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THE FORDn RAM t\/r.\, .41 Fordham College Thursday, November 17, i960 «*gss> 401 No. 5 Projects Advance Berlin Crisis To Be Viewed S. G. Mandate Not [Despite Obstacles In Talk Tom V Final, Says Kirby The international problem I Fordham's construction and renovation projects have of Berlin will be examined by joeen progressing despite financial and technical obstacles, a German prince and historian •said Fr. William J. Mulcahy, vice-president of business and when he delivers the eighth Asserts Congress Vote i finance for the University. g-uest lecture in the "Ameri- Father Mulcahy disclosed that a can Age" series tomorrow. "dream track" now under con vide more space for cars assigned Will Not Bind Him Istruction behind the Campu: to the Jesuit community. These He is Prince Hubertus z\x Loe- I Center will not be completed until cars include Fr. Laurence J. Mc- wenstein-Wertheim - Freudenberg, Student Congress last night passed by an 8-0-1 vote a (next spring because of the dif~ Qinley's '57 Lincoln, several '60 author of several books on Ger- resolution that S.G. president John Kirby be advised to vote Fords, and a '50 Chrysler. The man history, including a recent- against University affiliation with the N.P.C.O.S. Kirtvy em- I foundation. extension was necessitated by the ly published work on post-war phasized that, while he would take the Congress' resolution lack of garage shelter on campus, Germany. The lecture will be giv- into consideration, he would not necessarily be bound by it, The new track will be a one- according to Mr. James A. Clavin, en at 11 a.m. in the Campus Cen- and would continue to vote as he felt was right. [ fifth mile oval with a sprint physical plant administartor. ter ballroom. The issue of affiliation and its^ • straightaway about 100 yards. It Father Ivlulealiy stated that Prince Loewenstein will initiate $15 to $800 for the College at the [will be made from a patented tar- Fordham does not base its con- the second phase of the lecture financial implications will proba- organization's national congress ilike product and rest on a. grad- struction projects on a master series, foreign policy and Amer- bly be discussed at the University last year. Cummins answered, "Tho |cd gravelstone base. A fibrous plan. Instead, it employs the ax- ica's role in international society. Council meeting tonight. dues may be collected in any way [material will ensure a hard run- iom of "consistently trying to keep The first phase, on the national as long as reasonable effort is I ning surface even in inclement In response to repeated inquir- buildings in condition to fulfill election, presented. Vice-president ies concerning the collection of made to collect them." I weather, according to Father Mul- their purpose." fcaliy. (Continued on Page 3) dues, which were increased from A major issue has been the stu- dent tax to finance affiliation, a 1 Work on Keating Basement has j'ntrusure appvovou by Juim Kiifoy | been progressing rapidly, he said. at the last meeting of the USC. I The basement, formerly the Uni- Pert Frosh Keigns as Qu At the meeting, three represen- Ivcrsity cafeteria, will house the tatives of N.P.C.C.B., including I reservestac k area of Duane Lib- Richard Cummins, the executivs [rary, and is already the location vice-president of the group, ex- lot the new office of the Fordham plained the aims of N.F.C.C.S. The I University Press. program is centered about a dis- cussion of contemporary issues, The south end of the basement the topic for this year being "an I lias been walled, off and will be understanding of our timee: lused as a language laboratory. It Catholic responsibility in a plural- I will be equipped with recording istic society." (booths to allow language students Other functions include the for- Jto replay recordings of their own mation of a travel bureau, a pro- I voices when they study diction. gram for foreign students and ait I An intercom system is to fee in investigation Into • tne expanaea ! stalled so that a professor may be use of lay mbsionaires. I in constant contact with his stu- I dents. Atmosphere of Insulation Renovation plans for Dealy Hall Ken Conboy, senior class presi- Slave beer, held up uiuefiuilcly uu dent suggested that many j account of the University's in- find the chief objection to CatU- I ability to find another place to olic education in the insularity of [put the chemistry laboratories many of its students. He remark- f Presently housed there, said Fath- ed that the avowed N.P.C.C.S. | cr Mulcahy. purpose of understanding the va- ried aspects of our pluralistic so- Tentative plans call for .the sit- ciety could best be served by chan- juation of language and statistical neling the idealism and the en- j laboratories and extra classrooms i thusiasm of the members into the | in the revamped section of Dealy. l-iiuia Aieiio receives the Al™ I'uiilliam crown from her predecessor Ann Linsky, while Maroon Key nondenominational and far more The former University post of- president Jim Badami looks on. Her attendants, from left to right, Mary Hassctt, Johanna Grunwald, effective N.S.A. Jfice building near Dealy is being r.,<-tchen La Pointe, Ksithy McGuiness. and Aclriennc Schiavon nervously check audience reaction. I renovated into a garage to pro- Cumiiiiiio re-plied, "There are By MIKE SULLIVAN Fordham at various social functions. Run- some things that we must do a3 ner up in the contest was Johanna Grune- Catholics which we cannot do in Linda Aiello, freshman English major in wald. Other finalists were Mary Hassett, an organization like NSA." the School of Education, was crowned Miss [Rector Made Gretchen La Pointe, Kathleen McGuinness Cummins said, "I think if you Fordham by Anil Linsky, outgoing title-hold- and Adrienne Schiavon. involve 10 per cent of your stu- r, at the Arabian Nights ball in the gym last dent body in significant programs, Saturday night. She was elected from a field Patriotic, brown-haired, brown-eyed Linda Uli.s will iiiivi: ;i. favunllnH MCMMJII Fl'. Laurence J. McGinley, of six finalists by the University student body likes Italian food, Nixon and the Yankees. on the student body in general." President of the University, was last week. The event climaxed the Maroon An avid autograph hunter, she has collared After the N.P.C.C.S. represen- elected Iflfii prccid;r.t of the Ac tatives had left, a heated verbal •fociation of Urban Universities lit her scrapbook. '•When I go some place I get | battle between Melican _ The fntpful curtain parted at 11:45 and pin " qiirl the nrpttv uilsUl-'u- "IL-IIUUI uivorcu posupon- —.its annuul meeting last week at nervous aspirants to the throne began their all the autographs I can, said me pretty jng any ^^ (iiscU3sion on af. Netherland Hilton Hotel in l t idiht A Lin freshman. •ncinnatl, Ohio. promenade. Precisely at midnight Ann Lin- filiation until all the Congress sky crowned a breathless queen on her newly Though she dates frequently, Linda has no members had had an opportunity Not having been an officer m cquired throne. Vin Dragani, dance chair- steady boy friend. In her boy friends she em- to read the literature which had fne Association previously. Father presented heh r witith a gold Miss ForFordd- phasizes a "nice personality," and prefers been provided for them by Cum- •McGinley is the first Forriham j L" iiiiiiiaiiicnpVan' d Fran Videtto, representing the "collegiate looking" boys with "continental jmins. President tu be chosen tnr t,h<- School of Education, bestowed a bouquet of Kirby muinuuned thai a deci- P°st. Fr. Charles Deane, former accents." Beating a hasty retreat from the sion should be made immediately, President, served as the viee- American beauty roses on the blushing win- ball, at 1 a.m. the six finalists sped to Yonk- if he were tc take it under con= P'esident of the association from ner. ers' Forthill restaurant where they danced sideration in casting his vote at P35 to 1937. ft. all happened so very quickly. I'm very and dined 'till the wee hours. the USC meeting tonight. Melicaa surprised and very proud to be Miss Ford- replied that the College was 1106 .Father McGinley is active in The dance music of Stan Rubin and his 1 ham. 1 guess I should cry, but I can't," the bound by the decision of the USQ educational associations "Tiger Town Five" so pleased the crowd that «ml should t'irsf. consider th9 Woodhaven, Queens 18-year-old said. React- many stayed until the- last number. The mys- liiillonaljy :ir;c! ir. ;,V,v Vor!: in;; to her accession. Miss Aiello saict, "Uur- question of affiliation as a sep- P'ate. At present he is the vice- terious disappearance of the genii gracing arate body. piesident of the Middle State;; iii" Mas whole campaign I met so many peo- the floor throughout the evening was ex- ple and .saw no much of Fordham, even if I psoclatlon of Colleges ami Scc- 1 plained by its discovery atop a car leaving pndary Schools. didn't win the contest, 1 can honestly say I campus at 1 a.m. had ;i bull trying." The A«0on.mf,,., , The ball was enhanced by murals by Vin 1—"bit*wun ui uiutm uni- While in high school she won a oauy pic- Inside The RAM formed in 1014, deals ture contest, and took second prize in an art Dragani depicting exotic Oriental scenes. Fordham's "Dear Abby" p. 2 Problems peculiar to bin city rnmnelitioii with a drawing of Harry Bela- This year's fall weekend, sponsored annually Ride w. African Leader P. 3 It includes ninom: il:. foiil'i1 When Miss Aiello is not busy with the by the Maroon Key Society, -featured the City Hall Sweats p. 4 Members most of the colkr.es'in Glee Club or debating society, she likes to concert on Friday Raml)lini;3 p, 5 ''c New York metropolitan area, evening. A cocktail party was held before the vcl1 p.,int. and enjoys sports. Upon graduation Ferguson Review p. 9 fT "S Harvard University, l.lie she ulans to enter some phase of Journalism. dance for the contestants and was IC4A Results P. 12 -Mverslly of Akvmi n,,iim r,,,_ Queen for a year, Linda will represent by faculty and Maroon Key members. Be. Boston Collegi! and olheni. Page 2 THE FORDHAM RAM Thursday, Novmber 17, 196(1 ''Our 'Dear Abby1 RAM Staff Changes Named) In a series of staff changes on lilmer Bruiisman was named as. the KAM, junior Jim Melican, who sistant news editor. All are soph,). has been business manager for the mores. Miss Claire C. Fay, Dawn past 3 car, will assume new thiiif'- as a makeup editor. On the sports side, linger Paul Schneiders was promoted Hackcti and Frank Ite.ysen of i|le Through Dusk At Fordham o business manager, and AI Kie-spoils staff have been named as. cardi became circulation manager. sistant sports editors. By DON KUONSAKD It was a beautiful morning in Riverdale. A sharp chill w.-s ip, the air, and the rising ,snn painted the bedroom in gold. Outside her window, an old oak shook its last remain- Anx leaves loose to spin in a .shower of color to the around. The alarm clock threw a tantrum; it was 7:30. She drag- ,ged herself from bed and .shuffled into the apartment's cozy '(h tongas *L« •kitchenette lor her coffee. It was almost like Portsmouth, (Author of "/ Wan a Tccn-agc Dwarf", "77a' Mtmy .Rhode Island, slic mused. She*- Lores of Dobie Gillis", etc.) iiYinemberi'ti the same warm, 1 for the University Ball. After him, tseeaie feeling as a sir!, having si steads' stream of students •breakfast with her parents and •sauntered in for anything and Jsister before going off to school. everything: free theater tickets, HOW TO BEAT THE BEAT GENERATION 'She was born in Quincy, Massa- free information, free bids to chusetts, but had lived in Porls- dances in other colleges, free My cousin Ifcrkie Nylet is a .sturdy ind of nineteen summers iinouth since the age of four. dance lesions and free advice. who lias, we nil believed until recently, ,i lively intelligence and It was a normal day. She has an assured future. Herkkv.s father, Waiter U. isyiet, is as every- ; OU well, no time for nostalgia r now. She dressed and went down been a combination "Dear Abby," l oi uh.im 'M.itilim.ikel' one knows, president of the First National Artificial Cherry Arthur Murray and information to tile '5IJ Ford waiting' outside, As the clock raced toward five, Company, world's largest maker of artificial cherries for ladies' 'It turned over after a few pre-booth for young men all of her workimv life. She had started, in she wrapped up the day's work, hats. Uncle Walter had great plans lor Heikie. Last year lie fliminnry sputters, and she was off looking through the new mail, sent Herkie to the Maryland College of Humanities, Sciences, .to Fordluun. 