Homecoming has Ramsey, Upsala, pulchritude OBEXEI INSTTTUTf Of TECHNOIOGV The Ramsey Lewis Trio and a PHtLADflPHIA, PA. candidates in the Great Court at football game against Upsala will 1 p.m. Ballots will be cast by highlight Drexel*s Homecoming tearing the candidate’s picture next weekend, starUng on from this Issue of the Triangle O ctober 6. (see page 3) and placing it in OLUME xliv FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1967 Balloting for Homecoming the ballot box, which will be NUMBER 23 Queen will begin Monday, October located at the validation point 2 with the presentation of the for student ID cards. hew Division is created; DREXEL INSTITUTE OF TECHN0LCX3Y Intense activity HOMECOMING 1967 Friday night, the players will need scorecards to keep track of “ SPIRIT OF 7 6 ” the goings-on. At 8 p.m. there lallwochs appointed dean will be a pre-game pep rally in front of the Men’s Dorms fol­ ★ ★ ★ lowed by a street mixer featuring by R ic h a rd L a m p e r t the new grouping are English * -k -k Triangle News Editor . 8 ! the Shags and the TR5. Mean­ foreign language, music, psyl s l i i while, the Ramsey Lewis Trio chology, the academic sections ti O Q. O - -O 5 ; 2 will give two concerts In the Dr Robert G. Hallwachs, who of ROTC, and social sciences. 3 0 3 . THE RAMSEY LEWIS TRIO S l i Main Auditorium, one at 8:45 ame to D rexel in Ju ly a s the Dr. Hallwachs sees two basic IN CONCERT and one at 10:15. Seats for the chool’s new English Department functions for the newly-organized ■ 5 * jazzmen’s appearance will cost lead has been boosted to the division. First, he says, the de­ s $2.50 and $2.00 a head. osition of dean of the newly- partments he oversees “ will con­ Fric(^y, October 7 ,1 9 6 ^ At the same time, three bands ormed Division of S o c ial S c i- tinue to offer the kind of basic The Rogues The Ceasars will be supplying music for a inces and H um anities. service courses they»ve always dance in the Grand Hall of the According to Dr. Carl Gat­ offered.*’ The service courses DAC, Those who have purchased in vice-president for academic Include the basic humanities advance tickets to the Ramsey ifairs, a faculty committee courses, some American history leaded’ by Social S c ien c e s D e - courses and others. Next time you want some printing done, don't go where we went. Our printer can't read and lartment Head Stanley Wasson Second, the departments will lost his calendar. nterviewed a “ substantial hum- “take a long, hard look at /.ot>e, ler” of candidates for the job. electives to see whether they Bernd Pahl Then, says, Dr. Gatlin, “ they can relate the study of a partic­ Homecoming, 1967 lecided that the b e s t m an w a s ular subject to technology or English department L ew is p e rfo rm a n c e s w ill l)e ad­ ilready on b o a rd .” business.” A course such as mitted free, while latecomers history of science would relate in will have to buy tickets at one "New home base” the manner that Dr, Hallwachs is revises its courses dollar per person. Dr. Hallw achs told T he T r i- seeking. The word he used re­ by Jack Becker fundamental framework of Hu­ ingle that the division Is **a peatedly In describing his ideal Editorial Correspondent manities I, stated in the course Football and taffy lew home base for departments in this area was “Inter-disci- objectives, ten professors may Saturday at 1;30 p.m., Drexel which were form erly unaffiliated. p U n ary .” The English Department has follow ten different syllabi with Field will be occupied by the :t should provide a more co- just spent the summer revising varying concentrations of litera­ teams and the crowds as Drexel lesive, coherent and eco n o m ical Basic courses constant almost all of Its courses. The ture and the other arts. plays Upsala. Half-time activi­ modifications that will affect the )rogram.” The departments in Although he foresees little ma­ All of the basic humanities ties will include a mass taffy most people are those on the jor change in the nature of the courses have been similarly pull and a tug-of-war. At 8 that basic humanities sequence. In­ elementary courses, he believes structured, and Prof. William evening there will be a mixer In troduction to the Humanities I-IV, that teachers can encourage a Hollis, who chaired the com­ the DAC featuring the Rogues which is taken by all students student to take further work In mittee that revised the courses, and Tina and the Marquis while at D rexel. the liberal arts “by showing feels that some of these courses at 9 p.m. the fraternity open ‘ *We are concerned with getting (him) his need for it.” He hopes will be modified again next year. house parties begin. that teachers In the basic courses the student involved In a learn­ will demonstrate that the ele­ ing process that goes beyond the mentary wark provides a basis gaining of technical, functional Lloyd decries lack of funds, for the interdisciplinary ad­ skills,” emphasizes a memoran­ vanced courses. dum from the department. “We are concerned that he finish the Dr. Hallwachs Indicated that 'unrealistic’ evaluations his division will experience some courses with a greater under­ standing of himself and the world gradual changes in faculty mem­ who m arries while still In school in which he lives than he had bership. He said, “There will • First of a series is knowledgeably adding to his when he started. We are con­ be some redistribution of the There Is not enough money financial. burdens, and should cerned that he gain some under­ special interests as we find that available for financial aid to all therefore be evaluated differently standing of and Involvement In certain aspects of a subject students who need it, according than other students, the operations of a culture.” should be stressed. We*U bring to financial aid officer John S. Lloyd said that the burgeoning Lloyd. Because of this lack of in people who are strong in Non-literary media as well number of applications for finan­ those areas.” funds, the Faculty Committee cial aid has forced him to rely The department plans to Dr, Mary Stephens, head of on Scholarships and Loans has for the initial paperwork on the utilize non-llterary media— Drexel*s Humanities and Tech­ been forced to tighten the re­ College Scholarship Service in films, plays, paintings, sculp­ nology program, will become act­ quirements for applicants. Princeton, N, J. tures and the like—to make the ing head of the English Depart­ Lloyd noted that presently only Contrary to popular belief, the courses more encompassing and ment while members of the de­ students whose weighted av­ CSS does not recommend how more Interesting. A major ad­ partment conduct their second erages are at least 2.0 will be much aid any student should be Robert G. Hallwachs dition to the teaching scheme search in two years for a new considered for aid at all. He given. It merely compares total i^ew division*s dean is a new flexibility granted to hopes that something can be done department head. family Income to total family ex­ the individual instructors in any to alleviate this problem and penditures and, considering un­ one course. make money for aid available to usual conditions and extraor­ “ It is possible, for example, all students who need it. dinary expenses, calculates the 3 of this issue will show what The Triangle*s news editor for each instructor, working difference. I viewed the last issue with a the candidates really look like. >:J: within the general principles of Married students in trouble /arge quantity of egg on his face, the course and under the super­ Lloyd lamented the plight of On page I, the orientation The difference is then given vision of the department, to cap­ the married student, who, he yt seem s that everywhere he story mentioned a football game jg to the aid committee to do with italize on his own strengths. He said, Is treated unrealistlcally. looked, he found mistakes. against Upsala. Actually, the as it pleases. The CSS, ac­ may approach each course from First, his personal expenses are In the Homecoming story on cording to Lloyd, has many game was played against Lebanon primarily a literary point of view adjudged to be the same as be­ factors to consider In its com­ I P“ge 3, the schedule for Friday, Valley. or from wider and wider hu­ fore his marriage. Second, the putations; medical expenses, in­ I October 6 should have mentioned manistic angles. aid committee assumes that his debtedness, housekeeping, taxes the dance is open to every- Finally, a miscellaneous, non- ;;|j: “Furthermore, the courses parents will contribute the same and so forth. And “ they’re ac­ Triangle error: the ti c k e ts for are designed to evolve as the amount of money to his education o'le, not just alumni; and that it curate on about four of every needs of the students and the as they did when he was single. be held in the DAC and not Ramsey Lewis's Homecoming con- ijj:; five applications,” he said.* But, • Lloyd added, any student at the field. certs read Friday, October 7 Jj:; various colleges change, and as the abilities of the professors j 3 again, the pictures instead of Friday, October 6- broaden.” I °/ the queen candidates looked Other than that, we did pretty ^^0 little like the pictures the well. $• Ten teachers--ten syllabi editor chose. A look on page Ed. J Thus, for example, within the On the news scene

HANG ON to this edition of The what's ahead before the snow :•$ rexel opens new year; Triangle. The pictures of the falls. i Homecoming Queen candidates on page 3 will serve as your ballot In the voting. To prove that ppoints 54 new faculty there’s more to Homecoming than pulchritude, we’ve outlined the HE CAME, he saw, he got ___ _ _ —A fho tnto Drexel from manyma different , Cornell and the major events of the weekend on promoted. At the rate Dr, Ro­ begin Its new year schools and colleges such as bert G. Hallwachs is advancing Earth Sciences Division of leie- page 1, col 4. ty 54 newfacul- Villanova, St. Joseph’s, Wells at Drexel, he should be king in Colleges of dyne, Inc. . . College, Temple, Ohio U„ Co­ * * * * about a m onth. (S eepage 1, col. 1) The College of Business Ad­ riess Science, Busl- lumbia, College of ministration will Art and Leicester University in THE ACCENT in this week’s vision o?" term with 14 new faculty niern- Sciences. and S o cial , Triangle falls on fall sports. bers, some of whom come to D ir Thein« Bus Ad College, which The sports staff has put together Engineering from New York Unlversi^^, Gen­ was not covered by this survey, an exhaustive (and exhausting - AND THEN there's a story eral Electric, UCLA, R^A« jnd Will !; new faculty mem- announced during the summer they worked until almost dawn about money. What else can we searc h teaching and re- Haverford, ^s well as ^ that it hack hired a number of two nights running) preview of say? (See page 1, col. 4) sor from Syria and a Fulbrlght new faculty members, with em­ MeC, p Hahnemann Fellow from Peru. ^ phasis on people to teach eco­ tionai T I ^®S®»BrookhavenNa- The Division of nomics and those with doctoral and Social Science will add 18 will Princeton, d eg rees. new faculty m e m b e r s . They come ' eilesley, University ol DREXEL TRIANGLE Pagr 2 — Septpmbrr 29, 1967

