-U.S. Postage VOL. 55 NO. 33 PAID Bronx, N.Y. Permit No. 7608 u ' FALL Nonprofit Org. SPORTS SUPPLEMENT FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1973 •o// shows LC cafeteria ,C boycott boycott finds iupporfed solid support I Business is not going on as Lulil in the Lincoln Center The Liberal Arts Student boycott would eventually hurt [feteria these days. Downtown Government goes into the third business, Levy stated, "We'll Indents, ranging from freshmen day of a cafeteria boycott today, absorb whatever they feel law students, are strongly with Liberal Arts Student they're hurting us with." importing the organized Government President Greg One cafeteria worker, who oycotl. Fonti promising to keep the declined to give his name for fear Sixty people have been polled in boycott going at least until of management recrimination be cafeteria the past two days, Monday. estimated, "Business has fallen an overwhelming majority Speakingata meeting of LAS.G to 20 or 25 percent of normal." Of c found to be angered by Senators Wednesday, Fonti over 100 people in the cafeteria Hint some called the "atrocious expressed concern that the on Wednesday afternoon, less of Automatique, the new boycott keep momentum until than 30 were eating, and of those afeteria food service. Only three that time, "so we can show a 30, more than half had brought MULHOLLAND: "1 thought it would just be a year on the junkpile." ; of the 60 did not support the solid front." their own food. loycott. All three were found not The boycott began Wednesday §Many of the students have been be students of Fordham refuses to accept it morning in response to what taking advantage of the free Jniversily. student representatives coffee and cookies that the LASG lOne -third of the people described as the high price and has provided outside the nufstioned were discovered to low quality of food provided by cafeteria. Lists of neighborhood ? either building office workers Automatique. restaurants are posted. A outsiders. Twelve out of the Mulholland quits The initial effect of the boycott loudspeaker has been manned lo students appeared to partially Joseph Mulholland, associate the LAC "was uncertain." was not as the students hoped. most of the time, by Fonti and lupport the organized opposition dean of the Liberal Arts College, The letter continued, "I Lincoln Center cafeteria various LASG senators, who by buying only soft drinks. announced his resignation as concluded that not only was my manager Issac Levy, when have urged students not to buy When students were asked to head of the evening session in a future uncertain, but that my contacted on the first day of the cafeteria food. express their feelings, they letter to University President presence was no longer desired." boycott stated, "It has affected Tom Campenni, LAC '75, who Responded very much like James Finlay on August 23, The During the early August us to some extent, but it is helped run the free coffee table, Richard Rivera, LAC '75, who Ram learned yesterday. Finlay meeting, which was attended by nothing to worry about." He claimed that the 2,300 coffee "The 45 cents for orange declared last night, however, "I Mulholland, Drs. Joseph went on to say that the boycott cups that were purchased Buice is ridiculous, these prices have not accepted his Cammarosano and Paul Reiss, had not been a surprise, that the Tuesday night were gone by mid- same amount of food had been are ridiculous," (Mulholland's) resignation." executive vice president and afternoon on Wednesday. : prepared, and the normal Others such as Bill Twaddle, a The resignation, which academic vice president Several hundred cups were amount of food would be ordered [third year law student from the remains in an uncertain status, respectively, and LAC Dean given away to evening school for the next day. [adjacent building, claimed, "The was prompted by a meeting George Shea, Mulholland, ac- students at their 8 p.m. break, [food is really bad." These* Mulholland had with three top cording to the letter and When asked if he thought the (Continued on page 7) [comments were quite typical of administrators in early August statements made yesterday, was [student reaction, which on the During the meeting he was offered "another position within [surface appeared to be low- informed, according to his letter the University." Switchboard to persist keyed. to Finlay, that his future with Elaborating yesterday on his reasons for refusing the post, Mulholland declared, "I thought it would be just a year on the with "no answer" signal [Reiss sways proposal junkpile." Currently, Mulholland The University switchboard According to Crawley the has one year left on his contract. will remain closed from 2 a.m. to residents of Martyrs' Court, with Further, the evening dean 8 a.m. but faculty residents and extensions under 200, will be the of merger group stated, he was not informed of resident advisors are to receive only students affected by the between Academic Vice plans to restructure the day and individual phones with direct restriction. Spellman's ex- The dean of the merged President Dr. Paul Reiss and the night divisions of the LAC into dialing, according to Dean of tension is 696. No calls can be Fordham-Thomas More College committee. one unit under Shea until the Students William Crawley. placed to or from Martyr's Court after 2 a.m. because they must will not necessarily receive an Reiss suggested the change to second week of August. Rev. Raymond Schroth, who go through the switchboard. initial appointment of five years, the committee because he According to top administrators organized a petition among clerical dormitory residents and Anyone desiring to make a call laas was first proposed by the believed the initially-proposed the plans have been under currently resides in Martyrs' from the dorm must use an RA's il committee to investigate five-year appointment would put consideration since last year. 1 ( "pressure on the search com- Finlay, however, asserted last Court, stated flatly that "they extension or a pay phone. Only h ' administrative made a mistake." emergency calls can be sent to "•organization of FC and TMC. mittee to seek a conservative night that he met with type of dean." Mulholland on Tuesday and that Schroth commented that if students through the newly- Instead, the committee now "we pride ourselves on an at- formed hotline. proposes that the dean be ap- According to Reiss, a proposal "he (Mulholland) misunderstood that allows for an appointment of the context in which the offer tempt to establish community" Dr. Joseph Cammarosano, pointed for "up to five years." then internal communication is noted that the University is I'IC proposal was changed less than five years would permit was made." The president maintained that the Tuesday necessary to preserve the "planning to provide RA's with yesterday, after a meeting a search committee to try out "exciting people" who it might meeting "was most amicable and personal atmosphere of dor- direct dial. That should be more otherwise be afraid to appoint. most enlightening" and that he mitory life, particularly in an than adequate to handle any emergency." emergencies during the hours of Traditionally, University (Continued on page 1) 2 a.m. to 8 a.m." Statutes have stipulated no minimum appointment for deans. An unidentified resident of G house began circulation of a Dr. Craig lirush of the modern A not so secret document has been floating around the upper petition now gaining support language department and levels of the administration during the past few days which through tout Marty rs'Court ehainnan of the committee, outlines the "pimeplan" for the use of Edward's Parade Ground. which states in part, that "the called yesterday's two hour Dr. Joseph Cammarosano, chairman of the Green Grass decision would be one more in a meeting'to enable Reiss to react Committee, has outlined the terms of an agreement between long scries of actions that to the proposal. According to himself and Athletic Director Peter Carlesimo in a letter dated weaken the comfort, health, and Brush, he also .saw Reiss several September 18. well-being of students." times before the proposal was Only two groups, the varsity soccer team and women's in- "For 'economy reasons,'" the published to give the academic traimirals, will be allowed use of the grounds. And these groups petition continues, "the in- vice [-resi-dent "progress can not play during "inclement weather." firmary was closed at night. For The letter further stated that the grounds "are to remain off- t Reiss 'insurance reasons,' residents no limits to off-campus groups." William Crawley, chairman of the longer have University tran- At yesterday's meeting coin

