DIT Alumnus Triples Team`s Winnings

Transcription

DIT Alumnus Triples Team`s Winnings
I
VOLUME XL
D r e x e l
T o p p le s
T h i r d
O p p o n e n t
D I T A lu m n u s T r ip le s T e a m ’s W in n in g s
S a m m y
H onors
D r.
M o n e y To B e n e f i t
B lu m
D e f e a t s S im m o n s;
D e v e l o p m e n t Fund F a c e s IC n ox N e x t
The Drexel College Bowl team 's
winnings will be tripled, thanks to
M r. Charles Elston, an alumnus
of Drexel. M r. Elston has prom ised
to match the team 's winnings, and
his em ployer. General E lectric,
wUl then equal M r. E lston's gift,
so that, effectively, the team will
win th ree tim es as much.
General E lectric is matching
M r. E lston's contribution under
its Corporate Alumnus Program
whereby the company will equal
contributions by G. E. employees
to colleges and universities. This
program was established by the
tru stees of G.E. in 1954 to en­
courage th eir employees to Join
with the Foundation In the finan­
cial support of institutions of high­
e r education. M r. Elston, a Drexel
mechanical engineering graduate
of 1937, is employed as general
m a n a g e r o f General E le ctric’s
steam turblne-generator d ep art­
ment in Schenectady.
Or Mayer L Blum a Drexel olumnu., addresses the student body in the Great Court after reeieving the
Sammy Common.ty Service Award. Standing in the background are: Mr. George Ross, past SAM president,
and Dr. James Creese, who both presented the award.
-------- ----------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------
KIPPY
G ra n d F in a le F in is h e s S a m m y W e e k
F o lk C o n c e r t C l i m a x e s F e s t i v i t i e s
By Murray Loew
Sammy Week, sponsored annu­
ally by the S ig m a A lp h a Mu
Fraternity, Mu Eta chapter, will
conclude tomorrow night with the
Grand Finale: A folk concert at
8 p.m. in the Drexel Auditorium.
The week featured the presentation
of the fraternity's Community Ser­
vice Award, and of the skits built
around this y e a r's theme, "Sing
Sing Sammy."
The Community Service Award
was presented on Monday to Dr.
Mayer 1. Blum.a Drexel alumnus,
and president of the Mayer I. Blum
& Sons Co. Mr. George Ross,
alumnus of Drexel and past p re s i-
S tu d e n ts C r it i c i z e P r o g r a m D ir e c to r
Miss Cain J u s t i f i e s Her A c t i v i t i e s
"1 have been employed by Drexel
to coordinate social, recreaUonal
and cultural activities in the new
Drexel Activities C e n te r," stated
Miss Blanche Cain during an in te r­
view with Triangle Editor Richard
Pascal. Editor Pascal interviewed
Miss Cain in response to queries
made by students concerned with
®r role in student affairs.
Three form er Student U n io n
members—L arry Smith, Bob Me­
dian, and Jim Benner—voiced
ssatlsfaction and questioned what
“'ey called the "vague role and
authority of Miss Cain in student
affairs."
All tliree students pointed to the
atwlition of the old Student Union
y Miss Cain, 'niey felt that the
esiablishment of the present pro­
gram Uoard was somewhat autocratic in nature.
S m ith , f o r m e r board
president stated, " M i s s C a in
claimed that the Student Union
was inactive during last sum m er
when she arrived at the Institute.”
"A t the sam e tim e," he continued,
"sh e was given complete control
of the student activities budget.*'
The budget had previously been
entirely in student hands.
Bob McClellan, student union
social chairm an last sum m er.feels
that the Program Board, as it
now stands, is a figure-head group
carrying out orders. He stated,
'M iss Cain's ideas a re dominant
over all oth ers,"an d that"planning
by the students is at a m inim um."
Bob feels that a concrete definition
of Miss Cain's role in relation
to the students is needed, as it
appears to him that student im ­
agination and initiative a re being
stifled.
A third active member of the
old SUB is confused as to whether
((.ijiiliuin'd till
/*('.
2,
i)
The additional gifts will be given
to th eT h ree-Q u arterC en tu ry Fund
of Drexel under the direction of
the "A lum ni-In-lndustry'’ C o m ­
m ittee, headed by the National
Alunruil Chairm an, A lb en C .H an d schum acher. T his com m ittee o r (Continued on Pg. 2, Col. 5)
Drexel stretched I t s w in n in g
streak to three In a row by de­
feating an all-g irl College Bowl
team from Simmons College, by
a sc o re of 270-120.
The Drexel men won in a s p ir ­
ited game which was punctuated
by the squeals and shouts of the
Simmons foursom e. Although Sim­
mons got on the scoreboard first,
D rexel, paced by Paul Smith and
captain Dick Roserf, soon raced
into the lead and stayed there
for the re st of the game.
Smith and Rosen answered four
toss-up questions each to tie as
high sc o re rs for DIT. Fred Blum
and Bryant Meslck also racked
up toss-up and bonus points In a
real team effo n last Sunday.
Drexel quickly built up its lead
to 115-40 at the half, and staved
off a Simmons rally to continue
the fast pace, with leads of 155-40
and 180-80. With minutes left to
play, Drexel pUed up 90 m o r e
points to put the game out of the
Bostonians' reach, p u s h i n g the
final score to 270-120.
D rex el's support for theCoUege
Bowl team has been unflagging.
F o r the third coosecutlve week,
an enthusiastic D r e x e l c r o w d
((.outiuui-d on Pg. 2. Col. 5)
dent of SAM, presented the plaque
to Dr. Jam es C reese, P resident
of the Institute , who, in turn,
presented it to Dr. Blum.
The s i x t e e n t h annual Sammy
Week drew large attendance in the
Great Court, as the daily doings
of Al C atraz and E)ermuda Schwartz
were humorously chronicled by
the brotherhood and house fresh ­
men of the fraternity. Wednesday's
skit paid a mock tribute toD rexel's
current college bowl team, when
four of the faculty, representing
Sing Sing, battled Simmons Re­
form atory. M essrs. Kaczmarczik,
Rommel, M iller, and Bauland of­
fered strong resistance to the
Simmons onslaught.
Journeym en to Appear
Tomorrow night's folk concert
in the Auditorium will be high­
lighted by the appearance of The
J o u r n e y m e n , nationally famous
folk singing trio, who just returned
from a tour of college campuses;
Raun MacKinnon, r e c e n t l y ac­
claimed s o l o i s t from Temple
University; and the Catch Club,
a group of three UCLA graduate
students who have modernized a
form of s i n g i n g p o p u l a r in
Restoration England.
Tickets, priced at $1.75 and
$2.50 a re available at the table
in the Great Court from any brother
of Sigma Alpha Mu, and at the
door. The concert is to be followed
by the Winter Festival Dance at
the DAC, which is free to all
dcketholders.
G ir ls’ C o m p la in ts
F ood ,
S a n ita tio n
Four women students from the
Drexel D o r m i t o r y subm ined a
written le tte r of complaints to
the Dean of Women's ^ f ic e la s t
week. The le tte r listed two basic
a re a s of d issausfaction—food s e r ­
vice and sanitary m easures at the
dorm .
S tu d e n ts Lag
In P a y m e n t
O f C la ss D u e s
T his y ear a check of the comp­
tr o lle r's records reveals that, in
general, the student body h ere at
Drexel is delinquent in payment
of class dues. T hese dues a re
used to finance the Spring P rom ,
Senior Week, and otlier class func­
tions.
M r. Bob F o rsten , president of
tlie Student Senate, was asked to
explain the rule.s governing the
expenditure of class dues funds.
Me replied tliat tlie amount left
after the Spring Prom is paid
for is given to die class officers
to spend at th eir discretion for
anytliing tliat they deem to be in
the in terest of the class as a
whole.
These expenses m ust,
however, be approvctJ by tlic Sen­
ate.
He furtlier stated that in th ep ast
t h e s e additional expenses have
gone almo.st entirely for financing
social functions, and he asks "Why
not sometliing else?
If social
((.UHliiiHcd on Pfi.
( ot. I )
H eed ed
Im p ro v e
The le tte r states that "T h e re
a r e deplorable and unsanitary con­
ditions at the d o rm ." Unsanitary
c o n d i t i o n s and Insect-infested
showers coupled with bad odors
exist throughout th ed o rm ,acco rd ­
ing to the le tte r.
As fa r as food se rv ice was con­
cerned, the g irls felt that many
tim es the food served was not
properly cooked o r seasoned. Un­
clean dishes also served as one
point of the le tte r.
M iss Rebecca L ee. Doria Di­
re c to r, told the T riangle that
"E very possible m easure Is be­
ing taken to remedy the conditions
described by the le tte r .”
