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THE FORDHAM RAM Fordham , 58, N. Y.-April 10, 1963 401 Eight Pages

r9 Kinahan, Connolly in; 85% of Juniors Vote Fordham Phi Beta Kappa Picks 37 Seniors, 5 Juniors, 5 Grads Tau of New York, Fordham's course program including no less Phi Beta Kappa Chapter, an- than 100 semester hours of liberal nounced late last night the elec- arts studies. tion of 37 seniors, five Juniors, five A maximum of ten per cent of members of the class of '62 and the graduating class may be ac- three graduate school students to cepted into the honor society. But the actual count may be less, de- membership In the liberal arts pending on the number of qual- honor society. The following sen- ified students as determined by iors were elected; P. T. Villani, W. the selection committee. Along A. Drumin, M. C. Danahy, P. P. with the basic index, a student Gleeson, W. J. Eiley, P M. Cuccl, must give indication of intellect- B. J. Shramko, D. A. Tate, T. J. ual promise and achievement. Murphy, J. J. Lynagh, J. E. Mc- Juniors need a basic index of Govern, F. Chisari, R. L. Micheri, 3.75 to be considered. They must J. M. Hogan, R. P. Lawry, J. D. have completed at least 75 semes- Trasco, N. P. O'Donohue, V. R. ter hours of liberal arts study. Carllll, J. B. McCaffrey, R. P. Gas- Two per cent of junior year may Presidents Fogarty, Connolly, Kinahan. parovic, J. A. Zito, M. J. Shef, A. be accepted. J. McNulty, D. A. Northrup, W. J. Dr. Jean Misrahi The election committee of Ford- Eighty-five percent of the junior class voted in the [Turnier, T. P. Lltz, R. A. Zanoni, Fordham was the first Catholic gest turnout for a class election in recent memory. Jim A. P. Kurtz, R. I. Lopez, T. H. ham's chapter of Phi Beta Kappa men's college to be granted a is composed of those full-time jarty eked out a seven-vote victory margin over George Morrow, A. R. Matienzo, J. G. charter and only the third Cath- | Michaels and E. B. Jacobi. faculty members who are already omare for senior class president in the closest contest olic college on the society's rolls. members of the honor society. any office. Fogarty was treasurer of junior year while The following juniors were also The College of St. Catherine in St. Paul, Minn, and Catholic U. The Fordham chapter of Phi omare was junior class president. Fogarty's running mates elected: J. J. McGovern, J, D. Beta Kappa belongs to the Mid- the Senior Party ticket, vice 5 Burger, A. V. Nero, T. J. Arch- of America, Washington, D.C. are the other two. dle Atlantic district, one of the sident Sal Bizzaro and Bill Cro- Ragone and Bob Reno. deacon and P. Zerilli. seven districts which send elected i, treasurer won by margins of The 78% voter turnout in fresh- Five members of the class of '62 Fordham received its charter in senators to the society's perma- nil 32 votes respectively over man year was slightly above aver- were chosen: P. A. Branca, J. M. August, 1961 and the Tau Chapter nent elected body, or senate. The '64 Party opponents Mike age for class elections. Goering, H. A. Gilbert, J. D. Valen- was officially installed March 1, seven serve with 17 senators-at- os and Jack Williams. The JUNIOR YEAR tine and J. P. MoArdle. 1962. large, elected for terms of six A minimum cumulative index of years. The society's national org- C The three graduate school stu- anization is in Washington, D.C. victorious '64 Party candidate Senior Party dents chosen were: Pr. John Do- 3.25 is required for consideration i secretary Al Falivene by a Jim Fogarly — 220 for membership. In addition, the Dr. Jean Misrahi is the head of |nd 71 vote margin over Bill Sal Bizzarro 244 herty, Dr. Carl L. Schekel and Mr. John P. Murphy, SJ. candidates must be taking a Tail chapter. fitly percent of the sophomore Bill Maier 177 voted the unopposed Bill Cromie 229 i voteintod officethe ,unoppose electingd JohRamn Gcorg(, AH,,^^ 213 College Lags rally president, Bill Burke Michael Gyves 178 Enrollment Slump Felt e-presldent, Dick Seoul" seci'e- Al Falivene 248 1 and former sophomore class Jack Williams .197 With Mission Don Ross treasurer. SOrHOMORE YEAR Ram Party In Pharmacy-Business fn freshman year, Frank Kina- By FRANK CASEY Drive Return i former freshman class sec- Joh_ n Connolly 229 1 Bill Burke 229 RAM Makeup Editor Pr. Justin J. McCarthy reported "S eased past opponent Mark nick Scotti that the College has fallen even ola by 24 votes in a split elec- 229 In the past three years there has been a marked decrease Don Ross 225 in enrollment in schools of business and pharmacy In the farther behind in the Mission o to become next year's sopho- Drive than was previously noted. "s class president. FRESHMEN YEAR metropolitan area, officials of the said this week. Maroon Party Enrollment in Fordham's School of Business and School of With less than two weeks rem- Tynan, the other victor- Frank. Kinahan 215 aining before the drawing for the Pharmacy "has substantially decreased in the previous three 1963 Thunderbird, at the Univer- s Maroon Party representative, Dan Tynan 244 year period," said asst. director of admissions, Mr. Roger Ber- vice-presidential seat Vinnie Rauoiic 169 sity wide dance on April 26, the an '66 Party's Jim Buckman. Bob Reno nard. ®* tollege is running a second to the it the secretary and treasurer Fnrdham '66 Party 177 is it dropping at Fordham alone. substantially smaller School of The decrease In the amount of Pharmacy enrollment has de- |K were filled from the'CO Par- Mark rirola 191 students enrolling has reduced the Education. College returns which '' fanks with John Gould and Jim Buckman 163 creased in other , also." have come from predominantly student body in these schools to Speculation Kavanash taking healthy John Gould 233 Its lowest number In five years. two classes—Fr. Enright's seniors over opponents Vinnia Jim Kavanagh 231 The total enrollment in the Causes for such a drop-off in and Fr. Matthew's juniors—total Pharmacy has decreased from 409 the Business School have been the only $800 as compared with $1161 matter for considerable specula- for last year at this time. The in 1960 to 315 In 1962 and the School of Ed has more than business school uptown reduced tion. Some of the possible explan- Assigned ations include the raising of ad- doubled its returns to over $1500. from 664 to 557 in the period. But smaller School of Education. Col- the heavy percentage of decrease mission standards, the raise in tuition in most or all of the col- lege returns which have come from igence Post in these schools is more evident predominantly two classes—Fr. in the freshman enrollment for leges involved, the increase in "•Col. Edward A. Elchman, prestige of a liberal arts educa- Enright's seniors and Pr. Mat- SAF terminate his ns.