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• 7 rnoriftv^at $6 Weekends 11am - 1am (i $1.00 saving*) • 1 year at$§.50 > Q (a $4.50 saving*) Delicious heroes, soda, •HBKHF snacks, etc. %&5tfggg ,L if. Run by students, for students &"Ot!»Tlr '•? a o»e-Hmo.or.ly offe.. You must on- • •- "-•' a check or money order at this lime. cn single-copy newsstand price. at student prices eHn g ApiavbovF^E n orp ,i8 «M«MrePla h Corporation 919 S^ML i J I ^' yboy Building N. Michigan Av /, Chicago, III. 606g1 ? 60611 Page 2- IHE RAM- Friday, September 21, 1973 4E9 Club budget Two errors found allocations Evaluation merits "B" An informal survey of the 1973 organization...and knowledge of When asked about these ready today Course Evaluation shows that the subject." But the statistics disparities, Dengler replied that except in two cases, the booklet's printed beneath the review show "The written reviews seem so Following today's 1 p.m. judgments were fair and con- that 71 percent of the classes divergent that I can only say the meeting, the Student Activities formed to the printed statistics found his presentation adequate, analyst who did them viewed the Budget Committee is expected to submitted by the students. and 62 percent rated his lectures whole thing with a jaundiced release this year's allocations for However, the analyses of four as "often well-planned and easy eye." He added, "The evaluation the various clubs and activities. courses within the com- to follow." is a very good idea but the final Most budget requests were munications department show Neither does the review for execution has to be done in a reviewed at a series of summer that the human element has not Dengler's other course, very human way." The person meetings. Final decisions have been completely eliminated from "Language and Com- who had evaluated him didn't been delayed, however, until this the project. munications," correspond with "seem to have any appreciation semester's registration figures The written review for Rev. the statistics. It claims that of the complexities of teaching i;in be finalized. The Ralph Dengler's course, "The "Many students...found it and popular culture." American Film Industry" claims Fr. Dengler a bore." But 81 registration figures indicate how Stuart Maher, a film teacher in FINNIGAN: suggested a that the majority of students percent termed Dengler's many students there are to pay the communications department, cooperative University effort to "were displeased with this presentation "adequate," and 76 the $15 activity fee from also had his problems with the produce the course evaluation course...criticized Fr. Dengler's percent said his lectures were which the activities budget is course evaluation. Once again, booklet. style of presentation, well-planned. derived. "Conservative" the reviews and the statistics estimates by committee didn't match. Although the members place this year's review for "Basics of budget at a minimum of TMC - FC may take Documentary and News Film" $120,000. claimed "the opinion here was Representing the ad- pretty sharply divided," 86 ministration on the committee percent of the students termed are Dean of Students William more CBA courses Maher as "adequate," and 75 Crawley and Assistant Dean percent called his lectures well- The deans of Fordham minor in CBA for liberal arts which they plan to take the Lynn Lyptak. The United planned. Student Government is College, Thomas More College and students the number of courses course. represented by President Gary the College of Business they would take would be about Assistant CBA Dean Peter But Maher was able to get in Tulacz, Operations Vice Administration are presently six. If we don't, I hope the Seldin suggested that the touch with the evaluation President Jack Wallace, and Vice considering the possibility of University this year will increase University eliminate this form committee, and they agreed to President for Communications instituting a CBA minor for FC the number of courses a liberal completely, as a means of en- print a retraction of the reviews Anne LeBlanc. Rev. Julius Hejja and TMC students, according to arts student is permitted to take couraging more TMC and FC on a slip of paper in the course of the theology department sits Jean- Murphy, acting Dean of in the professional schools, such students to take CBA courses. evaluation booklet. Students as the faculty member chosen by TMC. as CBA, from three to four," she He noted that additional red tape were advised to consult only the stated. only intensifies the problem the the students on the committee. Murphy explained that the statistics. Mr. Maher could not Presently FC and TMC deans face in making this op- Dean of Student Activities FC-TMC College Council, slated to be reached to get his opinion of students can take, towards their portunity visible to students. Roy Dado, who acts as the hold its first meeting today, will the evaluation or the reviews. degree, up to 12 credits in CBA committee's executive secretary, discuss the matter of or any of the other professional indicated that the meetings have establishing a formal minor in A-house next schools. If they take more, run smoothly so far. "Most each of the individual colleges. If Murphy explained, these extra decisions have been based on a the council approves a minor for courses would not be counted as consensus of opinion. a student within his own school, Class filmed for recruits part of the 128 required credits. Professor Harry Arouh's Basic she continued, any liberal arts Discord, if and when it comes, Quartz spotlights flashed, Reporting course. student would then be per- Students, intending to take is more likely to erup*, from the cameras rolled, and once again a mitted to minor in CBA. courses in another school of the In an attempt to give clubs requesting fundt. rather University must fill out an Inter- movie was being shot on the prospective high school students than from the committee The acting assistant dean University registration form Fordham campus. It was not a more accurate view of For- members. According to Dado, pointed out, however, that the which is signed by the dean of Love Story or The Exorcist this dham University, a 12- the budget requests total University has not yet set the their school and the school in time, but Communications minute promotional movie about roughly twice as much as the number of courses for the minor life on hot h the Rose Hill and money available. This may bring or whether students in CBA Lincoln ("enter campuses is a lengthy round of appeals from would be able to minor in a being produced. the clubs such as was ex- liberal arts course. "This is Liquor to be served Jacoby-Storm Productions perienced last year. Should the something that would have to be Incorporated has been filming on appeals process promise to be both campuses since last week. decided by the College Council," excessively long, explained Shooting is expected to continue she noted. Crawley, the committee may legally at this mixer until next Tuesday. Executive "If we do establish a formal divide into two groups. Vice Pros '«nt Joseph Cam- Because of a last minute ap- may be served at all future marosano mated the cost of plication for a one-day license by engagements. production at $10,000 to $15,000. Dean Marotta, president of the Automatique representatives Filmmakers Jacoby and Storm Alpha Kappa Psi Society, there were not available for comment. emphasized that only people who will be beer and wine served at Marotta, who will also appear are actually connected with the tonight's "Two Story Mixer" run today before the ABC with a college will be in the film, and by Marotta's society. letter of permission from Dean of that there is no narration. Only The action averts the mixer Students William Crawley, said the voices of students and faculty being held without alcoholic "It is definite" that the com- will supplement the visual beverages, since Automatique, mittee would accept the ap- scenes. Fordham's new cafeteria food plication, thus allowing beer and The camera recorded the service, does not presently hold a wine to be served this evening. cafeteria strike at Lincoln Center liquor license with Liquor was served at last earlier this week. On the more State's Alcoholic Beverage Friday's mixer featuring Bill sedate uptown campus, the Committee covering the school. Donovan, apparently without a interior filming of student Today, representatives of the license, according to Director of discussions and several classes is food service will appear before Student Activities Roy Dado. almost complete, although some ABC to seek a one-year license. Selling tickets at the door to all footage was scheduled to be The outcome of this meeting will wanting to purchase beer was taken inside A house today. not affect tonight's affair but will done as a maneuver so not to Jacoby and Storm are in the FC and TMC students taking spoke in favor of more determine whether or not liquor exchange monies over the process of photographing ex- courses in CBA. counter at the bar. At the time, terior shots of the campus. On this was thought to be a way to Monday, several aerial views of circumvent the illegality of Rose Hill will be taken from a Committee revises new dean proposal selling liquor without a license. helicopter, and football practice An investigator along with the will be covered on Tuesday. president's advice. " wtinucd/rompagej) its next meeting. neighborhood police team As lights and a camera were Keiss claims that if the I"1"!merit receive two possible At today's meeting, the arrived on campus Monday set up in Arouh's class yester- organizations move the proposal ''tensions of three years each. Council will" also consider the however, and gave Fordham a day, the professor wryly com- as quickly as possible, it should It'iss suggested the 11-year status of its constitution, and formal warning about the mat- mented to his students. "I'm sure reach the Hoard of Trustees by imit procedures to be followed for the ter. Cd on page 6) ' be lifted because he its December meeting. If the '"•I'-ved the committee should adoption of the consitution. It will then discuss operational Hoard approves the proposal, ';"' prejudge" the situation. which calls for one dean and two !n procedures tor 197U-74. PCinevents " years, if we're satisfied associate deans, Keiss will then In two weeks, after the resents Tlmrs.. Sept. 27th •;'"'' a dean's performance) we appoint a search committee. il l||| College Council makes its " l not have to face a rule In an interview, Reiss said he Collins Auditorium Upm. . . i;! li r() recommendations on the ad »' dean must be let K -" believed the committee's plan for :; miiii-trative reorganization >i'sh denied that the 11 year administrative reorganization ";:iil was a reaction against FC |)r.,,.,i!N,il. and Hie ••i.;;iniittee "A Night in the Thirties" considers its suggestions, was not much different from the ''/'" (li'orge McMahon, who has Reiss plan. —A feature length film 1 r;'l liis office- for over ten years. I:Diversity I'r<•sident James 1 lr Finlay will receive the proposal The committee s proposal Brush will submit the —A Mae West Short/Betly Boop Cartoons 1 with any chaises. He will then allows for a dean of academic " "nttcc's revised proposal to submit it to the Campus Council planning and two associate !i ''"Hege Council at its \:'M) —Louis vs. Schmeling bout, 1938 and the Faculty Senate. Finally, deans, one for academic advising '• "linK today. The Council will it will reach the Hoard of .„„) the other to implement '';KS revisions and recom ADMISSION FREE with ID with the academic programs. "'Pilous for the proposal at Trustees, ong Friday, September 21, 1973- THE RAM- Page 3 Looking around— Mailer come-to-spar -.Mike Brown MARILYN, By Norman Mailer, Grosset and Dunlap, 271 pages, $19 95 First it was fiction: of war and life and death. Then it was brilliant JOHN G. HOLL RICHARD ROSSETTIE commentary on the American political system: the books on Chicago Editor-Jri-Chlef Business Manager and Miami and even a prediction of Watergate 10 years before. America's top literary mind had done just about all. List his being as philosopher, novelist, playwright, journalist-extraordinaire, PollllealAlfalnEdllort ROMHIII Ttioma* LaSali demiurge, human cathartic, essayist and even politician for a short UncolnC*nt*r Brian Tumulty while. . ,. .. . CsmputAlfalraEditort ROMHIII Loratta Tolani But now, with this hasty production on Marilyn Monroe, we can LlncolnC*nt»r Dan Hamghan add to that list psychohistorian (nee biographer) and, finally and CoordlnttlngEdllom Maureen CaMy Donna Rose Casalla dramatically, reality creator. Has Norman Mailer transcended even AtsoclitcEdllor Mlka Brown FMturwEdltor Jacqueline Orindrod Norman Mailer? SporttEdltor Gerry Msagher This large, glossy "biography" presents the combination of com AttlstantSportiEdllor Malcolm Moran ArttEdftor Q. Kevin Lally binations—an immortal meeting contrived in the stars. Marilyn and Photographers Calvin Brown, Greg Scatal Mailer, married at last. Why Monroe? What need to study her? "She was every man's love The Ram is Dubliahed on Tuesday and Friday during the academic year, except during vacation and examination periods, by the students of affair with America," writes the author as he pursues "an elusive K uJSwnSy. BronZNV 10458 Editorials represent collective opinions of the editorial board; columns and ed.lorial cartoons represent the opinions of the authors and cartoonists alone. search for that mercurial charm.. .the identity of a lovely if seldom simple woman." And the eloquent flow never does stop. "The sugar of sex came up from her like the resonance of sound in the clearest grain of a violin," we are told. "She was the Stradivarius of sex." Is someone of this nature not worthy of the Mailer pen? Support the boycott It is obvious with the advent of this new book that it is time once more for Mailer to throw cerebral fists at hollow reality; to create a new classification of books (the "novel-biography"); to invent a new The film crew putting together a however. Perhaps it will eventually be word ("factoids:" something that does not exist except in print); and recruiting piece stopped and took some vividly recorded as the recruiting film crew even a law ("if the past is full of old complications, the future will footage. at Lincoln finishes up their tour of Rose Hill. Inter- grow new ones"). Center: a cafeteria boycott. campus consolidation among students on And, at last, it is time for the genius to create the very essence of a human existence. We are inundated with over 260 pages of Mailer's The cameras moved on but the boycott such a unifying issue has been, is now, and Monroe, jettisoned beyond biographical facts to the world of his looks as if it will remain shamefully lacking. stays. Today being the third day, the point assumptions. The reader is asked to view the world through glasses has been made. Lincoln Center people - Approaches made by downtown student tinctured with the Maileresque. The sad thing is that the reader notes '!••' students, faculty and staff - know when they government leaders to United Student the word "factoid" applies to the author himself as Mailer wallows in are being taken and will not acquiesce. Government President Gary Tulacz, to say egregious apocrypha. High prices and mediocre food are not the the least, have not been received with What he does is chronologically relate the birth, maturing, epitome ordinary fare at metropolitan area colleges. enthusiasm by the USG executive. and downfall of Monroe's unprecedented life. He'Jl take the reader to the world of his supernaturalism (she was born in the year Valentino Regardless of inflation, there is still an Undoubtedly, the results of the downtown died and her feet were ominously Valentino's size) and then level off unreasonable gap between H & H Pur- boycott on prices at Rose Hill (just as high) to brilliant explosions explaining her psyche. veyors' wholesale prices at other places and He says she was narcissistic and expertly cosmetized. Monroe, says will have the same effect uptown as retail prices at Fordham's cafeteria. Mailer, was not merely a glamor girl of fantastic proportions; beyond downtown. Tulacz may get the same result Just who is getting too much of the gravy that, she personified a mirror to all who dared to stare. He claims in "his" cafeteria prices as Liberal Arts Monroe had the ability to magically capture both the lens of the remains to be seen. Automatique claims a Student Government President Greg Fonti camera and the eye of the beholder. revised wholesale list will bring down prices will get downtown, but it will not be to his The game plan is simple and maybe even clear. First, Mailer had to on Monday. credit. Starting his first full semester as construct a personage that justified a writer of his stature doing her We believe that the position of the life story. He begins at her birth and upbringing in the thettoes of leader of the undergraduate population at Liberal Arts Student Govenment is en- Los Angeles, takes us through a murky childhood as this illegitimate Rose Hill, Tulacz has been lackadaisical at couraging- Leg work being done on the child floats from one orphanage to another, and retells her struggle to times, and has exhibited little positive prices and pdlicies at other colleges, as well survive with an insane mother and grandmother. leadership. With Mailer the guide, the trip to her immortalization thickens as the acquisition of a list of wholesale fast. He includes all the nice gossipy details of her first marrir.ge at prices indicates strong initiative. The We believe that the boycott offers the age 15, spices the route to Hollywood with sordid sidebars of sex, and question now is how well the student USG President an excellent opportunity to carefully describes her involvements with both the world of modeling leaders will fare in negotiating with the assert some strong leadership and, at the and that of movies. cafeteria management on Monday. same time, to provide Rose Hill students Monroe, we are told, was an extremely insecure woman bent on Throughout the boycott fervor downtown playing various roles. He meticulously carries the reader through with reasonable cafeteria prices. It is an each of Marilyn's superficial marriages, especially her stint with Joe there has been one subtle disappointment, opportunity that should not be missed. DiMaggio. His insightful reconstructions are fascinating—even though we don't know how accurate—and her subsequent flings are romanticized and psychologically dissected at all costs. Mailer is particularly brilliant in recreating the American climate New York drug law that allowed this queen to come and rule. He adeptly comments on her artistic endeavors at Twentieth Century-Fox, the cheesecake and nude shots that stung America's Victorian hang-ups, and her multitudinous relationships with everyone from Arthur Miller ects some polici (author of "Death of a Salesman") to Frank Sinatra, Marlon Brando, and even her rapport with the Kennedy clan. Her affair, we realize, by Jim Cavanaugh constitutes great potential sacrosanct (from police raids)," was with America-at-large. The toughened New York danger, he explained, and of- he said, "But this is not true. A The writer's greatest portrayal b that of her demise: the in State drug laws are having fered the drug-related murders drug raid is not out of the creasing use of drugs, stints on psychoanalysis, torn relationships varied effects on Fordham. Some at New York University last question. I think the new law and surfacing insecurities. It all jumps from the pages with building are minor, others more year as evidence. should make a difference to the lucidity as Mailer finds, as he puts it, "the root of human comedy, and pronounced. For those on the receiving end, students." it is tragic." Official University policy has Fordham's drug users, the laws' Writing of Monroe's death, Mailer displays what is probably some no— t bee..V.V,.n. ~.vv.altere—d K,Jby th>,..ev laws«a»vo. effects can best be classed as AII ^ ^ taStG' He painls her alle8ed suicide as iust that-alleged. All kinds of cynical suspection is drawn into the account. The 30 or so pot smokers caught '"convenience. *Po vut i10s stilotllll in111 each year will continue to be good supply for most, the big tould it have been murder? Perhaps a right-wing FBI plot to brought before the student difference being, according to discredit Robert Kennedy? (Kennedy was involved in frienship conduct committee where most one user, that "street deals are with Monroe. An affair? No, says Mailer, "His brother (John) had of them will bo placed on out." "Before, I might have managed miracles of indiscretions, but Bobby had a hard enough probation. Hard drug users are asked someone on the street if he attorneys head to realize he was vulnerable to scandal"). rarer - only one was found last wanted some pot," he continued, is clear that no one can offer empirical conclusions, and Mailer year - and the University "but not now." Nor will he buy if u-mis to muddy an already murky account. But despite the low points stresses counselling for them in uft PP*•> f* Hr oacheI dI on the street•• , in ™\ .?• k°f suffioient researching), the book does pick one P lm(;s seems t0 addition to disciplinary action. Sellers, he said-...._, ar.... e^, mornun e^ v(carefuU tlUl Fn , transcend vicarious experience. nterested in tht> fi Dean of Students William t' o sel"l onl'y to people they know. ForTh I." ! f'' of this sex heroine, the book is good. Crawley explained that non- -- ... Conflictingo reportr s are heard those interested in Mailer, the book is great. We are allowed a selling drug users are not concerning pills and LSD. An esis of a possible Monroe, and better, an tin reported to police authorities, indulger in both indignantly how Ma il s HutwithV . 1 "' mind works. This policy, according to „ complained, "No one's dealing." <>f h 'WWJT! T °°k Muiler has lowi'™d hi™elf l0 the gradation spokesman for the 52 precinct, , y eiRtU On the other hand, another said mone„..v ,?II ' ™P' %htin"Biung aan tinrariketinrariked amateuamateurr merelmerely tofor *#_•«- technically constitutes "con- there are still "tons of people i frayed rope. U oh ft'•aling a crime." around doing them." 1-n'nR.s had Z*£ J'I1,.1*" , ° ™'"™nt, ?o»n contemporarcontemporaryy Concerning pushers, Crawley Housing Dean James Gearity ch his creativity toward hasty journalism. The was emphatic. "I would turn had words of warning for those boxer IL^ ^"^ lhu alrocititls the book is good. He is the star (horn in to the police," he who dismiss the laws. '\Students GEARITY: "I think the IK-W law St ; m sm should make a difference to Hailil s he fin'm" '" T" ' «tch «»n look graceful in the proclaimed. Drug dealing have the idea that, the dorms are » ni imally crumpled- - tha•• t• maddened• -, inebriated dump lit' students.'' MI nlhr(lil1 :: «'ni"Kt»fors,, long? No. Norman wins. But the victory Page 4- 1HE RAM-- Friday, September 21, 1973 Ram Fall Sports Special 1973

