in 1946, I re-entered the College of the University of Chicago, obtaining the Ph. B. degree in 1947. Entering the Department of Sociology at the University of Chicago, I obtained the M, A. degree in 1950 and the Ph. D. in 1952. I served as a teaching assistant in the De- partment of Sociology at Chicago in 1950-1951, research as- sistant in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Michigan in 1951-1952, and Ford Postdoctoral Research Fel- low in the Department of Psychology at the University of Illinois during 1952-1954. In 1954-1955, I did a study of student leaders and student government for the United States National Student Association, and in 1955-1956, as a Russell Sage Foundation Fellow, a study of an experimental patient care program at Montefiore Hospital, New York. In 1956, I was appointed Assistant Professor of Sociology at the City College of New York, joined NYU as associate professor in 1961, and became Chairman of the Department at University Heights in 1962. I am the author of a number of books and articles, the most recent concerned with the sociology of medi- cine. I live in Leonia, N. J., with my wife and two children. Proferror-Robert Bierstedt. Arrimwl Proferror-H. Laurence Ross. I1zff1'zfct01'r-Margaret Benz, Dorothea Hubin, Norman Klein. SPEECH AND DRAMA Chfziwmm-Associate Proessor George B. Sargent II. As an undergraduate at Tufts College, I was greatly en- couraged by one of my professors to enter the field of speech, After graduate study and teaching at the University of Michi- gan and at Grinnell College, I came to the Heights as an instructor in 1940. Things were a lot different here in those days. There was no major offered in Drama, and we didn't have our modern playhouse until the opening of the Student Center in the '50's. On St, Patrick's Day in 1942, I had the dubious distinction of being the hrst faculty member drafted during World War II. It wasn't so bad, thoughg I went through the war playing golf in Puerto Rico. After being released from the army, I married my wife, who was secretary to the editor of Harpefr Bazmzr. We live in Greenwich Village and have a home in Massachusetts, where I grow pine needles in place of grass and flowers. Presently, in addition to administrative and counselling work, I teach courses in discussion and conference, public speaking, and parliamentary procedure. During my years here, I have also been faculty adviser to the Heiglalr Daily Newr and the Debate Council. Speaking as a teacher of speech, I would say that New Yorkese is not as rampant now as it was when I first arrived here. There are, of course, exceptions, but for the most part our students, living in a university atmosphere, are well-spoken individuals. The primary aim of our department is to train students in the purposive use of speech as a tool for achieving effective human relations. Proferror-Ormond Drake Con leaveb. Associate Pro- fermr - William Vorenberg. Arrimzm' Profefrmf - Edward Thorlakson. Afijzmrf AJ.ri.r1faz11! Profefmr- Abraham Grossman. I1zri1'zzcf01 r-Leon Bloom, Harlan Lynn, Stephen Palestrant. COLLEGE OE ENGINEERI G AERONAUTICS AND ASTRONAUTICS Cbniwnmz-Professor Lee Arnold. I was born in Chicago, Illinois, and, with the passing of time, I graduated with honors in mathematics from Duke University in 1937. At Duke, I played on the varsity football team and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa in my junior year. After Duke, I studied under a fellowship at the Guggen- heim School of Aeronautics at Cal Tech, where I served as an assistant to Dr. Theodore von Karman. Seven years later I took my Ph.D. from Columbia. One of my hrst jobs was with the Glenn L. Martin Com- pany, where I was in charge of the dynamics group and helped establish one of the first aeroelasticity groups in the U. S. In the early 194O's, I formed and headed Republic Air- craft, an aeroelasticity concern. In the '50's, I became president of Lee Arnold Associates, Inc,, consultants to various govern- ment agencies, where I developed, along with Dr. von Karman, the application of Thwaite's airfoil to ship stabilization. From 1945-53, I was a partner in the Biot and Arnold firm, in which we acted as consultants in applied mathematics and physics. During this period we were consultants also to the air force, the navy, the Army Ordinance Ballistic Research Laboratory, Edo Aircraft, and Hamilton Standard. I have also been a consultant to the Advisory Group for Aeronautical Research of NATO. Under the sponsorship of AGARD, I have lectured at the Sorbonne, the University of Rome, the University of Athens, the University of Brussels, the University of Delft, and the Swedish Aeronautical Laboratory in Stockholm. Proferrorr-Gordon H. Strom, Chia-Kun Chu. Amari- nie Proferrorr-Arnold D. Kerr, Daniel B. Olfe, Jack E. Werner. Arrirmlzr Proferrar-H. H. Chiu. CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Cbzzimzzzzz-Professor john Happel, I received the B.S. Degree in 1929 from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the M.S, Degree in Chemical Engineering Practice from the same institution in 1930. I received the degree Doctor of Chemical Engineering from Brooklyn Poltechnic Institute in 1948. I have organized and given graduate courses there and also special lectures in Chemical Engineering at the University of Delaware. One year after joining the faculty of New York University in 1948, I became Chairman of the Chemical Engineering De- partment, the position which I now hold. I began my professional career with the Socony-Vacuum Oil Co. in 1930 and remained with this organization, serving in various techni- cal capacities, until 1948. During the war. I was a member of the Petroleum Industry War Council and of a technical committee which was charged with the responsibility for design and initial operation of the world's largest butadiene from petroleum plant. After the war. I returned to Socony-Vacuum Oil Co, fnow Socony Mobilj and was engaged in various petro-chemical projects until I joined New York University. At the University. I have continued to do research in the field of synthetic organic chemicals, especially the produc- tion of low molecular weight hydrocarbons fsuch as ethylene. methyl acetylene and butadienej and their utilization. I have also been active in the investigation of the hydrodynamics of particulate systems and chemical process economics. The author of numerous technical papers and Chemical Prorerr Erouomirr. Wiley, 1958, I am also credited with a score of patents on petroleum and petrochemical subjects. I am a member of the American Chemical Society fHonor Scroll of I. 8: E. CJ, American Institute of Chemical Engineers fTyler Award, member of Program and Admissions Committeesj, American Institute of Chemists, American Rocket Society. American Society for Engineering Education, Alpha Chi Sigma. Sigma Xi. Phi Lambda Upsilon and Tau Beta Pi. I am also a licensed professional engineer in New York State. Pr0fe5.r0r.r-Charles Marsel, Robert E. Treybal, How- ard Brenner. Arrocifzfe Pr0fe.rr0rr-johii Lamarsh, Wil- liam H, Kapfer, Robert O. Parker. Arrirlzzzzf P1'0fer.r0r -lack Famularo. Sperifzl Lerfffzerr-Edwin Slade, George Hsei. Adjmzrf f4l.l',ljJ'fl17Zli Proferroizr-Lyman Bajars, R, E. Schaffer. I2zJf1'1fr1'0rr-Paul A. Ast, Herbert Goldstein. CIVIL ENGINEERING Clmirmmr-Professor James Michalos. I took my B.S. from the University of Wisconsin in 1958, and, seven years later, my engineering masters from Yale University. In '63, I am serving as a National Science Founda- tion Senior Post-Doctorate Fellow at the University of Cam- bridge, England. I have been a consultant to industry, engineering firms, and government on design, structural mechanics, and structural dy- namics. In my eight years as chairman of the Department of Civil Engineering at the Heights, we have developed a full-time daytime graduate program and drastically revised the undergraduate program, especially emphasizing scientific engi- neering. My Theory of Szrzzclzzral Amzljtrir and Design, published in 1958. followed by several years the seminar programs I conducted at Princeton University and at Virginia Polytechnic Institute, I have also taught at Montana State College, Syracuse University, and Iowa State College, In addition, I was con- tributing editor of Vmz N0Jl1z11zd'r Scienlifir Encyclopedia, author 'of approximately thirty published technical papers, and have presented papers at national and international meet- ings. Included in my practical experiences are activities with TVA and US Steel. My other practical experience includes Kiki, Vassar '64, and Peter, Yale '65, Praferrorf-Glen N. Cox, William E. Dobbins. Ar- ,roriare Proferrorr-Albert H. Griswold, Morris Gross- wirth, Gerald G. Kubo, Mo Chih Li, Allen H. Molof, Edward Wilson. A.rJiJ1'zm1f Proferrorr-Charles Birnstiel, Irwin Kugelman. Imlrzzc2f0i'r-Bernard Grossfield, Charles N. Nalezrmey, Nicholas Morris. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Cbfzirmmz-Professor james H. Mulligan. I joined the faculty of the Department of Electrical Engineer- ing of New York University in September 1949. I have held the position of Chairman of the Department since 1952 and the rank of Professor of Electrical Engineering since 1953. I received the B.E.E. and the EE. degrees from the Cooper Union School of Engineering, the M.S. degree from Stevens Institute of Technology, and the Ph.D. degree from Columbia University. I was Hrst employed in the transmission development depart- ment of the Bell Telephone Laboratories, and later became a member of the Combined Research Group of the Naval Re- search Laboratory, where I served as Project Engineer for one of the radar IFFD equipments. At the conclusion of World War II, I joined the Allen B, DuMont Laboratories where I was initially concerned with research and development work on portable and studio television pickup and video equipment and subsequently chief engineer of the television transmitter division. I have been quite active in the two electrical engineering professional societies which were recently merged into the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. At the present time, I am Chairman of the Professional Technical Group on Circuit Theory and the Education Committee of the IEEE as well as being a member of several other technical committees. I am one of the representatives of the IEEE on the Engineers' Council for Professional Development as well as a member of the Education and Accreditation Committee of that group. I am a fellow of the IEEE and the AAAS as well as a member of the American Physical Society, American Mathe- matical Society, Mathematical Association of America, the American Society of Engineering Education, Sigma Xi, Tau Beta Pr, and Eta Kappa Nu. I am a licensed professional en- gineer in the states of New York and New jersey. Proferrorr-Sheldon S. L. Chang, Philip Greenstein, Charles F. Rehberg, Robert Cotellessa, B. james Ley, Sidney S. Shamis. Arroriazle Professors-Frank Lupo, Herbert Freeman, Don R. Stock, jack K. Wolf, Mo- hammed Ghausi. Arriflzzni Proferrorr-Gerald August, Andrew Cohen, Bernard Cheo, Richard Kieburtz, Leon Schkolnick. Iml1'zzrt0rr-Frank Alexandro, jeremy Glass, john Golimbeski, Arvin Grabel, Gerald Her- skowitz, Edward T. Lewis, Harlan Perlis, Ralph W. Windrum. INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING AND OPERATIONS RESEARCH Chzzirfmzlz-Professor Norman N. Barish. I joined the University faculty in 1947 as an assistant profes- sor and have engaged in industrial engineering and operations research teaching, research, and administration during the past 15 years, including a couple of years as Acting Dean and Associate Dean of the College of Engineering. I have also engaged since 1945 in numerous consulting assignments in various aspects of industrial engineering and operations re- search. From 1943 to 1945, I was an industrial engineering supervisor for the Radio Corporation of America, engaged primarily in systems and organization analysis activities. From 1940 to 1942, I was an economics and business analyst with the United States Government, concerned primarily with the analysis of economic and business factors affecting industrial production and the preparation of programs for converting to military production. I hold a B.S. in economics and statistics from the City College of New York. a B.S.E. in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Michigan, and a M.S, in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Pennsylvania. I am a registered professional engineer and a member of the American Institute of Industrial Engineers. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Operations Research Society of America, Institute of Management Sciences, Econometric So- ciety, American Economic Association, International University Contact for Management. Academy of Management, and the American Association of University Professors. I have held many offices and chairmanships of committees in these organiza- tions. I am consulting editor of the Ezzgineerifzg Eronamirt. I am a member of Tau Beta Pi. Phi Beta Kappa, Alpha Pi Mu, and Pi Tau Sigma, and also a member of the Engineers' Club CNew Yorkj. I am the author of numerous papers and several books. the latest of which is Economic Azmlyrir for Engineer: ing and Mrnzngerial Deririwz Maeizlg. McGraw-Hill, 1962. I have two children: Mike, age 15, and jean, age 11. My wife is a very accomplished artist. ,lean has inherited some of the artistic talent of her mother. Mike is a sports car enthusiast and reads all sports car magazines. The closest he has gotten to having his father purchase a sports car has been a Volks- wagen convertible. Mike plays the bass clarinet in the school band and jean plays the piano. The favorite family sport is skiing. Proferror-Raymond A. Katzell. Arrorinle Proferrorr -Richard S. Barett, Sylvain Ehrenfeld, Leon H. Her- bach. Arrirlrwt Proferroizr-Eugene D. Homer, Lloyd Rosenberg, Norbert Hauser, Alan W. Steinberg, Sam- uel Stephenson, Jr. Special! Lerffrrer-Harold Greenberg. Iurffzfrloi'-Irwin Greenberg. ai.. MECHANICAL ENGINEERING CbdfI'IlIc1l2TPI'OfCSSO1' Austin Church. I have been the Chairman of the Mechanical Engineering Department since 1946. I came to the Heights in 1940 as an assistant professor of Machine Design. I graduated from Cornell University in 1928 with the degree of M.E. and received an M.S. degree in Physics from New York University in 1934. Upon leaving Cornell, I worked for two years at the South Philadelphia plant of the Westing- house Electric and Manufacturing Co., six years as an instructor of Machine Design and Drawing at the Cooper Union, and three years on special problems involving centrifugal com- pressors, gears, turbines, and pumps at the De Laval Steam Turbine Co. in Trenton. I left this last position to come to the Heights. During the academic year 1957-8, I was on a leave of absence from New York University to work in the General Engineering Laboratory of the General Electric Co. in Schenectady on vibration problems. I am the author of several books, including Cezzzrifugal Pumpr and Blozverr in 1944, revised Guillet's Kizzenzaficr of Mazrbiner. fifth edition, in 1950. and Merlmzziml Vibmzionr in 1957. A second edition of this last effort will appear this year. In addition, I am the author or co-author of a number of technical papers and articles and a member of a number of technical societies. I was born and raised on the edge of the anthracite coal Fields of eastern Pennsylvania, and two of my summer vacations while in college were spent in the mines. My home since 1940 has been in Hastings on the Hudson from which I commute via a car pool. Mrs, Church and I have two married childen with three grandchildren plus a 17-year-old spinster daughter. When I can find a tolerant partner, who is not too adept, I like to play tennis. P1'0fe.rr0rr-Reno C. King, Fred Landis, Lewis O. John- son, Emanuel A. Salma, Bernard W. Shaffer, Ferdinand L. Singer. Afrocinte Proferforr-Yu Chen, Wheeler Mueller, Irwin Wladaver. Arrimzfil Proferrorr-L. M. Iiji, Huo-hsi Pan, Michael 1. Rabins, Martin Senator. Ifzrtrzzrtor-Herbert Yanowitz. METALLURGY AND MATERIALS SCIENCE ClJfIfl'717d7Z-PIOLCSSOI' john P. Nielsen. I was born and raised in Cleveland, Ohio, and attended various schools, culminating my academic work at Yale, where I received my Ph.D. in Metallurgy in 1947. I began my pro- fessional work at McGean Chemical Company in Cleveland, and was associate physicist at Philips Laboratories in Irvington, New York, and research metallurgist at 'International Nickel Company, I organized the Department of Metallurgy at NYU in 1954 which recently became the Department of Metallurgy and Materials Sciences. At NYU, I also organized the Summer Conferences in metallurgical and materials science subjects which has thus far given 14 conferences, the NYU Metallurgical Alumni Association, one of the very active NYU alumni groups that meet annually at metallurgical con- ventions, and currently a Service to Industry program for my department. My principal organizational product is the development of a research group in Metallurgy and Materials Sciences, employing a total staff of forty. I have been active in various committees and held olices of professional societies. I have been president of the Metal Science Club of New York, chairman of the New York Chapter of the American Society for Metals, and president of the Physical Metallurgy Group of the American Institute for Mining and Metallurgical Engineers. My professional work has taken me to many countries, visiting the Soviet Union several times. I am a member of Pi Tau Sigma, Alpha Sigma Mu, Phi Lambda Upsilon, Sigma Xi, and Tau Beta Pi. For relaxation, I enjoy urban living, my residence being in Sniffen Court in New York City. I have a scholar's interest in the New Yorker magazine, of which I have assembled a complete set and have almost completed a second set. I keep physically Ht with a weekly workout at the Yale Club gym. Arrorizzie Proferrorr-Irving Cacloff, Kurt L. Komarek, Harold Margolin. Arrirfmzt Profermf'-Edward Miller. 32 , -P I,-f-'lg . JV ,ff ' .- 5 x X x , L 4? 5 ,M w Af? g an if flj I N - - ff 0 f .5 L- X N, A -gp ' f-'n A 1 X 1.5! ff, 7 rift li. Q X I 4:13,-f '- vw X Y ,, 'sepf I : . , ' 1 ,c ? K Y7 19 Q f f 1 yy 4 X E2 ' gil f x E , , J I Xi q r?' . 4 if f fff'f:,,S'::mt T' , N4 N i -Q ,gf X ' f I 1 EI IE - 21? 1 X ff ,ff . f 11' 'f - N , za f f df W ' gfmfib. if C., -- .1 I f- upll llllagj hf- -'gg , f If A ' I, 'H I N 7Q?X5-- 114,449 ' -2.3, . i ii' , L...,-,- SRAM fn 5 r lx: -I F .1 I - xx 1 - li f , 1, N ,ill .X X X Sf-if f ' f I X A Y W ' A-A I-.ff-J! k v '- . T! 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M f Q .flllfl l ' 'fun '1 K f lf! if Q - fb J - ff- -' Ur ' Ll ' 3 I I ' ,, -7 ,J ,X ' y' 541 K IA X 'i 'Q W 17 T32 'sa' -T ' , wg? +A: MWGW' 5 2 xr S 1 K C,-if fi- X1 Xb A, Q, - X 35- 5 RETRGSPECT il 'ae'-11 ON CAMPUS: 1959-1962 It wasn't one helluva beginning, but we were a first. We were 646 on that first rainy day when the sun shined in September, and 77 of us had perfume in our pocketbooks, giddiness in our heads, and sex in our skirts. No entering class before us had entered with girls, we walked hand in hand down the aisle during that first awe-inspiring convocation, almost a 9:1 ratio, and our hearts thumped. The student activities office told us the girls have been thrust into an unrealistic situation. The Class of '63 was but a babe, and our childish insecurity was relieved when University Executive Vice-President john Ivey expressed his unmitigated con- fidence in our future by resigning after the hrst few days of classes. We mourned his departure in our spare hazing moments, in-between pushing peanuts up the mall with our noses and counting the bricks called Loew Hall. That same momentous day we were bolstered by another vote of confidence when Interfraternity Council President jerry Raicovich gave up. The Nezzgr made the news early when the CSA moved to undaily it, Some important people on the CSA, the kind cheap newspapers call important cogs in the wheel, decided that the only way to buy new G-strings for the Little Symphonyis smashed 'cello was by cutting down the ,fXl6Zl'.fl frequency. But decreased frequency increased the papers amplitude, and the Committee hnally decided to let the news breathe every day-only on the condition that the paper improve until reaching a level of the barest literate English. Things happened during our first semester. NYU researcher Severio Ochoa was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for Medicine for his analysis of the synthesis of nucleic acid. Even more important, though, was the For ll piece of peace. A diifeaprfjied comzopolitmzirm. ' 'M They toizrjuered. abdication of yet another monarch from the University, Dean Thomas Robinson, after gracing our ungrazed lawn for just ten months, left for greener pastures. He consoled us. He said he was Uboastfully proud of his association with us. We were consoled. Professor Bayrd Still returned to his former post as acting dean. It was a good act, a good dean. The female influence on campus was felt on the first day in September, when a woman was elected to the local chapter of Tau Beta Pi, national engineering hon- orary. We arched our brows and traced her curves, until our concentration on the hyperbolic and parabolic was replaced by news of the vertical-the admissions office told us we were getting smarter, much smarter. The increasing number of students makes it easy for us to be selective, we were told, we were the selected 646, the specially selected, screw the IBM's. The University received nationrwide intellectual repute when ex-NYU-niks Ivey and Robinson accepted posi- tions as television executives. This surprised us almost as much as a special report estimating that perhaps 90W of the Heights student body cheats. Pshaw, we said, and tucked in our cuffs. Administrators here called the charges ufantasticf' but were generally not impressedu with the proposal to institute the honor system in our hallowed halls. Nor were the important people in charge of the Hall of Fame impressed with the idea of electing jefferson Davis, former military man, to their shrine. The south might rise again, but we couldn't wait, we had risen, as Newr headlines splashed Diane Wins in 72-point type across the top of page one. A Heightsman UVe shall fm! be moved. Profermr Rorrifzi boldr a pmrliml. iri- emz Robinson leaves campus. was Miss NYU. She received no official sanction from the Parents Magazine seal of approval. Shortly after, another God was elected, the omnipotent Mr. Podvey was chosen in a general election as the leader of the new Zeus story. We clapped our hands and watched the rest of the excitement Hutter by, stuli' like some joker accusing card room card players of actually using financial incentives, like milk prices being chopped from twelve to ten cents per half-pint container, like tuition spiraling up to 340 per credit. All this was old news rehashed, with just the names and figures being changed. We came back next September, most of us. Life came out against us in a poll, and we came back out against them on the whole. The Governing Board challenged the literary magazineis claim that this University fills seats rather than beds , Life came out for beds, the SGB came out for seats, and the News took the middle road by coming out for both beds and seats. The national elections rolled around, as they will every four years, and we sat on our beds filling out questionnaires coming out for a young Catholic, Fitz- gerald Kennedy, a man who wanted to become president of the entire country. The other fellow who was inter- ested, the one with the receding hairline and the hurt look, received support from only 2692 of our students. One month later, the rest of the country conformed. Someone else we all had our eyes on was shouting just before the presidential campaign. Dear Miss Arvay, the pretty one who was our Miss, disclosed that she hadn't received any invitations to anything down at the Square all year. We wore black for a week, finally un- veiling ourselves for the inductions of Edison the elec- trician, Thoreau the writer, and MacDowell the com- poser to the Hall of Fame. The south hadn't yet risen. Big news broke during November. The News said Boards Books Bungledug the SCPB called the SGB stupid , the Board said it wouldn't take the Newry dirtg the Neztnr said the Board was not only irresponsible but guilty of slander as well. And Soviet scientists, the Ger- man people from Russia, called NYU research slander. We had made it, big. But our activities were not limited specifically to libel, we dabbled at expansion as Well. just before Christmas, plans to create a thousand-acre University Valley in the heart of Sterling Forest were announced. We were to pluck the ripe fruit of the virgin forest, and in the Hall of Fame the bust of Thoreau turned a grassy green. We helped Mother Nature shortly after, however. Now that a summer session at the Heights was to be in- novated, all the delinquents would be kept off the streets and the anti-greeneryis would be relegated the academic machinery of summer classroom scenery. One of Benedict Arnold's far-removed cousins subwayed downtown one fine spring morning, got off at Morningside Heights, and before you could say basketball- scandal -means - no -super - star -freshman - teams-anymore, jack Rohan had signed up as Columbia U's varsity basketball coach. The second year closed on a fiscal note, as President Carroll V, Newsom announced plans for a 575,000,000 three-year development pro- gram. Hundreds of Heightsmen shed sweet tears for the sorry economic plight of mother alma, realizing full well where the money would have to come from. Summer came, and, as expected, summer passed and we were back as juniors. The lovely little green stuff made the headlines again when NYU received a 352,- 750,000 Sloan Mathematics Grant. Lovely little red stuff made the headlines soon after, as four predom- inantly jewish fraternity houses were smeared with drip- ping red Nazi symbols. A short stubby man with a tiny moustache was seen sneaking off into the shadows, but nobody bothered following him. Others followed others, though. President Newsom became an ex-president, and a 37-year-old named james McNaughton Hester became the youngest president in the University's 130-year history. Not even youth could keep the bitch goddess down, and in january tuition was hiked to a Hat 31500 per year. We cried and got jobs. Lots of people were crying. Joseph Cillo had been elected president of the SGB and decided to resign. In a remarkably tough decision, the Board accepted his resignation and, with tear-stained gavel, Vice-President Barry King moved into the top spot. Soon after, a strong kid from the Bronx named Gubner moved into a top spot, when he threw a metal ball farther indoors than anyone else had ever done before. At times the campus was a live one. We turned white with fear when a Mr. X, nee Malcolm, told us you gotta be black, man, to be good. Missiles came, landed on our mall, and we could do nothing but picket. Some people with beards walked around the thing for days and days, and hnally when the people from the Plant Department merged minds with the Pentagon, it was removed. Grass never grew on the site again. Our junior year closed with a bang. Dollar signs be- came the dominant motif of the campus harmony when prices were hiked. CBS, NBC, and ABC visited the 500 staunch Heightsmen chanting we wontt pay the in- crease, we shall not be movedf' and after getting promises from higher-ups that yes, indeed, you will pay and you will move, couching what they said with smiles and little chucks under the chin, we all staggered back to our rooms. We had asserted ourselves. We had made the papers and the televisions. We had made our mark. Now we could become seniors and know every- thing. A fitwhflzfzzz ezzlefzi' GN CAMPUS: 1962-1963 It was the year of the big deal, baby-read it and weep. We knew she had us where we'd lose the vitals if we moved even when we were frosh, but we came back for more. We hated her, she didn't care. She laughed at us and we cried. She had us by the vitals and we came back. How much a school is like a girl: the harder she is to get into, the more she is respected. Harvard, we said -buck baby, chick honey, we've had the old blast, ain't we? We've seen it all. Ya come in good, ya go out bad. In between, you learn. The education mother never got: a Buick in a Sedgwick parking lot. It was the year of you. You had a ball team this year. Harvard, we said, hx, they said. Barry and Happy pouring through the hoopg nothing stopped us, we took 'em all. The phallic repre- sentatives of our pride, stronger than the strong of the strongest. The big guns-no speakee loudg what did we do. There was Cuba, we sent a letter to the Cuban edi- tor. We said be good in Cuba. Thousands signed. There was Meredith, black boy, white school, throw rocks, break heads. Mississippi, we said-we Sent a lettahg Mississippi be good. Take off your cape and your white riding hood. You came to me and you put your arms around me and you said-you broke my ear when you said look 1 932 reviril ed. what they're doing to Arthur Greene. Holy cow, we said, keep the Heights green. And we did, chuck kid. We put our mouth where our mouth is. He talked to us, he treated us like humans. He dressed well and he talked straight. The guy was bright and he knew what he was doing. We couldn't ask for more, so we asked for this: please let him stay here. We won. About this time, you remember, I was kissing you hard. You were holding me tight. Your dress was up to your ankles and I saw your Achilles tendon. I said, why don't you enter the beauty contest, hey? You didnlt, so you know what happened? Cecilio Grazio won Miss Ori- entation and Helen Bernardi got Miss Heights. They're better looking than you any day, howd'ye like that? Then there was the smarts. They changed the Dean's List this year. Used to be if you were smart for a ......z Rockefeller 3,066,111 A'l0l'gFI1fbz7ll 2,578,076 whole few years, you got on. Now it's real good: you only got to be smart for a year. That way we all can get on. Your nylons are running. I, was reading the other day they were going to change the library. They weren't going to add more books so much as more study rooms. That way there are less books per room and more equal distribution. No one gets to know too much, you know what I mean. My only complaint with the library is, well, maybe I shouldn't say so cuz I don't use it too much except for tentatives and finals, but, well: why don't they get some new dust. I mean old dust is okay, but it would sort of improve appearances. Anyhow, if they open up those new study rooms they're gonna run mighty low on ole dust, They'll have to spread it mighty thin. Look, frankly, honestly, seriously, why don't they open up a necking lounge? Hmmm? Mmmmm. When do the study rooms close? Reminds me, they had a contest going to name New Hall. How about Curfew Annex or Old Horny or Times Square or just plain Bed Boule- vard. Okay, I didn't mean it. Ya gotta take the good with the bad. Remember they had this abstract water color bit at the frats won first prize? Swastika-A Study. Or the fire in State that destroyed Webster's research where instead of putting up a new building for State Hall they told you to stop smoking in Language. Probably the worst of all was-what are you doing? Let go. That's better, whew. I thought you were going to hold my hand. Like I was saying about the news strike and how the HDN came through like a champ and gave out the school paper free to Burnside Avenue so they'd have something to eat when they read. They figured they couldn't hide it any longer from us, Slmiy of u thing pail. baby, so they told us boys will be as boys and like girls, so they opened up your beautiful wing, baby, on Sun- days for three hours of matinee. They couldn't decide for sure if this was like it should be and when I tried to get you up to my room they said we watchee no trickee and We had to go back to yours. We loved it, baby, and you told me about school. They stole our manhood and they stole our cars, and the cops said what me worry. They just picked up the damn thing and walked off with it and if the cops on campus and the cops off campus and the Cop Above couldn't stop him I guess it was okay. They stole in the dormitory too but we caught him, an addict, needed money for drugs. We plugged up his holes with locks. To be 01' not 20 be. They stole the cars but they sent us wheels, big, like Carlino and DeSapio, The first guy talked like he was trying to be a politician and gave us lots of numbers that we nodded at because we couldn't understand them, and the second left his angel wings in the car and came looking for friends. He always wore sunglasses and we liked him. He used to be and we hoped we would. There was stink in our roses, honey, the mall wasn't all milk and baby. One day we walked down the Hooded center walk down the mall and sniffed and you remem- ber how it did smell. So we called the man from the Department of Plants and he walked right down to the mall, just the Way we walked right down to the exact Az 14151, ff u'i111zer. same mall, and he told us that it didnit really smell so much as we thought it did. But you remember, baby, it was like smeared mascara, It was a year like any other year, baby. It was the year of 39 Heightsmen making Phi Beta Kappa when we didn't even know there were 39 people who could spell on campus. We always used to joke around about how bad this place was, and how we were the only smart people here, but they found 39 geniuses floating around somewhere. I wish'd I'd met them before, one of them might have been a chick. It was the year of noise, like any other year. WNYU tried to go FM and the people in publications started to fume when the radio prepared to move into the Publications Office, but everyone screamed and we both knew nothing would happen at the final end. Because nothing around here ever seems to happen at all. Every- one does a lot of talking and cursing and loving, but it's what the dean and his people want that actually becomes law. Heis a good guy, the deang not even re- senting his power could ever make us lose our respect Pl'EJ'fd6l1l Ueflj and edilor frigbfj. for him. But we could probably do a better job, baby, I'm not really sure about you, but I know I could. It was the year of the Board. It was the year when the president couldn't find the polls, the people at the polls didnit know they were at the polls, no one knew where the ballots were, no one knew if the ballots were, and somehow 150 people got lost. There was only one guy running for office anyway so it didnit actually matter too much, but it was a question of principle. And I'm principled, baby, that's one big thing l've learned here: if you don't give a damn or if you don't know what's happening at all, be principled. l.t's moral or something. It was the year of the late thesis, when we proved that two ultimatums don't make us write. We threw 3 l Cuba Ji. back at the orals everything wed been told in two years' worth of aurals and came out OK. They didn't really care what they heard as long as what they heard was right and we sure knew how to fool them. It was the year of the fool. Harvard, we said-But they made up for it because Life said james Hester was in the take-over generation when he took over NYU. But what was real nice was his inauguration, Everyone was there. Lincoln Center was never so packed-the youngest president in NYU history. And the best of all was DeMetro-Greek, Hebrew, Latin-what didnt he know. He got up there and told them what. He told them a thing or two in three minutes. But it was a good deal, no sweat. They The :mf of zz're:mz.f. Paul Goodman and lbe News. were bawlin' in the aisles. I.et's not get too serious, now. We helped move this school on Valentinels Day, didn't we though? The chap- erone gave me an awful dirty look when I. called it the VD dance, but that's one thing my senior year in college taught me, you know, to believe that what I say is right and even if I know it's wrong I've got to convince everyone else it's right, They sold every last ticket to that dance, honey, and that's about as unusual as cooperation from the big shots here. And we helped, kid, without us there would have been two others there and so it would have been different. I gave you my invitation and you looked for my ring. Things rolled after that. I mean it was like a brick of Amdemir freedo 172. success falling on another and then onto another and on. We went to see that frighteningly African hitter, Ola- tunji, and we cheered and made believe we really swung with the guy. But we really snowed them when we closed our eyes and listened to Iablonski and Stravinsky. No kidding, I bet every eye in the place was on me when I laid back in my seat and pretended to like it. Iust like when I laughed along with Norman Thomas. Life was half bad though considering as how the Por! exposed us gambling at Loeb Student Center. We weren't gambling. We were just placin' bets. After, we gambled. Professor Mallery went on Sabbatical this year. The only Rhodes Scholar this school ever had. Great Teacher award-I see him now and then on the campus-and I gotta theory about him: he couldn't get away from this place if he wanted to: he loves it. IVe'zi belief go. 1The bull session came in this year. After ten petitions and a collective expenditure of a thousand dollars, Wohl finally agreed to come up and speak to us. After that it was easy to get Javits and Morgenthau to speak. A lotta people, A beat poet, Bobby Short, and some kook from Cuba. Morgenthau was too much. He look like he mistook the Chapel for the bathroom. Held on all the way down the aisle and up to the podium till he finally wet his pants. Rome reassured him though and said not to be scared, and that if he wanted to, Morgenthau could run for the SGB next year. People died, but they opened up the Snack Barg yet our soccer team was denied an NCAA bid, but the ratio is 211, and at Cornell somebody slept with somebody and that's about it. You tell me nothing ever happens and that I'm so apathetic I don't care and I'm always using the same line or using you. But under the grim grey palisades, baby, you know I love you. We'd better go. Tl-TE WORLD: 1959-1963 Che,rhj1'e-Pzz.fJ, ' Alice hegmz . . . HHJOZIZCZ you fell me please zrfhirh may I ought lo go from he1'e.9 ' Thai depefzdr K1 good deal on where yon uvml fo gel, .rizirl the Cai. I o'o21'l mzrrh rare where- mir! Alice, Then it cfoerifr mrzlfev' whirh rzfazy yf01l go. ,mid Ihe Col: -ro long fir I get somewhere, Alice ruffled as mr expfrzfmfiozz. Oh, yozfre mre fo do lhfllf' .maid lhe Col, if ozzfy yon zmlh long ezronghf' As freshmen in September '59, confused by new situations and tempted by new freedoms, we could scarcely be expected to realize that the world was adding new scenes to the wonderlandg but our awareness came. The world has a way of intruding into even the sacro- sanct halls of higher learning. That funny thing called the world during our first year was evidence of Hobbes's insight when he called all politics talk g it was a year in which the world talked, intent on getting somewhere as long as it was alive enough to move. Arriving with much talk if little in concrete proposals, Chairman Khrushchev began a grand debate as a huge Soviet jet deposited him at National Airport in Washington. In his whirlwind visit through the United States, hidden behind his jovial jibes at our way of life and his