i · faculty and administrators joined together to show mutual concern for a ... you are cordially...

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October 15 was great. For the first time, we acted as if we were a university, ■‘'tudents, faculty and administrators joined together to show mutual concern for a near overwhelming problem, rose proudly to the occasion, and we can be justified for our pride in what went on. Unfortunately, the war is still with us. If we are not to be one o’clock liberals, we must keep up the pressure until it is over. If this one day’s participation will be an end to our involvement, then the day was a picnic, not a protest. We must display this force of conscience individually in each succeeding day, and we must join in the mass actions planned forthe months to come. We must not let our voices die. Ciome you winter patriots, all lovers of mankind and countr\ , those who would see the world as one, all sons and daughters of the new age of peace—the time is now. Come those who have strug- gled for years, and those who have just started, come all good men of conscience--this is only the beginning. There is no way to peace-- peace is the way. I \ '■ Jill r ( 1 i i V I'' ■ '• I n- I t * ■' i;. j- r, t ;i ' : i', f t.i ' 'U •rl 'I: I ' !l' i ■ : ^.i; > 1 : .!( liii: '1 ' IV I,- i i\ rl : i

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O c t o b e r 15 w a s g r e a t . F o r t h e f i r s t t i m e , w e a c t e d a s i f w e w e r e a u n i v e r s i t y , ■‘' t u d e n t s ,

f a c u l t y a n d a d m i n i s t r a t o r s j o i n e d t o g e t h e r t o s h o w m u t u a l c o n c e r n f o r a n e a r o v e r w h e l m i n g

p r o b l e m , r o s e p r o u d l y t o t h e o c c a s i o n , a n d w e c a n be j u s t i f i e d for our p r i de in w ha t went on.

U n f o r t u n a t e l y , t h e w a r i s s t i l l wi t h u s . If w e a r e no t to be o n e o’ c l o c k l i b e r a l s , we m u s t

k e e p up t h e p r e s s u r e u n t i l i t i s o v e r . If t h i s o n e d a y ’ s p a r t i c i p a t i o n w i l l b e an e n d to our

i n v o l v e m e n t , t h e n t h e d a y w a s a

p i c n i c , n o t a p r o t e s t . We m u s t

d i s p l a y t h i s f o r c e o f c o n s c i e n c e

i n d i v i d u a l l y in e a c h s u c c e e d i n g

d a y , a n d w e m u s t j o i n in t h e m a s s

a c t i o n s p l a n n e d f o r t h e m o n t h s to

c o m e . We m u s t n o t l e t o u r v o i c e s

d i e .

C io me y o u w i n t e r p a t r i o t s , a l l

l o v e r s o f m a n k i n d a n d c o u n t r \ ,

t h o s e w h o w o u l d s e e t h e w o r l d a s

o n e , a l l s o n s a n d d a u g h t e r s o f

t h e n e w a g e o f p e a c e —t h e t i m e i s

n o w . C o m e t h o s e w h o h a v e s t r u g ­

g l e d f o r y e a r s , a n d t h o s e w h o

h a v e j u s t s t a r t e d , c o m e a l l g o o d

m e n o f c o n s c i e n c e - - t h i s i s o n l y

t h e b e g i n n i n g .

T h e r e i s n o w a y t o p e a c e - -

p e a c e i s t h e w a y .

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DREXEL TRIANGLEf'agr 2 -0 rt . .h i r 17, l% 9

announcements, happenings and odd ends

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Anyone who Is the least bit interested in Hum-Tech and/or a Liberal Arts College should make the meeting on Monday, Oct. 20, 3:30 p.m. in Patton Auditorium in the Bus. Ad. building. The Hum-Tech Committee will be present, as well as the Commit­tee to plan the program for lib­eral arts. This will be an im­portant meeting, so be sure to attend.

APO and SPB cordially invite all to their annual Casino Night Mixer tonight, starting at 9:00 p.m. in the Drexel Academy of Crapshooters (DAC). House man­ager Tyrone Kedswaldie an­nounced that preferential treat­ment will be given to anyone claiming to have a winning “ sys­tem " (though Vice President Ralph Crouch and his system have been barred from the Ca­sino). The Malnliners and the Probable Cause will be appear­ing on stage all night.

bership dues will be collected If you’d like to join DNA.

*‘Where has all the money gone" is the topic of the SPB forum with John McCulIou^, Di­rector of Financial Aid, He will be prepared to answer all re le ­vant questions this Wednesday at 3:30 by the fireplace in the DAC.

The Student Program Board is running a questionnaire on page 8. Everyone is requested to answer fully in order to com­pletely evaluate all their ac­tivities, and try to improve them. You can return the questionnairesto the boxes in the Court and the DAC.

♦ * * ♦

The Drexel football team and staff would like to extend their thanks for the fine support given them by the Drexel administra­tion, faculty and student body, who traveled to Easton this past Sat­urday for our Lafayette game,

♦ * ♦ ♦

Samples of Space Food Sticks that were used on the Apollo 11 mission will be served at the firs t meeting of the Dietetics and Nutrition Association. The meeting will be held on Thurs­day, October 16, at 6:30 in Room 218 of the DAC. One dollar mem-

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W H O L E S A L E S H O P M A R K E T 7 0 4 STREET

Influenza vaccine is now avail­able at the Drexel Health Serv­ice and may be obtained on re ­quest during regular clinic hours. The United States Public Health Service does not anticipate a se r­ious outbreak of influenza this year. Immunization is recom­mended only for those with chron­ic diseases and those over 45 years of age who desire to have it.

You are cordially invited to attend the kickoff meeting of Phi Lambda Upsilon, the honorary Chemical Society, The guest speaker will be Dr, George A, Siemiencow of Lafayette College speaking on “ Mendeleev and the Discovery of the Periodic Law.” The meeting will be on Tues­day, October 21, at 7:30 p.m. in the Picture Gallery in the Main Building, A “ social” hour will be held following the meeting,

* * * *

The Drexel Newman Associa­tion is sponsoring a Day of Christian renewal, Sunday, Oc­tober 19, at the Newman Center, 219 N, 33rd Street, at 8:00 p,m. The mini-retreat includes dis- cur.sions, Mass, dinner and aso ­

cial. Sign up today at the Center or the Religious Office in the DAC.

* t * *

Catherine Berry Stidsen, the­ologian, will make her second appearance at Drexel, Tuesday, October 21. Mrs. Stidsen will lecture on “ Authority and F ree ­dom Within the Church” at the Newman Center at 8:00 p.m.

"Morality: Strict Legalism vs. Free Conscience” is the top­ic for this week’s Thursday night seminar, conducted by the sem i­narians at the Newman Center at 7:15 p.m. on October 23,

There will be a meeting of the American Society of Mechan­ical Engineers on Wednesday, October 22, at 3:30 p,m, in the DAC. That same evening, the ASME will visit the Baldwih- Lima-Hamilton plant in Eddy- stone. All interested ME»s are asked to meet in front of the DAC at 6:00 p.m.

Robert Chamberlain, hitherto inactive in Student Government politics, was elected by the Congress to the post of Vice- President of Student Affairs last Tuesday night.

Running against Matt Kokoska, President of the Pre-Junior class, and Thomas Land, Cham-

« r s t ballot vie-berlain won a tory.

His activity at Drexel as managing editor of the Tech

Journal, community relations ex ^ r le n c e and,participation in the Big B rother Program haJe alerted Bob to a reas that shouW be of concern to him in the vice-presidency.

E ric Roberts, who held that position p r io r to his elevation to the Presidency, suggested to the Congress In his speech that they look both within and out­side the Congress for qualified candidates for the then vacant post. Some might in terpret this as support of Chamberlain’s can didacy but Rick took no publicstand. In contrast, Sam Messine-er, past president and Chamber lain»s fra tern ity brother, gave him a ringing endorsement as did Tom Zuchal who worked with Chamberlain on the Tech Journal and is also a Sammy,

The expectation in Congress is that the new Vice-president will probably do a good job al though he wll find i t time-coni suming and arduous.

♦ ♦ ♦ ♦

The SPB Travel Committee, in an effort to offer more widely- based activities, has inaugurated a se rie s of subway trip s to Cam­den, N,J, In o rder to bring the program to the entire student body, tickets wUl be on sale at locations all over Philadelphia for just 30^ (exact change). A spokesman indicated that simi­la r but more ambitious trips of the sam e genre a re planned. While the destination is still s ec re t, it has been learned that the code name for the project is “ Paoli Local.”

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Students: you will soon have your chance to voice all your opinions about your teachers and your courses. This has finally happened due to a special faculty evaluation commission, set up by Student Congress.

The survey will take place sometime during the eighth week of this term . The results of this questionnaire will be given only to the faculty. Each teacher will distribute the questionnaires and IBM port-a-punch cards in class. Students will then poke the appropriate holes ifi the card, which will then be run through a computer.

Some of the questions will concern the teacher’s competence in the subject, his fairness in testing, his style (is he dull, boring?), his organization or lack thereof, his continuity. Is he easy to see out­side of class; does he want to answer questions; how does he like his class?

Textbooks will also come under fire . Is the book relevant to the course; is its emphasis on theory or practice compared to the course; is its format presented well; is it easy to understand?

A few questions will deal with credits. Are the credits propor­tional to the work load of the course; did you expect an easier or harder course?

Student Government decided to formulate the commission for three reasons. The main reason is to improve the quality of teach­e rs at Drexel. The second is to give each student indication of which teacher is suited to his individual need. The third reason is that Stu­dent Congress hopes, in this way, to influence the hiring and firing policy, giving students a small voice,

«

The results of this f irst evaluation will be sent only to the facul­ty members, but the next one, taken during winter term , will be published in time for spring registration. This will perm it the stu­dent to know what other students thought about his teacher and course before the term is half over.

