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A Ticker Love Story - Newspaper Was the Setting for Romance

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A Ticker Love Story

Robert Brooks (’63) and Marilyn Karlin Brooks met while working on The Ticker. Below: Their wedding day, August 23, 1964.

Marilyn-&-Bob-Brooks-WeddingBaruchians Robert Brooks (’63) and Marilyn Karlin met while working on The Ticker, the College’s long-running undergraduate newspaper. Bob shares his amusing memory of their first encounter.

I was sitting at my desk in The Ticker office when a young woman came in and asked, “Are you Bob Brooks?” I said yes, and she proceeded to pick up a ruler and hit me on the top of the head (lightly, I should note). I asked, “Why did you do that?” She replied, “My name is Marilyn Karlin, and I signed up to be a reporter on The Ticker more than a month ago. I was told that since you’re the news editor you’re the one to assign stories. Well, you still haven’t assigned one to me.” I told Marilyn that given the number of potential reporters, I hadn’t had the opportunity to assign stories to many other people who had signed up.

I was not certain she fully accepted that explanation; instead, she reminded me of her name once again. Rather than endure another hit on the head, I assigned Marilyn the next story that became available. And as the saying goes, “The rest is history.” We now have two terrific sons, two lovely daughters-in-law, and four wonderful grandkids.

I am very fortunate that Marilyn took the initiative and used the ruler in the way she did many years ago in The Ticker office. And I should add, she followed me as editor in chief of the student newspaper.

—Dr. Robert Brooks (’63)

♥ Editorial Note ♥

In 2014 Bob and Marilyn (Karlin) Brooks will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary. Although the two met working on The Ticker at City College/Baruch, Marilyn did not graduate from Baruch. Before she completed her degree, they married and moved to Worcester, Massachusetts, where Bob began graduate studies. Marilyn completed her undergraduate degree at Clark University.

Baruchians may also remember Bob—now Dr. Brooks—as Student Council president. Says Brooks today, “Baruch was a college at which I truly grew in so many ways, paving the way for joys in both my personal and professional lives.”

Related Articles: More Love at Baruch

Girl Meets Boy—Meets Bernard Baruch: Harriet Borah Leib (’54, MS ’58) and George Leib (’54)

Where Hearts Intersect: Daniel (’45) and Charlotte Bender (’50) Eth

An Evening Session Romance: Barbara Traiger and George Gershon (’56)

17 Lex Lovebirds: Martin Gitter (’49) and Valerie (Shark) Gitter (’50)

Love Italian- and New York–Style: Helen Mills and Gary Tannenbaum (’70) Share Their Story

 


Tribute to Living Legend Irving Greger - Distinguished Alumna Inspired by Faculty Leader

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Tribute to Living Legend Irving Greger

Longtime director of House Plan and Lamport House, famous for his ubiquitous pipe, Irving Greger.

By Dr. Anita (Varesio) Lohman (’62)

During her years at Baruch College, Anita Lohman—then Varesio—was extremely active in student affairs. She was president of the Lamport Leaders Society; chancellor of Sigma Alpha; president of her House Plan, Corwin ’62; member of the Beta Gamma Sigma Executive Board; and president of the Intramural Board. In her senior year, she was selected for inclusion in Who’s Who Among Students in American Universities & Colleges. She credits Baruch professor and living legend Irving Greger with inspiring her to have confidence in herself and her abilities. Her tribute follows.
Irving Greger was a mentor to me. I will never forget his kind support and encouragement during my years at Baruch. At times, when I didn’t believe I could accomplish something, he told me again and again he knew I could. And he was so right. I lacked confidence in myself and lacked perspective on my abilities.

I came from an Italian immigrant family where no one went to college let alone a female! So I had no inkling of my true potential until I met him.

In fact, I majored in psychology with the goal of becoming a dean of students, inspired by him and his relationships with students. I wanted to give back to other students what I had received at Baruch from Irv and others.

But that specific career was not meant to be. My involvement with clinical psychology began by working with severely emotionally disturbed children, and I was hooked. For 30 years, I helped others through clinical practice, teaching, and research.

I loved my career, and now I have been enjoying retirement for the past 16 years.

About the Alumna 

Anita-LohmanAnita A. (Varesio) Lohman enjoyed a 30-year career as a clinical psychologist. Today she is retired and living in Oregon. In addition to loving the outdoors, Lohman has discovered a previously untapped talent for art. “I enjoy art so much—the process of communicating through color and form things deeply felt and lived . . . . I’m also interested in helping others find their own artist within.”

 

About Irving Greger

Professor Emeritus Irving “Greg” Greger was a Baruch professor and staff member from 1947 to 1986. He held such jobs as coordinator of student activities, coordinator of freshman activities, associate dean of students, and director of orientation and special programs.

For many alumni, his name is synonymous with House Plan, Lamport House, and the Lamport Leaders Society. Says Greger, who by training is an applied psychologist with expertise in group dynamics, “I relished any job that involved working directly with students.” Greger is retired and living in Long Island.

Note: When Greger heard of this tribute, he immediately launched into memories of Dr. Lohman, whom he called “a brilliant student.” He shared this anecdote: Greger called Anita at home one night to talk with her about Lamport Leader business. Her mother would not connect the administrator with his student leader, saying Anita was not to be disturbed while she was studying. Greger was impressed that both Anita and her family had taken his advice about time management to heart, even if it meant that he could only leave a message for her to call him back.  

Going the Distance - Alumni Take Marathons in Stride

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Going the Distance

Seng Tiong Gan (MS ’13) participated in PCCW Global Charity fundraiser for the Society for the Physically Disabled in Singapore last June.

In anticipation of the New York City Marathon 2014, which will be run on Nov. 2, BCAM asked our alumni readers to share their marathon memories (we were right in assuming that many marathoners are among our ranks).

Nine Baruchians—runners from the Class of 1956 through the Class of 2013—answered our request with not only stats but their reasons and inspiration for crossing the finish line, which range from answering a dare, improving their health, challenging themselves, to checking off an item on their bucket list. Along those 26.2-mile routes, many found more. For alumna Izabela M. Biel (’99), running the 2010 NYC Marathon was “an unbelievable experience—almost indescribable. You have to live it to know how it feels.” Read their stories.

Warning: You may be inspired to lace up.

RACHELLE ANDUJAR (’07)

Rachelle-Andujar*Did you run for the Baruch cross country team? Yes. 

What made you decide to run a marathon? I was a middle-distance runner looking for a challenge. 

What races have you run? The NYC Marathon in 2005, and I am running the NYC Marathon this year, on Nov. 2, 2014.

Which was your favorite? So far I have run only one, but it was memorable. I didn’t know it at the time but found out shortly after that I ran the marathon and had mononucleosis! I certainly wouldn’t do that again, but at least I raised money for a good cause. Therefore, this year I’m aiming for a memorable “first” marathon. I’m hoping it will be fun and to post a decent time. Besides, they say you can only have mono once.

winningCATHY HUANG (’11)

Cathy-HuangWhat made you decide to run a marathon? I had completed two half marathons, was already in training mode, and wondered if I could push myself to the next level. So I talked with other marathon runners, who all said I already had a good foundation and should continue my training.

Please list all the marathons you’ve participated in. Philadelphia Marathon 2013, NYC Triathlon 2014, and the Wineglass Marathon 2014.

Which was your favorite marathon?

The 2013 Philadelphia Marathon was my first marathon and will always be my favorite. Also, I was going through some personal challenges right around that time, and being able to finish something physically difficult made me emotionally stronger. The sense of accomplishment when you cross the finish line—even if you’re literally dragging yourself across—cannot be compared to anything else. While I look forward to a stronger finish in my next marathon, I will always remember the finish line in Philadelphia.

winningIZABELA M. BIEL (’99) 

Biel-MarathonWhat made you decide to run a marathon? Running a marathon was always on my bucket list. I wanted simply to prove to myself that I CAN do it.

What races have you run? The NYC Marathon 2010.

Which was your favorite? Since the 2010 New York City Marathon was the only one I ran, it was my favorite. It is unbelievable experience—almost indescribable. You have to live it to know how it feels. From the very beginning in Staten Island to the last inch in Central Park, there are wonderful people along the entire way, cheering you up, handing you water or simply tissues. People of all ages from all over the world running together through the best city in the world!

winningLEONARD NATURMAN (’56)

What made you decide to run a marathon? My track career ended as a freshman at Evander Child High School with a dispute with the coach. But at age 35, overweight and out of shape and with four small children and a wife (Florence Kanes ’55) to support, I decided I should start to jog for my health. Next thing you know, I’m running 13 marathons.

Please list all the marathons you’ve participated in: New York, Long Island, Boston Qualifier, Tucson

Which was your favorite marathon? The NYC Marathon, because all of the family, including my grandchildren, could watch.

winningPHILIP HONIG (’58) 

What made you decide to run a marathon? It started out as a dare. I was watching the NYC Marathon with a group of friends and commented on the age of some of the finishers. I suggested that if they could do it so could I. They laughed and jeered at my comment. That’s all I needed. With that, I began to train and subsequently ran three NYC Marathons, with my wife Dianne accompanying me on two of them.

What races have you run? I ran marathons in 1991, 1992, and 1994, with my wife, Dianne, joining me in 1992 and 1994. To prepare for these races, we also completed many half marathons and some shorter races as well throughout the metropolitan area.

Which was your favorite? The NYC Marathon in 1994 was our favorite for several reasons:

  1. It was the 25th anniversary of the event, so the hoopla around it was special.
  2. It was the easiest one for both of us because our training was very scientifically done. When we finished, we felt as if we could have gone another 10 miles.
  3. Looking back now, we realize that between the two of us we earned five medals, which allows us to give each of our five grandchildren a medal to help remember us.

