The University-wide U.S. Postage Newspaper PAID Bronx, N.Y. Established 1918 Permit No. 7608 Non-Profit Org.

lot. 54—No. 17 Fordhnm University, Bronx, N.Y., 10458 ^H Friday, March 24, 1972 ococe, Buckley face run-off for president; iff executive posts undecided by first vote by John Holl necessary to achieve the 40 communications vice president, percent. Mike Cacace and John Buckley Doug Sterner and Mary Arm- will face off next week for the John Toffolon, running with strong will run off next week. presidency of United Student Care party, finished third with Sterner received 479 to Arm- Government, as will candidates 407 votes, ahead of Piece of the strong's 469. for every other executive post. Action's Carmine Mezzacappa Khalid Smith, who tallied 394 with 271, Andromeda party's Cacace, who headed the Party votes, and Bob Odabashian, who Calvin Seimer with 164, and Right Plus ticket, polled 475 votes to 432 received 305, finished third and party's Vincent Modica with 34. for Today party's Buckley. fourth, respectively. Justine Offer and Mary Anne Bill Wright, chairman of the Wright said the polls will be open Sullivan will run off for the post of elections committee, announced from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. for executive vice president. Offer yesterday that voting in the run- day students and from 5:30 to polled 547 while Sullivan received 9:30 p.m. for students in the off will be held Monday, Tuesday, 384 votes. School of General Studies in the and Wednesday. Bob Vernagallo finished third run-off starting Monday. In order to win an election, a with 339 tallies, followed by Rich candidate must gain over 40 Balloting will be in the Campus Limato with 278, Kevin Deary ICACACE: The sophomore percent of the total votes cast. Of lobby for Fordham with 185, and Howard Berger BUCKLEY: Polling 432 ballots, candidate from Party Plus led the 1783 ballots in the election for College and TMC students, the Today candidate faces {the other presidential contenders with 27. the presidency, 714 votes were Keating for General Studies Cacace in next week's run-off for fwith 475 votes. Mary Ellen Loughran, whose (Continued on page 3) the top USG post. 547 votes were the most cast for any candidate, will contest the academic vice president post Accents prison strife 'oters favor merger, with Joyce McCaffery, who received 432 votes. Tom DeJulio received 334 le/ecf college officers tallies, followed by Joan Cum- Berrigon talks Intown mings with 272 and John Konz The school of General Studies, by Greg Puchalski with 125. Rev. Daniel Berrigan reaf- donated $5 each to hear him, to Pharmacy, and. Bensalem also firmed his contention that support the Harrisburg Defence In a proposal added to the approved the merger. General For the post of finance vice prison justice will be the Committee with not just money 1 ballot just before voting began, Studies voted in'favor 61-29, president, Kevin Budds and Bob essential socio-political issue of but with more physical com- | the different schools within Ford- Pharmacy, 8-0, Bensalem, 2-0. Hinkley will run off, since Budds the '70's in his first public New mitments, such as attendance at | ham University, approved a "Although Bensalem and received 494 to Hinkley's 432 York appearance last night since the Holy Week demonstrations in petition to merge Thomas More Pharmacy are being phased votes. being paroled. the Pennsylvania town where his I College with Fordham College by out," explained Wright, "we felt Rich Nacchio, Augie Balaschio, The Jesuit, just released after brother Phillip and six others are | a final vote of 744-588. they should have a vote in the and Jay Allen all trailed, polling 18 months in Danbury Prison for on conspiracy trial. The voter breakdown in each proposal." 349, 267, and 189 votes, respec- burning draft flies in Catonsville, Declaring the white middle j school showed that only TMC Fordham College offices tively. Maryland, urged an overflow class no longer exempt from the opposed the proposal by a tally of In the Fordham College Joe Vallone, who polled 514 crowd at Fordham's Pope grips of injustice, Berrigan ! 154-128, according to United presidency race, Jim O'Mara votes, will contest the operations Auditorium to resist a system declared it essential to resist the Student Government elections won an overwhelming victory vice president spot with Al White, that is trying to force "official "bankrupt of spirit" and to | committee chairman Bill Wright. over Jack Barth. Ed Fagan, who who received 426. despair down our throats," those "forge connections" between hi the other schools, Fordham ran unopposed, becomes the Glenn Zemanek was third with who forbid poetry in Danbury, experiences such as full personal [College favored the resolution, secretary-treasurer of the school. 403, and Charles' Testagrossa and those who consider prisoners liberation and the existence of 377-269, while the College of For the college class of '73, finished behind him with 168 "dead-end prose." unliberating death of the children Business Administration ap- Frank Serbaroli edged out Joe tallies. Berrigan challenged the in the third world countries. proved it, 170-106. (Continued on page 3) In the closest race, that of audience, about 800 of whom had (Continued on page 3) Internship students gain professional experience

by Sue Maloney he occupies a small cubbyhole cut out of a and the smell of rubber cement—that we would only be able to get about five, but gives them away every time." we wound up with about 16 positions." Every Wednesday morning Joe Russo, a rather ordinary office on the 13th floor. The office belongs to Commonweal The internships last six hours a week for senior in college, leaves the Fordham To Russo, "It looks very much like any magazine, where Russo works in an in- one semester and count as a four-credit campus and climbs to the Third Avenue el, other office, an insurance office, for ternship program arranged by Sigma course for most students. They are where he begins a journey which will end example. The only things that are really Delta Chi. This semester the professional structured much like tutorials, with each at Madison Avenue and 37th Street. There, different are the galleys floating around journalism society joined the College of student under the guidance of a faculty Business Administration's accounting member at school and a professional department in offering some seniors a advisor at work. taste of working experience in their major The students must meet regularly with fields. their faculty advisors and submit samples Communications internships haunted of work to help the instructors determine Sigma Delta Chi for a long time before course grades. They also must submit they were attempted. Then last summer, periodical reports to Dr. John Phelan, Joe Russo, president of the organization, chairman of the communications decided that Sigma Delta Chi was doing department. nothing to put its members into contact Carrea is well acquainted with the with professional journalism. He people at ABC's Eyewitness News, where remembered the ghost of the idea, and by she secured an internship. The newsroom October a committee headed by Caress there is noisy and crowded with people Carrea, Thomas More College '72, formed who she described as "almost all eager to to initiate the program. help, especially if they know you're a "We went to communications faculty student." But Carrea tries not to spend too members and asked them to contact much time at the office. professionals they knew, who needed some "I do some research, but I go out with HUSSO: "Tin-galleys floaUngaro.md and the crew a lot," she explained MacNEILL: "A student from an in- help or might be willing to try the wnsnip understands far more the second the smell of rubber cement greet program," Carrea explained. "We thought semester." senior in his Commonweal office. GOING DOWN msmsmmmimmmmmmmmsmm Roundup New York by dark or day • James Kraeger of the placement office and TMC Associate Dean MlltIS IIOSSIM Jean Murphy will speak about teaching certification procedures, the During a March matinee bricks and paint were hurled in "Intolerance" and then "Or- Lincoln Center teaching programs and job opportunities in all fields of showing of "The Boys in the protest by local anti-Castro phans of the Storm." education Tuesday at 12:30 p.m. in the Campus Center ballroom Band," the Olympia Theatre on groups to their FESTIVAL OF Tomorrow's show has "The Students from all years interested in possible teaching careers are Broadway and 107th Street CUBAN FILMS which begins Birth of a Nation" and "Broken urged to attend. mysteriously became filled with today. The films were all made Blossoms" and Sunday is "In- • Jim Kitchell, the general manager of the NBC network, will discus smoke. Police and fire in- since the 1959 creation of the tolerance" and "Sally of the his experiences in China preparing media coverage of President vestigators traced it to an in- Cuban Film Institute and are Sawdust." Matinees are $1.00 for Richard Nixon's trip at 12:30 p.m. today in the Campus Center correctly wired explosive which, making their United States debut students except for Sunday and ballroom. Kitchell, whose appearance is sponsored by American Age if detonated properly would have after successful runs in London evening performances which are will give a brief lecture and then throw the floor open to questions from been effectively destructive. Also and Paris. $2.00. the audience. The showing through April 2 A total of 13 different films will • The ecology action committee will sponsor a wildlife preservation Air corps to join includes both features and show through April 5. For petition drive during March and April in the Campus Center lobby documentary shorts and the schedule information call 675- The club will meet Tuesday at 12:30 p.m. in Keating room 109. fiesta offers noon seminars, and 0935 (Eighth Avenue and 19th • The Laennec pre-medical society will sponsor a lecture by Jerome national conclave the numbers to call for the full Street). P. Parnell, M.D., director of admissions at Downstate Medical Fordham's Arnold Air Society schedule are 799-7466 or 674-3654. WHY JESUS CURSED THE College, today at 12:30 p.m. in JMH room 108. was recently nominated for two Now at the Elgin Cinema, often FIG TREE is a Jazz Cantata by • The classical music society will meet today at 12:30 p.m. in the national awards, the Maryland the theatre of moldy master- Paul Knopf to be performed this Campus Center music room. Cup and the Eagle award, in the pieces, a festival of the legendary Palm Sunday, March 26, at 11 * Decca recording artist David Pomeranz will join Jack Smith on his organization's yearly National epic-maker DAVID WARK a.m. at Judson Church, 55 show "Mixed Bag" Monday night at 10 p.m. on WFUV-90.7 FM. Conclave, according to the GRIFFITH is in progress. Washington Square South. • Today's topic for the Afro-American Institute writing clinic is University's chapter president, Tonight's bill leads with The St. John's University library skills. The session is set for 12:30 p.m. in Dealy room 107. Justin D'Angelo. America's first great film, a Student Union is presenting THE * Phi Eta Pi will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the Campus Center. The conclave, he said, which symbolistic silent montage, BEACH BOYS this Saturday • The Police Department has notified the Fordham will be held in Dallas from this night at 8 p.m. in their Alumni director of security that cars parked illegally on Belmont, Hughes and Sunday to Thursday, is Hall, Jamaica, Queens. St. John's 191st Sts. will continue to be ticketed regularly. presenting the Maryland Cup for Classifieds is on Union Turnpike and ac- Ride to Rochester needed on or about 30 • Fordham College juniors may nominatethemselves or a classmate the best squadron in the country March. Will share expenses, etc. Please cessible via the "D" and then and the Eagle Award for the best contact John Tonery ext. 616. 32. "F" train. Tickets are $3.50, $4.50 for this year's Who's Who in American Colleges. Applications are

project. wanted—copy of Yardbirds first Lp "For and $5.50 and the information available in Assistant Dean Joseph McGowan's office in Keating room Your Love" in good condition. Will pay. 320. The deadline for filing is March 30. The Fordham society's entry Contact Box 852, campus mail. number is 969-8000, ext. 492. for the latter award is their "Las Brides with High I.Q. and Low Finan- Vegas Nite" held in the Campus ces—See Barbizon's Photography Special Center on March 3 for the benefit This Section. Feminist psychologist attacks of Ailing Leukemia-Stricken Rooms available, summer and (all. 2 baths American Children, he said. with shower, kitchen, linens changed, minutes to school, reasonable. Apply now by According to D'Angelo, the calling FO 72348. traditional modes of treatment society made $5,000 in proceeds 1967 VW Fastback, 39,000 ml., New from 23 gambling tables, a Electrics & Clutch . . . S750. Call (914) H9- 8924 between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m. by Joan Frost unrecognized political force in mystifying polysyllabic coctail lounge, raffles and an ad Dorothy Tennov, an associate shaping our cultural and social technical terminology, is that it is 19(6 Dodge Dart, low mileage, 2 snow booklet. tires, new paint lob. Excellent condition. 733- professor of psychology at the institutions both through the without substance, without He also commented, "The 9686 after 7:30 p.m. University of Bridgeport, guest public pronouncements of its technique, without demonstrated attitudes on campus towards the BRIDAL PHOTOGRAPHY lecturered at the Bensalem proponents and practitioners and value of any kind." In her SPECIAL-Brldal Album with 34 color 8x10 society have changed. There's no prints ' Two parents albums with 12-3x5 feminist forum entitled "Rape or through the effects of individual opinion, "It is a hoax." more hostility. This has helped us color prints • 25 Photo Thank You cards Rap" last Tuesday night. therapists on individual plusonellxU Portrait * All for 1189.00 Call Explaining that many women to do even more for the Fordham Barblwn Studio 4591515 for appointment, The psychologist repeated the patients." dislike the hierarchical home or studin. community." speech she had given before the She then drove home her third arrangement of doctor-patient Pittsburgh Psychological point: "the institutions which relationships prevalent in Association expostulating her psychotherapy supports are traditional psychotherapy, 66 A triumphant success. An hypothesis that psychotherapy is those of reaction." Tennov discussed the new "ex- -Ni'W«wu-k. January 10. 