The philosophy behind expected changes in hiring and firing; the published evaluations will be cumulative. Repeated “ bad” ra t ­ings will not be helpful in the retention of relatively new teachers. They will either leave or be requested to leave. Repeated “ good” ratings will, they hope, convince the Administration that certain faculty members can have rapport with a class and not with the other members of their respective departments. Although tenured faculty members won't be fired, continually low ratings are ex­pected to motivate them to look for other positions.

The chairman of the Commission is Paul Berger, Ellis Cohen is the Operations Director and Marty Tunnell is in charge of d is­tribution, These three, along with Dale Weaver (finances) and Jan Levitt (publication), are the main forces behind the Commission, Interested students should contact any member of the Commission.

Future printings will occur at least twice a year, one at the be­ginning of spring term , the other at the beginning of winter term .

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The National Gallup Poll revealed that 57 percent of the sampled Americans favor Rep, Goodell’s Vietnam resolution. This resolu­tion calls for the withdrawal of all U.S, troops by Dec, 1970. Re­publican Congressmen have formulated a counter resolution, ask­ing Hanoi to negotiate in good faith.

In the now famous correspondence between a Georgetown Uni­versity sophomore and President Nixon, he reiterated the slogan that declares independence from the opinion of the mob in the s tree t. President Nixon has failed to notice that the Gallup Poll is an indictment contrary to his view of the protest l>eing only from radical youth. This indication of the President’s aliena­tion from the desires of his constituency bears strong resemblance to his predecessor.

In area news, local colleges have experienced a 48 percent drop in ROTC enrollment, due to the voluntary status of ROTC at Drexel and La Salle. (Drexel’s enrollment is down to less than 400 after be­ing around 1100 the year before.)

In a long awaited change. General Hershey has been retired from the Selective Service System. He is now promoted to Presidential Advisor.

The Chicago Conspiracy tria l has been maked with a rampage by a Splinter group of SDS known as the “ Weathermen.” Smashing windows and ca rs , the youths made known their displeasure against the senile judge and corrupted city. The melee also witnessed the injury to a city councilman, paralyzed from the waist down by a brick projectile.

Students and other residents of the Berkeley, California, com­munity are organizing a tenants' union for a massive rent strike this fall sim ilar to the present one in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

The residents are protesting frequent rent increases, one year leases, cleaning deposit and restric tive “ radical action clause” leases.

The Supreme Court Monday accepted for argument and decision two conscientious objector cases. This may result in a definite legal guideline, uniform for all local boards.

DREXEL TRIAHGLEO rtobrr 17, I% 9—Page 3

but tDiU ti)e siteepgkm feecip pou bjarm enougfj?

It’s warmer this way: a de­gree plus a career. So check out our Campus Internship Program.

Insurance counselling is a field without ceiling. It offers independence . . . the oppor­tunity to perform a highly use­ful service. And consider this: 22% of this company’s top agents began learning and earning while still in college.

So stop by or phone our campus office today. Remem­ber— keeping warm in that cold, cruel world is more than a matter of degree.

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dying in a lonely placeBy Steve Ro d ge r s

The black sinister muzzle of the M-16 silently part­ed the high grass. A mosquito’s buzz droned in his ear. The sweat from his palms greased the M-16’s stock. In the distance a twig snapped - - What was that? An animal? A VC? A helicopter chattered over to his right. He could hear the cracking of small arms opening up on the chopper, Sound was the clue to the fighting around him— it was impossible to see more than six inches in any direction through the dense grass. The isolation of his green cocoon detached him, for a moment, from the world of hate and pain and Death. His thou^ts turned inward and his vigilance relaxed.

As his thoughts turned inside him, once again he asked himself why he was here. Here, in the jungle, a few miles from anyone who loved him. Here in danger; here in this place of fear. For months now, fear had been growing like a cancer within him.

occupying more and more of his thou^ts. Even sleep provided no respite; nightmares tormented him con­stantly. Why was he here? Why was death a constant companion on patrols? Why did he dread every new day? Why?,..Why couldn’t he go h o m e ? . . .Home—he remembered something like that in another life, an­other time. He remembered that there was once a reason for living. God, how he longed to see her once again, to hold her, kiss her, love her as he had done in that other life. Her last letter had been sad; her tears had stained the pages. She had told him of his new born son. His son was named after him. She had even sent a picture of her and the baby. He always kept it with him under his helmet.

As he removed his helmet to look at his family an­other twig snapped not twelve inches from his face. He froze. His heart pounded loud enough for anyone to hejir it. Panic overtook fear. He lunged for his

rifle as three bullets exploded inside his body. Down he sank into the damp soil, down Into nightmarishunconsciousness,

The throbbing pain of his body brought him back to consciousness again. Around him the universe was ex­ploding; shells ripping apart the earth , the “ thwalk'" of mortar shells detonating In the jungle, the angry chatter of small automatic weapons. Above him knelt a medic whose green uniform was dark with blood. Whose blood was It? Was It the medic’s , or his? Was he going to die?....................

A new dimension of fear engulfed him. The abyss of death loomed beneath him. He couldn't die, not now not here. The medic had to help him, he had to. He had too many things to do before he died, too muchof Ufe to live. He couldn’t die, he couldn’t ........The medic was saying something. Something about a chopper coming; something about being all right because the doctors would fix him up; something about giving him something for the pain. He wasn’t going to die after all. Relief washed over his body - death was only a word again. He wanted to tell the medic to forget about the morjrfiine—that the pain wasn’t bad anymore. In fact, he couldn’t feel anypain......he couldn’t feel any fea r......... he couldn’t feelthe coldness creeping over his body.........

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Student Power means that students can reasonably influence and take part in the control of the decision making process. Stu­dent Power at Drexel does not exist.

Student government is not student power. Student government does not even have a consistent set of directions. At worst, it is an activity for budding rhetoriticians. At best, it solves small problems while accepting mediocre solutions to the big ones.

Power at Drexel is exercised by the Board of Trustees, a group of capable, hard-working individuals whose chief similarity is an ability to procure monies for Drexel while remaining blissfully unaware of what is really happening here.

There is no student on the Board, There is a faculty member, but he’s from Penn, And to mollify the black community, a Negro woman who is Superintendent of the West Philadelphia Public Schools has recently been appointed. (Dr. Hagerty proudly showed me the story as it lovingly appeared in the Philadelphia Press.)

Perhaps students, faculty and the community have just been overlooked. No, the policy is, in fact, deliberate. President Hag­erty pointed out that “ Parties of Interest should not be on the Board of T rustees.” Somehow, he compared it to a student help­ing decide whether or not he should be thrown out of school. Some­how, the analogy makes me sick.

Right now, Drexel’s only representative on the Board is P resi­dent Hagerty, and all that is Drexel is transmitted to the Trustees in his own image. Sometimes things tjet lost in the translation,

• This strange arrangement means that student power is simply a matter of influencing Dr, Hagerty and the best influence is fear. More student goals have been realized through fear of student

demonstrations than for any other reason. Mandatory R.O.T.C. is gone because of fear, there are black adm inistrators because of fear, and if a College of L iberal Studies is established, it will most likely be a result of fear. Those concerned students who are appeased by membership on a “ decision-making” committee that futilely recommends are being fooled.

There are literally hundreds of students who would like to see Drexel expand in the Humanities and Social Sciences. I asked Dr. Hagerty about the possibility of an Urban Studies Department evolving within the next five years. His reply was disheartening. “ We have to maximize the schools that we now have.” Ignore the fact that Drexel has the capability to develop excellent interdis­ciplinary programs such as urban studies. Ignore the fact that Drexel students want such a development to occur. Ignore all of this because an anachronistic Board of T rustees would sacrifice a balanced set of curricula for the proven products of Engineer­ing, Science and Business Administration.

If students are to have power at Drexel, the decision making processes must change. The function of the Board of Trustees should simply be to oversee the operations of Drexel. Basic de­cisions should be made by those involved in the Drexel Process. Curriculum decisions should be made by those students, faculty and administrators who are involved. When decisions are made involving the community that Drexel so blithely replaces with sterile orange brick, it seems reasonable that the community should be involved. In fact, it seem s reasonable that PARTIES OF INTEREST SHOULD DECIDE WHAT DREXEL DOES AND WHERE IT WILL GO.

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It’s YellowCatch: You must be 18 or over, have a Pennsylvania driver’s license and 2 years driving experience.Dividend: You might find driving a cab a bit of a liberal education in itself.As a part time Yellow Cab driver you can drive day or night (Girls—days only). So head for the great outdoors— the earnings are great.For more information or an appointment phone:MA 7-7440, Ext. 246.Or come in person to 105 So. 12th Street Monday through Thursday—9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday—9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

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By E l a i n eKinetic Art? More words — a game for

semanticists. Kinetics — opposite of potential— moving-feeling-energy. A rt-decayed buildings- old Greeks-Tahitian natives.

Kinetic Art Festival—Drexel-three parts. Part II-Tuesday October 28—8 p.m.—Matheson Audi­torium.

International—winners—kinetic,“ Et Cetera” — Svankmajer — P r a g u e - - b r i e f -

graphic-flashes, “ Miracle” —Ventilla-Budapest— images-music-flowing-feelings, “ Elegia” —Hus- zarik-B udapest-rebel-hallucinate, “ What do You Think” Kuri-Tokyo—action-love-life. “ Paris Mai 1968” - F i lm Cooperative of P a ris-an o n y m o u s- Student revolution-fight-help, “ Tonight Let’s AU Make Love in London” —Whitehead—London—C aine - seduction - Christie - acting - Bodypainting - Jagger - Stones - intuitions - Burdon - * nimals -

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France—Hungary—Germany—Yugoslavia--Italy— Japan—England—U.S.—26 film s.

