Spring Prom dilemma lo encompass broad field of study ...

7
^ ; for engineering or science, . , . cept Student fees adiucf.^ . '" n S se the Commonwealth of t,onnsvlvania did not completely S -Dresel-s requ^t for ftn- aid, President Imeet lancial lu" Haeerty announced that the ,won hike °* William that the 1967. tuition September Engineering Imajor.s were (‘Drexel is not I tuition any faster ,»» according to Dr. «l>m not saying it We're and science spared because going to raise than it has Hagerty, for an raising out next y e a r all the money we can ana iry- ine to keep tuition down.»» Besides tuition, the Institute relies on alumni, private and cor- porate friends, and the Common- wealth of Ppnnsvlvania for its I financing, i-icoc..*/, „ndenvriting 71% of the school's Presently, tuition is 15 million budget. Student fees adjusted Student fees will also be collected differently in Septem- A. f" of $150 on the invoice will replace separ- a^te notations for General Institute Fees, Student Deposit ($ 15 ) and Registration Fee ($ 10 ). This i<; a $15 reduction in assessment for engineering and science stu- dents. Graduate costs also up All graduate programs have also had their costs increased. The larger increase in graduate tuition reflects the substantially increased costs at this level »» stated the President, “ and is in keeping with the Institute policy of not permitting the undergradu- ate student to subsidize graduate Continued on Page 3, Col. 4 \m ) \oo ,. ........... *7 .... ......... .-L DREXEL INSTITUTE OF TECHNOIOGY PHILADELPHIA . PA . OLUME XLIV FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1967 NUMBER 12 umanities and Social Science Dept. Spring Prom dilemma lo encompass broad field of study A new division of Humanities land Social Sciences has been |approved by the Board of Trus- Itees at their meeting lastThurs- |day April 20. The division will encompass he now unaffiliated departments |of English, Psychology, Music, Social Science and Computer Science. It will be headed by its own dean who will be re- cruited in the coming months. Dr. Carl Gatlin, vice-president for academic affairs, stated, ‘ ‘The division will not grant un- dergraduate degrees except r. Hallivachs chosen for lead of English Department Dr. Robert G. Hallivachs, head bf the English Department and pean of the faculty at Wells "ollege in Aurora, N. Y., has been appointed to head Drexel*s English Department. The appointment was an- ouncecl last week by President Hagerty and the Board of Trustees. Dr. Hallivachs will assume his new post on July 1. Dr. Hagerty and the Trustees acted upon the recommendation 01 an ad-hoc committee headed oy Dr. Christiaan T. Lievestro. Also serving on the committee IJere Dr. Mary I. Stephens, Dr. IJalph C. Most, Mr. Thomas D. I f own and Mr. William M. Hollis I/’ committee was unan- imous in its recommendation of l^r. Hallivachs as Dept. Head. In earned his B.A. |in 1936 at North Central College, Âź majored in English and ology. Later he earned his Iverc’if^^ Princeton Uni- lin he also majored Ivif'f.'n While in the ser- la Mc ^^^^livachs also earned fornia Institute of Technology as part of his training as an Aviation Cadet in the U.S. Air Force, Eventually promoted to the rank of First Lieutenant, he served as a Weather Intelligence Officer. In the academic realm, Dr. Hallivachs has served on the faculty of both the University of Illinois and Princeton Univer- sity. In 1955 he resigned from Princeton to accept his present position at Wells College. through its involvement in the Humanities and Technology pro- gram. In the future it may evolve into a school which will grant graduate degrees.” At present the only school, as op- posed to a college, is the Gradu- ate School of Library Science. Many involved Dr. Gatlin related, “This pro- gram is the product of several years of discussion and planning involving many people including Dean Matheson, President Hagerty and members of the various departments con- cerned.” He further stated that this new division fits into the Institute policy of encouraging “ strong organizational depart- ments and flexible programs of study for the student.” The present Humanities and Technology Program is an ex- ample of this type of structure. In this program, course work is tailored to the student’s de- sire and need. Area students protest germ warfare research More than 100 college students — including a few from Drexel — and faculty members have been staging a sit-in since Wednesday in the entrance hallway and of- fice of Dr. Gaylord P. Harnwell, president of the University of Pennsylvania. The demonstration opposes On the news scene * * * x'A * * * * * * * * * Projects Spice Rack and Summit, the chemical and biological war- fare research Air Force con- tracts soon to be transferred from Penn’s campus to the Uni- versity City Science Center. The Center is jointly owned by Penn and Drexel, Swarthmore, Haver- ford, and Bryn Mawr Colleges, among others. Robert Brand, one of the or- ganizers, noted that, since Penn owns 53% of the stock in the Science Center, the University has not truly disavowed itself from the germ warfare re- search. In fact, he said, Presi- dent Harnwell has repeatedly dis- regarded objections to Penn’s complicity. Three hours after the sit-in had begun, Dr. Harnwell came out of his office to address the group and answer questions. He admitted that he felt Uie research was inappropriate for Penn; hence the transfer. Hew^ asked how he could condemn ^ e research at the University, but then condone it at Science Center. He replied, “The sci- ence Center was designed anything inappropriate University.” for for the aided by APO $1,000 The fate of Class Council’s Spring Prom is still unknown. After the Freshman Council’s “Soul Concert” two weeks ago, Class Council found itself with an approximate deficit of $4500. This resulted in the freezing of Class Council’s student account., On Monday morning, April 17, Bob Botta, Queen Selection Com- mittee Chairman, found out about the freezing of the account. He tried to purchase materials for the Spring Prom and was told that he could not charge anything. Al- Black Monday ^Review” During the past fall term, freshmen Jack Gedian, a Physics major, and Chuck Mester, an M. E., found that they could learn the required material more easily by compiling their chem- istry notes with those of other students. They gradually ex- panded this study-method into “ The Black Monday Review,” a money-making project that is also a service to all freshman chemistry students. These two students now attend the lectures of all N-403 pro - fessors and put in additional hours of library work to pro- duce their study guide. Copies of the “Review” are made a- vailable to students for the nom- inal fee of 25^! each. They are sold in the Basic Science Building on Wednesday and Thursday and in the DAC on Friday during the week preceeding each chemistry exam. though the prom was never of- ficially cancelled. Ho Cofbin, moderator of Class Council, was quoted in last week’s Triangle as saying that there is “no fore- seeable possibility of having the Spring Prom.” For over a week, plans for the prom have been unsettled. This past Wednesday morning came the first breakthrough. The brothers of Alpha Phi Omega voted to invest $1,000 in the Spring Prom. This offer holds true only if Class Council can raise the other $800 first. A tally of the student activi- ties fund is now being taken. According to Dean Eichhorn the balance can be anywhere from a negative figure to $2,000. The final results should be known by next Monday. As it now stands, the prom will not be held unless the stu- dent activities fund can bear the additional cost of the prom, the administration subsidizes it, or Class Council can find the $800 somewhere else. It is now possible for aspiring authors to work for fun and profit. The English Department Creative Writing Contest is offering $200 in prizes for winning short stories, essays, poems and plays. Entries must be submitted to the English office, 7-419, by May 8 to partake of the swag. So, un- clutter your minds as well as your attics and get some material here in time. Further information available in room 7-419. RPMcC THE MEN'S DORM, left, has this term been opened for partial residency.

Transcript of Spring Prom dilemma lo encompass broad field of study ...

; for engineering or sc ie n c e , . , .cept Student fees adiucf.^ .' " n S s e the Commonwealth of t,onnsvlvania did not com pletely S -Dresel-s r e q u ^ t for ftn-

aid, P residentImeetlanciallu" Haeerty announced that the

,won hike °*

W illiam that the

1967.tuitionS ep te m be r

E n g i n e e r i n g

Imajor.s were (‘Drexel is not

I tuition any faster ,»» according to Dr.

«l>m not saying it W e're

and sc ien ce spared because going to ra ise

than it has Hagerty,

for an rais in gout next year

all the money we can ana ir y - ine to keep tuition down.»»

Besides tuition, the Institute relies on alumni, private and co r ­porate friends, and the Common­wealth of Ppnnsvlvania for its

I financing, i - ic o c . .* / ,„ndenvriting 71% of the sch o o l's

Presently , tuition is

15 m illion budget.

Student fees adjusted

Student fees will also be collected differently in Septem-

A. f" of $150on the invoice will replace separ- a te notations for General InstituteF e e s , Student Deposit ($15) and R egistration F ee ($10). This i<; a $15 reduction in assessm ent for engineering and science stu­dents.

Graduate costs also up

A ll graduate programs have also had their costs increased.

The larger increase in graduate tuition reflects the substantially in creased costs at this level »» stated the President, “ and is in keeping with the Institute policy of not permitting the undergradu­ate student to subsidize graduate

Continued on Page 3, Col. 4

\ m ) \oo, . ...........* 7

. . . . .........

. - L

DREXEL INSTITUTE OF TECHNOIOGY PHILADELPHIA. PA.

OLUME XLIV FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1967 NUMBER 12

umanities and Social Science Dept. Spring Prom dilemma

lo encompass broad field of studyA new division of Hum anities

land Social Sciences has been |approved by the Board of T r u s- Itees at their m eeting la s tT h u r s - |day April 20.

The division w ill encom pass he now unaffiliated departm ents

|of English, P sychology, M usic,

Social Science and Computer Science. It w ill be headed by it s own dean who w ill be r e ­cruited in the coming months.

Dr. Carl Gatlin, vice-president for academ ic affairs, stated, ‘ ‘The division w ill not grant un­dergraduate degrees except

r. H a l l i v a c h s c h o s e n f o r

le a d o f E n g l i s h D e p a r t m e n tDr. Robert G. H allivachs, head

bf the English D epartm ent and pean of the faculty at W ells "ollege in Aurora, N. Y., has been appointed to head D rexel*s English Department.

The appointment w as an- ouncecl last week by P resid en t

Hagerty and the Board of Trustees. Dr. H allivachs w ill assume his new post on July 1.

Dr. Hagerty and the T ru stee s acted upon the recom m endation 01 an ad-hoc com m ittee headed oy Dr. Christiaan T. L iev estro .Also serving on the com m ittee

IJere Dr. Mary I. Stephens, D r.IJalph C. Most, Mr. Thom as D.I f own and Mr. W illiam M. H ollis I / ’ committee w as unan­imous in its recom m endation of l^r. Hallivachs as Dept. Head.In earned h is B .A.|in 1936 at North Central C ollege,

Âź majored in E nglish and ology. Later he earned h is

Iverc’if^^ P rinceton Uni-lin he a lso majoredIvif'f.'n While in the s e r - la M c ^^^^livachs a lso earned

fornia Institute of Technology as part of his training as an Aviation Cadet in the U.S. Air F o r ce , Eventually promoted to the rank of F irs t Lieutenant, he serv ed as a Weather Intelligence O fficer.

In the academic realm, Dr. H allivachs has served on the faculty of both the University of Illinois and Princeton Univer­s ity . In 1955 he resigned from Princeton to accept his present position at W ells College.

through its involvement in the Humanities and Technology pro­gram. In the future it may evolve into a school which will grant graduate d egrees.” At present the only school, as op­posed to a college, is the Gradu­ate School of Library Science.

Many invo lved

Dr. Gatlin related, “ This pro­gram is the product of several years of discussion and planning involving many people including Dean Matheson, President Hagerty and members of the various departments con­cerned.” He further stated that this new division fits into the Institute policy of encouraging “ strong organizational depart­ments and flexible programs of study for the student.”

The present Humanities and Technology Program is an ex ­ample of this type of structure. In this program, course work is tailored to the student’s de­sire and need.