We are now 77 and 76 years old, respectively, and no longer think about racing. Anyway, when we moved to a community built on two mountains, we effectively put an end to our ability to practice.

winningSENG TIONG GAN (MS ’13) 

What races have you run? I have run the 2014 Paris Marathon, the 2013 Berlin Marathon, the 2013 Gold Coast Marathon in Australia, the 2013 Singapore Marathon, the 2013 Sundown Marathon in Singapore, and the 2014 Bank of America Chicago Marathon, among others.

Which were your favorites? The Berlin Marathon and Paris Marathon: great running routes and event atmosphere.

See Gan’s photo top. 

winningIRA GREENBERG (’81)

What made you decide to run a marathon? New York City inspired me—and the thrill and passion did, too.

What races have you run? The New York City Marathon in 1990.

Which was your favorite? The 1990 marathon was the highlight of my sports life.

I had quit training because of the hours involved and was going to turn in my number. I had lost my enthusiasm. But then I figured, “What the heck. I’ll run even if my time turns out to be six hours.”

Well, on race day, it was 72 degrees and the crowd was out. And that crowd carried me to a 3:30 marathon time! I think I high-fived every fan along the route and ate everything that was handed to me. I even missed meeting my wife and family at planned mile markers, because I was so far ahead of my planned pace.

The crowd got me so high. I had a mind-blowing experience!

winningNELSON WEBSTER (’05)

What made you decide to run a marathon? I started running in 2009. Running a marathon was on my bucket list. 

What races have you run? I ran in the 2010 and 2013 New York Marathons.

Which was your favorite? The NYC Marathon is much different than running other races. It’s much bigger and lots of people cheer you on. And what joy finally crossing the finish line.

winningRACHEL KIMBER (’13) 

What made you decide to run a marathon? I started running with the Van Cortlandt Track Club in 2007, and the team encouraged me to try racing a marathon. They supported me through the training journey and shared their accumulated knowledge. I’m not sure I would have tried a marathon without the support of my team. 

What races have you run? I’ve run the Chicago Marathon in 2008, the Long Beach, N.J., Marathon in 2009, the New York City Marathon in 2009, the Boston Marathon in 2010, the North Face Endurance Challenge in New York 2011 and 2012, and the D.C. 50K in 2012.

Which was your favorite? Each was a very unique experience: Chicago was my first; N.J. was my Boston-qualifying race; New York City made me feel like a true champion, racing on my home turf; and at Boston, I was a global elite. In Boston, I was as close as I would ever get to an “Olympic Village” at the start line, surrounded by the best in my sport.

My final long-distance races were completed on the trail, which I discovered is my favorite place to run. An hour train ride out of the New York City lands me on some of the best single-track trails I’ve ever raced on.

The beauty of the marathon is that each is so very different. Each one, no matter how many you race, will be treasured.

We runners are privileged to get up and run each day.

* Note: Most of the alumni marathoners above did not participate on the College’s cross-country teams (which—when you think about it—makes their later-life marathoning even more impressive). When the question “Did you run for the Baruch cross country team?” is absent from an individual Q&A, it indicates that the alum was not part of the College’s track program.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In Memoriam: Fall 2014–Winter 2015

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Irene-Zanderer-1949-CroppedThe Baruch community was saddened by the passing of distinguished alumna Irene (Zanderer) Schwartz (’49) last August. Irene was the beloved wife of 63 years and lifelong partner of notable alumnus Bernard L. Schwartz (’48), with whom she had two daughters and four grandchildren. Irene was 86 years old.

Irene and Bernard (a Trustee Emeritus of the Baruch College Fund) demonstrated their love and loyalty to the College through tremendous generosity. At their alma mater, the Schwartzes are perhaps best known for their 1997 gift that established the Bernard L. Schwartz Communication Institute, which has impacted the lives of thousands of students and faculty members.

Irene Zanderer, “City College Downtown” co-ed, exhibited all the qualities lifelong friends came to love and admire: she was “extraordinarily energetic,” “warm,” “funny,” and “elegant.” Irene earned a BBA in foreign trade and was active in a variety of extracurricular activities, including the Boosters, 45 Club, the Athletic Association, and the publications The Planet, Pick ’n’ Pan, and The Ticker (in fact Irene and Bernard met in The Ticker office when they were freshmen).

In addition to her philanthropic commitment to Baruch, Mrs. Schwartz also devoted time and support to UJA–Federation of New York, the American Ballet Theatre, Bard Graduate Center, and the Central Park Conservancy.

Speaking on behalf of the entire College community, Joel Cohen (’59), Baruch College Fund president, said, “Together Irene and Bernard have spearheaded great and positive changes at Baruch College, providing a road map to all who wish to make a difference in public higher education in New York. She will be missed.”

Anthony J. Caserta ’37
Mildred K. (Klepper) Beskin ’41
Samuel A. Dyckman ’41
Gerald Kass ’41
Rubin D. Fier ’42
Solomon Reiffe ’42
Eli M. Cooper ’43
George J. Levenback ’43
Sidney Weintraub ’43
Paul F. Proskauer ’45
Rosemary Weinberger ’46
Allan A. Diller ’47
William V. Friedland ’47
Bernard Gelman ’47
Judith Lauterbach ’47
Arthur J. Simpson ’47
Stanley G. Berger ’48
Harold V. Rosman ’48
Seymour R. Shapiro ’48
Murray L. Weidenbaum ’48, LLD (Hon.) ’81
*Paul H. Chook ’49
Siegbert Greenbaum ’49
Paul G. Keat ’49
John P. Scarlato ’49
Martin M. Sokolow ’49
Arnold F. Laubich ’50, MBA ’51
Philip Thaw ’50
George A. Dean ’51
Stanley Duboff ’51
Gerald A. Reisman ’51
*Leonard M. Rosen ’51
Sondra K. (Kula) Safran ’51, MA ’54
Harry Leibowitz ’52
*Norman Vale ’52
Leon M. Hellman ’53
Richard Marshall ’53
Barbara A. Papamarcos ’53
Richard G. Karch ’54
Jules H. Kornblau ’54
Richard A. Regan ’54
Martin Landweber ’55
Vernon B. Charms ’56
Robert C. Kacer ’57
*Irma Friedlander Lesser ’57
Paul H. Wallach ’57
Benjamin J. Angel ’58
Stewart A. Weiss ’59
Joseph C. Campos ’62
Myrna (Walcoff) Wulfson ’62
Stanley Berger MBA ’63
Theodore M. Caridi ’63
Bernard E. Krantz MBA ’63
Alfred J. Fantini ’64
Jeffrey S. Gold ’64, MBA ’71
Thomas E. Moran ’64
John J. Cruse ’65
Harvey A. Holzberg MBA ’68
Gary Mulkowsky ’69, MBA ’70
Jerry Lerner ’70
Andrew S. Harris ’72
Reynold L. Graham ’73
Pearle W. Mulraine-Clendinen ’73
Eugene Riback ’74
Dennis W. Schaefer MBA ’74
Ralph A. Franklin ’75
Oscar A. Aguilar ’76
Charles S. Mazzocchi ’76
Maureen Vaughan ’76
Fernando Garcia ’77
Mario Natale MPA ’77
Antje Hensen ’78
Michael M. Howley ’78
Roslyn E. Rose ’78
Nancy Stubbs ’78
Mervyn Haft MBA ’79
Beatrice Levy ’80
Vincent A. Liguori ’80
Michael Turitto ’82
Celso Miragaya ’85
James G. Cannings ’88
John F. Sweitzer MBA ’90
Monica F. Hatten EMBA ’98
Andrew J. Vecchio MBA ’04
Gloria Barlow MSEd ’05
Dion L. Taylor MSEd ’11
Edmund Kunkel ’13

*Benchmark Society member

 

Leave a Legacy

Please consider including Baruch College in your estate planning. Your support secures the Baruch experience for future generations of students and creates lasting opportunities at your alma mater.

To learn how to use creative giving to achieve your own financial goals, please contact David Shanton at 646-660-6065 or david.shanton@baruch.cuny.edu.

BARUCH MEANS THE GIFT OF A LIFETIME

Family of Mann - Mishkin Gallery Exhibition with an Alumni Twist

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artphotoMilton Mann (’51) is shown here with his brother’s 1976 oil portrait of Mann as a boy. The canvas, entitled Portrait of Milton, was part of the Mishkin Gallery exhibition Kenneth Munowitz: Portraits Real and Imagined, which ran at the College last spring.

The exhibition featured portraits and everyday scenes with a surreal, cerebral yet whimsical edge. Munowitz, a painter and children’s book illustrator, died at the age of 42 before his talent was fully recognized.

For news of current and upcoming Mishkin Gallery shows and for gallery hours, visit baruch.cuny.edu/mishkin. All exhibitions are free and open to the public.

Photo by Aviva Maller (Portrait of Milton courtesy of Milton Mann)

Twins Spin Discs - Frank (’85) and Michael Antonucci (’85) Help SPA Celebrate

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Twins Spin Discs

Chic’s “Le Freak,” a disco chart-topper from 1978, was one of the tunes that twin alumni DJs Frank and Michael Antonucci, both class of 1985, used to tempt newly minted School of Public Affairs (SPA) graduates out onto the dance floor. The occasion was a special graduation party, held on May 29 (two days after Commencement 2014) and attended by approximately 150 SPA grads. The evening reflected the festive mood at the school, which is celebrating its 20th anniversary throughout 2014–15.

When not deejaying, Frank is director of campus operations and administration at Baruch College, and Mike is project technology lead at Citigroup.

Photo by Elizabeth Leitzell

A Queen and Her Courtship - Pearl Gnesin Ribet ’46 Remembers a Unique Baruch Moment

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CampusQueenChosen

Pearl Gnesin’s photo in the 1946 Lexicon.

Nearly 70 years ago, on the evening of May 4, 1945, Pearl Gnesin, an upper senior majoring in advertising and retailing at City College Downtown (today’s Baruch), was crowned “Campus Queen of New York City.”

