Rabbi Malino Returning After a Year's Absence
- Rabbi Jerome R. Malino will be- gin his 12th visit to the Alfred campus March 3. Rabbi Malino is considered to be a permanent fix- ture on this campus, and his re- turn to Alfred after a year's ab- sence is eagerly awaited by stu- dents and faculty member* w h o remember him.
Rabbi Malino, spiritual leader of the United Jewish Center In Dan- bury, Connecticut, will be on cam- pus uAtll March 7. A graduate of the College of the City of N e w York, be was ordained Rabbi at the Jewish Institute of Religion.
Rabbi Malino Is a member of the Central Conference of American Rabbis and of the National Execu- tive Committee of the Jewish Peace Fellowship.
A s a member of the National Prison Chaplain's Association, Rab- bi Malino serves as Chaplain at the Federal Correctional Institu- tion in Danbury. H e Is a member and a past president of the Dan- bury Board of Education.
Rabbi Malino has spoken at many 1 colleges and universities throughout the N e w England area.
H e has recently returned from a year of study and travel In Europe and Israel.
A s In past years, he will attend the various classes during the
[week, and will be a guest at the ' residence halls for dinner and a
! discussion period. T h e highlight of
! his visit will be his speech at the March 7 assembly.;
Other it^ms on his calendar will Include a luncheon to btf held In his honor .Wednesday, March 6.
Hillel Club has also announced an open house meeting at 8:30 p.m., Sunday, March 3, at Howell Hall, at which Rabbi Malino will speak.
Blue Key Talent Show
Highlight of this year's Blue K e y Talent S h o w will be the auc- tioneering off of faculty members.
T h e show will be held in Alumni Hall Monday, March 4, at 8 p.m.
Featured In the show will be acts by > students and faculty mem- bers. A m o n g them will be skits by the S t Pat's Board, Blue Key, and fläculty. Fred' Palmer will serve as master of ceremonies with Phil Partington assisting.
W a r e s will he sold before the show by Doctors Englemann and Bernstein.
Tickets, which are 60c, may be purchased from any member of Blue Key. Proceeds from the show will go to the University Building Fund.
"Lonely Crowd" to Be Topic Of Future AAUP Meeting
T h e first of a faculty panel series, under the auspices of the Alfred University, Chapter of the American Association of Univer- sity Professors, will be presented at 8:00 p.m., Thursday, March 7, in Howell Hall. The topic to be discussed will be " T h e Lonely Crowd," by David Riesman.
T h e participants in this series represent various fields of learn- ing. Prof. Sibley will lead this par- 'ticular panel discussion. Members
of the panel include Prof. K u m a n , w h o will discuss the demographic thesis of the book, Prof. Klitzke, w b o will trelat taste as riscussed in this book, Mr. Rakowski, w h o will discuss the story tellers.
Other members are Prof. Ander- son, who will consider " T h e Lone- ly Crowd's" psychological aspects, Dr. Engelmann, who will discuss Its political aspects, Mr. Bower, who will air its economic aspects, and Mr. Liberman, w h o will dis- cuss the impact of the book's thes- is on science.
Brief expositions! will be pre- sented by each member of the
panel, after which there will be discussion among the panel mem- bers. Questions and 'comments from i the audience will then be accepted.
T h e Alfred University Chapter ,of the American Association of University Professors has as its President, Prof. Klitzke, and as its Program Chairman, Dr. Engle- mann. The chapter plans tiwo such sessions like that of March 7 each semester. T h e purpose of these faculty panels, according to one participant, is tQ discover the le- gitimate function of higher educa- tion in a society threatened by con- forminity.
" T h e Lonely Crowd" by David Riesman ties social character to population developments, a n d therefore centers on changes in the American character from a period oi rapid population growth tct one of incipient population de- cline or stabilization.
Students and faculty members are urged to attend this unpreced-
ented meeting.
'Freshness 9 to Highlight
"Gallery" Performance
by Bonnie Gross
One of the interesting aspects of ' "In the Gallery"—which will be per-
formed Thursday at the Footlight Club assembly—is the freshness of its component elements.
T h e script is an original one by playwright-director, Nathan: Lyons.