«mn- the last three years, and it is in thew's juniors—total only $800 as ;his field especially that Univer- tion in the past few years, and •™ »s professor of air science the increased interested in the compared with $1161 for last year °*am this year to assume >ity officials are investigating. at this time. The School of Ed Business Freshman natural sciences that was bound nation on the lntclliRenco to follow space exploration, and has more than doubled its returns the Department of De- Freshman enrollment in Busi- several other explanations also. to over $1500. the Pentagon, Washinn- ness downtown has dropped from Fordham authorities are continu- .76 enrolled in 1960, to 76 in 1962, The office staffs and ground . ing to Investigate all the causes keepers have sold more books than t»»l Eichman, who has i decrease of 57 per cent over two of this two year phenomenon. rears. On campus the business the entire College. With the ex- »•" the Air Force for 22 your.,, school has dropped from 210- In the Pharmacy also there has ception of the Law School, at Lin- P °ce» stationed nt Fovdhnm been much speculation as to the coln Center, every other school Past Iow freshman in 1960, to 122 in this years. Coni- 'ear's enrollment, a 42 per cent causes of the decrease. The in- has surpassed its pace of a year " fT °» tills assignment, ht- decrease. crease in the prestige of liberal ago. VnJoyed lt ver-v much- avts, the fact that the image of Fr. McCarthy fears that apathy lted t0 sta The School of Pharmacy which L B?,! y loni;<>r." had an enrollment of 101 fresh- the pharmacist in large cities is is the contributing factor to the PAS will bDU. Col. Jo- not always that of a man who fills apparent failure of the College 1 USAF cl men in 1960, dropped to 57, in 1962, a 43 per cent decrease in a needed service, and government drive. "Certain responsibility rests onfd"' ^;, ' »™>^ investigations in the field of with the class reps." he said. Ah n Ule Stalt Ol t» P two years. U. Col. Edward A. Eicliman pharmacy, may have been con- "Since returns are extremely lack- oiui ° Colleges in General tributing influences in the decline Ing, it Is only fair to assume that 'There has been a noticeable r ! assiR»mcnt at i-rt to McGtiire Air Force Base in of enrollment at pharmacy schools enthusiasm Is lacking. ltmel Trenton, where he will serve as a drop in enrollment In business in general. At Fordham, the in- Meanwhile, Alpha Phi Omega's ?,° K'«l""an Had schools In the metropolitan area the intelligence office pilot in the Military Air Trans- crease to a five-year undergrad- Rose Hill Chapter, who aided the om during the past two years," said uate period necessary to attain a distribution of the books has ... ^ mander - in - Chief, portation Service. Captain Hea y Pr. J. Vincent Watson, asst. dean KoiHi whm ne wns will be replaced by Capt. Dante degree, and the raising ol stand- launched a publicity program o i G(' nnn ' of the School of Business. "Ford- ards for Pharmacy students, may aimed at the College students. tot n ' 'i.v. He will Valoii USAF, currently assigned ham has experienced this change, Defui to the Strategic Air Command in also have had effects on the drop. Two thousand books were dis- Wlctlm,, , ™ Department, though possibly in less degree tributed to the College olassea and u England. than other colleges." From 1958 to 1960, the Business As PAS. Colonel Elchman acted School enrollment was stable, so another 100 to College clubs. Only Dr. Albert J. Sica, dean of the 80 have been returned. This year's sor of air as a department chairman; ho the decrease which followed may cience, School of Pharmacy said that be periodic, and does not neces- drive will be two weeks snorter In fue- was responsible for the coordina- there is "no one, definite reason than last year's drive. \ A" tllm' tion of all nlr science Instruction why enrollment has dropped, nor sarily Indicate a decreasong trend. . he will bv nnd adnilnlstartion. THE FORDHAM RAM Page 10. ll 214 University Scholarships Monthly Issue Due Clancy Brothers: 3rd Shot Granted to Incoming Frosh Following Holidays; To Draw Crowd of 4,001 Fr. Joseph R. Frese, academic vice-president, has an- To Nam-:: New Editor By VIN PERELLA nounced that 214 University Scholarships have been awarded The long awaited third issue The three Clancy brothers, Liam, Paddy and Torn to students entering Fordham College in September. of The Monthly will appear on Tommy Makem were the third singing- group t attrac!'oi This i.s an increase over last year's total of 207. The ma- Monday, April 22, the day after 0 4,000 spectators to the Fordham Gym. jority oi these scholarships were awarded to students from the Easter vacation. The editor- Die metropolitan area; but scholarships were also awarded in-chief and his editorial board An audience, composed of a majority of middle-ai to students from Pennsylvania,'*' for the school year 1963-64 will people, received the folk singers and their rousing scm«s $ Ohio, Missouri, Maine, Maryland, enthusiasm and hearty applause last Friday night, The fi Delaware, Colorado, the District of Five Crooning Jrs., be announced in this issue. Be- Columbia, Connecticut and New cause the issue has been some- performers were on stage for over'; Jersey. 'Collegians,' Win In what delayed, an eight-page sup- two hours. The response to all thvoi- , The stipends awarded are based First Talent Contest plement has been added. Towards the end of the pro- certs indicates the iiicrpasin« J upon the financial need of the gram, the brothers and Makem ularity of such folk sinuir,.; I scholarship winners. This is tabu- The Collegians, a vocal group Thomas Gherardi, editor-in- tcrtainment groups

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UMIUSHI0I8IS 'ICEST MOP, Premium-priced imported hop;;, Mondcd. with fine domestic strains, are part of tho fiocrel; of tlmi; roiVi^liinp; Budwciser taste. 346 MADISON AVE., COR. 44TI1 ST., NEW YORK 1? One move of the seven .special thin;-; wo do to make your « NliWIiURY, COR. IlERKELEY ST., BOSTON 16, MASS. enjoyment of BudweiHci even ipmlcr] I'lTTSIIUIlCll • CHICAGO • SAN FIIANCISCO • LOS ANGEUiS KINO OF DECKS • ANHEUOUll-UUSCIi, IMC. • «T. t.OUI.'.i . NKWAIIIC • LOS ANGELES • TAMPA dnesciay, April 10^1963 •Page 3 The ABC's of a College Marking System FETE \VARI> they found mem bothersome. L is Carly September. Tlio One stated: "If a student has 1 could be any classroom on done good work in the first _' '. < The professor faces to semester he ought to be able to )U Yale, spreading quickly through- to a great extent on a business l-'vear's students. Their tem- out the country. marks is much easier than in go on and cover more matter I, ii one of resolution. He like- ethic. You work.for the produc- most.of the humanities courses. rather than stopping for a quart- le'lRdetmnincd. Prayer. <3en- Refuse Exams tion of a definite article and the Father Charles J. Lewis, chair- erly in the second semester . . ." ![,,quarks. He concludes: "yes, excellence of that article is the man of the mathematics depart- One mustn't get the idea how- reward you get. Education forms ment, who favors a numerical lult'inen, I expect wonderful Strictly Oral j.p.s of you this year. Why, a ever that students, or teachers, an essential part of the social system, suggested that perhaps structure. It allows you to assert "something could be worked out liLTof your ability ..." An took all this sitting down. When Yale first introduced marks, a your freedom. Without educa- combining the two" (i.e. numer- It is not infrequent that one *t;'.jiratory atmosphere embra- tion you couldn't break the bonds ical and letter grading systems). hears some idealistic .student or •s'tlie room: anticipation of petition signed in an "odd and ludicrous manner" was sent to of your past tradition." teacher expatriate on the merits lo'Ji'ly adventure. The hour 'D' Meaningless? of a direct student-teacher rela- u's to its close. Then just at the school's trustees. It stated tionship, with all tests being on -e bell the inevitable occurs: that the students who signed it Other answers saw marks in a purely oral basis. It seems "do unanimously agree that con- Professor Charles Walsh, head iiartls the rear of the room a a less hierarchical manner. Most of the department of economics, however that at Fordham there sidering the new custom about • deemed them a necessary part fid that when the present sys- are at present tew idealists. Of End rises: getting the attention to be introduced, viz. examina- 1 [he instructor the student of the educational process by tem of letter grades was institut- those questioned only a very few tion ... do unanimously agree which a teacher could determine ed a number of teachers were seemed in favor of orals. One Jondei's aloud a common cin- Nemo Contradicente and with- im; "Doctor, couid you tell us the relative abilities of his stu- dissatisfied with the "D" grade. was Mr. Robert OiesberR of the out any compulsion that we ... dents, while at the same time, It They felt that such a mark, es- history department, the only de- lit what we're responsible for will not be examined." Needless 3 the quarterlies?" enabled both the student and pecially since there is a gap be- partment of the College which to say the petition was given the teacher to know how well they tween it and "C", served no use- includes orals as part of its [Agreat many people would call lie by subsequent events. were doing In their respective ful purpose. Professor Walsh standard curriculum. However ich a query the height of boor- roles. Others emphasized the in- said that as a result of this most there is only one oral exam, hncss, but if nothing else it re- More than 30 years later, in centive motive, one saying that teachers shy away from giving which lasts but twenty minutes Jorcd reality to the classroom. 