Fordham University College of Pharmacy - Cosdamian Yearbook (Bronx, NY)

 - Class of 1967

Page 40 of 122

 

Fordham University College of Pharmacy - Cosdamian Yearbook (Bronx, NY) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 40 of 122
Page 40 of 122



Fordham University College of Pharmacy - Cosdamian Yearbook (Bronx, NY) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 39
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Fordham University College of Pharmacy - Cosdamian Yearbook (Bronx, NY) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 41
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Page 40 text:

jdeyibfory of fde Cfaad of I967 It all began in September, 1962. The campus was alive again as students greeted their class- mates with tales of the Summer past and prophecies of the year to come. For some, it was the last year, for most, it was another year, for us, it was the first year. The campus was covered with posters, the ROTC was recruiting as were the various fraternities and societies. For the Freshmen, it was a time of confusion. The paths of possibility were numerous and varied, each one beckoning to the student with an air of mysticism and guaranteed potential. Amidst it all, fifty-seven Freshmen gathered in Thebaud Hall to embark on a five year program that was to have changed their outlooks on every phase of life. 'KMy name is Dr. Sica, and, for you Latin scholars, that,s spelled with one We had met the Dean and orientation had begun. Father Taylor spoke of the many opportunities that Fordham had to offer, and Dr. Schubert was introduced as our Class Moderator. We were told to look to our left and to our right, and that one of those students would not be with us in 1967. After telling us that five years wasn't a very long time, a Senior took us on a tour of the campus, aided by a few of his class- mates. Assured of our potential, and bursting with confidence, we viewed the orientation speeches with a bit of skepticism, for we were so filled with the eagerness to meet a challenge that we failed to see a challenge at all. Indeed, we were very young. After numerous mistakes at registration, we began the formal studies divided as Section A and Section B, and, as the year gradually pro- gressed, we gathered many facts about a variety of subjects. Dr. Sica taught us Why aspirin could be sold in a Loblaw store, that William Proctor was the Father of Pharmacy, and that Pl?.6LI lTLClCy was a profession. Mr. Cotter told us 'iThey named the baby Henryv and went on to explain why He was soooo goodf, We were helped with exams before, during and after by Mr. O'Neil, and, while living in fear of Mr. Casazza's Chapter 17, we took bets that Father Murray would some day scoot too far and fall off that platform in Larkin, holding a cigarette in one hand and a piece of colored chalk in the other. Our yellow papers weren,t complete without a red mark in the margin when Father McCurty corrected weekly Theo- logy quizzes. We named Cosmo DeSteno, Lou Coluni, Don Kozlowski and Larry Rossi as our class officers and Don Pingaro sat on the Student Council. While facing the difficulties above, we found time to listen to The Kingston Trio, Peter, Paul and Mary, and the Clancy Brothers, and to watch a Varsity Basketball Team that went to the NIT. Section A captured the Pharmacy Basketball Championship before

Page 39 text:

' rf- if 1-Ye- ,V - , Not merely to exist, but to love, to dream ..... 'i In addition to her membership in the APhA, Sandie gave her literary talents to the Fordham Pharmacist as a Lower Soph, and to the Cos- damian for four of her five years. Aside from finding herself at the end of the alphabet in Upper Soph year, she's the one who took the drahness out of Ph 21. it i U i CONEBUT NOTFORCOTTEN Where have all the flowers gone? 'UN ,f X SONDRA RONS WELKIS Gonebut may have been a member of the APhA, or he may have even been a class officer at one time or another. Of our starting iifty-seven, only twenty-six originals remain among the thirty- nine members of the Class of 1967. Gonebut represents the thirty-one people who registered with us in 1962, but who will not graduate with us in 1967. He has left us gradually and yet, in a sense, he has not left at all, for some of us still hear from him, and all of us have spoken of him. He might have left by choice or force, and he may or may not be in Pharmacyg he may he married or single, and he might even be a woman. We will always remember him for what he was, and among the things that he has taken with him, we would like to include our sincerest wishes for every success and happiness that this world can bestow upon him. 29



Page 41 text:

the snow melted, and as the months went by, the divider was beginning to lift and the Class of 1967 was beginning to gel. At separate beach parties we put a year of notes, labs and exams behind us, and looked forward to the following Fall, when we would be called Lower Sophomores. We returned that fall a somewhat more conditioned group, eager to further not only ourselves, but also the College of Pharmacy. Feeling that our orientation by the Seniors was somewhat cold and distant, we obtained permission to orientate the Class of 1968. We set up a Coketail Hourv for the Freshmen, and remembering all the hardships of Fresh- man year, established a Big Brother program, events which have established a very strong bond between the two classes. Under Rick Hahn, Dave Scott, Don Kozlowski, Dave Carey and Don Pingaro, we merged into one unified group that was never to be divided again. The courses were upon us once more, differ- ing from Freshman year only in complexity. Mr. Casazza took us through one semester of Play your lnrnclf' and another of Beat the Clockv, and we thanked him with a chorus of Silent Night. More yellow papers were being slashed in Theology for incomplete answers to incomplete questions, and everyone could draw a marginal distribution curve for guns and butter. After learning all the problems every good physicist should knowf, we were relieved to hear that Bill Wolff doesn,t fail anyonen Qunless of course he didn,t know an authorls mother,s maiden namelj. A sociologist was able to explain the reasons for maifs ac- tions in every circumstance except for the times he cheated on an exam, but nothing could stop our momentum. Outside the classroom we turned out another champion basketball team and a Well drilled bunch of dreamers who knew the code words of Hutza onen, Banana outv, and aHalfback passf, Pharmacy went University wide when the Rose Hill Ramblers sang on WF UV and Ann Marie Phillipon was named Miss Ford- ham. Concerts were given by Ray Charles, the Kingston Trio, the Brothers Four, and the Hootenanny TV show, and a veiy content campus was rocked by a boycott of the Campus Center, much in the same manner as the world was shocked by the assasination of a Presi- dent. A year of excitement, filled with joy and tragedy was recalled at another beach party, and we said our goodbyes for the Summer once again. A Class Moderator directs his Freshmen with words of welcome, but apparently he directs his Upper Sophomores to start With inorganic materialsf, The word had gotten out that '67 was snowballing through, and the faculty took steps to slow us down. Dr. Patel made rheology an everyday word, and had us

Suggestions in the Fordham University College of Pharmacy - Cosdamian Yearbook (Bronx, NY) collection:

Fordham University College of Pharmacy - Cosdamian Yearbook (Bronx, NY) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 37

1967, pg 37

Fordham University College of Pharmacy - Cosdamian Yearbook (Bronx, NY) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 11

1967, pg 11

Fordham University College of Pharmacy - Cosdamian Yearbook (Bronx, NY) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 97

1967, pg 97

Fordham University College of Pharmacy - Cosdamian Yearbook (Bronx, NY) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 44

1967, pg 44

Fordham University College of Pharmacy - Cosdamian Yearbook (Bronx, NY) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 119

1967, pg 119

Fordham University College of Pharmacy - Cosdamian Yearbook (Bronx, NY) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 103

1967, pg 103


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