THE FORDHAM RAM , Bronx, N.Y., 10458—October 2, 401 Twelve Page* 'Dialogue' To Hold First Lecture Oct. 7 Philippine President On Marriage Issues Dialogue, the current issues di- To Receive Degree vision of the American Age lec- ture series, will sponsor its first By Bob Kelly event of the year, "Marriage The Hon. Diosdado Macapagal, Problems and 'Aggiornamento'," president of the Republic of the lecture concerning birth con- Philippines, will be awarded tlie Rev. George Hngmaier, honorary degree of Doctor of Laws next Fri., Oct. 9. Father Hagmaler, the assistant President Macapagal is cur- director of the Paulist Institute rently making an official state for Religious Research, was the department tour and will meet first priest to be awarded a doc- with President Lyndon B. Johnson torate by the department of mar- in Washington. His official sched- riage and family life at Colum- ule has not yet been released, but bia, and is co-author, with Rev. he will be in the U.S. for approxi- Robert Gleason of Fordham, of mately ten days. He will arrive in "Counselling the Catholic." Thurs., Oct. 8, and awarded a doctorate by the de- leave Sat., Oct. 10. Langdon, Connolly and Ross: Moment of Triumph partment of marriage and family life at Columbia, and is co-au- Rev. Vincent T. O'Keefe, presi- thor, with Rev. Robert Gleason dent and rector, will present the of Fordham, of "Counselling the degree at ceremonies to be con- Spirit and Ticket Sales Catholic." ducted in the Campus Center next Friday at 11 a.m. The lecture will be given at 8 \un High for Nov. 7 p.m. on Wed., Oct. 7 in the Cam- Fifth President pus Center ballroom. A question President Macapagal and answer period will follow. Rev. Joseph Mulligan, dean of Football talk and spirit in general have been constantly Dialogue co-chairmen Skee Da- liberal arts faculties, will read with Britain over possession of the the rise since Don Ross's surprise announcement two weeks, vit and Ed O'Hanlon also an- the inscription in Latin and Rev. Turtle Islands. The next year he ). Reservations for tickets to the November 7 Fordham- nounced plans for two other lec- Joseph R. Freese, academic vice- was appointed Second Secretary of U game have been piling in and official tickets go on sale tures. The first, "Freudian Psy- president, will read the English the Philippine Embassy in Wash- s week. Invitations to the game have been extended to sev- choanalysis" by Dr. Smiley Blan- translation. Following the cere- ington, and upon his return to 1 New York officials, including Governor Rockefeller, Mayor (Continucd on Page 3) mony, there will be a reception for Manila he served as Counselor for ijner, and Senator Keating. I invited guests. Legal Affairs in the Department [ore than 140 students signed President Macapagal was elect- of Foreign Affairs. on the first day of recruiting ed to the presidency in November, Political Clubs Protest Union, 1961, on the Liberal Party ticket. President Macapagal was elect- more than 120 have sweated ed to the Philippine House of r way through two weeks of He is the fifth president of the Republic since the Philippines Representatives in 1949, and soon sthemcs and workouts. Want Say in Policy Making received their independence on became chairman of the House I addition to the 33 sets of The controversy that seemed to threaten the future of July 4, 1946. Three of the other Committee on Foreign Affairs. uniforms purchased by Stu- the four College political clubs earlier this week met a swift four Philippine presidents have He was the only Liberal to be re- t Government, additional parts conclusion when, the leaders of. the clubs met -with Chris previously been conferred honor- elected in 1953. n 20 other sets" have been do- O'Flynn, chairman of the new Political Union, and a number ary Doctor of Laws degrees. Vice-president fcU by the athletic department, of other Student Government leaders. J)ling the club to raise its cut- Born in Lubao, Pampanga Prov- In November, 1957, he was IiHimber to 55. The riff between the four clubs and the SG sponsored ince, the Philippines, in 1910, elected vice-president, receiving lecause a heavy demand for Union became public Monday*- President Macapagal holds an As- 116,000 more votes than the total lets is expected from alumni, when Charles Fenton, president recognized or otherwise. All Invi- sociate of Arts degree from the with which the Nationalist Party- Jet sales on campus have been of the Conservative club, intro- tations will have to be cleared for University of the Philippines and candidate, Carlos P. Garcia, won Ited to a two week period. Last duced an open letter to the SG date and person to avoid conflict doctorates in both law and eco- the presidency. j for students to pick up tickets council meeting. The letter, signed with American Age. nomics Ifrom the University of Jcnmpus is Wed., Oct. 14. The by officers of all the clubs, The Suarez Society has decided Santo Tomas. He was admitted to After being elected President in charged SG with proposing and to remain a separate entity and the Philippine Bar Association in 1961 by a majority of 650,000 |ainins tickets after that date setting up the Union "without each of the clubs will be guaran- i be held for alumni, most of 1936 after receiving the nation's votes out of about 6.5 million cast, any consultation of the clubs in- teed a minimum budget of $40. highest grades. President Macapagal immediate- jm will recieve word of the NYU volved." The more active organizations will |t through a mailing campaign. ly initiated a program of reform. Fenton's letter added that the be able to draw from a reserve Legal Service Nov. 7 Activities O'Flynn had been appointed with- fund of $00 dollars that the President Macapagal has at- p has also announced plans for Union will hold. He thereafter served as legal tended several sessions of the UN out their approval as. head of assistant in the Office of the te and post-game activities campus politics and had been After the meeting Don Ross, SG General Assembly and came to the jt.u t at noon. A warmer-upper President and taught law at the U.S. in November, 1963. to attend given absolute powers over their president, told bystanders that he | University of Santo Tomas. in at noon; cocktails will budgets. As another of 17 ob- was "satisfied" with the way President Kennedy's funeral serv- |uved in the Campus Center jections against the Union set- things worked out. In 1948, he negotiated a dispute ices. iiudlately following the game up the clubs resented an alleged will be cocktails and a buf- ban on lecturers, "nationally 9 puncheon, which will continue known" figures by any croup oth- the Massive Victory Dance er than SG's affiliate, the Amer- 'Horizons Presents Minstrel Show held in the gym at 8 p.m. ican Ace Lecturer Series. fie (veiling before the same Campaign Plank |< will be a rally on campus, The Political Union was first "f which will not, be an- proposed by SG president Don h«d beforehand. The rally Ross last year during his party's piecede the Senior NiRht election campaign. According to F iilso scheduled for Nov. fi. Fenton, who addressed Monday's 'idhim Student Government meeting, the clubs were then in- miKction with the return ot formed that the proposed Union ill will also sponsor an alumni was to be a eoordinatlnf,' organi- " cr,;;ipi;.s an Oct. 13 fur itinu to stimulate activity ninonjr •L' Fordham All-Americun he Democrats, Republicans, Con- their teammates and servatives, and the Snare/, So- More than 200 arc ex- -iety. 'il to attend. Fenton stated that member- NYD-l'oi-dhain i:ame, crii;- ; 11ji> hud hewn (!e;-cribed as "vol- scheduled for Nov. 1-1, was intnry" last year. When this UP one week because law- year';, political club lenders met exams were also .-.clieduled wit li CFlynn lust week it turned ) it weekend. out otherwise. Throe of the clubs were told t-o join or they would lose recognition by KG. The Snare/. Society mis notified that, 'Pordhain t did not fit within the Political |"i/;lit is Fonlham Collect' Union as it 1;; now organized. l Munhiittaiivillc Colin;*'. John yo)d:>. the junior class , N.Y. The m-iMstmi is vice-president. wiim motlornli'd "I ho u>r ond ilr a on Horizon-/ fine aits Flanked by "Men of the Circle," 84-year- lil exclusively for Fonl- Wednesday's arbitration, called pio^i.Tin i'. Shi- film fostiv.il, opening next oltl "Prninicro Comedian" Sydney Easron | ('<>ll(-s« students. All thosi- he result about 50 per cent com- Tuosdity v/ifh tlt« first of fiwo scheduled rolls through one of his frolicking vaudeville <1 III uttl'lllllli;; should (>l>- inmiisc and Ml per cent clarifica- movies, "The Golden Age of Comedy." ki'ls Jit. the lal.li- in Hie 1 routines during Horizon's first concert offer- tion." Among lilt points clarified Tickets for tho ontirc film secies cost $1.50. Center lobby. Buses will tvas the duty of the Union clmlr- ing, .in original minstrel show. More than om Pordbnni (His eveniiiK; riimi O'Flynli. They arc currently baing sold in the Hori- ?>• Hi*! round trip Is $1. The clmlr will not have veto zon's office opposite the post- office in the 300 attended the gala affair last Friday eve- power over speakers, nationally Campus Center. ing in Collins Auditorium. THE FORDHAM RAM October 2, )9| Page 2 TMC Coeds Elect Carnelot Visits Rose Hill If AMBLINGS Council of Reps For 29th Harvester, Oct. l\ IF THE FORDHAM Club is financially As Interim SG The twenty-ninth annual Har- Bids are now on sale in successful, you know who downtown is going to want one. While the College initiates vester, sponsored by the Fordham | Campus Center for $3.75. All pa The RAM records a trend. Once the status symbol in cam- steps toward unifying the student College Sodality, will be held in j ceeds will be donated to the jl pus offices was an outside phone, then a refrigerator and a sovernments of all the campus the gymnasium on Saturday 'uit Mission Bureau. Five himdf icliools, the coeds of Thomas night, Oct. 10. This year's Har- couples are expected to atten rug. Now it's a cat. More have begun to se* up their ester will feature the theme of own governing organization. Camelot," a land of enchantment Margaret, please come home! Here Heidi, Heidi. and romance. Lenses Prescripts Last week, each of he seven Duplicated Fill! What C. A. major was overcut before lie registered? As sections in the first TMC class Several innovations are plan- a matter of fact, he's still standing in the line. elected two representatives to an ned to emphasize the theme. The Fordham Opticians IntJ interim school council. According centerpiece will consist of a 2536 Decafur Ave. The Mets would have signed Mickey a week ago but they to Rev. John W. Donohue, dean throne scene and mural back- Bronx, N.Y. 1O45S couldn't find1 the end of the line. of Thomas More, the council's drop by Richard Staub. The mu- activities are twofold: sic, featuring , songs from the Off Fordham Road What professor of history referred to TMC girls as Rad- The girls will have to organ- Broadway show "Camelot" and 1 block west of Webster cliff types? He also said they were gods, spelled backwards. ize and supervise the elections of the lighting will also contribute TUES., WED., FBI., SAT. ( class officers as a step toward to the mood. 9:30 a.m. - 8:30 p.m. FROM THE LENGTH of time it takes to find a seat in permanent unity. MON. & THURS. Music by Adato the Campus Center cafeteria it is assumed that plans to tear • The council will study and !K30 a.m. - 6 p.m. down the building and erect a larger one will soon be in prog- draft a constitution for the op- The tables will be set up in Tel. CYpress 8-0100 ration of a permanent Thomas imitation o,f a medieval fair. Each ress. They may decide to cement Edward's Parade over and More governing body. Father group of tables will comprise a paint it green: that's the only way it will ever look like grass. Donohue estimates that the work pavilion, representing the atmos- of this nature will not be com-phere of a jousting tournament. Someone ought to tell Rameses XX that some people pleted before the end of the year. PART TIME The music for the evening will don't consider His Highness a fit representative of the new In this direction, a committee be provided by Adato. The group POSITIONS $60 WK co-ed Fordham. Maybe he should establish his own dynasty, under chairman Jackie Feneley, also includes a singer to furnish and assistants, Mary Ellen Ross the lyrics to "Camelot's" songs. Interview families for child tout then that brings up the whole question of succession, and Heather Otherson, has al- develop co. Challenging, and . . . ready been formed to contact the A publicity campaign is pres- non-routine job with flex- eaders of neighboring collages' ently being conducted by the ible hours. Co-ed student PROBLEM I: 76,000 printed tickets minus 15,000 seats itudent governments and obtain Harvester committee, headed by staff. For a personal in- terview divided by 3,000 parking capacity equals some very red faces :opies of their constitutions. Chairman John Lolello. Dick Ci- Meanwhile, the College SG hasotti and Joe Connor are in charge and a police captain with a headache. ormed its own committee, under of decorations; Richard Staub has OR 4-5200 (ext. 9) PROBLEM II: One contract with New York City multi- iunior secretary Bill Murphy to designed all the decorations; (Sat. & 2 Evec.) nvestigate the proposal to unify John Ryan is responsible for sell- plied by six buildings at $1,000,000 per building, divided by ,he entire SG set-up. ing? tickets. one lethargic body of alumni and a used bankbook equals one lialf-empty lot and a lonesome law school. Some enthusiastic sports supporters at Fordham will be 'The Vision Of Saint Thomas' disappointed that Fordham's untolled tradition won't be swinging from His Majesty's Imperial Palace. Florentine Painting Unnoticed in Church! Who says Volkswagon tires aren't dependable? They By Margaret Reynolds should know they weren't made for rough terrain. RAM Copy Editor Is Dave Langdon another Johnny Bach? In November or 1948, a few weeks Ijetore the University Church was dedicated to the alumni who died in World Win Annual Vanity Cleaners & Dyers II, Fordham received a Florcn- Autumn Mixer 2542 Marion Avc. ISne painting never previously (No. of Fordham Road) exhibited to the public. The large egg tempra, nine feet high by All Fordham —Pick Up— Students Invited six feet wide, was placed in the Tucs. & Thurs. west transept of the remodeled Saturday, Oct. 3, 8 p.m. Lalande Aruhway Church, where it still hangs, vir- 5-7 p.m. tually unnoticed by students who Hunter College- retjucnt the chapel. No Exttra Charge For Park Ave. and 68 th St. One Day Service The painting, "The Vision of Saint Thomas." by Botticini (1446-1498), was lent to the Uni- versity by Princess Caralli ot Leuchtenbers, a descendant or Czar Nicholas I of Russia. It had been in her family for over 150 You mean, years, having been obtained by Eugene de Beauharmtis, a step- because I'm a student son of Napolcan Bonaparte. "The Vision of Saint Thomas" or teacher 1 get depicts an incident recorded in the New Testament eoncernin'! special rates at all the Assumption of the Vir-m Mary. According to the apocry- Hilton Hotels in the U.S.? phal account, some of. the apos- tles had been with Mary wYu'ii tmsameatmaemtmwmaMt she died: Thomas was not the in A few days later the apostles nyt with Thomas, who told them Hilton Hotels Corporation, that Mary's body was nut in 'lie National Sales Office, Palmer House tomb where they had placed il Accusing Slim of doiiblin Chicago 90, 111. again, the ;;roup opened thn r- Please send the Faculty-Student pulcher but. found the body ,",one Thomas then told llicni that ho Rate Brochure that tells all. had been transported to the top pt oi frhe Utuv I am a Faculty Member Q Student fj of the Mount of Olives and hid witnessed Mary's Assumption. A, own Hi ht v n (in mi Hi..1 HI ,i i Hun ixndi 1 ,11011ml the I" I proof of this, he produced I hi' m.un ol In i 1 ininii p'lntii m m IN "old ltalini' '1 hi' im' NAME cincture .she had worn when I In eludui J iDii.iidn di Vim i in I HI i'.th tin poudmed empty tomb with Mary gazing H(l 111 « 111) i ti li i Hull n CITY STATE down from heaven. eonsiiliMcd In uithon to h m nlh i lii tin ml painting ai COLLEGE NAME exceptional leellng for landscap- I lie National Museum in Uc Botticini, born Francesco do ini{ and cool color:;. '.Slmdc.'i oi I he I'llll Palace in FloriMKT Giovanni, was n pupil of Andrea lU'eon, blue and red predominate -cifT" DTATE 1 llic National Museum in Lon'f del- Verrocchto of the Florentine In "The Vision of iininl. Thoinii ' .Sumo of hi,; .smaller work school during- the Renaissnnce The luilos around the apo.slli , held by collectors or art 1" Del Verrocchio, a painter In his ami the Messed. Virgin, as will country |h>ber 2, 1964 THE FORDHAM RAM Page 3 FUV To Initiate Dean's List jilm Lecture Series In order to merit the Dean's List, the student is VNB UP •his Sunday Night required, to have a minimum year's average of "B+" •-Freshman moderator, Bob Haddock, has scheduled the Col- or the equivalent yearly Quality Point Index of 3.5. lege frosh banquet for Nov. 16. Plans are to hold it at the statler itation WFUV will broadcast a Hilton. The plans to hold the frosh Parents Day this weekend are les of lectures on "Creating an Campus School of Business live Film Audience," beginning cancelled. The event will be held on the traditional date in the sprint'. pdny evening at 8 p.m. Arthur Class of 1964 Joseph V. Furfaro . .3.5312 • Meeting dates for the college class councils have finally been Iyer, author, film exhibitor and Name Index There are 121 students in the decided upon. The seniors meet Wednesdays, at 4 p.m., when the jributor, will open the lecture Douglas P. Fields Class of 19C5. sophs convene. The juniors meet on Tuesdays at 4 p.m. les with a talk on "The Mov- . 3.9852 JCome of Age." Kenneth H. Fields 3,9558 Class of 1966 • Thomas More's interim council meets every Tuesday at 5 p.m. fhe film lectures, to be broad- Lloyd I. Wright 3.8571 Name Index All meetings are open to the public and held in the campus center* Francis J. O'Brien . .3.7812 every Sunday, from October . 3.8382 Thomas II. Hanley James P. Herbert . 3.7941 Robert D. Hynkar . 3.C875 • The KAM will initiate its 1964 election straw poll next week. , |December, are recorded talks Ronald S. Iticciardi ... . .3.6562 ach week the RAM will report its findings by the impartial survey, discussions from Fordham's .3.5588 Vincent P. Daley John II. Burns .3.5294 Bruce O. BrodUeck . . 3.593" in the edition of the week. load Annual Film Study Con- Michael V. Reader. ..3.5937 Ince which met last summer 3.5294 James R. McLean There were 152 students in the Nicholas J. Faletta . .3.5313 • The Arnold Air Society has already begun an ambitious pro- Jthe. Lincoln Square Campus. Class of 1964. Thomas J. Mitchell ...... 3.5312 ram of field trips and informational events for its members and Representing Fordham were There) are 112 students in, the pledges. The first trip, set for Oct. 24, is a group outing to Stewart William K. Trivett, Rev. Class of 1965 Class of 196G. Air Force Base, Newburgh, N.Y. The society also plaas a parade-and ' In M. Gulkin and Robert Miss, drill ceremonies for Nov. 11. •of the communication arts cie- Name Index Class of 1967 |tment. Father Trivett opened Mario J. Gabelli ..4.0000 Name Index • TMC coeds petition campus authorities next week for the right i conference with an lntroduc- Patrick J. Hennessy . .. 3.8125 Norman W. La Croix . .. ,3.7500 ;o wear Bermuda shorts and, yep, knee socks for their own intra- speeeh and Father Culkin Kenneth M. Bertram .. 3.7187 Richard J. Kitlinski . .. .3.6911 nural contests. Present rules forbid shorts or slacks on campus toe • the keynote address of the Patrick A. Colangelo . .. 3.0250 James S. Tcdesco . . 3.691 J he girls. ,, Joseph T. Murphy .,. .. 3.5937 Louis P. Salvatore. ..3.5441 • Marty Dunbar, a June graduate from the College, has been Ither speakers at the four-day James P. O'Neill . . . . 3.5937 There are 115 students in the Gary W. Winkler ... ..3.5937 assigned to a two-year .••tint in Venezuela with the Peace Corps. The. Iting were Judith Crist, film Class of 1967. group of 28 corpsmen he joined will specialize in training high school pc of The New York Herald students in physical education and athletics. bime, who discussed "Active College of Pharmacy Ivers in a Passive Culture," to • The LnFarge Society is now holding its annual drive for tutors. proadcast Oct. 11; Robert Ros- Class of 1965 Class of 1967 Volunteers will aid potential dropouts from city schools in reading, director of "The Hustler" Name Index Nan<-' Index English skills, math and elementary languages. Anyone interested in I more recently "Lilith," speak- Nancy Gonzalez 3.8802 John Petitto 3.8888 joining this program should contact Mike Mitchell. iabout "The Director: His Film Thomas J. Di Iorio 3.8G15 Sister M. Annuncia ] His Audience" to be rebroad- Sr. M. Ellen Piedmont 3.7704 Michalenko 3.8461 Oct. 25. Gcraldine Brennan 3.7153 Sister M. Lucille Fenncwald 3.6406 All Fordham Students Invited ither lecturers will include Bos- Mary Lou Villano 3.0194 Donald T. Kozlowski . 3.G111 fcrowther, film critic of The William Bologna 3.5479 ANNUAL AUTUMN MIXER York Times, who will talk Francis Men 3.f/073 Class of 1968 Saturday, October 3—8 p.m. 15 on "The Film Critic and Class of 1966 Name Index Public," with Paul Newman Name Index Karen Markovich 3.9O00 HUNTER COLLEGE, Park Ave. and 68th Street |ng the series on Dtc. 20. HisHelen Jakab 3.7837 Stephen Franko 3.8142 |ch will center around "An Winthrop MacLaughlin . ..3.0959 Eleanor Murphy ....3.7142 fr's Viewpoint on Film-Mak- Sister M. Anita Bray ... 3.0128 Louis Nastus 3.5142 Louis Rizk 3.0216 Jie purpose of this Film Study Sister M. Catherine D~oszcz 3.6052 (ference is aimed at provid- James DeAngelis 3.5675 practical suggestions to school Gabk community groups in run- film festivals, seminars, and j study courses, Welcome Pete Aaron titadvance fi'dham's communicaton arts Irtment also participated in ] Young People's Annual Film Frosh Orchestra |val, July 13-17, sponsored by City of New York. FORBES students from each public, Ite and parochial high school |e city were invited to attend, RESTAURANT) morning a feature film was |n and discussed in the after- Some of the films shown 368 East Fordham Road 9 a.m. — DI 4-2196 "The Miracle Worker," lid and Lisa," and "To Kill }5 % Discount- lockinfibircl." After 8 p.m., Kl 8-0710 gyor Robert F. Wagner en- Id the conference and said, =on Dinner for Students" I are deeply grateful to Ford- I University for initiating and ling through the original idea (young people's film festival." FT * rp^v* ~'w~*fe, ?. i We all make mistakes * V, 'CM Can't Buy Belial H WHY PAY MORE? Regardless of Where you live in New York, State-Wide can save you $20-$3O or more on your auto liability insurance. 3 S co oil -prves ice crc.mi In Et;io|io DO THIS!—Come in to a convenient State-Wide office near ERASE WITHOUT A TRACE you:— 1-We're saving a FREE all-plastic AUTO litter-bag ON EATON'S CORKASABLE BOND gitt for you. 2—Let a State-Wide expert give you the savings facts, Don't plague yourself with u pugc of typing sorrows. on full coverages tailored to your needs. NO Flick away your errors easily on Corrusable. An ordi- OBLIGATION.