She
advised that ‘‘consideration m ust
be given to the age of the building
and t h e p h y s i c a l l i m i t a t i o n s
imposed on short-run renovation
p la n s."
Miss Lee agreed that
unsanitary conditions of all types
should not be tolerated in any
case.
The adm inistration at school
responded well to the requests trf
the g irl^.
"Food service and
qualityhavsincreased imm ensely,'*
according to many of the dorm itory
resid en ts.
Many g irls stated,
* l.a s t Sunday’s noon meal was the
best one they had ever had since
th eir arriv a l at D rex el."
M r. Jam es E arl, D irector of
D rexel's food se rv ice,
been
actively supervising the food p r e ­
paration at the dorm since the
le tte r was submitted. Students
seem pleased with the response
of the Adm inistration toward these
problem s.
Draxvl Triongl*
P«fl« 2—Fabnmry 8. 1963
D ept. HHisuiiderstood,
D ietef ladU ates O ppertnaities
/M ef. f n g .
By St«v» Shapiro
The M etallurgical Engineering
Departm ent is one of the less
known, and certainly least under­
stood, departm ents in D rcxel's
College of E n g i n e e r i n g . The
Chairm an of this departm ent is
Dr. George D ieter, J r . , a I^rexel
graduate of 1950. Dr. D ieter’s aim
is to publicize the metallurgy c u r r ­
iculum and to acquaint students
with the opportunities in thi.s field.
Too many students a re m isin­
form ed about the M etallurgical
Engineering IJepartment.
It is
a common belief tliat m etallur­
gical enginL-ering is a restricted
fielil.
Mut actually, m etallurcical ctiginixTing iJeals with the
problem.s of alm ost every-other
field of engineering from energy
considerations to stru ctu ral con­
sideration, using the tools of m ath,
physics, chem istry, thermodyna­
m ics and m echanics to evaluate
problem s.
Since he graduated from DIT,
D r. D ieter has studied for his
Doctor of Science degree at C a rn ­
egie T ech, speiit nine y ears at
DuPont, and authored a textbook.
Mechanical Metallurgy.
When asked why he decided to
come back to education instead
of rem aining in industry, Dr.
Dieter explained that he felt there
was a g reater challenge and m ore
opportunity to obtain that intang­
ible quality, self-satisfaction.
Drexel is presently in a s u t e
at transition, both physically and
academ ically. To com plete these
changes, and to m ainuin the p r e ­
sent level of education. D rexel,
m ust change with the tim es. D r.
Dieter feels that "with today’s
ra p id ly
changing technology.
Drexel cannot continue to offer an
outstanding engineering education
without the support of a strong
re se a rc h and graduate program .
This type of balanced program
e a n
T
o o m
F r a t e r n i t y
b s
L
W
a r n s
e a d e r s
Dr. G eorge D ie te r
keeps the faculty ab reasto f chang­
ing tim es so that they w ill, in
turn , be able to offer students
the best possible education avail­
able.
'Education should be enjoyable
while at the sam e tim e p resen t­
ing a challenge to the studenu I
have the im pression m ost students
look upon th eir co u rses as a s e rie s
of h u r ^ e s simply to be surmounted
and then forgotten. I would like to
see a situation where the student
is placed m ore on his own r e ­
so u rces and forced to think fo r
him self. 1 feel too many students
have the attitude of educating them ­
selves for a job. and not fo r a p ro ­
fessional c a r e e r .”
D IIT 1 «IN
ion viM au noo.
Uw WMktnd Tut, for tumpl«:
•■Mnd-trip to PnwidtitM ^4.00 pluj to*.
CiB your trmi ag«nt or KIngsliy M555
______
u e H o n rju /u /m
YOUW AIR CO M M U TER S E R V IC E IN 13 B U SY S TA TES
R
G
r e e k s
e p l y
By Philip L. Zwick
A furor of activity has followed
Jim Mcl^onough's resignation as
president of the In te r-fra te rn ity
Council. The situation was accen­
tuated last Monday night when
Dean William E. Toombs spoke
at a council meeting.
Toombs delivered an ultimatum
to the fratern ities when he stated,
"T he individual presidents will
have to u k e m ore responsibilities
in their houses if they want to
continue under the present system
of self-governm ent. If not, the
school will govern the system.*
By way of explanation, he said
"T he presidents should indoc­
trinate each new m em ber, sophom ore, and pt%-Junior with the
responsibility as well a s the mean­
ing of fratern ity freedom
The fratern ities have reacted
tnst your trip to a non-scheduled carrier, like that overdue sports
eir sans top. To knowvtwn you’ll get where you’re going... and when
you'll pt back. .. fly Alleghenyto and from37 other airports in this
fun-loving comer of the country. That’s how to spend a lot less time
enroute.... and a lot less money than you think. Allegheny’s weekend
"innftrip" fares nowapply to all Saturday and Sunday fli^b. Return
on any Saturday or Sunday within 30 days. . . after you have
^uandered the 37%% saving.
'
M
D
both In writing (see L etters to
the Editor) and vocally. Each house
was contacted and seven p r e s i­
dents responded. They were asked
their opinions on the resignation,
the fraternity reaction, and Dean
Toomb’s statem ent. The general
consensus was that the situation
was overem phasized, b u t t h a t
problem s do exist, p articu larly
in drinking. They didn’t think that
any adm inistrative action by the
school would be necessary,
The drinking problem s t e m s
from the rule passed by IF Coun­
cil elim inating alcoholic beverages
legally from fratern ity social func­
tions during rushing. Tliis rule
has been m orally broken by f ra tern ities, which take freshm en In­
to apartm ents o r b ars for rushing
purposes. Most of the presidents
recognized the problem and hoped
C ain C r i t i c i z e d . . .
it would be alleviated.
{Continued from page I )
Comments from the individual
the P rogram Board is a r adm inis­
trative body o r a m ere work force. presidents follow.
Al Winistorfer - Sigma Pi:
Jim had been with the Student
"In te r-fra te m lty Council h a s
Union for over two and one-half
y ears p rio r to his resignation. He definitely been shaken up. TTiey
was chairm an of the planning com­ will reevaluate their ideas and
scope as to what they should or
m ittee at that time.
Jim told tf»e T riangle that he shouldn't have to do. The rushing
fro ls the pro g ram s a re definitely ru les will probably be rew ritten.
lacking. Suggestions by students As it turns out, the a c t i o n s
a r e not being heeded, according to will have the benefit of im prov­
Jim .
ing the fra tern ities through r e All three gentleman fielt diat evaluation.
“ Jim McDonough is a very Ideal­
M iss Cain should certainly be
allowed to sponsor h er own pro­ istic person. I don’t think be had
g ram s if she wished to do so; previously planned to resign when
however, the students should be he did, but did so in an emotional
f re e to cre a te activities with h er reaction when the ru les w eren’t
acting s t r i c t l y in an a d v i s o r y followed 100%. The ru les did stop
all dangerous drinking, and the
capacity.
When questioned about h er views little that was going, o n w ari
on the afore-m entioned m atters. thought about beforehand a s to
M iss Cain sta rte d to answ er by the fresh m an 's safety.
“ T h ere will be som e violations
saying, “ The students a re free
to ex ercise tbeir w ill, and use to any ru le s. The no drinking
the budget with supervision.*’ Ac­ rule lacked complete support be­
cording to h e r. die budget is partly cause it was passed by die Coun­
in h er hands to be used a s she cil itself without being brought
before the fratern ity floors. 1 think
sees fit.
She fu rth er s u te d that when it would have been b etter enforced
sh e cam e h ere last sum m er there if it had been voted on indivi­
was no p rogram planned for the dually.”
forthcoming year; furth erm o re, no
Bob Poretchon - Theta Chi
“ The action has made IF Coun­
students w ere available to oversee
direction of any d e v e l o p e d p ro ­ cil and the fra tern ities aw are of
g ram . She t h u s f e l t that the a few problem s that need straig h t­
m ajority of the planning should ening out. They a re not seriou s
be in h er hands since she could ones, but people in school feel
concentrate on it heavily.
they a re . The newspaper (Tiriangle)
In h er opinion, die Student Union has overem phasized the resig n a­
meetings last F all w ere a farce; tion and m isled the student body.
the students p resently do not have The fra tern ities a re not in the
the ability to c a rry the program d rastic state of affairs as implied
them selves, in h er estim ation. As in the a rtic le s. The letter from
fa r as the future is concerned, the IF execudve com m ittee ex­
she would like to see the students plains evei^thing.
plan and handle 80% of the program .