1372 an agent of patriarchy. The psychologist pointed out perimental" choice intended to Maintaining, "Psychotherapy that the "monster" is a large one, give women more of an equal Now in 70 mm. and 6 track stereophonic sound is a monster in our midst," she since "more than half, as much footing between the two females explained, "It is a kind of you can experience it, hear it, live it as never before. as 70 percent, in some areas, and involved in the session. opiate." even a higher percentage of The speaker continued, "It is women in suburbia, have at one an active, although largely time or another been treated by Camp fordham psychotherapists." The message that expands progrw, psychotherapy generates In an attempt to expand this throughout the nation is one of summer's activities, Camp Ford- " pa t r ia rch ica 1 male ham, a recreational program for supremacy," she stated. disadvantaged children, will "Women are advised to behave publish its own brochure this according to the feminine role of summer. passivity and nurturance," Frank Olivieri, last year's your pad Tennov exclaimed, "and the executive director for the camp, individual with problems is told said that any money from ad- ...with a set of CUE Maga- to go into therapy or to see a vertisements in the brochure will psychiatrist." be used to increase the zine's new matchbook In her research, Tennov has posters. 25 x 36 full color organization's enrollment, which found that hostility toward sponsors summer field trips for photos of matchbook women in psychoanalytical covers from 200 outstand- 200 children from the South papers is prevalent. The lecturer Bronx. ing NewYork restaurants. also talked of the problem of Plus a description of Last year, $5,000 of the Camp's seduction of women patients by $7,300 budget came from a United each. Decorative and their analysts. practical. (Cover peeling Student Government allocation The speaker also spoke of the Olivieri explained that the camp paint, crumbling plaster.) problem of transference when the Only $3.75 per set, in- officers were worried over the patient was dependent on the possibility of a USG budget cut cludingshipping and NYC therapist. She remarked, "It is this year and hoped for eventual sales tax. Use coupon to easy to produce dependence direct University funding of the order. because of the mystique and aura applt pr*t«nti project. of the situation. There is total Commenting on that possibility exposure on the part of the THE CONCERT FOR BANGLADESH yesterday, University President patient and non-exposure on the CUE POSTERS Michael P. Walsh said that 20 West 43rd St., N.Y., part of the doctor." ERIC CLAPTON • BOB DYLAN • GEORGE HARRISON • BILLY PRESTON N.Y. 10036 "although the University has LEON RUSSELL- RAVI SHANKAR • RINGO STARR • KLAUS VOORMAN The second part of her speech never budgeted anything f«r as wel as BADRNGER -JESSE DAVIS -JIM HORN • JIM KEUNER had to do with the newly- NAME community services except f»r CLAUDIA UNNEAR and CARL RADII instituted self-help service run by Diractftd by Soul Swimmer ' Produced by Gvorg* Harrison and AlUn KUin our own mmunity Relations Mutit Recording Produced by G«orq« Horriion and Ptill Spwtor T»thnltolor* ADDRESS women for women who need a Board", t...s policy "is not " opplt/aOltictntury-toK r.Uon fItnfmt i»mt Twd knSUVk On *fpU itm*x \ counseling situation other than question of being for or against CITY the aledged mystique-filled one community activities. It's simpb attached to "professional" that we don't have any money. CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCES START THURSDAY, MARCH 23. STATE ZIP psychotherapy. For the past two years, Walsh Please enclose check or money Tennov doubted the ef- gave $1,000 to Camp Fordham -/-••. order (or $3.75 with order. .„., "out of funds given me for Per- 4/lh SI 4 /in A,c CO 5 8430 fectiveness of psychotherapy, commenting, "It's secret, locked sonal use," Page 2-THE FORDHAM RAM-March 24, 1972 USG ran-offc sef fo start Monday (Continued from page 1) balloting, reported that the Toffolon, who missed the run- comment. students, and the Belmont lobby machine used for the Thomas off by 25 votes, announced Carmine Mezzacappa, the for those in CBA. More College voting was tam- that he would support Buckley. lame duck Evening Student Another booth will be in pered with, but that "no votes Referring to other College of Council president, who finished Thebaud for students from the were changed because the Business Administration leaders, School of Pharmacy and Ben- machine had already been behind Toffolon, declared he Toffolon said, "Bob Vinci, Vito salem. locked." would announce his support on Nardelli, Tom McCullough, Bob Saturday. Bill Carman, chief mechanic of Carman said, "The lights were the New York City Board of Hinkley, and Tom Bonhag and "My real purpose in running," VOTING: in this week's USG stolen and the seal was broken. It the rest of the CBA officers are election produced run-offs for all Elections, who supervised the use Mezzacappa maintained, "was to was probably just a childish all wholeheartedly for Buckley." bring added recognition and six executive offices. of the machines in this year's prank." Cacace was not available for support to the School of General Studies. I think we brought 77 USG senate seats filled across our point emphatically." Bob Vinci, president of the USG, explained that the origin of the 40 percent requirement for O'Mara, Bonhag elected college presidents first-ballot election arose from a constitutional amendment (Continued from page 1) and Leslie Hyatt won. senator seats from CBA, Brian vice-president and Dennis passed in 1969. Bongiorno by a single vote, 100- Pat Cunningham, Helen Fin- Cooper and Frank Olivieri, a Sullivan as secretary-treasurer, "The amendment was passed," 99, for the presidency. John nigan, Diane Salderelli, Judy sophomore and junior, respec- won in a sweep. Bill Bunne and Vinci said, "but whoever typed Farrelly ran unopposed thus Snyder, and Pat Wilson won tively, scored impressive vic- Keith Rinaldi took the student up the constitution forgot to in- becoming the secretary-' elections to the class of '74's tories. government delegates' chairs in clude it." treasurer of the junior class. student government while Janice In the individual class elections the class of '74. Wright was pleased with the , Bill O'Connor and Dan Howell Gannon clinched a seat in the for CBA, the class of '73's Running unopposed from the smoothness of the election, and were selected as congressmen, class of '73 balloting. Moderate party ran unopposed. class of '75 were John Chiesa, expressed the hope that the run- giving the Spectrum party a Joan Frost, Deborah Primiano Donald Almeida becomes the president, Richard Osterman, off will be handled just as ef- clean sweep. and Marge Raulintis won seats on new president with Frank vice-president, and Fred ficiently. Joe'Paragola scored a victory the USG senate, running unop- Petrasovits and Jack Duyarski Kambeitz, secretary-treasurer. "My only regret out of this in the College class of '74's posed. winning the positions of vice- Martin Mauro and Charles whole affair," Wright asserted, presidential election defeating president and secretary- Clarkson captured seats as "was the fact that less than 1800 John Reilly and Ed Gaudino, CBA results treasurer, respectively. David student government delegates. people voted." while Ed DeFazio edged Frank In the College of Business Almeida and Frank Leddy won as Heyward for the secretary- Administration balloting, elec- student government delegates. treasurer position by 9 votes. tions committee chairman Ray The sophomore Spring Of- USG presidency vote by school Congressional seats went to Grimaldi announced five of the fensive Party with Robert Heck Frank Iorio and Jim Maher. six Moderate party candidates as president, Vernon Davis as In the class of '75 elections, emerged as winners. College freshmen Bill Hamilton Tom Bonhag, CBA '73, won the and Kevin Powers ran unopposed presidency from the Your Berrigan attacks PHAR M CB A TOTA L . GE N STU D for the