Area students protest germ warfare research

More than 100 college students — including a few from Drexel — and faculty m em bers have been staging a s it - in since Wednesday in the entrance hallway and of­f ice of Dr. Gaylord P. Harnwell, president of the University of Pennsylvania.

The demonstration opposes

On th e n e w s scene

* * *x'A

* * *

* * *

* * *

Projects Spice Rack and Summit, the chemical and biological war­fare research Air Force con­tracts soon to be transferred from Penn’s campus to the Uni­versity City Science Center. The Center is jointly owned by Penn and Drexel, Swarthmore, Haver- ford, and Bryn Mawr Colleges, among others.

Robert Brand, one of the or ­ganizers, noted that, since Penn owns 53% of the stock in the Science Center, the University has not truly disavowed itse lf from the germ warfare re ­search. In fact, he said, P res i­dent Harnwell has repeatedly d is ­regarded objections to Penn’scomplicity.

Three hours after the s it-in had begun, Dr. Harnwell came out of his office to address the group and answer questions.

He admitted that he felt Uie research was inappropriate for Penn; hence the transfer. H e w ^ asked how he could condemn ^ e research at the University, but then condone it at Science Center. He replied, “ The s c i ­ence Center was designedanything inappropriate University.”

forforthe

aided by APO $ 1 ,0 0 0The fate of C lass Council’s

Spring Prom is s t i l l unknown. After the Freshman Council’s “ Soul Concert” two weeks ago, C lass Council found itse lf with an approximate deficit of $4500. This resulted in the freezing of Class Council’s student account.,

On Monday morning, April 17, Bob Botta, Queen Selection Com­mittee Chairman, found out about the freezing of the account. He tried to purchase m ateria ls for the Spring Prom and was told that he could not charge anything. A l-

Black Monday ^Review”During the past fall term ,

freshmen Jack Gedian, a Physics major, and Chuck M ester, an M. E., found that they could learn the required m aterial more easily by compiling their chem ­istry notes with those of other students. They gradually ex ­panded this study-method into “ The Black Monday R eview ,” a money-making project that is also a serv ice to a ll freshman chem istry students.

These two students now attend the lectures of all N-403 pro­fe s so rs and put in additional hours of library work to pro­duce their study guide. Copies of the “ Review ” are made a - vailable to students for the nom­inal fee of 25 ! each. They are sold in the Basic Science Building on Wednesday and Thursday and in the DAC on Friday during the week preceeding each chem istry exam.

though the prom was never of­ficially cancelled . Ho Cofbin, moderator of C lass Council, was quoted in last week’s Triangle as saying that there is “ no fore­seeable possib ility of having the Spring P ro m .”

For over a week, plans for the prom have been unsettled. This past Wednesday morning came the f ir s t breakthrough. The brothers of Alpha Phi Omega voted to invest $1,000 in the Spring Prom. This offer holds true only if C lass Council can ra ise the other $800 first.

A tally of the student activi­t ies fund is now being taken. According to Dean Eichhorn the balance can be anywhere from a negative figure to $2,000. The final resu lts should be known by next Monday.

As it now stands, the prom will not be held unless the stu ­dent activ ities fund can bear the additional co st of the prom, the administration subsid izes it, or C lass Council can find the $800 som ew here e lse .

It i s now p ossib le for aspiring authors to work for fun and profit. The English Department Creative Writing Contest is offering $200 in prizes for winning short sto r ie s , e s s a y s , poems and plays. Entries m ust be submitted to the English office , 7-419, by May 8 to partake of the swag. So, un­clutter your minds as w ell as your attics and get som e m aterial here in tim e. Further information available in room 7-419.

RPMcC

T H E M E N 'S DORM, l e f t , h a s t h i s te rm b e e n o p e n e d for p a r t i a l

r e s i d e n c y .

I '

DREXEL TRIANGLEPage- 2 - April 2B, 1967 ‱ ‱ A

D r e x e l m u s i c o r g a n i z a t i o n s a n t i c i p a t e

p e r f o r m a n c e s in S p r i n g M u s i c F e s t i v a lD rexel’s m usical organization

begin a crowded schedule today that will carry them through the entire term.

The major activities for the term are the Spring Music F esti­val, next Saturday, May 6, and the Varsity S in gers’ trip to Expo ’67 from May 11 through May 14.

The Music Festival will feature the four divisional winners of the Drexel Music Awards Contest, The contest, whose winners were chosen Wednesday night, con sists of a piano-harp division, a com ­petition for strings, a wind di­vision and a vocal contest. It was open to pre-co llege students throughout the area.

Another feature of the festival w ill be a performance by the winners of Kano, the brothers of TKE.

Drexel groups at the festival will be the combined Glee Clubs, the Varsity Singers, the Orches­tra and the Varsity Wind En­sem ble. Among the p ieces to be performed w ill be two numbers combining the Orchestra and the Glee Clubs; “ Beat, Beat D rum s” from Howard Hanson’s “ Drum Taps;” and “ Then Shall Your Light Break Forth,” the last chorus of Mendelssohn’s “ Eli­jah.”

The Varsity Singers will leave for Canada early on Thursday, May 11. They will sing at the Schenectady, N.Y., Rotary Club. The following day, the Varsity

For Your Pleasure,...

Razor Cutting

ERNEST & ERNIE’S

Wilford Barber Shop

HOURS: MON. Thru FR I.

8 A.M. - 6 P.M.

SAT. 8 A.M. - 2 P! t i .

1 0 9 N o r t h 3 3 r d S t .

E V 6 - 2 6 1 7

T H E C H R I S T I A N

S C I E N C E M O N I T O R

I S N O W O N S A L E

I N T H E D A C

DRIVE PART TIME

CHOOSE YOUR NIGHTS TO WORK

Yellow Cab Company of Philadal-

ptiia has openings for part-time

drivers. Here is an opportunity for pleasant, interesting outdoor work with good earnings.

Over the years thousands of college s tudents have driven Yellow Cabs to aid their financial needs.

Qualifications: 21 years of age; current Penna. Driver's License;

proof of driver's license for 2 years.

Apply

YELLOW CAB COMPANYEmployment Office105 SmiNi 12th SITMI

M « r 4 « v lk r« w |h T h w n ^ v - * AM. f f P JM. M i a v aNrf S a i w ^ y — f AJIll. § fM.

Singers will give two concerts as part of Philadelphia Day at Expo. They will have a free day at the fair Saturday and will re ­turn home on Sunday, May 14.

Tomorrow, the Varsity Singers will tune up for their tour in a concert at Ursinus College in Collegeville.

The Band is marching in to­day’s Loyalty Day Parade in town. The Band w ill participate in five parades or ROTC activi­t ie s between today and the end of the term.

The term w ill c lose for all activities when the Band plays for Commencement on June 17.

Brecht music-dramas will open at Drexel in original versions

The Humanities and Tech­nology Program and Theater Workshop are sponsoring two of Bertolt Brecht’s m usic-dram s in association with Riverside Productions.

“ The Exception and the Rule” and “ The Elephant Calf” will be presented as in the original New York production with the original cast, at 8 p.m. on April 30 in D rexel’s Main Auditorium. The admission will be $2.00 for the only Philadelphia engagement of the plays.

“ The Exception and the Rule” was written in 1930, not long after Brecht wrote his “ Three Penny Opera.”

“ The Elephant Calf” has been called Brecht’s “ hilarious army vaudeville” — “ a short surrealist extravaganza based on pure clowning— alm ost completely free assoc ia tion --a fascinating insight into Brecht’s sub­conscious mind.”

ROTC s c h o l a r s h i p

r e c i p i e n t s s l a t e d

b y C o l o n e l C o n w a yColonel Lewis W. Conway,

Professor of M ilitary Science, today announced the names of three D rexel sophomores who w ill receive two-year Army ROTC Scholarships. They are Norman F. Hubler, L eslie L. Kasten, Jr ., and Charles D. Runge, Jr.

These scholarship recipients were among the 347 awarded two- year ROTC scholarships in 1967 in the 15-state F irs t Army area. B asis for the selection is aca­demic exce llen ce , extracurricu ­lar activ ities, physical condition, personal qualities and leadership potential.

The Army pays the entire tui­tion, textbook c o sts and labor­atory fees of those se lected as w ell as providing them with a $50 monthly allowance during their junior and senior years. Five D rexel students are p r e s ­ently in the tw o-year sch o lar ­ship program and three have the full four-year scholarship.

The big question of the week is WILL THERE BE A SPRING PROM? People in the know have said no, but don't cancel your date yet. Alpha Phi Omega fraternity has already exp ressed in terest in providing som e of the funds, if not available e lsew h ere . Keep your e y es and e a r s open; although many are p e ss im is t ic , I s t i l l b elieve that som ehow the event w ill com e off on schedule.

The freshm an hazing com m it­tee for 1967 is looking for in ­terested people in helping to carry out a constructive and fun-filled frosh hazing program . The fir s t m eeting w ill be held Mon lay. May 1 at 4:30 P.M. at the North end of the ca feter ia in the Main Building.

The SOPHOMORE CLASS MIXER, scheduled for tonight at the DAC has been CAN­CELLED. This w as n ecessa ry due to the fr ee ze on C la ss Coun­c i l money until the F rosh Coun­c i l concert expenditures have been cleared up...Your f ir s t chance to see the work of the Hum anities/Technology P ro ­gram and Theater Workshop is this Sunday, A pril 30 at 8 p .m . in the Main Auditorium. THE EXCEPTION AND THE RULE

I r Âź l b f

uEobarromet, ÂŁtb.S u p p o r t s b i r t h c o n t r o l .

T h e r e f o r e , s m o k e i n b e d .

3643 Walnut 222-2224

W E D O I T SO W E L L ,

E V E R Y O N E I S C O P Y I N G U S !

Cyclops Copy Service128 So. 36th St. Open Wkdays 9 A.M.-10 P.M. on 36th near Wol. Saturdays 9 A.M.-] P.M.

“T ouch m y face , V eron ica.Feel h o w m y n e w N o re lc o T r ip le h e a d e r w ith 1 8 am azing ro ta ry b la d e s ,3 f lo a tin g M ic ro g ro o v e h ead s , s id e b u rn tr im m e r, co il-co rd , a n d o n / o f f sw itc h g a v e m e a sh a v e so c lo se , y o u c a n m a tc h i t w ith a blade.”

“ O o o o h , G e o rg e .

D o I d a re ? ”

The Tr ip leheader 35T — fas tes t shaver

on wheels

H e r e ’s t h e N o re lco R e c l t a r g e a b l e S p e e d s h a v e r ¼ 40C. Works with or without a plug. A single c h a r g e delivers twice a s m a n y sh a v e s a s any o th e r re ­c h a rg e a b le on the marke t . S haves so close , we d a re to m a tc h it with a razo r blade. Pop -up t r im m e r . More fea tu re s than any o th e r shave r.

The Norelco Cordless ‘Flip-Top’ 20B (not show n) sh a v e s anyw here on ju s t 4 pen l igh t ba t te r ies . Now With conyeo ien t bat te ry ej ec to r . Microgroove heads . Rotary b lades . Snap -open wallet with mirror.

