All-Scars Seek Second Win Faculty Pall-bearers Early Sunday morning, as the sun creeps over Spencer Hill, these fine, fit, fellows will be seen carrying the defeated egoes of an united faculty to their graves. Corning College Made Clearing Office For the CCFL On March first a meeting was held at the Houghton House for the College Center of the Finger Lakes. The CCFL is a cooperative venture of seven institutions designed to pool resources and talents for the benefit of member colleges and the constituents they serve. The charter members include Alfred University, OCC, Elmira College, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Mansfield State, Keuka and Ithaca Colleges. Hobart and William Smith Colleges operate as one Institution in this organization. The Center will provide assistance and leadership for the cooperative effort. This effort would aid culturally in the fields of academics and entertainment. Cooperative action also would benefit in solving institutional problems as well as give aid for common projects. Since Corning is located central- ly among the other members, it was unanimously agreed to have it a clearing house for a newsletter which will be distributed after each meeting of CCFL. The newsletter will hopefully stimulate college interest which is necessary for integrated activities. Because of the situation here in Corning regarding the campus, it must be realized that any immediate noticeable gains from the CCFL will probably be few. Also the organization itself is only in the fourth semester of existence. Nevertheless, as acting representatives, Larry Allison and Craig Whitman will do their best to see that a firm foundation is developed for both Corning and the CCFL so that the Center's purpose can be benevolent in the future to Corning as well as to the other col- The rampaging Crier All-Scars are out to seek their second victory in a row on Saturday, March 30th, when they take on the confident faculty aggregation. Ranging in all weights, shapes and sizes, the All-Scars boast one of the best uncoordinated, unorganized teams or whatever it may be, since the series started. Each member is capable of leaping to a ten-foot basket in a single bound, able to get in each other’s way (at the wrong time), and score points for the opposition. If it is ability they lack, it is determinaion and the fact that the faculty is not as good as it thinks, that spells victory for our hard court soldiers. Running down the All-Scar roster, we find such stand-outs as: Russ Tarbell, Sam Cole, John Nichols, Craig Whitman, Don San-tore. Bob Finlay, Bill Taylor and Bob Ball. Along with these determined All-Scars, even more racket will be supplied by the unbiased announcer, Bob Eolin and the cheerleaders whose ability to spur on the students and team is a must if we intend to win. The fine speci-ments of femininity who will be doing all the vocalizing are as follows: Joan Fredericks, Ronda Lyon, Eileen Kolynich, Fran Biggs, and Judy Collson. These, dear students, are the people that will achieve victory over such a formidable foe. It should be noted that we have faculty referees, so students should keep an eye on them. Recognition should also be given to the people behind the scenes. Aggie Tyler and Bob Finlay are the co-chairmen for this event while tickets and publicity are being handled by Bob Eolin, Dick Owlett, John Nichols and Ken Law. The starting time for the game will be 7:30 p.m. at the Corning Free Academy Gym on Saturday, March 30th. Candy and refreshments will be sold and a record hop will follow immediately after the game. Convocation: Wednesday, April 3, 1963. The topic of discussion will be "American Foreign Policy Today” by Dester Perkins, Professor at Cornell University. Professor Perkins has authored many books, his most recent being The United States of America, a history. He is slated to arrive at the college on the morning of April 3rd and will meet with some of the history classes at that time. The convocation will be held in the Corning Glass Center Auditorium at 2:00 p.m. Classes will be suspended at 1:45 until the convocation is over. . Four Supplement Faculty; Effective September 1963 Four faculty appointments were approved by the board of trustees of Corning Community College, effective next September. Sherman Craumer will be director of Athletics and Associate Professor of Health and Physical Education. A native of Corning, Mr. Craumer received his B.S. and M.S. degrees in Physical Education from Cortland State Teachers College and is presently a doctoral candidate at the University of Maryland. He has been a member of the faculty and coached football at Haverling High School in Bath and also coached at Bolibar High School. Neil Buckley of Savona, a 1960 graduate of Corning Community College will be a Physical Education instructor. He received his U.S. degree in Physical Education from the University of Buffalo, and will receive his M.S. degree in June. Miss Barbara McClure of Corning, a 1961 graduate of Corning Community College, will be assistant instructor