1948, by working for tiie Depart- ment of the 'Army as a recrea- catcliing up on her business cor- and Artificial Cherries, and fie intended, upon Herkie's gradu- ) Catholic schools, they are all tional director in Okinawa. Then respondence and getting a date ation, to find him u nice fut wife and take him into the Eim as •ttu same, she decided. It is the came Fort Dix, Camp Kilmer for one very uncomfortable fresh- (i full partner. man with a most becoming boyish atmosphere: nuiet, serene, con- i where she opened and officiated Could a young man have more pleasing prospects? Of course fident—especially in the morning. over the service club program blush across his face. not. But a couple of months ago, to CA'eryone's consternation, She knew, too—having received from 1950 to 1955), the Strategic It was way after five o'clock her secondary education at Sacred Air Command in Oxford, England, when she left for home. The sun Herkie announced that he was not going into the artificial cherry Heart AGademy, in Fall River, and finally, Verona, Italy, where had just set and was slowly be- businM*. Nor wits lie going to stay in college. "I am," said Massachusetts. she WHS Service Director. ing replaced by thousands of Herkie, "a member of the Beat Generation. I am going to San 1 The clod; atop Keating Hall In the summer of 1959. she en- twinkling star; ,. There were no Francisco and grow a beard." struck nine o'clock as she entered tered Columbia, studying recrea- dances tonight, no appointment!!, Well sir, you can imagine the commotion in the family when her office, on the second floor of tional administration. Upon grad- no company. Just the perfect eve- Ilcrkie went .traipsing off to San Francisco! Uncle Walter would ning to curl up with a good book the Campus Center. The first uation, she decided to give up the have gone after him and dragged him home, but unfortuuutely order of the day was to bring the Armed Forces work and try the and a snack; a good evening to bulletin board up to date, after college level. Her dreams solidified catch up on some needed rest be- lie WM right in the middle of the artificial cherry season. Aunt •which she checked over the re- when Capt. Clinton H. Siegel, di- fore returning te> that office Thelmii couldn't (ro either because of her old leg trouble. (One servations for the Center in the rector of the Campus Center, con- the Campus Center with the sign other legs is older than the other.) n.:-ar future. tacted the Columbia Placement on the door, which read, "Miss Collegiate life had not changed Bureau in search of an assistant Claire C. Pay." iriurft since her college days— director. She came to Fordham in It was a beautiful evening in nope, not-much at all. Thank God. August, 1960. Riverdale. A reminiscent smile crept across her face as she started back to her office. It had not been so very long aso. She had majored in English, at Emanuel College and went from there to the School of Practical Art, both, in Boston. T-f)-?* vnvpvin lvn? shattered ~" a student bounced into the office, tryi:i; to tie up the last loose ends Within inyou.o "*~P* Un So I went. I searched Ban Francisco [or weeks before I found Herkic living under (lie counter of a Pronto Pup stand. "Herkie, how arc you?'1 I cried, looking distraughtly upon his tangled Touch system or hunt-and-peck— beard, his corduroy jacket, hi-s stricken eyes, "!k?at>," fait! Kerkie. Results are perfect with I offered liim H Mr/lbovo .'in;! f;-!t insuuiUy ueiicr when ho took it hcutu^e when one smokes JMnvlhoros, one cannot he too far removed From the world. One still lias, so to speak, a hold "EATON'S CORRASABLE BOND on the finer things of life-like good tobacco, like easy-drawing filtration, like settling back nnd net-tint; comfortable nnil enjoy- Scholar dollars o Typewriter Paper >'•'!', H fiiU-fhiYOT:1!! slack,.-. Um: is, iji^piie aii appearances, basi- travel farther cally happiness-oriented, fiillilluieiil-dirceled, pleasure-prune. with SHERATON "Herkie, what are you doing with yourself?" I asked. Whatever your typing "I ;•,".;: ":.ili..h ....,^-if," in- replied, "t am writing n novel ii» talents, you can turn out the sand with a pointed stick. { am composing ,. On a tiny «i!ii(.> ^I,.,...!:; jj::cl reciting Sheraton Hotels. of au ordinary pencil -eraser. a free-form work of his own coiii|»i-.if.i>>n entitled /•J.cirina: The Your Sheraton card gets you special save-money rates and typographical errors Stnry of a lioij while hchiml liim u pa ti'm played 21)1) choruses on singles and greater savings disappear. No smears, no of 7'i'n Hoof Blues. per person when you share a room with one, two or three smudges. Saves time, leniper "Hnrlcie,"siii(l J, "coinrhoiiirnilh incioiiicartilirial cherries." friends. Genoruua group rates and money! "No," snid llerkie, so sadly 1 wen! lioim- to 1i-il Uncle Walter arranged for athletic teums, clubs and college clans the had news. iie«,-csles«(ii-i!rc-i cil than I had frarod. It seems Corrssabls isuvuiiableln several weights-from onion- Uncle Wultoi' has anolhi-rson, a (|iiirt hoy iniined iulvorls, about on-the-go. skin to heavy bond. In handy 100-Bhoet paokota end 600- Send for your Sheraton whom ho hud completely loi'notli'ii, nnd (mlay Mdvorts is in Bheel ream boxes. A fino quality pnner for all your typed Student I.D. Card or business with Uncle Walter and llcikie is beat, in Sim 1'Viinekco, Faculty Guest Card with aaslgnmonls. Only Eaton makes oraeablo Oorrusable. credit privileges. Please tell nnd everyone is htippy. us where- you arc a student or Cull-lime faculty member EATON'S COR Ti AS ABLE BOND vvhoti you write to: MR. PAT OREEN A Berkshire Typewriter Parser And you loo will be hamiu—wilh Mnrllmms, nr if //ati prefer College Relations Dopt. an unflttercil smoke, iritli I'Mlip JMorrjsi. Till the brana-new Slier&tan Corporation EATON P/U'EIt COlil'OUATtON £l|) Pl'l'TSFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS 170 Atlantic: Avdnuo Philjp Morris king-size Commander—long, mild, and leis- Uu,tun 111 M i . urely. Have a Comtnanilcr—ieelcotne alumni! Thursday, November 17, 1960 THE FORDHAM RAM Page" 3 Oulspoken African Nationalist Clms Banquet Speaker, Shows Confidence in People By JOHN LYNAGH Dean of Law School Urges Freshmen The obscure African nationalist riding to Fordham last month on the New York Central may sit tomorrow with kings, premiers and presidents. In a few weeks, Joshua Nliomo*' " To Make Most of intellectual Energy the nationalist will be caught in """Yes—, we have had bloodshed, By ELMER BRUNSMAN JR. the spotlight of the new African but we will not turn into another in the principal address at the freshman class banquet Monday ni ht, Dean. William surge toward independence, when Congo. The situation is different Mulligan ol the Fordham Law o^.uui uuvi K in the two regions; there were School advised the new members of the Fordham family to a government conference con- start and finish with all your intellectua' ' l' energy, and then everything is indeed possibles venes to consider revisions in the other factors present in the Con- for you." The dinner for the freshmen a | • constitution of the Federation of go. My people are fed up with and their fathers was held at the Biltmore Hotel. I minority rule. They want the Approximately 425 freshmen Rhodesia and Nyasaland. [right to stand up by themselves who attended this annual affair heard the president of Fordham This reporter, sitting next 10 i the way you Americans once did .. Mr. Nkomo, heard him say, in a University, Pr. Laurence J. Mc- Mr. Nkomo's confidence was Ginley, assert that the class uf calm but forceful manner, "We 1964 is important for what it can don't want the constitution re- evident. Faith in his people and deep concern for them showed be. Fr. Lincoln J. Walsh, clean of vised, we want it done away with the college, observed that Ford- and a new one formed, giving in- through in the words of this re- latively reserved politician. ham is an opportunity that many dependence and voting rights to boys do not have, William Clarke, all." Joshua Nkomo stepped onto the president of the class, responded Joshua Nkomo, whose recent platform of the Fordham station. to these incentives saying, "I would election as president of the Na-He may shortly step into the lead- submit that we make ourselves tional Democratic Party of South- ership of Africa's newest nation. worthy of this acceptance to ern Rhodesia may soon make ins Only the future can tell wiiat Ford ham." name as well known as that o( course that nation, when and if Lumumba or Kasavubu, was it comes into existence, will fol- The toastinaster, freshman strongly outspoken in his views low. moderator Don Brizzolara, intro- duced Dean Mulligan. His speech and, at the same time, calm, He then began to make his way friendly and deliberative. emphasized the importance of toward the studios of WFUV for imagination, ability and energy Tea dances and studies are not compatible, Law School Dean FWilliam "I happened to be out of the an interview en this topic, broad- in the attainment of success. In- Mulligan advises the freshmen at Biltmore Hotel banquet Monday. country when Sir Edgar White- cast last night. novnoi'o.tinff the personable touch, head threw all the members of my the dean of the law school de- from both Fordham College and He said that a combination of party in jail," he said, "so I de- clared that the status seeking Law School, declared that the academic achievement and .the cided to stay out and work ior Grants Received freshman strives to comply to thenumber of tea dances an indivi- other endeavors is the important my people." He has since decided Two grants, totaling $98,462, image of a Fordham freshman. In dual attended will not yet himthing. "Your ability to stay in . Princess Tin^'wn- in Exile. York and Eugene J. McCarthy of stein, when Hitler came to power. Minnesota; Harvard professors In 1946 Prince Loewenstein and The prince-historian was ap-ilis family returned tu Germany John K. Galbraith and Arthur M. pointed visiting professor for his- Schlesinger Jr.; and William P. to help in the reconstruction of Buckley, Jr., editor of "The Na- tory and government by the Car- his country. Prom 1953 to 1957 he tional Review." negie Endowment for Interna- served on the Foreign Affairs Fordham University tional Peace in 1337. Between Committee of the German Bundes-. Prince Loewcnstein was a mem- then and 1946 he taught at tag. He is a member of Chancel- ber of the Catholic Center Party Swarthmore College, the Univer- lor Adenauer's Christian-Demo- OFFICIAL cratic Party and is considered an and a leader of the Republican sity of Virginia, University of Neb- Students League and of the Re- expert on the North . Atlantic publican Youth Movement in Ger- raska, Brown, Emory, Rutgers and Treaty Organization and Western many of the early 1930s. A strong other universities. He was thedefense as well as the problems defender of tne Weimar Republic; founder general secretary of of aggressive Soviet communism.