Most of the actors involved in the production are Quite n e w to their responsibility of developing the in- dlvdual characterization; for many it is their first appearance on a stage, aside from camp and gram- mar school experiences. Mira Ru- binstein, the feminine lead, has act- ed in a single camp production.
Frank Pokorny, In the male lead, occasionally did acting bits while
in the navy, but insists that his
"repertoire" was confined to "bur- lesques."
In this cast comprised phimarily of novices, then, Vie Babu and Giene Lewis are exceptions. Vic portrayed Phil Clandon in this year's production of " Y o u Never Can Tell," while Gene took the plart of Sherdelieu in last year's arena performance of " T h e Addd- ing Machine.*'
T E A H O U S E
"Teahouse of the August Moon,"
the Footlight Club's production for S t Pat's Festival, is in the early stages of rehearsal. Cast lisitings will he posted in the F I A T next week.
French Week to be Observed;
Banquet Highlights 20th Year
French W e e k , under the auspices of the French Club, will once again be celebrated at Alfred.
T h e highlight of the week, to be celebrated beginning March 3, will be the banquet of St. Charlemagne, a n affair at which the outstànding students of all French classes give talks in French to prove their mas- tery of the language. A s in past year, there will be guests of hon- or.
The theme of the celebration Is
"Twenty Years with L a Semaine Française." Such subjects as the French Theatre and the Provinces will be stressed.
T h e festivities will begin on Sun- day when Dr. Wingate will present a carillon concert of French music.
Each afternoon, at 4:00 p.m., (ex- cept Thursday), gouter will be served in the Union by girls in French costumes. Posters and other material depicting France and the French people will be on display in university buildings and town stores.
Movies will be shown, free of charge on Wednesday and Friday afternoons in the Ceramics Build- ing. O n Wednesday night, In , the Campus Theatre, there will be a showing of Alphonse Daudet's "Let- ters from M y Windmill" in French.
Friday's films are especially for the children of Alfred. At 'that time, the festivities end with the pre- sentation of "Little Red Riding
H o o d " in French by the students of French 32.
Sunday Carillon Concert
Mon., Tues., W e d . , Frl.
Gouter,. 4 p.m., Uunlon W e d n e s d a y
Films, Ceramics Building, 4 : 3 0 p.m.
"Luxembourg Palace," " T h e Rhone River"
"Letters from M y Windmill/' Alum- ni Hall
Thursday Banquet, 8 ¿>.m., Howell Hall
Friday
Films, Ceramics Building, 3:30 p.m.
Childrenff's Program: "Zanzabellt In Paris," "White Horse," "Little Red Riding Hood.'* 4 : 3 0 p.m
FIAT Vol. 44, No. 14 TUESDAY, FEB. 26, 1957, ALFRED, NEW YORK Telephone 5402 LUX
IS etc Chem Group Meets
T h e first meeting of the American Chemical Society will be Held on campus, Wed- nesday, February 27, at 7 p.m., in Allen Lab. Attendance is re- quired of all members, but any- one Interested Is invited to come.
T h e new Alfred chapter of the A C S is a student affiliate group and was Just recently formed. Membership is open to any student majoring in chem- istry. J
Dr. Elliott, Assembly Speaker, Also Lectures Sociology Club
FIAT OPENINGS
Positions are now open in all phases of F I A T work. Interest- ed persons should stop in at the office Wednesday or Thurs- day evenings, or write to Box 754.
D r . Mabel Elliott, head of the sociology department at Chatham College, Pennsylvania, addressed the Alfred students jat the assem- bly on February 21. Dr. Elliott, a well-known criminologist, spoke on the topic "Crime in America."
Thje: speaker centered her talk upon the necessity for people to see crime as "a situation in terms of human\ welfare." She stressed the econotriic and social elements which cause a high crime rate.
Dr. Elliott attributes the crimes in the United Stiaites to four im- portant factors which pertain par- ticularly to American crimes. These
! are our puritanical attitudes and laws, our Negro population, the cultural conflict between our Pro- testant white population land that
1957 St. Pat's Board Produces Two New 4 Tree Form" Favors
i
Pictured above are the old and new designs of St. Pat favors. T h e insert shows the favor produced by the St. Pat's Board of 1937; the favors seen in the main body of the' picture are those that have been produced by thé 1957 St. Pat's Board. T h e designer of the 1937 >^>iece is unknown, but this year's designers are Dean Hokansen and Dick Thomas.