"T he response to DeanToom b's
Miss Cain concluded the in ter­ warning will be a program o r
view by saying, “ What we need su te m e n t to the effect of the
here is patience, tim e, and team ­ powers of the IP Council and
work.”
the fratern ities. TTie question is
how much responsibiUty does each
have? What will be answ ered is
JO B S IN E U R O PE where responsibility lies.
"T he p resent approach to drink­
Grand Duchy of Luxembourg ing during rushing is possibly
Feb. 1 1963 - Would you like to not applicable to the present sy s­
work at a Swiss resort, a Norwe­ tem. The rushing system may be
gian farm, a German factory, a changed and m ore practical rules
construction site in Spain, or a sum­ which can be enforced correctly
mer camp in France? Thousand may be p assed ."
of paying summer jobs (some offer­ Bob Swavely - Pi Kappa Phi:
ing $
monthly) are available "T he prooiem is dehning where
in Europe to U. S. students.
fraternity and IF Council responThe American Student Infor•- sibiiity lie s, 1have been satisfied in
niation Service, celebrating its B*** the
- past
r —- with
______
IFC.____
It hasn't step -
value and effect. D r i n k i n g promotes an unfair situation in rushing unless everyone Is doing It.
F ra te rn itie s a re put In a l
light If there is a rule aRainst
it. Intentionally breaking the rule
cre a te s a d irty atmosphere. I belleve fra tern ities have more to
(C on tin u ed on page 7, ( olumn /)
D e fe a ts Simmons . . .
(Continued from page I)
cheered the squad to victory, and
as before, the team was showered
with congratulations a n d good
wishes frtyn students, faculty and
adm inistration alike.
T eam m em ber Paul Smith was
asked how he wife effe cted by
participating on the show. He re­
plied, "W e’re all grateful for all
the good wishes that everyone has
been giving us. I hope that we can
Iv e up to e v e r y o n e ’s expec­
tatio n s."
Next week, the D rexelites wiU
face the College Bowl challengers
from Knox College of Galesburg,
Illinois. The winner will defend
against T exas Tech on the follow­
ing Sunday.
Triple Winnings . . .
(C o n tin u ed from Page I)
ganizes and coordinates contribu­
tions from Drexel graduates work­
ing fo r larg e industrial corpora­
tions.
T h eT hree-Q u arter Century Fund
Prog ram was launched by Drexel
in 1962. A goal of $18 mlUion by
1966 has been se t. T hese funds
will be utilized in the construction
of new educational facilities, for
extensive c a p i t a l improvements,
and fo r faculty sa la rie s , fellow­
ships, and scholarships. Drexel
m ust have these funds In order
to continue as a leading center
technology.
Independem studies have shown
that D rexel may expect an enroll­
ment of 14.000 students by 1970
as contrasted with the present
enroUmenc of 8.500. T h ere is a
critical need fo r well trained sci­
en tists. engineers, and technically
educated people of all kinds.
D rexel looks fo r funds from
th re e m ajor sources; private con­
tributions from alumni, corpora­
tions, foundations, and friends;
funds borrowed fo r self-liquida­
ting p ro jects, including dormi­
to rie s; federal and commonwealth
g ran ts-in -aid fo r perm anent im­
provem ents.
At the p resen t date, alm ost $9
m illion has been pledged o r do­
nated to the T h ree-Q u arter Cen­
tury Fund. Donations from cor­
porations and foundations com­
p rise the m ajo r p art of this money.
Some of the new educational
facilities fostered by this program
Include a Humanities C enter, new
classroom space which will soon
open in what was form erly the
Red Lion Warehouse, a new Basic
S c i e n c e C e n t e r with b e t t e r
equipped lab o rato ries, and a Nu­
cle a r P h y s i c s L aboratory with
specialized lab o rato ries for un­
dergraduate and graduate Instruc­
tion.
In addition, two dorm itories and
a dining hall are also planned for
early construction n ear the re si­
dential section of the cam pus. The
construction of v ertical parking
ped out of bounds and the meas- facilities fo r students and faculty
. . have
. been realistic Is under consideration.
u res taken
and reasonable. But they shouldn’t
a buffer for adm inistrative
Anniversary, will award TRAVEL
GRANTS to first 1500 applicants
F o r 20 - page P r o s p e c t u s ,
complete selection of European
jobs and Job Application (enclose directives.
$ 1 for Prospectus, handling and
"T h ere a re paper ru les which
airmail reply) write, naming your aliouid. M J a y e s tig a te d as to their
school, to: Dept. F, ASIS, 22 Ave.
THE FAIRFAX
do la Liberte, Luxembourg City,
Grand Duchy of Luxembourg. UnfurauhMi Apartmtnu FmiuHu
The first 8000 inquiries receive a
Dining Room. L uadi £
D in n n
$ 1 coupon towards the purchase • Quality
Gift Shop
of the now student travel book. •2 4 -H o u r D*ik S«rvic«
•ffordiag • btautUul
Earn, Learn & Travel in Europe. •• USun
u nd ry in Building
• Coqv«niMil to
Public
Tna*.
D iA D L IN E
N O T IC E !
All N ew s And
F e a tu r e Copy
Must Be In By
6 P.M.
Tuesday
Dr»x*l Triongl*
Pofle 3—February 8, 1963
M a th e m a tic s P r o g r a m T a k e s S h a p e
Triangle / o c r e a s e s Flexibility
O p t i o n s P l a n n e d F o r U 3 p e r c l a s s m e n Offset Printing Process T ested
The Mathematics cu rricu lu m ,
enrolled this past fall, and p ro s­
pects for an e v e r - i n c r e a s i n g
number a re fairly good. At p re s­
ent, th ere a re close to seventy
math m ajors at Drexel. According
to D r. Bickel, associate head of
the M athematics liepartm ent, the
d etails of the program a re being
now In its third y ear at D rexel,
is gradually taking shape.
The program got off to a ra th e r
slow sta rt—only fifteen o r six ­
teen students enrolled in the c u riculum for cacli of the f ir s t two
years. But th irty -th ree students
F r e s h m e n
C e m m e n I
F r a te r n ity
R u s h in g
O n
bf Murray Loew
As rushing season draws to a
close, TTie Triangle feels that the
o t ^ s of the fraternities* attentioos—th e f r e s h m e n —deserve
some opportunliy for expression.
Upon asking their comments and
observations on rushing, this re­
porter received the following re ­
sponses.
"It’s a wonlmtille function—it
gives a good Uea of the personal­
ities you'll encounter while at
DrexeL. This is the only way (Mie
can decide on a fraternity. If
you're not going to go fraternity,
they’re not going to talk you is o
"I think rushing’s pretty good.
1 think I’ll go f r a t e m ^ . Rushing
didn’t take so much tim e, since
I only went to a few m ixers. I
imagine I’ll see flaws in the system
in the future.'
------Steve Blackstrom , Bus. Ad.
" I haven’t gone to any of the
m ix ers, but contact with the bro­
th e rs has lived iq) to what 1 ex ­
pected, I'm not im pressed by it
y e t."
------Dan Hoffman, Math.
“ I have nothing against Joining
a fratern ity , but right now I'm
-----Ed Mangan, ME m ore interested in m arks. They
v ary in th eir requirem ents; some
"1 lilie it. I’m able to meet want high m arks, and others are
many boys this way. But I feel expensive,'’
some marks are affected.”
------Dave M elrose, ME
t.”
-----A. J. Chew, EE
"T hings a re the way they should
"It's not all that it’s played up b e—chances are you can get a
to be. I expected more from what bid. And the houses have good
1heard first term ."
m ea ls."
---- Wayne Albright, Bus. Ad.
----- Steve Mittan. ME
‘1 couldn't go fratern ity —1 d e­
cided that my schoohrork was m ore
important. Maybe in a y ear o r
two.”
---- Norman Kaplan. Math.
C onsensus—good. The fresh ­
men seem to be favorably im ­
p ressed by the actions of tlie
fratern ities, but some indicate
g re a te r in terest, at p resen t, in
studying than in p le d g i^ .
M ^ inter
considered very carefully, " a l ­
though it is too early to pin down
any big ite m s."
"Advanced c o u r s e s make o r
break a p ro g ram ," rem arked D r.
Bickel.
‘^ o f a r we a re quite
satisfied .” Drexel has co-op math
m ajors scattered over a good p o r­
tion of the E ast,w orking in various
capacities fo r both governmental
and industrial firm s, m ostly as
applied m athem aticians.
The math program at Drexel has
a good deal m ore math than other
program s.
Most schools offer
t h i r t y to t h i r t y - s i x sem ester
cred its, but Drexel offers from
forty-five to fifty sem ester cre d ­
its. Consequently,the math course
h ere is m ore enriched. And en ­
gineering courses add a touch of
applied flavor to the course.
