T he D rexel T riangle · T he D rexel T riangle Vol. Ill, No. 7 DREXEL INSTITUTE. JANUARY 25. 1928...

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T he D rexel T riangle Vol. Ill, No. 7 DREXEL INSTITUTE. JANUARY 25. 1928 A TOUGH BREAK FOR THE HATLESS LADS Chick Meehan, Coach of the N.Y.U. Football Squad, Finds Fad Re- sponsible for the Many Colds That Have Interrupted Train- ing, and Issues Order *^Keep Your HaU On!” Not a single hatless shiek is to be found among the forty men compris- ing the current season’s football squad of the New York University, the team that is battling its way to the highest honors among the football teams of the east. An iron-clad rule—“Keep your hat onl”—has been issued by Chick Meehan, who as coach of the N. Y. U. men, has been largely re- sponsible for the remarkable football history made by that organization. Chick has met and overcome all sorts of baffling conditions in his try- ing work as coach, first for the Syra- cuse eleven, and in the past three years for N. Y. U. But this year there de- veloped something new to his experi- ence. In mid-season, with his men in the best condition, members of the squad began reporting sick. Several minor colds—a most unusual ailment among men at the peak of physical fitness—handicapped the work of train- ing. Then Frank Briante, who to date holds the yardage record of all east- ern teams, had to take to his bed. 'Next day little Dud Hormell, track champ, and speediest of halfbacks, turned up with a cold. A good coach has to be doctor, law- yer, defective, father, mother and exe- cutioner, so Chick looked into it. What he located has nothing wrong with the course of training, but rather something new in conduct outside of training hours. Some of the men, having observed college youngsters flirting with the fad of appearing on the street with nothing on the head but a slick hair-comb, had thoughtlessly done likewise. The result, of course, was an epidemic of coughs and sneezes. At the next football meeting the bomb was exploded. Said Chick, “Any sane and adult person, who wants to -Jcgep his health, ought to know enough to wear a hat out of doors. If these other lads want to plaster themselves . with bear’s-grease and look like comic r strip shieks, we can’t stop them. But you can’t do it and stay on this team!” Now, at the door of training quart- ers, as the men go out, burly Charles Porter, and his diminutive assistant, John Williams, are stationed to keep a fishy eye on the heads of those who pass. Any man without a hat “catches hell.” Charlie Porter, who also has a na- tional reputation for keeping football aspirants in perfect shape, elaborated on Chick Meehan’s remarks. “It’s not that Chick is a crarik on the subject,” said Pp’'^ ' “ I t ’s simply common medicar /ledge that a man who spends nis^ time partly indoors and partly out, needs some sort of head covering, when he gets into the open. The head under its layer of hair is kept sensitive to changes of tempera- ture. The head perspires very quickly in an ordinary room. You don’t notice it because the hair absorbs the pers- piration. But when you get out into the colder air, the scalp is chilled by the cold, and speedy evaporation chills it still more. The surface blood-ves- sels contract, and the blood is con- ge'sted in the deeper parts—and soon there is trouble in the nose, throat and bronchial tubes. The result is colds, catarrhal conditions and sometimes neumonia.” In playing the tied game with Col- gate, one of the most formidable teams in the east, in the contest on October ' 29th,- N. Y. is well on its way to attain the unbeaten record that was missed last year in the final game against Nebraska. The organization has still to meet Penn State, Carnegie Tech, Allegheny and Nebraska, but with Colgate’s contest safely passed. Chick Meehan feels confident that his men h^ve the best possible chance of /inal victory. I g ii k FLYING RIVETS By £. D. McDonald Recently H. M. Tomlinson published in his fifty-fourth year a first novel. The title is '‘Gallions Reach.” This is so fine a book that it sets one to spec- ulating on vk^hat would happen if more novelists deferred the publication of their fictional strivings until the earth had moved around the sun fifty times and four. But after all, per- haps Tomlinson’s age had little to do with the quality of “Gallions Reach.” Sixteen years ago he published his re- markable “The Sea and the Jungle.” In any case, his first novel is written in distinguished prose, has a marvel- ously contrived description of a storm at sea, which lacks the strain of Con- rad’s otherwise perfect “Typhoon,” maintains throughout an admirable reticence and gives to a single woman character only the slightest bit of at- tention. I do not necessarily suggest that these last two points are closely interrelated. 300 COLLEGE HEADS CONVENE AT SHORE In the dignified and altogether re- spectable pages of Harper’s January issue. Dr. Bernard De Voto lays down a heavy barrage against the towering positions occupied by professional ped- agogics in the colleges and universi- ties of the Republic. “All very hot,” you will say. You will not be wrong. What I say is that where there is so much fire there must be some insur- ance. If De Voto’s “Farewell to Ped- ga^ogy” were moving in my direction, I should want complete coverage. Christopher Morley’s latest book is called “I Know a Secret.” Well, I for one have never been known to turn an unheedful ear in the direction of a secret. The fact is that I love secrets. Simple and confiding natures usuallly do. Why, then, do I find myself so incurious about Mr. Morley’s secret? Because he asks me to read a whimso- cal book to discover it. This price is too high. Whimsical books after they have been long steeped in time are bearable. Mr. Morley’s callow whim- sies of yesterday I do not care for. Let there be no secret about that. (Continued on Page 2) A COLLEGE EDUCATION Best New Year’s resolution any dad could make is to give his son a col- lege education. College education is worth $72,000. This is a profit of 1,200 per cent on an original investment of $6,000, which is the average total cost of a four years’ course in college. Deducting the cost of the education income at the rate of approximately itself, the student adds to his future $15,000 a year during the time he is in college. As classes are held only five days a week, this means potential earnings of $70 a day to the student for each day spent in the class room. These statements were made by Otto Y. Schnering, President of the Baby alumnus of the University of Chicago, in an address here. “A college education is not only very essential in modern business but highly profitable, if the student spends his time in real study,” Mr. Schnering said. “The annual average income of a high school graduate is $2,200 and that of a college graduate $6,000. Total earnings of the two classes of men up to the age of 60 are approximately placed at $78,000 and $150,000. This gives the college graduate a lead of $72,000 over the high school youth. “This is the age of specialization and scientific management in business,^ in which a college education is becoming almost an absolute necessity.” DELTA SIGMA ALPHA PARTY The Delta Sigma Alpha Fraternity held their first house party on Satur- day evening, January 7th. The affair took place in their house on Chestnut street, which they just occupied last term. The lounging room was appro- priately decorated in Drexel’s own col- ors; gold and blue. Lunch was served after the games and later the guests took to dancing. Dr. and Mrs. Hall chaperoned the party. Everyone en- joyed the affair so much that a sim- ilar one is being planned for the near future. Much of the credit for the suc- cess of the affair is due to Mr. Ken- neck, Mr. Fischer and Mr. Lentz. FAVORS COMBINED COURSE Nearly 300 presidents, deans and other representatives of colleges in every State of the Union assembled at the Chalfonte- Haddon Hall recently for the three-day fourteenth annual meeting of the Asso- ciation of American Colleges. National and international problems of college education were discussed at a banquet presided over by Lucia R. Briggs, president of the Milwaukee-Downer Col- lege, president of the association. A burst of laughter which bespoke general experience with the affliction greeted the remark by Dr. A. Lawrence Lowell, president of Harvard University, that “the vocal part of the alumni thinks a college should be a social, if not an athletic institution, in which education mysteriously is to be instilled, with little effort on the part of the student.” Dr. Lowell insistently opposed this conviction of the “vocal alumni,” declar- ing that “the main object of a college is personal education, acquired by the ef- forts of the student himself. The better the education he receives, as evidenced by his marks, the better for the student,” he said. Cultural rather than vocational educa- tion must be the aim of the American college. Dr. Lowell declared. He com- mended the “combined course,” by which the last two college years are devoted to studies leading toward a particular oc- cupation, but said that its proper place was in a State or other large university and not in a college. The college, Dr. Lowell said, should devote itself to “enlarging the field of knowledge, teaching men to think clearly and stimulating imagination. The art of life consists not in solving a problem but in knowing what problem •needs to be solved. Resourcefulness is the object of a college education.” SONG CONTEST The Key and Triangle and the Phoe- nix Club have announced a song con- test. This contest will open January 11th and close January 28th. Two prizes are offered, the first $10 and the second $5. It is hoped that this contest will give Drexel a number of “pep” songs, songs that may be used at football games and any other athletic contests. The words must be original, but the music need not be. The judges for the contest are Mr. Ryder, Chairman; Dr. Taft, Mr. Thunder, Ethel Weaver and Blair Forbes. This contest is open to anyone con- nected with Drexel—student, facutly, alumnus, but it is hoped that the stu- dent body will win both prizes. We need a distinctive peppy song at Drexel —so this is you opportunity not only to do something for Drexel, but also to win a liberal prize. You may not think you have ability, but ,you never know until you try. So try and try hard! We want a song that will mean as much to Drexel as “Hail, Pennsyl- vania,” means at the University. All contestants send or give your songs to Mr. Ryder. Get Busy Today! DREXEL GRID TEAM PLAYS TEN GAMES NEXT SEASON Drexel Institute's football team will play ten games next year, according to the 1928 schedule of the Engineers made public following a meeting of the Athletic Council, of which Dawsen Do- well is chairman. It was also announced that, for the first time in the history of the institu- tion, spring gridiron practice will be Ifeld next year in preparation for the progrym with which begin on Sep- tember 22, with Juniata, at the Drexel Athletic Field, and will conclude on November 24, with St. Joseph’s Col- lege, also at the Drexel Field, The new schedule reveals that Drexel has finally dropped the last of its early season games with the powerful elevens of the country, such as Carnegie Tech, Georgetown, etc., and has limited its games to colleges in its own class. Among the colleges which have re- turned to the Drexel schedule after a lapse of a year or two are Muhlenberg, Delaware and Ursinus, while the City College in New York will entertain the local collegians for the first time in New York. Juniata, which played Drexel to a scoreless tie this year, will again inaugurate the season. Susque- hanna, which trimmed Drexel 13 to 0. Washington College, which lost to the Engineers by a 19 to 6 score. New York Aggies, who were dumped 51 to 0, and Haverford, which beat Drexel 26 to 0, are again on the schedule. Athletic Director Walter H. Halas, who took charge of the Drexelites last September and in a few short weeks at- tempted to install a complete new sys- tem of play, and finally succeeded so that in the final games of the season, of which three were won by Drexel, the Engineers scored 113 points to 13 for their opponents, will once again direct the destinies of the West Phila- delphians, it was announced. Only four of the forty-odd members of the squad will be lost by graduation. They are Captain Blair Forbes, the fast end. Wolf and Armstrong, a sturdy pair of tackles who will be missed, and Chris Schwarz, the veteran backfield star of the eleven for the past three years. The schedule follows: September 22—Juniata, at Drexel. September 29—Muhlenebrg, away. October 6—Delaware, away. October 13—Susquehanna, at home. Octiber 20—C. C. N. Y., away. October 27—Washington College, away. November 3—N. Y. Aggies, home. November 10—Ursinus, away. November 24—St. Joseph’s (pend- ing), at hoiiie. HUNTER COLLEGE GIRLS IMPUGN HONOR SYSTEM Wholeule Cheating in Exunt Charged in School Paper The honor system of conducting ex- aminations a{ Hunter College, whereby students are free from faculty supervis- ion, has been impugned by the testimony of the girls Uiemselves. One unnamed student said that “nine- tenth of the girls cheat,” and another stated “only sixty-five of all the girls in the college are honest.” Their charges were printed in the current issue of the college student publication under the heading, "Undergraduate Testimony.” Other acctjsations were that girls car- ried notes up their sleeves in. examina- tions, that one was heard to say she had passed her examination, “thanks to the honor system;” that a group sat to- gether in a classic examination and pooled their knowledge, and that even when the teacher was in the room the girls passed their papers to one another. Officials at the college characterized the charges as. “exaggerated and over- estimated." ___ Single Copies, 5c COLLEGE ENTRANCE^ TESBASSAILED Dean Holmes, of Harvard, De- clares Secondary Schools Fail of Purpose URGES GERMAN SYSTEM “College admission requirements ob- struct education in the secondary schools,” according to Henry W. Holmes, dean of the Graduate School of Education, Harvard University, be- fore the annual conference of New Jer- sey State superintendents and super- vising princip’als at Haddon Hall to- day. “College log-rolling has resulted in too many points being required in this or that subject on the college-en- trance examinations. The result is that courses in the secondary or high schools are arranged to give the stu- dents just enough of a subject to meet those requirements,” he asserted. “The result is that the secondary school teaches a smattering of subjects but a mastery of none. The secondary school has no objective of its own.” Placing of examinations at the start of the college course, he said, makes it so that the high school does not com- plete its work. In Germany, he point- ed out, the examinations are placed at the end of the secondary school course, so that the school has a definite object of its own. He thought it far better that colleges accept a vocation course, because such a course has a real objective. “Preparatory education neither pre- pares nor educates,” said Mr. Holmes. “Students take subjects with the sole object of passing college examinations, and after the tests are through the sub- ject is no longer used. “Parents don’t care what the boy and girl learn so long as they are able to get in college. It would be better if we would analyze the values of subjects and use that as a basis of examinations. We have come to think of democracy in education as the same thing for everybody but not definite for any- body.” Thrift day is upon us! Now every- body laugh! Nice, isn’t it? That Drexel should co-operate with the Christian associations and help to bet- ter the student body. I suppose we’ll all glare with enthusiasm, we’ll count our pennies “one by one.” We’ll “try before we buy” and all the other beau- tiful things. Then after a couple days, what will happen? Why that enthusiasm will land right where the other Drexel enthusiasm (namely the football and Student Government zests) land. By the way, what HAS happened to all the Student Government “dirt.” I guess the very efficient janitor force succeeded in sweeping it up. I won- der why we’ve heard so little about it since Christmas? Evidently the girls have found that faculty government with student execution isn’t so bad after all. Just think how our con- science would hurt if we really had stu- dent government, and who wants to invite pain? DREXEL’S NEW BUILDING t o CONTAIN GYMNASIUM Athletic Roof Garden to Be Fea- ^ ture Also of Engueering Addition A gymnasium and an athletic roof garden will be features of the engineer- ing building which Drexel Institute will erect on the east side of Randall Hall, at 32d and Chestnut Streets. The building will be four stories high, and will have a seventy-foot frontage on Chestnut Street and extend back 192 feet to Ludlow Street. It will contain lab- oratories for mechanical, civil, chemical and electrical engineering classrooms, drawing rooms and the gymnasium. Both building and equipment will be the gifts of Cyrus H. K. Curtis, a Drexel trustee, who has also given a pipe organ and several cash contributions to the school.

