["itemContainer",{"xmlns:xsi":"http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance","xsi:schemaLocation":"http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd","uri":"https://library.hunter.cuny.edu/omeka/items/browse/page/26?output=omeka-json&sort_field=added","accessDate":"2026-04-21T14:19:26-04:00"},["miscellaneousContainer",["pagination",["pageNumber","26"],["perPage","10"],["totalResults","373"]]],["item",{"itemId":"2331","public":"1","featured":"0"},["fileContainer",["file",{"fileId":"2619"},["src","https://library.hunter.cuny.edu/omeka/files/original/03192f3fdc1e16698c9ff4e76a933a6d.pdf"],["authentication","2f5dcb6be2fa8d88853eff88e616513f"],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"4"},["name","PDF Text"],["description"],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"52"},["name","Text"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10440"},["text","THE ART GALLERIES\r\nLook at All Those Roses\r\nWell this week we're again confronted with a group of big shows. One of these, the Vuillard retrospective, at the Museum of Modern Art, is a really massive undertaking, with some hundred and fifty oils, water colors, drawings, and other items; and the others -- a loan showing of paintingsof flowers, for the benefit of the Lenox Hill Neighborhood Association, at the Wildenstein, and a selection of oils from the Brooklyn Museum's American collections, at Knoedler -- though not in this impressive category, are still sizeable. I found the Wildenstein affair, to begin with it, a little disappointing. An exhibition of flower paintings seemed just the thing for the cajoling spring weather we were having the day I went up to the gallery, and I'm not entirely sure why the show didn't live up to my expectations. I think the size if one factor, however. An array of no less than eighty-five pictures all on one subject, and that a restricted one, can easily become monotonous, and the effect is heightened in this case by the fact that the selection is unimaginative, or at least circumscribed. With a seriousness that is at times almost grim, it's held to flowers and nothing else -- no figures, not even subsidiary ones, and little background relief of any other kind; in short, just flowers. And as these are capable of only a limited variety of arrangements, in vases, in jugs, on tables, on shelves, against a wall, against a window -- well, you see what I'm getting at.\r\nThe range in time is wide, however, from a tiny, immaculate \"Vase of Flowers,\" by the sixteenth-century German artist Ludger Tom Ring, to a group by Derain, Dali, Rouault, and other contemporaries, and if one skips, or flits, about one can find plenty of appetizing pieces, I was charmed by Gauguin's large, calm \"Flowers of Tahiti,\" Cézanne's \"Vase of Flowers,\" Monet's blue \"Nympheas,\" and, going farther back, the Abraham Breughel \"Spring Flowers\" and the Adriaen Van der Spelt \"Flowerpiece,\" both of the seventeenth century. I was also, I must admit, delighted by some of the big set pieces that have thoughtfully been included. I'll cite only two, the early eighteenth-century \"Flowers in Vase,\" by Gaspar Verbruggen -- a riot of blooms, tendrils, sprigs, fallen petals, and whatnot -- and the even more luxuriant \"Vase of Flowers in a Niche,\" by a follower of the seventeenth-century jean-Baptiste Monnoyer. There's a whole roomful of these wonderful creations for your enjoyment."]]]]]]]]],["collection",{"collectionId":"4"},["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"1"},["name","Dublin Core"],["description","The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"50"},["name","Title"],["description","A name given to the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10341"},["text","Lenox Hill Neighborhood Scrapbook"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"41"},["name","Description"],["description","An account of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10342"},["text","The items found in these boxes are clippings and news stories that focus on the local neighborhood surrounding Hunter College's 68th Street campus, Lenox Hill."]]]],["element",{"elementId":"45"},["name","Publisher"],["description","An entity responsible for making the resource available"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10343"},["text","Hunter College Archives & Special Collections"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"40"},["name","Date"],["description","A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10344"},["text","1954"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"42"},["name","Format"],["description","The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10345"},["text","Optical Character Recognized PDF, black & white"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"44"},["name","Language"],["description","A language of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10346"},["text","English"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"43"},["name","Identifier"],["description","An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10347"},["text","Box 92"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"39"},["name","Creator"],["description","An entity primarily responsible for making the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10348"},["text","Hunter College Archives & Special Collections"]]]]]]]],["itemType",{"itemTypeId":"1"},["name","Text"],["description","A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"1"},["name","Text"],["description","Any textual data included in the document"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10451"},["text","THE ART GALLERIES\r\n\r\nLook at All Those Roses\r\n\r\nWell this week we're again confronted with a group of big shows. One of these, the Vuillard retrospective, at the Museum of Modern Art, is a really massive undertaking, with some hundred and fifty oils, water colors, drawings, and other items; and the others -- a loan showing of paintingsof flowers, for the benefit of the Lenox Hill Neighborhood Association, at the Wildenstein, and a selection of oils from the Brooklyn Museum's American collections, at Knoedler -- though not in this impressive category, are still sizeable. I found the Wildenstein affair, to begin with it, a little disappointing. An exhibition of flower paintings seemed just the thing for the cajoling spring weather we were having the day I went up to the gallery, and I'm not entirely sure why the show didn't live up to my expectations. I think the size if one factor, however. An array of no less than eighty-five pictures all on one subject, and that a restricted one, can easily become monotonous, and the effect is heightened in this case by the fact that the selection is unimaginative, or at least circumscribed. With a seriousness that is at times almost grim, it's held to flowers and nothing else -- no figures, not even subsidiary ones, and little background relief of any other kind; in short, just flowers. And as these are capable of only a limited variety of arrangements, in vases, in jugs, on tables, on shelves, against a wall, against a window -- well, you see what I'm getting at.\r\nThe range in time is wide, however, from a tiny, immaculate \"Vase of Flowers,\" by the sixteenth-century German artist Ludger Tom Ring, to a group by Derain, Dali, Rouault, and other contemporaries, and if one skips, or flits, about one can find plenty of appetizing pieces, I was charmed by Gauguin's large, calm \"Flowers of Tahiti,\" Cézanne's \"Vase of Flowers,\" Monet's blue \"Nympheas,\" and, going farther back, the Abraham Breughel \"Spring Flowers\" and the Adriaen Van der Spelt \"Flowerpiece,\" both of the seventeenth century. I was also, I must admit, delighted by some of the big set pieces that have thoughtfully been included. I'll cite only two, the early eighteenth-century \"Flowers in Vase,\" by Gaspar Verbruggen -- a riot of blooms, tendrils, sprigs, fallen petals, and whatnot -- and the even more luxuriant \"Vase of Flowers in a Niche,\" by a follower of the seventeenth-century jean-Baptiste Monnoyer. There's a whole roomful of these wonderful creations for your enjoyment."]]]]]],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"1"},["name","Dublin Core"],["description","The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"50"},["name","Title"],["description","A name given to the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10389"},["text","The Art Galleries, Look at All Those Roses"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"41"},["name","Description"],["description","An account of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10390"},["text","A New Yorker review of the exhibit \"Magic of Flowers in Paintings\" benefiting the Lenox Hill Association"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"40"},["name","Date"],["description","A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10391"},["text","April 24th, 1954"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"42"},["name","Format"],["description","The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10392"},["text","Optical Character Recognized PDF"]]]]]]],["tagContainer",["tag",{"tagId":"80"},["name","Lenox Hill"]],["tag",{"tagId":"81"},["name","Magic of Flowers in Paintings"]]]],["item",{"itemId":"2332","public":"1","featured":"0"},["fileContainer",["file",{"fileId":"2620"},["src","https://library.hunter.cuny.edu/omeka/files/original/682246af1caf0005dd9b629066e05aee.pdf"],["authentication","4eeeef38a6d86368e63b5321cf24e29d"],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"4"},["name","PDF Text"],["description"],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"52"},["name","Text"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10441"},["text","April 22-29\n\nprograms,\n\nreviews,\n\nlistings movies tv plays dining\n\nradio\n\nGOINGS ON ABOUT TOWN\nCole and Jimmy Rushing. Dancing .... CENTRAL fLAZA, r 11 Second Ave. , at 6th St. (AI 4-98Qo): Friday and Saturday. April 23-24. there'll be a welkin-ringing contest between (it is reported) Billy Butterfield, Red Allen, Bu ster Bailey, Herb Fleming, Sonny Greer. Freddie Moore. and Willie the Lion Smith. Dancing.