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MONDAY, N*V. 21 TUESDAY, NOV. 22 9:30 A.M. To 4:30 P.M. —$10.00 DEPOSIT WITH ORDER— Page 4 THE FORDHAM RAM Thursday, Novmber 17, ]%n] Overeonfidence Between THE COMMENTATOR The axiom, that nothing tempts so much as success was The amply proved last Friday night when the Maroon Key Soci- City Hall Sweats ety tried to imitate last year's highly successful Student Lines Government jazz concert. Without the careful planning and By JOHN R. STEACK Under Public Eye outstanding publicity that characterized last year's concert, "I've had it! Jiminey Crick- the Maroon Key of course drew a far smaller crowd. et, it's more than a man can At the time the Student Government officers under- stand!" said a friend recent- By JOHN LYONS RAM Managing Editor took the Brubeck concert last year, they realized that the ly. Asked to elaborate, he concert would toe supported and enjoyed only if well-plan- went on, "I mean iook—I've While President-elect Kennedy and his conscientious ned. The jazz concert was an important experiment in in- got a copy of the 'Brooklyn brain trusters are pondering the fate of America, the old Tablet' here and I can't take' guard democrats in New York City are trying to save their viting prominent musicians on campus. necks. With the last cheer of the election a vague echo, Car- any more. I buy it every week And the Maroon Key's failure to adequately promote its mine DeSapio realizes that his political troubles have just —you know, good parishoner concert may endanger the future of what could and should begun. DeSapio knows that next year's mayor—and maybe and all that—and I try to be a special event on campus. the next decade's city administration—may not be Tamma- read it every week. I think, 'It ny-run unless he acts quickly. The fact that a jazz concert requires much more prep- might do « some good.' So New York's people have voted Demo- aration than other campus affairs was recognized by th( I start with the Bishop's let- cratic but they are restless. They are mut- University Student Council at its last meeting. The Counci ter . . . O.K. Then I read the tering because everywhere they turn bad added a bylaw to its constitution stating that only two jazz lead article, and usually it government oozes out from behind closed concerts, one per semester, should be held each year. Stu- tells about how some news- doors. DeSapio with his organizational back- dent Government would have the priority on the first: an- dealer was fined a hundred ing, and Lehman with his minority support other organization, designated by the Council, would run are arguing who gave Kennedy the stronger dollars for selling dirty mag- support. Local Democrats were loyal to Ken - the second'. This bylaw was added after several organiza- azines. tions expressed their wish to sponsor such concerts. nedy, but did they keep their pledge to NRW "All right, this I can take. I York's people? Now the Democratic organ- Although the Maroon Key acted properly in securing mean I'm all for this business of ization is worrying and not without good the date for its concert, they did not give the concert the keeping news- reason. extensive preparation needed. In other words, the Key seem- stands clean ed to want the prestige of sponsoring the Ferguson concert but I figure Weak Before the Lawless without doing the corresponding work. there must In No city government likes to admit that it is weak before The Key already lias many privileges at Fordham. I something the lawless. Yet Mayor Wagner has implied that a $5,000,000 has the exclusive right of sponsoring open houses; other or- more about the news inside. S< bookmaking syndicate blossoms under the watchful eye oi ganizations can sponsor them only after basketball games I glance ove: America's largest police force. City Hall is forced to cry to The Key also is the only group to sponsor the Miss Fordhan the front pag< Albany for legalized gambling so it can rake off some of the contest. and see thai profits. Minor city officials didn't bother with the legal But there are no privileges without obligtions. In this some pastor i. niceties. Falsification of arrest record," at Police Headcjimr- j case the Key had the obligation to work harder than it did going to have ters and at court show a widespread racket's web. Payoffs a party for be. from narcotics and prostitution are not uncommon. The [ on the Ferguson concert. We do not want to see a sound ex- city's factory and dock workers, the small store keepers and j periment stifled by carelessness and overeonfidence. ing a priest lor fifty years. Wei and good. So I turn to the inside the te'nement dwellers are finding this out. Some of them "There half the articles are by end up floating in the Harlem River. Yet, the corruption some Catholic News Service and widens. they're all about what's really Time for Action 6uiiiK on somewhere. Ifou know, Most New Yorkers cynically admit to graft among a few how the Church is winning friends cops, a few members of the Building Department, and the Is the draft obsolete? Many American policymakers are overseas, and all that. Market Department. The tow track scandal, for example, •beginning to think so. The draft takes valuable time from "Some of the stories are just broke almost at election time. Tow truck operators had ad- great'numbers of young men, and misdirects the talents of editorials from Republican news- mitted buying police tips on auto accidents. When the people many, very often with little benefit to either the individual papers, mainly about what's heard about their protectors getting S1O aniee.p to report sn or the nation. wrong with libprnl?. Thor. you got nrnirier.t they were too engrossed in the big national issues. some columns by priests and nuns At the polls Tammany capitalized on Kennedy's momentum. President-elect Kennedy has said that we must become written for kids. These tell you "a nation of peacemakers." To the uncommitted nations, a how to keep out of trouble. You country which maintains a rigid draft can present no such know, for kids. Venality Near the Top image. Three weeks ago in a campaign speech in Los Ange- But City Hall venality doesn't end with the cop in the les, Senator Kennedy endorsed a bill sponsored by Senator "Well then you come to the grip of the local hood. It rises to the top where big deals an* Hubert Humphrey calling for a "Peace Corps." The corps editorial page and look at the cartoon. Usually you got some big money are hidden from the eyes of the subway rider and would be composed of qualified young men who as a substi- Buy in a dark suit with 'Outsider' the housewife. The City Hall elite still wince at the thought tute for military service would serve three years as techni- written on him. Then there's a of the Title I housing scandals a year ago. The Tammany big cians and teachers in underdeveloped nations. The bill was mountain with a building on it, wigs live in fear that some investigators will reveal their defeated in the last Congress, but will be re-introduced this and there's light coming out from questionable real estate connections. Already the public is coming session. behind it. This is generally a grumbling about a so-called public housing project called church or Truth or something. Washington Square Village where decent apartment houses Over the last weekend, representatives of forty-two Then you got a rowboat between were torn down in favor of posh $400 a month dwellings. eastern colleges and universities met at Princeton to discuss the man and the hiilldiug, uiiu The sponaurs were men with high Tammany connections. the Humphrey bill along with other possible plans for a it's marked 'Penance' or 'Hard "Peace Corps" of American volunteers. Fordham was invited, Work' or something ami the oars Bronx Democratic politicians stood to make a tidy prof- but somehow didn't get around to sending a representative. liave "Guidance" written on them. it on the South Bronx's Soundview project. Soundview, a Perhaps Fordham's campus leaders could take a little time Well all this is too deep for me. residential area, was condemned as a "slum" so that Bo!) from their N.F.C.C.S. discussions to give thought to this I like straight from the shoulder Moses' Shim Clearance Committee could plan a "develop- worthwhile enterprise. ;alk. None of this symbolism. ment" on its valuable waterfront space. Scon someone dis- So I read some editorials. covered the land was registered to the name of an employee Then I read them again because in the law office of Monroe om.dv.'O-tei1, a prominent Bronx THEFORDHAMRAM T d&n't thir.k I imuorstand them jjuiiucal leader. The project was drouDcd but there were Editor-in-Chief .he first, timo !