pity for our oppressed Amhczr.mr2'or Sier 6211012 761 e rli proletariat, American politicians were proud to recognize an unexpected turn: Khrushchev was impressed. He would still boast of Soviet might, but he was, at least for his we'll bury you style,'l subdued. Altruist Richard Nixon, always ready to better the American image abroad, soon returned Khrushchev's visit. It was summer and the Vice-President received a warm welcome. In his best beware Hellen Gahagan Douglass revival meeting tones, Nixon began the now famous kitchen debates with Khrushchev. But the bouncy Bolshevik was not to be angeredg a thaw had begun and little men with grand ambitions couldn't thwart it. Soon President Eisenhower began his travels. Visiting our European allies, our Asian friends, and our South American neighbors, Eisenhower was greeted as a man of peace, if not always as the great white God. Millions of Africans, Asians, and South Americans now strained to gain the U.S, aid which our new out- look on the world made more available, but progress comes slowly to an empty stomach nourishing hopes of new freedom and self-reliance. In Africa, the many examples of peaceful independence to colonies were to be marred by the bloody segregation-provoked riots, an indication of the still more primitive turmoil which was to come. Closer to home, the Cuban situation emerged, America was forced to make a rapid readjust- ment of her values to battle a regime which blasted the U.S. for imperialism, a regime which was becoming pro- gressively more Communist-tinged as all hope of a democratic Cuba went the way of all paper dolls. As spring of 1960 approached, attention turned to the Geneva disarmament talks and the summit talks which were to help the world situation reach sane solutions For God, for rozmzry, mmf for Guzzi, f.ll1I0lIll.lgKd C11h.111 1111.r,r1le film. for the potent problems which the mood of international debate had only temporarily eased. But what direction would the world scene pursue? IU that rlirecllwz liver 4 Hf1ffe1',' and 111 fhaf rllrec- tion l1z'eJ al March Hare, Virll erlher you like: 1'hey'1'e bofh mad. Biff 1 rl011'f 1111111 fo go f1111o11g 1116211 ,beo- plef' Alife 1'e111111'hed. Oh, yon Cdlfl help that, Jalal the Cat, we'1'e all mad here. 1,712 nmd, yozfre 77lcZd.U How do you know I nm 772ll6l.DH mid Aljre. Yon nzzfrf he, ,raid the Cal, Or you ZL'0lll6I7lZ!l have mme here. Khrushchev's scathing remarks against President Eis- enhower, a result of the U-2 spy plane debacle, soon ended the summit conference on which the world had placed its hopes. Another blow to American prestige soon followed this failure, when leftist violence in japan against the new American military treaty ulti- mately forced the cancellation of Eisenhoweris long- planned visit. This event in the Orient proved to be the harbinger of further political upheaval. It reached its climax with the assassination of the leftist leader of the Japanese Diet, earlier, Prime Minister Kishi was stabbed in the leg siX times, but he was reputed to have laughed it off. japan did not, however, have a monopoly on the world's violence and political crises. France and her Western allies continued to be plagued with the Al- gerian problem. But there was now hope that General Charles deGaulle's plan of self-determination would solve the issue. Europe's reaction to deGaulle,s assump- tion of almost dictatorial power in France was best seen by the joke making the rounds from French coffee houses to Yugoslavian bordellos. It depicted St. Peter greeting a psychiatrist at the Pearly Gate by saying, We,ve had a bit of a problem for the past few weeks. God thinks he's deGaulle , yet as deGaulle's plans for Glenn rlercriher mam 1 new heights. Algeria's self-determination were being satirized, new horses for the political merry-go-round were being born. The American public was becoming aware of the situation in the kingdom of Laos. In an attempt to keep the public at optimum awareness, the Pentagon issued one of its clearest statements in months, as Gen- eral W. B. Palmer announced, The situation is so con- fused we have not been sure who is responsible for anything. It soon became apparent that unless action was taken, Laos would probably fall to the Communists. American strategists preferred to wait, though, until the situation cleared a bit. Patrice Lumumba's government, unable to control dissident elements, presented still another danger spot, as conditions in the Congo deteriorated. Belgium soon intervenedg secessionist movements blossomed, and Lu- mumba asked the UN for armed assistance. With Khrushchev's threats in the background, the UN sent 19,000 men to the Congo. The political situation re- mained muddled, with Lumumba, Kasavubu, and Mo- butu claiming authority. When we had finally mastered the pronunciation of his name, Lumumba was found rather dead. In Berlin, Khrushchev declared that he would sign a separate peace treaty with the East German govern- ment, a treaty which would jeopardize Western access routes to the city. It was in the midst of all this that the u . - lun lmrgusui -Ulf Two rider: Fm' . . , international spotlight turned to the U.S., hosting one of the largest gatherings of dignitaries in historyg plans for the great tea party had begun when Mr. K from Russia announced his decision to attend the opening ses- sion of the world organization, It was at this session that a powerful new voting bloc emergedg and while much interest focused on how the thirteen new African nations would vote, more attention was directed to Khrushchev's opening speech. All hope vanished for a contribution to world peace, however, when his sermon turned into a rehashing of earlier speeches and proposals, supplemented by the crudest invective yet hurled at the Western Allies. Referring to the hosting organization, Khrushchev somberly maintained, Our position in the world is not determined by the way in which the voting in the UN runs, but by the economy of the Soviet Unionf' The party was not altogether without humor, Premier Castro's debut at the UN with his announced brief speech-it ran four and one-half hours-his version of Earl' Lynne at the Hotel Theresa, led many news col- umnists to declare that Castro stood alone as a delegateg a few of the more intrepid writers attributed this to his disdain for soap and water. But what did all this matter: the United States had a presidential campaign. The religious issue, among others, was resolved with the narrow election of john Kennedy to the presidency. Faced with the Cuban situation, Quemoy-Matsu, and the stalled Geneva disarmament talks, the U.S. was now in the period of transition from one government to an- other, an event traditionally accompanied by no radical move by the incumbent president. Eisenhower departed from this custom by cutting off diplomatic relations with Cuba. At the UN, newly-appointed ambassador Adlai Stevenson's first speech was interrupted by a riot instigated by Lumumba supporters. The Laotian prob- lem continued to worsen with pro-Western Bonn Oum, Communist Kong Li, and neutralist King Souvanna Phouma claiming power, reaching a climax with a U.S. warning to Russia that military action would be taken if a cease-tire was not effected. In Cuba, the obvious Communist infiltration of the government led many people to wonder when a CIA-inspired miracle would rid Cuba of a Communist-dominated regime. A few weeks after UN Secretary General Dag Ham- marskjold's air-borne death, the Twenty-Second Congress of the Soviet Communist Party announced two startling departures in program. Beginning with a caustic attack at the Albanian regime for supporting Stalinist policy and criticizing Khrushchevs goal of peaceful coexistence, A Pi olerfmzt Khrushchev went on to declare josef Stalin a traitor to world Communisms cause, Continuing in his calm mood, he suggested to Finland that she enter into a treaty with Moscow to gain protection from West Germany's threat to world peace. In our own hemisphere, few political analysts were surprised at Castros proclamation that he was indeed a Marxist. Establishing a new approach to Latin American affairs, Kennedy soon formalized an Alliance for Progress, a plan he promoted with well-received visits to Several key South American capitols. But the optimistic outlook was quickly toppled with a worsening of the Berlin ten- sion-the creation of The Wall, and the perplexing Sino- Soviet conflict. The year 1962 drew to a close on a note of American resolve and, within the Communist camp, ideological disunity. Decisive action was taken by the U. S. federal government in upholding the Supreme Court ruling of school integration by sending the national guard to secure the safe entry of james Meredith onto the campus of the state University of Mississippi. In late September, as our senior year began, Governor Barnett melodramatically took the states rights stance and threatened President Kennedy with secession from the union, with the rest of the south to follow unless the troops pulled out. During cl Calbollr, and lbs fulure. . . . and Againft. the verbal delivery of this Mississippi resolution, tear gas shot by the national guard sufficed to hold back the recalcitrant mobs on the Ole Miss campus. As for the rest of the Southland and the country, they watched this upheaval with disquietude as their attention was slowly being diverted by the unusually excessive diplomatic activity taking place on Capitol Hill. The October 1962 Cuba crisis was imminent. With definitive resolve, President Kennedy presented an ultimatum to Chairman Khrushchev. On a Monday night in October, the beginning of the sixth week of studies for Heightsmen-the first week of hourly exams for the year-President Kennedy was seen over tele- vision across the land gravely declaring that the Russian offensive weapons would have to be removed from Cuba or the U. S. would consider their presence an act ot aggression by the Soviet Union. An effective naval blockade of Cuba was installed. Most observers felt that the Cuban crisis precipitated an embarrassing retreat for Khrushchev, a victory for Kennedy, and a turning point in the cold war. On the Far Eastern front, the Chinese Communists invaded the northern Himalayan border of India, The attack took the neutralist country by surprise. The Chinese Communist action further widened the ide- ological gap between Russia and China, with the feud V? f In Law.. az mlulimz. now becoming an open ideological debate. If Communist China could succeed in pushing through the Himalaya Mountain border separating China from India, the balance of power between the free world and the Com- munist camp could radically shift. In God we trusted, so the Ecumenical Council in Rome was convened by Pope john XXIII. Speculation led observers to believe that this Vatican conference would affect not only Roman Catholics and Christians but perhaps the population of the whole world, long after Cuba was once again free and India no longer feared attack. As students got ready for Christmas vacation, New York City's newspapers went on strike for a record breaking one hundred forty-four days. Another strike immobilized all shipping on the east coast from Maine to Texas. The strengthening of European unity was evident, both politically and economically, in the growth of the Common Market. De Gaulle and Adenauer buried old animosities and signed a treaty of alliance. De Gaulle's refusal to allow Britain to enter the Common Market caused concern throughout the Western World. I-le had attempted to use the Common Market as a political and economic vehicle to build up France in- stead of considering the good of all the countries in- volved. Grave doubts were aroused as a result of this action concerning the solidity of the Western Alliance. Britain diplomatically sacked her Polaris missile plans in conjunction with the Nassau meetings with President Black Morzdfzy. f NA. Brolherhaorl' in lhe Congo. Kennedy on this issue. Britain adopted the Telestar operation, joining with the United States on an im- portant policy decision. The British humor magazine Pmzrh, however, displayed its usual satiric wit over the issue. It summed up the political change in a cartoon showing MacMillan, De Gaulle, and Adenauer in military dress, with Kennedy waving his outstretched left arm over the three heads of state. The caption read, 'fKennedy would like to see them all as lieutenantsf' As the new year came in, plans were consummated between the U. S. and Cuba to trade American military men, imprisoned there since the abortive Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba, for needed supplies. The U. S. traded 353,000,000 worth of drugs, food, and cash in return for the safe delivery of the American prisoners. The l:1fSt plane of Americans arrived in Miami, Florida, promising the return of others. What was hopefully signaled as a turning point in U. S.-Latin American affairs was the American pledge of six million dollars to further the economic develop- ment of neighboring countries south of the border. To cement relations with Latin and South America further, the Peace Corps, on the request of South America, sent able members to train their youth. This economic build- up would, hopefully, Offset the threat of communism in the Western Hemisphere. But what of permanent peace, what of the UNg had it really eased the problems it was dealing with, or was it merely a helpless lookingeglass in a world community where all powers insisted on playing Fury: Fzzry Jezlel to LZ mozzfe fha! he met in the hozzre, Lei nr hath go lo lhe law: I will proremle yon,-Come, I'll mhe 110 denial: we HZIIJZ' have ez triezlg for really thif mowzlfzg Fee zzathlfzg lo do. Said the meme to lhe Clif, Such cl trial, dem' fir, with no jury or judge, would he wazrfiug our hreezihf' I'll he judge, I'll he jlf1'y, mid fhe rmzfzifzg olrl Flfryg I'll fry fhe whole mme and mmlemfz you 150 death. The USA: illlzrinfz 1 1'e.1ll!3'. 'fm sri , 1V ,J , , 'fi J 4 -QR' ii' ' I -Digi , Ay Z f M Ha' 1,,-fi XX: !,- 1f ---57 Q j 2 2 ' , ,WV----N Eff' ,5 J, if ff-41 A , 1, fi iff-3 ,J E. - '+, ,fs-2 1 ' fa' K K I? ' lx k 19722: .oi ' X4 3 1 5 ' ,A f - --L E9 , Ly? 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Everyone was walking down the mall one day and went into a certain place and all of a sudden it was there. Everyone took it pretty much for granted, just assuming that there would be a 1963 Violet and that it would appear and that it would be divided into divisions and sub-divided into pages, they all guessed it would have a cover and that they would all get it free. There were only two doubters on campus, two who knew all along that the thing could never happen. Editors-in-chief Sandor Frankel and Dan Steinbrocker shoveled through the winter snow and swam through the spring madness and at last the thing happened, like Sandor Frankel Co-Edizor forget film. Five minutes after the meet had started, though, Yust wired a distress call to the office: I've got the film, OK, but I forgot the camera. What should I do? Not too much you can answer over the tele- phone. Then there was Steve Teller, formerly chief pho- THE STAFF Steven Goldberg QSports Editorj Peter Vannucchi CArt Editorj Sara Jane Radin john Halberstadt David Merkowitz jordan Peckins fHigh on the frustration list were rain and babies, it simply appeared. Tons of people helped it happen. A few of them were members of the yearbook staff, feathered friends from the student the Governing Board who said it The staffees, though not nearly as friends, were equally frustrating. the others were the activities office and wouldn't be done. imaginative as the the photographers, Ira Postel Peter Easton Judy Schwartz Ronald Protas Ralph Sandler Jack Weissman Sandra Shevey Stephen Teller Burt Yust who claimed to be photographers but were, in truth, only stakers to the claim. Chief staker, and one of the lesser photographers, was Burt Yust. Yust did not have one tremendous mind. There was the time, for example, when Frankel sent him out to Van Cortlandt Park to take some shots of the cross-country team. He reminded Yust not to forget the film, everyone in the office laughed: don't forget the film, posh, how could anyone Cynthia List Thomas Blau Alex Cairns Patricia Burstein Helen Hans james DeMetro Stephen Zeche tographer until he was called to task by the faculty and gently removed from the University scene. Teller had a remarkable bent toward bosoms. After each basketball game, the editors would eagerly wait to see the muscular men jumping and leaping and doing all sorts of things under the basket, but Teller followed a certain rigid consistency, always bringing in half the negatives hlled with female muscle, cheer-leading muscle, non-male muscle. We knew he'd make it some day, big. There were writers too. John Halberstadt was one. He spent most of his time trying to convince everyone else that he was one and probably even more than one, like maybe two. John tended to emphasize style and deemphazize commas, the first was an excuse for the secondg the second usually needed an excuse. He was a promiscuous writer, Halberstadt, his work was a veritable typewritten evacuation. There was a Don't Dare Tamper splashed in bold relief over all of his copy. Halberstadt claimed that all writers had to have a con- ceit or there was no purpose to their writing. Halber- stadt had a purpose. The Book claimed to have a sports staff as well, the sports staff claimed to be a sports staff, but neither hide nor hair of the sports staff was found until two weeks before publication date. Dave Merkowitz started out as ,,..--P' Stephen Teller, Pbologmpber. 45.2 fa 'E' Deadline :IPpI'0r1L'Z7. sports editor but took four months to reach a two-week deadline, so Steve Goldberg took over the chores. Goldberg was a sick-bed case. One day he called in and said he was sick. We said we were sorry to hear. The next day he called in to say he had mononucleosis, and the next day to Szly he had jaundice, we said get well soon. The next day, though, he called in to tell us he would be out for a full semester, honeymooning with himself and a serious case of hepatitis. We raised the roof, so he made it his business to get well quickly. That, unfortunately, was the only thing he made his business to get done on time. The sports department, indeed, had more ups and downs than a night between Mickey Hargitay and Jayne Mansfield. There was an art department too, headed and abetted by Sara Jane Radin. SJR was the layout artist, and as one of the few females on the staff took a good deal of riding because of her title. Whenever Sara Radin went downtown the people on the pavement looked at her, and she went home one night and laid out a 290-page yearbook. The Governing Board disapproved, though, saying sorry, we can only afford a couple of pages in between the covers and all that work you did, Dear Sara, will have to go for nought. Sara took it calmly. She quit. Calmly. But in a larger sense, we cannot hello this book without mentioning the little green rectangles with the presidents' pictures, and our champions from the student activities office. It all started one day in May, the May before the present, and it was the best of times. P. Price, director, promised the outgoing editor that there would be no budget review on this particular clay, so No sir, you don't have to show up. Fidelity Phil was in error, and the broad-minded Board gored us, suggesting that we charge the seniors for the book. They changed their minds later on, though, disclaiming any intention of a charge. So we had to plead with them. We held hands with the officers whenever tact called for it, we sat in at their meetings and laughed at their jokes: poverty makes strange bedfellows, and we prostituted ourselves. Grad- ually they gave us money, and we sidled up to them, sat on their laps, and pledged ourselves to suckling for as long as our need continued. They ran out of milk, finally, and we hopped off. It wasn't our book by any means, it was yours. You were the fraternity men who drank and smoked and sophisticated all over, you were the ones who stuck out your tongues at the photographer and poised an in- delicate finger into the air as the picture was about to be snapped. You were the athletes who moved when we only had a Polaroid, who ran in the rain when we had no overcoats. You were the writers who turned in copy months late, the sororities who didnit show up for your pictures and then complained that you'd been slighted. You were the original pipers and we were just the recorders. The recording business was a tough one. Late in March we had to announce that we'd be a little late this year, and everyone squawked because, gee, a year- book is a yearbook and why should it have to come Applying the fifzirlaizzg Iourlaer. out late. We smiled and got worried, and worked and sweated and hoped it would come out early enough to be late. There were walls to climb and we had trouble but we finally managed to climb them. They could have been mountains but the moles that controlled the doling stole our holdings. It happened at last, but it didn't just happen. It was an arrival that took a lot of traveling. l Summit with the brirzler. ,,' ,Qs 7- .irif -1 Vg f mf-'J i V V V Quj 1 V 7,1 2: ,A ' ' V , ' , A t 3 ,,,i 2 -1 . - it , tt V t --', Vf , , . , , f , t V , V f-,,,, Vifiii,?33gmmnlu'Mmw-,,mq X h tt xg. ,. 5 V X, Q 5, h Tp, , V Y .,,, H . ,V I I ,V ,i,,7,F A-, 'iii'-'c Q 'mih g a r V . 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I , J, A , I , I - , I , e V' .6 ,,LV f ,, tg , James De Metro Stephen Zeche Editors-in-Chief Jordan Peckins David Merkowitz Ira Postel Managing Editor Acting Sports Editor Associate Editor Sandor Frankel and Gary Weintraub, News Editors: Steven Lee Carson, Features Editorg Stephen Teller, Production Manager, Ken- neth Cohn and Jeffrey Stein, Business Managersg Fred Clarke, Night Editor: Elizabeth Schwartz, Associate Features Editorg Larry Greher, Assistant Business Manager: Peter Easton and Joe Pisano, Assistant Sports Editors: Brett Heiss, Assistant News Editorg Burt Yust, Photography Editorg Richard Watson, Special Projects Editor: Dean Schuyler, Sports Features Editorg Louise Caffin, Assistant Features Editor: Peter Rosenberg, Research Editor, Denis Hanlon, Reviewer, Seymour Weisenberg, Assistant Production Manager. The '62-'63 Heigbir Daily Neuaf, doing what the Heigbtf Daily Newt had done through eons before it, laid, made, weighed, and said the news on the average of 4V2 days a week. 'The Tweedledee-Tweedledum duo of james DeMetro and Stephen Zeche steered il shaky sometimes stah: of a few through the tortuous torture of digging up things to talk about and then talking about them. DeMetro, a Greek, was threatened with expulsion from the Univer- sity when the administration caught him in a pup tent on the third floor of the Student Center at 4:30 one Monday morning, laying out the first page. But Taki, claiming he was only scratching his Achilles Heel, got away with it. Young Zeche was pretty ambivalent about the Whole newspaper business. Ole Steve could take it or leave it. Y M Q V I - Qt- 'vi 'A' K Y The daily miracle. 'ew jordan Peckmr. Mmmgizzg Editor. David Merkowilz, Sporlr Editor. Im Pastel, Arrorifzle Editor. He left it more often than not, wandering around cam- pus dreaming of how he'd reject Harvard Law School and a couple of young chicks that always followed him around. Rumor had it that Zeche had a harem of psychos, but nothing was ever proved. The Napoleon behind these two josephines was fiery managing editor jordan Peckins. If someone wanted something done or somehow run or sometimes fun, Peckins was the man to whom they'd come. Peckins' claim to fame was a bit insane. It seems that a number of the guys from the paper all took the same course with a nice teacher who always scratched his neck and let some people out of exams. Peckins never got out of the exams. The executive editor was Ira Postel. He was a lucky one. The sports department spent the year coming and going. A sports writer named Goldberg started his sec- ond year as sports editor but wound up sick Qcf, Violet storyj. Dave Merkowitz, star of track and thesis, took over the chores. In between running track, fraternities, and into troubles, Merk managed to see to it that every time the rest of the staff put out the first three pages, there'd always be a page 4 to complement them. There were other important big shots on the paper, other than the managing board. Cne was a big blond named Gary Weintraub, one of the news editors. GW's journalism was as yellow as his hair. Weintraub special- ized in swastikas and Corvette thefts. Weintraub was big, smoked cigarettes, and looked the journalist through and through. Whenever there wasn't anything to write about, Gary got the call to write it. Then there was Steve Lee Carson, who spent the year carrying on some kind of strange relationship with Abe Lincoln, former US president. Carson's big moment came when he spoke in the middle of a street in Man- hattan, introduced by Mayor Wagner. Carson's smile won the crowd. Then there was the sad but true tale of Thomas Blau. Blau was a sophomore of acceptable intelligence who- somehow got mixed up with the wrong crowd. Blau would spend hours and hours looking mournfully at the nausea-green walls of the publications office, dream- ing of the hour he'd be able to return home and mem- orize some obscene limericks from a smuggled book a professor of his once loaned to him. There was a re- porter named Blau,fWith creased face and with wrinkled brow,fWhen told by the sages,!To lay out his pages,f He replied, But I never learned how. Each day up at that depressing office was a typical day, a typical experience in itself. At about 10 in the Two cbiefr .fend out lbeir Jignalr. l fcllllgi Dellfelm, C0-Edifor. a.m., one or two dolts would come wandering into the room, sit down on a couple of desks, and talk about sex. Then a whale would come swimming in from either the card room or the game room and stretch himself out on two or three desks, sticking a cigarette into his mouth and puffing contentedly. He was the only whale on the east coast who could moo while eating. One day, stretched out on the features editor's three desks, he gave birth to a baby rhinoceros. The obstetrics were per- formed with a pool cue. Baby's first words were, Why Stephen Z eclae, Co-Editor. doesn't anybody like me? Daddy's comment was, I'm hungryf' Even after losing the baby, he announced, But I'm winning over the season. The whale usually lost the baby by about 4 in the p.m., at which time DeMetro would realize that there was no news to put on the first page. There is no news to put on the first pagef' he'd scream. Everyone else would laugh. Zeche would walk in, tell some erotic story, and walk out, At 5, Weintraub would make an appearance, listen to DeMetro,s whisperings, and leave to buy some car keys or some red paint. Peckins would tell some people what to do, and then the next day Bingo, the newspaper wound up wound up, and the campus fish usually wound up wound up in it. Many were the times when there was nothing but nothing to be saidg yet something always had to be said. So everyone would sit down at the typewriters and write letters to the editors about one great big issue, like may- be that there aren't enough toilets in the dormitory. Then the next day these same people would write edi- torials agreeing with their letters. The making of a news- paper, 1963. The Nezzir had a two-week period where it was im- pressive. All the metropolitan dailies decided not to do any more typing for about 112 days, so the HDN de- cided to take up the slack. Working through the long hours down at the print shop, pilfering stories and lead sentences from the New York Timer press releases, braving the Bowery bums loitering around City-Wide, and generally lousing up their collective body metabo- lism, the staff distributed its product to the neighboring Burnside intelligentsia. The general consensus of opin- ion was that the venture was the most successful the Neuxr had ever undertaken. The printer, however, claimed that he was no longer bleeding a couple of editors but a collection of scabs. Another successful undertaking was the continuation of the annual Miss Meat of the Newspaper World Con- test, the MMNWC, or the Miss HDN contest. Supply- ing the first 150 voters with a full smoke's supply of Tipparilloes, the Newsies managed to attract more voters than the Governing Board had attracted for its great big flop. Miss Rheingold had beaten the President once again. There were others responsible for the paper's appear- ing most of the time. There were Cohn and Stein and Teller and Clarke and Frankel and Weissman and Mano- witz and Schwartz and Caffin and Easton and Pisano and Heiss and Watson and Schuyler and Beer and Schenley and Burstein and Weisenberg and Yust and Scharf and Yudofsky and Goldberg and Cairns and Ver- noff, and there were the people who picked up the paper every day to put their lunches on and turn into FJtIflll'L'.l' rzfilnr l'E'fft'1'c?.l' fr'1z,rll'4lli01f.r. the paper's wiimzz zfefre. There was the good feeling when someone came up to the office late and asked for a copy of a previous day's issue because he had missed it. When it was all over there was a good feeling of a job done, well in many instances. And everything had turned out for the best. Merkowitz got his thesis in. Postel got out of his exams. Peckins got into his societies. More important than anything, though, were the changes introduced into the lives of the editors. Zeche now could stick a hand in and draw anything out of his playgirls farm, Yalie that he now was and Phi Bet' to boot. And DeMetro had been thoroughly assimilated, he could now walk into Spevack's without feeling self-conscious. Even his Greek was developing unmistakable Yiddish intonations. Command zo the mme The Staff. CXJADRANGLE BERNARD SIEGEL Editor-in-Chief MANAGING BOARD GABOR FULOP Managing Editor PETER LI LIENTHAL Features Editor PAUL WALITSKY Business Manager EDITORIAL STAFF James Kitcher John Stein I-Ial Disman Bob Geiillcen Harvey Solomon Pete Campisi Alan Swirnow Michael Glass Michael Levine Pete Kiel Larry Kurland STAFF ARTISTS Andy Merritt Neil Reddy Tony Franco PHOTOGRAPHER Howard Levison The Jfllgi, poxizzg and prelendizzg I0 be bury. Quadrangle got out an issue here, an issue there, and wrapped itself away until the following year. Five issues were anticipated, but only three appeared. The first of these was distributed to freshmen only, during the orientation program. Articles appeared ex- plaining the academic goals and emphases of the de- partments in the College of Engineering, to help ac- quaint the numbers neophytes with all facets of the engineering world. Heading the managing board was Bernard Siegel, Edilor Siegel frigbfj and Burifzefx Manager lV:zlil.rky. editor-in-chief. He was assisted by Paul Walitsky, busi- ness manager, Gabor Fulop, managing editor, and james Kitcher and Peter Lilienthal, features editors. They themselves weren't assisted by too large a staff at all. 'The staff took pride in the return of Quadlings in the December issue. They ran funny jokes in that section, things like I'll see you,', said jim as he laid down four aces in a game of strip poker, or It was their Hrst date and they were both thinking of the same thing. She called it mental telepathy. He called it begin- ners luckf, They laughed at their jokes so hard they forgot to put out the last two issues. The issue also marked the appearance of Herbert Hoover in Quadrangle. Apparently the editors couldn't think of too much to say, so they ran a picture of some voluptuous broad sprawled over an editor's desk, called the editorial the Editors Desk, and ran, under the note Herbert Hoover is credited with the following observations, three paragraphs worth of Mr. Hoover's opinions about the engineering profession. The February issue contained articles on the handling of sports cars, an article on liquid hydrogen, an article on superconductivity, and an article on relativity. Sum- ming up the issue, the managing board asserted, Thus, this issue was able to discuss hardware and sophisticated physics. Of course, one individual might not be inter- ested in reading all these articles very closely. Pert, provocative disclosures. The final issue of the magazine was to be based on original research conducted by Heights undergraduates. Unfortunately, however, Seymour Popovitz's article on medical electronics couldn't be printed in its entirety because of legal difficulties. The issue was also supposed Looking for lbs Zur! f'Ll'0 i,rrzze.r. to include an article by Siegel which reported his re- search in the development of a technique for growing brass samples which could be used to study two-phase deformation. Such a system had never before been grown. But neither did Siegel's idea blossom into a reality. Because of a limited Governing Board appropriation, Quadrangle was forced to depart from the bizarre color front pages so frequently seen in engineering publi- cations around the country. The Engineering College Magazines Association praised the original black and whites which appeared, however, calling them an aesthetically pleasing break from convention. l P41111 I1 :1l5k3f, C0-Edifor. When green enchantment nears the Heights With dewy days and smoggy nights, The mall reveals a different hue, And jay Gould gives a grant or two, It's springtime then !-when all the masses Spill forth their soul and cut their classes. And if for art and verse they long, They open wide and sing this song: O hail Perrifzre !-ah so very Intellectually literary, Charming little magazine, Hail Permzre Ckeep it cleanj. Hail Perrlare! Never cower To the sword-pens have power. Though we hardly know your name, Praise Perfrtare just the same. ' So must we hail the SGB For giving us the do-re-mi, To join in this en masse elation. O bless their grand appropriation! Yet there were times of far less cheer. Bad times, as stale as tepid beer, When we bemoaned Pewiazreis Muse, Crushed hard beneath Fate's callous shoes. Yes. There were days filled with chagrin, When tender freshmen would bounce in: So what's Perria1'e! they'd declare. We'd smile and push them down the stairs. PERSTARE Dezmir Herbf, C0-Edilof. But we knew well that they were right, That it would be an uphill fight If we, the hopeless, could deny Pei'rim'e's lazy legacy. Yet something told us, something clear, Pemfzre means to persevere. We'd not give in-we'd never lose, We'd resurrect that dying Muse! We waited for the brilliant verse But all we got was stuff we nursed And tried to patch, the worn creation Mosttimes was passive to regeneration. We handled it gently, with love and kisses But the only time we approached Ulyrrer Was when at the end ofthe season's drama We noticed bad spelling and misplaced commas Now comes the spring, promised by Shelley, The time of love and cherry jelly, Of baseball and bermuda shorts, Of merriment and term reports. So if you'll join with us in season, And substitute laughter for reason, And if for art and verse you long, Just open wide and sing this song: O hail Pea-'.rlf1re-ah so very Intellectually literary, Charming little magazine, Hail Perriczre fkeep it cleanj. PALISADES HANDBOOK Sandor Frankel, Editor. Once upon a time and a very good time it was there was a moocow coming down the road met a nicens little boy named baby tuckoo and all the little baby tuckoos looked through a glass and reached their hairy arms out and snatched up their freshman guidy-widys and tra- lala'd off to the next exciting convocation. The 1962-63 Palifaaler Handbook weaved its way through the restless nights of the long hot summer and landed in the eager hands of every eager freshman dur- ing the orientation period. A polyglot of sections from past books, placed and pasted schematically on little dummy index cards and spiced by rare traces of orig- inality, the handbook defied the gods of the Student Activities Office by appearing right on time, wrapped neatly in the protective covering of a '66 beanie. When the book was already on the presses and the New York Timer reviewers had already been contacted, editor Sandor Frankel was stunned out of sleep late one September night by a frenzied call from a Govern- ing Board representative, and warned that if work was not started soon a new chief would be named. Equally frenzied, Frankel hitched up his drawers and rushed to his typewriter, madly applying the finishing touches to the Erosh Bible. But it was more than a one-man job, and Santa had his helpers. Chief gnome was Steven Lee Carson, of Civil War fame, who took time out from his summer job of Chief Preparatory Minister for the Celebration of the 150th Anniversary of the Inauguration of Abra- ham Lincoln to do whatever the historian of a Paliraaler Handbook does. STUDENT DIRECTORY The mendicants of the fraternity world, Alpha Phi Omega, surprised all and disappointed many by publish- ing its annual version of the Stnilent Directory earlier than anticipated. Deviating from the tradition of its ABC's-inclined predecessors, the '63 directory presented its abridged name-number-nation listings with a mini- mum number of errors, a precedent due mainly to the minimum number of students listed. The editors battled past glory. Rumor had circulated that the last few alphabetizing editors had met their demise doing mental therapy work at Rockland State, but the intrepid new men could not be stopped. Edited chiefiy by Samuel Hess, executively by Gerald Eelsenthal, and associately by Charles Rossmann, the Di- rectory was prefaced by a stern-faced warning to poten- tial saboteurs, subversives, and sublunaries: Use of the directory for commercial solicitation , . . is expressly forbidden. Anyone violating these restrictions will be subject to disciplinary action. As a further deterrent to the more mercenary, it warned, A further result will be the suspension of this publication. It was this latter warning, no doubt, which served the trick, and when the Student Directory hit the stands it ranked third in campus distribution behind the Thiel College Monthly Bnlletin and the Unpnblifketl Letterf of Dale Carnegie on Relationr Between Pnlvlirationf anal Student Actioitier Ojficialr. We waited on line from to- day until tomorrow for our copies, and greeted the rose- pink covers with heart-filled huzzahs. And then we thumbed feverishly through its lithographed pages and turned to find our names. And we turned, and turned, and turned .... Samuel Hen, Editor. STUDENT GGVERNING BQARD .d 'N . if A .nw- v Irzfizzg Rome, Preridezzl. The Sound The Governing Board and its money were soon parted. Shortly after their election, the new Board members collected themselves secretly in their pictur- esque grotto, with the bats and vampires and spiders flying and crawling around, and decided that what the heck, they were the people to play with the money, we had voted for them, So with a Hey, gang, let's be important, they magnanimously flung out their pennies here, pennies there. They were our elected officers, we were under their parole. Irving Rome was their leader. Irving spoke softly and had a fatherly manner about him when he'd sidle up to you and gingerly place his arm around your shoulder. Sometimes he'd say, Terribly sorry, Club President, but we had to take five dollars off your budget. Sometimes he'd say, Sorry, Editors, but we had to take away more than 32000 from your budget. He was consoling when he sounded the death knell. La belle president sans merci. The original vice-president was a smart young man. His name was Bill Sperling and he was smart, num- ber one, because he ran for ofhce unopposed, and, number two, because he left the Heights Haven even . 