\n\nmusic\n\nsports\n\nAR. T\n\nApril 24, 1954\n\n20¢\n\n(Unless otherwise noted, galleries are open weekdays from around ro to between 5 and~.) GALLERIES A .. ERICAN PANORA,.A-Upward ,'(f~ forty canvases, by Robert Feke, -..re~ Tillson Peale, Vinslow Homer, Jack Le,·ine, and others, in a wide survey of art in this country during the last two and a quarter centunes. A loan show from and a benefit for the Brooklyn lIuseum . Friday, .pril JO. (Knoedler. 14 E. ) Lou1s BoucHt-Country a s unnily lmpressioni May 8. (Krau shaar , 32 RoBERT DAVISON-S emi-S b lockily modelled and design, but generally urday, April 24. (H CHARLES DEMUTH AND can modernists in water colors; ( Downtown, 3 2 E. 5 LYONEL fEININGIR-New;:~~~~:~:~~~~~~~~¥~s,many of them showing in variations, by an artist now ia fourth year; through Saturday, May alentin, 32 E. 5ith St.) FuTURisw-A carefully selected, handsomely arranged loan exhibition o orks by the fi,·e I tali an arti~ts who foun the movementBalla, Boccioni, Carri1 , solo, a~. e,·erini; through Saturday, y 1 . (Jam IS E. 57th St.) ADOLPH GOTTLIEI-~ ew paintin shift iff.m hi s former \"c01 to a more fluid form of al Saturdlly, . pril 24. (K Ave. 7th St.) MORRIS Es-Ducks and dnlk ally ndcr , clone in oils was d i screetly Japane thro aturday, .pril :q. s6th J. M. H4NSON-Recent oils . delicately abstract in style, by a transplanted English artist now t eaching at Cornell; through Thursday, . pril 29 . (Passedoit, 121 E. 57th St.) C.o. .. ILLE HILAIRE-Dark. fluently patterned abstractions, many of them of :[editerranean scenes, by one of the you nger French moderns; through May 8. (Galerie 1foderne. -19 W. 53rd St. Weekdays. 12:30 to 6.) JosEPH HtRSCH- Thirty can'ases painted during the last three years in Paris; through 1[ay 8. (Associated American Artists, 7II Fifth Ave., at ssth St.) GuRil HoNotus-New paintings, chiefly of the circus which show a lot of understanding of their ~ubject; through Thursday, April 29. (llyer , 32  V. 58th St. Monday s through Fridays, 1 o to 6; Saturdays. 11 to s.) P.o.u t KLEE-A mall retrospective of paintings and drawings that date from '1912 to his death in 1940; through May 8. (Saidenberg, 10 E . 77th St. Weekdays, 2 to 5:30.) FRANZ KLINE-Big, powerful abstractions. all done in black-and-white, by' a n1ajor representative of the American calligraphic school; through May 8. (Egan, 46 E. 57th St.) HENRY KoERNER-Paintings and drawings keenly if a hit dryly, observant of the more earn~st s ide of life in a g irl's school ; through Saturday, May r. (1lidtown, 17 E. 57th St.) PER KROHG-The first American s ho wing of paintings, 1912 to the present, by one of. the leaders of the N orwegtan post- ImpressiOnists; through Saturday, April 24. (St. Etienne, 46 W. 57th St.) ~1c OF FLowERs-A rather ponderous but cer tainly comprehensive garland p£ flower j stu lies, from the si~teenth centlify to tl.1e present. For th e henefit of the Lenox Hill\n\nevents of the week\n(continued) *ORIGINALS ONLY Presents new plays at Originals Onl y Playhouse, 100 Seventh Ave. S. near Sheridan Sq. CH 2-9465 or WA 9-6608. Hot and cold refreshments may be purchased. Eves. Wed.-Sun. 8:40. Midnight Sat. Adm . by voluntary contribution. Cont.- \" N<! Legal G rounds\". *PRAISE OF FOLLY-Cont.-Blackfrlars production ·of new play by John McGuire. Blackfrlars' Guild, 316 W. 57. CI 7-0236. Eves . ex. Mon. 8:15 p.m. $1.75-$2.75. THEODORE-Every Sa t . -One-man Grand Guignol show. Not for the squea,mtsh or those with easily fluttered sensibilities . Carnegie R ecital Hall. 154 W. 57th. CI 7-'J..W. Midnight 51.80 & $2.40. *THREEPENNY OPERA, T'lt Cont.-The late Kurt Weill's score for this satiric gem of the '20s Is a modern masterpiece and his widow, Lotte Lenya lends a masterful. satiric bite to the re-creation of her original role. Theatre De Lys. 121 Christopher St. WA 4-8782. Mats. Sat. & Sun. 2:40, $1.10-$2.75. Eves. 8:40, Tues.Sun. $1.65-$3.30. No perf. Mon. *TIME OF STORM-Cont.-A fine cast, good production provide power and authority to Sheldon Stark's play about the witch hunt hysteria that spread through Massachusetts In 1693. With Mike Kellin, Jane White, Betty Bendyk. Greenwich Mews Playhouse, 141 W. 13. TR 3-4810. Eves. ex. Mon. & Fri. 8:30. Adm by contribution. *TIN WALTZ-Apr 22-25 & 30- May 4-Actors & Writers Theatr.e production of new play /by Nat Harris. St. Clements Church , 423 w. 46th S t. PL 7-6300. 8:30. $1.80. *SOUND OF HUNTING, THE-Cont.-Trio Produc tions presentation. CherrY Lane Thea .. 38 Commerce St . CH 2-9583. Eves. ex. Mon. 8:40, $1.50-$2.50. *WORLD OF SHOLOM ALEICHEM-Cont.-A rewarding richly-flavored dramatization of three classic Yiddish stories . Deft performances by Morris Carnovsky, Ruby Dee, 011 Green, Wlll Lee. Barblzon-Plaza Thea., 58th & 6th Ave. CI 7-7000. Mats. Sat. & Sun. 2:40, $1.10-'$2.20. Eves. 8:40, Tues.-sun. $1.65-13 .30.\n\nToronto Mend e lssohn Choir-Tue.s & Wed, Apr\n\n27 & 28---8:30. $1.50-$6.\nPh il h a rmonic Symphony- Thurs, Apr 29-8:45.\n\nMltropoulos cond. Michael Rabin , violinist. Ve rdi. Overture to \"Nabucco\"; Mohaupt, VIolin Concerto ; Rachmaninoff, Symphon y No. 2 In E minor. $1.75-$4.50.\nPh i lharmonic Symphonv-Fri, Apr 30--2:30.\n\nMltropoulos cond. Michael Ra.bln , violinist. See Thu rs eve program. $1.75-$4.50. TOWN •HALL-113 W 43. LU 2-4536.\nFriendly Sons of St. P a trick 's Glee Club-\n\nFri , Apr 23-8 :30. $1.38. ' ,C hora l Conce rt-Sat, APr 2-2:30 . Schola Cantorum of Hobart & William Smith Colleges. $1. ~ $2.40 . . . . 8 pm. American Mandol in Orchestra . Thomas Sokoloff cond . $1.20-$2.40 . Aristo Art ists-Sun , Apr 25-5:30. $1.10-$1.65.\n. . . 8:30. Caroline T a ylor, pianist. $1.10-\n\n$2.20.\nErn est Ulmer,\n\npi\n\n$1.10-$2.20 . . . . 8:30. Inc. First In serie's contemporary music . Room. Complimentary sers of Today , Inc,\nCenten ary Jr. College\n\n8:30. \" Fest ival of the\nChoral Conce r t - W ed , Apr\n\nCollege A Cappella Choir dren's Choir. $1.\nPhil i ppa Schuyler,\npi\n\n8:30 . $1.10-$2.75. WASHINGTON IRVING H.S 8:15 pm. Tickets 75c, from Concerts. 32 Union Sq . OR\n-Rudolf F irk usny , p ia nist..\n\n\" ADVENTURES OF SINBA 22-25-Puppet show; also candy. Club Cinema, 430 (near 9 St). 3 pm . $1. OR BROOKLYN CHILDREN 'S & Pa rk Pl. B 'klyn. 11:30 am>. live animal tlo n s. etc. (W'kdays 10 1-5 pm).\n\nBALLET &\nJOSE GRf!CO & In a Program way Theatre . (Wed. Apr 28: 2:40. $1.10-$2. $1.65-$3.30. Y.M.H.A .-Lexington Av &\n\n\"HEIDI\"-Wed, Apr\n\n92 St . TR 6-2366.\n\nSun , Apr 25-Ch a rles We i dman Dance Theatre.\n\n8:40. $1.50-$3. . . . Mon, Apr 26--Em ily Fra nkel a nd Mark Ryder. 8:40. 11.50-$2.50. . .. Tues, Apr 27-Ballet Theatre Workshop. 8:40. $1.50 & $2.\n\nOPERA\nNEW YORK CITY OPERA CO.-Thru Sun, May 2-N. Y. City Center. 131 W 55. CI 6-8989. Mats Sat & Sun 2:30. Eves Inc! Sun 8:15.\n51.50·$3.60. Fri , Apr\n23-~'La\n\nDrama Guild, Inc. Turn Hall, Lexington Av $1. LA 4-7569 . ICE SHOW AND LUNCHEON-Every Sat & Sun -Show \" Silhouettes on Ice .\" Steve Kisley's Orchestra. Hotel New Y-orker, Terrace Room, 8th Av & 34th St. Show starts Sa t 1:15. Sun 2:45. Sat club luncheon from $1.85 . Sun dinner from $2.50. Cover charge $1. LO 3-1000.\n11\n\nSNOW WH ITE\" -Eve ry S a t & Sun thru Apr-\n\nBoheme.\"\n\nSat,\n\nApr 24 (Mat) \"La Cene rentola\" . (Eve) \"Madama Butterfly.\" Sun , Apr 25--(Mat) \" Die Fledermaus .\" (Eve) \"Falstaff.\" Fri , APr 30\"Falstaff.\" Sa t , May 1-{Mat) \"Die Fledermaus.\" (Eve) \" Carmen.\" Sun, Ma y 2-{Mat) \"Tasca.\" (Eve) \"Show Boat.\" AMATO OPERA THEATRE - 159 Bleecker St. OR 7-2844. Eves 8:30. Adm free . Reservations must be made In advance at theatre or by maU (stamped. self-addressed envelope must be closed). Fri·Sun , Apr 23~25- 11 Don\n\nP resented by P laymart P roductions. Carl Fischer Concert Hall , 165 W . 57. Sat 1 pm & 2:45 : Sun 2:45 . 75c & $1.20 . PL 3-0746 or PL 7-2027. STUDIO THEATRE FOR CHILDREN- Sun , Apr 25-0rlental show presented by Kay Marw!g. S ~ories. audience participation in costumes. games, prizes , etc. Theatre Studio of Dance, 137 W 56. 3 pm. 40c . LE 4-7833.\n\nART EXHIBITIONS\nAMERICAN PANORAMA-Forty American Paintings from B rooklyn Museum. Benefit of the Museum. Knoedler Galleries, 14 E 57. Thru Apr. 50c. BRADBURY, BENNETT Marine paintings. Grand Central Art Galle·rtes, 15 Van derbilt Av. Apr 27-May 8. ELSER, ELIZABETH-Recent sculpture. Argent Gallery . Ho tel Delmonico, 67 E 59. APr 27May 15. FAIN , YONIA-15 PRintings by a Mexican artist. John Heller Gallery, 63 E 57. Fl ELD , FRANCES-Oils and pastels. Martha Jackson Gallery, 22 E 66 . Apr 27-May HL GASSER , HENRY-Olls , caseins, watercolors. Grand Central Art Galleries. APr 26-May 8. GLASCO-Show of drawings. Catherine VIviano Gallery, 42 E 57. Thru May 1. ·<iROUP SHOW5-\"Magic of Flq~ers ln Painting ,\" loan exhlbltflin of 86 pa!ritrngs, at Wllil1!ri5reln Gallery , 19 E May 15 . . . . 1s r c an JilO ern enamels, at ooper nion  Museum. 8th S t & 4th Av. Thru June 11 . . . . \" P aris In New Yo rk Festival. \" work by Bonho mme . Steve Kek , others, at Chapelller Gallery, 48 E 57. Thru Apr . . . . \" Predominantly\nFrench,' ' comprehensive show of contemporary\n\nuale.\"\n\nMUSIC\nBROOKLYN ACADEMY OF MUSI Av. ST 3-6700. Wed, Apr . . Chamber\nMusic Associates. $1.50 . . . . Fri, Apr 30-8:30 . Mass ie Patterson Carib S i ngers. \"Calypso\n\nl\n\nCarousel.\" program of West Indian music. $1.20-$2.40. CARNEGIE HALL-57 & 7 Av . CI 7-7460.\nPhilharmonic Symphony- Fri , Apr 23-2:30 .\n\ntropoulos cond. Leila Gousseau , pianist. alo. Overt ure to \"Le Rol d' Ys\"; Bizet, Symhony In C; Conve rse. \"The Myst ic Trumeter\": Chopin. Pl ano Concerto No. 2 in F !nor: Chabrler. Fetes Polonaise. $1.75-$4.50 .\nlharmonic Symphony-Sa t, Apr 24-8:45.\n\n!Jtropoulos cond. Leonid Hambro , pianist . ,ala . Overture to \"Le Roi d 'Ys\" : Bizet, S ym4'- bony In C; Everett Helm, Plano Concerto fm.ra~:ces~~h~~ko;,~~~~i. ~Y~~:o~~~~2/an tasy •\n!harmonic Symphony-Sun , Apr 25-2:30.\n\n\"!troPoulos cond. Leonid Hambro , pianist . Lar.,. Overture to \" Le Rol d'Ys\" ; Bizet, Symphony tn C: Rachmaninoff. Plano Con certo No. 4 In G minor; Chabrler, Fetes Polonaise.\n1.50-$3.25 . . . . 5:30. Norm a Jean, soprano,\n\n, Kenneth Lane, tenor. $1.10-$3 .30. . 30. Severin Turel, pianist. $1.80-$3.60.\n\nprintmakers, at The Contemporaries, 959 Madison Av. Th ru MaY 15 . . . . \" Portrai ts In Review. 