by Ray Cormier But, it did not happen overnight. The Rams had .. .So the editor says to me, "How about a 1000-word some good years through the World War (the first) story on the history of Fordham football?" "Sure," I especially under the helm of Frank Gargan in 1916-17, said, "why not." compiling an aggregate record of 18—3—1. Ok, where to start? The Blocks of Granite, right. Wait a Gargan soon left but returned in 1922 to mark the minute, which one; there were two versions of the true birth of Fordham into the world of major college Blocks of Granite. Ok then, how about those three football. The Rams always managed to keep a patsy or famous scoreless ties with Pittsburgh; or the sellouts two on the schedule, but from then on the bulk of the at and the against NYU opponents of the boys from Rose Hill were the likes of and little St. Mary's of California? Or, of course, how Boston College, Holy Cross, West Virginia, Purdue, about those two bowl trips and the Lambert Trophy in Pittsburgh, Alabama and Southern Methodist. 1941; or how we almost had Jim Brown, THE Jim Gargan left the helm after a so-so 3-4-1 year in 1926. Brown, as a Fordham alumnus; or should I begin with However his 1925 team was probably the most Fordhma as leader of the Club Football movement in powerful at Rose Hill to date, going 8-1 including wins the sixties. of 60-0, and 76-0, the latter over City College and Instead I better start at the beginning. 1881, yes, featuring a record five touchdowns by Artie O'Connor, 1881! The official Fordham records do not give much who retired as Fordham's track and field coach last information, but some kind of football team was that was. June. organized at Fordham. All that was played was a Regardless of who or what the opposition was, Taking Gargan's place was "The Iron Major" Francis "quasl-match." football took Fordham, and most colleges, by storm in W. Cavanaugh, who was later immortalized in the The next season was the first of 93 years of in- the next few years. In that next decade the Maroon movie The Iron Major by Pat O'Brien.Cavanaugh, a tercollegiate football competition at Rose Hill. The played and set the stage for rivalries with such in- legitimate war hero, coached at Rose Hill until his Rams started a glittering history in appropriate stitutions as City College of New York, Columbia (a untimely death in 1932. He coached the first edition of fashion, posting two victories over a nemesis of recent 40—0 loss, surprise!), Georgetown, St. Peter's and the Blocks of Granite from 1929 to 1930: Elcewicz, years, Seton Hall. There is no record of scores New York University. In 1909, Francis "Bull" McCaffrey Conroy, Foley, Miskinls, Wisnlewski, Tracey, Siano. available. became Fordham's first all-America as the Rams lost He won 69 percent of his games in his six-year tenure, For the following year there is but one contest on only one disputed game to Princeton. Football became 33rd best in history. This courageous record, and the Rams had their winning stieak snapped a mainstay of college life in the Bronx, still a wooded man—he coached that last year (a 6-2 season) even abruptly by Xavier (H.S.) of New Yrok, 12-6. This suburb, until 1910 when for two years no football was though he was nearly blind—is a member of the began a rebuilding period it seems, since the Rams played at Rose Hill. The Ram was not around in those College Football, Helms Foundation and Fordham Hali lost their next four battles over the next two years. days to leave us with an explanation for the lapse. of Fames. And it was he who truly made Fordham a But then a glory era set in as the Maroon went 11 —0 In two years football was back to stay and grow for national power, playing in 1932 Michigan State, St. and 4—0 in the next two seasons, for what has to be forty years before any real problems arose. In that time Mary's of California, and Oregon State. the longest Fordham winning streak in any sport ever. Fordham rose to the ranks of the mighty in the world of Obviously, finding a man to succeed Cavanaugh was Of course, most of those wins came at the expense of college football, equivalent to the Penn States and quite a task. Fordham's brass found that lightning can what the records call a "local athletic club," whatever Notre Dames of today. (Continued on page 6) Leadership, integrity: winning assets for Loucks

Dean Loucks Is a football soon to end as West Point coach. Dean Loucks is also a routed the Bulldogs 40-6, soon man. The dexterity with which after. he combines the two 16 With a Master's Degree in refreshing, in this day in which Social Science from Columbia most coaches leave their Teacher's College, Loucks human qualities at home with returned to White Plains to their family. coach football as his father had Loucks came to Fordham last done for 24 years and to teach year, amongst much con- History. As a coach, he was troversy, mostly generated by a quite successful in restoring New York Daily News part time the school to its former staffer, Jerry Cassidy who prominence. He quit coaching compared the move with that of in 1968 due to a prevailing tone Digger Phelps to Notre Dame of permisiveness under which and castigated Fordham for he found it Impossible to Loucks: the 37 year old coach was a star quarterback in his days at Yale leading the Eli to the 1957 Ivy being so hypocritical. The fact coach. League title. that Loucks took George Maier who was Loucks superior at the Irish Christian Brothers school, along with the Gaels' two top Grid assistants mix experience, players, Brian Colleary and Barry Molloy, could arouse suspicion. However, the plain enthusiasm in teaching players truth was that Cassidy, an irate Head coach Dean Loucks has high school. Loucks noted that thusiasm which the former Yale the most experienced member lona alumnus was just letting quarterback appreciates. of the group, having played off steam. Anyone who knew been preparing his squad for he has a lot of confidence In the beginning of the grid DeBrocky's desire to perfect Heading the other side of the football at Fordham before Coach Loucks had to respect Maroon staff is defensive line World War II. After compiling his integrity. Besides it was season with the help of four Fordham's backfield per- formance. coach Al Kull, who returns after an impressive service record, obvious that if Fordham wanted assistants, and their presence Anew addition to the list of a one year absence. Loucks Kull graduated from Rose Hill to conduct its program em- has provided valuable training for the Maroon players. assistants is offensive line calls Kull "a very strong fun- in 1950. For 20 years he was a Ploying shady tactics, the damentalist with a good coach at Mount St. Michael Gone from last year's coach Doug Young, who is a Maroon would certainly have command of football." Kull is school before coming here. coaching staff are offensive graduate of Easton (Pa.) High exceeded a break even record. School and Kutztown State. And furthermore Loucks didn't coach George Maier, who has taken over as football mentor at Loucks mentioned that "he has break a contract. a good overall knowledge of the The son of Glenn Loucks, Pace, Dino Garr, and John Daurio. The present staff in- game, especially in the area of during his life one of the most line techniques." The head 'enowned sports figures in cludes offensive backfield coach Steve DeBrocky, whom coach also remarked that Westchester County, Dean Young also brings an en- Loucks was destined to play Loucks taught at White Plains footbawl. And play he did, so won in fact that he never lost a Ram Fall Sports 1973 is a supplement to the Fordham Ram,

