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A New Cap for PMC.. ~ ~

SPRING I 1971 Magazina of PMC Collages • The narrow image of a nurse-in­ crisp-white-uniform-with-hand-on-fe­ vered-brow may be going the way of the dodo bird. Today, more than ever, nurses are &lInor S . Schrade r , Editor serving where people need help. Dea /gn: Grey Studio, Inc. From nearby urban ghettos to remote Asian villages, young men and women who want to help others are discover­ on the cover ing that they can offer an important and needed skill through nursing. Nursing student Ruth Webster holds a young At least, that's how some of PMC's patient at Crazer·Chester Medical Center. With the acquisition of the School of Nurs­ nursing students see it. ing, formerly associated with the Crazer Foun­ Susan Dyczko, for example, a junior dation, PM C Colleges gained a new four-year from Ridgewood, ew Jersey, has program , thirty four students, eight fulltime been interested in American Indians faculty members, and a $730,000 bu i ld ing. ever since childhood when she watched old John Wayne movies on TV. During high school she pursued the subject in more scholarly ways. in this issue: A New

A New Cap for PMC Cap for The School of Nu rsing offers a relevant education 2 PMC ow she would like to use her nursing education by working to improve the conditions of American Indians. The January Program Through the Public Health Service, After a trial run , the she can work on an Indian reserva­ faculty adopts new program 8 tion. In fact, if she agrees to work for the U.S. P.H.S. for two years it will pay for her final year at PMC. The Pub­ Around the Dome ...... 13 lic Health Service offers similar op­ portunities to nurses who want to work in clinics in deprived areas, in Alaska with Eskimos or in migrant About Alumni 16 worker camps. Barbara Belden is another nursing student who sees her career as a way to help others . She is interested in urban disadvantaged, but her experi­ Photo cred its: R. William Lindsey, cover, pages 3, 4 (left), 6, 7; ence at PMC has shifted her career Frank DiG iacomo, pages 4 (top and bottom), 5, 9, 10, 11, 12. goals. After talking with some of the students on campus from Chester, she feels that she can do more through .hospital administration working to IMPACT is published five times a year in November, January, March, May and August by PMC Col/eges, Chester, Pa. 19013 open new job opportunities for the' for alumni, students, faculty, staff, trustees and other friends disadvantaged than she could as a of PMC. Office of publication is Fourteenth and Chestnut Streets, Chester, Pa. 19013. Send form 3579 to IMPACT public health nurse in an inner-city PMC Col/eges, Chester, Pa. 19013. ' clinic.

2 Frank Heinze has already spent two work, possibly working for the U. S. interns and medical residents from the years with the Peace Corps in a small Agency for International Develop­ Medical Center. village in Nepal. As an agricultural ment. For instance, he might super­ PMC and the College of Nursing extension worker he introduced im­ vise a local birth control clinic. of the Crozer Foundation were not proved varieties of crops and showed Susan, Barbara and Frank are all complete strangers. For a number of farmers how to raise them. "We were newcomers to the PMC campus. They years, there had been a cooperative long on theory," he said, "but we are students in PMC's new School of arrangement betvveen the two institu­ didn't have confidence in it. What if Nursing, acquired late last summer tions enabling nursing students to at­ the new crops failed? The farmer's from the Crozer Foundation which tend PMC Colleges for two years, livelihood depended on it." moved from Chester to Rochester, then to complete their nursing major From this experience, Frank felt N.Y. at Crozer. he needed further education (he al­ Included in the acquisition: The Now, the School of Nursing is an ready held a bachelor's degree in Ger­ Towers, a modem air-conditioned integral part of PMC Colleges with man from Wagner College). He dormitory located on approximately students spending all four years on the chose nursing. seven acres of land adjacent to the campus. Nursing students have moved "I hope to go back to Nepal. One Crozer-Chester Medical Center. This into Dorm 7 and the Castle and the can use medicine to do so many things. building, which was completed last staff is comfortably settled on the sec­ If you heal them, then they will listen April at a cost of $730,000 and is more ond floor of Old Main. to you." than 50% paid for, is presently occu­ Here Dean Dorothy M. Stewart, a He is interested in public health pied by PMC male students as well as blonde-haired vivacious grandmother

THE SCHOOL OF NURSING

1JIJIfI",(:alre clinic in Chester takes a hemoglobin count.

PMC IMPACT . Spring '71 3 of four, directs the activities of her field of nursing such as mental health of Nursing after consultation with hos­ staff (eight full-time and two part-time or maternal and child care, work out pital authorities. The student reports instructors) and supervises 34 nursing of their offices on the second floor of to the hospital at 8 a.m. and works students. Old Main where nursing students with assigned patients until noon or attend classes, hold conferences or 4 p.m. During this period the student Dean Outlines Program gather for informal social hours. accompanies the patient to x-ray, to Sitting in her pleasant, informally But the inshllctors have roles which the lab, to physical therapy, to surgery, decorated office, Dean Stewart out­ reach far beyond the confines of the studies the patient's chart, gives the lined the way the nursing curriculum campus. One of their primary tasks is prescribed medication and writes a operates. "During their freshman and to supervise and arrange the students' thorough report on the entire case sophomore years students take the clinical education at the Crozer-Ches­ under study. At the end of the day regular liberal arts subjects plus cer­ tel' Medical Center (CCMC), Haver­ the student will do further individual tain required science courses. Then in ford State Hospital and the Commun­ study and research into the patient's their junior and senior years they con­ ity Nursing Service and Child Health particular illness or injury and later, in centrate on nursing courses and clin­ Centers of Chester and Vicinity. classroom discussion, will share the ical work, graduating with a bachelor experience with classmates who may of science degree in nursing." Clinical Education be covering different types of medical Junior students who transfer to PMC The junior and senior students' clin­ or surgical cases. In this way the from other colleges must already have ical education involves from l~ to 3 group learns from one another's clin­ completed the required freshman and days a week of actual on-the-spot ex­ ical instruction. sophomore courses, Dean Stewart perience and observation. Their medi­ Maternal and child care education went on to explain. Arrangements for cal-surgical nursing takes place at is handled in much the same way, with direct transfers have been worked out Crozer-Chester Medical Center. Here students participating in all phases of with several colleges. each student is assigned to patients nursing care in childbirth and infant The faculty of the School of Nurs­ who have been carefully selected in and child care. ing, most of them specialists in some advance by the faculty of the School During this period the student also

Frank Poliafico finds nursing education useful while serving as trainer for the football team in the fall. During the summer between iunior and senior year, students learn Dean Dorothy M. Stewart, obstetrical and pediatriC nursing. in her comfortable office on Here, Mrs. Sara Magee, who has two the second floor of Old Main, children of her own, gives water confers with a student. to a newborn girl in the nursery.