positions of president and Generation Party candidate, COLLEG E TM C secretary-treasurer, respec- Ellen Patti. Pete Striano, CBA prison injustices tively. John Versosky and Ray '73, running with Patti, captures Cacace 278 114 70 9 4 475 Lombardi captured the vice-presidency by six votes (Continued from page 1) Buckley 223 136 34 37 2 432 congressional seats. over Dennis Verhaegan. Focusing on the week's trial in Toffolon 115 60 207 25 0 407 8 1 3 258 1 271 Thomas More College races Sophomore Mike Santimauro Harrisburg, Berrigan spoke of Mezzacappa 128 30 3 2 1 164 was elected over Joe Hoffman as the Federal Bureau of In- Seimer In the election for Thomas 17 0 16 1 0 34 Mord College, the only contested secretary while Tom Lawler, a vestigation informer, "boy Modica 789 341 333 332 8 1783 race was for the class of '75 junior, becomes the new CBA Douglas," as being not as guilty Totals student government posts where treasurer by edging Joe Mc- as the judges and prosecuters, Pat Grennan, Mary Ott, Mary Connell by 13 votes. those people who are driven "to Hoolan, Pat Tuite, Denise Claffi, In the race for the two USG win by the same kind of icy will ECOLOGY VOLUNTEERS that is waging the war." FRONTIER APOSTOLATE EMPLOYMENT needs teachers, tradesmen, The standing-room-only crowd MONEY loudly applauded Berrigan when office and kitchen help, Humanities offering to pilot We are looking for college nurses. One thousand have he entered the room and students who can work part shared since 1956. Long responded similarly to his 45 time now and full time in the hours, hard work, no pay. minute talk, the majority of summer. A new ecological (Room and board plus 325 CRUC experimental system which was spent on a poem he oriented product is being month.) Accept challenge of had composed in Danbury. "Let a marketed in the New York missionary diocese: bring An expanded freshman the CRUC plan's major problem blade of grass intervene, let a area and distributors are faith and love; find hope, humanities curriculum offering will be attracting students into single bird cross his standard . . . needed. Small inventory in- fulfillment. Write today. will most likely serve as the the program. How can we have a and all is undone," he said, Bishop Fergus O'Grady, vestment required. Call for O.M.I., 393 College Road, pioneer "integrated program" in division if there are no students in continuing, "Be unlike, connect, appointment—(201) 947-4042. Prince George, B.C., Canada. CRUC's proposed alternative to it, he argued. Shanti, Shanti." the existing distribution requirements, Dr. Roger Wines and Rev. George McMahon confirmed Tuesday. EASTER The two ex-members of the Committee to Reorganize Un- AT YOUR dergraduate Colleges, however, ERRORITE BOOKSTORE disagreed on the fate of the IN LONDON "divison of general education," which the committee suggested Guaranteed # 4% A as a means of providing ad- ministrative direction to ex- A LITURGY flight* on IUU perimental education at Rose Boeing 707 jets W W Hill. OF COMMUNAL PENANCE In a related development, Roundtrip $199. University Executive Vice WILL BE OFFERED President Joseph Cammarosano announced that implementation IN THE NO AGE LIMIT of the CRUC proposal "is not Youth fare: $169, round trip only going to add any great burden to our already overburdened UNIVERSITY CHURCH Connections from London to major cities financial situation." Europe and Africa at special, reduced air-fares. The CRUC plan currently on tlolil Thursday Inquire now for summer flights. awaits action by the Fordham College—Thomas More College March 30,1972 Council. at 12:30 p.m. & 7:30 p.m. WIZARD FLIGHTS Citing the approaching spring preregistration, however, Wines HOLY WEEK SERVICES IN THE CHURCH: 9,70 Lexington Ave (betw 70-71 Sts.) New York N.Y. 10021 warned that no programs at all 49 Conduit Street London W.I. England. Phone734-7483 may start operation by next fall Thursday at 8:15 p.m.; Friday at 8:00 p.m. unless the Council gives prompt 1430 Ave. Cambridge Mass. 02130 approval to the mechanism for ' Saturday at 11:00 p.m. (617) 547-3038 their creation. Fordham College Dean Mc- ALL CORDIALLY INVITED 879^1605 Mahon, however, contended that March 24. 1972-THE FORDHAM RAM-Page 3 Established by the students of Fordham University in 1918 Once again The 40 percent rule has been in effect Cacace and should help provide the for three years now, and never before needed expertise in expanding and have all the executive positions been up improving USG services. for grabs in a USG run-off. Starting Mary Ellen Loughran has proved Monday and going for two more herself a capable administrator this grueling days after that, the elections year, with creative ideas and work, and drag on, the excitement and tension therefore deserves a solid re-election. continuing as twelve undergraduates Doug Sterner's platform planks and battle for the six top positions in USG. ability are far superior to those offered But let us deal with the immediate by the other communications can- situation first: those in the run-off. The didates. He should be chosen also. Ram re-endorses the slate of candidates Kevin Budds and Cacace will make a first offered one week ago today. For good finance team. Budds has done good president, we urge the voters to elect work with the football club, and should Mike Cacace. Justine Offer should be be elected to straighten out the present elected the executive vice president. USG financial problems. Al White, the Mary Ellen Loughran should be re- only candidate from General Studies to elected to the academic vice make the run-off, should be elected not presidency. For the communications only for his talents and ideas, but also LETTERS ;s«S-m*:*:%::¥::^^ post, we endorse Doug Sterner. For for the insured interests he represents finance and operations The Ram urges for campus minorities on the USG Of fiction and finances voters to elect Kevin Budds and Al executive. White. ,, TO THE EDITOR All the candidates in the run-off are The electorate has already recognized quite qualified and experienced the value of these candidates, giving students. We feel, however, that the Monthly money matters five of the six the lead in each of their ones we have endorsed are the better contests. Now is the time for the final choices and could make the student affirmation. government into something a bit more To the editor: the purely journalistic areas? Cacace has exhibited both a con- realistically useful to the un- Since, as it seems, I am 4) Where will an adequate staff sciousness of student influence and dergraduates at Rose Hill. destined to inherit the MON- come from? There are several power and an ability for leadership and THLY as editor next year, I helpers at present, but many cogent expression of opinion while Regarding the election scheduling: would like to present a few necessary areas still are unfilled. serving as a delegate on the Campus statements to the University at These obstacles are not The Ram feels that the actual voting large, and, indeed, to anyone Council. In comparison Buckley does should have been slated for last week to overwhelming, but should be not fare as well. Furthermore, Cacace's sympathetic to the cause and resolved. The publication, in my have avoided having the run-off in a plight of the publication. perspective, . offers greater platform displays an emphasis on school week with one day short. Next 1971-72. For those who haven't possibilities to all creative en- services that Buckley's deliberately year those in charge should consider deavors than most Fordham relegates to a secondary position, yet