These favors are made and sold as souvenirs of the Festival.
Over the years methods and techniques of producing these souvenirs*
have changed radically; today, the Ceramic College's modern equip- ment produces almost twenty times the number of favors that were put out in 1937. T h e favors have varied from vases and ashtrays to this
year's two "free form" pieces. » This year's favors will be put on sale on Friday, March 15, the
first day of the Twenty-fifth Annual St. Pat's Festival.
[of the more recent Cathojic imml-
; gration, and our frontier mores.
! "Segregation and discrimination,"
continued the speaker, "resolve themselves in many disturbing ways." These experiences that the Negro and immigrant inevitably confront create the bitterness and I revolt trait is one of the major J major causes of crime.
I Dr. Elliott pointed out that with the exhaustion of the. W e s t "Ameri- can turned from the security of land to the security of laws." These laws which "greatly limited the activities of our fellowmen . . . re- stricted the operation of our indus- trial corporations by social wel- fare legislations."
" W e , Americans believe rather seriously in the welfare of all,"
the speaker concluded. Yet, "in our tendency extol human freedom, w e as Americans have had to learn that freedom to exploit and to con- trol, and even freedom of enter- prise has to be redefined in the light of social dangers and human needs."
S O C I O L O G Y C L U B At a well-attended meeting spon- sored by the Sociology Club last Thursday -night in Howell Hall, Dr. Mabel A . Elliott, head of the Sociology Department at Chatham Colleg^, Pittsburgh, presented a talk on the humjan element involv- ed in international relations.
A graduate of Northwestern Uni- versity, where she -received her master's degree and a doctor of philosophy degree, Dr. Elliott is presently serving on many civic and welfare committees. She has travelled extensively throughout Europe, returning last year from the, University of Bonn, Germany, where she spent a year doing re- search.
In her talk, she stressed the fact that international relations are hu- m a n relations: the activities of in- dividuals have precipitated many lifternationial events.
Dr. Elliott expressed her belief that the Voice of 'America, for ex- ample, would do better to stress the American ideals of human free- dom, the dignity of man, and the fact that w e are essentially a
Christian nation, rather than de- voting a good plart of their board- casts to our high standard of liv- ing and wealth.
(Continued on Page 3)
P A G E T W O T H E F I A T L U X , A L F R E D , N E W Y O R K T U E S D A Y , F E B R U A R Y 26, 1957
_ _ _ _ _ _ — — — — *
Campus Briefs
A L U M N I M E E T Mrs. Jean Collins. Assistant Dir- ector of the Alfred Alumni Associ- ation will attend its second -annual business meeting on MartjJi 2. Mrs.
Collins will go to Schenectady, in lieu of Mr, Harold Reid, Director of the Alumni Office, presently va-
cationing in Florida. ' The association sponsors three meetings annually, two of which are held in Alfred, during Home- coming and June Commencement.
T H E D O C T R I N E S O F T H E T R I N I T Y
Dr. Alfred J. Gross, Professor of Theology, will be guest speaker of the Belmont Young Couples Club 9n Sunday, March 3. H e will talk on " T h e Doctrines of the Trinity."
O n March 4, Dr. Gross will attend a meeting of the Board of Missions and Church Extension of the Meth- odist Church. O n March 12, he will talk In Hamburg, N . Y . on " T h e J e w from Tarsus."
C R I M E C O N S I D E R E D T h e Crime and Society class, led by Dr. J. Whitney Shea, went to Buffalo, February 14, to visit the City Courts, Federal Court, Feder- al Probation Department anil the Brie County Court. T h e ' thirty- seven members of the class left at six in the morning and arrived back on campus at six p.m.
D E S I G N L E C T U R E Several members of the Depart- ment of Ceramic Design gave % pottery demonstration and sUjde lecture at the Robinson Memorial Center in Binghamton. Miss Jose- phine Crum gave the slide lecture op "Arts and Crafts of the Early Pennsylvania Dutch." Frank and Dorothea Stoke demonstrated the techniques used by the early pot- ters.
