THE FORDHAM RAM I. 46, No. 14 Fordham , Bronx, N.Y., 10458—September 18, 1964'j^fgy. 401 Twelve Pages

Politics9 Focuses on Election: Football Returns^— lumphrey, Keating Will Speak Fordham-NYU Bout Sens. Hubert H. Humphrey and Kenneth B. Keating have accepted invitations to ak at Fordham as guests of Politics '64-'65. No definite dates have been set for either aker. Set for November 14 Sen. Humphrey, Democratic Vice-Presidsntial candidate from Minnesota, will prob- By Frank Casey, Editor-in Chief appear on campus as part of his Westcnester County campaign tour in October. Sen. Football will return to Rose Hill campus Saturday, Nov. a ting is the incumbent senator from . 14, when Fordham plays , one-time arch rival, on . It will be Fordham's first intercollegiate Politics will focus its atten- football match since the sport was. dropped by the Admin- tion on the upcoming elec- istration ten years ago. tions. Co-chairmen Joseph Gridiron competition will be revived in the form of a Hunt and Charles Moxley will football club, sponsored and sup- ^' draw distinguishedi speakers ported by the Fordham In order to alleviate initial ex- from the fields of politics, law, Student Government. pens^s, the team will have no pro labor and diplomacy. According to Don Ross, presi- staff. Scheduled Speakers Also speaking this semester are: Senator Jacob Javits of New- York, on Dec. 6; William Bundy, Assistant Secfjtary of State for itheast Asia, on Nov. 6; Pat- rick Monynihan, Assistant Secre- ary of Labor, on Nov. 13; Dr. Leona Baumgartncr, Assistant Administrator •. of A.I.D., on Nov. 20: Ted Freeman, Gemini astro- Humphrey at Convention naut, on Dec. 4; and Rep. Melvin Laird (R-Wisc.) chairman of the Republican Convention Platform Committee, sometime in January. first Wave of Females Possible Speakers i A likely prospect for an early appearance will be William Miller, Republican Vice-Presidential can- (wades Ivy Sanctuary didate. Others contacted include The opening of classes last Monday marked a significant such political., personalities as Don Ross, Father McMahon, Dave Langdon, Foofb.V .ngc in Fordham's history as 214 coeds handed in admit- Robert Kennedy, Gov. Nelson )Ce cards as members of the first class of Thomas More Rockefeller, former Gov. David dent oi Student Government, the David Langdon, coach and captain of the Rugby Club will also coach |lege. TMC is the first school to be added to Fordham since Lawrence of Pennsylvania, and club will be on a non-scholarship, John Bailey, Chairman, of the the Football Club. Rev. Eugene School of Business was-opened in 1920. student - organized, student- O'Neil is moderator of the club. lis new liberal arts uol-v : . ",", •""•" 7 ~ Democratic National Committee. coached basis. has been opened initially !acatielnlc •wholalshli) award- The Politics '64-'G5, with Horizons Responsible for bringing back and Dialogue, constitutes a con- Negotiations for the game were football to Fordhnm are SG lead- women. It will subse- javernBe girl ranked in the top tinuation of last year's American concluded Wednesday afternoon. ers Don Ross, and John Connolly, mtly provide special lib- :«ven per cent of her class with an Age lecture series. Arrangements are being made for I vice-president, who spent the end arts programs for men i overall academic average of renting bleachers with a seating of last spring and all of the sum- available in the College, S1.2 per cent. capacity of 15,000 to be set up in mer working out feasible plans li as fine arts. On their College Board exami- College Proposes the center of Coffey Field on the with Langdon. nations, the typical freshman northeast corner of the campus. Ross and Connolly had made 'tei two days of orientation, scored C40 in the verbal aptitude and Thurs., Sept. 9 and 10, Campus-Wide SG General admission tickets will the return of football one of their I new freshmen registered Fri., test and 597 in the mathematics cost $2.50. (Continued on Page '1) 11 The first class is coin- test. By Bob Kelty ed mainly of non-resident The curriculum o( TMC will be Don Ross, president of the dents from the meteropolitan nearly Identical with that of the College Student Government, a There are, however, 3(1 College. Courses of study for the made two proposals yesterday Horizons '65 Will Bring Art r#?hiii"n boarding at the Susan freshman year will consist of toward the unification of te?ln Residence. English literature, a modern for- campus schools. Films, Folklore, Music Here eign language, theology, and a Stating that the trend of the Hish Hanking Students choice or either history, Latin or By Joseph Vaccarino University is toward greater uni- Gerard Boesgaarci, chairman of Horizons '05, has an- *PWM1\ -three of the TMC eo- Groek. and biology or mathe- fication of the separate schools, 1 , * have achieved some type of matics. nounced an exciting new program of concerts, films and cel- Ross proposed the organization ebrity receptions surpassing anything held at. Fordham in the of a eampus-wlde student govern- recent past. Horizons '05 is the fine arls division of the newly as ._ r - .--_--'.• r- , a Stravinsky b;tl!H a hour will l.-illow I< Oiij inui'd oil l';u',c !!} film le.'itival, and a special events Vivahll V (Nmrprl proiirum oi rreitu! ions. Tu •une.Tts are sched- (ii'iuime Min-.trti Stliuv for fall semester. The Masses The first offering oi Hori.-iiii.-. ' lir.-l. is \t: )1 Ilurol; Presents The annual Ma's of tin- Holy will be "The 'Grass limits' ol l/.thac 1'erlman" ill a violin recital 1 Ghost, i, sciieit'ili-d to <\l'tiri,;!l.v Aiuericnn Folklore." the "only of work. ; by Vhalili and Franck. ht'gin the academic year oti i'ept. i'.i'iuiine minstrel SUJW in the Isaac stern has compared the 111 1 Mil ill (he gymnasium. All students U.f-i." Tli" .-how. written by Nnbli | ye;ir-old violinist to Yaslm Heif- 1 on campus mr expected to attend. :;i;:le ana llubie lilac):, will be [el: .. 'I he cent will take place In ft hits also !>"rn derided Ihat presented Friday evening. Scpl.Uhr Campus Center Ballroom on the Mass on the junior-senior :>.:>, at H::»), in Collins Audiloriimi. | November 11 at 0:30 p.m. Atl- Day D! l.vnillectiun, Ui:!. :!I, v. ill A;hii!::,io!i i.. :,:::i..:ili: liel.cl.: may; be ottered In memory of Dr. Wil- bt: picked up at the ticket ofllce The last presentation of the iiuin li. I'ltsni. opposite the book store in the semester will be the rarely per- Fntlior IVonolma, TMC Dean, III Mixer (Sec story, l'a:;e .i) Campus Center or at Die door be- (('ontinucd on Page 10) Football History Page 5 RAMSPORTS Page 12 THE FORDHAM RAM September 18, 196] 1963-4 And a Hopeful Look Ahea< placements coming up from the games to the Redmen and an-Coast Conference power North was 9-5, placing second in Rugby second team. Ben Malveaux and other to Wagner College. Carolina State on the 17th. Metropolitan Championships Artie Geiger will form the nucleus Ace hurler Gerry Maekin pitched 11th in the IC4A. The team » The Pordham Rugby Club be- for the scrum, and the Hams' Next on the Ram schedule will gins its third full year this fall a masterful game in the first en- be Connecticut of the Yankee led by captain Joe McGovei two ,fine wing forwards, Don counter with St. John's, only to Norb Sander, Matt Cucchiarral with high hopes of continuing Somma and Andy Cordaro, also Conference. The varsity then the success of last spring when fall victim to his teammates' mis- travels to Rochester for the Ko- The team was not so succel the club ran up a record of 6-3.return. cues and inept hitting. Paul dak City Tournament on the 29th ful as was hoped due to msf •iTlie Rams had an overall record! The backfield will be very Smaldone's homer in the first was and 30th of December. Harvard, injuries throughout the seasl of 9-5-1, making them the only, strong, with Tom Mulvey, John the only Fordham run as the Navy, the Rams, and host Ro- At one time, four top runnl winning team of the Big Three Collins, Larry Restieri, Dave Rams bowed, 2-1, in 11 innings. chester will participate in the were out with injuries. sports: , , and Langdon, iay Larkin and 'Bob The Rams dropped an exhibi- two day affair. Rynkar. Firola, who has scored The indoor track season \* . rugby. tion game but swept a league highlighted by the runnin- l most of the Fordham points in the The new year will open with t The B" team had an overall doubleheader in between the two last two years and has constant- St. John's games. The second Rams at Memphis State on the Sam Perry, overshadowed" . record of 3-7. 2nd as they seek revenge for an ir.r.it Qf the season by Bob Has| : ly kept the Rams out of dan»ci same was a comedy of errors, as The Rams got off to a good with his kicking, will be back at thu Rams and Redmen both made NIT defeat two years ago. From At the Millrose games, Perry start last fall with a 3-0 win over'the fullback position. costly boots. When the dust had Memphis State the Rams go to his best time of the year, 6.1 i • Columbia, a 6-6 tie with the Man-' Loyola of New Orleans on the just missed beating Hayes iii In true rugby fashion, the settled, the Rams were on the hattan R.F.C. and an impressive' short end of a 10-8 total. 