Miss Quinn—Design Department—Student pro­gram board—

P art III—Tuesdaynovemberll - **The Last Trick of Mr. Edgar” —Svankmajer—Prague—gro­tesque - shock. “ V ersa illes” — Lam orisse— P aris—vis ions - P ar is -spaci al -he licopter, * * F low - e r ” — Kuri — Tokoy — silver award - Expo. “ Gavotte” - - Borowczyk — P aris - unexpected- dwarf - concert—? “ Red, White and Black” — Herbst — Hamburg - - conformity — Nazism- animation, “ The Magician” — Renc-and-Hobl-- Prague — happy-sad-vaudeville-castle-sea, “ Af- terward-the Adventures of a Doll’*—Winzentsen— Hamburg — w ar-su rrea l—traum a. “ Marie et le C ure” — Medveczky — Paris -fo rm er sculptor- erotic - psychotic - Laffont -countrygirl, “ Samd- h i” — Belson — San Francisco — color-sun- spots - microphotography -nebulae - - Guggen- heimfellowship.

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“ W hy?- niatter-of-factly.

** Because.”"Why because?*' 4

t h i ' 0' ‘h ' physics deparlmeni tests, l e t i J n ® ' ' " r “'S tudent Congress to en^t i r l T ' “Klslatlon, the food In the DAC, my lousy reclta-chlM T h ' " ' “ " ■ ■ s . “ I a»s Boddamn pinball ma-

• I r h l n v ? I®, "I® ' > ' ‘* 0 ‘ ' ' “ “ s a n d p o i n t s a l r e a d y t h i s g a m e . ” Thanx, I said and walked away.

lecture today (eight ball, cprner pocket)?*’ shot^°* wasn't In the chapter. Formulas, and all that (nice

||Which chapter (seven ball banked over here)?'*

my ^ o t ) ? ^ ’ (missed—

“ Class? You know that, that—whatever the hell he is—no interest man. He's a deadhead.*’

||You*ve got to get it somewhere (seven ball, corner).*’I d ra ther get it on my own—there’s no way in that class.**

Faculty evaluation, dig?

1‘Hey man, what*s happening Friday night?**

d o r m s , a s s o r t m e n t from the

” 1 have a date. Movies I guess.*’

dating that chick? Come to the party. Those Penn girls will make you forget whatshername.**

t h l n X r m e r . - - ^ ' ’" ’'

Don*t buck the system, dig?

Notice something? Yeah, you're right, everybody's on a different level, a different train of thought. They're not together. But who are ‘they.' Oh, nobody in particular—just the most important people on campus. What? Yeah, that's right, you, Joe Commuter; and you, Freddy Fraternity; and you, Bobby Bridge Player (Media local- late; three no trump; this keg*s empty-tap the other)—all the peo­ple who have been called nameless stereotypes--you are the most important people on campus.

But why these people? Answer this question first: How many times have you felt raped by the red tape of data processing, numerical codes, and ordered succession of events? How many? Doesn’t it bother you? Hell, sure it does!

A r e Y o u s h o p p i n g o n t h e

W r o n g S i d e o f t h e R i v e r ?

TTie L a t e s t F a sh io n s are a

Few S t e p s Away At

3728 WALNUT.ST.

EV 2-9063 I

Commission Chairmen Needed

Homecoming

Elections

Organizations

Parking

Freshman Orientation

Community Relations

Faculty and Course Evaluation

Submit a le t te r of in tent to the Dean of Men's

o ff ice by 5:00 pm Monday, O ctober 20.

E le c t io n s to be held T u esd ay the 2 1 s t a t

C o n g re s s M eeting, 7:30 pm OAC.

But to the m atter at hand. Why are they important? 'They're Im­portant because they are a mass of people who feel alienated, too alienated to believe that their problems and gripes could ever be solved by talking to the people whose job it is to solve them— adm inistrators, students with some Influence behind closed doors.

Knock, knock.“ Come in.*'

........................................... . In your favorite authority figure),I d like to talk to you about things that are bothering me.*’

Gripes man. Everybody’s got gripes. So why not do some knock­ing on doors; raise a little hell backstage, (“ ...and can you im­agine fifty people a day, I said fifty people a day, walkin* in, singin* a bar of Alice*s Restaurant, and walkin' out. And friends, they may think it 's a movement.."). And it would be (Berkeley. Columbia Penn). * ,

DREXEL TRIANtiLE()< to]>rr 17, 1 % 9 -l’ngr 5

h a g e r t y s ig n s p e t i t i o n

f o r V ie tn a m w i t h d r a w a lby e lo in e moguire

During the past f«w years, many students have petition­ed to President Hagerty for various reasons. Seemingly these appeals (most notably in the ‘‘Marty and Joe l" episode) bave had tu> effect.

Last Saturday, D r. Hagerty, along with 75 other collegeI presidents, s lg n ^ a joint statement calling for a **stepped-

up timetable for withdrawal from Vietnam."To quote ^ i r statement:♦*The accumulated costs of the Vietnam war are not in

men and m aterial alone. There are costs too in the effects on young people's hopes and beUefs. Our miUtary engage­ment In Vietnam now stands as a denial of so much that is best In our society, '

**More and mcnre we see the war deflecting energies and resources from urgent business cm our own d o o rs t^ . We urge upon the President of the United States and upon Con­g ress, a stepped-up timetable for withdrawal from Vietnanu We believe ttiis to be in our country's highest interest, at home and abroad."

John R, Coleman, president of Haverford College, gather­ed initial support that resulted in the statement. After Uie presidents of Swarthmore, Princet<»i, MIT, Bryn Mawr and the University of Chicago signed the statement. Dr. Cole­man mailed It to the presidents of the leading private col« leges and universities.

The statement was mailed to President Nixon and Con­gressional leaders on Saturday night.

R ic h a r d G o o d w i n

r a i s e d f u n d s f o r h im

J u l i a n B o n d

e n d o r s e d h im

T O M G I L H O O l

T o m G i l h o o l i s c a m p a i g n i n g fo r e l e c t i o n to

P h i l a d e l p h i a C i t y C o u n c i l a s a n i n d e p e n d e n t o-

g a i n s t a d o - n o t h i n g R e p u b l i c a n a n d a D e m o c r a t i c

m a c h i n e p o l i t i c i a n . H e h a s c o n s i s t e n t l y o p p o s e d

t h e w a r in V i e t n a m . A b r i l l i a n t y o u n g l a w y e r , h e

h a s a r g u e d f o r w e l f a r e r i g h t b e f o r e t h e U .S .

S u p r e m e C o u r t . A g a i n a n d a g a i n l i e h a s b u c k e d

M a y o r T o t e a n d C i t y H a l l ,

J o i n s t u d e n t s f rom 20 c o l l e g e s to h e l p c a m p a i g n

fo r T o m G i l h o o l o n S a t u r d a y O c t o b e r 2 5 a n d N o v ­

e m b e r 1. C o m e t o G i l h o o l H e a d q u a r t e r s a t 145 S.

1 3 th S t . , R o o m 2 0 8 , b e t w e e n 9 : 3 0 a n d 1 0 : 3 0 A.M .

C a l l WA 3 - 1 9 6 9 fo r f u r t h e r i n f o r m a t i o n

ir

DREXEL TRIANGLEPagp 6—Octobrr 17, 1969

DREXEL TRIANGLEO c lo b o f 17, 1969—I’ ago 7

w h a t c an b e

a n d

w h a t wil l b e

w h o n e e d s

d e f i n i t i o n

By Lar ry Marion

January of 1970 will see the rejuvenation of the Humanities and Technology program as originally conceived: an honors pro­gram encompassing basic and 2tf>plied science, with an overdose of humanistic endeavors. Under the new design, the Humanities and Technology program will be administered by an Executive Secretary of a Hum-Tech Board, made up of faculty, administra­tion and students. The four or five year plan of cooperative edu­cation for the Hum-Techs will remain in its present situation in which the co-op job varies from poor to mediocre. A ceiling limiting the total admission will be determined. Hopefully this maximum will include only persons with the intellectual capability to embrace the spectrum that Hum-Tech provides. For instance, the facilities for urban planning majors combining economics, sociology and civil engineering are plentiful; the minds necessary to grasp this diverse knowledge are scarce, hidden or uninterested.

The preceding description is an example of the role of Hum- Tech within Drexel: to combine the varied knowledge available toward imbuing an engineer with a social conscience that al­lows him to foresee the probable results of his discoveries; to give the economist a consideration of the consumer as a human being; to develop the sociologist’s awareness concern­ing the realities of our present and future technologies.

The Hum-Tech program had grown Into a catch. J glomerate of the disaffected at Drexel: people looking f 1 own thing. And thus. King Kong begat a son, and they c nl Son of King Kong; the development of a liberal arts coll attempt to legitimize a bastard son. It will be accomplish^ immaculate conception,

Genesis. The gods of our Institute are planning, with i d minute steps, the crea tion ...a board comprised of me ters will bring forth a degree granting college of liberal' This program will, benefit those who want an English?

or psychology degree from our reputable. Institution bi, Drexel’s Science-Technology-Art syndrome through cotJ the numbers involved. The new program will attract 1 couraged beyond redemption, the disillusioned lost souls

initially uniformed that now see their own Truth-In-Life think that the “ Son of King Kong” will be a reservoi^j adequate engineers or bored biz-ads; all programs nol visioned are positive in direction, not Saviours to the drajl Dead-beats must at least have a veneer of academic profici) a creative formula for a future course; and the dedicationi low through; by then they a re not dead-beats anymore.

If you see yourself as tired of the present, poor of i. tion, and huddled together yearning to be free from the

By La rr y Ml lask

At the present moment, often defined by a set of time-sp'ice coordinates in a relativistic sense, we and the world find ourselves relatively in­secure. There is no need to explain why this is so, for definition at this level is immediately sus­pect simply because of the complexity and mag­nitude of the situation. Moreover, only Taylor Grant is allowed to be cute when deaUng with these issues—like Vietnam, Peace, and Sanity.

