Talk is not cheap. The program of the day`s

Transcription

Talk is not cheap. The program of the day`s
o c f.
m
el
15
m o r a t o r i u m
b r o o k s
r e s ig n s
s c h e d u l e
- p .3
- p .8
h a g e rfy
FRIDAY, O C T O B E R
VOLUME XLVI
10,
o n
o c t.
15
- p .3
NUMBER
1969
34
Talk is not cheap.
To date, talk in P a r i s h a s c o s t u s 22 ,0 0 0 American dead. Had our govern­
ment been committed to som ething other than talk t h e s e men would liv e today.
T h i s week everyo n e who h as talked about ending the war in Vietnam will
have a chance to do som eth in g about it. Only a m a s s i v e sh o w of our d esire
for immediate p e a c e can hope to move a s lu g g is h nation. October 15 w ill be
a day on which t h o se c o n s c ie n t i o u s l y op p ose d to the war w ill su sp e n d normal
b u s i n e s s and join together to e x p r e s s op p o sitio n to the p resen t government
p o lic y . It w ill be a day to demonstrate on our home g r o u n d - D r e x e l- t h a t we
are tired of the war and the wars lik e ly to follow . It w ill be a day of ed u ca ­
tion and protest.
T h e war h a s c a u s e d a d efinite deterioration in the quality of American life .
T h e draft h as haunted all of u s in on e form or the other. We n e g le c t our home­
land to destroy the hom es of others. We have become the a g e n t s of suffering.
It must end.
There i s nothing radical about moritorium on “ b u s i n e s s a s usual.
It i s
som ething in, which every person of p e a c e must becom e in volv e d , for a d e c i­
sio n to do nothing about the Moratorium i s a d e c i s io n to support the war in
Vietnam.
Our government i s committed to prolongin g the war in d e fin ite ly . We are not.
An h o n e s t effort can d is e n g a g e us from Vietnam in months. We must le t our
s e n tim en ts be known to the nation. We must act together. F ra ter n ities and
Sororities h ave come out in support of the Moratorium. Student C o n g r e ss h as
urged all D rexel stu d en ts to participate in the Moratorium. F a c u lt y , ad m in is­
trators, g reeks and in d epend en ts, r e s id e n ts and commuters w ill all be invol­
ved. It w ill be D rex el’ s first broad-based public e x p r e s s io n of c o n s c ie n c e .
We urge all st u d e n ts to attend.
i
t
•
The program of the day’ s events appears on page three, and the Iriangle
o f fic e w ill be open all day for th o se who want to come in and rap about
thin gs.
We fee l that the war in Vietnam i s morally unjust. We want to end it now.
Join u s on October 15.
sc u lp tu re by B ren n er
p h o to by L o c k m a n
P eace.
i
DREXEL
TRIANGLE
P agr 2-Ortobrr 10, 1969
Announcements, h ap pening s a n d odd en d s
1 or 2 years in high school:
German 412, Russian 432,
French 450, or Spanish 470
3 or 4 years in high school:
German 414, Russian 434,
French 454, or Spanish 474
If you still have any questions
or uncertainties about the nature
of the foreign language courses
offered at Drexel, or about which
course you should reg ister for,
please confer with me before
you reg iste r. If Is often very
difficult, and sometimes im ­
possible, if a student has reg ­
istered for the wrong foreign
language course, to shift him
into the appropriate course
after the new term has begun.
PhiUp G. Buehler
Director of Languages
Department of Literature and
Language
Commonwealth Hall 413
Telephone: (EV 7-2400) ext. 561
If there is any type of Infor­
mation you wish to have printed
in The Triangle, whether it be
events, announcements or any
type of news, please contact The
Triangle in Room 52 of the DAC.
Rememl)er, we need your help
in disseminating information. Let
us know!
* • ♦
NOTE: The following sections
have been cancelled for the
winter
term
1970; French
451-01 (9:00 a.m.) and French
452-01 (12:00 noon).
If you have already passed a
foreign language course at Drexel, reg ister for the next course
in the sequence.
If you have not previously taken
a foreign language at Drexel,
bear in mind that two years of
a language in high school are
approximately the equivalent of
one year of the language at the
college level. You should register
as follows:
If you have passed this many
years of the language in h i ^
school, reg ister for this foreign
language course at Drexel:
0 years in high school:
German 411, Russian 431,
French 451, or Spanish 471
Each year prior to homecoming
a contest is run in which the
Freshman Queen is selected. The
process through which she is
chosen is as follows:
When you know
it’s for keeps
inarians and assistants. R efresh­
ments will be served.
On October 12, the Center is
holding an Irish Dinner from 6 to
7 p.m. Tickets are $1,50 and are
available at the Center or any
time in Room 215 of the DAC
from 1-1:30 today.
The center is located at 219
N. 33rd St.
1. Nominations are deposited
by ALL members of the fresh­
man class in ballot boxes which
shall be located in the Great
Court and DAC.