1953-54,'' at P ortraits, Inc., 136 E 57. APr 28-May 18. . . . APril show of oils by J osePh Albers, Milton Avery, James Brooks,\n\n�"]]]]]]]]],["collection",{"collectionId":"4"},["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"1"},["name","Dublin Core"],["description","The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"50"},["name","Title"],["description","A name given to the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10341"},["text","Lenox Hill Neighborhood Scrapbook"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"41"},["name","Description"],["description","An account of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10342"},["text","The items found in these boxes are clippings and news stories that focus on the local neighborhood surrounding Hunter College's 68th Street campus, Lenox Hill."]]]],["element",{"elementId":"45"},["name","Publisher"],["description","An entity responsible for making the resource available"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10343"},["text","Hunter College Archives & Special Collections"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"40"},["name","Date"],["description","A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10344"},["text","1954"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"42"},["name","Format"],["description","The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10345"},["text","Optical Character Recognized PDF, black & white"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"44"},["name","Language"],["description","A language of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10346"},["text","English"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"43"},["name","Identifier"],["description","An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10347"},["text","Box 92"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"39"},["name","Creator"],["description","An entity primarily responsible for making the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10348"},["text","Hunter College Archives & Special Collections"]]]]]]]],["itemType",{"itemTypeId":"1"},["name","Text"],["description","A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"1"},["name","Text"],["description","Any textual data included in the document"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10450"},["text","April 22-29\r\n\r\nprograms,\r\n\r\nreviews,\r\n\r\nlistings movies tv plays dining\r\n\r\nradio\r\n\r\nGOINGS ON ABOUT TOWN\r\nCole and Jimmy Rushing. Dancing .... CENTRAL fLAZA, r 11 Second Ave. , at 6th St. (AI 4-98Qo): Friday and Saturday. April 23-24. there'll be a welkin-ringing contest between (it is reported) Billy Butterfield, Red Allen, Bu ster Bailey, Herb Fleming, Sonny Greer. Freddie Moore. and Willie the Lion Smith. Dancing.\r\n\r\nmusic\r\n\r\nsports\r\n\r\nAR. T\r\n\r\nApril 24, 1954\r\n\r\n20¢\r\n\r\n(Unless otherwise noted, galleries are open weekdays from around ro to between 5 and~.) GALLERIES A .. ERICAN PANORA,.A-Upward ,'(f~ forty canvases, by Robert Feke, -..re~ Tillson Peale, Vinslow Homer, Jack Le,·ine, and others, in a wide survey of art in this country during the last two and a quarter centunes. A loan show from and a benefit for the Brooklyn lIuseum . Friday, .pril JO. (Knoedler. 14 E. ) Lou1s BoucHt-Country a s unnily lmpressioni May 8. (Krau shaar , 32 RoBERT DAVISON-S emi-S b lockily modelled and design, but generally urday, April 24. (H CHARLES DEMUTH AND can modernists in water colors; ( Downtown, 3 2 E. 5 LYONEL fEININGIR-New;:~~~~:~:~~~~~~~~¥~s,many of them showing in variations, by an artist now ia fourth year; through Saturday, May alentin, 32 E. 5ith St.) FuTURisw-A carefully selected, handsomely arranged loan exhibition o orks by the fi,·e I tali an arti~ts who foun the movementBalla, Boccioni, Carri1 , solo, a~. e,·erini; through Saturday, y 1 . (Jam IS E. 57th St.) ADOLPH GOTTLIEI-~ ew paintin shift iff.m hi s former \"c01 to a more fluid form of al Saturdlly, . pril 24. (K Ave. 7th St.) MORRIS Es-Ducks and dnlk ally ndcr , clone in oils was d i screetly Japane thro aturday, .pril :q. s6th J. M. H4NSON-Recent oils . delicately abstract in style, by a transplanted English artist now t eaching at Cornell; through Thursday, . pril 29 . (Passedoit, 121 E. 57th St.) C.o. .. ILLE HILAIRE-Dark. fluently patterned abstractions, many of them of :[editerranean scenes, by one of the you nger French moderns; through May 8. (Galerie 1foderne. -19 W. 53rd St. Weekdays. 12:30 to 6.) JosEPH HtRSCH- Thirty can'ases painted during the last three years in Paris; through 1[ay 8. (Associated American Artists, 7II Fifth Ave., at ssth St.) GuRil HoNotus-New paintings, chiefly of the circus which show a lot of understanding of their ~ubject; through Thursday, April 29. (llyer , 32  V. 58th St. Monday s through Fridays, 1 o to 6; Saturdays. 11 to s.) P.o.u t KLEE-A mall retrospective of paintings and drawings that date from '1912 to his death in 1940; through May 8. (Saidenberg, 10 E . 77th St. Weekdays, 2 to 5:30.) FRANZ KLINE-Big, powerful abstractions. all done in black-and-white, by' a n1ajor representative of the American calligraphic school; through May 8. (Egan, 46 E. 57th St.) HENRY KoERNER-Paintings and drawings keenly if a hit dryly, observant of the more earn~st s ide of life in a g irl's school ; through Saturday, May r. (1lidtown, 17 E. 57th St.) PER KROHG-The first American s ho wing of paintings, 1912 to the present, by one of. the leaders of the N orwegtan post- ImpressiOnists; through Saturday, April 24. (St. Etienne, 46 W. 57th St.) ~1c OF FLowERs-A rather ponderous but cer tainly comprehensive garland p£ flower j stu lies, from the si~teenth centlify to tl.1e present. For th e henefit of the Lenox Hill\r\n\r\nevents of the week\r\n(continued) *ORIGINALS ONLY Presents new plays at Originals Onl y Playhouse, 100 Seventh Ave. S. near Sheridan Sq. CH 2-9465 or WA 9-6608. Hot and cold refreshments may be purchased. Eves. Wed.-Sun. 8:40. Midnight Sat. Adm . by voluntary contribution. Cont.- \" N<! Legal G rounds\". *PRAISE OF FOLLY-Cont.-Blackfrlars production ·of new play by John McGuire. Blackfrlars' Guild, 316 W. 57. CI 7-0236. Eves . ex. Mon. 8:15 p.m. $1.75-$2.75. THEODORE-Every Sa t . -One-man Grand Guignol show. Not for the squea,mtsh or those with easily fluttered sensibilities . Carnegie R ecital Hall. 154 W. 57th. CI 7-'J..W. Midnight 51.80 & $2.40. *THREEPENNY OPERA, T'lt Cont.-The late Kurt Weill's score for this satiric gem of the '20s Is a modern masterpiece and his widow, Lotte Lenya lends a masterful. satiric bite to the re-creation of her original role. Theatre De Lys. 121 Christopher St. WA 4-8782. Mats. Sat. & Sun. 2:40, $1.10-$2.75. Eves. 8:40, Tues.Sun. $1.65-$3.30. No perf. Mon. *TIME OF STORM-Cont.-A fine cast, good production provide power and authority to Sheldon Stark's play about the witch hunt hysteria that spread through Massachusetts In 1693. With Mike Kellin, Jane White, Betty Bendyk. Greenwich Mews Playhouse, 141 W. 13. TR 3-4810. Eves. ex. Mon. & Fri. 8:30. Adm by contribution. *TIN WALTZ-Apr 22-25 & 30- May 4-Actors & Writers Theatr.e production of new play /by Nat Harris. St. Clements Church , 423 w. 46th S t. PL 7-6300. 8:30. $1.80. *SOUND OF HUNTING, THE-Cont.-Trio Produc tions presentation. CherrY Lane Thea .. 38 Commerce St . CH 2-9583. Eves. ex. Mon. 8:40, $1.50-$2.50. *WORLD OF SHOLOM ALEICHEM-Cont.-A rewarding richly-flavored dramatization of three classic Yiddish stories . Deft performances by Morris Carnovsky, Ruby Dee, 011 Green, Wlll Lee. Barblzon-Plaza Thea., 58th & 6th Ave. CI 7-7000. Mats. Sat. & Sun. 2:40, $1.10-'$2.20. Eves. 8:40, Tues.-sun. $1.65-13 .30.\r\n\r\nToronto Mend e lssohn Choir-Tue.s & Wed, Apr\r\n\r\n27 & 28---8:30. $1.50-$6.\r\nPh il h a rmonic Symphony- Thurs, Apr 29-8:45.\r\n\r\nMltropoulos cond. Michael Rabin , violinist. Ve rdi. Overture to \"Nabucco\"; Mohaupt, VIolin Concerto ; Rachmaninoff, Symphon y No. 2 In E minor. $1.75-$4.50.\r\nPh i lharmonic Symphonv-Fri, Apr 30--2:30.\r\n\r\nMltropoulos cond. Michael Ra.bln , violinist. See Thu rs eve program. $1.75-$4.50. TOWN •HALL-113 W 43. LU 2-4536.\r\nFriendly Sons of St. P a trick 's Glee Club-\r\n\r\nFri , Apr 23-8 :30. $1.38. ' ,C hora l Conce rt-Sat, APr 2-2:30 . Schola Cantorum of Hobart & William Smith Colleges. $1. ~ $2.40 . . . . 8 pm. American Mandol in Orchestra . Thomas Sokoloff cond . $1.20-$2.40 . Aristo Art ists-Sun , Apr 25-5:30. $1.10-$1.65.\r\n. . . 8:30. Caroline T a ylor, pianist. $1.10-\r\n\r\n$2.20.\r\nErn est Ulmer,\r\n\r\npi\r\n\r\n$1.10-$2.20 . . . . 8:30. Inc. First In serie's contemporary music . Room. Complimentary sers of Today , Inc,\r\nCenten ary Jr. College\r\n\r\n8:30. \" Fest ival of the\r\nChoral Conce r t - W ed , Apr\r\n\r\nCollege A Cappella Choir dren's Choir. $1.\r\nPhil i ppa Schuyler,\r\npi\r\n\r\n8:30 . $1.10-$2.75. WASHINGTON IRVING H.S 8:15 pm. Tickets 75c, from Concerts. 32 Union Sq . OR\r\n-Rudolf F irk usny , p ia nist..\r\n\r\n\" ADVENTURES OF SINBA 22-25-Puppet show; also candy. Club Cinema, 430 (near 9 St). 3 pm . $1. OR BROOKLYN CHILDREN 'S & Pa rk Pl. B 'klyn. 11:30 am>. live animal tlo n s. etc. (W'kdays 10 1-5 pm).\r\n\r\nBALLET &\r\nJOSE GRf!CO & In a Program way Theatre . (Wed. Apr 28: 2:40. $1.10-$2. $1.65-$3.30. Y.M.H.A .-Lexington Av &\r\n\r\n\"HEIDI\"-Wed, Apr\r\n\r\n92 St . TR 6-2366.\r\n\r\nSun , Apr 25-Ch a rles We i dman Dance Theatre.\r\n\r\n8:40. $1.50-$3. . . . Mon, Apr 26--Em ily Fra nkel a nd Mark Ryder. 8:40. 11.50-$2.50. . .. Tues, Apr 27-Ballet Theatre Workshop. 8:40. $1.50 & $2.\r\n\r\nOPERA\r\nNEW YORK CITY OPERA CO.-Thru Sun, May 2-N. Y. City Center. 131 W 55. CI 6-8989. Mats Sat & Sun 2:30. Eves Inc! Sun 8:15.\r\n51.50·$3.60. Fri , Apr\r\n23-~'La\r\n\r\nDrama Guild, Inc. Turn Hall, Lexington Av $1. LA 4-7569 . ICE SHOW AND LUNCHEON-Every Sat & Sun -Show \" Silhouettes on Ice .\" Steve Kisley's Orchestra. Hotel New Y-orker, Terrace Room, 8th Av & 34th St. Show starts Sa t 1:15. Sun 2:45. Sat club luncheon from $1.85 . Sun dinner from $2.50. Cover charge $1. LO 3-1000.\r\n11\r\n\r\nSNOW WH ITE\" -Eve ry S a t & Sun thru Apr-\r\n\r\nBoheme.\"\r\n\r\nSat,\r\n\r\nApr 24 (Mat) \"La Cene rentola\" . (Eve) \"Madama Butterfly.\" Sun , Apr 25--(Mat) \" Die Fledermaus .\" (Eve) \"Falstaff.\" Fri , APr 30\"Falstaff.\" Sa t , May 1-{Mat) \"Die Fledermaus.