4th of Ja'nuary and then return 60 yard dash in a disputed finil 14-3 win over the highly regarded ischedul e has...... not yet bee. n drawn north to meet Rhode Island away Distance runners Norb Sand! Columbia Old Blues, the Lions' UPl although tllel'e is a match This left the Rams tied with St. on the 9th and Georgetown's Joe McGovern and Matteo C John's, with only one more game graduate Rugby club. The latter scheduled with Holy Cross for Hoyas in Washington on the 16th.chiarra ran fine races during was one of the most exciting Nov. 7. There is also a match with to play. However, Bill Nelson of season, and the defending matches ever played by the Ford- the Old Blues scheduled for theWagner, one of the most promis- The varsity returns to Rose Hill on the 23rd to meet Temple tional Champion two-mile rell •liam club, but was an unsatisfy- same date. This conflict will be ing soph pitchers to come into team finished third in the li ing one because several injuries ironed out. The first match will the Met loop, put the final dam- Owls and then on January 30tt the .first of two double header: tional AAU meet. Seton Hall wl were suffered which hurt the be sometime In early October, per on tile Rams' title hopes with and Iona finished second. club for the remainder of the and the schedule will probably a six-hit, 7-3 win. will feature Manhattan vs. Hof- season. contain six or seven matches. stra and the Rams against Army's Tony Cruickshank just missl Graduation has almost com- Black Knights. breaking Gary Gubner's freshml Fordham lost its next'two mat- pletely decimated the pitching ches with Princeton and Holy staff for this comins; year. Gerry On February 3rd, Iona's Gaels Cross before turning around and Maekin, Paul Hurrell, Fred Fed- will be at Rose Hill and three days Bowling deck, and Steve Ryan are all gone later the Rams will meet Pitt Last spring, the Fordham bowl- from last year's staff. Coach Ri- minus Brian Generalovich in the ing team captured the Eastern naldo will also have to find re- Steel City. Then on the 11th the Intercollegiate Bowling Congress placements in the outfield for second Rose Hill doublsheader will championships ifor the second Paul Smaldone and Tony Grzy- open with Manhattan and Rut- time In three years. wacz. The latter player signed gers and have the Rams and St Francis in the nitecap. The Rams finished the three with the Cincinnati Reds for an team tournament with a 7-4 rec-undisclosed amount. From there the Rams move to ord St. Piter's cainc in second The Rams begin their fall ex- Boston on the 13th to meet Bob with a 5-6 count and Villanova libition schedule this Saturday Cousy, John Austin and the rest •as third at 5-7. with a doubleheader against City of B.C.'s Eagles. After that the College at Coffey Field. Rams will meet Rutgers on the The tournament took place at Raritan before they return home Fordham's home lanes, Bowlmoor to face St. John's Hodmen here on 13th Street. The Rams took on February 20th. two of three games from St. Basketball Next on the Rams' list will be Peter's, but took only one from Wagner's Seahawks on the 24th the Wildcats. At the end of the Fordham, out to improve on the school. Then first day, the three teams were last year's mediocre 9-11 record, on the 27th Fordham meets NYU's will open their 1964-65 season on Violets on Rose Hill in the sec- Dan Sornm3 Fordham opened the ^next day TTZ^*?^^ ond segment of the Subway defeating Princeton, 21-3, in thewith a win over Villanova and Championship. followed with another over the Coach John Bach's Rams, faced Norb Sander i last match c.f the season. It was with a rugged 24 game schedule March opens with the Rams at the highest point total ever run Peacocks. The Rams clinched it Queens College on the 1st before 35 lb. weight throw recoid m with their highest game of the and one tournament, will be eye- Metropolitan AAU meet with I up by the Rams. ing an NIT invitation. invading Madison Square Garden tournament, 1011, and a win over for the annual encounter with toss of 49 feet, 1 inch. Lions Lose Villanova. Prospects seem bright, in spite The outdoor team was of the bruising schedule, with four Manhattan's Jaspers. Fordham Columbia was the Rams' first This year, the bowlers will be closes out its regular season at riddled by injuries and did victim in the spring, bowing 8-0 o,r last year's starting five back without the services of Ronnie and several promising youngsters Worcester when the varsity meets live up to expectations P it rne Old Blues, with Pat Moran Pizzo and Ralph Greco, but Vln- Holy Cross. ran a 9.5 100'in his first l u •- kicking and Tom Hennessey and up from last year's Ramlets. The nie Pizzo, the MVP of the tour- only starter lost by graduation Fordham's hardwood fortunes the year, but sat out the us' i • Tom O'Connor running, defeated nament, wil be back, as will Ken the season with a leg Injun , •Fordham, 15-12, in an exciting was backcourt ace Jim Manhardt will hinge on the team's ability to Bertram and last year's frosh who crowned a brilliant varsity jell quickly because the material the Pcnn Relays, where Foidlij • seesaw battle. Mark Plrola scored standout, John Lamendola. These was defending both the 4 ... • •oil the Fordham points on pen- by joining the .select 1,000 point is certainly there. The Rams will alty kicks. three will form the nucleus for circle. have adequate, if not overwhelm- and 2 mile relay championslir! _ another possible championship ing height, in Zandy, Frangipane, the Rains placed third m tlaW The Rams then lost to "favor- team. Rcturnlw: for Each will be the •Ite club" Manhattan, 6-0. It was and Stevens and a real ballhawk- mile relay in n;07. Cuccmii-.. Rams' big front three—Len Zandy Bill Slater, Sander and Mtfi*»4 ' the first time the Green had ever at 6' 6". Joe Fi-angipane at G' 6" ing speedster in McGuirt. NIT • defeated the Maroon. anyone? ern composed the team &m Si and John Stevens at 6' 5", plus also placed third In the stap*ff' The Rams broke their losing Baseball team captain and MVP Wayne clia.se. letS . streak with an 8-6 win over West- McGuirt. chester in a match which led to One of the strongest Forcihmn Alter the season opener here The same four mile reliv U 'T* baseball teams in the past decade Track finished a close second to Gio ''"?' • the suspension of two Westches- with Loyola of Baltimore the 11 ter players for unsportsmanlike carried a two-game lead into the Rams will meet Fail-field's upstart With the return to school and town at the Quantico Rila I * final two weeks of Met Confor- Stags on the 5th and Yale's Bull- the coming of fall, the student week later. P»i • conduct. ?nce play before losing the title ; dogs on West Point, which the Rams the 9th before moving body will soon notice a group of Fordham finished third in l'' C to perennial champion St. John's u had beaten the year before 19-0 downtown to meet Columbia on thin, sparsely-clad students lop- Metropolitan Championship lP "' • came back with a vengeance and last May. It was a disapjjointin the 12th on Morniur.side Heights ins armmd Edward's Parade and hind St. John's and MaiiinU'^- took a 14-3 decision. finish for Dan Rlimldo';; Miuad, The Rams return home to meet the Martryr's Court lawn. This is SandCT, who graduated m li' J1 Fordham then went on a hot which had been unbratin in Con- | Seton Hull, minus Nick Wcrk- Kordhmn's Cross Country teuni. already Iraininy for tin i''1'* .streak, playing some of the best ference play before dropping two man. on tile 15th' iuul Atlantic Last year's Cross Country team Olympics, in the 10,000 m I *" ' rugby seen around Rose Hill, and and marathon. Over the mini''!?'< took their next four contests An hi- lost only one race, beatm i'1 Impressive 19-0 win over Yale be:,l disliinco runners in tin I P* was followed by the Rains' first including John KWley of lii t,'V< • win over Holy Cross by an 8-0 mid Hill Keefo of Conuoctinit • score. The Rams rallied to defeat also broken some of Ohnii -! St. Joseph's of Philadelphia 12- il I'f.-tc McArdlc's l-cci 6. and closed out the season with thr ami. a 17-3 victory over the Princeton first team. Cureliiarra, is,,i, DyUn. Jim M[' Scrum Thin Ii.ui, Dun Henry and Bob I I Fordham should field anothei in:: lirml the cross cmuiLi \ strong team this year. Although and could be in contention all the backs return, graduation the Mel, title. took its toll in the scrum. Stal- The indoor season could warts Jack Stack, John O'Lough- Hum In form by 1'J.ri' i St> lin, John O'Connor and Gerry Charlie Piazza could foe a tin Meditz will'have to be replaced, in tin; liiilf mid quarter miW Unit there should be adequate re- Tho Fordham Cnilck.slmnk and Dick Robin 4 Cum I.Kt spring Mopes are pole vaulUM-, will help in the llf high