D E S I G N E X H I B I T A n exhibition of crayon drawing, the work of George Vander Sluis, Professor of Art at Syracuse Uni- versity. is being shown at Binns- Merrill Hall until February 25. Mr.
Sluis has exhibited widely both abroad and in the United States.
T h e pictures are mostly color stud- ies for paintings.
N E W D I S C U S S I O N Dean Marshall, and M r . ' Hed- strom, acting dean of admissions,
will represent Alfred at a newly j c i a l S Upp o r t o f the student until organized discussion for colleges | h e l s a b l e t 0 ^ l e a s t contribute to of upstate N e w York, on Thurs-ljjis support,
day, March 7, at Hobart and Wil- liam Smith College in Geneva,
Letters to the Editor
Although the Hungarian Relief i are certainly more than the finan- Drive has come to an official close
on the campus, I feel that it would be well to write a letter to the F I A T , <so that all of the students could k n o w how the final results of the drive and the future plans Senate in regards to the actual of the University and the Student securing of a Hungarian student for the Alfred campus.
During the past week, I received notification from the office of the relief a g e n c y in N e w York, through which w e worked our drive, announcing receipt of our
•contribution of $ 3 % 0 W . They thanked us for our contribution and the interest w e had shown in helping the Hungarian refugees.
I would like to pass these thanks on to the student body as a whole and to many of the partic- ular individuals who gave so much of their time and effort to ensure the success of the drive on the campus.
I would like to particularly like to thank the stJaif of the F I A T for all the fine publicity coverage which they gave the drive, and particularly Nate Lyons, who orig- inated the drive, and Gene Lane.
Special thanks and recognition must also be given to the Depart- ment of Speech and Dramatics, and the students, faculty and townspeople who did such a fine job in presenting " T h e Dark Tow- er." T h e collection of oyer one hundred dollars taken at this sin- gle affair representated _ the larg- est single collection. In passing out praise, Holly /Lewis of the Brick must not be overlooked for the sizeable sum she collected from the residents of the Brick.
Her effort represents by far the most ambitious single effort and action during the drive.
During intercession I had an op- portunity to talk to M r . Philip Hedstrom, who is in chlarge of the
admissions at t h e University.
From our talk these tw» main, points evolved: i
1. T h e University is aiming at September of '67 for the probable admission date for a Hungarian student. ' ,
2. W e must have at least $500 in a bank account to guarlantee finan-
York.
S T U D E N T G U I D E S Several seniors with compara- tively light programs have been contacted by Mr. Hedstrom to act
T h e Student Senate has already appropriated $200 for this fund, which will, of course, require con- tributions of at least $300 from the student body, or particular groups of the student body.
There is no reason w h y w e as guides for prospective students j should not be able to raise this coming to evaluate the campus, j sum. It will entail only a small They will he paid a small fee for
their services.
sacrifice for our individual selves, and the benefits w e shall all gain
Fiat Lux
Alfred University's Student Newspaper
Published every Tuesday of the ~ - - school year by a student staff. En-
tered as second class matter Oct.
9, 1913, at the post office in Alfred, New York, under act of March 3, 1879.
Represented for national advertis- ing by National Advertising Ser- vice, Inc., 4 2 0 Madison Avenu%
New York Oity, New York. Sub- scription $4. yearly.
cial sacrifice.
You will all be hearing from us, as soon as w e get this drive under wiay, with solicitations for your contributions. A n d remember, the more you give us the first time w e approach you, the fewer times you will hear from us.
Sincerely yours, Philip Baker,
National Student Association Coordinator
Alfred,. New York, Tuesday; February 26, 195T
S t a f f
EDITOR-1N-CHÌEF Nathan Lyons
MANAGING EDITOR BUSINESS M A N A G E S Mary Bell Del Crowell
N E W S EDITOR — Meryl Hermann SPORTS EDITOR — AI Siegel F E A T U R E EDITOR — Jane Mnrphy
P H O T O EDITOR — Elliott Lasky
DIRECTORS O P CIRCULATION — Stephen Cohen and Pete Shapiro ADVERTISING^MANAGER — Chester Landau
PROOFREADER — Rosemary Sullivan
REPORTERS : Carolyn Ashley, Stuart BeOnoff, Murine Davis, Linda Goldman, Maxene Gorewltz. Barbara Groffman, Sylvia Johnson.