found out, there was a both this factor and the more important MONTHLY published this year. publications. I ask for a voice of secondary to a rather unnecessary possibility of having the voting on two Financially, there was an initial recognition and alliance, please. desire to legitimize his representation of rather than three or four days. Such an displacement of the magazine's Stephen G. Berry the students with constant polls and arrangement could not only facilitate $1600.00 budget which was not Editor, The MONTHLY constant solicitation of opinion. the hard work the election committee resolved until November 1. (In Primary emphasis must be placed on must keep up for two weeks, but could the final analysis, the magazine the services, only in that way can USG also ease the rigors of campaign for the was only granted $650.00). Thus hamstrung by funding, a volume Senate blues attempt to gain the .following it deser- large number of candidates. Con- was published: brief and of un- ves. A student who bites into a co-op deli ceiveably, if run-offs were necessary, meritorious reproduction quality. To the editor: sandwich will know USG is working for they could then be conducted in the It was, however, the best that I would like to correct two him rather than attempting to spout same week as the original voting. such a limited budget could errors that appeared in recent niceties on topics which should be of Also, USG should examine the need provide. Despite a fair amount of editions of The Ram. In the main concern only to the legislative good material submitted, much March 17 issue The Ram for a provision requiring a 40 percent or neglected to include my name in bodies on Campus. more victory. Are not the candidates unfortunately remains un- published; 900 copies were the list of candidates running for Justine Offer, with her experience on who are able to out-poll four or five distributed as adequately as was the FC '75 senate seats. Instead, the boarder council and the refrigerator others obviously the ones with a possible. The MONTHLY also the ficticious name, 'Paul service, should team up well with legitimate enough sanction to lead? suffered from a severely limited Sovern,' was listed. The second staff: generally consisting of error appeared in the March 21 souls amicably coerced into issue. I quote from the article on devoting their effort. Despite all, the candidates' forum—'Also however, this volume was as a absent were about half of the whole; I feel, a considerable senatorial candidates who, ac- Joseph DiSalvo improvement over many past cording to Bill Wright, director of _, „ . , ,, Editor-in-Chief , . „ publications, To continue in such the USG elections committee, Greg Puchalski John Coy an uncertain manner is, were all invited to the forum.' Not Managing Editor Business Manager nonetheless, foolish. so, As a bona fide candidate for JohnHoll Political AHalrs Editor the USG senate (why else would I UiShanov • Academic Allairs Editor have spent $7.89 on campaign Mike Brown Features Editor 1972-73. For the future there are Ray Cormier Sports bdilor several questions to be raised: posters, about $7.00 more than Gerry Meagher Assistant Sports Editor the office is worth, but that's Llncoln Cenler ea 1) Who precisely will be funding SleVVsmSh - "<" neither here nor there). 1 was sievesmnn «ns fctmot the MONTHLY this year? Will RoccoStalno Assistant Business Manager the budget come directly from never directly invited by any Martha Bodnar, Patricia "Vilson, Jo-Ann Lupo, Joseph Hoffman Advertising the University as in the past or by official of the elections com- JohnMugford Photography Editor way of USG as with the mittee, any ragged-edged leaflet Tim Healy Assistant Photography Editor Rosemary O'Brien „,„ Graphics Editor misplacement of the budget last slapped on a wall or any other Kathy Harkin .T Assistant Graphics Editor year? means of communication in- Staff: Kaihy Bender, Joe Bonglorno, Rich Brautlgam, Calvin Brown, John Callimanls, Jay 2) Should the MONTHLY con- digenous to Rose Hill. The only Carberry, Donna Rose Casella, Maureen Casey, Tom Curran, Laura DIDio, John Doyle, Denise Fortino, Joan Frost, Charlie Gelati, JoeGuilford, Patrice Halpln, Ed Irirarry, Tom tinue under its present name? It references made were to 'can LaSala, Gerry Lawson, Karen Lowensteln, Rosemary McGinn, Sue Maloney, Mike is true there is a dated past (83 didates.' Just candidates for the Meaney, Sam Molinari, Malcolm Moran, Mary O'Keefe, Jack Roney, Chris Rossini, Jason Schwartz, Anna Marie Sirianni, Beth Seymour, Frank Sleslnskl, Marge Strosser, Loretla years); but, unlike the past, I executive positions? Every last Tofanl, Brian Tumulty. doubt that such a budget will be candidate? Who in their right granted to justify this sequential minds would listen to all tin' name. people running for the various 3) Should the MONTHLY exist offices? I wouldn't, and I am one represent ihi? opinions ot authors and Correspondence: Campus Mail, Box B solely as a literary magazine; or of those power-hungry, junior should it, as some envisage, league ward-heelers running for encompass the spectrum of office. creative activity unavailable in Paul Sovran FC'75 Page 4-THE FORDHAM RAM-March 24, 1972 Brando leads 'Godfather9 by John Callimanis the film. Nonetheless, he does manage to do most films of the gangster genre. The Godfather has finally arrived. The dominate it through the force of his per- film version of Mario Puzo's bestselling formance. The ironies of the characters' actions novel is one of the finest commercial and beliefs are revealed in Coppola's In Michael, Don Vito's favorite son and direction and structuring. American releases in recent years. heir apparent, Al Pacino handles a much The Mafia leaders appear to function as The Godfather is, curiously, an "epic" more demanding and complex charac- ordinary businessmen. Don Corleone and film, a family saga played out over a terization. Pacino captures the evolution his family view themselves in this light. period of years. Director Francis Ford of a rather quiet Ivy League college When their day's work is done, they return Coppola's emphasis on the family graduate to war hero to a callous and structure, family loyalty, and sympathetic powerful master criminal very credibly home to families whom they love and characterizations allows the film an im- and effectively. protect. On Sundays they attend church pact and grip that the sensational gangster and pray for God's guidance. They mourn Richard Castellano as Clemanza, the the personal tragedy of a death in the melodrama rarely exhibits. "THE GODFATHER"; Brando's Don man hired to do the dirty work, Robert family. They accept butchery as an ex- Marlon Brando's Don Vita Coreleone, Duvall as Tom Hagen, the Godfather's Corleone "is a harsh businessman, one of the five most powerful leaders of pediency and necessity in the ruthless barking orders and promising favors to adopted son and consilieri, James Caan's world of the business of crime. loyal members of his clan." New York's organized crime world, is not vSonny, the Don's second son, and Diane the stock, sinister Mafia monster. He is a Coppola's juxtaposition of a baptism and Keaton as Michael's wife, a WASP out- family celebration with the simultaneous rather than attacking them from the harsh businessman, barking orders and sider, contribute the film's other im- massacring of the boss of the rival material with a tacky, unrealistic promising favors to loyal members of his pressive performances. families, ordered by Michael, makes his recollection of times past. The director clan, .