1845, examinations were still they were a good "threat." such a grade. and occurs during the second •his concern over marks is per- suspect. Witness the let- semester of senior year. Mr. |a;js the tragedy of education as ter by a young Mount On the whole, those in- Glesberg reasoned that such a today know it. Yet, Paul Holyoke student: "We terviewed gave the im- relationship, even if for only such iDdman aside, the closely ves- are now approaching the pression that the mark- a short period should be an es- JlEttd and bureaucratically outer verge of the mael- ing system as it is now is sential part of any student's ed- liiictured university, with its strom of examinations. the best possible at the ucation, since the student will present time. be expected to be able to express nncoinitant of a fairly imper- We begin to see the foam, to feel the gradually himself when he enters the out- pnal and static marking system, Avoid Curves side world. However, objections S lierc to stay. accelerating current, and hear the distant roar of When questioned on to orals outweighed this opinion. Fr. James Reid of the classics Harvard et Yale the awful vortex into their individual approach which whales, pumpkin to marking, those inter- department said that orals favor J Tiie first evidence of any type the "glib" student. Others said seeds, and perch will all viewed generally approx- they take up too much time of |i examination requirement in alike be drawn down." imated one another in leges in this country was in both the teacher and the stu- their responses. AH those dent. 16. The school was Harvard. Faculty members were ' asked stated that they ie'ore his degree was awarded less vivid but at times avoided marking on a [he student was required to prove equally perplexed by the curve. When asked if To Client or Not to Cheat ; capability by certain schol- necessity of written ex- they graded on a relative fsticattainments: "Every scholar aminations. Many con- or absolute basis most The question of examinations ; on proofe is found able to demned the cramming said they tried to ap- inevitably got around to-a dis- Nad ye originall of ye old and resulting from such tests, proach the latter. Some cussion of their worst byproduct: jiew testament into ye Latin ton- "a mode of preparation said they had an absolute cheating. Although a recent le, and to Resolve them logical- fraught with wretched standard which they ex- article in the RAM, (outlining witliall being of honest Hie consequences." pected their students to conversation and at any the results of a poll by Fr. Ro- reach. If.none of them bert J. McNamara which com- lublike act hath ye approbation The president of Yale Have marks as an end in themselves blinded did so, they said, they I(ye overseers with his first de- pared the moral outlook of Cath- wrote: . . . "the dread of us to the .purpose of education? had few qualms about olic and non-Catholic students Examination and Fear o£ giving the whole class a mediocre or failing grade. including their views on cheat- having a Degree de- ing) shed unfavorable light on I However it wasn't until the pend on merit has produced a Utilitarian Angle This opinion was an exception leeinning of the eighteenth cen- Catholic attitudes to cribbing, commotion and convulsion in , , .interview- however. The majority felt that |ffi that a standard evaluation number o£ those one cannot give marks completely most teachers expressed little College and martyrdoms; to the ,.ed stresseathe ,utllltal.iftn angie fas deemed necessary. Written cause of poor scholarship," on the basis of one or the other. concern over the amount of mis were initiated and they of marks: namely their . post- If, to go to the opposite extreme cheating on campus. However, fwly but irrevocably pushed Chain of Being graduate studies were both seen of the absolute, they are made to when asked if they would like pie orals. Yale was the first as obviously dependent on one's depend wholly on the merits of to see an Honor System formed pll to institute a regular Unfortunately or not.the clock standing in the class. This a particular class then the stand- at Fordham most of them, with iB system, the marks be- refused to be turned back and raised the question of whether ard of the particular teacher is marks were a means to an end the amused smile of the realist, V: Optlmi, Second Optimi, In- examinations gradually assumed obliterated in the process. answered in the negative. After aiores (Bonn, Pejores. By 1813 a dominant role in university or an end in themselves. Opinion narking based on a scale as we life. Today, to a greater extent was divided; most said that it Flexible Standard Necessary all a thing as important as marks {May know it was introduced at than ever before, the Index de- of course varied with each stu- cannot go unregulated. termines the hierarchy of a dent but the trend seemed to be The prevailing view held that school. Replacing "God" at the toward making them an end ex- some flexible standard was ne- top of the chain pf being is the clusively. One professor, Dr. Leo cessary: A very advanced class 4.0 index (this, of course applies Yanowski, stated that he found raises the requirements for a that pre-med students, under- good grade but if they all reach only to those institutions not en- a certain level of understanding gaged in professional athletics.) standably, were extremely mark- of the subject then they are all conscious compared to chemistry eligible for an "A" grade. One Wondering Just what the ins- and physics majors. professor stated that he had no tructors here at Pordham static absolute for very simple thought of marks in general and Numerical Grades (and humble) reasons: "First, it the system at Fordham in partic- When asked about Fordham's assumes you've been absolutely ular the RAM decided to ques- system of letter grades which successful in transmitting your tion a number of professors on was Instituted several years ago, ideas to your students: and sec- their views. opinion went from "best possible" only, a previously set standard to "any grade system is a nuis- implies that you have nothing to The first question posed was: ance." Several instructors wish- learn from the student." "What do you think the purpose ed that minus grades be allowed of marks is?" The responses for final marks, the present cate- Quarterly Exams rmved from a bewildered smile gories being too.broad at several to a philosophical analysis! The points. Some in the natural A majority of those question- it? latter came, appropriately, from sciences preferred numerical ed stated that they worried little a philosophy instructor: grades since in their subjects, about quarterly exams since they . . . the moment of truth (?). gave frequent tests. A few said the results. intellectual life is based the specific calculation of