2. Pick up ballots at your local
ballot box.
3. Both male and female may
nominate a prospective queen
but, only male students will be
permitted to make the final vote,
4. The nominees will be in ter­
viewed by male freshmen on F r i­
day, October 17th,
5. Five girls will be submitted
as sem i-finalists.
6. Voting will take place in the
Great Court between Monday,
October
20 and Thursday,
October 23.
. 7. The queen and her court
of four will be presented during
the pep rally on Friday, October
24. At this time the queen will
be announced.
(This is the perfect way in
which to obtain the address,
phone, number, and even the name
of that g irl you have been adoring
during the past month).
* * *
The Senior Class will be hold­
ing its ' second social function
on Monday, October 13. This will
be the day for Senior Lunch Day
which will be held from 12:30
to 2:00 p.m. in the DAC Grand
Hall. Hamburgers and cheese­
burgers will be sold for 10?
each, and we will also have free
Coke, birch beer, and potato
chips. Remember to bring your
senior LD. so we can insure that
only seniors will enjoy the bene­
fits of our budget.
The excursion to Brandywine
Raceway has been postponed until
final arrangements can be made.
Watch for further information
on this event. It should prove to
be an entertaining evening.
Following is a calendar of
your fall term social events:
Chestnut Hall Party, Friday
Oct, 13, 8:30-1:00; Senior B ar­
becue, Saturday Nov. 8; Drexel
Field, 11:00-1:00; 2nd Happy
Hour, Wednesday Nov. 12, 3:305:00; DAC Mickey Finn Nite,
Tuesday Nov, 18,
* ♦ *
The Drexel Newman Associa­
tion is hosting a series of sem i­
n ars on Thursday nights at 7:15,
The topic of the next session on
October 16, will be l.iturgy: Hid­
den Mystery vs. Community Wor­
ship. They are conducted by sem ­
YOU CAM CHARGE YOUR KEEPSAKE DIAMOND AT ALL
All your sharing, all your
special m em ories have
grown into a precious and
enduring love. Happily, th ese
cherished m om ents will be
forever symbolized by your
diam ond eng ag em ent ring.
If the name, K eepsake is in
the ring and on the tag, you
are assured of fine quality
and lasting satisfaction. The
eng ag em ent diam ond is
flawless, of superb color, and
precise m odern cut. Your
K eepsake Jew eler has a
choice selection of many
lovely styles. H e's listed in
the yellow p a g e s under
“Jew elers."
There will be an organization­
al meeting of the A m erican So­
ciety of Mechanical Engineers
on Wed,, Oct, 15, at 3:30, All
M.E,»s a re encouraged to at­
tend, Check the ASME bulletin
board near the ME offices for the
meeting room ,
♦ ♦ ♦
Wanted: Key-puncher to donate
hour o r two p e r week to process
scouting re p o rts. Contact S te r­
ling Brown, ex, 2119.
W H ERE YOU W ILL F IN D D E L A W A R E V A L L E Y ’S
L A R G E S T , M OST C O M P L E T E S E L E C T IO N O F
1106 M a rk e t St. •
561 2 G erm antow n Ave.
Roosevelt M a ll
•
4 62 6 F ra n k fo rd Ave.
0
1305 M a rk e t St.
r e g i s t e r e d
DIAMOND
♦ ♦ ♦
If you’ve got thetime,
we’ve got the car.
B r a n t s
27 S. 6Sth St.
i i'
The College Student’s Poetry
Anthology, printed by the National
Poetry P re s s announces the clo s­
ing date for the subm ission of
m anuscripts by College Students
is November 5, Any student at­
tending eith er junior or senior
college is eligible to subm it his
v e rse . T here is no lim itation as
to form o r them e. Shorter works
are p re fe rre d by the Board of
Judges, because of space lim ita­
tions.
Each poem must be typed or
printed on a sep arate piece of
paper and must b ear the name
and home address of the stu ­
dent, and the college address as
well.
M anuscripts should be sent to
the Office of the P re s s ,
National Poetry P re s s
3210 Selby Avenue
Los A ngeles, Calif, 99034
RI NG S
NEW M AN
THURSDAY NIGHT SEMINARS
I
V
7:15 pm
E
It’s Yellow
Catch: 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.
YELLOW CAB COMPANY
c
Oct.
9
Scriptures:
fundamentalism
OF PHILADELPHIA
v s ..
demythologization
o i l * 23
workshop
0 t. 3 Moral.ty: strict legalism vs. free c o n s c ie n c e
Oct. 30 Dogma: strict realism vs. phenomenology
Riiiy, ri.io- 1
lo show dr'u I
n ilOOiySIOOOO
Mufi Bey
A H PumI Ci."'u'.ny Inc
¥
v.
{■.I I BV ?