1 mil I)mli\ ,ii I u^iul mil),-, nary pencil eraser does the trick. You need Conasable's '[ '< "-Hid 111 111 111 ill to speeiul surface to produce unsmudged, iniscarred, per- "» Hi 1(11 11111,1, I 1, III i'ect looking papers every lime, the first time. Eaton's '• "1" I I"'" Illll III |l li ( if- CorriisuMc is available in liglil, State-Wide Insurance Company " "it I H tun I mil, il ) QUEENS-90-1G Sutphin Boulevard, Jamaica 35-AX 1-300O- ' i\ ulilili \\ ,, , I,, medium, heitvy weights ami '•9 nunitlil\ mil tin Ann in ,m Onion Skin. In handy 100- DR00KIYN-2344 Flatbush Avenue, Brooklyn 34-Cl 8-9108' JWt Infonnution K.-rviri. slieet packets and 500-slieet BRONX-3560 White Plains Road, Bronx 67-KI 7*MO' liiivcl jmnit:! in n^i-;- ream boxes. Only Euton |j ciils. lli(,.:(, inlrrislid Qu>enf, Bklyn, III Hon., Wed., Fri. »-« Tan.,TA«r«. !•$ Sat, « : makes Oirriisalile. B'I ( ml $:! In |)c|ii, T, ASIS, -325 Broadway, New York 13, N.Y.-RE 20109' *" >!'' I" Uli.Ttr, Lusr,,,. Daily (ttapl Saturday) to t ~|M itv.lJraniUlm-liyol' !,nx- A Berkshire Typewriter Paper |«W mid rniucst the ASIM |K« booklet Mutiny ami dr- SWITCH TO STATE-WIDE... lkcvcryavaihilili'juli.aiidn CATON WERCORPORATION PITTSFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS Ci'iinl and job applit-i«tion. I THOUSANDS DO.' Page 4 THE FORDHAM RAM October 2, 1964