One long-range plan is to se t up
a se rie s of options fo r the students,
whereby the math m ajor can select
the type of engineering that is
best suited for his m athem atical
ability, lie will also be able to
enroll in a m ath-oriented business
course. When this program will
be put into effect is difficult to
tell at the presen t, but it could
come about within the next two
y ears.
"We realize this is a
rath er ambitious idea, one which
has to be developed g radually,"
commented D r. Bickel.
Graduate Program
Flans a re also being made for
a graduate program leading to the
attainment of a M aster’s degree.
F irs t of a ll, though, one has to
wait and see how the curren t under­
graduate class fa re s. According
to D r. Bickel, "It is still a little
early to make any strong sta te ­
m ents. Until we’ve seen the whole
program in operation, we can’t
evaluate it properly.*'
F e stiv a l
TheD rexel T riangle has adopted
a new and m ore flexible printing
p ro cess. This p ro cess, known as
photo-offset, will replace the old
le tte rp re s s mctliod, which has been
used since tlie paper was founded.
The reasons and resu lts of this
change a r e noteable:
1. Huge reductions have been
attained in copy and picture co sts.
Offset places no lim it on the num ­
ber of pictures o r their siz e s.
The cost of pictures is negligible
a s compared to the le tte rp re s s
method.
2. The newspaper is now un­
lim ited in size. T w d v e, sixteen
o r even twenty o r m ore pages can
be printed at a fraction of the
cost which the le tte rp re s s method
dem ands.
3.
The new offset p ro cess
enaU es the paper to in crease the
num ber of pages at a moment*s
notice.
This im portant aspect
was not available under the old
method due to the p reset budget
and the trem endous cost of in­
creasing the number of pages.
4. C irculation has been in­
creased h ere at school and copies
at the T rian g le a re now being
sent to other colleges.
5. E xperim ents in many a re a s
of news reporting a r e now under
way to in crease general in terest.
Processes Described
A brief description of both p ro ­
c e sse s will clarify the basic d iffer­
ences. The old le tte rp re s s method
printed the newspaper in a flat­
bed p re ss using the rev ersed lead
type, sim ilar to a common ru b b ers u m p rev e rsa l.
The new offset pro cess utilizes
photography a s a means of r e ­
versing the type. The copy is
typed in actual p rint size on a
ty pew riter-like m a c h i n e which
S c h e d u le
9 A.M.
F re e C offee
Tours
Winter
and
of
S culpture
F a c ilitie s
C o n te s t
• D onuts
12 Noon
Children
3 P.M.
C lo s e of
S cu lp ture C o n te st
F eatu re film
1 P.M.
2 P.M.
A dults
b a b y s itte rs
film s
gam es
co o k ie s
en tertain m en t
F re e Bowling
11 A .M .-7 P.M.
Music
ludging of
and
Winter
S cu lp tu re
Gome Room F a c ilitie s
Open All Day
4 P i* .
spaces the columns equally. It
is then pasted in place on a m aster
page and photographed.
The negative, which is produced
from the photograph, is used to
etch the page on an aluminum p late.
The plate in turn is placed in a
ro tary p re ss which inks a rubber
m at which then p rin ts the paper.
Richard W. P asc al, T riangle
E ditor-in-C hief, commented on the
new pro cess:
'•riie new flexibility will enable
us to m eet the increased news
demand. By th is, I mean that all
news, le tte rs and com m entaries
will be considered fo r publication.
*‘I realize that the fine p rin t
q u a l i t y of t h e (dd le tte rp re s s
method cannot be equaled; however
the additional flexibility a s well
as economic considerations have
dictated the change.'*
The T riangle u rg es the student
to w rite. Students should ex press
th e ir feelings and ideas in le tte r s to -th e-ed ito r o r in news and fe a ­
tu re a rtic le s. No a rtic le o r news
story is overlooked.
T he T rian g le appreciates its
readers* support; however, by tak ­
ing a m o re active ro le, any student
can help the p aper and the school.
In addition, he gains the sa tisfac­
tion of seeing his work in p rin t.
D C F H o ld sA R R u o l
W in t e r S o c ia l in
U n i o n W i t h NCF
The Drexel Christian Fellowship
will hold its annual winter social
on March 2. It will take place at
the home of Oliver Feist, 5759
Rogers Avenue, Fennsauken. N.J.
Festivities will begin at 7:45 p.m.
There will be games, singing, and
refreshmeocs for all.
This social will be held in con­
junction with the Nurses Christian
Fellowship, its purpose Is to pro­
mote more personal contact and
fellowship than is available during
the limited time ofthe school year.
The D.C.F. also sponsors a
picnic every May and an outdoor
party every summer at the home
of their faculty a d v i s o r . Mi s s
M e 11 o r. All of these events are
supplemented by local fellowships.
The D.C.F. is affUlated with the
Intervarslty Christian Fellowship,
which holds monthly meetings for
colleges in eastern Pennsylvania.
The D.C.F. holds meetings twice
a month on Friday nights. This
F r i d a y night th e e d i t o r of
Eternity Ma g a z l n * w l l l ^ a k
There are also prayer meetings
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and
Friday from 1:00 to 1:30 pun.
in Room 235, and a Bible Study
on Wednesday.
5 P.M.
Ju k e Box D ance
6 P.M.
Lounge
C a su a l D ress
8 P.M.
Sammy Show • Main BIdg. T ic k e t stu b s from Sammy
A dm ission $1.75 or $2.50 Show-good for Grand Boll
fo r
9 P.IKL
C a fe te ria Open
W inter F e stiv a l
Grand Boll
G eneral A dm ission: $.50
D pa
&k 1 1w 3
V 9ss
9 •* V#WM19 U
n
P.M.
1 A.M.
Awarding of Sculpture
P riie s
All Day
Crowning of
F e s tiv a l Queen
EVERYONES
IVAIflmNfS
THE
C o lleg e s t o r e
Good Night
Dr«x*l TriongU
Page 4 — Pvbruory 8, 1963
PlAY
10% Discount
DUPLICATE
BRIDGE
A
O n A ll H o o k s
at
at the
- CENTER CITY
T h e B o o k C ella r
BRIDGE CLUB
2 1 0 0
W A IN U T
EM BASSY
ST.
3 7 0 9 S p r u c e S t.
A PT S.
O P t:N
M on d ay th ro u q h T h u r s d a y
Mon. • Wed. • F ri. • Sot.
1 :3 0/8 :3 0
LO 3-3734
Bob M iller.Dir.
ENIOY
't i l 1 0 :00 P .M .
F 'r i d a y a n d S a t u r d a y
't i l 6 :0 0 P .M .
HOME-MADE
FOODS
AT
D R E X E L 'S
C A F E T E R IA
We ore p h a s e d to se rv e you with a con ven ie n t s c h e d u le
for that " e a r ly morning s n a c k ” or “ late cup o f c o f f e e . ”
C a m p u s N o te s ...
New R O T C In str u c to r
E u r o p e a n Study T o u r
Major Walter A. Musgrave, J r .
has been assigned to the M ilitary
Department at Drexel. He lias
Just completed a fifteen month
assignm ent to the M ilitary Ad­
visory Assistance Group In Viet­
nam.
Major Musgrave is a graduate
of Boston University, 1947, where
he majored in business adm inis­
tration.
The College of Home Economics
is progressing in its preparation of
the 1963 European Study T our on
Architecture and Home Furnish­
ings. Re.sponse to the study tour
has been enthusiastic and a number
of reservations have already been
made.
[Printed brochures giving
d etails are available in the Home
Economics office. Any interested
student should receive a copy at the
office.
S. A. M . M e e t i n g
T here wUl be a Society for
A d v a n c e m e n t of Management
d in n e r -m e e tin g on Wednesday,
February 13, at 6;30 p.m . in the
" G r a n d H a l l ” of the I).A.(’.
Dinner will be at 7 p.m . imnictliately following a half hour r e ­
ception in honor of Joseph J.
McComb, President of the Retail
C lerks International Local 1360
(Camden, New Jersey).
After
dinner he will .speak on "L ab o r's
Position In an Automated Society."
T ickets will be on sale at the door
on the 13th o r may be obtained
from any S.A.M. m em ber, o r in
the Court. The p rice Is $2.00
fo r m em bers and $2.50 for non­
m em bers.
Ice S k a t i n g P o r t y
The Women’s Athletic A ssocia­
tion is sponsoring an Ice Skating
f’arty to be held tonight at the
Penn C enter Skating Rink. The
event welcomes all IJrexel stu ­
dents and th eir guests to skate
from 8 to 10 p j n . T ickets a re
$1.00 and may be purchased today
in the G reat Court.
F iresid e
refreshm ents, an added attraction,
will be served from 10-11:30 p jn .
at the Droxel Activities C enter.
junior class in Fashion iJeslgn
modeled the c o s t u m e s for the
F riends of the Drexel Collection.