O rg a n iz a tio n s to »j,

$4 million in Ford money for Penn’s Social Sciences f o r frosh membersJ

PHILADELPHIA (IP) - The humanities and social sciences. essary to fit them for the re­ tinuous'y through to the doctorate at activities night resources provided by a Ford “This is that the most tal­ sponsibilities that must be as­ by the University’s own re­ Foundation grant of $4,000,000 ented leaders of the future in the sumed by the ablest among them sources as well as by the Ford The annual Drexpi a “will enable us to correct a humanities and social sciences — if our society as a whole is to Foundation and other support. N ight (DAN) will briL n long-standing concern of the Uni­ unlike their counterparts in the prosper and fulfill the expecta­ New doctoral candidates en­ extracurricular attraction versity,” commented Dr, Gay­ physical and biological sci­ tions we cherish." tering in 1971 will be supported attention of the freshm? lord P. Harnwell, president of ences — have been deflected by without the aid of the Ford grant. and anyone else the University of, Pennsylvania, lack of the essential support The English Department began in discussing this latest support necessary for them to achieve such a program last September, Arrangements to vary terested on T„„day,°old for doctoral candidates in the the educational experience nec­ using University and outside re­ About two-thirds of the doc­ sources. That program served as toral candidates in the program Booths will be mannas , I a model for the Penn proposal will hold teaching or research Grand Hall of the dTc 1 4 p.m. to 8:30 d m k to the Ford Foundation. assistantships during their During this initial year 21 new second and third years. While bers of 75 to 100‘orgama"|?’ graduate English students were all English department students in search of recrulil pj assisted continuously from all in the program are expected to nent among these win h sources — government, founda­ teach, the arrangements will vary student Senate; the D ‘xeui:*, tion and University-including from department to department. lica U o n s - The Trlangt t teaching assistantships -- up Dr. Jameson said the grant Lexerd, the Tech Journal s through the award of a PhD in should drastically reduce the and others; radio station four years. “During the first proportion of graduate students the religious societies; p rS ’i year the student concentrates on (about 50 percent nationally, who sional societies re p S ^ course work,'* said Dr. Michael terminate their studies before m any c a r e e r fields and ! ? ‘l H. Jameson, dean of the Gradu­ receiving the doctoral degree). clubs and organizations e n S ate School of Arts and Sciences. There are several reasons for in many special activities. the high percentage, according d a n C h a irm a n Ann Second year to Dr. Jameson. “ The planning says, “I believe tha? c o T “ In the second he will assist of progress toward the Ph.D. education is more than cliL a professor in planning courses varies widely from department room learning. Ifs learain. t and examinations and in the grad­ to department. In some cases the worii with people and leam ing of papers. In the third he conception of what the PhJ). about people, and the vay tol' will be responsible for a class, should be may be out of date — th a t is to be in an organization and during the fourth year he while the dissertation on these Here»s a chance to%ee J 1 will devote full time to his dis­ fields traditionally is expected Drexel has to offer.” sertation." to be published in book form, Penn's grant from the Founda­ this may no longer be sensible. tion is based upon 186 new stu­ But most important, there has dents entering the four-year doc­ been a scarcity of funds to sup­ toral program annually the first port graduate students in the four years, being supported con- humanities and social sciences," M ak e believi