^ / (H)

i s an orig inal New York produc tion of B ertolt Brecht's music’ dram a. A dm ission is $2.01'

SHENANDOAH, a story of Southern fam ily during the Civill War, starring Jam es Stewart and Doug M cClure, i s theSPBFriday N ite F lick er for tonight. Thd p lace i s the Bus Ad Auditorium and the tim e is 7;30 p.m f

The COMMITTEE FOr ' thf ADDITION TO THE DAC will be distributing a questionnaire tol the student body in the near! future to better understand theirl d e s ir e s o f what should be in.l corporated into this new struck ture. So far, many have ex-| p r e sse d strong d e s ir e s that thel a rch itec ts avoid the color orange! (why could thatbe?)...IS THESP^bI REALLY DEAD? Nobody reallyj s e e m s to know. This seemsl to be e sp ec ia lly true of the mem-l b e r s who are distributing “ SPBl i s A liv e” buttons. Could theyl be trying to te ll us something?...! Tom McGinley, Triangle Editor^! in -C h ief i s retiring. His terra of ‘ ‘o ff ic e” i s ending and he is not re-running. Look for a ne\\ ed ito r - in -c h ie f to be announced in next w eek 's is su e . Electiona w ill be held on Wednesday, May 3J

C L A S S I F I E D A D S

Classified ad rates: $1.25 for 25j

words per week. $ .25 for eachl additional 5 words. Place c/as- sified ads in Triangle mailboxl in the D.A.C. or contact Adver-i

tising Manager, Room 12 (n{ the D.A.C.

F U R N . A P T . C o u p l e or Two Stu

d e n t s . $ 6 0 . A v a i l a b l e J u n e

C a l l T U 4 -7 3 5 8 .

S T U D E N T , m a l e , w a n t e d for af

t e r n o o n s in r e t a i l m e n ’ s shop

U. o f P . c a m p u s . E x p e r i e n c e 1

n e c e s s a r y . C a l l B A 2-9758.

W A N T E D : G e n t l e m e n o v e r 21 wh

o r e a f r a i d o f on h o n e s t d a y ' s w S u m m e r p o s i t i o n s a v a i l a b l e on

J e r s e y s h o r e . $ 1 . 2 5 per houi]

L O 3 - 8 5 3 9 . Y o u r F a t h e r ’s Mu«

t a c h e .

T IM E INC.

C a m p u s R e p r e s e n t a t i v e

T i m e Inc . - p u b l i s h e r of TIME L I F E a n d S P O R T S ILLUSTRAl

E D - h a s a n o p e n i n g for a campi

r e p r e s e n t a t i v e a t your scho

J o i n o u r n a t i o n w i d e network

o v e r 5 0 0 r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s in

w e l l - e s t a b l i s h e d s a l e s and me

k e t i n g p r o g r a m in o p e r a t io n moil

t h a n 4 0 y e a r s . E a r n $ 1 0 0 to $10

in C O M M ISSIO N S b y making suj

s c r i p t i o n s to t h e s e wide ly fÂź a n d r e s p e c t e d m a g a z i n e s avail

a b l e a t s p e c i a l s t u d e n t ratef

E a r n e x t r a F E E S for market rj

s e a r c h a n d s p e c i a l p ro jec ts ,

p r e v i o u s e x p e r i e n c e neces so r l

n o p a p e r w o r k o r b i l l ing- s t r u c t i o n s a n d s e l l i n g materiolj

s u p p l i e d f r e e . Write T i m e Inc . C o l l e g e Bureau , Tl*

& L I F E B I d g . , R o c k e fe l l e r Cej

t e r . N e w Y o rk , N .Y . 10020.

I s s u e d e v e r y F rid a y during C o l le g e y e a r an d s em i-m ontn

during J u l y an d c la s s p o e ta g e p a id at p A ia , P a . , O c to b e r 15, th e A c t o f March 3, a m en d ed . A d v e r t i s in g w w * n i s h e d u p o n re q u e s t . Address

b u s i n e s s com m unica tions ^

B u s i n e s s Manager. c o r re sp o n d e n c e , a d d ress ,

tor. S U R S C R IP T tO N , $3

I :

(usinessmen present Help Center plan;

students would be required to serveThe west Penn B u sin essm en ’s Berkowitz, proRram ^ _____The West Penn B u sin essm en ’s

Acociation re leased to the public April 20 its plans for the Help

r J e r program. The program provide tutorial help for d e -

llled children in th is area .

The help is to be given by .nllene students in c lin ic -typ e renters which w ill be donated

private industry. Mr. Arnoldbv

program chairman^ d West Philadelphia business!man, stated that “ Eighty ner-

processi s in the home. However, the deprived child doesn't have the honie ^ s i s t a n c e needed for him to f u l l e r his education.” The Help Center program is designed to give them that help.

jV lo t iv a t io n k e y t o p r o b l e m

s ta te s s p e a k e r o n p o v e r t yStaJiley W. P earson, J r . , E x ec ­

utive Director of the Equal Job ODPortunities B ureau ,w as guest peaicer at the Young A m ericans

for Freedom m eeting T uesday

"^According to Mr. P earson , the main problem is “ m otivation .” “The people that we are trying to help are not acclim atized to ^ork.” A feeder program has been set up to provide m otivation and to teach the “ r u le s ” of working in this soc ie ty . Ac­cording to Mr. P earson , “ T his first step is the tou gh est.. We may recycle them ten t im e s un­til they finally stick at a job.

“A large problem i s finding people for the jo b s ,” Mr. P e a r ­son stated. “ We ca n ’t find enough Negroes who are ready to step into jobs. We m ust train p e r ­sonnel on-the-job. The govern­ment is paying for h is su p er ­vision while he le a r n s .”

Mr. Pearson b e liev es that the slogan “ Burn, Baby, B urn ,”

DREXEL GRAD RINGS

‱ f r a t e r n i t y j e w e l r y

‱ w a t c h r e p a i r i n g

‱ g i f t s o f d i s t i n c t i o n

UNIVERSITYJEWELERS3425 Wolnut St.3725 Spruce St.

IS0 2 snnsom st .

TONITE t h r u M O N D A Y

S T E V E G I L L E T T E- p lu s -

C a m p F i l m s

f r e e s p i r i t s

olso The Mandrake Memorial

* b l u e s - r o c k

C O N C E R T

W O o ^ n v . c ' ^ J T r a c t i o n

? t r u c k s t o p

town J am 7— 7:30 P.M.I b r o a d & RACEAv,“ *3- 0 *4. "oN i'r Stores

C r c.” "' * Sis. 101, sf 4 Tr«,

Li,!"'' "ill M iV- Storw.I s A » » 4 1 9 WSiŸ ' Chest,.

mX i ‘‘'''Si Shop.ADORESS-

BAtS ff PAYABLE19102 CHESTNUT ST.,

should be replaced by, “ Build Brother, B uild .” Recommended organizations like the Rev. Leon Sullivan’s Opportunities Indus­trialization Center, which “ help the Negro to help h im se lf .” Ac­cording to the speaker, the m ii- tant Negro leaders can help by cooperating with the “ re ­sp on sib le” Negro leadership and with white groups. Through the m ilitants, job opportunities can be communicated to the Negro community.

Mr. Pearson attacked the Poverty Program for its in­effic iency , w aste, and threat of riot. The speaker said, “ The Government is terrified of riots and w ill pay poverty organiza­tions to prevent them.”

THE DREXEL ACTIVITIES CENTER

EXCEPTIONALFSERIES

p r e s e n t s o n M A Y 9

C L E O i s t h e s t o r y o f a g l a m o r o u s y o u n g w o m a n , p r i ­

m a r i l y i n t e r e s t e d in l u x u r y a n d p l e a s u r e , a n d 9 0 m i n u t e s

o f h e r l i f e - t h e t i m e b e t w e e n h e r v i s i t t o a f o r t u n e t e l l e r

a n d t h e t i m e s h e i s s c h e d u l e d t o m e e t w i t h h e r d o c t o r t o

h e a r t h e r e s u l t s o f s o m e e x t e n s i v e m e d i c a l t e s t s . In t h i s

b r i e f p e r i o d , C l e o a w a k e n s t o t h e r e a l i t y o f l i f e .

" O n e o f t h e m o s t i n t e l l i g e n t , m o s t t h r i l l i n g , m o s t f a s c i n ­

a t i n g f i l m s t h e y o u n g c i n e m a h a s o f f e r e d .

- L E M O N D E , P A R I S

Future Film s:

M a y 16 :

M a y 2 5 :

" N I G H T S O F C A B I R I A ”

d i r e c t o r : F e d e r i c o F e l l i n i

“ W O R L D O F A P U "

d i r e c t o r : S a t a y o j i t R a y

I t a l i a n

I n d i a n

A s e l e c t i o n o f s o m e o f t h e w o r l d ’ s f i n e s t f i l m s

s h o w n f o r y o u , e n j o y n - e n t o t t h e G r a n d H a l l in t h e D r e x e l

A c t i v i t i e s C e n t e r , T u e s d a y s a t 7 : 3 0 p . m .

A d m i s s i o n a t t h e d o o r ! 5 0 «

S e a s o n m e m b e r s h i p : $ 2 . 0 0

D R E X E L T R I A N G L EP a p r .1 - April 2B, 1 % 7

Dean gathers Bus Ads; cites apparent apathy

^ e program hopes that each college within an urban area roster a required, credited but not graded course under the title

Social Betterm ent.” Under the program each sophomore and junior student would be required to serve in a Help clinic three nights a week for two hours a night. Thus without an appoint­ment, an underprivileged child would be able to get the help he needs with homework or any other learning need.

Of the educational problems of underprivileged children, Mr. Berkowitz said, “ This is ,Ith ink , one of the most, if not the most, pressing socia l problem facing us today.” The B usinessm en’s Association feels the college stu­dents should be involved because, as the leaders of tomorrow, they should come face to face with the problem of educating the de­prived children of their com ­munity.

On May 1, 1967, the first Help center will be opened. It will be manned by 20 Drexel students who have volunteered to serve.

Mr. Berkowitz thinks the pro­gram must start now. “ If we have one clinic now,” he said, “ maybe w e’ll have 20 in Phila­delphia by September and later 200 or more throughoutthecoun- try .”

All students of the Bus Ad College were called together last week in an unprecedented move by James M. P arrish , dean of the college. In three separate meetings, he expressed his o v er ­all feeling about the College of Business Administration.

250 a t t e n d e d

The College held its annual Bus Ad Day on April 11. This year the fe s t iv it ie s acquired an international outlook with the honoring of Sir Paul Chambers, Chairman of the Board of Im­perial Chemical Industries, Ltd. of Great Britain. Many important Philadelphia area businessm en were in attendance. However,

many Drexel students were not, only 250 out of the entire en­rollment of 1100 were in attend- ence. Noting this apparent apathy. Dean Parrish asked whether the students wanted to carry on with Bus Ad Day in the future.

“ F i n e c u r r i c u l u m ”

Dean Parrish fee ls that stu ­dents at D rexel are well-endowed with a fine tradition and a posi­tive outlook for the future. In his estim ation, the College of B usiness Administration has “ as fine a curriculum as can be found anywhere.” He commented that the undergraduate education here i s better than many schools which have higher tuitions and a greater number of students.

Tuition hikeContinued from Page I

program s.”Specifically, undergraduates in

the following program s w ill incur the $100 increased assessm en t: Cooperative B u sin ess Adminis­tration, four year B usiness Ad­ministration, Humanities and Technology, Cooperative Busi­ness Women’s Program , Home Econom ics,

K W E S K I N

J U G B a n dR A U N M o c K I N N O N

Supermarkets Generol CorporationT H R E E COMM ER CE DRIVE

C R A N F O R D , NEW J E R S E Y 07016

272-7 100

Area C ode 201

T R A I N E E O P E N I N G S

w i t h

S U P E R M A R K E T S G E N E R A L C O R P O R A T I O N

T r a i n e e s h i p s o p e n for m a j o r s in F o o d D i s t r i b u t i o n , M a r k e t ­

ing, E c o n , BA, e t c . P ro g r a m c o v e r s s u p e r m a r k e t a n d w a r e h o u s e

o p e r a t i o n i n c l u d i n g h i - v o lu m e m e r c h a n d i s i n g , s t o r e p l a n n i n g ,

m a n a g e m e n t t e c h n i q u e s an d p r o d u c t d i s t r i b u t i o n .