5 Carl Cbernojf. Vice-Preriderzi. And The Fury before he stepped into office. When he stepped out Carl Chernoff stepped in. Chernoff had a sense of humor. Once Irving the President announced that the meeting was being taped for posterity and Carl the Vice- President said No, it was being taped for posterior. Chernoff had one big sense of humor. He had a spine made of funny bones. The man who handled the money was, as with most organizations, the treasurer. The man in the SGB was, as with not too many organizations, Donald Tepper. It was Linder Tepper's direction that the Board, one hne March afternoon, discussed a S15 increase for Bristol 101177741 for nearly an hour before voting it down, and then passed a bill calling for S1000 for a concert here in less than ten minutes. They knew what they were doing, our Governing Board, we were proud of their representation. The fourth and last member of the executive board was Barbara Mastriani. Barbara was! the nice girl who sang Hatikva during Orientation. She added the coeducational touch to the Board's proceedings, often giggling at Chernoff's humorous jokes. Sometimes she turned red when one of the more articulate I Boardmen made some highly hilarious sexual refer- ence. A happy time was always had by all on those wonderful Tuesday afternoon meetings. This was made possible mainly through the usual absence of a quorem, so that meetings could not be held anyway. The Board was by no means what could be called the Four Flashes, there were other minds augmenting the Quick Quartet. There was a sophomore representa- tive, for example, Steven Marcus, who was a sopho- more, an elected sophomore, a representative sopho- more. A frightening development occurred late in the year when the Board discovered, alas, that there was nothing for the sophomore representative to do. But nothing could thwart the Roman cohorts, and they de- vised ways in which Marcus could make a noteworthy contribution to campus life, Why not institute an award, they screamed, and, by golly, that they did. They proposed amending the constitution by calling for the administering of an award to a student politician holding no political rank, one who has diligently and unselfishly devoted his time to the general functions or an associated project of the Board, and who, not well known to the general student body for his work, has not been shown commensurate appreciation for his efforts. The CSA, however, asserted its authority by pointing out the noticeable lack of literacy in the rest of the amendment, various misspellings, and the whole idea's outrageous silliness. Our sacred constitution retained its virgin sanctity, and we were happy. There were some other things the Board wanted to do, like allow residents to keep their rooms during winter vacation. The Board kept up a concerted effort, Donald Tepper, T1'earu1'e1'. Barham llflartrifzzzi, Secrezary. Slerezz Marcur, Soplaomore Reflrerefzlulize. Rome rlarer :ll az meelirig. and, at long last, its unbelievable power was evinced when we were all, all but the athletes and foreigners, gently removed for the ten-day period. It seems that the janitors had to have time off, and the people in student activities felt that pretty soon everyone would want to live in the rooms they'd been paying for and then where would we be, But first things first. The first act of the SGB, after its hyper-intelligent allocations, was conducting the Freshman Orientation Program, ln an attempt to intro- duce the newcomers to the more intellectual side of campus life, the Board mailed out propaganda to all 5 Ta fi? sg ,fi al as-as SGB-spozzrored orientation: frosh that they'd have to read these three books written by really smart men, and then weld all sit around like we were having a seminar and discuss them, collegiately. just so the Class of '66 wouldn't grow too world-weary, though, the hazing masters tossed toilet seats around peoples necks and shaving cream in their faces and bodies in ducking troughs and all kinds of funny things like that. College is supposed to be fun, re- member, and we laughed hysterically. Going from the mind to the body, the Board set up an experimental commutor bus service for the cosmo- politans who just happened to be living in nearby pro- vincial New York City. 'lUnfortunately, students did not totally respond, the Board was sorry to say, but the important thing was that the experiment was finally launched after many years of talking. Then there was the Welfare Committee, directed, led, paced, propelled, and spearheaded by Marvin Pickholz. The Committee was conducting active in- vestigations of dormitory increases, as well as other financial activities which increased the burden on the Committee, but decreased the burden on the student. We felt our burdens decreased immeasureably, but when we looked at our tuitions and rents and goodies that cost money, we noticed no change. Other great innovations were innovated by our inno- vation-minded innovators. For one, the lnterclass Council was reestablished, with money of its own, to effect the effective restoration of class activity. The Board was happy with the results, as most sow are pleased with what has been seeded. All the classes worked together for the first time to effectively accom- . . . to rbow lbs frerlzmen Q MQ- N M z x ff P 5 ,www -KAW! aft ! T H opf Jmrea' af ll meefizzg. plish the first year -we had accomplished a first year, we had added a chapter to precede Gezzerir- in which the student was adequately represented, and given a choice of activities to participate in. Most of us never saw this list, of course, but most of us had never seen God yet we believed in Him, so why not believe in the list too. So we went to school from 9:00 to 5:00 and pretended we were active. It wasn't just the big pies that the Board stuck its foot into, it was all pies, well-baked and served with saccharine-coated vinegar. In a report summing up its . . . what cz lol of laughs' year's activity, the Board took pride in the joint faculty- student Heights Area Safety Committee, through which, they claimed, safety problems at the Heights were coordinated. Now what is so rare as coordinated problems, other than solved ones. It must have been a well-nigh impossible task, this coordination, what with the myriad problems. The Committee wrapped up all the problems, no doubt, tied a nice red ribbon around them, and tucked them safely away under its unused dictionary. Somehow, though, one of the problems got unco- ordinated, so an inquiry was also made into the pric- ing of textbooks in the bookstore in relations to other schools in the area. Fine, we had an investigation, now we could relax. Prices remained hxed. All good things end, and the Governing Board did too. By March, they decided that student government here was so important that they needed four adult-type voting machines to choose their successors. This wasn't a bad idea, most things considered, but at the time tons of clubs were applying for money and after all the one- armed law enforcers did cost 3580 per piece. The treas- urer's report affirmed the need for the machines and the vote of the Board confirmed his affirmation, so 3320 of the 3400 left in the budget went down the drain to insure honesty. We were practicing for our future role as citizens of these United States, and there was no doubt about it, we had to be grown-up. So we watched them roll in the machines, and as trumpets groaned off in the distance and the flag was lowered to half-mast, the Board carried its study in humility hum- bly off into the distant past. , . . college really ir. STUDENT CENTER POLICY BOARD Bari! Berfzrteizz, Preridenl. fEditors' Note: Ar deadline approarfaed and we were rtezggering too mach to fnirb ojjf the book on time, we arleed zz eerttzin high-ranking official of the SCPB to rzzbmit information regarding lrirfber orgazzizfztiorz. The t7Zf07'77Z6Zlf0lZ rzzbmitted war written in ez rmzmzer ro in- credibly inripid that we thought we ufozlld pam it on or it war, rparifzg ourfeloer effort and ojjferirzg you a eorzdereerzdizzg rbueklej ilt might seem to be just a wee bit of braggadocio to start a yearbook article with the blanket statement that this year's Policy Board was great, but it was. And, of course, Honesty is the Best Policy. Anyway, what bet- ter place is there to do a bit of horn-blowing than the Violet. Qlt may not be the function of this yearbook, but it is what it ends up doingj. So here goes . . . The Student Center Policy Board was wonderful, miraculous, marvelous, amazing, astounding, great, swell, dandy, terrific, awfully colloquial, fabulous, and fantastic. fThank you M. Rogetj The Student Center Policy Board also had some prob- lems. And these made its fine performance in the face of adversity and the Student Activities Ofhce even more ,gust-a 5: 5 r gt' . f....f C yzzlbhz Lirl, Vice-Preridezzt. indescribable, inexpressable, ineffable, inconvenient, and incredible. Fair as a star, when only one Is shining in the sky. fThank you English Lit 30-40 or whatever your new number may be.j Excuse the poetic outburst, but it's definitely of utmost importance to exhibit some erudi- tion, but only a teeny weeny bit, the Violet is so very, you know. ffxposiopesis, Dean Knedlerj -Now down to the serious business at hand-praising the Student Center Policy Board. stop look 8: listen nyug incline thine ear you students of Trivia, pause mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the scpb .... -O Education: O Lair Goodmazi. Scribe. mr. hopf and group CO to be a policy board now that shipton's here.j Back to the: S-o C-alled P-erfect B-lunder The SCPB lb1'01,lfJ 41 fmrty. Er . . . ab . . . memzzubffe . , . eh . . . But student activities can be fun. Remember that in whatever adversity you may face as out in life you wend your way. Titles are so important these days-they might get you into P8cP fit you have the right friends. They might even get you into Phi Beta Kappa, though no one knows what their standards arej. And a one and a two and . . . Bahsil? Or is it Baysil? Grufferman? Or is it List? Nachti gal ? Or is it Nightingale? Lois? Or is it? Student? S-mutty? Center? C-ommittee? Policy? P-ropagates? Board? B-ull? It was once almost changed to Student Center Activity Board, but the initials SCAB were rather violently op- posed by one rather violent chairman who said, I am rather violently opposed . After all, it might just as well be PINK. But he couldn't decide on the It's all really just a matter of opinion. But whose is what counts. Certainly not the students in student ac- tivities. Behind every truly great organization lies a truly great bunch of officers, committee chairmen, and members. The Policy Board, if you could ever get them all together Brolber Tbeodarez now, had a full complement of able, hard-working, capable, industrious, and diligent coming and going. The only problem was that they went more often than they came. There were serious responsibilities attached to as significant a position as that of Committee Chair- man, and too seldom did people realize this when they undertook a job. When the common plea of the students was Student activities is going to the dogsn and Apathy, my Apathy, How'r of NYU, and committee positions of leadership went empty or were not con- tested, the dirge could only be completed as: A Falloef' talk! abou! lmbier. religion . . . iThey will always sing thy praise, To thee they'll e'er be true! The Policy Board's answer to the problem of student apathy fwas it to only limited students?j was Basil Bernstein. With great industriousness and dedication to his task, Basil spent one year teaching the Heights to pronounce his name, and involved himself in sundry other crises. There were always crises on the Student Center Policy Board. The BB of the Heights also man- aged to run a mean Policy Board, coordinating all events, and all committees. As a sideline, Basil co- ordinated Messrs. Price and Hopf and Miss Shipton. Joyce Nachtigal, the hardy, hard-working treasurer, kept tight reins on Policy Board funds. Mrs. Rosen kept tight reins on Joyce. Mr. Hopf kept tight reins on Mrs. Rosen. Mr. Price kept tight reins on Mr. Hopf. Or did he? Lois Goodwoman, the crusty, trusty scribe, spent all her time stealing the magic markers from the steel- locked secret closet in Policy Board headquarters. It was all part of a plot initiated by Bobbi Stock .... The ace team of Goodwoman-Sock pointed their accusing linger or hngers at Stephen Wohl: Wohl had definitely eaten all the Publicity Committee supplies. QThis excused the publicity outfit from publicizingj The story is that Wohl had eaten all the magic markers in utter despera- rebellion . . . tion. The cafeteria had been depleted by a mass Policy Board snack before a seventeen-hour meeting, and Steve, after eight sandwiches and four malteds, had been too busy arguing to purchase his dessert. So he had a small snack of gum erasers and magic markers fall vegetable, you knowj. Steve had been arguing with everyone in the cafeteria about the efficacy of having one Pershing Rifle, two dic- tators, three campus politicians, four deans emeriti, and a partridge in a pear tree debating the subject of Birth Control in the Black Muslims of East New York, New jersey: Its Pros and Cons. Of course the Policy Board didn't involve itself only in such trivial matters. There were also the urgent prob- lems of everyday administration: Should skis be hung on the Student Center balcony in honor of the winter solstice? Tennis rackets in the spring? Bikinis in sum- mer? And just who has the jurisdiction to hang objects on the ozztride of the Student Center? Has it been ap- proved by the chief Board approver? Has the chief Board approver been approved? Still? Cynthia Gruffer- man List, who fulfilled that demanding position, said, I chiefly approve all chief approvals that have been approved by my chief. All wasnit just theory, however, on the Student Cen- ter Policy Board. Wasn't just budgets, committee reports, Committee on Student Activities meetings, disputes with and what kind of fool am I. the Student Activities Office. There had to be something else! There had to be a Larry Spiegel. There had to be a Gil Martin. There had to be some hip swinging boobies. These two boobs swung their hips all over the place- at the fantastic Valentines Ball, the plethora of TGIFS, the Personnel Committee meetings, the concerts-to the rhythm of Olatunji and his Drums of Passion, the Tar- riers, even to the Boston Symphony and its Strings of Passion. A laik with Mr. Tbomau ozfer Zerz. EVENING ENGI EERI G CGUNCIL The Evening Division of the College of Engineering, a six-year program leading to a baccalaureate degree in engineering, virtual city unto itself, a town awakening when most others on campus were settling down for the night. While some one thousand prospective engi- neers toiled despite the temptation of succumbing to morning and afternoon lethargy, another group of en- gineering undergraduates burned the midnight oil de- Hfzrry Szezwzrl, Prerfderzf. spite the temptation of bending to evening lethargy. Coordinating the affairs of the night engineers was the Evening Engineering Council, composed of Eve officers elected from the student body ranks. President Harry Stewart, along with Vice-President Robert McNeill, Treasurer Monroe Zicherman, Corresponding Secretary Myron Goldman, and Recording Secretary George Koehler, provided for faculty lectures through- out the year and for dances, dinners, and other extra- curricular activities. Most important among the activities sponsored by the evening engineers was Hexagon, a newsletter pub- lished four times per year and deriving its name from the six-year program of the Evening Engineering division. Issues acquainted students with employment opportunities open to them, publicized coming events, and provided in- formation necessary to the satisfactory completion of the school year. The year's issues, under the leadership of Marvin W. Walczak, editor, and Bryan Scheffield, Myron Goldman, Stewart, Henry Frey, and john Stig- litz, contributors, were highlighted by columns by sev- eral of the school's higher-ups. In his Administratively Speakingf' Emanuel A. Salma, Assistant Dean of the Evening Division of the College of Engineering, famil- iarized his audience with new regulations of the faculty. Stewart's Presidents Message served as a bulletin in itself of all happenings within the student government. Other articles included informative pieces devoted to the various engineering societies, as well as school organs like the Placement Services and Tau Beta Pi. Also included Mfzfz with pipe in moulb. in the magazine were editorials and a humor column, and letters to the editor. The evening engineers, with an average age of twenty- eight, presented diversified backrounds. The Electrical Engineering Society of the evening division was en- dowed with particularly interesting individuals. Among its members was the first city fireman to be graduated from a college with an electrical engineering degree. This particular scholar enlightened the student body Man wizb elbow on lable. with a film on fire righting. The electrical engineers presented an unusually for- midable front during the year, with the presence of a multitude of scholars. The sole magna cum laude grad- uate of the night engineering division was a member of the aforementioned society. This particular engineer had successfully undertaken the construction of an elec- tronic organ and was seriously interested in the photo- graphic field. The activities of the members of the evening division were continued with an extraordinary lecture by a mem- ber on the structure, function, and design of the sing- ing IBM machine. The novel computer emitted sounds of varying intensities bearing direct resemblances to popular songs and classical music. The industrial engineering society drew a large gath- ering by presenting a speaker representing the job placement service. Creativity and research were the most desirable elements looked for by the engineers. With an accent on the serious side, the night engineer occasionally indulged in moments of frivolity. Wives Wofzzafz and men wilb hand! on lable. night was an affair in which all Council societies par- ticipated. A buffet dinner in a reserved dining hall was just the beginning of one of the most entertaining eve- nings, a Broadway show followed the banquet, and a happy time was had by all. The accent on wives was continued during graduation. Frequently, good wifen certificates were bestowed upon distinguished servants of men. Besides awards presented to members of the weaker sex, the Student Council gave awards to partici- pants in the affairs of the Council and the various societies. Man wilfy rlain in lmrzd. HALL GF FAME PLAYERS We arrived backstage at the Hall of Fame Playhouse in time to catch some last-minute instruc:ions being given to the actors by their director. He was a me- dium-sized good-looking man with hair graying at the temples, a beard that circumvented his chin line just above the lower part of each ear. It also showed traces of gray throughout. As we listened to this slim Abe Lincoln issuing his pearls to the eager and expectant young thespians gathered before him, we could hardly help but marvel at the enthusiasm generated by the small group, The play to be given this evening was the Hall of Famers' first production of the season, a re-opening of Wilderls The Shin of Om' Teefh. The Shin of Om' Teeth had been given the year before and was widely acclaimed as a smash success. For this occasion six hun- dred eager NYU freshmen sat in the audience. lt was freshman orientation week and this evening was the annual orientation theater night. The play centered around the Antrobus family and its struggle for survival against the cruelties of the world. These cruelties included flood, war, starvation, and the coming of the ice age. We marvelled at the quality of the performances given, and were most en- thralled at watching Esther Feinerman, Marty Epstein, Hillary Merman, and Norman Soifer as the four mem- bers of the Antrobus family. Highest plaudits went also to Paula Lee Lorge for her captivating role as the Antro- bus' maid and sometime vamp, Sabina. We could feel the excitement in the air as the six hundred new mem- bers of the University family hled out of the exit doors of the Playhouse. Such comments were heard as, Cer- tainly a very stimulating evening of theater, and If this is characteristic of their performances, I have an interesting year to look forward to, and Wow, that Sabina. After expressing our delight with their first perform- ance of the year, William Vorenberg, the director of the Players, was kind enough to send us complimentary tickets for the four remaining plays of the season. We gathered again in the outside lobby of the theater for the second performance of the year, Ugo Betti's The Qffeen nur! lhe Rehelr. We were again fascinated by the production, but were unable to understand how the beautiful young woman, played by Bonnie Burlan, could possibly maintain such a lovely hairdo during a grueling three day bus ride through the mountains. But we re- membered reading somewhere that we must always sus- pend our disbelief in cases of this sort, and so we did. We were quite concerned over the force with which the queen, played by Frances Krant, hit her head on the stage floor when she diedg however, we were pleased to discover at the cast party following the show that she had survived her blow with good spirits and little damage had been done to the cranial nerve. The limelight of the first show was stolen by a ive- year-old child brought on stage by Bob Cohen towards The Scarecrow. fmnef Mitrhell in Barabbas 97 Barabbas. the end of the performance. This handsome young player, by far the youngest in the troupe, displayed some hesitancy and stage fright while in the wings wait- ing for his cue. His mother coaxed and pleaded to little avail. Only at the last second did the young aspirant condescend to being brought before the lights. l-lis The director. Comedia. efforts were highly commendable although we doubted very much that Ugo would have wanted him to scratch his nose the entire time he was on stage. All in all we were charmed by the performance and gave ovations to all the actors and behind-the-scenes persons con- nected with the play. The third full-length play put on by the Players was Tagores Cycle of Spring. We were treated to an unex- pected pleasure when we discovered that the show was specially adapted for this performance by Stephen Pale- trant's lovely wife, Judith, We could only applaud for this lovely production and sympathize with the composer of the music that the ballet at the end of the play had to be cut because of the time factor. The acting was very well done, the scenery and choreography exquisite, and the cymbals player on cue every time. We mar- velled at this musicians perseverance, sitting through three full performances and never missing a cue. Our next visit to the Hall of Fame Playhouse was for the Invitationals in january. Two one-act plays were in the offering: G, S. Kaufman's Sf!!! Alarm and G. B. Shaw's Dark Laffy of flae Somzefr. Both plays were done to perfection. Bob l-lurwitt's direction of Dark Lady and Bob Cohen's direction of Still Afarfrf showed professional skill unmatched in many Broadway or Drury Lane productions. At the cast party after the invitationals it was announced that Cohen and james Mitchell had been elected to the Green Room honor society. We were happy for both of these fine actors and gave them our personal congratulations. The only disappointment of the evening was that jimmy Mitchell did not know the Green Room song. The other singers managed to carry the ball for him, though, and we trust that by this time he has had sufficient time and practice to memorize his lines. The second week in March brought us once more to the halls of New York University, this time for the occasion of the highly heralded performance of Luigi Pirandello's tragedy, Bfzrazbbfzr. At our first glimpse of the open stage we were immediately struck by the beauty of the set. It was a double tier affair with exits on both levels and very intricate construction. We dis- covered later that the scene technician, Robert Cohen, after building the scaffold, developed a fear of heights and was deathly afraid to ascend the edifice that he constructed for his role as Herod, From the opening scene in the dungeon to the hnal death scene we were held spellbound by the power of Pirandello's words as spoken through the mouths of these excellent young actors and actresses. james Mitchell, as the amoral and verbose Barabbas, drew bravos from every corner of the audience. The two prison mates of Barabbas, played by Richard Yudell and john Spingarn, were most ef- fective in their supporting roles. We felt also that spe- cial mention should be given to jon Ross, Robert Cohen, Barbara Slifkin, Angela Oliver, Horace Bigsley, and Norman Soifer for character portrayals of the finest sort. Dale Donnelly, as the silent Jesus Christ, deserved honors as well. After the performance we went again to the cast Comedia. The Scarecrow, party where great merriment was being held forth. Steve Palestrant, who in one fell swoop had knocked down the entire set amidst screamings of run for your lives, a wild man is loose, was demonstrating the art of building and demolishing scenery to specific design. Bill Vorenberg nodded sagaciously at Steve's commen- tary with a knowing smile on his face. We left the party toward two o'clock in the morning, our revels ended for the night. Comedia. GLEE CLUB The eightieth season of the NYU Glee Club, one of the oldest singing groups in the United States, was a year filled with excitement and glory for both its mem- bers and the University. With groups singing at home and abroad, NYU was heralded and hailed 'round the world. Professor Alfred M. Greenfield, Permanent Director of the Glee Club, spent the year on leave from the University, working under the auspices of the U.S. State Department and establishing extra-curricular singing groups in the universities of Colombia, South America. For his work there, Professor Greenfield was named Professor Honorario de Cartagena at a special ceremony held at that University on October 6. Another highlight of his work there was a contest held among several of Colon'1bia's university glee clubs, all of which he himself had started. During Professor Greenfields absence from NYU, Craig Timberlake took over the direction of the Club. He prepared and conducted the Glee Club at its 32nd Annual Town Hall Concert, where it presented a varied program featuring works by Hayden, Mozart, Schubert, Bruckner, Debussy, Villa-Lobos, and the difficult spoken music composition by Ernst Toch entitled Geographical Fuguef' Also presented were several Christmas carols and a medley of songs from Lerner and Loewels Paint Your Wagon. james M. Hester, NYU President, was ceremoniously awarded honorary Club membership at the concert. The Golliards, fifteen voices from the Glee Club under the direction of E. jon de Revere, Assistant to the Director, also appeared at the Town Hall concert. During the summer, they made a triumphant tour of Summer rehearsal. Craig Tiwberfrlee. Cwldurfor. Europe as a service to the State Department. They visited U.S. military installations in France and Ger- many, giving more than fifty concerts during the sum- mer. On their return to the States, they received a special citation in the form of a personal letter from Cyrus A. Vance, Secretary of the Army. It said, in part, For your commendable efforts and substantial personal sacrifice, I extend especial gratitude and appreciation. The year was an especially busy one for the NYU chanteurs. As in the past, they were called upon to sing at presidential convocations in the fall and at midyear. They were also honored to participate in the Achieve- ment Awards Dinner of the Greenwich Village Chamber of Commerce, where President Hester was named its Man of the Year, When Dr. Hester was formally inducted as President of the University in Philharmonic Hall of the new Lin- coln Center for the Performing Arts, the first academic rite in the new hall. the Glee Club was again called upon to lend its able services to the occasion. At this event, attended by representatives of almost every major college in the United States, Professor Greenfield was flown to New York briefly to prepare the musical pro- gram for the Inauguration. In April, during the spring recess, the Glee Club made its third annual Puerto Rico-Virgin Islands tour. Offering music of worship in Catholic, jewish, and Protestant services on the islands there, they gave con- certs at Puerto Rico, St. Thomas, St. john, and St. Croix. Governor Paiewonsky of the Virgin Islands showed his peoples appreciation of i A NYU's work there by honoring the Glee Club with a reception at the Government House in Charlotte Amalie, St. Thomas, Virgin Islands. For the past three years the Glee Club had travelled to the Caribbean for a week of sun- ning and singing during the Spring recess. This year's sojourn proved to be a highlight in tue club's season and a memorable event for the many thousands who were fortunate enough to hear them sing. Their trip took them, via Pan American jet, to San juan, Puerto Rico, from whence they journeyed throughout that island and through- out the Virgin Isles. Departing April 6 from Idlewild Airport, the enthusiastic singers performed that very eve- ning in the Union Church at Santurce. A distinguished audience, which included Augusto Rodriguez, head of the University of Puerto Rico's Music Department, gathered for the formal concert. From here, the Glee Club launched headlong into its work, giving three concerts that Palm Sunday, while also taking time out to tour an old Puerto Rican chateau and to visit and perform for the Army-Navy installation at Fort Buchanan. The Golfiurdr lake lbe floor. At NYU itself, the group presented the annual spring and fall concerts both at the Heights and at Washing- ton Square. The Glee Club also gave special programs for the Andiron Club, and performed at the Interna- tional Students Reception at Loeb Student Center, Founders Day, Baccalaureate Services, and the NYU- Furman basketball game at Madison Square Garden. As it does every year, the Club met for a week of sunning and singing before the start of school. The To zwz Half performfmre. members spent a week's encampment at Pocono Crest, Pocono Pines, where they warmed up for the busy sea- son ahead and learned a good part of their repertoire. In addition to the Glee Club staff, other men connected with the University were on hand to assist when neces- sary. Dr. Robert Fowkes Served as language teacher for the Club, lending a valuable hand whenever composi- tions in foreign tongues were sung. Mr. Lawrence Hollander, Assistant to the Dean of the College of Engineering, was also present to give his services. Mr. John Petterson, A'32, served as voice teacher for the club members and as tenor soloist in Franz Schuberts Nachtelle, performed at Town Hall once the sea- son got underway. At the end of the week, the Glee Club sang its first concert of the season, playing host to fifty Glee Club alumni and members of their families. The addition of women to the Heights campus posed the problem of introducing female voices into the Glee Club curriculum. This was solved when the girls formed their own chorus, under the direction of Mr. de Revere. Also under his supervision was the Chapel Choir, the University's only mixed chorus, The Choir's season was highlighted with a performance at University Church, in which it sang a Latin Ave Maria written expressly for the group by a South American friend of Professor Greenfield. The Chapel Choir proved of great service to the Uni- versity during the year. As salaried performers, the members of the choir sang at convocations, at special services given at University Church, as well as giving their own concerts during the school year. Unlike the Glee Club, whose repetoire leaned toward semi-classical, folk, and popular music, NYU's mixed chorus sang mainly the music of the masters and liturgical works, although their concerts always included a generous sprinkling of more modern works. Tizlzberlake fell! bow il! done. Highlighting their season were several magnanimous works which the professional groups undertook to per- form. These included several passages from Handel's oratorio, The Messiah, the complete Mozart Te Deumf' performed in Latin, and other noted works by Beethoven, Mendelsohn, and Bach. Wluetlier in white tie and tails, blue Glee Club blazer, or simply a sweatshirt and dungarees, the Glee Club remained united fraternally in both song and spirit, brothers in song singing on. Brothers in song. 2 LITTLE SYMPHONY Lurking somewhere on campus was an organization which fiddled around with music and emerged twice during the year to perform before a select clique of NYU music afficiandos. The Heights Little Symphony, previously affiliated with the Department of Music, was a completely voluntary organization. Although the de- mand for comb-and-wax-paper players was limited, there was an opportunity for anyone with a tinkling of talent to join the group. The Little Symphony, being well-represented in all instrumental sections of the traditional symphonic or- chestra, by no means languished in what modems con- sider the bloodless age of Eighteenth Century German Classicismf namely, Pappa Hayden and Wolfgang Mozart. From Palestrina to Webern, it was a rare com- poser who did not undergo thorough examination dur- ing Friday afternoon rehearsals in the chapel. During the year, the group performed some purely instrumental arrangements like Bach's Brandenburg Con- certo ,7'i7. Voice arrangements included selections from Verdils Aida, and the two arts were combined in exe- cuting Humperdinck's ballet Hansel and Gretelf' Profersor Baldzwilz 10105. Slrilzg rympfaozzy. Members both contributed and received musical ad- vice and direction. Soloists who added spice to the year's events were Edward Bridge, playing M0zart's Violin Concert in G Minor, and Jonathon Dzik, with Beethov- en's First Piano Concerto. The year's first concert was given in conjunction with a dance group and with the Comedia del Arte. In the spring, the orchestra returned to its activities with suc- cessful performances of Beethoven's Violin Concerto and Mozart's Clarinet Concerto. Only the orchestra it- self was involved. Under the enthusiastic baton of Maestro Alexander Bernyk of the Department of Music, students and pro- fessors representing a fairly thorough cross-section of the University read considerably more music than they played at concerts. The officers of the organization were all undergraduates. Edward Bridge, president, Roslyn Patten, vice-president, and Carro Svenson, secretary, helped guide the Symphony through the year. fThe organization charged no dues and was dependent upon a yearly stipend it received from the Student Ac- tivities Office. With these funds it purchased music, in- struments, and publicity material. The concerts were free and open to the public. For the most part, the public didn't care. WNYU Direfziou . . . , . . Prodzzclion. WNYU was born in 1947, the brain-child of the NYU students who had gone to war, and, when it was over, had returned to the campus. A fledgling operation in more ways than one, the Voice of New York Uni- versity started out with meager, cheap, and old equip- ment, and at first transmitted between only a few build- ings at the Heights, The first WNYU staff on good days numbered a dozen, and didnit dream of the day when sixty people and 310,000 worth of equipment would bombard us over the station. The station saw its record collection grow to over one thousand. These are the records that were heard on disc jockey Dave Goldin's i'Varsity Drag program, the golden sounds of the 78's of yesteryear. Under the direction of Station Master Dave Rosenthal, Larry Spiegel showed us the sound of popular music, and Bob Cohen toured Broadway with A Sunday in New York. jim Leopold brought us the rhythms of country and western music and the Hall of Fame Concert, and, for a change of pace, Eliott Cohen steered The Rockhouseu program. lO4 Three years after its bar mitzvah, WNYU covered the residence halls, basketball games, and anything else pertinent to the Heights. In addition to the usual jazz, popular, and classical music, the station covered all special events and presented a half-hour faculty lecture series. In its coverage of President Hester's inaugura- tion, it became the first college radio station in Phil- harmonic Hall and the Lincoln Center for the Per- forming Arts. WNYU,s chief ambition was to go FM, thereby being able to broadcast throughout the city. Plans called for a link-up between WCAG at Washington Square with WNYU to create WNYU-FM, with WCAG trans- mitting during the day and WNYU, during the eve- ning, WNYU-FM, the staff believed, would be OK in giving the distant parts of the University a strong feel- ing and a reminder of kinship, and keeping the public aware of the accomplishments of the University and its students. DEBATE COUNCIL The activities of the Debate Council were carried out on both the intramural and intercollegiate levels. The members of the various teams representing the Heights received commendation during the year for well thought out and organized case and good demonstra- tion of salient points by example and illustration. ln- dividual members were praised for effective and en- thusiastic speaking, fluent and extremely effective style, and overall superior case. Leading the superiors was Gerald Rothman, president. Second in command was Anna May Mileo, vice-presi- dent. Paula Marcusa served as secretary and as historian, and Samuel Poss was treasurer. The national topic was, Resolved: That the non-communist nations of the world form an economic communitvf' In the municipal area, the debaters tested their merits against Hunter College, City College, and Brooklyn College. The team received, in addition, invitations to six out-of-town tournaments. Their travels took them to Georgetown University, LeMoyne College, Morgan State, Temple, and the University of Vermont. The highlight of the debaters' season was the tourna- ment they themselves sponsored, the annual Hall of Fame Tournament. Forty teams representing all sections of the country participated. Among the top finishers were MIT, Princeton, Yale, Dartmouth, and Rutgers. The Hall of Fame Tournament consisted of five rounds, or 200 individual contests. judging was based on speakers' points, rebuttles, refutation, analysis, or- ganization, delivery, logic, and evidence. The maximum score per debater was 25. Because of the increased popu- larity of the event, the Heights Debate Council awarded trophies to the top three teams. In past years, only the top squad received a trophy, a Hall of Fame cup. jack Meshel, student director of the tournament, jus- tified the Heights, not entering on the grounds that It would look ridiculous for the Heights to win its own contestf, The Council served as a forum for students inter- ested in world affairs and the problems confronting mankind in general and American society in particular. It also could serve as a catapult for especially gifted students: the president of the i62 team spent the year after his graduation doing graduate work in India via a Fulbright Scholarship. The Council's