The affair was held on Wednesday
afternoon, F ebruary 6, 1963, in
ttie D rexel Activities Center.
Some of the costum es shown
were pre.sented to the Drexel col­
lection by m em bers of well-known
P h i l a d e l p h i a fam ilies. The
d re ss e s varied from a brown taff­
eta gown of 1806, modeled by SaUy
Whittier, to a 1934 wedding gown
worn by Pam ela W illiams. Other
m odels included;
Susan l ^ul,
M artha Sprout, M arie Kearney,
Janet Boyd, Elaine N essin, Joanne
De Franco, Andrea Levens, Joyce
F ritz , C laire G eyer, Carol Collins,
and V irginia Stephens.
DCF Discussion
"F o cu s: New Guinea*' will be
the topic of a discussion sponsored
by the D rexel C hristian Fellows h ^ . M r. Russell T . H in, author
of Jungle P ilot and Cannibal Valley
and ed ito r of E ternity Magazine,
Mrs. Creese Holds Luncheon
will p resid e at the meeting, which
IJrexel’s H istoric Costume Col­
will be held at 7 p.m . on Friday,
lection was the center of in terest
F eb n iary 8, in Rooms 215 and 216
at a luncheon given by M rs. Jam es
of the DAC.
C reese last week. M embers of the
Spring Prom Meeting
T h ere will be a meeting for all
those interested in Joining the
Spring Prom Com m ittee in Room
216 of the D.A.C., Wednesday,
F ebruary 13, at 3:30 p.m .
Civil War Lecture
D r. Roy Nichols, Dean and Vice
Provost of the U niversity of I >ennsylvania, will speak at the Drexel
L ib rary C enter on February 21,
at 8 p.m . His topic will be ‘‘The
Civil War Still Puzzles Us” . PiLs
is the second in a se rie s of pro­
g ram s on Topics of C urrent ('ontro v ersy . Dr. Nichols, who is an
authority on nineteenth centun’ j
Am erican history, has written ex­
tensively on the period fietween
1845 and 1870.
The public is
cordially Invited to attend.
P a tr o n iz e
Y our
A d v e r tise r s
^ r g W
U N IV E R SIT Y
R e s u lt:
''C u s h i o n
R e c o il”
d r a m a ti c a l ly
In
1 9 6 3
p r o v i d e s
s m o o t h e r
■
JEW ELERS
r id e
3425
F o r d - b u ilt c a r s
The challenge given Ford eng in e e rs was to design suspensions
that would permit wheels virtually to roll with the p u n c h e s —not
only in a vertical plane but fore-and-aft a s well. Conventional
suspension systems provide only a partial solution to road shocks
by limiting wheel recoil to an up-and-down motion.
The solution? Exclusive Cushion Recoil suspension design in all
Ford-built cars for '631 Cushion Recoil, with cushioning action
in a fore-and-aft plane a s well a s vertical, sm others the jars and
jolts of rough roads, a dds to your comfort, safety, and driving
pleasure. Even the thump of freeway tar strips is reduced, and
on deeply rutted roads you experience better control of the car.
Furthermore, your Ford-built car is spared the wear and tear of
road-induced vibration.
Another a ssignm ent c o m p l e te d - o n e more example of engineer.
ing excellence at Ford and new ideas for the American Road.
WALNUT STREET
O P P O SIT E
U .
SOAKS UP ROAD SHOCK. Exclusive Ford
Motor Company Cushion Recoil action moves
back as well as up for a smoother ride.
OF
P .
NEW
L IB R A R Y
3 7 2 5
SPRUCE
STREET
O P P O SIT E
U .
OF
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DO R M S
E V 6 -I1 0 0
m otor
com pany
N O R M
_
*"*^******
DAVE
A N D
K AUFM AN
}
Drvxvl Trlongl*
Page 9—Februory 8, 1965.
WXDT
Expands C overage,
WXDT, Drexel’s cam pus radio
station, announced today that tr a n ­
sm itters a re now being Installed
In the fraternity houses, the F’anHellenlc House, the g ir l’s d o rm i­
tory, and the 52nd Stret Y.M.C.A.
Full installation Is expected to be
completed by F riday, February
15. Hecause of the Increased cov­
erage of the cam pus, the station
will sign off at eleven o’clock
Instead of the present ten o’clock
sign off.
A schedule of selected program s
is included in this edition of The
Triangle. To improve the ov er­
all programming of WXDT, the
station Is serve d by the United
P ress International news facili­
ties. Four-point new scasts are
scheduled hourly, and special fea­
tures and bulletins a r e broadcast
throughout the day.
Institute news, as well as nat­
ional, International and city news
items are posted twice daily on
the Student Senate bulletin board
as a service of the WXDT news
staff.
in other activities of WXDT,
Mr. Fred H arper, program d i­
rector of WPBS-FM, the F h iladelpfaia Bulletin Stations, spoke
to the WXDT staff at a general
meeting on Tuesday, January 29
in the DAC. M r. H arp er briefed
the staff on the responsibilities
of educational FM broadcasting
and the problem s involved in a pproaching an FM audience. He
Is aiding the WXDT staff to p r e ­
pare for an educational FM radio
station at Drexel.
Arrangements are now being
made fo r a special tour of WCAUTV during F ebruary. M em bers
of the staff will meet at the DAC
on Saturday, February 16 at 9;00
d.m.
P r o g ra m m in g
S e r v ic e l).A .(^ .
iV Ieels
W X D T
P ro fjra m
G u id e
If you like "T he Blues" then Gerry Vang and Mike Rathmill should get 100 points in your I.L.B. Book ( I Like
Blues). The Gerry ’n Mike Show will feature such singers
os Lizzy Miles, Big Bill Broonzy, ond Dinoh Washington.
So if you have an exam and wont to get in the mood for it,
listen to The Gerry 'n Mike Show or Monday from 1:30 to
2:30 p.m.
Dimension ‘63 hosted by Don Browns and Roddy Behrenhouser will present a wide variety of good music from 4:00
to 7:00 p.m. on Monday. Roger Williams, Hugo Winterhalter,
David Rose, and mony others will be heard from at this time.
The old and the new will be mixed on Wednesday from 1 to
2 p.m. when Nelson Bean mixes Jimmy Dorsey and Les
Elgort with Dave Brubeck. The finished product will be
good entertainment on “ The Swings the Thing."
Chuck Bubeck's "Showtime” will present music from two
all time favorites "T he Music Mon” ond "T h e King on<j I".
Showtime is heard from 6 to 7 p.m. on Thursday evenings.
The "B lack Tie J a i i ” styles of Miles Davis will be fea­
tured on Ed McCaney's "Sounds on V elvet.” E d's show
will be coming your way on Tuesday from 7 to 9 p.m.
The latest and most complete news from the sports world
w illbeaired by Ed Pikus on his "Sports Roundup,” 6:30 pm
Monday thru Friday. Sports commentary will also be featured.
SHOP AT THE COLLEGE STORE
THE
BELL T E L E P H O N E
SALUTE:
G E O R G E
P ro fjra m
A t
B oard
D e la w a r e
The active m em bers of last
te rm ’s Program Board attended
a diimer meeting as guests of
the University of f.)elaware Ac­
tivities C enter. The meeting was
held at the U niversity on Feb­
ru ary 4, 1963.
Drexel was represented by Wm.
L. Shute, chairm an of the D.A.C.
program board, and board m em ­
b ers as follows: Graduate School,
M ary Lou Scheoewerk; Evening
School, Pat McAnulty, Rube Mc­
Daniels, and Chuck Wallace; Day
College, C ris H arris, Bill Nubert.
B arry Kline, J o e Ragone, a n d
B arbara Campbell.
The P rogram Board was i a r o duced to all the U. of D. Ac­
tivities C enter Board m em bers.
They attended th e ir weekly bus­
iness meeting and exchanged Ideas
fo r present and future plans fo r
both College’s Activities C en ters.
The facilities at U. of D. are
on a p ar with those of the D.A.C.
T h eir student body Is s l i g h t l y
sm a lle r than Drexel, but they have
65% of all students living on cam ­
pus whereas DIT has about 15%
on cam pus.
M E R IN
S T U D IO S
1010 CHESTNUT STREET
OFFICIAL
PHOTOGRAPHERS
TO LEXERD
4S-Hour Servic* on PaaiportB
and Application Photograph*
Sp«eUd prUt$ for Drexel
Studeml$ am WedJhtg Alhmnu
EXPERT TYPING: TERM PAPERS, THESES, DOCTOR
AXES, MANUSCRIPTS, RESUMES, MIMEOGRAPHING
ADDRESSING, ETC. QUICK SERVICE!