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Exclusive removable carrying case with At The College S t o r e every bottle of Lensine. The scientific—and convenient—way ^ X D T /r a d io 830 to protect your contacts. LENSINE from The Murine Company, Inc. PANHELLING! w h y DON’T YOU ASK US IN? oar* spocialitt for 70,yMr« Barrier of fu tility A student powei By Rlchord Lom. The war of the werds Two weeks ago Defense Secre­ day on, of all places, the proposed The term “student power” sounds nesses. U the math Intellectual growth. Likewise, tary Robert McNamara announced questlonalre, h o w e v e j - By Larry J. Milask site of our Chinese Wall. We re­ belligerent, and it should. It sounds as a student with Vlctorlim s o c l^ if it was derived from the phrase **black that he would sacrifice plans to construct what has been sponded by returning artillery fire, Ions wiU hamper a student’s • t o i t t o power," which it probably was. omniscience, an unthShiJ® assum.s a parUoilar McGovern is an appears to be a basis of man’s Indi­ called a modem day **MaginotLine.** rowth. bringing up our B-52*s to saturate “ Student pow er" sounds like **black acUon for a PhD. HenJe i (each with its own bra^ ? Position S^uth Dakota viduality — his ability to arrive at a These electronic defense warning the demilitarized zone with bombs power*' because the aims of and tiie nalres, If distributed S ih for residents and fires awav Tt moraUty) JV I friends points personal, moral or scientific decision. obstacles to ttie movements are similar. In the files. ’ ou^not be re-elected come September. And any agency which in some way devices might, he feels, cut the and having our Seventh Fleet shell ripr for example, ttie plight of Doves castigate the Hawtean?SaH Those black power advocates who can Confronted with an ^hole barrage of reduces ttie ctorlty of ttie situation, flow of men and supplies to the S ’ in D rexel's Men’s Dorm , verbal crossfire is to deUver one*s as much of the DMZ as they could hypothetical math profes^l. reduces ttie opportunity for a man to rise above Rap lie commuter colleagues can mix blows with the most catching bitinR guerrilla forces in the South. He is, reach. All to no avail. Brown and com- have three choices. One achieve his Individuality. One must ar­ cept the situation. Two tiv car. a dark road and a girl in and virtuistic phrase possible. The rive, 1 assume, at a moral position of course, assuming that these will Is it possible that we are being pany are simply ^ ^ tional proportions, tiie resid en t greater your vir- asking everyone ! about the Drexel (or about ttie last point just made. not be sent down the Ho Chi Minh in the position of having no- tuousity, the more shown just how costly it will be to to accept black | shaft. Three, they cano^l Ito even talk with a g irl In p ri- interest you Distortion v. clarification Trail which runs through Laos and install our burglar alarm? people as real i petitions, boycott classes S i tause she is not allowed In ttie arouse and the people. Further, I prof’s office. ’ Both the distortion and the expres­ skirts the proposed line. A frightening possibility lies in [dorm room under any c lrc u m - more zealous fol­ the advocates say, t sion designed to clarify a situation The “ fire line** of which he the fact that these guns might not Pushing can work lowers you gain it must be recog- I until you become are done with words; it is only the man llicv such as this one Is a good or personality behind those words which speaks might also mean the expen­ be dug into the D\fZ at all. A mo­ nlzed that Ne- | Clearly, only the third choioo, Mr. Virtuous ^ of an inertial drift Into ab- distinguishes between ttie act of dis- diture of large sums of money for dern gun can easily fire 12 miles to groes have their * chance of alleviating the si£ u „ The men's dorm, it Is said, himself — on one own, very valid Lampert tortion and ttie act of clarification — enough electronic devices and choice requires a pushv hT io educate the whole man. Mean- side or the other. its target and the supposed no­ culture and that it is wrong to try the ultimate intention of those words. and thoroughly obstinate’ S ’ fthough, the administrators have their maintenance to effectively man's zone is only six to seven to make them into dark Caucasians. Hotrod of words Many people fail to remember this, «unter^astalUrat.ta*t If their minds to the fact that often our best friends. span the border and the commit­ miles wide. We cannot afford to L e parts of the men not edu- Only at Drexel does one meet the Student ideas valid Negotiations in Vietnam ment of great concentrations of men sustain our present casualty rate Let’s face it. Minds get fiabbv i ^ either classes or touch foot- proverbial stone-wall; built of engineers, Likewise, the student power idea muscles do. Schools, l l L l i S and many English professors, who don*t to prevent infiltration. The Penta- Igues. In the light (or should I say shadow) in this area, particularly if we are simply means that college administra­ racies of any kind, drift into nr understand the big words and manage of all this talk about language, my own gon*s estimate of only several to go ahead with construction. Thus tors have to realize that students have out ^ sheer, mindless inertiur [power can help to declaim anybody who uses them as verbal nebula, one is faced witti ttie valid, defensible ideas concerning the on any hundred million dollars and 15,000 not be an imposition aU nt power can help here. P e ti- academically pompous. Which is true. frustrating sitaation of peace negotia­ the way is open for yet another es­ nature of their educations. Students are tor or teacher to demand that he! [alculated applications of fo rce and At Drexel it is best to be simply fa­ tions between ttie U,S, and North Viet­ additional troops seems extremely calation of the war. Will we “ send a breed apart from the elders who run natical without the embellishments — a given policy, because that inrtiJ rikes are all possibilities if the nam, low. We can*t help remembering the their lives, and no one should expect or as few as one can possibly live our troops to secure the enemy’s slwuld always have a fetrators won’t listen to sense, The torrents of proposals, counter­ them to adopt the dress, ideals or even with (Yes, Virginia, you can end with original^ estimates for the TFX positions?** This would constitute Touchy question her students are protesting a proposals and rejections, all couched morals of the middle-aged set. prepositions. It puts most readers at F or example, a school vice-DrB, acher or the exhumation of Queen in the least picturesque phrases pos­ fighter-bomber. (It was to cost only an invasion of North Vietnam. To any educator or college admin­ ease). You will then gain a great deal might get upset if he were asked a, they have to organize. A strong, sible, is more than frustrating, it is two million dollars per plane and istrator, the thou^t that a student can of attention, but (alas, Drexel apathy) If the situation deteriorates this great number of superior teacheri ipported student government Is a inane and suspect. It all appears to be has now run to about 21 million.) far, can we even hope that Chinese know what’s good for the student has to forced out simply because they i few followers. This, of course, suits a cloud, a gigantic black storm cloud, U only a start. The student body most of us just fine; Drexel is strenu­ seem absurd. Most of the time, the publish enough scholarly panerJ designed to obscure the true reasons Even if this plan does work, “ volunteers** will not pour over the fhole must be ready to back up ous enough without having to drag a lot man in authority went to school for might get upset, but he should nl and situations behind the Vietnam issue. however, we have not solved any­ tie resolutions of Its government of followers around with you like Soc­ North Vietnam border to do battle some number of degrees to learn the should be able to state preciselH (tion or else the resolutions wind rates — each follower begging for a A verbal screen thing. We will merely have built a psychology of education and/or his his ideal of a good school is and ho with the “ imperialists**? After all, he trash bin. Further, students syllogism to hold and remember in “ free world** Berlin Wall. The North chosen field of interest. policy aids ttie school. The existence of the constantly ex­ the circumstances greatly resemble he government to challenge ad- reverence. panding credibility gap, whose source So the PhD in, say, mathematics says T h ere is one and only one criterli, Vietnamese will still seek' to help [ators or educators in every area, li^s in Washington, often leads one to those in North Korea in 1951. to himself, “I am a good matheme- choosing a poUcy for a schooU [nt power means th at students have A moral position? believe that Hanoi is correct when ttiey in what they consider the liberation And so we would be caught up in tician; therefore, I should know a good policy is to aid the school, it mu [, They have to think about their Nevertheless, behind the perpetual reject "public’’peace proposals by John­ freshman calculus text when I see one,” vide for ttie Increased growth of their southern brothers. And the a war with China*s masses. Since and the future of their world, war of words there exists the real son. These proposals. It seems, are a student—Intellectually, socially orj Russians and Chinese will still be we are clearly unable to fight a You’re wrong, prof ^y have to be prepared to show war, with real killing, and real stupidi­ screen designed to delay both national tionally. If a given policy merely elings. outdoing each other in aiding North The PhD is dead wrong. He can ty. It is about this war tiiat all the and international reaction to ttie U,S,’s ground war there, we might even the school laudatory headlines or i he start of a new school year, a recognize elegant mathematics when he words are being fired. And one is, actions in Vietnam, Vietnam in this pursuit. If we are parking lot, it is not a good pr (le for resolutions. Let's hope get to use some nuclear weapons. sees it, but he can’t think like some depending on his political orientation, But a more important question fol­ unless tiie headlines or the park once, most Drexel students will really successful, we might be able A frightening thought. poor kid who still isn 't su re about h i ^ constantly asserting some moral posi­ lows from ttie above conclusion. Why can contribute to the student’s mat I that their own opinions when .ex­ to freeze the present situation