T h e SGC T r a i n e e P ro g r a m is s p e c i f i c a l l y for t h e m an who

w a n t s a s t r o n g h e a d s t a r t , a n e x c e l l e n t b a c k g r o u n d a n d r a p id

a d v a n c e to e x e c . mgmt. T w o p r o g r a m s o f f e r e d ! C o -o p T r a i n e e ­

s h i p s for s t u d e n t s in c o - o p w o r k - s t u d y p r o g r a m s . A s s o c i a t e T r a i n e e s h i p s for o n - jo b t r a i n i n g d u r in g s c h o o l v a c a t i o n ,

SGC o p e r a t e s 65 h i - v o lu m e S h o p - R i t e S u p e r m a r k e t s a n d Drug

S to r e s in C o n n . , N .Y . , N . J . , P e n n , an d D e l , C o m p a n y k n o w n for

d y n a m i c m e r c h a n d i s i n g a n d g r o w th ; n e e d s m a t u r e , i m a g i n a t i v e

and a g g r e s s i v e c o l l e g e men l o o k in g for t h e b e s t w ay up!

S E E C A M P U S P L A C E M E N T C O U N S E L O R

F O R A P P O I N T M E N T OR I N F O R M A T I O N

R E C R U I T M E N T R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S W ILL BE

ON CA M P U S WITHIN N E X T FEW W EEK S,

A N N U A L

S P R I N G M U S I C

F E S T I V A L

D r e x e l M u s i c A w a r d s C o n t e s t W i n n e r s

E v e n i n g C o l l e g e G l e e C l u b

V a r s i t y W i n d E n s e m b l e

W o m e n ’ s G l e e C l u b

M e n ’ s G l e e C l u b

V a r s i t y S i n g e r s

O r c h e s t r a

May 6, 1967

8:00 p.m.

Drexel Auditorium Admission Free ii ' l l '

:Sl I I

mu

DREXEL TRIANGLEPagr 4 — April 28, 1967

I. . t

T h e p r o m t h a t i s n ’ t

F’o r w a n t o f e i g h t h u n d r e d d o l ­

l a r s , t h e S p r i n g P r o m m a y n e v e r b e

a r e a l i t y . T h e e n t i r e s c h o o l w o u l d

s u f f e r f r o m t h e i m p e t u o u s n e s s o f a

v e r y g r e e n F r o s h C o u n c i l a d m i n i s ­

t r a t i o n .

H o w e v e r , t h e b r o t h e r s o f A l p h a

P h i O m e g a h a v e d o n a t e d o n e - t h o u s ­

a n d d o l l a r s f r o m t h e i r n o w - d e p l e t e d

t r e a s u r y t o h e l p s u b s i d i z e t h e e s t i ­

m a t e d c o s t o f $ 1 8 0 0 . T h e o n l y

s t i p u l a t i o n t h e y a t t a c h i s t h a t C l a s s

C o u n c i l r a i s e t h e b a l a n c e o f t h e

m o n e y r e q u i r e d t o f i n a n c e t h e a f ­

f a i r . T h e d o n a t i o n i s b u t a n o t h e r

s e r v i c e f r o m t h e f r a t e r n i t y o f q u i t e

d e d i c a t i o n .

C l a s s C o u n c i l h a s t u r n e d t o D e a n

o f M e n , O . J . E i c h h o r n t o a u g m e n t

i t s s e a r c h f o r t h a t c r u c i a l e i g h t

h u n d r e d . B u t t h e o n l y s o u r c e b e i n g

c o n s i d e r e d i s t h e S t u d e n t A c t i v i t i e s

F u n d - t h a t g r e a t c a t c h - a l l f o r s t u ­

d e n t o r g a n i z a t i o n s w h i c h e x c e e d

t h e i r b u d g e t s . I t i s d o u b t f u l , h o w ­

e v e r , t h a t t h e A c t i v i t i e s F u n d e v e n

h a s a n e i g h t h u n d r e d d o l l a r b a l a n c e .

B u t w h i l e p r e c i o u s t i m e w a s t e s ,

a n o t h e r a l t e r n a t i v e h a s b e e n i g ­

n o r e d : t h e P r e s i d e n t ’ s C o n t i n g e n c y

F u n d - t h a t g r e a t c a t c h - a l l f o r

I n s t i t u t e o r g a n i z a t i o n s w h i c h e x ­

c e e d t h e i r b u d g e t s .

A s s u m i n g t h a t t h e s t u d e n t b o d y

i s s t i l l c o n s i d e r e d p a r t o f t h e I n s t i ­

t u t e , e i g h t - h u n d r e d d o l l a r s f r o m D r .

H a g e r t y ’ s l e n s - o f - t h o u s a n d s w o u l d

h a r d l y b e a n i m p o s i t i o n . I s D r .

l l a g e r t y w i l l i n g t o m a k e t h e s a m e

a c t o f f a i t h i n t h e s t u d e n t b o d y t h a t

A P O h a s ?

YA'HEAR ME-! Dt^AfT 'bAT bA'RA SA'RSOH)

T H E D R E X E L T R I A N G L E

E s ta b l is h e d 1926

M«mber of

Associated ColUgiote Pross

Official newspaper published by the students o f Drexcl Insti tute o f Technology, 32nd and Chestnut Street, Philadelphia. Opinions expressed in signed columns are not necessarily those o f the Insti tute or o f The Triangle. Phone: BA 2-1654 or EV 2-6200 (Extension 536).

E d i t o r - i n - C h i e f ......................................................................................... T H O M A S J . M c G I N L E Y

B u s i n e s s M a n a g e r ..................................................................................... F R E D E R I C K N I C K E L

M a n a g i n g E d i t o r ..................................................................................... R I C H A R D H . L A M P E R T

E d i t o r i a l B o a rd : Thomas J . McGinley, Frederick Nickel , Richard Lampert , Jack Becker, Kathy H i l l egass , Richard Jeryan, Mark Koral, Steve Lalka , Ja y Lockman, Patr ick McCullogh, Dennis M. Salter , Bob Steel .

N e w s : Patr ick McCullogh, editor; Dennis M. Salter , copy editor; Walter B a s h a w , Nora Buczek, Judy Candelor, E l l i s Cohen, Cheryl Decker t , Jay Freedman, Dennis M. Salter , Maria Tartag l ia , Marti Tunnel, Jeanne Woodward.

F e a t u r e s : Mark Korol, Jay Lockmon, editors; Ja n i s Wood, Jack Becker, Jock .D egnan , Bill He tzel son , Mike Kyle, Detta La F a ta , Sante Camo, Lorry Mllask, Dove Walter.

S p o r t s : Bob Steel , Steve Lalka, editors; Steve Bacino, Don Ba iley, Nancy Brown, Joe Doscola, Dove Everhart , John Jorgensen , Joe McGowan, Mike Mattio, Arnie Riewe, Mike Susco, Joe Siderio, Tom Urqhart .

B u s i n e s s : F reder ick Nickel , b u s in e ss mgr.; Carol Williams, a s s ' t mgr.; Ed Borowsky, Sue Damsker, Lynn Lauderman.

P h o t o g r a p h y : Richurd Jeryan, editor; Alan Klase, Robert Szomborski , Dr, Jane Cooper.

E d i to r i a l A d v i s o r ................................................................................................. Dr. J a n a E. C o o p e r

F i n a n c i a l A d v i s o r .......... ...................................................................................... M ic h a e l D e s t e f a n o

P e o p le w e r e gj out d a f fo d ils . . .By E l l i o t t B a r o w i t *

A s s i s t a n t P ro fe s so r o f D e s ig n

on Saturday April 15 my wife and I awoke at 8 a .m . - t i r e d . Cousin Sue had been up for som e time; was d ressed ^ dwalking around. I put on my work sh o es ,brown trou sers, my old corduroy acket, work sh irt and tie. These old and comfortable clothes would keep a s t r ^ e e e or two from dampening my sp ir its . My more optim istic wife, on the other hand, wore a bright flowery d re ss and a dark green raincoat. We had a d is ­cussion cDncerning the lack of support of her open-backed shoes.‱ Our contingent consisted by now of two in-law parents, a cousin and a f r i e n d - s ix of us. We had eaten. Sue had deposited her bags at Grand Centr al Terminal. She was planning to take the train back t o Cambridge that evenmg.

It was 11:30 a.m. and foggy when we reached Central Park. The Sheep Meadow was half full. Some people had erected a tower out of cardboard tubing where flew the flags of the United States and the N .L .F . There were balloons and sign s but m ostly people quietly m illing around.

It was about this time that my identity c r is is began. I did not know with whom I should march. I had told som e kids at Drexel that perhaps I would march with them; thinking that D rexeP s group might be weak in numbers. I thought also that I would like to march with the painters— even though there w as no such sp ecia l group designated in the, program. Wandering through the New England contingent I saw people from the Rhode Island School of D esign— another possibility .

What I actually was doing w as looking for Ken S. I do not know why— he hadn’t written, he hadn’t ca lled , and he had to com e from the M id-W est. And, of co u rse , it was the M id-W est group I next plowed my way into. I could not find him and nobody knew him, but they wished me luck with my search.

Looking, we went past the politica l groups, veterans* groups, community groups—one of which I had been in­volved with and it too seem ed sp a rse . We did not march with them. There were signs carried by som e independent Democrats: * ‘Johnson-Halfbright/Ken- nedy-Fulbright." There w ere p ac if ist groups and re lig ious groups, adult peace groups, teachers and l^ e r to R icans and many, many student contingents— as w ell as labor unions, p rofession al groups and other people—the unattached a ll believing that they must dem ostrate their concern for their country.

Thinking that if my search for my friend, Ken, failed, my identity c r i s i s would at le a st be solved after I had taken a look at a ll the groups, I con­tinued looking. I could at any tim e join the P rofess ion a ls near tiie end of what was now an enorm ous line.

P e o p l e w e r e g i v i n g o u t daffod|

t h o u s a n d s o f t h e m — a n d popcorn,

w e r e s e l l i n g b u t t o n s , a n d someonJ

w r i t t e n , “ L o v e , ” o n t h e door o|

c h e m i c a l t o i l e t .

Our entourage continued to wal the various delegations and we si in with the caps and gowns acad em ician s . It was 12:15 p.r the w om en’s groups, and the vet and the Indians had already pj down C entral Park South andf probably turning onto Madison Av

As we walked with the profes my w ife spotted Ken. It freakish lucky happenstantialj servation . He w as standing not fee t away and had been waiting half-hour for u s to walk by. We braced w arm ly.

And so we walked out of the A lady in a third floor window of the shiny new buildings on Park South w as waving a red, and blue s c a r f enthusiastically.

hers responded with applause, dy else had posted a sign in h is

“I am with U .” That w a s the lit was, people w ere o p tim is t ic , Tful, marvelously courteous, and ofVill.

[was still u n u s u a l l y f o g g y , a n d t h e

the ci ty s e e m e d v e r y s t i l l . A s i f

eutron bomb h a d d r o p p e d l e a v i n g

buildings, and t h e p e o p l e l e f t in

)rld had d e c i d e d to a s s e m b l e a t

|.N. to try aga in .