4 learns the importance of continuity of medication, assisting stroke victims, dents spend two days a week at care between hospital and community instructing the mother of a new baby Haverford State Hospital where they and is encouraged to follow the pa­ in health care and so forth. While the participate in a "one-to-one" relation­ tient's progress even after he has re­ student is in the field, the instructor ship with the patients. Here, students turned to the family environment. from the School of Nursing remains select the patient they wish to work Thus the student is introduced to available (in the agency office "sitting with from among several choices. community nursing. by the phone," Dean Stewart des­ They then attempt to create "inter­ Community Nursing cribed it), ready to answer any ques­ action" by working closely with the In this field the students' education tions that might come up, or, if neces­ patient, spending at least one hour a begins with a study of the functions sary, to go to the student's assistance. day in an "intensive-interview" type of of the various branches of public and Again , students are expected to keep situation. The rest of the time they family health organizations such as records, write reports and discuss their may accompany the patient to group physical and occupational therapy, various experiences with classmates. therapy, occupational therapy, or to family and homemaker services, sani­ A method of team teaching is used to the snack bar, trying to develop an tation and communicable diseases, coordinate the students' newly ac­ awareness of his problem and to re­ clinics for alcoholics, planned parent­ quired knowledge. Simply stated, this motivate him. In this way, the nurses hood and mental health. After they is when the instructors in the various are encouraged to think of themselves have become familiar with these ser­ nursing fi elds sit in on all lectures, all as therapeutic agents and to work vices they embark on fi eld trips ­ clinics, all discussions, so they can an­ with the patient, not with his diag­ again to carefully screened patients swer whatever questions arise in their nosis . and environments - at first in the com­ specialty. Group discussion follows, with at pany of a community health nurse; least two hours spent for each hour later, entirely alone. Mental Health Education the student devoted to the patient. On these visits the students wear During the mental health phase of At the hospital the students also attend their student nursing uniforms and their education, which takes place lectures by authorities in the field of perform such duties as administering during their senior year, nursing stu- psychiatry, chemo-therapeutics, etc.,

Above: Women nursing students relax in the Castle after a morning of clinical education at the hospital and lunch in MacMorland Center.

Left: At a community dermatology clinic Francine Ferris and Kathleen Minteer listen intently as Dr. Adolph A. Bleier explains a patient's treatment.

5 At the hospital, Francine Ferris helps a patient exercise on parallel bars during physical therapy.

Weighing infants is pmt of the routine care students learn at the child care clinic.

6 observe group situations on drug ad­ Today, more than ever before there graduates went on to take his mas­ diction and alcoholism, attend case is a large demand for well-qualified ter's degree at Yale in maternal-infant conferences. nurses with a broad comprehension care. Another male graduate is associ­ While studying mental health, the of the various fi elds of nursing. Both ated with the adolescents unit of the students spend one day each week at hospitals and cities are having trouble Institute of Hospital. Pennsylvania House in Chester, a finding enough nurses capable of fill­ Some male nurses find careers in in­ halfway house for discharged patients. ing the expanding roles created by so­ dustry, others in the military service During the day, the nursing students cially-concerned communities. In fact, where they insb'uct laymen and in­ also make home visits to discharged the U. S. Department of Health, Edu­ crease their own knowledge of emer­ patients. They come to understand the cation and Welfare es timates that 150- gency care. importance of following up patients 000 nurses are needed immediately. Military Careers in the home setting and learn that the One frequently overlooked aspect emphasis and responsibility for this is of nursing is the need for male nurses Women students too, find the mili­ shifting to the community where visit­ in today's urban communities. Mid­ tary service offers excellent career op­ ing nurse services handle referrals wifery is increasing, particularly in portunities as well as providing the from the hospital. inner cities such as Harlem where means of paying for their last two Puerto Rican and Negro families often years of college. The Army and Navy Students Keep Records cannot afford rising hospital costs. finance one year of college for each Each student records what goes on urses are desperately needed to as­ two-year enlistment in the service. In during his relationship with the pa­ sist at birth and to follow the progress addition the Army offers a special tient at the hospital, and at the end of home-born babies and their moth­ bargain of tvv'o-for-three, if desired. of the course writes a summary stat­ ers. Yet many areas are unsafe for urses who enlist are graduated as ing how the experience helped not women nurses to enter, especially at first lieutenants. only the patient, but the nursing stu­ night. Similar financial arrangements as dent as well. One of the School of Nursing's male noted earlier are also available from the U. S. Public Health Service. The School of Nursing, though small Kathleen Dalrymple gives a patient medication. and comparatively new (the first class graduated in 1968), already boasts a loyal and hard-working alumni force of 29 (26 women and three men). Two are head nurses and two are staff nurses at CCMC, four work in vet­ eran's hospitals and several are em­ ployed in public health agencies. It is the hope of Dean Stewart and her staff that the present enrollment of 34 in PMC's four-year baccalau­ reate program will steadily increase as high schools and colleges are ap­ prised of this newly-instituted curric­ ulum.

Chartered by the Common­ wealth of Pennsylvania, the School of Nursing has full ap­ proval of the State Board of Nurse Examiners. It is also ap­ proved by the Department of Public Instruction. It is accred­ ited by the Middle States Associ­ cation of Colleges and Second­ ary Schools and has been granted Reasonable Assurance of Ac­ creditation from the N ationaZ League for Nursing.

PMC IMPACT. Spring '71 7 THE -.JANUARY PROGRAM

• During January, the PMC campus included Cape Kennedy, the National Gallery of Art, the Chesapeake­ Delaware Canal and the United Nations. These are some of the places students went during an experimental January Program that allowed students to take an intensive month-long course on- or off-campus or pursue a project on their own through independent study. They earned academic credit. Although there were mixed reactions on campus to the January Program, the faculty studied this year's ex­ perience and then voted to adopt an interim program in January. When the program is implemented, each student will participate in the program two out of four Januaries that he is in residence. To provide the interim period in January, classes start earlier in the fall and exams will come before Christmas. Students who participated in the program this year learned some interesting things in some unconventional ways.