for school trigonometry. The logical course tion with regard to the war. ttie screen at all? What is it ttiat John­ Unless, of course, the ultimate p ro c e ss. in effective ways, can influence of action would be to pass out question­ I have often stat^ that I do not wish son is attempting to achieve by refus- at least ten to twenty years. Burdening a student with a poor! ures, to establish or assert any moral posi­ purpose of this entire conflict is a naires that would ask students their re­ ing to negotiate Instead of lying about Coincidentally, last week the a poorly-designed course or a te( ! end, it seems, student power, is tion, Yet, I often assert **no moral preventive wsu* with China before actions to the text, the lectures and so false attempts to reach ttie tables? who Is preoccupied with his latej a chance to show that students position,” which is just as bad. The North Vietnamese began an artillery she too has a workable mushroom on, and then act on the revealed weak- These are verbal questions, and ttiey for Federal funds will hamper the pie. idea, if it is legitimate, is to neither demand a verbal answer. In fact, the barrage of thousands of shells a cloud. assert a morality nor to assert that Y u g o s l a v io ‘ war in Vietnam needs a verbal solu­ no morality should be estabUshed.Ratti- tion: one that clarifies the situations er, I simply wish to provide a verbal behind the present conflict. ej^ression which will permit the reader me T a k in g o to find his own m oral position. The victims of our own words The credibility gap It may be that JMT UX POeSMT PM MUCH The problems situation, take what steps they thlnl _ that firm is evaluated and. If a V io la tio n ^KiOH^SHOCTAnt. necessary for improvement, andl At the seminars I attended at the Uni­ |*s shown, the w orkers a re at spend Hie rest of their time trylf T°retically entitled to it. im m ujm versity of Belgrade, we heard the word justify It as Marxist. I suspect then If... demography” quite often. In the Yugo- Constraints on that profit a re the ' 'TO s m m n A ploy more justlfiers than econoir nes we know. T axes, contin- means that they lost The city merchants (may-the: nas and loan paym ents g et ttie i v i ^ their war of starve-to-death) personify a culti of Expectation Uberation against the fascists (we know lan'tu ttiat the workers transition. They keep the same P the surplus, each worker re- U as World War n). it gives them, their fathers did when they were wc I a share proportionate to his twenty years la- ^ * the land. The stores open promp ter, a population* 8 a.m. and close at 8 p.m. But I 63% of which is It!!! ^>'®‘iuently misconceived tween they believe they’re still en ratio down. For instance, in the Bel­ under the age of jem espousing equal distribution to a four hour lunch from noon to j grade firm ttiat is tiie largest producer twenty-five. a 'yferentlation Is another of agricultural machinery in the country, Triangle Repartee THE DREXEL TRIANGLE The streets are dense with touris Vu*o.I«Vfc, M v m lM r o f generation that is natives, toe windows display clu the difference is only five-to-one from Established 1926 bursting with re v ­ I«S recognized that different tiie president of tiie w orkers’ council Afsecioted Celltgiat* Press trinkets and durables, money I olutionary ideas I ‘'tribute different value to the than ah^inrtant ayid the merchants i to tiie lowest paid worker. Appeal? Praise Offictal newspaper published by the students of Drexel Institute of Tech- (economic to be the Marxists and the nology 32nd and Chestnut Street. Philadelphia. Opinions expressed in sure) concerning they-all-starvW death) still "^ve an opportunity to hash Popular ihi scon caption Editor, Drexel Triangle: Editor, Drexel Triangle: they’re entitled to a four hour^ signed columns are not necessarily those of the Institute or of The Trianele the means to bring The western press has been giving I am a coed who Is coming to Drexel Normally I do not write ’^Letters to Profit incentive has taken a Phone: BA 2-1654 or EV 7-2400 (Extension 2118) * its country into McGinley differentiation Yugoslavia a great deal of space in this fall to study Home Economics, I ttie Editor,” but I feel that ttie fol­ second to tradition. ^ I cJ^^^^slng to even a Uberal the la s t few months. Between the tiiorough want to study Home Ec because I want lowing must not go unsald.I am a Busi­ recognition on the world market. In a sense, the Yugoslavs havei communists; so ttiey keep the coverage of T ito’s globetrotting and tiie to be able to be a good wife for my ness Administration student and have been conslstentiy reading The Triangle Editown-Chief...... R. PATRICK MeCULLOGH western flavor of its development, even husband, who will be a Drexel graduate. for over a year, I feel that The Triangle’s mighty Moscow has reason for jealousy. My problem is tiiat I don’t know who m y Business Manager...... DANIEL C. McCARTY advertising and business statfs have been Thus, before leaving for Belgrade I husband will be, but I’m looking forward to aweU rounded, humanitarian, liberally doing a m ore ttian excellent Job, The had ttie notion ttiat Tito and his mini­ Edl..fl.lB..,d:». P.W.I «.c.ll.,h, O..I.I a. Jecli Btcb., S»„ L.ll„. oriented Engineer and I would like to ads appearing in the paper have been sters had virtually no socialist scruples, Rkkard H. LamfMrt. Joy Leekimin. Larry J. Milask, Arnold Riowo, R«bort J. Siomberski. put a request in The Triangle for any not onty tasteful and appealing, but In­ and that what seemed like a good idea person who fits this description to con­ teresting. At this time, I wish to compli­ at the time was, by definition, a good Nows: Riehord H. Lamport, oditor; Noro Bucxok, Lois Cocehimiglie, EIIU Cohon tact me ttiroughThe Triangle. ment ttie unsung heroes of ttienewq>aper Choryl Doekort, Joy Proodman. Morio Tortoglio. ' Idea. Not so. Those philosophers ttiey world—the advertising and business employ to keep the policies in line with I am 6*4’.’ and weigh 260 lbs. Pm. staffs. Marxism must earn tiielr Thank you Faaturos: Joy Loekmon. Larry J. Miloik, oditors; Miko Kylo. DoHo La Fata. slavla Is a Communist country wltii tiie very interested in sports (Letters in football In my junior and senior year) Business Manager, Triangle unwavering goal of social ®^|ty* and I like to talk about poUtics (I wrote You're welcome. — Ed. simply has spent more time ^ a term paper on the “Basic inhumani­ early stages of development in pro­ tarian assumptions in the New Deal as to meet a nice young man who likes my viding consumer goods for its populace type. Can you please help? ^nom em onetary incentives for en­ applied to Orwell’s *1984’. ’*) Photogrophy: Photo oditor: Robort J. Siambori|ii; Sandra Spoors. Alon Kioto. Lonely couraging economic growtti. I have a beautiful Nordic face (ex­ They see it as a happy combination of What this school needs is a course in Buslnotsi Donlol C. McCarty, buiinoos mgr.; Suoon Domtkor. Brian Kroll, Lynn Laudormon. cept for a few scars I got on tiie *‘tiie end justifies ttie means*’ and Animal Husbandry. — Ed. Girls Boxing team). Really, I would like **getting there Is half the fun. DREXEL TRIANGLE Pagp{P 6 O —- Septnmber 29, t 1967 , _ _ _ Iow a dorm poll Programmed learning teaches Home tcs students, teachers support coed dorms was Started by M rs, MacKenzle in the margin. IOWA CITY, lA. a . P ) . M Kingston, R. I. (IP) - A new is wrong in his interpretation of In 1963 and first presented here the subject being studied, ’ con­ If he has Interpreted the frame University of Iowa under.raT approach to the study of home correctly, he goes on to the next during 1963-64, She revised the economics has been developed sists of a number of “ frames,*' program three times before uates and faculty members or paragraphs, which discuss key fram e. On the other hand, if he coeducational dormitories by M rs. Louise W. MacKenzle, came up with the wrong answer putting it out the following year assistant professor of home eco­ words or ideas. on a trial basis to Cornell, South majority of parents are opposJ In the m argin alongside each he would know immediately that to the idea. These are amn? nomics education at the Univer­ he did not interpret the textbook Dakota, Illinois and Missouri frame the correct answer is the findings of a questionnalrp sity of Rhode Island. It is the correctly. He would then go over Universities. As a result of these first application of programmed given. When the student uses the circulated by the Universl^ the material again to find out successful trials it is now in the learning techniques to a course program, he covers the marginal preliminary stages of publication Housing Committee. About % answers with a slip of paper. where he got off the track. The of study at URI. frames become more difficult as which will hopefully lead to Its percent of the undergraduat The frames are worded in such (83 percent of the men and 6 The program is now being the student progresses and from wider use. used in conjunction with the text­ a way that the student should percent of the women) favorprt logically arrive at only one an­ time to time tests are given to coed dorms. book in Home Economics Edu­ further check on his progress. In the meantime, Mrs. Mac­ swer. A space is provided in the Slightly more than half of thp cation 39, The programmed Work on her adaptation of the Kenzle Is adapting programmed text for his answer, which is undergraduates felt that most of learning device, which lets a programmed learning technique learning to another course, student know immediately if he then checked with the correct one **Problems In Education,” for the InteUectual, cultural, and so students In home economics. cial benefits of dormitory livinj Programmed learning has sev­ occur in the freshman year stu eral distinct advantages, she dents th ereafter tend to seek off! feels. Studying in small steps campus housing because it is and knowing at once whether you cheaper and allows more free, are right or wrong saves time dom and privacy. Fewer than for students who might other­ 10 percent moved for a better wise get well Into a subject be­ place to study. fore becoming aware they were Both mothers and fathers op. M e a n on the wrong track. It also en­ pose the dorm itory policy of ables a student to go along at having as many as three stu- his own pace and not be held dents to a room. Faculty mem- back by someone who Is slower. b ers, both men and women, ex­ It permits, too, the development pressed concern about the big. of greater breadth of study. ness, noise and “prison-llke” atm osphere of the dormitories.