Born and raised in Brooklyn, Gnesin competed against 11 other women from such city schools as NYU, Columbia, and Juilliard. And though the phrase “campus queen” connotes glamour, the WWII-era event (Germany’s surrender to the Allies was still three days away) reflected the serious tenor of the times: the ball at which the winner was chosen was a fundraiser for the Infantile Paralysis Fund.

Mom-Dad-and-Claud

Pearl and David Ribet with their daughter, Claudia, circa 1960.

So what did Pearl win? A cosmetics kit, a bottle of Prince Matchabelli perfume, a session with a top hairstylist, a radio interview, lunch at the Stork Club, a ticket to Broadway’s Laffing Room Only, and supper at celebrity eatery El Morocco.

We suspect, though, that Campus Queen Pearl valued another “prize” far more. At the time of the pageant, she had won the heart of and was engaged to fellow student David Ribet (’44). The two met in a Baruch business administration class and have been married since 1946.

—Diane Harrigan

Related Article:

The CPA and the Campus Queen: Long-Wed Couple David Ribet (’44) and Pearl Gnesin Ribet (’46) 

Remembering the Beaver Statue Dedication & Mr. Baruch - by Dr. Anita A. Varesio Lohman (’62)

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Remembering the Beaver Statue Dedication & Mr. Baruch

I met Bernard Baruch when I was a student leader at the College [Varesio was president of the Lamport Leaders Society, among other student leadership positions]. B.B. came to help dedicate our new beaver statue* in the Student Center lobby. It was a beautiful bronze sculpture atop a circular sofa. The Ticker ran an article and photos of the statue (see above).

During the ceremony, Mr. Baruch gave a little speech, which unfortunately I can’t remember. I do remember, though, that he was a very refined senior gentleman. Also, he was very tall (I am 5’7″ and was wearing heels!). I just remember feeling in awe of such an accomplished person, who had humble beginnings like many of us at the College.

Actually, I was so taken with him that I read his biography. He was inspirational!

Thanks to Baruch College for your continuing interest in this great American and those he inspired.

*In Varesio Lohman’s era, the College’s mascot was Bennie the Beaver. Baruch’s mascot has since changed and is now the Bearcat. To learn more about the bronze beaver statue, read this archival article in the 27 March 1962 Ticker: http://ticker.baruch.cuny.edu/files/articles/ticker_19620327.pdf

About the Alumna

Anita A. Varesio Lohman (’62) earned a BA in psychology from Baruch and went on to earn a PhD in clinical psychology. She was a clinical psychologist for 30 years. Today she is retired in Sunriver, Oregon, where she enjoys art and the outdoors.

Related Articles:

Girl Meets Boy—Meets Bernard Baruch: Harriet Borah Leib (’54, MS ’58) and George Leib (’54)

Adviser to Presidents Advises: Go Easy on Backflips in Your Golden Years: Richard Lazar (’56) Shares a Memory of Bernard Baruch

Tribute to Living Legend Irving Greger

A Short History of Baruch Mascots

 

 


A Tribute to a Memorable Professor: Samuel A. Dyckman ’41 - Lionel W. Greer ’42 Recalls “the Sam I Knew”

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A Tribute to a Memorable Professor: Samuel A. Dyckman ’41

From the days of their early friendship. Above, from left: The Lexicon portraits of House Plan brothers Samuel A. Dyckman ’41 and Lionel W. Greer ’42. Below: Greer remembers his friend, who passed on Sept. 7, 2014.

Professor Samuel Dyckman (1922–2014) was a friend from the time we met in 1939 as new members of House Plan McMaster ’42. He was intelligent, thoughtful, and interesting though not notably humorous. Yet, over the years, he was recognized and praised for his entertaining lectures on changes in federal income tax law and regulations.

To bridge the gap between the Sam I knew and the popular Professor Dyckman, several years ago I joined an audience of several hundred men and women—CPAs, attorneys, and other tax practitioners—in the ballroom of the New York Hilton Hotel. The subject was “Alternative Methods of Calculating an IRA’s Required Minimum Distribution.” While this sounds a bit dry, Sam was able to entertain and educate his audience at the same time. At the podium, Sam threaded his way through the mathematics while questioning the need or wisdom of the IRS having complicated matters by creating alternative methods. His mildly sarcastic remarks were a running commentary or footnote to his technical discussion. The audience enjoyed it—and would not forget the lesson the professor was teaching.

This is what makes a great teacher, and that is why Baruch students voted my quiet friend Sam “Best Teacher” several times.

—Lionel W. Greer ’42

Attention Alumni:

Do you have a story about “Best Teacher” Sam Dyckman? Please share it with your fellow Baruchians in the Comments section below or e-mail it to communications@baruch.cuny.edu.

An MLK Memory from William Aiken (’63, MBA ’70) - In Honor of Martin Luther King Jr. Day 2015

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An MLK Memory from William Aiken (’63, MBA ’70)

Double alumnus Bill Aiken (’63, MBA ’70) (right) was one of the lucky Baruchians to have heard Martin Luther King Jr.’s City College/Baruch Commencement address on Jun. 12, 1963 (archival photo above). Did it change his life? Hard to say. But the pioneering African American CPA was honored by the Baruch student chapter of the National Association of Black Accountants (NABA) at the club’s first annual Alumni Reunion on Mar. 8, 2013. Aiken, who designed the NABA logo as the organization’s president in 1971, was the keynote speaker.

Over 50 years ago, friends and graduating accountancy majors William (“Bill”) Aiken (’63, MBA ’70) and Bert N. Mitchell (’63, MBA ’68, LLD [Hon.] ’88) were in the audience at City College’s Lewisohn Stadium on Jun. 12, 1963, to hear the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., deliver their Commencement address.

“We really had no idea how momentous the occasion was,” says Aiken, who went on to a rewarding, achievement-filled career as a pioneering CPA. (Classmate Mitchell would also become a titan in the world of public accountancy, founding—in 1974—Mitchell & Titus, one of the country’s most preeminent minority-controlled CPA firms.)

Today, Aiken realizes just how special that Commencement memory is. Of seeing the Oscar-nominated 2014 film Selma a few weeks ago, the double alumnus says, “I remember practically everything that happened in that movie when it was happening . . . . We need to remember the struggles. Opportunities didn’t just happen.”

On that June day in 1963, Aiken would little imagine how many barriers he’d overcome and help others to overcome throughout his five-decades-long career in the field of public accountancy.

Coming in February: Alumnus William Aiken is profiled in depth in Baruch College Alumni Magazine Online.

Related Story

Martin Luther King Jr. at City College 50 Years Ago: A Historic Commencement

“A Certain Glow” - Transformed by Theatron: Claire Berkowitz Seigelstein (’58)

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“A Certain Glow”

Claire Berkowitz Seigelstein, today and in the 1958 Lexicon. Says the alumna of Theatron, “It’s one of the nicest things that ever happened to me in my whole life—and I’ve had a very happy life."

Remembering Theatron, Baruch College’s student dramatic arts society, clearly fills alumna Claire Berkowitz Seigelstein (’58) with joy. “It’s one of the nicest things that ever happened to me in my whole life—and I’ve had a very happy life,” she says. Theatron, one of the longest-running and earliest clubs, was a hub of student life, of camaraderie and creativity, from the 1930s through the 1990s.

Attending Baruch (then known as “City College Downtown”) was something of a happy accident for Seigelstein. The final decision of where to apply to college was made by her best friend, Myra. The 16-year-olds also considered City College Uptown and Hunter College. “Thinking it would be easier to get in, we decided to apply to Downtown midyear,” recalls Seigelstein (née Berkowitz). The co-eds’ strategy worked, and they enrolled in February 1954.

Why Theatron?

Also a “group decision” was the choice of Theatron as their extracurricular activity. Why Theatron? “My friend developed a huge crush on Larry Levy [’55] after we saw him in Finian’s Rainbow.” Her momentous decision aside, Myra’s Theatron career didn’t last long. After their first show as club members—Remains To Be Seen in 1954—she transferred to Uptown City. Now immersed in the student theater world and with her new crew of Theatron friends, Seigelstein barely had time to notice.

The alumna earned her Theatron pin when she was a sophomore.

As a member of Theatron, Seigelstein did everything but appear on stage. For the November 1957 production of Guys and Dolls, she is listed in the program credits under Technical, Props, Publicity, Business, Program, Rally, and Make-Up. Of the latter, she offers this vintage, sweet-bawdy anecdote with a laugh: “I only knew how to do men’s makeup. . . . I sat on a lot of men’s laps, doing their makeup.”

Does Seigelstein have a favorite Theatron production? Death of a Salesman from 1956 comes to mind, though she claims “no real favorite show,” adding, “all the rest were just pure fun!” Her Theatron résumé includes backstage credits for The Time of Your Life (1955), Good News (1955), My Three Angels (1956), and Light Up the Sky (1957).

Praise for the Ultimate Theatronite, Speech Professor Lou Levy

A favorite production, maybe not, but the advertising/publicity major definitely has a favorite Theatronite: legendary Speech Professor Louis Levy. “Lou Levy was the glue that held Theatron together,” recalls Seigelstein. “He was just the finest man, a gentleman and a scholar.” Levy treated Theatron students like family, inviting them to his home and introducing them to his wife and children.

Professor Levy from the 1945 Lexicon

The Theatronites of this era—and we suspect many other eras—formed a kind of band of merry friends, according to the alumna, who remembers group outings to Broadway and off-Broadway shows on Saturdays, frequent latenight dinners in Chinatown (especially eatery Han Fa Lo), and summertime trips to beaches. The students’ connection wasn’t only during the play production cycle. “I never felt it was a subway school,” Seigelstein says of her Theatron-infused college experience.

