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Page 97 text:
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'vi M 4'i2'f L X i f ' ' 77-777-,fp-YM il I U-O 'bib W A Ima 'Y-1-ww-,rr F U- 'Jr L W t www wg IN cv-cv ww-vr-Q l ,nfztl get i'i1l?52iItFi5s?I11Xt.L1AXl!, H- f i f r t r, 0QJTijQjj'fEE .. , 1 If g ': l1'-fi-' L '71 Ld Y at 1 L4 I Freshman E President: RAYMOND CONCANNON Vice-President: VVILLIAM SULLIVAN Secretary: JOHN M. BRADY Treasurer: GEORGE BOLAND WITH the heat ot summer not yet over, the men of Freshman HES' gath- ered one September evening to begin their first year ot college lite. It was a strange new existence to most ot us,-this going to wort: by day and school by night-but we were not long in Fordham before the full swing of its activity caught us up in its swirl. Classes, Professors Strassburger, Vvatsh, Leen, Sexton, Father Koonz, the things done in our school, ali made a tremendous impression upon our untormed minds. The experience has been so striking as to be unforgettable, standing out in bold relief against what we had come to expect from hte atter the contact with big business that has been so much a part ot us tor varying lengths ot time. Especially did we find surcease in the religious activities which comprise so great a part ot the training which Fordham ottered us. Before being brought to our senses, it appears that we had been sucked in by the whirlpool of the material. Such We feet shalt never again be the case and we are sure that we are better tor it. I 81 tid' WW . . . , . . 7 ,. . , . --------f i ' All V -' .. M 3,,f'-'Q N,f'ffg5,: ,U e -1 I , N .X .' l 5. 1,--X. 4 ' , L lViv ,1'Nc',c . , ' az- , - J , ' ' ,Ava ,Q 1 ., f- H 1, . , Mfr.. .. x. . sc r . iv' 314 gxfprjjl, fggw,-:L LQ. EFI!- L xlilghjf' ,L 531 'Q N 63:3 x J ni' V1
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Page 96 text:
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t wmftlfftey IDEM? Lllfm ti f--, ' .F ' 'K' 'DX Y N .. J v' 1 X JMU 'rrT?:? .fur xufwr- .. 3 -W ' hir JI - - Ivpig-1,5-aff1'vT fi-:i7'U ' WM 1' ' - .V UND, 'K not WuT1f1'1.: rf . 'RTM I A ' i-'il U I W J I 2 X ' ik X .Lv V P y EJ Freshman D Prsident: JOHN HOGAN Vice-President: JOHN QUINN Secretary: ROBERT MCGLINCHEY Treasurer: RAYMOND SMYTH can he no torgetting that tost and tonety teeting we experienced when first We stepped out on the Ucampusf, Yet, in retrospect, how soon We shattered att harriers Ot reserve and joined wholeheartedly in a spirit Ot comradeship. For were you to glide into our ctass some evening, and sitentty eclipse yoursett hehind Mr. Curry, you would hehotd an awtut panorama. On the dais you would see John Hogan, president and re- nowned thespian, in action. Un the right you might Overhear Mr. Glee- son, cetehrated nimrod, discoursing on hig game hunting with the C.C.C. At a sate distance might vvett he Mr. Schramm telling again ot his forty- seven yard run on a Statue ot Liherty play. But don,t teave us now. For Fortune may smite, and the tar-sung Mr. Henry give a decisive dictum on the arts. And you may hear the Venerahte Bede mutter from the grave his henison on our Mr. Ivory tor such handsome treatment. Such are the glories ot Freshman D. To those who have slipped and to those who may, we assure an at- tachment not easity dissolved. And to the men ot Fordham We suhmit an account ot Freshman MDM in the hope that We have shown ourselves f vorthy ot such a company. f I J mm :WL gum .. 80 In L' wlttttmm if 'll' C' liln W .yu . ,f, -, -. ... , - . ww 'f.',1ifff2Ji Yin' ff r .ft 15.5203 53512 f.O5,w5D3 my 2? LQ 55?
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Page 98 text:
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'III wr I fs Freshman G President: WILLIAM KELLY Vice-President: THOMAS BYRNES Secretary: WILLIAM J. DUGGAN Treasurer: MICHAEL DI PRETA ALMOST all of the memhers of our ciass had anticipated an arduous, grueiiing task in college. But when we had expected a hiacic night through which we might possihiy stumhie forward to the dawn we found that in reality dayhreaic was just ahead. Philosophy held no qualms for us once we were introduced to Professor Sherlock, the soft-spoken exponent of St. Thomas Aquinas. Nor did we tear Economics or Sociology once we realized the extent of the knowledge hidden hehind the dignity of Professors Walsh. and Vaughan. The humanity of Professor Sexton made what was heiore writ- ing assume the warmth of literature. Father Biahes charm dissipated the hardness of the classroom, while Professor Powers hecomes daily more gray in doing away with our cacophonies, and Professor Hart is drawing us through the daric realms of Neolithic and Paleolithic man. We are now in deep Water hut finding ourselves afloat are going to maize a swim of it. M Il . 82 ' My ' Wi Ft WI ' 'Ifr X it 1 Qu: Ill ma 'Ml if ' V f Y V -:hu Ir N L4 , 4 .wk 3' 'ffN.I1 ' 1 N. L ' VDAV , K5 ' 'fe ' ' K 7 5 twill illx,15lfg5j3f1Z4x2:2'g ' 'I
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