Theology And Philosophy Curricula Modified i STUDENT-FACULTY DISCOUNT Theology and philosophy curri- freshman year. Professional busi- cula in the College have been Changes Enable Students To Pursue ness courses will no longer be of- changed for this fall. Although fered in that year. Liberal arts now available for the most of the changes affect the A Much Greater Divirsity Of Topics coursej will make up 62% of the present sophomore and freshman school curriculum. RUGOFF THEATRES classes, juniors may be atfected and seniors will have three cred- Junior year and nine in senio; To replace the business courses Cinema I • >•••• Third Ave. at CGtli Si, next year. its, beginning with the Class of year, a total of 21. Cinema " Third Ave. el «!!, St. are a compulsory mathematics 6u"0'1 5"(h St. E. ol Third /„&, The new theology curriculum '67. Different courses will be giv- Father McMahon said that i course, a choice of French, Ger- offers 11 new specialized courses en to each section in junior and may also be possible that thi man or Spanish at the interme- Bcel.mao , , , E.CGlli St. on Securrf £ to juniors and seniors, beginning senior year. Mtm«y H.ll .... 34lh Si. Cast o( Le< / <• •with the Class of '67. Students Class of 1966 will have to taki diate level and a physics elective. Fifth Ave. Cinema •. , . F.flli Av

• 1. Now that we're 21 we have 2. Right. And this year we havo a-]ot more responsibility. a big decision to make —who gets our vote for President. Now we make the decisions. I've already decided to vote for the canclklata of my choice.

3. Your decision should hi: bused •1. Then how do yon expect to go on what the candidate stands for. out into the world, support a For,example, does your man's wile, raise children, and he a fiscal policy .square with your two-car family? philosophy on the matter? I wish I knew. I hope not. I never could handle money.

This is sue aweraie man. 5. Let me give you a piece of 0. .Soon as y^u get a job, put advico that will help you some dough into cash-value The men studying him aren't. off to a good start. insurance, the kind they call I'd sure appreciate it. Living Insurance at Equitable. It gives your wife and kids solid protection nnrfit Putting together thousands of measurements Air Force automatically builds a cash dertake vital missions of great responsibility. scientists designed this "typical" head. Its purpose? To value you can use instead for help provide better protective equipment for Air Force For instance, an Air Force scientist may be exploring retirement or whatever you like. flying personnel. the complex field of aerodynamics. Another may be fiiiy, why don't you run engaged in bioenvironmental engineering. A third may for President? But the young men working on this project are far from be studying the technology of nuclear weapons. average. As Air Force officers, they are working in a field How many other professions give a young man such that requires a high degree of technological insight. important work to do right from the start? The fact Is, most Air Force jobs today call for advanced, You can get started on an Air Force officer career by specialized know-how. And they give HA as FfllPPP enrolling in Air Force ROTC. For Infor- young officers the opportunity to un- UiUi AlP • Ml VW matlon.seelheProfessorofAirSclencD. The EQUITABLE life Assuiancc Society of ll.e United States | Home Office; 1285 Avenue of the AIIHTO.-IS, Now York, N. Y. 100XQ © 1864 JMober 2, 1964 T TT^ H E FORDH

Ci\il KiiiM

Mexico Project: An For Progress 3y Emilio Tirado the sociological expert jit's siesta time in a sleepy of the agroups . Our leader, Mor- (in which one is apt to share gan Desmond, a language one's seat with a live chicken They pointed out that our mis- Bexican town and the only was sion had not really been to build house itself was that of per- jgns of life are a few figures major, wMe ^ ^ ^man or Pig, could be depended upon to i e , a church—it was to work side suading the rest of the peasant Irking in some shaded door- Phil Lascelle, Mike Barberie and arr V at east 45 mlnutes community to begin working on iate. m fact no one even went by side with the Mexican peo- lays and a few burros peace- myse f, were more at home ple, to get to know them and their own. Little success was to Tilly grazing in the town square treating frogs and cats than outside to await it until it was be expected, Father warned the naif an hour overdue. The same have them get to know us Mor- jiie might expect Yul Brynner people. Yet, we were willing to gan and Father showed us that students, because the peasants lid the rest of the magnificent tackle anything. could be said for the train serv- were very mistrustful and un- ice; although the "super-ex- we were very well liked by the Iven to ride into this scene, people we had 'helped, as shown willing to cooperate with anyone lounted on their trusty steeds, 'Digging' y,rork press" could be depended upon from outside their small com- to arrive sometime the same by the fact that each day, while Iho, before ending their visit in Maravillas, a different family munity. To encourage their in- lould shoot it out with the out- The .first clay we split into day, the local had been known est, Father offered six quarts groups of twos some to patch not to show up at all. opened their homes to us, treat- Iws, become overnight heroes ing us to .lunch and sharing of corn per day to anyone who lid ride off in the sunset, to up the holes in the roof of the The second thing we never would either help with the mod- |e tune of "Red River Valley" church, and others to improve Quite got used to, and by far lid amid deafening applause. the hacienda" the townspeople the more inconvenient, was Mon- • During the past summer, the gave us for our use. Mike and tezuma's Revenge. Back home •exican villagers of Nopala I were the official carpenters Montezuma's Revenge is more •ropulation—800) were not so and om- duties consisted in scientifically termed diarrhea. •rtunate. Into their town rode making several packing boxes For the first month, most of fcrdham's Mexico Project. In- look like dressers, wedging some our work was done in the neigh- laid of Yul Brynner's "mag- two-by-fours into corners to boring towns of Maravillas and 1'icent seven," they were con- make closets, and constructing San Sebastian.. In the latter Jpnted with Morgan Desmond a latrine. We "dug" right into village, which was predominant- Id his "bedraggled six," climb- our work starting with the la- ly Indian, we built a volley ball I: wearily out of two 1948 part- trine. We were soon confronted court, planted a garden and set with a sticky problem. Due to a up a room- in the church which would serve as both a movie theatre and a meeting place for the town's young people. Joy and Sadness Maravillas was about seven miles from Nopala and it was formerly an old bandit strong- hold. Since the revolution of 1910 and up to the present time it Jias been under the influence c.f its new banditos, the Prote- Peasant slits underside of cow for evening meal stant officials, a group of con- what they had with us. In fact, servative, anti-clerical politi- they actually competed amon" el home or bejfin improvements cians. This explained why, un- themselves to see who could feed on Ins own house. Usually there til our arrival, they had been us best. Wherever we went in were two o:- thro; men working successful in keeping the town's this desert region of Mexico we Catholics fro m building a wiili the students, and by the were always treated with a t'"fl of AUKUS'.. with the model church. The people heard Mass warmth and hospitality which in the open at irregular inter- left us a little awed and per- Lome nearly ,omiJlet,ri, there vals, depending on whenever the haps a little self-conscioiH If -tie about .six /:,nii!ie.; who lnd priest from Nopala could man- the tables had been reversed bCf '™'* 0" 'Heir ow" homes age to get there. His priestly I doubt that we would have mission was complicated by the shown our friendship as sincere- fact that he had to visit many ly and openly. • •- U|i v/irh Hanson and Mold towns similar to Maravillas aa which were also without a lo- Building- Incentive -, ''i a tlncc thou- solid shell ot lotl., one couldn't •ci mile cross-country trip We cal priest. A curious ritual which After four weeks of valiant dig more than three feet down. we always enjoyed was the 15- T» would also come to t'rips This would obviously be inade- service, five of the group start- 1 20 minute display of sky rockets, I .some "varmints." buf'this quate for our month's stay, to ed the long trek back to the I "we the annloRv ends. With- set off before the beginning of pluce they affectionately called say nothing of the group that Mass. This pyrotechnic exhibi- |«. weel;s we'd be run out of was to arrive upon our depar- •Grmgoland." Desmond a n d tion's only .function was to alert Held, the remaining two, spent ture. We finally devised a plan the town and neighboring dis- which more thnn sufficed. In- the. month of July doing odd- Typical Town trict peasants that Mass was to jobs that Fr. Rafael could not do stead of the conventional hole, be celebrated. |>!>ala is „ very typical Mex- we decided upon an unorthodox himself for lack of time. me morable , .'"' '•own, about 80 miles While we were there, we met ' , Ph stllc dinnek ar ]ittimes trench. Across it, we stretched The last week in July the •^ "1 Mexico city. It is bet. two boards, on top of which we with a minor catastrophe which 'V " " »« 0 than most c,f the MU- served a useful purpose. It help- project began on its biggest job; flag c,f submission into nuiled an old wicker chair. Father 'Rodriguez had long the bowl of three-day old left- ,."" t!"VIls. "'»'in ruimin,; When circumstances necessitat- ed us to clarify our reason for f! being there,' which can easily be wanted to do something for the over beans or watching Art dis- ce ri . • a"d not well disposed cials who, by threatening us with raised hearths for cooking to "^ material needs. Our the first night and set up quite, keep dust out of the meals. In our 3 month's stay we '°se in coiiiin;: down, a howl, easily the least impor- violence, succeeded, in having "us removed. made friends for ourselves and tant distraction. To demonstrate the point, for the United States. And we ' This action came as a terrible Father asked the Fordham stu- There were two things we hnd fostered a spirit of Chris- let down and. we began to feel dents to begin building a "mod- tian unity, our real purpose ,for never quite conditioned , our- that we'd failed in what we el home" which would contain selves to. Tlie first was .the Mex- being there, We came to know dame down to achieve. But. two all these improvements. When and work with a people who will conf1dc l ican attitude best expressed 'by people showed us that this finished, the home would be » °« the word "manana"~-msanlng always ranks above the face- President or wasn't so—our leader • Morgan given to a family which badly •less, nameless blur of the world's es Donovan; George • "tomorrow," Nobody is in a Desmond, and, Father Rafael,., needed it, But more important hurry to"do anything.' The' bus billions and as somebody spe- podriquez, postor .,'|Ojf,-i Nopala; •than "tlW tank- ofr,bjiHctae. the cial to us seven.: . .. . THE FORDHAM RAM October 2, 1964 Page 6 •• i i M^^—— The Commentator THE FORDHAM RAM The Hamptons and Harlem Established by the Students of Fordham College in 19)8 By Mike Coucher