BY GERRY MEAGHER The Fordham football schedule this year must be termed competitive. Of the ten teams slated, none Is too good (as Columbia was last year) to consider to Rams pushovers. But of the ten, only the Manhattan College club team, and Saint Peter's, a nominal varsity, appear below Fordham's quality, The other eight contests should most certainly be hard fought although Fordham must be considered the underdog against three new opponents, Hofstra, Johns Hopkins, and C.W. Post. Coach Dean Loucks, in his second year at the helm, seems to have fielded an improved squad, owing primarily to the five grants-in-aid per annum, the football program was allowed last year. The 37 year old former Yale star has recruited some fresh- men with outstanding potential who should show constant im- provement through the season. Loucks has stacked the middle of his offensive line with his best beef to give some pep to the run- ning game. The passing game shows great potential, defense essentially unchanged from years is still weak at the tackle, but is very solid at the backfield, with Paul Tuths and Eg Maitland. Look for many close games this year and a lot of exciting football. Last year, I picked the Rams to go 5-5, which they did, however, I was only able to tab the victor in five of ten games. This year I think the Rams will repeat their 5-5 record. St. Peter's—the only question is when and where the Rams are Co captains: Tuths (left) and Molloy (right) believe the Maroon is capable of beating anyone on the going to beat this motley crew, the field and time of the game have changed so much the Peacocks should work it into their game sciieciule. plan. It may work, nothing else has! In their first game, they got beaten by crosstown rivals Jersey City State, 32-0. The Peacocks seemed to have retained their extraordinary offensive impotency, Grid captains forecast exceeded only by its incredibly porous defense. St. Peter's has scored only one touchdown in five games against Fordham and don't expect anymore with this crew of nobodies. Fordham 40-0 (1-0). very fruitful season Drexel—with 18 starters back, coming off a year in which they WitIIII.Lh a__n_ tinvigoratin 1 »! g summer th1UeH plays«!».,« , an««Jd thaiU.it ht,«e. wa...««s success«.. —, . Both feel the team to won three of their last four games, Coach Sterling Brown is camp and a successful actually more concerned with be "definitely better than last looking forward to his first winning season in the five he's been at scrimmage debut against looking at certain players in the year", referring to a 5-5 season. the Philadelphia engineering school. Westchester CC last Thursday plays than with the actual Tuths states that the Rams are The Dragons who shut out the Rams in rain flooded Philadelphia under their jerseys, the 1973 yardage gained. Barry thought "capable of beating every team last year will boast a solid defense headed by linebacker Ed Fordham football co-captains the scrimmage to be "very on the schedule". Molloy Schubert who's 6-2, 228 and being pushed for All American. are high on the Rams' chances beneficial as a team". concurs, adding, "If everything Brown calls Shubert the best hitter he's ever coached. for this season. Looking ahead to the tough jells, and the freshmen come The offense is ignited by senior halfback Jim Reilly who broke Barry Molloy, a six foot-two schedule, which this year along, ideallstically we can go off a long touchdown run against the Rams last year. Reilly 195 pound tight end, and Paul includes competition in the 10-0." He paused, then said, gained over 700 yards with four touchdowns on runs of sixty yards Tuths, a five-ten 175 pound Metropolitan league, both co- "Realistically, we should be at or more last year. On Jack Coffey Field, the Rams will come out cornerback, will perform the co- captains are convinced of Ram least 8-2." on top 14-10 (2-0). captain duties this year. Seton Hall—which won the National Club Championship last Both are among the 60-plus year, will enter its first varsity season with high hopes due mainly players who have made it to the return of the passing duo of Joe D'Angiolillo and Jay through the eight day, triple Alexander. Last year, D'Angiolillo threw for 1,100 yards and 14 session summer camp which touchdowns while completing 48 per cent of his passes. began August 31. This initial Ottaviano heads Alexander, a swift end, caught six of the scores, averaging 17 'period was spent, according t\ yards a catch for a total of 661 yards. The Pirates lost 30-6 to Upsala in the Orange Bowl exhibition. At Jack Coffey, the Rams to Molloy, "getting us into should break their losing streak against the Hall with a 27-14 shape first so that we could new athletic club victory (3-0). avoid serious injuries." Hitting Fordham's grid squad will be the football program to back up was kept to a minimum during Hofstra University—has drastically cut thair football aid helped and promoted this Ed Peterson, Ottaviano, and this time, but the following program but coach Howdy Myers now in his 24th year in Hemp- season by the new Student Joe Gullford. "We need good weeks have been nothing but stead will be in prime contention for the Met Conference Title. Athletic Club, formerly the freshmen managers who are However, the Flying Dutchmen didn't start the season that way. hitting. Tuths explained that Football Club. wiliino 'o work," Dan men- "we're not that big, so we have They were mashed by a strong Lehigh team, 49-0. But in the Dan Ottaviano, the President tioned, T club, in addition, is Wagner game, Myers found a quarterback in Steve Zimmer who to rely on our quickness in planni.'y to coordinate getting to the ball." of the volunteer undergraduate completed 13 of 24 passes for 247 yards in an upset of the Met association explained that its statistical information, in favorites. Hofstra showed well on defense against Wagner but Both co-captains were purpose will be to publicize cooperation with the sports their running game, completely decimated by graduation, is still encouraged by the scrimmage, Ram intercollegiate events, aid information department. unimpressive. The Dutchmen will give the Rams a proper in- won by the Rams, 7-0. in ticket sales in the Campus One area that the club will be troduction to the Conference, and stop the Maroon Homecomina Defensively, Tuths was Center, supervise cheerleading concentrating on is pleased. He felt the game victory streak, 30-10, (3-1). and help the football personel cheerleading. Despite the situation was necessary to the Johns Hopkins is a team the Rams should be playing. Hopkins with day-to-day operations. unit for reaction purposes, Fordham tradition for active is a good school and gives Fordham outside exposure. The Rams, support of athletics in the past, noting how they had suc- However, the CBA senior however, may wish they never heard of Hopkins. The Blue Jays that facet has fallen down to cessfully bottled up thwarnee d that the club formed lave their high octane offense returning from last year including the point where only a few Westchester option play. In last semester by the Athletic :he Mason Dixon Conference most valuable player, Jack Thomas. individuals participated last addition, the front four sacked Governing Board "is not a When he's throwing Thomas will have two all conference selec- year. In fact one of them, Frank quarterback Mark Samson four booster club, nor is it solely to ions to choose from scatback Bill Nolan and Riely Kowalchuck. Nastasi was the target of many te a ball carrier the 5-7,155-pound Nolan averaged more than five times. be associated with the Athletic people who impunged the ards a carry last year as did his running mate Phil Alba. But the Although the Rams had some Department. We're a service integrity of his position. offense will be burdened by the total inexperience of the vital degree of difficulty moving the or9anization to the Universitv " ffensive front. All five of last year's offensive linemen were lost balhall offensivelynffQnoiwnl.. , Mollo14 . II _ y was . . * ' Consequently, not many Another of the club's wanted to join the ranks of male i graduation. All-American lacrosse player Franz Wittelsburqer a satisfied. He explained that responsibilities will be ackfield star, anchors the defense. ' Coach Loucks was calling all cheerleaders." Ottaviano providing student managers for responded that, "anybody who The Bluejays have just too much punch for the Rams (30-21) (3- hasn't been involved with the Manhattan College—always comes out fighting one way or the Athletic Department in some her. This year won't be any different. Although the Rams have manner shouldn't knock the uch more firepower than the Jaspers, the Kelly Green certainly cheerleaders." II not give in easily. Brian Smith, senior left handed quarterback As for another factor in the II see to that. Last year, Smith threw for 1,500 yards and 15 current situation, the club head jchdowns. Steve Holmes, a6-3 sprinter, also will chip in to give theorized that since Fordham is 3 Jaspers fine offensive potential. Last year Holmes recorded a commuter school, many ?r 1 000 yards in total offense. But Manhattan's likeable students who work can't take ach, Larry Kelly doesn't have overall strength on offense or much time out for ex- «nse. The Jaspers nay get Rameses XXIV but definitely not the tracurricular activities. I" e Igame. Fordham wins In a walk 30-7 (4-2). addition, he noted that in tf> Georgetown - has beaten Fordham twice since 1968. Both case of football, there was es on Kehoe Field. The Rams have beaten Georgetown three more interest in the days when es since 1968, all on Jack Coffey field. Add to that students ran the program on a )rgetown's top notch backfield with the 29-year old ex-marine club level, before the Maroon turned varsity In 1970. ph Edwards and John Burke who both averaged over five yards n e my. Also add Alex Hampshire, Georgetown's 5-11, 270-pound Nevertheless, < jnsive tackle who spent his winter heckling Georgetown's organization is looking towards an Improvement in last years ketball opponents (In the game against Fordham he threw a hot n at Kenny Charles). Do not forget the fact that there will be a poor showing. Thoug tryouts ('"'V Homecoming Day crowd at Georgetown, as there is whenever !l1 (•Continued on page 7) a dozen '•< ' didates, the club is offerinu lht (Continued '<" i"-':'' Desmond Lawe and the good old

BEFORE: Freshman quar- AFTER: Junior linebacker terback Desmond Lawe, fall, Desmond Lawe, fall, 1973. 1971. With just over 18 minutes to go, Lawe hit end Bruce at 40-40, and if the Rams ever made a two-point Dulak over the middle for a 71-yard touchdown and conversion—heaven forbid—they would have won, 41- by Malcolm Moran now everyone was happy, even though it was a 33-6 40 and several thousand people would have needed a football game. cardiac unit. "LINEBACKERS AND ENDS," screams the coach, A couple of minutes later, Paul Tuths gave the Rams There was no 94-yard touchdown, no two-point and Desmond Lawe lines up in front of the sleds with good field position with a 32-yard punt return, Lawe conversion, and no cardiac unit was necessary. On the the other linebackers and ends. He will do to the sleds threw a 62-yard touchdown pass to Bill Dunne, and it next play, Lawe was tackled in the end-zone for a now what he will do to real people on game day. was a 33-12 game. safety, and the Rams were 42-33 losers. The standing "BREAK HIM IN HALF," instructs the coach, and Lawe Now the Alfred people were getting a little nervous, ovation for the freshman quarterback with the painful tries to break the sleds in half Just like the other so back came the first stringers. But when you're hot, ribs and his team was not for losers, though. linebackers and ends. you're hot. Tuths intercepted a pass, Lawe drove the The cheers became just memories last September Sometimes, when linebackers sleep, they think Rams 76 yards in eight plays (including a 44-yard pass when new coach Dean Loucks brought in two transfer about hitting sleds. That Is called having a nightmare. in a fourth-down-and-nine situation) and it was a 33-19 quarterbacks, Don Hommel and Brian Colleary, and Sometimes, they think about touching a football. That game. moved Lawe to linebacker. is called a dream. And sometimes, they might imagine There were almost seven minutes left, and the same "Lawe can throw the ball as well as any of them," they threw a football for 277 yards and four touch- fans that were willing to settle for just one score were Loucks said at the time, "but there are certain things downs in one game. That is called a fantasy. now hoping the Rams would make it close. they can do that he can't." What Loucks was trying to Unless it's Desmond Lawe. So Tuths intercepted another pass (naturally), Lawe say was clear. Hommel could pass and run. Colleary If you mention that one day, October 23, 1971, a threw a 20-yard touchdown pass to Dulak, and it was a could pass and run. Lawe could pass, period. smile comes to his face and the memories come back. 33-27 game. The Saxons went nowhere when they got "I wanted to play," Lawe said, "so I said I'd play Not all of them ("It all happened sort of fast. I only the ball back (of course), their punt was blocked by defense if they needed me." He had played quar- remember spots," he will tell you) but enough of them. Mike Ajello (you knew it would happen) and John terback and defensive back at Cardinal Hayes High It wasn't even a whole game, really, Just about 18 6'Donnell recovered the ball at the Alfred 17. School, but never linebacker. The new position, a new minutes. But for those 18 minutes, Desmond Lawe By this time, the Alfred coaches were wishing they linebacking system at Fordham and early-season looked like an ail-American, his teammates could do left their first team in, the Fordham coaches were injuries produced many problems for the ex-miracle nothing wrong, and the crowd at Jack Coffey Field saw hoping their team could move 17 yards in two and one- worker, and it wasn't until the next-to-last game of the a comeback they will probably never forget. half minutes, the cool, calm professional members of season that he felt sure of himself. Fordham was playing that day and the working press were shouting themselves hoarse, The cheerleaders don't yell his name anymore, and between Alfred's record (a powerful 5-0) and Fordham's and the same fans that were willing to settle for just the only time some people notice him is when he record (a not-so-powerful 1-3), Ram fans were ex- one score were looking for at least a tie. makes a mistake, but Lawe doesn't mind. "I always pecting 60 humiliating; minutes. After converting a fourth-and-six play, Lawe gave the played defense. I like it," he says. ball to North Callahan who ran seven yards to score the But does he like it more than throwing touchdown At the end of 30 humiliating minutes, the score was points that made it a 33-33 game. Callahan's point- passes? 30-0. after try was blocked, but no one really cared. The "Now I do," he says. "I guess wherever you're And at the end of 41 humiliating minutes and nine Rams had scored 33 points in just over 15 minutes to playing, you like it. It's satisfying throwing a touch- humiliating seconds, the score was 33-0. There was tie one of the better small college teams in the country, down pass, but it's satisfying making an interception one touchdown pass, two touchdown runs, and to and no one could believe what they were seeing. or a good tackle, too. You make a good hit, you feel make things more humiliating, there was a freshman Unfortunately, everyone did not live happily ever good." kicker named Donald Hockenberry who kicked field after. Which brings us back to the practice field, and the goals of 35, 34, 30 and 50 yards. The fifty-yarder screaming coach, and the sleds that Desmond Lawe is cleared the crossbar by five yards, and if you don't Alfred made an option pass work for 37 yards on a supposed to break in half while Don Hommel and Brian believe that, don't worry, the people sho saw it didn't third-and-12 play and drove for the winning touchdown Murray toss passes several yards away. believe it, either. with 43 seconds left. The Rams were then pushed back "This is 'where the fun is," the coach shouts. to their own six yard line, but Lawe was willing to try So time was running out, Alfred's second string was "I don't think anyona thinks hitting the sleds is fun," for one last miracle—-another pass to Bruce Dulak. m the game, Ram fans were willing to settle for just Lawe admits. one score, and freshman Desmond Lawe was playing "The safety fell down," Lawe says now, "but Bruce But there is one conso' uion. When the games start, quarterback. turned one way and I threw the other. It would have Hommel and Murray are going to get clobbered. The "I wasn't supposed to play," he remembers now. "I been a 95-yard touchdown." linebackers are ihe dobberers and the quarterbacks are had bruised ribs, but I suited up and had all sorts of Well, not quite. It would have been a 94-yarder, but a the clobberees- pudding around my ribs. I was pretty surprised when I touchdown and conversion would have tied the game It's more fun being a clobberer. went in."