So, in order to allow myself a small amount of credibility, I shall only discuss a- more specific question of insecurity; one which I feel to be most certainly tied Into the question of definition. This question is the status of Drexel's “ Humanities and Technology’’ program. The “ definition” not only involves what this program is supposed to be but what education at Drexel is supposed to be!

The present situation goes something like this; The Humanities and Technology program is in need of reorganization. The reason for this re ­mains somewhat uncertain; but I do know that the files on the students in the program are “ in a m ess.’» Moreover, there seems to exist an ambient beUef that the students in the program are not properly motivated and directed. It appreas thatmany of the students participating in the Humanitiesand Technology program are only trying to find themselves, rather than working towards a specific

goal.”

The nature of this “ goal” to me also remains a

vague concept. However, it does appear to be in­extricably involved in an acceptable definition of

Humanities and Technology’ ’ at Drexel. Those stu ­dents who are uncertain as to their course of edu­cation, and hence are insecure about thereason fo r heir existence, are now even more uncertain and

insecure. What to do?

The answer to any situation of this kind in a structure is well known and well e s t-

tablished—form a committee!!A committee—that uncanny concoction of well-

meaning administrators, the coccyx of any gov- ernnient which is forever destined to study, recom ­mend and adjourn. Only on a question of definition

wUh maximum e f f e c t -

m ““ ‘■■“yed the Roman E m p lre -a Roman

was'^orm.ld*'!** ' “■ » committee*“ *“8 Humanities and

Technology program. It is to define the program

‘‘- A -

Let me make it clear at this point that the In-

« e “ '”'>■ ‘““ 8 ‘he committeeat tho attack. My quips are only directedat the committee s truc tu re" itself. If anyone

^^sonally threatened or such, I can only be horoughly apologetic-tough shiti In “ y evLV

H um anTii *" **>»* “ eht happen to the

me workings of this committee.

The definitioi nology is sup will determine! in the program i will determine'* gram will recei fear the latter wt|

As I now sei| Humanities and' that students course of studj manner the fie* Just how thesel what purpose is most import know in advanc

not simply entH the various pfjsimply find >ii goal—one he rhetoric of the can he l)e traine*

It is unlikelyj establish a syst There are too the people whoi The question he< education. It definition of Hun ports to turn t

tional prison that presently traps you, plan your own Uberation. The time is sho rt—the new program may be submitted to the Board of Trustees in December and enacted (by the as yet un­chosen creators) beginning January, 1970, If all the organiza­tion can be done. What must be accomplished Is the adaption of the Planning Commission Report, the report from the Dept, of Public Instruction and student input during this term , all com­bined Into a coherent and malleable prescription, firm of foundation and sense of direction.

There Is a pessim ism , an Inner doubt, a subtle sense that the bureaucratic p rocesses here cannot function that rapidly; the unnamed committee has a tremendous task. The attitude that has already been established Is one that listens to student de­sire s . These desires must be articulated, so that definite pro­posals can be distilled from them. On Monday, October 20, stu­dents can dem onstrate their Interest In realizing Individual de­sires by attending and participating In the open Hum-Tech boai d meeting. The sole purpose of this meeting Is to listen to what the students want. Consider this a hypothetical “ carte-blanche” ; if enou^ care there will be a productive reality—students will obtain what they want from the dominant Establishment at Drexel, If enough care to comment, the Board Is obligated to listen and produce.

te n y e a rs a f te r

By Jay Lockman

The Drexel Mid Range and Long Range Planning Commission

met during the past summer to determine goa ls and po l icy for

th e l n s t i tu t e o v e r th e next ten y e a r s . The Com miss ion was com­

p o s e d o f s tu den ts , facu lty , adminis trators , tru s tees and alumni.

Their recommendations would o s te n s ib l y become school po l icy .

The fo llowing is the f irst part o f an a n a lys i s o f the Com mis ­

s ion Report.

Committee on Academic Role and Scope has an Impressive ring to It. The specific document that this committee produced Is equally Impressive, though as a whole It has a curious flavor. If It were a person, we would say that It was schizophrenic. It lacks

positive Identity.For the College of Home Economics, as well as the Evening

College The College of Business Administration, and The Col­lege of Science, the philosophy of the report can be summed up in the phrase: “ The future will be much like the present, only more so ” Perhaps the Committee was reluctant to prescribe direction in ' more detail, or perhaps It simply felt that an adequate job w ^ already being done. In any case, for these colleges, policy for the next ten years has been left pretty much up to the individual deans.

The situation Is somewhat different In the prospectus for the

c o m m i t t e e o n a c a d e m i c r o l e a n d s c o p e —e x c e r p t s

college of engineeringa t iv e e d u c a t io n c an be p r e s e n te d more e f f e c t iv e ly to s t u d e n t s from

h ig h er incom e f a m i l i e s . '

" U n d e r g r a d u a t e e n g in e e r in g e d u c a t io n in c re as in g ly wil l becom e a

p r e p a r a t i o n for a w ide sp e c t ru m of p r o f e s s i o n s such as m anagem ent ,

u rban p l a n n in g , in format ion s c i e n c e s . T o w a r d s t h i s en d s a b roader

u n d e r g r a d u a te e n g in e e r in g c u rr icu lum with g re a te r s c o p e for e l e c t i v e s

w il l be i n i t i a t e d , "

Immanitles and social sciences“ In o rd e r t o b e e f f e c t iv e , th e D iv i s io n shou ld imm edia te ly ob ta in

c o l l e g i a t e s t a t u s e q u a l to e x i s t i n g u n i t s and should offer both b a c ­

c a l a u r e a t e a n d a d v a n c e d d e g r e e s in i t s own c h o se n a r e a s . T h e Hu-

m a n i t i e s and T e c h n o l o g y program sh o u ld be re ta in ed a s a un ique in-

t e r d i s c i p l i n a r y u n d e rg ra d u a te program for s t u d e n t s who s e e k a broad-

ly b a s e d c u r r icu lu m in te g ra t in g s c i e n c e and h u m a n i t ie s . F l e x ib i l i ty

in s t r u c tu r e o f ‘t h e program c a n b e m ain ta in e d through con t inued ex ­

p e r im e n ta t i o n . ”

urban responsibility

cooperative education“ A s p i r i t of e x p e r im e n ta t i o n sh o u ld be e n co u ra g ed . Spec ia l a t t e n t io n

s h o u ld b e g iv e n to u t i l i z in g the indus try p e r io d s for independen t a d ­

v a n c e d s tu d y . A s e r i o u s p rogram shou ld be u n d e r tak en of how the

n e e d s of many s t u d e n t s for f i n a n c i a l su p p o r t c an be met so t h a t s tu ­

d e n t s a r e f r e e to c h o o s e t h e i r jo b s b a s e d on e d u c a t io n a l oppor tun ity ,

o p p o r tu n i ty for t r a v e l , o r o p p o r tu n i ty for community so c i a l work, ^-on-,

v e r s e l y , s e r i o u s s tu d y sh o u ld be g iv e n of how the b e n e f i t s of cooper-

“ Drexel r e c o g n i z e s a comm itm ent to t h e w e l fa re of i t s sur round ing

urban c o m m u n i ty ."“ T h e t e c h n ic a l r e s o u r c e s of D rexe l wil l be a v a i l a b l e to s tudy prob­

l e m s of th e c i ty and to c o o p e r a te in t h e i r s o lu t io n in a r e a s w i th in t h i s

in s t i t u t i o n ’ s c o m p e t e n c y . "“ In se rv in g t h e c o m m u n i t i e s ’ e d u c a t io n a l n e e d s , Drexel wil l d i r e c t

i t s e f fo r t s to th e e d u c a t io n of t h o s e who can b e n e f i t from i ts s e v e ra l

a c a d e m ic p rogram s. S in ce t h e r e now e x i s t s a smoll num ber of a p p l i ­

c a t i o n s com pared to t h e s i z e of t h e b l a c k com m uni ty , D rexe l sh o u d

t a k e a g g r e s s i v e m e a s u r e s to s e e k ou t t h o s e who h a v e a r e o s o n a b le

ch o n c e to c o m p e te in our re g u la r a c a d e m ic p ro g ra m ."

innovation in teocliing methods“ F a r g re a te r a t t e n t io n sh o u ld be g iv en to in n o v a t io n in in d u s t r ia l

m e th o d s . C a re fu l s t u d i e s of a d v a n c e s in pedogogy , su c h a s pro­

grammed in s t ru c t io n , TV in s t r u c t io n , s e l f s tu d y , s t u d e n t - t au g h t

c l a s s e s , courses t a u g h t on th e c a s e s tu d y , mult i -n .^dio in s tru c t io n

should be c a r r i ed out . Some f ra c t io n of th e in s t r u c t io n a l bu d g e t sh o u ld

be a l l o c a t e d for r e s e a r c h on in s t r u c t io n a l m e th o d s . At D re x e l , we

shou ld gea r our t e a c h in g m e th o d s t o o p h i lo so p h y th a t e d u c a t io n is

th e s tu d e n t ' s responsibility and h e sh o u ld be b rought to a rea iz a t io n

th a t e d u c a t io n m us t be th e co n ce rn of t h e s tu d e n t h im s e l f , s e l f -w i l l e d

and In a la rg e m e a su re s e l f - d i r e c t e d . "

at Humanities and Tech- ^ean Is very important. It jrnally directed a student

In a sense, the deflaltlon those students In the pro­

education or a training, I iie case.

tie desired definition of the alogy program will require program pursue a specific

Igned to combine In some I humanities and technology,

will be combined and for I up to the student. But what I that the student will have to

his goal is to be. He can- I explore, to expose himself Its of the environment, to

He must have a definite Kpress in the non-meaning nic establishment. Only then'

San he be directed,[any committee could really

rigid as the one I outlined, ways to get around it, and

Ister It are also only human, awever, involves concepts of Qus that I am opposed to a Bs and Technology which pur-

logram into a glorified spe­

cial studies program, I am opposed to a d e fla ­tion of Humanities and Technology to those stu­dents who are dissatisfied with established and defined courses of study the opportunity to pur­sue their studies for the sheer joy of study Itself, What I would really Uke to see Hu­manities and Technology is an antidefinition.