Transcript of T he D rexel T riangle · T he D rexel T riangle Vol. Ill, No. 7 DREXEL INSTITUTE. JANUARY 25. 1928...

Page 1: T he D rexel T riangle · T he D rexel T riangle Vol. Ill, No. 7 DREXEL INSTITUTE. JANUARY 25. 1928 A TOUGH BREAK FOR THE HATLESS LADS Chick Meehan, Coach of the N.Y.U. Football Squad,

T h e D r ex el T r ia n g l eVol. Ill, No. 7 DREXEL INSTITUTE. JANUARY 25. 1928

A TOUGH BREAK FOR THE HATLESS LADS

Chick Meehan, Coach of the N.Y.U. Football Squad, Finds Fad Re­sponsible for the Many Colds That Have Interrupted Train­ing, and Issues Order *^Keep Your HaU On!”

Not a single hatless shiek is to be found among the forty men compris­ing the current season’s football squad of the New York University, the team that is battling its way to the highest honors among the football teams of the east. An iron-clad rule—“Keep your hat onl”—has been issued by Chick Meehan, who as coach of the N. Y. U. men, has been largely re­sponsible for the remarkable football history made by that organization.

Chick has met and overcome all sorts of baffling conditions in his try­ing work as coach, first for the Syra­cuse eleven, and in the past three years for N. Y. U. But this year there de­veloped something new to his experi­ence. In mid-season, with his men in the best condition, members of the squad began reporting sick. Several minor colds—a most unusual ailment among men at the peak of physical fitness—handicapped the work of train­ing. Then Frank Briante, who to date holds the yardage record of all east­ern teams, had to take to his bed. 'Next day little Dud Hormell, track champ, and speediest of halfbacks, turned up with a cold.