And when Claire returned to the theater many years after her graduation, her friends remarked on “a certain glow.” The Theatron Jane-of-all-trades founded SRO Musical Productions and served on many theater boards, including as chair of the Arts Council of Rockland (N.Y.). “Theatron never left me,” she says with genuine delight. And for that, Claire, we are grateful.

More About Claire Seigelstein

Seigelstein with husband, Len, today.

Claire Seigelstein is retired and living in Wellington, Fla., with her husband of 56 years, Len. The couple has three children and six grandchildren. Of her volunteer work visiting patients in hospitals and hospices, she says, “I just go into every room ‘cold,’ and you’re not going to tell me that a theater background doesn’t help!”

—Diane Harrigan

*Attention Theatron Alumni*

Do you remember Claire Berkowitz from your years at Baruch/City Downtown? She’d love to hear from you (e-mail clarylen422@bellsouth.net). And remember, there’s an open mic here for all of your Theatron stories. Please share your memories below or by e-mailing communications@baruch.cuny.edu.

Related Articles 

Enter Stage Lex

Curtain Still Rises for Five Theatron Alumni from the Class of ’55

Entertaining the Troops: CCSO: City College’s USO

Altruism as Entertainment: Theatron and CCSO

 

Love at First Byte - Stephen (’76) and Susan Barr Wain (’76)

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Love at First Byte

On their wedding day in 1976, Stephen and Susan (Barr) Wain, both graduates of the class of 1976. After 38 years of married life, Sue says, “Steve is the most giving and generous person I know,” and Steve counters, “Without a doubt, Sue has the most incredibly likeable personality that you can find in anyone. She’s always positive and is a friend for life.”

Stephen Wain (’76) and Susan Barr (’76) met in the fall of their freshman year. And though they may have been destined to be together (to this day, Steve jokes that his admission to Baruch was a lucky “computer error”), their first steps toward romance were anything but certain. Although quite outgoing today, Steve characterizes his younger self as “introverted” and remembers “wondering how I would get the courage to speak to Sue.” Not helping matters, at the beginning of college, Sue was—as she describes herself then—“pretty shy,” although she didn’t stay that way.

In spite of those obstacles, Steve made his move in their freshman law class. In an advance that required four or five classes to complete, he maneuvered closer to where Sue always sat. Next he asked to borrow her notes for a class day he’d missed; only it turned out she’d missed that day as well. Success finally came with a pen ploy: Steve asked to borrow a pen. “I had a purple pen with scented ink,” Sue recalls. “He borrowed it, and we both shared a laugh. From then on, we started to become friends.”

A Santana concert in October at the Nassau Coliseum was their first official date. “We had a great time and talked the whole night,” says Sue, who “can still picture walking back to Steve’s car and the jacket he was wearing.” Even so, it looked as if their romantic relationship had fizzled after only two months—although they remained friends. Then one of Sue’s friends persuaded Steve to ask Sue out again. Their second round of dating began on May 4, 1973 (yes, they remember the day), and they’ve been together ever since. “Love at first sight?” Steve asks. “I don’t know, but close to it.”

Sue was initially an accounting major and then changed to a computer science major; Steve started out as a double major in accountancy and computer science and a minor in law. Both were academically motivated and enthusiastic about their studies, especially comp sci. They spent a lot of time in the College’s Computer Center, “debugging our programs and just hanging out,” Sue says. They weren’t alone: the computer science students formed an ad hoc club (Steve was the president), and the center was their clubhouse. Steve was an engineer and later a DJ at WBMB, the College radio station, and occasionally Sue would visit him there. Of course, they also hung out with friends at Baruch’s (official) Student Center, and after hours the gang could be found at Chinatown’s legendary restaurant Wo Hop on Mott Street.

By 1975 the college juniors had already discussed getting married. “I was not exactly sure when,” says Steve, “but it was obvious to me that I didn’t want to be without Sue for any stretch of time.” He proposed the summer before their senior year, and they married a few months after Sue graduated, on Sept. 19, 1976 (Steve graduated the previous January, having completed an accelerated 3½-year course of study).

The Wains today.

The day they got back from their Hawaiian honeymoon, they drove from New York to Texas for Steve’s job. Eventually they would settle back on the East Coast, in New Jersey, where they now live and work. Steve is the founder and president of Calder Associates, Inc., a middle market M&A advisory with offices in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and the Washington, D.C. area. Sue is Calder’s director of professional services. The Wains have three grown children, Jenny, Jason, and Bryan.

Says the very happily married husband, “Many partnerships don’t last, and some that do last in name only. But Sue is definitely someone I am happy to call my true ‘partner in life.’ We work together and are with each other for almost 24 hours a day. After over 38 years, that says a lot.”

—Diane Harrigan

♥ Additional Baruch Love Stories

The CPA and the Campus Queen: Long-Wed Couple David Ribet (’44) and Pearl Gnesin Ribet (’46)

Romance Develops in Darkroom: Aneta Glinkowska (’02) and Kosuke Fujitaka

Ticker Love Story: Newspaper Was the Setting for Romance

Girl Meets Boy—Meets Bernard Baruch: Harriet Borah Leib (’54, MS ’58) and George Leib (’54)

Where Hearts Intersect: Daniel (’45) and Charlotte Bender (’50) Eth

An Evening Session Romance: Barbara Traiger and George Gershon (’56)

17 Lex Lovebirds: Martin Gitter (’49) and Valerie (Shark) Gitter (’50)

Love Italian- and New York–Style: Helen Mills and Gary Tannenbaum (’70) Share Their Story

 

No Substitute for Professor John Bauer - Richard Friedman (’72) on the Psychology Department Legend

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Upon reading Dr. Robert Brooks’s alumni magazine tribute to his mentor and friend Baruch Professor John Bauer, Richard Friedman (’72) recalled his own experience of the popular professor. Friedman’s tribute is not as Brooks’s was—based on years as a student and mentee—but on having Dr. Bauer as a one-day substitute in the psychology class “Interviewing Techniques.” Friedman’s anecdote below underscores just how memorable Bauer was, after 40-plus years and one college class later.

In the early 1970s, the late Professor John Bauer served as a one-day substitute in my psychology class Interviewing Techniques. The recent tribute to him by my fellow alumnus Dr. Robert Brooks (’64) sparking my memory of that day. Dr. Brooks described how Professor Bauer encouraged him to achieve success in the field of psychology.

Psychology Professor John Bauer in 1969

Yet his article—poignant as it was—missed the thrust of what made Bauer so popular and well regarded among the students. In essence, it was his dynamic, sometimes blunt way of communicating psychological principles and concepts in the classroom.

On that particular day, the well-known, high-profile “substitute” discussed the concept of transference, which occurs in the patient-therapist relationship and by which the patient makes the therapist the object of emotional response. Bauer bluntly and somewhat humorously pointed out that if a therapist were to ask a patient what s/he likes about the therapist, the answer may be disarming. Said Bauer, “He will say, ‘I like your big [expletive deleted].’” That question and its ilk, presupposing a different dynamic, isn’t advisable, memorably advised the professor.

That was John Bauer.

Related Article

He Asked the Right Questions: Dr. Robert Brooks (’64) Remembers Professor John Bauer

Five Distinguished Alumni Remember - Tributes to Professor and Dean Angelo Dispenzieri ’53

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Five Distinguished Alumni Remember

From the 1962 Lexicon (b. August 2, 1929–d. February 8, 2015)

The College community was saddened by the news of the passing of alumnus and former beloved faculty member and administrator Dr. Angelo Dispenzieri on Feb. 8, 2015. He was 85 years old.

A graduate of the class of 1953, Dispenzieri was the son of Sicilian immigrants who settled in Brooklyn. He had six siblings.

After earning his City College/Baruch bachelor’s degree, he earned a doctorate in psychology from New York University in 1961. At his alma mater, Dispenzieri was a professor of psychology and also served as Baruch’s dean of the Evening and Extension Division, an important role in a college with a historically large part-time student population.

Below four alumni—Walter Reichman (’63), Benjamin Schneider (MBA ’62), Abe Fenster (’62), and Harvey Barocas (’64)—all profoundly affected by this professor—offer personal tributes to the teacher, scholar, mentor, and friend they remember.

Dr. Walter Reichman (’63) Remembers

I was a 20-year-old City College psychology major when I decided to take an industrial psychology course at City College’s Baruch School of Business and Public Administration (today’s Baruch College) during the summer of 1959. Why Baruch? Because I was working in Manhattan and because it seemed appropriate to take an industrial psychology course at a business school. That summer, a 29-year-old instructor, Angelo Dispenzieri, who was completing his PhD at NYU, became my teacher, my mentor, my friend, my muse, and the older brother I always wanted. He was instrumental in my developing a philosophy of life—recognizing what really matters in life—and in my thinking about the role of psychology in my life and the world of business. During that eight-week summer session, he influenced the direction of my career and life.

Angelo presented a view of industrial psychology that was different from the way it was practiced and researched at that time. He presented a humanistic orientation to industrial psychology in which the employee and his well-being—not the bottom line success of the business organization—were the focus of attention. This focus directed the course of my professional life, which led me away from the mainstream of industrial psychology for many years. In recent years, however, Angelo’s orientation has become a part of the mainstream of the discipline: there is now a branch of industrial psychology known as humanitarian work psychology. My involvement in this movement is a direct result of being Angelo’s student and adopting his philosophy all those years ago.

Angelo treated me differently than any other teacher ever had: with respect, with respect for me as a person and as someone with ability and potential who was worth teaching and befriending.

I came to Baruch in 1961 as an MBA student in industrial psychology with a teaching assistantship in the Psychology Department, which Angelo was instrumental in my getting. The Psychology Department at that time reflected Angelo’s approach to students and to his understanding of the role of a college.

