Reorganization group seeks

new governm ent structure DREXEI INSTITUTt Of TECHNOIOGY The Student Government Re- as set forth by the lawmaking phiiadelphia, pa. prganization Committee has de­ group, tentatively called the Stu­ cided that the executive and le­ dent Congress, will look into gislative branches of the new problems of student concern and student government should be propose needed legislation. At separate bodies. the head of the executive branch ilu m e x l iv FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 1W7 number 9 The executive branch, in ad­ will be the President of the Stu­ dition to implementing the rules dent Body, who will be elected by all of the students. To as­ ouncil meetings off sist the president there will be three popularly elected vice presidents. One will be in charge of student affairs, another the in til furtiter notice head of financial affairs, and the \]i„l,.rator Ho Corbin an- “ Secondly, in view of ihe third would oversee academic af­ lonn.r.l at the C lass Council reorganization now taking place, fairs. Each vice president will this Tuesday evening I feel that it is imperative for be able to appoint, at his discre­ Class Council meetings these people to look at them- tion, secretaries in charge of ^,jll 1,0 suspended until further various facets of his work. selves and evaluate die jobs One of the main purposes of loti 01'. they have been doing. I had the executive branch, as visual­ An attendance of 12 out of hoped that by suspending fur­ ized by the Reorganization Com­ er 30 members initiated this ther meetings of the Council I mittee, will be to provide a means lotion from the chair. Mr. Gor­ could force them to do so.” for student opinion to be expres­ lin did state, however, that the Corbin emphasized that, sed in the legislature. For this ropranis now in effect will be we can’t go on kidding our­ reason a prime responsibility of ric(i out by the chairmen of the vice presidents and their selves that the people present­ staffs will be to elicit student he respective projects. ly in student government, in the opinion and inform the president One council member called Student Senate President John Tedesco explains his views to the Continued on Page 2, Col. 5 of their findings. In order to |ut. “ But we haven’t done any- Student Government Reorganizotion Committee. bring the information thus inp in the past two meetings.” gathered to the attention of the Mr. Corbin’s reply was, Congress, the four members of j‘Mocling adjourned.” Canadian citizenship head says this executive council will sit The councilman then added, as non-voting members of the legislative body. They will not ‘Throe weeks!” hold any office in the Congress \\hen questioned as to the itself. fiisoning behind this suspen- U.S. draft dodgers^not welcome^ Exact structure unknown |ion, Corbin replied, “ We have By Richard H. Lamport zenship is interrogated by a Those that are there may be without a quorum for the Triangle Managing Editor judge. As long as they’re not making Canadians uncomfortable Although the exact structure jst two meetings in spite of Canada's top official in charge subversive they can be granted for a long time. First, to quali­ of the Congress has not been fact that I’ve done every- of citizenship said this week that citizenship.” fy for citizenship, an immigrant definitely established, it has been ling in my power to get full American draft dodgers are “not If an applicant for citizenship has to live in Canada for at proposed by the Committee that welcome...(but) they're allowed said that he would fight only in least five years and show some the representatives be elected Itlendance. I am not going to wars that he felt were justified, stability before his papers can kiand for further violations of to come in” to her country. by class, with each class having Miss Judy La Marsh, Canada’s his appeal for citizenship m i^t go through. its own president and vice presi­ [ither Class Council’s bylaws be rejected. Second, warrants are out in dent to lead its delegation to the Ir of the members’ responsibil­ Miss La Marsh said that an the U.S. for many of the dodgers Congress. This body will elect ities. action like burning a draft card in Canada, and U.S. authorities its own speaker who will serve “wouldn’t disqualify you.” Ac­ are saying that no statute of only as a parliamentary chair­ cording to her, Canada is not limitations applies in this case. man, and a secretary who will IBJ’s draft ideos concerned “if you were a bad The Canadian Mounties, aided record minutes. citizen in the country you came by the FBI, are keeping some of As the structure is develop­ to affect stvdent from.” the exiles under surveillance. ing, legislation could be pro­ Miss La Marsh said that the Miss La Marsh said that in posed by either the executive deferoient rules dodgers are safe in Canada. some cases “Mounties have gone branch or a representative to “ There’s no way under our laws with FBI agents to inform some Student Congress. When a mo­ By Thomas J. McGlnley that we could send them back.*' of the people of their responsi­ tion has been passed it would Triangle Editor I don’t think that older bilities.” go to the Student Body Presi­ President Lyndon B, Johnson, Canadians are very comfortable Canada doesn’t “have any dent for approval. Congress will about their being in Canada,” troops committed (to the Viet- retain the right to override a expected, recommended al- JRAJ she said. ^rations in the present Selec- Continued on Page 9, Col. 2 presidential veto. ve Service system that close- Miss Judy LaMarsh reflect the proposals made Draft dodgers “not welcome" the Johnson-appointed Ad- Secretary of State, spoke to a Horm Smithf DAC Program Office sory Commission on Selec- press conference last Saturday Service. The overlapping in connection with International Bcommendations are: House’s annual ball. Designed dispute SPB^s contracting right f(l) A lottery-type system of primarily to publicize Expo 67, election (Johnson termed it the conference dealt mostly with Norm Smith, former president Denied negotiating power vory's present duties. Fair And Impartial Ran- Americans who go to Canada to of the Student Program Board and The crisis came to ahead when The conflict between Mrs. Sa­ system of selection), under avoid possible conscription in the now its cultural chairman, is SPB's Cultural Committee pre­ very and Mr. Smith has been ^ich all men eligible for draft- Vietnam war. threatening to instigate a boycott sented its list of programs for brewing for some time. Mr. Smith would be subject to one year Miss La Marsh estimated that of many DAC activities next term. next term to Mrs. Savery and was said, “I was told by Mrs. Savery high vulnerability. The com- a “ a few thousand” dr aft dodgers Mr. Smith will propose that the refused permission to do the ac­ that unless an SPB cultural com­ Mssion suggested the age of are now living in Canada. When SPB ask the Senate to support the tual negotiating \vith the booking mittee were formed immediately, I Johnson suggested 19. asked if she thought that the boycott if Program Director agents. she would give another organiza­ .2) A drastic reduction in the Americans could make any use­ Blanche M. Savery does not allow Mrs. Savery contends that she tion the responsibility. I resign­ les of available deferments, ful contributions to her country, the Board more responsibility in is a professional in the booking ed my presidency to take over this phose suggested for elimina- she gave a one-word answer; negotiating contracts. field so that her opinions should committee in hopes of keeping and retention are charted “No.” Would hit speakers be highly regarded. She says that the SPB together.” ‘ page 8.) She said that she would m ^e According to Mr. Smith, the she will permit students to work SPB President Bell said that 1(3) Deferments for graduate no blanket decision on granting according to “their initiative, citizenship to draft dodgers. She boycott he proposes would hit interest and ability.” ]^onlinued on Page 8, Col. 1 said, “Each applicant for citi­ those activities run by the DAC "Simply . . . tickets” Mr. Smith contends that “this has meant simply setting up pub­ licity and selling tickets.” At present, students from the SPB can make initial contacts with On the news scene booking agents, set a date for the event and ask what the per­ former's standard fee is. At this point, according to Presi­ VARIED interests is on page 1, coL 1. lents discuss “ Science and dent Bell, the Program Board * * ♦ ♦ must step aside to allow Mrs. Canities,” as opposed to **Sci- Savery to negotiate the actual terms of the contract. Mrs. Sa­ WE SENT Jack Becker up to|: very contends that this is ne­ * * * ♦ Boston last week, but he came:^ cessary for two reasons: first, back. The results of his trip — the students cannot legally com­ mit the Institute to a contract, IS out of the way; or, what do college editors do:;|; with their weekends? ~ are on;^ and second, the booking agents Mrs. Blanche Savery ^ ^ t lut stands between Sam prefer to deal with an adminis­ Feels “responsibility** is hers V cagers and an NCAA page 13. :i|:| trator since there is such a Norm Smith turnover in student leaders. the ultimatum was sent down be­ P// ''' modest, humble, Wants "student responsibility' cause the Program Board had de­ ‘"J Slate, (page * * * * I Program Office that he feels layed for a year and a half in GOVERNMENT REORGANI-^ should be run by the SPB. This Compromise turned down forming this committee. * * * ♦ ZATION is drawing to a logical :J| would include the entire slate of Mrs. Savery turned down a conclusion (thank heaven). The g. speakers that his cultural com­ compromise offered by the SPB “ Refuses” advisory position mittee would invite for next term. at its last meeting. The SPB According to Mr. Smith, Mrs. d r a f t pro- basic structure can be found on wanted Mrs. Savery to continue Savery should act in the capac­ ^jeested by our fear- page 1, col. 3. Read it well, SPB President David Bell said, has indl- “I am totally against (the boy­ in her present capacity for the ity of advisor to the Program stionf The way“ ow he you’re going to be voting on it 'j.j; spring term, but with SPB ob­ Board. sees them next month. cott). I don’t think it wiU accom- servers. In the fall term, ac­ He said, **Mrs. Savery refuses Dlish anything. My responsibiU- cording to the proposal, SPB to accept the fact tiiat she is Ues are to the students, and we our advisor.** must have a series of programs. members would assume Mrs. Sa­ DREXEL TRIANGLE Page 2 — March 10, 1967 R o u n d D I T OK<:

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Tickets Sptclal This

I t DAC

National Repertory Theatre

3/15 Opening

A t G eneral Telephone & Electronics, w e MALE, permanent part-time sition teaching rapid r®® w ant people w ho have learned how to think Requires mature man with lege degree, neat W e help teach them to think bigger. sharp speaking ability, ond reference. Must have car. after training. $4.00 pof start. Phone FL 2-400 / (JU K Ei""“ ■ ™ SieLEaK'“ i“ r.% 7ISi«c™ tween 10 and 3 p>*n<

v;.', DREXEL TRIANGLE Page 3 - March 10, I% 7 Isenate calls for reform F i n a l s schedule revealed if m e a l t i c k e t s , c a l e n d a r Friday Saturday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday conate passed a m otion concerning student government March 17 March 18 March 20 March 21 March 22 March 23 the reform of the m eal organiz^iUon. Dave JaJniTson 9:00 A.M. “'f f system and approved a Classes Classes All classes N202 U102 Classes /in the school calendar idea of the Reorganization Com­ to mittee.” meeting meeting not N505 U106 meeting ^ by Drexel V lce-P resl- 11:00 A.M. Monday at b rie fe r a. Its meeting last Monday at otherwise E413 U315 Tuesday at p ^ n i o r Mike Markowich said 10.00 A.M. that Class Council has the riehf 11:00 A.M. provided for EOOl S615 12:00 noon . ' 'i Iweek- re senator Joost to lake the poll, but 1!^ 'w S 11:10 A.M. sponsored a m otion to RlOl ii have any weight.” to Classes S206 N701 Classes Classes Classes t mea^ tickets strictly volun- R102 meeting sub-chairman 1:10 P.M. N702 E801 meeting meeting meeting ^ for residents. He made the ? Committee, Tuesday at E006 Tuesday at Tuesday at Monday at „?Uon because of highly c ritic a l told the Senate that Class Council 9:00 A.M. 11:00 A.M. 2:30 P.M. 9:00 A.M. has had no representatives at 1:50 P.M. the last two reorganization meet­ Classes B002 N501 Classes Classes Classes N401 N402 ings. to meeting N502 N704 meeting meeting meeting 406 405 f t T J l Tnn^^nyder strento^ The discussion 3:50 P.M. N N ended incon- Tuesday at N506 Monday at Monday at Monday at N415 N416 clusively. 1:30 P.M. ' r - a r t r r / M Another part of Mr PahPs 12:00 noon 1:30 P.M. 2:30 P.M. E301 E411 Sets to be punched in sections discussion led to a Senate letter E302 if 10 cents. This w ould ease the to Harold B. Olsen, director of 4:00 P.M. B116 Classes Classes Classes Classes Classes oblems of students who buy the DAC, requesting that the to B117 meeting coke and have to spend a w hole DAC open on Sundays from 1 to meeting meeting meeting meeting 6:00 P.M. Tuesday at cket to do it. 5 p.m. beginning spring term. Tuesday at Tuesday at Monday at Monday at The other amendment re­ 3:30 P.M. 10:00 A.M. 8:00 A.M. 3:30 P.M. 8:00 A.M. vested that the m eal tickets

,uld be used at any of D rexel»s d facilities. At present, Fortune mag lauds Chambers; omen living at the dorm h a ^ to