A good coach has to be doctor, law­y er, defective, father, mother and exe­cutioner, so Chick looked into it. W hat he located has nothing wrong with the course of training, but rather something new in conduct outside of training hours. Some of the men, having observed college youngsters flirting with the fad of appearing on the street with nothing on the head but a slick hair-comb, had thoughtlessly done likewise. The result, of course, was an epidemic of coughs and sneezes.

At the next football meeting the bomb was exploded. Said Chick, “Any sane and adult person, who wants to

-Jcgep his health, ought to know enough to wear a hat out of doors. If these other lads want to plaster themselves

. with bear’s-grease and look like comic r strip shieks, we can’t stop them. But

you can’t do it and stay on this team!”

Now, at the door of training quart­ers, as the men go out, burly Charles Porter, and his diminutive assistant, John Williams, are stationed to keep a fishy eye on the heads of those who pass. Any man without a hat “catches hell.”

Charlie Porter, who also has a na­tional reputation for keeping football aspirants in perfect shape, elaborated on Chick Meehan’s remarks. “I t ’s not that Chick is a crarik on the subject,” said Pp’'^ ' “I t’s simply common medicar /ledge that a man who spends nis^ time partly indoors and partly out, needs some sort of head covering, when he gets into the open. The head under its layer of hair is kept sensitive to changes of tempera­ture. The head perspires very quickly in an ordinary room. You don’t notice it because the hair absorbs the pers­piration. But when you get out into the colder air, the scalp is chilled by the cold, and speedy evaporation chills it still more. The surface blood-ves­sels contract, and the blood is con- ge'sted in the deeper parts—and soon there is trouble in the nose, throat and bronchial tubes. The result is colds, catarrhal conditions and sometimes

neumonia.”

In playing the tied game with Col­gate, one of the most formidable teams in the east, in the contest on October

' 29th,- N. Y. is well on its way to attain the unbeaten record that was missed last year in the final game against Nebraska. The organization has still to meet Penn State, Carnegie Tech, Allegheny and Nebraska, but with Colgate’s contest safely passed. Chick Meehan feels confident that his men h^ve the best possible chance of /inal victory.

I

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FLYING RIVETS

By £. D. McDonaldRecently H. M. Tomlinson published

in his fifty-fourth year a first novel. The title is '‘Gallions Reach.” This is so fine a book that it sets one to spec­ulating on vk̂ hat would happen if more novelists deferred the publication of their fictional strivings until the earth had moved around the sun fifty times and four. But after all, per­haps Tomlinson’s age had little to do with the quality of “Gallions Reach.” Sixteen years ago he published his re­markable “The Sea and the Jungle.” In any case, his first novel is written in distinguished prose, has a marvel­ously contrived description of a storm at sea, which lacks the strain of Con­rad’s otherwise perfect “Typhoon,” maintains throughout an admirable reticence and gives to a single woman character only the slightest bit of at­tention. I do not necessarily suggest that these last two points are closely interrelated.

300 COLLEGE HEADS CONVENE AT SHORE

In the dignified and altogether re­spectable pages of Harper’s January issue. Dr. Bernard De Voto lays down a heavy barrage against the towering positions occupied by professional ped­agogics in the colleges and universi­ties of the Republic. “All very hot,” you will say. You will not be wrong. What I say is that where there is so much fire there must be some insur­ance. If De Voto’s “Farewell to Ped- ga^ogy” were moving in my direction, I should want complete coverage.

Christopher Morley’s latest book is called “I Know a Secret.” Well, I for one have never been known to turn an unheedful ear in the direction of a secret. The fact is that I love secrets. Simple and confiding natures usuallly do. Why, then, do I find myself so incurious about Mr. Morley’s secret? Because he asks me to read a whimso- cal book to discover it. This price is too high. Whimsical books after they have been long steeped in time are bearable. Mr. Morley’s callow whim­sies of yesterday I do not care for. Let there be no secret about that.

(Continued on Page 2)

A COLLEGE EDUCATIONBest New Year’s resolution any dad

could make is to give his son a col­lege education.

College education is worth $72,000. This is a profit of 1,200 per cent on an original investment of $6,000, which is the average total cost of a four years’ course in college.

Deducting the cost of the education income at the rate of approximately itself, the student adds to his future $15,000 a year during the time he is in college.

As classes are held only five days a week, this means potential earnings of $70 a day to the student for each day spent in the class room.

These statements were made by Otto Y. Schnering, President of the Baby alumnus of the University of Chicago, in an address here.

“A college education is not only very essential in modern business but highly profitable, if the student spends his time in real study,” Mr. Schnering said. “The annual average income of a high school graduate is $2,200 and that of a college graduate $6,000. Total earnings of the two classes of men up to the age of 60 are approximately placed at $78,000 and $150,000. This gives the college graduate a lead of $72,000 over the high school youth.

“This is the age of specialization and scientific management in business,^ in which a college education is becoming almost an absolute necessity.”

DELTA SIGMA ALPHA PARTYThe Delta Sigma Alpha Fraternity

held their first house party on Satur­day evening, January 7th. The affair took place in their house on Chestnut street, which they just occupied last term. The lounging room was appro­priately decorated in Drexel’s own col­ors; gold and blue. Lunch was served after the games and later the guests took to dancing. Dr. and Mrs. Hall chaperoned the party. Everyone en­joyed the affair so much that a sim­ilar one is being planned for the near future. Much of the credit for the suc­cess of the affair is due to Mr. Ken- neck, Mr. Fischer and Mr. Lentz.

FAVORS COMBINED COURSE

Nearly 300 presidents, deans and other

representatives of colleges in every State

of the Union assembled at the Chalfonte-

Haddon Hall recently for the three-day

fourteenth annual meeting of the Asso­

ciation of American Colleges.

National and international problems of

college education were discussed at a banquet presided over by Lucia R. Briggs, president of the Milwaukee-Downer Col­lege, president of the association.

A burst of laughter which bespoke general experience with the affliction greeted the remark by Dr. A. Lawrence Lowell, president of Harvard University, that “the vocal part of the alumni thinks a college should be a social, if not an athletic institution, in which education mysteriously is to be instilled, with little effort on the part of the student.”

Dr. Lowell insistently opposed this conviction of the “vocal alumni,” declar­ing that “the main object of a college is personal education, acquired by the ef­forts of the student himself. The better the education he receives, as evidenced by his marks, the better for the student,” he said.

Cultural rather than vocational educa­tion must be the aim of the American college. Dr. Lowell declared. He com­mended the “combined course,” by which the last two college years are devoted to studies leading toward a particular oc­cupation, but said that its proper place was in a State or other large university and not in a college.

The college, Dr. Lowell said, should devote itself to “enlarging the field of knowledge, teaching men to think clearly and stimulating imagination. The art of life consists not in solving a problem but in knowing what problem • needs to be solved. Resourcefulness is the object of a college education.”

SONG CONTESTThe Key and Triangle and the Phoe­

nix Club have announced a song con­test. This contest will open January 11th and close January 28th. Two prizes are offered, the first $10 and the second $5.

It is hoped that this contest will give Drexel a number of “pep” songs, songs that may be used at football games and any other athletic contests. The words must be original, but the music need not be. The judges for the contest are Mr. Ryder, Chairman; Dr. Taft, Mr. Thunder, Ethel Weaver and Blair Forbes.

This contest is open to anyone con­nected with Drexel—student, facutly, alumnus, but it is hoped that the stu­dent body will win both prizes. We need a distinctive peppy song at Drexel —so this is you opportunity not only to do something for Drexel, but also to win a liberal prize. You may not think you have ability, but ,you never know until you try. So try and try hard! We want a song that will mean as much to Drexel as “Hail, Pennsyl­vania,” means at the University. All contestants send or give your songs to Mr. Ryder. Get Busy Today!

DREXEL GRID TEAM PLAYS TEN GAMES NEXT SEASON

Drexel Institute's football team will play ten games next year, according to the 1928 schedule of the Engineers made public following a meeting of the Athletic Council, of which Dawsen Do­well is chairman.