My love for Angelo and for the department was solidified during my years as a graduate assistant. He and I began to collaborate on a number of small projects during those years. I spent every Saturday at his home working with him and enjoying the company of his wonderful family: his first wife, Fay (Francine), and his young daughters, Betsy (Elizabeth) and Angie (Angela). I was at home with my big brother and his—my—family and grew intellectually and emotionally from the experience. I even dated a cousin of Fay’s with the thought of becoming an actual member of the family, but that did not happen.

I saw and learned another side of Angelo when he was my thesis advisor. He was an excellent researcher and writer who demanded an extremely high caliber of performance from the students he mentored.

He spent hours reviewing our work, demanding perfection before he approved a written line of our theses. My first presentation at a psychology conference was based on my master’s thesis. I thought Angelo should be credited as a co-author, but he refused, saying it was my work and that I deserved the credit. In actuality, I could not have done it without him.

In my last year as a graduate assistant, I asked the chairman of the department to let me teach a summer session course. He refused, saying I wasn’t ready yet. Angelo told me to prepare a course in industrial psychology, and he would see to it that I taught it. Two weeks before the beginning of the summer semester, Angelo told the chair he would not be teaching his course but knew someone who could fill in. Thus began my teaching career at Baruch, which lasted until the beginning of 2002.

When I met the woman I wanted to marry, I brought her to meet Angelo before I brought her to meet my parents. Much to my delight, they liked each other.

In my years with Angelo and his family, I learned great lessons in child-rearing, which carried over to the raising of my children. I remember one such instance: My wife and I and the Dispenzieris were in a fancy shop that sold expensive crystal. Angelo and Fay were looking at a big, heavy crystal vase. When they decided against it, Angelo handed it to his younger daughter, Angie (now a physician), and asked her to replace it on the third shelf of a glass case. I remember her grasping the heavy vase, standing on her tiptoes, and barely holding the edge against the shelf. As I moved into position to catch the vase, Angelo turned away from his daughter with a look of extreme confidence. When she got the vase in place, she turned to him. He patted her on the head and said, “Good.” 

He had confidence in his children, his friends, and his students, and all of them strived to live up to his expectations.

When I completed my doctorate, Angelo hired me to work on a major research project dealing with the community colleges. Once again I was under the tutelage of a first-class researcher.

Angelo took on very important administrative duties at Baruch when he became dean of the Evening and Extension Division. He turned his attention to a very important component of the Baruch student body, those men and women who worked all day and came to school in the evening while supporting and raising families. Because of Angelo, policies and procedure began to take them into account.

In the years that followed, our friendship continued. We attended each other’s family events and celebrated life together. Angelo’s second wife, Eileen, became a great friend of mine and a great support to Angelo in the years he battled post-polio syndrome. His struggle to overcome polio was never apparent to anyone he worked with. He was always strong, vibrant, energetic, and full of definite opinions supported by evidence and a powerful code of ethics.

He was significant in my life and career and in the lives and careers of many, many students.

About the Dr. Reichman

Walter Reichman, EdD, is Emeritus Professor of Psychology at Baruch College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. He chaired the Department of Psychology for 17 years. He is currently a partner in the organizational psychology consulting firm OrgVitality. He is the main representative to the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations for the International Association of Applied Psychology. His recently edited book, Industrial and Organizational Psychology Help the Vulnerable: Serving the Underserved, was published in 2014 by Palgrave Macmillan.

Dr. Benjamin Schneider (MBA ’62) Remembers

I graduated from Alfred University in the spring of 1960 and, with the urging of my soon-to-be-wife Brenda, applied to the brand-new Baruch School of Business and Public Administration MBA Program in Industrial Psychology. I knew Mortimer Feinberg—a faculty member in the program—through my parents, because he lived near Croton, where we lived. Mort told me that he and his colleagues were going to try to train industrial psychologists who had some knowledge of business, a novel idea then and still. The new Baruch program was an evening program, which fit my needs, as I was working full time in Manhattan.

My first class with Angelo was called Theories in Psychology, if I remember correctly. We used a text edited by Marx, apparently the best such book at the time. This was not theory in industrial psychology but theory in psychology writ large. Even so, Angelo presented the text as a foundation for industrial psychology, since he knew the students would get plenty of instruction on the practice side from Feinberg and Ben Balinsky, who also ran a consulting firm.

It is hard to explain the impact Angelo’s classes had on my personal and professional future, but I’ll try.

Angelo just seemed to really love the field: he loved discussing it with the class, teaching us about it, answering our questions, and making sure we got the message in each of the chapters he assigned. He pushed us to gain a fuller understanding of the theories through discussion of them.

Angelo was also my adviser for my research-based master’s thesis. Again he pushed me to balance theory and data, a lesson I learned well and have pursued ever since.

Angelo connected with his students beyond the classroom. I remember the evening he and his wife had all of us in that initial cohort—including our spouses—over to their home, something I forever after have done with my students.

I believe I was the first student to graduate with an MBA in industrial psychology from the Baruch School, class of 1962. But that was just the onset of my interest in the field. Under Angelo’s tutelage, I became quite excited about research, and he recommended I apply to the University of Maryland. In 1964, after serving two years in the U.S. Army, I enrolled at Maryland, earning a PhD in 1967.

I have had an interesting and wonderful career because Angelo showed me the possibilities of integrating theory and research with practice.

Before I close this note of appreciation, I want to add a few thoughts from Dr. Irwin L. (Irv) Goldstein (’59), who passed away a few years ago. Irv was an undergraduate student of Angelo’s and continuously spoke of the impact Angelo had on him as a person and as a professional.

In short, Angelo Dispenzieri had a wonderful influence on me in many ways, and I will always remember him with great fondness.

About Dr. Schneider

Benjamin Schneider, PhD (MBA ’62) is a senior research fellow with CEB’s Talent Management Labs.

Dr. Abe Fenster (’62) Remembers

On the 50th anniversary of his graduation from City College/Baruch, Dr. Abe Fenster (’62) wrote to his college professor Dr. Angelo Dispenzieri. Dr. Fenster asked that we share this spontaneous letter from 2012 as his tribute to this special man and mentor.

June 20, 2012

Dear Dr. Dispenzieri,

This month marks the 50th anniversary of my graduation from City College. As I think back over my entire academic experience, I am so pleased that I took your general psychology course, which then led to my taking additional courses with you in industrial and experimental psychology as well as an independent study course. You also provided invaluable career and some personal counseling to me without any compensation. Moreover, when I received my PhD, you spoke with Professor Ben Balinsky and successfully recommended me as an adjunct to teach a graduate experimental psychology course.

For most of my life, I had considered my education something that I had to do, not something I wanted to do. It was a form of work rather than pleasure, and I found it only minimally fulfilling. My experience with you was different. From the beginning, I looked forward to each of your lectures (and even felt deprived if a film was shown in class or a psychological test administered). I always experienced you as dedicated, interesting, authentic, nonpossessive, and committed.

As you may or may not remember, for 40 years I was a psychology professor at John Jay College. I retired in 2007 and continue to work part time as a psychotherapist. I consider my career to have been successful and gratifying in part because I assimilated some of your attitude, enthusiasm, and general approach to scholarship.

Were it not for my working and studying with you, my career and much of my life would surely have turned out very differently. For that, I can only say thank you very much.

Warmly,

Abe Fenster

About Dr. Fenster

Dr. Fenster is Professor Emeritus and founding chairperson of the Department of Psychology at John Jay College of Criminal Justice/CUNY.

Dr. Harvey Barocas (’64) Remembers

Dr. D, or Angelo as he preferred to be called, was a remarkable man, an outstanding teacher and administrator, as well as a beloved colleague and dear friend. Embodying the qualities of hope, optimism, and resilience, he was an advocate of positive psychology long before it emerged on the national scene. While others afflicted with polio may have withdrawn from life and sat on the sidelines, Angelo embraced life fully. I never thought of him as physically challenged or disabled. His enormous energy and zest for life made trying to keep up with him physically challenging for many of us.

Where others saw problems, Angelo saw opportunities for growth, change, and development. In addition to being a superb teacher, Angelo was an exceptional psychotherapist and healer. He was frequently sought out not only for his keen analytic mind but for his deep sense of humanity and compassion. He was a wonderful human being who earned the respect and admiration of everyone who was fortunate enough to know him.

I first met Angelo over 50 years ago as an 18-year-old undergraduate at Baruch College when I enrolled in his Introductory Psychology class. He had that rare gift as a teacher to expand your mind and touch your heart. He was a renaissance man whose love of psychology, science, anthropology, music, and art infused his lectures with an intellectual passion that was simply infectious.

Angelo was the teacher’s teacher and the mentor’s mentor, always generous with his time and wisdom.

For an undergraduate thinking about career options, Angelo was an inspiration for my development as a clinical psychologist. I was his student, fellow, colleague, and friend in a relationship that spanned more than a half century.

One of my fondest memories of Angelo was when he decided to teach the jumbo Introductory Psychology lecture when Baruch was transitioning from small recitation classes to large lectures. I remember, at the time, being concerned about Angelo’s capacity to handle such a daunting teaching assignment, but he quickly proved me wrong. Angelo became a chariot of fire, rushing down the aisles of Mason Hall on his crutches, followed by a large group of students.

Standing at the podium, Angelo displayed what outstanding teaching was all about. Soon students would be singing his praises, and at the end of every semester, he would receive a standing ovation. Students were so appreciative of all he had given them.

Angelo was a loving husband, father, and grandfather, completely devoted to his family. Those of us who knew him were blessed to have him in our lives. He inspired and mentored countless students who went on to receive their doctorates. His warmth, kindness, and generosity endeared him to a generation of Baruchians. He was a legend in his time, and legends never die, especially a chariot of fire. To know him was to love him.

About Dr. Barocas

Dr. Barocas is a professor of psychology in Baruch’s Weissman School of Arts and Sciences and a member of the Doctoral Faculty in Psychology at the CUNY Graduate Center. A clinical psychologist/psychoanalyst, Barocas specializes in adjustment issues, psychological trauma, and crisis intervention. He is the director of a field work/internship program and conducts workshops and training programs on child abuse, victims’ assistance, sexual harassment, and workplace violence. He is the co-author of Personal Adjustment and Growth: A Life-Span Approach (William C. Brown, 1990).