Give the student who desires to do so a chance to make his own definitions. And, If he des res the chance to re ject definitions me, he will continue to exist and pay his tuition. Give the student, who wishes to, the oppo^timity to enter Into the process of than being only the passive receptor of endless S , 7 t is the need and desire of today’s stu­dents to establish the Unlits and process of their own education-they wiU not ^estabUshed patterns and definitions, ^ n t It happen to the Humanities and Technology pro­gram , or It wlU simply die.

If the administration cannot be secure unlessth i're"!: a^’C r k a U e . . definition

— ti!:. ~ 1 . let it

rTlc"L.gy. p r o g r a m JS

m lttees,”

College of Engineering. Here, issue has long been building up for change. C ries have been heard from aU directions, including from within the professions themselves, for a reform in the education poUcy of engineering institutions. The committee was to some ex­tent caught up in the sp irit of the tim es. They called for a broad­e r undergraduate engineering curriculum with electives The effect this will have on Drexel s individual de- f i t m e n t ; remains to be seen. It is however, a mandate for me

kind of program many people have ^ iiT taIn the Graduate School of L ibrary Science, the trend will be

toward more full time students and a decided emphasis on al­ternative technologies to handle information vending In «^e fu ^ re . Specifically, the report says, “ ,„the School must move " \^ h more heavily into instruction In non-print media services and ®^ucat o n ^ technology,” With the demand for information s to r a p f techniques becoming more vital each day, the School will be a - v i c in g into new and exciting ground. Potentially this Program c ^ be more Important than any other at DrexeU If it may well come to be known more for Its Information freaks than Its

®“^ e r the committee caUed for incorporation of ‘h®J)ivlsion ofHumanities and Social Sciences into the Institute with co lle^atestatus it hopefully provided the final Impetus for this much n e e d ^stfp ip l T h f advantages of such a change have beenfor some time, and work is now In progress towards fulfilling thisgoal. Of equal Interest though, is themittee on the status of the Hum-Tech Program,for retention of the program, and maintenance of flexibility instructure,„through continued experimentation,” FlexlblUty has beena H u r T « h probtem for years, and it wlU t a e faith ina large measure of administrative genius to prevent the programfrom becoming as rigid as the re s t of the Institute,

The report’s sections on Urban ResponslblUty and ^ o y ^ t lo n In Teaching Methods are reprinted on this page In their entirety, sine Drexel has had no previously stated policy on either of these areas.

•I •:

I !I

DREXEL TRIANGLE1‘a g r B -Ortobf-p 17, 1969

S P B q u e s t i o n n a i r e

h i '

it

; . . i '■

M

1 I

r

‘ I*

In an effort to evaluate the complete scope of our activities, we are providing you with the opportunity to comment on our events. If you help us evaluate our past programs, and give us guidelines for future ones, we will attempt to plaii them accordingly. Please return the questionnaire in boxes in the Great Court or in the DAC.

Please feel free to use additional paper for answers.

1. ANSWER KEY; use the most appropriate number:

DIDN’T GO1. cost too much2. not interested3. didn’t know about it4. conflicted with another event

WENT5. disappointed6. O.K.7. great time8. other reasons (specify)

2. PAST PROGRAMS - MAJOR EVENTS Wild Welcome MixerOrgyLecture, Arthur C. Clark Casino Nlte Ski Weekend Go Go Dance Welsh Choir

3. SERIES EVENTS(If you partlcpated in any one of these In a series) Friday Night Flicks Day Ski TripsLatin Casino Dinner Parties Self-Defense Lessons W ater Ice Socials Day excursions to New York Day excursions to Washington

4. OTHER ORGANIZATIONS* EVENTSDan Night meet representatives of all actlvltesHomecoming ConcertFraternity Seml-FormalsFrosh Orientation WeekendPi Kj^ ShowTep Play

5. PLEASE ANSWER “ YES»» OR *‘NO»» to the following questions:DO YOU READThe Triangle regularly?Banners hung in the court?Activities Calendar?Posters in key points?SPB Scene?Signs on bulletin boards?

6. DO YOU LIKE PSYCHEDELIC1. Lighting Effects Yes2. Posters Yes3. Music Yes

NoNoNo

• t

4. Groups, like the Vanilla Fudge Yes No

7. DO YOU SPEND MOST OF YOUR LEISURE TIME IN (Rate 1 to 5)CourtDAC'CafeteriasLibraryLounges'

8. DO YOU READ THE SPB SCENE OR WALLET CALENDAR? Yes No

9. ARE YOU IN A SOCIAL FRATERNITY OR SO­RORITY? Yes No

10. ARE YOU A COMMUTER? Yes No

11. DO YOU LIVE ON CAMPUS? Yes No

“t UDENtT ' T / ° " NO

“ O®® th a n on e pe r so n onTHE PROGRAM BOARD? Yes No

14. ON THE WHOLE, ARE YOU SATISFIED WITH DREXEL ACTIVITES: Yes No

® * S A T E .FACTORY JOB OF PROVIDING EVENTS? Yes No

16. WOULD YOU LIKE TO GET THE AC­TIVITIES CALENDAR WHILE IN INDUSTRY? Yes No

17. DO YOU p o W WHERE THE SPB OFFICE B? iCS No

19. CIRCLE THE ACTIVITIES YOU WOULD LIKE TO SEE MORE OF:Mixers Dated Dated Dances Area Bus Trips Variety Shows Plays Big Name ConcertsClassical Concerts Road Rallies' Orgy Pinnocle Tournaments Nifty Lectures Lessons Daytime Events Weekends Week Nlte Events

Skimmer Weekend

20. LIST ONE OR TWO SPB EVENTS YOU REMEM­BER FROM LAST YEAR.

21. WHAT WOULD YOU LIKE TO SEE MORE OF? (Put 1 after most desired, 2 after second, etc.) Big Name LecturesNewly Released Films Trips; (1) to resort areas

(2) to nearby points of interest(3) anywhere In the U.S.(4) foreign

Big Name Rock Concert Karate Lessons

TRAVEL

22. WERE YOU INFORMED ENOUGHABOUT ALL THE TRIPS? Yes No

23. WERE YOU NOTIFIED OF OUR TRIPS THROUGH Court DropBulletin Board in Main BuildingTriangleOther - Specify.

24. SPB CAN RUN BUSES TO ALMOST ANYWHERE. WHERE WOULD YOU LIKE TO SEE US RUN A TRIP?

25. SPB IS GOING TO RUN SEVERAL TRIPS TO NEW YORK CITY. WOULD YOU GO ON A TRIP OF THIS SORT? (Buses leave at 9 in the morning and leave New York 12 at night.)Yes No Comment

26. WHERE WOULD YOU LIKE TO SEE A TRIP RUN? WHAT STATE?

27. DO YOU INTEND TO PARTICIPATE IN ANY OF THE SPB SKI TRIPS OR SKI WEEKEND?Yes No

28. WOULD YOU LIKE TO SEE A BUS RUN TO WASHINGTON ON NOV. 15 FOR THE VIET NAM WAR DEMONSTRATION IN ADDITION TO THE TRIPS TO NEW YORK ON OCT. 18 AND NOV. 8 AND TO WASHINGTON ON NOV. 22? Yes No

29. DO YOU THINK THE NEW YORK AND WASH­INGTON TRIPS ARE WORTH $2 or $3?Yes No

LECTURE

30. WHAT TYPE OF SPEAKER ARE YOU MOST INTERESTED IN? (Check appropriate one.) Political and Governmental PersonalitiesCivil Rights Leaders Political Scientists Columnists L iterary Figures TV Personalities News Commentators Social Critics Top Scientists

31. WOULD YOU PREFER AFTERNOON OR EVE­NING LECTURE PROGRAMS?Afternoon about 3;30 Evening

32. WHAT DAY OF THE WEEK IS THE MOST CONVENIENT FOR YOU?

33. WOULD YOU ATTEND DISCUSSION GROUPSOR LECTURES ON DRUGS AND NARCOTICS? Yes No

34. DO YOU THINK IF THE SPB HELD A TOWN MEETING SOME AFTERNOON TO ANSWER STU­DENT QUESTIONS ABOUT ITS EVENTS (PASTPM SENT AOT FUTURE) IT WOULD BE BENeI if ICIAL? Yes No

35. WHEN WOULD BE THE BEST TIME?Day NightM T W T F

p e o p l e YOUWOULD BE INTERESTED IN HEARING IN L E C T U R ^

SPECIAL EVENTS

37. WOULD YOU BE INTERESTED IN WORKING ON A COMMITTEE TO RUN A TYPE OF DREXEL SKIMMER WEEK?If yes, print NAME ADDRESS PHONE

38. DO YOU HAVE ANY SUGGESTIONS FOR THIS KIND OF EVENT?

39. WE ARE GOING TO TRY TO HAVE A BIG NAME CONCERT THIS YEAR. NUMBER YOUR PREFER­ENCE AS TO THE LOCATION.Armory Auditorium Outside (field)Other

ORGYS

40. DID YOU ATTEND THE ORGY? 'IF NOT, WHY?

41. WHAT WAS YOUR REACTION TO THE MOVIES?

42. WOULD YOU PREFER FRIDAY OR SATURDAY? What time?

43. WOULD YOU BE INTERESTED IN TAKING SELF- DEFENSE LESSONS?Yes No

/

44. WOULD YOU BE INTERESTED IN PARTICIPAT­ING IN A WEEKEND ROAD RALLY?Yes No

FILMS '

45. DO YOU HAVE ANY IDEAS AS TO HOW THE FRIDAY NIGHT FLICKS CAN BE IMPROVED?

46. WHAT FILMS WOULD YOU BE INTERESTED IN SEEING?

47. DO YOU INTEND TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE 4:30 SHOWING OF THE FRIDAY NIGHT FLICKS'? Yes No

48. WOULD YOU LIKE TO SEE THE RETURN OF THE EXCEPTIONAL FILM SERIES?Yes No

SOCIAL

49. DO YOU HAVE ANY SUGGESTIONS ON HOW WE CAN IMPROVE OUR MIXERS?

50. WOULD YOU ATTEND A DATED DINNER DANCE OR A SPRING PROM, UNDER ANY CONDITIONS? Yes No If no, why not?

51. WOULD YOU ATTEND A DATED DANCE WHICH DID NOT INCLUDE DINNER BUT DID HAVE A BAR? Yes No

52. DID YOU ATTEND THE SPRING PROM?Yes No

53. WHAT CAN WE DO TO MAKE YOU ATTEND t h e s p r in g PROM?

54. WHAT CHANGES CAN YOU'RECOMMEND?

* ^ ™ E R s e e i t FORMAL OR SEMI-FORMAL?