Small-Time 'Big-Time' The long hot summer has come to its inevitable end. will soon be forgotten? To say they once Along with the untold enjoyment experienced by so many •"• ''The return of football has brought with it "good kids," there also remains a dramatic history of vio- •"'.'ihe return of spirit and a renascence of pride played football in college? lence and inflicted suffering caused by some "not so good •M to the Fordham campus and to New York City There is more to it than this. Those guys kids." -as well. New York has been so starved for are out there every day, not, for themselves ' football in recent years that the City Fathers alone, but for their school and for football We all followed the shocking story of the riots in Har- have seen fit to import Army, Syracuse and fans everywhere who regret the passing of the lem, Rochester, Paterson, and Jersey City. That story told Notre Dame to give'the fans some good foot- sport from a once-powerful school. They're of frustration, ignorance, and an irresponsible leadership ball. . • out there every day going through laps, which led youths to lash out against a vague white enemy. This year's Fordham-NYU game • will not calisthenics, drills and scrimmages for an Earlier, there were two members of this fabricated enemy come close to being "big-time," but it will idea which is now in the formative stages— who gave their lives along with their brother Negro to teach return to our city the rivalry that once packed good football native to New York with the us a lesson in true equality—white or black, we all must die. ' with 80,000 fans. • name of Fordham and the color cf Maroon. : It was unfortunate that such a situation existed to cause Take a look at the Fordham squad practic- For themselves, their school and football their deaths; it was even more unfortunate how little most ing some afternoon. There were 120 candi- lovers everywhere. It would be a shame to people learned from their sacrifice. dates, now there are only 55 players. For say, five years from naw, that they bumped Then, at the close of the season we were taken aback i what? For one game with another team which their heads, not against other teams, but by the unprovoked—yet planned!—student riot in Hampton is also in its first year? For one game which against a stone wall of resistance. Beach. The contrast between this audacious outbreak of destruction and violence as opposed to the martyrdom of those three Civil Rights workers is one of the most striking Beware, Professor examples of what is happening to our students of today. Last year Time magazine suggested it. This Of course, it cannot even be suggested that There are college men—with direction and dedication year the sociologists say it's a fact. the newest inhabitants of Rose Hill could be —and there are college bums, the so called "New Jet Set," According to Trans-Action, a publication practicing chicanery. We won't know for sure whose only craving is for their own pleasure. These are the non-working students, drifters who play beatnik between Of Washington University, St. Louis, Ameri- until after quarterlies. Yet the problem is not remote. semesters. The beaches are their summer habitat; and if can college males design some of the most there's an art festival or a music festival nearby they might •elaborate "con" schemes in the interest of Thus, in the better interests of all poten- actually forego a night of beer drinking to attend—and leave better grades, since Phil Silvers sold the tially bewildered assistants, associates, in- their mark upon—said function. Brooklyn Bridge . . . the first time. structors and even chairmen, as well as the ' But it's the fair sex, the femme fatale of male majority of our readers, The Fordham A Riot- Is Not A Good Time the ivy enclosed Elysian fields, the scientists RAM takes this opportunity to issue some benevolent advice. We don't mean that a good time is not to be enjoyed say, who are by far the more subtle, ^ind the by these students; but can a riot at Hampton Beach (or any hlore effective perpetrators of the grand de- What ever you do ... Don't let them sit in beach) be called a good time? If we were to ask someone ception. front of the room. ' • who might have been there, we feel it doubtful he would say it was—and if he did, there would be reason to doubt his character. | Between the Lines We read about the students in foreign nations who, rebel against institutions and even their governments—bull Fordham's Tour Blocks of Oatmeal' in the good old U.S.A. our student groups organize to causft wanton destruction, for its own sake. Who can condemn the' By Ed Kelleher hoods of Harlem or Rochester who are told they are fighting for a cause, when the only excuse offered by educated young The news that good old football is returning to a mat. Since there are only three players, there is men and women for their own disorderly conduct is "a final, Fordham has been met with enthusiastic appro- invariably an extra mat. It must be removed at fling before school opens?" val. Tickets for the upcoming game with NYU once from the court. have been selling rapidly and there has been a It raises doubts about our "leaders of tomorrow." Ar marked upsurge of school spirit. The successful A participant is given a small round object which he may refer to as a ball. He may hit It to any these people supposed to graduate within a few short year reinstating of the sport and the increasing support and assume positions as responsible individuals in a fre for the football club have been sources of en- one of his opponents with the certain knowledge couragement for a small band of athletically con- that It will be returned to him. This Is because society? Then what is to become of that society—Romet scious students who like the gridiron game well the ball is attached to his own shoulder by a Or docs a diploma give such an individual a sudden recog- enough, but prefer a slightly different sport. Re- rubber band. If a player can cut the rubber band nition of his responsibility to himself and to his society cently they have begun making plans to return of his opponent, he gets absolutely no credit for it. Perhaps his assuming a role in society quells those pent u this sport to the campus. In fact, he may be penalized fifteen yards, de- anxieties he has had to release during his • summers. 1 pending on whether or not he has done it delib- short, does his getting a job bring- about an end to his sum Yukon sand tennis 1B not for the weak or the erately. mcr madness? cowardly. It Is a violent, deadly contest demand- ing a .ferocious zeal, matched only by a fanatical Unlike common, or peasant, tennis, Yukon sand Nevertheless, we have io feel a bit sorry for the st determination. Consequently, it has not been played tennis does not employ a net. Instead, players are dents at Hampton Beach. Although many, if not all, of tlij anywhere in the world for over a hundred years. asked to imagine where the net would have been (The last match was held before 42,000 screaming and aim Wicir serves accordingly. Surprisingly, misguided rioters in the Negro communities have an edi partisans on a lush Pacific isle, which, unfortu- there are few arguments about the validity of cation of negligible value, the vandals who tear up beach nately, could only hold 41,000. So intense was the points scored. This is because the players have and resorts are being given their college education and a Action on the field, however, that the thousand little or no imagination to begin with. In fact, the sound guidance they need—so much more than tl •who disappeared into the sea were not even miss- many of them cannot Xorm a mental picture of a Harlem delinquents—and yet think so little of it, or ed until several days later, when they began in- net. themselves. terfering with the International Date Line.) Although each participant Is given the tradi- tional type of tennis racket, he is not compelled to On the surface it would seem they have no regard i There was a time, though, when Yukon sand other people's property, or other people. Actually, they set' tennis was a tradition at Fordham. And it Is this use it during the game. If he does not like the looks tradition which the present group of sportsmen of a ball which has been hit to him, he may catch to have little or no regard for themselves. They have hope to restore. Fordham Initiated the game dur- it in his hand and throw it out of piny. If the ball direction or ambition—they have no set of values for then ing the 1840s with the hope that it would take peo- should happen to hit a spectator, both ho and the solves: there is only the good time, "La Dolce Vita," ll ple's minds off the Mexican War. Soon fans were spectator are awarded a bonus point. The specta- sweet life. There Is, after all, no pleasure in the plea.sui flocking to the campus by the tens to watch the tor, however, is escorted from the premises find powerful Ram squad take on the best Yukon sand various trumped up charges are gleefully levelled tennis clubs in the East. at him by the referees, who itsnnl!]> have nothing •, i." better to do. THE FORDHAM RAM . „.,.,.. ...a » , „» *»•>, ,...i| The player3 on the Fordham team became heroes Scoring is not on the numerical baste but on the rind (•xninlniitkm periods, froin October to MR t Ui ludmt if loidham Uim to>the fans and legends in their own times. Even Bronx, Hew York I015B. today, we continually hear references to these im- alphabetical one. For example, if you score, you Frnnk J. Ossfy — Killtor In ( hit f get the letter 'a.' The next time you score, you Joseph A. Viicrnrinti — Mum | Hip I illtor mortal athletes, particularly the famed quartet af- John S. Srtinor.iji/vli — llii In, i Muiiiir fectionately known as the Four Blocks of Oat- are credited with 'b.' The first player who can NKVVK: Hirry fjduiton niul Itoh JUlly. Lilito s meal. spell his own nnmo is declared the winner. This Tom Donlon, tlocer IIITIIILUI, I'rtt-' liluft 1 h, vml li Hill Jlnpor Iloberl nl used to drive Zola crazy. liliin, Ilimnitl Ilurda, ltoticr Cukrii'.. .liihn i>l liiMh Jurat Dumilni (tur The game of Yukon sand tennis was invented Jim Mnrllli, T>O1, Roimlr:!, MUhiul .'icluu 11 by a nameless Itinerant beachcomber from South, It has been estimated that the cost of returning F0K1IM: Hull I>B7e>? mid Tow Miillnnry, Ililltori •America. Known as the bum from Ipanema, ho de- Yukon sand tennis to Fordham would be consid- Kd ICelli'lier, UQU Ket'ler, Mtki- {liimlit'r, .IIIM |,li {'ilfa-.IT vised the game in order to bolster the sand and erably less than that of reinstating football. In fact, Ol'OltTH: lion OnleMtnislii imcl llol, Whlir, r.ili.us gravel industry. However, in his haste to formulate Tom MulvL'V, Ai Lnliiiiili', Hob Hrrrn, Mike wlllmniin, 1)111 (lonlla, John Am> the committee has already raised the necessary Jim O'llrlcn, Jolni AlLI-.t-n, ' mid' Cfitit•z ' complicated rules for the game, he failed to stress amount: twelve dollars. Other colleges have also [Ih'iUn the necessity of playing Yukon sand tennis on been contacted and they ore anxious to join with MAKEUP: Dick llnjnnlhi, l:tliloi riltlTOCiRAPHV: Ivniirn Larkln, Vrtt B:i| a surface of sand. Consequently, the game has Fordham in a league. So it may not be long until COPY EDITOR: Mun;lil-rl Hvyiinli > AKMK'IATI; rmroii: sroit en always been played on jugs. the once dead cry of "aaaaaaaaaaagh" is heard Moderator! Fr. Hubert o'Comiell. fl.j. again on Roso Hill. S.?.0"1?!1!01" "•V™"™1 '" "la colnmiiB o( Tlia HAM an> not nccrnsarlly those of I The rug Is divided Into four sections, which ore RAM ctiltors. lho inlittirlnl vlewu itro not m!ct?r,Biirlly thosri of tho Unlverstly I ministration designated as mats. Each of Hie players stands on It's groat to be in the vanguard. October 2, 1964 THE FORDHAM RAM Page-T Inside Coverage: Of Rights and Riots: 'Fault on Both Sides By Bod Davey RAM Feature Editor derstand other people." me. I belong to a club. I go to the tow*' Mrs. Worthington's friend had this with them, play cards with them. 1*> One week after the riots broke out in Harlem, a friend and I were to offer: "The people are too ignor- them I'm 'Merrie.' I'm not a nigger.'S: on the road to Canada, along U.S. l.At first, out of nothing more than ant to understand. If you lived on one of like my neighborhood, and I like m;/ curiosity, I asked Negroes we met on the way their opinions on the these blocks, and were met daily by pov- neighbors. I kept working for the move- riots. It v>as soon apparent that I had material for a feature. What erty, by disease, by hunger, by lack of ment, giving my time and my money, ao': follows is not all of the interviews, but only a very small portion of warmtJi and love—if you never knew that the people I grew up -with, tRe> the.n. They represent what I consider to be the consensus of opinions discipline or strength or authority you people who didn't make it, can have a gathered on the trip. The people we met were interviewed along V S 1 would act no differently. I am not con- better chance. Yet they turn around .am* from Neio York City to the Canadian border. When we came back we doning the riots or the lawlessness, and throw bricks at cops and riot? Thoy make- I am not condemning the police. I am the people I associate wth look at me, spent a meek talking to people in the metropolitan area, and when we merely saying that there is fault on both and say: 'What are you people trying, later found ourselves on the rouO. again 1 talked with Negroes in Wash- sides." to do? As if had a part in it. No more; ington, Philadelphia, Baltimore and Jersey City. I present the end re- "I'll go along with that ," Philip Cran- I'm pulling out." sult here and now, without analysis or interpretation. dall replied, "but I am not going to whitewash, or should I say blackwash, It was cold that night, outside Jones- that they were bad. "One of my cousins PORTSMOUTH, MartJff" every punk or hood that comes along. I Frank F. is a driver of a Coca C$tt* feld, Maine, along U.S. 1. We sat beside was down there in the riots during the was raised on one of these blocks—in a fiie, sipping beer and talking to James war. Riots are bad. My boys are smart. truck. At night he goes to CCNY, whew- Chicago. The first thing I learned was he is a chemistry major. He and his wWc C, an accountant from Philadelphia, They could tell you more about them. All that when a cop says "move," you move, who occupied the campsite next to ours. I know is that we don't want whites are expecting a child this winter. THejae and when he says "stop," you stop. If were spending a week in Portsmovitlv, "You ask me what I, as a Negro, think hurting us, and if we hurt them we're no you don't, you'll get a rap on the head or at the Negro riots in Harlem and Jersey. better." He blamed the riots on the par- Maine, a week after the riots broke ottti.- a bullet, maybe in the leg, but maybe in Frank discounted the usual reason of"" Why identify me with that rabble? Why ents. "Even myself—it's partly my fault the back." reduce me to their state of mind, to their too, because if my boy was out of jail fered for the cause of the Harlem riot!;: "Whenever you shut people up in a "Police brutality, my joot. Three civ.*' state of life? I'm a college graduate with he'd be there, raising Cain like the rest slum, a ghetto, witai- nothing to do and a wife, a home, a job and six kids to feed. of them." rights workers were murdered in Miss- Do I ask you about the whites in St. nothing to alleviate boredom and ten- issippi this summer. Last year it v/av Augustine or Mississippi? Do I feed you sion, pressure builds up, and it has to Medgar Evens and that postman. Whei-P1' questions about what you, as a Catholic, WASHINGTON, D.C. come out someway. They'll grab the first were my people then? Where were tUor think of the Catholics in South Vietnam Mrs. Martha Worthington, 67, and thing that comes along that promises martyr mourners at their funerals? But' grandmother of seven, has lived In Wash- relief, and this time it was rioting in the let a punk get shot by a cop who's de- or of the fallen Diem regime?" streets." Philip spoke differently. "I know He was interrupted by two of his chil- ington, D.C, for thirty years. Before that fending: his life, and you have a riot." she had lived in New York City, and in that if I were a cop, and someone came "Last year I was in Jamaica, and SOJBO' dren, Linda and Peter, who wanted to at me, I'd use my gun. My Lord, I'm know about the r.oises they heard by Nashville, Tenn. hoods started wrecking- my truck whiWn- Philip is a garage mechanic working afraid to walk in some sections of this 1 was in a store, You know what I did? the lake. We picked them up and carried city, and I'm black." them down to the shore, to listen to the his way through engineering school. He I took a bottle, broke it, couared one of i uatei lap the rocks by the dock. They and Mrs. Worthington and two of their • * •> them and told him if he didn't rake oIF' went to bed when they'd heard the night friends argued for an hour over the best NEW YORK I'd cut his throat. One of them dropped noises, and I watched Jim as he joked, way to answer me and the best things The boy lounged in front of a hot dog a knife out of his sleeve. So I wacked ninu- and kissed them, and tucked them Into to tell me. stand In Central Park. He said he worked with an empty soda case. And that's> "It's not too easy," said Mrs. Worth- what the cops should do now. Walk rigBt; their sleeping bags, and I thought of as a concessionaire in the season, and as 1 my friend Mario, the cop who'd found ington. a delivery boy in the winter. He chain into Harlem and put those riots downi ' himself in the middle of the Harlem riots "Things are different here. Washing- smoked three of my cigarettes as he His wife spoke softly, but with convitt'- after only a month on the beat. ton's population is mostly Negro, but spoke. tion. "I pity them. They're poor, ignor* you can see fdr yourself that it isn't the ant. They're trapped. But a lot of theMM1 "God, but it was dark down there. "Some of those punks hit my stand in same as it is in Harlem. There aren't any June. One of them tried to rough don't care. There has been wrong-dotefcr People were jumping up and down on ghettos, and except for an occasional on both sides. That, can't be rectified or1 tlie roofs, throwing stones and bottles me up, and I kicked him. Nobody block here and there, you won't rind any- accused me of brutality. And nobody undone now. But it can be stopped, je at us. I kept asking why they wanted to thing resembling a slum. The city is open know that many of my race have been hurt me ... why they wanted to kill me. tried to help me either. I could have been to the sun and the fresh air. You can .in tOie riots if I wanted to, but what for? held back because of their color. But now- I started to hate anything that had a breathe. You can move. The city is clean- there is something that they can do—so lack face and wasn't wearing a badge. All punks. I don't blame the cop (Lt. er, the houses are nicer. But even here Gilligan) for shooting the kid. What in much they can do. My husband and I don't anymore, but then I did, because there is the possibility of trouble. I've hell was he supposed to do—try to dis- have it hai'd. We've had it hard for- *> was scared." He'd told me how police seen cases of police brutality—cases arm him? Sure, and the punk's got foul" while now, and things don't look mu«»- ad chased a mob down an alley, and where the police don't take the time to or live friends in the street with him. better in the future. But how many.' ffhen they'd turned Itftit- cornier they understand or reason out what makes "One of them would have smashed the white students do you know who are Off- laught a Negro in a suit, starting after someone act in a certain way. ing the same thing? They don't have it- officer's skull and they all would have 1 he mob. They wrestled him to the "But still, there is no danger of riots. taken off. And if none of them had done any easier than we do. Are we going tW» jround, pummeling Mm and ripping his Not here. But you can prepare yourself that, the cop still would have gone up cry prejudice every time something acket in the struggle. Later they found for a lot of them this summer, and not against a blade unarmed. I tell you, if doesn't work out, every time we fail?'}!* ait that he wasn't with the mob. He have the feeling that that is what a lot- as a plaincloth.es detective on special of us do, and it makes me sad." lutjr. * * * PHILADELPHIA, Perm. 1 CALAIS, Maine Little Lortada, was only eight yews When Jesse Mann climbed down from old, but she knew all about bad white men. She stopped playing house with the hb tractor to give us directions, he look- two white boys and her white girl friend d twice as old and squat and pudgy as lo ten me about them. They had beaten ie had In the driver's seat. His second up her brother two years ago, and l?*t fife was young, tall and lean. They work- year had spilled garbage over hty front d a small farm in the middle of nowhere, lawn \UiicTi hud nitule her moriier o*y. nd went to church in Calais, near the Ca- T She thought that people who rioted li- adian border. We talked lor si while, the streets and threw bottles at i>eop]o md then his wife asked us to come in for were bad. If slu- did it she'd yet a spank~ Wfee and pie. The outside of the house ini;, and she couldn't undevstaiMl -wisy. coked like that of a sharecropper's. The people didn't punish those who did do it;