CENTRAL LETTER SERVICE
2100 North Broad Street, 2nd Floor
PO 9-1717, PO 5-3783
C O M P A N IE S
H U D S O N , JR .
George Hudson, Jr. (B.S., 1960), has improved efficiency
on just about every job Pennsylvania BeU has given him.
That’s why he has climbed swiftly with the company.
On his present job at the West Chester Office, George
supervises a group that coordinates the work of 46 in­
stallers and repairmen. He sees to it that customer orders
are handled swiftly —a responsibility that calls for a lot
of decisions and original ideas.
On earlier assignments George supervised 12 repair­
men, and handled special assignments for the District Plant
Superintendent. Outstanding performance on both jobs
earned George his present responsibilities.
George Hudson and other young men like him in Bell
Telephone Companies throughout the country help bring
the finest communications service in the world to the
homes and businesses of a growing America.
C la s s D u e s .......
l(.<j)ilhiiH’(J from /fUf>e I)
fuiKtioiis a re all that tlie money
is usctl fo r, tlie office of class
prcyiilent is rcduced to tliat of
social chairm an. Why can’t class
dues he spent on otiier tilings tlian
social functions?” Mr. Forston
saiil tliat tlie Senate is working on
lilts problem , and will wolcoine
.my and all student opinions on
liio subject.
I he following data, com[)lete
tiirough Januai 7 10, 1963, were
furnislied to tlie T riangle hy Mr.
Forsten. Tlie total balance column
nil. hides tlie balance caixied over
from the past school y ear, as
well as tlic dues collected tliis
year since September 1.
MEN C o l l e c t e d
Fr.
Soph.
Pre. Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
$
T o *g I
P o t e n ti o i
To t .B o l.
t
97 4. 00
911.31
656. 73
544.89
518.11
866
760
484
408
402
$1,82 2
1,436
1,258
1,148
920
2,920
6, 58 4
3, 60 5.0 4
228
188
138
68
$ 466
320
258
156
$252.00
23 4. 75
239.17
113.83
622
1,200
WOMEN
Fr.
Soph.
Jr.
Sr.
Totol
$
Grond tota l
839 .7 5
$4 , 444.7 9
Only about half o£ the students
have paid th eir dues for the 196263 school y ear. Com paring the
sc‘xes, the g irls outpaid the boys
51.856 to 44.3%. By c la s se s , the
sophomore class with 545^ led in
payment, followed by the fre s h ­
man, sen io r, and junior cla sse s,
rtic p re-ju n io rs with 38.5% bring
up the r e a r.
BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES
Or*x*l Triangle
Pog« 10—Febniory 8, 1963
Pin M a i d e n s D e b u t - T o p N e w York II. P . M . C . G a m e P r e v i e w e c
By L a V e r n e D u V i n o g e
The g irls bowling team of 1963
made Its debut on Saturday, Feb­
ruary 2, in a victory over New
York University, 2176 pins to 1893
pins. This match also marked the
s e n s a t i o n a l d e b u t o f fresh ­
m an, R o s e m a ry L o u g h e ry
of Abington High School, as a
Drexel bowler. Rosemary bowled
a three game se rie s of 522, achie­
ving, en route, one of the highest
sco res ever recorded by a D ragonnette kegler, a sensational 222.
Sophomore Ray Sanders rolled the
By Boyd K. Mockleer
second highest s e rie s of 457, with
a game high of 172, Senior, March
Richards, four time team -m em ber
had a 422 se rie s with game high
at 161. Diane Pemberton rolled a
416 se rie s for Drexel, and Sandy
Morrow rolled a 358 to enable
Drexel, as a team, to sco re 743,
752, and 681 se rie s.
Coach Gladys D arrah is pleased
with her team ’s total of 2176 pins..
She and the team are looking
forward to the next match, which
will be on February 14, at Temple
Drexel’s Dragons defuted a tenadous Swartfamore College team
66-47 Febniary 6 on the losers court. TTie game was much closer
than the final score indicates. Hie [>ragons who had slaughtered
the Little Quakers 74-38 In an earUer meeting found the going
much tougher in this encounter. Drexel led by only 55-47 with six
minutes to go but Ted Siiek replaced Chuck King and allied six
quick points and the Dragon d^ense held the Garnet scoreless
to make the final score quite deceiving.
The first half of the game was
all Drexel as the Dragons shot Shaetfer contributed seven Drsi
a blistering 52% from the floor. half points but more important
Mike McCurdy paced the attack added eight assists to make the
with seven for ten from die floor offense which had been sluggish
for 14 points at the half. George ( Conliiimed am Pg. 11 Col. 2)
B o s k e tb o ll
(C ontinued from, p a g e 12)
D rax el 4 6 J o h n s H o p k in s 41
H A V E
A
D A T E
F ebruary 11
o n
I f you’re ab o u t to get yo ur e le c tric ^ , m echanical
or in dustrial engineering degree — sign up today
w ith your P lacem ent Officer for an interview on
the above d a te w ith a rep resen tativ e o f W est
Penn Pow er. I f you w an t a career and
n o t ju s t a job, sign up and leam all
ab o u t th is engineering-m inded com ­
pan y w here you can siu-ge ahead.
W E S T PEN N P O W E R CO M PA N Y
C a b in Hill, G r e e n s b u r g , P e n n s y l v a n i a
H o w
c a n
t a k e
Orexei’s Dragons staffed the
Blue Jays cf Johns Hopkins 46-41
Mooday, February 4, on the loser’s
court in Baltimore, Md. Chuck
King with 13(4-5) and Mfte Mc­
Curdy 12(6-0) led tlie point bri­
gade while PeteZimmerroan paced
the rebounders with U. which was
one more than King grabbed. The
starting five was augmented by
tlie timely scoring of Ted Sitek
who tallied six points during four
minutes of the second half when
he was forced into action as a
result of King picking ifthisfounh
of five pel sonal fouls.
This game was not one of the
Dragons’ best and only an allout
team effort enabled Drexel to pre­
vail. The halfrime score was a
scant 19-10 in the Dragon’s favor.
Actually, tiie final score might
l^ve reflected a greater margin
of victory except for extremely
poor foul shooting on the part
f a r
y o u r
y o u
i d e a s
in
t l i e
o f
o p p o r t u n i t y
in
d a t a
a t
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Write-in Patch 318A
UAIA PHOCCSMNG INVISION
IB M
39 F&M 31
This cottesttookpiaceSaturday,
Felviiary 2. on the Sayre Junior
High School court and was wit­
nessed by the largest home crowd
of the aemaoB. The game was
d ose for the fibrst 12 minutes witii
no more than four pofats separa­
ting the two squads until Pete
Zimmermann stole tiie hall m ier
the Dragon boop^and qpiickly talliuJ
two of his nine points. SeconJs
latcn- Chuck King stole tlie sphere
from Herb Gray, fanner Simon
Gratz star, and drove in for the
unmolested layi^ .
This twogave the Drexdites a
24-14 lead wliicfa represented their
largest of die game. The half
ended 24-17 in Drexel’s favor.
The second half saw F ft M
attenvt Co cut die Dragon lead
mail the score read 35-30 with
5:45 remaining in tlie bottle. At
this point George Shacffer led the
Oragons in as pretty a freeze
as this writer has ever seen.
F fc M managfri oidy lour shots
at the basket in the re maining
time wtiile the Dragons controlled
the ball and made four of eight
foul goals to boost their «igf to
eight points at th^gam e’s end.
Mike McCurdy tallied 12(4-4)
and King got 11(5-1) to gOalong
with Xiromermann’s nine in leading
tfie Lk^gon scorers. The first
five played tiie attire game anl
Bob MoUuro was tough on defense
wiiile ShacSer made the freeze
work. This was a real example
of unselfish team play by the
Dragons.
The Freshmen added to their
unbeaten record in the first game
bjf tancx^ing victorious over a
stubborn F & M Frosb .«»iuad
^8-66, While tiie final score
indicates a close game, the young
rk^gons held a 17 point lead mid­
way ttirough the second half.F6 M
rallied but they were not able to
catch Norm Uenn’s h o o p s t e r s .
Once again thrix; men scored in
double figures and two odiers had
eight poias each to lead the w d lbalanced Frosh attack.
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cf the Dragans. whic± was partioUariy distressing durii^ ooeand-one situations.
Norm Benn’s F r e s h m e n won
th d r 11th straight victory in the
opener by the lopsided taUy of
77-48. Three men led the scoring
parade in double figures as the
reserves played mostcf theseconl
half.
B U 8 H E D 7
ALERTNESS
CAPSUUES
Combat fatigue almost bnmediatehf. Keeps you alert
and full of pep for hour after
hour, after Iwur.