Dwisrht Otla, Steve Sperber, Evadila Sterrett, Barbara Strana FEATURES : Joseph Balm, Judy Dryer, Barbara Warren
L A N E R E V I E W E D February 21 T o the Editor of the Fiat L u x :
Gene Lane's exquisite mastectomy of David Buckley's new novel,
"Pride of Innocence," is the very essence of stibnitic osteogenesis.
The phautasmorgic escarpment, as Batten has so erioaciously said,
is erotically cuboid in the Destiny- Soul of our facrocosmic Zeitgeist.
Burton, in fact, went so far as to argue: " Q u a n d on doute, punte,"
but the functional relationships of the segmental patterns along the continuum is sthenically etheraliz- ed in the declinatory Weltan- schauung. This can easily be seen in Friedrich, Brzezinsky, Nietzohe, Coolidge and Zane Grey. It
Universally, the Eternal person's acumen is esteemed as hardly per- ceptive concerning whatsoever mat- ters, as Durstine has pointed out, but Osborne's conceptualized God- head-in-Being phlegmatically de- fenestrates. the Catharsis.
Joyce, of course, bad the final answer: "Horhorn, quickening and verfluchte. Send us, bright one, light one."
Jerome Slater
Hi Folks,
Tie ma again, S t Bat, bringin' a little more news about m e and m e festivals
Today, I'm plannin' on goin' back to the old days and bring back some memories. It's been a
long time since m e first festival when ole Deann Holmes brought up the idea of having a festival oelebi<atlng m e Day. For this I was very much obliged and since that first festival, back in 1933, m e le- prechons have grown in number, the Ceramic School has more than doubled its size and Alfred Uni- versity has changed so much that m e old friends wouldn't even rec- ognize the place.
D e a n Holmes thought m e festi- val would emphasize the ceramic school and that it has. T h e work that m e fellow engineers are doing is now known to all at Alfred and elsewhere and I'm proud to say that we're even known back in the
ole country, m y country, of Ire- land.
Through these many years, I've seen many festivals, 24 to' be exact. There have been many dif- ferent Queens and many different Savors and it would be puttin' m e on the spot to choose one best Queen and one be&t favor. But, lookin' at this year's Queen candi- dates, and two ' beautiful favors, I'm thinkin' m e little helpers on the Board have out done them- selves. Not that I'm braggln' mind you, but I'm well pleased with the work that ls beln' done for m e 25th anniversary. Even ole Dean McMahon, w h o isn't quite old enough to remember m e first fest- ival, is getting relady to show off his ceramic school in great colors.
I'm hopin' that all m y friendB,;
the ones that remember the old festivals and those that have never been to a St. Pat's festival will help m e celebrate this 25th Anniversary. A n d it you're won- derln' w h o will be entertaining you on March 15 and 16, be sure .to read the next issue of this F I A T because I'll be anouncing all next week.
Be seein' you all in a few weeks, till then, E R I N G O B R A U G H .
S t Pat
Calendar
Tuesday
W o m e n ' s Student Government Student Senate , Inter-Sorority Council
Wednesday
Business Club Movie: " T h e Du- pont Story"
Thursday
Assembly: "In the Gallery," Foot- light Club
Basketball: Freshmen vs. Intra- mural All Stars
Yarsity 'vs. Clarkson, 8:15 p.m.
Men's G y m Saturday
Wrestling: University of Buffalo, 3 p.m., Men's G y m
Sunday
AlXred Student Christian Fellow- ship, 6:45 p.m., Howell Hall
Movies
Wednesday: " T h e Girl H e Left Be- hind"
Friday: "Never Say Goodbye" and
"Joe Macbeth"
Saturday: "Toward the U n k n o w n "
"Men Around Ike"
Poli Sci Discussion
Angela Zegarelli will discuss tho
" M e n Around Eisenhower" at the Political Science Club meeting to<
night at 8:30 in Kanakadea Hall.