\" (Eve) \" Carmen.\" Sun, Ma y 2-{Mat) \"Tasca.\" (Eve) \"Show Boat.\" AMATO OPERA THEATRE - 159 Bleecker St. OR 7-2844. Eves 8:30. Adm free . Reservations must be made In advance at theatre or by maU (stamped. self-addressed envelope must be closed). Fri·Sun , Apr 23~25- 11 Don\r\n\r\nP resented by P laymart P roductions. Carl Fischer Concert Hall , 165 W . 57. Sat 1 pm & 2:45 : Sun 2:45 . 75c & $1.20 . PL 3-0746 or PL 7-2027. STUDIO THEATRE FOR CHILDREN- Sun , Apr 25-0rlental show presented by Kay Marw!g. S ~ories. audience participation in costumes. games, prizes , etc. Theatre Studio of Dance, 137 W 56. 3 pm. 40c . LE 4-7833.\r\n\r\nART EXHIBITIONS\r\nAMERICAN PANORAMA-Forty American Paintings from B rooklyn Museum. Benefit of the Museum. Knoedler Galleries, 14 E 57. Thru Apr. 50c. BRADBURY, BENNETT Marine paintings. Grand Central Art Galle·rtes, 15 Van derbilt Av. Apr 27-May 8. ELSER, ELIZABETH-Recent sculpture. Argent Gallery . Ho tel Delmonico, 67 E 59. APr 27May 15. FAIN , YONIA-15 PRintings by a Mexican artist. John Heller Gallery, 63 E 57. Fl ELD , FRANCES-Oils and pastels. Martha Jackson Gallery, 22 E 66 . Apr 27-May HL GASSER , HENRY-Olls , caseins, watercolors. Grand Central Art Galleries. APr 26-May 8. GLASCO-Show of drawings. Catherine VIviano Gallery, 42 E 57. Thru May 1. ·<iROUP SHOW5-\"Magic of Flq~ers ln Painting ,\" loan exhlbltflin of 86 pa!ritrngs, at Wllil1!ri5reln Gallery , 19 E May 15 . . . . 1s r c an JilO ern enamels, at ooper nion  Museum. 8th S t & 4th Av. Thru June 11 . . . . \" P aris In New Yo rk Festival. \" work by Bonho mme . Steve Kek , others, at Chapelller Gallery, 48 E 57. Thru Apr . . . . \" Predominantly\r\nFrench,' ' comprehensive show of contemporary\r\n\r\nuale.\"\r\n\r\nMUSIC\r\nBROOKLYN ACADEMY OF MUSI Av. ST 3-6700. Wed, Apr . . Chamber\r\nMusic Associates. $1.50 . . . . Fri, Apr 30-8:30 . Mass ie Patterson Carib S i ngers. \"Calypso\r\n\r\nl\r\n\r\nCarousel.\" program of West Indian music. $1.20-$2.40. CARNEGIE HALL-57 & 7 Av . CI 7-7460.\r\nPhilharmonic Symphony- Fri , Apr 23-2:30 .\r\n\r\ntropoulos cond. Leila Gousseau , pianist. alo. Overt ure to \"Le Rol d' Ys\"; Bizet, Symhony In C; Conve rse. \"The Myst ic Trumeter\": Chopin. Pl ano Concerto No. 2 in F !nor: Chabrler. Fetes Polonaise. $1.75-$4.50 .\r\nlharmonic Symphony-Sa t, Apr 24-8:45.\r\n\r\n!Jtropoulos cond. Leonid Hambro , pianist . ,ala . Overture to \"Le Roi d 'Ys\" : Bizet, S ym4'- bony In C; Everett Helm, Plano Concerto fm.ra~:ces~~h~~ko;,~~~~i. ~Y~~:o~~~~2/an tasy •\r\n!harmonic Symphony-Sun , Apr 25-2:30.\r\n\r\n\"!troPoulos cond. Leonid Hambro , pianist . Lar.,. Overture to \" Le Rol d'Ys\" ; Bizet, Symphony tn C: Rachmaninoff. Plano Con certo No. 4 In G minor; Chabrler, Fetes Polonaise.\r\n1.50-$3.25 . . . . 5:30. Norm a Jean, soprano,\r\n\r\n, Kenneth Lane, tenor. $1.10-$3 .30. . 30. Severin Turel, pianist. $1.80-$3.60.\r\n\r\nprintmakers, at The Contemporaries, 959 Madison Av. Th ru MaY 15 . . . . \" Portrai ts In Review. 1953-54,'' at P ortraits, Inc., 136 E 57. APr 28-May 18. . . . APril show of oils by J osePh Albers, Milton Avery, James Brooks,\r\n\r\n"]]]]]],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"1"},["name","Dublin Core"],["description","The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. 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Both the\n\nreception and the annual meeting will be open to the general public. The Lenox Hill Neighborhood Association was founded in 1894 by the Associate Alumnae of Hunter College. Its services include\n\na family health department, a day care program for children of working mothers and carefully planned and supervised educational and social activities for people of all races and .creeds.\n\n-30-\n\n�"]]]]]]]]],["collection",{"collectionId":"4"},["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"1"},["name","Dublin Core"],["description","The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"50"},["name","Title"],["description","A name given to the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10341"},["text","Lenox Hill Neighborhood Scrapbook"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"41"},["name","Description"],["description","An account of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10342"},["text","The items found in these boxes are clippings and news stories that focus on the local neighborhood surrounding Hunter College's 68th Street campus, Lenox Hill."]]]],["element",{"elementId":"45"},["name","Publisher"],["description","An entity responsible for making the resource available"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10343"},["text","Hunter College Archives & Special Collections"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"40"},["name","Date"],["description","A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10344"},["text","1954"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"42"},["name","Format"],["description","The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10345"},["text","Optical Character Recognized PDF, black & white"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"44"},["name","Language"],["description","A language of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10346"},["text","English"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"43"},["name","Identifier"],["description","An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10347"},["text","Box 92"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"39"},["name","Creator"],["description","An entity primarily responsible for making the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10348"},["text","Hunter College Archives & Special Collections"]]]]]]]],["itemType",{"itemTypeId":"1"},["name","Text"],["description","A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"1"},["name","Text"],["description","Any textual data included in the document"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10449"},["text","FIRST ADD LENOX HILL\r\n\r\nA reception and Open House, during which the public is invitod to tour the settlement house and witness its many programs for people of all ages, will be held from 4 to 5 P.M. Both the\r\n\r\nreception and the annual meeting will be open to the general public. The Lenox Hill Neighborhood Association was founded in 1894 by the Associate Alumnae of Hunter College. Its services include\r\n\r\na family health department, a day care program for children of working mothers and carefully planned and supervised educational and social activities for people of all races and .creeds.\r\n\r\n-30-"]]]]]],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"1"},["name","Dublin Core"],["description","The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"50"},["name","Title"],["description","A name given to the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10397"},["text","Sent to City and Picture Desks of all New York Papers"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"41"},["name","Description"],["description","An account of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10398"},["text","A typed description that was meant to publicize the Lenox Hill Association's Open House. This was sent to all local papers' city and picture desks hoping for coverage in the paper."]]]],["element",{"elementId":"42"},["name","Format"],["description","The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10399"},["text","Optical Character Recognized PDF"]]]]]]],["tagContainer",["tag",{"tagId":"80"},["name","Lenox Hill"]]]],["item",{"itemId":"2334","public":"1","featured":"0"},["fileContainer",["file",{"fileId":"2622"},["src","https://library.hunter.cuny.edu/omeka/files/original/3d0e9abd927bc0b23615c7f781647bd8.pdf"],["authentication","06577f93a6b2050b340f6e88c47a17c8"],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"4"},["name","PDF Text"],["description"],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"52"},["name","Text"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10443"},["text","TO SOCIETY EDITORS OF ALL NEW YORK NEWSPAPERS\n\n'.\n\n'\n\nFIRST ADD LENOX HILL\n\nThe public is invited to attend the reception and Open House, during which they will be able to\nt~ur\n\nthe settlement house and ob-\n\nserve its many programs for people of all ages, races and creeds. Mayor Wagner, who will be accompanied by Mrs. Wagner, and Mr. Arthur Lall, Indian Consul General in New York and alternate delegate to the United Nations, will be the chief speakers at the annual meeting which will begin at 5 P.M. The Mayor will also pre/\n\nsent a proclamation honoring the Lenox Hill Neighborhood Association for its sixty years of service to the people of New York to Mr. James M. Snowden, president of the Association. Miss Lillian D. Robbins,\n\nexecutive director of the Association, will deliver the annual report. The Lenox Hill Neighborhood Association was founded in 1894 by the Associate Alumnae of Hunter College. Its services include a ·\n\nhealth and sooial service department, a day care program for ohildren of working mothers and carefully planned and supervised educational and social aotivities for people in the Yorkville area.\n\n-30-\n\n,.\nI\n.(1 (\n\nI.\n\n�"]]]]]]]]],["collection",{"collectionId":"4"},["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"1"},["name","Dublin Core"],["description","The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. 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Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"1"},["name","Text"],["description","Any textual data included in the document"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10448"},["text","TO SOCIETY EDITORS OF ALL NEW YORK NEWSPAPERS\r\n\r\nFIRST ADD LENOX HILL\r\n\r\nThe public is invited to attend the reception and Open House, during which they will be able to tour the settlement house and observe its many programs for people of all ages, races and creeds. Mayor Wagner, who will be accompanied by Mrs. Wagner, and Mr. Arthur Lall, Indian Consul General in New York and alternate delegate to the United Nations, will be the chief speakers at the annual meeting which will begin at 5 P.M. The Mayor will also present a proclamation honoring the Lenox Hill Neighborhood Association for its sixty years of service to the people of New York to Mr. James M. Snowden, president of the Association. Miss Lillian D. Robbins,\r\n\r\nexecutive director of the Association, will deliver the annual report. The Lenox Hill Neighborhood Association was founded in 1894 by the Associate Alumnae of Hunter College. Its services include a ·\r\n\r\nhealth and sooial service department, a day care program for children of working mothers and carefully planned and supervised educational and social activities for people in the Yorkville area.