S S SPONSOR TOO MANY ORTOO FEW MIXERS? (Circle)

D A N i^ ^ DATED DINNERD ^ C E IN THE SPRING FEATURING:

“ ocean linerMusic by a rock bandTie and jacket (no need to rent a tux)

by ^ ^Yes No

w h a t WOULD YOU BE

uideVjM. ™ *■ (Perperson)?$5.00 1 6 . 0 0

Over $6.00

L.1IUL b e s t ABOUT THEM?

Greek gridders in heated contest;

PKPr TC, DSP remain undeafted

DREXEL TRIANGLEOctober 17, 1969 -P ag r 9

B y B o b C o w a r d

P K P 44 S P 32In what must have been one

of the wildest games in a long time, Pi Kap came from behind in the second half to edge a strong Sigma Pi six , 44-32. Sigma Pi took an early 26-7 lead on 3 touchdown passes and a 5 yard run by Barry Thompson. But Pi Kap would not fold. They slow­ly picked away at Sigma P i’s big lead, and took a 28-26 lead in the third quarter. Sigma Pi came back to lead 32-28 on a Thompson 50 yard T.D. run, but it wasn't enough as P i Kap scored 2 more tim es to sea l the big win. For Pi Kap, Altimore threw 5 touchdown passes, 3 to Jim Miller, and one each to Tom Schneider and John Shivers. Mike Varsally also threw a touchdown to Gary Auld. F or Sigma Pi, Barry Thompson was outstand­ing, running and throwing the backing, mainly to Ed Burke (2 touchdowns) and A1 C alabria (1 touchdown).

LCA 18 SAM 0LCA finally got its offenses

rolling as it used a powerful of­fense and a tough defense to de­feat “ Sammy” 18-0. LCA was led by the running and passing of QB Mike Poulick. Poulick scored on a fine 35 yard run and threw 2 touchdown passes, one each to “ Stubbs” McKenna and Wes Carver. “ Sammy” could never get started as LCA’s de­fense completely sm othered their offense. For Sammy, Rich Mc­

Pherson and John Reeser were outstanding in the defense bacic- fleld.

D S P 26 S A T 6

I think if we could eliminate the f irs t quarter, and just use the second, third and fourth, DSP would be untouchable. For the second week in a row, DSP sta rt­ed slow, but exploded to score 26 points in less than 3 quarters to defeat SAT. Bob PolliU threw 4 touchdown passes, 2 to Joe An­thony and one each to Mike Mur- lino and Harry Weaver. But the story again was DSP defense which held an improved SAT team to one touchdown; that com­ing on a Renshaw to Ank- rum touchdown pass in the 3rd quarter. Renshaw, Ankrum and Kamon played a fine game for SAT while Shafner and West were outstanding in DSP defense back- field.

T E P 14 T K E 14

I think the Takers were a little surprised by the way TEP play­ed in the firs t half. On the sec­ond play of the game, TEP’s blitzing defense hailed Rich Te- desco for a safety. Minutes later, on fourth down, Phil Cross threw a perfect pass to Larry Mittle- man for a touchdown. TKE scor­ed on a safety, but that was all ’til the fourth quarter when TKE tied the score on a Tedesco to Mike Chi TD pass. But TEP came right back to score on a c ro ss to Mittleman Pass. With time running out, Tedesco threw to Tom Hunt for the topping touch­

down. TEP 's defense played an excellent game, with Tom Wolf and Ken Masterton coming up with key interceptions. For TKE, Tom Hunt and Gerry Madden went both ways and played a fine game.

P L P 12 A P L 7

Pi Lam scored the biggest up­set of the year with their 12-7 win over “ Apple P ie .” Robin Brobst threw 2 touchdown pass­es to Tom Basalik, one in the firs t quarter and one in the third. During this time, PLP defense held APL at bay. “ Ap­ple P ie” finally got on the board in the fourth quarter on a Bob McCunney touchdown run. Mc- Cunney then threw to Yanoshik for the extra point. With only 5 points separating them, Pi Lam dug in to hold “ Apple P ie” and preserve their victory.

T C 13 P S K 0

TC ran into a fired-up PSK team Sunday, but used their ex­cellent defense to forge PSK into mistakes and a 13-0 vic­tory. PSK held TC scoreless in the first quarter, but a Raupuk to Kearny scoring pass started the second quarter. TC applied continued pressure causing bad passes and an interception by A1 Schreiber. The Raupuk to Kear­ny act was repeated in the third quarter, and that was all TC needed. For PSK, the entire de­fense played very well, stopping TC scoring machine and allowing only 2 scores.

L a f a y e t t e b e a t s B r o w n m e n in t h e f o u r t h q u a r t e r ; s q u a d o p t i m i s t i c a b o u t G e t t y s b u r g g a m e o u t c o m e

Continued from page 12

the two, safety Lynn Ferguson picked off a Lafayette pass on the 50 and returned it 33 yards to the 17. A Schwering to Myers combination brought the ball to the 10 yard line. Schwering ran for 5 more and again for three where the third quarter ended. From two yards out the call went to Dan Miller, who took two plays to cover the needed ground. Ed Wieland kicked the point after touchdown to narrow the gap to 13-7.

With 14:00 remaining in the final period, the Dragons had a lot of work in front of them. Follow­ing the kickoff, Paul Lit recov­ered a fumble on the Leopard 39. Two plays later, a Schwering pass was intercepted on the Lafayette 24. However, the home team couldn’t move and they were forced to punt. The same result came about at the end of three Drexel attmpts. Once again the Leopards had the ball on their own 25 yard line. Showing their rea l offensive capabilities, they moved 75 yards in only six plays to cross the goal line for their third T.D. of the afternoon. The PAT was good and the score stood at 20-7.

With only a few minutes re -

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maining on the clock, the Dragons turned all out to their air game in hopes of tying the score. On the Blue and Gold's fourth offen­sive, play, a Schwering pass was intercepted in Lafayette te rrito ry and returned to DIT’s 37. The time remaining in the ball game was only 28 seconds when the home team notched their last score of the day. The point after attempt was good and the score stood at 27-7.

The final score was no indica­tion of the type of game played by the scrappy Dragons, Out­weighed and supposedly outclass­ed, they did an outstanding job containing the second ranked Lambert Bowl team. This same type of desire and guts-out ball will have to be shown in tomor­row ’s game against the Bullets of Gettysburg College. If it is , then a big victory could be in the mak­ing.

Thank You Great

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WE N E E D WORLD F E D E R A T I O N

L-O-O-K ____

G en t lem en : p l e a s e sen d informa­t io n ab o u t World F e d e r a l i s t s ,

U.S.A.

N am e ■

Add. • ----------------------------------------------

C i t y ------------------------- .Zip.

(wri te : W F/USA , 2006 Walnut St. , P h i lo . 19103 . L 0 c u s t 3 » 7 0 2 5

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o p i n i o n s a n d g r i p e s f r o m t l i e i e d i t o r ’s m a i l l i a gEditor, Drexel Triarjgle:

Upon reading “ a quick and dirty history of Vietnam /' (Tri­angle, Oct, 10), I realized that you overlooked a few facts which seemed to me to be relevant to the subject.

F irst, you mentioned the country of Annam which existed when the European traders came, but you did not mention the

country of Tonkin which also existed at that time. Today, the borders of Annam are approxi­mately those of South Vietnam, while the borders of Tonkin are approximately those of North Vietnam. There are two countries in what we now call Vietnam. Previous to the French conquest there was rivalry between the two countries for centuries. With this knowledge, the logical mind is forced to call Ho Chi Minh and his Viet-Minh imperialists rather than nationalists.

You also mentioned nothing a- bout the years of disruption in a nei^boring country—L a o s - caused by the Viet-Minh, This is Nationalism?

Also it is a fact that the Viet-Minh aided Mao Tse-Tung in his Communist revolution in China, This is Nationalism?

Finally, the Vietnamese from the Tonkin Delta have pro­claimed: “ We will have the space

^ F E S T IV A L ,F r id a y , O c t . 3 1 • 7 P M

Janis Jopiin Joe cocKer B. B. King Santana

S a t . , N o v . 1 • 7 P M

Canned Heat The Yeungbioods ciiiGago Transit

Autiiority Santana

Light Show by Electric Factory Sound by Festival Group

CIV IC C E N T E RC O N V E N T I O N H A L L

34th & Civic C en te r Blvd., Phila.