Susan Osborne was one of fifteen students who spent January at Elwyn Institute, a voluntary, non-profit edu­ cational and training facility for the handicapped. Susan taught mathematics to emotionally disturbed children - an experience she found "challenging and good, even though it tried my patience on a number of occasions."

8 AN EXTENDED CAMPUS

Three biology students train goldfish in a specially-constructed tank as part of memory cell experiment.

Other FMC students performed different tasks at the Three hopeful premed students were preoccupied with I nstitute. One worked in the industries section helping goldfish during January. A desire "to do something dif­ to direct projects such as packaging spoons in plastic ferent" led them to conduct a memory cell experiment bags. Another was involved in the work-study pmgram; with goldfish. others worked with the pre-school children. After a week spent making the equipment, Ross Dar­ For Susan, contact with these children brought her to lington, Harold Hoffmeier and Joseph Archibald spent an important career decision. She knew she was inter­ eight days training four goldfish to turn away from light ested in elementary teaching, but last year when she did rather than toward it as they would do instinctively. Con­ practice teaching at a nearby elenLentary school she ditioned by a mild electric shock, the fi sh learned to found it routine, even boring. jump over a barrier in the specially constructed tank. The three biology majors then injected a chemical substance At Elwyn, it was different. Emotionally-disturbed chil­ into the fish intended to inhibit protein synthesis and dren are difficult to work with, but Susan felt that she erase the memory. The students, working under the could help them more. A little girl who usually did not direction of Associate Professor Thomas DeCaro, were talk, for example, 1'esponded at length to Susan's ques­ able to determine experimentally that the chemical inhib­ tions about a book she was reading. itor did cause the well-trained fish to forget. The next N ow Susan is convinced that she wants to concentrate step is injecting brain cells from trained fish into un­ on special education at the elementary level. trained fish to find out if they acquire the memory.

PMC IMPACT. Spring '71 9 "'vVe are only repeating other people's work here," explains Joseph Archibald. There is strong indication, through this type of experiment, that memory may be coded in protein molecules in brain cells. "We can take our experiment further during the spring term in Biology 399, independent study," Archibald adds.

A class of both cadets and civilians took a close look at the role of the military in a democratic society, mostly through th e eyes of gll est speakers. "These speakers have a peculiar expertise in their fi eld," explains M ai. Ronald L. Beckett, assistant professor of military science and instructor for the January co urse. One of the speakers was iOlll'l1alist Ward Just, author of recent articles in the Atlantic Monthly and a new book, Military Men. Both book and articles were based on 10 Pennsylvania's Senator Richard Schweiker talks to months of research and 250 interviews. Declining to students studying "Strateay for Peace." speak formally, he answered questions and offered opin­ ions for two hours. Queried most about an all-volunteer army, Just said he felt it was not "in the American tradition. It would become an army of mercenary troops," he said, "more separated from society, more inward looking and rigid than it is now." Although he sees a need for reform, Just feels that "the Army should hunker down and 'take' it for a few years. What's got everybody bugged is the , and it's a bad time to make strtl ctural changes in the Army." There were other topics discussed with obvious dif­ ferences of opinion. Making it clear that he considered his book a situation report on the Army, Just commented candidly, "] don't have solutions."

"At the United Nations a man who had served as mediator in Cyprus talked to us about the peace-keeping Football coach Frank Glazier and player John Keebler operations there. I didn't know very much about Cyprus show Kate Sisso/1S how to block a pass. - it was impressive to hear about it from someone who had actually been involved." trade organizations and other topics from the United Na­ This was the reaction of freshman Mike Zimmerman. tions staff. While in New York the students had an oppor­ With nine other students in Professor Franz Gross's tunity to visit the Russian embassy - or see "Hair" (Mike "Strategy for Peace" course, he went where things are opted for seeing the musical). happening to get firsthand reports. Both trips included research - in the Library of Con­ During a week in Washington, the group was briefed gress and the New York Public Library. At the end of by State Dep:utment officials, Pentagon personnel and the course Mike was required to write a paper on nuclear World Bank and staffs. They heard some­ weapons and arms control, suggesting his own solutions. times diHerent views on a gamut of international ques­ tions - arms control, the Middle East, Rhodesia, Africa Kate Sissons, a fr eshman, learned to coach football, and Asia. In a session with Pennsylvania's Senator Rich­ basketball, lacrosse and track during January. ard Schweiker they heard about the new Congress, the She likes sports, obviously. And she thinks a knowledge SALT talks, commitments in the Middle East and the of sports will be helpful to her when she is teaching ele­ prospects for an all-volunteer army. mentary school. That's why she signed up for the course Traveling to the United Nations in New York the stu­ on coaching offered by the physical education staff. dents heard about UNICEF, minority voting rights, We stopped in one morning while the class of 25 was

10 courses before, others were taking their first serious look at art. One student was interested enough to go back to the National Gallery on his own.

A course in journalism, offered by Associate Professor Edmund R. Biddle, interested a cadet who writes for "The Dome," plans to be a lawyer and wants to improve his writing skill. As part of the course, Maris H . Eshleman spent time at the local newspaper office studying the case of the Chester Sixteen - a group convicted of conspiracy to 1 riot following a disturbance after a football game in 1968. Not only did he study the newspaper accounts but he re­ viewed the leaal proceedings and had an opportunity to talk with the lawyers preparing to appeal the case. For him, January was a chance to do some reading, alld some hitchhiking around the country and, as he puts it, "to have time to think and talk to people."

The space center at Cape Kennedy was the laboratory for an engineering studen t, Jim Sloan, who spent January studying telemetry problems at the Ai r Force Laboratory. For Jim, an Air Force Institute of Technology student at PMC and electronics sys tems officer, it was on-the­ job training. He studied several telemetry systems, then selected one system for detailed study. Working on this problem involving a telemetry system of a satellite, Jim put together data and spent some time each day with a civilian engineer on the base who "told me what was right or wrong and gave me references." Looking back at the month, Jim says he enjoyed dig­ ging information out on his own and the chance to use the laboratory's excellent library. "I had a good time, I learned a lot," he concluded.