. Miss Zegarelll's remarks o n this subject will be taken mainly from- the project she developed as part of- her Washington semester plan at the American University last semester. H e r topic was " T h e
President's White House Office Staff."
Miss Zegarelli focused her at- tention in her paper on a descrip- tion of the in-group of this staff, and although she used mostly sec- ondary sources, had the opportu- nity of speaking to a few mem- bers of the actual staff. H e r pro- ject featured the men who channel information and who are the im- portant m e n around Eisenhower, such as Shermlan Adams.
Club News
B U S I N E S S C L U B Buzz von Nida, a recent Alfred graduate, was tne guest speaker at the Business Club party held last Friday at the Hotel Wellsville.
T h e party was organized and di- rected by Social Chairman Torrey Fritz.
At the March 28 meeting of the President of the Carborundum Company and one of the advisors- to the Atomic Energy Commission, will speak on " T h e Economic Im- portance of ftuclear Energy." Mr.
Bartholomey will touch on the pro- duction of zirconium, an important
element in the production of atoni- icv energy. All interested persons are welcome to attend. ,
A.S.C.F.
"Christianity in the Problems of the Modern World" was the topic of Professor Leach's talk at the la^t meeting of the Alfred Student Christian Fellowship.
O n March 3, Phyllis Hutchinson, Canylle Crofoot and James Ken- yon will lead a discussion on sum- mer service projects open to col- lege students.
I N T E R N A T I O N A L C L U B Dr. Green of the Ceramics De- partment spoke at the February 24 meeting of the International Club. His formal talk on his recent trip ti Europe was accompanied by colorful slides.
For their March 3 meeting, the International Club hopes to work with the French and Sociology Clubs for a panel discussion on Courtship and Marriage in Vari- ous Countries." T h e panel expects to reveal many ancient courting customs peculiar to nations around the world.
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GOLDF/ÖH ßOWL-
by Judy Dryer
Delta Sig's pledge dance w a s held Saturday evening at the house.
Kevin Fleming is pinned to his girl In Elmira, Mary'Verneer. Mr.
and Mrs. Holbrook were dinner guests Wednesday. Results of Del- ta Sig elections are: R a y Urode,
president; T o m Doty, vice-presi- dent; Don Ulmer, secretary; Lou XJrsitti, treasurer; Bob Lovett, ser- geant-at-arms.
Fred Luhrs, of Kappa Psi, was married Carolyn Murty in Rived- (Side, 'Connecticut, last Saturday.
Phil Partington is going steady with Marsha Weaver, of Ag-Tech.
Klan's cellar-warming party Sat- urday was a big success. T h e cel- lar has been redecorated, with red- and-white rubber tile on the floor, and the former T V room has been converted for dancing. Everyone celebrated Steve Sperber's victory in the wrestling match. H a n k Ad- ler hasn't gone home yet.
O n e hundred and two persons at- tended Kappa Nu's pledge dance Saturday night in Howell Hall. Din- ner was served by the pledges, wearing white dinner jackets, and later, there was. dancing to Jimmy Ellis' band. T h e pledges, as usual, get back at the brothers in their pledges. W o r k is progressing on K N ' s basement, and they hope to have it open for St. Pat's.
L a m b d a Chi held their pledge dance at the Hotel Fassett in Wellsville Saturday night. Hubie Thornton and Jim Chase were back for the weekend.
Four brothers from T a u Delta Phi at L I U visited Alfred's T a u Delt last weekend.
Mary Schia>tt and Dagny Behr- mann, of Geneseo, were weekend guests at Omicron.
Crime and Sociology
(Continued from Page 1) In her capacity as full professor at the law school at Bonn, Dr. El- liott observed that students are very much alike in all nations. W e must use caution, however, in judging foreign students by strict- ly American standiards.
T h e equivalent of our high school education is not widespread in Germany. T h e German people claim that they cannot afford to have the broad educational system indigeous to our country. However, students who do go on to much higher education in Germany enter I with a broader background than
students entering colleges in Am-
J erica. » r At the conclusion of Dr. Elliott's
talk, members of the Sociology Club, visitors from Houghton Col- lege and the general public were invited to partake of the refresh- ments which were served.
Sue Sadowsky w a s back at the Castle for the weekend.