I ’*ti
6
L ife Style:
esch o to lo g ico l orientation
June).
v s. involvement
p a i d at P h i l a d e l p h i a , P a , ,
O c t o b e r 15, 1926 unde r the
^ c t o f March 3 , 1879, a s a-
i HOW TO PLAN YOUR ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING
I
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.
1
,
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W M d i,,"
N«m._
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Addit*'
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C it,----
I
N e w m a n C enter
N. 33rd S*.
N ,x t to H,ol«h C .n f ,r
St«if—
Zip-
YORK ,3201
( I s s u e d F r id a y from J u n e to
D e c e m b e r a n d T u e s d a y and
h riday from D e c e m b e r t o
Second c la s s postage
me nd ed. A d v e r t i s i n g r a t e s fur'n i s h e d upon r e q u e s t . A d d r e s s
a l l b u s i n e s s c o m m u n ic a tio n s
to the H u s i n e s s Manager, A l l
o th er c o r r e s p o n d e n c e , a d d r e s s
the E d ito r, S u b s c r i p t i o n , $ 4 ,5 0
p e r YEAK.
DREXEL
TRIANGLE
October 10, 1%9-P«|^e 3
Moratorium
Schedule
Wed.
15
O c to b e r
9:30—10:00
Inter faith me moria l s e r v i c e for the war dead.
Main Auditorium
10:00-10:30
^ en era l me etinf' - information about day* s a c t i ­
vities.
Main Auditorium
10*30-11*45
'I'^f^ch-ins concerninfr **Mass Me dia and the
War, E c o n o m i c s o f P e a c e , C r e a t i v i t y v s . De~
structioTU**(Rooms to be announced). T h e s e are
V
Dear Mr. Nixon:
WE CALL FOR AN END TO THE WAR IN VIETNAM
The w ar has taken a terrib le toll in human life. Thousands of
persons have been killed.
The w ar has virtually destroyed the country of Vietnam. The
w ar has generated dissension and disunity. The w ar has produced a
c ritic a l financial condition in this country.
We call for an end to the Involvement of the United States in the
w ar in Vietnam.
open forums on the s o c i a l , p o l i t i c a l , ec o nom ic ,
N am e
____________________________________________________
a n d h u m a n is ti c a s p e c t s o f the V i e t n a m e s e War,
u nd er th e d ir e c t io n o f va rious D r e x e l p r o f e s ­
sors.
C l a s s (o r D e p a rtm e n t)
P oetry Readings
-----------------------------------------------------
This statem ent will be sent to the P resid en t of the United States.
P lease detach and retu rn to the box at the table in the G reat
C ourt, o r to The T ilangle office in the DAC.
Student Mobilization Committee
F i l m s - **The War Game** and **Night and Fog**
and o th e r f ilm s wh ic h g r a p h ic a l ly portray the
f u t i l i t y , w a s t e , and s t u p i d i t y o f war.
Main Au ditorium .
11:45-1:00
S e c o n d s e r i e s o f t e a c h - i n s and f ilm s ( s a m e as
Dear Dr. Hagerty: w-
above),
1:00—2:00
R a l l y in Q u a d - F a c u i t y and G u e s t s p e a k e r s ;
f o lk s i n g e r s .
2:00—6:00
Ho urly s e s s i o n s ; t e a c h - i n s , w o r k s h o p s , film s.
Main A uditorium
7:30—
F i l m s , ( T h e War G am e, other s),
Wednesday, October 15, is being set aside on campuses as well
as in business and industry, local communities,
other places,
as the Vietnam M oratorium on ‘‘business as usuld.’’ Appropriate
observances of various kinds will be held. The purpose of the
Vietnam M oratorium is to unite all persons in an effort to call at­
tention to the fact that the w ar in Vietnam, with its loss of lives
and destruction of property, continues. We call for an immediate
elKi through a negotiated settlem ent o r unilateral withdrawal.
It is hoped that you will support all adm inistration, faculty and
students who wish to observe this day of conscience in a m atter im­
pro p riate for each individual.
In hope for Peace,
Melvin Brooks
Samuel M essinger
E r ic Roberts
Nancy Zinneman
David Jam ison
Paul E . B erger
Michael C. Kyle
Tom Gottshall
W ayne Outten
Samuel S. K erre
Dennis L. Neider
J . Volpe Jam ieson
Joan M. Mower
M arion Thomas
Lynn Lauderman
Michele Krahn
Alan N. Rudnitsky
Ja m e s C. Kitch
Aileen Green
J . P . Steinhom
Suzanne Michel
Thomas Kilkenny
Dale W eaver
Paula Scheinfeld
Debbie B artleson
Lyle Wolf
W. M artin McCabe
Matthew Kokoska
A1 C alabria
S ing-in
Dear Mr. Brooks:
In reply to your le tte r of Septem ber 29, I understand that uni­
v e rsitie s throughout our country have been requested to observe
October 15 as a day of m oratorium to p ro te st the w ar in Vietnam,
In your le tte r you and a num ber of your fellow students have re ­
quested that D rexel observe this day **as a day of conscience in a
m anner im propriate fo r each individual.*'
To honor this req u est I p r(^ o se that those faculty and student
m em bers of D rexel who a re concerned develop a suitable pro­
gram . D rexel will not be closed on this day, but individual faculty
o r students may elect to participate in such a program . It is my
hc^e that these events at D rexel will make some meaningful con­
tribution to the resolution of the issu es created by the Vietnam W ar.