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THE FORDHA M R A M Wednesday, April THE FORDHAM RAM The Commentator Established by the Students of Fordham College in 1918 The Maverick By Mitchael McCartney Cafeteria Food Service Informed that French President Charles de Gaulle! Recently, a Campus Center food report by faculty. Many of them are reasonable criti- vetoed England's expected entry into the Common Ma] the College Student Government was made cisms: dirty milk containers, cold'hamburg- ers, exorbitantly priced milk ($.40 a quart), President Kennedy made one quick comment: "That's J public which corroborated many of the state- lie thinks." ments made in a RAM feature article on dirty forks and knives, etc. December 7, 1961. The quality of of the food Possibly, if the qualtiy of the food and With all the vigor of a Boston-bred politician, Mr. I was criticized as it was a year and a half ago. service were improved, many of the board- ers who now eat off campus would return to nedy prepared to reign the French Maverick back in I Also in the same issue an editorial was Across the Atlantic, however, Mr. de Gaulle was thing printed which pointed out the difficulty of the cafeteria, thus increasing the profit for a cafeteria service which must feed several the University. "That's what he thinks." thousand' students a day. The RAM realizes Many of the criticisms we have heard over The British were "insular" and "maritime" in theirf the complexity of the situation. However, any and over, some of them are not well founded, student who eats at the cafeteria should be but certainly, many of those which the Stu- toric orientation, said Mr. de Gaulle, and would not entitled to a hot and edible meal. This is not dent Government mentioned are true. fitting memlbers for the continental communtiy of n'ng often the case. Except for the soup and cof- The students have brought forth reason- friends. But President de Gaulle's decision was not so i fee, the dinner is frequently cold. On one eve- able and fair questions concerning the pres- formulated, not so spontaneous. He had been planninl ning, five plates of Hungarian goulash were ent food service. It is now up to the Univer- reign In the United. States for a number ot years. The Brf sity Administration to consider these ques- hardly touched at one tatole. bid for entry into the European Economic Community j These criticisms of the food service are tions and to answer them with an Improve- made iboth by students and members of the ment of the cafeteria food service. merely the opening he needed to throw his punch. The Arbiter Sport of Death Some years ago de Gaulle wrote in his war men Once again the headlines blared: "boxer Once again, they said boxing is "good" be- "The states along the Rhine, the Alps, and the Pyrei slain in the ring." Once again young men cause it helps poor kids from the slums with must form a political Ibloc that will toe one of the world's I met their death as cheering throngs lustily no future to make "big money," to "get great powers, an arbiter, if necessary, between the encouraged the flailing combatants. It was fame." Robbing a bank gets the same re- and Anglo-American camips." The French, and indeed i all too evident that the death of Davey wards and in neither instance does the end Moore, the death of Benny "Kid" Paret and justify the means. Also, for every "poor kid" Europeans, have long wanted' their own horse, have the comatose state of Alejandro Lavorante who makes the blgtime, there's another been tired of, what seemed to them, riding the saddle belj had not been enough to spur the boxing twenty who will never see a purse bigger the United States. moguls, the state commissions, the governors than 100 dollars and who will spend the rest and all the others into immediate action to of their lives with scrambled brains and When the first flush of anger caused by the jolting 1 abolish what is commonly referred to as the pushed-in faces. elation of the de Gaulle Grand Design subsided in Washl "sport" of boxing. Once again, we read how boxing will be ton a bit of humor set in—a very small bit. One Preside! It was made all too clear that these several made fatality-p)roof if safety precautions aide told the story that someone had walked unannouij tragedies had little lasting effect on society such as head-protectors are made compul- 1 into a room where de Gaulle was kneeling and eyes rail as just last Saturday night, boxing added sory. Tell that to the family of Francesco two more victims to its rapidly expanding Velasquez who was wearing one when he hit toward Heaven, was saying: "Dear God,please have iaitlj obituary. One was a young army private par- the canvas for the last . time in Carbon- me." ticipating in an amateur bout sponsored dale, Pa. ironically by the "Friends of Boxing" in Car- Once again, as throughout the entire con- The Power bondale, Pa. while the second was a young troversy, the most basic question, namely professional in Australia. whether boxing in itself is wrong and im- But the not so simple fact that everybody in Washing] However, even these two new fatalities moral has been totally ignored. This ques- was forced to face was that the French President weren't enough. The grist mills of newspa- tion just cannot be lightly glossed over as it cided long ago what he wanted1, and Washington was po\| pers poured forth columns and articles sing- is the very crux of the problem. Can a "sport" less to do anything about it. Several possible threats and I ing the praises of boxing, explaining the the main object of which is to inflict physical "good" it does, the new precautions which harm on an opponent be considered as moral, prisals were considered. But so cunning was the de Ga| will be taken to ensure a lower fatality rate, as permissible, in a society in which cock- execution of his Grand Design, that the threats would etc. ad finitum. fighting- is prohibited on the same grounds? been idle harangues and the reprisals would be more da) aging to the United States than to France.

Between the Lines The future of France, and the fate of NATO, rested ] once in the hands of the French. It was a hard fact for I United States, after so many years of unchallenged lead Come, Come, Bertie ship, to face. But it is a fact that will have to be faced i By John Ward now on, until such time as it becomes a way of life for| concerned. Bertrand Lord Russell is a man who simply re- munism that has taken hold ol the West. We Getting rid of Charles de Gaulle will not return fuses to settle comfortably into the expected con- have been deluded into thinking we constitute a NATO balance of power to its old status quo. Millions ventional role of benign, doddering, tamed radical. "Free World" in clanger of being swallowed up by He hns gained enormous prestige among intellec- the Communist bloc. This myth is foisted upon a western Europeans, though presently a little shaky : tuals as a brilliant mathematician-philosopher. To deceived citizenry by the collusion of imperial- the de Gaulle method, are solidly behind his objective, readers of the popular press, he has been for years istic cfliptalism nnd a purchased press. How, after a master of the barbed comment as well as sort of all, can we speak of a world a.s free which sup- feel a new sense of pride in themselves, a new self in brainy Tommy Aliitisvillc. At ninety he dabbles in ports the dictatorial regimes of Spain and Portu- lance, a type of new renaissance. As one German sti international .statesniiiiisliit) and is active in the gal? put it: "We are back on our feet. We will be heard." nuclear disarmament campaicn. Actually, the Russians have realized that world Russell's Ban-lhe-Boinb shenanigans have in- war is unthinkable and this is proved by the volved him with a number of hare brains and he prompt withdrawal of their nii.isilcs from Cuba, was recently tokl by a London magistrate to act Our brinkmanship in Unit area merely demon- his ace and stop cavoilint: with a group of peren- THE FORDHAM RAM •* „«.,„*,-„ „,*.,. ,x«Pt *,* ;; strated our own nuclnar maclm-w. nnd ranmlimtiol, prrloils. fmn, cu-wlicr tu May, l.y Urn stmtalts ol FonlM''1 nial tccn-ngers. China, according to Russell, has also come to VoriHinin UntU'riitty, N»r,v Yuri; r,3. Kew York. Nuclenr disarmament, however, is not the ex- reject world war by its action, if not, by its words. VMII,,,'.