plans extended into the future. High on the list of proposals were the introduction of open meetings at which experts would speak on the national topic, and the possible creation of a New York Collegiate Debate League. Debaterr Jlalir. Debfzlerr dyfzazzzic, l ANTHGLOGY EDITORIAL: The Logical Choice The Heights most important election of the year, indeed of many years, is soon to occur, but the student body will have noth- ing to say about its outcome. The man se- lected will become the dean of the Univer- sity College of Arts and Sciences. We agree that the student body, a transitory and un- informed group, should have no large say in the matter, but the News has given the matter a good deal of careful thought, and we do not feel we must remain silent. We all agree that the new dean must be familiar with the situation at the Heights, that he must be a man of imagination and ideas and energy, that he be a good educa- tor and scholar and foremost, that he be a man dedicated enough. to push his ideas to their conclusion and to overcome a discour- aging but real student lethargy. That such a man be available is almost too much to ask. But he is available, and the incredible thing is, he may be by-passed. This man is John W. Knedler, Jr., professor of English and associate dean of University College. An investigation of his career has prov- en to us that he possesses all the necessary characteristics. Perhaps a brief biography would be desirable. Professor Knedler is originally from Elmhurst, Pa. He received his A.B. from Harvard in 1924, and since then has taken his A.M. and Ph.D. both also at Harvard. He joined the NYU fac- ulty in 1929 as an instructor of English, was made an assistant professor in 1938, associate professor in 1946, and gained the rank of professor in 1951. His administra- tive duties took on a new importance in 1946 when he was appointed assistant dean. In 1957 he was promoted to associate dean. Let us now consider the qualities he has shown during this career, and how they equip him for the office of dean. To ques- tion whether or not he is familiar with the Heights is ludicrous. If he does not know more than anyone else about the intricacies of the College, he knows as much. This can- not be disputed. Is he a good educator? He-is not. He is an excelent educator, perhaps a great edu- cator. Proof of this can be found in the opinions of any students who have been in- structed by him. We Wonder how many stu- dents have come away from Dean Knedler's Shakespeare course with not only a new appreciation of the Bard, but also of poe- try, literature, and life itself. We know of students whom he has inspired to abandon more mundane pursuits in favor of educa- tion as a career. Can a greater tribute to a teacher exist? There can be no attack on his reputation as a scholar. The extent of his knowledge and intelligence becomes evident after any thoughtful conversation with him. One Uni- versity official termed him an apparent expert on a combination of literature and history. His scholarly endeavors 'include the editorship of ','Masterworks of Science , published by Doubleday in 1947. In addi- tion, he is a member of the Modern Langu- age Association and has served as a special advisor to the humanities department' .of the Manhattan School of Music. During the time he has served as assist- ant and associate? dean, Professor Knedler has proven that he posseses the important quality of dedication. -In addition to teach- ing one or two courses, and serving on in- numerable committees, he must review and pass on the programs of hundreds of stu- dents twice each year. In spite of this, he has always managed to keep the office run- ning smoothly,. even in times of unusual stress.. Janet Kennedy, Arts recorder, as- sured us that Dean Knedler examines and takes care of every thing himself. He is very conscientious. Surely, he has the dedi- cation and energy needed for the job. But now we come to the bugbear. All around us people shout for a young vigoi- ous dean, bright-eyed, eager andfresh out of gra.duate school. True, Professor Knedler is not young. Rather, he possesses the ma- turity that breeds respect. b Nevertheless, he is no educational con-. servative. He has proven to us that he be- lieves in a changing, improving College by his work on the Committee on the Coordin- ated Studies program. He was the chairman of this committee which was responsible for most of the progressive changes in Liberal Arts curricula over the past two years. Bare cheeks are not a prerequisite for youthful thoughts. Professor Knedler has proven that he can be a capable, respected dean. His long years of service to the University deserve a reward. To import an outsider, or to jump someone over his head would be foolish for many reasons, the best of these being that it is simply not necessary. Professor Kned- ler is the most logical candidate. We im- plore the University administration to agree. C Heights Daily News, Wednesday, November 4, 1951 107 Season of Dubious Cheer Last year at this time the balcony of the Student .Center was festively decorated with a Christmas tree and a Menorah in honor of both Yuletide and Chanukah. This .year neither vegetation nor polybrachiate Candlesticks adorn our campus. Visitors at the Square, on entering the Loeb Student Center, are visually regaled by displays of silvered Christmas trees deco rated with blue and pink ornaments and by gold stars pendant from the ceilings. The Heights, it would seem, is not interested in extending Seasonls Greetings to the students and faculty. Admittedly, last year's balcony adorn- ments stirred up a good deal of to-do, with such austere personalities as the presidents of the Student Governing Board and the Student Center Policy Board railing at each other concerning the religiousness or non-religiousnessu of the tree and the can- dles. President Eisenhower, Mike Bierne, former SGB president,-said at that time, does not light Hebrew candles. Bierne continued his remarks stating t h a t a. t'Chistmas tree is not a religious symbol. Well, it would seem that last year's debate has won out in the end. The Heights is unadorned. Neither the Christmas spirit nor the victories of the Macabees gladden the hearts of Heightsmen at this season. In lieu of strife between the major religions on campus, we have substi- tuted unconcern. 4 University Heights is, however, satisfied tor at least so it seemsl to ignore two of the major holidays of the Western world. Now, while we certainly do not recom- mend that the Heights turn into a theologi- cal training ground, we do feel that no re- ligious controversy is involved in placing these symbols in conspicuous places on cam- pus. Last year's mud-slinging and related activities should have proven that recogni- tion of religious symbols is honorable and healthy. In the t'Season of Good Cheer, the Christmas tree and the Menorah deserve to be returned to the campus. Heights Daily News, Friday, December 18, 1959 Step On The Siudenfs The announcement of across-the-board increases in Heights residence hall and board rates is absolutely astounding. ' We could not believe that any organ- ization could act so callously and with so 'little concern to force students to pay rates which are unbelievably high and for rea- sons which are little more than a web 0 rationalization. This is an action which we can only call contemptuous. Students living in Gould Hall last year could have obtained a room as cheaply as 3210. Loew was priced as low as 3340. This year Loew was raised to S3903 Gould was closed, and New opened at a 'fine' rate. - The new plan to bring rates in line and eliminate inequities make us ashamed to think that any University could expect to spueeze the mortgage and maintainance money out of students to support extreme financial burdens and an elaborate dormi- tory organization. We are glad Frederick Hahn, who will be leaving the University, revealed the Housing. Administration -had found an in- Gqultyn in housing rates. We wonder where the inequ1ty lies. Were the rates already the highest in the nation? We would have Chf1H9FgGd.Mi'. Hahn to list the number of Universities who charge S500 for accom- modations like those in Loew Hall. The New Hall rate was unmerciful when the dorm. opened in September. The new increase in. board charges makes us hope the plan will be more unsuccessful than it was this year. Let us examine each of their state- ments. 0 They hope the rate can be main- tained for three years. But why should we expect the rate to be maintained for these years if it has been increased substantially for the past two semesters alone? 0 The increase is necessitated by the high mortgage costs. But it would be just as easy to say they should assess each dorm resident the cost of the dormitory because they moved in just as the bills fell due. 0 The dorm operates on a slim margin. But it is too late to tell us the dormitory cannot be operated at a level which will allow its tenants to pay their rent. And then the most intolerable conces- sion of all. 0 Students may obtain refunds of de- posits paid. But we wonder why they didnt announce the rates before the applications were submitted. They threw the student-s out of the dorm last Christmas and made them pay a fee to move back in. There was no student protest. N-ow they are asking students to take more of the same treatment. We know they are systematic to the problem but we can-not see students hurt by those who have no contact with the past. We urge all student groups to meet im- mediately with housing officials and with the Director of Student Activities before a lot of harm is done to those tlittle' peo- ple administrators always want to tprotec-t.' We saw good reason, with some reser- vations, for the tuition increase announced -this semester. We have understood many of the previous dorm increases. But this is the most intolerable move of all. We hope there are those students who will not stand for it. Heights Daily News, Monday, A pril 9, 1962 They Want To Know W y We are proud to see so many students fighting so fiercely for a cause which is so vital to our welfare. When the University announced a maj- or tuition boost earlier this year, we joined with those who realized that a limit would soon be reached beyond which few students could afford to finance their education. This increase in dormitory and board fees came at a time when the University had already asked the student body to fi- nance a major faculty pay boost. The University could only offer a shrug when it announced another increase only four months later. Yet the student body was not enraged. It asked why. Why are resident services not commensurate with the price? Why do hundreds of students share one study hall? Why are so many students forced to share one bathroom? Why are they evicted as soon as holiday recesses come and allowed to return if they pay a nominal fee? The University consented to meet with resident students and answer their ques- tions at a special meeting in the Gould Memorial Auditorium Wednesday. They came unprepared to treat the protest se- riously. They brought no figuresg They used nebulous phrasesg they gave no answers. But they were not dealing with children. These students cannot afford to draw up-on the income of their parents beyond what those parents can spare from the expenses used in raising their families and maintain- ing homes. 1 The students pointed out wasteg the ad- ministration said they were opposed to waste. They questioned an expanding admin- istrationg they were told it was indeed bad that the administration was expanding. They were not treated with any respect. The students were wrong in many respects, both in their attitude and their questions, .but they left that meeting more frustrated than ever before. They protested with the very respect and dignity they asked from the University. They are not asking for the impossible. T-hey are only asking for cooperation. They want their problems considered with the same diligence the University has consid- ered its expansion plans. They want to know w-hat they will re- ceive in exchange for one of the highest dormitory rental fees in the nation. This is-a matter of finances but it is also an ethical problem. The administration has shown no regard for the student as an individual. They are not concerned with consequences or ability to pay. It became a matter of the masses. These students plead for understanding. This is a giant university but we have al- ways thought of ourselves as an NYU com- munity. If we work together to solve our problems, then the decisions' which are made will be those of the entire community. If the students want study halls, bath- rooms, flexible rates, they must be treated as equals. Not as equals in planning but as partners in consideration. We realize that the mortgages on New Hall and renovated Gould Dormitories must be paid. But if the University has taken upon itself financial commitments which it cannot meet without bringing a merciless burden to bear upon the student pocket- book, it is not just for them to use their administrative power in an arbitary man- ner. We ask the administration to treat the student body with concern for their wel- fare. We do not feel that the increase in dormitory rates may not have been nec- essary. But if students want services which are granted by all other universitiesg if they want to know what is being done to put President Hes-ter's 'economy moves' in forceg they are entitled to receive factual answers. This is a peaceful protest. These stu- dents want to know why. It is the Administrations responsibility to answer their questions. Heights Daily News, Friday, A pril 13, 1962 I CLASS or SERVICE T T DL:Day Lcue his is a ast mcssagc I unless its deferred char- A NL:N'ghI Lure' dt d Y r I ELEGRAM - -1 'H' . Z'opcf5LImQ,f,fc QU 603 LT-t'lfflf'TlTeQ.m . I W. P. MARSHALL. Pnzslozwr The hling time shown in the dale line nn domestic tclcgrnms is LOCAL TIME JI POIM Of Ofigin- Timf of YCCCIPT is LOCAL 'Q If Point of dfsfinndon f I W' f - .1 -RBA105 NBA569 RB 0 - ,pg -NA869 :GOVT PD WASHINGTON DC 24 9065? EST I RONALD. HUBIN 3 EDITOR IN CHIEF NEW YORK UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS DAILY NEWS UNIVERSITY :HEIGHTS NYK 2 , :I WANT TO SEND A WORD OF GREETING TO THE HEIGHTS DAILYI NEWS :OF NEW YORK UNIVERSITY ON THE OCCASION or YOUR 50TH ANNIVERSARY 2AS AN UNDERGRADUATE PUBLICATION YOU HAVE DEMONSTRATED AN EXTRAORDINARY 2 VITALITY AS THE SMALLEST COLLEGE DAILY IN AMERICA I WISH You :ALL CONTINUED SUCCESS IN THE YEARS AHEAD 2 JOHN F KENNEDY. 2 T I7 e Firsf d y Tl911ISIZIIziI?ij1ZBZigy7zI22V? The First Lady is dead. You don't have to ask which First Lady, there can only be one. First in peace, first in the nation, first in the world. At 78, Eleanor Roosevelt is no more. Why should people mourn her so intensely as they do? She was not beautiful, nor was her warbling voice always pleasant. But the asset that endeared her to millions was her humanity. She helped bring the White House to the people, in a way that no First Lady ever did. Her many selfless acts cannot and need not be recount- ed here. But people will always remember stepping up to the soup kitchens in the Depression to find, without re- . . porters being present, the wife of the President of the Unit- Heights DHIIY News ed States Serving food' Frzday, November 9, 1962 Others will recall the startled faces of miners, when they dropped their shovels in the mines as Mrs. Roosevelt tramped through, or when during the war soldiers ran from their outdoor showers on a remote outpost in the Hebrides when the First Lady suddenly appeared. Being the eyes and ears of a crippled President, she went where he sent her and though she wanted to go, it was 'only at the request of her husband that she did so. Life was meant to be lived she said, and curiosity must be kept alive. One must never for whatever reason, turn his back on life. Her twelve year reign as First Lady was one crisis after anot-her, but she said, Having learned to stare down fear, I long ago reached the point Where there is no living person whom I fear, and few challenges that I am not Will- ing -to face. This was true whether she laughed with a soldier in a hospital to keep up his spirit.s, even though she saw he was dying, or Whether she stood up to Molotov as a delegate at the United Nations and had the Declaration of Human Rights passed. Besides being the wife of the most bitterly criticized man since Lincoln, she brought a storm of abuse about her head by leaving the traditional, reserved status of a First Lady, to fight against the social and economic blight of her time. She was found gathering information for her husband in city slums and decrepit mountain villages. Angrily ac- cused of trying to be president when she called press conferences, it was soon discovered that if the female re- porters xverenlt able to cover these meetings, they would be out of work, for the thirties were not times of fashion shows or teas. James Wechsler of the New York Post said, t'In truth the world is full of people who have been helped by Eleanor Roosevelt-from the southern sharecroppers, whose cause she took up at the White House in the 1930's Cin direct ne- gotiations with her husbandl to refugees from all forms of political terror whom she salvaged from the scrap heap of history. t'At moments she was beguiled by charlatansg anyone who tries to do so many things is bound to encounter dis- appointments and even betrayal. But despite her surface simplicity, she long ago detected the split personality of men. Her times required everyone's help, and being in an advantageous position she dared not let it slip by. If you loved Eleanor Roosevelt, and there were many, or if you hated her, and there were many, the news of her death must have still grieved you. For she was a doerg aided where she could, comforted where she could not. She devoted her life to the betterment of humanity. To our youth she said, The tragedy of our times is 'that our young people are being taught that they must never make a mistake. All great men have made mistakes. If you're afraid of making a mistake, then it means you will stop functioning. She never stopped functioning. In d-eath she will continue to serve as an inspiration to us all. The Fifth Colurnnll- Two : fi :1 .1Ei5E-:5-Elliliaf 4 ' ' 1551.555:':f:5: 255515555 . -'F5I3E1sF'f2Esi5iif' 'f5i55S?5?Z::2S:1 '5'rk'1:3E25E5E2j. :15E5g1: : ' 5'i ' 51-sf .-53525555553 , ' fifffaiririiiiir' 'fiEEE5555E5E'1 'E5ErE5EgEgZ,E5EgE5gEgEgE5iE1E1 .. ',g.3g1515:g:5:3g, j.3s:g1z :-1-1-5133 -5. 'rzfi - F5-12 :Ez 'Z-52E1E1E1E1E1E2Sr?-. '11-f 5211 45, iff ' - 5- -'-'--5.-:f:f:Z:Q:2:5:f:f:f:f,, -,as-. ' ,:5:g:3:-t,,,., ' fs .,z1'35:3:5:5:5:3:515:515:1:5sigq'rifqz::1321321215152Erikririi' 'I-'E,15I3fj 2553555355E31g5:E:5E5 f ' 'fl'-''-2'1' f'555EE5E5E555E5252552 -'.':f:s2 92532555255555:fs5sg2g!g'gsg1g:g.:-' 'fefsisisiieisisg 'Y 15f5i5i5E --rE'E?5- ' .. Z ,1, ,5i,E - . X r hlrts By JOHN HALBERSTADT When We will have committed all the senior sins and reached' the understanding of and hon-ey of desire lake, when we will bough that yields to she is cherry in the will have spoken to the rock, when we will have known the cream and the rise that smokes by rocklight on the have committed to imemory and the leaf the bow, the belief that comes from knowing, when thighs, when he is apple at the flood, when we our local father and our random mother, will our kindred brethren like us? Will they speech and teach us? Will they say the last face you have to face face to face is God? His education will have been: a teacher who taught his parrot Latin. Hers, a :harm school. It is too early to write valedictorics and I am not a vale-dictorian, but there will always be time to be nosological, so-sological, sesqui- pedalian, verbigerative, time to be valid, time to be mature, time to say things that are important and have meaning. There will be time to murder Eliot, and create. There will be time to suspend our disbelief. Time to close the valves and valvules of aortic man. Heights Daily News Wednesday, October 3, 1962 For two shirts I had a considerable birthday. The shirts should last me till I'm twenty-three. They are beautiful shirts my parents bought m-e when the hour on the olo-ck I wrongly set tcounterclock- wise setj came in like Liston on the tide to let me lmow it's twenty- one, Housman time. Perdurable Van Heusens that should fit: the shell could not he closer to the egg. S0 WHEN I say I am curious about twenty-one ,when I say I fear two-shirted twenty-one that only leads to twenty-two in shirt- sleeves I think that you will understand and feel by rocklight on the lake what Housman knew. There is a psychology of the child and there is a psychology of the adolescent and I hear that there are studies on the middle years and I know there is a science of the dying. But there is no psychology of twenty-one. I have seen a graph that sho-ws that at twenty-one our anabolistic acquisitive pro- cesses of mind and memory for certain kinds of information in statistically average man are at their peak. I am now entering the upward decline. You are now entering the upward decline. On the decline then, grow old along with me and if you're not a valedictorian too, you too at twenty-one can write a valedictory too, or two of them. It's high time and it's easy as a river. This is my valedictory. Listen. The woods are turning and the lake is full of smoke and what your father knew by fire is all your own. Say One is baby, and two is thumb, and three is what you first remember. Four is trousers and five is swim, and six is S as in Sunday Schoolg eight is ball and bat and broken window. Ten is gang and twelve is girl and thirteen is now I am a man. The rest is chocolate pudding. Until we get t.o twenty-one make up your own listg make up your own valedictoryg make your own two shirts. But twenty-one leave blank and let me fill it in for you, which is: Peter Pan and Wendy and a shadow sown on Peter's back like two shirtsg which is: the horses that changed at midstreamg which is: father become brother, -mother become sister, friend become ohaverg and that is: fuel in the stove, and dove l-ove. It is a professor who has nothing to profess, an all night exam on which you are not examined, a test where you weren't tested, a final that is incomplete, a course that wasn't offered, or for which you c-an never gain the prerequisites, a multiple-choice exam with no choice but to take it, a school that only offers a degree in temperatureg and it's the cute-cheeked kid in English Ten. It is not an education. Twenty-one is a cut class. And drink in any state and vote at any poll and serve in any army. If you are no longer a minor, are you a major? TILL YOU have bitten off the cheese of sleep, till you have slept with the grasssnow of our other mother-that is weltschmertz. That is two shirts. That is .two shirts for two zuzim. Chad Gadyovh. was ,Round 4 - 1 I gsxxacaaacasecscacacmcwacxvec:B7' STEVEN GULDBERG scssecsacss. At the end of every newspaper story upeurs the symbol -30- signifying the end. At the end of every career the sports editor, even if he has been put out of action by hepatitus, records his ft-nal thoughts. And so-here are mine. ffl? ii AY It was sunny the day I was born. 'Until this year I liked to think that there was a casual relationship, but now I know that Burns was right in his observation of mice and men. I stepped into a big mouse- trap. While eight weeks alone in -bed is no joyride, the time is useful .for putting papers, people, and places in proper perspective. This col- umn puts 'forth some of the observations without having to buck the usual restrictions put on a reporter. After 150,000 words I can, for the first time, use the pronoun All that I have written before has been for my readers who showed great faith if not such good taste. This is my column. Heights Daily News Tuesday, April 16, 1963 Most of that which I have gotten out of NYU has been through the newspaper. While the faults of the HDN are many, it is a relatively fine newspaper. One need not look at the superior ratings, but simply at the competition to see that this ls true. There are many advantages to being sports editor of the HDN. There had better be. If I had spent my time as a bricklayer instead of an editor I would now be appromimately 9,680 dollars richer. The greatest advantage is not the free tickets. the fine people one meets, the travel, or even the wonderfully egoebuilding aspect of having a respected opinion. The sweetest: fruit is the satisfaction of knowing you did a job-did it well-did it better than anyone else could have. Perhaps this is the reason that women make such lousy editors. Certainly they have the needed in- telligence and, usually, a far greater perceptivity than their male coun- lerparts. But the feeling, connected K with masculiity, of efficiency and running the show, is a virtue not required, and therefore usually not present, in women, It is a shame. I suppose here it is my duty to give some advice to my successor. The greatest admonition is simply that he must remember that sports, per se, are merely games being played by boys. The athlete has mfa n y admirable qualities but, usually, one is not maturity. Ma- turity has to do with putting things in proper perspective and the great athlete must never do this. The re- . 4 porter must. Only if the writer can NCVCH G0ldbCl'g extract from sports those feelings: emotions, hopes, and fears for which sports make such a. fine stage: only lf he can show the fat man who finds picking up the paper exercise that the same factors which mold his life and personality are demon- strated in bold relief on the athletic field: only if the great themes such as youth against experience, desire against ability, and even love against hate can be extracted and magnified for inspection: only then can the' sports reporter bathe in that sensuous feeling of fulfillment and only then can he be said to have pro-duced something worthy of consideration by a human mind. If the HDN has been a nearly unqualified success, the Heights has not. The Heights has many virtues. And many faults. The good young teachers come-and go. McBride left. So did Flood. We still have, however, a few great ones. Abelson -is one. Leonard will be soon. When will the mediocre poor students and apathetic good ones force them to leave? Apathy is like degradation. It feeds on itself. Revolution is neces- sary to overcome it and the Heights student seems quite content. Most of the students would rather be verbal toreadors in the cafeteria than workers at extracurricular activities. Most will be happy to watch apathy envelope the Heights as the surf envelopes the sandcastle, The Heights is the sandcastle of the Bronx, a cosmopolitan university with provincial people. But there are enough aware people at the Heights. Will they raise this college to the heights it can obtain or let it fall to the level of the ninty per cent not worth the extraordinary expense? I will not bother to mention the NYU administrationfs incredible obsession with money. No outsider would believe it, anyway. But there is so much that is, or could be, good about NYU. While many of the courses are melanges of glop and sugar candy, uncarecl for disorganization based on minutia, some are fascinating. We have a dean who is so respected that not even the apathy can dim the respect. There comes a time for summing up. With all its faults, and mine, I 'have loved this place. I have loved a few of its people, liked many, and ha-ted none. I am satisfied with the box score, I have learned to believe in myself and have faith in others and, I guess, that is what college is really about. But there comes a time when you feel that you should have left yesterday. That time has come. I hope we will meet again when we are all doing bigger and better things. Till thengthe word I have been dreading since I was a freshman sub-reporter. Good-bye. FIVE PART CHURALE by ALAN WEINBLATT HE dusk made funny little noises as it gathered in the room. It would prod the shadows, lengthening now for several hours, up the walls and across the ceiling until he could no longer find the random patches of light on the wall that had been there but a quarter of an hour before. On other floors, Eve o'clock had already descended. It sounded of water moaning in old pipesg of people safely arrived from their mysterious doings through the brighter hours-hours which for him changed shape and content no more, no less than the patches of sun on the far wall. Several large families, a girl whose companion on the homeward journey differed every few hours, other drifters, coloreds who for want of better, orbited between the cement stoop and the bar which forever was open. So they returned weary, but no more so than they had left in the morning. He knew them as they came, not as people-he had forgotten about them long ago-but as little cries of greeting that escaped faulty transoms. Of a toilet flushing and many doors slamming, as these fragments, in twos and threes or alone, fell, or were pushed, or blown into the building to take their ordered places in the events of the night. And in listening he was less aware of the network of shadows darkening, deepening from gray to charcoal hue, seeking total abolishment in his blackening mind that the sun had ever played here. He lay staring into the mirror- its content nothing. She softly opens the door. For all her life the same door and this time as if it never were. She goes to where he lies, his skin obscene with whiteness. For a moment watching him in the mirror. His fingers crawling above the sheets, working with an expressive fury over the cream paper which nearly hides his face from the rest of the room. Why, she asks, not looking at his fingers. Why? His eyes forget the colored fury and bore two holes in her, drive her back, nail her to the mirror. II It was the slowest night you ever seen. Pickenem up like Hies in Brooklyn-can't get nuthin here. What the hell . , . niggers don't take cabs, I says if you got a boss, you gotta listen. But don't expect me tbring in a whole lot omoney when I donit get two rides a shift. I says things is rough enough as it is. What with an old man thats cracked and the old lady gettin there too, and me bringen in the only damn money of the whole lot. But I don't complain. Maybe it woulda been better tleave him up in Mattawan, leave him with his own kind. If he wants tscribble crazy talk on paper and then burn it, thats O.K. but not where I gotta sleep. But I don't complain. If the boss says you coast here tnight, you coast. Go ahead, -I says, youre the boss, but don't gimme hell when you don't get no money. Thinks theyre big shots sitten in the office, tellin us where to drive. Things are rough all around what with doctor bills and medicine, when the only medicine he really needs is his own kind upstate. But its alright. I says live and let live. just don't give me no arguments. Not you or the old man. Thats what I told him. Yop , . . you shoulda been there. Slowest night you ever seen. III It takes 20,000 volts to light the utilitarian sky. To keep it dull, another 20,000 lives dripping with fluorescent light comes falling through the mirror. A matronly woman who sometimes hands, sometimes throws Christmas dinner to the gotta-nickel Bobs lined up on the pavement next to the trash cans which is: 1 glass of orange juice 1 london broil with fresh summer peas and 1 pat real butter 1 rice pudding 1 cup of real black coffee. The star of Bethlehem shines equally on doing' it be- hind dark windows or lighted windows dressed with filmy Curtains. IV Exhausted from shrill gaudy dreams, he lies quietly on the bed. When he turns to the light, he cannot arrest the cool ones still upon him. When they come afresh, they cross the terrific patina hiatus, they move from the children in the street to his mind of carved blunt content. Illusions. The steadily walking stranger will not be an illusion. He will pass the happy children, peer at the number, alert, pulling at his lip, climbing to the door. The landlady will Wait. When he Ends the door, she is there. Can you tell me if Mr. White is home? the alert stranger asks. She peers at him for several seconds, then snaps, he a1n't.,' Well look, he begins again, ucan you tell me when he'll be back? Good lord, no, she cries. 'lYa never know when he'll be in. Why . , . its just like . . . well, you're working and then he's in. Ya know, just like that, her fingers snap. Sneaks in when ya don't even know, so it won't do ya any good to wait. Anyway, if its money you want, he already owes us four months rent and she's no better. Doesn't even cook no more. ' Oh, no, lad, you don't understand. He owes us his mirror. V She moved through unrecognized streets while a new feeling of intoxication welled in the hollowness. I wonder, she thought, If I must be hollow to feel this peace. She moved through deep skyless streets. Then it was in the air, off in the distance. It was lots of things of clapping and jumping, sugar and chocolate, shouts and giggles. A child with pigtails ran before the group, beating a tambourine, laughing merrily as she trip- ped into the snow. Others threw back their heads and tossed their caps in the frosted air. It was a toy flute that made her turn as the party spilled round the corner. The ball of joy rolled on down the street, their giggles preceding them like tentacles. It passed the destitute hag shaded by a rather unconvincing door whose paint, by the end of this cold winter, would all have peeled away. Why do they sing so loudf' she muttered. But when she tried to focus on the flying pigtails, it would already have skipped a couple of steps, leaving her stare to the snow which the children seemed not to mind. Brassy, shiny whistles tore through the street, sailing above the taffy plumes of their chilled breaths. She turned away. In a little while, after the children had gone, she would start home, seeing neither the door with its tattered decorations or the lightly falling snow. She turned away, bitter with the coming of the Lord. Perstare, S prin g, 1962 Two ormots By PA U L W A T S K Y I could evade the issue and pretend That you, my latest, are the first I've knowng Or hedge the matter, claiming that a friend Was all another woman had- my own Sweet virgin sentiments in reserve A dowry for your novel, wakening touchg But platitudes are less than you deserve, While only crippled passions need a crutch. The truth, then, must content you, jealous spy, And kill, perhaps forever, your desire. Though Ild far rather let affection die Than stoke with falsehoods unrequiting fire. So I must put your judgment to the trial, Hoping my honesty's not love's denial. Abeautyls charm is always well defined By uninvolved observers, loveless men Who say, with leers and gestures, She's refinedlw Or rate her breasts in multiples often. Each calculates her features in his brain, And waits until the most respected speaks, Then damns or praises in the proper vein Her waistline, earlobes, eyelashes, or cheeks. It,s different when I see you, so alive, My cool reflections falter, dreams prevail. Caught by your every feature, I contrive To view you as the lechers, but I fail. Frustration is their barren, witless end, While I collect a lover 's dividend. Violet Review S prin g, I 963 WARD DUSK Ar a rand clfme rlitherr into holhiugrzerr with the whirl, Ar ice mellr itz lhe rearing colcl heat of alcohol, Ar fallen leave blow romewhere hat are :fever fomzcl, So mart I roorz clirappear in a pay? of arh Azul three rmall Jhreclr of a heart. So mm! I wring from my hair the ral! of a thozzrazzzl lover Ariel ro mfcrt I wipe from my cheehr the clarh heclr of rwolleh riverr, Am! ro mart I he lort. I Jhall walk with my heacl high ana' hotter coimectecl Azul you will ree my loer poiiztecl rlraight aheazl Azul yoff will greet me hu! receive no arzrwer, For I Jhall not he I. lBright, fearlerr eyer .flare from a face once mine Ana' two rmall feet flep eforflerrl y high over a clecayihg me j Fool, to reeh reftlier from mummy-tvrappingr! In a momzcl of yellowhzg paper I will hary me Anil echoes of the wifza r hootiag laughter rhall he my clirge Ifz lhe moorzlerrnerr of the :light that ir lo he my fmzeral rervice. Call my rzamey no voice anrwerr. Brother, Jirier, I :lo not mach yon, nor can I rcorrz yong M y rilezlce ir the silence of new rzonexirtehce. If you mm! Jpeah itz the pretence of nothing, hear thir in miml: That I will not allow me lo he re5.'f1'1'eclefl from the wiml-rozfghezzezl lotzelifzefr of my choren grave. Throw me appler aml oranger, dazzh my griizuing month with milh, ill my earr with worflrg I will not thank yon. Believe me when I .ray I am rleacl, So alearl that I walking aroaml am hollow and clevoicl of me. liz a rwirl of fire aizcl the rizrllmg of layfeta I come to you empty of me. I have clearzrea' my had y of me and evicted me from my rolfl. Am! ro I pore for the worlcl, a rmilizzg zfpright marhlenerr That neither weepr nor lover Nor yet crier om' itz the nigh! at the rteuch of a cleacl aml rolling me Ywept in the corner mzcler yellowing paper and flzcjr of llllff. -PiioEBn SPINNAD Perstare Spring, I96I 5 HONORARIES PHI BETA KAPPA the p1'i1111z1'y b0720l'!ll'Jl roviefy ill fhe 1'01111t1'y 1'ec0g11iz111g academic and intellectual achievement P1'efide11t Professor Robert A. Fowkes Vice-P1'eJide11t Professor Brooke Hindle SeL'1'eflll'y Professor Richard D. Mallery T1'6cZJ'.7H'6l' Professor John Knudsen Robert Berger Linda Bergton Jack Camhe Eleanor Cohen Katherine Eisenman Robert Feinstein Richard Glass Michael Goldfarb Edith Goldstein Susan Greenfield Dennis Hecht David Hershberg Steven Kaplan Frances Krant Constance Leibowitz Burton Levy Maurice Levy Cynthia List Terry Mizrahi Joyce Nachti gal Marvin Nash Judah Newberger Charles Paturick Jordan Peckins Ronald Protas Marvin Rosser Stephen Salmore Janet Sigal Gloria Sitzman Phoebe Spinrad Marjorie Straus Gayle Teitelbaum Alan Weinblatt Joan Weiss Linda Wolin Iris Wool Stephen Zeche Leonard Zir Peter Zirnis TAU BETA Pl I0 71161136 T77 tl filing 11111111161 More 14160 have f07Zf6l'7'66ll !707ZOI' 11111011 their 1111114 mater by d1rti11g11i.rbe11' 56601111- Jlaip 111111 '6X67lZpllZI'y fb111'11rZe1' ar 11121fe1'g1'1z1l11112'eJ T72 engi- neering 111111 I0 forler ll rpiril of liberal r11l1111'e f7Z the e11gi11ee1'111g rolleger of A11ze1'ira P1'e,r11Ze111' George Harrick Vive-P1'er11Je11f Bryan Sheffield C0r1'erp0111ii11g Ser1'ef111'y Gunalp Seren Re1'01'1l111g Se1'1'el111'y Bruce Goodman T1'e1zr111'e1- Asst. Dean Frederick Teichmann Alexander Almoian Robert Bowden Charles Browning Harold Brownstein Gerhard Caroll Edward Catera Williain Chiang Nicholas DeCapua Patrick Driscoll Richard Duffy Allan Edwin Henry Frey Richard Hirsh Robert Ippolito Ralph Jacobs Richard Kaplan George Koehler George Lieberman Winston Lue Robert Magilen David Mauriello Gabriel Miller John O'Connell Giora Pelled Seymour Popovitz Elias Pritchard John Quick Sheldon Rashba Murray Siegel Nelson Sobel Harvey Solomon NYU HONORARY to lyonor tbofe iindergradnate Jflldgltlj' of New Yorlf Unizferrity wbo, batting maintained aradernir Jtandardf, bane excelled in co-curricular activities to tbe benept of tbe Unioerrity . . . to inrpire and proinote devotion to New York Univeriity antong the nndergradnate .rtndentr 1Basil Bernstein james De Metro Sandor Frankel Cynthia List jordan Peckins Irving Rome Bernard Siegel Stephen Wohl Stephen Zeche ALPHA PI MU to confer recognition npon tbe .rtndent industrial engi- neer wbo bas Jbown exreptional aeadenzic intereitr and abilitier in hir field , . . to benept