Tickets $4 • $5 • $6 • $7On Sale at Electric Factory, 2201

Classman’s Ticket AgencyArchGimbel’s Chelt. & Center City • Wana- makers • All Sears Stores • Hassle Record Store, Sansom Village • Herb Auritt Men's Store, Castor & Cottman • Wee Three Record Shops. Plymouth Meeting Mall and Moorestown (N.J.) Mall • Mads Record Shop, 9 E Lan­caster, Ardmore •

( o k (Clip a n d Mail to:ELECTRIC FACTORY 2201 Arch St.. Phila. 19103 * In formation: P hone LO 3-9284 Enclosed is check or MO payable to

Electric Factory for tickets @

5 ______ _ ea. totalling $for performances checked below: ' n Fri.. Oct . 31 • 7 PM [i; Sa t . . Nov. 1 • 7 PM PLEASE PRINT DT 1017

Name

Address

City

State & Z ip ___________ ___________ I

Day Phone_________ ___________ jEnclose Mif-addrtssad itampad env. |

we need,,. One day Indochina (Laos, Tonkin, Annam, Cam­bodia, and Cochinchina) will no longer be a collection of separate and distinct countries, but a single country impregnated with Vietnamese blood, inspired by Vietnamese dynamism and power of action,(“ Storm Over Laos,” pp, 23-24, Sisook Na Champas- sak, PREAGER, N,Y., 1961)" This is Nationalism?

Richard J, Grandzol Graduate Student

o p t i m i s m ?Editor, Drexel Triangle;

This reader, unable to share the bit of optimism expressed by Michele Krahn in her article *‘if P.T, Barnum Were Alive Today.,.,” was disturbed by her reference to Mr. Tom Men- denhalPs “ eloquent silence.’* I might describe that temporary

Krahn would have a happier tale to telU Past Student Body P resi­dent Sam Messinger had every right to be disappointed since, after donating so much time and effort to activating our student

retirem ent period more ad­equately as annoying and untimely, leaving the burden of that office prim arily on the shoulders of Congress' one full­time administrator, Rick Rob­erts . It seems that thinking a- bout one’s duties and responsi­bilities leaves less to be desired than performing them, and I suggest that had Congress been given a bit more executive guid­ance at a time when the Student Body President, a relative stranger to Drexel ‘‘politics" needed such a commodity, Miss

government, Congress was permitted to dwindle to its present state of affairs. Judging from the comments I have en­countered lately, the loss of mo­mentum suffered in the last four months could have more of a serious effect, in term s of stu­dent support, than is presently evident.

Unwilling to take a completely fatalistic outlook, I nevertheless must express my concern that the ‘‘enthusiastic students" sought by the Congress speaker in the closing moments of the meeting might now be much fewer and farther between.

W. Martin McCabeC. E. 1971

m o r a t o r i u mEditor, Drexel Triangle:

A percentage of non-collegians and those whose lives are not

to participate. And after only 45,000 American deaths, (appar­ently, concern over any less extensive m assacre, say 35,000 deaths, is unwarranted.) Can it be that the depths of public torpor and apathy are not really un­fathomable?

The question is rhetorical. Having been aroused from its stupor by a fantastic succession of outrages, the public will dis­cover that any demonstration at this juncture, irrespective of its magnitude (short of a major in­surrection), must be an exercise in futility. The moratorium is predicated upon a misconception, to wit; that this country is a democracy, and that the sentiments of the populace have

directly imperiled by the Viet­nam conflict are actually according the scheduled mora­torium their invaluable appro- bration; some are even deigning

political efficacy. Taurine excre­ments I Nixon, in asserting his intransigent disregard for the opinions of his constituency, has as much as avowed that, between elections, he is nothing less than a despot. Although it may prove slightly deleterious to the nation’s economy and mildly dis­ruptive of students’ education, a suspension of “ business-as- usual” in no way constrains Richard Nixon to withdraw one additional soldier from Vietnam, although he may embark on a “ one-a-day” program, hoping we will be mollified by a forseeable termination of the war within 900 years. A suspension of Richard Nixon (preferably, by the neck) might be more efficacious, but is, unfortunately, somewhat less viable.

Vice President Agnew has characterized the Vietnam mora­torium as “ absurd .” Perhaps it is . Considerably less absurd than the election of a mental deficient to the Vice-Presidency but absurd nevertheless because of its Impotency.

Even were it to be irrefutably established that a majority of Americans were opposed to our Vietnam policy (and it will be virtually impossible to ascertain with any accuracy the magnitude of participation in the mora­torium), Nixon would be obliged to do nothing more than pre­varicate somewhat more vigor­ously in 1972. If Nixon refuses to heed an orderly show of public opinion (as is , apparently, his prerogative and proclivity), then, manifestly, our only effectual recourse is a DISORDERLY demonstration of adequate pro­portions to constitute a disruption that can not be d isregarded. The war MUST end. Taxpayers will not subsidize it indefinitely. We students do not wish to kill and we do not wish to die. We do

not even wish to be subjugated by an institution so repugnant and dehumanizing as the military for the purpose of conducting an im m oral war.

Sincerely yours,Mark B. Fishman *74

L e c t u r e Co mmi t t ee

p r e s e n ts

DICK GREGORY

Tues. Oct. 28 8:00 P.M.Grand Hal l - DAC

T i c k e t s a t DAC D e s k

F N F : " T h e G r e a t R a c e ” 4 : 3 0 & 7 : 3 0 M o t h e s o n H a l l

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TYPIN G-THESIS, MANUSCRIPTS,

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MASON WILLIAMS(C om poser o f “ C la s s ic a l G as'*}

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S a t u r d a y , O c t . 1 8 a t 1 : 3 0 P . M .

DREXEL TRIANGLEO rtobrr 17, 1969-Pagr 11

1. Shgryl A lbahari 2. Debbie B artleson 3. Sharon Bailey

hom ecom ing queen candidatesAll matriculated students can vote for Homecoming Queen

in the Greo4 Court. Voting will begin today, and last until

Thursday, October 23. You may vote at the booth from

10 a.m. until 2:30 p.m. daily.

4. T an y a Binder 5. K ath leen B oas

THE D R EX EL TRIANG LEEstablished 1926

M«mb«r

USSPA, ACP

O ffic ia l new spaper pub lished by the s tuden ts o f Drexel In s t i tu te o f Technology, 32nd and C hestnu t S tree ts , P h i l ­adelphia, Opinions exp re s se d in s igned columns are not n ecessa r i ly those o f the In s t i tu te or o f The Triangle. Phone: BA 2-1654 or E V 7-2400,(E x te n s io n 2118).

Editor-in-C hief......................................... Jay LockmanBusiness M an ag er ................................... Lynn K. LaudermanManaging E d i t o r ...................................... Mik* Kyle

Editorial Board: J a y L o ck m an , L y n n K. L au d e rm an , Mike K yle ,

J a y F re e d m a n , N an cy K o lk e b e c k , J o e McGowan, C ra ig N ygard ,

E l a i n e MaGuire .

N ew s: E l a i n e M aguire , n e w s ed ito r ; J im K itch , Kathy K ow ale -

zyk , M ich e le K rahn , J im L e w is , Larry Marion, C ra ig Nygard ,

Jo h n S i l v a s i , J a c k G ed io n , B a rb a ra H u d d le s to n .

Features: N a n c y K o lk e b ec k , ed ito r ; L in d a T h o m p so n , a s s ' t

e d i to r , E l l i s C o h e n , J e a n n e K yle , Tom J e r e m ia h , A lex T u r fa .

Sports: J o e McGowan, ed i to r ; J im B u d in e tx , A rn ie R iew e , S tev e

B o c in o , Mike C h a in , Dove S te in , D a v e Urquhart*

Copy: B ruce^M oryanoff , copy h e a d ; Ivy F l e c k , Caro l H a r r i s ,

T e r ry K yle , E u s t a c h y L u k a s i e w i c z , Marty T u n n e l l , Jo c k T o o le .

B u s in e s s : Lynn L au d e rm an , m anager; C a r o le K ru sh o w sk y , as> s i s t a n t m anage r; S te v e B a r th a , C ar l G o u s e , Marci G o ld s t e in ,

Mike Krahn, J im L e w is , D e n n is N e id e r , Tom P o l l a c k , S teve

R h o d e s id e , J e f f R o b e r t s , L in d a T h o m p so n , Marty T u n n e l l , A|

W alker, B er t W ein traub , L y le Wolf.

Daguerreotypes and stuff: J a y F re e d m a n , Kim Archer .

F a c u l t y A d v i s o r ..................... .................................. R aym ond L o r a n t a s

12. Carol Mordigion 13. V a la r ie Sandillo 14. B arbara Saunders

Tonite thru Sat.MANDRAKE MEMORIAL

O ct . 2 2 - 2 5 W e d . - S a t .

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F iV F “ The Great Race, Shows: 4:30 & 7:30 Matheson Hall

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C L A S S IF IE D ADS

C la ss i f ie d ad rates: $1.25 for 25 words per i s su e , $.25 for each add it iona l 5 words. P lace c la s ­s i f i e d ads in Triangle mailbox in the D.A.C. or contact Adver­t i s in g Manager, Room 52 in the D.A.C.

Typlng-tarin papers, masters and doc* toral dissert ions . Printing>24 hr. ser* vice, xeroxing 4 & 3 cents , posters, photography. Penn Towne Printing and Typing Service, 3733 Wolnut St. EV 2 ^7 2 7 .____________________ ___

Overcoats (excellent condition) for sa le . Select coat and liner. Limited supply. $10.00 cash. Contact ROTC Supply at EV 7-2400, ext. 209S or basement. National Armory.

Part-time Secretory: Irregular hours, but needed 8 - 1 0 hours per week - Paid on hourly rote - Excellent work­ing conditions - Contact Hal Conner, D.A.C. 208 ext. 2106, or SA 7-9230.

WANTED: Self-starting Entrepeneur Campus-oriented marketing company seeking Campus Monoger. The right man will organise and direct on-cam- pus field force in advertising, pro­motion and research projects. Fixed fee plus commissions and o chance to grow with a dynamic young com­pany. Write for gpplicotion todoy. Regional Manager 175 Jefferson Rood Princeton, New Jersey 08540.