It was also announced that, for the first time in the history of the institu­tion, spring gridiron practice will be Ifeld next year in preparation for the progrym with which begin on Sep­tember 22, with Juniata, at the Drexel Athletic Field, and will conclude on November 24, with St. Joseph’s Col­lege, also at the Drexel Field,

The new schedule reveals that Drexel has finally dropped the last of its early season games with the powerful elevens of the country, such as Carnegie Tech, Georgetown, etc., and has limited its games to colleges in its own class.

Among the colleges which have re­turned to the Drexel schedule after a lapse of a year or two are Muhlenberg, Delaware and Ursinus, while the City College in New York will entertain the local collegians for the first time in New York. Juniata, which played Drexel to a scoreless tie this year, will again inaugurate the season. Susque­hanna, which trimmed Drexel 13 to 0. Washington College, which lost to the Engineers by a 19 to 6 score. New York Aggies, who were dumped 51 to 0, and Haverford, which beat Drexel 26 to 0, are again on the schedule.

Athletic Director Walter H. Halas, who took charge of the Drexelites last September and in a few short weeks at­tempted to install a complete new sys­tem of play, and finally succeeded so that in the final games of the season, of which three were won by Drexel, the Engineers scored 113 points to 13 for their opponents, will once again direct the destinies of the West Phila­delphians, it was announced.

Only four of the forty-odd members of the squad will be lost by graduation. They are Captain Blair Forbes, the fast end. Wolf and Armstrong, a sturdy pair of tackles who will be missed, and Chris Schwarz, the veteran backfield star of the eleven for the past three years.

The schedule follows:September 22—Juniata, at Drexel.September 29—Muhlenebrg, away.October 6—Delaware, away.October 13—Susquehanna, at home.Octiber 20—C. C. N. Y., away.October 27—Washington College,

away.November 3—N. Y. Aggies, home.November 10—Ursinus, away.November 24—St. Joseph’s (pend­

ing), at hoiiie.

HUNTER COLLEGE GIRLS IMPUGN HONOR SYSTEM

Wholeule Cheating in Exunt Charged in School Paper

The honor system of conducting ex­aminations a{ Hunter College, whereby students are free from faculty supervis­ion, has been impugned by the testimony of the girls Uiemselves.

One unnamed student said that “nine- tenth of the girls cheat,” and another stated “only sixty-five of all the girls in the college are honest.” Their charges were printed in the current issue of the college student publication under the heading, "Undergraduate Testimony.”

Other acctjsations were that girls car­ried notes up their sleeves in. examina­tions, that one was heard to say she had passed her examination, “thanks to the honor system;” that a group sat to­gether in a classic examination and pooled their knowledge, and that even when the teacher was in the room the girls passed their papers to one another.

Officials at the college characterized the charges as. “exaggerated and over­estimated."

___ Single Copies, 5c

COLLEGE ENTRANCE^ TESBASSAILED

Dean Holmes, of Harvard, De­clares Secondary Schools

Fail of Purpose

URGES G E R M A N SYSTEM

“College admission requirements ob­struct education in the secondary schools,” according to Henry W. Holmes, dean of the Graduate School of Education, Harvard University, be­fore the annual conference of New Jer­sey State superintendents and super­vising princip’als at Haddon Hall to­day.

“College log-rolling has resulted in too many points being required in this or that subject on the college-en- trance examinations. The result is that courses in the secondary or high schools are arranged to give the stu­dents just enough of a subject to meet those requirements,” he asserted.

“The result is that the secondary school teaches a smattering of subjects but a mastery of none. The secondary school has no objective of its own.”

Placing of examinations at the start of the college course, he said, makes it so that the high school does not com­plete its work. In Germany, he point­ed out, the examinations are placed at the end of the secondary school course, so that the school has a definite object of its own.

He thought it far better that colleges accept a vocation course, because such a course has a real objective.

“Preparatory education neither pre­pares nor educates,” said Mr. Holmes. “Students take subjects with the sole object of passing college examinations, and after the tests are through the sub­ject is no longer used.

“Parents don’t care what the boy and girl learn so long as they are able to get in college. It would be better if we would analyze the values of subjects and use that as a basis of examinations. We have come to think of democracy in education as the same thing for everybody but not definite for any­body.”

Thrift day is upon us! Now every­body laugh! Nice, isn’t it? That Drexel should co-operate with the Christian associations and help to bet­ter the student body. I suppose we’ll all glare with enthusiasm, we’ll count our pennies “one by one.” We’ll “try before we buy” and all the other beau­tiful things. Then after a couple days, what will happen? Why that enthusiasm will land right where the other Drexel enthusiasm (namely the football and Student Government zests) land. By the way, what HAS happened to all the Student Government “dirt.” I guess the very efficient janitor force succeeded in sweeping it up. I won­der why we’ve heard so little about it since Christmas? Evidently the girls have found that faculty government with student execution isn’t so bad after all. Just think how our con­science would hurt if we really had stu­dent government, and who wants to invite pain?

DREXEL’S NEW BUILDING t o CONTAIN GYMNASIUM

Athletic Roof Garden to Be Fea- ^ ture Also of Engueering

Addition

A gymnasium and an athletic roof garden will be features of the engineer­ing building which Drexel Institute will erect on the east side of Randall Hall, at 32d and Chestnut Streets.

The building will be four stories high, and will have a seventy-foot frontage on Chestnut Street and extend back 192 feet to Ludlow Street. It will contain lab­oratories for mechanical, civil, chemical and electrical engineering classrooms, drawing rooms and the gymnasium.

Both building and equipment will be the gifts of Cyrus H. K. Curtis, a Drexel trustee, who has also given a pipe organ and several cash contributions to the school.

Page 2: T he D rexel T riangle · T he D rexel T riangle Vol. Ill, No. 7 DREXEL INSTITUTE. JANUARY 25. 1928 A TOUGH BREAK FOR THE HATLESS LADS Chick Meehan, Coach of the N.Y.U. Football Squad,

THE DREXEL TRIANGLE

OIJfp i r m i ( g r t a t t g UOfficial newspaper publi^ied by the students of Drexel Institute, 32nd and

Chestnut Streets, Philadelphia. Issued on the first and fifteenth day of each month during the college year.

Entered as sccond-class matter, October 15, 1926, at the Postoffice in Philadel­phia. Pa., under the Act of March 3, 1879.

PRICE....... ✓ .......... S Cents per Copy

T H E ED ITO RIA L STAFFCharles S. H e a d .................................................................... Editor-in-ChiefEdith M. R o o d .................................................................. Associate EditorWillard Baum.................................................................... Business Manager

Sarah Baxter...............................................................................News EditorCharles M a sc h a l ...................................................................... News EditorFlorence Loftus .................................................................. Athletic EditorRobert B urns ........................................................................ Athletic EditorClarence B o y e r ..............................................................Circulation EditorGuy D’A lfonso ................................................................ Composing EditorDr. E. J. H all ...................................................................... Faculty Advisftr

---------- o— —Mildred Burchinal Frank Gervasi

W alter Cooper Harry ErbRobert Dovener Otto Hertw igHenry Gaul Charles SeltzerCarl Gregory Wilton W righ tDorothy Williamson N. G. Belding

JANUARY 25, 1928

WAKE UPThe state of civilization in this incoinparable commonwealth has

been lauded by everyone. Big Bill Thompson has recently proven the point through historical data. In addition we find such enlight­ening organizations as “The W atch and W ard Society,” for pre­venting immoral influences from reaching Bostonians. (W hich so­ciety picks on such “vile” plays as Drieser’s “American Tragedy.”) Now we have a Citizen’s Committee, headed by sage Florida church officials, which has prepared a seventeen page type written report containing quotations from “obscene, vile and vicious” books kept in the libraries of the Florida State College for Women and the Universit yof Florida. H a i l ! All Hail this, our present everadvanc- ing and high type of civilization.

And did you read about the English woman lecturer who has recently been barred from the American lecture stage because she smokes! A very intelligent, deep thinking woman, too. I guess Drexel is only following in the footsteps of American pig-headed- ness. Think what a laugh England is going to have on us! Re­member when girls who wore fancy garters were indecent? Even the most proper of donkeys learn to see how short the distance be­tween their ears has been. Sometimes it seems as though the American people will never wake up.