>ee--^c I isii'l set :nr»ny raiocu uyubrows. | he point. Usually they say, 'It's BILL GILLEN a good thiiifr we're all Christians, A tragic record of misadminislration was again hig|i-/-jj Managing Editor because tliingc, would be pretty lighted last summer. An accountant turned up a 1955 City JOHN LYONS all around if we weren't. rock salt bill for $175,509. Everything was fine on the bill but O.K. so I keep looking for news the city never got the rock salt. Fortune and Anthony PoPe> • News Editor Copy Editor Sports Editor and for someihinjr that's going RON MASELKA ED KLEMONSKI TOM LAMAINE *.o be good for me. the financiers who sold the city the non-existent rock salt, were indicted by the Federal Government for a. stock frn.no- Makeup Editors Business Manager DOM ANGIELLO, JIM MELICAN, "I look at the lellers section City Fun-.lm.se Commissioner Joseph V. finngna was charge" PAUL SCHNEIDERS and see that people who write in with accepting a vacation from Fortune Pope and was sus- Exchange Editor Photo Editor Circulation Manager are all against something. Gc-ii- PETE BYRNE pended. After a '-'study," Mayor Wagner proudly announced TOM BARKEK AL RICCARDI srally it's Queens COIIPEP. Once ve)1 Assistant Copy Editor: Nino Marino in a while a college kid complains the City purchase Agency was a "c:ond ricnnvtment." He e Assistant Makeup Editor: Salhn Balady .bout the 'Tablet's' editorials or hinted that he might not. tire Spagna. point of view. And they pull him Assistant News Editor: Elmer Brunsman jpart like a broken accordion. Mayor Caughf- Off guard News Staff: >*••> Btonsaid. Ken Oonboj, Dick Donaghor, E(1 curvey, John McKcctc Usually the poor sap says, 'How JoracB Pannetl. Prunk Bceere. Mllic Bulllvnn. John Zubol. inn an adult newspaper be so stu- The .gallant. Mayor v/r.s c;uii-,'nL wiiiemoutlied when a bi- Sports Staff: Jolm TiTino. Frank De atefano, Prank Be,.™, Roger Hackett, Bob ild?' Well they never answer his partisan State Investigation Commission confirmed that Furphy, Don Boyle Pat Burke. luestion, but they knock him be- Purchase Commissioner Spagna had manipulated con tracts Typist: id. onto. Copy Degk, Jm Ont^ Bob Coj[amo ause he spelled a word wrong or for his long-term pal. Fortune. PW« TIK: commission ac- Exnhangr Stuff: Frfl1 o»™t. mentioned Shakespeare or aumn- ody. cused the agency of collusive bidding, contract rigging «»'' ruWWied weekly except during vacation and examination period., ,rOm fcplwnw to May by the .tudent, ol Forrtlmm Oollceo, Portham University, Now York 58 NY •bribery. The people will probably forget that their vast $1» "You know I read this -every 1 Moderator. Pr. Jame, Tyno, S.J., Subscription *2.oo. Entered „„ ,,cond das.'mat' Sunday and I can't take it any million agency is riddled with knavery .It's just a matte ' o In October 1 1020, IU tlin Pott office ol Nciv 'York, N.Y. more. I give up. I'm just going- time though, before the honest judge, and the clisgi'""'10 back to 'The New York Times.'" (Continued on opposite Page) Thursday, November 17, 1960 The RAM Page 5 RAMBLINGS City Hall Sweats By JO1C HOGAN and I'ETE I'AOM'CCI s (Continued from Page i) Well anyway, it's over, although they're still adding up Mcllor reads this column far the score. The students are at peace uute again. Two great across the sea in Louvain. This clerk may turn on the flame, and the truth may boil over. questions, however, have arisen out oi tile proceedings: Was j compensates for at least ten stu- The biggest charade in rity officialdom was the Hr.lan the I.B.M. No. 7090 Electronic Rj'ain rculiy impartial? . . . lieuis lieie who do not bother. Jack case. The Manhattan Borough President was charged Whatever happened to Kiigenc V. Debs, whose name was no- At any rate, do not over relay. with accepting $4,400 Iroiii rt;al estate developer Sidney Un- where to be found on the ballot? in ilif; Campus Center lounge, licaclions: Jubilant George Diffiey is wefghing his since potted palms may conceal gar to remodel Jack's apartment. The people could not un- chances for a cabinet post. On the other-hand, the younger the deadly tarantula . . . am! derstand the high finance of complex real estate transac- Ilogan, Raring war, will immediately seek a deferment from remember, if it were long enough, tions but they could understand a "payoff." The affable of- the Draft Hoard. one ball of twine would not rcac ficial was ruined without a real trial. lite moou. Be it known that the Booster.;* are planning a tour oi historic cousin from the Lone Star State— A Sinister Backround skills for the near future. You has been seen in Al's company arc invited to join them in a look recently. Beneath this simple issue there were more sinister forc- at Old Georgetown, Boston, Pro- Senior Week is to be the crown- University Names es. Sidney Ungar originally sued the "New York Post" be- vidence, Philadelphia, and maybe ing experienced cause the "Post" had suggested that Mr. Ungar might not oven the Spanish Mission of San- be ideally suited as a sponsor of a shim clearance project. la Clam. You "'lil also <<<(> vvt..il Who would KO imlmi>i>y to hi.s historic basketball games. grave, having' the Glee Club and The newspaper investigated Ungar's business affairs and the ladies of the College of New Leon Lowcnstein, textile manu- Honorable 'exposed the story of the redecoration of the Borough Presi- Roclidle to sing- him off? Their facturer and civic leader, has F1 a n n e r y is performance lust Thursday eve- dent's apartment. The trial was almost successful in releasing using the min- ning was of a fine caliber, and been named to the Board of Lay the biggest pandora's box of irregularities since the Seabuiy utes of the Stu- if it ended sadly, nrvrrthrlcss be- Trustees of the University, an- investigation. Many high city officials were subpoenaed. dent Congress gan on a joyful note witli a chorus nounced Fr. Laurence J. McGin- as an outlet ioi of good old "Vive L'ainour." They said that Hulan Jack asked no bid for Sidney Ungar. his literary tal- ley, president. Mr. Ungar took the stand and said that Jack "opened many The freshmen physics majors ents. These re- The board assists Fordham's doors" to help him sponsor a Title I slum clearance proj- ports may soon also siiiu welt. administrators in long-range ect and to get higher rent lor a. city occupied office build- replace the War and peace: Our ROTC planning, problem evaluation, and Boost- units have been engaged in in- ing he owned. fr Boosts" or terservice football. The junior the promotion of public support. "The Curved birdmen arc Hying high with Edward L. Steiniger, president of Sidney J. Ungar rested from his appearance at the Horn." several recent victories. , . . Vven Sinclair Oil Company, is us Huian Jack trial by showing up on the floor oi the Demo- Sue Ander- though a lew squares showed up, chairman. cratic National Convention. He was a guest of the National the ULI Beatnik Ball was a howl- son became Committee. Everyone said they were surprised to see Ungar locked out of ing success, while the Military Chairman of the board and her apartment Ball promises the flavor of a chief executive officer of the tex- play any part in the convention. They thought he had taken this week, bill grand Prussian display. , . , Our tile firm M. Lowenstein & Sons, a rest from politics. sharpshooters are sponsoring tlieiv Inc., and its 15 affiliated manu- gallant Brent Nerves were taut in the city offices during the Jack trial. Played a cat annual Turkey Shoot,—5 shots lor facturing companies, Mr. Lowen- burglar with a two bits. stein is vice-president of the Fed- Ungar testified that before the trial he advised Hulan Jeck, eration of Jewish Philanthropies match at 2 i. The gentleman on the opposite "Why don't you get in touch with Carmine?" Then the greasy a.m. and saved of New York and honorary chair- page has been espied at Fort Tot- man of the Joint Defense Appeal. political pot was almost ready to boil over. Now it's sizzling the day. ten with our lone lost Audi Moore. again with the new Hulan Jack trial. This time City Hail By Dec. 5, there shall have been The Monthly was well worth Honorary vice chairman of both may be scalded. another concert entitled "Jazz at waiting for, but we cannot under- the United Jewish Appeal and Rose Hill." stand how Hilberg- of the Fiery the Anti Defamation League of Ray McGoo has been taking ex- Locks found time to write be- B'nai B'rith, he is also a mem- cellent care of his Pordham Club tween Ecrimages. ber of the boards of Hillside and brother Alphonse. Qodo—McGoo's We are elated to note that Ron St. Vincent's hospitals.

Noiv you, the college student, can open your own charge account...and you'ii find that your back-to-school clothing budget goes much further hew?. We've Tried captured the campus spirit, interpreted Regular It in terms of apparel and accessories Filter uttuneu to your needs and your wishes. irieu The stress i« on comfort '.'.?.£ c.cmctr.£3i, Cigarettes? combined in natural shoulders, soft tni- Menthol ioring and a siim, trim look. Cigarettes? NOW! Come Up./. All The Way Up to the MENTHOL MAGIC /All Wool Suits $59.95 ?!p Costs, Inptd f:br!c..$SS.85 . Imported Sharkskin Sults..$69.95 Plaid lined Raincoats $19.85 ; oi h> \ Saxony Sport Coats $44.95 Button DownOxfordSnlrts.j .4jS5.: X imported Flannel Slacks..$16.95 Shawl Cardigan Sweaters...ii5.95 When your taste tells you NOW AVAILABLE FOR THE COLLEGE STVDENT... it's time for a change, VOL! FEEL A CHARQB ACCOUNTS AND I MQNVHOliEDITPLANSI remember: Only Kool— NEW SMOOTHNESS no regular filter cigarette, DEEP IN YOUR THROAT! n° oilier menthol cigarette— gives you real Menthol Magic!