John Sipos and Christopher Hanifin clocked over Hundreds of fo ssils collected by these students will 1000 miles on Chris's 1964 Dodge Dart and collected be studied during spring term. hundreds of fossils on seven fi eld trips. learning how to coach track under the direction of Coach Now covering two long laboratory tables, the collected George Hansell. The class practiced the jobs of timers, specimens range from large fossilized shells to tiny par­ judges, starters and runners in a track meet. ticles that look like grains of sand until a microscope re­ For her paper at the end of the course, Kate devised a veals their fantastic shapes. system, of foo tball offense. Says football coach Frank Both men, who plan to teach, were pleased to have a Glazier, who also taught the class, "Kate is the most month to do intensive fi eld work despite the bitter knowledgeable coed in football in the U. S." weather. On a trip to the Chesapeake-Delaware Canal the wind-chill index was 5 degrees and they could work One of the most popular courses was an art museum only 20 minutes at a stretch. "When it's cold, everything tour under the leadership of Assistant Professor of Fine lo oks like a fossil," Chris commented. "But by now we Arts Gabriel Lukas. know pretty well what is and what isn't." Traveling by chartered bus, 24 students visited the Their project was supervised by Assistant Professor Museum of Art, the collection of the Barnes Richard P. Boekenkamp whose own fi eld is paleontology. Foundation in Merion, the Metropolitan Museum in New During the spring term, both students are taking special York City and the National Gallery of Art in Washing­ problems in biology and they will have a chance to probe ton. Although some of the students had taken fin e arts the what and when of their collection.

PMC IMPACT. Spring 71 11 THE QUESTION OF A VOLUNTEER ARMY Colonel Montague outlines the Army's "formidable" tasle of ending reliance 011 the draft by July 1973.

The prospects for a modern , all-volun­ volun teer, leaving a " large gap" of Blumenson, historian and professor at teer arm y came under close scrutiny 100,000. Acadia Unive rsity in Nova Scotia, put from military professionals and ROTC Calling the approach experimental, it this way: students at the fourth annual military Colonel Montague stated that the Army "A small volunteer arm y is ready but co ll oquium at PMC on February 27. was looking at its own methods of opera­ is it big enough to do the job? It costs The all-day session was attended by tion, striving to make the Army more more, but can the economy support it? about 200 cadets and Army personnel profess ional and at the same time remov­ It does away with the coercion of the from 18 area ROTC institutions. ing some of the irritants. He pointed out draft, but does everyone share the dan­ During the morning, students and that the attention of the media had been ger? Is it democratic?" He concluded that if there were a military professionals met in four groups directed toward relaxation of off-duty total war, then a mass army might be to discuss aspects of an all-volunteer rules. "We're makin g grea ter demands better, but in guerilla-type warfare a army - its effect on ROTC, national and during duty hours," he asserted, "asking volunteer army - hardhitting - could do foreign policy, its relationship to society, for more professionalism." the job better. and the impact on the army itself. "We also believe we have to test out A sociologist at Northwestern Uni­ some pay incentive," he sa id . In addi­ At the luncheon, three speakers of­ versity, Professor Moskos asserted that tion to a general pay raise, his offi ce has fered different points of view. anti-militarism was concentrated at the suggested special pay for men in the in­ Col. Robert M. Montague, from the intell ectual and cultural level of society. fantry, armor and artillery services. offi ce of the Lt. Gen. George I. Forsythe, He blamed hostile coverage of the mili­ special assistant to the chief of staff for The Army is stepping up its recruiting tary-industrial complex by the mass planning the modern all-volunteer army, effort, he reported, by increasing the media. spoke for General Forsythe who had number of recruiters and stations and "Anti-militarism is becoming the anti­ been originall y scheduled. paying recruiters an additional $50 per semitism of the intellectual world," he He told the audience that the Army month. They are also testin g the effect stated. was working at the "formidable task" of and desirability of an advertising cam­ He warned that the Army must not carrying out the directive of President paign. overreact to criticism from a small area of ixo n to reduce reliance on the dra ft to The other two speakers, Professors the population. "Too many changes," he zero by July 1973. Martin Blumenson and Charl es C. Mos­ contended, "could boomerang, disen­ He explained that currentl y the Arm y kos raised some ques tions about the con­ chanting career men and making the needs 260,000 men and about 160,000 cept of an all-volu nteer army. Arm y onl y sli ghtly more tolerable."

Future Army officers discuss impact of volunteer army on national and foreign policy.

12 Dr. Blumberg Dies Dr. Leo Blumberg, fonner chairman of the Engineering Division, died Febru­ ary 28, 1971 in Wilmington. Services at Temple Beth Emeth were ARCHBISHOP OBSERVES RELIGIOUS EMPHASIS DAY attended by a delegation of faculty and His Eminence the Most Reverend students. lakovos, Archbishop of the Greek Ortho­ Dr .. Blumberg taught engineering at dox Church of North and South Amer­ PMC from 1947 to 1962. On his retire­ ica, recently spent a day in residence on ment, he was lauded in the PMC Alum­ ntis: "He is a dedicated teacher - and a campus in observation of Religious Em­ good teacher - with a way of motiva ting phasis Day. students to a high level of accomplish­ The stately religious leader talked with ment . . . Dr. Blumberg enjoys an ex­ students during an afternoon seminar, ceedingly broad acquaintance in busi­ answering questions on topics ranging ness and industry which has enabled him from religion to drugs, the pill and to place his engineering graduates read­ abortion. ily. Dr. Blumberg always has taken a personal interest in his students, and he During the student seminar, the Arch­ continues to follow their progress as bishop said that he found an increased they pursue their careers. He long has interest in religion among American stu­ been one of the most popular members dents. of the PMC staff ." And he felt that religion could elim­ When he retired, more than 300 for­ inate the use of drugs. "Many times a mer students attended a testimonial din­ student will begin experimenting with ner for him. drugs to see if he can elevate himself to A prominent consulting engineer, he a position where he will be able to com­ Century Club Organized was listed in American Men of Science, municate with God," he asserted. Who's Who in Engineering in America, The Century Club has been formed W ho's Who in Engineering in the East, Taking a stand that several students to recognize individuals who contribute and Who's W ho in Delaware. took issue with, Archbishop lakovos told at least $100 to the PMC annual giving He held bachelor degrees in electrical the audience that he opposed the dan­ program. engineering and in mechanical engineer­ gerous trend of thought "that can kill or Membership in the Century Club al­ ing from the University of Delaware. He thwart life through a pill or abortion. I ready includes more than 116 alumni, also held professional degrees in both cannot fi nd any justification for abortion," parents and friends who have made lead­ areas from the University of Delaware. he stated. "You can't legislate through ership gifts to the College. In 1954 PMC honored him by award­ state bodies on moral questions involving These unrestricted funds are used to ing him an honorary doctor of engineer­ human life." support salaries, student aid, books for ing degree. The day's events culminated with a the library and other operating expenses. He is survived by his wife, Julia .. college convocation in the evening. Arch­ In appreciation of their support of the The Dr. Leo Blumberg Scholarship bishop lakovos was awarded an honorary College, Century Club members will be Fund has been established in his mem­ doctor of literature degree and delivered accorded special recognition including ory. an address. newsletters fr om the President's Office.