Continuous Action
Non4iaMt fcnniiV
0 NO PRiSCfUFTtON NEEDED«
Drmi«l Trianqlc
P o t* 1 1 - ^ e b ru o r y I , 1M3
T C
D
L C A
o w
D
n s
e f e a
P i
t s
K
a p
T K E
,By F rank G allc
APL took over sole possession of firs t place in the Gold League
as a result of th eir victory over SAM,and TKE’s defeat at the hands
of LCA. TC and SP still sh a re the lead in the Blue League with
identical 2-0 reco rd s.
LCA-38 T K E-37
In the most exciting gam e of this season, LCA rallied from a
21-12 halftime deficit to overcom e TKE, 38-37. It was not until
the end of the third q u arter that LCA started to play tosketball.
TKE was ahead when Bob Snader drove in fo r two points. Bruce
MUIer and Phil Singley followed suit and LC was back in the game.
Skip Bedper made a foul shot, but Bi-uce M iller scored on a jump
shot that tied the gam e at 28. TKE surged to a 33-28 lead but
Fred Palm er popped a foul shot.
SP 68 T E P 29
Tom Woody tallied two and Snader
SP
survived
a shaky beginning
evened the sco re at 33 with five
minutes remaining to be played. to rack up a 68-29 decision over
This victory along with
LC tlit-n stole the ball from TKE T EP.
and Palm er sunk a lay-up and T C’s win over PK se t the stage
a foul. Snader ripped the cords for a F ebruary 14 showdown fo r
for two and'LC was ahead to stay. firs t place in the Blue League.
DSP-63 DKR-27
Both teams m issed foul shots in
DSP ran roughshod over DKR
the waning m om entsasTKE scored
four points to no avail, the final by a 63-27 score; This proves
two with only four scconds left.* that my predictions a re w orthless.
Bob W eindorfer and Bernie T h aA PL-56 SAM-60
Friday night APL had to hold m arus scored 19 points apiece
off a last ditch rally by SAM to fo r 1J6, and P ete M orse added
eum undisputed firs t place in its 15. Denny Piontek kept DK in
league. APLwasahead by as much the scoring column with 17 points.
This week should prove to be
as thirteen points in the fourth
quarter, but Sammy cam e back the m ost important of the IF se a­
to tie with one and one-half m in­ son. TC c^iposes APL tonight in
utes remaining. The rally fell a battle of the unbeatens. Tuesday
short, however, as APL scored night offers an attractive doublesix quick points to put the game header with TKE and APL, ap­
out of reach. Bill Hassoo scored parently the two top contenders
18 for AP
and Steve Cohea in the Gold League, squaring ofi.
The opener matches T EP and SAM
matched that total, fo r SAM.
in the annual "Nose Bowl Classic.**
T C -44 P K P -3 0
Thursday night TC and SP take
TC stayed even with SP by the floor. From what iliis w riter
virtue of its victory over PKP. h as seen thus f a r, the winner ol
PK was never in the gam e as this game will m ore than likely
P len ty of actio n a t th e l-F P a le s tr a In th e T K E-LC A gom e, a s TKE ro lls in f ru itle s s ra lly .
TC displayed a wedl-balanced team .win the Blue League champion­ Lam bda Q ii won gam e by o ne big p o i ^ ____
effort in capturing tiielr second ship, and eventually the IF crcwn.
straight game. PK could not cope In other gam es DSP takes on SP
th ru sts, but also with slash es.
with TC’s switching m an-to-m an (tonight), and LCA (next T h u rs­
Since Drexel has no nfflclal
By S teve F ite
defense, and TC worked its of­ day).
fencing team . Tom takes his le s ­
fense "to perfection. Five T C ’s
On January 29, the sw im m ers from Tem ple University beat our sons from Louis C s isz a r, a w orld'cored six o r m ore points.
varsity team easily by a sc o re of 62-30. Tem ple was Just out of recognized authority in fencing in­
/
our class. As always, co-captains Benner and Strantz w ere the m ajor struction. ‘‘The M aestro” , as Tom
Februory 8
point producers from Drexel. Benner took two seconds and a third affeaionately calls M r. C sisza r,
LEAGUE STANDINGS
in tlie 200-yard freesty le, SOO-yard freesty le and 100-yard freesty le was the coach of die 1956-U.Sw
7:30 pin: T C - A P L
Gold L eague Blue L eague
respectively. Strantz outdid him self with two f ir s t place finishes— Olympic Fencing team and is c u r­
9:00 pm: D S P -S P
in the SO yard freesty le and the 200-yard backstroke. His v ersatility rently homing the talen ts of die
A Pl
TC
2-0
2-0
gave Drexel ten of its points. B erry took second in the 200-yard Am erican fencing representatives
backstroke while Simkanick and Baiis did uKewise in the 200-yard to the next Pan-A m erican gam es.
TKE
M
SP
2-0
individual medley and diving event r e s j ^ t i v e l y .
"P eaches” f irs t had the notion
7:30 pm: T K E -A P L
SAM
LCA
1-2
1-1
Drexel B eaten by F&M
to compete in the N.C.A.A. Cham­
9:00 pm: T E P - SAM
Last Satiupday our v arsity swim­ F e n c i n g . . .
pionships some months back. He
PKP
DSP
1-2
1-1
m ers traveled to F r a n k l i n &
went to M r. John Semanik. head
(C
o
n
tin
u
ed
from
p
a
g
e
12)
M
arshall
and
probably
would
have
TEP
DKR
0-2
0-2
of D rexel’s athletic program , to
p referred to rem ain home if diey Colorado.
see if Drexel would sponsor the
7:30 pm: D S P -L C A
had
an
insight
into
the
final
sco
re.
The
N.C.A.A.
fencing
contests
Girl’s B - B a ll. . .
trip . M r. Semanik consulted “ H ie
9:00 pm: T C - S P
F & M presented a su rprisingly a re held yearly and a r e opra to M aestro” and, after being assured
(Continued from page 12)
good team and won handily 66-29. all collegiate fen cers. Tom will that 'T o m will not disg race your
ing game,
D rexel’s big tfiree got back on com pete in the sa b er division, c o U e ^ ,” "^'I^eacliap’* was granted
Marlon Layton was O rexel’s high P.M .C. G a m e . . .
the winning track and provided
scorer, with 17 points. Marion and (Continued fmm page 10)
category w h i c h , c u r i o u s l y the funds to make the trip to-OenBetsy Schneck tied fo r field goal in tne two previous games move most of the points. Benner cap­ enough, featu res the use of the v er.
honors with six each. The job of with the speed displayed in the tured firs t place in the 200 and sa b er in m am -to-m an coittest.
It may be a bit out of line to
the guards, Cindy, Cele, and Anne, Rochester Tournament. The score ’TO-yard freestyle and took second
F o r non-fencers (and th ere are make a prediction of Tom ’s su c­
cannot be forgotten. Cindy proved at the half was 38-22 in the Dragons in the 5(X)-yard freesty le.S tran tz at least 5,000 of us at Drexel), c e s s at Denver, but asG eneM auch
finished firs t in the dash and second the sa b e r differs from the epee said (assuming his foot wasn’t in
to be a double th reat as she favur.
played both guard and forw ard.
Early in the second half a field in the backstroke. Tom Davis r e ­ and the foil in that you can score his moudt at the tim e), "w inners
Cele Y erger played best* when goal by King and two by Pete turned to his old winning way and points with a sa b er not only with usually win.”
at the m id-court line. Anne M ans­ Zim m erm an boosted the Dragons took firs t place in the diving event.
field was the leading rebounder into a 19 point advantage and the
F reshm en Triumph
FOR VALENTINE’S DAY
as she constantly grabbed the de­ game seem ed well in hand but
A good note in the F & M
fensive rebounds. Mary Kline and Swarthmore staged a rally which meet was die triumph of our fresh ­
IT’S
Ginny Makin made effective sub­ caused the Dragons some co n ster­ men sw im m ers against the F & M
stitutes for coach LlUiam Haas, nation. At one point th e Little counterparts. T railing 39-45, the
H E C SH F L O W E R S
who used her team to best advan­ Quakers ran off 10 s t r a i g h t 400-yard relay team (Lilienfield,
tage in earning a victory over a points to close the gap to seven Hill, Davis, and Jorgensen) won
3407 WALNUT STREET
scrappy Pennsylvania team .
points at 47-40 with nine min­ their event to make the final sco re
46-45. Captain E rrickson took two
utes remaining,
BA 2-7477
Zim m erm an and Shaeffer r e ­ firs t places and Jorgensen and
FRATS . . .
entered the game replacing Sitek Davis each won one event. This
(Continued from page 7)
and E arley and the Dragons be­ team will have to be the nucleus
FLOWERS
Bob Smorodin - Alpha Pi Lambda
gan to a s se rt themselves again. of a winning team in the future.