uv their dinners there. They

annot use their ticke ts fo r d in n e r fthe DAC or the M ain B uild- balance of Bus Ad Day set g’s cafeteria, T)Panelists o Whave m 1been_____ procurred ^ 'Angett of the htghesi order' Mr Romeu said, “ President and the schedule finalized for agerty said that they’re count­ Business Administration Day Angel Records on somfc people not using 1967. The theme of the day’ Answers the need for tickets. He said that the ‘‘International Exchange,” isrel ckets give the lunch counters fleeted in the panel topics and the Low-Priced Albums me working capital... They’re men who will fill the panels on aying that the C af can*t depend April 11. of Supreme QualHy i voluntary patronage. People One panel discussion will be Seraphim albums feature: e getting billed fo r food they »re *‘potential markets for United •World-acclaimed recordinRS, incliid- t e a t i n g . ” States* business in Eastern ing new material never before re­ Mr. Romeu accused the adm in- Europe and Russia.*’ The sec­ leased in America. tration of not tru stin g the stu d - ond will involve “ potential mar­ •World-famous artists in world- its to know w hat’s good fo r them ’ kets for United States in lesser- famous repertoire. e a t. developed markets.** • The truly Rreat performances you may have missed. He asked, “Why canU the The award recipient and key­ •Quotations from leading critics at­ hool spend m ore tim e im p ro v- note speaker for the day. Sir testing to the exceptional quality of its educational procedures Paul Chambers, is chairman of the recordings. stead of its babysitting p ro - the board of Imperial Chemical •Remastered older tapes —for im­ l u r e s ? " Industries. He was recently com­ proved sound w'ithout the artificial ‘I’m wondering w here a ll the mended in “ Fortune** magazine, Sir Paul Chambers (inset) is chairman of the board of Imperial gimmickry of false stereo. loney is g oing.” which noted that “ since 1960, • Albums pressed to the meticulous Chemical Industries which is located on the Thames River adjacent quality standard of Angel record­ Foil calendar changed (he) has led the British company to the House of Parliament. through a thorough reorganiza­ ings. • Our special price: Mono or Stereo. The calendar changes sug- tion and massive modernization coffee hour at 9:15 a.m. The Henry J, Dempsey of the Dept, ested would slightly change the program. panels will begin at 10 p.m. of Commerce and Professor ructure of the fa ll te rm . F irs t, “ The effort to transform the in the Matheson Hall auditorium Milas Samardzya, a visitingpro- hey would move Founder’s D ay company into one of the tou^- and room 101 of the DAC, fessor of economics from Yugo­ $1.79 bto October. Second, they w ould est competitors in the chemical A luncheon for guests, the slavia. He is currently teach­ take Election Day in N ovem ber world has cost $1.35 billion since visiting panelists. Sir Paul ing at the University of West­ I s c h o o l h o l i d a y . 1964 and will require $500 mil­ Chambers and the_ Business Ad­ ern Michigan. Choose from this The change in the date of lion more next year (1967). Gi­ ministration Day committee will Dr. Jan B. Luytjes, assistant II magnificent catalog: |ounder’s Day w ould take advan- gantic new plants are rising be served at noon. professor of economics, will □ □ Tlie Inimitable Sir Tliomas (Royal Phil­ of the more temperate For the first panel. Chairman moderate the second paneL The harmonic, French National Radio Or­ throughout the ICI network.** chestras; BEECHAM) S-60000 eather in October. A lso, ac- “ Fortune** went on to say that Mike Markowich has obtained Mr. panelists are Professor Hans Singer, chief of the United Na­ □ Purcell: Music for tlie Funeral of prding to Senate P resident John “ By 1960 nothing short of full- Raymond Thomas as moderator. aueen Mary. Bach: Magnificat tions Industrial Development di­ (GERAINT JONES SINGERS) 60001 esco, it would get “ m ore scale industrial revolution, in Thomas is president of the Com­ vision; Dr. Irvin Kravis, a pro­ Schubert: Symphony No. 8 ("Unfin­ udent support" because it w o u ld fact, could have saved ICI — pany for Investing Abroad, a sub­ ished"). Mendelssofin: Symphony No. |)t f a l l s o c l o s e t o f i n a l s . sidiary of The Fidelity Phila­ fessor at the University of Penn- 4 ("Italian") Philharmonia Orchestra; new leadership, new plants, new CANTELLI) 60002 markets, but most of all new delphia Trust Co.; Dr. Henry sylvania*s Wharton School and Iiere doss council gets off Dr. H. Gabriel of a New York □ Wagner: "Giitterdimmerung" Selec­ vision.** Tadd, director of foreign trade tions (FLAGSTAD, Vienna Philhar­ ISenator Bernd Pahl used a of Houdrey Chemicals, Inc.; Mr. business consulting firm. monic and Philharmonia Orchestras: Chambers, the man who led ICI FURTWaNGLER) 60003 pm ittee of the whole to discuss out of its economic wilderness, □ Brahms: Variations on a Theme by p e matters he wanted to talk will speak at the afternoon con­ Haydn. Hindemith: Nobilissima visione out. (Philharmonia Orchestra; KLEMPERER) vocation at 1:30 p.m. in the Main CAUTION; Breathing city air 60004 |He said that he “ can’t see Auditorium. may be hazardous to your health □ n Hindemith; Concert Music for Strings Class Council gets off*’ and Brass; Symphony in B Flat (Phil- The morning activities will harmonia Orchestra; HINDEMITH) J^™ |J^p o ll they conducted commence with registration and i Ye Olde Tobacconist, Ltd. ^ S-60005 □ R. Strauss: Alpine Symphony (Bavar­ 3643 Walnut 222-2224 ian State Orchestra; STRAUSS) 60006 □ Chopin: Piano Concerto No. 1 (LIPATTI) 60007 Cliff’s Notes can keep □ Moussorgsky: Songs (CHRISTOFF, you from falling behind French National Radio Orchestra; Tzipine) 60008 ELECTIONS and failing to under­ □ Schum.-inn: Piano Concerto in A minor; stand classic litera­ Etudes symphgniques (HESS, Philhar­ ture. ForJuliusCaesar, monia Orchestra; Schwartz) 60009 □ Chopin: Sonata No. 2 (*‘Funoral F O R CHAIRMEN OF: and all of S h ak e­ March"). Shostakovich: Three Pro- speare’s plays, Cliff’s iudos and Fugues (GILELS) 60010 Notes give you a com­ □ Brahms: Two Sonatas, Op. 120 (PRIM­ plete explanation and ROSE, FIRKUSNY) 60011 □ Mozart: Eisultate, Jubilate (Motet, summary of every K.16S). Bach: Jauchzet GoU In alien scene - in language Landen (CantaU, BWV.51) (SCHWARZ­ KOPF, Philharmonia Orchestra; Suss- you can understand. kind, Gellhorn) 60013 MEN’S FRESHMAN CAMP Don’t worry about your □ □ Verdi Arias (FISCHER-DIESKAU, Ber­ literature grades - let lin Philharmonic Orchestra; Erede) S-60014 Cliff's Notes help you □ □ Handel: Nine Gorman Songs (MATHIS) improve them. OVER S-60015 AND 125 TITLES covering □ □ Beethoven; Concerto No. 1; Sonata No. 27 (SOLOMON, Philharmonia Or- frequently assigned chestra; Menges) S-60016 big b r o th er plays and novels. □ The Unashamed Accompanist at your bookseller □ Puccini: La Bohtoio (DE LOS ANGELES, or write for BJOERLING, MERRILL; BEECHAMJ ■1 free title list 'B-6000 □ □ "Serafin at La Scala" - Donizetti: L’EllsIr O’AfflOre (CARTERI, ALVA, La Scala Orchestra and Chorus; WILL BE HELD AT SERAFIN) SIB-6001 ^.JUUUSCAESa □ a Mozart: The Marrlaio of Figaro (PREY, t h e s t u d e n t s e n a t e m e e t i n g ROTHENBERGER, GUEDEN, Dresden oa®'u’[ i s State Opera Orchestra .md Chorus; 7:30, A P R IL 6 IN DAC Suitner) (Sung in German^ SiC-6002

D R E X E L liMOln. Mete. MMI B O O K S T O R E DREXEL TRIANGLE f’agr \ — Marrh 10, 1967 Science and Hotnanitiest O rganized reorganization Resolved: I lirough the perception of some ber of the legislature can originate and the hard work of others, student proposals. government is finally resolving the When these needs are translated The educational dilemma problems which spring from its into proposal form, they are present­ By Gary Hawthorn present appalling structure. ed to the legislative branch. The Leave Drexel ! Several years ago, this first question, T.S. Eliot offers thoc Some of this perception is credit­ members would debate the merits of two-word ultimatium appeared as if thoughts: ed to C lass (Council Moderator Ho the proposal and pass or defeat it it would mark a disniption in my edu­ “ A man is not himself un­ cation. Because a course of study less he is a member (of so­ Clorhin, who announced at the (loun- accordingly. which suited my purposes did not exist, ciety); and he cannot be a cil’s last meeting that no further Such structuring also provides I would have to leave Drexel. In re­ member unless he is some­ meetings would occur until further that the mundane selection of com­ membering the rigors of application and thing alone.” of becoming re-situated, I became quite notice. This was a fine, nebulous mittee chairmen can be done by distressed over my predicament. I did Eliot suggests two requirements for way of saying that the Council, as executive appointment rather than not wish nor could hardly afford to re­ a mutually beneficial relationship: in. dividuality and participation. it now exists, is obsolete in view encumbering the entire legislative peat that process. Think how such a disruption of your I suggest two questions; Does a of forthcoming reforms. branch with debate over who will education would impress itself upon specialized education help or hinder I'he hard work has been generat­ be Homecoming or Parking Sticker your mind. The above two-word ex­ the production of individuals? is a ed within the Student Government chairman. This has been trimmed to clamation seemed to be echoed through specialized education the most efficient method to learn the “ art” of social executive appointment with legis­ the previously congenial gaping arch of l^eorganization Committee that has cemented lips which wreath Drexel's participation? been mowing down obstacles to lative approval being required. main entrance. However, frequent trips Dr. Leland J. Haworth, Director of I effective student representation. One proposal upon w’hich the up that flight to the Great Court re­ the National Science Foundation, made these remarks at the Seventy-Fifth An. committee has not yet reached minded me that those unknowing bas- I'he emphasis, you’ll note, is on reliefs could hardly be guilty of my niversary Dinner of Drexel's Nationa'll student representation, not student unanimity relates to an area of vital seemingly inevitable departure. Instead, Alumni Association: government. The present structure concern. As previously reported in the administration inside—appropriately “ The traditional academic or­ is one that frequently appears to The Triangle, the committee has located to the right of the Great Court — ganization along disciplinary was involved in my probable exit. exist for the aggrandisement of its committed itself to devising a lines — although vital to ad­ Ideally, an administration should be­ vances in those disciplines members. The proposed Student method by which direct contact come aware of common needs among that provide the basic, detailed Congress will more effectively com­ with the student body could be students and then act to fulfill them. knowledge — is not sufficient.. The courses which I sought existed at mit elected representatives to the made whenever there arises an We are increasingly aware Drexel. The program did not exist. that a new dimension must task of reflecting the needs of issue of sufficient magnitude to In retrospect, others had a similar now be added to meet the their constituents. warrant it. There seem s no better need and probably arrived at a know­ challenge that lies ahead — ledge of this need in a similar man­ In summary, the Congress con­ way than writing into the constitu­ the social and human ner. I arrived at a knowledge of my factors...” sists of separate legislative and tion a presidential power to call a need in the Drexel way — through my Upon reflection on these remarks, executive branches. Responsibility general meeting of the entire stu­ initial co-op experiences. (Incidental­ ly, Mr. John Green, I prematurely ar­ I sought the cause and further impli.’ for preparation and proposal of dent body to obtain and measure rived at what would have been a future cations of this “ new dimension.” E-l legislation rests on these branches reaction to topics of major import­ realization of indeterminable cost, lar­ manuel G. Mesthene made these state. I ments in the “ Saturday Review:” bilaterally. The executive members, ance. gely through my experiences in indus­ consisting of the student body- try. One can and should learn from “ Technology — the develop­ This power would be reserved the “ good” and the “ bad” of Drexel*s ment of tools — need in the elected president and three vice- for the few occasions when the “ sample and choose” system.) long run worry only those presidents, do not preside over the Congress must decide whether to While in industry, I realized that a who are themselves no more Congress, but the student body. simple solution was available — just than tools,.,The more ma­ lend or deny support to campus- transfer to another “ fixed” program chines can take over what we These officers, through contact wide issues. of study. This alternative hardly would do, in other words, the more with the students, must determine Could there possibly be a better have been the answer to the question we are freed to do what ma­ the needs and sympathies of their of one's future profession. Instead, it chines cannot do... with more way to determine how the consti­ would have been a quasi-blind com­ opportunities, we can have constituents.^Cf course, any mem­ tuents feel, than to ask them? mitment which simply would have pro­ more freedom, and with more longed a final decision — one that freedom we can be more hu­ would 1)6 made with greater certainty man... At its best, then, tech­ LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS because it was made with less free­ nology is nothing if not lib­ dom. erating.” During my co-op period, I experienced Humanities and Technologj^ the complementary nature of the arts However, two years ago when I re- and sciences or, more specifically, the turned to Drexel from industry, I did

I '