' said there would be v io len ce — an 1 was having probably the m o st fun

life making obscene g e s tu r e s . I people—mostly h i ^ sch oo l a g e— Id profanities.lone of us responded with anything ptnan understanding. It w as r e - We. Our academic group by th is

lad been blended with wom en, k ids, |adults and some students— a ll of

sic conviction. They wanted th is I war to just stop. T here w ere

A s c h iz o p h r e n ic e v e n iiB h R o n n ie

L a m p er t

Ronald Reagan is a fine speaker. He is a superb politician for the right audience. But - h e ’s no thinker. Those are the im p ression s I carried away after watching a film of an address Reagan made last year. I saw the film in the home of a woman named Mrs. Wagner who sent me som e d is ­approving le tters about other co l­umns I’ve written about Reagan.

It was a sch izo ­phrenic evening. I got to the Wagner house expecting a kind of B irchist revival meeting. The five-foot-high picture of Reagan on the doorstep added to the im p ression , but then I m et M rs. Wagner and som e of her guests. M rs. Wagner is a fortyish, motherly sort who doesn’t seem to have a radical bone in her body, and her husband seem ed to regret m issin g “ Bonanza” for politics. Although there was one guest who alluded to the Birch Society, m ost of the two dozen or so guests seem ed to be friends of M rs. Wagner who had been asked to se e her idol, “ Ronnie.”

The living room was not what you’d expect from the average fanatic. It was what you’d expect from good, aver ­age Mrs. Wagner. The only publications visible were Life, Look, L adies’ Home Journal, and a Sears-Roebuck catalog. No political tracts , no pamphlets.

When we went into the basem ent, how­ever, I felt that I was walking into a

B y R i c h a r d L am per t

Reagan sh r in e . There were twc tu res of Ronnie, coffee cups wH im age, a R eader’s Digest oper a story about him , and an autog^ copy of an “ a s- to ld - to ” autobiogi?

If the basem ent was a shrine worship w as pretty mediocre Reagan did a so lid , even ^ job of hacking apart the War on i oi farm su b s id ie s . Federal aid to ef tion, and the like. So far, s i

Something w as m issing, . suggestion of how to improve tn that Reagan illustrated so well. W cla im ed that he was in synipa putting a floor on incomes an fa r m e rs , but he didn’t give any gestion about relieving tiie a trative abuses that s e e m e d to I major com plaint against tlie y

Poverty. .The latter part of Reagans

had to be upsetting to ested in a tw o-party system, for Republican u n ity -o n Goiaw ! term s. He told Republicans y “ im itaUng” the Democrats. J that the Republicans a unified body, apparently uni jhim , and he got overwhelnuug aFHfrom the people to whom

G u t t y p e r f o r m a n c e

Reagan put on a gutty He spent a good couple | hauling out every ...J, ,,npli about the old actors. know a guy who watches tii to s e e h is hairline recede. ) he admitted that he was **

pt of his life. Although R eagan’s pay not have a b i-partisan sound, ■ 's life history does. I had to ■ the man’s honesty.

Wagner has been a Reagan fan years, and he see m s to have her in better than typical m o v ie -

«nion. Mrs. Wagner, who c la im s p was never particularly in te r - I politics, got rabidly involved p agan turned political. I got ■ppression that, if Reagan turned P tomorrow, she would follow ,

Wagner’s attitude is a good 0 what the C om m unists c a l l

, 01 personality.” Granted thatllnlv A o w n s u p t oPP y -docum ented p a s t , b u t I c a n ’t

bfinn ^‘ ^sesses even m inim al high public o ffice ,

happened with other oesn>t ’ h istorica l p r e c e -

mean anything, lean 1 dangerous because

^©generate into c la s s ic a l

^'ng e lse, t h e a c t i v i t i e s o f t h e

I* c a n ' tp o l i t e c o m p a n y a n d

Qd a n y o n e . M rs . W a g n e r

lut I c h a t a f t e r t h e♩ th ink t h a t e i t h e r o f u s

yi 'Pothy for t h e o t h e r ' s s i d e .‘ Waii'nu.. ih a i l P l e a s a n t l a d y

iiii.L- if ^ a n ice enough1 tliiML f ^ ^ a nice enough k if Mr. Reagan has

tile ; will, liepublican Party

n o t l o o k o r t h e

law yers, businessm en, doctors in white coats , artists , union men and women, secr e ta r ie s from Queens and, every here and there, a colorfully psychedelically variegated d ressed teeny-bopper.

A s we entered Dag Hammarskjold Plaza we were bombarded by eggs. I wonder why neither the press nor the radio mentioned the egg throwing hood­lum s. N evertheless, they could not hurt u s, we were in the majority here, and for a moment it actually felt that all this w ell-being , this camaraderie, had power.

It was 2:30 p .m ., Pete Seeger was singing and soon Martin Luther King would courageously, in the face of cr it ic ism , a sse r t the feelings of his conscience, only to be generally m is ­understood and quoted out of context the next day.

A Harlem group arrived — som e w ith tin h e lm e ts , som e w ith hardened eye s; S to k e ly C arm ichael embraced Martin L u th e r K ing; i t s e e m ed as i f there was

a grand a llia n c e . The P la za was s o a k e d w ith hum anity; w ith 'Hove not

war,*’ “ draft beer no t b o y s ,” ^ le v i ta te ,

n o t e s c a la t e ,” s im p ly m odeled d o ves ,

“ napalm burns ch ild ren .”The sw arm s kept coming. By 4:30

p.m. the police estimated 125 ,000 people at the Plaza; the lines went back across 47th Street to Madison Avenue to 59th Street and into the park and up the drive to 76th Street, perhaps thirty abreast for 10 blocks, and they kept coming. At 6 p.m. two college kids asked me if Dr. King had spoken yet; they had just arrived at the plaza. At 6:15 people w ere s t ill marching and the la st had just left the park. Most people never heard the speakers.

It poured; we met more friends at designated after-rally spot, drank

and my wife, Ken and I went aoiu«, the others who had had to wait their turn drinking coffee would follow.

Later we unwound at home; d r a ^ beer, or scotch or bourbon, ate spaghetti and clam sauce and talked. It was all g o o d -th e crowds, the friends, the food. Ken left for Shea Stadium to board his bus to Detroit, the others left also for other places in other states, and we went out to buy a Sunday paper.

“ 100,000 congregated at the u . in. Plaza ” thev said; a n d w e wondered aboutthe 200,000 or 300,000 or even 400,000 other m archers. -T h e sweet smeU of bananas” lingered, they said. Burning bananas stink. Sweet-sm elling ncense was burning however. They say that *h nark was clear at 4 p.m. m at was not the way it was; they s a y the Vietniks, Peaceniks; sandal-footed beatniks were there That was not exactly the way it S T ’ Wto threw the egg? we wondered They featured draft card burning. That was not exactly the way it was; thatwasn’t the way it was.

T h e funny th in g a b o u t i t al w «

♩ h a t for a w h i l e i t s e e m e d a .

p e o p l e h a d won.

acoffeehome

The one man parade

DREXEL TRIANGLEPagp 5 - April 2B, 1967

Someone asked me why all those people marched out to Kezar Stadium in San Francisco last Saturday to pro­test the war in Vietnam. And I don’t really know.

There were hippies and old-tim e radi­cals and serious looking college stu­dents and teeny-boppers and a large sprinkling of m iddle-c lass, middle-aged, middling-ordinary Americans.

Some carried banners of hate and some carried banners of love. Some, I suppose, marched out of bitterness, som e to change the world and som e simply for a lark.

All I know is why Imarched. I marched for me.

I went out of a grim sen se of duty. I have that m iddle-c lass aversion to marching, to making a public spectacle of m yself, to laying m yself open to the comments of those standing on the curb— particularly to marching in a minority cause.

I doubted my marching would alter the course of our foreign policy. I doubted my marching would save a single life. I don’t hate our leaders, nor am I able to love all human beings. I simply wanted, by marching, to divorce m yself from any responsibility for the war in Vietnam.

I think the war is both illog ica l and immoral. And should som e final judg­ment ever prove me right, I could then say smugly, “ Y es, but I marched a- gainst it .” What an easy way to absolve your guilt.

So I went to the march grim , ill at ease, self-righteous. I went to march for me. I stayed because I enjoyed it so.

I enjoyed the festival air of the marchers around me, all of us sm iling and laughing and gentle with each other, warmed by the bond of having gathered

By A r th u r H o p p e

Chronicle F ea tu res S y n d ic a te

in a common cause. I enjoyed the ex ­citement of the rain show ers, the tinkly b ells and flow ers on the hippies and picnicking on the grass .

I enjoyed the sight of a little tow­headed boy, no more than four or five, standing by a tree with a sign saying, “ STUPID WAR.” How stupid, we agreed, it seem ed.

I enjoyed sitting in the stadium in the sun under the rain-washed sky with all those thousands of others. Here, in the stadium, we were the majority, the consensus, the establishment. How s e ­cure we were in our shared beliefs .

Then, out of a tunnel cam e that little

band of pro-Vietnam dem onstrators, waving their American flags and a pla­card saying, “ Support Our Men In Viet­nam .” I couldn’t help but admire their courage. Yet we many thousands al­lowed them to parade around the track unharmed.

We tolerated these dissidents the way the world outside the stadium had tol­erated us. How proud I was of both them and us.

So I walked home through the park all aglow. What a lovely day it had been. What a marvelous capacity our society has for tolerating d issent. How healthy, despite everything, our democracy s t i l l is . How good I felt about it all.

The next day on television , Mr. Dean Rusk said that we m archers had probably prolonged the war by taking part in these Communist-backed dem onstra­tions and while we certainly w eren’t tra itors...

Slowly, inexorably, I could fee l som e­thing inside me which had opened up the day before in the park c lo se shut. Once again, I was marching in a one-m an parade. Once again I was marching for me.

Progress in brutalityBy G a r y H a w t h o r n

Mention of an albatross usually brings to mind Coleridge’s poem “ The Ancient Mariner.” Yet one probably does not remember all the superstition and symbolism surrounding this bird. Most recall that the ancient mariner learned quite a lesson and paid quite a price for the wanton killing of a bird. But such intellectual recollection need not concern us here. It should suffice to state that the albatross has always been a profound m ystery to man because its flight seem s to defy the laws of physics. The bird has the ability to follow a rapidly moving ship (for food scraps) for days on end with seldom or never an apparent movement of wing. The albatross has continually appealed to man’s imagination because it apparently defies science while demon­strating a com plete-m astery of an art which has baffled man until recent tim es. During more pensive and romantic moods, all sensitive men can experience a pride, a satisfaction, and possibly even a spiritual fruition in being connected to, and accompanied by, such a unique, dig­nified, m ajestic, and yet docile form of life.

But this article does not describe sensitive men. About the time of Wright’s feeble attempts to simulate any form of flight, the a lbatross--the Laysan variety—was being studied not for its winged beauty—but for reasons other than the b ird s’ air-borne stability. Max Schlemmer decided that there would be a market in P aris for the wings of al­batrosses. After investing in a v e s s e l and some Japanese coolie labor, he departed for Laysan—an island 700 m iles northwest of Honolulu which was the breeding location of the Laysan Al­batross. Schlemmer succeeded in sep ar­ating about 300,000 birds from their wings. The usual method was to cut the wings from living birds and leave them to bleed to death. However, Max quickly learned that if the birds were starved, “ the tissue lying next to the skin would be used up, and the skin would be left free from grease so that it required little or no cleaning during preparation.” Allow those a cres of bones and dead bodies to saturate your sen ses...a lon g with Max’s three ca r ­loads of wings, feathers, and skins.

Mon’ s c a p a c i t y for c r u e l t y

The purity of an albatross in flight is nearly erased by the purity of brutal­ity found in this incident. And although man’s capacity for cruelty need not be proven, exhumation of this early twentieth century happening does provide a crystallized purity of human brutality for one to fathom. The simpUcity of this brutaUty is evident because Max was

prim arily motivated by greed. The targets of this greed were d e fen se less birds. The weapons were only clubs. He ex erc ised the freedom to add pro­fitable innovations to his p r o ce ss as h is in tellect dictated.