' McDonough’s resignation is of McCurdy wound up the leading This was their only scheduled
some benefit; it is a cautionary sc o re r with 19 (9-1) while Z im - m eet of the season but it certainly
shock action. I think he could mermann a d d e d 16 (8-0) a n d is an indication of good things to
have gone about it a b etter way. Shaeffer-14 (6-2).
come.
e s
As far as the -drinking rule
The Freshrhen team (Continued
Set up by IF Council is concerned, their fine play with a 68-33 vic­
3233 PoweltoQ Ave.
I think It is a good thing. 1 feel tory for their 12th straight. Frank
" I s T h ere Any Group
that self-imposed control of drink­ P restileo and Denny S a r a f i n a s
ing by IP Council safe-guards scored 16 and 15 respectively as
Have your prcKripdoiu filled hcfc.
fraternities from the possibility 11 men tallied.
Our stock ia complete and up to date.
of school Imposed co n trol.”
We Have Not O ff e n d e d ? "
Sw im m ers Lose, F n sh W'm
F Basketball
Friday,
Tuesday, February i2
Thurs., February 14
FOR ALL OCCASIONS
F r id a y
F lic k e r s
" 1 9 8 4 '
8P.M.
G rand
H a ll
P hone B A 8 - 0 2 0 0
...M o rt Sahl
VOLUME XL
D ra g o ns
FEBRUARY 8.1963
W in
T h re e ,
H o ld
D rag ons T ro u n ce CCNY
J o e l ‘T h e G i a n t ’ P i n s 3 r d
By Roger H arris
Well, they did it. didn't * ey ? Only they did It right. What am I talking about? Why, the m l^ ty
matmen from DITI They pounced, bounced, and trounced the foes from CCNY. The sc o re, 27-3, was
the biggest trounce so far this season. It may have been a foggy day In Phllly town but the Dragon
gym shone brightly with soundr of sunny re f whistles and clear sm acks of re f hands on the big mat.
Drexel rolled up this Im pressive score In the sam e manner they’ve rolled up the re st of their sc o res
this year, with each man coming through strong.
As usual the match started with Van Doren. Jack, after a week of re s t, scored high as he pinned
Bratnlck In 2:37. Mike Mosmon, power house that he Is, looked even stronger as he bounced Frankie
for a 5-0 dec. Next upScottl who,between watching Blondes and Ooug, rolled In wltli a 3-0 dec.
And then came Randolph and
Sm ltty, the form er pinning his
man with “ P retty Boy” Jay d ecisioning his 5-0. Following at
167 came BeaJe with a 5-4 decision
over Leydecker. At 177 CCNY
registered their o n ly w in as
Leichner lo st a close one,3-2.
L ast but not a t all least Joel
"T he Giant” came through again
with a c r o w d - t h r i l l i n g 3rd
straight pin for this season’s three
matches. Way to hustle Joel; k et^
it upl
This meet marked the end of
D rexel's home stand this year
as from now on they hit the road.
Tomorrow, they bounce into their
f irs t away meet with Haverford.
Follow themi None of the matches
are too far away, so fo r a good
Saturday afternoon's e n t e r t a i n ­
m ent as F rey’s fabulous mat time
moves from the city to the suburbs,
be there at 3:301 It’s not farl
NUMBER 4
C
Q
L e a d
In
z e n - M
e n
P * M « € «
T
o m
M A C
F a c e
o r r o w
By Boyd K. M ockleer
As of deadline date this week, the Dragon hoopsters still load the
Southern Division of the MAC with a reco rd of e i ^ t victories and
two defeats. Haverford ranks second with four wins against two
lo ss e s, and F&M is third at five and th ree. The rem aining Dragon
schedule consists of Swarthm ore, PMC:, H averford, U rslnus, and
Lycoming In league play with a February 15th P alestra date against
R ider, the only non-league encounter. The University of Pennsylvania
will oppose Dartmouth in the opener of tlie P alestra doubleheader.
L ast Saturday against F&'m the Dragons froze the ball for six
minutes to p re se rv e victory and tfien eked out a five point win over
Johns Hopkins Monday n l ^ t In B altim ore. This was the firs t “ off
night’’ since the PMC d isa ste r In
the P a le s tra . However, after a
relatively easy game scheduled at
Swarthmore (result received too
late to Include here), the log shows
i^ames at F^MC tom orrow afternoon
and at Haverford F ebruary 13th.
If the Dragons win all th ree of
these, then they will be just ab iui
home free .
The team got th eir finest support
of the season last Saturday but will
need the sam e support tom orrow at
PMC. PMC has a student body
whose good sportsm anship Is ex­
hibited by th eir w histles, shouts
and other asso rted childish antics
when any visiting player is shoot­
ing a foul. Add to this Ignorance
the willingness of the Cadet players
to turn the game Into fisticuffs at
the drop of a hat and It is ob­
vious that the team needs some
shouting of th eir own in the PMC
bandbox, which poses somehow
as agym.GETOUTANDSUPPORT
YOUR TEAM!
(C o n tin u ed on Page 10, Col. 4)
T h is W e e k
In S p o r t s
V a rsity B a s k e tb a ll
Saturday, February 9 - 3 : 0 0 pm
PMC — Away
Wed., February 13 - 8:15 pm
HA VERFO RD - Awoy
* * * * *
V a rsity W restling
Saturday, February 9 - 3 : 3 0 pm
HAVERFORD - Away
_ * * * * *
Girls B-Ball
iJ s o ls
Top P e n n s y lv a n ia
By LaV erne D uVinage
The g irl’s basketball team , fresh
from a p re-seaso n victory over
Camden Catholic High School, a
high scoring squad from South
Je rse y , maintained momentum and
d e f e a t e d Pennsylvania In t h e
season’s opener here on Monday.
The outcome of the thlrty-tw omlmite contest was In doubt, lite r­
ally, until the last second of play,
as Pennsylvania rallied too late.
The final score was 37-34.
The game started off slowly,
but the shooting of Marion Layton
and Naomi Wark gave Drexel a
9-7 first quarter advantage. Nancy
LaPelle kept Penn In the game at
this point with two timely field
goals.
Betsy Schneck entered the game
In the latter stages of the first
quarter, and her “ peppery” play
^
G o tc h .n g iv es in stru c tio n s on how to pin on
F irs t, pull man to mot for two po in ts a s shown in larg er pix; seco n d , jump on h is back to
h i^ to L
P '* ;
« iP him over and nail
him to A e m at. The third ste p follow s after the seco n d so f a s t th e photographer d id n 't g et
time to load th e cam era.
’
sparked the Dragonette lasses to
a 21-16 half-tim e lead. Both Betsy
and Marion amazed the spectators
w ith t h e i r adept ball-handling,
faking, and accurate s h o o t i n g .
Meanwhile the Dragonette guards,
Cindy Beale, Anne Mansfield and
Cele Y erger contained the Quaker
forwards.
in the third q u arter, the Dragonettes stretched their lead to a 7
point advantage, 30-23, but In the
fourth and final q uarter Penn came
on strong, outscorlng D rr 11-7.
The Penn rally faUed, as the
advantage gained by Drexel e a rlie r
in the game proved to be three
points superior to Penn’s rally (Cmtiuueii <jn Page II, (.ot. I)
D K X l l f t N C l R IN N C A A
Women's B a s k e tb a ll
T h u rs., February 1 4 -4 :1 5 pm
CHESTNU T H ILL - Away
* * * * *
Women’s Badminton
Wed., February 13 - 4:00 pm
PENN - Away
* * * * *
W omen's B ow ling
By Mike Appleboum
When Hungarian-born Tom Pescvaradi cam e to this country In T h urs., February 14 - 4:00 pm
iiT
trouble pronouncing his surnam e that
T EM PL E - Away
they dubbed him “ P eaches.” Nowadays, though, few people have
trouble with Tom s last name, for It seem s as if every tim e you
pick up an edition of The T riangle, “ Peaches” is being congrat­
ulated w ith a n o t h e r a t h l e t i c
accomplishment.
The latest in a string of su c­
cesses for last season’s soccer
P a le s tr a T ic k e ts A v a ila b le
co-captain is, as he puts it, “ the
g reatest th rill of my life ," for
T ickets for the D rexel-R lder BasketbaU Game on F r i on March 29-30 Tom wUl re p re ­
ta";h e
now on L i e
sent D r e x e l a t t h e N.C.A.A.
ta the AtWette Office. The Drexel game Is at 9;15 P r e ­
ceding, at 7:30, Penn hosts Dartmouth.
fencing championship in Denver,
(Continued on Page II, Col. 4)