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HVH 3 Hi '81 161 September 18,19€ Page 4 THE FORDHAM RAM Fordham Forms Football Club—NYU Nov. 14

(Contnucd from Page 1) $1,500 publicity for the game, In commenting on the return tention to the University. sports as their models, hoping minor campaign planks when advertising, ticket and program of football, Ross listed four bene- Both Ross and Langdon feel enter into competition w i t running for student office. Most printing, fits: that football on the non-scholar- schools like NYU, Georgetown t students, however, paid little at- $1,500 players' insurance, doc- ship, club basis is the best setup University of Chicago. The • Football will build up Ford- for Fordham. tention to the plank, considering tors' and trainers' fees, salaries ham spirit. "Nothing is as memor- teams, though University subs such an accomplishment not only of guards, referees and other per- able as a college football week- "There is no chance of 'moral dized, are operating on the cli Impractical but also inconcievable. sonnel. end." hypocrisy'" said Ross, "because The issue has been brought up there are no scholarships. The football level with only a ft annually for the past ten years, As yet, there has been no defi- • It will fill the gap in the games scheduled annually. Foi nite settlement on how income athletic and social calendar be- team will be students who play but no positive action had ever only because they like the sport. ham is the only school that h; ibeen taken. from attendance will be divided. tween the opening of school and One thousand dollars income is the basketball season. Fordham will not look like an a stuflcnt-run, student-support Football, which had been a expected from advertising reve- athletic factory, because we are team. University-supported sport when nue, program sales and refresh- • It will aid alumni relations a high academic school, and this the Rams played big-time ball, ment and souvenir sales. by providing another bond with is not a University-budgeted ac- Both Langdon and Ross a was dropped because of financial their alma mater. tivity." optimistic about the future losses. On the new scale, there Fordhain profits from the game will be no cost to the University. will be used to support next year's • It will serve as a publicity Langdon and Ross used the club football. "Three schools c team and other SG activities. vehicle by drawing national at- Fordham crew and Rugby club "Since it is run by students, the Kast Coast have it," sa football will in no way consume Ross, "and the trend is growing University finances," said Ross. Student Government expects "Football will not deplete funds financial success from the NYt necessary for educational pur- Fordham game, especially sin poses." there are no travel expenses Estimated expenses for the inconveniences for the studen game are running more than of either school, and since tl $18,000. For this reason, Ross has strongest concentration of alum asked that students purchase CRUSH THE VIOLETS is in the metropolitan area. It h their tickets as soon as sales also been proposed that Nov. open. THE FORDHAM BOARDER COUNCIL be a fall alumni father-son da Rental of bleachers is the high- with children admitted free, est listed expense, estimated at mailing campaign to alumni In $12,750. Other expenses include: John Callahan, president been started and Student Goven $3,000 cost of equipment for 33 ment hopes to reach 38,0i alumni. players, Pete Mazzetli, vice president Larry Quinn, treasurer Bart O' Brien, Secretary

I 0SI SMl AM FOOTBALL'S BACK COLLEGE and so are STUDENT • G© VEHEMENT THE BOOSTERS perpetrators of various stunts and sundry zoos!

Don't forget the Gala '

IS.V.B.

[(December 5—After the Fairfield game); ¥¥+**•¥**¥¥¥*¥¥¥¥¥¥¥+¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥+*¥¥¥¥*¥¥¥*¥*¥*+**¥+*•¥* Also WtZ BOOSTER BIRTHDAY PARTY

FfMSIMIAM Vs. MY (Members on!y)

November 14, 1964 Time and Place to he Announced at COFFEY FIELD Paul A. Soden-Presidenf Mail Orders: General Admission: $2.50 Bob Fierro-Vice President