Sincerely,
W. W. Hagerty
P resid en t, D rexel Institute of Technology
A r e
A L P H A PHI O M E G A
Y o u
W rong
is having a
s h o p p in g
S id e
o f th e
on
th e
R iv e r ?
I !■
LOST A N D
FOUND
OCT. 14
SALE
9:00-2:00
T he L a te st
DAC COUNTER LOWER LEVEL
F a sh io n s are a
F ew S te p s A w ay A t
F r e e
M o n e y
F r o m
Y o u r B o o k s t o r e
3728 W ALNUT ST.
J
E V 2-9063
B e T h e Big B read W in n e r
On T tiis C am p u s
N o th in g
F re d d y 's R e s ta u r a n t 4 P i z z e r i a
P i c k
u p
e n t r y
t o
b u y
f o r m
in
y o u r
Old World A t m o s p h e r e F o r L o v e r s
of F i n e I t a l i a n F o o d a nd P i z z a
Meet at F r e d d y 's R estauront
Serving Lunch ond
Dinners Every Day
Tale e O u t S e r v i c e
21 St a n d C h e s t n u t
B .Y .O .B .
LowilowTfliOSl
FOAM RUBBER
POLY FOAM
T
e r m
a n d
P
l a n
n
e r
b o o k s t o r e , T o d a y
(umited supply)
P o c k e t S e c r e t a r y
a t y o u r
IM M E D IA T E
V E N T U R E C A P IT A L
A V A IL A B L E
fo r n e w b u s in e s s e s
or deposit this entry form in Bookstore Sweepstal(es Box within 4 weeks from start of classes
We a r e looking f o r g ra d u a te s tu d e n ts vk^ho have sound
ideas f o r new p ro du cts or services as well as th e capa­
bilities to head up as p rin cip als new o rg a n iz atio n s to
see th e p ro jec ts culm inated.
AddfeM.
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! I
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32nd & CHESTNUT STREETS
U N D E R W R IT E R S A N D IN V E S T M E N T B A N K E R S
DREXEL
TRIANGLE
Pagp 4—Octobpt 10, I% 9
By Larry Marion
This
nation
wants
out
C
h o o s e
On Oct, 15, a new chapter will be written In the sad saga that is
the war in Vietnam, The “ Moratorium” ultimatum presents to the
Administration a united effort toward extrication from the morass.
The forthcoming dissent will be uttered not just by student radicals,
but by various segments of the adult population. The majority of
Middle America feels that Vietnam was a mistake. (See National
News Column.) This Day of Contemplation is for the entire coun­
try; businesses and the general public are urged to devote some
time to think about our involvement in Vietnam. To initiate the
public p ressu re necessary to provoke peace, a display of wide­
spread dissatisfaction must be evident; it also must be from all
segments of society.
And now the various forces coagulate. The Moratorium, and its
aims, have been endorsed by 400 college student body presidents
and newspaper editors, A faculty petition has been signed by hundreds
of concerned professors, from all the major institutions in our na­
tion; Harvard, Yale, Cornell, UCLA, SUNY; the entire spectrum
of higher education has been banded together.
The emphasis of this campaign to discredit war has become na­
tional in reality. The president of the United Auto Workers, Western
Division, the Washington Teachers Union, the National Institute of
Health, the City Council of Berkeley, Calif,, are all planning to
show their support to the Moratorium. In Milwaukee, people will
drive through the stre e ts with their headlights on all day, signifying
their empathy. The President of Rutgers University has “ called on
campus groups to devise programs suitable for such a day of criti­
cal reflection,” and offered the school’s facilities. These efforts
are intended to present to the Administration in Washington a
picture of a unified American “ People’s Complaint,” asking for a
halt in the American participation. An immediate withdrawal is
desired by the people, the face-saving technique of Washington
is not worth the life-wasting destruction in Vietnam.
Where are you among this swirling national eruption? Com­
muting on the El o r the Ben Franklin Bridge, as usual? Declare
a Moratorium on Slide Rule Manipulation; now think about that 2-S—
is it a necessary evil, or representative of a blasphemous insult
to self-preservation? Ask yourself why you remain outside of the
controversy, ignoring it or ignorant about the lies perpetrating
the conflict. Consider joining those that want to end the rape of
Southeast Asia; care enough to end the injustices in this coun­
try, Let your voice be heard.
a
SC U L P T U R E BY BRENNER
PIX BY LOCKMAN
F iv e
I,.