The date- October 23, 1971. When Lawe wanted to throw the ball, he got great blocking [far left] and had time to find Bruce Dulak, among others [second left] for four touchdown passes. When Lawe wanted to run the ball, he got more great blocking [second right] and gave the ball to North Callahan, here scoring the tying touchdown [far right], among others. Friday, September 2/1, 1973—The Ram-Page 3S BRIAN COLLEARY AL LUCIA GENE McCUlLOUGH 80 AJello, Michael' STEVE TOMASIEWKZ 38 Afgarin, Richard 31 Bagley, James 89 Benef ico, Joseph Offensive success rests 23 Boyd, Michael 84 Branca, Mark 66Casfmos, Christopher 30 Casino* on youthful interior line 47 Cates, Reginald 13 Chlsolm, Richard The big question for the Although Hommel has been Maroon will be team captain 19Chrisafis Fordham offense and the suffering from a sore arm this Barry Malloy, a 6-2, 195 75 Cirrito, Michael success of the team this year is week, Loucks discounted that it pound senior set all modern 24 Colleary, Brian* single season records for a how well the offensive line affected his decision, ex- 27Colombini, Anthony holds up against the bigger and plaining that Hommel's arm receiver at Fordham last year 12 Couch, Kevin more experienced defenses was just tired from throwing. after transferring from lona. 78 Craig, Nicholas they will meet throughout most Playing along with Murray In Kevin McQuade and Mark 18 DeMeo, Dennis of the season. the backfield will be Brian Branca will alternate at tight 87 DePas, Ralph "The offensive line holds the Colleary at tailback. The 200 end, bringing the designated 36 Oinallo, Michael key to the future of the team," pound senior, also in top play in from Loucks to the 76 Doyle, Ed was Dean Loucks' assessment shape, has been hard pressed huddle. Branca, also on the 63 Fablani, Edward' of the situation. "Whether they to keep Dennis DeMayo from track team, is the faster of the 55 Fenner, Michael will be able to hold off the taking over his position. At two having run the 100 in a time 22 Fenton, Kevin vfc' defensive line and move them slotback, Loucks will go with of 9.8 seconds. 14 Glover, Gerald out to allow a running game will freshman Owen Ward and at Overall, Loucks is looking for 32Gottsegen, Richard' mean alot." continued Loucks. fullback Tommy Kampa. The 6- DON HOMMEL an improved offense over last 48 Hart, Michael The line upon which so much 0, 217-pound freshman was an year, now operating out of the 68 Hemsley, Stephen* is resting this Saturday, will all-city fullback from Xavier. T-formation. "There are a lot of 42 Henderson, Richard' include Tom Weber at left He too was in a close battle V new kids who have had little 16 Hommel .Donald' tackle, Joe Jordan at left with freshman Mike Dlnello for experience. It's too early to tell guard, Rich Renziat center, Chris a strarting berth. 17 Hurley, James* yet, but they could be a good 72 Jordan, Joseph' Casimos at right guard, and Ed Starting at split end for the offensive team." I'. 'Fabiani at right tackle, 37 Kampa, Thomas although Loucks warned that 34 Keenan, Patrick the personnel will be changing 61 Kepple, Timothy a lot over the year. "There were 39Lawe, Desmond* 46 Leyden, Gene tight races" at practically all One day, manv, years -ago, a running back on the Syracuse^ offensive positions," com- University football team had a particularly good day against 54 Lucia, Alfred* - mented Loucks. He even stated Cornell, and after the game, a local merchant asked the player to 29Maltland, Egerton.Jr.' that Joe ^Jordan was being work on a radio broadcast. 75 Marrero, Manuel pushed~t)y sophomore Nick "You don't want me,'± the player said. "I'm nervous, I stutter, I 35 McArdle, Peter Craig. This despite the fact stammer..." 79~McCullough, Gene' that Jordan is in top physical "I'll pay you 15 dollars," the merchant said. 85 McQuade, Kevin shape and, according to the "I'll take it," the player said. 26 Milne, Christopher' coach, "looking better than he's 81 Molloy, Barry* ever looked." At center, three- The player was Marty Glickman, and while he won't be working of the WFUV football broadcasts in reality, he will be there in 11 Murray, Brian year starter Al Lucia has been . 20 Mylott, Martin ousted by freshman Rich Renzi spirit. In 1970, while broadcasting the Football Giants' games, TOMMY KAMPA 10 Oliva, Thomas in another tough battle. Glickman and CHip Cipolla (a former WFUV announcer and Fordham grad) tried a new form of football broadcasting. Instead 83Pallonettl, John' As far as the question of of the traditional play-by-play—color set-up, one announcer 41 Perricelli, Robert' which quarterback will start watched the offenses and the other watched the defenses. And a 70 Phelps, Thomas Saturday, Loucks has chosen third announcer wathced whatever he wanted to watch. 73 Poletsky, Joseph University of Massachusetts The result was instead of only learning who made the tackle, you 45 Reno, Robert transfer Brian Murray, although learned why he was able to make it, and where he got help from, or 50 Renzi, Richard the choice was not easy. "It where he should have gotten help from. And instead of only learning 51 Reyes, Hector was very close between two who ran with the ball, you learned why he ran with the bail, or 33 Rice, James very good quarterbacks." maybe why someone else should have run with the ball. 71 Rivera, Ralph explained the Yale graduate So tonight, when the Rams open the new season, Malcolm 86 Russell, William "For what we're trying to do I 77 Safarowic, Kenneth feel Murray should start." Moran will be watching the offenses, Steve Petrone will be wat- 43 Sokol, Joseph Loucks explained that Murray ching the defenses, Mike Boccia will watch whatever he wants to •52 Stabile, Mark edged out junior Don Hommel to watch, and Gary Stanley will be roaming the fields of Harrison, 70 Szerszynski, Michael because of his poise and ex- New Jersey with a microphone. In later weeks, Ed Randall, Bob perience. "We want to play a Heck and a cast of thousands will be doing the same thing. 49 Thompson, William, Jf well-executed game and "You'll be surprised how much football you'll learn," said Glick- 25 Tomasfewicz, Stephen" therefore we went with the man as he gave the young announcer pointers on the new system. 62Tuths, Mike most experienced personnel. Hopefully, we'll all learn, starting tonight at 7:30 with a special 21 Tuths, Paul* We're trying to build our of- pre-game show, and continuing all season, with a telephone-talk 44 Ward, Owen fense." said the second year show starting 30 minutes before each game. 74 Weber, Thomas* JOE SOKOL coach. 88 White, Art 28 Williams, Anthony

MCK HENDERSON JOE JORDAN Page 4S-The Ram—Friday, September 21, 1973 KEVIN FENTON 6-5 225 CHRIS MILNE MKE AJEUJO 5-11 185 PATKEENAN EGEftTON MAIILAND 5-11 170 6-2 190 6-0 195 Veteran defense suffers 5-10 - 175 6-4 270 5-10 190 I 6-1 215 from sparcity of depth 5-6 160 6-0 170 by Kevin Cleary 5-11 190 Loucks, is "a very exceptional four spots open: returnees 6-1 190 Traditionally, defense at tackle", and he and Doyle, Steve Tomaslewicz, co-captain 5-7 160 Fordham has always been the although somewhat Inex- Paul Tuths, Tony Casino, 6-1 175 stronger unit. The success of perienced, had fine per- Egerton Maitland and Chris 6-0 205 Fordham's defense this season formances against West- Milne. Maitland has a slight 5-11 190 could depend highly on in- chester. injury and will not start 6-1 190 juries. The team has gone As a whole, this line held tomorrow at St. Peter's. 6-0 215 through four weeks of hard Westchester to an amazingly Tomasiewicz, a junior, didn't 6-0 195 practice and one scrimmage, low-negative 75 yards rushing, play football his freshman 6-0 200 and emerged unscathed from in addition to four sackings of season, and saw limited action 6-6 245 serious injury, but the season the quarterback. last year in the secondary. He 5-10 170 has not started yet. West- Key substitutes up front will start in a safety slot. 5-6 150 chester is not C.W. Post. include end Bill Russell and Paul Tuths is a hard-hitting 6-0 200 The team has an exceptional tackle-middle linebacker Tom All-State senior and will be at 5-11 190 starting unit, but not the depth Phelps. his usual comerback position. 5-9 190 needed if key changes due to The linebacking crew is He has been a four year starter BRIAN MURRAY 6-1 180 injuries are to be made. And "vastly improved over last year. for the Rams, and doubles as a 6-1 190 injuries could become a harsh This has been our biggest return specialist. 5-9 160 reality when the smaller Rams improvement defensively." Joe Chris Milne likewise is a 5-11 215 go up against Division III Sokol, a feshman, and returning starter and will be the 5-11 200 powers like C.W. Post, Hofstra Rich Gottsegan are the outside other comerback. 5-10 165 or Johns Hopkins. linebackers, while Desmond Casino and Maitland were 6-1 215 Coach Dean Loucks has Lawe starts in the middle. among the defensive mainstays 6-0 200 whipped the team into shape, Converted guard Steve Hemsley of last year. Maitland, a junior, 5-11 165 andfhe Rams will need every step Is the first substitute; Hem- has started ever since suiting 6-0 205 they pan get in order to do4he sley, who is also a shot potter up at-^ose Hill. Casino will ; i 6-1 175 job. The 4-3-4 formation on the track team, has been start at the other safety spot 6-0 170 utilized will have to be very hampered by a bad leg. against the Peacocks of Jersey 6-0, 175 tight If theJRams are to stop .Lawe, a former Ram fluar- City. 6-1. 230 their opponents and give the terback, saw linebacker-action Jim Bagley and Kevin Fenton 6-0 180 multiple offense a chance to last season and has really come are top substitutes in the back- 5-9 165 unlimber. around this year. Gottsegan field. 6-2 195 The defensive line has was a starter by mid-season Coach Loucks, on the whole, 6-3 200 two standouts at the end last year, and will be playing seems guardedly optimistic in 6-0 185 spots. Mike Ajello, a 6-5 junior the wide side of the. field. regards to .his defensive unit. 6-1 175 is In" top shape and will The defensive secondary, "We can only go on past 5-9 190 claim his right end spot. He is according to Loucks, has "the performances," he stated, "and KEVIN McQUADE i I 5-9 180 praised by his coach as being numbers but not too much against Westchester we did a 6-1 220 "one of the best ends around". depth." Five key men fill the very fine job defensively." 6-2 205 The left end, Rich Henderson, 5-9 155 was pressed into linebacker 5-10 205 duty last year but he has 6-0 205 "always been a better end. We < V 6-0 195 needed him at linebacker last t. 1 6-1 200 year." 6-2 190 The defensive line lost its 6-0 205 entire interior, but Loucks has 6-0 205 found very capable 5-10 200 replacements. Bob Api, a 225- 6-2 205 pound tackle, quit the team and 5-10 185 is now coaching at Westchester 5-11 170 Community College while still 6-3 215 attending Fordham. Gene 5-10 21 Cullen, the other tackle, is a 5-9 185 215-pounder who transferred to 5-11 205 Holy Cross. 5-10 175 Taking their spots will be Ed Doyle and Len McCullough. Henderson: the 6-2 sophomore, number 42, has been moved from 5-11 175 linebacker to end. McCullough according to MKEMNELLO i ii

'• •, i.