of Business Technology and Secretarial Science. She will receive her B.S. in Business Education from Albany State in June. Miss McClure has participated in a student teaching program at Walt Whitman High School, Long Island. Gary Yoggy of Elmira will be an instructor of History. He is now engaged in doctoral work in history at Cornell while teaching at Binghamton North High School. He has graduated from the University of Michigan and received an M.A. degree with honors from Syracuse University. “The man who says, ‘It can’t be done’ and doesn’t use his wit, is apt to soon be pushed aside by a man who’s doing it.” Biggest Weekend Evah! The Spring Week-end coming this May promises to be the biggest and best ever. The weekend starts early from Thursday, May 9 through Sunday, May 11. The events scheduled are as follows: Thursday, May 9—Bermuda Day— all day, with a picnic and movie on the Houghton House lawn in the afternoon. Friday, May 10—Anything-can-happen-day, with anything liable to happen. Evening—dance at Corning Country Club, 9 p.m.-l a.m. featuring Freddy Cannon, the Or-lons, and Ronny Dio. Saturday, May 10—picnic at Havana Glen, 1-8 p.m. Tickets for the dance on Friday evening are available at the bookstore at $5 a couple and $3 single. All the other activities are free of charge. The tickets for the dance are expensive as they have to cover the cost of hiring the entertainment and also the cost of the picnics. The students are therefore requested to buy their tickets early, by April 8, if the picnics are to be held. The Spring Weekend is a recent innovation planned by capable students. If student interest is high, and if the weekend is a success, Corning Community Colleg-iates can expect bigger and more weekends similar to this. Student support and co-operation is needed. So, please buy your tickets early so that the picnics can be arranged and future parties be planned. The weekend committee has really worked to give you a good time. On Anything-can-happen-day you can do anything except cut classes; Bermuda Day expects the faculty and students turned out in bermudas. For the Havana Glen picnic, the whole glen has been reserved for us. For the dance, the best available entertainment has been hired. The weekend will really be good! Please support it with your presence! The chairmen for the different functions are: Anything-can-happen-day Bermuda Day—Ronda Lyon —Ernie Lusky Dance—Jane York Tickets—Henri Richards Page Two THE CRIER March 29, 1963 The Editor Notes Several weeks ago, general information from the office of Student Affairs regarding housing accommodations for next year, was mailed to returning students in addition to those who will be entering the college, for the first time this fall. A total of 196 persons were contacted-—an exception being made to those students in the Corning-Painted Post area. In essence, the letter expressed the desire of the school to unite its students in one central location hy converting the present Faculty and Student Center into men’s residence and the newly-acquired Sullivan House into another women's dormitory. Plans for dining are tentative, but it is hoped that cafeteria facilities will be provided for both men and women in the Sullivan House. Enclosed also was a mimeographed post card where the student could indicate his preference for residence hall living and was to be returned promptly to the Student Affairs Office. Students should he cognizant of the fact that this is an obvious attempt on the part of the administration to make this facet of college life a real and more meaningful experience by focusing their attention and efforts on group living. One cannot dispute the benefits gained from dormitory life; the majority of those who have tried it have liked it in spite of inadequate facilities. To cite a specific instance—of the 23 girls living in the current women's residence, 20 are possibly returning and. of those 20, 15 have replied affirmatively to the new proposal. This appears to be a definite indication of interest. We urge both your consideration of the matter and response, be it favorable or otherwise, as quickly as possible since next year's plans will rest on your decision. Thirty "pure” Irishmen turned out March 17th to adulterate the surrounding campus streets with the infamous tint of the Irish. The CRIER Student Newspaper of Corning Community College Corning, New York Circulation 500 Elmira Quality Printers, Inc. Editor .............................................. Aggie Tyler Managing Editor ........................................ Bob Finlay Sports Editor..................................... Craig Whitman Feature Editor.......................................... Bob Eolin Business Manager .................................... John Nichols Reporters: Ken Law, Eileen Kolynich, Don Santore, Joan Fredericks, Judy Colleson, Fran Biggs, Bob Ball. Photography: Roger Palmer, Dick Owlett, Al Bowen Faculty Advisors: Mrs. Helen Williams, Mr. William Thompson, Mr. William Dolan Circle 'K' Begets Gong and Gavel Mr. Jay Finley, President of the Corning Kiwanis Club, presented a “Gong and Gavel” to the Circle K Club at their regular dinner meeting held in the Student Center, March 11, 1963. Accepted the gong and gavel on behalf of Circle K, President Bill Taylor recalled the many gifts received from Kiwanians and how they were being used. The gong, a foot high brass bell, will be sounding attention at all the Circle K Meetings in the future. After dinner the members adjourned to the lounge for the evening’s program. Slides were shown and narrated by an exchange student from Brazil and a former exchange student to Greece. The films revealed that Brazil is a progressive country, quite modem and comparable to the United States. Both students are presently attending local high schools and to the pleasure of Circle K, both were attractive young ladies. Program Chairmen were Jim Wilson and Roger Palmer. The last dinner meeting was held on March 25, 1963. It included planning for the Blood Bank to be held on April 24, 1963, the coming convention and elections of new officers. E.C. Sponsors Recital Elmira College Dance Recital will be held in the Emerson Building, Elmira College April 26th and 27th. Tickets are available in Mrs. MacDowell’s Office. Adults $1.00, Students .50. Tickets may be purchased until April 12th. Four Crier Staff Members Attend News Conference Four Corning students attended the Fourth Annual Newspaper Conference in Rochester of March 1st. The conference was sponsored by the Rochester Institute of Technology and the Gannett newspapers and played host to 18 New York State colleges. The morning sessions, made of ten workshops of which the Corning delegates, Bob Finlay, Roger Palmer, Bob Eolin and John Nichols, attended two each. In these workshops, many of the Crier’s problems were brought to light and found to be similar to those of many other college newspapers. The highlight of the conference was the luncheon and a speech by Desmond Stone, a New Zealand journalist working for the Rochester Times Union. Mr. Stone commented on racial problems in the Rochester area and the United States-Canadian situation. Awards were given to the top newspapers and yearbooks of colleges in this area. The Crier, however, was not in the competition. Also, a proposal for a Western New York Press Association was cited. Green Revelry It is a well-known fact that around the 17th of March each year, the percentage of Irish in the United States increases by at least 500%. The reason for this curious phenomenon is something called St. Patrick’s Day whose effects are more rapidly felt and longer lasting than the flu. Corning Community College was no exception to the rule. Some of the students who were harder hit by the “green rash” even attended a dance held at the Baron Steuben Hotel from 8 ’till midnight. Bob LaDelfa’s band provided the music and, due to the efforts of Ernie Lusky and his committee, everyone had a good time. A green stripe down Chemung Street and splatters of green paint over a few sidewalks gave mute testimony to the returning students on Monday of the Donny-brook that had been held over the weekend. Griffith "Spectacular" At Houghton House The Museum of Modem Art and Corning Community College present: April 26, 8:15 p.m. in Houghton House Loft— INTOLERANCE — with Mae Marsh, Robert Harron, Lillian Gish, Constance Talmadge. This D. W. Griffith "spectacular” was to astound the world. It is generally considered the formal masterpiece of the movies, and it exercised enormous influence on production throughout the world. The very short shots characteristic of the Soviet school are seen at their source in INTOLERANCE, and so is the moving-camera photography usually associated with the postwar German school. C.C.C. Women Host Mrs. Houghton at Tea There will be a tea sponsored by the women of Corning Community College, April 4, 1963, at the Sullivan House in honor of Mrs. Amory Houghton, Sr. The tea will last from 3:30-5:30 P.M. Nurses to Have Their Week The week of April 28 has been slated as Student Nurse Week by the Student Nurse Association of New York State. In keeping with this week the student nurses of Corning Community College will be demonstrating nursing skills such as artificial respiration in area store windows. Coupled with this, an open house will be staged having Future Nurse Club moderators from surrounding schools as the honored guests. The election of an ideal student nurse chosen by the nursing body for her scholastic and nursing excellence will climax the week. This student nurse will then vie with the ideal student nurses chosen from the 11 area nursing schools for the overall title. To Kill A Robin by Sam Cole Chronologically speaking, spring had arrived. But it was still cold. The husky days of March ran along with the usual furor of snow, sleet, rain, and bright blotches of sunshine. At times the clouds drifted by too fast for reality and just about everything foreshadowed a late spring and an early summer. There was even the arrival of a robin on the scene. He, or she, (intimacy is for the birds!) was