,L
k e e p
October 15th, please read even
the fir s t
chs^pter of David
Schoenbrun’s “ Vietnam, How We
Got In, How To Get Out.” It
is sh o rt, factual, and startling.
October 15th is your day to
join S enators, Congressmen,
P resid en ts of Student Bodies and
V eterans F or Peace, in demon­
stra tin g your unwillingness to be
sent into the slaughter to give
up your life in a w ar that the
Am erican people did not vote
for and do not want.
P resid en t Nixon prom ised us
that he has a plan to end the
w ar. Each day that he desists
from instituting that plan costs
the suffering and the dying of
hundreds of people. Today it is
not you; tom orrow it could be.
P re sid e n t Nixon prom ised us
that he has a plan to end the
w ar. Each day that he desists
from instituting that plan costs
the suffering and dying of hun­
dred s of people. Today it is not
you; tom orrow it could be,
WORK FOR PEACE - OCT. 15TH
Ben H arrison
NEW M AN
L
i t
Oct. 12 Irish Dinner 6 - 7 p.m.
Oct. 19
Oct. 26
Nov.
keenO hP N
unique rotary action
keeps the blades sharp while it strokes off whiskers
Every time you shave.
the cord model or
th ! Rn
ui®'
keep your look. But
thfoo
anyvyhere. For up to
" '^ o s t twice as many
shaves per charge as any other rechargeable.
Look them over. The choice is yours.
I
V
SUNDAY NIGHT PROGRAMS
finished, you just push a but­
ton and the head flips open for an easy clean-up job
/
n o w ...
lo o k .
Choose any look. Make it yours. Then Norelco will help you keep it
Because no rriatter which look you choose, your beard still grows
It still needs to be trim m ed and shaved. Norelco handles fhat ’
ch
trim m er will keep your whiskers and sideburns
shaped the way you want them. The 3 floating heads will /
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Shaved. And inside
heads are 18 self-sharpening blades that .
shave as close or closer than a blade every day. With-
t h . p Z l! '
from
For the next week you will be
bombarded with appeals to join
the Moratorium for Peace on
October 15th. Before you decide
how to react toward this National
Day of Protest, you might want
to consider what is at stak e-—
your very life.
The war in Vietnam has been
raging for eight years compiling
a death toll of 45,000 Americans
and countless thousands of Viet­
namese, old and young. When
napalm falls upon a village in
Vietnam, it incinerates child­
ren and adults, civilians and
soldiers. The war in Vitenam
may not be goodfor our economy,
our medical research plans, our
engineering
adventures, our
urban conditions, or our pride,
but it is very good for one
thing— death.
Having
returned from
a
thirteen month voluntary tour
in Vietnam, I can assure you
that the reasons given for our
being there are fallacious. If
we are there to save face, then
we should ask, “ Whose?” John­
son’s, Nixon’s or yours? If you
have just a few minutes before
N o r e lc o w ill h e l p
y o u
days
Tripleheader
45CT.
2
Dr. McGuire “ Rebel With a C a u s e ”
Coffee Hour” Maureen M cCauley
Jim M atter
pm
ASCAP Award winning M edical M is s io n o rie s
•"olk Group
g
Nov. 9 Informal Mixer
Nov. 16
Biafra Film s and d isc u ss io n with
Diofro Exile
Nov. 23
Thanksgiving Turkey D inner
Speaker to be announced
N ew m an Center
219 N. 33rd St.
®1969 North American Philips Corporation, 100 East 42nd street, New Yorl<, N.Y, 10017
Pn™ 5
Night with W .c . F ie ld s 8. C h a rlie C baplir,
•nree Films
t^orelcor
Even on a beard like yours.
pm £
Noxt to Health Center
g
pm
pm
6 pm
g pm
DREXEL
TRIANGLE
O clobrr 10, 1969—Page 5
According to reliable so u rces
in the Dean of Men's office there
is no danger of students losing d e­
fense loans because of p articip a­
tion In the Oct. 15 M oratorium .
If and only if Drexel deems any
student
dem onstration
d is ­
ruptive, D rexel’s adm inistration
must Inform the F ed eral Gov’t
(something they are reluctant to
do). Oct. 15 has unofficial ap­
proval by the adm inistration and
will not be disruptive, so there
Is no possibility of loss of any
loans, scholarships, etc. for
participation.
D rexel
com es
a liv e
/
%
By D ave Jam ieso n
STUDENTS AND FACULTY!
concern over the Vietnam con­
Drexel Is allvel People at Drex­
flict and work for peace. P a rtic i­
el are becoming concerned. Oct­
pation
in “ an appropriate
ober 15th is fast approaching and
manner” is being encouraged
many students and faculty mem­
throughout the nation’s college,
b ers are actively Involved In a r ­
university and business com ­
ranging a program ,
munities.