B u t m a n ' s c a p a c i t y for v u l g a r bru*

t a l i t y i s g r e a t l y e x p a n d e d w h e n h e i s

m o t i v a t e d a n d c o n f u s e d b y r i g h t e o u s

p r i n c i p l e s . A l s o , h i s i n t e l l e c t i s m ore

i n g e n i o u s l y e m p l o y e d w h e n h i s t a r g e t s

a r e n o t d e f e n s e l e s s . T h e i n c i d e n t s in

m in d c o n c e r n t h e u s e o f n a p a l m — an

a lu m in u m s o a p o f n a p h t h e n i c a n d p a l ­

m i t i c a c i d w h i c h , w h e n m ix e d w i th

g a s o l i n e , fo rm s a s t i c k y s i r u p .

The burning of human beings has always been a controversial topic. I think maybe as human beings, we should all be offended and ashamed by the use of napalm. Let’s not kid ourselves; people are being burned alive. Flesh is being fried. But, m ost importantly, the truth about such mat­te r s is being withheld and disguised.

But it is p rec ise ly in such perpe­trations, in the seeking of such p lace­bos to sooth . the ruffled con scien ce, that the rea l offense to humanity is being committed.

Another example of man’s c lev er at- temps at self-deception occurred sev era l Sundays ago. Taylor Grant related this occurrence; In an Easter serm on, the President w as told (as was the nation) that our actions inthatwar were justified because they originated from a mandate for lo v e ! I guess that the use of napalm is just one means of expressing that love.

D i p l o m a t i c a b i l i t i e s f a i l e d

The acceptance of such distortions of the truth is one explanation for the ex ­pansion and extension of that struggle. Since man’s diplomatic ab ilit ies have failed to bring h ostilities to a halt, why don’t we face the g ro ss , physical aspects of the war— in their total u gliness. V isions of these aspects might accelerate man toward meaningful negotiations.

It is quite apparent that when man fu ses h is intellect with h is animal instincts, the destruction which he can render is quite indescribable. Since man’s rational abilities have failed to deter his present course of action, his sen se s may provide a key to the solution of his troubles. If his se n se s are allowed to be offended by the repulsive truth, the desperation of the current situation may se t his intellect straight. If outraged and ashamed enough at the wanton and horrible deprivation of life , humanity might rally to its own salvation.

Pol vs. alcoholEditor, D rexel Triangle:

The recent (April 21) article In the Drexel Triangle concerning the suspension of three students for smoking marijuana on school property has ra ised som e serious doubts in our minds.

It was pointed out that these students did not m eet nebulous “ conduct expectations” and that “ there is appropriate action taken whenever students fall to m eet conduct expectations.”

We rea lize that these students in som e way failed to take into consideration the people they w ere living with, and that this inappropriate action took place in Drexel approved housing (sup­posedly). T herefore, this r e ­flected on the Drexel Image (s ic).

Under “ Official rules and reg ­ulations for Students” (as pub­lished in the D-Book), under the heading “ Conduct,” Rule No.36 states, “ It is the policy of the Institute to forbid the use of intoxicants, at Drexel Institute of Technology and at all occasions held under the name of Drexel Institute of Technology. This shall be construed to apply to all buildings owned or controlled by the Institute, and to all other places where Drexel functions are held ,”

This rule is obviously not being applied to fraternities (and so ­rority form als). Three students have been suspended for conduct violations. At least 800 students have not been suspended for con­duct violations. If this does not constitute blatant hypocrisy with respect to rule 36, then what does?

We are not taking a stand pro or con intoxicants (either alco­hol or marijuana) but we would like to sQe a consistent position on the p£(rt of the administration.

Victor U. Catano, EE ’67 Larry A. Palm er, EE '67 J. Pat Valentik, Hum. Tech. ’68 Amicus Juridicus, ’68 Dale Adams, EE *70

D R E X E L T R I A N G L E

P a g r 6 — April 28, 1967

T R IA N G L E R E PA R T E E

Mac Bird! Demajiofjiiery of Dr. KinjiEditor, Drexel Triangle:

The commentary on “ Mac- B ird l” in last week’s Triangle was conspicious due to the ab­sence of the one man who made the Sunday night performance the su cc es s it was. Lance Strick- ler stepped in as director, taking over for a skeptical Dr. Byer the Thursday before the perform ­ance, and working from 9 o ’clock Sunday (including a disastrous performance in the afternoon), he managed to get his enthusiastic but inexperienced ca st into shape for the major performance that evening. I’m sure I speak for the whole ca st in offering my thanks to Lance for a fine job done under adverse conditions.

Ken CraigoP hysics ‘69

Editor, D rexel Triangle;Jack B eck er’s adulation for the

demagoguery of Dr. Martin Lu­ther King on the Vietnam issu e is deserving of som e comment. Dr. King has seen h im self bei.ig upstaged by the radical elem ents in the Civil Rights movement. In desperation he has turned to the “ P eacen ik s” to assure him ­se lf a continuing place in the newspaper headlines. In his rush to make up for lost tim e, Dr. King has advanced such patent falsehoods and distortions about the Vietnam war that many of his form er adm irers are be­ginning to shy away from him.

Dr. King’s proposals w ill save neither A m erican nor V iet­nam ese liv e s . The Communists w ill succeed at the “ p eace” table where they could not succeed in

the field. The co st of such folly w ill be reckoned at som e later date in m ore American lives and in the liv es of whatever other people that the Communist cancer chooses to infect. As soon as Dr. King and h is sycophants, such as Mr. Becker, rea lize these truths, the sooner the world can hope for rea l peace.

John A. SchettlnoME ’67

Significant com pl im entEditor, D rexel Triangle:

I’ve waited three,long, disap­pointing, sorrowful years to f i ­nally find m yself in a position to pay The Triangle what I con­sider a significant compliment. This is not to say The Triangle has been totally devoid of any worthwhile a rtic les . No; what I mean is that The Triangle has been devoid of consistent s ig ­nificance.

Well, that’s all over. Now The Triangle has Mr. Dave Walter. Here is a gentleman who actu­ally takes ideas seriously - who actually always has “ something to sa y .” Unlike many popular political personalities, Mr. Wal­ter manages to identify the under­lying, basic is su e s Involved in the political arena.

However, there are certain things about his column that d is ­turb me. F irs t of all, it defi­nitely should be printed in som e­thing on a leve l much higher than that of The Triangle. Secondly, the response to h is observations

:5 VACATION and SUMMER NEEDS

Yes W e K n o w !Y e s w e know, D rexel In s t i tu te w ill so o n

c l o s e for V a ca t io n . T h erefore , w e are running our

Summer SA L E a b it ea r ly , s o that you w ill a ll

h a v e the a d v a n ta g e o f our r e d u ct io n s .

^arsitg jB^liop men s wear

C A M P U S U N I V n S I T Y O F P iN N S Y L V A N I A - 3 7 1 1 S M tU C I f T .

P. S . C la M ih i9 a l H r e r t o — f r — . . . o s u s u a l . . .

E N G IN E E R S

R e c e n t g r a d u a t e s a n d c o l l e g e s e n i o r s i n

c h e m i c a l , c i v i l a n d m e c h a n i c a l e n g i n e e r i n g .

V a c a n c i e s e x i s t in th e P e n n s y l v a n i a

H e a lth D e p a r tm e n t for A ir P o l l u t io n C o n ­

trol a n d S a n ita r y E n g in e e r s . C a r e e r

a d v a n c e m e n t o p p o r t u n i t i e s a re

E X C E L L E N T .

S ta r t in g s a la r y ra n g e

$ 7 , 7 7 2 - $ 9 , 4 5 4

P o s i t i o n s a r e a v a i l a b l e t h r o u g h o u t t h e

s t a t e . F r i n g e b e n e f i t s i n c l u d e 1 5 d a y s

a n n u a l l e a v e ; 1 5 d a y s s i c k l e a v e ; 1 3 p a i d

h o l i d a y s .

F o r more i n fo rm o t io n w r i t e D e p a r t m e n t of H e a l t h ,

D i v i s i o n o f P e r s o n n e l , Box 90 , H a r r i s b u r g ,

P e n n s y l v a n i a 171 20

A p p l i c a t i o n s m a y b e p i c k e d u p a t a n y l o c a l

S t a t e E m p l o y m e n t O f f i c e .

i s amazingly low. As. a matter of fact, I don’t believe there has been any at a ll. Mr. Walter has blatantly, un-blushingly blurted out the a ll-terr ib le word - CAPITALISM. This in itse lf is usually enough to bring about torrents of c r ie s about greedi­n ess and little children working in dirty factories and one-tim e virgins turning prostitutes, e tc . , etc ., e tc ., but, I don’t hear them. Is it that the honest sincerity of Mr. Walter has made such c r ie r s stop to think?

It rea lly is true, is n ’t it, that “ freedom is the mainspring of human p r o g r ess” ? It rea lly is true, isn ’t it , that all the So­c ia lis t ic c r ie s stop when the is su e s are quite clearly thrown into the faces of m oochers by truly honest intellectuals such as Mr. Dave Walter? Congratu­lations, T r ia n g le! It’s atx)ut tim e.

William F. SperaME ‘69

L e x i n g t o n H a n d

L a u n d r y a n d

D r y C l e a n e r s

3 6 0 0 - 0 2 L a n c a s f e r A v e .

24 H O U R

SHIRT A N D

DRY C LE A N IN G SERVICE

Fluff Bundles

W a s h - D r y a n d Fold

S a m e D ay S e rv ic e

E V 6-0952

Student welfareEditor, D rexel Triangle:

Congratulations are once again in order for Ho Corbin and his mighty band of “ M agnificent Men” com prising the Frosh and C lass C ouncils. His wonderful handling of student funds for the Soul Concert again exem p lifies his regard for general student w elfare.

Once again the C la ss of ’67 has been the victim of the u lt i­mate shaft. Unfortunately, this tim e the shaft has been admin­is tered by an irresp on sib le group of fellow students to the tune of $4500. By foolish ly spending money in e x c e s s of allocated funds they have deprived the June graduates of som ething they de­se r v e and look forward t o -----The Spring Prom . Should we a lso assum e th is r e c k le s s spending w ill blot out the calendar of senior events (the senior boat trip, p icnic , dlnner-dance, e tc .)?

It i s no wonder that refunds of student deposits by sen io rs are being requested with increasing frequency.

L. McLaughlin, Mech. Eng.'67 J. Cianfrani, Mech. Eng. ’67

G. Bowen, Mech, Eng. ’67 D. Rhoads, Mech. Eng. ’67

To the best of o u t know­ledge, Mr. Corbin was not direct­ly involved in the mismanagement of the funds in question. — Ed.

Kano ’67Editor, D rexel Triangle:

Give cred it where cred it is due! The la rg est , m ost cr it ica l and difficult to captivate group of judges of the arts is THE PUBLIC. The public felt - Sat­urday night there were two fra ­tern ities that perform ed out­standingly w e ll at Kano, but w ere not rated as such! They are (in no particular order) Lambda Chi Alpha, and Pi Kappa Phi. What do you think?

Name withheld by request

Bananas don’t work

T h e B i g

i s H i d d e n

In T l i e

M a i n B u i l d i n g !

W X D T / R A D I O 8 3 0

D isgustedEditor, D rexe l Triangle;

I w as d isgusted by Martini Whitehead’s artic le in the April 21 T riangle, apparently intended, to d iscred it the peace movementi Certainly it would be better tc speak in te rm s of a peacel m arch er’s assum ptions than to reduce the d iscu ss io n to personal prejudices concerning dress and hygiene.