|i,-Chief: ('li:irlr» I', Nasfro clusive province of soft heads and many, including Their unilateral cease-fire In the border dispute Muni:,;!,,:- Kdllor: Kol't-rt It. Menry Russell, consider it an issue of such overwhelming with India is offered as proof of thi;; new attitude. IJiM.ulal 11,..,.I- .V,,,,.lat,. mil,,,, J. Hi.niMn itMiii; Asmi'i'll'' KilU"'-. *'"'''', urgency that everything else is of minor signifi- Lord Russell fi;els there i.s a moat chance to !l,l.: .\riv>. l:,Ml,,,'. .I,,,.,,,: n'.nm-IIv, S;mr!:< i:,lll,.ls .Mm FOil'Wiy. Billk;"! cance. Man must simply not destroy himself and begin a laslims setllriiu'iil of all major cold war (mill Adu-,,,,',,', K,,„,.,• liru,,,•:,,,„„, .l,.p p.,,,] \v,i';. Communism cannot be overcome by corpses. Many issues here and now. Khrushchev is amenable. Mao A.,.,.ri,,(,. Il,,,n,l: |-',.,, uiri- F.,111,,1-, Ali'ii'!,, IVinofrlo: Miilu-up Keillor, Fr..";- - mature thinkers feel that modern warfare is an I'litli. i:illt,.,-:,, ,11 •,-•],,,.I,t ,M,,i M',-.-li-l',,,l K>i',liii-.s J!:,,"ipir. Clmrli'S MIINI J. ;M1* bus come around. It is wo in the West who jiui:;t IMlii: M:,i,;,,.<•,'. . I.. 11; i !,:in,nr,i V" v Ki I'M-liilli:'!' Ilillliiri AmllTW Clnrfir: absolute bertayal of anything worthwhile in hu- drop our suspicious aitiltulrs nnd make a few con- :l|:,i,UBt-r, Ilun ,i,mi;. manity and that it is better to endure evil for a 1 cessions In the interests of humanity. N,:,,., I;,,,,-,,,,: 1,1,.,; |.,||M-,i:,, .,„,,,, mill :|,,l, Id Uv. Mlimiv n-rnarrln, I;"""'1" time rather than to multiply it. This Is no an un- '"'"-••• VMiii-, r-n,'i|... ,'„„ u.,,,i, i,. „••, y.-,,l,... Jolm HiM'OBWy. c1"'1 ' ; ,J'| If Russell's sittiliuli' tov;:\r«l tin:' iai.s.iiin.s i.s ,:,li,li be jun.ii, Ivli-r Wnnl. in The New York Times Magazine arc a heavily headed in n direction more suited to man's dignity. lilr'l: (ilimllfln, •""" jargoned collection of half truths, self deception, Nevertheless, It would be fooll.sli to believe, as v.'-c ulJ nnd outright falsehoods. 'III,' .,|>!,,In,,: ,..;,u-i':-:-.,.,l |,, ihc ,-,,i u-i of The HAM nrc not iwceBHlrtly t' 1|( sometimes seem to do, Unit, our:; hi a complelolv H.\M '-illliil., 'I'),,, ,',|l ,,,!.,I i|,.,,-|| „„. „„[ iielUBMll'llV UlOSC o( ll>» UlH"" " Russell feels that Communism ceased to be a altruistic crusade or Unit our motive; arc always serious menncc with the death of Stalin. Commu- unmixed. Russell's article, iinbalmin <1 as it i.s, M:,,|,-i:,lni: ,:,. .I,,,,,,.,, 1.,i,,i:,v, f.., ra,l,-,.ct an socimd clliss Hint'" Ol'H'W '' nism Is a danger merely because wo think it is. makes this clear, We need more ijadfllCK of hi:; '.In, I'.n.l (ilil,-,. ,,| !,-,•„- y,,|!;, N.Y. rlie big threat now Is the fanatical tear of Com- outspokenness. ifalnesday, April 10, 1963 THE Air To Raise Funds ?or Remounting Victory Bell The Arnold Air Society has received the permission of oLetterd to the (Lditor ?r Victor R. Yanitelli, vice-president for student personnel, Ho raise the necessary funds to rebuild the Victory Bell Tow-' Sly Doe challenge the superior intelli- servative. And I submit that it is • and Foundation. To The Editor of The RAM: gence, education, and secret stud- the liberal who is the emotional Letters have been sent to the organizations and classes For years, editorials and let-ies of the Administration? All at-fanatic. Just mention a few key throughout the University. The letters include a short his- ters in The RAM and other tempts at change, in addition to words: McCarthy, General Walk- |ory of the Victory Bell and a re Fordham publications have been being contrary to the law of God, er, HUAC, "Operation Abolition," for financial help. Pledg Boosters Appoint subtly hinting that the wheels of serve only to weaken the happy Goldwater, etc. and they become Contracts have also been included the Fordham Administration are community spirit which has tra-highly irrational to the point • the convenience of class rep New Ramkeepers a little out of round because the ditionally enveloped Fordham in where no discussion can take sentatives. medieval wooden gears have worn a cloud of loving kindness. place. Two Minute Hate with the Larry Prendergast, head Ram-' I The cost of rebuilding a towe smooth. However, it has long been New York Times seems to have keeper announced last week that John Thornton's subtle attack Lid of constructing a foundatior apparent that the authorities on the defenseless library shows Pavlovian effects on them. Barneses XIX has new Ramkeep- till be approximately $1,100. Th concerned are incapable of rec- him to be a bully and a coward. ers. The new men are all juniors It is the conservative who ar- ognizing such subtleties. How can he expect a reply of lirnold Air Society has already and were chosen on the basis of gues for three separate but eciual equal wit to formulate itself in mtiibuted $50 toward the proj- ability, free time and evidence Recently, that approach was branches of government. It is the the mold and find a suitable or- of past loyalty to the Booster changed and an effort made to conservative who sees Commu- gan in which to be printed? Tlie Bell was donated to Ford- Club. They are Sal Bizzaro, Donconfront University officials with nism as a threat to liberty, not as a matter of freedom of speech University after World War Meade, Martin Dunbar, Bob statistical information and con- Grant Doe and containment. He sees the by Admiral Chester Nimltz. O'Neill, John Landers, Bob In-crete proposals. However, this College '63 wrongs in the centralization and lite purpose of the Bell was to toll telisano, Bill Poppe and Dan met with the old maxim that what socialistic leanings of the liberals. Fordham's victories. However, in Shedrick. can be asserted witn proof can On the Right i the Bell was removed from be denied with authority. Despite You will not find the conserva- lib position In front of the Gym The Ramkeepers' duties are what seemed like conclusions to To the Editor of The RAM: tive worshipping Progress. Nor the care, feeding and sheltering Mr. Roberts fell for a trap that does the conservative put his last land its foundation was disman- of Rameses and the maintenance the contrary, at least one official tled to make room for a power denied the student erlpes were many liberals do, i.e., believing hope, his final faith and obedi- of his house. The new Ramkeep- their own conceptions of what a IfJant. ers' tenure of office begins imme- present "even under the surface." ence to the United Nations, but conservative really is. I find it is in God, for only in Him and obe- diately and will continue till next the conservative who insists on Anyone who is interested in April. God knows, we love our little dience to His law will there be medieval university, and always rights as against Government in- •contributing toward this project peace, and a respect for life, lib- •should contact Major James The position of head Ram- hope to keep it so. How can a trusion and infringement. And the iQulnn at the Arnold Air Society keeper is still undecided. This downtrodden and ignorant stu- conservative is not emotionally erty, and property. •office in Reidy Hall. will be made public at the Boost- dent body armed with improper fanatic. Those who are, are not Clifford F. Ainsworth, Jr. er Club banquet in May. statistical methods ever hope to to be confused with the true Con- College, 'C3 "Rhinoceros" The Mimes and Mummers will present "Rhinoceros" by Eugene Ionesco in Collins Aud- itorium on May 10 and 11. This three-act French comedy recently played for a season on Broadway. The Mimes' production features John Biv- ona and Bill Arrigon in the leading roles. Tickets, priced at S1.25 will go on sale In the Campus Center Lobby on Ap- ril 22.