How many times have we heard some sage papa reprimand his child for drinking, saying: “ I don’t believe in prohibition but I do believe in enforcing the law.” He is a law abiding citizen! True, a country must have law abiding citizens in order to prosper, but is he one of them?

Does h? jay-walk? Does he gyp P. R. T. whenever he can? Does he keep other liquids than milk in his milk bottles? Does he declare only a part of his personal property for assessment? Does he speed when there is no cop in sight? Does he spit in public?

Papa—look to your laurels and practice what you preach.W hat could make Pop or Mom or sweetheart or friend or

whatever—have you any happier than to know that yours-truly is really up to date? W hy let yourself be so behind the times as to remember mother with a bit of real sentiment, or be so ultra-modern as not to evidence any remembrance at all? No one loves he who is different! Don’t ever let anyone kid you into thinking indi­viduality is respected. Just glance around at the people made un­believably happy by the greeting and versatility. Just walk into a store, choose from a large selection, and you have it. The exact expression of what you want, composed by an expert mind! W hat could be sweeter? And don’t forget you must send that girl from Blah-Blah City a card because she hinted that she might send you o n e !

THE CHRISTMAS PARTYOn Saturday evening, December

10th, at 6 o’clock, the annual Chrrst- nias party was celebrated at the Stu­dent Houses.

Committees from each house had charge of the decorations for the tables. There were many and varied effects everything from a miniature of "2^6” to small snowmen.

A delicious chicken dinner was served under the supervision of the dietician. Miss Baker.

Between the courses Santa Claus, (who was none other than the inimit­able ^̂ lo Loftus) made his appear­ance, to present gifts from the girls at the student's house to Miss Dorsey, Miss Baker, Miss Chelles, Miss Rob­bins and the waiters.

It was a jolly party with songs dur­ing the meal, and everyone enjoyed herself. '

The general social committee, Francis Bishop. Gertrude Eddinger, Willa Bradt and Sally Baxter had charge of the dinner.

SECOND CRUISE OF THE SS. RYNDAH UNIVERSITY AFLOAT TO SAIL FROM

NEW YORK SEPTEMBER 19, mDr. John Carleton Jones to Head College. Distinguished Faculty

Nearly Complete. Idea Has Gained Recognition From Many Colleges and Univerisities

The date of sailing from New York of the second College World Cruise on board the steamship Ryndam, has been announced by Charles H. Phelps, Jr., presideJit of the University Travel Association, as September 19, 1928. After seven and one-half months’ cruise of over 40,000 miles by land an dsea, the college will return to New York on May 4, 1929.

During the cruise 27 foreign coun­tries are visited and the steamer calls at 37 different ports. Sailing west­ward the Ryndam calls first at Havana, then through the Panama Canal, stop­ping at Colon and Balboa, thence to San Francisco, and from there across the Pacific to the Settlements, Java, Sumatra, Ceylon, India, Arabia, Egypt, Palestine, Turkey, the Mediterranean and Europe.

Interesting programs have been ar­ranged at each port and special trains

will take the students in groups, on inland trips in Japan, Java, Siam, Ceylon, India, Egypt, Palestine, Italy. France Germany, and England. In most of the foreign countries official receptions and entertainments will be provided and will afford the students an insig'ht into the customs and lives of the people that is not afforded the tourist. Last year, it will be recalled, the entire faculty and student body were for four days the guests of King Rama V II of Siam; it is expected that tlie same reception will be accorded to the members of the second cruise.

The Steamship Ryndam of the Hol­land American Line will again be used as the home of the floating college. l*'xtensive alterations and improve­ments are planned to better adapt this vessel as a university afloat.

The college body is . limited to 375 young men who will be under the

guidance of a faculty of 45 outstanding professors and instructors, who are being appointed from the leading col­leges and universities of the country. Over 70 courses of college grade will be offered, and Dr. Lough has so ar­ranged these courses that a student may complete a year of college work during the cruise, and need not lose time in earning his degree. A special feature of the cruise is the preparatory school department which provides for a limited number of young men who wish to prepare for college entrance examinations.

Dr. John Carleton Jones, Ph.D., LL.D., President-Emeritus, University of Missouri, has been appointed as president of this unique college. Pro­fessor Elmer W. Smith, head of the English Department of Colgate Uni­versity, will be in charge of the Eng­lish Department of the cruise, and will also act in the capacity of Dean. Dr. James E. Lough, formerly Dean of the Extramural Division of New York University, and Acting-President of the Pioneer College World Cruise, is associated with the organization as Educational Director. Others on the faculty who are well known in the educational field, are as follows: Pro­fessor Edmund Caskie, Oberlin Col­lege! Professor Ross Lee Finney, Uni­versity of Minnesota; Professor John Pickard, University of Missouri; Dr. Oran sLee Raber, formerly University of Michigan; Professor Douglas Clay, Ridgeley, Clark University; Professor Howard Edwin Simpson, University of North Dakota; Dr. Francis Way- land Shepardson, formerly University of Chicago.

Last August the cruise scheduled to sail in September, 1927, was deferred for one year. Mr. Phelps stated that postponement was necessary owing to the lack of sufficient enrollments, caused by the late announcement of the cruise, which resulted in the se­curing of over 600 prospects for the 1928-29 cruise, but an insuffiicent num­ber for the 1927 trip. Mr. Phelps also stated that the general falling off in bookings for all world cruises reflected a condition which directly affected the success of the college cruise. From present indications, however, this con­dition no longer exists and already a goodly number of registrations have been received, and it is expected that by late spring the total quota of 375 will be reached.

Since the return of the first College World Cruise on the Steamship Ryn­dam on May 4, 1927, the idea of study combined with world travel has been growing in favor with, and gaining the recognition of the colleges and uni­versities of the country. Insti­tutions have signified their willing­ness to co-operate with the University Travel Association in arranging credit for work done during the cruise, and also by recommending and releasing members of their faculty for service on the College Cruise. Among these in­stitutions are, Brown University, Dart­mouth, Williams College, Lafayette College, Lehigh University, University of Michigan, University of Georgia, University of Louisiana, Clark Uni­versity, University of North Dakota, University of Minnesota, University of Missouri, University of Washington, University of Southern California, Le- iand Standard, nUiversity of Kansas, New York University, Columbia Uni­versity, Colgate University, University of Alabama.

The University Travel Association which sponsored the pioneer university afloat on the Steamship Ryndam is working diligently in an effort to es­tablish the College Cruise as a perm­anent educational institution which will be a valuable supplement to the college or university ashore.

FLYING RIVETS(Continued from Page 1)

As I grow older and am more and more preoccupied with the state of my billiard game, it interests me to find that Harold Bell Wright is rapidly be­coming my favorite author. The rea­son is not far to seek. He never writes a book that I have the slightest in­clination to read. I rejoice, therefore, that Mr. W right’s latest homiletic is a best seller. This struggling author will now be encouraged to carry on. A chance acquaintance tells me that “God and the Groceryman” is a bit rough in spots. But I remained unmoved. My imaginative life, what with one thing and another, is already sprightly enough.

Mr. Thornton Wilder, author of “The Bridge of San Luis Rey,” is be­ing compared to Walter Pater, Anatole France, George Moore, Aldons Hux­ley, and to many other practitioners of prose that is nowise usual. Not for a long time have I seen such drooling at the mouth. Mr. Wilder comes out of Yale. Professor Phelps calls his book a classic. There’s rather more than a smile on the face of the Tigfer. Re­ports seem to show that Harvard is about as well as could be expected, everything—including the football sea­son—considered. Temperature: 98 flat.

That literature south of Mason and Dixon’s line is just now on the up­ward swing can be seen as clearly as anywhere in the work of Du Bose Harvard, whose second novel, “Angel,” is an altogether satisfactory successor to “Porgy.” Mr. Heyward give us the great American novel will is also a poet. And here is a predic­tion: The man who will eventually be not only a story-teller; he will be a poet as wfell.

Among the present crop of English novelists E. M. Forster is one of the most important. His “Aspects of the Novel,” has just come into the Library. Everybody with an intelligent interest in fiction will want to know what Forster, who all too seldomly sends us a new novel, has to say about this literary form.