Barocas has been recognized with such honors as the Baruch College Distinguished Teaching Award, National Institute of Mental Health Postdoctoral Fellowships, and the CUNY Doctoral Alumni Association Achievement Award.

Tom Diamante (PhD ’87) Remembers

Dr. Angelo Dispenzieri had a lasting and profound influence on my development. He was my professor, mentor, and friend.

Angelo was the principal reason I pursued psychology professionally. He stretched, supported, nurtured, and challenged me at every turn. Did I mention he was fun to be with?

Dr. D. brought wit and humor that would light up a room. He found the best in everybody. His level of concern for others, combined with an encyclopedic command of applied research, made him a formidable mentor. I am a lucky guy.

On a personal note, I remember being the young graduate student that was also bringing a daughter into the world and I asked him for a bit of counsel. “Just love her,” he said. Straightforward. Good advice.

Angelo encouraged my reading of many disciplines in psychology and reinforced efforts to integrate the research. He wouldn’t let me get away with coloring inside the lines. No way.

He was imaginative, creative, and inspirational. Think broadly, integrate, go ahead, and connect what is not yet connected, he counseled.

Perhaps an interesting tidbit is that upon completion of my industrial degree I entered a one-year postdoctoral program in cognitive behavioral therapy.

Angelo provided C-level consultations to a number of Fortune 500 companies. He generously taught me how to consult, counsel, and advise using complex, highly sensitive psychological cases. It was a special experience to gain this window into the executive board room, especially given that I was merely an eager student. It wasn’t his day job to work with me in this manner.

Dr. D. made heavy investments in people in general and in me, I share humbly. He cared. It showed. And it had impact.

My last name begins with a “D”’—oftentimes I am called Dr. D. It makes me smile.

About Dr. Diamante

Tom Diamante is a licensed industrial and organizational psychologist. He held executive positions at Merrill Lynch, KPMG Consulting, and Altria. His experience is C-level, cross-industry, and cross-cultural. His practice is centered on executive development, accelerating venture success, and building cultures that sustain a company’s product as the practice director at cca, inc., a privately held company.

  

 

Attention Psychology Alumni:

Do you have a memory of Professor and Dean Angelo Dispenzieri to share? Please share it here or e-mail communications@baruch.cuny.edu.

The Legacy of Bernard Richards ’49 - Three Baruch College Fund Trustees Share Their Tributes

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The Legacy of Bernard Richards ’49

Bernard Richards addressed the students at the College's midyear Commencement in 1983.

On March 9, 2015, Baruch College lost one of its most generous and tireless advocates, alumnus Bernard Richards, class of 1949. He was 87 years old.

A distinguished student—he graduated with honors—Richards quickly became a successful, distinguished alumnus. Bernie (as his friends called him) began his career as an entry-level accountant and rose to become chairman and CEO of Slattery Associates, which helped build some of New York’s iconic structures, including the Headquarters of the United Nations and Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts.

During his thriving career, his commitment to his alma mater remained strong. Richards served on the nascent Baruch College Fund Board, first in 1974 and then twice as its president. In 2002 he was named a Trustee Emeritus. The College honored him as a Wood Fellow and twice as Outstanding Alumnus of the Year.

Richards met his wife of 66 years, Arlene (class of ’50), in the stairwell of the College’s Field Building at 17 Lexington Avenue. In 2009 they were recognized with the Annie and Bernard Baruch Couples Award. The couple has endowed scholarships and lecture series, among other initiatives. Their generosity daily impacts and inspires the lives of students.

It was my good fortune to have met Bernard Richards in the early 1980s and have him guide me as a new trustee. He was my inspiration as I observed him in his role as president of the Board of Trustees of the Baruch College Fund (BCF).

He shared with me his great passion for Baruch College. He was tireless in using his skills as an executive to guide the BCF, always smiling and calmly working on various BCF matters or chairing committees for the benefit of the College that he loved so much. Bernie and his wife, Arlene, generously gave of their time and money, raising funds and endowing many scholarships when the BCF was in its infancy and money was scarce. We owe him and Arlene a debt of gratitude for the great accomplishments of today’s BCF. I will miss him greatly.

—Dov Schlein (’70, MBA ’75)

I “discovered” the exceptional Bernie Richards long before I had the privilege of meeting him face to face. As a young securities analyst and portfolio manager, I had invested in a public company he ran. That company’s financials were exceptional in their clarity and straightforwardness. I discerned at once the accounting precepts inculcated in me by my mentor, the late Professor Abe Briloff, who impressed on me a company’s obligation to present results realistically.

But I truly got to know Bernie after I joined the Baruch College Fund (BCF), which he had helped to found and on which he had already served as a president. Given my background, I received an initial assignment of heading the then-small investment committee. Fortunately, Bernie was a member of that committee, and I quickly came to depend on his wisdom and insights.

From that time forward, I knew Bernie as someone who could always be relied on for sage, independent, and caring advice. He was a man of deep integrity and kindness who was committed to sustaining Baruch’s legacy of providing opportunity for others as it had for him and for so many of us. We have lost a valued friend.

—Charles Dreifus (’67, MBA ’73)

Bernie was a true son of Baruch. He was totally dedicated to his alma mater, giving tirelessly of his time and resources to further the school’s mission. Having met his beautiful wife, Arlene, at Baruch while still an undergraduate, Bernie felt an extra special connection to the College.

Bernie was my first BCF President when I joined the board in the mid-1990s. He was welcoming, humble, thoughtful, caring, and—most of all—passionate. He carried himself with an easy grace and was a truly beloved figure when he walked the corridors of Baruch talking to students or when he chaired the BCF Board meetings. He was inspiring to me and to all who had the privilege of knowing him. The Baruch family has suffered the loss of an extraordinary friend.

—Arthur Ainsberg (’68, MBA ’72)

 

Honoring Bernard Richards ’49

Please consider donating to the Baruch College Fund in Bernard Richards’s memory. Your support secures the Baruch experience for future generations of students and creates lasting opportunities at your alma mater.


Pet Projects - Two Animal-Loving Alumnae

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Pet Projects

After stints in for-profits and nonprofits, Adrienne (Rayski) Preuss manages Animal Loving Care in Brooklyn. Photo by Sophie Gamand.

After a postcollegiate stint in the world of digital marketing and communications, Adrienne (Rayski) Preuss (’07) is applying her skills and her love of animals to a small business venture in Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn: Animal Loving Care. With Preuss’s help, the business—which specializes in dog and cat grooming, daycare, and walking services—expanded in size and services in 2014.

Says Preuss, “Going from structured corporate environments and then higher education to running a small business has been a tremendous change. Every day there’s something new, and it certainly gets hectic juggling it all. But the rewards are so, so great. . . . I feel honored to call this my work now.”

Diana Clemente with her office cat, Sky. Photo by T. Clemente.

Diana Clemente (’81), president and principal of Brooklyn, N.Y.-based limousine operator Big Apple Car, is helping to improve the lot of neighborhood cats. Clemente provides space to local cat-control group Ferals in Peril for spay/neuter and vetting of feral cats and for temporary housing of adoptable animals rescued from feral colonies. Her feline philanthropic activities were praised in a February 2015 Brooklyn Daily online article titled “Bensonhurst Livery Cab Station Fixes Feral Cats.”

Attention Alumni:

Calling all dogs, cats, guinea pigs, gerbils… Do you have photos with your pets? Please send them to communications@baruch.cuny.edu.

Navigating Your Career & Business - Q&A with Founding Partner and Chief Strategist, Ready Set Rocket

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Navigating Your Career & Business

"We recruit out of all of the major universities in NYC," says ALEX LIRTSMAN (MBA ’07), "and I would say that Baruch students are the most hardworking, both as interns and employees. They’re willing to invest in their careers. They don’t expect anything to be handed to them."

Alex Lirtsman, founding partner and chief strategist of Ready Set Rocket, has led innovation and digital strategy for global brands and nonprofits. His past and current client list includes the ACLU, Ann Taylor, Better Homes & Gardens, Deutsche Bank, Diesel, FastCompany, Freshpair, Johnson & Johnson, J.P. Morgan Chase, Live Nation, Michael Kors, Perfumania, New York Life, the NBA, Tanger Outlets, and Univision.

When Lirtsman began his Baruch MBA degree, he was in the financial services industry earning a six-figure salary. Over the course of his MBA program, he realized he needed to risk a change. So he left his first field to pursue what was for him a more challenging, more creative endeavor in digital marketing. Lirtsman began his current professional journey as a $10-per-hour intern at Freshpair, Inc., a small but growing e-commerce company.

It’s an amazing story: Lirtsman’s career trajectory has given him insights for professionals at all stages of their careers, especially in relation to the key business area of digital marketing.

Want to learn more? Great, because Lirtsman not only shares his expertise with high-level Ready Set Rocket clients but has a passion for education and mentoring and happily offers in-the-trenches advice to his fellow Baruchians.

Q: What do individuals—professionals outside the field—need to know about digital marketing?

A: People in other fields—that includes CMOs and SVPs of brand marketing, corporate communication, products and engineering—need to understand the role that digital marketing plays in acquiring, retaining, and growing the lifetime value of their consumers. It’s not required that they know how to make that happen, but it is critical to understand the basics of how digital marketing impacts their brand, industry, and role.

Q: What does every business, big and small, need to know about digital marketing?

A. You can’t go about business as usual or treat offline and digital marketing separately. If you are marketing your brand, make sure you are doing it through a cohesive lens.

Q: How do you and Ready Set Rocket stay up-to-date in a field that’s constantly changing?