Fordham University FO 7-5400 Ext. I 13 or John M. Diczok-Secretary

Box 75 FO 5-2959 Frank Mannello-Treasurer ember 18, 1964 THE FORDHAM RAM Page 5

IM ordham's Finest Tradition by Bob Wl.ite RAM Sports Editor I 1954, when sportswriters all Graham quarterbackea Ford- the country summed up ham to big wins over George- just-closed football season, town and NYU. The Ram-Vio- sang the praises of Navy, lets metropolitan championship State, Oklahoma and Mines were inaugurated this ,L.A. They spoke of Terry year at Yankee Stadium and re- nnan, who had taken the mained the big football attrac- at Notre Dame and who, tion in the city for years. hoped, would continue In Frank Leaihy tradition, "Iron Major" 'hile- the greatness of Notre In 1927, Major Prank Cavan- ic football was beginning to augh was signed as the new the greatness of another coach. The "Iron Major" was lition had been killed and the true originator ot the "Not- death went almost unno- re Dame Box," the shift made d. famous by Knute Rockne and his was the year Fordham erroneously attributed to him. ball died, the end of a long When Cavanaugh took over, •ss which began &.fter World there was little talent left with II. It lay ill for years with which he could work. Yet 1928 luster and impotent teams. was a successful year and in aiimon and always fatal dis- 1929, Cavanaugh's dream was Fordham'i starting cloven which beat Missouri, 2-0 in 1942 Sugar Bowl. and was killed by skyrock- realized in a victory over NYU costs and lack of support. and Pordham's first undefeat- of that team, Vince .ombsrdi, Football was agtin suspended the coining games. Scores of was bigtime football on a ecl ,season- The Rnms rolled UP went on to become a .,uccess,ful because of t'.ie war, but was re- 55-20, 21-7, 75-7 and 39-9 (run recol cl that enr ancI pro coach, first with the Giants lltime scale. It was Saturday ' y vived in 1946. The Rams met up by Boston University, Bos- moon with'Yankee Stadium 6°'°°° 'ans saw the fl"al game and now as head coach of the with little success in the first ton College, Miami and West 20 per cent filled. It was a at Yankee Stadium. Packers. two years, but in 1948 Coach Virginia) soon put an end to all eat from the Stadium and National prominence grew. It In 1937, everyone was talking Ed Danowski had a group of hopes of a good season. Syracuse- to Randalls started in the last two years ab'out the upcoming Fordham- sophomores which were consid- powered its way to a 20-7 win nd. of the Twenties, the era of Tony Pitt game. For the last two years ered to be the best since the and Villanova added the final Siano, Tubby Beloin, Johnny flays of . Tho jnex- insult with a 41-0 shellacking Beginnings of this great series the final Gripp and Jim Delany, and score had been a 0-0 tie. Fans perienced team lost its opener of the last Fordham team. had not always been so, of grew throughout the Thirties were looking for someone to to Lafayette, then defeated and into the Forties. Kings Point and St. Francis of And so, on December 14, 1954, •se. Football could not have break the ice, but the great de- l'brdham University officially !d 03 years at Fordham In 1930, St. Mary's of Cali- fenses of both teams contained Loretto, 48-0 and 41-0. Canis- fornia handed Fordham its first lus and Georgetown handed the announced that it had dropped lout support and without the other's offense and the football. Of course, it was an- great teams. But the time loss in two years with a 20-12 game again ended in a score- Rams their second and third win over the Rams and launch- setbacks, and Boston University nounced unofficially in the c when the support and the less tie. Fordham finished sec- RAM on December 17, 1952. l were no longer great, then ed one of the greatest intersec- ond to the Panthers In the na- also came away with a victory. jven good, and then there tional rivalries in the history tional ranking that yiar. Then the young club began to New Hopes of COIICEC football. The same play much improved ball, but no more team to support. year, 80,000 fans packed into In 1940, the slogan "From lost to odds-on favorite Holy An era came to an end. Even 3i-dham played its first the Stadium to see Fordham de- Rose Hill to Rose Bawl" swept Cross, 13-fl and powerful Rut- the few good years following e in 1883 against St. Fran- the campus. Fordham never cot the .war were poor in attend- Xavier College of New York feat NYU, 7-0, and another gers, 28-19. The season ended 80 000 Slnv a 7 7 tie between the to the Rose Bowl, choosing in- on a ,';ood note, however, when ance. The pep rallies, which lost. 12-6. In 1954, the team ' " stead to play Texas 4&M, the Fordham beat NYU, 26-0. name stars often attended, were one, lost seven and played two teams the following year. tie. The Giants don't draw 80,000 season's national champion, in usually better attended than even now. They saw two of the more prestigious Cotton The End the games. A promising fresh- le tradition which was end- Bowl. The Aggies were rated hie man team went elsewhere to ten years ago grew slowly, Fordham's great All-Americans, The sophs came of age in center Johnny Del Isola and favorites, but won by an extra I960. A.fter an unexpectedly play ball. Football was gone and ball in the early days was point, 13-12. Twenty-two mem- forgotten—for a while. ersally played on a small back Ed Danowski. close opening win over Lafay- bers of the Fordham team ette b., 20-19, the Rams lost to basis. Only until after the "Golden Kia" caught influenza on the trip. Football itself was not for- World War did HIH sport Soon the whole nation look- Yale, 21-14. Then the Rams gotten, but the tradition behind n to blossom into what it is ed to Fordham football. "Sleepy The next year, Fordham was went on the rampage and won it was. The old glories were not y. invited to the Siiv.ar Howl to seven straight, beting Boston .Jim" Crowley was signed in 1933 College, 7-6, and West Virginia, so important as the return of ndham played trams from after Cavanaup.h's death. Over play Missouri. An intermittent th-3 jport itself. Much of the tra- but very heavy rain hampered 27-23. Fordham came from 14 East, where football had its a nine year period, the former points back in the second half dition ceased to exist for those test concentration and sup- member of the Four Horsemen the offenses of both teams, but who wanted football at Ford- the Rams won, 2-0, when Al to defeat San Fr^'icisco, 21- The Rams played Prince- guided Fordham teams to a 14, then edged out Georgetown, ham. Football was killed in '54 Columbia, Navy. NYU ancl record oi :>!> wins, 12 defeats Santilli blocked a Mizzoo punt by ti.e students who did not early in the first half. Stan Ril- 14-13. NYU, Temple and Syra- Carlisle Indians. Carlisle; and .seven ties. It was the "Gold- cuse fell before the Ram's great- support it. Now the students, at defeated by Fordham in en Era" of the "Seven Blocks inski recovered the ball in the leasj some of them, are seeking end zone for Fordham but slid est team since 1937, . 14-10. When the «ur came, of Granite." ancl the less known to make amends. The resurrecr >all was suspended. hut (.'finally effective "Seven past the end line on the muddy In their next to last year, the tkm of football may ov may not ie first star came to Ford- Pillars of Stone." Fordham All- turf. It was ruled a safety by Rams finished with a 4-5 rec- be successful, but it is an at- soon after the war. Frankie Americans were a reiuilar fix- the officials. Throughout the ord, beating Detroit, Rutgers, tempt. IS it does succeed, new :h, the "Fnrdham Flush" ture. Les liordon was picked in game, serious threats by both Miami and Temple, and losing traditions Will arise in the place teams were ended by fumbles. to Boston College, • Holy Cross; was to make his reputatiop n 193'!, Amerino Sni'iio in '35 and of the old. It may lead to a re- bl Despite the bad weather 100,000 Villnnova. Penn State and- Syr- • surgence of the. old traditions ascball, was a triple-threat Nut Pierce in '30, and in 1937, fans turned out for the game. American. ihrec Kordham players were acuse. as well.. Football deserves a an years followed in Die picked to the select team: Al;-x Fordham opened its 1954 sea- chance, but it-must be support- ' Twenties, but a new mi Wolriechowira. Kd Franco, and son with a 13-7 win over Rut- ed it it is to survive and not born In 1923 when "Zi'v" Al Harbiitsk.v. Another member gers and hopes were high for die. Next time may be the last.

r 1

}m6ty * H FdrJhnm fan* ildo flrotruck ti

Conch Eil D.mow>ki f u< , OI, r i>|,uu IJI lorr Arn-y s™«> '" 1949. Cotton Bowl Jim Crowloy mi-ots squnii at first practice, 1939, THE FORDHAM RAM September 18, 196f Page 6