humanities and technologies. My first not haven a v e them e advantage uof i this twenty-'-"'-••y i observations of my dilemma were twenty hindsight. Because I didn’t wishj “I WON'T HOLP VOJTOTH't EXT ON 1M6 BXAAA — O n l y clouded by emotional involvement; how­ to leave, I frantically sought a solu-j MY 1N/TERPRETATIC3N OP IT." ever, time provided a more rational per­ tion in the Drexel Bulletin. At thel THE DREXEL TRIANGLE spective and my perception improved beginning of my sophomore year, M«mb*r of considerably. I began to think that appeared to me that Drexel was Established 1926 Drexel»s various curricula did not pro­ A««ocl college of science or art, I vide a sufficient background in the hu­ was not a synthesis of both. . manities. Such a deliquency did in­ began to wonder if the triangle on thel justice to the student who might have Drexel Insignia was truly equilateral.l a proclivity to such an area of study. Was the Industry side supported by M I then returned to Drexel with the longer “ science side” than “ art side I uncertainty or prematurity, if you will Obviously, I decided to remain. B®'| which occasionally haunts most of us’. cause about that time, a program was I asked myself; Am I so certain of Instituted which was consistent wiwj all my capabilities that I accept mar­ Drexel's “ sample and choose” ideals Ed.tor-.n-Ch.ef...... tho m AS J. McGINLEY riage to a funneling curriculum which It Is available only to those who ha''® Bus,ness Manager...... FREDERICK NICKEL mass-produces the specialist, but al­ first demonstrated themselves so alters and manipulates the produc­ one of Drexel's other programs. Tn Manag.ng Editor ...... RICHARD H. LAMPERT tion of individuals? More important- program is aptly titled Humanities ar Jy, is not the specialized education Technology, becoming divorced from the future de­ As graduation nears, I become mands of Industrial leadership? aware of the fitting, figurative sigmi ------BOARD:,noma. mcorniey,Ihomo. McGinI.y, Frederick Frederick Nickel, Richord Nickel, Lampert Fl . Kothy H illegais, Richard Jery ...... ficance of an obvious geographic lac j McCullogh, Bob Steel, Jack Becker. education dehumanize? upon leaving the Great Court via tnj Today, after much contemplation and Chestnut Street Exit, the adminlstraj tive offices are on the left. The Adinfni Editorial Advisor T Impasse, Istratlon, by establishing theHunianiU^ Dr. Jana E. Cooper Financial Advisor iimnari to those who are and Technology Program, has Michael Destefano similarly perplexed or just curious. In discussing the Implications of my proved Itself to be Uberal, progressiv»| and extremely farsighted. DREXEL TRIANGLE Page 5 - March 10, 1967 ®**d Humanities: The educated scientist By U.S. E stilow Scientists are usually classed as much broader outlook than that gained humans (students may except teachers) entirely from contact with those courses *• . <-i\ v - r - 'I . i r _ d i ^ but can scientific thought and humanistic encountered in common training pro­ thought and humanistic concepts exist grams. It must be realized that not 'v H TSi = A i‘^'- compatibly in a single person? The thesis all science courses are totally non- on which this article is based is a re­ humanistic. In physics, for example, sounding “ yes” to the above question. the entire involvement is with the study Scientists are often called narrow in of natural laws. While solutions and outlook and biased in opinion. True proofs may be highly technical, the laws some may fall into this category, but ^ r f - , and their implications affect both man the majority are neither biased nor and his universe. A better understanding narrow. of these laws is by its very nature Scientific training--and note the use humanistic. Thus the scientist cannot 4 i l H f w of the word “ training’* rather than remove himself from the humanities. ‘‘education” — is often purposely narrow The excuses most often heard from the in scope and aim. Thus an individual scientist or science student for lack experiencing or observing such a pro­ of knowledge of the humanities are no gram might come to an incorrect con­ interest, no ability, or no time. As has PSS clusion...... T-niw....j- '"niii-ii-ii b j a y been pointed out, it is impossible for An educated scientist must possess a the truly “ educated” scientist to dis­ associate himself from humanistic con­ siderations. Thus, while the discovery Tow ard a greater w orld view of new laws and the reworking of proofs of the old must occupy much of his thinking, the use to which these laws By John Brown and proofs are put is of interest to the We have learned in our century from of the universal men, showed what the entire community. inter-subject conferences held in every specialist-humanist was capable of and leys, Whorf, Wallace Stevens, St. John Lack of ability is the poorest of all civilized land of the great need of in­ ever since Rousseau reaffirmed the place Perse, Tillich, Watts, Merleu-Ponty, possible excuses, for anyone who can terdependencies; that isolation if it bears and validity of feeling as a way of ar­ Chardin, Northrop--each seems to have grasp the involvements of science has fruit at all limits itself to a weak good; seen that the first task is to say to the innate mentality to sufficiently under­ riving at understanding, there have been the self, “ understand.” All appear in that any intellectual exclusion destroys men waging wars against the encapsu­ stand humanistic concepts. However, the itself; that questing the Absolute Truth that spirit of mankind’s personal pan­ desire to know must be present. lated—the one-eyed specialists who re­ theon dedicated to the bridgers of bound­ with shutters on the eyes is futile and mained unaware of the inchoate visions The excuse with the most justification ultimately sterile. We have learned aries and the revealers of the artificial among those offered is lack of time. With of their species. The closed world of dragons that stopped our moving. simply that anything alone and closed some artists and scientists, each re- the packed program in science, it does There is an urgency to understanding seem that there is little time to pursue likened to that quickness with which an­ the humanities, even if interest and no truly iittdli^cnt fnon is itnowore oj th€ scvcml thropology must act if it is to salvage ability are present. It is sufficient to the remaining primitive and archetypal say that if the desire is great enough, universes of realities that be,” truths that stand on the edge of ex­ time will be found. The writer proved tinction’s cliff. There is a creative this to himself on one occasion while from the fluxes of shared existence and moral energy (in their most ex­ teaching a load of thirty hours. My garding the other as savagely misunin- tensive sense), latent in intelligent men, limits truth and weakens man. The formed, each pocketing the other in a time commuting to work on public trans­ Medieval Age and the security of an needing more than a pluck of nerve to portation, was used. Forty books on category of exclusion, can in no way release it into the last quarter of a understandably ordered universe is gone. enhance man's wholeness or healthy varied fields within the framework gen­ The grail long ago rusted. century that is expanding into unknown erally classed as humanistic were read state of world-awareness. When the lands with questionable tools and wea­ and enjoyed. We are left in our times, however, and artist becomes irresponsible to his pons. In Kenneth Boulding, Marshall somewhat sadly, with the residue of Pages could be written for both sides gift, when the scientist puts on one ex­ McLuhan, and in the prophesies of Hoyle in this seeming conflict. The point once-believed things. And it still lives clusive eye, when each of all the any- and Asimov, we are told of ourselves by on in the heads of some men whose of this brief article is that no real ones in the world becomes encapsulated, picking up the pieces we left, and were conflict exists. An educated scientist lives are unopened to anything unless what sharing can there be of man’s all along the trail to where we are. We it bears on it the brand of their dis­ must become involved with humanistic creative moments of hunting and en­ can discard those that led us wrong, concepts. Time will be found if the cipline. Today the closed mind is as countering those solvable or illuminable with our now vantage eyes. We can cause is worthy. anachronistic as phlogiston. These areas of human mystery? plod on with the force of our concern, To the student whose every moment words are devoted to this problem. In our own time among the hierarchy understanding and then eradicating seems filled with prescribed dis­ Before we can ask how it is that of intellectual lights of both “ cultures” plights. We can make the earth feel cipline this is difficult to grasp. Gradua­ “one understands reality,** we must are men whose minds stand apart from our footprints as holy, or curse us. But tion, however, does not mean the end I take one giant word-step backwards. the vagaries of labeling, apart from the to make the earth and to make tomorrow of education. In fact, to most it is the Reality. If we mean by this the phy­ isolating of the human dimension. White­ good, there must be a sharing, a lending, opportunity to begin. sical universe then our tools are rea­ head, Russell, Wittgenstein (whose wri­ a borrowing of eyes. There are enough Thus when opportunities present them­ son and an accumulation of facts and tings on aesthetics, psychology, and windows in the common house of our­ selves, make the most of them. Let us possible facts, got from the human pre­ religion Cyril Barrett, S.J. has just selves, but only a few doors that open in turn hope that the humanities realize sence which itself alters data, and edited). Max Picard, Poincare, the Hux­ into the front yard of the world. a like need for science. chance. The very act of a rational inves­ tigation of the physical universe is some­ how incarcerated in the formal struc­ ture of our Western language. Per­ haps it is only the creative mathe­ Bridging the disciplines matician who is excused from the pre- By Dennis Salter judical hold that the world-view of a % I language imposes. The whole of human knowledge and reaction to the objects and the ques­ physiology. But no truly intelligent man is un- endeavor may be split into two cate­ tion of the object’s existence. Essen­ The physico-chemical processes of ware of the several universes of re- gories, the sciences and the humani­ tially the humanities are subjective and the nervous system may be consider­ the sciences objective. In order to ob­ 3 ^,^hat be. Forgetting for a mo- ties. More often than not, and perhaps ed a transition between the sciences tain the most complete world-picture and psychology -- here psychology is Loinc- ^ happy in unjustly so, this schism is consider­ ed irreconcilable. The two categories possible, the theories of science and considered the boundary between sci­ ignorance relative to the the elements of the humanities must ence and the humanities. Intri^ 1 known, or in psycho- are placed at opposite poles and are considered at least unrelated if not in be integrated. Darwin’s theory of evolution has had arh^t we can confront the The contention here is that the two an undeniable effect upon philosophy creates actual conflict. The objectives of both the sciences classifications are complementary and and subsequently upon religion. that joining the two fields can be jus­ Transitions between philosophy and imnnsin i"Ss in his head, or by and the humanities are very much re­ lated. Both attempt the derivation of tified. physics become apparent when one con­ l^"^Pos ng or applying the truth of his An analogy may be made between siders the relationships between deter­ line ac” u^- nature, thus creat- a world-picture. True, the results and the methods of derivation are quite the energy states of an atom and the minism and classical physics, and with “ ®idegger believBs, new being individual fields of intellectual pursuit. Plato’s idealism and the abstract con­ Too, the theo! different. Where the sciences deal with the structure and interaction of ob­ Beginning at the bottom, or “ ground struction of the wave theory of mat­ ho-ipi function in the jects that are assumed to exist, the state,” and working up, place physics, ter. Another transition is evident when limmediafl^^ world of number with no humanities are concerned with man’s chemistry, biology, psychology, philos­ Heisenberg’s uncertainty. Indetermi­ I other th' fruit's relevance ophy and so on until at the top is placed nism, Is compared with the philosophi­ herence intrinsically valid ad- theology — perhaps the most abstract. cal arguments dealing with “ free will.” I '0 Its own law. This model serves merely as a means Consider the ancient Greek tragedians’ |the humanties share of illustration; it is far from complete view of fate, a significant event leading I same sun h ^^netion under the John Brown -- poet and French or wholly accurate. to an Inevitable climax, as a transi­ man from understanding of teacher, spent last summer explor­ Just as an electron may “ jump” tion between philosophy and the sci­ pith idenl ' 7 same ground. They work ing caves in Dordogne, trance. from one level to another, one may ences. Fate may be likened to the or­ 1 minds Tim * ^ home in their consider transitions and interrelation­ der of nature In modern scientific h mo;e the ideas giving some U.S. E stilow -- a physics instructor ships between the fields listed. As one thought. Thus, a valid experiment In­ Imental reality than mere of long standing at Drexel, is also progresses up the steps, the transitions evitably decides the fate of preceding become increasingly complex and ab­ theories. hstronomv this year in human enough to be teaching his­ rhat havp iff discoveries stract to the point of being unrecog­ The arts — literature, painting, etc. — that fir scientists to anchor tory. nizable as transitions. Thus, the step have been excluded from the spectrum P^lowed to (irfff i foresightfully between biology and psychology will as has mathematics. For the arts I Naturp'.ii,. of speculation, Gary Hawthorn - transferred from be more difficult than the transition and mathematics play very much the r*' intuit ^i”^ discover Chemical Engineering to the new between chemistry and biology. Actual­ same role In their respective fields. P in a nosiH t)ut now that man Humanities and Technology pro­ ly only a very few of these steps are The arts provide the means of expres­ recognizable; hence, consider the fol­ sion and outlet for the humanities, while |i"cumbont uD.?n"h^ nature, it is gram early in 1966. mathematics performs the same task I?"'* (iirecthmc u*” rethink the steps lowing transitions not as universal or complete, but at best as isolated^ spe­ for the sciences. I?® slow] f Impose, Dennis Salter - a junior physics f is Way iiiy-out and path-find cific instances. If one will allow that these few il­ major, is currently trying to pass The introduction of the theory of lustrations constitute sufficient reason lie pro 5 turn, each atomic physics and still remain a quantum mechanics, in the early twen­ for other such transitions to exist, , “®rent future ® Possibility of a human being. tieth century, established the relation­ however complex, then it is reason­ ' i '“Jt oniv nn! that the world able to consider the sciences and hu­ rnoro f changing as he ship between physics and chemistry. i*nportantly, because he A link between chemistry and bi­ manities as complementary rather than ology is quite evident in the field of separate entities. ‘•ince Leibnitz, as one of the last DREXEL TRIANGLE Page 6 — March 10, 1967 T S i A N O t i

Senator protests food p la n service;