still bundled in a furry cloak of extra downs which from the front made the bird look like a weathered fern turned brownie and, from the back, like an animated powder puff with a crook in its neck. The side view was not unlike that of a pregnant penguin plodding along an icy beach. Mr. Robin had his problems! (Incidentally, I have dubbed this robin “Mr.” because a fly-by-night female robin just wouldn’t fit into my gross-ish plot.) Snow had piled up for several months but for its own reasons it just wouldn’t dig being faded into nothingness. As Frank Fontaine, alias Crazy Guggenheim, would say: “It was just haggin’ ’round, Joe. It wahzent doin’ nuttin'.” And so, back at the snowbank, food was a problem. Mr. Robin would starve if his supply of shrunken-up red berries, pieces of rotten, dried-up bread, or half-dead leaves depleted too much. It seemed he was always in want of food and that cold chaser of melted snow didn’t warm him up at all. Another problem for Mr. Robin was that of his social life. There weren’t any robinett.es to be seen from one snowbank to the next or to the next. It was a lonesome and cold, cold world without numbers of the opposite contingent who, on occasion, produced eggs like “robin’s-egg blue.” He yearned for the warmth and hospitality of close living quarters and dreamed of better times. Consequently, his days of wine and roses were shot. He was no longer a sweet bird of youth; he was a prisoner of a cold, white, and sullen Alcatraz. It was di-vorce-American style. This was certainly to be the longest of his days. At six A.M., nine hundred miles to the south. Candid Candy, his mate, started the long journey northward to join him. At six thirty he was dead. He was frozen stiff and the gentle snow drifted lazily down and made him a contour blanket that fitted just right. An effective newspaper helps a democracy to function well, and helps people to be effective citizens. “Our Man” sympathizes with the fretting faculty. March 29, 1963 THE CRIER Page Three Student Affairs Cites Transfer Possibilities Since many schools have deadline dates, all students planning to transfer to other colleges and universities are urged to attend to the matter as soon as possible. Students from Corning have gone to schools such as, New York University, Colgate, Syracuse, Vanderbilt, Ohio State, Memphis State, Cornell and Kent State. A large percentage of our students enter other units of the State University. It should be stressed, that beginning in the Fall of 1963, all units of the state university will offer a liberal arts program in addition to the regular teacher education plan. Much controversy has been raised about the addition of a $400 tuition charge in the state university schools. This should not discourage prospective applicants. If money is a major factor in your education, it should be remembered that scholar incentive awards and your financial situation can greatly reduce this $400 charge. Corning has an excellent transfer program. Credit is transferable depending upon the caliber of work and the program it is to be transferred into. It should be pointed out, however, that the final decision concerning a student's acceptance at a college rests entirely with the school he is applying to. If there is a question about the transfer of credit, students are urged to notify the Office of Student Affairs immediately. SYNC Mostly Cabbages by Roger Palmer Color is the most important aspect in amateur photography today. Nearly 50% of all snapshots are in color and more than 90% of home movies are in color. What, you are probably asking now, should be done to take a good color shot? Few color shots by an amateur are good or even passable examples of photography. The reasons are numerous: insufficient light (remember, the emulsion on color film requires either a longer exposure or wider aperture), foggy lens, use of outdated film or keeping the film more than two weeks after exposure, storage in a damp or hot place, etc. Color film is not as stable as black and white; it must be treated with care. You can take your pictures in negative-color (Kodacolor, Agfa-color) or in positive-transparency color (Anscochrome, Kodachrome, Ag-faehrome, Perutz). If you want to have prints for your photo album, the negative color will be best and least expensive to use. However, if you wish slides, then a transparency color film is what you are looking for. New York State will be supplied with the new Polacolor film sometime this summer. Those of you using Polaroid cameras will have to pay about $5.00 for a six-exposure roll and wait about one minute for a finished print. The color prints will not have to be coated. A good color picture is worth a thousand words; a bad color picture is worth a dark comer In a forgotten closet.) Be careful with color film. Follow the manufacturer’s directions to the letter, have it processed as soon after exposure as possible and your color pictures will improve. Any questions you may wish to ask should be sent to Roger Palmer, c/o The Crier, Corning Community College, Corning, N. Y. by