A. When we’re working with our clients, we’re looking at trends and where their customer journey is headed at least two years—sometimes five—in advance. We want to position clients to be successful in the short term and find opportunities for long-term growth.

This also means that we spend a lot of time future casting. It’s a lot of research, but our job is to determine ways that innovation will impact our clients so we can get them ahead of the trends.

We get paid to dream; I’m pretty lucky in that regard.

Q: What challenges have you and Ready Set Rocket faced in the digital marketing environment?

A. Recruitment is a huge challenge and a critical factor for our business to succeed.

Our ability to scale is strongly impacted by our ability to recruit. Because we are, to a greater degree, rooted in the consultancy and strategic mindset, we only succeed if we hire the most exceptional people.

And we’re in a competitive space where we’re recruiting people who are also being recruited by startups that are flush with cash and give away equity. The way that Ready Set Rocket succeeds comes down to culture and making sure people enjoy the work that they’re doing and the people they are doing it with. There’s absolutely no room to float.

Q: What’s the key to hiring amazing people?

A. Intern or full-time employee, we look for drive and passion.

For interns, it’s important to find people who can grow on their own and ask the right questions at the right time. They need to be self-starters. We look for folks we can mentor, not manage and certainly not micromanage.

As for full-timers, we look for the best of the best. We have to ensure that they will be absolutely brilliant and amazing to work with for everyone in the company.

Q: Are Baruch students among those you recruit?

A. We recruit out of all of the major universities in New York City, and I would say that Baruch students are the most hardworking, both as interns and as employees. They’re willing to invest in their careers. They don’t expect anything to be handed to them.

Q: How successful are universities in preparing professionals in the field of digital marketing? Are students learning more at college or out in the world?

A. Universities as a whole are struggling to produce great digital marketing talent. Academia has not kept pace with innovation in digital. This is why General Assembly, Miami Ad School, decoded, and a handful of other players are capitalizing on this vast demand for digital talent.

The challenge is that you have to live and breathe this content to teach it. Textbooks are obsolete by the time they hit the press. Practitioners at the peak of their careers need to teach these classes.

Right now, students are learning more about these advances in the real world or investing in further education in digitally focused programs.

Q: What curricular changes do you propose?

A: There needs to be a commingling of digital, traditional marketing, and branding courses. Teaching digital as a separate course silos out those other components. Consumer behavior is completely omnichannel, so digital needs to be integrated into every course offering.

Students coming out of universities today don’t have enough exposure to digital marketing, strategy, and omnichannel connectivity—what’s happening in real life.

Q: We’ve discussed students, interns, and the general business owner/practitioner. But you’ve also been called upon to give advice to mid-level, mid-career professionals eager to join the C-suite. What do you say to them?

A: First, understand your weaknesses. That’s one thing that’s really hard to talk about. Knowing what you are not good at is as important as knowing what you are good at.

Second, whether you’re the chief strategy officer, chief marketing officer, chief digital officer, or chief operations officer, understanding the metrics behind every decision is a critical component to make it to the next level. That means really diving in and knowing your key performance indicators (e.g., the cost to acquire a customer, the lifetime value of a customer). Constantly refining and optimizing against KPIs [key performance indicators] is really the key.

And lastly, listening. As we go through our evolution from an employee, to a manager, to a department leader, to a director, a VP, an SVP, we do a lot of delegation. And delegation almost seems as if it will require more talking than listening. But that’s not the case. As professionals rise higher in an organization, they work with experts who are incredibly knowledgeable, and they become advisors versus the executors. Along the way, there needs to be a transition from talking to listening.

Going from manager to leader is a skill that no one teaches us in school because we’re not trained to be leaders. We’re trained to be managers. We’re managing our own tasks and time, and we’re managing employees under us. As we make it to the C-suite, we need to transition from being that manager to being the leader.

About Alex Lirtsman

For more than 15 years, Alex Lirtsman has led innovation and digital strategy for global brands and nonprofits. As founding partner and chief strategist of Ready Set Rocket (RSR), Lirtsman oversees the teams that fuel innovation and digital strategies for such brands as the ACLU, Ann Taylor, Deutsche Bank, JPMorganChase, Michael Kors, NBA, and Univision. Prior to RSR, Alex’s roles included director of e-commerce at Freshpair and CMO of digital agency Purple, Rock, Scissors.

The alumnus is also an adjunct and guest lecturer in the Master’s Program in Strategic Communication at Columbia University and the MBA Program in marketing at Baruch’s Zicklin School of Business.

 

 

Swimming with the Sharks - A Q&A with Shark Tank Contestant Brittany Hodak (MS '10)

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Swimming with the Sharks

Brittany Hodak (right) competing on Shark Tank with her ZinePak co-founder Kim Kaupe.

Since 2011, Brittany Hodak (MS ’10) has been hard at work as co-founder of ZinePak, an innovative startup that teams with celebrities and pop stars to create custom music packaging for “superfans.” In just a few short years, her hard work has paid off–literally. On the April 24 episode of ABC’s hit show Shark Tank, Hodak and ZinePak co-founder Kim Kaupe agreed to a $725,000 deal with sharks Robert Herjavec and Lori Greiner for a 17.5% share of the company.

Hodak chatted with BCAM about her Shark Tank experience, discussing her preparation, the filming process, and how her Baruch education helped put her in a position to succeed.

 

What made you want to compete on Shark Tank, and what was the process like to get picked for the show?
Shark Tank producers reached out to us in June after noticing we were the old self-funding company on Inc. magazine’s 35 Under 35 list. They asked if we were interested in raising money, and when we said yes, they invited us to appear on the show. We wanted to appear on the show not only for the chance to raise money and snag a Shark (or two!) as a business partner, but because we recognized the promotional value of getting the national TV exposure in front of 8 million viewers.

How did you prepare for your appearance on the show, and what was your strategy?

I’ve been a big fan of Shark Tank since season one, so I had already seen most of the episodes. But I rewatched almost every episode to study the common questions the Sharks ask and the things that entrepreneurs do and say that get reactions out of the Sharks, both positive and negative. I read dozens of articles about and by each Shark. One of my most important strategies going into the Tank was not to have a confused or upset look on my face at any point, because I didn’t want to give producers anything to edit in over and over again!

Going into it, which Shark did you think would be most likely to bite on your offer?

I wasn’t really sure! Kim and I were kind of approaching it like a blind date: we didn’t really know what to expect or have any idea what we were in for, so we tried to go in with an open mind and without any preconceived ideas about who we may or may not hit it off with.

Where did the filming take place, and what was the whole experience like?

We filmed in L.A. in mid-September. The process of leaving and entering “the Tank” is very much like you see it on TV. We didn’t have a chance to talk to any of the Sharks before or after filming, and they had no idea who we were when we walked in. The negotiation with the Sharks lasted about an hour, so it was edited down substantially for TV.

IMG_7046 (1)

What was the most unexpected part of your Shark Tank experience?

The excitement from my friends, family, employees, and colleagues. I knew that when I was in the Tank I was an ambassador for my company, but I never thought about the fact that I was also representing all the people and organizations that have helped me along the way: Baruch, my undergraduate alma mater, my grade school, my hometown, my childhood summer camps, etc. It’s been really amazing to receive the love and support of people who’ve known me throughout my life and have them tell me they’re proud of me and how I represented them. I’m glad I didn’t think about any of this before filming, because I probably would have been a lot more nervous!

What was the biggest lesson you learned at Baruch that has stuck with you today?

I learned so many important lessons at Baruch that helped shape me into the entrepreneur and person I am today! One of the most enjoyable, interesting, and useful classes I’ve ever taken was Professor Mary Kern’s negotiation class. I learned so many important skills that I use every day … even on days when I’m not negotiating with Sharks! That course was so valuable.

I would encourage every student to take some type of negotiation class to learn the basics of how to add value for all partners and walk away from every deal as a winner … or, in cases where there’s not an opportunity to “win,” to walk away without losing anything!

What’s your biggest piece of advice to aspiring entrepreneurs?

Just go for it! There’s no better time than today to jump in and chase your dreams. I’ve known several entrepreneurs who let fear and worry dictate their decisions. Don’t get caught up in “what if” and all the potentially bad/negative things that could happen. Instead, make your decisions from a place of hope and excitement. There are very, very few jobs where you’re dealing with life-and-death situations. If you’re lucky enough to be starting a business that isn’t dealing with life and death, don’t be afraid to chase crazy dreams and ambitious goals. You’ll never know your own limits unless you push yourself past them!

Finally, what are your hopes and goals for ZinePak moving forward?

I’m very excited about ZinePak’s expansion into other verticals. As I type this, I’m on my way to L.A. and will be meeting with several companies in verticals we’ve never worked with before—sports, film, and fashion. I’m hopeful we’ll be able to create engaging products for fans of these sectors and help bring some of the same excitement to “superfans” in these areas that we’ve been able to bring to the music space.

Related Article

The Whole Package: Brittany Hodak (MS ’10) Creates ZinePak for Superfans

 

Thank You, Lexicon - Yearbook Celebrates 80th Anniversary

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Thank You, Lexicon

A collage of college yearbook covers: The Lexicon from 1935 through 2013.

A college yearbook is a memory keeper of the people who touched our hearts and lives over the course of four very important formative years. Whether yours is in mint condition or is filled with signatures, personalized sentiments, and wishes for a successful postgraduate future from friends and professors, we hope you cherish your Lexicon.

Yearbooks also create a unique archive for an institution, telling its history in timely, student-centric ways.

For all The Lexicon has done for Baruchians over its eight decades, we offer it and its dedicated staffers our lasting thanks with the brief tribute below. 