disagrees w ith‘D rexel Theory of EdiicaiionI Is a profit organization. Editor, Drexel Triangle; orexel In an effort to acquaint the Drexei A word must be included concpmi populace with my reasons for mov ng the quality of food at the Dac ?hat the Student Senate support a volun­ Drexel supplying a good dietary tary rather than compulsory meal ticket tion? Is there a choice of meaio policy, 1 havewrittenthissummary of my And what about the food service'’ t i speech to the Senate floor. In my quest to find the administration s seen hoagles scraped from the floor inn® Piy Bill H etzelson after being restuffed into the hr? h plotted the assassination, and mention reason for compulsory resold. One instance which has It was sure to happen. Some yonng found a few interesting facts. The admin­ intellectual, fed up with the Johnson this to the Egg ofHead(AdlaiStevensOn): brought to my attention is that a DrPv i (“ To see, or not to see? That is the istration’s explanation was student once found a caterpillar fdp.T Administration and dissatisfied with the Drexel’s intent to train the who e question./Whether ’tis wiser as a states­ luckily) in his hoagle. Countless o J ; relative innocuousness of the demon­ person.” In other words, Drexel would stration route, had to express her dis­ man to ignore/Tlie gross deception of instances can be brought up, and i fan outrageous liars,/ . . .”) To allay the attempt not only to educate Its students to see how. If the food service has marie sent in play-form. The result hit the academically, but also dietetically. country with the explosive force of suspicious MacBird asks the Earl of its money before it serves the food h Warren to conduct an investigation (E. Another reason was that thepreliminair will attempt to better its food anH an A-bomb (or is napalm bomb more meal-ticket capital would enable the appropriate?). “ MacBird!” is the play of W.; “Oh, whine and pout,/that ever services, ^ I was born to bury doubt.”) Mean­ food department to improve Its food that has caused the nation's critics— quality and service. Other interesting Is the price of food at Drexel reaiw literary and political—to take a second while, Lady MacBird has become hys­ cheap? Is the proposed $i.eo for a terical because she smells the blood facts which cropped up in my investiga­ look. Barbara Garson, its Berkeley- tion were that, in order to offer its Drexel dinner inexpensive? No. The spawned author, has forged a brilliant she has helped to spill. Her daughters places in the area where a good meal accompany her, spraying Air-Wick customers this “ fine selection of foods,” satire of the Johnson Administration the food service is counting on the fact can be gotten for less are many. Even on the frame of Shakespeare’s where she commands. (“ Here s the at the fraternity houses a good meal is Macbeth,*’ with ample assistance from smell. Out, out damned odor, out.” ) that the meal tickets would not be fully She has planted flowers along the road­ cheaper. The Drexel Diner, Linton's *‘Hamlet,” The product is a funny ^^I^’disagree, and I believe that the and Stanley Green*s, are just a few invective which accuses all politicians sides, (“ Yet all the petalsof a summer’s roses/can never sweeten this accursed Drexel student body disagrees with this of the places where more inexpensive of ruthlessness and inhumanity, and good food service Is available. which specifically accuses Johnson and land.” ) so-called Drexel Theory of Education. Lady Bird of plotting the assassinations Most of us. I’m sure, came to Drexel The last point brought forth by the . . . of the king with the hope that we would receive an of President Kennedy and Adlai The Wayne of Morse joins the Ken administration is definitely the most academic education in the field of our heinous factor in the meal ticket problem. Stevenson. O’Dunc clan because of toe Viet Land choice. Due to a distance factor, some The question of taste policy (“Since when do we permit an To say that they are counting on in^ of us have or will have to live in the complete use of meal tickets by the The play is written in Shakespearean open challenge/To all the world’s secur­ residence halls. In other words, the verse. Experts have said that the ity and peace?/Rip out those Reds! students infers that if all the tickets Drexel student does not voluntarily de­ were used for full face value, Drexel style is impeccable; even a novice can Destroy thelf. root and branchl/Deploy cide to reside in the residence halls recognize the aptness of the many whatever force you think we need!/ would not be able to supply enough because of the “ education*' which they food, Drexel is counting on—no, de- parodies of famous speeches. The Eradicate this noxious, spreading offer the student. If Drexel intends to strength of the play is that it never weed!”). The witches come in again pending on—the fact that meal tickets tell its students what to eat, it is will not be used. It is depending on free deviates from this high literary quality; C'Bubble and bubble; toll and trouble,/ closely approaching the policies of a the success of the play is that it is very, Burn baby bum, and cauldron bubble.”) money! There are numerous instances military college. Will the next attempt when the student will not eat at the very funny, and that it satirizes a They show MacBird the reassuring be to Institute compulsory uniforms? very open target; the controversy of visions of General Ky and Madame Nu, DAC—fraternity dinners, dates, meet- the play is that it deals in part with Then Robert comes and enlists the I cannot see the logic of providing ings, study—and it is ridiculous that a very unfunny subject—the Kennedy witches’ aid In enacting a scene that will our food department with a preliminary Drexel require they pay for a $.90 assassination—and that it makes undo MacBird, a la Hamlet (“Convention capital in the hope that this will be an meal and $1,60 dinner when they aren’t seemingly unfounded accusations. Most eve, and now the play’s the thing/ impetus for better food. It would be going to eat it, “ MacBird!” critics have scored it for Wherein I’ll catch the conscience of much more logical for this buslness*s A meal ticket policy can be good its tastelessness; we are all sensitive the king.’*) At the play*s end the capital to be in proportion to its food and useful when voluntary, but even about the assassination, perhaps too forces of Robert are unbeatable, and quality. If the food quality is bettered, if voluntary it will only be as good much so. This columnist did not find MacBird dies, clutching his cracked the customer support will rise. It is as the food offered. If the meal ticket the tastelessness that others did. Miss heart. to be emphasized that our food service system becomes effective in a com­ Garson seems a kindred spirit to Mark pulsory manner there will be some Lane, but she is non-documentary; she “ in the pocket** money for someone. vtst fling;» arrows, but this is her Impeach Lyndon Johnson If the food service, as a profit or- Uterapy - prerogative. I think that ganization, wishes to have a thriving! ^‘MacBird!” is provocative and vital to By Jack Becker business it should first improve itsj the moral health of our country. We Just when we thought he would be been called economically unfeasible. It food and service. If the opinions of need a good kick in the rear every once content with his own little “ non-war,” is said by the Administration that such the students and opinion of the student in a while to help stimulate our some- Lyndon Johnson proved us incorrect an army, to be large enough to ful­ body’s representative on campus, the times-stagnant brains. “ MacBird!” by striking another blow against a free fill present requirements, would neces­ Student Senate, is not considered, I serves its purpose. society. sitate exorbitant expenditure. But this will encourage a campaign that the The story of “ MacBird!” closely par­ In the most recent coup of his fer­ is not the case. student body use all of their future meal allels that of “ Macbeth*' for a while and vent quest for power, Johnson has con­ If this country had a volunteer army, tickets at full value whether they eat then goes its own way. MacBird plays clusively proved himself a definite threat there would no longer be a need for the food or not. Who knows? Will Drexel | Macbeth to John Ken 0*Dunc’s Duncan; to the welfare and best interests of the the Selective Service System. Hence, Lady Bird is Lady Macbeth; and the American people. have to follow the example of the Vil- the government would have at its dis­ lanova food riot? three witches serve the same purpose. Continued sub­ posal the money spent on salaries, The three witches are probably Miss Joost A. Romeu servience to this operating costs and all other System Sophomore Student Senator | Garson’s greatest invention. They are: man’s whims expenses. This money could be chan­ (1) a student demonstrator, beatnik serves only to en­ neled into an improved public rela­ stereotype; (2) a Negro with “ the im­ courage and tions program designed to attract more Drexel fans chided peccable grooming and attire of a ‘Mu­ assist him. young men into the armed services, and hammad Speaks’ salesman” ; and (3) Therefore, we are also into increases in soldiers’ wages conspicuous absence an old leftist, wearing a worker’s cap hereby calling for and fringe benefits. Considering how and overalls, and carrying a copy his impeachment Editor, Drexel Triangle; much System employees are paid, and Last Saturday night I was fortunate j of Marx’s complete works. and asking for the how many employees there are to pay, support of our Becker enough to see part of the Wagner-1 The play’s the thing . . . there is quite a great deal of money Scranton playoff game for the Champion­ No discussion of “ MacBird!” would be readers. First, however, we want to tell now being spent by the Selective Ser­ complete without at least a brief samp­ of his latest ploy. ship of Uie M,A,C, Northern Division. vice System. And there would be no Wagner brought almost half agymnas-j ling of its scathing satire and its bril­ better place for spending this money liant Shakespearean parodies. The play Ignored the committee, anyway ium full of students all the way from the | toan giving it to the men who are dy­ Eagle’s Nest on Staten Island. Scranton, begins at the 1960 Democratic conven­ Realizing the need for a revamping ing for the miniscule rice paddy re­ tion (witches; “ Fair is foul and foul of the Selective Service System, John­ not to be outdone, brought their full, or public that Johnson, in his less-than- what seemed to be their full, complement j is tair,/Hover through stale and smoke- son charged a committee with investi­ infinite wisdom, has decided to “ de­ filled air.” ) and ends at the 1964 or gating the program and devising the fend.” of troops—including a shouting, scream­ ’ 68 convention, when Robert Ken O’Dunc best alternative. The committee sub­ ing, throbbing throng of over 400 stu­ But, apparently Johnson has heard dents, numerous signs stating that they takes over. Miss Garson effectively mitted its report, and Johnson then all of these arguments before. He has were No, 1 , and one very loud twenty- introduces her characters with great modified the suggestions contained heretofore refused to act, and, if his entrance lines (John to Bobby; “ Good therein. He announced his final pro­ five piece band, with conductor. posal last Monday, proposals last Monday are any indi­ Oh, but before I forget, Drexel playea God, this womanly whimpering just/when cation of his future plans, he will con- I need your manly immorality.”) We find it easy to ignore the trivial tmue tt) amend the present system in the in the first game Saturday, (MacBird to delegates; (aside) “ Let*s amendments to the present system. futile hope of finding a tolerable solu­ reason for writing; I feel tliat ^ ’ give them folks a thrill./The name’s Rather, we are concerned with the prob­ tion. Hagerty should send a letter of MacBird! I’m mighty proud to meet lem in its entirety, and this concern to the student body of Scranton c * ya! (discovering they are the witches); has not been alleviated or dispelled by His inability — or, rather, his un­ gratulating them for the I **Why, it’s a nigra and a filthy beatnik,/ minor alterations of inequity. willingness — to act in this situation they did as DSSB*s (Drexel Suos * God damn! Those beatnik picketers all for the benefit of the people is another tute Student Body). Also, tliere sh over!**) Evaded the real problem in a long list of injustices perpetrated be a special note of thanks to by this man against the American peo­ To resort to an old cliche, John­ Scranton band for lending us their k. . . . wherein we’ll catch . . . son has misse(J the forest by looking ple. His escalation of the Vietnam war player. Since Scranton lost their g j The play takes us to the “ coronation,** only for the trees. Rather than pro­ his unconcern for numerous peace feel­ Saturday night, this leaves and then to Dallas, where voices in the posing abolishment of the Selective Ser­ ers from Hanoi, and his all-too-obvious ball team In a rather unusual ' crowd are heard (1. “So rich!*’ 2, vice System, he has chosen to propose abuse of presidential prerogative — to they have no student body to Inspire ' the point where he borders on being “ So young!*’ 3. “ And yet so wise sterile amendments, designed only to What are they to do for a and sure,” / l. “ It feels so safe to know further escalate the Vietnam war more student body this weekend? he’s there.** 4, “ Aw hell!/He*s just a expeditiously. Thus, he is justifying proof that he is determined to ignore plan was to hire the Muhlenberg ^ politician like the rest,*’) Here Miss continuance of the inequiUes intrinsic the opinions of any and all people not body, but investigation proves j.gj Garson uses a clever stage direction. in any structure of selective service on the presidential payroll. After the shot is heard, a projector Since it is evident that Johnson is costly. The problem gets particularly overt and offensive when as we come closer to game jjjtel throws an “ X** In a slxth-floor window this structure Is utilized in an ostensibly not striving to establish the most equit- of the building, trajectory lines extend we have no student body. ; ,,.cept| free society. The obvious hypocrisy of democratic structure date we are desperate enough tu from the building to the sidewalk, letter­ the System is not the only facet war­ ^ssible, there is no recourse but to even Drexel students. ,, >711 ing appears, reding “Grassy Knoll,** ranting denouncement. The fact that S radical-rlght ' David Hill- 'I “ Railroad Ov^jpass,** etc. In this way the System denies free will and free­ John Birch Society and the radical-left P.S, Any student who is the backdrop becomes a newspaper dia­ dom of choice means that it Is also Boston gram of the assassination scene, Illegal and unconstitutional. finding out the happenings of la«i g, [flal "" ‘ 0 call for the g a m e should contact any brother 0 \i Immediate impeachment, on the grounds . . . th« consclanc* . . . Many have suggested the Initiation PI. As I understand it, they „ of| The Ken 0*Duncs suspect that MacBird of a volunteer army, but this idea has of confUct of Interests, of Lyndon John­ son as President of the United States to WXDT»s play-by-play descrip” both games. d r e a EL t r i a n g l e ir DIT faculty members B I t’agrPagr 7 - Marrh 10, 1967 rour-letter w ord and m oney iscuss p o llu tio n p ro b le m iFour members ot Ibe Drexel pollution and Dr. Remson dis­ * m led a discussion on air cussed water pollution. d e l a y L e m m i n g R e v i e w ' water pollution at the Hovel. Publiraf

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You will do significant work, in an exciting [ ] Mechanical Engineers at Du Pont t h e n e w teclHfic^l environL nt. with the best men in their fields, [ : Engineers at Du Pont and with every necessary facili^. LJ Du Pont and the College Graduate ^fAHUTS® Sign up today for an interview with tl e Du Pont cartoom b o o k i Numo .M ajor "If '-narles M. Schulz Class Degree oxixjcted in tedinic-al (ields-Cli.K., M.t-. ■■> _____ C'ullogo Only yoor colUg* I.E., Chemistry. l'li,v»ics and My uddruBu disciplines —and m Business ^ 1 Jl bookttor* C i t y ------State y ip Code Administration, Accountnig |115- '•'nehart and Winston, Inc. and associated lunctions. DREXEL TRIANGLE Page H8 — Marrhiviarrh 10 Ml,, 1967iv n / Many features of current draft system may be scrapped thus be subjected with them to Continued from Page / plored. I hope and expect that the Congress will debate the one year of high vulnerability. Presidential recommendations regarding existing Any male who was not called school, except for medicine and questions this issue poses for deferments dentistry, would be eliminated the Nation's youth and the Na­ during his year of vulnerability completely. tion’s future J I will welcome the could be virtually assured that RETAIN public discussion which the com­ he would not be called for mil­ President Johnson feels that itary service. 1 - Extreme hardship further study ought to he given mission report will surely stim­ ulate.'' 2 ■ Students in officer training programs who are committed to ser to retention of college defer­ The argument against under­ How it works (see related article below). ments. The commission, by a graduate deferments is that they Processing of males would 3 - Students until the end of a given academic year very slim majority, recommended would become actual exemptions work in this way: 4 - High school students until, graduation or age 20 that such deferments he no long­ because students would be in All males register at their 5 - Reservists er granted. school beyond the age of high draft boards at age 18, then go 6 - Medical and dental students Johnson stated, “ An issue so vulnerability. As a means of through physical, mental and 7 - Ministry and divinity students coping with this situation, John­ moral checkups. Those classi­ deeply important, with so many 8 - Sole-surviving sons compelling factors on both sides, son recommends that college fied as eligible would have their cannot be decided until its every graduates be placed with the names placed in a common pool. 9 - Certain elected officials aspect has been thoroughly ex­ 19-year-olds of that year, and Random selection from this 10 - Non-draft liable aliens pool of “ eligiblees” would oc­ ABANDON cur until that year’s needs for the military were met. 1 - Married men supporting children In times of greater need (Con- 2 - Graduate students (except medical and dental) gressionally-declared wars or 3 - Occupational deferments for critical skills Presidential conflicts), those 20- UNRESOLVED year-olds who had not been call­ ed would be re-entered into the 1 - Undergraduate college students name pool. This progression 2 - Apprenticeship deferments would continue through age 26, and then revert back to those think the present law has too much those for married men with chi! between the ages of 18-1/2 and discretionary authority,” he dren and occupational defe7 19. said. ments. These two will probal^ I The proposals also strive to be approved. f Cool reception eliminate reserve units as ha­ If, however, these defermer c,0 vens from the draft The present are retained, they will not (io Congress has not reacted fa­ vorably to the suggestion of a system is structured so that those available to those men who h a ^ lottery system. It is also con­ in the reserves are not placed had a deferment for undergrad cerned with the executive free­ in combat situations until there uate studies. The main concej dom that President Johnson has is a congressionally-declared of the investigative commissi^ to alter the established program. national emergency. and the president is that Presently, Johnson has the power No deferments for reservists eligible male be granted moft would be granted under the new than one deferment. ' to issue a presidential order 7 that would provide for a lot- system to those who signed up tery-type system, the drafting of after the age of 18-1/2 — the Yes, hut when? k 19-year-olds first and halting age at which they became draft- of graduate deferments. eligible. Vacancies in specified The earliest possible date iW f Rep. L. Mendel Rivers (D.- reserve units would be filled implementation of the propos S.C.), chairman of the House by the 17 to 18-1/2-year-old would be July 1 when the pres Armed Services Committee, said bracket. draft law expires. However, C that he would take steps to limit Other deferments that are re­ gress has been asked by tti such presidential authority. “ We commended for elimination are President to extend the e x i^ APRIL 10 9-12:30 P.M. ing draft law in order to provide for full discussion andinvestii tion of the lottery system by Advanced corps ROTC cadets Houses of Congress. The date ^ enactment may be as late u Due to capacity limitations, we are forced maintain draft deferments January 1, 1969, ,, to impose the following regulations: Merely by Presidential d ir * “ Students in officer programs Sion of ROTC has an annual quota tive, it should be remember^ who are committed to serve” is of fifty advanced corpsmen. Prior the present Selective Servj|je one of the classifications for de­ to this year, if the unit received system can shift its emph ferment that President Johnson more than fifty qualified appli­ for draftees on a youngest-fi V. All students - 50< has recommended for retention. cants, the quota could be exceed­ basis rather than the pres At Drexel, this encompasses oldest-first priority. This coi 2. Drexel students must have I.D. ed to accommodate the appli­ those students in the advanced cants. The additional slots were come about as early as JulyCl, 3. Non-Drexel students are required to corps of the Reserve Officer taken from other colleges who 1967, present ticket of admission & college Training Corps. could not fill their quotas. I.D. Col. Lewis Conway, professor This year, however, the di­ of military science, commented rective from the Pentagon is H ealth service awc^n on this draft-exempt category. to maintain the assigned quota, Drexel has received a He explained that Drexel’s divi- which means that the ROTC unit year grant of $ 2 0 0 ,0 0 0 from at Drexel can select only the Public Health SejMce of the fifty best-qualified applicants, partment of Health, Educa LIMITED according to Col. Conway. and Welfare to support stu ENGAGEMENT Last year. Col. Albro L. Par­ of solid wastes disposal. sons, then professor of military The first year's grant of hkmmAHb science, asked for and received $40,000 will enable four grad Royal Shiikespeare permission to accept 4 7 addi­ students to study for mast' Company AmrnrwH Presents tional candidates. degrees in environmental The quota is being strictly civil engineering and envii^ PETER BROOK S held because the military can mental science. To qualify, thpr MOTION absorb only a given number of work must be related to s officers each year. Each of the waste disposal. Each student PICTURE 247 college and junior college of­ receive tuition fees,$250am ArpimMBb fering ROTC has a quota. These and $30 a month for each ^ OF THE original quotas are now being more read­ oendent during his year of st BROADWAY STAGE ByTHBmAm ily filled because of the war in The purpose of the stud; PRODUCTION Vietnam and the resulting reluc­ to provide graduates train ofmmuM tance on the part of undergrad­ manage government units uates to be subject to the draft collect and dispose of s oFmMoH upon graduation. wastes. u m m ,