MEKEBOYD ED DOYLE STEVE HEMSLEY DENNIS DeMAYO Fordham football, a long story

(•Continued from page 1) strike twice, however, when they hired a young man named James Crowley, a Knute Rockne protegee, to take over the football program. This man known as "Sleepy Jim" hired as his assistant a man by the name of Frank Leahy, who later would register the second best coaching record in the history of the game at Boston College and Notre Dame, and continued and enhanced the Maroon's winning tradition. Crowley, in his thirteen years as Fordham's head coach won 78 percent of his games and provided the greatest moments in Fordham's long and colorful sports tradition. He began with a 6—2 year, shutting out Alabama and West Virginia among others, as Ed Danowski passed his way to the first Madow Trophy presen- tation. He rebuilt with a 5-3 season. Then, with the new version of the developing, he began a dynasty of sorts: 6-1-2, losing 7-0 to Purdue; 5-1-2, getting revenge on Purdue, 15-0, and playing two monumental games at Yankee Stadium, beating little but powerful St. Mary's 7-6, and for the second year battling mighty Pitt to a scoreless tie; and finally 1937 was an undefeated year, but the cry "Rose Hill to Rose Bowl" was not to be heeded because for the third consecutive season Pitt had played the Rams to a 0-0 tie. Yet, the Maroon wave rolled on in 1938 leading the country in rushing and total offense on the way to a 6-1-2 year, this time losing to those damn Panthers from the Steel City. The famed Seven of Druze, Barbatsky, Jacunski, Kochel, Bernard, Wojciechowicz, Franco, and their replacements Seven Blocks of Granite: were actually fourteen, as Fordham had two sets, one in 1929 and the more famous one Lombard!, Pierce, Paquin never brought their legen- in 1936-7. dariness to a bowl game despite being the best team instilled the same pride in his men as he had as one of on the East Coast for three years. the famed "Four Horsemen", and he brought them to Coach Crowley finally got his team to a bowl game the Sugar Bowl the very next New Year's Day and though. On January 1, 1941 the Pams lost to Texas A defeated Missouri 2-0, for an 8-1 season and the end of and__M.13-12 in the Cotton Bowl. But "Sleepy Jim" the greatest era of Fordham football, the Crowley years, as "Sleepy Jim" entered the Army. With the departure of Crowley and the onset of World War II, football at Rose Hill entered a very un- sure period. Fordham, like other schools save the very largest powers, did not field a team for three years during the war. And when it was time to return to action at home instead of overseas, Fordham found that it had fallen far behind the other major powers on its schedule. From a winless season in 1946 (Penn State clob- bered the Rams 68-0, LSU won 40-0 and West Virginia 39-0) the Maroon made steady progress in its program under former Ram great Ed Danowski. By 1949 they led the nation in passing with the great Ed Doheny at quarterback, and finished 5-3. Doheny led the Rams to an 8-1 year in 1950 losing only to powerful Yale and beating Ollie Matson-led San Francisco, as well as NYU, BC, Syracuse and West Virginia. A rebuilding year of 5-3 followed, but then things went downhill at Rose Hill, hitting rock-bottom in 1954 with a 1 -7-1 year. Not only that but the Rams were not drawing fans in competition with the pros, and football was costing Fordham too much money. While the Rams had a chance to recruit Jim Brown out of Long Island, the announcement of the cessation of football at Fordham was announced by the administration. For ten long years the only football played on Rose Holo Grounds: was the scene of most of Fordham's most Hill of any note was played by the New York Giants of memorable battles. the National Football League, who Crowley: was perhaps Fordham's greatest coach. 'Sleepy sSin? ™°TBALU 0" September 18. Club football. T , , «.mOI unit i_ee M Jim' one of Notre Dame's four Horsemen currently "' J™ ftj& a"d v™e Lombards knowing y Zl nlf and suPP0|led by the Student Government, in Scranton, Pennsylvania. 9 S most im Then, in 1964, after intense effort on the part of SPS hv PX!" T Portant boost here in New York student leaders, The Ram practically S^S qLln? Ihe Rams PlaVed twice that year under 2; c°acJ Davld Langdon, losing to Maine

V 42 and in the fi st real club matchmatrh , Hdefeatin ?^ g NYU'° 20-14' .' ' The next year saw a professional, full-time coach in ™ng, a member of the Sugar Bowl team of 1942 4 1 Z,*™"?* end at Fordham. He led the Rams to ;i ^°": fol|owed by mostly winning seasons a<- •^ me culmination for Lansing was winning \w nampri r K ,Foolba" Championship and bdnci named coach of the Year in 1968. v era began soon, however, pushinc; eh:!1 nt lt! R.im ' ° J own niche in Fordham history, in- torn were back! In 1970 Peter A. Carlesimo, athl,•!*• ^iieclor announced. at Fordham was turning varsity again i'1 last year President James Finiay :m r

year.also, the Rams joined a new league iht ^yed a major role in creating, tlr.- 'n[fcollegiate Football Conference. Ami i if, •?ir Dean Loucks, the 34th head foothaH '"ustrious annals of Fordham football. H»: league, playing9'" Seri°US ComPpe

Kdward'n I'arad* Grounds: wore wl.,r, the Now YoTfS^^^" Webster (left) mn» Trunk (,'ifford. ' T itsfOOtbal9oin g !s atmewh Fordharem Page 6S-The Ram-Friday, September 21, 1973 ° « of a", death! 'gcorniny, and most astounds ater polo squad seeks to capture lastern champs by Bob Lee able to stay out of foul trouble. An optimistic coach Joe The talented high school all- drnal viewed the upcoming American will lend balance to brdham water polo season like the team, something it lacked Ls "We will take one tour- in previous years. lament at a time, peak toward "In the past, we leaned too ,e big one and come home much on Kelly," stated Bernal. -ltd a championship.". The "Now if everyone can carry their hampionship he was referring load, we should be a winning 0 iS the Eastern cham- team. jjonships, a tournament which Bernal also cited Kevin las remained just beyond the Sullivan, who has "developed iach of the Rams. quite nicely" and goalie Denis Two years ago Bernal's team Zinkand who has come back in jurprised everyone by the best shape he has ever been lefeating second-ranked in. An added plus for the team lucknell, 14-13 in an exciting is that freshmen Paul Dara and latch, to enter the finals Chuck Felice both have had [gainst a powerful Yale squad. experience in water polo. tlthough the Rams were The Rams will face a lefeated 15-5, Ned Kelly, a schedule which includes Yale, iphomore at the time, was last year's Eastern champs, .jlected to both the all-east Bucknell and the cadets of mmmr m- vK^'W^ '^MHW ,JHBMK»>; mm ind Eastern League teams and West Point among their Kissane: the junior transfer from NYU has joined his brother John, on Fordham's powerhouse water polo in exuberant Bemal stated, toughest foes. In noting a team. le've come a long way, and reason for Army's success, /e'll be back." Bemal stated, "The team is Last year, the Aquarams did always in excellent shape Soccerams eye tournament :ome back, no longer the dark through their summer program and reporting back to school lorse they were the year before, by Augie Gomez past performances, and Can the flick a pass through any id lost, in the semi-finals to a earlier." offense score enough? The opening, run and shoot swiftly. larvard squad they had beaten As far as the condition of his The soccer outlook for this questions are connected, for When he cocks his left foot to inly one month previously. own team, the coach was not autumn's team is optimistic the best offense is a good shoot, it is reminiscent of "E" Jernal explained his teams 9-5 particularly happy. He said that due to their past experience and defense, yet you can only win because both are so quick, Jefeat this way, "We just took because Fordham students talent. Within reach is a by outscoring the opposition. accurate and powerful. Ihem too lightly." This year, report back to school later than regional NCAA berth that would In the Metropolitan area Probably the one player who lernal hopes it will be dif- others, his team has little time definitely put Fordham on the forward Leonard Kelly has has as much to do with this ferent. to practice. "We've had very map as a team to watch now established himself as one of year's soccer fortunes as "On paper we are as good little chance to run through and in the future. Only three most dazzling and exciting anyone is Kevin Masterson. He is anyone in the East." com- organized plays and patterns in games separated the Rams players around. Leonard's is the one who can take the lented Bernal. "If they (the the water. We're not drilling and from attaining a berth last year. creativity with or without the pressure off Kelly and Guzzo by ilayers) want to work together practicing enough." stated the It will be an uphill struggle ball makes him a joy to watch scoring. The native of Ireland ind develop themselves, they NYU graduate. because 10 of the 16 games are and a threat to score at any has the potential and ability yet in do it." This year, the time problem on the road and the Rams will time. He reminds you of Jerry it remains to be seen whether or Leading the Ram attack will has been compounded by pool miss leading scorer Ifeatu West or Walt Frazier because not it will come through. A big s Kelly, now a senior conditions which were not the Otue. The key games which will bft is so smooth, daring and year from Masterson will I-American, whom Bernal best. The chlorine has been decide Fordham's autumn are smart. Kelly has an inner sense remove the pressure from the sailed the top player In the high and forced the swimmers Columbia, Fairleigh Dickin- of not only where the goalie is, defense. The defenders will but where the goalie is in " tst. Sophomore Paul Macht of out of the water. "It bothers son, Adelphi, and N.Y.U. therefore be able to play more relation to the goalposts, which ipper Merion, Pennsylvania, their eyes and mucous linings Like all good teams the heart cpenly and confidently without is even more important. His light well be the key to suc- and they have to stop." was of the team is down the middle, fear of making a mistake. Bernal's explanation. starting with goalie Marcus acceleration is startling, and The midfield positions are jss for the Rams should he be combines effortlessly with a Junker, speedy fullback Dave 1 anchored by Haitian Marques Gordon, his calm and clever breakaway speed that befuddles Ossan nd Peter Bourbeau. partner, Tony Lamptey, half- and frustrates Ram foes. His This is ii third year together backs Marques Ossan, Peter fellow inside, freshman and siu «.d be their most Bourbeau and forwards Armando Guzzo, will fill the productive. Their job is to set Armando Guzzo and Leonard gap left by Otue somewhat up the front line and control the Kelly. Their performance will simply by his precociousness vital midfield area as well as tell the story of this year's and ability. Armando can deftly aiding the defense. team. Both the team and the Fordham community will miss the incomparable Ifeatu "E" New band program Otue from Nigeria. In the Ibo language Ifeatu means 'Miracle', and many times "E" was just that. He did things one set for fall games never imagined a player could (Continued from page 3) Georgetown encounter, m do. There were countless times addition, the band will make he would put on that charac- service of an NYU graduate the trip to Washington for the J teristic burst of speed to assistant to coach the female l °hnson: the College Division all- Georgetown encounter. In american has scored four times Bernal: "On paper we are as outrun a surprised defender, members and to come up with a new routines. The club will also addition, the band will institute | gainsl the l{&mB j,, two ycar8i good as anyone in the East" dribble by a bewildered a pre-game performance, defenseman or score that provide safe and convenient mmmimmmmmmmmmmmmmmtm complete with a ROTC color needed goal from impossible transportation for them. guard and a Block-F formation angles. But Ifeatu was more Ottaviano realizes that on Coffey Field. than an artist, he was a leader because the club is voluntary, SHE BROHX CHEER and a man. His calm "You can't force people to do Father Mul queen's 1ue« Jrom page 3) disposition and unflagging anything if you're not paying organization, which has in- tho tW0 Jesuit rlva]?-meet. There Is no way the Rams can buck desire to do his best carried the them." He is hoping that a good creased its ranks to around 60 *se odds. Georg^owrUn a tough battle, 21-20, (4-3). team through many tough portion of the student body members, will be offering a variety of music to better en- a| psaia - is still burning over last year's upset loss to the Rams situations. In his last and finest might come out to participate 1 Jack Coffey Field. This combined with what Coach John year at Fordham he made All- in the support of Fordham tertain Maroon spectators this nK.calls his "best 9rouP of recruits in my 16 year career" will New York State, thereby athletics. "We already have coming year. s** Jough for the Rams in East Orange (which Is northeast of making him one of the finest in diehard fans. We want to reach ^ange). Look for the Vikings In a tussle, 13-12, (4-4). America. Edwards Parade Will the people who have never roari »• °ost - will gree9 t the Rams as they tire from their longg no longer echo with the familiar experienced Ram events. In DATE OPPONENT PLACE The Pi general, people don't realize Quart K °™*'s lost their entire backfield except for chants of " E - E - E - E ". He Sept. 21 St. Peter's Away