\r\n\r\n-30-\r\n"]]]]]],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"1"},["name","Dublin Core"],["description","The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. 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This was sent to all local papers' society editors hoping for coverage in the paper."]]]],["element",{"elementId":"42"},["name","Format"],["description","The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10402"},["text","Optical Character Recognized PDF"]]]]]]],["tagContainer",["tag",{"tagId":"80"},["name","Lenox Hill"]],["tag",{"tagId":"82"},["name","Open House"]]]],["item",{"itemId":"2335","public":"1","featured":"0"},["fileContainer",["file",{"fileId":"2623"},["src","https://library.hunter.cuny.edu/omeka/files/original/d61be40e70e993015a2ad52dd9d54d40.pdf"],["authentication","02995608ba84b3ed35ea4b1bc62338c1"],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"4"},["name","PDF Text"],["description"],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"52"},["name","Text"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10444"},["text","-FROM LENOX HILL NEIGHBORHOOD ASSOCIATION 331 East 70th Street New York 21, N.Y. Mrs. Barbara Bakst Public Relations Director RHinelander 4-5022 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE MAYOR WAGNER AND ARTHUR LALL TO ADDRESS 60TH ANNUAL MEETING OF LENOX HILL NEIGHBORHOOD ASSOC. FOR INFORMATION CALL:\n\nMayor Robert F. Wagner and Mr. Arthur Lall, Indian Consul General in New York and alternate Indian delegate to the United Nations General Assembly, will be the chief speakers at the sixtieth annual meeting of the Lenox Hill Neighborhood Association to be held at the Neighborhood House, 331 East 70th Street, on May 4 at 5 P.M. The Mayor will also present a proclamation to Mr. James M. Snowden, president of the Association, honoring the settlement house for its sixty years of service to the people of New York. The theme of the moeting will be \"Our Neighborhood, Our City, Our World Community\". Miss Lillian D. Robbins, executive\n\ndirector of the Lenox Hill Neighborhood Association, will give the annual report. - MORE -\n\n�"]]]]]]]]],["collection",{"collectionId":"4"},["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"1"},["name","Dublin Core"],["description","The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"50"},["name","Title"],["description","A name given to the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10341"},["text","Lenox Hill Neighborhood Scrapbook"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"41"},["name","Description"],["description","An account of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10342"},["text","The items found in these boxes are clippings and news stories that focus on the local neighborhood surrounding Hunter College's 68th Street campus, Lenox Hill."]]]],["element",{"elementId":"45"},["name","Publisher"],["description","An entity responsible for making the resource available"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10343"},["text","Hunter College Archives & Special Collections"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"40"},["name","Date"],["description","A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10344"},["text","1954"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"42"},["name","Format"],["description","The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10345"},["text","Optical Character Recognized PDF, black & white"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"44"},["name","Language"],["description","A language of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10346"},["text","English"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"43"},["name","Identifier"],["description","An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10347"},["text","Box 92"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"39"},["name","Creator"],["description","An entity primarily responsible for making the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10348"},["text","Hunter College Archives & Special Collections"]]]]]]]],["itemType",{"itemTypeId":"1"},["name","Text"],["description","A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"1"},["name","Text"],["description","Any textual data included in the document"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10447"},["text","FROM LENOX HILL NEIGHBORHOOD ASSOCIATION 331 East 70th Street New York 21, N.Y. Mrs. Barbara Bakst Public Relations Director RHinelander 4-5022 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE MAYOR WAGNER AND ARTHUR LALL TO ADDRESS 60TH ANNUAL MEETING OF LENOX HILL NEIGHBORHOOD ASSOC. FOR INFORMATION CALL:\r\n\r\nMayor Robert F. Wagner and Mr. Arthur Lall, Indian Consul General in New York and alternate Indian delegate to the United Nations General Assembly, will be the chief speakers at the sixtieth annual meeting of the Lenox Hill Neighborhood Association to be held at the Neighborhood House, 331 East 70th Street, on May 4 at 5 P.M. The Mayor will also present a proclamation to Mr. James M. Snowden, president of the Association, honoring the settlement house for its sixty years of service to the people of New York. The theme of the moeting will be \"Our Neighborhood, Our City, Our World Community\". Miss Lillian D. Robbins, executive\r\n\r\ndirector of the Lenox Hill Neighborhood Association, will give the annual report. - MORE -\r\n"]]]]]],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"1"},["name","Dublin Core"],["description","The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"50"},["name","Title"],["description","A name given to the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10403"},["text","Mayor Wagner and Arthur Lall to Address 60th Annual meeting of Lenox Hill Neighborhood Assoc."]]]],["element",{"elementId":"41"},["name","Description"],["description","An account of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10404"},["text","A publicity write up that was sent to local newspapers announcing the open house of the Lenox Hill House. Mayor Robert F. Wagner and Arthur Lall, Indian Consul General for the United Nations were to be speakers."]]]],["element",{"elementId":"42"},["name","Format"],["description","The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10405"},["text","Optical Character Recognized PDF"]]]]]]],["tagContainer",["tag",{"tagId":"80"},["name","Lenox Hill"]],["tag",{"tagId":"82"},["name","Open House"]]]],["item",{"itemId":"2336","public":"1","featured":"0"},["fileContainer",["file",{"fileId":"2624"},["src","https://library.hunter.cuny.edu/omeka/files/original/a1389ae88539f832c2ff7092b6c8c091.pdf"],["authentication","48cbe7e43eb526e3e9506881eea03c71"],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"4"},["name","PDF Text"],["description"],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"52"},["name","Text"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10455"},["text","�"]]]]]]]]],["collection",{"collectionId":"4"},["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"1"},["name","Dublin Core"],["description","The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"50"},["name","Title"],["description","A name given to the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10341"},["text","Lenox Hill Neighborhood Scrapbook"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"41"},["name","Description"],["description","An account of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10342"},["text","The items found in these boxes are clippings and news stories that focus on the local neighborhood surrounding Hunter College's 68th Street campus, Lenox Hill."]]]],["element",{"elementId":"45"},["name","Publisher"],["description","An entity responsible for making the resource available"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10343"},["text","Hunter College Archives & Special Collections"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"40"},["name","Date"],["description","A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10344"},["text","1954"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"42"},["name","Format"],["description","The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10345"},["text","Optical Character Recognized PDF, black & white"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"44"},["name","Language"],["description","A language of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10346"},["text","English"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"43"},["name","Identifier"],["description","An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10347"},["text","Box 92"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"39"},["name","Creator"],["description","An entity primarily responsible for making the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10348"},["text","Hunter College Archives & Special Collections"]]]]]]]],["itemType",{"itemTypeId":"1"},["name","Text"],["description","A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"1"},["name","Text"],["description","Any textual data included in the document"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10460"},["text","Some people have all the luck. Like these young children who, while the rest of the city swelters, play in their \"crib\" in the indoor swimming pool at Lenox Hill Settlement House. The \"crib\" is a new device to help the youngsters learn to swim safely in pools and lakes. This one, perhaps the only one in the city, was christened and launched at ceremonies in the Play School yesterday morning, to the children's delight -- and our perspiring discomfiture.\r\n\r\nSTAR Photo by John DeBiaso"]]]]]],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"1"},["name","Dublin Core"],["description","The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. 