«mt was peeling, the roof looked as * * ••> hough it would cave in, and the porch five way under my welsht. The barn JAMAICA, Queenrr Joked just as bad. But inside the When I got home, I talked to a NegiO' IOIISO, the floor was clean. There- lawyer who Has his office in Jamaica.- as a pinno in one corner, and a He laughed at some of the things that i-fl and television in the other. The were said at the interviews. But Ui«rc eB''o pointed proudly to the library of were times when he just shook his head.' wiks in the den—leather-bound—the "To paraphrase our illustrious James'' -olumbia Encyclopedia, Shakespeare, Farmer, what else can you expect? Those' ickens, Thoreau. Heraclitus. Clceio. ~*$& riots were Mne work ol maybe one ven- tomcr; "I tion.t mwl Uu,m" JU> ra_ Rioters Ravage Harlem cent of the Negro population of tnis^ country, and yet people read about them, "just the children and the iust in Hnrlem. The word is out." Wash- that kid had been smart, he would have and immediately suspect every Negro< Oman." He joked about the woman ington was different. And the Inhabi- dropped the blade first thing. You don't they come across of carrying a han*lt ""ting the books more Hum a repair tants of Washington's Negro sections do that. Cops are jumpy, especially in the grenade strapped to his belt. It's unfor- >o on the house. She snapped back tlutt knew this, but they themselves said that summer. Hell, I'm jumpy." tunate that people turn to violence, ami' "-' house didn't need money, iu;;t a little they were no different from the Negro in yet for many, white and black, that "is* °i'k and energy on iik; part. 10 any other pail of the country. One youth LONG ISLAND the only way. You read about men k»B- winked at me and snickered that said • "Wherever I go, I am a Negro. It is Ing one another over a dollar, a woman, 'Uvpen her and the farm and little Meredith R. is si plumbing contractor. lss an inescapable fact. If I am treated dif- He and his wife make t'helr home in a bottle of scotch. It may sound ridk««- -V's piano playim;, he was always be- ferently in different cities, it is only be- tous, but sometimes I think they are mew "•' l>ut to sleep. Ills wife withdrew to Lone Island with their three children. cause each section of the country has its Until this summer, he was a firm sup- snne than tihose of us who commit vio- «•' Kitchen to fix th« i-oifi-i- and pie, own way of handling what they call "the lence for an ideal, or an idea. At lorft't, "< fie old man told us of his four son.'; porter of the civil Tights movement. 1(1 Negro problem." when you fight over a bottle, you know two daughter,; by hi:; firM. wife, and "I was born and raised in Harlem, and from the time I was ten I had one thing what you are fighting for—It's there— •our sons ana ont> dmiirhttr by his "What is there to understand? A cop there's no doubt about lt. 1 can say that - ''•'•cut mtirrlnKe. is a COP. He (jets paid like me, and his In mind—to get out of there. It stinks. And because I want a decent home and it would be wonderful to flglit and> die two youniieM, a boy and cirl, still Job is to protect people, even against for civil rights. I can, understand; thefso> ll themselves. He has a home and a family, fresh air for my wife and kids, and be- 1 • at home. The two older i;irls were cause I want to give them the better people, I can understand the people wW© wii'led. one ;,ou w,,,: u Baptist min- and he wants to avoid trouble. If he attacked Negroes on the beaches in SK>< breaks something up and trouble starts, things like a TV and camp and pets, I'm ami two wen: at coilciif, both on called a traitor to the cause, a 'whito Augustine. But violence is wrong. TtwflW* rshl then he has to get rough. I think its arc too many people who get hurt, tt*> about time we stopped telling others to man's nigger' and 'Unole Tom.' "°iie of 'em is i.,, juii;. ]ie juuied. Ite "Look, my neighbors respect me, like many innocent people." •un I know mudi about the riots, Just understand us, and start trying to un- October 2, 1964 Page 8 THE FORDHAM RAM