^t times, Brando's godfather Coppola's direction successfuly coor- point implicit. also captures, especially in a marvelous becomes an immensely moving and dinates these performances and adopts a One of the more remarkable wedding sequence, the whole Italian- human figure, content to retire within the simple, straight-forward narrative style. achievements of the film is the vivid American milieu. protected gates of his Long Island estate to The three hour long film is carefully recreation of the post-war (I) period. The Godfather succeeds admirably in all enjoy the pleasures of family life. constructed. It never lags, yet it does not Coppola's keen sense of time and place it attempts. It tells a fascinating story and Brando does not have the largest role in rely jn action scenes to sustain interest, as saturates his audience in another era it does so with taste and intelligence. Times Square 6 Spectacle of spectacles.,* downtown of downtowns9 by Mike Brown towns; a spectacle of spectacles. Egypt string instruments, and singing Italian For it is here that women of the night has the pyramids, Colorado its dam, solos. There the ambitious bums rush to hold their stance under the Hotel hotel as Neon news flashes around the Allied Niagara the falls, and New York Times the tourist and plea for change that will they hiss pitches to passersby. They line Chemical building above; tourists and Square. buy a strange brew of soup, while the tired the streets displaying their wares in the perverts mill below. Broadway is Those roasted chestnuts jam your and frustrated lay blank on the cement latest of skimpy fashions leaving their blanketed with its unique variety of nostrils while book and magazine covers dull to their pain. roosts only for a hot dog at Weinerwalds. pedestrians, thousands of them passing sting your eyes. Walking around means Seventh Avenue, for the most part, has While most are black, they do come in all under a marquee displaying "Femmes dodging the people: the short ones, the tall slowed some now. The Metropole topless shapes, sizes, colors, and they all ad- Fantastique," and by a new massage ones, the gimpy ones and the call ones. has closed, and their patented group of vertise with the same tell-tale hairdos. parlor that has opened above Bob's And not bumping into the wrong ones. peekers have elsewhere gone. Across the Affronted by token police resistance last Bargain Books near 43rd. The frenzy You watch your step and stride over street a chubby old woman stands her summer, they had to leave their haunts for originates somewhere in the area of 48th tramp urine that has drained onto the ground bravely in the midst of on-rushing lesser-known beats, but they're back in street and reaches its breathtaking sidewalk from a fenced storefront nearby. turmoil as she sings in a haunting, high force and have once again nailed the ' crescendo toward the legend that is 42nd. You avoid the dopers, the thiefs, and the voice for her bread. Her hand is extended "open" sign on the Taft, the Dixie, and the There the lights transform the dark to beggars, the queens. There you ignore and grasping a tin cup as she rotates so all Aristo. day, and every other storefront is either gorgeously garbed pimps, and that girl see a wooden sign on her ragged back On 46th street they do what on 42nd they Tad's steaks or Blackjack books. It's you know is a guy, standing near a record explaining blindness and financial grief. view. It still demands the thick wallet, but where a bra shop will draw a peculiar shop that is blaring a rendition of ecstatic Nowadays she competes with others who on the west prices range from $15 to $50 throng of windowshoppers, where the groans, murmers of delight and have realized that blindness is good while whores on the luxurious east side Krishna Consciousness freaks must provocative hisses onto the street. It's business and have donned unneeded dark rake in $500 on good nights. The price, compete with the massage parlors in America's great jungle next to which the glasses and authenticated their con with which does not include that of a bed, is leafletting the sidewalk flow, and where Congo is thin. i he purchase of seeing-eye dogs. usually hard to lower until the harsh one can sample the best of culinary On the corner of 42nd and Eighth Avenue Once in awhile a stumpy legless man weather moves in and the ladies become mastery only to lose it watching a movie the Franklin Bank breaks the tide and will bolt by on his rollerskate board, while cold, desperately bargaining harlots. next door. dams much of the square from flooding an old pauper missing only one of the limbs They're always lined up against Dolly's Some call it the downtown of down- into the rest of the city. There the peep hobbles by on crutches. But this is all the Accessory on 48th, "The House of a 1,000 shows end, the theatres quit showing "Who mainstream; this is where the glittering Laughs," where they can intermingle with Slew Aunti Koo?" and girls are not openly gadget shops yank in conned customers sightseers checking out the latest in invited to the porno shops. and where the Roxy Burlesk displays its grotesque gags. There they "wanna Before that, though, is the amusement totally raw dancers and inconspicuously date?" lonely looking men a good part of park never meant to be. Before that are plotted movies. It's where the porno ad- the night without fear of Patrick Murphy's the apprehensive, the suspected, and the dicts beg for three dollars to see "The undercover vice squad. cops in duos who never dare to stray apart. Abductors," then take their place in Always on the move, they tour for the And there the clever panhandlers are molting seats at the Apollo, strategically money they need to finance their ex- selling dancing dolls, playing homemade place their hats on their laps and watch travagant attire, fatherless kids, and two hours of bedroom lust followed sometimes their score of heroin. The jaggedly by a five minute ending where serious onlookers eye them from around People stare and the dope dealer gets his. corners and pretend they're interested in But Times Square is more than glim- the yellow cabs and fancy Eldorados mering Broadway, and it's more than passing by. For the customer it's cash headlights glare dancing 42nd or populated Seventh before delivery and a 15 minute stay in one Avenue. It's also the sidestreets, from 43rd of those flea bag bedrooms equipped with a in America's to 48th, along with the one dollar barber, sink and towel. off-Broadway plays, international cuisine, At 49th a street gang shifts suddenly, and the section's ultimate in sleazy hurrying down the street and disappearing greatest freak show stereotypes. into red-lit buildings or gypsy storefronts. Photo by Jason SchwarU Strutting by, a tall, excited black prostitute excitedly breaks the news of a bust at Orange Julius as she excuses herself from a prospective John to call it a day. As the night stretches into the wee hours, the sun threatens to rise. Cop cars stray the lonely streets as late night hustlers hurry by the bums. Where only hours before the square was roaring, it now struggles to remain above a whimper. At the IND, Times Square ends and present as its swansong an old lady sleeping on the stairs wrapped in yellow newspapers and muddled in her own dirt. There is only time for one final look at a place everyone scorns yet secretly prays won't up and die, and one more appreciative glance at a rare bird no one sincerely wishes extinct.

March 24, 1972-THE FORDHAM RAM-Page 5 NO MORE PENCILS NO MORE BOOKS NO MORE TEACHERS' DIRTY LOOKS.