PMC IMPACT. Spring "71 13 Recent Gifts to College Recent gifts to PMC Colleges include grants to the Sesquicentennial capital campaign, the School of Nursing and the School of Engineering. A check for $10,000 from the Gulf Oil Foundation was presented recently to President Clarence R. Moll by Jack Burk, general manager, and Charlie Coleman, manager of industrial relations, Gulf Oil Refin ery of Philadelphia. This grant to the Sesquicentennial cap­ ital campaign provides funds for the major building program nearing comple­ tion. Already in use, the Lt. William J. Wolfgram Memorial Library was dedi­ cated last fall. The Bernard Lee Schwartz Physical Education Center and the Louis Kapelski Learning Center are Delaware County Historical Society President Samuel H. Newsome cuts rib­ scheduled to be completed in June. bon to Society's new library. Looking on: Robert S. Pew, Mrs. Helen Green­ The School of ursing recentl y re- halgh, President Moll, Lee Brown and f. Newton Peu;, Jr . ceived an anonymous foundation grant of $15,000. A $5,000 grant has been awarded to HISTORICAL SOCIETY DEDICATES NEW LIBRARY the School of Engineering by E. I. The new library of the Delaware County Historical Society, located in the Lt. du Pont de Nemours & Company. The grant was made to the engineering me­ William J. Wolfgram Memorial Library, was dedicated February 21 in memory chanics program. of John C. Pew, Sr. Last year, a similar gift from Du Pont Pew, who died in 1954, was president of Sun Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co. was used to purchase an industri1l1 data for 31 years, during which time it" was the world's largest privately owned acquisition and control system employed shipyard. He was also a trustee of PtvIC Colleges for 31 years. As a civic in both undergraduate courses and in leader, he founded the Welfare Federation of Chester and Vicinity (now the seminars for engineers from industry. United Fund) and served as its president for 10 years. He helped to develop the Chamber of Commerce and actively promoted the industrial growth of the Faculty and Staff County. • Assistant Professor Thomas C. Jones The Delaware County Historical Society has been on the PMC campus for has co-authored a paper, "Ferripolyphos­ four years. Its'new facility, located on the first Boor of the libralY, has 4,000 phate as a Whey Protein Precipitant," feet of space including two small rooms for historical documents and microfilm, presented during the environmental chemistry session of Middle Atlantic Re­ and approximately 5,000 books and 4,000 documents in the collection. gional Meeting of the American Chem­ Those taking part in the dedication included J. Tewton Pew, Jr., senior vice­ ical Society. Professor Jones and his wife, president in charge of marketing of the Southeast ational Bank of Penn­ also a chemist, recently spoke on, "Chem­ sylvania and a grandson of John C. Pew, Sr. ; Samuel H. Newsome, president of istry and Applications of Some Con­ the Delaware County Historical Society; and representing PMC, President densed Phosphates," at a seminar of the Clarence R. Moll and Lee C. Brown, librarian. Eastern Marketing and Nutrition Re­ search Division in Philadelphia. Mrs. Jones is a senior chemist with the Divi­ sion. Academy Superintendent Speaks New Nursing Alumni • At the ACS meeting, Prof. Irvin M. Gottlieb presented a paper, "A Student­ Major General William A. Knowlton, Nursing alumni, formerly of the Col­ Laboratory Exercise to Illustrate Hydro­ superintendent of the U. S. Military lege of Nursing of the Crozer Founda­ gen Bonding." Academy at West Point, was guest of tion and now of PMC Colleges, met in honor and principal speaker at the Cadet February for a luncheon with Dean Dor­ • Associate Professor Martin A. Gage is Corps' annual "dining-in" ceremony in othy M. Stewart and the nursing faculty. author of an article, "New Educational February. After lunch, the nurses were the guests Expense Deduction Cases Exhibit a Lib­ He spoke on ROTC training and the of the Alumni Association at a reception eralizing Trend," in the February 1971 military aspects of the duties cadets will welcoming them as PMC alumni. Journal of Taxation. assume as second lieutenants. At a business meeting, the group voted • Athletic Director George A. Hansell General Knowlton served as Secretary to petition the Association for their or­ has been elected secretary-treasurer of of the Army General Staff in Washing­ ganization to be called "the Crozer Chap­ the Middle Atlantic Intercollegiate Foot­ ton before his appointment to West Point. ter." This petition has been approved. ball Association.