The Commentator THE FORDHAM RAM Football Gets New Hike Established by the Students of Fordham College in 1918 By Donald K. Ross Support The Club President. Fordham College The Class of 1965 has broken many precedents in it 'Ten silent years but Fordham once more and inexhaustive industry to apply them- selves to a burden previously attempted only three years at Fordham. We have set many standards will echo the roar of gridiron cheer. Ten those who come behind us to measure up to. long years and Rose Hill recalls the memo- on the university level. SG has labored for ries of Fordham fame: heroes of football months researching, examining, probing the The new football team will be organized and administei| ed by the Student Government of Fordham. College. Its fil and undefeated seasons. Fordham again will problems of collegiate football — starting a nances will be administered strictly by the officers of th claim football headlines. team, purchasing equipment, renting bleachers, arranging sales. But above all, Football Club and they will act under the jurisdiction of th The aims of football at Fordham are made they have assumed the responsibility of fi- Fordham College Student Government. No financial assi evident in this issue, but two points cannot nancial backing. tance will be forthcoming from the University. It is a non be overemphasized—why football has re- scholarship, student organized, student supported team. turned; how can we keep it. Estimates for merely one game are run- ning over $15,000. All class treasuries com- The Fordham football team will: provide a campus con To understand these two points, we must bined are nowhere near this figure. Profits keep in mind why it was dropped. Rev. Lau- from last year's concerts, the largest fund- tract sport for those who do not wish to play Rugby; hel rence J. McGinley, in a letter to students raiser known on campus, were only half this fill the gap in the athletic and social schedules that exi.st and alumni when football was dropped, amount. Bringing back football is an ex- from the end of freshman orientation to the first basket pointed out the financial dilemma of a uni- pensive endeavor. ball game; aid alumni relations by providing another activ versy-supported football team. Football is SG has done the unexpected. It has ity which will focus their interest on their Alma Matei; extracurricular and therefore secondary to brought back football. It is up to us to keep serve as a publicity vehicle for the University. intellectual and religious training. Univer- it. Football will be supported solely from the sity funds necessary for education cannot sale of tickets—not from class treasuries, From fiVe Press- Alumni and Students be used to support an extracurricular ac- not from University funds. tivity. Ten years ago Fordham football was We do not see how Club Football can fail to excite grer a financial loss soaking up University funds. How We Keep It student and alumni interest. If it is publicized in the conxi At that time, loo, Fordham embarked upon manner, it should receive a larger coverage from both tii the educational expansion program at Lin- More than 10,000 tickets have to be sold. SG is contacting 38,000 alumni, hoping that national and city sports press. Moreover, if its non-scholai coln Square — a program demanding mil- perhaps one out of three will respond. It is ship student organized characteristics are stressed, this cm lions. There was no alternative. Fordham up to us—students and faculty—to add to erage should help to stifle alumni cries for the big time (th had to drop football. these sales. good or days) football. Why We Have It Fordham has waited ten long years to We contend that the reactions of the press, alumni an reclaim football headlines, to hear the roar students will depend on the way football is presented ; of Maroon cheers. If 10,000 cheers do not Fordham football will no longer consume them. Sports columnists, especially the New York pros University funds. Football will be supported go up on the 14th of November, Fordham solely by Fordham men. The Return of will wait another ten years. Football de- have a vested interest in urging Fordham to go big ttm. Football '64 is due to the efforts of a Stu- pends on financial success. Success this year However, if at every interview with them, if after each in dent Government filled with unprecedented means Football—Fordham—Forever. citing story, if in every press release, the non-scholar.shi. aspects of the team are stressed, we believe this clamor wil soon die. The Time Has Come It will soon die for we contend that the student bod! : The time has arrived for integration. Hints of dreamers among us will have to refrain from heir- will be proud of its non-scholarship, high academic tcaij it have been in the air for a long time, but this oglyphing their hallucinations upon the desk tops whose players play because they feel like It. There are son! in . alumni extremists who would never be satisfied with an;] year was fated to see its inception. Many people thing but a Cotton Bowl contender but these are in til have Ions; opposed it; some are opposing it even But there are also advantages. Many of the girls now that it has become a reality. But the obvious have already agreed to join The RA11 in its anti minority. The bulk of the alumni will be proud of a non advantages in accepting it and the evident injus- keep off grass campaign. Who ever heard of a scholarship team. . tice in opposing it have overcome some of the un- co-ed campus with forbidden grass? And wouldn't reasoned prejudice. The girls are here and here to it be nice to have female cheerleaders at our bas- A Precedent for Club Football stay. ketball—and, of course—football games? Is there a precedent for this type of football? Yes, an! Of course, there are many problems involved Of course it would. And so The RAM, on behalf we believe that the trend is growing. Johns Hopkins mi) in the change which will have to be resolved. For of all Fordham, would like to welcome Thomas one thing, co-ed nature lovers have been known More to the campus, with hopeful anticipations its entire athletic program on this basis as do a numbei c- to swim together in the same pool—but not at a that their intelligence and enthusiasm will match other schools on the East Coast. Jesuit university. And the more passionate day their proven charm. Georgetown and N.Y.U.—two which have le cently dropped football—are instituting this level of foot Between the Lines ball. Georgetown will play N.Y.U. on Nov. 21, 19G4, at Geoii,t town. Georgetown has managed to field impressive athkt- teams (basketball, crew and tennis) and at the same tin; Tm Registering-Please Help Me' maintain a high academic standing. Both N.Y.U. and GOOIM'1 town are supported by the university—we would suppou m' By Ed Kcllchcr own team. During the past week there has been a "That's the seminar class where you study We don't believe that we have solved or anticipate? great deal of talk about registration. Un- great literary masterpieces. Then you re- every immediate and future problem that Club Football v, i doubtedly this is because the past week has produce them on graph paper. face. There is no doubt many problems will arise betwi-u H»OO been registration week. You didn't know now and the first game. However, we are positive as we < ilit "Is it 2:00 yet?" he asked. be that we have solved the major difficulties and have dm that? You say you registered and you knew "No, it's not even noon." #ic it was a week but you never connected the the background work to make the others easy. "I don't know," he muttered. "I left my two ideas? My advice is: leave immediately. inexpensive watch over in the Economics There is no doubt that the problems will arise in tl No college can help you. Department and I've been afraid to go back future when the originators of this club have become alum. For most of us, registration is a give-and- there." We firmly believe, however, that if the proper care is u, ministered from the beginning and if a sharp vigllanci take proposition. You give them your money; "Maybe I could pick it up for you." they take It from you. They give you class maintained, future clamors for big time football can be i admission cards; your professors take them "Forget it. This was three years ago. My mud boioie they bepm from you and rip them up. wrist has outgrown it. Laissez faire." He opened his wallet and studied his draft a There are always a few students, how- card. Tilt.; FORDHAM RAM „. „„.„!„,„•,. « , . , , ,»„ ever, who have more trouble with registra- "I'm 21 years old," he moaned. "I thought rt y MC P tlurlnB tion than their classmates. I came across mill ..xnrnliinilnii iiorloil.i, Horn OcU.lirr t0 M,lv, by !!„• ..tudi-iits of Fonlliam Unl i I was 20." He crumbled an application form Bronx, Hvv Yuri; K'irl» Hs-lty. r.mit'i % ' '^ '" *'*' color and denomination. In front of him "I think that's it," ho said. "I've actually •rum DiMilim, HogtT llrniinn, !Vt.< ntui-r. I'.'lrr Vi-nt.-.ln. Kill Ilnkrr. ilobnl II nun. I!.,.ml,l Hunt*. l!..,;.r r.'ul.in.;. ,l,,l,,i niN.mi... J.,,,,1, l>u,,,,lilB Fetor K was a cardboard sign which read: "Please finished." Jin. Miulili, limi R^.'ii.ll'..;, Mlrhn.l iLlumnm Help Me, I Am Registering." I congratulated him. i'Oltl'M: Hull Ilnvty mil Tom MiilLinrr, Ililltnrs K.I Kfll..!n|., J>ol> K.'.-I.T, r.Hk,. timiiii. i, ,l.iif.!i rnl:if He pondered over a copy of the college "Don't mention it," he said, fvrttlnr, to hi.'; EirOJtTS: iUm Oi>lfl»lr>.i'.I,i jm.l II.I. wt.ll.*. l.lil..p. catalogue. feet. "Now I'm off to the gym to turn Uirao •l-iini Mulvcy. /il I.III.JMIII'. II.II, rim.i. Mil..- Willmiuiii, mil lioi'lU J.ilin >i I things in and pick up the next sot of forms." Jim O'llrliu, John AHtrn, IHumkl (i,,it- "What is this?" he suddenly shouted, with lilllUH^HH; ATl.-.tsUi-l (•....].••, !..n;,,i I. Cn.h,]., 1.. ,, ilm '.| )l,i!(..:i a wild gesture of despair. "I don't want "But I thought you said you'll finished Milli «:(!«•: ,0kk lluj.i.iIlM, l.ilil.u riliii«(ili.,iriiV: K.nrn i.iirkln I'd. creative writing—I asked for creative read- registering?" COPY Klirroit: Mnritaii-I liryn.il.h. ASHOri.Vli: I IIIIOII: .ii-oll (.'111 Moilpmlar: l"r. HIIILTI H'C.1.. II. ll.J. Ing!" "Are you kidding? That was for the Janu- 1 1 18 '"'? "I' " '" '•».'"• '•',' "' V" /•"""""« «' TIIP HAM n,,, ,,,,t nccrasnvllv tho'io of 4 W* ary 1962 semester. Now I'm only Va years 1 l lcl rUy u u vl "Creative reading?" behind." iiifiifnt'atl.m ' ' " "'" "" " " """° "' " i'l '""J ' W ;ptember 18, 1964 THE FORDHAM RAM Page Hail, Men...oops, Girls of Fordham, Hail9