Bob Eolin The day of the wearing of the green has come and gone. It started, for us, Saturday night with the traditional Saint Pat’s Dance. The following day, Saint Patrick’s Day, another tradition was fulfilled—the painting of Chemung St. This year the wild imaginations of the 18-20 street painters prompted them away from the usual green stripe design. In its stead they executed a grand, sure an’ begaushen, shamrock. The life of this shamrock was fleeting though. It was run over by cars, dogs and a few students. Although ye olde shamrock is gone now it has not been forgotten. No indeed! It lives on in a few girl’s hair, the bottoms of our shoes and in small green blotches on the sides of our levis. There is, also, an unfortunate side to our St. Pat's festivities. As we returned to school the following Monday we found someone had divided our sidewalk with a green stripe. These people must be either conservatives or delin- quents. If they are conservatives their green centerlines, no doubt, were made in protest against the newly adapted shamrock design. Being conservatives they want to stick to the old “split the road with green” tradition. If these highway engineers are just plain old delinquents all I have to say is they wasted a lot of good green paint. I could go on and moralize, but if I did no one would finish reading my column, so I'm going to change the subject. I have been asked, by Mr. Alfred P. Suggins Jr., to remind you that he is going to make his first public appearance at the CRIER-Fac-ulty game. He also stated that the winner of the Alfred P. Suggins Jr. contest would be announced during the half time. I don’t know what this is all about but I’ll be there to find out. I hope you will be there too. Who knows? YOU might be the big winner! George C. MacGreevey 313-315 E. Water St. Office Outfitters Suppliers Elmira New York PORTRAIT-FRAMING WEDDINGS COMMERCIAL-COPYING PHOTO-FINISHING Worry is the interest paid on trouble before it is due WILLSON STUDIOS 25 Denison Pkwy. East Corning, New York DIAL XN 2-0212 or XN 2-2009 May you always seek knowledge Which gives you wisdom to live CORNING GLASS WORKS COMMERCIAL & PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHERS TOM GILL'S PHOTO STUDIO AND CAMERA CENTER 60 E. Market St., Corning, N. Y. Dial XN 2-2133 Supplies Equipment “The Complete Photo Service" Patronize Our Advertisers SODAS SUNDAES Reynold's Newstand 85 East Market St. Corning, New York LUNCHES MAGAZINES Smoke a Pipe Brown's Cigar Store at the Banking Corner PIPES REPAIRED The College Store SCHOOL JEWELRY WRITING PAPER CHILDRENS SWEATSHIRTS BEER MUGS STUFFED ANIMALS SCULPTURES ART PRINTS STUDENTS! Alperts Bring this little old ad into Al-perts and receive a generous reduction on your gift subscription — yes even on any watch or jewelry repairing. 19 East Market Street (111 E. Water St., Elmira) Clark’s Shoes 6 E. Market Street Corning, New York Ready to serve our College students and faculty with their shoe requirements. Happy to help in the growth of a strong college educational center for our community. Page Four THE CRIER March 29, 1963 From A Jack To A King by Craig Whitman After losing its first five games, Corning staged a gallant comeback, manhandling its opponents in winning five and losing only four over the remainder of the season. Overall, five wins and nine losses does not constitute a successful basketball campaign. Not so in this case. It is the best record any Corning College team has compiled. Throughout the season the Barons managed to loom as a hypocritical type team manifested by game results in both defeat and victory. We were two-faced in all of our defeats, especially noticeable at Jamestown and Auburn. A bad start led to the short-end outcome. Down by 16 and 21 points respectively at the halves, we almost overcame the insurmountable as the leads were cut to four points in each instance, a complete reversal from those hinder -ous first periods. In victory, we easily surprised Keystone and Baptist Bible. After having supposedly little effort in beating us on their home courts, each by over twenty points, they undoubtedly anticipated victory as they journeyed to Corning. Time and teamwork plus Jack Cappucci and Taft Jackson were all that the Barons needed to subdue their once acquisitive, but now disheartened, opponents. Jack came off the bench, malting his first appearance for Corning, and dropped in eight of nine field attempts plus two fouls as Keystone fell 67-61. Then came Mr. Jackson. He scored 20 points. 