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TICKETS ON SALE BY MAIL I ERIC THEATRE 1 Every Thursday FOR INFORMATION CALL MISS BARBARA - LO 7-4079 ■ NAME___ I ADDRESS. PRICE t, PERFORMANCE SCHEDULE _ _ l A FINE DEAL IN RESERVED PERFORMANCES NO. OP SEATS------at )___TOTAL J, GUARANTEED SEATS Moo.QTilS FRI. SAT SUN. GIANT ECONOMY thru [^) 1,00 r 11:30 □ 2=00 MON. THRU THUR. 7ilS & 9>4S . $2.2S ThurQ»i4S □ 10.30 □ J:45 □ 4nS Free Advice to Young Ladies FRIDAYS 8i00i I0i30...... $2.50 DATE REQUESTED SATURDAYS SUNDAYS □ *^00 r. l 4=30 ALTERNATE DATE I>30ai3i45 $2.25 2>00 & 4> 15 $2.25 O t-'ii 1:45 LO 3 * 8 5 3 9 call before you come down if you need Stnd Chack Poyakla lo 6i00 8)15 I0<30 $2.50 6i30 & 8:45 $2.50 ^ I0i30 directions, (some people find us hard to find) DREXEL TRIANGLE V a r i e d opinion is offered on subject I’agr 9 - Mart'h 10, l% 7. Three sororities win in o( Canadian residence t o a v o i d d r a f t ______“ I've a lw a y s without a littlp ___ ^ ■ VI I | » •««« sawdust and these a t a mnn had an obligation WAA Carnival Swing ! ficht where his country P ? sawdust. 15 an IntormaUve m fn " says Corporal Ron te'lf a cari^er soldier with to ' Army. “ But it rqnadi*'in — £Ss th'^riheTte-’L S re t the to me Ithat the United States r'.n-t civen^ its ooys muchluuun ofui Texpl^ination on why they should Canadians favor dodgers’ stand on such crucial matters as de- ^ Viet Nam. So if they want ^0 ob lig e. fo Lme up here to escape the We don’t even think about i t ’» nd landed immigrant status (a Hrilt it’s fine with m e/’ Canada views says a spokesman for the citv shinf^^^f Canadian citizen- \lost of official Cana( of Toronto in the town’s posh snip;. In essence it says that things the same way. Police, new City hall. -What’s t^e i and university adminis- coming to Canada poses no major ’ well as the press solid- saying? What you don’t know trators as the right of U.S. s°cTly hesayswhim- Iv endorse pamphlet is .iti7Pns to avert conscription. A spokesman for the Royal our fastest selling item at I- s diplomatic and military of­ Canadian Mounted Police 4 - present. We get about 50 re­ ficials are not visibly dismayed plains that the draft status of quests a week and the number ^ the situation either. U S. immigrants is not a matter is growing.” "There’s no reason to get your of Canadian concern. Another organization aiding hiood pressure up when you have And the Toronto Glove and Mail draft dodgers is the Fellowship a few hundred draft dodgers wrote in a recent editorial, “ The for Reconciliation, a small 30 million draft regis­ granting of political asylum is an Christian pacifist group. The trants ” National Selective Ser­ accepted principle in all civilized group’s Canadian National secre­ vice Director Lt. Gen. Lewis B. countries. Canada cannot de­ tary, Brewster Kneed, says he This beats pledge interviews in the Great Court . Hershey said, cently breach this principle.” tore up his “draft card into fine “You can’t have a sawmill At the University of Toronto pieces and mailed it back to The Women’s Athletic As­ skirts danced the hula on the admissions director E.M. David­ the draft board,” after moving sociation held its annual Carni­ stage while young men tried to val Swing at the Drexel Armory Planned parenthood son says the draft status of here from Cleveland. throw leis around their necks. American applicants is not a last Friday evening. This event The reward for getting the leis is traditionally comprised of around the pledges’ necks was topic of discussion factor in admission to the school No artificial ideology' demanded “ We admit exclusively on aca­ booths set up by the pledge class­ the traditional Hawaiian aloha es of the various sororities and demic and behavioral grounds.” Kneen says one of the most lei and kiss. at home ec m eeting Davidson has noticed no up­ fraternities. There were also encouraging things about Canada booths sponsored by the WAA In second place was Delta Zeta Dr. Sarah Tabin, co-author of surge of applications from Amer­ to new arrivals is the lack of sorority. The theme of their dis­ "Success in Family Living” and and Newman Club. This year, ican men to the school. In fact, “ pressure to become Canadian. there were 14 booths competing play was * ‘Tonsorial Memorial. ” a staff member of the Child Guid­ the number of U.S. male appli­ No one makes you take on some for the silver cup awarded for Inside their booth, which was de­ ance Clinic of Philadelphia, spoke cants has fallen off in recent kind of superficial idealogy. It’s the best all-around display. signed like a barber shop, the to the Drexel Home Economics months. “ But that’s probably not like America,where you must The pledges of Alpha Sigma pledges massaged the backs of Association Wednesday after­ because the draft is draining do it or get drummed out. I’d Alpha sorority captured first their patrons. noon, March 8, about planned off a lot of our prospective much rather bring up my kids place with their display, “Alpha Taking third place was Sigma parenthood. American students,” he explains. here than in Cleveland.” Aloha.” The Alpha pledges, with Sigma Sigma sorority. Their Dr. Tabin reported that there Several Canadian organiza­ Nicholas Volk, U.S. Vice- the help of the pledges of Delta theme was “ Snag a Sigma Sea­ has been a revolution in methods tions actively assist expatriates. Consul in Toronto says he is Sigma Phi, built a hut in which maid.” The supporters of the of family planning all over the The Student Union for Peace not worried about the aid they sold pineapple sections for booth fished for treasure chests, world. The two basic reasons for Action with headquarters at 659 Canadian groups are giving 1? a piece. Beside the hut was and on catching one, received a this are: 1) the population is in­ Spadina St. has become the Wel­ American draft dodgers. “It’s an enclosed area with a stage kiss from the girl tiiat corres­ creasing at a geometric rate, and come Wagon for American draft none of our concern,” says Volk. in the middle backed by palm ponded to their catch. 2) many new contraceptives have dodgers. It helps new arrivals “ We feel it’s a matter for the trees. The pledges, adorned in Music for Carnival Swing was been devised. However, Dr. Tabin to settle. Canadian government. We are crepe paper, leis and grass provided by the “ Mark IV.” did say that family planning is not While SUPA leader Tony Hyde guests here.” new. Cultures throughout history is quick to explain that his or­ Volk says of draft dodging: have used various methods for ganization “makes no move to ‘ ‘Anything like this naturally en­ limiting the number of members get people to come up here,” courages the Communists, but in a family. generally I think the problem is overrated.” The major barriers in using C anadian official methods of family planning were, Nonetheless American offi­ cials have taken an active in­ at one time, income and educa­ describes neutrality tion. Now the federal government terest in special cases. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police has made funds available to com­ in Vietnam conflict munities for the establishment of says it receives five or six family planning clinics. The use Continued from Page 1 inquiries a month from the Fed­ of contraceptives has also been namese war), because it is a eral Bureau of Investigation made legal. member of the International Con­ seeking to find Canadian citizens trol Commission. It’s a little who lived or worked in the U.S. Premarital sex hopeless, a little fruitless some­ and returned to Canada when they Dr. Tabin went on to speak times... We support the pres­ received their draft notices. about the availability and use ence of American troops in Viet­ (Canadians who live in the U.S. of contraceptives by unmarried nam, (but) it’s intrinsically an are subject to American draft women, especially college co­ American position.” laws.) eds. She summed up her feeling Although Canadian Prime saying, “When an unmarried wo­ Minister Lester Pearson has Edythe Tegethoff man asks for contraceptives, a called on the U. S. on several physician may try to influence occasions to cease bombings of is Mil Boll Queen her toward ‘a more chaste pat­ North Vietnam, Miss La Marsh tern of behavior,’ if that is in reported that there was “no re­ Miss Edythe Virginia Teget­ hoff was elected Honorary Cadet accord with her standards. For action” within her government . . . while this merely beats pledges. ojiers he (the physician) may to Sen. Robert F. Kennedy’s call Colonel at the 38th Annual Mil­ ggest psychiatric or other ap- for a halt in the bombings. itary Ball last Saturday night. Propriate medical help. In other In general, she said, Canada She is a sophomore Home Eco­ ^stances, premarital sex may will continue to stay neutral in nomics Education major, a the Vietnamese conflict because cheerleader and a member of turpappropriate, ma- Delta Zeta sorority. Miss Te­ own consistent with her “ the Canadian government does n moral standards*," She had not take positions on issues which gethoff will serve as Honorary are foreign governments’domes­ Cadet Colonel at all ROTC cer­ tas these opln- emonies next year. ______01 C 1967 Issue tic policies.’' ______EASTERN REGIONAL The DOG HOUSE ALWAYS OPEN PLAYOFFS TEN DIFFERENT HOT DOGS rrmiii^**^ SPtnnm mw\^ (Fountain - Fries - Hamburgers) Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner Served Daily JONI MITCHELL £V 6 -3 7 9 0 - p lu s - 34th & Lancaster Ave. 6 : 4 0 P .M . Chaplin Festival” - ON CAMPUS -

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V DREXEL TRIANGLE Page 10 — March 10, 1967 Drexel Bus Ad students Senate committee needs tacts may ^et new honorary on many Drexel organizations “If we are admitted to the Parrish. American Collegiate Schools of \^ e n asked what would happen PI NU EPSILON Rusinesst we would become eU- The following organizations still have not submitted a cur­ RETAILING CLUB S lor appllcaUon towards Sigma Rho, the Dean saw no rea rent constitution, list of officers and name of advisor to the Stu­ SAILING CLUB Starting a chapter of Beta Gam­ son why it should not continul dent Senate Eligibility Committee. H these organizations have not SCABBARD & BLADE ma Siema the National Business to exist, but felt the honorar fulfilled these requirements by the end of this term (March 23;, SIGMA PI Honfrwy Fraternity.” stated p ^ t of Sigma Rho would they will not be included in the official list of Drexel activities SIGMA PI SIGMA Dean Parrish when questioned likely merge with Beta Gamm! and will not have the privileges of an approved organization. SIGMA SIGMA SIGMA about the possibility of a new Sigma. “ I have nothing a S The requested Information may be placed in the Eligibility SIGMA RHO business honorary. the local fraternity, but J Committee mailbox in the DAC or sent via Student Mail to David SOC. OF AUTOMOTIVE The Dean stressed the fact advise any qualified student o Jamieson. ENGINEERS that to have a chapter of Bete join Beta Gamma Sigma, as it SOC. OF WOMEN SCIENTISTS DELTA ZETA Gamma Sigma, the college of is a nationally recognized hon ACCOUNTING SOCIETY & ENGINEERS business must first be accred­ orary.” ALPHA PI LAMBDA ETA MU PI STUD. ZIONIST ORGAN. ited by ACSB; Drexel will mi "'entloneci the ALPHA SIGMA ALPHA HOME ECONOMICS ASSN. TAU KAPPA EPSILON know definitely whether the possibility of a new national bus ALPHA SIGMA MU HOVEL VARSITY CLUB school will be accredited until iness professional fraternitJ AMER. INST. OF BASIC SCIENCE INDEPENDENTS INTERCOLLEGIATE CONF. WOMEN’S ATHLETIC ASSN. Msiv which would be open to the en AMER. INST. OF CHEM. ENG. tire business student body both AMER. INST. OF ELECTRONICS ON GOVERNMENT WXDT The National Honorary, Beta and ELECTRICAL ENG. KEY & TRIANGLE Gamma Sigma, would be open to graduate and undergraduate! Both LEXERD both male and female members this professional group and the AMER. INST. OF INTERIOR DESIGN honorary will probably not be AMER. INST. OF PHYSICS MARINE SCI. SOCIETY The United States is now host from any major within the busi­ MARKETING SOCIETY ness college who have the organized until the fall or winter AMER. SOC. OF MECHANICAL ENG. to about 275,000 Cuban refugees, term s of next year. AMER. SOC. OF METALLURGICAL MARRIED STUDENTS SOC. with about 50,000 more coming flciatlons necessary for initia- ENGINEERS MATH SOCIETY each year under our agreement ASTRONOMY CLUB MEN'S RESIDENCE ASSN. with Castro. Although the largest ^^^‘‘Assumlng we are admitted God made man in his BETA SIGMA TAU OMICRON NU number, 100,000, live in Miami, to ACSB, we would petition al­ image and likeness . , , BETA NU PANHELLENIC COUNCIL other Cubans have moved to such most immediately for a chapter CHARLES BIDDLE LAW SOC. PHI KAPPA PHI of Beta Gamma Sigma. Our stu­ widely scattered places as Los and man returned the BLUE KEY PHI LAMBDA UPSILON Angeles, New York, Des Moines, dents are too good not to have this CHESS CLUB PI ALPHA Kansas City, Chicago and Denver. on their records,” said Dean favor, “ Mark Twain CHRISTIAN MOVEMENT PI LAMBDA PHI