October 15th has been de­
signated, nationally, as a day
At Drexel the Student Mobili­
to depart from “ business as
zation Committee h asb een fo rm u su al” In an effort to dem onstrate
ed to plan our program in ob­
servance of October 15th. The
program is being established as
an informational and educational
activity which will serve as an
opportunity for commitment to
the November 15th “ March for
P eace.” It is planned to run all
The SMC has been organized at Drexel to support the work
day and Include an inter-denoof the Nat’l Vietnam Moratorium Committee.
mlnatlonal memorial service for
By E la in e Maguire
the Vietnam dead, faculty-conSTATEMENT OF THE STUDENT MOBILIZATION COMMITTEE
In most schools, a provost is
P ro v o st will s ta rt with next
ducted forums on topics relevant
We count ourselves among those persons who are concerned
comparable to an “ inside p re s i­
y e a r’s. He Is formulating a
to Vietnam, films and a rally
that
the w ar in Vietnam, with Its loss of life and destruction of
dent.” G raphically, he Is som e­
schedule. Including a projection
in the Quad with guest speakers.
property,
continues. We are d istressed over the alienation of
where between the p resid en t and
of next Septem ber's enrollment,
This program should prove to
people in the United States, the financial c ris is in our nation,
the vice-presidents. T his a r ­
to be approved by January by the
be enlightening for all p a rtic i­
and the misplaced p rio ritie s which have resulted from the w ar.
rangement allows the president
Board of T ru stees.
pants. The program Is being
We call for an end to the Involvement of the United States In the
of the school to concentrate m ore
Although D r. B rothers Is the
presented for all members of
w ar in Vietnam.
on public relations and fund ra is ­
official Provost, his appointment
the Drexel Community who are
Our p rim ary goal in helping plan the Moratorium at Drexel
ing, while the provost **runs"
is only interim until a permanent
concerned or wish to find out
on October 15 is to provide an opportunity for people to express
the school.
Provost can be found. D r. Broth­
more about the conflict.
th e ir d esire to see an end to the w ar. We wish also to help Inform
At D rexel, however, this is not
e r s said that the perm anent P ro­
people about the issu es involved in the Vietnam w ar and its effect
the case. The p ro v o st's exact
vost should be a man who thinks
I think it Is encouraging to
on our lives. We urge your participation In the October 15 Mora­
duties have not been defined so
see this Interest at D rexel, So
torium , In the November 15 March for Peace In W ashlngton, and
that the position is free to de­
fa r, the participating students and
in other continuing efforts to end the w ar In Vietnam.
velop. Both P resid en t Hagerty
faculty are from many different
STEERING COMMITTEE
and D r. Leroy A. B ro thers, D rexsegrhents and of many different
Kim A rcher
el*s Provost, will sh a re the ‘‘in­
attitudes, but all are concerned
Mel Brooks
side” and “ outside” duties of the
and are able to work together.
Hal Conner
school.
I am extrem ely proud to see this
David DiJullo
unity and cooperation In a rran g ­
F ra n c is Ducoin
ing a program at Drexel and
Rol)ert Erbeau
V . p . fo r a c a d e m ic s
for Drexel. For once, we are
George Hartman
not standing by watching the
David W. Jam ieson
In 1963, Drexel*s Board of
other schools do this or that,
Chuck Klelnhagen
T ru stees created one position,
but we’re so rt of “ doing our
E ric Roberts
entitled V ice-P resid en t of Aca­
own Vthing." I sincerely hope
Bob Stockfield
demic Affairs and Provost Alan
these encouraging signs are
John
Von Hagen
T. Bonnell filled the position un­
still present after October 15thl
Jay Baumstein
til 1965, when he left to become
president at the Community Col­
lege of Philadelphia. During his
term , there was also the posi­
tion of Dean of Faculty; D r,
Matheson filled this position. In
1965 both of these positions were
vacant. D r. Gatlin was appointed
to the position of V ice-P resid en t
very much like the P resident of
of Academic A ffairs. A V icethe school. This will enable the
P resid en t of Student A ffairs was
Provost to make decisions in the
originated. The Dean of Faculty
absence of the President.
and P rovost w ere left vacant.