runners. Miller, who presently by Charlie Gelatf is a member of the New York There are certain Individuals Athletic Club, related that a who run up to Van Cortlandt harrier can inct. an injury Park rather than take the bus. "especially when you don't They can be seen passing the know the course that well. The Bronx reservoir instead of home advantage is why certain admiring it. For the Fordham schools change courses from cross-country athlete, his year to year to win meets. endeavor is a time consuming, Stepping in a hole or tripping physically enduring, and lonely on a rock can result in anything experience, without the from shinsplints to an ankle glamour that accompanies sprain. In addition, Miller other major sports. asserts, "You could be hurting Few people on campus are all week, but when the meet aware that the harriers put in comes around you have to an average of 100 miles a week forget about it. Cross-country running double practice centers on how much pain your sessions, to get ready for body can take and then go grueling five-mile inter- beyond that." collegiate competitions on the A related influence upon the weekends. Unlike the indoor harrier's performance is the and outdoor track man, the climate. "The heat really takes a x-country harrier does not enjoy lot out of everybody during the the luxury of a level surface. first couple of meets," Miller Inclement weather also is a big says. He added that the ideal obstacle. And if that wasn't situation, where the day is enough, the really serious long- overcast without precipitation distance runners also compete and temperatures are in the 50's in officially sanctioned AAU rarely comes around. road races or marathons, which However, the people involves at least another 20 associated with the sport still miles. hold a high appreciation for it. So why do these Maroon Kelly claims, "There's nothing athletes subject themselves to to compare with it except the rigors and frustrations of a swimming for individuality". little, known sport in the Despite the work, he feels, "The KELLY (left) AND BYRNE: note that the long distant runner must face long hours, frequent pain, and a J Metropolitan area and most of better a runner feels, the more challenging outdoor environment. America? Fred Miller, a quarter- that he wants to run." Indeed, miler on last year's track squad many Maroon harriers have to see one of his runners you can take running on The same phenomenon caul 1 noted that cross-country "is a continued to run long distance, Iff. dedication, a habit. Some even after they have graduated compete in a roadrace, Fordham Road or Pelham Park- also be found at cross-country | people like to go out for a drink from Rose Hill. An example provided that either the Athletic way, though." meets. Miller added that Director or the Assistant A.D. is and there are others who like to would be Dr. Norbert Sander, Trammel, however, sees the recognition of the runners informed, since "from the go out for a good run." He who is on the medical service at meaningful purpose of cross- "comes from your peers, since moment they register till the described the enticing quality Metropolitan Hospital in country as, "a preparation for they know what you're going day they graduate, our boys are of long-distance running as Manhattan. Dr. Sander has the indoor season." He, like through." In addition, the "the challenge to prove that under the Fordham colors." participated in many top-flight Miller, agrees that the sport motivation for doing better you're better than the other marathons since running on the For the head of the Maroon builds endurance since the comes from coaches and man." All-American four-mile relay track program, the most indoor season is based on teammates. "There's nothing The sport, unlike basketball, team at Fordham with Coach valuable result of the cross- speed. better than having someone baseball or football centers on Byrne ten years ago. Among his country experience is the come over to you and individual efforts. There are no accomplishments are a 14th discipline that runners learn. There are particular Maroon congratulate you for a nice substitutions; runners know place finish out of 1400 entries Byrne points out that it's a harriers who approach cross- race," he maintains. « that they have to finish the five- in the famed Boston Marathon. tribute for anyone to run so country very seriously. They are mile course. Track coach the true long-distance runners, Sander's philosophy towards much and still say, "I must do This inner cameraderie Tommy Byrne notes, "It's not it." When you see their efforts, the ones who participate in the running in competition and in among runners helps to like a relay race where someone it benefits them physically and road races. Jim Kelly, who training (he's known to com- compensate for the lack ol else can pick lost time from mute to his Bronx home on in so many other ways." confesses that "you have to be support and general knowledge anyone." Team standings are foot) is that, "There's never a a little crazy," said that a mihr According to sophomore about cross-country. Never- determined on how well run- winner or a loser, it's the goal can recover within the same ners can wind up in the order of Alex Trammel, even the theless, the Ram harriers wouW you set for yourself that's day, but after running 20 miles, finish. practices are dependent upon like people to make an effort to important." it takes a great deal longer. He the outdoors. "The environment come out to the big meets like Even the cross-country Track mentor Byrne holds noted that because of the plays a big part," he claims. "If the Metropolitan Cham- courses, which are generally special admiration for the long- unique situation where the you have a terrain you really like pionships or the IC4A's. The located in a secluded, wooded distance men whom, he terms, trackmen are practically the environment, can present, can it's an advantage." Coming only people on the course, it audience at these meets mainly form, "a very unique fraternity." from upstate New York, Alex present hidden dangers for the The coach is more than happy results in friendly competition consists of those individuals declares, "There's just so much among participants. who have run track in the past, coaches, and close family members.

The reasons are many for the crowd, absence. It's not a big spectator sport. According to Coach Bryne, "Up at Van Cortlandt Park, (The Rams' home course) you can see only two miles until they go into the woods. You don't see the real agony in the hills and when they come out, there can be changes in the order of the runners." Where the fans usually gather is towards tfie finish of the course. The sport because of the distances, cannot be viewed in one central areallke basketball, so the lans have to miss part of thu action In addition, the indiviUuas themselves are not iVlteiy ,V known. Like the milers or trie Olympic gold medalists. This is because the sport cioesni receive adequate medial coverage. The Maroon harriers open their season tomorrow down at Seton Hall, but tna a CROSS-COUNTRY: is not a big spectator . should interest only a f ' at Fordham like football, baseball, or basketball. portion of the community.

Page 8S-The Ram-Friday, September 21, 1973 R A looking for an answer

by STEVE JAMBOR resident advisor staff. Again, depending upon where he is located, the service that [The current issue facing the University each RA has differs markedly. Many in 1 the wake of its decision to shut down Queen's and Martyrs' have extensions lone service between 2 a.m. and 8 a.m. lower than 200, thereby severely limiting Incerns primarily resident students in them as outlined above. In Queen's, there |th an indirect and direct manner. are two 500 extensions; Martyrs', two; |Thus far, the subject has only been and Spellman, one, available for RA use. amined in the light of the more direct The picture is greatly different, if not that the on-campus population is more confusing, in 555. As of now, RA's jfected. In addition, the degree to which (there are five on the staff), don't have is effect is felt differs greatly, depen- any phones; neither private lines nor ng upon where a particular student extensions. The work year for them began Us. Those in Martyrs', Queen's and on September 8, more than two weeks bellman, with campus extensions lower ago. Last year, the system in use Kan 200, won't be able to make any phone depended upon each RA subscribing to a Ills at all past 2 a.m. Those with ex- private line, without University reim- overdoses occur nightly, but that resources to keep it in ready contact, •nsions between 200 and 500 won't be bursement. If that plan were in effect assistance be readily available in the whenever needed, with the entire cam- H to make calls to off-campus or to now, RA's in 555 would be unable to phone event that something should happen. Mr. pus. her extensions lower in number than the campus and would not themselves be Courtney mentions that since July 1 less If the problem in this area were 0, Those with extensions higher than reached by the campus extensions lower than six emergency calls have been corrected, the crisis over the switchboard ) can make both out-going off-campus than 500 after 2 a.m. In effect, the RA received via the hotline. However, full would not exist in the dimension that it Us and receive all calls from campus staff in 555 would be shut off from direct occupancy of the University dorms did not does now. In short, the RA staffs in both ; higher than 200. None of the contact with the remaining campus. exist during much of that time. Even if we Queen's and Martyrs' Courts need to have tipus extensions, however, can be Indirect communication could be in- are fortunate to have a span of two their extensions changed where necessary ached by an off-campus caller. stituted using the emergency hotline months of relative calm, this in itself to above 200. The RA staff in 555 needs |These facts introduce the dimension of system now in effect. should not be reason to cut back the phones, and these also should be campus problem which confronts those There is, however, reason for another service provided. extensions above 200. Isidents of 555 East 191 Street. There more direct solution. The University Some mention has been made of the log This does not imply that those : no campus extensions in that building spends approximately $100,000 per school book kept in 555 during its first year of dissatisfied with the switchboard cut- listing for student use. At present, only year on the RA program. With the operations. In it is recorded every in- backs would no longer have cause to •security guard in the lobby, the head limitations on phone service mentioned cident, minor or major, involving an RA protest. With the exception of the hotline, jsident (myself), Mr. Gearity (Assistant above, both the University and the between 6 p.m. and 8 a.m. No statistical off-campus callers would be still unable to ban of Students) and the two apart- resident students themselves will not be breakdown has been done as to when the reach any campus extension past 2 a.m. Jents of faculty members- in-residence getting the return on their investment worst incidents do occur. I personally do All that would be accomplished is a sound Ive campus extensions. For the most that they could realize. There is no need to not believe that the switchboard hinges system of minimal telephonic com |rt, 555 students cannot make telephonic build in another substitute circumventive upon one log book, from one dorm and munications involving the RA staff that is ntact using their private lines with the system of communication, such as the whatever incidents that can be plucked already present in the dorms. Additional s after 2 a.m. The service of an hotline, if one decides to make full use of out, to prove or disprove the need for service involving a return to the 24 hour rator is necessary for this. Likewise, the program that already exists with the service past 2 a.m. Arguing on that level set-up remains the ideal goal. However, I campus extensions lower than 500 are RA staff. in itself runs against the principle behind such negotiations have a habit of con- jntacting 555 at those hours. It is self-defeating to spend $100,000 to the entire dorm policy. tinuing for a long time; whereby with this |These varied limitations remain the main have people on duty every night I do feel that there is sufficient evidence minor concession, the conditions would at irt of the problem directly affecting throughout the entire year equipped with to prove the need for an RA staff in the least be livable. Isident students. The second part affects phones that have highly limited use. The dorms; otherwise, they would not have (Steve Jambor, a graduate student in Jem in a less direct way: it involves the principle used in having specific on-duty been hired. Likewise, that staff should be the School of Education, serves as head lone service made available to the coverage for RA's is not that assaults and properly equippped with communications resident in 555 East 191 Street.) Student power: analyzing failure