INTERNATIONAL REPORT .., By Cene Harper ing, economically and socially century? To a German that insecure class has taken con- Goldwater, as President, would Pardon the Misunderstanding. . . trol of the Republican Party; not be belligerent in Berlin? *-'ftOME, Sept. 15 —Election century, Europeans, quite un- er seeks to strengthen the these people simply fear the And the prince of absurdities year in the U.S. has practic- animously, would rather their NATO Alliance when the mere progress that has been made —the charge that the Kennedy ally the same effect on the esthetic sensibilities be some- sound of his name seems to in civil rights, international and Johnson administrations political dialogue in Europe as what disturbed than America disrupt European - Ameaican relations, economic theory and have been manipulating for- it : does at home. Admittedly plunge them into four years of relations. are groping for something in eign crises for domestic politi- •,European interest may be un- a Goldwater administration. That Goldwater would like the past to hold on to and cal effect—proves equally em- sophisticated and emotional in The worry, repulsion and even to reduce foreign aid —since catch their breath. And the barrassing. What does the Eu- .more cases, especially this year. horror expressed here at the by cutting the budget and in- British thank God the faction ropean think when the leader i but there has been exhibited prospect of a Goldwater elec- creasing military spending he is as small as they hear it is. of a major American politcal a great doal of mature political tion is alone enough to instill would do just that—is not par- Divided Germany knows the party, a Presidential teandi- ^linking in the Goldwater- quite a fear in Americans who ticularly appealing to people presence of the nuclear threat. date, makes such a charge on Johnson race. -^perhaps justifiably — believe outside the walls of the Land According to one German stu- such a vital issue and exhibits President Kennedy, of that Goldwater would be no of the Free and the Home of dent, Berlin is militarily in- such a lack of understanding course, enjoyed a popularity in worse than an Eisenhower. the Brave. Any kind of twen- defensible, save toy the use of and maturity vis-a-vis the Europe unparallelled in Ameri- Various points of a Goldwater tieth century isolationism is nuclear weapons. You just problems of the Presidency? program cause this fear. neither desirable nor realistic. don't tell the Russians to 'can political history. His im- Admittedly, only a few ' age and that of his wife were Europeans harbor a singular Perhaps again our Baiiry is knock down the wall. The only misunderstood .... strength behind such an ulti- Presidential candidates have indeed significant factors, fear of nuclear weapons. Hav- survived blanket endorsement both being essentially Euro- ing known war on a conven- The Italians and French are matum is a nuclear threat— and the risk of such a nuclear from the European press, but j pean in taste, style, and ex- tional scale, they stand united very much afraid of present as even Mr. Goldwater admits, pression. So it was, precisely if only on one position—that Republican nuclear policy and war is to be avoided by ration- al man. The answer—negotia- a strong NATO Alliance is ab- the European aspect of the tha risk of nuclear warfare isolation tendency; witness solutely necessary. Observing Kennedys which so attracted should be avoided, if at all pos- DeGaulle's claim for the nec- tion, not severing diplomatic ties. Europe, one doubts that Mr. Europe to tJhein. President sible. The Goldwater image, essity of an independent nu- Goldwater can accomplish this. Johnson is a living caricature created by the candidate him- clear force. How does one explain to a at almost everything that peo- self and with help from the Re- The British tend to look at Frenchman that Goldwater did Perhaps the most humorous ple over here distrust in an publican platform, inspires the Goldwater candidacy with not suggest the nuclear-defoli- observation appeared in an American—he is a wealthy and nourishes this continental typical humor; they don't ac- ation project, but merely men- editorial cartoon in The Texas politician addicted to fear of war. An easy rebuttal, tually despise him. They seem tioned it as a possibility? How Guardian. It showed "Presi- barbecues, cowboy hats and that Barry is so often misun- to be more sophisticated in does one explain to an African dent" Goldwater being inform- overwhelmingly American derstood, is meaningless. The political discussion. Nations a vote against the Civil Rights ed by an aide that the Rus- homey-ness and homeliness. President of the United States all have backward and pro- Bill? To an Englishman that sians had just attacked. His But this year, two-thirds of cannot afford to be misunder- gressive elements, they say. archaic economic and social first orders were "Tell the the way through the twentieth stood. Paradoxically, Goldwat- In the States, this year, a grop- theory is actually twentietlh wagons to form a circle." Football Hits Rose Hill With A Bang

BEAT

Don Ross looks over the packed ball- . . . and the reaction of the crowd leave;, no room as he starts to speak , . . doubt that they like what they hear „&&£&

Dean McMahon, who authorized the club, approves of the reaction

NYU

. . . and everybody's interested

Hopeful candidates begin their trial Itober 2, 1964 THE FORDHAM RAM Will Win': YR Chief Fr. Lynch Announces Plans By )oe Kennedy as the press reported, ljukens Lddressing a crowd of nearly claimed. He said this was typi- For World Science Center in the Campus Center ball- Lukens Asserts cal of news distortion and mis- a week ago, National Young reporting. Rev. J. Joseph Lynch, president of the New York Acad- Ipiiblican Chairman Donald E. Precinct Campaign emy of Science, and director of Fordham University's seismic fuzz" Lukens predicted a Gold- Against Ku Klux Klan station, has announced plans for a $35 million World Science cr-Miller victory in November. Will Decide Vote Sen. Goldwater, Lukens con- Center to be erected near Fortlham's Lincoln Square campus stressed, however, that such tinued, had renounced the sup- in the Lincoln Center cultural area. The project is scheduled victory depends largely on the port of the Ku Klux Klan, despite for completion by 19G7. of, Sen R (R live, 1): certain press reports to the con- ected programs now being cott- trary; but President Johnson, he Father Lynch described the irk of young Americans. planned Academy building as emplated are realized. One such pointed out, has failed to disavow 'an international clearing house wogram calls for 25 major sci- recent statements by Nikita or world science." The plans as ntific conferences to he held suft- [vernmei Khrushchev that urge Johnson's outlined so far include a sky- mally. These conferences would ikens w •e-elect)on over Goldwater. craper office building that would bring together scientists froja year-old Lukens, a former the national ticket. The same day he spoke here, be the Academy's new headquar- 11 over the world. •mocrat, heads the Young Re- Charge Against Press Mr. Lukens was a guest on WMCA ters. Present headauavters locat- iblican movement, which claims In answer to another question radio's Barry Gray Show, where ed at 2 East 63rd Street are out- ire than 400,000 members in all from the audience, Mr. Lukens he repeated and expanded many moded. A number of other sci- states and the District of Co- denounced television reporters of the statements he made here. entific organizations and science- Interested in .bia. oriented corporations wovild also and syndicated columnists for al- He concluded the WMCA in- his brief statement and the legedly "unfair" coverage of Re- have offices in the building. BERMUDA lestion and answer session that terview by describing the Gold- publicans in general and Sen. water-Miller ticket as a "team An electronically controlled sci- lowed, Mr. Lukens repeatedly Goldwater in particular. ence library would be a main over EASTER? nphastzed S e n. Goldwater's v/e can trust" and labeled Presi- Lukens said that Goldwater had dent Johnson "impulsive" for feature of the building. An audi- Itvongly pro-civil rights" posi- not, for example, advocated the torium, to be used for lectures, Contact ms, which he contrasted with such incidents as "speeding down use of nuclear bombs to defoliate •a narrow Texas road at 90 m.p.h. demonstrations and motion pic- [e.sldent Johnson's "hypocritical" trees in South Viet Nam, as some tures would also be included. M. J. GABELLl orcl on civil rights. with a can o,f beer in one hand elements of the press reported. and his f Johnson's) hat over the Pro Civil Rights The erection of this project is P.O. Box 751, The size of the crowd greeting speedometer because he didn't expected to cost $25,000,000. An 'specifically. Lukens cited Sen. Sen. Goldwater in Atlanta, Ga., want to see how fast he was go-additional fund of $10,000,000 is Fordham University Iduater's Senate votes in favor last week was 250,000—not 100,000 ing." sought to make certain that pro- both the 1957 and 1960 Civil ."Ms Acts, and Goldwater's on? support for racial integra- m m the Arizona National iiaid, the Phoenix public schools id an port, and the local Arizona iiiptei of the American Legion. Sip also recounted the Republi- |n Party's strong "historical imnntment" to civil rights and isted that Sen. Goldwater uld if elected, fully implement (1 enforce the Civil Rights Act • 3 10G4 A * « lukens chai'Bed that President **# JE ilin-ion, on the other hand, de- * * 7" qpunced FEPC and public ac- *** mimodations proposals in the m Jfimte, and voted against civil UPr !iU measures in Congress 21 / ' ps He also accused the Presi- 1r Clas ic poplin rainrcnt SHp-on moccasins: uppers of TapcrtJ <-t retch -lick Dacron polyester, Int of writing a discriminatory 1 lube into a deed fov Johnson 65% "Dacron '* pol>t tcr, "Corfam"* poromenc worsted, L\cra' * spandtx •optitv in Austin, Tex. I Golilwatcr's Program jLukens .stated that no law p| H'd by "big daddy government" ii b> itself, eliminate discrimi- tion Sen. Goklwater, he added, 11 unveil in the course of the •iip.iigu five or six concrete mams for local communities follow in establishing racial ulitv and peace, but he did not boiate on the exact nature of Programs. 3n a related topic, he said he ceitain Sen. Goldwater and ri'iessman William E. Miller e a definite plan of action in id to carry out their campaign mise of freeing major U.S. it* from violence and crime, '»sh he conceded he does not '«' what that plan is. Foreign Affairs n the area of foreign affairs, YR chairman concentrated on ' critical situation in South •]• Nam, where ho said he re- Hy served a.s a U.S. Air Force llicence agent. He vehemently used the Administration of 'ling American soldiers into nbat against the Viet Com; nmunlst guerrillas In planes so dated they arc "literally fall- apart," and ho strongly de- Pentagon claims that the Ml States Is winning the war 3-l>utton '.Mil v.'ith • Button dov\n pl.nd s|H>rt slnrt 1005c Du Pont nylon let Nam. b5% "Dacron" poly ester, 35% cotton 55% "Dacron" polyester, *\5% worsted likens stated in response to a that he "thinks highly THE YOUNG MAN IN THE KNOW: WHAT HE'S WEAU1NG THIS FALL