Phil Feld and Joan Braun were married February 3, and are now living in El Paso.
Sue Baker was back at PI last weekend; Jerry Clark was in Al- fred visiting Ellen.
Pris Parsons, Ruth Lelsman, Ma- ry Ellen Ramsey, Polly Viner, and Jackie Monaghan were at Sigma for the weekend.
' Joan Snyder, of Theta, Is pinned to Bruce Kent of Delta Upsilon, at Lehigh. Jiackie Morse, Lisa Finel- 11 and Betty Reinke were back for the weekend. Gil Chollick was in town visiting Carol. Sylvia John- son is new social chairman.
Service Department
Applications for the April 18 administration of the Selective Service College Qualification Test must be postmarked no later than midnight March 5.
Application blanks and informa- tion Sheets concerning the test may be obtained from Dean Gertz's office.
Some people pay a compliment as if they expected a receipt.
— F . M . Hubbard
Dipson's * 1
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Disa and Data
by AI Siegel FIAT LUX Sports Editor
Before a Hungarian student can receive a scholarship "to Alfred, another $300 must be obtained.
Part of it could be donated through the intramural athletic program. There is much interest in this program in both meh's and women's basketball.
other form of playoff should and could be set up with a donation of, say 25-50 cents, being the admis- sion fee with proceeds going to- wards the drive. W e are sure the gym would be available and w e would be happy to do whatever is necessary towards running this contest.
W e have submitted this idea to There probably will be a tie be-
tween L a m b d a Chi and Kappa Psi
for the men's crown while Delta ! o u r S e n a t e P^sident and would ap- Sig and Klan should wind up in a I »r e c i a t e a n y suggestion in regard tie for third. In the women's league i
Cortland State, victors over A U in a 75-74 cage win, has announced its acceptance of an invitation to appear in the firsts; annual N C A A College Di- vision basketball champion- ships as a representative at large.
there is always interest but not I much attendance or publicity. I
This corner would now like to publicly propose a basketball clash which should pack the gym. It would feature a tripleheader. Let's have a battle between Klan and Delta Sig open the bill. T w o top women's clubs can meet in the mid-
dle contest and the finale would pit In '58 when the i Saxons play Tri.
L C and K P for the league champ-' nity College on the football field ionship, if there is to be a tie. | It will he the first contest between
This is merely a suggestion. A n y , the two schools.
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P A G E F O U R T H E F I A T L U X , A L F R E D , N E W Y O R K T U E S D A Y , F E B R U A R Y 26, 1957
Alfred Tracksters Cop Union Meet Four Firsts Aid in AU Victory I t h a c a X o p p l e g
AU Matmen, 19*13
by Allen Siegel
Pour victories in ten events gave the Saxon tracksters their second consecutive victory in the annual Union Invitational track meet as they copped "the decision in the six team field.
Garnering 3 3 % points the A U club finished-ahead of host Union with 29, followed by Cortland 11, LeMoyne 6 % , R P I 5 and Buffalo State 4.
Bill Clark took the high hurdles in 07.5 while Dave Wilcox took the other individual Alfred win as he came home first in the 1000 yard run in 2:26.5.
T h e other Saxon first came in the relays' as the Purple and Gold
IM Nears Close;
Tie Seen Likely
Lambda Chi bounced Delta Sig from a three-way first place dead- lock in the Inti^unural league
Thursday night, 36-25. With 24 sec- onds left, Don Wilklow put in a free throw to break the tie and decide the contest. '
Wilklow was high man in the game with 13. Frank Finnerty
chipped in' another 10 for Lambda Chi and Jay Abbott, registered 12 to leiad the losers.
Kappa Psi still shares first place with L C as a result of knocking off Delta Sig 53-45. High man w i s Yanuzzi for D S with 20. Grimindl led the way for K P with 12.
Other league action" s^,w Klan dump Kappa Nu, 36-33. Marty Schiff was high in the game, scor- ing 21 in a losing cause. Dave Bri- son led the Klansmen with 13.
Jamesson trimmed the Rats 34- 28. High men were Jim Ryan and John Zluchoski with 14 and 12 for Jamesspn. Dick Botoer led the
"Mouskateers" with 9.
