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Brooklyn College Suspends 6 Youths
New York Times May 21, 1950 pg 61
BROOKLYN COLLEGE SUSPENDS 6 YOUTHS
Student Editors Disciplined After Issuing Student Paper
Following Ban
Five Student editors and the business manager of Brooklyn College’s
suspended official weekly newspaper, Vanguard have themselves been suspended
for “evasion” of the college ruling against the publication,
it was disclosed yesterday. In addition, fifty student staff members of
The Vanguard were officially reprimanded and placed on probation.
According to a college spokesman, the disciplinary action was taken by
Dr. Fredrick W. Maroney, dean of students, because the staff had evaded
the week-old suspension of The Vanguard by publishing an unofficial paper
called Draugnav. Publication of The Vanguard was halted by the college
authorities after its faculty adviser, Dr. Julius Portnoy aid that the
students refused to heed his advice.
Arthur Lack, 21 years old, editor-in-chief of The Vanguard as well as
of its unofficial replacement, was suspended five days beginning tomorrow
“for conduct unbecoming a student.” Three day suspensions
were given to Miss Martha Wechsler, the business manager, and to four
executive editors, Harry Baron, Gene Bluestein, Norman Gelb and Herbert
Dorfman.
Mr. Lack, a senior, said yesterday that Draugnav was financed “though
independent sources” and had been distributed free outside the campus
gates and that the staff had not broken any college rules or city ordinances.
He said that the entire matter would be appealed to the college authorities,
the student council and the Board of Higher Education.
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