Here are some of the clothes that rate with college stay in great shape through lots of hard wear. And «t an inexpensive lunch, men this fall. We know. Because we asked them. easy care will keep them in great shape. Ida or sonic sive«>ts Campus leaders from all parts of the country gave us All the big styles come with the extras of Du Pont »y us a vslt the word at the 3rd Annual Du Pont College/Career fibers. Just make sure the label says "Dacron", Fashion Conference. "Orion", "Lycra", "Antron"* nylon, Du Pont nylon These clothes have more than great style. They also . . . and, in shoes, new "Corfam". Stop and see your favorites at WALLACHS, New York & branches. & Ilaack have the built-in neatness of Du Pont fibers. They 11 87 East Fordham Road Bronx, N. Y. ••w Corner of Becalm- Ave. MtTER THINGS fQ« KTTIK UVING ,., THKOUGH CHtMlSTW THE FORDHAM RAM October 2, 1961 Vage 10 'Human Energetics' Series Returns 'Dialogue9 On Birth Control (Continued from Page 1) To Read the Bible" and "Basic • ...1 ...worln..1~] dn^nMlim problemr nlfll'/s l mor& f f P(\{\e VPeffectivelyl V . Plans are currently being work- studies in science and natural ton, is scheduled for Tues., Oct. Christian Beliefs." The lecture history. He held a doctorate in These problems were discussed 13 at 8 p.m. in the Campus Cen- I will be given at 11 a.m. in-the sd out lor the formation of a and debated at the Workshop last • second Human Energetics confer- geology, moved into paleontology ter ballroom. Dr. Blanton is theCampus Center ballroom. and archeology and became in- summer. Next summer's confer- author of a 19S6 best-seller "Love Dialogue also hopes to sponsor ence, to take place during the ence is expected to pick up .from ifimmer of 1965. ternationally known for his part or Perish," and an associate foun- panel discussions on such topics In Dhe discovery of "Peking man." these discussions and use them der and member of the board of as civil rights, but all such plans The conference will involve The .purpose of the Teilhard as a starting point for wider in- the American Foundation of Re-are presently tentative and will discussions by experts in the ma-studies, according to Rev. Robert vestigation. "We are less inter- ligion and Psychiatry. be announced as they become def- S' and Elm PI, next door to Mc- WANTED Rae's and Bond's clothing. Its •findings will be made Typewriter repairs — Sales — N. W. Corner, Fordham Kd. & available and published In book Stationery — School Supplies Webster phone evenings: Lunch $1.15 up, Dinner $1.35 up form. "UPSTAIRS" Teilhard de Chardin had early 371 E. Fordham Rd. Center Ski Tours Catering for Parties studies in Greek and Roman 12 Tables Bronx 58, N. Y. $1.50 up classics and- his later concentra- Air conditioned 212 NE 8-8578 tion on philosophy and theology CY 8-57G8 CY 8-2451 were interfused with continued

Interested in PUERTO RICO over EASTER? Contact M. J. CABELLI P.O. Box 751, ForOham University THE it staples term papers and class notes, photo- graphs, news items, themes, reports, National SecurityAgency is a totally unique organization ... and offers creative research opportunities in ittadts the art and science of sophisticated communications On-Campus Interviews dling terminal equipment, more effective for Mathematicians and En- notes to bulletin board, pennants ThereJs absolutely no other organiza- speech band-width compression . . . and to wall, shelf paper, drawer linings. tion like it... no other organization doing scores of s-milar advances. gineers will be held later. the same important work, or offering the Consult your Placement Of- same wealth of opportunity for imaginative 2, Ny the very nature of "secure" com- thinkers in the Liberal Arts, as well us the munications, assuring the continuing in- fice for dates. Physical and Engineering Sciences. vulnerability of U.S. communications The National Security Agency is a major through cryptologic procedures and tech- research arm of the Department of Defense, niques. Because cryplology and its crypto- but its influence and responsibilities are far graphic counterpart are not taught else- broader. It works closely with many indus- where, mathematicians, scientists—and all trial and research institutions; it has special others with appropriate intellectual curios- access to .scientific information at universi- ity—will be taught this challenging new ties and ^ other Government laboratories; discipline right at NSA. Work in this field and it enjoys close consulting arrangements may involve specially-designed computers, with scientists of commanding stature. NSA television, computer-to-computcr data party costumes, prom decorations, stall' inembi'rs enjoy all (he liendils of Fed- links, and edp programming. (Hvcn music, school project", posters, stage sets. eral employment without the requirements philosophy, or the classics may be useful imposed by the Civil Service system. prerequisites lor cryplology!) What does NSA do that warrants 3, Translating written data, and presenting this unique stature? the crux of the material in meaningful NSA approaches the subject of sophisti- form. This is the home of the linguistics cated communications from these original expert and the languages graduate—enab- standpoints; ling the talented graduate to make the most of hii; or hev particular gift, and 1. Creating secure eoiiiiumiieations sys- quickly expand familiarity with other tems and equipments linknmvn anywhere tongues.' else, and devising special refinements for In all (hat NSA iloes, tlicre is .seldom computers & cdp systems that will increase any existing precedent. Only NS\ (uoueer.s It's the "Tot 50" our handling capabilities. This means that in .secure i-omimnik-ations on this broad a Communication!; Hngincers, Computer De- scale, so only NSA oilers the college gradu- Swlngline sign Specialists, Mamematicians, Program- ate the best chance to make immediate use mers, and Systems Analysts, all contribute of his disciplined (liinl,i»i; . . . without to the dcsir.ii of antennas, transmitters, re- years of post-graduate experience. All these Xgfgt/ . Stapler ceivers, and terminal equipment ... to ex- features —together »i(h its well-inslru- UNCONDITIONALLY CUARANTEEB periments using new semiconductors, mag- merited laboratories. libraries, and profes- netic film, superconductive devices, etc., sional stalf of specialists in amazingly resulting in new logic circuits anil memory varied ticlds-nrovidc a slimiilaliiif; aca- units, better high-gain arrays for UH1'demic atmosphere for individual accom- radio systems, higher-capacity data han- plishment.

VDIir flir"fP1"1'0" »»!i (Including 1000 staples) arecr size CUB Desk stapler be mailed before October 14th ThJ?J|S m°rt l71P°rtant: J°,.apDlY for Qn NSA Position, nil students EXCEPT Mathe- only $1.49 maticians, Engineers, and Physicists must toko tho PROFESSIONAL QUALIFICATION NSA is located in expniKlino facilities at Fort No blegor than a pack of gum.Relllls I»^T ?CtS° NIA pOnfS0tVd0fnOCnSb0r, Z4th- Sl.°P ln nt y°"r Pl»«ment OHice and Oeorqe G. Moruk', Mruylmic!--twilfwtiy betwotm available everywhere. Made in U.S.A. aak foo r tho NSA Professorial Qual Mention Teat brochuro . fill out nnrl mnll in thn Washington and ilnltimore. It is handy to trans-- byPma1f onolooed ln»l*> • • • ond bring to the tost the ticket you £ili receive portatton facilities, the University cf Maryland j«t any Stationery, variety, book storol and Johns Hopkins, ciiUurbnn or rural living (ln- r tovn living, too, now that the new circumferen' ° ° ""' ' COre°r inl0r6sts V'. E<" the facts on NSA opportu- Hal highways arc completed). . , and tho Chesa- INC. peake Day resort region. LONO ISLAND CITY 1, NEW YORK- L>ber2, 1964 THE FORDHAM RAM Page 11 Roses 'n' Thorns A New Dimension Boosters Accept 130 Freshmen By Bob Fierro Along with the Freshmen, who been made for the members to'- In Contact Sports An intensive campaign to lo- have already hinted that they are attend away gairie'S cate and talk to the high spirited true to the Booster "tradition," such as Rutgers, Rhode Island ,'A >fi->>. members of the class of 1968 has over 30 upperclassmen have reg- and Connecticut by bus; Holy By Bob White paid off tremendously for the istered with the officers, proving Cross and Boston College by car RAM Sports Editor Fordham Booster Club in the last that the club has made an im- cavalcade; and Georgetown by I Following in the footsteps of Member of Parliament. ' few weeks. Hampered with a small pression over the last few years way of a gala train trip. iuinalists of yore,, this column But even worse, consider what percentage of sophomores in its At the Harvester 1 starting a crusade. We feel it on students who heretofore had [in the best interests of Ford- might happen if a winger has to rank - and - file, t h e Boosters not considered themselves Booster Following the annual birthday- Sin University, arid Thomas sneeze while going for a try. Con- sought out "new blood" in the "material." party which was held Wednesday T orc College in particular, to sidering decorum above all, she freshman class and came away Successful Club night in the Ramskeller, the i a coed Rugby match. would' remove the handkerchief with brims overflowing. Boosters will be seen in tlhe next President Paul Soden advises few weeks in such various and Icertainly this has its advan- from her belt, a tackle would be Over 130 freshmen — largest that this year could well be the cs. Not only would it fill the declared by an astigmatic referee, iingle group In the club's history sundry places as the Harvester—'. t in the TMC athletic program most successful the Club has had and a long run would go for —have been accepted into the yet. He specifically points out where they have ten tables re- gup which is very wide since served—and the Peter, Paul and :re is no athletic program), naught. All Is not lost, however, Boosters, Fordham's official spir- that the new members were sign- it would tie in well with the for the sneeze is caught in the it organization, that dedicated ed up even before the announce- Mary concert. You won't have to fysiral fitness program. If girls nick of time. group of rabblerousers one sees ment concerning football was look hard to find this group of •c expected to do push-ups, at every atheltic function regard- made. Besides attending the foot- 300 strong having a good time in lll-ups and run the marathon As we say in television, "But less of the quality of the team. ball game "en masse," plans have ithe traditional Fordham way. lice a week, why shouldn't they seriously, folks," a match of this ly Rugby? sort is something we would like to see. There is no doubt that Jit would also help the Rugby this match would attract a large fib, which is in for some trou- ls this year, with many of the number of curious spectators. It fiyers going out for the football would prove very interesting and and likely to make it. It might get some other kind of ath- |ght provide a breather for the letics going for the TMC girls, b. Of course, if the girls win, who are loudly complaining be- • Rugby club might fold, Keat- cause they have none. If Art Gei- Hall might collapse, and Ron :er doesn't like the idea, maybe jolebicwski might get married Don Ross can handle it. lice months later. THE RAM STAFF has sched- I uled a football game with the staff for, you might suppose, Thomas of NYU's Square Journal for Fri- lure will have to close up shop, day, Nov. 6 at 4 p.m. This game ith too many girls out for the will precede the pep rally for the Jison with serious injuries. All secondary game to be held the lose poor, delicate females (ad- next afternoon. Two years ago, |css ail nasty letter to: The The RAM defeated the Journal, JUI, Campus Mail) coming in 37-0, behind the quartcrbacking Intact- with those Minor Mon- of J. Brendan Ryan, who threw Irs of the Midway in a game for six touchdowns, and the line Jiich many o,f the giiis should play of Bill Kammer and Charles It even be watching is almost P. Nastro. No game was held last year, so NYU will be out to jthinkable. Of course it is. avenge their last defeat. The re- fjjEnoueh of jesting. That is not liable Jersey House has NYU by way the game goes when the 3'/2. Prank Casey is going to \-s play. Girls play touch throw the game, so put your mon- fctball, so why not touch Rug- ey on the Journal. Also, it's 2-1 It's pretty much the same that Casey gets married three Hit Rugby •School, where, as months later. might expect, the game orig- d plays a match with a DESPITE THE HOPES of a sop- a*1 hborinu girls' school every homore sports writer, this year's IWr. and the girls usually win. basketball team, which faces a (1 i n body knows the old say- tougher schedule with a weaker ll« Hie buttle of the sexes was team than in three previous wan on the playing fields of Rug- years, will not go to the NIT. It bjj ' The girls strike fear into will go to another, even stronger H* hearts of the Rugby lads— tournament, the WAY (Who te|l ol Playing too aggressively Asked You?) tournament, to be Mjof binding too tightly in the held Mar. 26, 27, and 28 in jum. The girls win easily, some- Goose Bay, Labrador, The reason "' '< by as much as two tries, or for the late date is so the WAY points. tourney can get as much newspa- Can beer be too cold ? |)f course, the girls have a def- per space as possible, while keep- fc advantage—there are twice ing Its small time, de-emphasized Maybe we shouldn't care how cold people drink beer. .. identity. Since it is being held | many girls as boys. (Those just so they drink Budweiser. (After all, we're in business!) feel this is the same as say- in an odd spot, wags and wits will two girls are worth onu boy undoubtedly christen it the WAY- |',jwj But we do care. And if you think that's unusual, you puld mail all correspondence out tournament. Actually, it is ought to see the care we take to brew the beer. For instance, the Headmaster of Rugby for teams which, through some fool and the president of the amazing stroke of good luck, we could save a lot of time and money if we weren't so p> Football for redress.) It is manage to win 25 per cent of its stubborn about our exclusive Beechwood Ageing and 1 enough to cover one girl, let Outstanding players can natural carbonation. But we are. . . and we have to pay lie two, and there are often SIRII with either of two teams— li.v scoring opportunities for jthc USO or Bob Hope. the price. In fact, we know of no beer produced by any girls which their opponents [ ,,,,„,. sl>oRTS STAFF is looking other brewer that costs so much to brew and age. W never get. ,,,^,^, wlth or without ex- fm. That's why, after we go to such fuss to brew all that JsJ in touch footballfotball, the BillBills pmirnce. The same sophomore who v taste into Budweiser, we want our customers to get it all | handkerchiefhdk s in their belts! i,.,,s illusions of the NIT is pusli- aic considered tackled when ! inn f01- girls on the staff. We're out. And this is a fact: chilling beer to near-freezing tem- handkerchief is removed, not exactly indisposed to the idea, Ire is obviously a lot of "nan-i either. It's happened before on peratures hides both taste and aroma. Iwnky" going on. One Runby other papers, college and profes- 40° is just right. Iwas caught by a wire service .slonul. Anybody with the knowl- To make it easy for you, we've asked all the bartenders Itographer three years ago us- tedee of sports and writing abil- |an illegal play, u proved very ' ity is welcome. Maybe then we can to serve Bud at 40°. Also, every refrigerator is designed to lauassing to England, the •:rt some serious writing done. cool Bud at 40°. Jo], and the Queen. To- pim- Our door is always open (but no- nim, they made him a Tory body's ever home). Of course, if you're on a picnic or something and the Bud is on ice and nobody brought a thermometer... oh, well. Things can't always be perfect. , Inc.