By Joseph Vaccarino our representation in student the surface. Underneath may be RAM Managing Editor government." pete with a city that is the cul- either pessimism or the desire tural center of the world? Ford* The following feature is in no way intended to "I can't exactly put my finger to achieve." 1 be a sociological suruey 0/ the opinions of Thomas on why I like it at Fordham. ham can try to introduce the More girls, as will be immediately obvious. The quo- There just seems to be an atmo- "The Fordham man is a fel- students to the cultural advan*; tations are those of individual girls, chosen for their sphere over here that puts me low who knows what he wants, tages of the city by bringing art,' interest, variety 0; view, or humor. The author has at in a mood to study. Also it was where he is going and is using music and performers to tht- all times tried to avoid personal comment, except in a relief to find that we were not all good means possible to reach rare instances where the temptation was too great. met by pickets or something of his goal. He's friendly, helpful campus, but it cannot compete." that sort on arrival." and, most of all, a gentleman." "The cultural life here should ' There's Y.A. Tittle!" college, I believe, is basically the "I think Fordham lacks a great (Amen.) not have to compete with that', Who is he? There are two same as that of a man. She is laid ones." amount of the spirit that should "He's O.K. Polite, respectful of N.Y.C. You can have the best; '•• there to acquire for herself the accompany its good scholastic of both." A steady stream of students, best possible education. Her name. It is considered a type of funloving—not the amoral typ3 alking enthusiastically and mere presence, however, brings prestige school, yet in reality it found at a city-run college or "Culture is where the lndivl-. ughing, comes marching in a bit of realism and outside doesn't live up to its name. The an out-of-town campus." dual finds it. Fordham offers— iderly formation from Keating culture into an otherwise all- people are very nice and accom- "Where is he?" we must take the offer or leave all to the Campus Center.'Im- male domain." modating, but in addition to In the interest of peace, it it. N.Y.C. is basically the samo.- nsdiatr:y, all the guys watch- "To seek the best possible ed- close friendships and good behooves us to state that most Thomas More girls also have* ng ballplaying in Edwards ucation for her future career, at courses there should be the type of (he responses Here very fav- 'a to an about face and the same time bringing culture, of campus and university unity orable to Fordham men. some political preferences. Most ;a?.e dazed by the novelty of the that football teams and the like would elect Johnson for Presi- s aesthetic appreciation and ideal- Have the girls encountered any ight, but with an obvious air istic attitudes to this previously creates." dent and Kennedy as New York f appreciation. anti-feminist feeling? How all-male world." What could have imp.'ovcd would they handle it? Senator, most would like to see The strains of the ever-present "A woman's role at college is the program? "I've heard from some boys the medicare bill passed. uitai are heard, and the wail- to take advantage of all the ed- "Big Brothers." n(! of "voices" fills the lobby that others held anti-feminist The single event most girls.- ucational and social facilities "Our orientation program was views. In response I would ask would like to see take place at if the Campus Center. Guys available and to maintain her much too stiff. While the boys it aiound on the sofas and join femininity and own personality were playing ball and having beer 1 guvs . . . and girls. ir parties, we were sitting in n. Thomas More College is here, warm lecture hall listening to lo more will Fordham be the speakers who probably didn't \clusive lair of the man. The even want to be there. I think i[ ns of change are omni-pres- it could have been a lot more nt—and so are the girls. casual and we could have been Last year, The RAM, in anti- invited to the barbecue." ipation of this long-awaited "I enjoyed the orientation pro- noment, examined feminine gram and I truthfully can't bought on other college cam- think of any suggestions that uses. It is no longer necessary would make it better than it :> try to gain some hint of the was." 'homas More personality from thers They are here. And here "Instead of the talks by teach- < what they say. ers and juniors. I think that Why did they come here to there should have been some ac- ordham? at the same time." tivities such as were present in the orientation for Fordham Col- "I made my own choice of "I feel that college must ful- lege. I like the Coffee Hour with ollegcs and I chose Thomas fill a personal need. You must the faculty and I think this had ore because it was not taught get from it enough to find your- much better results that the y sisters and because it is a • self. But this is a private goal. As to a woman's role in college, talks in the lecture hall." atholic college on a co-educa- How about the food and board? onal campus. The idea that that's an obligation that belongs ordham is a Catholic college to men as well as women—to "The Campus Center" food is as very important." give of themselves and partici- fine except for the hamburgers, "I chose Thomas More be- pate as much as possible in the hot dogs and roast beef sand- Joy and Cay Meluski, in 'tomburg headgear, beside Sinn h iren door at :iuse it provided an opportunity things around them. I can't wiches. I haven't tried anything Susan Devin Residence. After this picture was' taken, girls excused them- r a liberal Jesuit education in stand people who just vegetate." else. The thick shakes are good." selves to report for 7 p.m. curfew. few York City. It gave me the "I think ii woman's role in "The food at the Campus these dissenters what they're go- Fordham this year is—a football dvantages of an all-girl school college is to become well educat- Center is consistently 'Poor." ing to do to stop us." 1 s well as the convenience of a "Very good. Inexpensive." "The team (Extra-sensory percep- ed. She should not compete with "I haven't encountered any at tion!) Some others chose an ap- a-ed college. The spiritual life a man—but she should not be food is awful! Actually, it's pas- all. I would answer such opposi- pearance by Robert Kennedy and-: as an important consideration, completely passive either. Her sable, objectively speaking. But tion by acting my normal self. am tired of the narrow-mind- role is to complement." for the prices charged it's pret- I don't think fellows like over- a return concert by the King* i, conservative Catholicism so And there's always one in the ty bad." "Not like Mama used friendly girls and I don't think ston Trio. One young visionary; evalent in Catholic girls' high to make." "Inexpensive, not too wanted to see "Elins, on his fie- hools." group: "This question requires flavorful, rather bland." "Ex- they'd approve of the girls try- a personal philosophical evalua- pensive, but palatable." ing to prove themselves worthy ry chariot coming through the "I felt that I didn't want to tion of the role of education and of an equality which is theirs." sky." the responsibilities of students S|o to a public college because "I board at Susan Devin (the "As yet. I have not met with If we were to draw any con- gj wasn't ready to answer the which I don't think it deserves, residence for TM girls at 198 St. since it is placing emphasis on any, but if I should, it has al- clusion about tlie answers re- Buestions placed against the and Grand Concourse), and I ways been my opinion to avoid ^atholic faith by many in these an incidental factor, and which, think it's very nice. Our only ceived, it would be possibly that in any case, it isn't going to get." and ignore the ignorance of sup- chools. I also felt that if ever I complaint is the 7 p.m. curlew posedly educated people." they are less sarcastic and more • _ ad a really big problem, the After a week of orientation, on weekdays. We want to be al- starry-eyed than those received t lowed to go to the library or club "Yes. By trying to explain to "Jesuits will be ready to answer what docs a Thomas More girl last year at the other girls' nv questions." (No comment.) think of I'ordham, both Kenerally meetings in the evening." them that TM is just as anxious to keep its identity as tell wo- schools. The RAM promises to "I chose TMC because I want- and particularly? "I think Susan Devin's is n ed a Jesuit education and the "My impression of Fordham is very neat and respectable resi- observe the growth over the year ood open-minded, healthy spi- that it is a university adapted dence, but I do not care for the toward sophistication and sar- ;it of the Fordham campus." "I to the preference and interests food, the hours we have to be casm and maturity, or immatur- :ho-,e Thomas More because I of its male students. A few con- there to eat, G:30—8 a.m. break- ity, depending on one's point of espcct Fordham University ami fessions have been made thus fast lor go without 1, 5:10-1! p.m. view. elt also that Thomas More con- far on account of the Thomas dinner (or do without*, our cur- fined greatly to my idea of Mure students, but it is up to the few which will be 7 p.m., and But conclusions at this time 'hat a college should be like." TM students to effect such the long walk from the campus." are not necessary. The girls What Is a woman's role at change as they feel desirable. will be here all year—for four ollege? Some of these are female use of "Well ... 120 people and one "The reason it woman attends the pool, women's sports, and phone!!! years, and we can form our con- "The question which raised the clusions as we go along. most controversy in last year's We close with a few choice feature was "What do you think words—one TM girl's opinion of of (he Fordham man?" I'M girls the basic challenge confronting were Riven the opportunity to Americans today: answer this also. men's liberal arts division of a "The Fordham man is a great university, establishing its "The basic challenge is the total gentleman who knows how to own traditions as Fordhain Col- realization and utilization of in- have fun at the right time and lege is to maintain Its separate dividual talents. If everyone de- to study at the right time. He identity." veloped his own potentialities, can discuss politics at one mo- then Soicety would greatly profit "No opposition, just odd looks from it. ment and tell a joke in the next, on guys faces. Scream and yell." lie's good company for an ex- Most girls found no such anti- "There are so many indivi- citing time." feminist feeling. duals who possess so much latent and untapped tnlent that, pro- "By and large the Fordham As to Fordham's ability to com- perly exploited, could solve many man is one of two groups: either pete with 's cul- of the world's problems. This he's too far gone on books, or tural life, most thought it applies to all talents—physical, too for gone on girls." "You couldn't; many said it shouldn't mental and moral. have to. don't really want me to answer Everyone should do anything- this one." "The Fordham man. "How could a college or uni- he Is capable of doing to the best versity expect to be able to com- of his ability." n Ti rm.iii Hall!" 'You're sitting on it' In my opinion, Is a skeptic on THE FORD HAM RAM September 18, 1964 Page 8 Coach's 'Run to Daylight' Campus Prepares For Invasion Threat Turns Packers Into Champs by Joseph Cuskcr By Bob Davey RAM Forum Editor Although the Fordham campus has seemed calm The "Red Lock" society, the university's oldest It wasn't too long ago that sive coach for 's and serene these first few weeks of the new semes- and largest integrated organization, is prepared a football player was considered Giants. With linemen like Ray ter, The RAM has learned from sources high in to run a welcome mixer, free, for both male and to be nothing more than a Witecha, Jack Stroud and Rosy administrative circles that just beneath the sur- female students. The organization's president mound of muscle on which was Brown, a pass catching corps termed tins: "A totally new concept in group re- mounted a skull as hard as his headed by Kyle Rote and the face lies much unrest and dlssention among stu- lations." bleep. backfield of Mel Triplett, Prank dents. Despite the fact that all may seem quiet on Today, it is an accepted fact Gifford, Alex Webster and the rolling hills of Rose Hill, these persons, who As a last resort it is rumored that the ROTC that the athlete has to use his "Chuekin" Charley Connerly, wish to remain anonymous, insist that the in- will be federalized. tegration brought about by the advent of Thomas brain as well as his brawn. He Lombardi helped Jim Lee break The Perishing Sabres are reported to be pre- More College will undoubtedly cause what they is held in account for countless Paul pSrown's stranglehold on paring defensive positions around the Adminis- termed "incidents." offensive and defensive forma- the division in '56 and '58, and tration Building which houses the headquarters tions, plays, pass patterns and gleefully watched his backfield Although total integration has long been a of the integration forces. p blocking assignments. Gone are make a shambles of the Chicago reality in the Southern departments of Fordham, It is not known whether outside peace officers the days when a fullback was Bear defense in the famous only token integration has ever been attempted will be asked to intervene. Fordham officials seem in the North. Because of the small numbers in- to feel that the campus's own security "police" volved and other related reasons, that attempt force will, as in the past, be sufficient for the was generally looked down upon. needs of the campus community. Now with the invasion of 200 "outsiders" into Some student leaders have voiced concern over an area exclusively male for 125 years, the pos- the busing of many Thomas More students and sibility of physical violence among the more ex- the resulting breakdown of the "neighborhood tremest elements of the campus