M/tNHATMN: Seventh Ave. corner 36th St. • 1482fl'way • 33 West^rd^trtet ,/ IROOKtYNi 1213 E. New YoikAve.-H05KingS'Highway / FORDHAM: East 187th Street (oil Grand Concourse) / THE MARK OF QUALITY IN TOUACCO PRODUCTS ©"40, tROWN & WlttlAMSON TOBACCO CORPORATION , OUEEHS: 9S-44 Queens Blvd. • NIW JERSEY: 869 Broad St., Newark / Thursday, Novmber 17, I960 •Page 6 The RAM Mimes, MummersUniversity's Enrollment Army and A. F. ROTC h Present lew' The Mimes and Mummers will Reaches All-Time High Stage 17th Annual Ball present their version of Shakes- peare's "King Leal" early next Fordham's enrollment hit an School of Pharmacy has n Fordham's 17th Annual Military Ball, sponsored by the month in Collins Auditorium. all-time High this year with 9,- more freshmen than last yt;u joint-committee of Army and Air Force ROTU units, will be There will be three evening per- 060 men and women registering lield Saturday, Nov. 19, in the gym, The affair will begin formances Dec. 8, fl, and 10 at in the various schools of the Uni- The Alumni Federation an- 8:30 and a matinee performance versity. nounced that 8.0 per cent of the at 9 p.m., and bids are $5.00. Sunday, Dec. 11 at 2:30. freshmen entering were children The only social event sponsor- urchase of regular army insignia Total registration, including of graduates. Five sons of Ford- ed by the military annually, it John Pero will play Lear. He is For the senior cadets upon their assisted by Pat Brennan, Dick the School of General Studies' ham professors have enrolled will be highlighted by the crown- graduation. Barnes, Bob Shortlno, Phil Le non-accredited courses, is 10,246. here, and the sons of English ing of the Queen of the Military In addition to the cadets, sev- Strange, Bill Arrlgon, John Gar- Of these, 3,359 are wpmen. En- professor Gabriel M. Liegey. are •Ball. Contestants for the queen 'ral Fordham ROTC instructors barino and Joe Paone. Sev- tering full-time freshmen in the among the six sets of twins en- contest were entered by then- will be in attendance, including eral girls are being recruited from various schools and colleges to- rolled. cadet escorts. Group commanders Col. James E. Skelly, Army prof- nearby colleges to play Lear's tal 1,253. •(jsi-.i*: daughters. There are students from 50 na- of both tlie Army and Air Fnrce essor of military science and tac- The College shows an enroll- tions studying here including the ment of 1,838 and has attracted -will be judges. tics, and Lt. Col. Paul J. Cunnif, Fr. John Leonard, moderator, first AUricari student to enroll professor of air science. ' 597 freshmen. Tills was the larg- and director Vaughn Deering hope at Fordham, and the son of Nica- Music will be provided by Dana that the present offering may est freshmen class in ten years. Members of the Fordham ad- ragua's permanent ambassador to Walters and his orchestra. Ac- ministration have also been in- equal the presentation of Menan- The Business School duplicated cording to ticket chairman Robert ited. der's "Curmudgeon" last May. its attendance of 1959, and the the U.N. Clementc of the Army, a turnout iOf over 500 couples is expected. TThe proceeds will go toward the \XTl%n4- nt\ oixtwic n«f r>nr\3 You don't need a little cap with a belt in the back, or Jjebate Team T"lldl. IlU ol/Ulla Ldl UitU• , . i_. ~~,— , . . . . • , ' r r knowledge of some esoteric automotive jargon to enjoy To Compete a Corvette. All you need is a desire to own a car that is designed for yeur use personally. This is no station wagon, no family sedan, this is your car and nobody else's. It is the ultiniaie development ei a £r.c car iiiai In Rochester has rknown five years of unparalleled success in the maelstrom of "sports car tsmrpetrtjon, and -yet it can be • Affirmative debaters Don Quin- tailored to your personal tastes—even if you don't know a tappet from a teapot. lan and Phil Tobin and negative Push-button door handles, inside door locks and a side-view mirror are some of the Corvette con- •speakers Bob Goodwin and John iFarrauto wfil represent the Coun- veniences you don't get on most other sports cars. You also have a wide choice of power teams—ranging cil of Debate teday'at the Uni- from the standard 230-horsepower engine (which can be matched with Powerglide* to delight the boulc- versity of Rochester, The Ford- vardier) to the swashbuckling Fuel Injection* V8 with four-speed close-ratio transmission.* Talk it over tham team will defend the second place trophy it won at the Ro- with your dealer. Whatever version you decide on, you're in for the greatest adventure of your driving career! chester Invitational Debate Tour- nament last year. ; '61 CORVETTE BY CHEVROLET The Council of Debate has been reinforced with four freshman and several sophomores and Ju- niors, developed under a training nvr.rjr-.in conducted by coach Mi- chael Lanzerone and president John Fan'auto. . i Turnout Encouraging Farrauto feels that the team acquired "an unexpected depth" which will make it capable of •fielding two full squads on any given weekend. He says that "a concentration on organization and analysis coupled with an exceed- ingly strong affirmative ap- proach" encouraged excellent Fordliam turnout at tournaments the past two weeks. Last week the team took second place honors at St. Joseph's Col- lege in Philadelphia. Jim English and Ray Farrelley on the affirm- ative stand, and Phil Tobin and John Echan on the negative, wound up with a 9-1 record in the tournament. Behan was selected as the best speaker while Phil Tobin, a freshman, ranked seventh in the list of outstanding debaters. The team defeated Navy l Lehigh, and Boston University and placed ahead of Dartmouth y !Af'T^\l and Georgetown. Affirmative Victory Earlier, Pordham's debating team competed in a tournament at Howard University in Wash- ington, D. C. The affirmatives with a 5-0 score won in their sec- tion, John Farrauto won a sec- ond place trophy while frosh Don Quinlan copped a third place prize. Bob Goodwin and Jim Eng- lish finished among the top six negative speakers. Among the col- leges competing in the tourna- •Oplioml il ti'lri coil ment were Pittsburgh University, Richmond, John Hopkins, and Kent University of Ohio. See the new Corvette, Chevrolet cars and Chevy Corvairs at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer's IThursday, November 17, 1960 Page 7 Ixistential Plays of Qenet, Sartre Poor Response Delanyj JTo Be Staged by College Junior '61 Maroon Progress By JAMES PANNI'XL j Progress on this year's edition still be focused upon, however, of The Maroon has been stifled so The hand of Joseph Krenusz will .transform the stage of I far due to the poor response of The editor lias hopes that the {eating Little Theater into a world of bizzaie lights, con- activity heads to letters of in-"annual" approach will help boost sales in the sophomore and jun- iemned souls, and stark scenery—the world of existentialism, quiry concerning their organiza- ior years. jrenusz, a junior in the college, will direct two one-act plays tions, editor-in-chief John Terino said recently. The cost of the Maroon will be if the avant-garde Jean Genet and Jean-Paul Sartre on Dec. Of 50 inquiries sent, the publi- $10 for freshmen, sophomores and 3,4, for the Mimes and Mummers. cation has had only ten replies. juniors and $12 for seniors. Those Krenusz, 25, is a small, dynamic '"" ~ These replies are necessary to The who pay 525 can have their names engraved in gold on the cover of ,.,... siaious curse of enduring an lm- Maroon staff to supply informa- tion need for drawing up a pho- the book. „„ who ventured into thien dramHuna- mutable hate for each other Saj, tography schedule, Terino indi- gry•hlle. Througat medicah lhi schoos amateul in rHun ex- tre's hell is without a God—a hell cated. of other people, that he implies Grad Exams lerience there, he was charmed exists in life too. He said that The '61 Maroon's i the new French school of Mau- The cast for "No Exit" includes format "will be a departure from Examinations for admission to types employed in the past." It graduate schools will be adminis- ,ac and Sartre. Their Influence College sophomore Don Boyle, tered to seniors beginning Nov. Madison, and Pharmacy freshmen will be an annual rather than a led him to choose Genet's yearbook, containing a pictorial 19, and fellowship programs are Wth Watch" and Sarte's "No Vita. Bivona and Susan Wallace. summary of the events of all four still open to application, according Krenusz, a history major in the years, he added. Senior year will to the Dean's of fire. xit" for his first try at direction College, plans to do graduate nee coming to the United States work. He thinks he would prefer |nur years ago. to be a playwright after his educa- tion is completed. Next month's Joe Krenusz Method Direction production will be performed He hopes a Krenusz "stamp" arwithoue requiret charged and, hmaey said be . obtaineTicketds office or in the office of Pc. John ill be on the performance and In the Campus Center director's Leonard, Keating Hall. reduction on opening night. He ipkincd ebulliently, "Qenet and WHEN! SHOWED UP arti-e are nihilists! They write Take me ith pessimism and overriding egation. My direction will con- fute to the fantasy-like setting to your A SCHAEFER SiX-PAK. ar use of sv bare stage and special |ehting effects." Esterbrook He canvassed Fordham five eeks ago for "veal" talent and dealer! INSTEAD OFAN ime up with a troupe of actors nd actresses from the College nd the School of Pharmacy. lie ickly begun rehearsals and set ENGAGEMENT RiNG, instilling his cast with the Stanislavsky-method," named fter a Russian who believed in Jiving" and "getting involved" in MYGIRLTriREWMEOUT... role. The so-called "method" stor is an offshoot of this meth-

Off-Beat Themes [Genet, who is-represented on tl-Bioadway with "The Bal- j»iy." Places the action of "Death patch" in a prison vi\th three s, one of whom is to be fiecuted. In one sequence an enactment of the prisoners' peams tums the actors into somnambulists. The climax i the murder of one of the prison- resulting from' the perverted pro-worship of the criminals for p condemned protagonist. "Death Watch" will be played .minors prank McGrath, Eu- '- Miller, and Tony Madison, neshman Ron Mele, all of the ;ge. Attention earthlings I The word is getting around! Eslerbrook Fountain Pens are out of this, world! [Sartre's "No Exit" was well re- when it appeared on With 32 custom-fitted pen points there's an Ester- roathvay. It opens in a fire-loss brook to fit any writing personality—staT-stiuck or D r torture-lpss h !i " hc"~ *'i^ earth-bound. * »ur characters suffer"'the in- The Esterbrook Classic is only $2.95 and great for class notes. It starts to write as soon as you do. |<>P Judo Expert .'. . with that amazing new miracle discovery—ink! Feels just right in the hand, too-not fat, not thin, • Worms AUSA' looks good, too! Colors? There's a veritable rain- bow to choose from. Pick your favorite of"six col- [n Self Defense ors. Why not today? No space ship needed. Just zero in on your Esterbrook dealer. s dirtiest street fiehlpr." Bd- tf- tV* FordhtMu chapters: Association of United States f"1Ies yesterday. ejson- spoke on the art of self ns • » Mid hnnri t2 hand coi.i-