TWA INTRODUCES THE 1972 GETAWAY* PROGRAM. This ad wasn't written to amuse you. It was airline card in the world. And it's free. written to get you to think. To think of how few TWA's Youth Passport* Card. school vacations you may have left. If you're 12 thru 21, you can get 1/3 off normal Before you know it, the 9 to 5 hassle will be domestic coach flights, on a standby basis. starting. So this summer may be your last real Plus discounts on over 20 other airlines in the chance to travel. To help you plan your getaway, let United States, Canada, and Europe. :i: us send you our free Getaway Kit. The card also gets you discounts at over 700 shops With the Kit you can get: and hotels around the world. TWA's Stutelpass* TWA's Getaway* Guidebook. A coupon booklet that gives you a room and A 224-page guidebook highlighting 19 of the most continental breakfast in either a guesthouse or popular cities in the world. student hotel in Europe for only $4.80 a night. No advance reservations are needed. Also included are free coupons that can be used 7 PLEASE SEND ME for bullfights, use of a bicycle, theater tickets, TWA DENT/YOUTH GETAWAY KIT. sightseeing and more. TWA's Bed and Breakfast Adventures. TWA, P.O. Box 876 Farmingdale, N.Y. 11735 2- to 7-day guesthouse packages to any ,of 50 European cities. Among them Amsterdam, where you can spend 3 days for only $22. And Athens, Name where 3 nights cost only $16. Address__ TWA's Getaway* Card Application. City__. ' With TWA's Getaway Card, you can charge airfare, hotels, meals, car rentals, Getaway State packages and more. And then take up to two years to pay. It's the most widely distributed, widely accepted [JVly travel agent ™ 'Service marks owned exclusively by TWA. ——— — zmnT-—.J

Page 6-THE FORDHAM RAM-March 24, 1972 BEHIND THE -™*mmmmtmmm»» I Reflections on a season !nlW1ISlll|l$; •mmttmtmmmmmmm* RAY CORMIER media, accounting students work for credit For many reasons this year's finale last Friday at the Garden impressed me as appropriate. That this season's Rams (Continued from page I) radio and public relations and The dean mentioned only one finished the year as unpredictably as they started it is not surprisine enthusiastically. The assignments hopes to expand its programs in drawback to the internships. she has witnessed are many and Hal Wissel inherited a team without a certified star but with a star the future. However, Carrea Since the firms participate on a varied, including funerals and candidate in Ken Charles. The package included a great defensive claims that the internship purely voluntary basis, the state political luncheons. The TMC center who stands a mere 6-4 and could not be expected to stop any top- program is something of an of the economy influences the senior gets a firsthand view of notch, huge opposing center. Bart Woytowicz was a starter with experiment for the com- number of students they will exactly how much work is in ability and a tenuous attitude. munications department, and its accept. "I think that it's im- exactly how much work is in- Dr. Wissel's predecessor, Dick Phelps, also left a whirlwind of continuance will depend on this portant to note," MacNeill volved in covering an assignment, semester's success. pointed out, "only about six hustle in George Zambetti, who was the sixth-man during the last half and then filming a report which In sharp contrast to this ten- students got internships last of that incredible NCAA year. Finally, there was one more holdover will last only minutes on the tative situation, the University's year, 1970-71. That, was because Tom Pipich, who had played an important part in a few games during evening news. his sophomore year but who was virtually untested at guard. other internship program is quite of the recession." Outside of these four Wissel had a group of sophomores and an in- firmly established. The ac- CBA senior Vito Nardelli, an Journalistic proximity counting department of the jury-plagued 6-8 junior center not considered quick enough to play a At Commonweal Russo per- accounting major, has spent four College of Business Ad- weeks with Arthur Anderson and pressing, running style. forms many of the duties of an ministration has conducted it for Company, a top rated accounting editor. He reads manuscripts, over 10 years. firm, which handles a wide Could lightning strike twice? proofreads galleys, and sits in at variety of clients. The first week, conferences where his comments CBA program However, when the season began at Yale on December 1, the Rose he explained, was devoted to James MacNeill, the dean of Hill campus felt an eager expectancy that maybe lightning would are apparently valued. learning the fundamentals of the CBA, explained a program which strike twice. A record-breaking opening win over the Eli, on the heels Russo claims he is gaining firm's own particular systems is structured quite differently of some optimistic pre-season rhetoric by players and coaches, valuable insight into the and techniques. He then worked from that of the communications brought a capacity crowd to the Rose Hill gym for the home opener operation of a small journal of as an assistant accountant with department. against Fairfield. The loyal rooters were treated to a sloppy, if ex- opinion. "Just seeing the at- the auditing staff, handling cash citing come-from-behind Maroon victory. It was a sign of things to mosphere, the organization, is Each year 20-to-30 top ranking and inventory for two separate come: a strange year filled with growing pains. good," he commented. accounting majors obtain in- clients. The senior on each job ternships with certified public I saw this team play 22 times this year and I'm exhausted. Every Professionals connected with reviewed his work and submitted accounting firms. The programs game was a truly new experience and the wins would always be the internship program seem an efficiency rating to the last four-to-six weeks between pleased with it, and they stress its manager on the job. designed in Hitchcockian shades. And the losses also were totally the fall and spring semesters, value for experience and job unique in their contexts. Like the young child learning how to run, the and because the students work Nardelli termed the program contacts. Al Ittleson, an Rams would make sprints full of potential and skill, but lacking full-time, special arrangements excellent, and claimed, "I knowledge and stamina, often trip over twigs or logs that tired and executive producer with must be made for final exams. learned more in four weeks there Eyewitness News, has watched than I did here in a full uncoordinated little feet would catch. Usually the flock would pick During the internships the several of these informal lear- semester." For this reason he themselves up in time to end up in front of their less naturally endowed students receive direct training ning programs at ABC. He favors expansion of the program foes. However, with one exception, the Rams could not overcome in method from the firm, as well believes a good internship "is to four months in senior year. those teams considered superior to them. as indirect training through worth about two years of college Beyond Fordham walls working as a special member of in practical value," because "the Flash Heyward cools off Princeton the staff. Whether internship programs nuts and bolts of covering a news are new and experimental, or The one exception was the Princeton game, of course, when a flashy story are very different from the MacNeill believes firmly in the older and well established, "You transfer student, sophomore Frank Heyward, in his second start of the concepts of journalism." value of the program, both for really can't learn anything unless year, led a disciplined Ram attack and did a fine defensive job on ail- As well as the advantages of practical experience and for job you submerge yourself in the American candidate Brian Taylor. internships, Ittleson noted possibilities. "From teaching work, actually confront it on the In other words, Fordham's team this year was a good one, not a several drawbacks in certain seniors, I find that a student from job," Nardelli posited. great one. Considering that only Woytowicz and Sullivan were bona types of work. He claimed that an internship understands far A university situated in a city fide returning starters at their positions with Charles' shift to guard, union regulations prohibit more the second semester," he which affords as many op- and considering the lack of height and exceptional speed and students from operating maintained. portunities as New York does, quickness and considering that one-third of the Fordham schedule equipment or actually writing He noted that many students should be able to provide contained tournament-bound teams (five opponents played in the stories for the newscast. They graduate and go directly into something of that vital working NCAA tourney and four more made the NIT field, with seven of these can, however, implement stories public accounting. "The firms experience for its students. With having won at least one tournament game), I can't see how anyone at and research them. He admitted tend to use the internships as a well-developed internship Fordham cannot be both satisfied and proud of this year's per- with a smile, "In that way they're recruiting device," he said, programs, Fordham has an formances by players and coaches. almost like management, except adding that because of the good excellent chance to offer its they don't live or die by their relations fostered by the students an education which A lesson in predictions ideas." program, the firms recruit not extends beyond the University Certainly, many lessons were learned in this crazy year of college Sigma Delta Chi has placed only from the internship, but walls and into a world for which basketball, a year in which only UCLA could prove itself super- students in television, magazine, from the University as a whole. they will be far better prepared. human. A couple of hours after the loss to Jacksonville coach Wissel joked that he would give up making predictions. ««*'*^«*''c