Harold Brecht, one of my boon companions, is in 0 '’Brien’s “Best Short Stories of 1927,” with a tale called “Vienna Roast,” As a writer, Harold is coming fast. Only a little while ago I advised him to take his first serious story to Harper’s. The editors of this iournal were delighted with it, bought it, and asked for more. All this hap- oened in the fall of 1925, since which time Brecht has appeared in Harper’s and other magazines with various of­ferings. Harold was born in Lans- downe; he now resides in Manoa. Which seems to show that on occas­ions a man will get the better of out­ward circumstance. Brecht plays a wicked game of bridge.

Speaking of bridge, there are three sorts of people in the world; those* who play bridge, those who do not, and those who always lead their aces. The rubber is over.

ENTERTAINS AT THE TEA ROOM

Sara Bennett and Blanche Ball were joint hostesses at dinner on Wednes­day evening, December 14th, at the Tea Rose. Thirtee guests were present.

On the afternoon of December 31st, in Pittsburgh, Pa., Kathryn Eason be­came the bride of Edgar Stough, of Youngstown, Ohio. Mrs. Stough at­tended Drexel last semester, living at “3420.” Mr. Stough is a member of the A T O fraternity, and is a gradu­ate of Washington and Jefferson Col­lege.

Jeanne Whitney, who has lived at 216 for the past three years, has been forced to leave school for the winter term, due to ill health. Jeanne is plan­ning to, tour the South until Spring,

PAN-HELLENIC PARTY A HUGE SUCCESS

On Saturday night, January 10th, rushing season opened with a bang. The party was given under the aus pices of the local Pan-Hellenic Asso­ciation.

The party was held in the court to entertain new girls.

Music for dancing was furnished by the Campus Crusaders.

For entertainment the Pan-Hillenic Council gave a “talk-off” on the faculty —which was a decided success.

The members of the three sororities were introduced by the President of the Association, Len Kerr.

Lunch was served and then ^e re was a grand scramble for the student house girls to get in by the prescribed eleven o’clock.

cmms msimiiEOPENS NEW H A U 4

Concert Aadhoriomy Seating 304, Has Foar-Mannal Orga^

and Large Stage

HOFMANN gT v ~ES RECFTAL

What was probably one of the most notable gatherings of musically and so­cially prominent persons ever seen in this city attended the opening of the new concert hall of the Curtis Institute of Music, 18th and Locust Streets, re­cently.

A feature of the event was a piano recital by Josef Hofmann, director of the institute.

The concert hall, known as Casimir Hall, is the result of the desire of Mrs. Edward Bok, founder and president of the "institute, to have a complete m u - ' sic institution under one roof.

Three Mansions ConvertedThe original group of buildings com­

prising the institute were formerely three mansions, two of them the resi­dences of George W. Childs Drexel and Theodore F. Cramp.

The east wall of the i'6rmer Drexel mansion was cut throug'h to give ac­cess to the auditorium. There are no outside openings above the basement level, in order to exclude noises from the street.

On addition to being sound-proof, the hall is fireproof, made of steel and and re-enforced concrete, with cut- stone facing, harmonizing with the ex­terior of the Drexel home. It is lined with white mahogany with a decorative tone of gray.

Guests yesterday occupied every one of the 304 seats, arranged on a main floor and two small balconies. A view of the stage, which is of sufficient si^e to accommodate an orchestra, was af­forded all present.

A four-manual pipe organ, the gift of Cyrus H. K. Curtis, has been in­stalled in the auditorium.

An intricate network of ducts, con­cealed from view by ornamental panels and grilles, takes the place of outside windows and doors and permits the circulation of fresh air.

Practice rooms for students are in the basement. In the sub-basement is located a power, heating and ven­tilating plant for the entire group of buildings.

Doors Made by YelUn A pair of wrought-iron doors, the cre­

ation of Samuel Yellin, is at the Locust Street entrance to Casimir Hall. Hor­ace Wells Sellers was the architect for the auditorium.

Necessary extensions in other build­ings of the institute have been pro­vided for through the addition of the concert hall. One entire floor has been given over to a restaurant seating 8.5 persons. . ̂ f

In addition, the library has been en­larged by the addition of three stack rooms having a capacity of 15,000 vol­umes.

List of Invited GuestsGuests invited by Mrs. Bok included

the following:Ernest Hutcheson, dean of the Juil-

lard Graduate School of Music, and Mrs. Hutcheson; Prof. and Mrs. Leo­pold Auer, Mr. and Mrs. Leopold Go- dowsky, Mr. and Mrs. Leopold E. Steinway, Sigismund J. Stojowski, Dr.Carl Engel, Alex;jinder Lambert.

Mr. and Mrs. Curtis, Mr. and Mrs. Harold E. Yarnall, Mr. and Mrs. Law­rence Gilmanfi Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Chatzinoff, Fritz Reiner, Horace Al- wynne, William Jay Turner, John Braun, Arthur Judson, Miss Nellie C. Cornish.

Dr. and Mrs. K. G. Matheson, Dr. and Mrs. Moses Behrend, Dr. and Mrs. W. W. Comfort, Alfred J. Swan,Dr. and Mrs. Frank Aydelotte, Dr, and Mrs. Julius Goebel, Dr. Ernst Diez,Mr. and Mrs. Thornton Oakley, Dr. Louis W. Flaccus, Adolph S. Ochs.

Mrs. Theodore'W . Cramp, Mr. and Mrs. John F. Braun, Mrs. William J. Bok, Mr. and Mrs. Isidore Kohn, Dr. and Mrs. James P. Nichol, Dr. and Mrs. T. Grier Miller, Mr. and Mrsi,W. C Tuttle, Mr and Mrs Thoma, Raeburn White, Mrs Clarence G ar_ ner, Mr. and Mrs. James Francis Cooke.

111II m I

; “ TEN . SHUN” iDON’T FORGET THE i

MILITARY BALL jAT EASE

f

)r.nd m

m

\

Page 3: T he D rexel T riangle · T he D rexel T riangle Vol. Ill, No. 7 DREXEL INSTITUTE. JANUARY 25. 1928 A TOUGH BREAK FOR THE HATLESS LADS Chick Meehan, Coach of the N.Y.U. Football Squad,

THE DREXEt TRIANGLE

DRBXEL-TEXTILEThe opening basketball game was

played on our floor on November 30th, with the Philadelphia Textile School as our opponents. The game was a one-sided affair from the beginning; the final score was 57-21, and thus we avenged ourselves for last year’s de­feat.

Our regular varsity five, Schwarz, Tucker, Dobbins, Hey and Gregory, started the fracas for us. After they had piled up a substantial lead in the first half, some of the subs saw action. They added a few points to increase

[ the margin and the half ended With k the score 29-11 in our favor.^ ’ The subs also started the second I half, and after seven minutes of play,

during which time they outscored the Textile varsity, our regular varsity again took the floOr. From then on the field goals fiew thick and fast into ou r‘basket and at the end of the game saw us in the lead, 57-21.

Tucker, Schwarz, and Dobbins with 13, 12, and 9 points, respectively, lead

I our scorers while Wooley managed to cage three field goals for Textile.

The line-up:D R EX EL

Fid. FI. FI.Pos. Gls. GIs. Trs. Pts.

Schwarz ........ F 3 6 6 ,12T u c k e r ............ F 6 1 2 13D obbins.......... C 4 1 2 9Hey ................ G 1 1 1 3G regory .......... G 2 0 1 4Best ................ F 1 1 2 3Davis .............. G 2 1 1 5Fink .............. E 0 1 1 1Maschal ........ G 0 0 0 0Logan ............ G 0 1 1 1Shuipis .......... F 3 0 0 0

T o ta ls .......... 22 13 17 57T E X T IL E

Pos. Gls. Gls. Trs. Pts.Fid. FI. FI.