population iias university" concept. Plans for a boycott were said become a real danger. to be under consideration. Fordham officials denied there was any con- Fordham authorities had no comment, on al- nection between the opening of legations from opposition leaders that integration and the passage of the Civil Rights Bill this past would result in mixed marriages nor would they June; but doubts still persist. speculate on charges that the Anglo-Saxon Chris- To guard against outbreaks, many of the cam- tian character of Fordham would be destroyed, pus activities are planning preventive action. The university has not seen such agitation and The "New Cheer" party. feels that it speaks unrest since the never-to-be-forgotten riots of last for the majority of students in opposing any lib- fall over the introduction of parking lot silos. gives Packers a strategic 'chalk talk.' Fordham's former eral moves to change the status quo in these chal- One piece of comforting news was that which coach has recently co-authored the book 'Run To Daylight!' lenging times. While it would not condone of- discounted rumors to the effect that College ficially, any acts of violence, nevertheless, its considered a guard with his "sneaker game" of '56. The alumni would attempt to block integration. Ford- leaders admitted that integration at this time brains beaten out, and the foot- sneakers gave his runners trac- ham College, it was noted, would not be affected ball player's dormitory was de- tion on the Polo Grounds' froz- would be dangerous and provocative. This was by any change of status. The same will be true risively termed "the animal en field, and the Gaints took especially true because of the upcoming battle • house.1 Increasing demands are of boarding facilities. As in most Jesuit institutions the championship in a one-sided over the introduction of fluorine into the swim- of higher education, separate, but equal, accom- being placed on all connected ming pool. with the sport—coach as well as 47 to 7 victory. modations shall be maintained. Little objection p]ayer. When he took over as head The "La Rouge" society, on the other hand, has has been voiced openly against this plan, for the coach and general manager of volunteered its services to aid in spreading a spirit moment at least. Football, professional and col- the Packers in 1959, they had of "fraternization" among the old and new mem- lege, has entered the realm of just suffered the worst season of Fordham students are keeping their eyes open, "big business." And there is no bers of the Fordham community. however. businessman more astute in his their forty year history. Wheel- field, more calcuiilting and im- ing and dealing, he turned the aginative in his tactics than league's worst defense into its Vince Lombardi (College '37), best. Taking Paul Hornung off general manager and head the bench and letting him loose, coach of the Green Bay Pack- he made him pro football's ers. "Golden Boy," who led the 1 league in scoring in '59 and '00. One Of "Hie Seven led the Packers to the division As a senior letterman in the championship from 1960-2 and .fall of '36, Vincent T. Lombardi the World championship those won considerable fame as one of last two years. In his first year the "." at Green Bay, he received the When his playing days as right Unico award as the outstanding Sexy Suave guard were over, he enrolled in pro coach of the '59 season. Fordham's Law School, fully Askew intent on a career off the grid- An Active CTitizcn Fordhamites Flip Their Lids iron. To support himself, he took There's a cliche about find- Dear Chief: ed shirts, grubby faces, grimj a job as head coach of St. Cs- ing a busy man to do something, In accordance with your memo hands, blood-shot eyes. Oh, Chief colia's high school football team since he'll find the time. This it's pitiful. Now they're all wear- in EnRlewood, N,J. And any certainly applies to Vince Lom- of Sept. 9. 4:15 p.m. F.J.C., li slipped a leash on photographer ing ties, and shirts with buttons, iflcas he might have had about bardi. As a resident of Green and even suit jackets, and now ailaw career were trampled un- Bay, Wise, where he makes his Pete Stace and sauntered out to capture all the slory, the joy, thenone of them sweat anymore— der the "T" formation that car- home with his wife and two They all perspire. ried St. Cecelia's to a winning children, Loinbnrdi served as good cheer of Orientation Week .sltein of 36 straight games. chairman of Green Bay's 19U1 on film. We had six rolls of film We used up all the film, honest. I He carried his press releases March of Dimes campaign. He left over from last year, when! but I think that ritual did SOIHL-- and the "T" to Pordham in the is also a member of the Elks Pete took all those terrific shots thing to Pete's .sensitive nervous forties, where he worked as Club and a fourth degree Knitilit of the Commencement Exercises system, because when we not back freshman coach and later as of Columbus. Somehow lie still with an unloaded camera. And to the office ho was giiiKliin'. Varsity offensive coach under finds time to serve as a trustee incidentaly, Chief, I think you quietly, and when lie came back Ed Danowski. e,f St. Norbert's College in Wis- should do something about the {from the dark room he was carry- 'in 1949, he heard the words consin, and to contribute to ni, nasty rumors going around about i,u; these photos and still Kintdii'i:; "Uncle Sam wants you," and alma mater as a member of the the still Pete built in the dark- quietly. toted his play book up to West Board of Directors ol the Ford- room, I Fjoint. His first year there was ham College Alumni Associa- | You really can't blame any- tion, a position to which lie was the hardest. He had to develop happyIt too, k happyus .seve, nhappy hours, tosmilin reach!bodyg things, .Chief If yo. It'u sdon' justt onwanet o ft othos Hie tjie "T" from scratch, get the elected in 1960. iippy, happy. I'n himin faie immbci seven. II ,me you can run these pictures Ifcrsonnel used to his system, When he received the Alum- ajnd acquaint himself with the ni Association's Acnicvemenl nallv u.rn t om fault Chief. It';; land call them pxnmplcs of "crea- n]tmosphere of a military acad- Award In the field of sports in alv lh oti nliio faulu ht i oful 'lin Uoe ( coinnuiiii.sl.;;mi campus.! tive photography'"--or some- emy. His undefeated season is 1960, Jim Lee Howell's opinion It po ibli lo ' 11 a candid photo thing. Collegia!!' osily excused and just as easily of his number one aide was ol i (O d' f,\ jlu |Jnll W(. would Sincerely, Wondered at. fittingly quoted. It is Just as fit- hd I ' (I Hi 1) in, meter and liob Davey Forum Editor Coach For The Giants tingly quoted now to sum up .mil adui.sted (he the career and life of one of our vimld have seen To I he Reader: In 1054, Lombardi found him- more famous alumni. "He is on I 1111' llllo lllOSe The above leitcr is the reason If In the pro ranks, as offen- the style I like—daring." i all line !;<•! iiooks we are I'lokini; iur a new Forum ni ual. You '-.now: I'klildV. In accordance with the !'Interested in i uu t . oinl) Snir, •mo »f H'iil. HI, 2:35 p.m.. ll ! la.',:,c.'. U>,, we nlmll run the pictures | PUERTO RICO, BERMUDA In blii'h in an e>;nmph' (if "creative phu- iraphy," ii final, fitting tribute over EASTER? ' ..\ viii no b Hi r. Ke- his memory. Contact M. J. CABELLI, ni( mbt'i Iho't t( 111 i Mints we Sincerely, P. O. Box 751, Fordham University run last yriir- sloppy sneakers, P. J. C. Secretive liiilnt.-.'itaincd fhorts, sweat-statn- Editor-in-chief September 18, 1964 THE FORDHAM RAM 9'keefe Appoints Lay Trustees; Mulligan Heads Study Group Gov. Nelson Rockefeller has announced the appointment, of William H. Mulligan, dean of Fordham Law School, to head Nine Businessmen Join Board a seven-man committee to study the apportionment of the ev. Vincent T. O'Keefe, Uni- manufacturing firms of Quigley New York State Legislature. >ity president, announced yes- Panel Construction, Inc. The committee's work will include an analysis of the lay that nine leaders from William T. Brady iness, industry and the pro- THOMAS F. O'NEIL: chairman present legislature. The Governor said the report would form ions were added to member- Named Chairman of the board of RKO General. "a basis for my calling a special?" • j on the Fordham Board of He is also chairman of the board session of the legislature to con- Dean Mulligan, who lias served of the General Tire and Rubber sider and acotn an apportion- in the Law School post since 195G, Trustees. Company, the parent company of ment plan." his Board is the University's sociation's Achievement Award Is also a member of the state's for bringing "distinction and The Yankee Network, Boston; The committee, a non-political Law Revision Commission, hav- icipal lay board. According WOR-AM and WOR-TV, New its by-laws, it was organ- honor" to the school. He is a state agency, is the result of a ing served under both Governors member of the Fnrdham College York; KHJ and KHJ-TV, Los recent action taken by the Su-Harriman and Rockefeller. He is "to advise, assist and Angeles; KFRC, San Francisco; perate with the president and Alumni Association and a director preme Court. This act requires a graduate of Fordham College of the alumni association of theWHBQ-TV, Memphis; and legislatures to allot their dis- '39 and the Law School '42. llnlstrators of the University." Fordham Law School. WGMS, Washington, D.C. mrrcntly numbers 32 trustees. tricts' representation such that This summer Dean Mulligan Board is aimed at the forma- Electric Company Director OLEN ROOT: previously a spe- they would be "substantially received national notice for a of a link between Fordham JAMES J. HAGAN: the honor- cial assistant to the Governor of equal in population." speech he delivered to the na- the community for mutual ary chairman of the board of di-New York for Federal and Inter- No deadline has yet been set tional convention of the Ameri- ignition of New York's educa- rectors of Fidelity Electric Com- state relations, now associated for the filing of the report. The can Bar Association. Time mag- needs and the University's pany, Inc., and a member of thewith the law firm bearing his state, however, recently obtained azine called his "Up from the nirces and plans. New York Athletic Club and Uni- name. a court injunction delaying the Serbian Bog, or, Sex and the New Board Members versity Club of New York. He is HOWARD A. SEITZ: attorney- Implementation of reapportion- Single Premium," a "et 'em in nine new Board members, an alumnus of the Fordham at-law at the Paul, Weiss, Rif- ment until after the November the Tent" title for a legal ad- ointed for three-year terms, School of Business and the presi- kind, Wharton & Garrison. He elections. dress. dent of both the American Manu- also acts as a director of several AMES E. BURKE: in charge facturing Company and a Domi- business and social concerns, in- he First Aid Products Division nican Republic firm. cluding the Council of Greater MeAteer and Sander Named the Robert Wood Johnson JOSEPH KINGSBURY-SMITH: New York. ipany. He was recently ap- one-time foreign diplomat corre- Chairman Appointed ited executive vice-president spondent, general manager of the Father O'Keefe has also ap- Army, Air Force ROTC Heads marketing at Johnson and International News Service and pointed William T. Brady as the David McAteer, College history summer training at' Indiantown nson. publisher of the New York Jour- chairman of this Board of Lay major, has been named Cadet Gap, Pa., this year. EORGE A. BROOKS: accred- nal-American, now trustee of the Trustees. In 1963 Mr. Brady was Commander of the Fordham Raymond Sander, College '65, by receiving the Alumni As- Hearst Estate and Foundations. elected chairman of the board of ROTC Brigade. McAteer, 21, will has been appointed 1964-65 Group He is a winner of the Pulitzer the National Association of Man- hold the rank of Cadet Colonel. Commander of the Fordham Air Prize for international reporting ufacturers. Fordham University Changes in army cadre include Force ROTC. Sander, 20, is ma- and the United States Distin- conferred the honorary doctor of two new officers to replace Capt. joring in history. guished Service Award for pro- laws upon him at the June 1964 Albert J. Rios and Major Serefino The Air Force staff has been in- moting public understanding of ARE YOU 6000 commencement exercises. Scalise who have left Fordham creased by one member this year. civil defense. The vice-chairman of the this year. The two new assistant Capt. Joseph B. Maddalena, 32, ENOUGH TO BE DONALD H. McGANNON: pres- Board of Lay Trustees is Rear professors of military science are will be the new assistant profes- ident, chairman of the board, and Admiral Edmond J. Moran, USNR Maj. Hector Coreanza, who will sor of Air Science IV, AN ARMY OFFICER? chief executive of Westinghouse (ret.), president of the Moran instruct MS III, and Capt. Ter- I Capt. Maddalena has more than Broadcasting Company, recently Towing and Transportation Co., ence Doherty who will instruct eight years service, and holds a IF YOU ARE, DON'T selected for the Distinguished Admiral Moran has received MS I. bachelor degree in general edu- SETTLE FOR LESSI Service Award of the National many citations for his war-time Major Coreanza has nine years' cation from the University lof Association of Broadcasters. He services. service and was stationed in Italy Omaha. He has been stationed at received an honorary doctor of last year. He holds a B.A. degree Maxwell Air Force Base, Mont- humane letters degree from Ford- from Morristown College, N.Y. gomery, Ala., and last year at ham as well as the CARTA Captain Doherty, 27, was sta-McGuire Air Force Base, N.J. award. tioned in Germany last year. He Thirty-one seniors attended Quigley Company President has six years in the service and camp this year, 27 at Plattsburg JOHN A. MULCAHY: president holds a B.A. degree from Provi- AFB, N.Y., three at Otis AFB in of Quigley Company as well as dence College. Massachusetts and one at Hamil- the high temperature refractories Sixty-eight seniors attended iton AFB, Calif.