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For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"50"},["name","Title"],["description","A name given to the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10341"},["text","Lenox Hill Neighborhood Scrapbook"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"41"},["name","Description"],["description","An account of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10342"},["text","The items found in these boxes are clippings and news stories that focus on the local neighborhood surrounding Hunter College's 68th Street campus, Lenox Hill."]]]],["element",{"elementId":"45"},["name","Publisher"],["description","An entity responsible for making the resource available"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10343"},["text","Hunter College Archives & Special Collections"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"40"},["name","Date"],["description","A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10344"},["text","1954"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"42"},["name","Format"],["description","The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10345"},["text","Optical Character Recognized PDF, black & white"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"44"},["name","Language"],["description","A language of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10346"},["text","English"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"43"},["name","Identifier"],["description","An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10347"},["text","Box 92"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"39"},["name","Creator"],["description","An entity primarily responsible for making the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10348"},["text","Hunter College Archives & Special Collections"]]]]]]]],["itemType",{"itemTypeId":"1"},["name","Text"],["description","A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. 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For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"50"},["name","Title"],["description","A name given to the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10462"},["text","ENTERPRISING"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"41"},["name","Description"],["description","An account of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10463"},["text","Newspaper clipping with photograph of children playing with watering can while in their bathing suits."]]]],["element",{"elementId":"42"},["name","Format"],["description","The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10464"},["text","Optical Character Recognized PDF"]]]]]]]],["item",{"itemId":"2338","public":"1","featured":"0"},["fileContainer",["file",{"fileId":"2626"},["src","https://library.hunter.cuny.edu/omeka/files/original/95ddc499f342523de7f28ff6f003c3f1.pdf"],["authentication","1352001df589543009b14f11de4d7c36"],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"4"},["name","PDF Text"],["description"],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"52"},["name","Text"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10466"},["text","FROH:\n\nLenox Hill Neighborhood House 331 East 70th Street New York 21, N. Y.\n1 ·:Z.s. Barbara Bakst\n\nFOR ADDITIONAL INFORH ATION CONTACT:\n\nPublic Relations Director RHinelander 4-5022\n\nFOR RELEASE:\n\nNovember 18, 1954\n\nlENOX HILL NEIGHBORHOOD HOUSE EXTENDS FUND DRIVE TO NOV. 30TH\n\nThe Lenox Hill Neiehborhood Association will extend its annual drive to raise its 1954-55 budget of $310,000 until November 30th, it was announced today by M James H. Snm'lden, president of the r. Association. H Snowden said that the action was taken in order to give r. more persons interested in the work of the Association an opportunity to make a contribution. The Association operates the Lenox Hill Neighborhood House, 331 East 70th Street. t:ore than one thousand people take part each\n\nday in its year- 1 round program which includes day care for children of working mothers; a group work and club program for the 6-12 year olds, teen-agers and adults; a special program for old people; Family and Health Department,,\n~nd\n\na summer camp at Bantam Lake, Conn.\n\n-M ORE-\n\n�- 2 -\n\nFIRST ADD LENOX HILL\n\nIn reporting the two-week extension of the campaign, W Snowden .r. explained that the $310,000 goal was the minimum figure necessary to maintain the Neighborhood House's present program.\n'\"Ne must be\n\nsuccessful or else we will have to make serious reductions in the services wu are now providing for people who need help the most, 11 ' he said.\n~~.\n\nSnowden said that the Neighborhood House, which serves the\n\narea between .59thr and 96th Streets, east of Fifth Avenue, had geared ? its program to combat the rising rate of juvenile delinquency in New York City. \"'If the Neighborhood House is to continue to try and solve the delinquency problem in a constructive way, it must keep on reaching out to disturbed boys and girls and their parents. To do this, it\n\nmust maintain its present staff of highly trained professional social workers, 11\n1~.\n\nSnowden said.\n\nContributions to the Neighborhood House may be made through eighborhood Association, checks made payable to the Lenox Hill N 331 East 70th Street. All donations are tax deductible.\n\nThe Association is a non-profit,non-sectarian organization which was founded sixty years ago by the Associate Alumnae of Hunter Colle ge. :W:iss Lillian D. Robbins is Executive Director. -30-\n\n�"]]]]]]]]],["collection",{"collectionId":"4"},["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"1"},["name","Dublin Core"],["description","The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"50"},["name","Title"],["description","A name given to the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10341"},["text","Lenox Hill Neighborhood Scrapbook"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"41"},["name","Description"],["description","An account of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10342"},["text","The items found in these boxes are clippings and news stories that focus on the local neighborhood surrounding Hunter College's 68th Street campus, Lenox Hill."]]]],["element",{"elementId":"45"},["name","Publisher"],["description","An entity responsible for making the resource available"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10343"},["text","Hunter College Archives & Special Collections"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"40"},["name","Date"],["description","A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10344"},["text","1954"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"42"},["name","Format"],["description","The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10345"},["text","Optical Character Recognized PDF, black & white"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"44"},["name","Language"],["description","A language of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10346"},["text","English"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"43"},["name","Identifier"],["description","An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10347"},["text","Box 92"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"39"},["name","Creator"],["description","An entity primarily responsible for making the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10348"},["text","Hunter College Archives & Special Collections"]]]]]]]],["itemType",{"itemTypeId":"1"},["name","Text"],["description","A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text."]],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"1"},["name","Dublin Core"],["description","The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"50"},["name","Title"],["description","A name given to the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10467"},["text","Lenox Hill Neighborhood House Extends Fund Drive"]]]]]]]],["item",{"itemId":"2430","public":"1","featured":"0"},["fileContainer",["file",{"fileId":"2680"},["src","https://library.hunter.cuny.edu/omeka/files/original/7eb7f7bb6ae448cf598b2746adc72ed0.pdf"],["authentication","8a23cc1fc34da7755e533fb7c7417d9b"],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"4"},["name","PDF Text"],["description"],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"52"},["name","Text"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10695"},["text","The HUNTER COLLEGE ALUMNI NEWS\nPublished Mon.thly from October tQ June, inclusive, at 49 East 65th St., New YOI1k 21, N. Y., by the Alwnni AssociatiQn of Hunter College of the City of New York Entered as second·class matter, Dec. 28, 1945, at post office at New York, N. Y., und er act of Mar. 3, 1879\n\nVOL. LX\n\nNEW YORK, OCTOBER, 1955\n\nNo.7\n\nFR'O M THE PRIES:I!DENT OF THIE A,I.JUMN'I ASSOCIATION I hope that we are all returning to our winter activities with renewed energies, despite the trying summer weather. A number of our Chairmen continued in the summer to work on plafls for the coming year_ The new President of the Scholarship and Welfare Funds, . Vic Bitterman , already has a number of projects in view for the Funds. The election of Mrs. Bitterman to the Presidency-she was one -6f the originators of the ~hole enterprise to help undergraduates-is a loss to the Executive Council, for she was for a long time Chairman of the Committee on the Council. But the Council's loss is the Funds' great gain. We are all deeply grateful for Vic Bitternlan's long-continued service to the Alumni. Our indefatigable Louise Draddy is now President of the Association of Neighbors and Friends of Roosevelt House. A full program of activity for the year is already planned. I want to express a special word of thanks to our Committee on Constitutional Revision , Anne Trinsey, Chairman, and Ethel Berl, Lillian Corrigan, Irene Graff, and Adelaide Hahn. Theirs was a stupendous task, as I learned, sitting with the Committee. So much was accomplished in six months. I think that we may all feel that we now have a good working instrument in the constitution that was adopted at the Annua~ Meeting last May. To clarify the relation of Chapters to the main organization, a meeting was held in Westchester in July, at the home of Mrs. Cano. Mrs. Winer, the President of the Westchester Chapter, various members of the Chapter's Executive Committee, Miss Corrigan, Chairman of the Committee on Chapters, Mrs. Trinsey, and I at- ( tended. There was fruitful discussion of various matters. A special word of thanks is due too to Anne Mackey, Treasurer, and Anne Loop, Assistant Treasurer, who in the summer finished the monumental job of preparing the records for the Auditor. And thanks, too, to Ray Miller, who has continued, as Chairman of the Committee on Finance, to look after our investments. Our own editor, Adelaide Hahn, continues to serve us faithfull y. I hope that with increased membership we can afford to spend more money for the NEWS and have an enlarged and illustrated monthly, as our Editor\nwi~hes.