* small andpwicclu , looklnB '. (hos only 5'G") Nelson's • T.M. 1'iic iMei'ltruuli l**n Ci • «s arc registered with New State as lethal weapons. fOT CHOICE OP 33-UNt IS uiJSTOM-FITTED FOR YOUI ir'anTi1 M theSecon d Wol'Icl . ,p , Marine judo instructor t J**™- Nelson lists among wont achievements the cap- The F. & Nl. SCHAEFER BREWING CO,, NEW YORK and-ALBANY, N^.V.' • - Imls'ri,; I flrst Japanese prin- |clln"l during World War II. Page 8 THE FORDHAM RAM Thursday, Novmber 17,

Songs5 Dances Brighten'Soph Pledges Climb GreasedPoles, Endure Delta Rho Mud Bain Trial Russian Uiib Program M Tlie Russian Club under tlieis being presented in conjunction direction of Pr. William McBrenr- with the Interracial Council. ty, moderator, will present a pro- The officers of the Russian l srram 01 Rn.^ian sonp.s and dances i and a play Dee. 10 in the Campus Club for this year are: Ray Mc- Center. Tlie program, which is en- Govern, president; Joe Kollar tirely in Russian, is being pre- vice-president; and Ted Vittona sented by approximately 30 Rus- secretary. sian majors in the club. The Russian Club will also pro- win a full-length movie, entitled Library Annex "Hudsi.i" Dec. 3 at 11 a.m. in According to Mr. Joseph T. Larkin Hall. The film deals with Hart, University Librarian, the the people, customs and tradition tentative date for the occupancy rrm^ of Russia. " , of the new library annex ha: Also planned for the near fu- been set for after tile Christina: ture is a slide-lecture on Russia holidays. given by George Muri'ay, a Col- Work on the construction of lege alumnus, #ho spent last sum- stacks in the Keating annex wi,'l mer in Soviet Russia. The lecture i begin within the next few weeks

Ami thru the i.uns e line . . i-ast Kmiii.u man} ,t n.u>lrs« Delia Dho pledge Miffi'ieil tin natural wi.ith of pledsem.islei Mike Ljnth and .issoriatrs. What sinMri machinations boil up in thl minds of these uppefclassmen, seemingly bent upon the extinction of pledges and sundry otlul fauna? Pledges are anxiously awaiting the coming- of "Hell Night" tomorrow evening. This eve og reckoning will climax Ihe fourth in an annual series of oi£uiiucil attempts at the apex of cainpuf mayhem—a fraternity initiation. The traditional shaving of the Brownson statue and the ccrrinonij ous tug-of-war played a major role in the calculated oppression of the future Delta Bhoman. Alumni Plan Fordham's Political Groups BUTSHE Waldorf Fete Active in Senate Campaign Mr. Myles Gnnnon, director of The Republican and Democratic Clubs of Fordham disi the Alumni Federation, announced played their political colors in the recent campaign for th| KEPT7HE that the Federation's 107th An- 29th Senatorial District Seat in the East Bronx. nual Dinner will be held in the Under the direction of presi-^ Grand Ballroom of the Hotel Wal- dent Peter Byrne and vice-presi- The Democratic Club nwi!c| dorf Astoria Thursday, Feb. 2. cards to each Fordham senior vJ dent William Kohler, members of His Eminence Francis Cardinal siding in New York State ursii'J SCHAEFER! Cardinal Spellman tC-'ll), will the Republican Club worked for him to vote. They turned tlic-l be honored on the occasion of his the campaigns of Charles Bailey attentions to the 29th Sen;:tori| Golden Juhilep. Robert Moccc, ~r. a"id John Zenir. Bailev, nf j District, concentrating their elj honorary Fordham alumnus and 8th Assembly District, was seek- • director of the New York World's ing a position in the Albany State | fort* s on getting Mr. Joseph Marl Fair of 1964-fi"5, will be the prin- House. Zenir. of the 29th Sen- |ine dccted to the legislative bod! cipal speaker. atorial District, was in quest of President Tom Palumbo, vies The officers and directors of a seat in the Senate.. | president John Rausch, treasure the Alumni federation anticipate The chief activity of the club j Dick Carraher, and Denny Ri> a record-making turnout of dis- members was door to door cam- | berts, Joseph Mezzacappa au tinguished educational and civic, paigmng. They also distributed ! Brendin Miirrjhv -M ibn.it "> leaders as well ns several members leaflets to popularize their can-1 Muiphy set about ... of the American College of Cardi- didates, and they operated a | task °' ri"Si"B doorbells, 1 nals. A large representation of the sound truck to herald the Repub- residents to back the Democra -! Federation's 13,500 members is al- lican merits throughout the candidates. The fruit of their M so expected. Bronx. ors was Mr. Marine's victory. Membeis oi botii ciubs ai.^o a>j HOW DO THE GIRLS RATE YOU SOCIALLY? sumed as a personal resiJO'.'. ity tlie chore of swaying the sym- pathies of fellow students to tlici| respective causes. If they think you'te smooth \fy\j sophisticated daie- bait,v "^chances are you've taken your New York City dates ^,--,7 to Tavern-on-the-Green :tSSty for a • delightful evening of dining c52> and dancing.sy fij • Girls go for the romantic C\j Central Park setting ami ihe StfMS&il^i glamour of the Rose Room.' 1 :4 No cover charge. Free parking©2-<»J s0| jf you're holidating in New York, eallfTR 3-32000^'Cef Lionel Hampton and his "j L piece jazz band will be feat for reservations 'X at: in "Jaz; .at Rose Hill" Sur n«> 4 at 3 p.m. in the '= nnsiuni. Tickets, which iw!l!*8 admission to the social which W'| lows, are $2.00. GIGANTIC XMAS HOLIDAY MIAMI BEACH BARci Don't you get thrown for The ja. i. concert is beim: sP°n a loss. Insist on the beer ri'il by i he College Sttidnu Go« nutem to help nnaiict- '" that gives you all the ie> '• \hiei ie;i n Age," iecturo sfi' pleasure of the first beer (-^ mcfn e j-chaimicn Georee J""" 11 1 everybeerthrough. Make VI and Al Pre?scr \\O\K a co.'"' ' It Schaefer'all around! 1 > , ,,f v,-,i (1 I make it successful. The co-chairmen said IIif'I | »re banking on the lull .-UPP0"! ; liv c j of all the schools of the l ' i '| The F. & M. SCHAEFER BREWING CO., NEW YORK and ALBANY. N. Y. j sity as well as an appeal to ?'j HlMW« N W7W M IN 9-8300 • roundinir IMITJ schools to r^' I 'hursday, November 17, 1960 The RAM Page 9

jaiiona! Leaders Due Philosophy Deptv Campus Concert Reviewed: or Peace Discussion University Press Jazz Ensemble Is Sixty leading spokesmen in the fields of science, inter- tional politics, economics and law will meet on campus Plan Publication 'turday for a one-day conference on "United States Initia- Fordham University Press Met With Fervor ls to Advance International Peace." will publish the "Interna- Sponsored by Fordham University and the Carnegie En- tional Philosophical Quarter- Hvment for International Peace, the conference has been ly," edited by the department ganizcd into four round-table discussions on international of philosophy of Fordham economic cooperation, arms' University and faculty mem station, and the impact of at the recent Geneva Arms Con- bers of Berchmans Philosoph- ienee and technology on foreign ference will be one of the leaders icum, Heveree-Louvain, Bel- licy. Tin' conference is part of of the arms limitation panel. gium beginning Jan. 1. c Endowment's fiftieth anni- The one-day conference is part Each issue will consist of aiti- rsary observance centering on of the endowment's endeavor cles from different parts of the ? theme: "Peace With Freedom stimulate consideration of con- world, an analytic survey of le- d Justice." structive initiatives which the cent literature and a book reuew nen of the discussion United- States can take toward section. Plans are under way oups are Dr. Milton Katz, di- peace. In a joint statement, Fr. for inclusion of works by Asian :tor, international legal studies, Laurence J. McGinley, president authors. irrard Law School; Paul G. of Fordham, and Carnegie En- Biinian, managing director oi uowment president Joseph Philosophers f t o m Holland je United Nations Special Fund; Johnson, expressed the hope "that West Germany, France, Australia i. William T. R. Fox, director, Ufe exceptional knowledge and and the United States have wi it- Ltitute of War and Peace Stu- experience of the group gathered ten articles in the first issue. Culumbia University; and at the University will make a Cornelia de Vogel, presently Hugh Odishaw, executive di- Significant contribution to this teaching at the Royal University Jctor for this country's participa- purpose." at Utrecht, Holland and one of fcn in the International Geo- the world's leading woman philos- on locks the Cimpu<. »••• *t* 1-1 'lL it.lll.11 pj'sicn! Year. ophers, writes on "What Philoso- totaled only 248 Play Postponed ophy Meant to the Greeks." Jean [Members ot the various panels By FRANK SEGERS first class orchestra of his own. fchitlc among others: Gray don Fr. John R. Ryder of the Rus- Trouillard, professor at the Insti- tut Catholique in Paris, and rec- The Maynard Ferguson The band is a young one (aver- Jton, assistant secretary of the sian Center has announced the band came to Fordham last age age about 29), and it features asury; Congressman Walter postponement of his play "Men of ognized authority on neo-Platon- ism, discusses "The Logic of At- Friday and roared. It was as compositions of members. "Hey Judd of Minnesota; Arthur H. Contradiction," originally plan- simple as that. Heads .started There," for example, was arrang- an. former .special TT.R. Ain- ned to be staged on Nov. 18, 19, tribution of Plotlnus." Dietrich von Hildebrand, professor emeri- nodding and feet tapping as ed by tenor saxophonist Willie ssador to the Republic of Ko- and 20. The play will now be pre- the audience was treated to a Maiden and "B J.'s Back in Town" i; Thomas K. Pinletter, form- sented on Feb. 6, 7 and 8. tus of Fordham, writes on "The Modes of Participating in Value," concert of potent modern jazz. was composed by the proficient Air Force secretary; and Ro- The play describes the experi- trombonist , rt K. Woetzch, professor of ences of an underground mission- Other contributors are Hans- The band was "on" and the audience knew it. Cheers greeted blic law and government. Fre- ary priest in a communist-con- Uouard Hengstenberg, professor Mr. Ferguson began his career rick Eaton, U.S. representative trolled country. at the University of Bonn, Ger- the group as it kicked off ttie in his native Canada as a side- concert with an up-tempo version man in various dance ensembles many; Maxwell Charlesworth, 1 University of Melbourne, Austral- of "Welkin ," Lew Carpenter's including the Claude Thorghill :ampus ia; and Fr. Thomas Berry, C.P., vehicle. The audience also dis- band. He was the feature lecturer in Asian history and covered that Maynard Ferguson, man with for a iharacter: bought at the Asian Institutes of the general factotum of modern number of years. It was here that Seton Hall and St. John's Uni- brassmen, was leading an or- his audience saw his dazzling 'ersities. chestra with the power of a group technique. After leaving the Ken- twice its size, The band consists ton ovchostrfi he worked with oi only thirteen pieces and it various studio groups in Holly- cal Quarterly' will subsidize as magically combines volume