Rose Hill's 'First Tradition': Just an Old Obscure Trough By Margaret Reynolds RAM Copy Editor In the brown and green blades of uncut grass, trampled by Rameses XX around His Imperial Palace, lies an old tai- nished silver bell, Fordham's first tradition. This bell, known as the "student bell," was commissioned by Archbishop John rap Hughes, founder of Fordham, when the College was still St John's. It's inscription is simple: "St. John's College, Rose Hill, Westehesler County, 18-10."•'> the Jesuit summer home in Con- The bell, prominent in the rec- necticut. ollections of old timers of the Welcome The Return of the Bell Colefje, hung in the cupola of the Administration building and It is .supposed that Fordham Frosli ., , . , , , gave the bell to the Keyser I.s- rang the changing of classes foi huid Jesulu. nftci. (hey r(.ceivC(1 Rose Hill Bell: An Untollcd Fordham Tradiiion the first four decades of thet;h e Mmll.esa M1 ,rrom the semi- FORBES school's existence. In 1955, after nary in West Park, N.Y. Aftei b"inr away from Fordham for 75 mnny months of correspondence vears, the bell was returned with the New England Province, . the bell was returned to Fordham largely through the efforts of on De(, 7 lg55 368 East Fordham Road Maurice L. Ahem, University It was then put int0 storngo to archivist, and Rev. Vincent J. awalt the compietion of the Hart, former director of Univer- Campus Center building and .15 % Discount :;ity Development. eventual placement in a bell tow- The Manressi Bell er outside it. It has been used ;On Dinner for Students; lately to hold grass and feed that In lf!53 Mr. Ahern, while look- tne ram eats «.WJU)JUUUL(ULo:: "Aloysia Maria, Manresa." This of time and fate upon the mem- wiis the first time anyone realized ory of Fordhamites, the bell is all SEItA-NATA that the original bell was missing tiut forgotten. Its place as the PIZZF.KIA and that another bell had taken symbo, to rlng Fordham victories ''"' |lli"'1'- has been taken over by the Vic- Italian & Americaii Hhorlly HuTi'iifter, while index- . B „ lven t the university Res tail ru u I iur an i'-.'iuc of Tin- Monthly. Mr. . . Iftme Coolihu',, K.nHhvifixs, Ahem rtisrmvreil a reference to >«» Ui.n twenty years ago. Ihi1 ;,ilviT bell, iilvlMi! its inscrlp- Is the true vitcory bell of Ford- Beer anil Wines lion. I••] nin lhi:; inscription he was liam destined to remain surround- 2593 Webster Avenue nbl« to find two faculty members WMds am, out „, the s,ghl Soprano K Narclso C^^T^Vl^ of all but F