14 J BASKETBALL SEASON ENDS ON CONTROVERSIAL PLAY The 1970-71 basketball season has "The kids worked so hard since Oct. ended for the Pioneers but thoughts of 15 and now this," said a dejected Rowe what might have been linger on. after the game. After upsetting defending CAA small "I don't mind losing on a tap, but I coll ege champion Philadelphia Textile, just hate to see the season end on such a .53-52, in the regular season fin ale, Coach controversial play." Alan Rowe took his team to Moravian Rowe's team always seemed to run College in Bethl ehem for the Middle At­ into a Delaware (74-54 loss) or a Ford­ lantic Conference Southern Division play­ ham (68-53 loss at Penn's Palestra) in Fabian Bachrach offs, confident that two victories there the midst of a winning streak against would make the Pioneers unofficial cham­ small college opposition. Trustees Elect Wilder pions of the entire MAC. Those two defeats ended twin four Robert C. Wilder, president of Lewis Textile had been the regular season game winning skeins (longest of the & Gilman, Inc., in Philadelphia, has been Northern Division titlist and the Rams season) for the Pioneers. elected to the Board of Trustees. also copped the Northern Division play­ Wally Rice, 6-3 junior guard who off, so PMC could have claimed league never played basketball at West Phila­ He has been with the public relations supremacy with a playoff success. delphia High, led the Pioneers to an 11-4 firm of Lewis & Gilman since 1950 and record for second place in MAC South­ has been president since 1964. The Pioneers were not so fortunate. A controversial official's call in the final ern Division play. He is a member of the board of sev­ second of the MAC opener with Lebanon With a 24 point effort in the fin al eral organizations including the Greater Valley College sent PMC reeling to game with Lebanon Valley, Wally to­ Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce, the its 10th and fin al defeat of the season taled 485 for the season to shatter the Medical College of Pennsylvania, the against 15 wins. previous season high for a PMC junior Inter-County Hospitali zation Plan, Inc., formerly held by the great Earl Wentzel. Leading 63-62 as the final seconds the Philadelphia Coll ege of Pharmacy Rice scored at a 19.6 points per game and Science, Metropolitan Board, YMCA ticked off, the Pioneers had the game apparentl y won until referee Jim Arm­ clip and took runnerup honors in re­ of Philadelphia and Vicinity, the United bounding with 9.2 a game. Fund of Philadelphia, United Health strong ruled that a tap in by Lebanon Valley had beaten the buzzer to give the Soph Joe Kell y, 6-7 center from Nor­ Services and the Pennsylvania Ballet ristown, led all Pioneer boardmen with Company. Flying Dutchmen a 64-63 win and a berth in the fin als against Johns Hopkins, 9.4 grabs a game. Mr. Wilder is a graduate of Wooster a team that PMC had beaten earlier in Prospects are bright for next year since Coll ege. He and his wife, Annabel, live the season, 76-46. Rowe will see only one player graduate. in Penn Valley and have two children. The second referee and the official Captain Tim King, the lone senior, timekeeper in the Lebanon Valley en­ averaged nearly six points a game. Businessmen Work for PMC counter disagreed with Armstrong's call. C. McElrone During March a group of alumni, par­ ents, area businessmen and PMC fac­ ulty and staff visited companies in Penn­ sylvania and ew Jersey for the "Busi­ nessmen for PMC" campaign. An important part of the College's annual fund, the "Businessmen for PMC" is an expanded Delco Fund campaign with emphasis on personal visits to more than 200 companies. An international buffet Chairman for the campaign is Steve for faculty and students Pahides '63, regional vice-president, raised funds for Southeast National Bank. The Delaware foreign student scholar­ County area is headed by Jack Randall ships. Here, Sanieev '68 and Steve Pahides. Chairmen for Ahluwalia of Kenya stirs Philadelphia, Montgomery and Bucks the main dish, a spicy Counties are Gregg Strom '64 and Sid­ lamb curry prepared by ney Mathues '51. Vincent Deasey '50 is Assistant Professor chairman for . John Sevier.

PMC IMPACT. Spring '71 15 '49 '52 Burt Mustin updates his career: A research elech'ical engineer, Ro­ Lt. Col. Vito D. Stipo, director of "The boys may be interested in know­ bert L. Bradney is with the Cornell facilities of the Army Topographical ing I have just completed a feature Aeronautical Laboratory Inc. in Buf­ Command, is the Canaveral Dish'ict role in a big TV special, 'The Ameri­ falo, .Y. Engineer for the Army Corps of cans: a pilot for a proposed series Engineers, Pah'ick AFB, Fla. in which I sing, dance, do setting-up John J. Wolski is director of re­ exercises and appear in six sketches. search and development for Selby, I'm in it from start to finish and it is Battersby & Co. in Philadelphia, man­ quite different from my usual 'they ufactW'ers and installers of seamless went thataway' roles. It will not be Roors. Living in Springfield, the Wol­ '53 shown for several months, as they skis have three children - Victoria is In Palm Beach Gardens, Fla., hope to start the series in the fall." a junior at Penn State, John is a senior at Springfield High School and Terry Henry D. Bogatin, Jr. is president of is in the Springfield Junior High Castle Builders, Inc. School.

'24 '51 REUNION CLASS '54 Alan S. Meyerhoff is on a trip start­ ing in the Canary Islands, then William J. Graham, Jr., director of Egbert Horton, Upper Providence proceeding through Scandinavia and development of Wagner College, was Township, has been named adminis­ Russia. recently elected president of the Lu­ trative assistant to the president of theran Laymen's Movement of the Delaware County Community College. Lutheran ChW'ch in America and Chairman of the LCA's Commission on Stewardship. '32 Joseph F. Kent of King of Prussia received a master of engineering, en­ '55 Royston Crewdson is vice-president gineering science degree from Penn­ Alexander Woschenko, living in and branch manager of the American sylvania State University in Decem­ Framingham, Mass., is vice-president Trading Company, Japan Ltd. In ber. of finance for Industrial Service Cen­ Japan for over twenty years, he and ter, Inc. in Cambridge. his wife live in Kobe. Alumni Deaths Recent deaths as reported to the alumni office: '58 REUNION C. A. Metzger '29, Wynnewood, CLASS '41 REUNION Pa. , August 1, 1970. CLASS George A. Cleaver and Walter C. Hurst W. Hackett '28, Sunbury, Evans have been promoted to lieuten­ Living in Barrington, R.I., James Pa., on January 11, 1971. He ant colonels. H. Diffenderfer is plant manager of was president of Hackett Hard­ the Tower Iron Works in Seekonk, ware Stores, Inc. Douglas H. Pawling is a co-pilot Mass. with Pan American World Airlines.

16 '80 Maj. Edward R. Green has been selected for advanced service school. Richard Kramme is treasurer for P. E. Kramme, Inc. in Monroeville, N. J. The Krammes have four boys: Mike, 13; Karl, 9; Jeff, 8; and Scott, 5.

REUNION '81 CLASS Maj. Joseph D. Newsome has been selected for advanced service school.