FACULTY DISeOUIT , vacationing students and faculty members can enjoy summor accommodations at Sheraton Hotels and Motor Inns, at special low rates! inanks to Sheraton's Student I .D. or acuity Guest Cards, you'll have a "etter vacation this summer for less money! Sheraton Hotols get straight «s in every department: Comfort, "Wnience, and cuisine. And il ™rc traveling by car, there's Freo rar'ng at most Sheraton Hotels and la|l Sheraton Motorlnns. Got these ls c unts ?0| . ° a' My of Sheraton's 80 els I,, „,„ M,SA( ,|awaii mu] li^NDERF SMOKES! "«a. Just present your Sheraton Vintage tobaccos grown, aged, and blended luf "t I.D. Cord or faculty Guest rd CHESTERFIELD KING when yoi, register. To Eel your ENJOY THE 7'at°" card or make reservations, LONGER [IGARKTTURKTTU!S IENOTH OF T|lesmok e of, Chesterfield King • CH(i9TEBFiet,t> mellows and soltens as it (lows KING through longer length... becomes ' CENTONZE CHESTERFIELD KING smooth and gentle to your taste. UNIVERSITY rRPLEASlRETOOGOODTOM.SS

YORK 58 N Y ge6 THE FORD HAM RAM Wednesday, A , pri 10. Frosh to Hold Cruise, Dance On Apr. 26, 27 Tempest Winners...Lap 3! College li'efhmon will hoi their Weekend on (he evening o, Friday, April 20 and the after noon and evening of Saturday April 27. Tlie Frosh will sponsor a boat- ride around Manhattan, from 7:45 p.m. to midnight on Friday eveninn. Dancing facilities and refreshments from the boat's Gary L.Lewis John V. Erhart Byron D. Groff D. B. MacRitchie J. L. Millard, Jr. J. 0. Galleeos "i concessions will be available for U. of San Fran. Loras College Fenn State U. of Michigan Ft. Hays State U. of New Mcxic' the 200 couples who attend. A picnic will be held on the terrace and lawn in front ol Mar- tyr's Court on the following af- ternoon. Food, games with prizes for winners and dancing to Dan Scotti's quartet will be featured A show, including a number of folksinging groups from nearby colleges and from Fordham, will A be the highlight. N.T.G. Rosania S. James W.Todd W. T. Oliver Justin C. Burns Edward R. Wassel Morris S. Boyer The Gymnasium will be the site Kansas State Valparaiso U. (Staff) Lafayette College St. Bonaventure U. Clarkson College U. of Georgia of the Weekend's final event, a University-wide dance, "Spring- time In The South," with the at- mosphere of a Southern planta- tion garden. The Fordham Uni- versity Dance Band will provide the music for tliu affair which will be from 9:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. The crowning of the Queen of the Freshmen Donee, to be chos- G. J. Tamalivich P. S. Holder, Jr. en by Miss Fay, will highlight the > Worcester Poly (Staff) St. Mary's U. dance. I The full package at $10 and bids for individual events; $3.50 for the boat ride; $2.75 for the picnic and $3.75 for the dance are on sale now in the Campus Center. Did you win in Lap 4? YACHTING IMPORTANT! If you hold any of the 20 winning num- SUMMER bers, claim your Pontiac Tempest LeMans Convertible in accordance with the rules on the reverse of your POSITIONS license plate. Girls! You may choose Instead a thrill- LAP 4... ing expense-paid 2-week Holiday in Europe~for The Wetherill Company, two! Plus $500 in cash! Of) WINNING I a crew placement interme- diary with yacht listing on the East Coast, West Coast, £U NUMBERS! Gulf area and the Great Lakes is soliciting for crew members. Due to the preference of most yachts- men, we are accepting ap- 2. D328872 6. A8184T1 11. G19I819 16. A112433 plications from college stu- 2. B552083 dents and graduates as 7. C175380 12. A078S03 17. A337477 crew on motor cruises and 3. B631155 8. A131483 13. D215452 18. C4B7893 sailboats. Positions for ex- 4. D148138 9. C702412 14. AB09T59 19. B911494 perienced as well as inex- 5. C59175S 10. A909791 15. CGI 3177 20. B482160 perienced men and women are available. Experience wtih cooking or child care CONSOLATION PRIZE NUMBERSI is helpful. If you hold a Consolation Frize number, you win a 4- 1. B3B103T 6. A139564 11. C52724Q 16. A237594 21.1 Each application will be speed Portable Hi-Fi Stereo Set, "The Waltz" by RCA 2. A2CB110 7. C373D57 12. 0793068 17. A1275B8 22. B73256I sent to over 3,000 large Victor. Or, you may still win a Tempest! (See official 3. A681037 8. A713453 13. 11335471 18. BG86223 23. B145355 yacht owners in April. Claiming rules on reverse of your license plate, and ob- 4. B74G597 9. 0831403 14. C033935 19. B521492 24. C4Q2919 serve claiming dates given above.) Crewing affords an oppor- 5. A49165I 10. B9B5589 15. C757103 20. A057655 25. B707528 tunity to acquire or sharp- en boating skills, visit new places here and abroad while earning a good salary in pleasant outdoor sur- roundings.

To apply, send us a short resume using the following form along with $5.00 proc- essing fee.

(1) Name. Address. Phone No. 12) Age, School 131 Available from,... .to ..i.e. Northeast. Great Lakes, East ami South, etc. (4) Previous boat- ing anil relevant work experience (51 Two references ffl) Preferences I.e.. Rncliifr. SiUtuont Crutslnu. Motorbont- tnp. MOIIL1, etc. 17 other pertinent facts. Two applicants wishing to work together, stiite this preference. Every aliplluiint will receive u finished res- *'In smoking-- s@ii$fscimni. ume, BEE THE PONTIAC TEMPEST AT YOUR NEARBY PONTIAC DEALBRI Dt-Hillllu for applications Is April 26. UtGX Hem! IO WeUierlll Company, Box I21(M. rlilla. ID, Pa. 10, 1963 Page 7 This Week In Sports Thursday, April H Evaluation BASEBALL: Fordham vs. Colurr bia at Baker Field—2 p.m. Saturday, April 13 By JIM FOGAUTV BASEBALL: Fordham vs. Iona et RAM Spoils Editor Iona—2 p.m. CREW: Fordham vs. A.I.C.— !„ reviewing the games played by Fordham teams in the lOa.m Atf major sports of baseball, and football one RUGBY; Fordham vs. the Man- I iWdiiy see that baseball is not only credited with the hattan R. C—12 noon. 1st successful all-time record, but is also the most tradition Monday, April 15 and sport on Rose Hill. Baseball began in 1859 while foot : Fordham vs. Columbia at LOOKING AHEAD .; began in 1881 and basketball in 1902. Thus unlike col the Leewood C.C.—1:30 p.m. es such as Yale, Pennsylvania and Williams which orb- Tuesday, April 16 With the sun moving ited intercollegiate football teams in the early days of the BASEBALL: Fordham vs. Man- closer each day it's time to ,rt during the 1870's and which have since relied on foot hattan at Van Cortlandt—2 p.m. visit us for the new and II as the number one sport, Fordham has placed baseball :REW: Fordham at Marist Col- lege, PoughkeepsK New York interesting in spring and the position of athletic .prominence throughout the larger summer fashion. From our rt of Rose Hill sports history. 10 a.m. IIUGBY: Fordham vs. Notre exclusive natural shoulder Dame at Fordham—2 p.m, clothing ... to our famous The reason is simple. Football at Fordham didn't register Wednesday, April 17 •ccessfully in both popularity and finance until the teams TENNIS: , Fordham at Hofstra, furnishings styled especially lame powerful and won many games. From 1929-1942,' in- Hempstead, Long Island 2 for young men ... you will Isive, the Ram football squads were nationally ranked P.m. find proper taste and reason- i probably as a result of this, it was the top sport on Thursday, April 18 able prices at Rogers Peet! lpiis during that time. On the other hand, basketball like- BASEBALL: Fordham at Yale, ; was never very popular until the stretch of years be- New Haven, Conn.—2 p.m. GOLF: Fordham vs. Manhattan jing with the 1924-5 season and continuing through the at Leewood C.C.—1 p.m. cuid SBoyo 4iiu£ 1874 !8-9 season. During this period Fordham compiled a 82-9 Friday, April 19 |n-lost record. FRESHMEN BASEBALL: Ford- ham vs. Manhattan, Van Cort- Recent Cage Popularity landt Park—11 a.m. : Fordham Teams such as Kentucky and Oklahoma State (origin- in the Queens-Iona Relays, s' Oklahoma A&M) have always relied on basketball as Randall's Island—11 a.m. iir number one sport. Again the popularity of this sport Saturday, April 20 y be directly attributed to the fact that it was the most BASEBALL: Doubleheadev — tessfiil in winning games. Only recently since football Fordham vs. Wagner at Wag- s dropped at the conclusion of the 1954 season did basket- ner—11 a.m. II become the number one sport at Fordham. DREW: Fordham vs. LaSalle at Phila., Pa.