\n\nFROM TH,E SWF P~ES'I,D'ENT At the last annual meeting of the Scholarship and Welfare Funds of the Alumni Association, held on June 2, the Board of Directors elected me President. This project, which was started by me six years ago, is very close to my heart. Despite the great expenditure of energy, time, and effort by the Directors and our many friends since 1949, we have not yet reached the half-way mark. I pray that, with the cooperation of the Alumni Association, our twelv.e Chapters, and the anniversary classes, it will not take six more years to reach the goal set - $250,000. . We are deeply appreciative of the splendid . work of the Queens, Bronx, Washington, and ' . ,-t.!\"' Westchester Chapters. The Queens Chapter has con tributed $1,000 annually since its or· ganization several years ago. We hope all the other Chapters will follow the fine example of Q9-Cens. Remember, every dollar helps a n eedy ~tudent. It is interesting to note the tremendous advance in....interest and support evinced in the past three years by members of the Alumni, especially Executive Council Representatives/ and by the Faculty and Administrative Staff of the College. I appeal to all my loyal friends to continue the int((rest and support manifested in the past, and .I- urge those who h~ overlooked us so far to help us now, for it is never too late to help a worthy cause. We shall welcome constructive suggestions, and those who make them are assured of prompt ,~ action. __ ' The Board has been most fortunate in having had Louise F. Draddy as its President for the past six years. Her charm, wit, and kindliness have endeared her to all of us. In conclusion, I wish to thank the members of the Board for the honor they have conferred upon me. I promise to give the b~st that is in me to help promote the progress and success of our Scholarship and Welfare Funds. MRS. ,SAMUEL BITTERMAN 275 Central Park West, New York 24\n\n...\n\nf\n\nTo all who have helped in the work of our organization, my heartfelt thanks. May we all continue to serve the Alumni and the College in good faith. I am looking forward to a fruitfy.l year. FRANCES ROTH ABRAMS President, Alumni Association\n\nAt the Annual Meeting of the Scholarship and Welfare Funds of the Alumni Association of Hunter College, held on June 2, elections were held. The new officers are as follows: President-Mrs. Samuel M. Bitterman Vice-President-Mrs. Cornelia S. Amster Recording Secretai-y-Mrs. Anna M. Trinsey Corresponding Secretary-Miss B. Elizabeth Kallman Treasurer-Miss Laura Guggenbuhl Assistant Treasurer-Miss Ray L. Miller The following members were elected to the Board of Directors; - Mrs. Frances R. Abrams, Miss Marie K. Gallagher, Mrs. Jacob Larus, Miss Ra y L. Miller, and Mrs. Seymour R. Thaler. ,\n\n�1920 creepin g,\n\n1955\n\nWho says tha t 'round the corner age is slowly That we . who sowed in '20 are almost done with\nreapin g,\n\nThaI we who won the college sings mu st li st to other- ' singilng, s T,hat we h ave flun g our flin g and now mu st watch th e others flingin g, Tha t now is c/}me th e quiet time, the time for contemplatio n, F or lagging f eet and slippered ease and waning anima ti on? A fig for pessimism and all that kind of rot: Baby-s ittung with our knitting will not he our lot! W e' re past th e a,ge for comfort th at at forty life hegins- Or is there a ny fiv e-yea r old that Hunter's B.A_ wins?There's too mu ch fiTe in the bones that made old '20 fl ame, An d every added year but teaches how to pl ay tJl e game; F or eaoh time b rin ~s its own ri oh gi f~3 tha,t we wil h grace accelpt, And age but adds its wi sdom and mak e us more adept. Th e · threa t of f uture boredom fri g h~s us not a j ot: Baby-s-itt:i ng w i~h our knitting will not be our lot! F Oir now h as come the magi c time when hou sehold chores h ave thinn ed, And now we've earn ed a 'breat hi ng space 10 catch ou r seco nd wi nd . Yes, now at la,st vhe ni ghts are slill and 'all the ohildren grown . An d so we find that we ,ca n pau,se and call our l ives\nour own;\n\nWe now can primp or take a trip or even ca n r etire Or engin eer a new career to set th e Th ames on fire. We know not w hat we will do ; we know whal we wil l not: BaJ)y-sitLing with o ill· knitti ng will not be ou]· 101!\nMOLLIE\n\nR.\n\nGOLOMB EpSTEIN\n\n�"]]]]]]]]],["collection",{"collectionId":"6"},["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"1"},["name","Dublin Core"],["description","The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"50"},["name","Title"],["description","A name given to the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10507"},["text","Highlights from the Hunter College Archives"]]]]]]]],["itemType",{"itemTypeId":"1"},["name","Text"],["description","A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"1"},["name","Text"],["description","Any textual data included in the document"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10794"},["text","The HUNTER COLLEGE ALUMNI NEWS\r\nPublished Monthly from October to June, inclusive, at 49 East 65th St., New York 21, N. Y., by the Alumni Association of Hunter College of the City of New York Entered as second·class matter, Dec. 28, 1945, at post office at New York, N. Y., under act of Mar. 3, 1879\r\n\r\nVOL. LX\r\n\r\nNEW YORK, OCTOBER, 1955\r\n\r\nNo.7\r\n\r\nFROM THE PRIESIDENT OF THIE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION I hope that we are all returning to our winter activities with renewed energies, despite the trying summer weather. A number of our Chairmen continued in the summer to work on plans for the coming year. The new President of the Scholarship and Welfare Funds, Vic Bitterman, already has a number of projects in view for the Funds. The election of Mrs. Bitterman to the Presidency - she was one of the originators of the whole enterprise to help undergraduates - is a loss to the Executive Council, for she was for a long time Chairman of the Committee on the Council. But the Council's loss is the Funds' great gain. We are all deeply grateful for Vic Bitterman's long-continued service to the Alumni. Our indefatigable Louise Draddy is now President of the Association of Neighbors and Friends of Roosevelt House. A full program of activity for the year is already planned. I want to express a special word of thanks to our Committee on Constitutional Revision , Anne Trinsey, Chairman, and Ethel Berl, Lillian Corrigan, Irene Graff, and Adelaide Hahn. Theirs was a stupendous task, as I learned, sitting with the Committee. So much was accomplished in six months. I think that we may all feel that we now have a good working instrument in the constitution that was adopted at the Annual Meeting last May. To clarify the relation of Chapters to the main organization, a meeting was held in Westchester in July, at the home of Mrs. Cano. Mrs. Winer, the President of the Westchester Chapter, various members of the Chapter's Executive Committee, Miss Corrigan, Chairman of the Committee on Chapters, Mrs. Trinsey, and I at- ( tended. There was fruitful discussion of various matters. A special word of thanks is due too to Anne Mackey, Treasurer, and Anne Loop, Assistant Treasurer, who in the summer finished the monumental job of preparing the records for the Auditor. And thanks, too, to Ray Miller, who has continued, as Chairman of the Committee on Finance, to look after our investments. Our own editor, Adelaide Hahn, continues to serve us faithfully. I hope that with increased membership we can afford to spend more money for the NEWS and have an enlarged and illustrated monthly, as our Editor\r\nwishes.\r\n\r\nFROM TH,E SWF P~ES'I,D'ENT At the last annual meeting of the Scholarship and Welfare Funds of the Alumni Association, held on June 2, the Board of Directors elected me President. This project, which was started by me six years ago, is very close to my heart. Despite the great expenditure of energy, time, and effort by the Directors and our many friends since 1949, we have not yet reached the half-way mark. I pray that, with the cooperation of the Alumni Association, our twelve Chapters, and the anniversary classes, it will not take six more years to reach the goal set - $250,000. . We are deeply appreciative of the splendid work of the Queens, Bronx, Washington, and Westchester Chapters. The Queens Chapter has contributed $1,000 annually since its organization several years ago. We hope all the other Chapters will follow the fine example of Queens. Remember, every dollar helps a needy student. It is interesting to note the tremendous advance in....interest and support evinced in the past three years by members of the Alumni, especially Executive Council Representatives/ and by the Faculty and Administrative Staff of the College. I appeal to all my loyal friends to continue the interest and support manifested in the past, and I urge those who have overlooked us so far to help us now, for it is never too late to help a worthy cause. We shall welcome constructive suggestions, and those who make them are assured of prompt action. The Board has been most fortunate in having had Louise F. Draddy as its President for the past six years. Her charm, wit, and kindliness have endeared her to all of us. In conclusion, I wish to thank the members of the Board for the honor they have conferred upon me. I promise to give the best that is in me to help promote the progress and success of our Scholarship and Welfare Funds. MRS. ,SAMUEL BITTERMAN 275 Central Park West, New York 24\r\n\r\n...