by JIM BUCKLEY No one of sound mind who has observed some would call campus leaders. In all can really believe he can effectively something are hampered by several government (on the Rose Hill honesty, they probably are the most negotiate with people to whom he is in- things, aside from their associates. "pus) at close hand can deny there are qualified, in terms of experience, to lead. debted is incredible. Inexperience, misconceptions about the 'ere problems. It is not respected by However, it is too far beneath their And there are still others who simply art of negotiation and a dearth of ninistrators, the students-at-large or dignity to become involved with the view the government as a campus club. aggressive leadership are these additional ;en many of the student representatives student masses. Constitutions, to these, are unnecessary obstacles. Inexperience can only be jemselves. It is defensive, reacting Others, whether innocently or pur- and to be ignored. Confrontations are corrected in time. Something can be done " than initiating. It is lacking in firm, posefully, have forfeited their negotiating avoided because it would force them into about) the other problems. Tessive and imaginative leadership. strength by accepting direct or indirect the uncomfortable position of taking a There is a feeling that any sign of an 'here are many who feel nothing can be favors from the administration with which stand. aggressive spirit on the part of student ie to remedy this situation, and there they are supposedly dealing. That anyone The students who do wish to do government will (1) jeopardize the con- •others who think they can amend the cerned students' personal relationships "Jlems. Both are wrong. The basic with school officials and (2) threaten these ls m student government are not officials so they will not accede to any Jctural. If the structures were student requests. So, the tendency is to have highly informal dealings with the gerly operated, . ..but, they are not. administration. I strongly reject this He fault |ie j the attitudes of too S w tn notion. Just as unions would get nowhere ')' <>' the student representatives. For if they dealt with strong management on reason, forming additional student their knees, students will get nowhere if "imtions, as some have proposed, is a they continue to assume a posture of ' <• <>( valuable time and energy. extreme deference. ' n> ll is potentially even more The key to success in anything is student representation. It S l)asic aggressive, imaginative leadership. L' ' Problem and creates, in Through polls of the students and close I • "val student bureaucracies and involvement with influential bodies r l';tsi'Hv, while most represen- structure is sound; the "leadership's" | ttt.ul.1 agree with the definition, attitudes are lacking. There's nothing s lltl f|,|( ' '«' to live up to it. wrong with the horse, it's the jockey. ri,', ':"M''''"'>''iU is populated by a wide {Fitnl/ium Colic ye snphomort' Jim [,,, '" ^"'IfiiLs. There are those who liucklvij in (i itit'tttln'r of his school's |1 l U| l lU (ltobl ii'<> ( coupon.) Dec. 8,1973. Final decision by and very talented," adding. ^ The Tot 50* stapler is un- an independent judging organ- expect a great deal from this :1 conditionally guaranteed. It ization. Prizes awarded to en- film. This is not going to '">»" changed lnit staples, tacks, mends. Only tries nearest actual count. In slick Madison Avenue lie 98c* with 1,000 staples at your case of tie, a drawing deter- rather a tough little film alwut stationery, variety or college mines winners. Offer subject thousands undergraduate life at Ford'"™' bookstore. to all federal, state and local which will make an annum' 1 Cub* Desk and Hand laws.Void in Fla. andWash. high school student senmisly staplers are only $1.98*. and wherever prohibited consider coming to Foniham. And the Super Cub'" sta- or restricted. Storm specialized in pler with no-slip, 'Suqfjpslr'ri Hi'tml Pin." ";•?;•;> • educational films, mosih I'"' lives. publishers such as Kan-loni House, Doubleday, Nat"""llh1 ' ..!, - SWINGLINE HONDA i"?.M.;'.;- .;:.-..-.. Geographic, and Tinif I»".!;5i*-t» •••:ti '- (You couid |i|| between 200 I'O. llox 1C!) Jacoby has made docunu'iiu and 300 Tois with the sla- Now York, JJ.Y, I00IG .Jil'Ti; I plos in the j;ir.) for ami about .such imi^" "1 licit: nru . 5l;iples in ()li:a lliuj.if. Important: Wrllo your clients as Mutual of guosa outside the envellope?, n lower Id! hand earner. Warnaco. Burlington Iii(ln-' Name . and the Xerox Corporation- READ Tolephonr.1 FASTER 5 weeks guaranteed i" DOUBLE or TRU'I.K SJM-«M1.Understand won1- Div fit Swin'llinr: InC 1 31 00 iiKillm.iii A-m , I. I.C.. II V I! 101 more. Nationally k' '' <.«:%••-?•'/•;}'J.;f '\\>< Ml professor. Class form!" READING SKILLS 864 <- O-'IHK RAM- Friday, September 21, Post Office Social Service center stalls plaza tries to quiet its crowd Reports on progress made in night. He added that 250 more are site switch attempts to improve conditions Rivera handed out numbered, being relocated "soon," and 3,500 at the Fordham Social Service multicolored cards to the l'lans for the proposed For- cases from areas in the South Center were made Wednesday welfare clients, each color dham Plaza, a city effort to Bronx will be placed in other night at a meeting sponsored by representing a different type of revitalize a portion of Fordham centers by November 1. To the Fordham Bainbridge problem. Rose cards were facilitate in this transfer Road near the University, are Association. presently at a standstill, ac- handed out to those who hadn't procedure, the welfare depart- Al Rivera, a member of the received their checks on time. cording to city planner Neil ment has authorized overtime Federation of Puerto Rican These people were then Pariser. "The city is momen- for the Center's staff to be Volunteers, described a system requested to line up in tarily awaiting a decision from compensated with equivalent he instituted on Monday to help numerical order on one side of time off after January 1. the U.S. Post Office concerning a BliCCI: thinks the SABC can organize the crowds which land trade," announced Pariser. the building. All others, such as Better restroom facilities will finish hearing budget requests congretate outside the Center the disabled, holding yellow also be provided at the Center, within two weeks. Pariser explained that the city beginning as early as 12 mid- cards, and those with housing according to Burdick, but wants to acquire the block of problems, holding blue cards, nothing can be done about the land adjacent to Roosevelt High Heqrings continue downtown were asked to form a line on the problem of this nature which School on Fordham Road, other side. exists before the facility's doors presently owned by the Post A representative from City Open. Office. The city is willing to LC SABC deliberates Human Resources Commissioner The question of hiring ad- exchange this block for an Jules Sugarman's office, Martin ditional staff was also raised but Student Activities Budget Social Science, the history club, Burdick, also reported that according to Sugarman's alternate and even larger piece Committee hearings for the the Fordham Jazz Society, and of land south of East 189 Street. transfers into the Center had representative, the city is ex- Liberal Arts College student Omnia, a club for the instruction 250 "We would like to put retail organizations will continue for and education of film and artistry stores on Fordham Road because cases had been transferred out Income maintenance about another two weeks, ac- techniques, within the past week. specialists. it's more conducive to selling. A cording to Associate Dean of Post Office could do just as well Student Activities Vincent in another location," added Bucci. Pariser. Six clubs' budgets were con- A Board of Estimate meeting sidered this week, the first week was planned for yesterday at of SABC deliberations. Bucci, which the Post Office and the ex-officio administrator on SABC, The Fordham Debate Team WFUV's coverage will begin City Planning Commission would said yesterday that he expects will begin its season October 20 Fordham's boarder population at 7 p.m. Monday, though the negotiate this trade. the committee to consider "at at the Southern New England during the evening hours after speeches will not start until 7:30 least nine more clubs next Championship Tournament in the University's cafeteria food p.m. In the half-hour interim, In other related developments, week." Bridgeport, Conn. Other service closed down, is now anchormen Bob Heck, WFUV Pariser said that the City A total of 21 organizations are zournament stops include threatened by an exclusive Director of Public Relations, and Department of Traffic has requesting funds from the Princeton, the University of rights clause in Automatique's complied with the city's $28,000 that were collected from Toronto, Florida Tech, the contract with Fordham suggestions on traffic light Ed Randall will present some the newly instituted, $15 student University of Chicago, McGill of University. # # % changes. Pariser said that activities fee. background information, in- Montreal, Harvard and Tulane WFUV wi,, ive cov to cluding excerpts from previous construction of the Plaza area Last years squad placed g The clubs investigates this t|w cheg Senator gam Watergate hearings. required new timing with the week were the Gannon Debate H traffic signals to insure a smooth second among 48 teams at the Ervin (D.-N.C.), Chairman of the Society, the political science Randall believes that the flow of traffic. Bridgeport tourney. Senate Select Watergate club, the Journal of History of Leading the returning Committee) and Senator Howard response to the broadcast will be debaters are John Peterson, Baker (R..Tenn>)| vice- excellent since October 1 will be Rober Hughes and Kevin •chairman< when they visit the a Watergate hearing day, and Offered new post AT\ U TV Wi r*TWe Rose Hill campus on Monday, Ervin and Baker are the two additional help from Joe Manso, Q ^ j £ r fc about ^ most prominent figures in Mike Lampmen, and Reilly Watergate scandal. inquiry. Dundon. Mulholland resigns Peterson and Hughes were both recipients of Class of 1915 Dorm phones closed (Continued from page 1) Cammarosano said that the Awards for Oratory last year. keep rates down in the expects a possible decision from contemplated reorganization is • • • (Continued from page 1) University during this in- Mulholland on whether or not to meant to provide downtown Negotiations have been taking Resident Advisors, or am- flationai penod." take the position today. students with the opportunity to place between United Student bulances," the petition stated. No s' .>nis in a work-study The president stated, "I have attend classes at any time of the Government leaders and the Crawley reiterated financial offered Dean Mulholland an management of Automatique, prograia could operate the day. management oi Auiumauuut:, . .. „ , . switchboard during the interim administrative position in the newly instituted cafeteria food ™e P^sufent Brother James University which relates directly "Right now we are operating to alleviate further spending, he on two tiers, which has not concession, during the past three Kenney s contention that said, because the University to adult education at both weeks over the future of the studentservice s shoulwhod install private campuses." proved very satisfactory," employees belong to a union with Cammarosano noted, claiming Student Delicatessen Service. lines in their suites. Finlay's apparent optimism fixed wage rates that excludes that students now must enroll in The student deli, initiated in towards Mulholland's current He stated that "we cut back to that nature of employment. either day or evening classes. the spring of 1972 to serve the feelings on the situation did not coincide with statements made Under this new plan, simultaneously by the evening Mulholland's job would have to dean to another reporter. be eliminated and a new tuition Lincoln Center caf boycott Neither administrator was structure set up. Presently, available to comment on the evening students pay by the Oner's latest remarks last credit while day students pay a shows success after first days evening. flat tuition rate. revised wholesaler's list will Keiss contended that he had (Continued from page 1) Radi and Dan Alvino, 'nformed Mulholland of the new LASG Vice President Theresa representatives of Automatique, have been issued by then and job offer "and the concerns of his Although Mulholland claimed Sanders estimated, The students to discuss a reduction in food Automatique may be able to present position, at the end of last night that personal pressure have the capacity to put out 480 prices. h(' • ''<• was "being pressured M'llholland nssene.,, "I don't viiiK." The more sue anticipate beinf, unemployed," ;i program, he felt, "the and noted that he has already UK 'iffii-ult the University received several job offers. He " f«w the program to go did, however, express doubt f ".' ;' He cited Hensalemand that, if ht were to leave For- M'erimi'ntal education dhain, he would accept another l;r;lni academic position. He said he "" "t Unrein Center as DOWNTOWN CAFETERIA: Support continued strong for the LASG sponsored boycott during its first "f this alleged ad was looking into job offers in- ls'i-ative harassment. volving social work. lwo