—10 a.m.. Boston.- Tremont St. at Dromliclci St. • HWu'wrton: 14th St G Streets, N.W Since 1859 the Fordham baseball teams have been vic- IAILING: MAISA Spring Elem- ious in G7 percent of the games they have played, com- lnations at West Point—12 m. TENNIS: Fordham v&. St. John's ing 1,017 wins against 409 losses. On the other hand, Ram at Fordham—11 a.m. 1 teams won 62 percent of their games (245-150 won- 'RACK AND FIELD: Fordham |t record) while the basketball teams compiled a 5G.7 per- in the Queen's-Iona Relays at 1 (550-418 won-Iost record). Or are you mature enough to help others—in a well- Randall's Island-, New York— paying job? Enough social conscience to be willing to 11 a.m. Overall, teams which generally produce the most im- Sunday, April 21 help care for neglected teen-age boys in a residential 'ssive won-iost records and' the teams which participate in BOWLING: Fordham vs. Pace at home-and-school in Connecticut—starting at $80 a week traditional rivalries make the most out of any sport fi- Bowlmor Lanes, 110 University with room and board? Unselfish enough to take respon- mially. Popularity may also be determined on the same Place—2 p.m. sibility for the daily needs of others—about 125 miles as. Records and tradition definitely combine to determine Monday, April 22 from Boston, and 100 from New York? Have you leader- | • status of sports in any university or college. GOLF: Fordham vs. New York ship ability to lielp direct the extra-curricular activities University at the Leewood of boys in a group living program? Are you athletic This year the Fordham baseball team is out to complete Golf Course—1:30 p.m. enough to play and coach team and other sports? other successful season and maintain its fine tradition. Tuesday, April 23 Are you outgoing enough to like people and to enjoy esently participating in its thirteenth year of competition in TENNIS: Fordham vs. Falrleigh working with them? Are you docile enough to accept metropolitan Collegiate Baseball Conference, the Rams Dickinson at Teaneck, N.J.—2 p.m. direction and to work as part of a team of young men ' stiff opposition from this perennially tough league. Wednesday, April 24 . alongside a psychiatrist, psychologist, caseworker, and TENNIS: Fordham vs. Rutgers at teachers? Are you mature and secure enough to have no MCBC Prognostication Fordham—3 p.m. need for excessive nightly social activity after hours? Are you a convinced Catholic, willing to live your faith he team which represented the MCBC three out of Friday, April 26 TRACK AND FIELD: Fordham and to share- it with boys who lack religious formation? •»st four years—St. John's—is a strong contender to do in the Penn Relays, Phila., Pa. If you are such a man, you are the kind we urgently want 'U'ain. "While this might seem surprising at a cursory e sl —2 p.m. for prefects for this coming September. Let us hear from, »ce eight of St. John's letter-men who completed Saturday, April 27 you. •undefeated season last year have graduated, it is not so S A S E B A L L : Doubleheader — Wising when one considers the fact that four of the '62 Fordham at Hofstra—11 a.m. Father Director A11 star bel rim " 'to winners are back again this year in !REW: Fordham in the Hughes St. John School for Boys Cup Regatta at Travers Island ™an uniforms. It is also interesting to note that four of Deep River, Connecticut Smeluating seniors have since signed bonus contracts —10 a.m. tUGBY: Fordham vs. Columbia Pro teams. Leading the St. John's stickmen are catcher at Fordham—2 p.m. ugom-i and outfielder Bob Arnone who hit .455 and .315, tUGBY B: Fordham vs. Princeton Men with High School, College or fpectively, last year. at Fordham—12 noon. Technical Training serve God as JAILING: The MAISA Spring :-. Don Newberry of NYU expects to Improve last 12 Championships at West Point jw " record. The Violet mentor lost Warren Albert, the —12 noon. •Vini , ting champ, but that is all he lost. Big Don Blaha, ba TENNIS: Fordham at Adelphi, 501 E. Fordham Rd., N. Y. 58, N.Y. I", sketball standout, leads the pitching staff, and Garden City, L.I.—1 p.m. En I men on the squad withoilt varsity experience are ?RACK AND FIELD: Fordham Please send information to: ih :,.f'"andez ancl catcher Paul Rizzuto, both sophs and in the Penn Relays, Phila., Pa. f lv"n enough ability to crack the starting line-up. —11 a.m. Name Age Sunday, April 28 Address i0"1* again assumes the "dark horse" BOWLING: The ELBC Area Fi- life i Herb WnItc has a strone hitting club. While nals at Bowlmor Lanes—2 p.m. City Zone State RIFLE: The NBA Sectional •jost Curt Blefary, a long hitter and excellent first championships at King's Point ", to the Yankees, he still has Jim Morio on the mound ^12 noon. ENGAGED? ALL MAKES •oth» ? Kellev at second base, along with Jack Manofsky, FILING: The MAISA Spring • «wr long ball man, in the outfield. Championships at West Point Buy your ring direct from TYPEWRITERS fstl a —12 noon. the diamond cutter at .Hofstr°,) r' has a top pitcher returnin"' in George Roth, who ADDING MACHINES ERA lastl vcar ilmi vin Monday, April 20 manufacturer's prices. a't h2,oo . ' Karatin, who appeared in Sold-Rentcd-Ropairod-Traded Kilm bt 1OLF: Fordham vs. St. John's three games bu t allowed "just 1.2233 runs in 22 inningsii . at the Bethpage Golf Course, Authorized Portable Dealers S hopes this ycar fm a m st cUvlsion berth rest Bethpage, L.I.—1:30 p.m. Visit our factory in the Liberal Trade-in on your old Jack P"'ow " ' Typewriter i[' |, [ cre, captain uncl .shortstop, outfielder Paul Jamin Tuesday, April 30 heart of Manhattan. I n P(Hro Ji BASEBALL: Fordham at New FRANKLIN ."'Chef r Ron p0tr0-. Ji"m> MeDermotf McDermoU'ss IonIonaa GaeGaelss had a York University, University TYPEWRITER. SERVICE IIPI i lllark hisl yen1'' ;illd slncsincc etnen have lost several Call CO 5-8122 1-ou Heights Campus—2 p.m. WE 3-0260 HIM " Gh graduation. CCNY is similar to Iona In ItsFRESHMAN BASEBALL: Ford- Refer to this ad for SPECIAL 011 ef 2601 Webster Ave. Ito'r, fects, but, has a bright spot on the roster in ham vs. STUDENT DISCOUNT. Bet. 193rd! & 194th Sts. » nin ""nn' a PH-Pher with a 1 21 ERA last year, who can at Fordham—3: IB p.m. 1Jlav the outfield. Holiday Schedule! Looking 'Em Over See Poge 7 RAM SPORTS See Page 7 Wednesday, April 10, 19 Page THE FORDHAM RAM Junior Goes t& Braril; Ruggerams Split Twof Fordliam Loses to NYU Frank Bulger Will Row In '63 Pan Am Games Matches With Cornel After Princeton Victory By KKNN GIBBONS By BOB WHITE By TOM IUULVEY Frank Sulger, College jun- Fordliam commenced its 1063 league season with a loss to The Rugby Club split two mat ior, leaves for Sao Paulo, with Cornell University at Ithaca last Saturday, the N.Y.U. last Saturday on Coffey Field. The debut was marked Brazil, next Tuesday as part by sloppy play from the first inning. The Rams yielded one team bowing, 16-6, and the seconds coming- out on top ' of the United States team 15-8 score. It was the second loss of the season forH run in the top of the first and then came back with two on participating in the 1963 Pan Tony Gryzwacz's single. Ed Kala, who had been shaky, then American games. Sulger is the firsts, against two wins, and the first win for the .seed began to settle down, but was victimized by a costly outfield in three matches. •* alternate member of America's | The Rams missed (.overall riTor. With two Violets on base,*' ~ entry in the single sculls event, portunities to score, cspeciall] Denny Rehnan tried to make the and thus becomes the first Ford- the first half when they big play on a single to left field liam man to represent his coun- down on the Cornell five yard! but misjudged the ball, and the try in competition of this magni- three times and could not cctl single became a triple. The man tude since Tom Courtney appear- ball over. It was not until f on third eventually scored, mak- ed on the '56 Olympic squad. closing minutes of the match i ing the score 5-2 at the end of Fordham scored a try, withi one and ;x half innings. Sulecv, a dean's list history Conahan carrying the ball major, earned this honor with an B Team Victorious Reinian proceeded to rectify his impressive array of successful error with a long triple, and The Fordham seconds performances during last year's pletely outplayed the Cornclljj scored on an error on the relay. rowing campaign. He placed third NYU scored two jnore in their in the Open single sculls event at Bernle Muller, aided by a stri half of the third when center- last year's National Champion- push from Bob McDonald ana fielder Bob La wry tried to shoe- ships and copped first place tro- Bates in the second row, cog string a sinking liner. The ball got phies in the Metropolitan, New tently' beat the Cornell hooj by him for a home run. England and Middle States races: and this made the difference. 