|x»-

Meet Nick Dozoryst, 2 2 He’s a Law student

r>l'. H e rebuilds cars

H e reads 2 0 0 0 words a minute

*

Watching Nick’s hand fly over the pages (his hand here are typical samples of progress in words per S E E F R E E acts as a pacer) you can’t believe that he’s actually minutes by Reading Dynamics graduates. reading. He must be skimming. DEMONSTRATION Words per Minute Comprehension • Leam how we can help you But he’s not. 1st Wk. 8th Wk. IsfW k. 8th Wk. to faster reading, with im­ SALLY HOSTETTER, Cedar Crest...... 72 1428 60% 63% Nick Dozoryst can read the average novel in a little ALAN EPSTEIN, Muhlenberg College.. 276 1098 86% 96% proved comprehension, great­ EDWARD G. FLAIL, JR., er recall. Lehigh University ...... 210 1310 80% 80% under 40 minutes. Even on the toughest material he DIANE LOCKWOOD, rarely dips below 1,000 words per minute. Muhlenberg College ...... 409 1812 73% 88% RON PESOTSKI, Vlllanova University. 287 1780 77% 86% MARTHA JANE PLUMMER, DOWNTOWN PHILADELPHIA Moreover, he can comprehend and recall what he’s Bryn Mawr College ...... 358 1272 65% 89.5% STEPHEN LICHTENSTEIN. (Th« W«llington, 19th A Wahut) read — right down to the smallest detail. Albright Jr. College ...... 482 4980 60% 81% Tu«t., March 14-5:45 PM CHARLES HENKELS, Penn State...... 290 1200 80% 83% JIM SHELLENBERGER, W*d.. March 15-8 PM Nick Dozoryst is not a mental freak. Nor is he a Thon., March 16-5:45 & 8 PM Lafayette College ...... 211 1395 76% 79.5% naturally fast reader. He learned this revolutionary MARY FRANCES KlLLE, U. of Delaware ...... 3 33 2112 85% 86.5% WM. O'CONNOR, Drexel ...... ’ 256 1842 technique of rapid reading at the Evelyn Wood DAVID M. UNCASTER, JR., 70% 77.5% JENKINTOWN John* Hopkin* ...... 3 7 0 Reading Dynamics Institute. 3630 82% 88% •"’"’aeulata...... 141 1090 47% (119 York Road) ARTHUR GWIN, Montgomery County 70% Community College ...... 151 W«d., March 15 — 8 PM Nick was one of our better students. He started the 613 50% 72% College.... 158 1063 FrI., March 1 7 —8 PM CORYDON M. WHEAT, Ursinus. 270 740/0 82% course at about 350 words a minute and increased 1280 58.5% 88% Sat., March 1 8 - 1 0 AM P.nna.:;:;;382 1513 82% 84.5% his rate 6 times. Our average student begins at I '^'•Ionova U...... 315 1020 78% 81% about 300 words a minute and graduates at speeds Sf.’;.,...... d 940 67% 82% 3272 69% 75% WAYNE 2233 85.5% 87% over 1,500 words a minute. 2242 WILLIAM COLVER, Drexel ...... 342 70% 74% (130 W ost Loncostor Av«.) 1618 70% 86% You can do this, too Tu*t.. March 1 4 - 8 PM Thurs., March 1 6 —8 PM “Reading dynamically,” says Nick “is often like Comprehension is stressed At a recent teacher training conference, Mrs. Wood watching a movie. You have no sense of reading PENNSAUKEN, N.J. words. Sometimes your involvement is so intense emphasized that dynamic reading is nothing like the skimmmg techniques commonly used in speed (Ivyttono Inn) (Rt. 130) that it’s as though you’re actually there, watching Tu«s., March 1 4 —8 PM the action take place.” readmg courses. She said, “Skipping words is dan­ Sat., A^rch 18—10 AM gerous as you don’t know whether or not you have You may not learn to read quite as fast as Nick Dozoryst (and then again you might!), but the na­ ?rth\rte?ci';^ — ALLENTOWN tionally known Reading Dynamics Institute insists (W hitehall Moll) “You read five times faster,” she pointed out, “not March 13, 14, 15, 16 & 17-8 PM that you at least triple your reading efficiency — or March 18-10 AM receive a full tuition refund. (Reading efficiency by readmg every fifth word, but by reading flve hmes M many words in the same amount of time " combines speed and comprehension, not speed alone.) TO BE SURE OF Mrs Wood emphasized that using her technique of Just to show you that Nick Dozoryst is not unique. A SEAT CALL rapid readmg, every word on the page is noted p. TU 7-9000 Wood Dynamics w l l 'i > DREXEL TRIANGLE ritlsh metallurgist P*g«* II - March 10, 1967» ,t DIT as visiting prof H ancock, Longer, Bevitz

r meUllurg? at the n o l o ^ , Drex^/»s"''vislSi ^op entries in C one Show „fnerial College of Science and fessor spent 14 P**®" M Q 1.1___. Snology at the University of career in industry bef^e r l l r n Hancock, Bev- nndoti, recently b e c ^ e a vis^^^^ ing to academic life. He held kev professor in the M etallurgcal positions in the m etallur^ofi E ei ___ T,.incT rS ' Denartment.Department. Pro- Pro "e^nurgicalen- IS o r Bradshaw will give a "! of lectures to Drexel grad- Rhodesia' and The outfits of the winning con- Portugal prior to 1958. when he ,1 and undergraduate students les ants were chic, e x tre m llX L process m etallur^ and return and reflected the College as an assistant profes- latest trends in fashion. to the Imperial College late in winner, Mary [April. full professorial chair. Profes­ Catherine Hancock, completed 14 years in industry sor Bradshaw is acUvely en- h o t ^ w ith graduate of the Imperial ^ “ industrial consul- * h?r shorts; it also fea- p u b lis h e d ed tuiHp® “ exaggerat­ much of his process metallurev ed turtle-neck and an optional iusic organizations w o r k . wrap-around m ini-skirt. Until April, Professor Brad­ shaw and his wife, who is visit­ a senior in to present program toe College of Home Economics, ing the United States for the and is m ajoring in fashion design^ first time, are residing at the lomorrow in DAC “Eye Opener” by Janice Be- Dorchester Apartments in Phil­ vitz was a shocking pink cotton adelphia. In Great Britain, Pro­ Drexel’s Annual Music Night velveteen bikini, trimmed in t^rogram, featuring choral, in- fessor Bradshaw is a member of peen with a matching top. Miss jtrumental and dance groups, w ill the Institution of Mining a n d Langer carried the impression :e place tomorrow evening at M etallurgy, London, and a fellow of sophisticated elegance with a p.m. in the Grand Hall of of the Institution of M etallurgists. black velvet jump suit and rhine­ stone belt. le DAC. The Combined Glee Clubs will All contestants were Drexel Dorm only half ready Ising selections from “Music Triangle colum nist students and most modeled their /Ian by Meredith Willson and own designs. A wide range of iirorks by Mendelssohn, Verdi, fabrics was used. These were to discuss 'new right' ershwin and others. Com posi- provided by Cone Fabrics. Navy for scheduled opening by Johann Strauss, Rim- blue and red dominated day w ear but a myriad of colors and fal>l y-Korsakov and B ergsm a will on TV this Saturday The new men’s dorm, origi­ is a chance of mid-term occu­ performed by the orchestra, rics pervaded other apparel. nally scheduled to open by the pancy if the new building is open­ ilusic by Holst will be featured Lines were smooth and sleek and beginning of spring term, will ed before the end of April, How­ the Varsity Wind Ensem ble, David W alter, who writes the the hemlines favored mini length not have full facilities avail­ ever, students will not be moved vhile the Varsity Singers will Conservative Commentary col­ or slightly longer. The students able on tim e. Only 50 percent of in if the opening date is too late bresent selections by M orley, umn in The Triangle, will ap­ combined imagination ajid an un­ the building will be completed in the term . Persichetti and Dawson. The pear on the W FIL-TV show, Gen­ derstanding of the arts to pro­ and in use by the time spring Room rental at the dorm will Rand’s n u m b e r s w il l i n c lu d e s e - erations in ConfUct, on Satur­ duce desirable, styUsh designs, term begins. be $180 per term , which will not day, M arch 11 at 4 p.m. He and according to one official. include m eals. No food plan will ectlons from “ Man of La M an- William Dixon, Director of ha,” a trumpet trio and a m arch. Thomas Lamont, Penn YAF be mandatory for the rem ainder the Drexel Housing Office, said chairm an, will discuss “ The New of the academic year. New to the program this year this week that construction de­ Right*' with form er Gov. George l^ill be a presentation by the lays and strikes have caused the Leader and new Republican State brexel Contem porary Dance Club postponement of full occupancy Chairm an John Jordan. lirected by M rs. SeUna G arrett, until a later date. M r. W alter is a senior major­ BANK’S hey will dance two com positions “All the freshmen presently ing in Accounting and is Eastern by the Varsity Wind En- staying at the YMCA have been Pennsylvania's Council Chair­ emble. assigned rooms and will move man for Young Americans for DRUGS Conductors are Dr. W allace into the dorm on schedule, but Freedom, the nation’s largest peaton, director of D rexePs m u- those staying at other Drexel conservative youth group. 3233 POW ELTON AYE. department with Walter housing facilities will have to felackburn and Clyde Shive. w a i t .” Upperclassmen from the “Y” B A 2 - 0 2 9 0 may elect to take up residence ilitary engineers to tour at the dorm, but all must leave PrescripUoM it Health Itemg the “Y” by March 23, when C o sm M tie* — T o b a c c o Drexel’s lease runs out. G i f u Mr. Dixon added that there p a c e facilities in Florida

Approximately twenty ROTC Assistant Professor of Military bdets from DrexePs studi^at Science, who is advisor to the papter of the Society of Am ei ■ SAME chapter and will accom­ "I Military Engineers will tour pany the group, indicated that John F. Kennedy Space Cen- similar field trips are made Ir at Cocoa Beach, Florida, dur- annually. “It gives the cadets Jg spring vacation. a chance to see construction The itinerary of the cadets projects sim ilar to ones which eludes a four-hour tour of the they may become involved with pace center facilities, during once they join the Corps of En­ pich NASA will stress opera- g i n e e r s . " pnal aspects of the program . N U.S. Army Engineer Dis- Ijct, Canaveral, will then pro- fOe a g uided to u r o f c o n s t r u c - L at Cape Kennedy and If ^®rritt Island Moon Launch rea. ISponsored by the Office of r of Engineers and ad- limstered by Colonel W.W. W at- Ti’ioJ'! Engineer of the pladelphia District Corps of ‘de p a rt DONT roorf International rport on March 28. They will ly at Patrick Air Force Base, f i g h t it. “rida, during the three-day

[Captain George A. Pincince, G et Eaton’s Corrasable Bond Typewriter Paper.

M istakes don’t show. A mis-key completely disappears Hand from the special surface. An ordinary pencil eraser lets Laundry and you erase without a trace. So why use ordinary paper. E aton’s C orrasable is available in light, w eights and Onion Skin. In 100-sheet packets and 500- Cleaners W hen you can’t afford to be dull sheet ream boxes. At Stationery Departments. |600-02 Lancaster A ve. sharpen your wits 24 H O U R w i t h N o D o z . A N D NoDoz keep alert tablets or new chewable mints, safe as coffee, help bring you c l e a n i n g s e r v i c e back to your mental best... help you become more alert to the B undles people and conditions around y M oD ox you. Non-habit forming. “ ------Dry and Fold ■

Day Service Whils studying, or altar hours, Only Eaton m akes Corrasable. sharpen your wits with NoDoz. ^ ------6-0952 IATON P*MR COmWATION. PITTSFItlB. MASSACHUStnS Ttbltit orn»w Ch»wt£i» MInU DREXEL TRIANGLE Page 12 - March 10, 1967

W e l l te a c h y o u to

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i . ' f ' ’ -i.

in th irte e n w eek s.

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You nam e it, we ve got it. The biggest selection in tow n. U rdu and T agalog and Sw ahili and Hindi and Q uechua and Spanish and French and Portuguese. To list a few. All free for the learning. And w hen we say learning we don’t m ean ordinary speak and listen and read learning. N o sir. W hen we teach you a language we teach you to cook in it, teach in it, play basketball in it, build sanitation

facilities and farm cooperatives in it. W e teach you to clim b m ountains and span rivers in it, to have patience and understanding in it, to do som ething im portant in it, to look at your­ self and the w orld in it.

We teach you to m ake friends and get along w ith people in it. A nd w e even supply the friends and people. Yes sir. W ith every foreign language you get, absolutely free, an invita­ tion to spend tw o years in a m atching foreign c o u n t r y .

So hurry! H urry! D on’t delay. It’s the chance of a lifetim e. N o catches. N o gimmicks. N othing to pay. Y ou see, it’s all part of a pro­ m otion for a product w e’re interested in push­ ing. Peace.

W rite: T he Peace C orps, W ashington, D.C.

PUBLISHED AS A PUBLIC SERVICE IN COOPERATION WITH THE ADVERTISING COUNCIL

J!'■ 'I ii

„ Jii r n . m I . DREXEL TRIANGLE - M.rrh 10, National student new« j p r o p o s e d EdUnlinI T.nrrespondent pers and magazines.-The frUs Leon Howell, of the Univer- tratlon engendered by this com UtTChristian Movement, pro- municaUons deficiency led to the In existing nationwide services* Ced the establishment of a proposal, purposely left va^e to one to conveyed is often Kuonwide weekly student news M for consideration of all one to three weeks old by the timp prvice, probably in the form ideas. The proposed news service the subscribers see it. The new would work closely with “ insur- If a newspaper, at a college edi- iate^mn ^ immed- ,rs> conference last weekend gent new spapers,’’ and radio and In! Another means for television, to reach the largest of a dilemma is that Boston. . ^ j possible audience. Howell, who attended a m eet- nlif ? anticipatory jour- Howell wants to reach the in­ P*’®Pare us better for line on th is s u b je c t l a s t O c t o b e r dividual student, not only the '^Ann Arbor, Michigan, said what happens, rather than report­ campus newspapers. When the ing on crises after they’ve al­ at there are two basic needs suggestion was forwarded for in­ ready come to a head.” pretofore neglected by exist- serting the proposed publication Howell is looking for enough collegiate publications. They ling in college papers, Howell object­ ^ople willing to help - both lare the following: an adequate ed. He feels that “the real in administration and in report- ommunication of ideas and is­ strength lies in having an inde­ A n r i r ^ meeting in late sues to awaken people, and an pendent readership.” Thus he April or early May, to start internal dealing with the quests had hoped to begin as an inde­ solving the problems and trans- if any given movement or or- pendent publication. But he ad­ concepts into ranizational structure. mitted that such an idea may be a tangible entity. ’ According to the proposal impossible without some spon­ The areas listed for report­ Irafted last October, “ several soring organization, which would ing include community organizing are clearly not being m et, ^ utilized to attract donations efforts, such as VISTA and the stories which need to be from foundations — “hopefully War on Poverty; “the wider im­ leard are not told, and a vast LEON HOWELL tells college unsuspect foundations," he add­ plications of technological change editors of his plan for a national lollege audience is being served e d . and the implications of cyberna- student weekly news service. tion; the debate over the negative r i m m -; ------tne aeoate over the negative income tax, guaranteed annual from Latin American student income, and the work ethic; and movements. South African and isitor to China and North Vietnam the ongoing program s of the pre­ Mozambique liberation move­ sent civil rights organizations, ments, and authentic Asian views including discussions of black on American involvement there; tells of news service inaccuracies power and the role of whites in Communism today; the gap be­ the movemenL” tween the rich and the poor; By Jack B ecker leader. The latter “ticked off” communists were able to run* O th e r to p ic s c i te d a r e th e s h a p e Cold War history and American Editorial Correspondent e i^ t reasons, including the fol­ of cities today and tomorrow, Buddhists who foreign policy; developments in lowing; 1) Neither Communists m i^t have run for office were through case studies and in-depth religion; and models of student Dave Dellinger, editor of Li- nor neutrals were permitted to in jail at the time of the elec­ analyses; the entire range involvement “ in our South, in our Iberation M agazine, went to Hanoi participate; only avowed anti­ tio n . of educational problems; “ Third cities, in our universities. In and Peking last N ovem ber, and he World” revolutionary move­ Europe, and in other parts of related some of his observations ments, including inside stories the world.” I at a college editors’ conference [last Saturday at Boston U niver- I sity. First Much of the news reported I about China in this country com es I from the slogans and graM ti on C h o ice [Red Guard posters all over C hi- jna, he noted. In this light, D el- Ilinger, having spent eleven days Of T h e I in China last Novem ber, w as able Ito say that, at that tim e, “ there I was almost no relationship be- Engageables jtween what was appearing in the jpress, and what was going on” |in China. Dellinger warned against de- Ipendency upon the Red Guard jposters, because they are the ■medium for public debate, and jthey contain virtually every kind of slogan. For example, he said he had seen, on the same posters lauding and de­ nouncing the sam e m an. LIBERATION MAGAZINE'S editor, Dave Dellinger, gestures to He listed some of our sources emphasize his point while addressing several college newspaper esides the posters, and he noted editors at a conference last weekend in the office of the Boston hat many are CIA- or USIA- University News. The background of Senator J.W. Fulbright’s famous supported groups. We also rely on contacts in Japan, which, he statement, "We ore succumbing to the arrogance of power," is appro­ said, “was also a victim of the priate, for Dellinger is relating to the journalists his experiences in United States.” Hanoi and Peking. He claims that the United States' position in Regarding Vietnam, D ellinger Vietnam has not accurately been explained to the public. said, “The White House ... is REGISTERED ready to grant independence Vietnam. ... We got a rigged TC eep>setlce* Bction, which now w e’re giving DIAMOND RINGS i evidence of the fact that there»s ome hope of dem ocracy.” They like the smart styling and He a lso n o te d t h a t th e B u d d - i>ists had boycotted that elec- the guaranteed perfect center Curious about their rea- diamond ... a brilliant gem he questioned a Buddhist of fine color and modern cut. The name, Keepsake, TRIP TO VERMONT in your ring assures lifetime drI vT w r t tim e satisfaction. Select yours at your Keepsake Jew eler’s store. M ar. 17 thru 19 H e’s in the yellow pages under 'Jew elers." F u t u n M f. S n o w Tour reser­ vations will bo accoptod up until two wooks prior to dato of tho trip.