Origin and Early Years

The Lexicon owes its existence to the early spirit of camaraderie and independence at the downtown outpost of City College, today’s Baruch College. In the spring of 1934, students decided that their school, the School of Business and Civic Administration, merited a yearbook of its own. Prior to that, business students were included in Microcosm, the official yearbook of the Free Academy and then City College. Downtown students’ thinking reflected a new sense of identity: after all, they merited their own skyscraper on 23rd Street—today’s Field Building at 17 Lexington Avenue—and had already established their own newspaper, The Ticker. A separate yearbook seemed the logical next step.

Dorothy Stogel, from the Class of 1935, first suggested the name “The Lexicon.”

Of course, this yearbook needed a name. And although students were given an opportunity to voice their opinions, the decision fell to an enthusiastic few, including Dorothy Stogel (’35), who first suggested “Lexicon.” The name seemed fitting because of the school’s location and one of the word’s meanings, a book of information on a particular subject. Generations of Baruchians should be eternally grateful that the other contenders—The Twenty-third Street Corner and The Commercial Chronicle—were not chosen!

The first yearbook—for the class of 1935—was simply designed, imitating a modern magazine layout, and already strived to balance its serious mission with a sense of fun. By the second year, the 1936 editors expressed their awareness that they had created something special and potentially permanent, inscribing, “THE LEXICON is both mortal and immortal. As an institution it is perpetual—perhaps eternal. Editors will come and go, but the constancy of the Lexicon remains an assured fact.”

For The Lexicons of the forties, the most significant influence was U.S. entry into World War II. In 1942–43, students debated whether to proceed with its production, the majority voting “yes,” even as many graduates headed off to war.

The inside front cover of the 1942 Lexicon shows grads and soldiers.

A year later, in 1943–44, war-depleted, resource-constrained yearbooks for uptown and downtown City College merged, publishing the only joint Microcosm-Lexicon. By 1945 The Lexicon was again independently produced but as a very slim volume. During this era, The Lexicon was considered so essential a memento that students off fighting the war still received a copy, given to their parents free of charge. 

The Midcentury and a Turning Point

With the growth of postwar college enrollments in the 1950s, publishing the yearbook became more labor intensive: Lexicon’s production cycle expanded to 18 months, and adhering to such time-honored traditions as individual senior portraits—more than 700 of them—was daunting. Highlights of the decade were the dedication of the 1954 issue to the school’s most illustrious alumnus, Bernard Baruch (class of 1889), and Lexicon’s 25th anniversary in 1959. To the anniversary editors, the yearbook still charted “aspirations to a better world.” Heady sentiments indeed. 

Yearbook editors and seniors celebrated Lexicon’s 25th anniversary in 1959.

Changes were to come in the 1960s, when increasing student apathy presented the biggest threat to The Lexicon’s survival. Student unease also found its way into the yearbook’s pages. The class of 1965, for example, characterized itself in poetry as “Born into a time of turmoil but not part of it, / Born into a time of ‘give ‘em hell- Harry,’ / And ‘I Like Ike.’ / Oft read about, but unremembered.” Controversy and open dissatisfaction with Lexicon also plagued the mid-sixties’ issues. Not even the new status of the school in 1968 as a senior college, Baruch College/CUNY, buoyed students’ outlook.

Revolution and Renewal: The Seventies and Eighties

This Ticker ad for the 1971 yearbook shows its iconoclastic approach, in sync with the times.

Dissatisfaction manifested itself in radical departures and experimentation in the 1970s Lexicons. In 1971 the most unusual yearbook ever was created around the theme “Changes,” intending to offer “a multi-media phenomenon” of brochures, games, artworks, photographs, and plastic records. Explaining their creation, its editors described themselves as striking a blow against “traditional institutions,” which the yearbook symbolized. Customer disapproval was expected, and the editors challenged seniors with, “If you don’t like what we did, take a scissor and do it yourself. It’s your schoolbook.” Perhaps not unexpectedly, yearbook production was plagued with delays in the seventies. Two issues—for 1978 and 1979—had to be combined. Was The Lexicon becoming less relevant?

Changes were afoot in 1978 with the arrival of Carl Aylman, Baruch’s new director of student activities. One of his first assignments was to work with the Lexicon staff. Aylman’s dedication greatly impacted the 1980s issues, but even his help could not prevent delays or the non-issuance of the yearbook in 1990. Aylman, who is shown left wearing a tie surrounded by the 1981 student staff, would work with Lexicon students for three decades.

Problems and Solutions: The Nineties Through Today

The Lexicon reappeared in 1991. Nineties yearbooks were notable for changes in production: staffers now relied on computers and state-of-the-art software. Notwithstanding these advances, combined yearbooks were issued for 1995–96 and 1998–99 and by the end of the decade, publication ceased again.

But better times and renewed student commitment were around the corner. The Lexicon reappeared in 2002 and, by the mid-2000s, was back on solid ground—with greater support from the College. Full color came to the pages of Lexicon in 2003. Fast forward to 2015, the yearbook has the theme “Transcendence” and is scheduled to deliver in mid-May.

Promotional digital advertisement for the 2015 edition of The Lexicon.

On The Lexicon Tradition: Editor-in-Chief for 2015, Michael Lai

“It is challenging, yet worthwhile, to be able to lead a project with such a rich history,” says the 2015 editor-in-chief of the Baruch College yearbook. Lai and his team—his “Lexicrew”—pride themselves on having produced a yearbook “to help the graduating class carry their memories with them” long beyond Commencement Day. 

Lexicon’s 80th anniversary editor acknowledges the newest obstacles facing a traditional print yearbook, the digital age. “A student may find a yearbook irrelevant because our generation can easily take photos on their phones and share their memories on social media sites like Facebook,” he explains. “But who can know for sure if Facebook will still be around—if not popular—in the future? A physical yearbook has tangible and sentimental value. It is something that you can pass down and share with future generations, telling them the stories behind each photo and autograph.”

In Conclusion . . . for Now

OVER ITS LONG EXISTENCE, Lexicon has meant different things to different generations. We’re happy to report that it is still going strong. Pull out your copy, get lost in its pages of forever-young students, and share your Lexicon memories with us! 

CALLING ALL LEXICON ALUMNI: 

Share your memories with the College and your fellow Baruchians here or by e-mailing communications@baruch.cuny.edu. We want to hear from you!

Above article was based on an essay and original research by Alex Gelfand (’06).

 

 

 

Class Notes: ’80s

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Class Notes: '80s

Cathy Avgiris ¹80Catherine Avgiris (’80), executive VP and CFO of Comcast Cable, was honored with a Distinguished Alumna Award at the 26th annual Bernard Baruch Dinner on Apr. 22, 2015. The benefit is held in support of The Baruch College Fund.

 

 

Last fall founder and managing director of American Development Group, LLC, Perry M. Finkelman (’80) participated in the College-hosted panel discussion “Real Estate and the Arts,” which focused on mural projects in new buildings in Manhattan.

This spring Anthony Sutera (’80) joined Morgan Stanley Wealth Management as a financial advisor. Sutera has more than 35 years in the industry. He currently lives in Wilmington, N.C., with his wife and two sons.

Diana Clemente ¹81Diana Clemente (’81), president and principal of Brooklyn, N.Y.-based limousine operator Big Apple Car, is helping to improve the lot of neighborhood cats. Clemente provides space to local cat-control group Ferals in Peril for spay/neuter and vetting of feral cats and for temporary housing of adoptable animals rescued from feral colonies.

 

Robert Ganim (’83), chief information security officer at Neuberger Berman, was the subject of a cover profile in the November issue of Waters magazine, a publication of the online financial technology news portal WatersTechnology.

The American Marketing Association’s New York (NYAMA) chapter inducted Trevor Edwards (’84, MBA ’90), president of Nike, into its 2015 Hall of Fame in May. Edwards was awarded an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters (LHD) at Baruch’s Commencement ceremony in June 2014.

Motivated by personal experience in the foster care system, Stephen O’Donnell (’84) is co-founder of the THRU Project, which links adult mentors with transitioning youth who have aged out of the system. Professionally, he is a partner in Hill Country Bakery, an approximately 400-employee operation in San Antonio, Tx.

F Antonnucci ¹85Frank Antonucci (’85), director of campus operations and administration at Baruch College, has returned to DJing at WBMB, Baruch’s radio station (he DJ’d as an undergrad). His show, Rockin’ at the Sock Hop (airing Fridays from 1 to 2 pm live at wbmbbiz.com), features doo-wop and on-air interviews with stars of the fifties and early sixties.

 

Ralph J. DiRuggiero (MPA ’85) received the President’s Medal from his undergraduate alma mater, University of Scranton, at the university’s 2014 President’s Business Council Award Dinner. He is senior VP for property management at Paramount Group Inc.

Last February Lisa Davis (’86) joined Wilson Legal Solutions, an international provider of software and services to enhance law firm profitability and productivity, as a senior consultant. Previously Davis was the manager of Shearman & Sterling, LLP’s global technology portfolio planning and oversight.

In November, Salvatore Cordaro (’87) was installed as the new pastor at St. Joseph Church in New Paltz, N.Y. He entered the Capuchin order of Franciscans in 2005 and was ordained a priest in 2012.

A graduate of the National Urban Fellows Program, James E. Smith (MPA ’87) is city manager for Banning, Calif. He is also an adjunct professor of political science at San Bernardino Valley College. Previously he was budget director for the city of Oakland and general manager for utilities and the park and recreation departments for the city of Riverside. He and his wife of 25 years, Carol, live in Riverside.

Leighann Lord 89Comedian Leighann Lord (’89) recently published Leighann Lord’s Dict Jokes: Alternate Definitions for Words You’ve Probably Never Heard of But Will Definitely Never Forget. Lord has appeared on Comedy Central, Lifetime, ABC, and HBO.

 

 

Brian Sheets ¹89Brian Sheets (’89) hosts cable TV show Give It to Me Straight, Doc, which began airing on Cablevision Channel 88 in Connecticut in February. Sheets, who established a private practice in 1997, previously hosted his own weekly radio show tackling topics in health, wellness, and prevention.

 

 

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