witli wood, before his newly formed many Asian subscriptions as its intricate musical cohesion. It rip- band made its debut in Birdland, resources allow," said the review's ped through such blues tunes as the New York jazz nitery. American editor, Fr. W. Norri "B. J.'s Back in Town" and Clarke, for "it is futile to talk "Frame for the Blues" and yet The band last Friday ripped about a dialogue between East and maintained a high degree oi del- and swung its way through tune West unless readers in the Orient icacy when treating .such ballads after tune with unfailing preci- have easy access to Western pub- ns "Hey There." sion and good humor. At one lications." point, the pianist palmed off an The technically efficient group amazingly good imitation of ErroH overcame the disadvantage of Garner. Other key soloists in- playins in a cavernous gymnasi- cluded Slide Hampton, trombon- um with the absence of key side- ist, tenor saxophonists Joe Far- men and won the attention of rell and and trum- the audience with tasteful treat- No need to be. really. If thoughts peter Red Keefer. But the man ments of "Got the Spirit" and of the hour was, undoubtedly, Mr. of life insurance planning bring "Ola Man River." a cold chill to your bones, you GRADUATE PROGRAM Ferguson himself. His technique It was apparent that the group is dazzling (especially on "Frame aren't thinking in the right — leading to "*** had been together for some time. direction. of the Blues'), and his solo con- In fact, it had. struction is logical and rhythmic. Starting an adequate life insur- iriASTfiti w &UIIM,B Maynard Ferguson, trmnpetev- ance program now, while you'ra trombonist, has led the band for The sponsor of the campus Con- still at college, gives you a head- DEGREEwith specialization about four years. The young ex- cert was the Maroon Key Society. start on the future. Provident Kenton sideman had always It was part of their fall weekend. Mutual ofters a variety of plans m PHARMACY .uliviturb. with guaranteed savings and pro- tection features; only through ADMINISTRATION life insurance can you buy such LOOKING FOR ni A GOOD TYPISST? We'd like to tell you more about February and September HO nrivrrs under '!.->, avoid the Assigned Theses, Term Papers P these flexible plans which are Course is designed to prepare Itlsk Plan. Our company is now according to format He finds that «'•• * Brooklyn, N.V. Intercollegiate Jazz Festival. Georgetown U.. Wu&liinuiun, D.C Page 10 The RAM Thursday, Novmber 17, Basketball Capt. Coaimon Explodes Quietly on Court' Gy FAT BURKE but how controversial :;<> js \ John Coaimon is a tough matters. So the press release! read, "This is the year John man to interview. He's big mon should come into and like many guys his size, own . . ." But press releases < the biggest statement he read the record. makes runs about four syl- Last year, Coaimon was lables. An interviewer has to tenced to play center, h pull the answers out of John, built, but he stands six-fou today a six-four pivot m and to pull, anything away from small, even for high school guy who stands six foot four All season long John spoiltei and weighs two hundred pounds opponents two or more hichel is quite a job. height. And what did he tlo?l n\ TIM JH'N l?'i.i!H".s fullbailL, Von Woods, skills left end for It's not that John is uncooper- merely was the second l\\%\ -1'oit O.HW in All-St.ir gitmr SatuitLi}. ative. He's simply one of those scorer on the team wiih mid-westerner,1; who happens to point per" game &veras;i\ fit in the pattern that easterners seven-tenths of a point b' commonly place them. He's friend- Pat O'Donnel!. the top m.iii. College Stars Win ly, but quiet. Even the statistics don't Hl| Ever since his arrival at Rose Coacli ar.d Cuiiiaiii "'hole story. Coalman was ai Hill, people have been watting for best against the toughest a\>i John to explode. They keep say- overlook their accomplishments ents. Whonuvirr he was On Last Second TD ing, "Perhaps this will be the and berade them for non-produc- in the scoring column, the Ri By TOM LAMAINE year ..." or, "Maybe now, he'll tion. To these enthusiasts, it's usually won; when he was dr burst loose." Even this year, fans not how effective a ball player i;:, the team went down with hin RAM Sports Editor will be looking for some sort of It seemed as if the game would go on all night without an explosion. a score when, with lli seconds left in the overtime, Bob I'eti- gmv snared a pass deep in the end zone to give the College These fans had best not hold a 6-0 win over the Business-Pharmacy in the senior-junior their breath. They will see no ex- Maroon Key All-Star game Saturday afternoon at Edwards plosion. John Coaimon is- not an explosive ball player. He is a big, Parade. powerful, serious competitor. But After almost two hours of grueling grid grinds, the regula- most of all, he's quiet, and ex- tion piay ended in a scoreless tie which brought on the ten plosions are not quiet. minufe 'sudden death' period. Neither team could get inside its opponent's 15 yard line All quiet ball players are, at until late in both periods. some time or another, doomed to Cassidy at the 20 as the half the same fate. Fans generally Late in the second half, an ended. interference penalty on a pass from Tom Corcoran to Mike John Koestner, who took over • Burke gave the Bus.-Pharms. as College quarterback in the sec- Dear Student — employed? a first down on the College ond half, had a long pass inter- As a progressive national or- cepted on th» first play in the ganization we have openings —the antithesis KoDoz® could save your lif 12. That threat ended two for enterprising men who de- plays later when Mike Bevi- overtime. This gave the Bus.- of perspicacity. Right? Worth Knowing? Right! Pharms. a first and ten on their sire high income, vast experi- locqua intercepted a Corcoran ence, short hours Many men Too often, driving a car is like reading a textbook. It can mate vo«| aerial on his own live and the awn 35. Two short plays moved have spent their entire college the ball to mid field. Then Tom drowsy no matter how much sleep you get. But safe NoDoz fi^li College iiiiuicuioii:2j ijunicd away. cures! v.'iil. iii. Oiii part-time kind of "hypnosis." Safe NoDoz alerts )ou lvith , Near the end of the first stanza, AudeiiDrooke, wno nadn't been in- men averase In Excess of $100 Corcoran, wiio was passing like volved in a play all day, hauled weekly. Very interesting, digni- caffeine—the same refreshing stimulant in ^C \ in Corcoran's pass and streaked to fied work, is yours for the ask- coffee and tea. Yet non-habit-fonning Khrushchev says lie makes rock- ing. Call OW 9-9378 for ap- ets, connected with his fullback, the College SO yard line. NoDoz is faster, handier, more reliultle. pointment, Monday through So to keep perspicacious while you drive, Don Woods, who had clear sail- Two more pisses got Coreoran's Friday, or write Mr. Peter J, ing until he tripped and fell on forces inside the twenty, but they Ilaff, — 137 South 5th A\e., study, and work—keep NoDoz Uandy. the College 33. Sal DeBosa then lost the hall bit iioiviis. Mount Veruon, N.Y. The^ slay awake lablol —available everywhere. Anolhor lina product of Grove tabor3luiefc| picked-off a Corcoran throw on With two minutes loft in the his own 23 and raced to mid field overtime, Koestner passed to with two minutes remaining in stellar Sal DeRosa, who made .the half. sensational calch as ho was sand- wiched between two defenders On the first play of the ensu- down on the 10 yard stripe. The ing scries, Jay Fitzgerald threw play covered 50 yards and cost a longf pass that was broken up Sal some re-injurcd ribs. A pass at the Bus.-Pliarm. 20 by Joe Nic- interception at the Uiire unded astro. Fitz then tried a reverse that threat. and lo'it 12. Dcllosa (rot ten on a At the 16 second mark, Koest- double reverse and then Joe Phcl- ner on third down faded to his an's 20 yard jaunt was nullified own 30 and heaved the pigskin all by a penally. the way to the end zone. That's On last down Bob Cavanaugh when Pettigrew put it and the connected witn left end Mark the game away ... at last. Johnson's 27 Y Avg. Tops Ram Marksmen All is quiet on the Pordham nil. •-•?• rifle team front. The riflers The old story of team effort haven't shot a match, since could be no iqore in evidence than October 28 and their next en- with thio Maroon Tillers. It seems counter isn't until "December that whenever the - stars don't 2. Ail M/Sgt. Lillie's forces shine, somebody up else, does. hope is that this spasmodic When Jim Conroy, team co-caB- schedule doesn't cool off their un- tuin, failed to place among the defeated guns. top five scorers against Manhat- tan, seventh leading scorer Brian The Ramrods go into December Fitzpatrick rang up a sparkling With four victory notches in their 278 score. Cor.roy and John Ral- M rifie butts in two triangular ben didn't toe the mark against meets. In their first encounter Queens and Stephens but the team the Rams stopped Queens and won anyway. i \v^ /? Stephens and then defeated Man- hattan and Hofstra. This mark- One of the main reasons for ed the first time that the Ram- the team's success is Coach Lil- Iel; with the division leaders meeting to decide their league In Tourney Race For College Title lcs. In a see-saw battle, that In the length of yesterday's will meet Business senior B, the In the "A" division, the defending champion Bams are wasn't decided until the last College playoff game between Business School champion, next tifdulcd to trade blocks with the undefeated Mahdrofs of race, Fordham's freshman Senior F and Senior B is week. sailing team just missed sec- any indication of Friday's Also next week, Junior C, the House. The Bams defeated third-place Alphas, 12-0, in ond place by a point in the elr last contest, while the Mahdrofs remained idle. Tom championship tussle between Business School runner-up, will Middle Atlantic Intercolleg- Junior B and Junior H, the pair otf with the college runner- denbrook, who reeled off a fit- * iate Sailing Association Fresh- yard dash after taking a short contestants may be at it until aft- up, which is to be determined to- man Championships at Kings er Thanksgiving. morrow. Tlie University champ- is. and quarterback Tony Ar- Ram Boivlers Point last Sunday. nio, who scooted 65 yards to It took two sudden-death over- ion should be determined by next • end zone on the last play of The Rams totaled 30 points be- times, and ar, least three argu- ; game, acocuntcd for ail of Slay Even hind winner Kings Point's 42, and ments between the two teams and second place Princeton and Penn, the Intramural commissioners, be- flie "B" division winner will be who deadlocked with 31, in the fore Senior B was declared the •jded today when the mighty With 9-9 Logeight team field. winner. The gnme ended up in aii's Tram, which has ceded After sampling both victory and "We didn't have a chance a 0-0 deadlock, but since Senior if one touchdown to its op- defeat in the past two Sundays, against Kings Point in the calm B had penetrated deepest into icnls in tlie past three years, the Fordham Keglers now sport a air," said frosh captain Jim C'ol-enemy grounds it was declared the ne to grips with an upset-bent gan. "Without wind Kings Point's victor. House array. The underdog A- 9-9 record and hold third place in knowledge of the current in their F and B played twice prior lu a have shown surprising the Intercollegiate Bowling Con- home waters made the differ- this engagement. P won the first myth in their first season of ference. ence". contest. 