F irs t , it should be pointed out_ that the purpose of the peacd march w as to indicate specifi-| cally the growing feeling against, the United S ta te s ’s role in Viet-I nam. P ro and con discussioiJ regarding th is ro le should be con-1 cerned with certain basic as-| sum ptions which might be sum^ m arized as follow s:

One p oss ib le view is that thel conflict in Vietnam is basic allj internal; A m erican interventior s e r v e s only to in cr ea se the blood­shed by delaying a local solu­tion.

A second opinion is that the conflict co n cern s Asia rathei than the United States and we should gracefu lly withdrawj

Countering th is i s a segment w ishing to p r eserv e fair play by protecting V ietnam ’s interest against Asian exploitation.

A fourth group s e e s the con- f l ic t a s a g g ress io n by Worlc. C om m unism , w hose spread must be prevented at a ll co sts .

Any attem pt to discredit the peace m ovem ent should properlj concern i t s e l f with discrediting opinions such as the first tw( above.

Bryan Jam es Stevens Chem ‘67

Character

assassinationEditor, D rex e l Triangle:

I fe e l David Walter may im­prove h is m ethods by discon^ tlnulng ch aracter assassinatioi a s used in the recent article J “ E n cyclica l erra tu m .”

When a p erson w ish es to re-« fute an idea disagreeable to him] he has s e v e r a l methods at his dis­posa l, including discrediting the im m ediate so u rce of the ides T his method is , in my opinion] questionable.

The m isp laced authority trans­ferred from an individual to idea may w e ll be unfortunate. Ij may be w ise to mention thaf id eas concerning a certain subj ject are not n ece ssa r ily authori^ tative. H ow ever, to attack th« source of the idea does not re f lee t on the validity of the ide£

Henry Bachraclj ME ‘67

S a m m y W e e k

K I C K - O F F M I X E R

F r i d a y , M a y 5 , 1 9 6 7 , D . A . C j

featuring

The Percussions

The Variations

ATTENTION STUDENTS!

Ovor 150 titl«t

Turn in b e t t e r r e p o r t s a n d turn ^

h i g h e r g r a d e s w i t h STUD

MASTERÂź re v ie w notes .

Arsa 'a Largast Pap«rbock

C h e l t e n h a m S h o p p i n g Cente^HOURSj 9:30 A.M. to 9i30 P-«- OPEN SUNDAYS - TU 6-3679

Le/ta Sigma

iJEP dsfeats

tively.

By Mike S u i c o

All tlie good games w ere played Rliie League this week as

‘" 'h r o t E 's of TEP and DSP * ' heir game this Sunday

“ ill-or-nothing affair by f^n^Hne A PL and BN, r e s p e c -

Both team s have good . uprs and defense but there is fdU er^nce in pitching, TEP av ng the upper hand. In other Ipc SP won its second, w a l-

PLP 22-6 and TKE got S in defeating LCA

'^This Sunday TEP and DSP have J b i g game at 3:00 p .m . w hile ? f A V p , LCA-PSK, A PL -B N

Phi siams Beta Nu; APL} SP, TKE rompjponent this week Hi an "

D R E X E L T R I A N G L EPago 7 - April 28, 1967

G i a r d e l l o i s b a c k !Continued from Pnge 8

also play.

TKE 13, LCA 1 Never a contest, the Lambda

Chi's sither had opening gam e jitters or aren’t nearly as goodas expected.

TKE scored 6 runs in the f ir s t inning, four on John C hapePs ■rrand-slam, but the runs w ere Actually produced by four w alks and a hit batsman, to the f ir s t five batters. They could have stopped the game then, but they kept playing and the game took t\vo hours as TKE kept getting more runs.

TKE’s Briner was a litt le shaky in spots but had enough control to hold LCA to a s in g le run. Mert Hill played w ell for LCA,

SP22, P L P 6

The Pi Lams ran into a tougher

opponent this week tlian they did la s t week, as is evidenced by the sc o r e . Sigma Pi was “ only" leading 6-1 after three innings but really iced it in the fourth with 10 runs. Big man with the bat w as pitcher Gary Kemp who had four hits before he was re ­lieved by Worthy Sanders.

D S P 2 5 , BN 12

BN, working und^r, a handicap of guys getting married and babies being born, ruined a chance to top off a very good weekend with a softball victory by losing to title-contender DSP.

The hits w ere c lose (16 for BN* 15 for DSP), but the Delta Sigs got 21 men on base through walks and hit batsm en, and this coupled with tim ely hitting by them, gave them this important victory. Im­portant, but not easy since they trailed BN by seven runs at one tim e and had to score thirteen runs in the sixth inning to make the sco re look so lopsided.

Snyder, Davis and Carr all hit home runs before BN tired in the late innings. Joe Anthony and Keith Mitzkewich had seven of D elta Sig’s fifteen hits and Rick B a la ssa itis pitched a bet­ter game than the score indi­ca tes .

T E P 11, A P L 8

The ■ T E P ’s celebrated their exodus from Egypt by stepping into a tie for f ir st place with this important victory. They never gave the Apple Pi*s a

Penn romps over EpmenContinued from P age 8

periods.

Drexel’s only sco re cam e m id ­way through the second period. The Quakers were down by one man, giving the Epmen an ex tra ­man offense situation. John Hawk on the attack took a p a ss from Ron Leopold and rippled the net for the score.

Licking their wounds and seeking revenge, the Dragons invaded Bethlehem and h a rasse d the Engineers of Lehigh b efore finally succumbing to defeat.

Drexel drew blood f ir s t on an extra-man offense situation at 7:04 of the first period. The m id ­field led by Cook and Leopold brought the ball around to the attack. John Hawk then p assed to Bill Voss who sco red on a quick-stick play. Moments la ter , midfieldman Charlie W alters gained a one-minute r e s t in the penalty box, and the D ragons were down by one man. Lehigh immediately took adavantage of this asset to tie the s c o r e . G ill and Horstmeyer combined on the attack for the goal. The home squad broke the deadlock in the inal minutes of the period when orstmeyer fed a p a ss to F lew ry

who netted the ball. The period ended, 2- 1.

The Dragon attack opened the second period with a t ie -s c o r in g combination of precision and

1 /5 * , the ballthe goal, s e t

wuh connectedI Z , for the sco re . S e c -sessin ’ Lehigh gained p o s - off ?I1 on tiie fa c e -EtiPHn fast-breakplay , the

‘ alUcontroihomo contained thesix attack for the next"'ere D ragons

Pen^tv'^h^ m iddies inboxed ^ The defensehigh's 0 prevent L e -‘0 no scor in g , butfneyer br^

nf around theTurner u p assed to

‱>‘s « e -on the vicif I unopposed

ended with D rexel down, 6-2 .

Lehigh sco red its seventh and final goal in the early moments of the third period. Gaining pos­se s s io n of the ball, defenseman Kenderick brought the ball up- fie ld and took the ball to the goal unchallenged. The Dragon defense then gave the offense the go-ahead as Quinn, Williams and C ozzens kept the Lehigh attack adequately under control. Drex- e P s third goal came at 5:19 when Mike Cook scored by beat­ing h is defenseman and scoring un assisted . The Epmen again h arassed the home squad’s de­fen se as M yers scored unassist­ed on a strong corner shot from the right of the goal. The per­iod ended, 7 -5 .

chance to have the lead, scoring

k/ u, the sixth. Theb g blow-was Mike Cutler’s grand slam after two hits and an error had loaded the bases in the fourth.

“P» scoring in the fourth, fifth and sixth innings, but TEP kept scoring, too. Bruce Golden also hit a home run for TEP, while Mark Snyder pitched another strong game for the violet and white. For Alpha Pi Lambda, Cowan and McCaskey played well both ways and Consalvi hammered again.

BaseballContinued from Page 8with a walk, then John Boyd tripled to drive him home. Don Freeman cleared the bases with a home run to left center field, and Paul Diana matched the fact with a homer also. The inning ended with the score 6-0 . John Ward was denied a no-hitter and a shutout in the seventh as an error, single and two walks forced homeSwarthmore's only run of the game.

About - f a c e

The afternoon game was a complete about-face as D rexePs defense fell apart and committed seven errors. Swarthmore did not waste any time as they juinped into a 3-0 lead after three in­nings. Drexel came back momentarily in the third to close the deficit to 3-1 on the strength of a MacElrevey home run.

The sixth inning proved a big one for the Garnets as they broke open the game with seven run barrage. The first batter singled, then Drexel pitcher Larson walked the next two bat­ters to load the bases. Swarth­more took advantage of this situa­tion as a double drove home two runs. The following batter walked and the Garnets again rose to the occasion, clearing the bases with another double. A walk, and two singles tallied two more runs as the hot bats ended the inning with seven runs and four hits. Drexel ended the game scoring in the seventh inning by bunching together a home run by Big John Boyd, a triple by Freeman and a RBI single by Paul Diana. The game ended with the Dragons on the lower end of the score 11-3.

the “ champ*» quite well and his return to the ring com es as no surprise. Joey, whose real name is Carmen Tulleli and who origin ­ates from New York, is and has been a South Philly favorite for a long time. Playing in schoolyard softball leagues, marching down Broad Street as a mummer on New Year’s day, leading sports trivia se ss io n s at local taprooms, Joey has become a neighborhood trademark who has made the big time. He has had som e bad tim es in the past, som e caused by him ­se lf, and som e due to bad breaks. He is often paralleled to Rocky Graziano as far as being a tough kid who made it big in boxing, got into trouble, and then was r e ­made into a resp)ectable citizen through someone dear to him. Joey is now a civ ic leader and all his respectability stem s from his relationship with his nine year old son who is retarded. When Joey realized what a re ­sponsibility stem s from his r e ­sponsibility little Carmine was going to be, it made a lasting im pression on him, and let him to be reborn as a man and an individual.

Now, financially secure and w ell established as a’boxingper-

sonality, Joey has become bored. He m isse s the roar of the crowd and the agonizing pressure con­nected with each lx)ut. One of boxing’s greatest counter punchers is eager to test his aging body against som e young contender. Joey is scheduled to fight Jack Rodgers in Pittsburgh on May 22, hoping this fight will lead to a rematch with Dick Tiger this fall in the new sports arena.

Really though, he doesn’t care who he fights just as long as he does what he always has. Joey is a competitor; he never quits and you cannot knock him out. He has only been stopped by cuts in his car ee r , never literally knocked out. A veteran of som e 140 fights, he can not be coming back for more money or prestige. No, Joey is a boxer just as Rockefeller was an oilman. A man has to do that which makes him happy. Joey Giardello’s ultimate happiness lie s within the ring. Some people say he i s crazy, but he knows exactly, what he needs. I wouldn’t be surprised if he is fighting ex ­hibitions when h e’s fifty years old.

Beta Nu sweeps Greek GamesContinued from Page 8

erated in the m ile relay. As before, LCA, SP, and BN were favored. Drueker gave LCA a ten year lead over BN and SP at the end of the first lap. BN rallied to tie LCA after the s e c ­ond 440, and SP dropped 25 yards back. Then Hess of SP narrowed the gap and eventu­ally took the lead by a couple of yards after the third lap. With about 200 yards left in the final lap SP held a five yard lead and as Stankus of BN was passing Hill of LCA he accidentally knocked Hill’s baton from his hand. SP won the race, but it was granted that Hill has a tremendous kick and might have won. LCA claim ed a foul but it

w as not allowed by the m eet offic ia ls.

Although Beta Nu’s margin of victory was 23 points, you can ,see that the m eet was not the run-away it appears to have b^en. One point in the decathlon, a quarter inch in the broad jump and a decent break in the m ile relay and LCA could have won the meet.