18 in the second half, to spark a come-from-behind revengeful win over B.B.S. It was his foul shot which enabled us to win in overtime, 80-78. Brian Rose came through, scoring four of his six points in the extra period. Jack Wills, playing his finest game ever hitting steadily on 20 foot jumps, wound up with 21. Against the freshman of Alfred University it was again Cappucci and Jackson hitting for 19 and 17 points respectively as we managed to stuff victory number four under our belts, thus breaking the old record of three wins gained by the 1957-58 Baron edition. We held a 7 point lead at the half, but a highly spirited Alfred team soon led us, 48-40, with only five minutes remaining. Then a great team effort by Corning turned the tide as Walt Grace, Cappucci, Rose and Jackson scored pressure bas- kets causing our host to buckle. That final, 55-53. In our final encounter of the season with Morrisville, we again gained revenge, winning 59-56. T. J. and J. C. showed the way with 19 and 13 points. It wasn't the smoothest game we’ve played offensively, but our close checking, man-to-man defense and hustle under the boards enabled us to merge the victor. DON’T forget that first victory that CCC took from Onondaga. Remember, this was before we were fortunate to have the talented twosome of Jackson and Cappucci. Corning stepped into the light of reality after losing some twenty games straight. After such a dry spell, approximately thirty minutes elapsed before any of us even contemplated victory. Our smaller forces of Wills, Rose, Ron Gebhart, Grace, James Anderson, Bill Hanrahan and Jack Pastore demonstrated what teamwork can accomplish in machine-like fashion by grinding out a come-from-be-hind, overtime victory, 88-82. We gained some consolation for those previous losses prestige-wise as Corning was the first team to ever defeat Onondaga. (They were 1-0 while in their first season of college basketball under the NJCAA. * * * No team can be successful without a good bench to back it up. The Baron’s four unheralded performers, Larry Reisbeck, Al Jim-merson, Guy Haskins and Malynn Budd ail deserve much praise for their faithful attendance to practices and games. Al and Larry played quite a part in our comeback from as much as 24 points in the Auburn contest while Guy and Malynn turned in stellar performances in the Alfred Tech game. The spirit they showed was a great team inspiration. LITTLE was realized of the importance of our coach, Mr. Shaddock. Acting voluntarily as athletic director for the college, he gave up most of his free time to see that a few of us could enjoy the basketball sport. Patiently, since the school first fielded a team, he worked with what material was present and succeeded to get out its best skills. Only this last semester did his accomplishments become apparent as the quality of material improved almost overnight. Very quickly he was able to mold it into a feasible Alfred Tech rebounds over the fruitless grasps of Jack Wills and Taft Jackson. OPEN FRIDAY NITES 'TIL 9 P. M. 34 EAST MARKET ST. PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES ECKER DRUG STORE Market Street PRESCRIPTIONS Reid Steiner tangles with Alfred opponent on the road to C.C.C.’s wrestling triumph. THE FOOD MART STORES BETTER FOODS BUILT OUR BUSINESS Engineering Supplies CORNING FLOWER SHOP 20 West Market Street Cunnings 12 E. Market Street College Supplies unit that produced five glamorous victories including a home court, four games winning streak still in existence. He did a very commendable job. * * * CORNING was a team typical of a champion. It had much, much hustle plus a great desire to win. When it was down, it never gave up. When it lost, it lost as a champion. And when it was victorious, it reigned as a champion. Barons Bring Home the Bacon School's First Trophy After compiling a most respectable 2-2 regular season mat record, the Corning Community College grapplers, led by Dave Tremaine capped third place at the National Junior College Athletic Association Region III Tournament at Delhi. In all, Corning took one first place, four seconds, one third, and one fourth place out of eight entries and compiled a third place team score of 58 points. Fine showings were made by Reid Steiner (2nd 115), Jan Stever (2nd 137), Captain Dick Cowley (2nd 147), Bob Lynch (2nd 157), Big Fred Hannan (3rd Hvwt.), and the hero of the day, Dave Tremaine (1st 191). After scoring two previous pins in 2:04 and 5:14, Dave did it again and pinned Delhi’s Puccia in 4:14 to guarantee Coming at least a tie for third and the first trophy in C.C.C. history. Tremaine was the only wrestler at the tournament to go all the way with pins. Throughout the regular season, Coach Gene Palmer’s squad drubbed Keystone Junior College 22-7 and beat Mansfield State College 19-13, while losing to Alfred Tech and the Ithaca College frosh. Outstanding performance awards went to Jan Stever (137), Dick Cowley (147), and Dave Tremaine (177191) while improvement awards went to Ernie Cowen (147-157), and 262 pound Fred Hannon. In recognition of their hard work, Reid Steiner, Terry Young, Walt Poland and co-captain Nick Bar-bieri received honorable mention. Next season, Corning wrestling fans can look forward to an expanded schedule with a much stronger squad led by nine returning men, In addition to some expected star-studded freshmen. At the wrestlers’ banquet held February 28 at Tarantelli’s Sunnyside Restaurant, Coach Gene Palmer and Dean Rollin Perry made plans to add a new trophy next year to the one that now graces the Administration Building trophy case.