6-0. while the spconel BY. Tiu-y wuu theh' last contest By the third race Kings Point The Hams rolled to a win over fray last Friday ended in a 12-12 la 7-0 count over E-House. had built an insurmountable lead. deadlock. jll (lie close oi the regular New York Institute of Technology But the battle for second place Junior H, thc other participant (son, the three top teams of but were sent to defeat at the was far from over, with three in the college championships to- 111 division will advance into thc hands oC Hunter College on the points separating Princeton, Foi'd- inon'ow, dovv'sied Junior B Mon- Jfrlea;'!!!1 playoffs to determine previous Sunday. ham and Penn at the end of the day, 8-6, to attain Its berth. Dick : Boarder League champion. A division race. In B division the McHugh of H trapped Denny fts one of the newest activities Fordham won all three games margin tightened even more us Murphy of B in his own end zone |campus, Boarder League Bowl- of the series against Tech: by the Rains tied Princeton with 23 for a safety early in the first moves into its sixth week, scores of 802-761, 856-847, ark points with Penn one back. quarter. This spelled the differ- i Mahdrofs arc perched atop 870-633. Ralph Greco had high In A division of the fourth and ence in the score. H and B both Soph Championship Action league standings with 13 game for the Rams with a 265 final race Colgan took a second had ended the season with 3-0 nts to the Fugitives' 11 and in the third round, followed by behind Penn, tying the Quakers slates. Wednesday, when the winner of ns' 10 elicits. Ed Adamec who placed high m and dropping the Tigers one back. The winner of tomorrow's Col- the Pharmacy champ-College imons the individual leaders the second round with a 201. Gre- Second place would be decided lege contest will face the Phar- champ scrape will meet the Bob Farley, high individual co also had high series for the in B division, but the Rams were macy champs, Senior A, next eventual victor of the Business '2231, Ken Speranza, high match with a 605 followed by not to have it. Bill Harrington week. Senior A became Pharmacy champ.—Pharmacy runnerup and ividual average (159) and high freshman Bob Latclla with 513 and Jim McArdle got off to a kingpins yesterday by downing College runnerup—Business run» «game series (535). The Fugi- pins. poor start, and never caught up. Freshmen B. B, the runner-up, nerup battles. s racked up the best three- 1 The Rams lost the series to series for a team, knock- Hunter as only four men showed down 2121 pins in an eve. up for the match. FIRST STRING. You can depend on that refreshing Five Has Veiseil. taste. Which is why awyer-Coach the campus crowd agrees- „ By FRANK REYSEN ^° Natter how many games this year's freshman cagers where there's life... csti, you can bet they won't drop too many arguments "'•«th a lawyer-coach. :'lc Hamlets' new chief advocate is Mike Keane, ball- there's Bud® uier extraordinaire," occasional scorer, and sparkplug of ™y Bach's Ram fives at the start of the last decade. 'lmss with him from the classrooms of the Fordham • scnool an acute sense of when to talk and when not to. caching philosophy is that a noncommital attitude re- I ! ^Uitmg iineup will keep his charges hustling I" : Ollt Ple-season drills. Keane therefore tactfully evades fouus ]cqiioits for even a tentative opening clay lineup. JH ei |to] " > vou can expect to catch the flavor of Keane's aiui lc . when his team becomes involved in any dis- -LLJUllt Ulle '"terpretation. In fact, enemy coaches and i eferees may have to resort to carrying pocket 1 rule books to all Fordham sanies to combat Before his affair with the law books, Mike gained a measure of prominence by winning three varsity letters as a regular Ram guard between 1949-52. The short (5'7"), stocky Hamlet coach recalled that "although I nevw broke any .scoring records playing behind such" prolific pointmakers as Fred ... ' " Danny Lyons, I did play several memorable games L 'I101' >'e«-." Mike's bluest thrill came in the N.Y.U. •ain T1952- '"That was my next to last game in Maroon 1 was |\7 lucky enough to .score tlie winning basket in ciL i eeker over a 8°otl Viok>( team," beamed Mike. He ninth 21~Point output against Yale earlier that season • "iner high,point in a career which Johnny Bach has '«' selfless and aggressive." > c'"Jr .mterspersed a two-year Manne hitch and some U1 952 '"g between his m'ndtintion from Fordham College A" llis entrancc into law .school in 1055. esavst 1Problem s £acin« l»m in his new undertaking, nat ; wl"' his main difficulty lies "in trying to mold five Ia • cliffP ° P y<-'d under different, high school coaches •tjoni, baslcetball philosophies into an effective unit unc1er nd tl " the Fordham pattern of attack. You've got ire nien wll° Vlay ocst; together, and sometimes i"arc 01 your rive be.st'performers," remarked Keane. link thc true testestt oi any freshman coach is whether ot hhen b oi any freshman coach 1 blen d his live beM cohesive •• AnAn, 1°']" - ballplayers into a ISaOFBEtBS • MWEUSER-BUSCH. IHC.. Sf.LOUIS . HEWAHK • LOSANGEUS • MIAMI. TAHPA this Lboo k. ,,quippe isd a Fordhaiii'; problem ;whic newesh yot coachu don'. t solve with a Page 12 THE FORDHAM RAM Thursday, Novmber 17, 19 Frosh Harriers Cop Second Soccerams Hope for Win In IC4A's; Varsity ^Eleventh On New Field Next Season By ROGtR HACKETT The Soccer team has always straight all-losing year. It seems that each succeeding year,, track coach Artie O'Connor can make a better wanted two things, a field and The future looks brightn announcement about his yearling squad. Last year at the annual Freshmen Banquet, he a win. They didn't get cither the Rams with the new field; lauded his team's spectacular fourth place finish in the IC4A cross country race at Van Cort- this year but next year it'll be different, they'll have a field. seven lettermen returning n landf Park. Now, at this year's banquet, O'Comor announced a SECOND place finish for, this season. The team's high sco year's bumper crop of Ramlet harriers in the IC4A's. The field will be a part of Sal Brizzaro, will be back In his elation, O'Connor later cited the 3-4 placing of Bill Slater and Joe McCovern the general expansion of ath- with assists leader, Ray Brcnn in Monday's race as an advance over last years 23rd place performance by Con O'Connor. letic facilities which is just get- "They have great potential . ting under way behind the Camp- Brizzaro scored five goals eil," remarked Coach O'Connor. was followed by Charlie Garcia in year, two of them In the 5-31 they will certainly help next year." 1 us Center. Plans call for a soc- —these are a lew of the phrases Ife explained that the varsity 14th place with 28:04, Niel O'Don- cer field to be constructed within to Columbia. Brenaii had fi O'Connor used to emphasize hi. would be "more seasoned" next ohue running in 10th place with the confines of an all-weather assists for the year. year, with the whole team return- point. He also was pleased with 28:26, Matt Diomede 21st in track. their times—16:01 for Slater and ing, and three or four freshmen The only serious loss will 10:02 for McGovern, not their flashcu added. 28:30, Bill Kenny 22nd in 28:31, In the past the team was forc- ed to play all its games on the through the graduation of goa fastest, but good for the recently He nlso pointed out that this Since the KMA's were the last John Koestner. Kocstncr re-ali^ned course. year's varsity hadn't done badly, meet of the season, O'Connor road and couldn't avail itself of In team score, Manhattan won considering their "greeness." Last looked to trie future. "We should the advantage of playing in elected MVP by his teammates the irosh race with 63 points to week, he pointed out, the Bams have a good indoor season," he friendly territory. Last year's MVP Jack Wcp the Ramlefs 82. Cornell, LaSalle, had placed 3rd in the Metropoli- stated. "With Ed Kohler, John Playing away the Rams drop- was also named to the NCAA Syracuse (which had beaten the tan Championships, behind Man- Murphy, and Bill Greene scoring ped their last two games of the American Soccer team. In freshmen earlier this season in a hattan and St. John's, but ahead in the fiold categories, a 'more season bowing to NYU and Seton of Koestner's one-man hero dual meet, and was the favorite of N.Y.U.. Seton Hall, and Iona. seasoned' varsity, and many dry Hall, 7-1 and 5-1. The losses throughout this season, he's in the IC4A's>, Massachusetts, and In this meet Donald O'Connor runs in December, we should be brought their season's record to prime candidate to follow W( Princeton rounded out the first came in 10th in 27:36 time. He pi-epared for a good show . . ." 0-7 completing their second pel to the "All" team. seven. Masati S. Mochaaka, of Cornell, a foreign student from Nairobi, Kenya, copped first place tor individual honors. In a meet in which some 141 freshmen entrants from 20 schools competed, five other Ramlets YOU MAY RECEIVE A LIFE-SIZED placed well up in the standings. Norb Sanders came in 25th, Steve Greene 31st, Gene Pabst 33rd (his best race this year), Dan Shed- rick 38th, and Jim Dahme 43rd. AUTOGRAPHED PORTRAIT OF The lC4A's were the rubber match of this season's clashes with the Manhattan freshmen. Earlier in the year, the Ramlets had edged the Little Jaspers by VMROOD-UNLESS YOU ACT NOW! one point in a dual meet, Last week, however, Manhattan turned the tables ou Fordham and top- Hurry! Rush out now and buy a pack of Luckies! Smoke ped the Rams by a point (35to3G) in the Metropolitan Champion- them quickly! Send the empty pack to Dr. Frood. If you ships. Slater and McGoveni fin- ished 1-2 with 13:52.8 and 15:53 times respectively. So the stage do it now—Frood guarantees not to send you this photo. was set for yesterday's "fixudge" rematch of the two, and Manhat- tan came out victorious. In the IC4A's extensive varsity run Fordham finished 11th in a field of 43 schools, two places ahead of last year's finish. Rob- ert Lowe of Brown, winner of last week's Heptagonal run, copped first place in the meet with- a 25:40.4 mark, 24 seconds better than his best previous showing. Penn State won team Honors. Donald O'Connor, placing 30th in a field of 177 finalists (270 had entered), clocked' in at 27:18. Charlie Garcia was the next Ram across the line at 27:58 to finish 57th. Neil O'Donohue was 77th in 28:18, Matt Diomede 28:23 for 82nd, Bill Kenny 88th at 28:29, Steve McGeady 103rd at 28:54, and Carmine DelGrosso, 107th, at 29:10. Last year, the Ram's front runner, Walter Cooper, also fin- ished 30th. The results of Fordahm's show ing in the IC4A's were "as expect-

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