P resid en t Hagerty decided to
rein state the position of Provost
C o m m itte e fo rm ed
because, a s D r. B ro th ers said,
O
u
r
p
i
l
L
“ the positions of the P resid en t
A com mittee has not been set up
and the V ice-P resid en t of Aca­
to find a successor for D r. Broth­
dem ic A ffairs have grown to the
e rs , but he said that D r. Hag­
point where they a re too big for
erty is reviewing the list of
two people.” The P rovost will
candidates for the V ic e -P re sialso have some responsibility
dent of Academic Affairs. One
form erly alloted to the V icename mentioned frequently in
P resid en t and T re a s u re r.
this connection is D r. Mason,
NoDoz when you can get caffeine in a
If you’ve ever resorted to NoDoz* at 4 a .m .
presently head of the business
cu p of coffee?
th e night before an exam, you've probably
P la n n in g th e b u d g e t
adm inistration school at the Un­
f
Very sim ple. You take NoDoz all at
been disappointed.
iv ersity of Denver. Nothing is
One pro ject that D r. B rothers
once i n stead of si ppi ng coffee for 10 m inNoDoz, afte r all, is no s u b s titu te for
definite, though.
has already begun is to co­
utes. And if you take two NoDoz tablets,
s le e p . N e ith e r is a n y th in g e ls e w e c a n
ordinate a budget for future
th e recom m end ed dosage, you get twice
think
of.
One of th e main p roducts of
y e a rs. M r. M eyers, the V iceth e caffeine in a cup of coffee.
What NoDoz is is a very strong stim ­
P resid en t and T re a s u re r, is the
c iv iliz a tio n is h istory .
Two ta b le ts —isn’t th a t likely to be
ulant.
In
fact,
NoDoz
has
th
e
strongest
only adm inistrator involved with
K .E. Boulding
habit
forming? Definitely not. NoDoz is
stim
u
la
n
ty
o
u
c
a
n
buy
w
ith
o
u
ta
p
re
sc
rip
­
this y e a r 's budget, so that the
B rothers interim p ro v o st
Goals of Moratorium ix
b u d g e t p la n s initiated
t'
Does it really work?
tion.
When Will Reason
Prevail?
D ennis L. N eider P re s id e n t, SAT
SAT
Eric R ob erts
SAT
J . S. Kamon
SAT
R. P. Ford
SAT
A. G. Huey
SAT
William E. Ja c k
SAT
David H. McBride
SAT
David Rheinheim er
SAT
Anthony R. S p ad avissi
SAT
J o s e p h Egan
Caffeine.
W hat’s S O strong about that?
If we may cite The Pharmacological
B a sis of T h era p eu tics: C affein e is a
powerful central nervous stim ulant. Caf­
feine excites all portions of th e central
nervous system . Caffeine stim u lates all
portions of th e cortex, but its main action
is on th e psychic and sensory functions.
It produces a m ore rapid and clearer flow
of th o u g h t a n d alla y s d ro w s in e s s a n d
fatigue. After taking caffeine, one is c a ­
pable of m ore sustained intellectual ef­
fort and a m ore perfect association of
ideas. There is also a keener a p p re c ia ­
tion of sensory stimuli.
V ery i n t e r e s t i n g . B u t w h y t a k e
! i
■
com pletely non-hab\t forming.
W h ic h m e a n s i t ’s s a f e to t a k e
w h e th e r y o u ’re c ra m m in g a t night. Or
abo ut to walk into an 8 o ’clock class. Or
driving som ew here (even though you’re
re s te d ) a n d th e m o n o to n y of th e road
m akes you drowsy.
O ne la s t th i n g you s h o u ld know
abo ut NoDoz. It now com es in two forms.
Those familiar white pills you take with
w a te r. And a c h e w a b l e t a b l e t c a lle d
NoDoz Action Aids*. It ta s te s like a ch oc­
olate mint, but it does everything regular
NoDoz does.
And if you’ve m anaged
to stay awake this
long, you know
th a t's quite a lot.
,11
'
I,
i
'If,
!
I J
D REX EL TRIANGLE
Page 6—October 10, 1969
M
c
G
u
I
r
e
s
Ed McGuire encourages dissent.
That's what he said last summer at D rexel's Long Range Planning
Conference at Hershey. McGuire, vice-president for student af­
fairs, and Rich Lampert, form er editor-ln-chlef of The Triangle,
were the chief architects of McGuire's subcommittee's report on
University Government.
Dr. McGuire will rap with anyone who wants to come to the New­
man Center on 33rd St. this Sunday at 8 p.m. He, his wife Angle
and the kids will be Newman's featured guests at the first In a
se rie s on contemporary student problems.
“ Rebel without a Cause—Constructive Revolution on Campus"
is this week's topic but come prepared to run the gamut of dis­
cussion from psychotherapy to the October 15 Student Moratorium.
McGuire is a dynamic speaker who talks openly and won't hassle
your beliefs.
If you can't bum a free meal beforehand, come to Newman's Irish
Dinner served from 6-7 p.m. Tickets are $1.50, available at the
Center anytime o r in Room 215 in the DAC from 1-1:30 today.
By Larry Marion and Jim L e w is
p
e
a
k
s
COMING N E X T WEEK
Drexers Great Leap Forward:
The Long Range Planning Commission
T r ia n g le 's
a n a ly s is o f th e
National News
President Nixon announced last week that all draft-eligible
graduate students doing satisfactory work (I.e. passing) will be
safe from the draft for the re st of the academ ic y ear, ra th e r than
getting their deferments on a term -b y -te rm b asis.