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driver's licensi for 2 y to n ! Name. Address. C ity - CAB COMPANY tmpioyment Office State. -Zip. KEEPSAKE DIAMOND RINGS. BOX 90. SYRACUSE. N. Y. 13202 DREXEL TRIANGLE 'Page 14 — March 10, 1967 Cagereites continue streak; Taming of the W olves

Continued from Page 16 undefeated season in sight more than one shot. but together they can make the In the last two minutes Billy Murphy, Fran Connell “ All-Unexpected” byeUminating date came at Chestnut Hill on and Bob Croft are just as es­ the Wolves from the tournament By Noncy Brown Tuesday, February 28. guard DIT LindaWiliiams 5 for the third strai^ t year. Chestnut Hill’s Joan Me VSv sential. It is a must for them With one more game to play In the first quarter it looked It can be strategy and discipline went to the sideUnes. Drevli to play the best defense that the women’s varsity basketball like the Dragonettes’ anticipa­ overcoming superior ability if up by five, were told to f S they have ever played. If Kunze team brought their season s 7-0. tions of a close game were un­ the Dragons play it right For the and Mims are continually haras­ In the last half of the 1967 founded, as they went ahead 16-8. the but Chestnut Hill title of the last chapter of Cozen’s managed to steal it awav sed they will force their shots schedule they defeated Chestnut At quarter tim e, Chestnut Hill classic, come up to Muhlenburg convert wo. ^ and commit many mistakes Hill, Bryn Mawr, and Rosemont. adjusted to a tighter zone, and tonight. You may find it labeled leading to important turnovers. the DIT offense was unable to Coach Miss Haas calUd atlm. “The Taming of the Wolves.” Drexel’s biggest win to Hal Blitman’s adroit eagers penetrate. They also failed to hit out and or^zed her ottC have met defeat twice this year from the outside. So in the The cagerettes, waiting eiE ’ for the go<^ or the i„te„,ij“ and only four times in the last MtDMlfaMlilKrg second eight minutes, five of three years. These defeats came the cagerettes nine points were fouI,managed to put Intourmor. at the hands of team s who took the from the line. Both team s fouled above form ula and implimented it heavily. Chestnut Hill converted to near perfection. Long Island six free throws, and made three Bryn Mawr University forced Cheyney to stop field goals, to bring the score running and cam e away with two O n M ^ c h 2 , D re x e l showed to 2 5 -2 1 . successive NCAA victories. This In the third quarter. Chestnut s u p e r b b a U h a n d lin g on their year Mansfield State did the sam e ?f^ Hill changed their tactics once home court by defeating Brvn thing and frustrated the Wolves Mawr, 68-39. In the first half n again, playing a man to man into complete submission. (» the cagerette offense of Jan Mar 0. defense. Drexel loosened the It is such a beautiful tactic o North zone in order to stop Chestnut q u a r t , C a r o l W u r s te r , Dottil and is actually a coach’s dream. o s To 309 Hill from scoring from the K lase, and Janet Lamon executed I t ’s lik e c a g i n g a le a p in g m o u n ta in corner. This brought the cager­ f a s t b r e a k s , s c r e e n s , and worked lion in a twenty foot square and EE ettes little success, as Chestnut the high post. They went ahead watching it sm ash itself to death < 29 to 17, ’ CL Hill scored ten. D rexel’s offense because it lacks self control. U.S. 22 East put in 13, m ostly from the outside. In the second half, DIT scored Kunze and Mims are both great 39 points, while the defense of shooters but they have to shoot Proceed west on the Schuylkill Expressway to the Valley Forge In­ Eileen Eldridge, Clara Mitchell often and in varied fashions. This terchange of the Pennsylvania Turnpike. Take the Turnpike east to a n d M e g M c G a r r y held Brvn is what they thrive on and it por­ K o u f f a x Allentown, via the Northeast Extension. Exit at Interchange 33 (Route Mawr to 22. trays the schoolyard manner of Continued from Page 16 O n T u e s d a y , M arch 7, the basketball. Hal Booker and Tom 22). Take Route 22 East to the second exit (Cedarcrest Blvd.) Go ing marks tied to longevity, his cagerettes traveled to Rosemont. W ashin^on, the big men, need the south onto Cedarcrest (turn left at the top of the exit ramp) to the concentrated brilliance during a They took this one by a score stuff shot and the pronoimced re ­ first stoplight (Tilghman St.) Turn left onto Tilghman, drive about 5 brief period has qualified him of 69-35, D rexel went ahead in bounds to make them feel at home. blocks, then turn right onto 23rd St. Turn right onto Liberty Street. for enshrinement amongst base­ the first half, 33-19, of which This is what their victors took The Muhlenberg Field House and its parking lot are on your left. ball’s immortals, according to junior Dottie Klase scored 13. away from them with their slow­ Follow the throngs of Drexel jackets, pennants and cheerleaders to the SPORT article. In t h e s e c o n d h a lf Drexel down method. A theft of this sort the gymnasium and let Ursinus know why you've come so fai. brought about some satisfying The record shows that Sandy rolled it up. This was largely w in s . Koufax led the National League d u e t o a s e c o n d h a lf 16 point effort in earned-run average for an f r o m J a n M a r q u a r t , and nine from Defensive sage M entzer wins MAC crown unmatched five consecutive J a n L a m o n . Sam Cozen comes from the Continued from Page 16 years. His 165 wins and 87 loss­ Harry Litwak-Jack Kraft mold Tony Godonis dropped a close mon made the finals with his 4:57 es form a .655 percentage, fourth M erm ei place eightli when it comes to defense. The match with Mike McGlinchey of pin of Roger Shatzkin of Swarth- best on the all-tim e list. Continued from Page 16 Dragons will be ready to face the Delaware 3-2 (McGlinchey beat m o re ). In strikeouts, Koufax stands challenge and it won’t be on sheer Wilcox during the season). Ray The finals came — and Dave alone, says the feature. He is sw im m ers nearly upset the pre- courage. Sam will give them the Moats beat J. Hawk 6-2 in his knocked off Sigmon handily with the only pitcher- in the history viously undefeated Temple frosh, game plan and the multiple de­ opener, but then was edged 11-9 a 5-0 decision to become Drex­ of baseball to have struck out The D ragons w ere leading going fense to cope with the situation. by Pete Eataugh of Juniata. el’s first MAC champ since Jack more than one batter per inn­ into the final event, but Milce He will play a combination zone- Van Doren won the 123 pound ing pitched throu^out his car­ C h a i n s w i m m i n g fo r the third man to man with the heavier Mentzer the champ crown in 1963, eer (2396 strikeouts in 2325 inn­ tim e that day was no match for attention on a tight, flawless de­ Our best hope in the meet was On the strength of Mentzer’s ings.) He is also the only t h e f r e s h f r o s h fro m Broad fense no matter what is em­ with Dave M entzer, who placed 14 points Drexel came in ninth pitcher with three 300-strikeout Street, as the Dragons fell, 39* ployed. Boxing out the opposition third last year, Mentzer was of twenty-three schools with 16 seasons, and he holds the one- 3 4 , from taking the rebound is seeded third this year on the points. Ahead of us were cham­ year m ark with 382. Butch Shafer led the Mermen another highnote of the game basis of his 7-1 record, while pion W ilkes with 73; Temple, 62; The record for strikeouts in a attack with two firsts, one in s t r a t e g y . Willman of Lebanon Valley was West Chester, 51; Lycoming, 44; nine-inning game is 18 — once th e 5 0 f r e e s t y l e an d the other Knocking oif Cheyney would be first (12-0) and Taylor of Ly­ Juniata, 22; Moravian, 20; Eliz­ by Bob Feller and twice by Kou­ in th e b u t t e r f l y . H e also came a “feather” in our cj^. This coming was second (10-1). Cham­ abethtown, 18; and Lebanon Val­ fax, Sandy also has struck out in second in the 500 freestjle. certainly would be one of the pions are not made by seed­ le y , 17. 10 or more batters in 97 dif­ M a r k Z i p f a n d C h a in both swam biggest victories Drexel has ever ing, however, as neither of these The champions were: 123- ferent games, another record. w ell, each taking two seconds and had. Contrary to what many two men made the finals. Ment­ Wayne Boyd of Temple; 130-Don Further, Koufax has thrown four o n e t h i r d . people think, it’s not an im­ zer first blanked Bob Orwan of Milone of Temple (2nd year); no-hit games for another m ajor Coach Joe Jurich said that he possible occurrence. Sam’s E-town 7-0, then went on to chew 152-Dave Johnson of Lycoming; league record. expects to field a winning team Dragons have come a long way up highly-touted Jim Powers 160-Joe Wiendl of Wilkes; 167- “ So Sandy will go into the Hall for the first tim e in many years since November, and they have from PMC 13-1. Next it was Mike Dick Cook of Wilkes (2nd year); of Fame, at the earliest possible next season. This will be facili­ done it on team work. Nobody M oyer »s turn — and Dave pinned 177-Dave Mucka of M oravian (2nd moment, for the simpliest pos­ tated by the addition of five good wearing the blue and gold to­ him in 4:59 to set up a showdown year); and Hwt.-John Piper of sible reason: he belongs,” con­ frosh and the loss of only two night will make All-American with Ken Sigmon of Temple (Sig­ Muhlenberg, cludes the SPORT article. veterans, Caste Hi and Palmer.

Music N ight, 1967

M arch II, 1967

Grand Hall, DAC

8 : 0 0 p . m .

Varsity Singers

Contemporary Dance Club

Glee Clubs

Band

O rchestra

V arsity Wind Ensemble

Admission Free DREXEL TRIANGLE Page IS - March 10, 1967 I Kap beats M en’s and w om en’s sailing I: leets Sigma I?!' Uagoe, classes slated for s p r i n g P i tor (o irt cliampionsliip Sailing classes will be held Certificate will be accepted as By Mike So SCO regularly this coming spring proof of swim m ing ability. O ther­ spired ballgame,ballgame. especiallyesDPoiQiivM.i.-. Mike . * term beginning the week of April wise, women will be required to I uniile four teams did nothing fensive boards meant TKE sel­ R ic h H u s te d w h o h a d 3. A women’s class will convene arrange for a swimming test Lore important than jockey for dom got a second shot. The Pi on Monday afternoons from 1:30 A m } ^ respectively, through the Women’s Physical I d^n in the final standings aps finally had a five point lead APL Jumped ahead at the out­ to 3:30, and a men’s class on Education Department. Men will iK’ the Blue League, the brothers set, but the PI Kaps started Thursday afternoons from 1;30 have to make their own test ar­ Ilf Pi Kappa Phi storm ed through getting hot by the middle of the and TKE couldn’t catch them. to 3:30. Nautical terms, basic rangements through a local Ifhe Gold League by overw helm ing sailing skills and elementary From here until the 20 ^ scorers with YMCA, ISD-seeded APL and TKE w i th i n end of the game their shooting and Husted had 19 for PKP racing techniques will be taught Miss Millie Quammen will be space of S six d a y ^ d took tte ke^pt getting better and better For TKE, Shepela had 19 w h ile Interested students should sign In charge of the girls’ classes Lawhead was held to 12, up in Mr. Vogeler’s office be­ I league with a 5-1 record, i?®" pressure was on Apple and Charlie H orter and Jeff Rhi- |!md APL tied for second, both Pi, and they started making m is­ fore the end of the winter term . zor. In charge of the men's lu/jth 4-2 logs. takes In an effort to catch up- LCA 69, TER 64 All students must be able classes. Each group will be Um lt- r l other games played, BN It seemed as If PKP capitalized to swim 50 yards, A Jun­ ed to 20 people — first come, p e Lambda Chi’s have to be ■defeated SAM, and LCA knocked- on every mistake. Thev led ior or Senior Life-Saving first served! called the “ team of the future” In I ff TEP to finish in a tie for 36-23 at halftlm e and could have basketball. The two best subs Isecond place in the Blue League, won by more had they not put in the league, Jim Cousart and Sind SP (both LCA and BN in substitutions at the end. Wayne Huntzinger, scored 26 ■lost to SP and to each other;, with PKP 53, TKE 46 ^ in ts apiece to lead LCA to their IaIso, SP defeated DSP, fourth victory of the year. # O n C a n fa s ^&]C§^IuIman I One point worth mentioning TKE played an outstanding first The lead seesawed most of the |is the apparent superiority of half, especially on defense. They {By the author of ‘'Itally Routul the Flag, Hoys!", way but LCA moved out in front ■the Blue League, since, in inter- forced many turnovers, but failed "Dobie Gillis,” etc.) for good with two minutes left. lleague contests, its record was .to capitalize on many of them. TEP was shocked, losing to a I 4 -I. It will be interesting to W hat kept the Pi Kaps alive In the team who had lost their three ■see* if the championship game first half was the shooting of starters in the frontcourt due to WHO’S GOT THE BUTTON? [against SP will follow this them e. Varzally again. i n ju r ie s . ■Speaking of the championship The Pi Kaps found their eye I’m sure it has not escaped your notice that underlying ■game, it will be played this In the second half. They started the adorable whimsy which has made this column such a Sunday afternoon. Check on the hitting consistently on long jump SP 79, DSP 48 popular favorite among my wife and my little dog Spot, time and go if you want to see a It’s a shame that DSP waited shots to keep the pressure on there is a serious attem pt to stay abreast of the problems to play their best ball game od ball game. TKE, On defense, they bottled that beset the Am erican college student. against a team that was so much the middle, making It virtually M any a trip have I made to m any a cam pus—talking to better than they. Even though |PKP 66, APL 48 Impossible to get the ball jji to undergraduates, listening to their troubles, hearing their There were two factors that Walt Lawhead, who is a sure the margin of victory was big, grievances, reading their buttons. (Incidentally, the sec­ decided the outcom e of this gam e, two points with his jumper from the Delta Sigs didn’t score 48 ond and third most popular buttons I saw on my last trip nd they will be listed In order inside. This forced Joe Shepela to points very often this season, were: “WALLACE BEERY LIVES” and “FLUORI­ Df least importance. Two of take more shots from the out­ SP divided their scoring among DATE M USCATEL.” The first most popular button was, ^pple P i’s s t a r t e r s d id n ’t p l a y , side than he should have, and three men: Bailey, who had 15 as we all know, “SCRAP THE SCRA PE” which is worn, ivery Pi Kap played an in- PKP’s dominance on their de- and Conway and Maguire, who as we all know, by Personna Super Stainless Steel Blade had 11 apiece. users who, as we all know, are proud to proclaim to the world that they have found a blade which gives them BN 68, SAM 49 luxury shave after luxury shave, which comes both in BN also finished the season double-edge style and Injector style, which does indeed luarterback protection with a 4-2 record, and high scrap the scrape, negate the nick, peel the pull, and oust hopes for next year. Their the ouch, which shaves so closely and quickly and truly strongest scoring usually comes and beautifully that my heart leaps to tell of it. (If per­ from their backcourt,but in this haps you think me too effusive about Personna, I ask you alls for 12 man team game^Stankus and Dunn decided to remember that to me Personna is more than just a With the recent numerous In- a quarterback running play. He to score as well as get rebounds, razor blade; it is also an em ployer.) luries to the flrst-strlng pro would be a specialist to end all Sammy, who showed a lot of But I digress. I make frequent trips, as I say, to learn Quarterback --th e m ost IncUs- specialists -- and exclusive promise this year, and is the what is currently vexing the American undergraduate. pnsable man on the football bodyguard to the most valuable only team who have beaten PKP Last week, for example, while visiting a prom inent Eas­ lield — indicating particular vul- piece of bric-a-brac In pro foot­ this year, didn’t have it for this tern university (Idaho State) I talked to a number of perability, a unique proposal to b a l l . ” g a m e . engineering seniors who posed a .serious question. Like brovide much needed protection all students, they had come to college burning.to fill them ­ ■or a quarterback Is submitted JULSLSLSULSLi 8 9 8 8.fl.B.fl.