Best sophomore: Marvin Barnes, Providence. David Pomeranz will also be performing on April 1 at the Town Hall, P-T SALES OPPORTUNITY READ FASTER $50 43 rd Street between 6th & 7th Ave. 10 hrs/week Car. 5weokiguaranteedcourse; DOUBLE or TRIPLE your speed, understand more, retain more; Nationally known $500/month profesior'i clast forming now 533-6892 after 2:00 p.m. READING SKILLS 864-5112 March 24, 1972-THE FORDHAM RAM-Page 7 McDougald starts to build Rams; junior star, frosh dominate team by Malcolm Moras s •"::£*>--::::££ ;ur.:cTi Sot said. He can play second short G-.cz«s.r £DC Joe Cert to lead the •x third It looks lie I'll have to To build &gair. or to find a place fee him." ct &aea-. usually the pans ••Las; year." the coach con- that are x good coo-isan aad UD'oed.' 'our biggest problem was SOEDC r.e* par is &einf used. »>:cJo*': :-e surprised if *** pitching Since then, our pitchers as. to rebxld a bouse, a will have gained a lot of weight, and a typewriter, a *«rharf. a cry. Cork h:: -2M as a :1rs sase at this stage, they are throwing or a baseball team. "Webster's ias year aod a expeC rr.ach harder.'" Xe»' Imeraaoooa! Dictjasary . Ranss' fc:g RBI rrin. while McDotugaki called junior lefty Baseball coach Gil McDougald Guira," hit 22S- £x»f «1D "be even Gene McEJwain "the key to our is eeci&HiEg 15 new parts with becer this year." aectrding to BASEBALL SE/\SON APPROACHES: and tke Fordham nine several oid«r a oricog ooes in as the third year coa<±. staff He stands a chance of stress a running, hustling game plan. effort to improve tbe Rams" 5-24 tely rax> other recaroees »~J3 wincing six games by himself. A Good defense, good pitching If our pitchers car. hit his target record of last year. be starting: ngbrfiekier Jim lot hinges on his arm." "We are gcang to be a running and the size of Jackie Hoolihan and keep the ball down, there A ill McDougaJd is counting oc Currac arid cecterfieida- Gerry Angs Tbe reraaisder of the bafleJub." MeDougald said. "We form the coach's master plan. be a lot of groimders. If we can projected starting hneup «1S be are going to have to outhustle the "Little (5*10", 160 lbs) Jackie has get some good defense, we 11 be made up <£ newcomers. ether clubs, and we'll have to a strong arm, and he's small able to handle them." •*We will be mostly a young excel defensively."' enough to give a good, low target. It sounds so simple. team- aod because of that, we will have better spirit." the coach said "Tm freshmeo that I am Diamond veterans hope for eor/y victories ptcg to piay won't be em- barrassed. Of what I've seen so by Gerry Meagher "because we have a lot of good far. they look like they are ready There are few veterans on this young pitchers." to play college baseball I don't years baseball team, but the The veteran backstop, think I am overrating them.. We ones who are here are looking for beginning his third varsity could be a surprise team." a quick start this season. campaign, does not believe the Tbe most impressve freshmen Baseball team captain Bobby Rams have the punch this year to are third baseman John Guinan sees tbe first few games replace the departed Jack Burik. Vanacore aad catcher Jadcie as decisive for a good season, in Burik, who is now in the Mets Hoolihan. while first baseman this, Fordham's 92nd year of farm system, had a pacesetting Egerton Maitland and Joe baseball competition. .389 average and drove in 21 runs. Buenhora will compete for a The junior second baseman starting Job. Early played at Manhattan hopes a few early season vic- Prep with Guinan. He feels that if Another talented first year tories will give the young team player is infielder Bobby Young. the Rams win half of their games, McDOlGAlD: 'I woaWflt be the confidence it needs for a it will be a successful seasnon. sarpriswJ if we woe half oar "So far, he has been our most successful year. games." impressive fielder." the coach Catcher Charlie Whitaker and Guinan, who passed up relief pitcher Mike Early are the scholarship offers from NYU and only seniors on the 28-man squad, Manhattan, sees the Rams Crew teams to begin composed mainly of freshman running much more this season. and juniors. "We have guys with good speed Whitaker, an energetic per- like Gerry Anst and Jimmy season this Saturdayformer both on and off the field, Curran who could make us a real believes the squad must rely on a threat on the basepaths," ac- Tbe Fordham crew opens its equipment repairs, cut in half the team effort to succeed "We cording to the Manhattan l tm Tim HH . raring season Saturday morning normal preparation time on the should be better," the Northport, resident. "We have to get real GUINAN: predicted t*at tbe 1972 as fee varsity eight defeods the water before tbe first race. baseball team vfll be "a real Long Island native commented, good pitching, also," he added. threat oa the Deering Cup against Manhattan Coach Bruce Millman kept the at 11 a.m. oa Orchard Bead crewmen in shape, continuing Charles named a//-eosf lagooc. their winter program of weight Tbe junior varsity will take on lifting i/nd running. the same opposition an hour A further delay in boating all Sullivan snags earlier while the third crew will three crews was encountered row against Columbia's light- when the University delayed Basketball co-captains Tom recipients (1954-55), percentage. approval for spending the money Sullivan and Ken Charles both Jim Cunningham (1955), and "I played pretty well through won accolades this past week for River at 3 from an insurance claim for the Charley Yelverton (1971). Other most of the season, but I kind of their excellent play this season. After a long search, the crew greater part of the balance owed Haggerty winners include Dolph fizzled out at the end of the year. has found a near home, rowing on on the new racing shell in which Sullivan became the fourth Schayes, "Satch" Sanders, Leroy said 'Silly.' "I was very weak the Harlem River from the New the varsity crew is rowing. Fordham player to be selected as Ellis, , and Jim over the last few games," the Haggerty Award winner, York Institute for the Blind The claim resulted from the McMiUian. sharing the honor with For Claries, the all-East nod Rowing Gub, at the foot of Dyck- total loss of the crew's best shell The Bronx native, known for Manhattan's , culminated an outstanding man Street in Manhattan. in a 1971 accident while tbe boat his tenacious defense that more while Charles was named to the season. The 6'3" forward guard Tbe length of that search, plus was being transported for a race. than overcomes his height all-East squad. pumped in 572 points for a team disadvantage, also had his finest leading average of 21.2, including Sullivan's tie for the award season offensively for the Rams a spectacular 41-point per- with the talented Jasper back- in this year's 18-9 campaign. Fin al b as ketball sta tis tics courtman is the first in the 31- formance against The senior averaged 11.4 points Massachusetts. Varsitv year history of the trophy given per game, hitting game highs to the most valuable player in the The former Brooklyn Prep star FS FT FT* Pet !<>e A against Seton Hall (29*, Prin- O*r«i or t ' '4 Metropolitan area. The 6'4" also was named to the all-Holiday u 364 n ceton (21). and Boston College li 3'i center joins fellow Ram festival team on his way to t: j" K U6) while shooting at a .490 r» ./K it *3 joining the 1000-point club in only Si *.' his junior year. 74 ft U 72 t.: It Charles joins a host of great It a talent in being picked to the all- C*r. .BI East squad Among them aro 5X TOTA.LI HI "* : ; Brian Taylor of Princeton. Trac> VjJ -4 Tripucka of Lafayette, Kern;;: Freshmen Washington of American. Grog Kohls of Syracuse. Emu NAME FT DiGregorio of Providence, am1. sw 43 5*** u Wil Robinson of West Virgmui 51 Coach Hal Wissel was beami:^ T4 5i upon hearing the news of his t^" il 3 5% ": ME players. "I can't think of anyone 5 4"* 4 more deserving of winning t!>i" 5 n < • i •4 - 3 ass "i :i*3 u: Haggerty Award than Ton. •ECORO AWARD WINERS: Tom Sullivan i15 I LOSSES Sullivan, or anyone more deserving of all-East honors than

A¥X:A%:*:*XW:K::%S:^%%^:^^ Kenny Charles," commented the Pelham resident. Page 8-THE FORDHAM RAM-March 24, 1972