ity nienzberi' by tbe arroeiation and experience tbat ran rozne from bring- ing togetber a gronp with .rinzilar intere.rt,r, objertizfer, and abilitier, and to promote tlae ll77'0f6,t',l'l0lIeIl welfare of all Prefident Charles Browning Vice-Prefident Patrick Driscoll Co 1'1' erponding Secretary Richard Kaplan Recording Secretary Gerald Saari Treaynrer Ferdinand Schmid Donald Clarkson Henry Frey Howard Levison Marvin Schildkraut PERSTARE ET PRAESTARE tbore nndergradaate rtadentr, male and female, wbo bane persevered and excelled in tbeir relationfbipr with New York U nizferrily tbrozigbont tbeir collegiate careery and bane in Jo doing made rigniprant contribution to tbe UlllIf61'Jtlj'H9lgbfJ Center Prerident Cynthia List Vice-Prerident Irving Rome Secretary Stephen Zeche Hiftorian James De Metro Basil Bernstein Nathan Iglia Frances Krant David Merkowitz Joyce Nachtigal jordan Peckins Bernard Siegel ARNGLD AIR SGCIETY to fnrtber tlJe pnrpore, znirrion, tradition, and concept of tbe United Statef Air Forces ar a ineanf of National Defenie, promote Azneriran Citizeniliip, rreate a rlorer and more eyfrient relotionrbip among tbe Air Referee Ofj'icer.i' Training Corpr cadets Connnander Major Murray Siegel Exerzftire Ojirer Captain George Harrick Operationx Ojjzirer lst Lt. Domingo Sepulveda All11ll1IlrlilI'dllZ'E Ojjzirer lst. Lt. David Feit Bruce Berke Melvin Birnbaum Charles Bronshvag Barry M. Dorf Frank Farrell Wilfred M. Garcia john Ionone Howard Joslyn Richard P. Kent III William Korbell Dennis Lane Kenneth Nocito joseph Perhto Paul Sauer Michael Shankman Phillip Sternberg BETA LAMBDA SIGMA to promote iiztererf itz and the derire for biological learning, to eizeoilrage and develop those individuals who have an aptitude for mth learning Chazzfellor Dr. H. Clark Dalton Vice-Chazzfellor Gilbert Tabbot Serretary-Treafizrer Dr. D. B. Webster Howard Appel Richard Arnold Gail Botkin Robert Feinstein Clifford Feller Gerrlynn Green Kenneth Holwitt Stanley Klausner Gilbert Martin Jeff Robbins Alice Singleton Carol Stern Raphael Witorsch Bette Merker Raobel Zelkind DELTA PHI ALPHA to proziiote the Jtiidy of the German language, litera- tare, and civilization and endeavour to emphayize there afperff of German life and riittzzre which are of imi- veryal 'valve and whith tofitrihilte to 777417711 eternal fearrh for peafe and irzzlh Preyjdefzt Alan Weinblatt Vine-Prefidem Stanley Klausner Secretary Ruth Horowitz Treafizrer Cynthia List Peter Fichte Meyer Hochman Peter Hofmann Kenneth Holwitt Stuart Levine Gilbert Martin Constantino Michos Sidney Pollack Leslie Schwartz Raphael Witorsch Alan Wollerstein CHI EPSILON dedirated to the pzirpore of 7lZtZi7Zfdil7i7Zg and promotiizg the .rtalvy of Civil Engineering af an ideal profeffiofz . . . I0 Vemgizize the fharaeteriftiry of the individual Civil Eiigiizeer deemed Z0 he fimdameiital 10 the Jur- rerrfid Parfait of an efzgifieerizig rareer, and to aid iii the development Of there rharacterirtiff iii the Civil E11 gif-zeerifi g Jtiidezzt Prerideizt Elias Pritchard Vife-Preridezzt Anthony Bini Secrelary-T1'eaJin'er Arthur Boschen Harry Edwards Ernest Koehler Winston Lue Michael Spanga Alfred Ward Monroe Zicherman ETA KAPPA NU that there men in the proferfiaiz of Electrical Engineer- ing, who, hy their flliffli7777787'Zf.!' in rollege 01' iii practice, have mafzifefted a deep izztereft and marked ability in their chofezi life moth, may he hroaght into flofer anion whereby marital heizefit may he derived Prerideizt Seymour Popovitz Vine-Preridefzt john O'Connell Correflbofidiizg Serretary Alexander A, Almoian Recording Seeretary David Mauriello Treafzzrer John Ricci Bruce Goodman George I-larrick ETA KAPPA GMEGA to provide recognition for onlrfanding Jimlenlr in eco- nomics, to Jefnre an open fornnz for the inferrlaange of ideaf anzong meh rlnderzfr, anrl to provide a rneanr of bringing Jpeakerf nolea' for their rorztribrztiomr fo foiy jiela' io the ranzpzzf Linda Bergton Stephen Flechner Michael Gilbert Stuart Schlesinger Stephanie Spungin Stephen Zeche 1osEPH H, PARK an orgarzizalfon ertalalifberl fo rerognize ozflflamlnzg Jlnclenfa' in history .... flnclenfr ufborre Jnperior rerorclf nzalae fbern eligible for thin' elirllnrflon John Abrams Basil Bernstein Lawrence Bluth Jack Camhe Robert Feinstein Gerald Felsenthal joseph Greenberg Bruce Leader Joyce Nachtigal jordan Peckins Ira Postel Francine Savitz Thomas Strax Donald Zahn Stephen Zeche GREEN RCDOM fbe forlering anal encouraging of dramatic activity at Unioerrlfy Heigbtf by rewarding rneritorioar rnernberf of fbe Hall of Fafne Playerr wjib nzenzberfbip and ily alfenrlenf honor and prizrileger Prerirlenl Frances Krant Vive-Prefinlenz' Joseph Tauritz Seerefary Richard Finneran Treafnrer Nathan Igla Hirlorian Angela Oliver Lancelot Braithwaite Robert Cohen Dale Donnelly Richard Kent james Mitchell Norman Ristin Norman Soifer PHI LAMBDA UPSILGN lbe prornolion of bigb Jrbolm'Jbip and original in- oeyfigalion in all branfbef of pnre and applied chem- istry Preyidenl George Wahl, Jr. Vice-Prefialenl Stephen Dreier Serretary Peter Fichte Treafnrer Paul Schneider Robert Berger Allen Cooper Michael Levine Marvin Nash Marvin Rosser Edward Stiefel PI SIGMA ALPHA io riinznlafe prodnrfiife rrholarfhip and infelligenl in- fererz' in lhe mbjerf of government . . . fnnrlioning ar an iniegral part of the polilifal Jrienre deparlrnenl in lhe pronzofion of zzforlhwhile exfrarrzrrirnlar arlizfilier relafed to public ajjtairr. Prerirlenf Stephen Salmore Vire-Preridenl Barbara Gitlin Seerefary-Trearrizrer Ronald Protas Linda Bergton Jay Morse Carson Carl Chernoff Edith Goldstein Gloria Seiler Robert Segal Stephen Zeche PSI CHI to provide rerognition for onzfrfanawig jllldlgflff in psy- chology, to Jecnre an open fornrn for the interchange of ideas among rnrh rlnalenzfr . . . ana' to bring about a rloyer relaiionrhip between rnenzberr of the fatally and the afore-inenlionerl riiraleiifr Prerident Dean Schuyler Vice-Prerirlent Norman Ristin Secretary Frances Krant Eleanor Cohen Elliott Cohen Alice Davis Burton Levy Janet Sigal Gloria Sitzman Leonard Zir PI TAU SIGMA to erfablifh a rlorer bona' of fellowship which will re- rnlzf in rnnlnal benefit to thore men in the finely ana' in the proferrion of mechanical engineering, who by fheir aradenzio or pracliral achiezfeinenlr, nzaniferf a real infererl and nnzrherl ability in fheir rhoren work Prerialenzf Nicholas De Capua Vice-Preriilenzf Robert Magilen Correrponcling Serreiary Owen Fortune Rerorfling Serrelary Nelson Sobel Trearnrer Prof. Reno C. King Roberto Alphonso Danial Hayes Robert Ippolito Paul Lerman Carl Maurer Nguyen Son Stephen Wohl RED DRAGON a ferret renior rociety Gail Botkin Carl Chernoff Elliot Cohen james De Metro Monte Engler Helen Hans Nathan Igla Stephen Klein Frances Krant Harold Lamster Gilbert Martin Jordan Peckins Irving Rome Marvin Rosser Norman Soifer Lawrence Speigel Dan Steinbrocker Joseph Tauritz Stephen Zeche FRATERNITIES oseph Reither INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL aculzy AQIUIJO7' Premierzz Ralph R. Jac ALPHA EPSILCDN Pl President Richard Reiss Vire-Prericfent Harold Disman Secretfwy Richard Watson Trefzfmfr Harvey Fixman Class of 1963 Steve Adrian, joseph Benezra, Larry Bluth, Lenny Chaim, Harold Chaim, Harold Disman, Howie Gilman, jerry Harkavy, Tobin jacob- son, Herbert Kessner, Gene Kippel, Larry Kurland, Ivan Lissauer, Allan Schwartz, Larry Silbert, john Simon, Al Sperber, Gil Tabbot, William Weinstein, Mel Zweibach. Clary of 1964 Lewis Belkin, Dan Handelsman, Ken Harris, jack Kulka, Al Levinson, Steve Mandell, Stu Schlessinger, Marv Schildkraut, Steve Schwartz, Steve Stein, Lloyd Taylor, Richard Watson, Gary Weintraub, Larry Wilens. Clary of 1965 Ronald Davidson, Ned Gutman, Leon Laub, Medwin Mintzis, Arthur Sackowitz, Neil Padron, Steve Weitzman. DELTA PHI Arnold Von Kaenel Prefidenf Vice-Preyidezzl james Kitcher Secremry Tom Ognibene Tl'8tZ.fZl1'61' Robert Emerton Clan of 1963 Anthony Correra, Thorsten Sehumacher. Bob Vitalis, Peter Warruer. 'Clam of 1964 Robert Emerton, james Kitcher, Tom Ognibene, Arnold Von Kaenel, Robin Wohnsigl. Clary of 1965 Otto Nonnenmann. 7 fig? ' , f ,X we , 5 i2 fifgkf, W5 , W . e,,, ..., , , V , xQ,,' I ' ,Ag I- 2 Q F 1 vffovi 2YwT'.'24'2f, 'I f, fr f vw M HQ., . V: ww off H 1 1 Hmmli, ,.-.... . , 1M,.,r.,, .,. Y-w.,,-..,,,.,, El.. , IQ.:-.- ' 1 ,, Ax., KAPPA SIGMA Preridefzl Anthony Zuzolo Vice-Preridew' Lenny Stans Secretary Chester Romano Trearzzrer Gerard Busch Claw of 1963 George Harrick, Milt Marrone, Fred Richter, Chet Romano, Lenny Stems, Anthony Zuzolo. Clam of 1964 Danny Domogala, Bill Groth, Ralph Jacobs, Pete Pieck, john Scarzello. Clam of 1965 jerry Busch, Cal Butler, Bill Colon, Harry Drum, Ron Ehmsen, Lou Georgiacles, Richie Paul, Les Skoski. wwf - 'jfs .bg K2 - W xx. ' f,. PHI EPSILON Pl Preridem' Michael Hori Vice-Preridefzt Tom Blumenthal Secretary Allen Schor T7'E6ZfZl7'87' jeff Dissin Clam of 1963 Tom Blumenthal, Lew Christie, Allen Cooper, Dave Dantzker, Jef? Dissin, Herb Epstein, Cliff Feller, Larry Gray, Lee Haber, Michael Hort, Ed Iasie, Herb Kaplan, Lenny Lawrence, Bob Magilen, Gabe Miller, Marv Pickholz, Arthur Rose, Larry Spiegel, Bruce Tisch, Alan Wilder, Marshall Yablon, Nelson Sobel. Clam of 1964 Dick Allison, Dan Arick, Alan Berkovsky, Don Gross, Peter Lilienthal, Vic Marrero, Michael Pollack, Manny Rosen, Kenn Scheinberg, Allen Schor, Paul Stessel, Jeff Waldstein, Bill Wilson. Clam of 1965 Kenneth Fields, Richard Freirnan, Abe Greenstein, Rouben Hagopian, Tony Lomonaco, Steve Marcus, Kenneth Rifkind, Barry Rugg, Peter Schnell, Richard Strauss, Edward Wholl. f'm4,6i!f'V f.,, L ', it We I, CDE!! PHI GAMMA DELTA Pferidenf Gary Norman Serremry Vincent Cardone T1'66ZJZl7'67' Kenneth Nocito Clair of 1963 Bill Bond, Lee Flocke, Mike Giannone, George Hansen, Gary Nord- man. Clary of 1964 Brian Cross, jim Hare, Dan Hayes, Henry Leesment, Ken Nocito. Clam of 1965 Norman Cosentino, William Pisani, Anthony Villzrmena, Frank Vogel, James Butkus, George Manolakes, Viesturs Petersons. 'k egpglm -2 GFA PHI SIGMA DELTA Preridefzf Jerard Cohen Vife-Prefidezzl Mark Berenbaum Serrelary Eric Rothstein Tl'6lZJ'Zll'6'I' Allen Abrams Clan of 1963 Allen Abrams, Ira Adler, Brian Alpert, Richard Arnold, Barry Brooks, 'Ierard Cohen, Monte Engler, Steve Greenfield, Barry Kramer, Arthur Littman, Gilbert Martin, jeff Moross, Michael Nash, Ronald Protas, Eric Rothstein, Harvey Rubenstein, Steve Silver. Clam of 1964 Mark Berenbaum, Arthur Berger, Asher Bernstein, Michael Braff, Larry Browner, Mark Chasin, Douglas Dallio, Mike Feinman, Steve Flechner, Leslie Goldberg, Tom Kelly, Kalman Kessler, Louis Kop- ry 'T' , E12 V 2 CDEA pleman, Stan Levine, Ken Ronson, Robert Sherman, Neil Wolfinan. Clary of 1965 Charles Bloom, Ed Bomsey, David Cotton, Harvey Flisser, Mitch Freidman, Brian Glass, Ken Hodor, john Kase, Steve Katz, George Kelly, jeff Lieb, Mike Meshnick, Richard Spitzer, Martin Stark, Jeffrey Stoll, Henry Storper, Peter Strauss, Arthur Trotzky, George Zelma, jay Zucker. PI LAMBDA PHI Prerinfenf Stephen Zeche Vire-Prericlezzl Irving Rome Ser1'efnry George Burak TI'6d.f1lI'61' Meyer I-Iochman Clary of 1963 Steven Goldberg, Ivan Klein, Michael Manowitz, Warreri Murray, Irving Rome, Stephen Zeche. Clair of 1964 George Burak, Fred Clarke, Williziiii Curry, Richard Gordon, Meyer ,ff N Q, f313 lf' . if ,. DAQ I-Iochman, Warren Machleder, Edward Meilman, jack Needleman, Wfarren Uchitel. Clary of 1965 Stanley Glick, John Graubard, Brett I-leiss, Richard Stavsky, john Stern, Paul Strickler, Lawrence Zinn. PSI UPSILON Prefidelrf Henry Gibson Vice-Pzwidezzf Williain Howley Serrelfary John Politi i ,ff iiky Treamivr Richard Pardi X f i Clary of 1963 y T5 Dominic Abbondanza, Arthur Abramoff, Shafat Baker, joseph Bernal, of iii ' 1' V Henry Gibson, Williain Howley, jon LeCompte, Louis Messina, jo- seph Orlando, Warren Schnibbe, Robert Zak. Clam of 1964 Nz ' 1 't Richard Bohensky, Tom Brinckerhoff, Frank Caputo, joseph Ferri, Otto Giannico, john Indrigo, Robert Kotter, Richard Pardi. Clary of 1965 Augustus Fiume, Robert Gioggia, George Hudson, Daniel Muscatello, john Politi, Anthony Terrell. it TAU DELTA Pl-ll Paeficlefzf David Merkoxvitz Vire-Piwiflezzf Richard Meszler Serrefnry Dennis Hecht Trepzmrer Donald Strauss Clan of 1963 James DeMetro, Dennis Hecht, Howard Jaffe, James Leopold, David Merkowitz. Clam of 1964 David Acker, Steven Arvan, Steven Carson, Orin Chein, joel Drucker, Frank Fiore, Daniel Fuchs, Charles Gersch, Robert Kohm, Kenneth Manne, Richard Meszler, David Sondaek, Donald Strauss, john Tad- dey, Jonathon Turkel, Robert Wechsler. Clair of 1965 Jeffrey Cohen, Joseph Pisano. 5: F . ,AX a ff? lb TACID TAU EPSILON PHI 'Preridemf Steve Friedman Vice-Prefirfeazf Joel Albert Secretary Cary Sklaren Trepzyzzrer Paul Janis Clair of 1963 Ed Barbach, Harold Brownstein, Mike Eiger, Richard Fialkoff, Steve Friedman, Richard Hirsh, Danny jelinsky, Mark Levine, Herb Lon- don, Marty Reizes, Michael Sagat, Bruce Shauer, Al Singer, Herb Weinstein. Clair of 1964 ' ,ar g .t r ns., , Jar TEQD Joel Albert, A1 Berger, Robert Berger, Peter Blanc, Phil Cohen, Gary Drezin, Steve Eclelstein, Gene Friedman, Stan Friedman, Richard Frome, Marty Horowitz, Paul Janis, Mike Kaufman, Barry Olshen, Les Rosenblatt, Jeff Rubin, Cary Sklaren, Al Wollersteiiu, Al Yaruss. Clair of 1965 Alan Agdern, Richard Crystal, Mal Davis, Mike Gale, Dave Orlands, Howard Rubin, Robert Stein. ZETA BETA TAU Prericfefzl' Kenneth Cohn Vine-Pzefiflezzf Robert lgiel Sewelfzry Robert Lapkin Treamrer Alan Mintz Claw of 1963 Peter Bry, jack Camhe, Elliot Cohen, Steven Emers, Robert Igiel, Elliot Moses, Ira Pitchal, jack Saxonhouse, Arthur Shaffran, Niel Siderow, Lawrence Silverman, john Spingarn, ,lack Uram, Raphael Witorsch. Clam of 1964 Wfilliam Altman, Peter Carrier, Marc Cezer, Kenneth Cohn, Steven Eldridge, Quenten Federman, Howard Glance, lan Glasser, Richard Goldstein, Richard Goodman, Martin Greenwald, Henry Gruen, Ivan Hillman, Ronald Klagsbrun, Ted Kohl, Robert Lapkin, Alan Mintz, Fred Roth, Kenneth Schulman, jeffrey Stein, Paul Watskyi, Bernard Post, David Rodkin. Clam of 1965 Richard Cantor, Stuart Kaufman, Steven King, Peter Morrell, Bernard Raizner, Ira Rappaport, Robert Rosenberg, Richard Schotter, Peter Taub, Arthur Thorn, Orest Zaklynsl-cy. ' . X X A A! ff ,H A I xx QZB x ' ' ZBT .X A ZETA PSI Piwidefzt Bill Stroh Vice-Preyidezzi john Sexton Secretary Steve Gordon Trenmrer Michael Weisbard Clary of 1963 Bill Stroh, Al W:1i'd. Clan of 1964 J Z ,f J it Q, , xg ,..x. mcff 1 A x ZX? Dhirender Aggarwal, Patrick Corry, Christopher Czarowicz, Peter Dzinnenberg, Steven Gordon, Chaturbhuj Nagdev. Clam of 1965 Al Leopold, John Sexton, Farook Sultan. Michael Weisbard. ,b , - T Jeff... '7' 1.6-if-1 ! kg 'a 'I C, I CID 5 , '7 ' f A, 'D J Q ,' 'I 'Q' -L' L ' g .-rw -1-I 5:5 , W 'i - 'fviqgsf Q' .ff ' , 7 -- ,,, ....,,'g. ,. --' Gf7 f4.+-' f v ,A , 11 Q':1 - .4 ,i 414,44 . , XE ' - 1 :A W W v ' . A V f I XL1, - X v' 1 , X ' f 4 Em s ein., f K X X , 6 5 1 wa' 1 Y- NX X ,,..--f QQQ ,. -1 -- - - 2. r, A' . .f-'- 450,93 Z -Pl 1 Q gl F. A. - - fic. 1' 1 l9Q9 1 S? 1 ' ' , 5 J: A 1- 1- Y 'wggflll' - at' - 'I -:Q 3 -1 X fri., ' Q' 'bin 1-1'.mfL.c v1 zsirxw-cum.: ' . 9 -:Q 3 , www --I -'ff-Tg - -- --' PP f. ' 'A A-45,92 ' W3 X ,- fl' . -1 , -- - X9' x X! ..-1 V-- sf' s i .. SX v' Q Gi A ' 'dpi- -fl-,- W1 Q i -5 4 I I F' 1-l , A K xx NN., - 1. .' i' :Q gf., ' L' ' Qi- ,- , f - g Q? I 'UI 6 .6529 K T i' i'l, --V ,- V :1:ag.,.i- . Nl' P614 -- ' E 4' 's f ' ff 'LI V' 5' 1 4 :T A Ag ff' f 7' fir ' 7 ,f . IQ! X 1- -G f I I V V X XI,-af Af 4, Y 5 It 11 1 ' GL vfcur- '-ri. f J If K .1 I-Ax' f lx' X Tag If' Cf V Ii' 1 -if A ' f A y x f A ,j A W 'E S ,,. ' K yv 'f W f B. N1 IV .--:-J., 1 X. ,, Mr' -qv ,, X S K Y-J., P X X ,flgggg f f ffff vt PORT BASKETBALL Kzleefizlg, lefl 10 rigbl-Marc Groothius. Gene Fisch Neil Okelll Sfllldlllg Don Newbery fAssistant Coachj. Arnold Bergen flwlanncer Bob Pltton l-liroltl Hurston Bob Willianas fCaptainj. Barry Kramer. Steve jordan. Lou Rossini Coach X01 1111111141 Rit Keith m Frontera. Art Loche Assistmt Coich A year for the NYU basketball team was a year for Barry Kramer and Harold Hairston. And it was more than coincidence that the zeniths and nadirs of the sea- son coincided with the highs and lows of these two forwards. The 1962-63 season would be one of the most im- portant in Violet history even if the 18-5 record had been 0-23, for it marked the first time that the New Yorkers had had a bona fide All-American. In the long history of basketball at the Heights, never had an NYU player been chosen on more than one of the six or seven top tives picked each year, but Barry Kramer was chosen for the Associated Press and Look Magazine All-Ameri- can teams, Kramers credentials were indeed impressive. He came within five points of being the country's leading scorerg he set a new Violet season scoring markg and he be- came the first NYU player to score 1000 points in two seasons. Wheiu the curtain of the season abruptly came down, the lithe forward had scored 675 points in 25 games for 29.35 p.p.g. But if Kramerls statistics far overshadowed any of his predecessors, then the inordinate amount of publicity he received put them to shame. He was the subject of articles in Life Magazifze and the Snlz11'a'ay Evening Poff, 189 for 403, or 46 QW the word on the mouth of every New York schoolboy, and one of the most famous figures in sports. All of this he deserved. In October, it became obvious that Kramer would have to carry NYU for the seasonis first half when the announcement was made that Hairston, the previous yearis high scorer and rebounder, was ineligible to play. Coach Lou Rossini announced that he had only one real scorer left. He was right. The Violets' first game was not an easy one. They faced a Georgetown team of hot shooters who came into Madison Square Garden after winning their first three games. Fans wondered who would replace Hairston. They soon found out. Kramer was superb. He broke the NYU single-game scoring record, formerly held by Tom Sanders and Cal Ramsey, chalking up 42 points and leading the Palisaders to an 85-65 victory. Another hero was made that night. Bobby Williams, the senior captain and perennial bench star, started and proved to be a decisive factor in leading the winners in rebound- ing. He was a rock under the boards and showed that he was to be an integral part in any hopes for future Violet victories. 4 The following night saw an easy win over Canadian country cousin Toronto, 104-57. But without Hairston to back up Kramer, losses would have to come. The Violets did not have to wait long. The Hawks of St. Josephs flew in just long enough to infiict the Palisaders with their Hrst loss, 74-64. Kramer again led all scorers with 29 points, but this time the second hero was Steve Jordan, a junior transfer from the University of Michigan, who scored 20 points while hitting nine of eleven shots. But the Kramer- Iordan scoring duo was not enough, as the Violets were outclassed and outplayed. Then came another of Pennsylvania's top fives and the result was different. Challenging Lafayette on the Leopards' home court in Easton, the Violets took an early lead and topped the country boys more easily than the 67-59 score indicates. Per usual, Kramer was high man, though this time with only 22 points. Williams hit a career high of 19, and by now the Violets were set for the acid test, the Holiday Festival. A break in the first round draw enabled the locals to face an ailing Duquesne squad playing without the services of muscular star Willie Sommerset. Kramer's 23 points and Williams' 13 rebounds paced the winners, 71-66. In the game which followed, a slugfest with Illinois, the Palisaders looked as good in defeat as they ever had in victory, The Mid-Westerners, eventual tourney champions, had an overwhelming height and The belief buff of lbe 561.1011 K7'IlllJEl' ZI'ilff,f-. Iwo on one. scoring advantage. But NYU had Kramer, and Kramer had another school scoring record. Netting 42 points again, he kept the Violets ahead for 38V2 of the game's 40 minutes, but power told and the Illini won, 91-84. In the consolation game, the adrenalin kept pumping and the Palisaders wrapped up a third-place finish by outshooting St. Bonaventure, formerly the class of the East, 90-81. Now it was Jordans turn to shine, as his 30 points topped even Kramer by four, Kramer, however, took over rebouding laurels from Wfilliams by pulling down 16 boards. A long line of inadequates followed. The Iona game was like all Iona games. There was never any doubt that the Violet record would grow, but the lead was never more than 12 points. Kramer had 21, but even the Heads ami Jlaoulderr above. All-American could not add interest to the boring 70- 60 encounter. Army offered more interest but no more competition, as Kramer's 38 enabled the Violets to raise their record to 7-2. Then came into the Alumni Gymnasium one of the strangest of sights. Acadia travelled down from Nova Scotia to display a bit more of that fine Canadian basketball. Time and again the Axmen would drive in Hcljl'.fl0ll ,rrreezzf for Bit-ibn. for a clear shot only to pass the ball out again for an- other try. The Violets won 57-41, despite the holding of Kramer to 16 points, He doubled this total in the next contest, though, with NYU whipping Boston Uni- versity, 67-58. The next game was another easy one, but this time with a difference: Happy Hairston was back. Happy was also back in form, The incredibly strong six-sixer matched Kramer's 26 points while hitting 12 of 15 shots to lead the team to a 70-62 triumph against Fairleigh Dickenson. But if the Palisaders went into high gear against FDU, then they hit the straight-away in the games against Furman, Temple, and Holy Cross. The Paladins came into the Garden hailed as one of the class clubs of the southlands. They left on the short end of a 108-82 tally. Hairston hit 15 of 22 from the Fircb bullelr by in Alumni Gym. floor for 34 points and Kramer chipped in 32 as the Violet bandwagon rolled for victory number 11. After the big two had split 48 points in the Temple trampling, 77-59, they set sights on Holy Cross in an attempt for number eight-in-a-row. It came in spades. Hairston hit 38g Kramer hit 353 the fast break was never faster, and the margin of victory was never greater. The Violets won, 102-71. Notre Dame was the next to fall, The Irish were gunning for the Violets and came within a basket of 1 N0 rofzmrl .rfJ01'!. ending the skein. The South Benders held a 40-36 half- time advantage and raised the margin to seven points before the tide turned. Kramer and Hairston hit 10 con- secutive points of their eventual 51 to put the game on ice. The frisky Terriers from St, Francis could not match the Violets Off the boards and fell 76-62. Manhattan was the twelfth straight victim in a game which put the Violets in the National Collegiate Tournament. Un- like preceding years, there was no fight and little good basketball. NYU won 78-72. Then the depths. A Fordham team made up essen- tially of players who had ended the NYU freshman winning streak two years ago completely outplayed and outhustled the Violets to end the varsity streak at 12, . -5 f 1 ' f-'99 'if ' QQ! Irzzo llae drive. X - . A J Nm, Xpgxpgx x . Km X, ...xx WFQESXXQFxwfgzii-fsssf.Sf'Nff ' xv- 'avr -' sX,S All-Afzzcrimn, jfnzior yazr. 142 Cclpfrlfll lViUi:1mr lvirfofr , . . 71-68. The Violets closed out the regular season by overcoming the slow-down tactics of St. Johns, topping the Indians by 56-47. But all this was prologue as the NCAA was about to begin. When the Violets took to the Palestra floor against Pittsburgh in the opening round of the tourney, the announcement was being made in New York that Kramer and Hairston had been selected to the All- Metropolitan team. Pittsburgh was unimpressed, The Panthers crashed the boards and, for a while, seemed headed for an upset. Then the All-Mets proved their mettleg Kramer and Hairston ripped off 14 straight points, and the Panthers were slain. Kramer had scored 37, Hairston 29, and the Violets were headed for Col- lege Park, Md., and the Eastern Regionals. Duke stood between the Violets and the Eastern Crown. While the New Yorkers sported one of the nation's top ballplayers, the Blue Devils had the beit. Art Heyman had gotten every most valuable player award given. While the New Yorkers had one of the finest of rebounding teams, Duke had perhaps the finest. These slight differences between two great teams was to tell the tale. The Blue Devils went out to a 9-5 lead, but the Violets were quick to catch up. Later in the Hrst half Kramer, who added 34 during the night to his new season record, put the Violets ahead by 3, 19-16, but the ensuing deviltry saw NYU down by 5 at the half. The second half was evenly played, and Duke won, 81-76. Playing impressively against Duke, as they had played so often during the year, were Neil O'Neill, Bob Patton, and Don Blaha. O'Neill completed the season with a 7 point average and an equal assist average. Patton, the ruffian of the squad, was among the high- est of the rebounders and the retriever of frequently lost balls. Blaha, a renovated high-jumper, joined the squad at mid-season and perked up the scoring. The night following the Duke affair pitted the Pali- saders against the Mountaineers of West Virginia in a game in which no one cared too much about the out- come. The primary interest was to see if Kramer could score the 35 points he needed to become the nation's number one scorer. He couldnt. His 29 points put him within a hair's breadth of topping Seton Hall's Nick Werkman, but the season ended a minute too soon. The game itself was sloppily played by both teams. Rod Thorn, Mountaineer All-Everything, pumped in 33 to lead the way for WVU. It was an eventful year for the hoop team, The re- sults were better than anticipated, but not as good as they could have been. Kramer surpassed all expectationsg so did Williams. Hairston showed signs of greatness. The Fordham loss cannot be explained without dishon- oring the Violets. A backwards glance makes one won- der why the Violets did not become or nearly become national champions. The whole did not manage to equal the sum of the parts. and dimer. TRACK AND FIELD Kneeling, left lo rigbf-Dick Mikita. jim Carroll, Mel Meyers. Dick Batho. Keith Forde, John Chandler, joe Genalo. S1a:1di11g-josepl1 Healey fCoachJ, Doc Goldenberg. Hamilton McRae. Dave Merkowitz,'Pete Dolle, Don Parks. Gary Gubner. Bernie Ford, Dave Laird, john Stevens. Ken Borg, jerry Monkofsky CAss't Coachj. The 1962 spring track team was blessed with an out- standing group of seniors and sophomores, but suffered from a malady that has been inherent in NYU track history. Despite the efforts of a few talented individuals, there was not enough depth on the squad to make the year completely successful. In its first meet of the year, the team travelled to Quantico, Virginia, for the annual Quantico Marine Relays. Despite seasonal extremes of weather over a two-day period, NYU turned in some performances that gave a hint as to what could develop. Sophomore Gary Gubner, already being recognized as one of the best shot putters in the world, easily triumphed in his first outing with a toss of 62-6, a new Quantico record. Turning to the discus, Gubner got off a heave of 169-1, taking second in the college division and third in over- all competition. These two performances earned Gubner the trophy as the Most Valuable Athlete of the meet. Third places seemed to fall like poker chips to the Violets. In the mile relay, soph Hamilton McRae turned in a 47.8 third leg to pace his team to the show position. The 880-relay, with Ken Hendler, co-captain jim Wed- derburn, McRae, and Cliff Bertrand, grabbed the third spot in 1:27.5 after a 20.5 anchor leg by Bertrand, a senior from Trinidad. Tom and Charles McGrath, Dave Laird, and jim Brown combined for third place in the two-mile relay in 7:48.6. ' 44 In addition to these, other places were taken by Bill Urban, sixth in the high hurdles with 15.1, Jeff Little, second in the high jump with 6-4, and Jim Brown, fourth in the 880- with 11559. The following Saturday, at the Queens-Iona Relays on Randalls Island, the one-mile realy team came into its own. Brown led off the quartet with a 48.8 clocking, followed by Wedderbtirn, who turned in a 48.3. McRae followed with 48.4, and Bertrand anchored with a tre- mendous 46.8. The combined time of 5212.3 set new meet and school records. It was truly a line day for Bertrand, as his sprint medley team took second place to Fordham. After Hendler's lead-off leg of 49.8 for the quarter and McRae's 220- leg of 21.6, Bertrand took the stick and made world record-holder Frank Budd look like he was standing still for a 220-. Bertrand's time was 20.2 around the curve, and Brown anchored with a 1252.3 for the final 880-. Once again, Gubner took a first place with a new record in the shot put, this time placing the ball 62-2 from the circle. His 157-9 throw gave him second in the discus, while Little placed in the high jump with 6-5V2. Urban captured second in the 440-hurdles with 56.6 and third in the broad jump with 21-3. In the Penn Relay Championships of America, the NYU team reached the peaks of its glory. These are the most famous and competitive races in the nation, and the Violet did itself proud. On the first day of com- petition, the NYU entrant in the special Metropolitan One-Mile Relay scampered to victory in one of the best times in the history of the meet, 3:12.0. Brown led off in 49.3, and Wedderburn, McRae, and Bertrand fol- lowed with legs of 47.5 apiece. This established NYU as one of the primary contenders for the Championship mile relay, the climactic event of the meet. Before this event could end the extravaganza, NYU entrants had turned in some brilliant performances. Ur- ban and co-captain Henry johnson turned in their best times of the year in the 120-yd. high hurdles, with 15.1 and 14.9, respectively. Gubner took hrst in the shot with 61-4. Little placed fourth in the high jump on a 6-4 leap. The NYU team in the sprint medley relay pulled off a major upset by capturing the Championship of Amer- ica. McRae turned in a 48.8 for the quarter, Hendler and Bertrand ran 22.0 and 21.0 on the 220-'s, and Brown coasted in with a 1:53.7 half for the victory. One championship is a great honor, but the mile relay, the last event, run on a track where hundreds of races had already been held, held the greatest garland of all for the Violet. Pitted against some of the best squads in the country, Brown led off with a 49.3 to put his team in good position. Wedderburn's 48.1 had NYU in hrst, but McRae, at 48.2, was passed on a great leg by Morgan State. It was all left to Bertrand and the tall Olympian was equal to the challenge. He inched past his opponent on the final straightaway, bringing the crowd to its feet. His time of 47.3, and the collective time of 3:12.9, were considered spectacular under the conditions. Unfortunately, the rest of the season was mainly downhill for NYU, as a number of injuries took their toll. The Violets racked in the relatively minor New Utrecht Relays, but were hurting when the Metropolitan Intercollegiates rolled around. Bill Urban was the iron man in this meet, placing in four events and scoring 12 points. His 22-M, gave him third in the broad jump, he placed second in the hop, step and jump with 43-ZVZ, was third in the javelin with 182-V2, and fourth in the high hurdles with 15.3. Basketball standout Barry Kramer tied with Little for Hrst in the high jump at 6-3. Gubner took the shot- put at 62-11V2 and captured second in the discus with 173-SVZ. Sophomore Paul Woodall was second in the pole vault at 14-0. Other seconds were taken by jim Brown in the 440- hurdles, Ken Hendler in the 100- and 220-yd. dashes, and the NYU mile relay. McRae was third in the 440-, and johnson third in the high hurdles. Gubner surprised everyone by taking first place in both the shot and discus in the IC4A Championships, with tosses of 62-174 and 168-10V2, Bertrand added to IVo1'Zd'J .rlrozfgesl leemfgef 'Nr f Zl'Iilmrr2 G.lll16J'.' lly6'llJd67'fJlll'lI 1111111 into rermzd. a great year by taking second in the 440- in 46.9, and third in the 220-, Brown was second in the 5000-meter steeplechase in 9:56.1, and Little fourth in the high jump at 6-3. The ensuing weeks saw Gubner and Dallas Long con- tinue their rivalry. In one meet, Gubner threw 64-11, only to have Long set a new world record with 65-11. However, Gubner took the National AAU championship with 63-8, and took second to Long in the US-USSR meet. Bertrand capped off his season by taking fifth place in the 220- in the NCAA Championships. After the unsuccessful 1962 cross-country season, Healey was doing his best not to follow up with an MrRat' mm' Pnrkr mee burdler. equally disastrous indoor track schedule. Although NYU became embroiled in the NCAA-AAU battle for the control of track in the United States, the Violets still managed to give a good account of themselves in a number of major meets. Gone from the past year was the most successful group of seniors ever to grace an NYU track squad, and it was impossible for the 1962-63 team to follow in their footsteps. Even Gubner was not up to the level he had been at one year earlier, although there was still no one who could beat him indoors. The Boston AA Games saw him win with a 60-1 put and the mile relay turn in an unspectacular time of 3:25.2. By the time of the Millrose Games, Gubner was in somewhat better form, winning with a 65-4 throw, but the varsity mile relay was still in the doldrums, clocking only 3:26.4. The main problem with this team was evident in the Metropolitan Indoor Championships, The limited group had to be spread very thin, and it resulted in a like amount of points. Soph Ken Borg, McRae, and Dave Merkowitz, the only senior on the team, competed in the broad jump, with Borg placing second on a leap of 21-10. Gubner took an easy throw to win the shot put, but Pete Dolle flnished just out of the money in sixth. McRae ended up third in the 600- in 1:13.7, while Borg took fourth in the high hurdles and fifth in the high jump. The Violet mile realy was forth in 3:27.1, McRae hitting 49.0 for his anchor leg. In this meet, the Violet freshmen began to emerge as a promising group. Mel Meyers captured the broad- jump with a 22-6 leap, while Keith Forde was first in the 600- in 1:14.0. John Chandler was second in the 60-, right ahead of Meyers, and then anchored the frosh mile relay with 49.0 to win in 5:28.4. Gubner continued his winning way in the NYAC Games, his throw of 65-4 far ahead of the nearest com- petition. McRae was third in the Buermeyer 500, hitting 58.7 for the stint, Afterwards, he came back with a 49.0 quarter to give the mile relay team a fourth place. The freshman mile relay was second in its race with a 3127.0 clocking. The only place that NYU could get in the National AAU Indoor Championships was Gubner's first, a tol- erable 62-8 toss with the 16-lb. ball. McRae was elimi- nated in his 600- heat, though he hit 1:12.8, and the relay team missed out with 3227.4 The frosh medley squad hit 1:56.3, Hnishing fifth, but out of the point scoring. The Knights of Columbus Meet saw Gubner hit his indoor peak, as a 64-6 throw set a new meet record. The freshmen competed in the handicap mile relay and ended up in first place. At long last the varsity showed some definite improvement, McRae anchoring it to a 3:23.6 mile relay. The last meet of the season, the Indoor IC4A's, was also the best for this group. Bernie Ford, Ron Bryant, john Stevens, and McRae raced their heat in 3:21.9 to qualify for the final, where they finished just out of the money, in sixth place, McRae's 48.9 anchor helping them to a 3122.2 total time. Switching from the leather-covered shot to the solid iron ball, Gubner was again first, this time with 61-5. Excellent times were turned in by McRae and Stevens McRae of Ibe block, in the 600- trials, with 1:13.8 and 1:14.4, and Bryant in the 1000- trial with 2:14.2. The frosh squad capped its season by nabbing third place in the special fresh- man distance medley championship. Keith Forde ran a 1259.7 for the 880-, Chandler hit 49.3 for the quarter, Meyers 25.0 for the 220-, and John Loeschhorn turned in his best performance of the season by anchoring with a 4:24.0 mile. With these excellent performances in mind, coach Healey looked forward to the spring campaign with some enthusiasm and encouragement, and also with the prospect that things could only get better. llVi7z11i1zg f1'?.fb7IZrUZ medley relay lefzm, SDCCER --W,wt.