Gen. Frank S. Besson, Jr. (U.S.A. '82 Col. John H. Longbottom '43, chief ret.), former commanding general of Assistant director of student' activi­ of staff of the Defense Ammunition the U. S. Army Materiel Command, ties at Queens College, Francis J. Procurement and Supply Agency, Jol­ received the Lt. Gen. Charles F. B. Colantuno reports that he is working iet, Ill., was awarded the Lt. Gen. Price Silver Medal for excellence in on a master's degree. Married with Charles F. B. Price Bronze Medal at military management at a recent din­ two children, he adds that he is a the awards dinner. ner sponsored by the Eagle Society reserve officer. While in Vietnam, he and the Lt. Don E. Olmstead Me­ was awarded the Soldiers Medal, morial Company. Combat Infantry Badge, Bronze Star, Army Commendation Medal and the Vietnamese Honor MedalIst Class. Sebastian Faro received a Ph.D. '83 from the University of Iowa in August '57 and now is a postdoctoral fellow at Edward C. Schaller is secretary­ Writes Millard J. Gordon of Harris­ the New York Botanical Gardens. Liv­ treasurer of Schaller's Bakery Inc. in burg: "On October 26, 1970, the ac­ ing in Dobbs Ferry, he and his wife, Greensburg, Pa. The Schaller's twin counting firm with which I was asso­ Sharon, have a one-year-old daughter, daughters celebrated their first birth­ ciated merged with Laventhal Krek­ Ann Marie. day in January. They also have another daughter. stein Horwath & Horwath. I am Bruce M. Hanley, now a zone man­ conti,~ uing as a partner with the new ager in sales with Ford Marketing On General Electric's management firm. Corp., reports a daughter, Jennifer training program, Thomas A. Cres­ Maj. Christ F. Potamos has been Lynn, born in September. cenzo was awarded an MBA from the University of South Florida. selected to attend Armed Forces Staff On a recent visit to campus, Bill College. Kester reported that he is sales man­ Lawrence M. Liss of Bryn Mawr ager for Du Pont in Chicago. is president of Flightways Corpora­ Maj. Daniel H. Lucy h as been tion and is a member of the Phila­ '58 selected to attend USA Command delphia Aviation Committee. and General Staff College. William John Nelson is an attorney Gerald Wray Peterson is a pro­ Another September girl, Nicole in Ft. Myers, Fla. A d aughter, gram analyst with the U. S. Depart­ Elizabeth, was born to the Eugene J. Heather Anne, was born in October. ment of Labor. Madzelans. He is a cost accountant with Du Pont in Wilmington. Salvatore F. Pisasale is teaching '58 math in the Philadelphia School Dis­ trict. In Chicago, Samuel H. Ramont is '84 corporate controller for Wilson Phar­ A special agent for the U. S. Secret Promoted to staff engineer: George maceutical & Chemical Corp. Service, Glen E. Winn reports that R. Lawrence is employed by IBM, he is "assigned to the Los Angeles Federal Systems Division, in Gaithers­ An institutional salesman for Loeb, area and has frequently protected burg, Md. The Lawrences have two Rhoades & Co., Michael A. Rodgers President Nixon and Vice-President children. is now living in Devon, Pa. He notes: Agnew; frequently been assigned to "As of 1/ 1/ 71 given states of Ala­ the Western White House at San A daughter, Tracy Elizabeth, was bama and Tennessee for institutional Clemente, Calif." The Winns have born in October to the Douglas D. coverage of stocks and bonds." two children. MacDonalds in Upper Montclair.

PMC IMPACT. Spring 71 17 Hugh J. Purnell, Jr. was reelected REUNION president of the Chester County 'GG CLASS Chambers of Commerce and to the Board of Directors of the West Ches­ Associate editor of the Nashville ter Chamber of Commerce. The Pur­ Banner, Michael J. Bonaneld recently nells have a daughter, Kelsy Lynne, held a professional journalism fellow­ born in June. ship at Stanford University. The Bon­ Well-informed alumni are an Completing his work for his mas­ afields' daughter, Victoria, was born asset to PMC Colleges. Alumni are ter of divinity at Asbury Theological in June. asked to refer prospective stu­ Seminary, William L. Rhoads moved dents to PMC and to support the After receiving a master's degree College finan­ to his first church in Berkshire, N. Y., from the State Univerity of New York in January. ciall y. To do at Binghamton in computer science, this effectively, Nick Trainer is in sales with Sar­ Stanley Kiernicki moved to Nashua, they need to tomer Resins, Inc. in Essington Pa. N. H. where he is with the Raytheon know what is The Trainers have three children. Company in New Bedford, Mass. He happening at Maureen, the newest addition, was is married with one daughter and PMC today. born in August. another child expected in the spring. Michael C. Siegfried is an actuarial Most alumni analys t for the Insurance Company in the Dela­ of orth America in Philadelphia. ware Vall ey 'G5 Living in Chadds Ford, he and his are well-informed through the Del­ wife, Jacqueline, have a two-year-old aware County Daily Times and Homer W. Boyer, Jr. of Hender- daughter, Janet Lynn. local radio. However, there are sonville, . C., is a quality conh'ol significant numbers of alumni re­ engineer, x-ray film , for Du Pont. siding at a distance from this area. John H. Burton is supervisor for Over 1,000 alumni hail from Cen­ the Delaware County Department of 'G7 tral and Western Pennsylvania, the Environmental Resource. Claude W. Davis, Jr. of Y9rk is a Northeast, Washington D. C., the From York, Harry Carlip notes that teacher in the York City School Dis­ Midwest, and the ' Vest Coast. he has a new job as Director of Data trict in special education, mentally re­ Their primary source of College Processing for Motor Freight Express. tarded. At the same time he is work­ news is IMPACT. The Car lips' daughter, Marcy Ilyse, ing on a master's in education in was born October 29, 1970. I will soon be "going to the fi eld" special education, mental retardation. as the advance man for a "PMC Living in King of Prussia, Joseph Stephen R. Sturgeon of Bethel Park Today" program. We hope to ex­ V. Carter, Jr. is a sales representative is a construction engineer with U. S. tend alumni awareness by trans­ with AC & S Division of 3-M Com­ Steel in . In Vietnam in porting the multi-faceted advances pany. A daughter, Cari-Lynn, was 1969-70, he was awarded the Bronze of the College from the campus to born to the Carters in April. far-Hung alumni through personal Star. Michael A. Gardner has been contact. named design supervisor in the Cen­ As "advance man" I mean to re­ tral Engineering Department of Sun search our local alumni informa­ Oil Co. The Gardners, with a one­ 'GB tional preferences. Are the alumni year-old daughter, live in West Ches­ interested in a formal , or a loosely­ ter. Discharged from the Army after a six-month tour of duty in Vietnam, structured, informal local organiza­ An accounting supervisor, Stephen tion? Should we have "PMC Hap­ George R. Bertolet, Jr. has returned E. Hughes is with Owens-Illinois, to his position as bank manager for penings" - a convening for lunch­ Inc. in Tomahawk, Wis. eons or dinners with a College Girard Bank. He and his wife, Susan, speaker? Are the alumni in favor of Michael P. Park is a sales repre­ have a one-year-old daughter, Jenni­ slides of the new campus facilities, sentative for Helena Rubinstein, Inc. fer. color movies of the '70 football sea­ From Manhattan Beach, Calif., Leo Donald S. DiNicola has been ap­ son or silent movies of the 1922 F. Pelleriti, Jr., writes that he is a pointed a commissioned officer, Medi­ commencement? supervisor, General Motors Parts Di­ cal Service Corps, U. S. Army Re­ During the next few months I vision, General Motors Corporation. serve, by means of a direct commis­ will be visiting the following cities: He adds that a son, John Anthony, sion. He is attached to the 348th Harrisburg/ Pittsburgh, North Jer­ was born in September. General Hospital of Folsom and form­ sey/ New York City/ Long Island/ A customer engineer with IBM in erly held the rank of corporal. Westchester and Fairfield Counties, Philadelphia, Robert C. Reed has Lt. David R. Earl, a helicopter Baltimore/ Washington, and Chi­ moved to a new home in Warminster. pilot with the U. S. Army in Viet­ cago/ Los Angeles/ San Francisco. The Reeds have two boys, three-year­ nam, received his Aviator's Wings old Robert Charles, and one-year-old las t May. How do you feel about this kind Stephen Scott. of program? Drop me a line, send Teaching social studies and Eng­ me your ideas and we'll get to­ Tom Tracy and his wife, Mary, lish in the Penn-Delco Union School gether to discuss them. announce the birth of a daughter, District, Charles A. Grassano also is Kelly Anne, in December. coaching football and wrestling.