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''r DREXEL TRIANGLE. ^our candidates scramble Page 7 - Septrmbrr 29, 1967 or starting QB. position by Ted T ay I or , The battle for John Kuzan's thews of Conshohocken slenal vacant quarterback slot on the caller Billy Baer. S i football squad has be- “ ^ t ’s face it, quarterback is L T e a four-way fight with the our biggest worry,*’ head coach Uapirf imnrovement of ex-St. M at- Tom Grebis said, “but each of the four candidates has looked good at one time or another,” Unipan favored Vet Richie Unipan, 5'7»» F sports scrapper from Monsignor Bon­ ner, probably has the edge right Continued from Page 8 now because of his knowledge of Grebis’ system. Rangy Paul Mc- IpKP, LCA and TEP battling for Gloin, soph transfer from Kings the title. Point, throws the best pass of the group, and soph Eddie Wel­ PKP seeks repeat land from Hatboro, has the best PKP in quest of Its second overall moves at this time, ac­ I IF Cup in four years, will have cording to Grebis. to place high to keep Its hopes “ We’re working Baer with the I alive for the Cup. LCA looks better backs now,” backfield like the spoiler of the league. coach Bob Schweid commented, foot of D attempted block of a punt, Sworthmore defender comes down on the [ The “ BO” has a strong team re­ “ and h e’s got a very good arm .” root ot Uragon Jim Lynch. Nice shot, Jim! turning and has enough score to Schweid, who is also head take it. PSK and BN should be freshman coach, welcomed can­ IHouston Hall Student Union Boord battling for the fourth and fifth didates for that team to the team’s — U. of P. and William Honney spots with SAT matches not training camp on Wednesday, present I counting in the final standings. September 13. Kuzan also re ­ Announcement ARTHUR FIEDLER Don't ask me to pick the win­ turned to camp, this time as one and The Yomluri Nippon BANKAS ners of the league. At this point of Schweid’s assistant frosh Mrs. Francis A. Williams Symphony Orchestra it’s an impossibility. Why not coaches. of Philadelphia, announces "Pops’* Concert just drop by at the 30th Street Friday, Oct. 27, 1967 - 8:30 p.m. DRUGS 1 lanes some Friday night between the engagement of her Palestra - University of Penna. 3233 POWELTON AVE. six and eight-thirty starting Oct. DREXEL daughter Tickets: $3.50 Reserved • $2.00 Students - $1.00 13. You’ll be sure to enjoy your­ Carol Ann self. Mail Orders: BA 2-0290 GRAD RmcS to Houston Hall Student Union IF BOWLING LEAGUES • fraternity jewelry Mr. Daniel G. McCarty U. of P., 34th & Spruce Sts., Prescriptions & Health Items • watch repairing son of (Please enclose stamped, self- Cosrhetics - Tobacco - Gifts • gifts of distinction addressed envelope). Gold Blue Mr. and Mrs. William L. Tickets on Sale: Houston Hall, APL PKP UNIVERSITY McCarty of Drexel Hill. SP TEP Both are students at Drexel TKE SAT JEWELERS Institute of Technology. LCA PLP A June wedding is planned DSP BN 3425 Walnut St. SAM PSK 3725 Spruce St.

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Tom Grebis and the 1967 edi­ Other injuries tion of the Drexel varsity foot­ Joining Rissell on the disabled ball team broke camp and re­ list are safetymen Eddie Welland turned to campus on Sept. 20 and Bobby Enoch. Both sopho­ after a grueling 12-day session mores, they were pegged assure defensive starters before they FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1W7 in the wilds of Camp Skymount VOLUME XLIV number 23 (Green Lane), Pa. were grounded. The Dragons have been hit Senior halfback Kenny Wise and hard by injuries to key per­ soph back Ed McFillin are still sonnel and Grebis is even more operating at less than a hundred pessimistic than usual. “We per cent due to hamstring pulls. might not show up for the first Grebis expected to have them Drexel gridders gain revenge; gam e,” he quipped, “ but we m i0it operable by September 30, how­ be ready for the second." ever. , Drexel opened last Saturday The injuries to Enoch and Wel­ against Middle Atlantic Confer­ land have forced Grebis to shift ence rival Lebanon Valley and two members of his quarterback Bomb Swarthmore eleven 55-7 highly touted junior Cliff Risell corps to the defensive unit. Sophs missed the action. Paul McGloin and Billy Baer will Risell, who had earned a sta rt­ now face the prospects of double “ I hope Lew isn’t mad at me »» ing offensive end slot along with duty, something that isn’t really Drexel footballcoach Tom Grebis his usual position in the defensive unusual for a Grebis quarterback. said on Sept. 21 as his Dragons secondary, was injured on Sept. (John Kuzan, last year’s starter, took apart Lew Elverson’s de­ 13 and trainer Doug Frey is was named to the MAC all league fending Middle Atlantic Southern reluctant to even hazard a guess team on both offense and defense.) College Division champs in a as to when the 6’3”-200 pound Grebis is very happy about the “ game condition” scrimmage star will be ready. rapid development of linebacker 55-7, at the Drexel Field. ' Carl Hertrich. “Hertrich has “ I’ve never seen our kids so come fast; we feel he’s the top fired up for a scrimmage game Veteran Yonkermen man at the position ri^ t now,” as they were for Swarthmore »' the coach stated. Hertrich, 6’- Grebis added. “They performed return early for 185 pounder, from St. Matthews far better than they have since (Archbishop Kennedy) of Con- the start of pre-season training.” shohocken may eventually work The psychological factor was pre-season drills his way in to the offensive pic­ there. Drexel hasn’t lost a game ture as an end,especially with to a Southern College division Rissell’s return date doubtful. rival for three years, but Swarth­ All-American George Burka Grebis expected senior Tony more keeps winning the title. The was among the veterans who Gromalski, who missed the open­ reason is that there is no con­ greeted Drexel soccer coach Don ing sessions of the camp due to ference rule that says one league Yonker at the beginning of pre- personal problems, to regain his team m ust ever play another. season drills. defensive tackle slot by opening D rexel, therefore, schedules Yonker, who will be beginning day. Gromalski, a 6'-192 pounder sev eral N orthern Division teams his 21st season as the head of from Mahanoy City, looms large to get enough games to qualifj’ the Dragon footmen, conducted in the Drexel picture. for the crown and usually man­ a light workout and showed a Tackle Woody Kielinski, doubt­ ages to lose one of them. Swarth­ EYES INTENT ON DOWNFIELD openings. Dragon halfback Randy 30 minute film featuring two of ful because of an auto accident, m ore and Drexel, however, the top soccer teams in the never reported to camp and his Holmes moves clear of Swarthmore defenders. Drexel, swamped the haven’t met officially since 1953, world. “I showed the movie to status is questionable at best. opposition 55-7 in the “ game condition** scrimmage. motivate our players,” Yonker Eight men score said, “ and to show them how One of the biggest items for soccer really can be played." IF Sports G rebis, other than the convinc­ Other vets who pleased Yonker ing perform ance, was the fact in the initial sessions were Jeff that eight different players Tryens and Hank Leung, a pair scored touchdowns. The eight of wingmen; Ron Wright and Steve PKP wins volley ball championship; were Randy Holmes, Rich Uni­ Foelster, raiding backs, and pan, Steve McNichol, Kenny Wise, goalie Paul Diana. Mike DiDonato, Jim Lynch on a Yonker was also glad to wel­ pass from Paul McGloin, Wayne come Burt Reiff back to the Bowling key In tight IF Cup race Huntsinger and StanCzermanskl. squad after a year's layoff from Soccer kicker Paul Secunda re­ the sport. Fred Pohlmann, up By Bill DiMarino a team which was powerful enough followed by DSP and PLP. turned to school, put on his pads from last year's frosh, also im­ but seemed to fail in the close pressed the veteran coach. Welcome back to schoolysports and promptly booted three out of fans. The I.F. sports scene has matches. Blue League four ex tra points. Tom “ Izzy” The Dragons will conduct daily Rounding out the league will workouts until they open the sea­ been a hectic mess during term The Blue League also shapes Laing kicked two more place­ break, so let’s try to recapitu­ be SPj which seem s to have no up to a three team affair with ments and Unipan fired a pass to son, October 7, with their tra­ team which is capable of car­ ditional clash versus the alumni. late the story, scene by scene. G reg Dubas for the other extra The volleyball championship rying it higher than fourth place. Continued on Page 7, Col. 1 points. was finally won by a strong and young PKP six over SP in stormy battle which took place on the The Red Line Frosh D ragons eve of Summer finals. On the Davis Cup tour this rep orter finds SAM and APL f a c e H averford; still playing and protesting each other with the winner still un­ The Varsity Club look prom ising decided. Beware freshmen, some vigilante might have you shovel­ ing snow off the tennis courts By Joe Siderio The 1967 freshm an football in November so these two houses team has been working diligently can complete their match. Letterman beware! The Drexel Second objective some time this term. It will be preparing for its four game Looking at the Cup standings, Varsity Club is back in action evaluated, and then a course of schedule which includes Franklin one finds SP leading the pack and aims to win the hearts of all The second objective that the action will be questioned if »1 and Marshall, PMC, Temple, and with PKP, APL and SAM follow­ those connected with and in­ Club’s new adm inistration has seems to be contrary to the in­ U. OF P. “ B.” team. The frosh ing right behind. terested in Drexel athletics. established is the restoration of te re st of the student body. team reported to camp on Sept. You see, the Club has been Varsity Club social events. In 13, and has been Improving ever Key to IF Cup dormant for some time now, but days gone by, the Club would al­ since. It is not a particularly big So as we move into the fall under its new President, Bob ways sponsor a kick-off dance, Student poll team, but morale is high and what sports, let us take a look at a Reuss, the organization has out­ run all pep rallies, play a faculty the freshmen lack in size, they sport the importance of which lined some new objectives and in­ Varsity Club basketball game and And how will the Club know make up in hustle. not too many people realize, but tends to achieve them on interest finally run a Varsity C lub banquet what the student body this year is capable of tossing alone. at year’s end. These are the af­ Another m ajor project will oe Haverford scrimmage the standings into a real turmoil. The Varsity Club over the fairs which the Club is re­ to conduct a poll among During their scrimmage with Bowling’s Gold League has to years has always been the main vitalizing, in order to make the students (written questionnaire Haverford College varsity, the shape up to a real dog fight athletic body at Drexel. In the Drexel athlete feel he belongs to and at-random personal inter­ freshmen showed a great deal of with the three power-houses all past four years, due to a lack a unique organization. views by club members), » promise both offensively and de­ forced to bowl each other. APL, of interst and non-participation, The Club also runs the con­ the Club believes, will gi^ve an fensively. They realized that not last year’s champ, has most of the Club hasdeclin^. Bob Reuss, cession stand at Drexel football overall view of what the Drexe only were they battling the op­ its team returning and rumor along with many other members, games, and Bob intends to con­ student feels is needed in tne position but they also were fight­ has it that they’ve added a few wants the Club to regain and tinue this, while possibly expand­ area of Drexel athletics. ing for starting positions. Show­ more high scorers to their line­ possibly surpass its past ac­ ing the accommodation. The Varsity Club has many ing a lot of ability in the back- up. But this year will be far from complishments. ideas, but forem ost among its - field were running backs Art a walk away for the Pi’s, for Generating force terests is the growth of Ziller, Bill Hutton, Lynn Fer­ placed in the same league are The plan Last but not least, and probably Club Itself and the generation o guson, Jody B relsford and the Sammies and Tekes. The Club would first like to most important of all, the Club interest in athletic expansio quarterback Mark Wissinger. Up SAM will be returning with the build its membership to about has outlined as a new objective, parallel D rex el's g^owtli as. front, linemen Brian Collinan, same team that has carried it to 50 actives. In order to do this, the possibility of making Itself academic Institution. Both Royden Thomas, Joel Speigel, two consecutive league champ­ Bob has appointed Ron Leopold, the generating force behind a be had under the same roof, - Pat Fredrick, Mike Romen, and ionships. The Sammies will be Drexel’s all-star lacrosse play­ Phil Salvi showed a great deal student push for an expanded ath­ the Club will give all it has counting on their three All-IF er, as pledge master, Ron’s job letic program. of hustle and desire. All in all, bowlers from last year to lead see it come about. If yo'J . will be to recruit possible mem­ This, the Club believes, is terested, whether you’re a freshman coach Schweid was very them to the third league title bers and then take them all the something lacking at Grand Old terman or not, contact Bob pleased with the squad’s perfor­ and a possible over-all champ­ way from pledging to inlUation, mance against Haverford and ionship. DIT. Yours truly, asaClubmem­ via student mail. If There are many sophomores and ber, has made this a pet project seems to think that this year’s TKE will pose a problem for juniors who possess letters and red Interested, get a ^ j^gveri team is coming along very well. both APL and SAM and has the and intends to question the ad­ delphia and draw a this who belong in the Club. Ron will ministration on its decisions con­ 32nd and Chestnut, becaui> If the spirit remains, the team potential to take it all for itself. contact these men and try to should have a very successful Returning for the Tekes will l>e cerning the report submitted by is the only method you j. generate some interest on their the '* committee for athletic of finding your way bacK season. the starting five from last year. behalf. evaluation.” The report is due graduation. ______w t Football, jazz concert