Part-time Campus Rep.i Put up adv. posters , earn $S-$10 per hour. No selling. Write Univ. Publications, Bex 20133, Denver, CO 8-0220 for de ta i ls .

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DREXEL TRIANGLEI’ngf l2 -()rtob . p 17, l% 9

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sportssports

sports

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T H E S T A R T - O u r c r o s s - c o u n t r y t e a m i s o f f a n d r u n n i n g a g a i n s t P M C a n d G e t t y s b u r g C o l l e g e

a t B e l m o n t P l a t e a u . T h i s w a s b u t t h e b e g i n n i n g o f a n a g o n i z i n g f i v e - m i l e r o c e , in w h i c h o u r f o r c ­e s d e f e a t e d b o th o f t h e i r a d v e r s a r i e s .

Gridders fall to Lafayette College; Leopards score twice in last period

By B u c k T a b l e r

The Drexel Dragons dropped their second game last Saturday, to the Leopards of Lafayette Col­lege at Easton, Pa. It was a tough loss for the Dragons who enter­ed the locker room at the half with only one T.D, scored against them by the number two team in contention for the Lambert Bowl. Without a doubt, Drexel played some of its best ball in that half. There can be no question about that by anyone who was there watching, the Dragons played their hearts out.

F i r s t H a l f

The first quarter was a hard fought battle by both teams. A fine display of defense was put on by the Dragons; as well as by Lafayette. Neither team could progress in the seesaw battle be­ing waged on the field. It wasn’t until the second quarter when things started breaking loose. It started when a punt put Drexel with their backs to the wall on the 3. The Dragons were forced to punt and the return was to their own 44 yard line. From the2 7 the Leopards scored their first touchdown with 8 1/2 minutes left in the half. The extra point was

T here A lre a d yBy J o e M c G o w a n

Since spring of 1968, there has the challenge.been a lot of talk about Drexel’s athletic program and its future, especially considering its entry into the Middle Atlantic Confer­ence University Division, effect­ive fall of 1970. There was a lot of noise from a number of sources, this column being one of them, as to whether Drexel would be ready for the competi­tion and able to handle it. The caUber of the competition that the Dragons are facing now represents pracUcally the same competiUon scheduled for next year, and we»re handling it now!

For a very long time, the Inter­collegiate Athletics program and various people connected with it were thought to be of a complacent attitude; satisfied to sit back and remain mediocre in a mediocre league. However, since fall of 1968 there has been almost a complete reversal of this general consensus. The athletic depart­ment has brought to Drexel new head coaches for nine of the twelve major sports in which the Institute competes, and many of the staffs have almost been doubled in size. There is, all of a sudden, a real emphasis on recruiting outstanding high school athletes to represent us in future years. Recognizing the need for an upgraded program necessitated by the University Division move, Drexel has done everything in its capacity to meet

As far as the competition, and how Drexel will fare in the new setup, this is evident this year. Looking at the schedules for the football, soccer, basketball, swimming and baseball teams’ you will see numerous University Division opponents, and more than a few of these schools were on past schedules. The biggest change will be seen in the basket­ball schedule. This year’s varsity schedule is the same as in years gone by, with Delaware, Scranton West Chester and Lehigh as the feature games. The freshmen however, will get a real taste of the action as they face every Big Five frosh team except Villa- nova. Perhaps Sam Cozen's dream of The Big Six will come into being. Another big boost to

basketball program will be bringing the home games back on campus.” The site of the cagers home games will be the Armory at 33rd & Lancaster Aye. instead of Sayer Junior High at 58th and Walnut. This alone should provide a real boost in attendance.

A lot of things have changed all of them for the better, and now it 's time for the attitude of the student body to improve with the athletic program. If this important factor can be altered, then Drexel deserves to be commended.

good, putting Lafayette into the lead to stay.

On the next series Drexel was again forced to punt. From their own 27 the Leopards began to drive but not for long. On their own 35, Dragon tackle Paul Lit belted Leopard quarterback Baker so hard he didn’t know what hit him. A loss of five yards on that play put Lafayette into a passing situation. The pass was picked off by Bill Geisdorf and returned to the 50. A pass to Dan Miller put the ball on the 25, but the Dragon offense couldn’t click after that. Lafayette took over on their own 20 and the same was true for them. A hard rush put on by end Ron Schmidt stop­ped a pass play and forced the Leopards to punt again. The Dragons couldn’t move beyond their 40; so they kicked again to Lafayette’s 30. The first play from scrimmage was a pass pick­ed off by linebacker Carl Hert- rich. Gregg Dubas took a Baer pass to the 27 and Dan Miller bulled his way to the 25 for a firs t down. Wayne Huntsinger took another one of Bill Baer’s passes to the 10 with 9 seconds left. The time limited Coach Brown’s T.D. attack and after two incomplete passes the half ended.

S e c o n d H a l f

The opening series of downs in the second half was for both the Dragons and Leopards terminat­ed by punts. About four minutesinto the half Lafayette began their second touchdown drive. From their own 43 they marched down

^ to paydirt.The P.A.T. was no good leaving the score at 13-0 Lafayette.

Drexel’s only touchdown drive began on the following kickoff from their 25. Back Danny Mil­ler snagged one of Bill Baer’s P ^ s e s and took it to the 49 fora first down. Steve McNicholcar-

^ 9 t h e29 for another first down. Baerwas hit hard by a barrage ofLeopards for a loss of five andreplaced by backup quarterbackJim Schwering. The Dragonscouldn’t move and they turnedhe ball over to the home team

for two plays. On the second of

Runners^ Total Ef fort R esu lts In M ee t Sweep

B y Kim G e l s l n g e r

Their future did not look good. Before the s ta r t of their r against PMC and Gettysburg College last Saturday morning at mont Plateau, a prediction for a poor season was in order f Drexel’s Cross Country team. Injuries, for one thing, cast doubt their attaining positive resu lts. Senior Bob Andreo is out for entire year with bad knees and a physical problem appeared lik i to hinder the performance of Glenn Lysinger, s ta r of last yea^> Freshmen. Also, they were coming off a shoddy showing at Lafavett'^ College during the previous week. Yet, these problems were n insurmountable. The big strike against our h a rr ie rs seemingly their lack of team consciousness; to a number of observers th " deficiency was too strong to permit victory. Those who don’t reall^ know where i t ’s at with cross country a re probably having a chuckle over this last statement. You may believe that such a 1°* distance event depends only on the talents of each individual ra^*^ but this is where the misconception lies . These contests relv^^^ much on cooperation and a keen feeling of unity among team merT bers as do football and lacrosse. C ross country is definitely a spo t which demands teamwork. ^

Last year, the Dragons were led by their co-captain Dave Rhein heimer. He was both a leader of runners and a leader of men, that is" he not only won many races, but also he pulled together his mates in^’ united effort. Unfortunately his athletic eligibility ran out and t looked like the glue was also gone. * ^

This Saturday’s race, however, may have been a turning point Our runners defeated Gettysburg resoundingly 18 to 38 and shut out (15 to 50) the PMC club. Sure it’s nice to win but the rea l pleasure was that the race was a true team effort. Their new outlook was epitomized by an actual arm in arm crossing of the finish line by Dragons Eric Henkels, Bob Kushner and Lysinger in a time of 30-16 The five mile course was next completed by co-captain Rick Noll of Drexel in 30:52. Gettysburg’s Jeff F is te r , Bill Walker and Bill Sayer filled the fifth, sixth and seventh p laces, respectively DIT’s Dave Arthur was eighth and Gettysburg’s Bruce Leiby was* ninth The top ten was rounded out by Dragon Paul McCorrison. PMC’s first finisher was Mazlneray, who was seventeenth.

One of our team’s brightest points was the freshmen race against PMC. Rich DiSebastian, Joe Hoffman, and G erry 0»Brien captured the first three positions for our forces to give us a 20 to 35 victory DiSebastian’s time of 15:21 set a new record for the three mile freshman course. The future is looking good for the years to come

But what of this season? Our varsity men may have discovered this past Saturday the magic formula (not F=MA) needed to win Victory necessitates strong individual effort plus good teamwork'If our harriers will continue along this path—only time will tell’

AN D T H E f i n i s h - C a p t u r i n g t h e f i r s t t h r e e p o s i t i o n s a r e

H ^ G l e n n L y s i n g e r , E r i cen e l s , a n d B o b K u s h n e r . C o o c h M u r r a y M i l l e r r e c o r d s t h e

w i n n i n g t i m e a t t h e f i n i s h p o l e .

B o w l i n g F o r G i r l s S t a r t s ; K e e n C o m p e t i t i o n F o r s e e n

This year’s W. a . A, inter- athlon bowling tournament is off to a good start. We hope to strike

amonr^th competitionS t . Participating teams. Lndpn represent the inde-

five socl!,!a Z D 7 on campus:

rp/ * PSS and SSS.DAC at thenieht f 7 every Mondaynight from five to seven o»clockvWph K '■® '*®shments are pro-

a . s o c l a U „ r

, “^ “pendent teamto s b e e n le a d ln g thetourn^,^..;!:

continued on page 9

h o m e c o m i n g

^ 'e x e l v s . Al br igh t

Next Week

With scores of 901 and 912, The high sco re r each week has been from the independent team s also. Linda Jacks bowled a 146 the first week and followed the next week with a 153, I t 's really great to see this team ’s enthusiasm in action.

The frosh team had a rather rough time getting organized but they made a good showing with a score of 775 for their f irs t game. Any freshman interested in bowling on this team should con­tact Heather Higgins via student mail o r contact the women’s physical education office in the majn building.

The sorority team s are very well organized and have scored very well as usual, PM is leading the sorority team s with a score of 910, ASA follows with 884, DZ is third with 849, SSS scored 780 and PSS has a score of 697 points.