18 'G8 Frederick A. Ateto is a civil engi­ neer working on construction of In­ terstate 95 in Philadelphia. Married last July, he and his wife live in Media. Lt. Richard H. Carman is billeting officer at Fort Sill. Charles W. Christy III is instructor and department head of industrial engineering technology at the Dela­ ware Technical and Community Col­ lege. He is a member of the American Institute of Industrial Engineers, Del­ aware Chapter. Recently married to Rosemary E. Fean of Cinnaminson, Richard T. Det­ skas is zone manager, Ford Marketing Corp., Autolite Division, in Pennsau­ ken, N. J. George Duque writes: ''I'm com­ pleting my work towards my master's degree in Ibero-American Studies in R. Anderson Pew, former trustee, was recently honored by the Alumni Portugal. I was awarded a fellowship Association with the presentation of the R. Kelso Carter Award. At the mid­ to study at the University of Lisbon winter dinner, William T. Burton, Jr. presents Pew with a clock. doing res each in the colonial period of Portugal's history." He will retW'n to the University of Wisconsin in the FORMER TRUSTEE RECEIVES ANNUAL ALUMNI AWARD fall to take his master's exam and "then I'm off to the Army." The Alumni Association honored R. Anderson Pew, former member of the Promoted to first lieutenant, Fran­ PMC Board of Trustees and an executive of Sun Oil Co., with the presenta­ cis T. Lotz III is serving with the 14th tion of the R. Kelso Carter Award at the mid-winter alumni dinner. Armored Cavalry Regiment in Ger­ many. Memorializing R. Kelso Carter, a member of the class of 1867 and the Lt. John James Pierson, Jr. was married in December to Sandra Ellen first president of the Alumni Association, the award is presented each year Schmidt and is now stationed at Fort to a person who is not an alumnus and "who by his actions on behalf of Hood. PMC Colleges has brought significant recognition to the college." Recently promoted: William Potts of ew Brunswick is with Johnson Accepting the award from William T. Burton, Jr. '31, president of the and Johnson Pharmaceuticals. Alumni Board of Managers, Pew spoke about future direction of the College, Laird C. Robbins is a finance officer at Ft. Lewis. especially as it is related to the study of urban problems. Norman R. Robinson was married Pew was a member of the PMC Board of Trustees from 1968 to 1970 to Debra L. Millichap of Brookhaven in April. when he resigned because of expanded business interests. He served on the finance and development committees and worked on the Sesquicentennial campaign. Since his resignation from the Board he has continued to serve on '70 a voluntary basis on committees and served on the ad hoc committee to eval­ Charles Garneski of Woodlyn is in uate the findings of the Eastern Management survey. He is particularly in­ the U. S. avy. terested in new programs of the College to better relate PMC to its An officer candidate, Michael J. community. Kennedy is stationed at Ft. Benning, Ga. Pew is board chairman and chairman of the executive committee of Charity Nelle and Jim Serapilio '68 are married and living in Wilmington. Germantown Laboratories, Inc., a member of the Middle Atlantic Com­ 2nd Lt. David P. Payne is doing mittee for Project HOPE and a member of the Board of Managers of the graduate work as an electronics engi­ Children's Hospital in Philadelphia. neering guidance and control officer at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, The mid-winter alumni dinner at the Officers' Club at the Philadelphia Ohio. Naval Yard on February 12 brought together more than 100 alumni, guests, Pvt. Charles R. Sharbaugh recently completed nine weeks of advanced faculty and staff. In addition to the Carter award, the program included a infantry training at Fort Polk, La. talk by President Clarence R. Moll on the College.

PMC IMPACT. Spring '71 19 cllel~IP If eve lis

APR. 16 Performance, Concert Band, Alumni Auditorium, 8 p.m. 21 Lecture, Dr. Paul A. Cundiff, Department of Engli sh, University of Dela­ ware, Red Lounge, 11 a.m. 21 Spring dinner, Delaware Valley Parents Society, Wyman Dining Room, 6:30 p.m. 22 Address, Lt. Gen. Joseph M. Heiser, Jr., Deputy Ch ief of Staff of Logis­ tics, Department of Army, Red Lounge, 7:30 p.m. 25 Ca rmen, Suburban Opera Company, Alumni Auditorium, 8 p.m.

MAY 6 Address, G. B. Russell , Ass istant Secretary of the Army, Red Lounge, 7:30 p.m. 8 The Boy Friend, theatre pmc, Alumni Auditorium, 8:15 p.m. 21 Commencement and Alumni Day

SDIPls cllel~IP

BASEBALL APR. 17 2:00 p.m. Haverford Away 20 3:00 p.m. Drexel Home 22 3:00 p.m. Johns Hopkins Away 24 1 :00 p.m. Albright Away 28 3:00 p.m. Swarthmore Away

MAY 1 2:30 p.m Ursinus Away M 5 3:00 p.m. Haverford Home 0 GI 8 2:00 p.m. Franklin & Marshall Away 11 3:00 p.m. Washington Home « D-

o II: TRACK w I- en APR. 17 2:00 p.m. Lebanon Valley Away w J: 20 3:30 p.m. Ursinus Home ~ () 23-24 Penn Relays U. of P. 27 3:30 p.m. Franklin & Marshall Away aII ... MAY 1 2:00 p.m. Johns Hopkins-Washington Washington "... 7-8 MAC Championships Dickinson "'" 0"'" u u \ .. •Do