4 Fordliam came back in the bot- as well as the President's Cup tom of the fifth. Tony Armenio backs, led by Tom Mulvey, : race. Ailsby, Joe Benedict and walked, Ron Golebiewski singled, Rowing both in the single scull Eeiman walked, and Paul Hurreii, and as stroke in the eight oared Bynker, took it from there. who had relieved Kala in the sec- Fordham opened the scorlnjj ond, walked to score Armenio. shell for the , Frank crossed the finish the first half on a try by Don Blaha (of basketball fame) diet, and Al Tortolani kicked J entered the game in relief and line first in twenty-five of thirty- Outside Center Dave Langdon extra points. From there it nine attempts. He was also stroke threw a wild pich that sent Gole- Baseball Couch Dan Rinaldo The first match saw Fordham Fordham's match, as the Big biewski home. Then lie settled for Fordham's highly successful never came close. verse condition. Bill Murray and varsity crew. start off well, controlling the ball down to strike out Smaldonc and Tony Gryzwacz led the Fordliam in Cornell territory. The Rams Joe Wagda scored late In i Murray, and got Bob Lawry on a offensive with doubles. The um- First Entry's Illness opened the scoring with about first half, picking up a loose 1 pop up. Ed Kata was charged pires finally called the game in five minutes gone in the first and carrying it in, after Con| Ordinarily an alternate's half when Wally Smith, kicking had scored on a penalty with the loss and Blaha got credit the top of the seventh, due to ex- chances of actually participating! for the win. In the absence of Mark Pirola, hit Tortolani again added the poii cessive wind and cold. Fcddick in the games would be very slim, on a penalty kick, Bob Bynker scored the fj] Tigers Tagged got the win. but America's first entry in the Fordham try with about ten lii Last Thursday, the Rams trav- After the kick, Fordham couldn't Last Saturday, Fordham's fresh- event, Seymour Cromwell III, for- come back with a sustained ef- utes to go in the match on a gj elled to New Jersey to defeat the man baseball team made a game merly of Princeton, suffered an at- fort, and the Big Red took over run, and Tortolani put on the i , 13-8. under very into batting practice as they de- tack of hepatitis during the winter and dominated the match. Cor- lshlng touches. A Cornell try \ poor playing" conditions. Gerry feated the NYU frosh, 27-0, at and might be forced to withdraw. nell quickly evened the score at less than five minutes to Mackin started, and was riding NYU. Pitchers Lucci, Mueller, and 3-3 on a free kick, and then nothing but make the final so] on a ten run cushion until the Hall each contributed 2 innings "He's still quite strong," Frank scared a try on a two-on-one closer. fifth, when Princeton scored six apiece to the no-hitter. The hap- commented, "but the pressure of break. The kick for points was This Saturday, Fordham moj limes. Fred "Howdy" Fcddick re- less Violets never got the ball out several days of competition might good, and Cornell carried an 8-3 into the home half of the soaj lieved Mackin in the middle of of the Infield, Musuchl led the wear him out and give me the lead in to the second half. with a match against the Ma this stanza and as a result of his Ram attack with 3 hits, and Zan- chance I've been waiting for." The Ithacans scored twice more hattan Rugby Club at Fordliatj wild pitching, two runs scored. dy and Zulo each contributed two. There is also a possibility that in the second half. A Cornell Fordham follows up the M( There were only two hits in this Ccnterfielder Pallingra had the Sulger will row in the eight oar player picked up a loose ball and hattan match with a map Princeton spree, as the Rams er- longest hit of the day, a lengthy shell for the U.S. ran it over, and another made a against Notre Dame on TuMj rored repeatedly under the ad- good break for the score. April lfi, also on Rose Hill. triple. Frank began his rowing career at the age of eleven when he was coxswain for the NYAC shell and has been stroke of all the Ford- Rants Lose Two at Sea ham crews he has ever rowed on. Raws Lose Too on LarA His absence from this year's Crew Sailing squad has evidently hurt the Tennis Bowling Rams chances for another winning Fordham's crew team dropped The sailing team traveled to season, and Frank is eager to get Three matches in three days. The long nip-and-tuck the varsity, junior varsity and Kings Point last Sunday to par- back in the boat; "Yes, right af- With that arduous beginning, the between Fordham and St. Mi freshman contests to Boston Uni- ticipate in the Nonagonal Regat- ter the Pan Ams." Fordham tennis team plunged in- for first place in the New Y| versity on Saturday, April 0. The ta. The Ram sailors placed only division of the Eastern lntcr| races were run over the Henley seventh. In a fine performance, He hopes to be in on Fordham's to the 1963 season last weekend. legiate Bowling Conference cij distance of 1-5/1G miles on t-lifi the Now York State Martime Col- bis championship races near the On Friday the team travelled Charles River in Boston. lege copped first place. end of the season, and feels that to a close last Sunday. The to Philadelphia to face a contin- the Rams should just be hitting- lost the final three-game scj Despite an early lead, the var- The two Fordham skippers, gent from St. Joseph's College. their stride by then. "The lack of to the Redmen, 2G72-2533. sity dropped behind the Terriers Bob Powers and Jack Kelly, were practice due to the ice in the The Rams crushed the Hawks, at the mile and finished in 0:04 plagued with bad luck. The course sound has definitely hurt us, but 8-1, as Hugh O'Dormell, Tom The defeat brought the Raj to 8:38 for the Terriers. The itself had not been explained we'll be tough along about May." overall record to a 45-24 coif choppy conditions of the river O'DonnolI, Tom Palmer, Bill clearly and in the opener, Powers and dropped them into ttf and the winds which ranged up sailed part of the race on an in- Murphy, Carmine AiiBrisani, Pete to 25 miles an hour during the correct course. In spite of this lie place behind St. Johns 49§ Shapiro, and Keith Mlceli nil won 19'/a. and Iona, 46'/:>-22>,s. race hurt the Fordham crew with was still able to finish sixth. Jack in the singles, and the teams of its German oars and its high- Kelly was forced to drop out in Rums, however, are not count stroking style. his third race when, because of O'Donnell and Palmer, and Wilt pletely out of the running- a sudden shift of the wind, he Marrin and Ron Chalmers won year the New York and Long I The J.V., maintaining the same was blown Into the course of an- in the double;;. land divisions of the Confcrea high stroke into the wind, never other boat. (Kings Point is well were joined together to form c caught the Boston team and lost known for its tricky winds.) The next day, however, the sit- division. Consequently, two too. by four lengths. Again in the sixth race, Kelly, uation was rcvnr.oii. The Rams headed down .••outli to face an ex- not one, will be sent to tlw <" Fordham's freshman eight had while workiang for his starting 1 fcrence championships from position, was boxed in by two tremely strmi ; ::qu»d from the race by a half-length until Georgetown. The Iloyas, a pow- York. the closing seconds when their boats and forced to relinquish his valuable starting advantage. erhouse in (ho Mid-Atlantic This setup leaves Fordham stroke "caught a crab." Tills mis- •States Confwouce, trounced Hie hap cost the Ramlets the race. in contention. The Bams lit" A week from this Saturday, Ram:;, 9-0. (hree-mime series with P»' In the coming weeks, the team April 20, 'the Fordham Sailing The Forrllmui nclmwi then l