Bellemere . . . . F 0 0 0 0Wooley .......... F 3 0 0 6Kavanaugh . . . C 1 2 3 4Cushman . . . . G 0 2 5 2Lewis ............ G 0 0 0 0Carpenter . . . . G 0 1 3 1S H irer.............. F 2 0 1 *G. S h ire r ........ F 1 0 0 2Underwood . . G 1 0 0 2

Totals ........ 8 5 12 21Referee—Lewis of Harvard.Time of halves—20 minutes.Score by halves:Drexel ................ 29 28 —57Textile ................ 11 10 —21

DREXEL-RUTGERSRutgers had no respect for the scores

of our previous annual games with them, which were very close, so they proceeded to snow us under to the tune of 42-21 on their own floor at New Brunswick on December 3rd.

regular varsity five played pr?ic- tically the entire game with the excep­tion of the last few minutes. Rutgers

X sported a tall, fast quintet, each niem- W of which had an uncanny ability to shoot long-distance field goals. We were also rather loose in our defense and as a result Rutgers ran up nine­teen field goals, the largest number scored against us in a good many moons. Hey was our outstanding player, he scored four field goals and played a good game at guard. They all scored for Rutgers. The score at half time was 18-8 against us.

The line-up:D R EX EL

Fid. FI. FI.Pos. Gls. Gls. Trs. Pts.

Schwarz .. . . . F 2 3 6 7Tucker . . . F 1 0 0 2Dobbins .. . . . C 1 0 3 2Hey . . . . . . . . . G 4 0 2 8Gregory .. . . . G 0* 1 3 1Shuipis . . . . . . F 0 0 0 0Logan . . . . . . . G 0 0 0 0Davis . . . . . . . G Q 0 0 0Best .......... . . . F 0 1 1 1

Totals .. 8 7 15 21RUTGERS

Fid. FI. FI.Pos. Gls. GIs. Trs. Pts.

Roberts . . . . . . F 3 1 3 7Alton ........ . . . F 6 2 5 14

1 Rohrback . ... -c 5 0 1 10L Boettcher . . . . G 1 0 1 2W o l m ........ 1 0 0 2nli^rk ........ . . , F 1 0 0 2

Gowden . . . . . . C 1 0 0 2. Magie . . . . . . . G 0 1 1 11 Rosen . . . . . . . G 1 0 0 21 _

Totals .. • t • 19 4 11 42Score by halves: Drexel ................ 8 14 —21Rutgers .............. 18 24 —42

Philadelphia College of Pharmacy and trimmed them royally, 63-27. Al. Hey played the feature role in this game which was rather uninteresting. Fre­quent substitutions and plenty of “rough stuff*’ was probably the cause for the dullness of the game. Alto­gether, twenty-three players saw ac­tion and forty-two personal fouls were committed.

Strictly speaking, we had no varsity combination in action at any one time during the game; it was just a question of who was to be high scorer for the day. Hey led the field with 24 points, 10 field goals and 4 fouls; Dobbins halved him with 12 points, 5 field goals and 2 fouls.

The first half saw the score 25-12 in our favor, and during the second half we almost lost count as the subs and regulars netted 16 field goals and 6 fouls.

The line-up:Fid. FI. FI.

Pos. Gls. Gls. Trs. Pts. D R E X E L

Hey .......... ., F 10 4 8 24Tucker . . . . . . F 2 2 2 6Dobbins .. . . . C 5 2 4 12Gregory .. . . . G 1 1 3 3Schwarz .. . . . G 2 1 2 5Fink ........ . . . F 1 0 1 2Shuipis . . . . . . F 3 1 1 7Davis ........ . . . C 1 0 ' 1 2Maschal .. . . . G 0 0 0 0Best j . . . . . . . G 1 0 1 2Logan ___ . . . G 0 0 0 0Brown . . . . . . G 0 0 0 0

Totals .. 26 11 23 63PHARMACY

Fid. FI. FI.Pos. Gls. Gls. Trs. Pts.

Sahagian .. . . . F 2 2 3 6Harris . . . . . . . F 1 1 1 3Goldman .. . . . C 0 1 3 1Malone . . . . . . G 3 0 0 6Catteau . . . . . . G 1 2 6 4Holz . . . F 0 0 0 0Yingst V-- F 0 1 2 1Gray ........ . F 2 2 2 6Pyle .......... . . . F 0 0 0 0Guinski . . . . . . G 0 ,̂ 0 0 0Powloski .. . . . F 0 0 2 0

Totals .. 9 9 19 27Score by halves:Drexel ., 25 / 38 —63Pharmacy 12 15 —27Referee—Lew Miller.Time of halves—20 minutes.

DREXEL-SWARTHMOREDrexel succumbed to the Swarth-

more quintet, 39-28, in a fast and fu­rious game on the latter’s court on January 7th.

Drexel’s inability to locate the bas­ket caused their downfall, although a weak spot in the defense permitted Mc­Daniel, Swarthmore forwa«<l, to break through for ten field goals and contrib­ute largely to our defeat.

The first half of the game was ex­tremely exciting and interesting. After Swarthmore had gained a 5 to 3 lead they commenced cashing in on long shots and after ten minutes of play they held a 13 to 3 lead. Drexel |hen tightened her defense and held Swarth­more scoreless while the Bluetind Gold forged ahead, 14 to 13. The rest of the half saw ^ome fast action, with Swarthmore holding the lead at the end of the half, 20-18.

During the second half the play was much slower. Swarthmore managed to keep the lead(, although Drexel threat­ened to tie the score on several occa­sions. Both captains, Gregory, of Drexel, and Tipping, of Swarthmore, were removed from the game via the personal foul route. Swarthmore out- scored Drexel again in this half and the game ended 38-29.

McDaniel, Swarthmore freshman, and forward, was the outstanding scorer of the game; he netted 22 points. Dobbins led the Drexel scorers with eight points. The score:

D R E X E L

Referee—Ferguson.Umpire—Kleinfelter.Time of halves—20 minutes.

PREXELPHARMACYOn Iwcember 6th we entertained the

Position G.G. F.G. F.T. T ’tlTucker, F .......... . 0 1 2 1

3 3 5Hey, F .......... 5 5 7Fink, F ......... . 0 0 0 0Robbins, C .......... . 3 2 4 8Gregory, G .......... . 1 0 2 2Davis, G .......... . 0 0 0 0Schwarz, G .......... . 3 0 0 6

_

Totals ................ . 9 11 16 29Position G.G. F.G.

SW ARTHM OREF.T. T ’tl

McDaniel, F ......... ....10 2 6 22T ’stwuide, F . . . . . . . 1 0 3 2Johnson, C .......... 1 3 5Dellmuth, G .......... . 2 1 3 5

0 0 4McCook, G .......... . 0 0 0 0

—- _

Totals ................ 4 15 38Referee—Geiges.

20 minutes.Time of halves—

D rex e l................... 18 11- 2 9Swarthmore ........ V • • • • 20 18—38

BRYN NAWR GETS G A U m F O R A R T

PemuuMBt EzUliitkm Room in Wyndliam Hill to Open

Monday

STUDENTS ^ E R E D P U N

Through the efforts of the students themselves and the enthusiasm of the Executive Committee of the Parents Association of the Thorne School, off­spring of Bryn Mawr College, Bryn Mawr itself is to have a permanent ex­hibition room for works of art.

; BETWEEN CLASSES ̂

Just step up I and try the appetizing

edibles served at

our fount—

THEPENNSYLVANIA

PH A R M A aI 32nd Sl Woodland Ave.

The gallery, following new ideas in the display of art, is really a fine old room in Wyndham Hall, a building which is part of the old Ely estate, recently purchased by Bryn Mawr College.

For some years Bryn Mawr stiidents interested in the study of art have banded together in lieu of a definite college art department to further their aims, and to bring at stated intervals from New York or elsewhere an artist who could guide them in their enthusi­asms.

EVERYTHING BUT MONEY COLLEGE LEGAL TENDER

German mark notes, street car tokens, buttons and telephone slugs apparently have become legal tender on the North­western University Campus.