\r\n\r\nf\r\n\r\nTo all who have helped in the work of our organization, my heartfelt thanks. May we all continue to serve the Alumni and the College in good faith. I am looking forward to a fruitfy.l year. FRANCES ROTH ABRAMS President, Alumni Association\r\n\r\nAt the Annual Meeting of the Scholarship and Welfare Funds of the Alumni Association of Hunter College, held on June 2, elections were held. The new officers are as follows: President-Mrs. Samuel M. Bitterman Vice-President-Mrs. Cornelia S. Amster Recording Secretai-y-Mrs. Anna M. Trinsey Corresponding Secretary-Miss B. Elizabeth Kallman Treasurer-Miss Laura Guggenbuhl Assistant Treasurer-Miss Ray L. Miller The following members were elected to the Board of Directors; - Mrs. Frances R. Abrams, Miss Marie K. Gallagher, Mrs. Jacob Larus, Miss Ra y L. Miller, and Mrs. Seymour R. Thaler. ,\r\n\r\n1920 -- 1955\r\n\r\nWho says that 'round the corner age is slowly creeping,\r\nThat we who sowed in '20 are almost done with reaping,\r\nThat we who won the college sings must list to others' singing,\r\nThat we have flung out fling and now must watch the others flinging,\r\nThat now is come the quiet time, the time for contemplation,\r\nFor lagging feet and slippered ease and waning animation?\r\nA fig for pessimism and all that kind of rot:\r\nBaby-sitting with our knitting will not be our lot!\r\n\r\nWe're past the age for comfort that at forty life begins --\r\n--Or is there any five-year old that Hunter's B.A. wins?--\r\nThere's too much fire in the bones that made old '20 flame,\r\nAnd every added year but teaches how to play the game;\r\nFor each time brings its own rich gifts that we with grace accept,\r\nAnd age but adds its wisdom and make us more adept.\r\nThe threat of future boredom frights us not a jot:\r\nBaby-sitting with our knitting will not be our lot!\r\n\r\nFor now has come the magic time when household chores have thinned,\r\nAnd now we've earned a breadhing space to catch our second wind.\r\nWes, now at last the nights are still and all the children grown.\r\nAnd so we find that we can pause and call our lives our own;\r\nWe now can primp our take a trip or even can retire\r\nOr engineer a new career to set the Thames on fire.\r\nWe know not what we <i>will</i> do; we know what we will <i>not</i>:\r\nBaby-sitting with our knitting will <i>not</i> be our lot!"]]]]]],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"1"},["name","Dublin Core"],["description","The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. 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"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"45"},["name","Publisher"],["description","An entity responsible for making the resource available"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"11096"},["text","Alumni Association of Hunter College"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"47"},["name","Rights"],["description","Information about rights held in and over the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"11097"},["text","Copyright Hunter College, CUNY"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"44"},["name","Language"],["description","A language of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"11098"},["text","English"]]]]]]],["tagContainer",["tag",{"tagId":"83"},["name","Alumni"]],["tag",{"tagId":"84"},["name","Poem"]]]],["item",{"itemId":"2431","public":"1","featured":"0"},["fileContainer",["file",{"fileId":"2681"},["src","https://library.hunter.cuny.edu/omeka/files/original/327a008e849c7970208adaf670a9e94b.pdf"],["authentication","35f726f3319c5ecb52e85068aad4e687"],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"4"},["name","PDF Text"],["description"],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"52"},["name","Text"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10702"},["text","THE ALUMNAE NEWS\nEnterel'i as second· class matter, December 28, 1945, at ·the po ;t 'office at New York, N. Y .• und<r the act of ·March 3. 1879\n. I ,\n\nPublished MOllt4ly from ()ctob'er to June, inclusive, at. 49 East 65th St., New York 21, N. Y., by th(' . Associate Alumnae of Hunter College of the City of New York . , \" .\n\nVOL. LUI\n\nNEW YORK, J UNE, 1948\n\nNo.6\n\ntwo examples of needy cases whose urgency was matched, he said, by many others not specifically described. . Developing the theme enunciated by Presi,d ent Shuster, Mr. George Hamilton Combs, news analyst and student of the political scene, stressed the need for a vivid and dynamic democracy, a democracy of opportunity which will identify leaders and equip them to preserve the way of life we hold dear. On the platform with Mr. Combs, President Shuster, and Mrs. Draddy were Miss THelma Vint, in charge of the Reunion, Miss McLaugi11in, Mrs. Theodore E. Simis, Dr. Ruth Lewinson, Mrs. Leslie Graff, and Deans Ann Anthony and Anna M. Trinsey. Their presence was acknowledged by the audience with applause. The report of the Nominating Committee followed this greeting with the slate as listed, which was unanimously adopted : President, Mrs. Robert E. Draddy 1st Vice-Pres., Mrs. Samuel 'Bitterman 2nd Vice-Pres., Miss B. E. Kallman 3rd Vice-Pres., Miss Marie K. Gallagher Recording Secy., Mrs. J. P. Thompson Asst. Rec. Secy., Mrs. Harry J. McCallion Corresponding Secy., Miss Lillian Corri~n Asst. Cor. Secy., Mrs. Wilbur F. Throne . Treasurer, Miss Elsie R. Kengla Asst. Treasurer, Miss Josephine Burke Mrs. Draddy then spoke of 'the series of lectures arranged by Mrs. Mari~n Kortjohn and urged the Alumnae to attend these valuable programs. Notices appear in the NEWS. Music for tr.e afternoon was provided by Miss J oan Pont at the organ and Miss SPRING REUNION Several hundred Alumnae gathered in the Dolores Michelini with severa charming College Assembly Hall on Saturday, May songs. After group singing of \"The Ivy 15th, at 2:30 ,P . M., to fasten college ties a Leaf\", Mrs. Draddy announced tea, which little tighter and recapture for a brief mo- was served in the North and South Lounges. ment the spirit of college days. A warm I n the Alumnae Lounge was an exhibit of spring sun after much bleakness encouraged . creative work of many Hunter Alumnae. ANNE L. HARRIS many to find their way back to what is at least the site of their girlhood, though the scene is so greatly changed. EVENING SESSION ALUMNAE After a greeting by the spirited Mrs. The Evening Session Alumnae met on Robert E. Draddy, President of the Asso- May 20 at the College and elected the folciate Alumnae, Miss Isabel C. McLaughlin lowing officers: President, Hana Hartman; reported briefly for the Membership Com- Vice-President, Henrietta Raymond (Mrs. mittee, which is still several hundred new Irving Raymond); Secretary, Adele G. names short of its announced goal of 1000 Cremona (Mrs. Chris F. Cremona) ; Treasnew members. She urged continued work urer, Clara Labenow (Mrs. Max Labenow). toward the accomplishment of this aim. The next meeting will take place on June President Shuster then informed the 17 in the Alumnae Room (302) at the Alumnae that in honor of the 80th birthday Co llege. Our guests will be the new graduof the College, a plan to aid 80 undergradu- ates of 1948; and we shall have as guest ate students a year would be undertaken. speakers Professor E. Adelaide Hahn, Miss This would require a fund of $250,000 Lily Diana Mage, and Mrs. Robert E. which the Alumnae would assist in rai!?ing. Draddy. Alumnae of all classes will be President Shuster illustrated his talk with welcome. ADELE G. CREMONA PRESIDENT'S GREETING At the end of . my fir;st term in office I should like to take this opportunity to express my thanks to all of those whose wholehearted cooperation has made mi job a pleasant one, namely, to all Officers , Directors, and Chairmen: To Professor Hahn, for her meticulous care in editing the NEWS; to Mrs. Bitterman and Miss McLaughlin, for their splendid zeal in promoting membership; to Mrs. Graff, for her inspired job at Lenox Hill; to Miss Kallman, for her continued activities with her Dutch School; to Mrs. Simis, for the outstanding annual Birthday Luncheon; to Miss Mellor, for her hard work on the Bridge; to Miss Vint, who makes all Reunions very delightful; to Miss Burke, for her fine planning for Alumnae Day; to Miss Miller, who so carefully budgets our finances; to Mrs. Kortjohn, as new Chairman of our Special Activities Program; to Mrs. Thompson, for the fine job she does as Chairman of the Alumnae Hall Committee; to Mrs. Berliner, for the splendid Forums ; to Miss Plumb, for her very keen interest in buying new books for the library ; to Mrs. Mulligan, who continues to keep our Ivy Leaf famous; and to the following whose duties are not so arduous, but always well-done-Mr~ . Newmark, Miss Lewinson, Mrs. Zanger, Mrs. Cohan, Mrs. Burger, Mrs: l'4acLean, Mrs. Grahan, Miss Goodhart, Miss Witmer, Mrs. Flouton, Miss Deis, Miss Martin, and Miss Allegri. Have a pleasant summer. (MRS. ROBERT E.) MARY LOUISE DRADDY\n\n�1928-1948\n\nI remember, I remember the school where we were taught; The buildings \"Old\" and \"New\" that New York City taxes wrought. On Lexington and Sixty-eighth stood Hunter's building \"New\"; The ivy-covered Gothic tower embraced Park Avenue. I remember, I remember the day so long ago When Hunter's Fame-'~ong may she Iive\"-set Freshman hearts aglow. As little Sophs! as Juniors bold, as Seniors full of glee, We Twenty-Eighters sang our way three times to victory. I remember, I remember-'tis all of twenty yearsWhen Hunter's newest graduates left teachers, friends-with tears. Though older now, and wiser, too--we've traveled far since thenOn this, our anniversary, our hearts are joined again! CECIUA A. HOTCHNEIt, '28\n\n�"]]]]]]]]],["collection",{"collectionId":"6"},["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"1"},["name","Dublin Core"],["description","The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"50"},["name","Title"],["description","A name given to the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"10507"},["text","Highlights from the Hunter College Archives"]]]]]]]],["itemType",{"itemTypeId":"1"},["name","Text"],["description","A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. 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