fhis weekend. (See iiji actVaily assu’mi^ his’ new pos't interested contact the Suburban I uauum«. .. wntn U ^ null. Homecoming th (jjgcuss his policies Travel Agency to make their own C 'l ! “ l;“« the game, | « ' arran,emen... hundred attended an ...... li DREXEL TRIANGLE DREXEL TRIANGLE Page A2 — September 29, 1967 Page A3 — September 29, 1967 '67 season marks toughest slate yet A price you have to pay by Steve Lalka

by Joe Siderio VARSITY FOOTBALL SCHEDULE Coach Tom Grebis' gridders took Henry’s offense gears to capitalize Green Lane, Pa., is a little community set in the Drexel Field on Saturday, on speed and quickness In his flip- off somewhere between Quakertown and Allen­ September 30, to open the '67 foot- flop pro T. Junior Bruce Decker is town. Camp Skymount is a boys' camp located S season. The season will see re- the L.V. quarterback, while sophomore somewhere in Green Lane — only coach Tom " al of clashes with two old op- and reserve QB Taki Babotas has been TIME DATE OPPONENT PLACE Grebis and the founder of the camp know its Donents in Rensselaer Polytechnic In- switched to flanker. The Dutchmen 1 :30 p.m. Sat., Sept, 30 Lebanon Valley College Home exact position. I ctitute and Gettysburg CoUege of the possess an all-conference fullback in 1 :30 p.m. Sat., Oct, 7 Upsala College Home Each year prior to Drexel's football season, i MAC University Division, as part of John Fashnacht who has been switched (Homecoming) Coach Grebis hauls his loyal forces to Camp I one of the toughest season slates in to tailback in the McHenry offense. 1:30 p.m. Sat., Oct, 14 Rensselaer Polytechnic Skymount. The members of the squad are blind­ recent years. Key men on the line are guard Tom Institute Home folded, loaded into a bus, and secretly routed After their opener with Lebanon Palato, tackle Pete Giraffa, and Jack 2 ;00 p.m. Sat., Oct. 2 1 W ilkes College Away to this mystical place. They are sworn to se­ Valley, the Dragons remain at home Howie, who led the Dutchmen last year 2 : 0 0 p.m. Sat., Oct. 28 P.M.C. Colleges Away crecy concerning the camp*s whereabouts, if for the H om ecom ing contest with Up- in tackles. 1 :30 p.m. Sat., Nov. 4 Gettysburg College Home Dinner is served at 6:00 p.m., and then you accidentally uncovered during the trip. fun and games — wheelbarrow races, “he's sala and the renewal encounter with The Dragons own two straight vic­ 2 : 0 0 p.m. Sat., Nov. 1 1 Western Maryland College Away are free until 8:00. Some guys play cards or Home When they arrive at Skymount, their blind­ not heavy he's my brother”-type races, and a R P I. The Dragons then take to the tories over the Dutchmen and will be 1 :30 p.m. Sat., Nov. 18 A lbright College read, while others just shoot the breeze. How­ folds are removed and they each get a blanket host of other “enjoyables," Then the kicking road to meet Wilkes and PMC Col­ eager to make it a third in the initial ever, a few ju st rack out once again, thinking and cabin number in which they are to house game is worked on as the first practice closes. leges before returning home to tackle ’67 contest. some gratifying thoughts about.the day's ac­ themselves for a questionable number of days. Breakfast follows a “ hot" shower, and there University Division foe, Gettysburg. A complishments. Yes, this is Drexel football camp 1967, and you are racked out contemplating the 9:30 trip to Western Maryland to take on though the above may be exaggerated, the squad a.m. practice. the Green Terrors precedes the sea­ should still get a round of applause for its You put the football gear on slowly about Evening skull session son’s final clash with Albright Col­ display of courage. Football camp is the un­ 9:00, because the coaches want you to be on Upsolo ■ Oct. 7 three encounters and five of the last There is an 8:00 p.m, skull session sched­ lege at home. pleasant side of a game, which most people the field 15 minutes before the formal session The gridders, led by a stingy de­ six. The last PMC victory over Drexel feel is all cheers and glory. begins. The whistle blows at 9;30 and cales- uled, and as you pick up your play book to was a 10-0 verdict in 1963. embark on your journey, the soreness and fense, could put together an MAC They say that anything which is of any value thentics precede the workout. The second morn­ championship season if the problem R ensselaer - Oct. 14 Eddie Lawless will be starting much - chills are brought to mind once again. Stiff­ QB The Homecoming crowd this year will to the individual has to be worked for, in order ing practice is normally a sled popping drill see the Dragons square off against from scratch in the wake of no spring ness has set in and you feel achy all over that heckles Grebis is solved and the to achieve it fully. Well, the 1967 Dragons are type affair which closes with a 20 minute dum­ depleted offensive line shored up. The the Vikings of Upsala College. practice, due to the coaching change­ as you laughingly bring yourself to make it over. He has a strong running threat shooting for all the marbles, and at Skymount my scrimmage. offensive muscle m ust be strengthened Like the Dragons’ mentor Grebis, For Dick Riendeau, coach at Rens­ Lunch usually falls about 12:30 p,m., and to the meeting. selaer Polytechnic Institute and his 33 in Rich Head and the right arm of in Green Lane, they pay the price. If the Dragons are to tame the tou^ Upsala Coach John Hooper is looking after your second “hot” shower of the day, Meetings include a film and a chalk talk, charges, the football season of ’66 was QB Bill McQueen, who played prac­ competition they face this y ear, for a replacement for quarterback Lou A football atmosphere you push yourself to make it. The meal is and half the tim e you find yourself falling “pigskin satori.” True, their 5-4 log tically all of last season at that spot. A rundown of the types and talents Chichetto who set several Upsala asleep. The session completed at 9:45, you barely skimmed the.500 mark, butwhen With 18 additional returning lettermen, Camp is the place where things get done. normally light to insure no unpleasant ex­ records in last year’s 6-2 season. of the teams D rexel w ill encounter things should improve at PMC from the Physical conditioning, timing and team cohesion periences during the afternoon practice. You find that you have 15 minutes to make it Hooper will probably be leaning toward you come from a 1-42-1 record over this season is as follows: uninspiring 2-7, 2-6 logs of the past are the primary targets in this relatively then find yourself racked out once again watch­ back to your cabin before lights go out at junior Howard Holliday, but expects six years,., A year ago, to say that the austere two years. short period of tim e (l>etween 12 and 16 days, ing the clock as 3:00 p.m, draws near. 10 p.m. competition from three highly touted halls of this Troy, New York, school Right now, the Cadets may appear the determined by the Grebis almanac, which is frosh recruits. More work Thoughts before sleep were more famous for producing underdog for this contest, but pre­ noted for its many “on-the-spot changes*'). At the running back position. Hooper Lebanon V alley-S ept. 30 nuclear scientists than grid “sci­ dictions go down the drain in any tradi­ It is truly a football atmosphere and not much You dress more slowly this time because As the lights dim and some idle chatter has Ken Severino and hurdler-jumper- entists” would have been an under­ tional rivalry such as this one. Seems of anything else. The squad knows that it's your muscles you thought you never had just ' ceases, you find an unusual silence. Some guys sprinter Richie Davis, who form a ring out with a dull ache. The sun is usually go to sleep immediately, while others con­ statement. Today the 5000 or so under- to me, Drexel was the heavy favorite there for business, and readies itself to take Coach Bill McHenry will bring in potent duo behind an offensive wall on anything which may come its way. hot for the afternoon workout, making it that template whether it’s all worth it. The night grads might provide a contrary argu­ back in 1963. a team with 21 of 33 letterm en back averaging 215 from tackle to tackle. much more uncomfortable within your helmet. is cold and the cabin is filled with air holes, ment. to the opener for both schools at If Hooper can find his QB by this The routine You trudge down the cement walk leading so you're norm ally bedded down pretty heavily. Thus a team that has found winning Drexel Field. The experienced r e ­ second game of the season, the Viking 1966 MAC STANDINGS At Skymount you put in a full day. You rise to the practice field, as the hailstone sound You feel the so reness and throbbing now, and contagious is what Coach Riendeau will turners should bolster a somewhat in­ attack should prove a formidable test COLLEGE DIVISION at 5:30 a.m. and are to be on the field at of cleats against the concrete fills the air. you begin to think of the guys back home and bring to Drexel Field on Nov. 14. adequate '66 line tow ards improving for the Dragons’ outstanding defense. 5:45, The first thing you encounter is a lengthy W eariness has set in and you wonder how what they're doing right at that time. RPI has 21 lettermen back from the NORTH the 2-6 record of last year. The Dragons too will be out for hell Wilkes 7 0 0 physical training session. This is followed by you will ever make it through this one. How­ You ask yourself again w hether it's all worth team that reeled off four straight end- Size is still lacking, however, in to avenge an openingday 12-71osswhen of-season wins enroute to the improved 1 0 ever, the whistle blows and practice begins. it, and when you answer yes, you decide to Up so 1 a 6 the Flying Dutchmen’s line, and Mc­ the team s last met in 1965. The heat of the day starts to loosen you up roll over and get some sleep, because tomor­ season. Delaware Valley 4 2 0 Among them are QB John Contento and the aches go away. The afternoon prac­ row will be here before you know it. Just before Lycoming 4 3 0 and running threat fullback Bell Criss, tice is the one which separates the men from sleep overtakes you, it begins to dawn on you Moravian 4 4 1 the boys, because tit is here where most of Behind a solid line, which includes five Albright 4 4 0 that it's a very high price you're paying to returning starters, the Engineers from the contact work and live scrimmages take 3 3 0 play college footbalL A price, you realize, that Troy maintain a strong offensive Juniata place. Practice ends with wind sprints about a lot of people would not pay. Then you think Wagner 1 3 1 5:15 and the coach tells you it's all right to machine. that you're not a lot of people, and that's a This year a contest with RPI stacks SOUTH go swimming. You take a quick shower and then satisfying thought. Sleep comes easily now, be­ up as no breather for the Dragons. Swarthmore 6 0 1 into the swimming pool for a relaxing 15 min­ cause you figure there aren't many like you - 0 utes. there aren't many willing to pay the price. Drexel 4 1 F. & M. 3 2 2 Dickinson 4 3 1 W ilkes - Oct.21 Ursinus 2 4 1 Muhlenberg 2 6 1 The first away contest for the Lebanon Valley 2 6 0 Dragons will find them journeying to PMC Colleges 2 6 0 Wilkes-Barre, Pa,, to take on the Haverford 1 5 0 Colonels of Wilkes. Johns Hopkins 0 6 2 Wilkes, as last year, has a strong defense led by linebacker Mike Con- naly, Benley Varchal and behemoth tackle Bill Laydon. The rock hard G ettysburg - Nov.4 unit was key last year as Wilkes rolled an 8-0 record (including a 14-7 win Last year’s neo-baptism against at Drexel’s Homecoming) and a MAC MAC University Division talent saw the championship. Dragons drop the Engineers of Lehigh The left side of the offensive Ime on the opening day. Hopes are high is strong, too, with Joe Roszyko, Bruce for a continuance,, as the scene shifts Comstock and Joe Skvara from guard to Drexel Field and a renewal encounter to end. The backfield is more uncertain with another University Division foe, with three candidates for the QB spot Gettysburg. to work with running threat Lee Namey. Ciettysburg lost to graduation last The team’s strength has led many to year, if you call three of four backs pick Wilkes as a strong challenge to and the entire offensive line except Drexel. One thing is sure in this game — center a loss. Gettysburg’s season the Dragons are not likely to forget hopes, needless to say, will ride on that lone season loss of last year. finding replacement offensive talent. V Early practices saw coach CJene Haas moving defensive standouts Chris Skaar PMC Colleges Oct. 28 and Bob Wagner to offense to shore up his line. The quarterback position will V-- be handled by Mike Daar, with Dave Things may be “ new” at PMC Col­ Demorex, Ken C ream er, and fullback leges, this year with a new name and Steve Brandt, the lone returnee, com­ new coach in Eddie Lawless, but the pleting the field. Dragons will be looking to keep one Iron hard on defense, Gettysburg will “old” Institution intact — their strong have six defensive starters back in- record against the Cadets in recent Continued on Page A8 years. The Dragons have won the last Sprinting into th« ■•eondory, Jim Lynch moves ° ®,g,immoge b; “gainst Swarthmor*. The Drogoni won th* game eondit DREXEL TRIANGLE DREXEL TRIANGLE P«|^e A4 — September 29, 1967 Page AS - September 29, 1967 QB question

The 1967 Dragons come into the season of their best teams in recent years. As the pre­ ’6 7 - dI s - ’6 7 season drew to a close, most of tions were still being hotly contested, both on offense m m m s and defense. The team will again run from the unbalanced T- * r formaUon, one which allows a comparatively small peclally the Tom Grebis’t^?o f°U eU !'”H?e”iJ,de^ team, like Drexel, to use its speed and quickness to confidence and leads the team well best advantage. The offense has three guards and one Sophomore Paul McGloln Is also flghtlne for the tackle rather than the two and two of a balanced P^ltion. A transfer from King’s Point, Paul runs T sittflLCke probably see a lot of action The position of the weak side end has been hotly contested for by sophomore Greg Dubas and junior 1 experience, he has a tremendous Cliff Risen. Dubas, a transfer from Lafayette, with arm and can throw a ball 50 to 60 yards accurately. good hands and good speed has shown very well by Amie Riewe T for the halfback slot are Jim Paul Claffey in pre-season play, and thus seems to have the edge Lynch and Ken Wise. Lynch is a hard runner who on the position. Risell, a defensive speclaUst last everything well. Wise is an exception- Dave Lofink year, is a bigger man and a tough competitor who ally trtcky runner, somewhat along the lines of should not be counted out. Cliff, however, had a Gale Sayers. If Ken stays healthy he could prove severe knee and shoulder injury and is a question­ ^j.u small college backs around. able early season performer, if ,^ ^ c k s to watch are Randy Holmes and Ed McFillan. Both are speedsters and could help V-guard the offense greatly. The weak side guard position Is being held by junior The leading candidate for the fullback slot is junior Paul Claffey. Paul is a big, tough, steady performer Steve McNlchol. As a sophomore, Steve led the team who saw a good amount of action as a sophomore. with a 4,8-yard rushing average and should Improve One of Paul's biggest assets is that he rarely makes on that this year. He Is fast and quick to the Une, a mistake. Closely pushing Claffey for the position and Is an exceptional blocker. Sophomore Mike Di- Wieland, Baer, Unipan, and McGlein is one of the promising sophomores, Pete Sculley, Donato is also trying to crack into the starters. Sculley, weighing In at about 210, Is extremely strong He»s an extremely hard worker with exceptional but needs a little experience. If he learns quickly, strength and could push McNlchol hard for the look outi position. At center Is Dave Loflnk, also a strong, steady performer. Close behind is soph John Durham who is smaller, but quicker off the ball. John Kozakowski The inside guard on the strong side is a tough Defense solid fight between John Kozakowski and sophomore Ed The Dragons* defensive alignment also shows a Lorry Colbert Mattio. Kozakowski has more experience and is big lot of promise for the upcoming year. The team will and tough. He is an excellent trap blocker, which use the familiar 5-2 defense that has been so suc­ makes him almost Ideal for the position. Mattio, cessful in the past. Blasko and Rydel will hold down possibly the best soph prospect, has good size and the end spots, backed by Stan Czermanskl and Pac­ is a hard worker. He will be a hard man to keep zosa. The interior of the line remains strong with on the bench. Tony Stonis, Larry Colbert and Tony Gromalski The outside guard is contested between seniors holding down the starting positions. These three all Larry Colbert and Tony Stonis. Both have a lot of Ken Wise Jim Lynch have a lot of defensive experience and opponents experience and are steady performers, and no matter will have a tough time making yardage through the which way the decision goes, the Dragons* *0* guard middle. slot will be in good hands. The linebacker spot remains in question. There is a great deal of talent but experience is lacking. Three way fight Tony Stonis Carl Hertrich The top candidates are all sophomores, with Ed Mattio Tackle is a rugged fight between three seniors: and Carl Hertrich seeming to have the upper hand. John Juzwiak, Gene Blasko, and Tony Gromalski. Sophs Jim Reed and Mike Kerwin are also vying Juzwiak is the biggest of the three at 6»2»* arid 215 1967 D rexeH ball Squad for the position. pounds, but has been hampered with pre-season The defensive secondary also looks strong this year Injuries. Blasko has been a steady performer for with the return of Holmes, Pavoni, and Risell, and the past three years and always seems to get the N o . N a m e W t. H i ^ S c h o o l with newcomer Bob Enoch, Pavoni set a record last job done. Gromalski is the rugged type of ball player year by intercepting seven passes from opponents John Paczoso 1 7 *Pa\il Secunda 1 6 0 Pequea V alley who never gives up. His second effort has meant and Is out looking for more this year, Enoch, from 18 *Lou Ravoni 1 5 0 Lower M erion the difference for the Dragons in the past. La Salle High, will be a big help to the backfield The strong side end is still not completely sewed 19 Paul McGloln 1 8 0 St. John's Prep and has already shown good talent. Also bound to down, John Paczosa, a senior, has experience, desire, 2 0 K e n W i s e 1 7 0 Y e a d o n see a lot of action are Ed Wieland, Jim Lynch, and Bill Baer. good speed, and good hands. He is being pushed very 21 ♦Rich Unipan 1 6 0 Msgr. Bonner hard, however, by Gene Rydel, who has a little more Talent is not lacking on this year’s squad as can 2 3 ♦John Paczosa 1 8 5 size. Rydel, a sophomore, is big and strong and looks West C atholic easily be seen. If the Dragons can solidify in the ques­ like a good bet for the future if not sooner. 2 4 ♦Randolph Holmes 1 5 5 M o o r e s t o w n tionable positions, look out! 2 5 B i l l B a e r 1 8 0 St. M atthew's