d r e x e l

GRAD RINGS ^U)EAT£H I pr • fraternity jewelry COlJT^Hm liquor, • watch repairing • gifts of distinction BOX 1 1 0 0 BAcro., HP. ^ ( ^ 0 3 W hen Champert, having completed his degree in wing nuts and flanges, reported to the enlightened corporation OFFTPRVOIP W HeUC'PR.OHIftJTeP BV UAVA/ UNIVERSITY where he had accepted employment, he was not rushed forthwith to a drawing board. He was first installed in JEWELERS the enlightened corporation’s training campus. Here he was given a beanie, a room-mate, and a copy of the com­ 3425 Walnut St. pany rouser, and the enlightened corporation proceeded 3725 Spruce St. to fill the gap in his culture. First he was taught to read, then to print capital let­ ters, then capital and small letters. (There was also an attempt to teach him script, but it was ultimately Freddy & Phil abandoned.) From these fundam entals, Cham pert progressed slowly but steadily through the more complex disciplines. He JARBER s h o p was diligent, and the corporation was patient, and in the • Lonco.t.r & Mork«t St. end they were well rewarded, for when Cham pert fin­ On 33rd St. ished, he could play a clavier, parse a sentence, and nam e to 6 P.M. all the Electors of Bavaria. Poised and cultured, Cham pert was prom ptly placed in an im portant executive position. I am pleased to report that he served with immense diatinction-not, however, I-EOND A for long because three days later he reached retirem ent a g e . '^ohn PILLA Today, still spry, he lives in St. Petersburg, Florida, where he supplements his pension by parsing sentences Tw w ith r i i Q m for tourists. • » * ^ *** Thun, and Sun. * * * O '**7, Max Shulmitn Here'* a $entence that*» easy to par$e: Subject—**you.** COFFEE CABARET y e r b — **double.” O bject —**your shaving c o m fo rt w h en Open IHU thiu SUN ©The National Brewing Co. of Balto., Md. at Baito., Md. you use tturma-Shavef regular or menthol^ along with 874 Laiicdbtet Ave also Phoenix # Miami • Detroit _____ n itnnnnf vm rm rmnmnrm TmnmnnnirmTinnnnm nr your Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades,** Btyn Mawi ^ I Dragons drop Ursinus in M A C , face Cheyney State in p la y o ff

The strategy used by the Co- play “run, shoot unu I By John A. Jorgensen zenmen for ten minutes during During this interval, this period proved that they could tet ran the Bears into Mi Sam Cozen’s dynamic quintet polished off the Ursinus^ Bears last Saturday evening, 67-43, to e a r n a NCAA playoff berth against Cheyney State tonight at Muh­ MurphyI f i M I# j c ite d the» game was uneventful lenberg College Gymnasium. The Drexel basketball captain, Bill Sam Cozen’s big five / game will be played at 9:00 p.m. I Murphy, picked up a pair of home, 67-43. ^°aste{l| and should prove to be an in­ honors last week for his excel­ teresting event as the Dragons Cheyney looms strong lent play this season. are sky-high spirit wise. The Philadelphia Basketball The Wolves of Cheynev I Dragons spill Bears W riters Association gave Murphy Teachers College may prove tod its “Unsung Hero” award along The first half of the MAC an extremely formidable od Southern Division playoff saw with other college ballplayers ponent ^ is evening. Their str?t'l who seemingly get overlooked the Dragons play slow-down tac­ egy is basically a run and slo harassm ent type of school S tics, maneuvering for the good from week to week; andtheECAC shot. Big Joe Hertrich and Bob (Eastern Collegiate Athletic Con­ Croft led the Dragons to a half- ference) named Murphy to its All- their offense and appear to haS time lead of 31 to 25, by net­ East Division III team for the sec­ no concern for defensive ta i ting 12 and 11 points respec­ ond time this season. tics. Several tim es this year th] In commenting on Murphy’s tiv e ly . Dragons have demonstrated th i The second period began with award from the writers, head c o ^ l d p la y th is type of ball I the Dragons playing inspired bas­ coach Sam Cozen said, “ Mur­ a lth o u g h a la c k o f ex p erie n ce maJ ketball. Sophomore Bob Croft phy isn’t really an unsung hero, prove fatal. The Dragons ;vili scored six points in three min­ he’s my ‘sung’ hero and without have to be flawless tonight an him we would have been in big Sam Cozen will have to u< utes to put the Dragons ahead, use! 39 to 28. With 15 minutes re­ trouble. He’s a very fine, very every maneuver in the mana to w in . maining in the contest, the Dra­ coachable young man and we’re gons switched to run and shoot really going to m iss him .” Murphy cited os “ Unsung" strategy. This t>pe of action A graduate of St. Thomas M ore coupled* with a Dragon press for High School, Murphy is the lead­ Senior captain Bill Murphy was LEAPING HIGH to shoot, Drexel sophomore Cliff Rissell attempts practice (Cheyney plays harass­ ing scorer on the Dragons with selected last week as the PhilaJ o basket while Joe Hertrich looks on. Drexel defeated Ursinus, 67-43, ment basketball), enabled the 250 points and is the leading foul delphia Basketball Writers ks. in the MAC playoffs lost Saturday. Dragons to surge ahead 61 to 31. shooter with a .757 percentage. sociation’s “ Unsung Hero.” Swimmers fall to tough Temple team place eighth In MAC championships

By Don Bailey swept to an easy victory in the Cassidy’s individual string of College Division as Bucknellwon at least one first place per meet The Drexel mermen finished was halted at eight. eighth out of eleven teams at the the University Division. The Second places were garnered MAC Swimming Championships Dragons scored 11-1/2 points in by Michaelis in the 200 free- last weekend. Dickinson College the meet held at Johns Hopkins University. Earlier in the week, st>’le, Cassidy in the 500 free­ Drexel (2-7) closed out their style and 200 backstroke, Ed­ Koufax sure pick dual meet schedule, losing to the wards in the diving competition, Temple Owls, 65-30. Castelli in the 500 freestyle and for Hall of Fame Captain Tom Cassidy figured Horn in the breaststroke. “ Though he won but 165 games in all of the Dragon scoring at Meanwhile, the freshmen ______and though he had only four full the MAC’S, placing second in Continued on Page 14, Col. 5 VOL. XLIV FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 1967 NUMBER seasons as an outstanding pitch­ the 200 individual medley er, Sandy Koufax has earned his (2:17.6), tying for fifth in the 50 place in the Baseball Hall of freest>ie (24.0), and finishing Fame,” declares a prominent sixth in the 100 freestyle (53.0). sportswriter in the current is­ Cassidy also anchored the 400 Mentzer takes MAC championshii sue of SPORT Magazine. freestyle relay team (Michaelis, “ In January, 1972, Sandy Kou­ Tj^son, McAllin) to a fifth place fax will be voted into the Base­ finish, which established a new for D IVs first crown in four years ball Hall of Fam e,” continues school record of 3:45.4. By Dave Grudem sportswriter Leonard Kippett of Superiority tell s the New York Tim es, “ but it will Last weekend eight Drexel be a mere formality. The record In the Temple meet, Drexel grapplers traveled to Moravian tells it all.” was up against a greatly superior College for the MASAC W rest­ Though Koufax’s injury-short­ team, and managed to g r^ only ling Championships. This meet ened career kept him from es­ one first place. This was ac­ features such area wrestling tablishing a number of pitch- complished by the same free­ powers as Temple, Wilkes, Ly­ coming and W’est Chester State. Continued on Page 14, Col. 4 style relay team. In this meet. The Drexel entrants were: Joe W^are at 123; Jim Walsh at 130; The Red Line Dave Mentzer at 137; Greg Kel- leher at 145; Ray Mosman at 152; Denny Wilcox at 160; Tony Godonis at 167 and Ray Moats “ T / i e Tam ing at 177. The lone bright spot of the day came from Dave Ment- zer’s 137 championship, the first of f / i e Wolves^* for Drexel in four years. When the draws were made for By Joe Siderio the initial bouts it was clear that a tough day was ahead in Friday’s Tonight at nine o’clock, the final chapter of Sam Cozen’s prelim inaries. Joe Ware lost his classic “the-team-that-surprised-me-too,” will be made first bout to Doug Beacher of d r iv in g f o r THE PIN, Drexel groppler Dave Mentzer scores, public. For those who have followed its progress, there may Gettysburg (who ended in 4th victory in his 137 lb. class match. Mentzer went on to capture th# be a happy ending. place) by a fall at 4:44. Jim first MAC championship for Drexel since 1963. The Wolves from Cheyney State are slated as the opposi­ W alsh’s first match was witlilast tion in the first round of the NCAA small college extrava­ year’s outstanding wrestler and 130 pound champion Don Milone ganza. This local aggregation is supposed to be one of the Baseball schedule annoonced] of Temple. Jim lost this by a best small college quintets ever assembled on the eastern 9-2 score as Milone went on to seaboard. repeat his 1966 performance and season in full swing April 8 With talent such as Emory Mims, Frank Kunze and Hal take Outstanding W resUer again Booker, the suburbanites have compiled a 24-2 record and hove Skipping the 137 pound class Drexel launches a thirteen son; both are juniors. Steck hij captured their third straight state college championship. They for now, Greg Kelleher lost a pm e varsity baseball card by .382 and Piersanti .316. have height, speed and a magicion’s ability on the basketball prelim inary bout to Sherk of Jun­ hosting the Haverford College The coach also expects floor. They ore not, however, beyond reach. iata by a 6-0 score. Ray Mos­ Fords at 43rd and Powelton Ave­ s e a s o n s f r o m th e tw'o lea * nue, on Saturday, April 8. Cheyney plays a wide-open, fancy-dan offense with little man met Rod Cooper of Ursinus Dragon hurlers of a or no concentration on defense. Their starting five are all in his first bout and blanked him The schedule concludes with John Ward, a junior soutg good “ individuals” who dribble behind the back or between 9-0. In the second round, how­ a home game against W estChes- from Ardlsey, Pa., and K ever, he was pinned by Ron the legs and shoot with either hand. The Wolves have crushed May 2^ Saturday, Larson, senior rightliander many opponents playing run and shoot “ schoolyard” basketball. Grubbs of Moravian (Grubbs was Hatboro, Pa. W ard won Oireea They have been successful because their opposition has tried beaten only by the eventual cham - lost five with a 3.43 earned Veteian coach Jim Brown re- to play Cheyney's game and run with them. This is impossible Piw, D. Johnson of Lycoming, turns hoping to improve on D rex­ a v e r a g e . , for a sm aller and less talented foe. el s 3-8 overall record of last The complete schedule: M Demiy Wilcox had a very close Cheyney can be beaten with a slow, deliberate offense 8, Haverford; April 12, at match with Ed Reinoso of Tem­ season. The Dragons compiled a which takes only the good shot. Discipline and concentration verford; April 15, Stevens ple, losing in the last seconds by cntiT Shank will are the key words tonight. The Dragons have to bring Cheyney April 19, Temple; ^prU m a 6-4 score. Unfortunately Rein- coach the freshm an team. to play the Drexel game. Defense is extremely important; Joe Swarthmore; April 2 6 , at 1 oso was later axed by cham­ Hertrich and Cliff Rissel have to give an all out effort to con­ Brown will have his two lead- Colleges; April 29, at La J trol the defensive boards and stop the Wolves from taking pion J Wiendl of Wilkes and was S L J . ’ second baseman Bill May 3, Ursinus; May 6, a therefore eliminated from fur­ Continued on Page 14, Col. 1 Steck from Blenolden, Pennsyl­ sala; May 11, at Delawaie, ther matches in the consolations. vania, and left fielder Tony P ler- * 1 “I ri nrinnnannn nnnnnn 13, at Rider; May j Continued on Page 14, Col. 2 s ^ rph"" Pennsauken, New Jer­ seph’s; and May 20, West sey, returnmg for another sea­ t e r .