NO lOKE!With e v e r y p i p e y ou b uy ,

w e ’ll g i v e y o u o f r e e p o u c h

of y o u r f a v o r i t e t o b a c c o

(Habaitomat, iitii.3643 Walnut 222.2224

S A I L I N G

E N T H U S I A S T S !!

S t u d e n t w ho d e s i r e s s u m m e r

job a t S o m e r s P o i n t , N . J . a s

s a i l i n g i n s t r u c t o r ( s u n f i s h

c l a s s )

C a l l

N E L S O N R U T L E D G E

( a r e a c o d e 609)

7 6 7 - 5 2 1 9

e x t r7 Lehigh squad with

orstmevf.r ' * situation,sist as gained an a s -feed shof corn er ,

Fink who

fally.wiS ? Âź Koal- F i -

un 1 Bram ble^ w eave

the left end. The half

THE NEW BREED

7 ^ 0 ,t c e n t e r s .

I I Aft A < Sm m m 4 I MAA . a /4 VAi ■ W i r I

F o r f u r t h e r d e t a i l s , w r i t e :

O R A N G E SPORT PA RACH U TIN G CENTER

O ^ N G E ? " ^ A M f f i 01364

T e l . 6 1 7 - 5 4 4 - 6 9 1 1

LA K EW O O D SPORT P A R A C H U T IN G CENTER

POST OFFICE BOX 258 L A K E W O O D , NEW JERSEY 06701

T e l . 2 0 1 - 3 6 3 - 4 9 0 0

v>

m m t"'/ ^

V O L U M E X L I V F R I D A Y , A P R I L 2 8 , 1 9 6 7 N U M B E R 12

Dragons lose to Temple nine by 6-1;

Split double header with SwarthmoreBy Jo h n J o r g e n s e n a n d J o e D a s c o l o

The Temple Owls displayed their usual fine talent and de­feated our Dragons 6-1 lastW ed- nesday, April 19, on the home field. Saturday broughtSkimmer Day, and also a split decision as D rexel played a double header with Swarthmore, winning the opener 6-1^ and dropping the nightcap 11-3.

Wind and rain set the scene as our uptown rivals took ad­vantage of Dragon m iscues. ' T em p le’relied on their pitching and soft hitting to ease to a triumph on the wind-swept field. The Owls began the second in­ning with a walk and advanced to third as an attempted pick-off got away from the second base­man. Temple scored later on a f ie ld er's choice play. In the fourth inning, Temple put to­gether a triple and a nm scoring single to make the score 2-0 after four innings.

Windy romp

The roof fell in on the Dragons as the elem ents took the upper hand on the game. Temple's D eFelice began the inning with a wind-aided home run. The next batter reached first base on an error and the wind caught catcher Paul Diana's throw on an attempted steal. It carried onto

, center field with the runner

f reaching third base. A walk was followed by two sing les and

" 'another wild throw. The result was three runs on two hits and three errors.

The seventh inning proved more disastrous as the Owls scored again on three singles to lead 6-0 after seven. The only consolation was a home run by pitcher Ron Freeman in the bottom of the fram e.

D o u b l e h e a d e r

Those who are not familiar with college baseball do not realize that they too also have double headers as do the major leagues. Last Saturday, Drexel

hosted Swarthmore. Ace pitcher John Ward picked up his fourth win, as he pitched a masterful one-hitter.

D rexel did not waste any time as they combined three walks, a single by Tony P iersante and a

sacr ifice bunt by Paul Diana to lead after one inning 2-0. The tempo of the game settled down as both pitchers retired the sides easily , until the fifth inning, Drexel*s Gary Edwards lead off

Continued on Page 7, Col. 3

O a r s m e n t a k e o n e o f t h r e

in G W U , A m e r i c a n r e g a t t a lBy J o e M c G o w a n

The D rexel crew played host to crew s from George Wash ington and A m erican U niversity last Saturday a s a prelimini ary to the annual Child’s Cup Regatta, better known to aien enthusiasts as Skimmer Day. Battling heavy winds and hieh w aters, the DIT rovers didn't fair as w ell as was hoped for taking but one first in three ’events.

In the freshm an eight race George Washington didn’t place an entry, leaving only A m eri­can and D rexel boats in the race. The young Dragons finished on the short end by a length and a half, or seven second margin. The main troubles the frosh encountered w ere m ain­taining power and smooth b lade- work. Hampered by these dif­f icu lt ies , the frosh perform ed poorly, but they show prom ise of improved efforts under better conditions.

S L I D I N G I N T O T H IR D , S w a r th m o re r u n n e r i s th ro w n o u t o n a t t e m p t ­

ed s t e a l p l a y . T h e D r a g o n s s p l i t a d o u b l e h e a d e r w i th S w a r th m o re , t a k i n g th e f i r s t g a m e , 6-1 , a n d d ro p p in g t h e s e c o n d , 11-3.

A m e r i c a n U. s c r a t c h e s

As the jayvee race started, it was A m erican U’s turn to scratch , leaving G. W. U. and Drexel. Stroke m anTom Sinagra and company didn’t let the winds bother them. They took the lead from the start and in creased it gradually. At the halfway point they had a length and a half lead. Continuing this way, the jayvees won handily in good time and good form .

V a r s i t y m i s t a k e s

The varsity "competition saw a big change as all three en tr ies raced. The winds again proved to be too much for the D rexel boat. The conditions made them com m it m istak es which they usually don't make. George Washington, used to such winds from rowing on the Potomac, had l e s s trouble than expected and beat the DIT boat rather con­vincingly, by about two lengths.

Pirates, Orioles favored to take league pennants

The Baltim ore Orioles will b

runaway pennant winners in th A m erican League race and th Pittsburgh P ira tes are heavy fa. vorites in the National League according to an exclusive po] of m ore than 500 major-leaguerappearing in the current issn of SPORT Magazine.

Carskadon takes decathlon victory as BN romps in Greek Games ^B7

o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o

By Don B a i l e y

A supposedly three way battle between BN, LCA and SP for fir st place honors never developed as Beta Nu easily won the Greek Games 1967. Bruce Carskadon led the Beta Nu attack by totaling 24 (the most any one person could contribute) of his team 's 62 points. LC was a distant second with 39 points, and SP placed third with 35 points.

Most of the excitement was centered around the decathalon, the broad jump, the 100 yard dash, the steep lechase, and the mile relay. Carskadon won the decathalon (six events) by one

point over Huntsinger of LCA. Huntsinger had won the hurdles, the 100 yard dash, and the 440. Carskadon won the shot put and the broad jump. Carskadon totaled557.7 points to Huntsinger's576.7

Carska'don was again the center of attraction in the regular broad jump. M orris of LCAhadalready jumped 18'8” , and Carskadon only had one jump left, everyone e lse having finished jumping. C arska­don proved to be the true p ressure

athlete as he leaped 18'81/4” to nose out M orris,

The 100 yd. dash was rated a to ss up between Huntsinger, Smith of SP and BN's S h ell- haummer, who had just won the 110 yd. low hurdles ea s ily . C lose as it w as, but Huntsinger broke the wire f ir s t in the tim e of 11.5. Shellhammer was second and Smith third; both w ere clocked at 11.6.

The most excitem ent w as gen- Continued on Page 7, Col. 4

P i c k s

Picked to fill out the fir division behind the Orioles the A m erican League are th< M innesota Twins, Chicago Whit Sox and Cleveland Indians, lowed in order by the Cali/ornij A ngels, Kansas City Athletic* New York Yankees, Boston Sox and Washington Senator?

In the National League, contenders behind the Pirates according to the player poU w ill be the San Francisco Giants Atlanta B raves, Philadelpnl P h illie s and Cincinnati Reds. : h 1966 pennant-winning Los An g e les D odgers, without retire Sandy Koufax and traded Maur W ills , are expected to drop sixth in the standings trailed the St, Louis Cardinals, HousrJ A stro s , New York Mets and Chi] cago Cubs.

T o p p e r f o r m e r s

In the SPORT Magazine polhn for top individual performance by A m erican Leaguers, t h

O r io le s ’ Frank Robinson wu chosen as the probable Mos Valuable P layer and Home-Ru Leader, the T w ins’ Tony Oliv and Jim Kaat as Leading Hiite and Leading Pitcher, resi < c tiv e ly , and the Red Sox' Reggi Smith as the Outstanding Rooki(

In the National League, th p la y e r s ’ poll named the Pirates Roberto C lem ente as the cii cu lt's probable Most ValuabJ Player and Leading Hitter, tf: B raves' Hank Aaron as Hom( Run L eader, the Giants’ Juj M arichal as Leading Pitcher the R ed s’ Lee May as Outstandir Rookie,

m n n o o o Q o o g

G iard e l lois back!

Quakers romp over stickmen,11-1;

Lehigh edges DIT as attack fails

By J o e S id e r io

Above a sm oke-filled poolroom on the corner of Passyunk ^ d Moore Streets in South Philadelphia lies a gymnasium This IS no ordinary gymnasium, and in A m erica today, there are very few like it. It has no basketball, volleyball, or hand- ball courts. It has no weight lifting or calesthenic facilities. All It does contain is a canvas ring, a heavy weight bag and a light

punching bag suspended from a circular wooden prop. Yes, this i s the Passyunk Gym, home train­ing grounds for former middle­weight champion of the world------Joey Giardello.

The gym and everyone con­nected with it have been in mourning ever since Joey retired when he lost his title to Dick Tiger last year. Now, new vigor and enthusiasm have spreadthroughout this old land mark____Joey’s back and wants to fight again! At 35, Joey Giardello has decided to return to the only thing he knows and the only thing that makes him happy.

Lr w s r e p o r t e r h a s c o m e to k n o w J o „ G i o r d e l l o

Continued on Page 7, Col. 4

By S t e v e B a c i n o

D rexel w ill always be “ that sm all group of buildings at the northeast edge of Penn’s cam ­pus” to the m em bers of Penn’s la cro sse team. Penn cam e, Penn played, and Penn conquered; an eight-goal first period gave the Quakers their onslaught over the Dragons last Wednesday, l l - l . Three days afterwards, the Epmen traveled to Lehigh and were again defeated, 7-6.

D rexe l o i U c l a s s e d

Seven seconds after the opening iace-off, Drexel was down, 1-0, A little over a minute later another goal zipped by the home squad’s goal tender. The Quakers ran, scooped, and passed the ball while encountering very little resistance from D rexel, as the Penn attack, led by Klein and Patton, scored a devastating eight goals during the first 15 minutes of play. The period ended finally with Drexel decisively outclassed, 8 - 0 .

Overlooking the first-period farce, the Epmen played their h earts’ out in holding the v is i ­tors to only three additional goals. Penn scored only once in each of the three remaining

Continued on Page 7, Col. J

d a r t i n g T H R O U G H D R A G O N A T T A C K M E N , P e n n d e fen se r

o f T / ! * i o u t c l a s s e d t h e D r a g o n s to the ti

Kuzan goes to the DogsDrexel quarterback John Kuzan

signed a contract with the Phila­delphia Bulldogs of the Continen­tal Football League. Coach Wayne H ^din intends to pive Johnny a lull shot ut quarterback Bob Brodhead’s job and a real good

in thedogs cletensive secondary.

School boy pro

Johnny, v/ith mother year of

school to com plete, canbecomj unique profession al. There ui many schoolboys who can cc tinue school and st ill play fession a l football. The DulK start the defense of tlielr crown in mid-August and ‘ Hardin thinks Johnny can tribute handsomely. The sit^‘ took place at a special lum'lit sponsored by IBM, Joluuiy’t; ‘ op em ployer.