2 6 E d W i e l a n d 1 7 8 Hatboro-Horsham 2 7 Edward M cFillin 1 6 8 St, Joseph's Randy Holmes Bob Enoch 2 8 Mike DlDonato 1 6 4 West C atholic 3 0 Mike Kirwan 1 8 9 Bishop Egan

3 2 ♦Jam es Lynch 1 8 0 S t . J o h n ' s

3 9 ♦S teve McNlchol 1 6 5 L a S a l l e

4 1 Wayne Huntslnger 1 5 5 Cherry H ill 4 4 ♦C lifford Risell 1 9 5 H ioenixville

HERMAN 5 0 M i k e S m i t h 2 0 0 Southern Wayne EPSTEIN 5 2 John Durham 1 7 5 Haddon H eights BOB Assistant 5 3 ♦M iles S titt 1 7 5 West C atholic 1 9 0 SCHWEID Tom*s 32-15-2 record since he as­ Coach 5 4 ♦Gene Blasko P e n n s a u k e n 192 sumed the head coaching position in 5 5 ♦A nthony Gromalski Mahanoy Area Frosh 1961 puts him right behind his mentor ♦L arry Colbert 2 0 0 Coach at Drexel - Eddie Allen - In total JOE VETTER 5 6 M arple-Newtown DICK FRASER 2 0 5 career wins by any Drexel football Assistant coach 5 7 ♦Steve Terebus W e s t m o n t Assistant coach 1 8 5 coach. 5 9 ♦D avid Loflnk North A llegheny A 1954 Drexel grad, G rebis had been 21 0 6 0 ♦John Juzwiak Card, Dougherty coaching at his alma mater for the Edward M attio 187 Bishop Nexmian past ten years. Prior to assuming his **Eppy" begins his 20th year as a * 6 1 A 1963 Drexel graduate, Fraser re­ 1 9 0 Last year was Schweid's initial sea­ current post, he was assistant and head Drexel football coach this season. He 6 2 Pete Sculley M c D e v i t t son as freshman mentor and he p ^ - turns to coaching at his alma mater Joe begins his fourth season as a 2 0 0 freshman coach. has served seven years as a varsity 6 3 ♦Paul Claffey S|;. Joseph's duced a winning (3-D record, "^e after successful stints as a coach in Dragon assistant, with his major duties Don is a highly respected Une coach A native of Windber, Pa., and a assistant and was head freshman coach 1 8 8 the U.S. Army. Dick was offensive line that of chief scout. Vetter, a familiar 6 4 ♦John Kozakowski Father Judge Uttle Dragons knocked off * who will begin his ninth season as a graduate of Windber High School, for 13 seasons prior to that. 1 8 0 M arshall, PMC Colleges and Penn. coach of the vn Corps team in Stut- face at most area high schools, is a J i m R e e d D u n e l l e n Dragon mentor this ye^. Grebis led Drexel in scoring and pass Nationally known as a fine lacrosse 6 5 gart, Germany, that won the USAREUR 1 9 5 OnYv a mammoth Temple team, with Shank played his collegiate football receiving in his junior year and was key factor in the relationships between ♦Tony StonlB L a S a l l e coach, Epstein has been DrexePs only 6 6 a i L su W defeated Schweid's crew. at Penn State - as a Uneman - and championship in the Fall of 1964 and Dragon co-captain in his senior year. the college and local high schools. 1 7 5 lacrosse mentor and, last June, served 8 0 Gregg IXibas Springfield * Of tte U. S. Naval A c ^ - was a starter until he departed in was an assistant coach at a U,S. He also played two years of service Vetter, a former center, coached at Army High School in Germany the as an assistant coach in the annual Stan Czermanskl 1 6 5 St. M atthew's demv Orange Bowl team In 1960, the football at Fort Knox and Fort Meade. North-South Lacrosse contest. Roman CathoUc High School before 8 1 1954 following year, coming to Drexel. He is also the ath- 19 0 St. M atthew's personable mentor ynlve?- Pr'ior to coming to Drexel, Shank When not coaching, Grebis, an as­ A graduate of the University of Mary­ 8 2 G e n e R y d e l IM days at Colorado State Univer coached at high schools in the Nor­ Fraser's outstanding career as a 185 St, M atthew's lineman was cut short by an injury sistant professor of finance, teaches land, where he played football and la­ CYO 8 3 C arl H ertrich X wlfere he also played and coached ristown (Pa.) area where he resides. in the School of Business Adminis­ crosse, Epstein coached high school 1 7 5 L a S a l l e after two games of his final year of Vetter is a graduate of the Drexel 8 4 B o b E n o c h Employed by Drexel as D ^ector of tration. He is a member of the Max­ football and was once line coach at ^“ J io /to coming to Drexel, schweid the Athletic Field and Field Facilities eligibility. Fraser was Dragon captain well Club's Board of Governors and a Johns Hopkins University, A versatile a former recipient 8 5 T o m L a i n g that year after having served a co­ of the Mary S. Irick Drexel Award Building, Shank also coaches the fresh­ past president of the Alumni Varsity guy, Epstein, who holds a law degree, man baseball team In the Spring. captain the year before. Club. was once a practicing attorney. tor outstanding accomplishments by an evening college graduate. * Letterman rassistant r r aat Delaware « r Valley « College, S DREXEL TRIANGLE P a ^ A6 — September 29, 1967

S o c c e r team to install

E u r o p e a n t y p e o f p l a y

DrexePs soccer team will open up This job is to follow the play when Drex- the 1967 campaign with a n6w look. el is on defense and foil the thrusts Last year’s team played excellent de­ before they reach the goal. Doug Clark fense but the offensive punch was lack­ and Bill Muir are quite capable of “fill­ ing when it was needed. Remember last ing in" at either position. The fullbacks will be led by All-MAC year's “strikers?" Well, this year the Ron Wright team will feature a “schemer" and a Ron W rl^t. Ron’s size and coolness Jurij Burka “spoiler." The team structure is the under fire make him an outstanding de­ first of its kind in the nation, although fender. Jack Wolf, Fred PoUman and It is used widely by European and South Bob Walker will be working for the other American teams. wing fullback position. Ron Dreltas and The team structure is in the basic Bob Sloan, both sophomores, will man form of a 4-1-1-4 (four forwards, one the two inside fullback positions. mid-fielder, one free fullback and four In the goal-keeping department, Drexel fullbacks). The only variation is that the has the same problem as the Philadel­ wingmen will be retreating on defense phia Spartans: two goalies of superior and the wing fullbacks will be moving quality. Paul Diana will be returning up on offense. This will enable ttie team for his second year as varsity goalie; to have seven men on offense at times, he will share the goal chores with John and there will always be seven men on Halvorsen. Both goalies are experienced defense. and confident. There is an abundance of linemen out for the team this year. Returning letter- men Jeff Tryens, Hank Leung, Paul Se- cunda and Doug Clark will be vying for the forward positions. An added scor­ ing punch will be felt with the return Bill Nhari John Halvorsen of Bill Nhari and Burt Reiff after a year in industry, Jeff Boles, A1 Zalcmann and Bill Muir round out the forward line. All-American George Burka will play the role of the “schemer" this year. He will be responsible for finding the openings and setting up the offensive thrusts. Dick Foelster, Drexel’s other mid-fielder, is cast as the “spoiler.".