-- -,, V s. f yn ' . ' Slfnzding, left 10 right-jeff Stoll CAss't Mgrj, Hal Lamster fMgr.J, Philip Dawes, Peter Wolfe, Reynold Heraux, Alex Gould, Charles Weintraub, Demos Triantatillou, Costas Michalopoulos. Paul Patti, Mayer Rossabi fCoachJ. Seated, leff Io rigbf-Tati Okereke, Ken Harewood, Nick Zlatar, Edmund Turton, Claudio Souza, Milos Cirovic. Gratification and disappointment: the pervading ele- ments of a paradoxical 1962 season for the NYU soccer team. Led by rookie coach Mayer Rossabi, an ambitious and determined young man, the Violets compiled a sea- son's record of seven victories and two defeats. On the basis of their fine record and several outstand- ing performances, the Violets deemed an invitation to the National Collegiate Athletic Association Tourna- ment within the realm of possibility. Indeed, as the season drew to a close all who were close to the team were optimistically looking forward to the trip to St. Louis. However, a bid was never forthcoming, as the tournament committee bypassed the Palisaders in favor of Hartwick, a team which NYU had upended by a 4-3 count earlier in the season. Despite this drawback, the Violets' fortunes were consistently bright, with the exception of setbacks ad- ministered by Fairleigh Dickinson and West Chester State. From the outset, prospects were favorable for a good season. Rossabi, showing himself to be a com- petent and imaginative coach, juggled a sometimes short- handed squad with aplomb. He took a young and in- experienced team at the start and molded it into a cohesive, aggressive unit capable of better things than most star-gazers had believed possible. In a pre-season exhibition game the Violets were trampled by a rough Brown University squad, 6-2. Many veterans were absent, however, and because of this the team appeared woefully disorganized. Once the season got under way officially, though, it was a com- pletely dilferent story. In the season opener NYU played outstanding soc- cer in whitewashing jersey City State, 5-O. Inside right Kenny Harewood and outside left Ed Turton, both natives of the British West Indies, tallied two goals apiece. Turton's pair of markers both came on penalty kicks. Center forward Nick Zlatar, an extremely talented all-around player, booted in the fifth score. Violet goaltender Alex Gould turned in one of his finest per- formances in hanging up the shutout. The Violets were scored on in their next encounter to the tune of three goals. However, the offense was on target once again as Turton and Harewood each tallied once and Claudio Souza, Brazil's gift to the Palisaders, booted in a brace of goals. His second score snapped a 3-3 deadlock, enabling the booters to edge Hartwick, 4-5. Rider College was the next victim to fall prey to NYU's high-powered offensive machine, as the Violets registered a 7-1 rout. After spotting the Broncs a marker within the first three minutes of play, NYU tallied once each in the first and second periods on kicks by Souza and Turton to take a 2-1 lead. Zlatar hit early in the third quarter and Harewood virtually wrapped up the decision himself by tallying twice within three minutes late in the same stanza. A third goal by Hare- wood in the final period, enabling him to turn the hat- trick, and a score by Souza, wrapped up business. Against Renssalaer Poly on a muddy field, the Vio- lets sloshed their way to an unimpressive 2-O victory. Goalie Gould, in chalking up his second shutout of the campaign, was called upon to make only five saves. Souza and sophomore Milos Cirovic counted for the booters, as no real scoring thrust could be mounted due to the slippery traction. Sporting a 4-0 record and plenty of optimism, NYU next faced Fairleigh Dickinson. But the Knights burst the bubble, shellacking the Violets 4-0. This game was one of those in which the team could do no right, only wrong. Several opportunities for scores were nar- rowly missed at close range, the defense was sluggish, and the attack ground to a halt. The Violets rebounded impressively in their next affair, subduing Colgate, 3-1. Though they spotted the Red Raiders a goal in the opening period, the Violets roared back with singletons in each of the last three quarters to annex the victory. Gould played a mag- nilicent game in goal, making several difhcult stops. Souza and Turton tallied for the Violets, as did jean Dorsinville, a newcomer to the squad at that juncture. Coach Rossabi classified this game as a turning point T!91UtZ7'li7Zg 0171 NYU drizfe. and noted that in it the Violets indicated the spirit and ability to bounce back from their miseries in the pre- vious encounter. The Violets pressed deep and often into enemy terri- tory against City College but could tally only twice. That was enough for the win, however, as the Violets blanked the Beavers by a 2-O count. Harewood and Dorsinville were the scorers in this fray. High winds and a driving rainstorm forced cancella- Turion driver frame cl point. ff? Turion .relr up block. tion of the Violets' next scheduled game, against Drexel Tech. Thus, West Chester State, the national champions of the previous year, provided the opposition in the next encounter. The Rams proved too much for NYU to handle as the Palisaders were forced to absorb their second defeat of the season, this time by a 2-O score. A 4-1 decision over Seton Hall ended the season on a happy note for the Violets as far as the regular sched- ule was concerned. Claudio Souza became the second Violet to turn the hat-trick, Nick Zlatar accounted for the fourth goal. However, the day after the victory the team was denied a regional bid to the NCAA cham- pionships. Still holding out hope for an at-large bid at some later date the booters were stymied here also, as no tournamentbid was forthcoming. Although Souza, Harewood, Turton, and Zlatar were the big scorers, one man who ranked as high as these four did not score a goal all season. This was Demos Triantaffilou, who was an outstanding defenseman. Game after game he displayed fearless, gambling play O and a definite anticipation of just when to leap at a shot or loose ball. By himself he saved at least three shots a game that had goal written on them. joining Triantaffilou in the solid defensive wall were Ray Heraux, a speedy Haitian halfback, Costas Michalopou- los, Pete Wolfe, and Phil Dawes. With the exception of Wolfe, the stalwart defense consisted exclusively of first-year men who got better as the season progressed. The campaigns Hnal statistics indicated the potency of the Violets' game. Only 12 goals were tallied against the Palisaders as contrasted with 27 which they booted into enemy nets. Souza led the Violet scorers with nine goals, Harewood had seven, Turton five, Zlatar three, Dorsinville two, and Cirovic one. Good team play was the keynote to success, fine indi- vidual performances notwithstanding. NYU featured a fast and short passing game which demanded precision and dexterity in execution to achieve results. More often than not it did. g V , 13, Obio Field difereure of o11i11i011. Gould gels il oul. FENCING , an , 'r 12? ' -3: s Y S Z Z Q f Bark row. left Io righi-Irv Adler, John Gillespie Alan Saltzman Marv Garavoy Paul Spletzer jeff Wolfe fManagerJ. Middle mu'-Hugo Castello fCoachJ Barry Yarkon Marshall Brumer Barney Baron, Gene Funfschilling, jeff Chakes, Mike Berman fAssistant Managerj Fmul mu Bill Goldfried, Howie Goodman, Bob Waltz CCO Captainj Den Tapman N01 171517179627 jerry Cetrulo QCO-Captainj Keith Gamboa NYU had the nation's fourth best fencing team in 1962-63. The varsity fencers stood head and shoulders above every other athletic squad participating in NYU's eleven intercollegiate sports. Although the parriers were accustomed to being the best in NYU, they were not used to being merely fourth in the United States. The last several National Collegiate Athletic Association tournaments, previous to the 1963 version, had seen the Violets place among the top two each time. The swordsmen's 7-1 record included victories over Harvard, Columbia, Yale, Pennsylvania, MIT, Prince- ton, and CCNY, the lone defeat coming at the hands of Navy. The Palisaders copped a total of 126 bouts during the regular season, losing but 90. The record breaks down to 46-26 in foil, 46-26 in sabre, but a los- ing 34-38 in epee. A mid-season tragedy hit the NYU foilsmen when their two top men, Jeff Checlces and jerry Cetrulo, be- came scholastically ineligible for competition. At that point sophomore Checkes had registered 15 triumphs against a pair of losses, and junior Cetrulo, team co- captain, was 10-8. The balance of the foil brigade filled in admirably, 5 ----....... Ejzee, lbrml and puffy at Pgllfl, 15 2 as third man junior Marv Garavoy moved up to the first spot and won 12 while losing 8. Senior Marshal Brummer and sophomore Irving Adler picked up the slack and finished 8-6 and 1-2, respectively, for the season. The team's other co-captain spearheaded the sabre- men for most of the early part of the campaign. He was senior Bob Waltz, and he was ably abetted by Howard Goodman, a sophomore who was a late-season flash, and another soph, Paul Spletzer. In regular-season competition, Waltz's record of 13- 7, Goodmans 16-8, and Spletzer's 15-8 gave NYU three well-balanced sabre efforts. junior Gene Funfshill- ing, primarily an epee participant, also added two vic- tories and three defeats to the Violet sabre total. Epee, the Palisaders, weakest division, possessed as its strongest swordsman senior Alan Saltzman. Other serv- iceable epeemen were a pair of juniors, john Gillespie and Funfshilling, whose records of 8-7 and 11-12 were second only to Saltzman'S 9-5. In addition, Adler cap- tured four of his fourteen bouts, and junior Vic Gamboa was shut out in three attempts at an epee victory. The big match was against Navy on February 23, as the Palisaders brought their six straight successes to Washington Square, In this battle of undefeateds, could the Violets, missing two of their top swordsmen, stop the tough Midshipmen from Annapolis? As it turned out, they couldn't, NYU faltered in epee and was under- manned in foil, both were lost, 7-2. A stirring sabre performance did not help matters much and the match was lost, 17-10. The story of the Intercollegiate Fencing Association tournament for NYU was one brilliant performance and several mediocre ones. The result of the sabre competition of the meet was a first place for the Violet trio, as Goodman swept his eleven bouts. 7-4 marks by Waltz and Spletzer completed the 25 wins and 8 losses which gave the Palisaders the team sabre trophy. His fine effort earned Goodman the right to enter the in- dividual competition, in which he tied a Navy man with 4-1. In the playoff, Goodman upended the Mid- shipman by a 5-2 count to cop the individual sabre title. A 7-4 ledger by Garavoy, 6-5 by Brummer, and 5-6 by Adler gave NYU fifth position in foil with 18-15. It was the hrst time in seven years that the Violets did not win the team foil trophy, the ancient Little Iron Man, The epee team of Gillespie Q7-llj, Saltzman and Funfshilling Cboth 5-65 copped fifth place in that class with 17-16 and helped garner the IFAIS third spot for NYU with a 60-39 mark. Checker fzenefi-ales for a point. SWIMMI G Top row. leff In riglsf-Tom Ognibene, Dick Tangeman, ,lohn Snooks. Robin Wohnsigl, Mel Chaskin CManugei'J. jack Collins fAssistant Coachj, Sal Variello fCoachj. Bollom mu'-Tom Gustavson, joe Bernal, Clifford Dean CCaptainQ, Keith Edwards, Gilbert Kiefer, The swimming team was a good one which chose to play with great ones. The teams it chose to play with were, for the most part, not from the New York area. But when the mermen did challenge local opposi- tion, they were ultimately successful, becoming metro- politan champions despite the loss of eleven of thirteen matches previous to the tournament. The names most often seen in the Violet headlines Vnriello nfzer Ike 67.731 meel, were Gustavson, Tangeman, and Bernal. NYU's Tom, Dick, and Joe won easy decisions on title day. It was Bernal's record victory in the 400-yard in- dividual medley which gave the Violets their eighth consecutive met crown. Despite being a novice in the event, Bernal turned in a time of 5:0-4.8, well below anything ever done before in the meet. Gustavson iced the virtually uncontested king of the divers title by taking his third consecutive one-meter and three-meter dives, Tangeman's victory in the 500- yard freestyle was a surprise to no one. Proving un- beatable, he lapped the Held. Others added to the Violets' 18-point victory over favored Adelphi in the tourney. The Tangeman-led 400- yard medley relay team, consisting also of john Snooks, Robin Wohnsigl, and Tom Ognibene, created still an- other new record. The most exciting single event of the night was Tangeman swimming his second race, against Adelphi's All-American Kel Rustiala. Both winning swimmers easily broke the existing mark, with the Long Islander winning by the breadth of his nylon swim trunks. When the days of action were over, the Palisaders had amassed 110 points to top the Panthers and everyone else. Much of the reason for victory was attributable to the checkerboard strategy used by coach Variello in the placing of a squad of only six men. This paucity of swimmers often meant defeat in dual meets, but some of the Violets' dual-meet opposition bcasted more talent than the whole of the metropolitan area could throw at NYU. The most impressive Violet showing came not with victory, but in defeat, defeat at the hands of Columbia. The Lions, heralded as one of the powers of the East, had to clear their arsenal to manage a 53-42 win. The meet was not decided until the final 400-yard freestyle relay. Ironically enough, it was the 400-yard relay which put the Violets out in front at the beginning. The Lions Tmzgemmz l77'6flk.l' from Ike porz. 5 G0,g0,g0 . .. started fast with a hrst and third in the 200-yard free- style and a sweeping of the 50-yard freestyle. Gustavson evened things up by doing what came naturally in the one-meter dive, Tangeman did likewise and again the Violet was blooming. But then disaster struck. Columbia swept through the 100-yard freestyle and the tables were turned in just 53.9 seconds, the winning time. Cliff Dean, Violet Chieftain, followed by swimming the crowning race of his career, as he triumphed in the 500-yard freestyle. His 6:12 time was the fastest metro- politan time of the season. Wohiasigl kept up the pace by capturing the 200-yard breaststroke to put the Violets within striking distance with only the 400-yard free- style relay remaining, but at this point the Lion plucked the petals. The better Violet victory was against Fordham, an advertised power from across the Concourse. As usual, Gustavson and Bernal paved the way, with the former taking his two firsts, The 59-32 win was the first against the Rams in seven years. If Rams were not powerful enough to crush Violets, though, Panthers were. The Pittsburgh swimmers an- nihilated the New Yorkers 67-26. Only Gustavson could capture a first place, and he accounted for two. The second Violet win came in an undistinguished match against CCNY. Variello, annoyed at the traditional pcor turnout for his team, claimed that another six swimmers, no matter how poor, would have turned three defeats into vic- tories by preventing forfeits. But the six were not forthcoming, and neither were the three additional wins. CRGSS-COUNTRY Sifmdifzg, lefl Io rigbl-Doc Goldenberg fTrainerj, jerry Monkofsky ffxssistant Coachj, Mike Ofstrofsky, Bernard Ford, john Stevens, Dave Merkowitz, Louis Howort QCaptainj, Dave Laird, Ronald Bryant, Robert Becker, Donald Parks, joe Healey fCoachJ, Kneeling-john Loeschhorn, john Chandler, Keith Forde, joseph Trachy. john Bradshaw, Neil Scott, Barry Batho, Tony Petrillo, Bruce Leader CManagerj. Distinct discouragement characterized the exploits of NYU's cross-country team in its 1962 season. The Violet harriers went through a year that was, if not their worst, close to it. Possibly the only claim to dis- tinction by the team would be to say We finished, as the small undermanned squad ran through a schedule of seven dual and triangular meets with nary a victory. Coach joe Healey took some consolation from the fact that most of the men on the team were juniors and sophomores. However, the only two seniors on the squad, captain Lou Howort and Dave Merkowitz, were among the top five runners. The individual standout through the long hard season was sophomore Ron Bryant, who, despite inconsistency, took some good places and turned in some good clockings. Dave Laird, a junior, did not run as well as the previous year, but was always among the top five runners on the team. Sophomore Donald Parks competed in about half the meets over the course of the season, turning in a couple of bright performances, but nothing good enough to give the Violets a chance for victory. john Stevens, a junior, and Bernie Ford, a sophomore, completed the NYU line-up. The main problem Healey faced was an obvious and definite lack of legitimate distance runners. The five-mile cross-country grind requires a special brand of runner and a special brand of training. However, every mem- ber of this cross-country team was a middle-distance man or sprinter who had moved up to the longer runs for the sake of the competition, training, experience, or endurance. The only bright spot in the hill-and-dale picture was the promising, though only moderately successful, fresh- man squad. This team was led by john Loeschhorn, one of the best scholastic milers in the country, and a prom- ising distance prospect, After Loeschhorn, though, the frosh suffered from the same malady as the varsity, that is, runners competing out of their medium. joe Trachy, the son and nephew of two former NYU track greats, was the only other runner on the team with any previous distance experience. Keith Forde, the latest in a series of NYU imports from the West Indies, moved up from his usual half- mile race to the three-mile freshman distance. Miler john Bradshaw completed the top four, while fifth place on the bud team was taken by either john Chandler, a great high school sprinter, or Tony Petrillo, a top scholastic half-miler. In the first meet of the year, against Rutgers, Healey's harriers entertained at Van Cortlandt Park and were promptly trounced by the Scarlet Knights, 19-44. The personal duel between Bryant and Chuck Hennings of Rutgers provided all the interest, with the latter winning out in 27:58. Bryant turned in a clocking of 28:01. In the freshman section, Loeschhorn led his team to victory, 27-28, with a 17:02 performance. The next week, NYU travelled to Princeton for a triangular affair with the Tigers and Rutgers. The re- sults this time were bad on both ends, with the Prince- ton varsity finishing first with 21, Rutgers second with 36, and NYU last with 81, In this race Bryant suffered an early fall, and finished well back in the field. The Violet freshmen were hindered by illness and injury, and finished in third place. Princeton had 32, Rutgers 44, and NYU 48. Once again, Loeschhorn captured first place. In this sport where going uphill counts the most, the varsity continued its downhill trek against St. john's and Navy in another triangular meet, On the same day, the Redmen frosh handed a defeat to NYU's buds, al- though Loeschhorn turned in a spectacular race. His time of 15:29 was just a few seconds off the course record. Bryant turned in his best time of the year in the varsity section, as he came through in 27:35 to take sixth place. Two days in a row saw two losses in a row for the harriers on the next week-end. On Friday, in a windy, driving snow amid the hills of West Point, the harriers were trampled by the Military Academy and Massachu- setts. Less than eighteen hours later, the tired and injury- riddled crew came back against the U. S. Merchant Marine Academy, and, despite a valiant effort, sustained another defeat. The Metropolitan Intercollegiate Championships of- fered the Healeymen the undesirable opportunity to be the first team to finish seventh, as Rutgers entered the field for the first time. In a close point-race, Iona just beat out NYU for sixth, as Bryant, Laird, Merkowitz, Parks, and Stevens were the leading Violet finishers. Seton Hall won the team championship in an upset. Loeschhorn proved himself the best freshman in the Vmz Conlmzdl diruppoizzmzezzt. area, as he won the first-year division with a time of 15 :28.1. This easily broke the old meet record, but once again missed the course mark. The last meets of the year were against Fairleigh Dickinson and Iona. The best team effort of the year was not enough, as FDU won by 18-45, and Iona squeezed through, 25-30. The Gael frosh, best in the area, beat their NYU counterparts, despite I.oeschhorn's victory. IC4A Championships closed out the year, and was possibly the worst race for NYU. 'Villanova won the team championship, only four Violets were able to com- plete the race and were therefore unable to compile a team score. Loeschhorn also met with misfortune in the frosh division, coming down with a case of cramps and finishing well back in the field. It was fitting, it was a year of cramps for the harriers. Azzolloef' Van Corllamizf dimppoifzlmezzl. W.. M Q ' Max E., . ,Q . BASEBALL Bark- row, lefz lo rigbl-Don Newbery fCoachj, Bob Malota, Al Brescia. Dom Cecere, Neil Berniker, Larry Oehler, Larry Anderson, Bob Emerton, Norman Ament flvianagerj. Frou! roar- Don Blaha, Burgess Schuster, Warren Albert fCo-Captainj, Bob Wagner fCo-Captainj, Murray Sklar, john Miller, Len Auletto. Mickey Lettieri. , X -wr .. ,., ir- H- . c h Q.,- ! Q, I, 2 , .Wg .WS 'N l F z' QQ 4, he L. . ' ' S 'Y ' 'i-MJ' . , -t , 1- fJ-sa.,- - -- . B 1 ' at 'N WNW ? - Ka m' Y , ' Lf . , iq-teh Q Q . 'V - 5 f 53.2 1's:. 12t f' . ta, f- -MN ' c a . j'i1ipp9, -in y g? ifi,..f. 9 ' -' K 'i t A at f ., 'f 3-X' -.qu - U N? 'itz - ' . -tzszz-2, -' -if. ' as . ----- , a W . asm YQ. ' . X i.. ..... . Q ' -we at . t X .af -'tw .ww ' 1 - s - , . . .. is ,aw A - ts .. . x- , -f,, t f-c 423 1 .Wt f 1 C 'was-,szz .sa waiffmr' F' f , frfz4'.f.?a' 4xQw't .wa-ffaff. 'ws -.fr ' ff wmv at Z'-T7 .nfl - f 36 L X937 W at-fe vslpuc wwf- W -my . .-g s-W . wfff-:za-sf . W A K H6 f 5 we Wa. - 4 at T ac. . V. .hwy-,. , ,c We as V X I X A F1822 'M ' .. , - 'ptfifi-J I 1 T .1 - , l 9,144 ,. J , . U f' .f fm':iaEM'b'ffXi 4 WW- ' fat--, ' S Q g I Q, c - ,L f. ' Qty W C971 'wx X l ,- ' L :-v f,f,1.- .X ,Z . ' i ' . Second-mrkef' Bobby Emea-1012. - v . Q 5, 4 Q sa, e i km. f-.cf The 1962 edition of the baseball team could manage only a 7-12 record, a disappointing comedown from the one-loss record of a year previous. There were a few high spots brightening the dismal picture, but over- all the year was one to forget. The season started off in fine enough style with a 7-2 win over an unusually tenacious CCNY nine. Every hitter in the Violet line-up collected one hit except for winning pitcher Burgess QButchj Schuster. He got two hits. Three humiliating defeats were then plastered onto the Violet record. Princeton scalped the Violets 12-1, Hofstra beat previously unbeaten Don Blaha on Blaha's errorg and St. Johns Larry Bearnarth, one year away from signing a pro contract, overpowered NYU 10-0. Three consecutive victories put the Violets back on the track. A strong Columbia team was beaten in a 14-9 slugfest which saw NYU hitters rap out 14 hits. Man- hattan and Fairleigh Dickinson were next on the list, FDU's defeat being its first of the campaign. The Fordham Rams followed onto Ohio Field, a prohibitive favorite to take the league crown. Blaha was selected to hurl for the diamondmen and, for six innings, an upset seemed in the making. But Fordham finally butted Blaha to his second defeat, 7-4. The Violets next ran into Bruce Wilson, Wagner's number one moundman, who plucked 15 Violets en route to a 4-0 victory over John Miller, son of Bing. The following game turned into a big victory tinged by disaster. Unbeaten Seton Hall hosted NYU, and the visitors handed their host an unwelcome beating, 8-4. Gary Lasker, however, with his .300 batting average and guardian of the hot corner, broke his ankle on an attempted steal of second base, and was through for the year. Blaha followed up his SH win by toppling Iona, 12-3, and Hofstra, 4-3, for the only other NYU con- quests. In the latter game, an extra-inning affair, the Violets countered Hofstra's two-run tenth with three runs of their own, clutch hitters Dom Cecere and Larry Anderson collecting the RBI's. The season ended with five straight losses. The big guns in the Violet offense were Warren Albert, Lasker, Anderson, and Murray Sklar. Albert was the first selection on the All-Star Metropolitan Conference nine. He batted .383 overall and .415 in league competition while leading the club in home runs. Lasker added an almost unblemished fielding average to his .300 pre-injury batting average. Ander- son finished the season at .291, leading the team in games, at-bats, runs, doubles, stolen bases, and bases The maria lbirzkr. on balls. And Sklar filled in admirably as catcher, a po- sition he hadn't played for years, and finished up the season as a .300 hitter. But when the MVP award was presented, it was for Blaha, who pitched more than twice as many innings as any other Violet pitcher and accounted for 4 of the 7 victories. There had to be an MVP, but the team itself wasn't particularly V. 't X . t i .. ,Q ,E L , A - V F i sL,, ,,,,,. i yi .I ing! ,, ff rt. af 'sf rs ww i . fm ff' i l 'Rf .fl X 'WV L'-,lid 3 ,ij V 1 V, V! , - - s .mf I' - ,fs f ,f fb Lq1,,fff , i xxx-: td V r if A wa-ww . f .. ., . f , 055194549 M Liqafa gfi fy . ' ag , . 5 , -g , , waxy.. a.,gw.w.s fs-'Mtv--sa: -sfavs ,i ' fy f - - - - . - . 3 vfsiga , , wa V Qi., r ' , ws, f a , 4, . 4 V , ' . , 'Q ,f I V V t fi - v l , f f l if ' 1 N a s-24 W, ,Mrk iaaiit . t' . it .-wg, 1 . 1 I ,WI I ,Zigi .A ..4 3, . s 5 A' wwf - Hare behind zlae plane, Oebler az fini. WRESTLING From row, lefl lo riglaz-Larry Frankel, john Stein, Bob Dobies, Ira Goldstein. Rear row-Tom Bocchino, Bill Howley, Bob Kotter, Gerry Hudson, Frank Russell fCoachJ. The wrestling team had pitifully few ups to com- pensate for its season of downs. The former few were the particular responsibility of the grunters' 177-pound star, Bill Howley. Howley became the first Violet wrestler in two sea- sons to win the metropolitan championship in any weight division. He swept through three matches, all against heavier men, to capture the coveted crown. The All-Mel Bill Howley Jef: up for 4 pin, championship match was the last of a career which saw five wins for every loss. The only other Violet to show well in the tourney was sophomore Tommy Bocchino, Hindered most of the season by a fractured thumb, the 147-pounder rolled over opponents from CCNY and Kings Point before dropping a close decision in the finals. While the wrestlers, record of three wins in eleven matches was unimpressive, the whole picture was not bleak. Of the victories, the most telling was against Brooklyn Poly. The Violets won 29-3, with only one pin counting in the winning score. The pin was pro- vided by Tony Mezzatesta in the 167-pound class in only 90 seconds. Howley ran up a 9-1 score but could not keep his opponents' shoulders to the mat for the full count. After the Poly victory, the matmen traveled to arch-rival Fairleigh Dickinson, but the anticipated vic- tory was not forthcoming. Howley and Bocchino won as expected, and Bob Dobies took another five points as his opponent was injured and could not continueg the remainder of the Violet squad, however, was held scoreless, With Decker wrestling the final match, the Violets trailed 16-13 and needed a pin to win or a decision to tie. Decker himself was pinned, though, and the Knights won, 21-13. The rest of the season followed the same pattern, but most of the matches were not as close. TENNIS Kneeling, left zo rigbz-Bob Kaplan, Herb Siegel, Ken Hol- witt. Szamding-Frank Russell fCoachJ, Mark Fleischner, Jim Warheld. C Performing before negligible crowds, practicing the few times that weather permitted, and generally with- standing oppressive situations, the 1962 tennis team managed a winning record under the tutelage of Coach Frank Russell. Spearheading the netmen's attack was Heightsman John Rothman. Rothman's record of five wins and four losses matched the team total. Second man was West Indies champion Clinton Wong. Wong's victories in both the singles and doubles matches against arch-rival St. John's enabled the Violets to take victory at jamaica by a single match. Neil Brown and Bob Kaplan contributed their tal- ents as the number three and four men. Brown showed the most improvement of any of the netmen, according to Coach Russell, after the Commerce student put together back-to-back victories against Columbia and Rutgers, both in losing team causes. Joe Rubell and Mike Manowitz were interchanged as the team's fifth and sixth starters. These two made up the most successful doubles contingent. The big win for the netmen was a 7-2 whipping of Seton Hall. Here all six singles starters won, most with ease. Only a couple of makeshift doubles teams failed to triumph. The closest loss was to Rutgers at the Scarlets' home. All four of the Violet victories were singles matches. The Garden Staters captured two singles and all three doubles matches. Rollammz u':11'l2zJ' up zvilb az f01'GfJc'll1lf Cf! , 5 L 2 .,.i7 ,ff Jil - ' ' Z.. X M -5 92 ,X , 4, If A vi, L4 -L-A4-M1 M .3 X 2 1 X It I 1 I ,? JA X xi H, fvv A IDRS ..r, - . Q . 'ff 1 1 r ,LVL M ,,,' 'wg I 9 X V, , ,MR la. I fx f'i1,'.pc My f sr, 4' V, :K ,X ALBERT ABELE, 78-42 Cloverdale Boulevard, Flushing 64, New York. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Future: Graduate School. ARTHUR ABRAMOFF, 1151 Wariiig Avenue, New York 69, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Economics. Psi Upsilon, Vice-President. Future: Air Force Lieutenant. ALLEN ABRAMS, 15-56 212 Street, Bayside 60, New York. College of Engineering, Industrial Engineering. Phi Sigma Delta, Treasurer, American Institute of Industrial Engineers, Undergraduate Engineer- ing Council. Future: Industry. SYBIL ADELMAN, 215 East 80 Street, New York 21, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Psychology. Phychology Club. IRA ADLER, 2414 Pearsall Avenue, New York 69, New York. Uni- versity College ot Arts and Science, Economics. Phi Sigma Delta. Future: Law School, WILLIAM ALBERT, 495 West 187 Street, New York 33, New York. College of Engineering, Meteorology. Phi Sigma Delta, American Meteorological Society. Future: Practicing Meteorologist. IOYCE ALEXANDRO, 1559 Warirag Avenue, New York 69, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Mathematics. Gamma Sigma Sigma, Vice-President, Heights Christian Association. Future: Mathematician. ALEXANDER ALMOIAN, 2266 Andrews Avenue, New York 68, New York. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Eta Kappa Nu, Corresponding Secretaryg Institute of Radio Engineers, Secretary, American Institute of Electrical Engineers. BRIAN ALPERT, 330 South Broadway, Tarrytown, New York. 'Uni- versity College of Arts and Scienceg History. Phi Sigma Delta, House Manager. Future: Dental School. ELLEN AMADO, 59 Locust Avenue, New Rochelle, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Scienceg Music. Chapel Choir, Foreign Students Committee. Future: Graduate School. RICHARD AMIONE, 14 Cayuga Place, Commack, New York. College of Engineeringg Electrical Engineering. MARILYN ANAGNOSTIS, Yonkers, New York. University College of Arts and Science, English. HAROLD APPEL, Queens, New York. University College of Arts and Scienceg Biology. Beta Lamda Sigmag WNYU. JUDAH APSELL, 629 Cortlandt Avenue, Mamaroneck, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History, Huntington Hill His- torical, Fairchild Sociological Society, jewish Culture Foundation. RICHARD ARMOUR, 10 Anthony Road, Wlaite Plains, New York. University College of Arts and Scienceg History. Association of the United States Army, Scabbard and Bladeg ROTC Corps of Cadets, Brigade Executive Officer. Future: Army. ARLENE ARMUS, 1362 Grand Concourse, New York 56, New York. University College of Arts and Scienceg History. Delta Phi Epsilon, Senior Prom Cornmitteeg Student Center Policy Board Entertainment Committee. Future: High School Social Studies Teacher. A 57 ,Aww a1cHARD ARNOLD, 69-39 Yellowstone Boulevard, Forest Hills 75, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History. Beta Lambda Sigma, Glee Club, Phi Sigma Delta, Goliards. Future: Medical School. STUART BALABAN, Bronx, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History. Opera Workshop, ROTC Drum and Bugle Corps, Drum Major, Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society. Future: Dental School. EDWARD BARBACH, 1895 Walton Avenue, New York 53, New York College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Tau Epsilon Phi, Sports Car Club. Future: Graduate School. GIDION BARNEA, 71-11 Juno Street, Forest Hills 75, New York. College of Engineering, Chemical Engineering. ARNOLD BERGEN, 60 Knolls Crescent, New York 63, New York. College of Engineering, Chemical Engineering. Varsity Basketball, Head Manager. Future: Law School. JEANETTE E. BERGER, 250 East 178 Street, New York 57, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Government. Gallatin Gov- ernment Society, Russian Club, Student Center Policy Board, Lecture Committee. Future: Government-Foreign Service. ROBERT BERGER, 1420 Grand Concourse, New York 56, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Chemistry, Honors. Heights Little Symphony, 1st Trumpeter, Draper Chemical Society, Student Center Policy Board, Films Committee. Future: Medical School. BASIL BERNSTEIN, New York 72, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society, Huntington Hill Historical Society, Debating Team, Student Center Policy Board, President, Future: Medical School. ANTHONY BINI, 40 Monroe Street, New York, New York. College of Engineering, Civil Engineering. Chi Epsilon, American Society of Civil Engineers. MELVIN BIRNBAUM, 155-15 77 Road, Flushing 67, New York. Col- lege of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Institute of Radio Engineers, Arnold Air Society. Future: Air Force. JEFFREY BLANK, 245 Lenox Road, Brooklyn 26, New York. Univer- sity College of Arts and Science, Economics. Adam Smith Economics Society. Future: Investment Field. SHEILA BLOND, 67-36 Harrow Street, Forest Hills 75, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History. Alpha Epsilon Phi. Future: History Teacher. TOMMY ALAN BLUMENTHAL, 2271 Loring Place, Bronx 68, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History. Phi Epsilon Pi, Vice-President, Student Governing Board, Welfare Committee, Arnold Air Society, Executive Officer. Future: Law School. LAWRENCE BLUTH, Brooklyn, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History, Honors. joseph Park Historical Society, Alpha Epsilon Pi Fraternity, Adam Smith Economics Society, John Marshall Pre-Law Society, Orientation Committee, Student Center Policy Board, Public Relations Committee, Huntington Hill Historical Society. HERBERT BOCKSTEIN, Brooklyn, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Biology, Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society. EDWARD BOGDANOFF, New Rochelle, New York. University College c A 1 of Arts and Science and College of Engineering, CFive Year Arts-Engi- neering Programj, Chemical Engineering. Zeta Beta Tau. i. Rf' Q57 s WILLIAM BOND, 401 Bayside Avenue, Rockaway 95, New York. College of Engineering: Electrical Engineering. Phi Gamma Delta, Recording Secretary, American Institute of Electrical Engineers, Institute of Radio Engineers. Future: Electronic Engineering. GAIL BOTKIN, 43 Bronx River Road, Yonkers, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Biology. Beta Lambda Sigma: Student Cen- ter Policy Board, Personnel Chairman, Cheerleading Squad, Captain: Senior Prom Co-Chairman. Future: Biological Research. NICHOLAS BOYKO, 675 West 187 Street, New York 35, New York. University College of Arts and Scienceg Sociology. Scabbard and Blade, First Sergeant, Phi Gamma Delta, Heights Christian Association: ROTC Rifie Team, Co-Captaing Russian Club: Glee Club: Undergraduate Ath- letic Organization. Future: Dental School. PHILIP BRATER, 5 Brighton 8 Court, Brooklyn 35, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, Mathematics. Student Governing Board, Orientation Committee: Student Center Policy Board, Enter- tainment Chairman. Future: Graduate Work in Mathematics. BARRY BROOKS, 1420 Noble Avenue, New York 72, New York. University College of Arts and Science: History. Phi Sigma Delta: Stu- dent Center Policy Board, Entertainment Committee, Heights Equestrian Society. Future: Medical School. MICHAEL BROOKS, 855 Walton Avenue, New York 51, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Biology. Future: Medical School. CHARLES BROWNING, 35-44 75 Street, Jackson Heights 72, New York. College of Engineering, Industrial Engineering. Alpha Pi Mu, President, Tau Beta Pi: American Institute of Industrial Engineers: Evening Engineering Student Council, Vice-President. Future: Graduate School. HAROLD BROWNSTEIN, 248-10 Deepdale Avenue, Douglaston 62, New York. College of Engineering: Electrical Engineering. Tau Epsilon Phi, American Institute of Electrical Engineers: Institute of Radio Engineers. Future: Graduate School. vm PETER BRY, Maplewood, New jersey. University College of Arts and Science, Biology. -Intramural Softball, Glee Club. Future: Medical School. DONALD BUCKHOUT, 212-04 55 Avenue, Bayside 64, New York. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Institute of Radio En- gineers, American Institute of Electrical Engineers. Future: Graduate School. JACK CAMHE, 723 Steven Court, East Meadow, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History, Honors. Zeta Beta Tau, Hzmfmg- 1011 Hill Hirforiml, Managing Editor, New Hall Student Council, President, Spanish Club, John Marshall Pre-Law Society. Future: Law School. PETER CAMPISI, 21-46 80 Street, jackson Heights 70, New York. College of Engineering, Metallurgy and Materials Sciences. American Society of Metals, President, American Institute of Metallurgical En- gineers, President, Qmzdzz111gfe,' Undergraduate Engineering Council. Future: Graduate School. VINCENT CARDONE, 140 Sunnyside Avenue, Brooklyn 7, New York. College of Engineering, Meteorology. Phi Gamma Delta, Correspond- l lu. ing Secretary, American Meteorological Society. Future: Graduate School. MARSHALL CARLIN, 2966 Marion Avenue, New York 58, New York. University College of Arts and Science, English. Glee Club, Chapel Choir, Organist, Pianist, Vocalist. GERHARD CARROL, 1585 White Plains Road, Bronx 62, New York. College of Engineering, Engineering Science. American Nuclear Society. Future: Graduate School. EDWARD CATERA, 1048 Dean Avenue. College of Engineering, Elec- trical Engineering. Institute of Radio Engineers, American Institute of Electrical Engineers, President. Future: Graduate School. ,siy .... . X s f.vC 5 4 . ., . , .aw it.. -s .-wif? ff ,gawk t , af G s fe why ,M 9M ff!! , f V , , f A 2 ff 45542 ffl f ,ya ,i ,za Jn ff , nw ff 31 Y f f ,W Q9 ff, ary. ,yr wr 0. X ,,.v.f'ff ay' , V ' F . 1 V' fd? ' 5 4' V J., Q we 'WMM ',' ? LEONARD CHAIM, 2125 St. Raymond Avenue, New York 62, New York. University College of Arts and Science, English, Alpha Epsilon Pi. Future: Law School. CARL CHERNOFF, 527 Riverdale Avenue, Yonkers, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, Government, Honors. Pi Sigma Alpha: Student Governing Board, Vice-President, WNYU, Announcer, john Marshall Pre'Law Society, Executive Vice-President, Student Center Policy Board, Recreations Committee. Future: Law School. XWILLIAM CHIANG, 325 Riverside Drive, New York 25, New York. College of Engineering: Electrical Engineering. Eta Kappa Nu, Tau Beta Pig Institute of Radio Engineers. Future: Graduate School. DAVID CI-IIDECKEL, 156 East 171 Street, New York 52, New York. University College of Arts and Science: Psychology, Jewish Culture Foun- dation, President, Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society, President. Future: Graduate School or Medical School. LEWIS CI-IRISTIE, 113 Putney Road, Valley Stream, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science: History. Phi Epsilon Pig Equestrian Club. Future: Law School. DONALD CLARKSON, 51 Cresthill Road, Yonkers, New York. Col- lege of Engineering, Industrial Engineering. American Institute of In- dustrial Engineering, Treasurerg Student Council. PAUL CLIFFORD, Bronx, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Chemistry. Alpha Phi Omega. ELEANOR COHEN, 75 Bruce Avenue, Yonkers, New York. Univer- sity College of Arts and Science, Psychology. Psi Chi. Future: Graduate School. ELLIOT COHEN, 481 Stratford Road, Brooklyn 18, New York. Univer- sity College of Arts and Science, Psychology. Psi Chi, Rho Tau Sigma, Zeta Beta Tau, WNYU, Station Manager, Program Director, Bristol Pre- Medical and Pre-Dental Society, Future: Medical School. JERARD COI-IEN, 75 Bruce Avenue, Yonkers, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Economics. Phi Sigma Delta, Interfraternity Council, Vice-President, Committee on Student Activities, Orientation Committee, Hazing Master, Varsity Swimming Team, Interfraternity Council Brochure, Chairman, Interfraternity Council Social Committee, Chairman, Future: Graduate School for Business Administration. ARLENE COI-IN, 225 Cross Bronx Expressway, New York 57, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Spanish. Spanish Club, Gamma Sigma Sigma, WOIUCHYS Chorus. Future: High School Spanish Teacher. MARTIN COLE, 83-30 98 Street, Wfoodhaven 21, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, Psychology. Psychology Club, Heigbfr Daily News, Business Staff, Zeta Beta Tau. Future: Graduate School and Industrial Psychology. THOMAS J. COLLINS, JR., 189 Roberts Avenue, Yonkers 5, New York. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. American Institute of Electrical Engineers, Institute of Radio Engineers, Newman Club. ALLEN COOPER, 1230 Teller Avenue, New York 56, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, Chemistry, Honors. Phi Epsilon Pi, Pledge Master, junior Class Vice-President, Draper Chemical Society. Future: Graduate School in Chemistry. DAVID COSTELLO, Peekskill, New York. College of Engineering, Civil Engineering, Intermural Basketball, Football, Civil Engineers of America. EDWIN CROSS, R.D. No. 1, Altamont, New York. College of En- gineering, Electrical Engineering. Society of American Military Engineers, Institute of Radio Engineers. PAUL D'ANGELO, 1142 Metcalf Avenue, New York 72, New York. College of Engineering, Chemical Engineering. American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Nuclear Society, Future: Army. DAVID DANTZKER, 2181 Barnes Avenue, New York 62, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Biology. Philosophical Society, President, junior Varsity Glee Club, Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society, Student Center Policy Board, Entertainment Committee, Student Governing Board, Personnel Committee, Epsilon Lambda Mu. Future: Medical School. ERNEST DARBOVEN, 80 North Kensico Avenue, Wlnite Plains, New York. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Institute of Radio Engineers, American Institute of Electrical Engineers. ALICE DAVIS, 11700 Broadway, New York 40, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Psychology, Delta Phi Epsilon, President, Vice-President, Senior Class Prom Committee. Future: Graduate School. LESLIE DAVIS, 217-42 53 Avenue, Bayside 64, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Chemistry. Green Room, Alpha Phi Omega, Vice-President, Hall of Fame Players, Heights Symphony Orchestra, Student Center Policy Board, Draper Chemical Society, Heights Dance Band. Future: Chemistry Teacher. NICHOLAS DE CAPUA, 1228 59 Street, Brooklyn 19, New York. College of Engineering, Mechanical Engineering. Tau Beta Pi, Pi Tau Sigma, American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Secretary. Future: Graduate School. JAMES DeMETRO, 80 Bennett Avenue, New York 33, New York. University College of Arts and Science, English, Honors. Perstare et Praestare, Student Speaker at President Hester's Philharmonic Hall Inauguration, Heights' Daily News, Editor-in-Chief, The SZIZDPZEIIYEIZI, Editor, Pfzfirczder Hmrflbook, Executive Editor, Violelg WNYU, Tau Delta Phi. Future: College Teacher. ELAINE DIGRANDE, 3926 Orloff Avenue, New York 65, New York. University College of Arts and Science, English, Honors. Heigblir Daily Newr, News Editor, john Marshall Pre-Law Society, Treasurer, Student Welfare Committee, French Folk Song Club, Wornen's Chorus, Student Center Policy Board, Entertainment Committee. Future: Medical School. fires. A f '!' 2 ,g s. 1 J '- . j I 5 X- -: 'le i ffl X JEFFREY DISSIN, 1579 Metropolitan Avenue, Bronx 62, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Mathematics. Phi Epsilon Pi, Treasurer, Mathematics Club, Heights Daily Newry Student Center Policy Board, Personnel Committee, Bowling Team. Future: Law School. SARVADAMAN MANSUKHLAL DOSHI, 1735 Undercliff Avenue, New York 53, New York. College of Engineering, Mechanical Engineer- ing. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Society of Automotive Engineers, Treasurer. Future: Graduate School in Industrial Engineering. RICHARD DUFFY, 142 Betsy Brown Road, Port Chester, New York. College of Engineering, Chemical Engineering. Tau Beta Pi, Student Council, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, President, Secretary. Future. Graduate School in Chemical Engineering. HARRY EDWARDS, 101-21 133 Street, Richmond Hill 19, New York. College of Engineering, Civil Engineering. Chi Epsilon, American So- ciety of Civil Engineers, Future: Continue Learning, and Apply It to Construction. SUSAN EIKOV, 2700 Henry Hudson Parkway, Riverdale 63, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History. Future: Graduate School. PETER EISENKLAM, 71-36 110 Street, Forest Hills 75, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Sociology. Delta Phi Alpha, Scahbard and Blade, Association of the United States Army, Executive Officer, ROTC Rifle Team, Co-Captain, Reserve Officers Association, President, Deutscher Verein, Future: Graduate Work in Sociology. SYBIL ENEELD, Belle Harbor, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Mathematics. Women's Varsity Basketball Team, Women's Varsity Tennis Team, Woman Athlete of the Year, 1961-62, Student Governing Board. Future: Mathematician. MONTE ENGLER, 244 Oxford Road, New Rochelle, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Economics. Senior Class Presi- dent, Sophomore Class President, Phi Sigma Delta, Adam Smith Eco- nomics Society, john Marshall Pre-Law Society. Future: Law School. HERMAN EPSTEIN, 304 51 Street, West New York, New Jersey. University College of Arts and Science, Psychology, Phi Epsilon Pi, Student Governing Board, Student Center Policy Board. Future: Medical School for Psychiatry. IRIS EPSTEIN, 116-15 223 Street, Cambria Heights 11, New York. University College of Arts and Science, English. Future: Advertising. JAN EZER, 221-29 Manor Road, Jamaica 27, New York, University College of Arts and Science, History. Glee Club, john Marshal Pre-Law Society. Future: Law School, Politics. DIANE FARBMAN, Riverdale, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History. ROBERT FEINSTEIN, 153-10 75 Avenue, Flushing 67, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Biology. Beta Lambda Sigma, Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society, Vice-President, Brirfol Mmzlbly Bffflefiu. Editor-in-Chief, Brirlol fomvml, Librarian. Future: Medical School. DAVID FEIT, 2074 Mohegan Avenue, Bronx 60, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Physics. CLIFFORD FELLER, 3410 Kingsbridge Avenue, New York 63, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Biology. Beta Lambda Sigma, Phi Epsilon Pi, Treasurer, WNYU, Disc Jockey, Bristol Pre- Medical and Pre-Dental Society. Future: Medical School. GERALD FELSENTHAL, 3985 Gouverneur Avenue, Bronx 63, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History. Alpha Phi Omega, President, Student Center Policy Board, Publicity Chairman, Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society, Jewish Culture Foundation, Sflzdem' Directory, Editor, Orphans' Christmas Party, Chairman. Future: Medical School. PETER FICHTE, 178 Church Street, New Rochelle, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, Chemistry. German Honor Society, Orchestra. Future: Graduate School, Chemistry or Mathematics Teacher. SETH FIELDING, 1232 East 27 Street, Brooklyn 10, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, Psychology. Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society, Loew Hall Society, Judicial Committee, Freshman Baseball Team, Heights Intramural Basketball Team. Future: Medical School. JOHN FIORILLO, 55 East 190 Street, Bronx 68, New York. University College of Arts and Science, English. Heights Students for Human Rights, Hall of Fame Players. Future: Graduate School. MARK FLEISCHNER, 1235 Grand Concourse, New York 52, New York, University College of Arts and Science, Psychology. Tennis Team, Brite House Plan, President, Hall of Fame Players. Future: Graduate School in Psychology and Medical School. STEPHEN FUNK, 2 Fisher Drive, Mount Vernon, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, Economics. ALBERT FORBES, 2556 Fish Avenue, New York 69, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, History. Student Center Policy Board, Publicity Committee, Psychology Club. Future: Graduate School in History. HARVEY FORMAN, 2020 Grand Avenue, Bronx 53, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, Biology. Alpha Phi Omega, Orphans' Christmas Party, Chairman, Heights Students for Human Rights, Talent Show, Chairman. Future: Graduate School in Biology. OWEN FORTUNE, 135-15 83 Avenue, jamaica 35, New York. Col- lege of Engineering, Mechanical Engineering. Pi Tau Sigma. Future: Work in Nuclear Engineering. LARRY FRANKEL, 230 Broadway, Lawrence, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Biology. Wrestling Team. Future: Medical or Dental School. ARTHUR FRIEDMAN, 555 Kipp Street, Teaneck, New Jersey. Univer- sity College of Arts and Science, Economics. Adam Smith Economics So- ciety, Future: Law School. STEPHEN FRIEDMAN, 64 Perry Place, Yonkers, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History. Tau Epsilon Phi, Chancellor, Inter- fraternity Council, judiciary Committee, Huntington Hill Historical So- ciety, Ford Scholar. Future: Teacher. RICHARD FROME, Kew Gardens Hills, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History. Student Center Policy Board, LecLure3 Committee, Student Governing Board. GABOR FULOP, New York, New York. College of Engineering, Phy- sics. Sigma Pi Sigma, American Institute of Physics, Qlmdrrmgle. GEORGE GALUSCHAK, 36 Orchard Street, Yonkers, New York. Col- lege of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. American Institute of Elec- trical Engineers, Institute of Radio Engineers. Future: Work and Gradu- ate School. NANCY GARDINER, 88 Irving Avenue, Englewood Cliffs, New jersey. University College of Arts and Science, Mathematics, French, Honors. Gamma Sigma Sigma, President, Mathematics Club, Student Center Policy Board, House Committee. Future: Graduate School in Mathematics. PAUL GARDNER, 1902 Cortelyou Road, Brooklyn 26, New York. College of Engineering, Chemical Engineering, American Institute of Chemical Engineers. Future: Air Force. LYNN GARODNICK, 31 Claremont Avenue, Maplewood, New jersey. University College of Arts and Science, English. Heights Equestrian Club, Le Cercle Francaise, Dormitory Advisor. Future: English Assistant in French School. HELEN GASOFF, 4 Center Avenue, Weston, West Virginia. University College of Arts and Science, English. Future: Management or Personnel Interviewing. JOHN GEBERTH, jr., Mount Vernon, New York. College of Engineer- ing, Mechanical Engineering. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Society of American Engineers, Sports Car Club. ROBERT GEFFKEN, Brooklyn, New York. College of Engineering, Metallurgical Engineering. Newman Club, American Society of Me- chanical Engineers, Qzzfzdmazgle. MARTIN GERBEN, Roslyn, New York, University College of Arts and Science, Psychology. Psychology Club, LANCE GESHWIND, 1971 Grand Avenue, New York 53, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Chemistry. Alpha Phi Omega, Vice-President, UNICEF Committee, Chairman. Future: Graduate School. IBRAHIM GHORAYEB, 9 East 76 Street, New York 21, New York. College of Engineering, Mechanical Engineering. American Society of Mechanical Engineers. MICHAEL GIANNONE, 3025 Radcliffe Avenue, New York 69, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Biology, Bristol Pre- Medical and Pre-Dental Society, Phi Gamma Delta, Future: Medical School. BARBARA GITLIN, 54 Muirheld, Road, Rockville Centre, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Government, Honors, Pi Sigma Alpha, Vice President, Violet, Assistant Editor, Dormitory Advisor, Savoyards. Future: Graduate School. GEOFFREY GLATT, Bronx 57, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Biology. jewish Culture Foundation, Treasurer, Association of the U. S. Army. DAVID GLUCK, 117-O1c Park Lane South, Kew Gardens 18, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Biology. Student Center Policy Board, Movies Committee. Future: Medical School. JOEL GGLDBERG, 5605 Tiiaoo Avoooo, Brooklyn 5, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Psychology. Student Center Policy Board, Lectures Committee, Loew Hall Society, Secretary. Future: Gradu- ate School. PAUL GOLDBERG, 251-12 83 Avenue, Bellerose 26, New York. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Alpha Epsilon Pig Stu- dent Governing Board, Elections Committee, Student Council Policy Board, Welfare Committee, jewish Cultural Foundation, Young Re- publicans Club, Institute of Radio Engineers, American Institute of Electrical Engineering. Future: Graduate School. STEVEN GOLDBERG, 211 Central Park West, New York 24, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History. Rhymers Club, Heigbfr Daily Newf, Sports Editor, Violef, Sports Editor, Pazli.rr1de.r Hand- book, Sports Editor, Interfraternity Council, Sports Committee Chairman, Pi Lambda Phi, Social Chairman, jazz and Blues Club, Vice-President. Future: Sports Writer. CHARLES A. GOLDSMID, 6555 Broadway, Riverdale 71, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Sociology, Honors. Alpha Kappa Delta, Southern Exchange Program, Coordinator, Heights Daily Newt, Contributing Editor, Fairchild Sociological Society, Vice-President, Heights Committee for Human Rights. Future: Graduate School in Po- litical and Communications Sociology, Peace Research. ' EDITH GOLDSTEIN, 1335 Allerton Avenue, Bronx 69, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Mathematics and Government, Government Honors. Pi Sigma Alpha. Future: Programmer or Lawyer or Government Work. BRUCE GOODMAN, New York 34, New York. College of Engineer- ing, Electrical Engineering. Tau Beta Pi, Recording Secretary, Eta Kappa Nu, Bridge Correspondent, Institute of Radio Engineers, President, American Institute of Electrical Engineers. LUCILLE GOODMAN, 156 Madison Road, Scarsdale, New York. University College of Arts and Science, French. French Club, Violet, Student Center Policy Board, Concerts Committee. Future: Foreign Language Teacher. PAUL GRAPPELI., 1015 Washington Avenue, Brooklyn 25, New York. University College of Arts and Science, English. Future: Medical School. LARRY GRAY, 12 Backman Avenue, Ellenville, New York. College of Engineering, Physics. Phi Epsilon Pi, Athletic Chairman, House Man- ager. Future: Graduate School. BURTON GREENE, Yonkers, New York. University College of Arts and Science, English. Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society, Presi- dent, Brirlol fozmml, Editor, WNYU Radio Station, Huntington Hill Historical Society. JAY GREENBERG, 47 Maple Street, Brooklyn 25, New York. College of Engineering, Civil Engineering. Pershing Rifles, Executive Ofiicer, Pledge Officer. Future: Civil Engineer. ROBERTA GREENBERG, 2640 Davidson Avenue, New York 68, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History. Future: Teaching and Graduate School. STEPHEN GREENFIELD, Bronx, New York. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Phi Sigma Delta, Athletic Chairman, Intramural Basketball, Institute of Radio Engineers, Vice-President, American Insti- tute of Electrical Engineers. MATHEW GREIF, New York, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Economics. Adam Smith Economics Society, Chess Club, Student Center Policy Board, Welfare Committee. Future: Economist. DAVID GRIPPE, 143 Wellington Road So., West Hempstead, New York, University College of Arts and Scienceg Psychology, Heights Photo Society, Vice-President. Future: Graduate School and Industry. ORIN GROSSMAN, 5324 Irvine Avenue, No. Hollywood, California. University College of Arts and Science, Economics. National Student As- sociation, All-Square Congress: Student Center Policy Board, Social Committee Chairman, Orientation Committeeg Violef. Future: Graduate School. FRANK GULLA, 2544 Laconia Avenue, New York 69, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Psychology. Newman Club. Future: Graduate Work in Psychology. PAUL GURI.USKYg 417 South 5 Street, Brooklyn ll, New York. College of Engineering, Chemical Engineering. Newman Club, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, Reserved Officers Association. Future: Graduate School or Army. LEE HABER, 227 West End Avenue, New York 23, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History. Phi Epsilon Pig Student Center Policy Board, Personnel Committee, Entertainment Committee, Student Governing Board, Welfare Committee, Senior Prom, Co-Chair- man. Future: Law School. LYNN HAMMER, 333 East 69 Street, New York, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, French, Honors. Ford Scholar. Future: Teach English in France. HELEN HANS, 3235 Cambridge Avenue, New York 63, New York. University College of Arts and Science, English, Honors. Future: Graduate School in English: College Teacher. PATRICIA HANUSIK, 9 Ambrose Place, Yonkers, New York. College of Engineering, Physics. Undergraduate Engineering Council, Secretary, American Nuclear Society, President, Heights Christian Association. JEROME HARKAVY, New York 68, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History, Honors. Alpha Epsilon Pi, joseph Park His- tory Honor Society, Scabbard and Blade, Captain. GEORGE HARRICK, 62 Gladstone Road, Buffalo 7, New York. Col- lege of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Tau Beta Pi, President, Eta Kappa Nu, Cataloger, Arnold Air Society, Executive Officer, Kappa Sigma, Guard, Disciplinary Committee, Dormitory Advisor. Future: Air Force, Second Lieutenant. RICHARD HARTWIG, 4 McKinley Street, Haskell, New jersey, Col- lege of Engineering, Chemical Engineering. American Institute of Chemi- cal Engineers. Future: Navy. DANIEL HAYES, 2415 Seymour Avenue, Bronx 69, New York. Col- lege of Engineering, Mechanical Engineering. American Society of Me- chanical Engineers, R.O.T.C. Rifle Team, Phi Gamma Delta. KAREN HEFFER, 1801 Dorchester Road, Brooklyn 26, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Psychology. Alpha Pi. Future: Teacher, Graduate School in Education. ROBERT HELLER, 1325 Nelson Avenue, New York 52, New York. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Alpha Epsilon Pi, Institute of Radio Engineers, Treasurer, American Institute of Electrical Engineers. Future: Masters Degree in Electrical Engineering. MICHAEL HERBST, 41 Ben Air Avenue, New Rochelle, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Economics. Phi Sigma Delta, Senior Prom Committee. Future: NYU School of Business Admin- istration. ,,. . , - amwif -' . . .,., . L., .,', .L . L, Vvtb fl slave vw Wtnfl JW-f 1-iw. ,-45,1 -Time ff-W 'NW f. . , , . sa... C. eawqaf P Zisfffk al-iv.-Y ,mf-fhswy fyd 1if-j:?Q.fkZ,!1i:'L.Qa5a. ,pg , 'Qt fKMz,,w,,1,f .x . . . . - Q .0 ,, r A 0' 4 W6 'N 5- aw W fi? fs 0 N ff rw A if I' fog, V95 as A rs WW? f if '1 A .ssrrf . H .Kysxffw -. '- Marinas .5-w x-1-L. . . feng- gfssaywax say. fa... Zag, . J . emo, ' VNC N ' 'f 'as Yaris ii 'Gif a f s .ts ,,t . , .f SQQ S' ' Eff . 0 .wtf Q -' . f I X- .Mau-', 1 1,1-.: . sflgrssq-f - - ' W fy: A i f Q 1 :W Vx N 115451 ff se 0 . .4,.-15:-:13'p: f L . , wwf' , ,a X fem. , ,V .s-,..a,i.a , 1. ,. , . M- , sf- K- m9,,W,.WW.,M' ' ef . . . . w,tWfg.w4f:Q.ff f ,ae - ,. f. 4 V f .' MQ Vl-if TRUONG CONG HIEU, Box 140, New York University, New York 53, New York. College of Engineering, Chemical Engineering. Future: Graduate School. GERALD HIRSCH, Bronx, New York. College of Engineering, Electri- cal Engineering. Intramural Basketball: Intramural Softball, Brite House Plan, Institute of Radio Engineers: American Institute of Electrical Engineers. RICHARD HIVRSH, 2691 Reservoir Avenue, New York 68, New York. College of Engineering, Aeronautics. Sigma Pi Sigma, Tau Epsilon Phi: Institute of Aerospace Sciences: Sports Car Club. Future: Graduate School. PETER HOFMANN, New York, New York. University College of Arts and Science: German. Delta Phi Alpha: Heigbfr Daily Neufr: Student Center Policy Board, Public Relations Committee. ROY HOLIAN, 1435 Waring Avenue, New York 69, New York. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Institute of Radio En- gineers: American Institute of Electrical Engineers. Future: Graduate School. EDWARD HOLLE, 2649 Decatur Avenue, New York 58, New York, University College of Arts and Science, History. Kappa Sigma: john Marshall Pre-Law Society. Future: Law School. KENNETH HOLWITT, Flushing, New York. University College of Arts and Science: Biology. Beta Lambda Sigma, Delta Phi Alpha: Varsity Tennis Team: Varsity Wrestling Team, Manager, Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society. MARSHA HORELICK, 595 Ocean Avenue, Brooklyn 26, New York. University College of Arts and Science, English. XVomen's Dormitory Representative. RUTH HOROWI.TZ, 100 Ft. Washington Avenue, New York 32, New York. University College of Arts and Science: English and German. Delta Phi Alpha, German Clubg Equestrian Club: Orientation Committee for Foreign Students. Future: Teacher. MICHAEL HORT, 355 College Road, New York 71, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History. Student Governing Board, Personnel Chairman, Phi Epsilon Pi, President, Freshman Class President. Future: Law School. MARK HYKIN, 1630 Grand Avenue, New York 53, New York. University College of Arts and Scienceg History. Hall of Fame Players. Future: Show Business. CYNTHIA INSEL, 567 Ft, Washington Avenue, New York 33, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Government. Student Gov- erning Board, Women's Committee, John Marshall Pre-Law Society. Future: Graduate School. ROBERT IPPOLITO, 2959 Wallace Avenue, New York 67, New York. College of Engineering, Mechanical Engineering. Pi Tau Sigma, Tau Beta Pi, American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Secretary. Future: Graduate School in Mechanical Engineering. JOSEPH I,WANOWSKI, 46 Oak Street, Yonkers, New York. College of Engineering, Industrial Engineering. IRA JACOBSON, Bronx, New York. College of Engineering, Aerospace Sciences. Pi Lambda Phi, Intramural Basketball, Intramural Football, In- stitute of Aerospace Sciences. WILLIAM JAEGER, 63-84 Fitelett Street, Rego Park 74, New York. College of Engineering, Mechanical Engineering. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Society of American Military Engineers, Society of Automotive Engineers, Heights Christian Association. Future: Gradu- ate School. HCDWARD JAFFE, 984 Sheridan Avenue, New York 56, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Economics. John Marshall Pre- Law Society, President, Heights Young Democrats, Vice-President, Stu- dent Center Policy Board, Lectures Committee, Tau Delta Phi. Future: Law School. DANIEL JELINSKY, 3024 Avenue V, Brooklyn 29, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, Economics. Tau Epsilon Phi, Track Team, Cross Country Team. Future: Graduate School. WILLIAM JOHNSON, 82 Pell Place, New York 64, New York. College of Engineering, Metallurgical Engineering. JOHN JORDAN, 12 Mahaline Road, Old Bridge, New Jersey. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Student Council, Representative, Institute of Radio Engineers, Recording Secretary, American Institute of Electrical Engineers. Future: Graduate School. JAY KALTMAN, 83-33 Austin Street, Kew Gardens, 15, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History. Student Center Policy Board, Concerts Committee. Future: Dental School. SHEI.LA KAMIEN, 2715 Grand Concourse, New York 68, New York. University College of Arts and Science, French. Chapel Choir. Future: Publishing. STEPHEN KAMINSKI, 11 Metropolitan Oval, New York 62, New York. College of Engineering, Chemical Engineering. American Society of Chemical Engineers. Future: Graduate School. RICHARD KAPLAN, 175 West 12 Street, New York 11, New York. College of Engineering, Industrial Engineering. American Institute of Industrial Engineerings, Vice-President, Tau Delta Phi. Future: Graduate School. l STEVEN KAPLAN, 24 Hearth Lane, Westbury, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Physics. Sigma Pi Sigma. Future: Graduate School in Physics. BARBARA KARLOW, Mount Vernon, New York. University College of Arts and Science, English, Honors. Equestrian Club. ALLAN KATZ, Kew Garden Hills, Queens, New York, University College of Arts and Science, Biology. Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society. MICHAEL KAUFMAN, 1025 Esplanade, New York 61, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Chemistry. Track Team, Tau Epsilon Phi. Future: Medical School. MINORU KIMIZUKA, 1272 Amsterdam Avenue, New York 27, New York. College of Engineering, Mechanical Engineering. American So- ciety of Mechanical Engineers. EUGENE KIPPEL, 2320 Aqueduct Avenue, New York 68, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Biology, Honors. Student Center Policy Board, Recreations Committee Chairman, Public Relations, Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society, Alpha Epsilon Pi. Future: Medical School. VICTOR KIVAIT, 6805 Springfield Boulevard, Flushing 64, New York. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Institute of Radio Engineers. STANLEY KLAUSNER, Merrick, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Biology. Beta Lambda Sigma, Delta Phi Alpha, Rifle Team, 202 Society, President, Heights Little Symphony, Future: Medical School, ..,,,,, , X ,, ,,.. Q f A cy , yf .- ..1,, fa W, -A A wrt, , N., i- X A . iflfgv. A-2' 5? f ,f .9 I S , , x Km ' AW , f A ? if f W f , X, X , N 3? f X f M f ,. .,, -.,- - . , f if - 4 .-...f,-.ma .... 3675: agasiff- 4-rv SANFORD KLEIN, 2235 Wallace Avenue, New York 67, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History. Senior Class Secretary, Orientation Hazing Master, Student Center Policy Board, Recreations Committee Chairman, Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society. Future: Medical School. STEVEN KLEIN, 451 West End Avenue, New York 24, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History. Hmztifzgfou Hill Hif- torjml, Publicity Chairman, Heigbtr Daily Newt, Sports Staff, john Marshall Pre-Law Society. Future: Law School. WILLA KLEIN, Bronx, New York. University College of Arts and Science, English. CLARENCE KLINGER, Mount Vernon, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History. Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society. ERNST KOEHLER, 184 Palisade Avenue, Emerson, New Jersey. College of Engineering, Civil Engineering, Xi Epsilon, American Society of Civil Engineers, Evening Engineering Student Council. GEORGE KOEHLER, 506 Prospect Avenue, Laurence Harbor, New jersey. College of Engineering, Chemical Engineering. Tau Beta Pi, Student Council, Chairman, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, President, American Society of Mechanical Engineers. MARVIN KOPLIK, 388 Avenue X, Brooklyn 23, New York. College of Engineering, Operations Research. Operations Research Society of America. Future: Graduate School and Work. MERRI KORMAN, Forest Hills, New York. University College of Arts and Science, English. Future: High School English Teacher. TOBY KOWAL, 68-37 Yellowstone Boulevard, Forest Hills 75, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Philosophy, Psychology. Student-Faculty String Quartet. Future: Graduate School in Philosophy. GERALD KOWITT, Brooklyn, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Biology. 202 Society, Vice-President, WNYU, Disc jockey. Future: Medical School. RICHARD KRAJEWSKI, 192 27 Street, Brooklyn 32, New York. College of Engineering, Chemical Engineering. R.O.T.C. Rifle Team, American Institute of Chemical Engineering, Reserve Officers Association. Future: Army. BARRY KRAMER, 3720 Kings Highway, Brooklyn 34, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Biology. BONNIE KRAMER, 1675 University Avenue, New York 53, New York. University College of Arts and Science, English, Gamma Sigma Sigma, Equestrian Club. Future: Graduate School. FRANCES KRANT, 1749 Grand Concourse, New York 53, New York. University College of Arts Secretary, Treasurer, Green Room Fame Players, Perstare et Praestare. Psychology. CAROL SIEGEL KRAVITZ, 758 New York. University College of Publishing or journalism. and Science, Psychology. Psi Chi, President, Vice-President, Hall of Future: Graduate School in Clinical Pelham Parkway South, Bronx 62, Arts and Science, English. Future: JERRY KREINCES, 7-35 Richard Street, Fair Lawn, New Jersey. University College of Arts and Science, Psychology. Brite House Plan, President. Future: Dental School. GARY KREITMAN, 108 Lincoln Road, Brooklyn 25, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Chemistry. junior Varsity Glee Club, Manager, Varsity Glee Club, Manager, Student Governing Board, Elections Committee Chairman, French Club, Vice-President. Future: Medical School. ISAAC KRIVASHEI, 1710 Popham Avenue, Bronx 53, New York. College of Engineering, Aeronautical Engineering. EDWARD KRUFKY, Oceanside, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Biology. Heights Jewish Culture Foundation, Bristol Pre- Medical and Pre-Dental Society. VIKTOR KURKOV, 3444 Knox Place, New York, New York. College of Engineering, Chemical Engineering. American Institute of Chemical Engineers. Future: Graduate School. LARRY KURLAND, 100 Stuyvesant Place, Staten Island 1, New York. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Scabbard and Blade, Stu- dent Governing Board, Publicity Committee, Institute of Radio Engineers, American Institute of Electrical Engineers, Alpha Epsilon Pi, Qzmd- mfzglej NYU Football Club. Future: Masters Degree in Electrical Engineering. HAL LAMSTER, 53-34 206 Street, Bayside 64, New York. College of Engineering, Industrial Engineering. Phi Sigma Delta, Committee Chair- man, Undergraduate Engineering Council, Chairman, Institute of Aero- space Sciences, Officer, Airfoil, Editor, American Institute of Industrial Engineers, Varsity Soccer Manager, Engineering Seminars, Chairman. Future: Graduate School. ALAN LANDESMAN, 4309 40 Street, Long Island City, New York. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Hall of Fame Players, Institute of Radio Engineers. Future: Graduate School. GAIL LANDMAN, 392 Central Park West, New York 25, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Sociology. Fairchild Sociological Society, Society for Study of Social Problems. Future: Sociology Research. MARILYN LAPAN, 280 Kneeland Avenue, Yonkers, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, Biology. Student Governing Board, Women's Committee, Chapel Choir. Future: Biology Research. PETER LASSNER, 101 Ellwood Avenue, Mount Vernon, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Economics. Alpha Epsilon Pi. Future: Business. LEONARD LAWRENCE, 1478 Walton Avenue, New York 52, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Psychology. Phi Epsilon Pi. Future: Graduate School of Business Administration for Advertising Psychology. ROBERT LAWRENCE, Kingston, New York. College of Engineering, Industrial Engineering. American Institute of Industrial Engineers, Treasurer. ROBERT LeCLAIRE, Whitestone, New York. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Alpha Phi Omega, Gould House Plan, Quad- mngleg Institute of Radio Engineers, Hall of Fame Players. TAUKEN LEE, 2927 Campbell Avenue, Wantagh, New York. Col- lege of Engineering, Mechanical Engineering. PAUL LEIBOWITZ, 1911 Glenwood Road, Brooklyn 30, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Biology. Bristol Pre-Medical. Future: Medical School. JAMES LEOPOLD, 819 Country Club Drive, Teaneck, New jersey. University College of Arts and Science, Economics. Rho Tau Sigma, Vice-President, WNYU, Treasurer, Tau Delta Phi, Social Chairman, john Marshall Pre-Law Society. Future: Law School. PAUL LERMAN, Bronx, New York. College of Engineering, Mechanical Engineering. Society of American Military Engineers, President, Ameri- can Society of Mechanical Engineers. ' MICHAEL LEVINE, 125-B West 168 Street, Bronx 52, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Chemistry. Student Center Policy Board, Film Committee Secretary, Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre- Dental Society, Correspondence Committee. Future: Medical School. PAUL LEVINE, 60 North Columbus Avenue, Mount Vernon, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Sociology. Future: Medical School. ALAN LEVINSON, 199 East 51 Street, Brooklyn, New York. University College of Arts and Science, English. Alpha Epsilon Pi. Future: Gradu- ate School. BURTON LEVY, Bronx, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Psychology, Alpha Phi Omega, Psi Chi, Scabbard and Blade, Pershing Rifles, Psychology Club, Student Center Policy Board, Recrea- tions Committee. IUDITH LEVY, 174 East 74 Street, New York 21, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, History. Heigbfr Daily Newr, Circu- lation Staff, French Club, Huntington Hill Historical, Student Center Policy Board, Personnel Committee, Student Governing Board, Course Evaluation Committee. Future: Elementary School Teacher. GEORGE LIEBERMAN, Forest Hills, New York. College of Engineer- ing, Operations Research. Brite House Plan, Intramural Baseball, Intra- mural Basketball. OLGA LIPTAK, 32 Stevenson Avenue, Hartsdale, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History, Future: Teacher. CYNTHIA GRUFFERMAN LIST, 121 East 46 Street, Brooklyn 3, New York. University College of Arts and Science, German, Honors. Perstare et Praestare, President, Delta Phi Alpha, Treasurer. Student Center Pol- icy Board, Vice-President, Secretary, Public Relations Committee, Chair- man, Southern Exchange Committee, Undergraduate Educational Policy Committee, Der Deutsche Verein, Student Governing Board, Welfare Committee, Womenis Committee, Violef. Future: Graduate School, Col- lege Teacher. J. JAY LOOK, 113-12 jewel Avenue, Forest Hills 75, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Psychology. Glee Club, Pub- licity Manager, Chapel Choir. Future: Graduate School in Experi- mental Psychology. HOWARD LONDON, 6 Meadow Way, White Plains, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Biology. Phi Sigma Delta, Biology Club, Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society, Washington Square Representative from All-Square Congress. Future: Medical School. Society of American Military Engineers, Honorary Member. Future: I A I ii 55K RONALD LITT, 147-24 70 Road, Flushing, New York. College of En- gineering, Electrical Engineering and Mathematics. Scabbard and Blade, Amateur Radio Club, President, American Institute of Electrical Engi- neers, Secretary, Armed Forces Communications 8: Electronics Associa- tion, Vice-President, Institute of Radio Engineers, Gould House Plan, Graduate School. WINSTON LUE, 600 West 144 Street, New York 31, New York. Col- lege of Engineering, Civil Engineering. Chi Epsilon, American Society of Civil Engineers. Future: Graduate School. FRANCIS LUIZ, 1102 Southern Boulevard, New York 59, New York. College of Engineering, Civil Engineering. Glee Club, ROTC Band, American Society of Civil Engineers, Society of American Military Engineers, Hall of Fame Players. Future: Commission in Army Reserve, Second Lieutenant. M. L, MacMEDAN, 188-30 87 Drive, jamaica 25, New York. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. ROBERT MAGILEN, Bayside, New York. College of Engineering, Mechanical Engineering. Pi Tau Sigma, Vice-President, Phi Epsilon Pi, American Society of Mechanical Engineers, President. ',fs,9f- . -F W. if I I 5 ff 1.- f ff .fem f - v Q fe f'XQ f ? 4 N at t KK N V N 1 2 , ,, f It f f ygffv, , v Q A ,. as-A N, sa wa, ,A 2,-g:w1,M.'aef+s ' g.-,Ama INGEBORG CHRISTINE MAHN, 11A Thorne Street, Jersey City 7, New jersey. University College of Arts and Science, German. . STEVEN MAIER, 629 West 173 Street, New York 32, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Biology. Future: Medical School. .. WILLIAM MAIER, 147-38 17 Road, Whitestone, New York. Univer- sity College of Arts and Science, History, Honors. Pershing Rifles, ,loseph Park Honor Society, Future: Graduate School. MICHAEL MANOWITZ, 8801 Second Avenue, North Bergen, New jersey. University College of Arts and Science, History. Heigbfr Daily Newry Pi Lambda Phi, Marshall. Future: Graduate School in Business Administration, Computor Programming. JAMES MARCUS, 1700 Albemarle Road, Brooklyn 26, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, History, Pershing Rifles, Finance Ofhcer. Future: Government Intelligence Agency. MILTON MARRONE, 26 Cayuga Avenue, Yonkers, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, Biology. Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society, Italian Club, President, Newman Club, Social Chair- man, Kappa Sigma, Social Chairman. Future: Dental School. GILBERT MARTIN, 49 Sugar Maple Drive, Roslyn, Long Island. University College of Arts and Science, English, Biology Honor Society, Delta Phi Alpha, Senior Class Vice-President, Student Center Policy Board, Entertainment Committee Chairman, Lectures Committee, Phi Sigma Delta, Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society. Future: Medical School. MADELINE MARTUCCI, 1826 White Plains Road, New York 62, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History, Future: Teaching. X CARL MAURER, 315 8 Avenue, Pelham, New York. College of Engi- neering, Mechanical Engineering. Pi Tau Sigma. BRUCE MATZNER, 1510 ,Iesup Avenue, Bronx 52, New York. College of Engineering: Civil Engineering. American Society of Civil Engineers: Society of Military Engineers. Future: Army Corps of Engineers-Second Lieutenant. KENNETH MAY, New Rochelle, New York. College of Engineering: Electrical Engineering. Brite House Plan, President, American Institute of Electrical Engineers: Institute of Radio Engineers, Society of American Military Engineers, Treasurer. DAVID MAURIELLO, Quaker Avenue, Dover, New Jersey. College of Engineering: Electrical Engineering. Eta Kappa Nu. Newman Club, American Institute of Electrical Engineers, Wce-President, Institute of Radio Engineers. Future: Graduate School in Engineering. VERNON MCDERMOTT, 60-33 83 Street, Elmhurst 73, New York. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Institute of Radio Engi- neers. ROBERT MCCULLOCH, 7208 72 Court, Brooklyn 9, New York. College of Engineering, Industrial Engineering. ANTHONY MEILAN, 500 West 169 Street, Bronx, New York. Col- lege of Engineering, Mechanical Engineering. American Society of Me- chanical Engineers, Vice-President, Student Governing Board, Welfare Committee. Future: Mechanical Engineer. ROBERT MCNEILL, 1705 Purdy Street, New York 62, New York. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Institute of Radio Engi- neers, Corresponding Secretary, American Institute of Electrical Engi- neers, Corresponding Secretaryg Student Council, Chairman Representa- tive. Future: Graduate School. If f , ' ff' J, . f f f ' WJ .f,, .5-,fy law' . ' 2 Ye ,K H ' 1 f 2- I 4, ,tl , f V 5 , f ay , , , X, f J, mg 1 ' t 4 cvs- 'f ' ,f ,, ,f Q.. ' '-, e',,f--vfliiikia . - JV U s 'Q f -Q f :e ff 0' ag ffmzxg-Egg., . - STEVEN MELAMED, 1135 Waring Avenue, New York 69, New York. University College of Arts and Science, English. Heights Little Symphony: Violet. Future: Graduate Work in English. BETTE MERKER, 1950 Andrews Avenue, Bronx 53, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, Biology. Beta Lambda Sigma, Future: Social Worker. DAVID MERKOWITZ, Teaneck, New Jersey. University College of Arts and Science: English, Honors. Tau Delta Phi, President, Cross-Countryg Indoor Track Team, Outdoor Track Team: Heights Young Democratsg Heighir Daily N911-'J',' Violeff Perstare et Praestareg Student Governing Board, Student Center Policy Board: Interfraternity Council: Under- graduate Athletic Organization. JACK MESHEL, 887 East 175 Street, New York 60, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Scienceg Government. Alpha Phi Omega, Hall of Fame Debate Tournament, Directorg Debate Council, American Psy- chologists Convention, Host: Ford Foundation Scholar: Bristol Pre- Medical and Pre-Dental Society: Heiglvfr Daily Newt. Future: Medical School. LOUIS MESSINA, 25 Wood Valley Lane, Port Washington, New York. University College of Arts and Science: History. Psi Upsilon. Future: Dental School. KENNETH MICHAELSON, 19 Abeel Street, Yonkers, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History. Future: Law School. ANNA MAY MIILEO, 1829 Tenbroeck Avenue, New York 61, New York. University College of Arts and Scienceg Government, History. De- bate Society, Secretary, Newman Club, Secretary: Huntington Hill His- torical Society, Treasurer, john Marshall Pre-Law Society. Future: Law School. BERTON MILLER, Brooklyn, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Economics. GABRIEL MILLER, 1563 Findlay Avenue, New York 56, New York. College of Engineering, Aeronautical Engineering, Honors. Tau Beta Pi, Sigma Pi Sigma, Treasurer, Sigma Gamma Tau, President, Phi Epsilon Pi, Institute of Aerospace Sciences, Qzmdmfzgle. Future: Graduate School in Aeronautics. IUDITH MINOFF, 641 Harrison Avenue, Scranton, Pennsylvania. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, English. TERRY MIZRAHI, 506 Quentin Road, Brooklyn 23, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, Sociology, Honors. National Sociologi- cal Honor Society, Fairchild Sociological Society, Violet, Dormitory Ad- visor. Future: Graduate School in Social Work. JEFFREY MOROSS, 1 Oxford Road, New Rochelle, New York. Univer- sity College of Arts and Science, Government. Sophomore Class Corres- ponding Secretary, Violelg Senior Prom Chairman, Phi Sigma Delta. Future: Law School. ELLIOTT MOSES, 1811 Cortelyou Road, Brooklyn 26, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, History. Zeta Beta Tau, Bristol Pre- Medical and Pre-Dental Society, Student Center Policy Board. Future: Medical School. WARREN STEPHEN MURRAY, 2209 Andrews Avenue, Bronx 53, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History. Bowling Team, WNYU, Loew Hall Society, Kappa Nu, President, Interfraternity Council Representative. Future: College History Teacher. MICHAEL NACHT, Bronx, New York. College of Engineering, Aero- space Sciences. Intramural Basketball, Intramural Football, Institute of Aerospace Sciences, American Rocket Society, Airfoif, Associate Editor. IOYCE NACHTIGAL, Bronx, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History, Honors. Student Center Policy Board, Treasurer, Huntington Hill Historical Society, john Marshall Pre-Law Society, Delta Phi Epsilon. MICHAEL NASH, 60 Sutton Place South, New York 22, New York. University College of Arts and Science: Economics. Phi Sigma Delta. Future: Army. HARVY NEEDLEMAN, Bronx, New York. College of Engineering: Aerospace Sciences. Intramural Basketball: Intramural Football, Institute of Aerospace Sciences, Vice-Chairman: American Rocket Society: Airfojl, Associate Editor. JACOB NEUFELD, 220 Bay 22 Street, Brooklyn, New York. University College of Arts and Science: History. Huntington Hill Historical: Fair- child Sociological Societyg Pershing Rifles, Co. EV8, Pledge Officerg Jewish Culture Foundation. Future: College History Teacher. SANDRA NEUFELDg 1630 Grand Avenue, New York 55, New York. University College of Arts and Science: History. Student Governing Board: Student Center Policy Board, Publicity Committee Chairman: Senior Class Prom Committee. Future: Masters Degree in Educatior JUDAH NEWBERGER, White Plains, New York. University College of Arts and Science: History. Joseph Park, History Honor Society: Hunt- ington Hill Historical Societyg Jewish Culture Foundation, Culture Chairman. STEVEN NEWMAN, 222-35 69 Avenue, Bayside, New York. College of Engineering, Aeronautics-Astronautics. Institute of Aero-Space Sci- ences: American Rocket Society: Airfoil, Editor. J. HARRIS NIERMAN, 29 Greenway Road, Lido, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science: History, Jewish Culture Foundation, Rituals Committee Chairman: Interfaith Council, Vice-President, Future: Graduate School. RICHARD GODFREY NOBLE, 79-25 Furmanville Avenue, Middle Village 79, New York. University College of Arts and Science: Physics. Society of American Military Engineers, Photo Society. Future: Graduate School. GARY NORDMAN, 87-46 153 Street, Richmond Hill 18, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Economics. Phi Gamma Delta, President, junior Varsity Glee Club. Future: Business. STANLEY NOSOL, 2362 Ryer Avenue, New York 58, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, Economics. Newman Club, Treasurer, Board of Governors, john Marshall Pre-Law Society, Heights Young Americans for Freedom, Heights Interfaith Council. Future: Law School. KENNETH OERTEL, 77 Soundview Drive, Fort Salonga, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Biology. Varsity Rifle Team, Captain. Future: Law School. BERNARD O'HALLORAN, 2454 Wallace Avenue, New York 67, New York. College of Engineering, Mechanical Engineering. American Society of Mechanical Engineers. STEPHEN OLINS, 48-21 190 Street, Flushing, New York, University College of Arts and Science, Psychology. JOSEPH ORLANDO, 622 South Street, Peekskill, New York. College of Engineering, Mechanical Engineering. Pi Tau Sigma, Psi Upsilon, American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Rifle Team. Future: Graduate School. HENRY ORTIZ, 2131 Clinton Avenue, New York 57, New York. Col- lege of Engineering, Mechanical Engineering. American Society of Mechanical Engineers. Future: Production Engineering in Machine De- signing. SAMUEL PALEY, 125 Coolidge Street, Brookline 46, Massachusetts. University College of Arts and Science, History. Jewish Culture Founda- tion, Vice-President, Glee Club. Future: Graduate School in Near-Eastern Studies and Archaeology. JORDAN PECKINS, 1416 Walton Avenue, New York 52, New York. University College of Arts and Science: History. Heigotr Daily Newr, Managing Editor: Violet, Associate Editor: Palisade: Handbook, Associate Editor: Student Center Policy Board, Films Committee Chairman. Future: Medical School. ALFRED PEDUZZI, Queens, New York. College of Engineering: Aero- space Sciences. Varsity Soccer Team: Intramural Football: Intramural Bas- ketball: Institute of Aerospace Sciences: American Rocket Society, GIORA PELLED, 60 White Oak Street, New Rochelle, New York. Col- lege of Engineering: Electrical Engineering. Eta Kappa Nu: Institute of Radio Engineers. Future: Graduate School. JOSEPH PERFITO, 1728 Hone Avenue, Bronx 61, New York. College of Engineering: Electrical Engineering. Arnold Air Society, Pledge Master. Future: Air Force. CHARLES PETERMAN, Van Houten Fields, West Nyack, New York. College of Engineering: Chemical Engineering. American Institute of Chemical Engineers. MARVIN PICKHOLZ, 35 Trinity Avenue, Spring Valley, New York. University College of Arts and Science: History. Phi Epsilon Pig Student Governing Board, Student Welfare Committee: Heights Safety Commit- tee: Student Center Policy Board, Personnel Committee: Orientation Com- mittee, Hazing Master: Senior Prom Committee. Future: Law School. IRA PITCHAL, 1133 Midland Avenue, Bronxville, New York. University College of Arts and Science: Government, Zeta Beta Tau, Rushing Chair- man: john Marshall Pre-Law Society: Adam Smith Economics Society: Huntington Hill Historical Society: Fairchild Sociological Society. Future: Law School or Career in State Department. PAUL PLESA, 6815 6 Avenue, Brooklyn 20, New York. College of En- gineering: Industrial Engineering. SIDNEY POLLACK, 4260 Broadway, New York 33, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, Mathematics. Delta Phi Alpha, Student Center Policy Board, Lectures Committee, House and Arts Committee Chairman. STUART POLOVSKY, Bronx, New York. University College of Arts and Science, German. Hall of Fame Players, Alpha Phi Omega, Student Center Policy Board. Future: Medical School. SEYMOUR POPOVITZ, Manhattan 40, New York. College of Engineer- ing, Electrical Engineering. Tau Beta Pi, Quf1d1'm7gle,' Eta Kappa Nu, President, American Institute of Electrical Engineers, Vice-Chairman, Institute of Radio Engineers, Vice-Chairman, Alpha Phi Omega. Future: Medical School. IRA POSTEL, 520 East 90 Street, New York 28, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History. Heighff Daily Newt. Associate Editor, Paliraa'e.r Hmzclbook, Associate Editor, John Marshall Pre-Law Society, Jewish Culture Foundation. Future: Law School. RONALD PROTAS, 55 Lenox Road, Brooklyn 26, New York. Univer- sity College of Arts and Sicence, Government, Honors. 1962 Violet, Co- Editor-in-Chief, Pi Sigma Alpha, Secretary-Treasurer, Sophomore Class Vice-President, Heiglatf Daily Newy, Contributing Editor, Phi Sigma Delta. Future: Law School. BETTY PUKEL, 120-48 233 Street, Cambria Heights, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Sociology. Student Governing Board, Social Committee. Future: Market Research. ANDREW RABINOWITZ, 923 Walton Avenue, New York 52, New York. University College of Arts and Science and College of Engineering, fFive Year Arts-Engineering Programj, Electrical Engineering. Institute of Radio Engineers, American Institute of Electrical Engineers, Sports Car Club, Vice-President, Russian Club. IRWIN RABINOWITZ, 64-17 175 Street, Flushing 65, New York. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Institute of Radio Engi- neers, American Institute of Electrical Engineers. Future: Graduate School. SHELDON RASHBA, New York, New York. University College of Arts and Science and College of Engineering, fFive Year Arts-Engineering Programj. American Institute of Electrical Engineers, Institute of Radio Engineers. TAMA RATNER, 1504 Metropolitan Avenue, New York 62, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Chemistry. Draper Chemi- cal Society, Vice-President, jewish Culture Foundation, Secretary. Future: Graduate School in Chemistry. RAYMOND REBER, Frances Drive, Montrose, New York. College of Engineering, Chemical Engineering. Association of the United States Army, American Rocket Society, Draper Chemical Society, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, Affairs Representative to 1962 N.Y. Metropolitan Conference, Chapter President. Future: Graduate School or Industry. NEIL REDDY, 655 77 Street, Brooklyn 9, New York. College of Engineering, Mechanical Engineering. Qffnfliwlgfe, Staff Artist, Student Center Policy Board, Publicity Committee. Future: Work in Mechanical Engineering. EDWARD REICI-I, 1409 West Avenue, New York 62, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Meteorology. National American Meteorological Society, NYU Weather Station, Weather Observer, American Meteorology Society, President. Future: Graduate School in Meteorology. MARTIN REINER, 2109 Matthews Avenue, New York 62, New York. College of Engineering, Metallurgical Engineering. American Society for Metals, American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical and Petroleum Engineers. Future: Reserve Army Officer. WENDY REISMAN, 570 Fort Washington Avenue, New York 55, New York. University College of Arts and Science, French. Future: Advertising. RICHARD JOSEPH REISS, 432 Roslyn Avenue, Carle Place, New York. College of Engineering, Industrial Engineering. Alpha Epsilon Pi, Presi- dent, Wrestling Team, American Institute of Industrial Engineers. Future: Graduate School. GILBERT REITER, 4320 Manhattan Avenue, Seagate, Brooklyn 29, New York. College of Engineering, Mechanical Engineering. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Vice-Chairman. Future: Graduate School. FREDERICK REY, 73-39 52 Avenue, Maspeth 78, New York. College of Engineering, Mechanical Engineering. American Society of Mechanical Engineers. JOHN RICCI, 411 East 239 Street, New York 70, New York. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Eta Kappa Nu, Secretary, Associa- tion of the U.S. Army, Heights Company Commander, Scabbard and Blade, Institute of Radio Engineers, American Institute of Electrical Engi- neers, Armed Forces Communications and Electronics Association, Society of American Military Engineers. Future: Graduate School in Electrical Engineering. FREDRIC RICHTER, 5 South Sixteenth Avenue, Mount Vernon 17, New York, Unnersity College of Arts and Science, Biology. Kappa Sigma, Newman Club, President, Treasurer, Varsity Rifle Team, Co- Captain, Heights Little Symphony, ROTC Band. Future: Medical School. NORMAN RISTIN, 44 North Broadway, White Plains, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Psychology. Psi Chi, Vice- Presi- dent, Green Room, Secretary, Hall of Fame Players, Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society. Future: Medical School. JEFF ROBBINS, Bayside, New York, University College of Arts and Science, English. Beta Lambda Sigma, Student Center Policy Board, Publicity Chairman. CHARLES ROBINSON, 3475 Fish Avenue, New York 19, New York. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Institute of Radio Engi- neers, American Institute of Electrical Engineers, Phi Gamma Delta. Future: Engineering Sales. KENNETH ROCKMORE, 45 Bayley Avenue, Yonkers, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History. Scabbard and Blade, Huntington Hill Historical Society, john Marshall Pre-Law Society. Future: Law School. IRWIN ROITMAN, 61-15 98 Street, Forest Hills 74, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, Philosophy. John Marshall Pre-Law Society. Future: Law School. CHESTER ROMANO, 2268 Waterbury Avenue, New York 62, New York. University College of Arts and Science: Classics. Kappa Sigma: Newman Club. Future: Graduate Work in Classics in Preparation for Teaching. IQRVING ROME, 206-55 Whitehall Terrace, Hollis Hills 27, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Government, Honors. Perstare et Prestare, Student Governing Board, President. Pi Lambda Phi, Vice- President, Debate Society: john Marshall Pre-Law Societyg Heights Young Democrats. Future: Law School. SHELDON ROSENBERG, 864 East 149 Street, New York 55, New York. College of Engineering: Electrical Engineering. Future: Graduate School in Electrical Engineering. RICHARD ROSENBLUM, 245 West 107 Street, New York 25, New York. University College of Arts and Science-g Psychology. Bristol Pre- Medical and Pre-Dental Society, Student Center Policy Board. DAVID ROSENTHAL, 20 Wooley's Lane, Great Neck, New York. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Rho Tau Sigma, WNYU, Station Manager, Institute of Radio Engineers. GARY ROSENTHAL, 336 Fort Washington Avenue, New York 33, New York. University College of Arts and Science, English. Brite House Plan, Vice-President. Future: Medical School. NORMAN ROSENTHAL, 152 Lincoln Road, Brooklyn 25, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Biology. Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society, Librarian, Heigbir Daily Newry Vialefy Junior Varsity Glee Club, Student Center Policy Board, Lectures Committeeg Student Governing Board, Elections Committee. Future: Medical School. 'lr 419 45.7 '7' LARRY ROSENZWEIG, 1525 Walton Avenue, New York 52, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Mathematics. Future: Graduate School. SELIG ROSENZWEIG, 34 Metropolitan Oval, New York, New York. University College of Arts and Science, English, Pi Lambda Phi, Student Center Policy Board. Future: Law School. RICHARD ROSS, 16 Sunset Road, Great Neck, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Mathematics. Mathematics Club. MARVIN ROSSER, 125 Marcy Place, New York 52, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, Chemistry, Honors. Glee Club, Varsity Quartet, Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society: Future: Medical School. GERALD S. ROTHMAN, 5220 Netherland Avenue, Bronx 63, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Political Science. Debate Council, President, Iohn Marshall Pre-Law Society, Young Republicans Club. Future: Graduate School, College Teacher. ERIC ROTHSTEIN, 99-12 65 Road, Forest Hills, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Biology. Phi Sigma Delta, Recording Secre- tary, Student Center Policy Board, Entertainment Committee, Spanish Club. Future: Dental School. HARVEY RUBENSTEIN, 1110 Philip Court, Valley Stream, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Chemistry. Equestrian Club, Wrestling Team, Phi Sigma Delta. Future: Medical School. HOWARD RUBENSTEIN, 2090 Barnes Avenue, New York 67, New York. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Institute of Radio Engineers. Future: Graduate School. ROBERT RUBINO, 412 5 Ely Avenue, New York 66, New York. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. 'Institute of Radio Engineers, American Institute of Electrical Engineers. Future: Graduate School. ROBERT SACHS, 531 East Lincoln Avenue, Mount Vernon, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History, Honors, Glee Club, Zeta Beta Tau, New Hall Dormitory Society, President. Future: Graduate School. BARTON R. SADOWSKY, 77-O2 170 Street, Flushing 66, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Chemistry. Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society. Future: Medical School. MICHAEL SAGAT, 1750 Grand Concourse, New York, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Biology. Freshman Fencing Iohn Marshall Pre-Law Society, Future: Law School. STEPHEN A. SALMORE, 185 McClellan Street, New York 56, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Government, Honors. Pi Sigma Alpha, President, Maas Essay Prize, Minnie Kramer Cowin Award, Debate Council. Future: Graduate School, College Teaching. ALAN SALTZMAN, 67-64 Austin Street, Forest Hills 75, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Government. Tau Epsilon Phi, Freshman Fencing Team, Co-Captain, Varsity Fencing Team, Heigbir Daily Newt, Photography Editor, Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society. Future: Medical School. SURESH K, SAMPAT, 1735 Undercliff Avenue, New York 53, New York. College of Engineering, Industrial Engineering. American Institute of Industrial Engineers, International Club, Society of Automotive Engi- neers. Future: Further Studies in Automatic Controls. DALE SANDBERG, Yonkers, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Biology. Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society. FRANCINE SAVITZ, 259-07 57 Avenue, Little Neck 62, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History. Joseph H. Park History Honor Society. Future: History Teacher. BETTE SCHEIN, 1820 Loring Place, New York 53, New York, Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, History. Future: Graduate School. JENNY SCHIFF, 200 West 86 Street, New York, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History. FERDINAND SCHMID, 4245 East 177 Street, New York 65, New York, College of Engineering, Industrial Engineering. Alpha Pi Mu, American Institute of Industrial Engineers. Future: I.B,M. Sales Engineer. SYDNEY SCHNEIDER, Paterson, New jersey. College of Engineering, Physics. Sigma Pi Sigma, Scabbard and Blade, Association of the US Army, American Institute of Physics, American Nuclear Society. WARREN SCHNIBBE, 215-09 47th Avenue, Bayside 61, New York. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Psi Upsilon, American Institute of Electrical Engineers, Institute of Radio Engineers. Future: Graduate School. LOUISE SCHOENFELD, 99-63 66 Avenue, Forest Hills 75, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History. Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society, Delta Phi Epsilon. Future: Graduate School in His- tory, History Teacher. IEROME SCHULMAN, 35 Winchester Oval, New Rochelle, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Chemistry Honors. Draper Chemi- cal Society, Secretary. Future: Graduate School in Chemistry, y 6 12 X iff ft KU' QW 1 ' V , . I , ii ly QQ,.j ig Qzjg ,L f di' 7 ,j g f , -: fy.: .,'Y.f,41. f . , ,' H' ,V jf V' I jf, ,i ga, ., ,zg ., ' i,gw,,f HERBERT SCHULZ, 5720 Independence Avenue, Bronx 63, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Physics. Sigma Pi Sigma, Ameri- can Institute of Physics, American Nuclear Society. Future: Graduate School for Doctorate in Physics. TORSTEN SCHUMACHER, 5152 16 Street, N.W., Washington 10, D.C. University College of Arts and Science, Biology. Delta Phi, Newman Club, WNYU. HOWARD SCHUMAN, 1898 Billingsley Terrace, New York 53, New York, University College of Arts and Science, Biology. Future: Medical School. LEWIS SCHUYLER, 960 Grand Concourse, New York 51, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Psychology, Honors. Psi Chi, President, Heights' Daily Newr, Sports Features Editor, WNYU Sports Broadcaster, Undergraduate Athletic Organization, Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society, Future: Medical School. JUDY SCHWARTZ, 911 Walton Avenue, New York 52, New York. University College of Arts and Science, English, Honors. Heigblr Daily Newr, Art Editor, Violei, Art Editor. ROBERT SCROFANO, Bronx, New York, College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. American Institute of Electrical Engineers, Insti- tute of Radio Engineers. NANCY SEGAI., 96 Highland Avenue, Rensselaer, New York. Univer- sity College of Arts and Science, Chemistry, Draper Chemical Society, Secretary, New Hall Dormitory Council, Floor Representative. Future: Graduate School. ROBERT SEGAL, 519 Magnolia Road, Long Beach, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, Government, Honors. Pi Sigma Alpha, Iohn Marshall Pre-Law Society, Vice-President, Student Center Governing Board, Lectures Committee, Varsity Debate Team, Heights Students for Human Rights. Future: Law School. GLORIA SELLER, 260 Beach 132 Street, Belle Harbor, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Government, Honors. Pi Sigma Alpha, Height: Daily Newry Huntington Hill Historical, John Marshall Pre-Law Society, Women's Basketball Team, Iota Alpha Pi, Future: Graduate School. DOMINGO SEPULUEDA, 10 Orchard Place, New Rochelle, New York. College of Engineering, Aeronautics and Astronautics. Arnold Air Society, Operations Officer, Pledge Officer, Institute of Aerospace Science. Future: Navigation Training School. FRANK SEVERINO, 6028 Park Avenue, West New York, New jersey. College of Engineering, Chemical Engineering. American Institute of Chemical Engineers. DANIEL SHANTZ, 2062 Mayflower Avenue, New York 61, New York. College of Engineering, Chemical Engineering. Newman Club, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, American Nuclear Society. Future: Graduate School. A. BRUCE SHAUER, 1105 Deer Park Avenue, Babylon, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Biology. Tau Epsilon Phi. Future: Medical School. DAVID SHERER, 170 Second Avenue, New York 3, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, History. Varsity Glee Club, Gold Key Award, Heights Symphony Orchestra, President, Conductor, Football Club. Future: Medical School. ROBERT SHUGAR, 64-25 Boelsen Crescent, Rego Park 74, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History. Glee Club, Assistant Manager. Future: Retail Foods. BERNARD SIEGEL, Brooklyn 12, New York. College of Engineering, Mechanical Engineering. Perstare et Praestare, Qfmdmzzgfe, Editor-in- Chief, Undergraduate Engineering Council, Vice-President, American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Secretary, Committee on Student Activi- ties, Publications Committee. MURRAY SIEGEL, 1684 West 8 Street, Brooklyn 23, New York. Col- lege of Engineering: Physics. Tau Beta Pi, Arnold Air Society, Com- mander, AFROTC, Commander, Institute of Aeronautical Sciencesg Football Club, Captain, Heights Daily Newry Residence Hall Advisor. Future: Air Force. ROBERT SIERRA, 1845 Hobart Avenue, New York 61, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Chemistry. Pershing Rifles, Co. E-8, Executive Officer, Draper Chemical Society, President, Newman Club. Future: Chemical Research. JANET SIGAI., New York, New York. Psi Chi, Psychology Clubg Heigbir Daily Nezufg Student Center Policy Board, Entertainment Committee. SUSAN SIGEL, 46 Minerva Drive, Yonkers, New York. University College of Arts and Scienceg History. Hall of Fame Players. Future: Teacher. STEVE SILVER, 56-07 205 Street, Bayside 64, New York. University College of Arts and Science and College of Engineering, CFive Year Arts- Engineering Programjg Engineering Science. Phi Sigma Deltag Hall of Fame Players. Future: Peace Corps or Graduate School. STEPHEN SILVERSTEIN, 15 Featherbed Lane, New York 52, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Biology. Tau Epsilon Phi, Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society. Future: Dental School. JOHN SIMON, 4010 Saxon Avenue, New York 63, New York. College of Engineering: Aerospace and Astrospace Sciences. Scabbard and Bladeg Alpha Epsilon Pi, Institute of Aerospace Sciences, Society of American Military Engineers, Future: Graduate School. GLORIA GROMET SITZMAN, 1955 Williamsbridge Road, New York 61, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Psychology. Psi Chi: Prycbarrope, Editor. Future: Graduate School in Social Work. MARTIN SKLAVER, Mount Vernon, New York. College of Engineer- ing, Mechanical Engineering. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Society of American Engineers, Sports Car Club. LYNN SMILES, 3240 Wilson Avenue, Bronx 69, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History, Honors. Joseph Park, Orchestra, Opera Workshop, Choir, Heights Students for Human Rigths, Future: Graduate School in History, History Teacher. ALEXANDER SMIRNOFF, 135 Hall of Fame Terrace, New York 53, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Economics. WNYU Radio Station, Phi Gamma Delta, Corresponding Secretary, Rifle Team, Interfraternity Council, President. Future: Navy. ROBERT SMITH, 15-59 Parsons Boulevard, Whitestone 57, New York. College of Engineering, Civil Engineering. Future: Marine Corps- Second Lieutenant. MICHELE SMOLLAR, 89 St. johns Avenue, Yonkers, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Sociology. Hall of Fame Players, Student Governing Board, Women's Committee Chairman, Orientation Committee, Fairchild Sociology Society, Dormitory Council, Secretary of Provisional Council, Women's Basketball Team. Future: Graduate School in Social Work. ARLEEN SNYDER, 7 Cumberland Drive, Yonkers, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, Psychology. Gamma Sigma Sigma, President, Debate Council, Student Governing Board, Welfare Commit- tee, Psychology Club, Future: Graduate School, Teacher. NELSON SOBEL, Roslyn, New York. College of Engineering, Mechani- cal Engineering, Pi Tau Sigma, Secretary. Phi Epsilon Pi, American Society of Mechanical Engineers. HARVEY SOLOMON, 79-41 213 Street, Flushing 64, New York. Col- lege of Engineering, Metallurgy. Alpha Sigma Mu, American Society for Metals, Qzmdmngle. Future: Graduate School. 6 7 'aw X X 'fo 1 .. X 156 c QQ. . 2 . ew ?f1r-- ft ' J Q f aww Q 4 A ,vii if A fsyag ,MEA 2255. :' . A I S5iig'f?Z,s2..A . . sis? A it W v . - 1 - ev, t a il. SU s- FQ 2 ti'-ivfsw H. N ,311 ti z X MORRIS SPECTOR, 2461 Davidson Avenue, Bronx 68, New York., University College of Arts and Science, Chemistry. jewish Culture Foun- dation, President. Future: Graduate School or Medical School. ALAN B. SPERBER, 671 West 193 Street, New York 40, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Chemistry, French. Student Center Policy Board, Recreations Committee, jewish Culture Foundation, Athletics Chairman, Alpha Epsilon Pi. Future: Medical School or Gradu- ate School in Chemistry. LAWRENCE SPIEGEL, 180 Barlow Drive So., Brooklyn 54, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Psychology. Rho Tau Sigma, President, Student Center Policy Board, Personnel Committee Chairman, Senior Prom, Phi Epsilon Pi, Psychology Club. Future: Graduate School. PHOEBE SPINRAD, Bronx, New York. University College of Arts and Science, English, Honors, Newman Club, Pez'i'fm'e. LEONARD STANS, 39 Lakewood Terrace, Bloomfield, New jersey. College of Engineering, Physics. Kappa Sigma, AFROTC, Interfraternity Council, Treasurer, American Nuclear Society. Future: Air Force. DAN STEINBROCKER, 208 East 72 Street, New York 21, New York. University College of Arts and Science, English. Rhymers Club, Chancel- lor, 1963 Violet, Editor-in-Chief, Heigblf Daily Nezzfr, Contributing Editor. Future: Graduate School. CAROL STERN, 184 Rugby Road, Brooklyn 26, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Biology. Beta Lambda Sigma, Delta Phi Epsilon, Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society, Student Center Policy Board, Personnel Committee Treasurer. CYNTHIA STARR, 70 Sherman Place, Jersey City 7, New jersey. University College of Arts and Science, History. HARRY STEWART, 112-25 34 Avenue, Corona 68, New York. College of Engineering: Mechanical Engineering. Student Council, Chairman, Vice-Chairman, American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Chairman. EDWARD STIEFEL, 832 Avenue Z, Brooklyn 35, New York, University College of Arts and Science: Chemistry. Pershing Rifles, Second Lieuten- ant, Draper Chemical Society, American Nuclear Society, Future: Gradu- ate School in Chemistry. GARY STRAUSS, 53-35 203 Street, Bayside 64, New York. College of Engineeringg Electrical Engineering. American Institute of Electrical Engi- neersg Institute of Radio Engineers. Future: Graduate School. THOMAS STRAX, 10-53 Totten Street, Beechhurst 57, New York. University College of Arts and Scienceg History. Loew Hall Society, Secretaryg Student Governing Board, Personnel Committee: Student Center Policy Board, Personnel Committee, Public Relations, Board of Elections. Future: Medical School. STEPHEN STUART, 1918 Haight Avenue, Bronx 61, New York. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Tau Beta Pig Western Electric Company Award. Future: Graduate School, Research in Semi- Conductors. ISSAC STUDENT, 2960 Grand Concourse, New York 58, New York. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Institute of Radio Engi- neers. Future: Graduate School. ALAN SWIRNOW, 2111 Albemarle Road, Brooklyn 26, New York. College of Engineering: Metallurgical Engineering, Qm1d1'm1gle,' American Society for Metals, Vice-Presidentg American Institute of Mining, Metal- lurgical and Petroleum Engineers. Future: Army Reserve Officer. GILBERT TABBOT, 831 Gerard Avenue, New York 51, New York. University College of Arts and Science: Biology. Beta Lambda Sigma, Glee Club: Huntington Hill Historical Society, Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society, Student Governing Board, Student Center Policy Board, Concerts Committee, Alpha Epsilon Pi. Future: Dental School. Q22 ., iw? ' n 4 ' . er - ,gi x - A . Q1 NORMAN TAROWSKY, 2446 Creston Avenue, New York 68, New York. College of Engineering, Engineering Physics. American Institute of Physicists, American Nuclear Society, Northern Students Movement: Harlem Educational Project. HOWARD TASHMAN, 1971 Grand Avenue, New York, New York. College of Engineering, Industrial Engineering. Orchestra. Future: Orchestra Leader: Independent Record Producer. 1 2. . rf 'I' 'Y . ff? 1 J! ...af i..f ii.. . JOSEPH L. TAURITZ, 1650 West 10 Street, Brooklyn 23, New York. I College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Green Room, Vice-Presi- dent, Heights Students for Human Rights, Secretary, Undergraduate Engineering Council, Treasurerg Student Center Policy Board, Lectures Committee Chairman, Committee on Student Activities. Future: Graduate School. STANLEY TEICH, 1668 Vyse Avenue, New York 60, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, History. Amateur Radio Club, Vice- President. MARC TEICHMAN, 409 West Street, Middletown, Connecticut. Univer- sity College of Arts and Science, History. Rho Tau Sigma, Loew Hall Society, Vice-President: WNYU, Sports Director: Undergraduate Athletic Organization. Future: Graduate School. GAYLE TEITELBAUM, 267 St. Johns Avenue, Yonkers, New York. University College of Arts and Science: English, Honors. Heights Young I Republicans, Huntington Hill Historical. Future: High School English 2 Teacher. - . DONALD TEPPER, 53 Travers Avenue, Yonkers, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Government. Phi Sigma Delta, john Marshall Pre-Law Society, Student Governing Board, Treasurer, Student Center Policy Board, Concerts Committee, Foreign Students Orientation. Future: Law School. BRUCE TISCH, 635 East 211 Street, New York 67, New York. Univer sity College of Arts and Science: Biology, Philosophical Society, President junior Varsity Glee Club, Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society Junior Class Secretary, Student Governing Board, Personnel Committee. Future: Medical School. JOHN TOMASZEWSKI, 89-41 Aubrey Avenue, Glendale 27, New York. College of Engineering, Chemical Engineering. American Institute of Chemical Engineers, Treasurer. Future: Industry. NORMAN TREISTMAN, Bronx, New York. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Hall of Fame Players, Veterans Club, American Institute of Electrical Engineers, Institute of Radio Engineers. RONALD VAVRUSKA, 88-18 102 Avenue, Ozone Park 16, New York. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. ANDREW VENTRE, Scotch Plains, New jersey. College of Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, American Society of Mechanical Engineers. ANGELO ROBERT VITALIS, 8 Soliman Pasha Street, Cairo, Egypt. College of Engineering, Civil Engineering. Delta Phi, American Society of Civil Engineers, Secretary, Treasurer, International Students League. Future: Graduate School. DONALD F, VRADENBURGH, 22 White Street, North Babylon, New York. College of Engineering, Mechanical Engineering. American Society of Mechanical Engineers. Future: Consulting Engineer. CHARLES WATSON, 444 Madison Street, Brooklyn 21, New York. University College of Arts and Science, English. Heigbfr Daily Newf, Managing Editor, Student Center Policy Board, Chairman, Relations Committee Chairman, Debate Council. Future: Medical School. JOHN WEBB, 2656 Decatur Avenue, New York 58, New York. Uni- versity College of Arts and Science, Physics. American Institute of Physics, Vice-President. ALAN WEINBLATT, 245 East 11 Street, New York 3, New York. University College of Arts and Science, English, Honors. Delta Phi Alpha, President: Heigbfr Daily Newr Supplement, Editorial Board. EDWARD WEINER, 105 Buckingham Road, Brooklyn 26, New York. College of Engineering, University College of Arts and Science: Civil Engineering, Psychology, American Society of Civil Engineers: Junior Varsity Glee Clubg Psychology Club. Future: Graduate School. MICHAEL WEINSTEIN, Woodmere, Long Island, New York. Univer- sity College of Arts and Science, History. john Marshall Pre-Law Society: Huntington Hill Historical Society. WILLIAM WEINSTEIN, 3472 Seymour Avenue, New York 69, New York. University College of Arts and Scienceg Chemistry. Alpha Epsilon Pi, Recording Scribe: Equestrian Clubg Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Societyg Draper Chemical Society, Treasurer: Psychology Cluhg American Chemical Society. Future: Medical School. JOAN WEISS, 1001 Jerome Avenue, Bronx 52, New York. University College of Arts and Scienceg English, Honors, WNYU Radio Station: Heights Students for Human Rights, President. Future: Graduate School. PEGGY WEISSMAN, Bronx, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Sociology, Honors. Delta Phi Epsilon. Future: Graduate School. LESLEYCARLA WENGER, 605 W. Pierson, Phoenix 13, Arizona. University College of Arts and Science: English. SAMUEL BRUCE WEXLER, 904 Rhinelander Avenue, New York 62, New York. College of Engineering: Electrical Engineering. Institute of Electrical Engineers: jewish Culture Foundation. Future: Graduate School. ALAN WILDER, Bronx, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History. Phi Epsilon Pi, ROTC Band, Student Governing Board Orientation Committee. . ,Y .. r i r ' rr ' i V DEBORAH MANN WILENTZ, 215 East ss street, New York, New I ' wif A... York. University College of Arts and Science, History. Future: Graduate A X School in Social Work. I ELLIOTT WINSTON, 6 Ascot Road, Yonkers, New York. University In College of Arts and Science, Mathematics. Future: Graduate School. 'ZW 'L X. ,I Q H ... ALLEN WINTERS, Bronx, New York. University College of Arts and Science, History. Bristol Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society. RAPHAEL WITORSCH, 68-05 150 Street, Flushing 67, New York. A University College of Arts and Science, Biology. Beta Lambda Sigma, A Delta Phi Alpha: Heigblr Daily Newt, Business Manager, Zeta Beta Tau. Future: Ph.D. in Physiology, RICHARD VUOLFMAN, Huntington, Long Island, New York. Univer- sity College of Arts and Science, Chemistry. Intramural Football, Student Center Policy Board, Entertainment Committee. IRIS WOOL, 215 West 68 Street, New York 21, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Economics. Future: Elementary School Teacher. MARSHALL YABLON, 2271 Loring Place, New York 68, New York. rj, University College of Arts and Science, English. Phi Epsilon Pi, House Manager, Student Center Policy Board. Future: Law School. JONATHAN YOUNG, 65-61 Saunders Street, Forest Hills 75, New York, University College of Arts and Science, History. Student Center Policy Board, Concerts Committee. ZORINA ZAPOLIN, Bronx, New York. University College of Arts and Science, English. Student Center Policy Board, Publicity Committee. ROBERT ZAK, 1792 Pitman Avenue, New York 66, New York. College of Engineering, Electrical Engineering. Psi Upsilon, Future: Engineering. STEPHEN ZECHE, 1235 Grand Concourse, Bronx, New York. Univer- sity College of Arts and Science, Economics, Honors. Pi Sigma Alphag Eta Kappa Omega, Perstare et Praestare, Secretary, NYU Honorary Societyg Rhymers Club, Murray Altman Prize in Economicsg Pi Lambda Phi, Presi- dentg Heigbfr Daily Nerzxr. Editor-in-Chietg Pf1li.r.1z!e.r Hfzmfbrme. Editor- in-Chief, Violet. Future: Law School. MONROE ZICHERMAN, 2716 Marion Avenue, New York 58, New York. College of Engineeringg Civil Engineering. Chi Epsilong American Society of Chemical Engineers, Treasurer, Student Council, Treasurer. MARTIN ZUCKERMAN, Elmont, New York. University College of Arts and Science, Economics. Future: Dental School. ANTHONY ZUZOLO, 42 Windsor Terrace, White Plains, New York. University College of Arts and Science and College of Engineering, QFive Year Arts-Engineering Programj, Electrical Engineering and Mathematics. Kappa Sigma, President, Treasurer, Newman Club, Interfraternity Council, MELVYN ZWIEBACH, Bronx, New York. University College of Arts and Scienceg History. Alpha Epsilon Pig Freshman Basketball Team, Man- ager, Undergraduate Athletic Organization, Vice-President, Freshman Class Vice-Presidentg Student Governing Board, Publicity Committee. W BENEFACTCRS Compliment! I of Zb6 NY U CAMPUS STCJRE Q cwpzfmem Of THE ALTSCHUL HOUSE THE RELIGIOUS CENTER OF UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS 5 SEDGEWICK AVENUE C 0121 lliljillfllfj Of HOUSING and EGOD SERVICES DIVISICN OF UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS C 0117 plmzefziy 0 the STUDENT CENTER PULICY BOARD N EAL'S RESTAURANT Catering - Weddings - Beefsteale Parties - Banquets - Socials SEA FOOD - CHOPS - STEAKS When Uptown It's NEAIQS for Pleasant Dining 66-68 WEST FORDHAM ROAD NEW YORK 53, N. Y. Tel.: FOrdhi1m 443892 Atlas Beer Distributors 3735 WHITE PLAINS ROAD Near 217th Street OL 2-2425 Keg Beer - Case Beer - Soifa Delivered to Home and Organizations Acme-Active Beer Distributors 1405 WEBSTER AVENUE Near 170th Street CY 3-4747 'IACKSON'S Steak and Lobster House Sleak and Lobsler Hmzse Fordham Road and Sedgwick Avenue BRONX, N. Y. CY 840055 We Welcoiiue NYU Students 22 Official Photographers for The 1963 Violet Murray' 3ll'l' Studios Inc. Wedding Portraits and Candid Wedding Albums Special Rates for Students and Their Families Copies of Photographs Appearing in This Book Can Be Purchased at Any Time C077Zf71f7l76IIf,t' of Conzplimenfir of Berkowitz Formal Wear 505 E. FORDHAM ROAD GRANADA RESTAURANT 225 The Perfect Graduation Present Is Z1 One Year Membership to the New York University Club - NEW YORK UNIVERSITY CLUB 123 WEST 43rd STREET NEW YORK 36, N. Y. Cmnjlfimezzh U! PI LAMBDA PHI FRATERNITY C07li!1ffll7r?7lf.Y of JAY EFF CASUALS, Inc. 289 E. KINGSBRIDGE ROAD NEW YORK 58, N. Y. WE 3-3240 1548 CENTRAL AVENUE YONKERS, N. Y. DE 7-4000 Cwzlpliwe-11l,r of the Heights' Sororitie. ALPHA EPSILON PHI DELTA PHI EPSILON GAMMA SIGMA SIGMA IOTA ALPHA PI 224 ,efws f .ww . . 1 - fa . Q 1 f f has C I I . ,,,,, .H .,. --V W-f-fy: f -o N M..-...A. .M


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