Buck Lovett scored 19 for Rod- ies as they whipped K N 44-32. Lam- bda Ch{ turned back Klan Alpine 53-45, with Phil Baker hitting 13.
In B 'action Bartlett beat L C 41-37 and K P downed Klan 30-20.
, Saddler and Wiirch led the victors.
The Saxon basketballers scored 1279 points last year.
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clad harriers took the mile relay and the frosh medley. The mile squad consisted of Fnank Gilbert, Frank Finnerty, Bill Clark and Don Ulmer who outran Buffalo State to the wire in 3:06.9.
Running in the medley the team of Joe DiCamillo, Norm Olaess, Joe Matucci and Larry Sweet took an 8:14.6 victory over Union and Le- Moyne.
Frank Finnerty took seconds in the mile and two mile runs while T o m Bates came in second in the 600 with Frank Gilbert getting a third place tie in this same event.
In the 50 yard dash, Dick Kappus came in third. Bobby Clark gained the lone A U points in field events as he took second in the broad jump.
The win follows on the heels of the outstanding showing of the squad at the Buffalo State relays last week and establishes the Fax- ons as one of the major threats for the N e w Tork State champion- ship meet at Rochester in the spring.
r
The A U wrestlers took a 19-13 defeat at the hands of the Bom- bers of Ithaca College on Satur- day.
Gaining points for the home squad were Steve Sperber land Ron Carmichael with pins and Dick Er- rico with a decision. ,
Big upset of the afternoon was a 5-2 victory by E d Sullivan over Frenchy LeBlanc in the 130 pound class. At 123 Sperber gained his win in 1:59 of the second period.
At 137 Andy Seaman (was pinned in 1:40 by Boriello while A1 Bush was nipped 6-5 by Apple at 147.
A 6-0 win gave Whitlock a decis- ion over Jim Hartnett at 157.
Carmichael gained bis pin over McFarlane at 2:34' of the final per- iod while Errico wrestling at 177 defeated Sevik 6-0. Ithaca took the heavyweight match on a forfeit.
O n Saturday the squad will be in the finale against Buffalo in the gym at 3 p.m.
Mac in Finale as AU Closes;
Statesmen Edge Alfred, 71-64
John McNamara holds the free throw record at A U with 16 for 16.
by Pete 8haplro
The Saxon cagers wind up their season Thursday night lat the Men's Gym when they clash with the En- gineers from Clarkson. T h e contest features the last appearance of sen- ior John McNamara, one of the top scorers in A U basketball history.
Tonight the Warriors jpurney up to Brockport to face the Eagles in the road finale.
Alfred carries a 4-10 record in- to the Brockport game as the re- sult of last Saturday's, trip to Ho- bart, where they bowed, 71-64. The game was much more of a contest than the previous meeting of the clubs, with the Cagers holding a 35-34 edge at the half.
Art Lambert led the Statesmen against Alfred once again with a game high of 28. The Hobart cen- ter hit 14 for 16 free throws. The men in the Purple and Orange fol- lowed this torrid pace, totaling 23 for 29 from the foul line.
However the second half was a different story. After the lead changed hands twice in the open- ing minutes, Hbbart pumped in ten straight points while checking the
Alfred attack. W h e n the dust sett- tied, the Saxons were on the wrong end of a 48-37 score.
John McNamara was high for Al- fred with 15. Following close up were Greene, Bubnack and Ohs- trom with 13, 12 and 11.
In the opener the Junior War- riors were drubbed by the Hobart frosh, 71-37. Chirlstein led the Statesmen with 19.
All Stars Selected
The frosh cagers will meet the All Star team of the Intra- mural league on Thursday night.
Playing for the stars will be Frank Pokorney and Jim Hart- nett, Delta Sig; Roger Shields and Bill Rhodes, Lambda Chi;
Dave Brlson and Harry Miller, Klan; Jim Sproule and Gary Girmlndl, Kappa Psi; Moe Ko- tick and Dick Zodikoff, T a u Delt; Marty Schiff, Kappa N u ; John Farnan, Jamesson; Bob Clark, Barresl; Al 8legel, Rata and Bob Chellln, Rodles.
Coach McWllnams Is a former Penn State basketball captain.
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