Jeff Tryens VARSITY SOCCER TIBIE DATE OPPONENT PLACE 11:00 a.m. Sat., Oct. 7 Alumni (Homecoming) Home 3:30 p.m. Wed. Oct. 11 Hofstra University Home 3:00 p.m. Frl., Oct. 13 Rider College Away 11:00 a.m. Sat., Oct. 21 St. Joseph's College A-way 3:30 p.m. Wed., Oct. 25 La Salle College Home 2:00 p.m. Sat., Oct. 28 Muhlenberg College Home 2:30 p.m. Wed., Nov. 1 University of Pennsylvania Away 11:00 a.m. Sat., Nov. 4 University of Delaware Away 3:00 p.m. Wed., Nov. 8 Haverford College Home 2:00 p.m. Sat., Nov. 11 Johns Hopkins University Home 3:00 p.m. Tue., Nov. 14 Ursinus College Away

Poul Diana Hank Leung

Don Yonker, a versatile coacH

by Joe Dascola

Don Yonker is no stranger to the Drexel he transferred to South Philadelphia and was campus. As coach of the varsity soccer named to the post of Director of the physi­ team, he has led them since 1947 and can cal education department where he also boast a National Championship team in 1958. coached soccer and golf. This talented soccer mentor began his soc­ After serving with the U.S. Navy In the ce r career in 1927 at Frankford High School Caribbean and Pacific as a senior grade in Philadelphia. His coach at Frankford lieutenant during World War II, he con­ always gleams when the name of Don Yonker tinued teaching at South Philadelphia High is mentioned. Coach Harry Barfoot describes School until 1957, when he became depart­ with pride how “Yonk" started from scratch and later played outside right on a champ­ ment head at Olney High School. ionship team. “Yonk" has been the only soccer coach “Yonk" continued his soccer at Temple in the history of the sport at Drexel, Dur­ University while studying physical educa­ ing his reign his teams have compiled an tion. During his playing days he was noted astonishing 134-61-17 record. He has turned for his quick reflexes and jumping ability out 17 All-Americans and three collegiate coaches. to “out-head" his opponents. In his senior year he captained his team to another champ­ To add to his accomplishments, “Yonk" ionship while excelling as an All-American. has displayed his literary style and his skill in languages by translating soccer articles Teaching career from German, Italian, and Spanish, He has Don was graduated from Temple and in been editor of the Soccer Journal since 1953 1935 began his physical education teachine and President of the Eastern Pennsylvania and District Referee’s Association and both Don Yonker career at Central High School, also coach­ ing soccer, track and ice hockey. In 1942 the Philadelphia and National Soccer Coaches* Associations. DREXEL TRIANGLE Page A7 — September 29, 1967 T o p C o a c h

The Drexel Alumni Varsity Club In 1965 awarded him with a trophy in his name commemorating the annual Alumni-Varsity game. He also received the 1964 National Honor Award of the National Soccer Coaches Association of America, that organization’s highest award. This past summer Don was named as assistant director of physical education and intramural sports at Drexel. If one had to measure how “Yonk»» has best contributed to soccer, where would you begin? His writings? His development of the International Soccer Camp for boys? His fight for “good clean soccer**? To select an individual contribution would be impossible, Don is definitely a unique man. His var­ ious talents, from writing to teaching, have always been for the cause of promoting soccer as tiie true international sport. Don­ ald Y, Yonker is truely a versatile coach.

Forward Doug Clark drivei the boll downfield in last year's action vs. Rider. Steve Foelster moves behind.

Harriers open on third season of competition

The 1967 edition of Drexel’s cross­ eligible. John F lor, who pressed Down­ country team began Its dally fall prac­ ing's heels all season, is lost by tice on Thursday, September 28, at graduation. 3:30 p.m. on the Drexel Field and Six varsity lettermen return this expects to be running on the hilly year, led by captain Ross Becker, who terrain of Belmont Plateau In F alr- placed first for the Dragons last year CROSS COUNTRY mount Park within a week. against PMC and L,V, Lettermen Jim T I l f B D A T S OPPONENT PLACE The Dragon Harriers open their Druecker, Ken Johnson, Joel Lantz- 1 1 :00 a . m . S a t , O c t . 7 *Lebanon Valley College and season at 11:00 a.m. on Saturday, man. Bill Reiter, and Dave Rhein- P.M.C. Colleges Away October 7, when they meet two of heimer round out the list of veterans. 4:00 p.m. Wed., Oct 1 1 Phlla. Coll. of Textile A of their most formidable MAC op­ Last year’s yearlings Bob Andree, Eric Science Belmont ponents, PMC Colleges and Lebanon Henkels, Rich Noll, Rich Patterson and 1 :30 p . m . S a t . , O c t . 1 4 Haverford College and Johns Hopkins Univ. Belmont Valley, In a double dual meet on the Bob Smith, are expected to make the 1 1 :00 a . m . S a t , O c t 21 *Ursinus College and latter team's 4.5 mile course at Ann- competition for the “ first five” a wide Delaware Valley College Away ville. open contest, according to Coach Mur­ 1 :00 p . m . Sat, Oct. 28 *Rider College and PMC, with an all-veteran team which ray Miller. Temple university Away took second place in the College Divi­ Also returning to the squad are up­ 2 :0 0 p . m . S a t . , N o v . 4 *La Salle (Allege and Lafayette College Belmont sion of the MAC Championships last perclassmen Bob Kleem^n, Tom Lind, 3 :00 p . m . Wed., Nov. 8 West Chester State College and November, just nosing out the third Norm Long, Denny Neider, Dan Soss- St. Joseph’s College Belmont place Dragons, are gunning for the amon, and Jay Westler. 1 :00 p . m . S a t . , N o v . 1 1 *Moravlan -College and championship this season and may University of Scranton Away Dork horses prove to be Drexel’s tou^est league 1 7 M.A.C. Championships — 2 :0 0 p . m . F r i . , N o v . Host; Temple University Belmont opponent. L.V, should also field a Two “dark horses” will report this All home runs at Belmont Plateau strong aggregation. September. Sophomore Dave Arthur, •Site of Race who has been running in California One and two lost this summer, and Ben Fischer, ex- Lost to this season’s harrier squad Monsignor Bonner runner, also running are Drexel’s number one and two men this summer, may prove key factors of 1966, Tom Downing, who placed in the Dragon line-up in October. ninth in the College Division Champion­ Over forty freshmen have Indicated ships last year, is scholastically in- to Coach Miller that they will report to the yearling squad this year, a bright note for Drexel’s newest var­ sity sport, now In its third season of IMMEDIATE MAC competition. PRESCRIPTION SERVICE SEPT. 28 — OCT. 1 IRIVE PART TIME The Dragon harriers have yet to ★ LOWEST CUT PRICE DRU6S post a winning season in dual meets, ★ COSMETICS and TOILETRIES Gordon Lightfoot while placing seventh in the 1965 Max Factor — Re»:on — Chanel — championship, and third In last year’s Lanvin-Old Spice - English Leather TRIO & ELAINE WHITE competition. —Yardley ★ STATIONERY & SCHOOL SUPPLIES ★ FILM and SERVICE - Flash Bulbs S T A M P IT ! IT'S THE RAOE R E G U L A R PENN PHARMACY MODEL 3607 Walnut Street ' ANY $ Cliecks Cashed 3 LINE TEXT C S Tht finctt INDESTRUCTIBLE METAL POCKET RUBBER STAMP. W ■> 2"- Send check or money order. Be men and w o m e n sure to include your Zip Code. No poHtage or handling charses. Add day o r I NIGHT WORK For Your Pleasure,..- »aleti tax. / Prompt ihipmmt. Satisfaction Guarantaod Yellow Cab Company of Philadel- Razor Cutting THB MORP CO. Pnia has openings for part-time P. 0. Box 18623 Lonoi Sqiwra Station <'|ivers. Here is an opportunity for ATLANTA, QA., 30326 pleasant, interesting outdoor work FtoWt with good earnings. ERNEST & ERNIE’S

Over the years thousands of college PHILA.'S LARGEST FOLK CLUB students have driven Yellow Cabs Live MUSIC&Supper for aSoiiR The YOUNGBLOODS w aid their financial needs. Wilford ,lso Tho MANDRAKE MEMORIAL SoDt. to Qualifications: 21 years of age; Open ^30Thur,Fri.Sat & 6 Sim 29 Oct. 1 Driver's License; Barber Shop Show sB & lO iLateSat S h o w n 30 P'oot of driver’s license for 2 years. Hoot&AuditionsEverySun,6to8 WOODY’S TRUCK STOP Apply HOURSt MON. Thru FRI. 8 A.M. - 6 P.M. - plus - 'ellow cab company SAT. 8 A.M. . 2 P.M. 4M ilesW estofPhila.oiiRt.30 ''Third Banquet” By Lawrence Booth Employment Office 109 North 33rd St. 8 7 4 L a n caster Ave. Bryn f^awr ’05 South 12th Street Ptioiie (215) LA 5 3375 A.M. to 9 PM. EV 6-2617 “"d SgturdQy_9 A.M. to S P.M. DREXEL TRIANGLE Page A8 -> September 29, 1967 Season slate Continued from Page A3 eluding big ends A1 Satos and Rich Erdman. The outcome of this game may well hinge on whether by that time Dragon coach Grebls has solved his own of­ 1 fensive problems.

W estern M aryland - Nov. 11 0

For several years now, armchair forecasters have predicted only so-so performances from the Western Mary­ land eleven, but mediocre Is not the word for their play against DrexeU Thou^i the Dragons have won the last three contests, the Terrors from West­ minster, Md., lead the overall series, 12-7. 1967 DREXEL VARSITY FOOTBALL SQUAD This year the predictors expect only slight Improvement from Coach Ron Jones’ 4-5 record of last year. Depth 1*t row - March - Mgr., Pavoni, Unipon, DiDonato, Schweid • Frosh Cooch, Shank - Ass*t. Coach, Grebis is the problem for Jones, particularly Head Coach, Frazier - Ass't. Coach, Epstein - Ass't. Coach, Holmes, Baer, Wise, Ruwet - Mgr. on both the offensive and defensive 2nd row -M cFillin, Huntsinger, Laing, Sculley, Enoch, Kozakowski, Juzwiok, Lofink, Blasko, Claffey. lines. If his sophomores come through 3rd row - McGloin, Terebus, Smith, Gromalski, Czermanski, Mattio, Reed, Hertrich, Rydel, Durham. it may be Jones' year to foil the pre­ 4th row -> McNichol, Paczoso, Colbert, Stitt, Schank, Stonis, Dubas, Wieland, R issel, Kirwan. dictors. Last year, it took a second half rally by the Dragons to take ttie con­ test, and two years ago, an 80-yard pass play, setting up a touchdown in the final two minutes was needed. For ttils year’s contest,..,

A lbright - N ov.18

If history is any guidllne the Dragons final encounter will prove the toughest of ttie season, as they meet “tradi­ tional” closing day foe, Albright Col­ lege from Reading, Pennsylvania, Two years ago the Dragons hopes for a 7-1 record were crushed 21-0 by the Albri^t Lions in the season finale. Last year, they took a 5-1-1 log to Reading, and came home on the long end of a 21-20 squeaker and the finest Drexel record in years. Lion Coach Johxi Potskian has a returning QB-HB duo in John Long- onecker and Denny Zimmerman, which should once again provide solid punch. Zimmerman, a sophomore, led the MAC Northern Division in ground gaining as a frosh. End Herb Nauss leads the of­ fensive line, but the interior lines needs rebuilding because of the loss of several key starters. The Lions have always been tough, leading in the overall series with Drexel 7-1 and should prove a fitting closing to the ’67 Dragon grid season.