Since school opened last September, the University Athletic Association has lost $600 at its “honor” candy stands, scattered about the campus because some of the studejits drop slugs and buttons instead of coins in payment for their sweets.

i DREXEL SUPPLY STORE iROOM 207

Lefax, DraMring Equipment, Pennants, Stationery, Fountain Pens, Drexel Post Cards,

Text Books, Paper, Drexel Jewelry

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V ,

Page 4: T he D rexel T riangle · T he D rexel T riangle Vol. Ill, No. 7 DREXEL INSTITUTE. JANUARY 25. 1928 A TOUGH BREAK FOR THE HATLESS LADS Chick Meehan, Coach of the N.Y.U. Football Squad,

THE DREXEL TRIANGLE

ALUMNI CALENDARJanuary 19—Parliamentary Law

Class, Picture Gallery.January 21 — Basketball, S e t o n

Hall, home.January 24— Basketball, Delaware,

away.January 26—Parliamentary Law, Pic­ture Gallery.

January 28,—Basketball, Upsala. away.

February 2—Parliamentary Law, Picture Gallery.

February 3—Basketball, Western Maryland, home.

February 8— Basketball, Washing­ton College, home.

February 9—Parliamentary Law, Piicture Gallery.

February 11—Marionette Show, aft­ernoon and evening. Secure tickets now.

February 11—Basketball, Gettys­burg, away.

ALUMNI NOTESEx-Faculty—Ruth Burwash, Instructor

in Home Economics from 1925- 27, is teaching in Long Beach, California and living at Apt. B, 217 Belmont Avenue.

’95—Henry G. Wolfe, a consulting en­gineer, is living at 153 Green Ridge Avenue, White Plains, N. Y.

’96—E. C. Sharer lives in ColoradoSprings and invites Drexel Alumni to

look him up when visiting that city.

’97—John ^Tracy Lay is Research As­sociate, University of Pennsyl­vania, and lives at 4015 Pine Street, Philadelphia.

’00—Edward P. Simon, of Simon and Simon has been selected as the architect for the new engineering building recently given the Insti­tute by Mr. Cyrus H. K. Curtis, and to be erected on East Lot. The following Drexel men are in the employ of Simon and Simon: E. H. Penson, W. Maginnis, T. S. Newman, C. C. Gerlach, E. A. Vanderslice, B. G. Storey, J. Mc­Lean, W. McClain, W. Quicksall and J. A Smith

’02—Mrs. J. H. Clo (Julia P. David­son) has moved from Brooklyn to 24 E. Seaman Avenue. Bald­win, L. I., N. Y. Jessie E. Fair­child, who has a tea room called the "House by the Lake,” at Branchport, N. Y., advises that Lillian Fairchild died in 1910. Julia Williamson sailed recently for Porto Rico, w'here she will remain until spring.

’03—Ina F. Nelson is cataloguer, Col­lege of Industrial Arts, The Texas State College for Women, at Den­ton, Texas. Grace Stadelman Stuard has opened a shop at St. Augustine, Florida.

’04— George H. Duffield of 119 W ash­ington Street, Newton. Mass., is District Manager, Electrical Pub­lications, McGraw Hill Publish­ing Co., Inc.

’05—Katherine C. Devine lives at 816 Bellevue Ave., Syracuse, N. Y., and is District State Supervising Nurse for the Counties of Wayne, Oswego and Jefferson, with the N. Y, State Department of Health. Miss Divine graduated from John Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, in 19(19 and from 1917 to -919 served in France as a nurse with the U. S. Army. Since 1920 she has been doing developing and organiza­tion work with the American Red Cross and Public Health Nursing Department and with tlie State Departments of Health in North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Tennessee, Louisiana, Alabama and now in New York State.

06’—Mrs. Frank Stanford Persons and family now live on Mt, Lucas Road, Princeton, N. J.

’08—Lenna F. Cooper is Food Direc­tor, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, with offices in Barbour Gym.

>10—Walter Irving Rogers, of Rahway. N. J., died aher a short illness on December 22. 1927.

’13—Esther Maule is teaching in Cleveland, Ohio. G. D. Thomas is an instructor, Penn State Col- lege.

’15—A. A. Lipschutz is wit hthe Phila­delphia Electric Company and living at 6014 Hazelhurst Road, Ovcrbrook, Philadelphia.

’16—Ruth Davis is teaching Domestic Science in Wilmington, Delaware, and living at 1008 Madison Street.

»17—Jessie G. Seeger and Charles Ed­win Rector were married in Buf­falo, N. Y,, on December 26. They

will be at home after February 1st at 29 Princeton Boulevard, Kenmore, N. Y. Mrs. Gerald Grofoot Williams (Janet Curtis MacBirney) is now living at 124 Triphammer Road, Ithaca. N. Y.

18—Mrs. A. K. Barnes (Kathryn Brooke) formerly technician. Orthopedic Hospital, has accepted a position with the Woman’s Col­lege Hospital, Philadelphia. Mary E. MulHn is designer w’ith Rose- nau Brothers, manufacturers of children’s dresses.

’20—Harry Bonner is teaching in the Philadelphia schools.

'21—Mrs. James H. MacNeal (Eliza­beth Hodgson) of Wyoming, Delaware, announced the arrival of their second child. James, Jr., on November 22, 1927. A. H. Matthews, of 905 15th Street, N. E. Canton, Qhio, is Distribution Engineer with the Ohio Pow’cr Company.

'22—Mrs. Albert L. Morris (Beth Nor­ris) has moved to 820 Sixth Street, Ocean City, N. J.

’24—Ruth D. Shaffer, of 72 Walker Road, W. Orange, N. J., is teach­ing in Newark, N. J. L. A. Zier- nicke is with Thomas C. TrafiFord. builder.

’25—Louise Pickard recently announc­ed her engagement to Mr. New- M. Sell is secretary to the Prin- ton Heston Parkes, Jr. Frances cipal of the Clarion (Pa.) State Normal School.

'26—Edith A. Hetherington is teach­ing in the New York City Schools. Clara H. Thomas is secretary with F. P. Ristine and Company, Philadelphia.

’27—Maybelle Asper has accepted a position with Frank H. Mancill, Packard Building. Mr. Mancill is a former instructor in the In ­stitute. Mildred Bruen is with N. W. Ayer & Son, Advertisers. Evelyn E. Eagleson and John L. McKay were recently married.

Drexel alumni had a table at the All-College Dinner held in Lancaster on December 28, during the conven­tion of the Pennsylvania State Edu­cation Association.

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ATTENTION!!!

ANNUAL MILITARY BALL

FEBRUARY 10

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MEMBERSHIP TEAMSSTART WORK

One Thoutaiid by March 3Announcement has just been made

of an intensive alumni membership campaign to close March 3, the date of the Engineers’ Dinner and the Alumni basketball games.

H. H. Wentz, ’01, is captain of Team A which includes representatives from the classes of 94, ()1, 06, 11, 21, 25. Esther E. Steiger, ’22, is captain of Team B including the classes of 97, 99, 02, 07, 13, 17, 22 and 24. Clara M. Kembrey, ’12, is captain of Team C, including the classes of 98, 03, 08, 12. 18, 20 and 23; Wm. J. Stevens, ’26, is captain of Team D, including the classes of 96, 00, 04, 09, 15, 19, and 26, and M. Rebecca Lingenfelter is captain of Team E, including 93, 95, 05. 10, 14 and 27."

There are twenty-five workers on each team aiming to secure at least 100 members for their team. Each member of the Association is asked to help by securing an additional mem­ber. The clerical work in the Alumni office is done by the 'alumni scholar­ship students and membership dues helps to pay for this work so that in addition to covering your subscription to the Triangle, alumni membership helps worthy students who are earning their college expenses.

ALUMNAE CLUBOF PHILADELPHIA

A dinner meeting of the Alumnae Club was held at the Institute on Tues­day evening, January 10. Following a short J)usiness meeting those pres­ent enjoyed a talk by Professor E. D. McDonald, head of the English De­partment.

It was decided that the next dinner meeting should be held in the Drexel Cafeteria Building followed by cards. Attention was called to the Marionette show to be held at the Institute on February 11, under the auspices of the Club, the proceeds to be added to the Maude G. Hopkins Scholarship Fund There will be an afternoon and an evening performance. Reserved seats will be seventy-five cents and general admission fifty cents. Come and bring your children and your friends chil­dren, but secure your seats early. A number of alumni have registered for the course in Parliamentary Law to be given, begining Tuesday evening, January 19, by Mrs. Floy E. Bootli, of Wilmington, Delaware.

J

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