Qualify Flowers Budweiser, ••' \ Phone: FO 7-8848; FO 7-2420 N.W. Cor. Fordhtun Road that Bud....that& beer! ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELES • TAMPA (253D Webster Ave.) New York SB, N.Y. Support Roses 'n' Thorns Page 11 RAM SPORTS The Club October 1, \% Page 12 THE FORDHAM RAM Varsity Victorious 2-0,1 In First Alumni Gam( While the Varsity was downing Queens College, 4-0, Sat., Sept. 26, most of the fans in the Coffey Field gandstam were watching a bunch of guys in Fordham uniforms "wan ing up" down the left field line. As they played pepper, jabbering away the whole tin! you looked at the big fellow with the red hair and number on his back and wondered who ->— he might be. Then you stared at it was football, because he the little guy with the black hair on an unlimited substitution basi and the horn-rimmed glasses. He Pitchers were batted for and i| was wearing number 19, and appeared the next inning in somehow seemed to be in charge. outfield. Catchers batted out turn and were soon found to I And a big tall guy with blond 1 hair, one of three wearing num- playing third base. ber 17 on his back, looked very The first two innings we familiar. scoreless, with Bill Mueller of I When your curiosity finally got Varsity and Hank Kapmeyer ai the better of you, you asked some Jack McQuade of the alumni .fellow who was setting -up loud- ing the pitching. speakers Inear t)he home plate But in the bottom half of t: Line Candidates Bump Heads in Early Light Contact broadcast booth. He said they were third, with Tony Balsamo, fo alumni of past Fordham baseball mer Cub relief pitcher, in the b; teams come back to haunt the game for the alumni, the Varsi Varsity. Number 17 was a fellow broke the ice. Ed Lawry drew Football Squad Begins Drills named Paul Hurrell, number 38 walk, and was promptly thro» was Jack McQuade, who also used out stealing, Saviola to the shoi By Mike Willmann all, the two schools have met 33 to pitch, and the little guy was stop covering. Butch Zullo's lo: imes, with Fordham holding the Gerry Bochicchio, the former drive to center was caught on For the first time since 1899, Fordham University will shortstop who had arranged the spectacular over-the-shoulder gt. 'have a student -coach; and for the first time since 1954 the edge, 23-6-4. whole thing on an idea oi sports by Don Haig. Tony Pellinj school will field a football team when the Fordham Football The Nov. 7 contest will mark publicist Bill Burke. singled to left, stole second, ai : Club meets NYU's Violets on Nov. 7 on Jack Coffey Field. the 492nd game of football played The game itself mercifully last- scored on a single _by Pat Lew The game will mark the 75th anniversary of the first by Fordham. The Maroon's rec- ed only six innings (mercifully, The Varsity adde'd one more :Fordham-NYU game, in which the Bams ravaged the Violets, ord over the years is 288-160-43 that is for the poor fellow keeping the fourth against Paul Hurn 'MS. . for a percentage of .643. This score). Only two runs were scored, whose curve ball looked as Coaching the Fordham club is I don is quick to point out, however, places Fordham 22nd on the all- but a Met Conference record for as ever. With two out, Tom Cm IJBave Lmgdon, assisted by Bernie! toat nobody has been proven un- time list of major colleges in win- st Illegal lineup changes in a owski, batting for Golebiewsl Mullei'. Artie Geiser and Dick c'.er fire. ning percentage. single game was set by Eon Gole- drew a walk. He went to third •Ciotti. John Leary is the student Of the final squad, almost all blcwski. captain and coach for Lawry's Texas league double, a: In the 33 previous games with the day. Apparently, Ron thought came in on a passed ball. * trainer. have played in high school. As the Violets, the Rams have scored Langdon and his staff greeted the coach notes, he and his staff 591 points to 244 for NYU, an over 140 men on the first day of just don't have the time to teach average winning score of 18-7. tryouts. and beginning Monday, football, a regrettable but un- ' :the final squad of 55 will begin to avoidable situation. Leading the Heightsmen will be Rams Defeat Seton Hal emphasize contact under game Also aiding Langdon are several Bill Windish In Ms first year as conditions. alumni who have volunteered their head coach. Before moving to services for one or two days a the Bronx, he coached at Susque- Frosh Win Led by Fat According to Langdon, the team hanna College where his teams •>is in good shape after two weeks week. The Foixlham club will probably compiled an enviable 30-2 record. In their initial outing of the season, the 1964 version i •ttf; calisthenics, laps, sprints and the Ram cross-country team soundly defeated the harrieJ •'reaction drills. play platoon football with several "Coach Lanffdon" players going both ways. Although from Seton Hall in both the varsity and freshman competl Pleasant Surprise the offensive strategy Is not yet a Langdon comes from Joliet tions In a dual meet held last Saturday at Van Cortlandt Pail Dave's appraisal of the team is matter of public record, the coach Catholic in Illinois. In his junior Under the leadership of co-captains Matt Cuechiara ar.| generally one of quiet surprise. does admit that he "likes" a 6-3 year he was the team's leading I pass receiver and In his senior jfTerry Ryan, the team seems to "•He feels, that the backs have good defense. have found the spirit which It size and excellent speed, that the year was second in team scoring. Kajns Hold Kdgre' The Joliet club ground out a total lias needed for a good many years. •interior line has good size al- The work-outs have been tougher, though the tackles are merely The last time the Rams met of more than 2,500 yards on the ground alone bhat year. (nd yet the response and desire •adequate, that the ends are rangy NYU on the gridiron in 1952, Ford- evidenced by the team has been Hud have excellent potential, and m whitewashed the faded Vio- Langdon jokingly says that he freater than Coach Artie O'Con- that the battle for quarterback lets, 45-0, and the year before it came to Fordham to turn over a nor has seen in quite a while. •liu-i uncovered good talent. Laii'i- was Fordham in a 41-0 romp. In new leaf—studying. Actually, he admits that after considering and In Saturday's meet, the Rams rejecting the seminary, he came romped over the Pirates by 22 to Rose Hill on the recommenda- points, winning: 20-42. The team Rookie Pitchers Beat Queens; tion of a Carmelite friend and Was led by strong sophomore Dan because of his interest in psy- Henry and Matt Cuechiara. Cuu- chology. ehlara and Henry battled Seton 14 Batters Fanned In 4-2 Win Jtall's long distance ace, Canad- By Bill Coglia the runners in both frames. At Rose Hill, Langdou was ian Bruce Andrews, over the The combined efforts of pitch- The Rams picked up two of converted" to rugby and .still grueling 5-mlle course. Andiews eto Ken Whitney, Bob Verbesey their five runs in the second on admits "an intense interest" in finally won the individual title, and Ron Wood resulted in a 5-0 £ lilt batter, a walk, a pair of er- the sport. After a neck injury (followed b'' Henry, Cuccluaia shutout win over Queens College, nrs and a run producing single while water skiing in his fresh- Terry Ryan, Jim Median, Hob pelitor for the Rams. The sc'W Hume on walks. But tough control vile witt (;et tougher ham, and the Rose HlUers eihould statement: "No matter what hap- for the 3 mlk freshman o.oureiv o: •jflttching and good defensive piny have made a better'showing. St. pens, thla will be the best Ford- lie was followed bv Cirei: Griffith meet, with Yule providing the