The Democratic Party chairman. Sen. F re d H a rris , convened
a meeting of Democratic Senators and C ongressm en. **out of
the meeting came a decision by these D em ocrats to join cause
with the nationwide student anti-w ar p ro te st on Oct. 15, and to
press in Congress for resolutions calling fo r an end to the war
and a withdrawal of American tro o p s,"
Meanwhile during his Sept. 26 p r e s s conference, P resident
Nixon was quoted as having said, “ ... under no circum stances
will I be affected whatever by it (Oct. 15 M ovem ent)."
♦ ♦ ♦
In another attempt to diffuse student ra d ic a ls and control lib­
era l faculties a House subcommittee said that if ROTC Is forced
off of a campus, all defense education funds will be withdrawn
from that campus. Funds for m ilitary re se a rc h at these cam­
puses would not be cut.
d o c u m e n t th a t w ill
* * *
g u id e D r e x e l's fu tu re w ill a p p e a r s ta r tin g
O c t.
17. A v a ila b le
The National Gallup Poll this week revealed that the Vietnam
war is considered a m istake by 58% of ttie A m ericans polled.
This figure is larg er than the h i p e s t ra te of disgust reg istered
by Americans during the Korean conflict. T h ere has been a parallel
rise in the distaste over P resid ent Nixon’s w ar adm inistration,
a rise only interrupted by his periodically announced wlthdrawls!
a t y o u r lo c a l n e w s s ta n d .
PRESENTS
Oct. 10 film -"B arefoot in The P a rk "
Oct. 11 B u sse s to L ay fette game
Oct. 17 film-‘*Great R a c e "
APO-SPB C asino Nit*
Oct. 18 NYC Bus trip-$2.50
Oct. 28
DICK GREGORY
in lecture
In a futile effort to d eter locally the O c t 15 M oratorium plans
.of Rutgers University, P resident M.A. G ro ss has been charged
with neglect of duty. The summons was sen t to him at his home.
(See article entitled *‘This Nation Wants O u t" )
U.S. Vietnam casualty figures a re now 298,748.
Special thanks
....
for this Issue go to
Joy Freedman
o M adiso
LI-
e
spedal photo effects
Kim Archer
graphics
Lioda Thompson
layovf
Kathy Kowalciyh
loyovt
1
i'
Cross College Dance
presentg its weekly
i>
h
'
MIXER
i
featuring
“THE IMPALES”
S u n . G e t. 12»h
" F ire s id e
P U T N E Y
T h e
T r u th
a n d
S W
S o u l
O
P E
M o v ie
The World. 1830 Market • LG 3-1236.
"
H e a rth
B a ltim o r* P k . ^
®ishop Av«.
^ f i n g f l tl d , P a.
9:0 0-12:00
A dm ittion $1.75
DREXEL TRIANGLE
O c t o b e r 10, 1 9 6 9 - P a g e
7
Living in tiie ocean
M a n k i n d
m u s t
a n
e n d
to
w a r
o r
w a r
a n
e n d
w ill
to
p u t
p u t
m a n k i n d
S C U L P T U R E BY BR E N N ER PIX BY LOCKMAN
J o h n
F.
K e n n e d y
M r. Robert M. Cohen, consult­
ing engineer in the Ocean Systems
P ro g ram s of General E lectric,
was the firs t speaker in a se rie s
of lectu res sponsored by the Stu­
dent Program Board. The topic
of his talk was *'Man in the Sea,**
and he supplemented this with
a brief film.
As an introduction, he ex­
plained the Dektite experiment.
On Valentine’s Day, 1969, four
men started to live fifty feet be­
low the ocean surface off the
sho re of St. John's Island. They
did this to obtain scientific data
such as psychological s tre s s , that
can be tran sferred to the space
program . The re s e a rc h e rs from
the Departm ent of the Interior,
studied mobility and origins of
plankton, and the habits of lob­
s te r s through sonar detectors.
They also cartographed the oc­
ean floor, using th eir knowledge
of sediment and sand drifts.
The biomedical studies p e r­
formed on the re se a rc h e rs in­
cluded pulmonary variations,
EKG tests, and micro-biological
investigation. During the fifth
week, three of the scientists devel(^)ed “ sw im m er’s e a r .” Ex­
cept for the nineteen hours de­
voted to recovery, they spent an
average of two hours a day per
man in the ocean.
The main resu lt of the sixtyday m ission was that there is a
g reat deal more to learn. Emo­
tional states were kept at a lev­
el when the re se a rc h e rs were
perm itted to vent their aggrava­
tions to the observation crew
topside. Mr. Cohen noted that
the m ost amazing feature of the
en tire experiment was completed
on schedule and within its budget.
i:
p^nnuaf
Oct. 10& 11 F ri . & Sat.
VELVET UNDERGROUND
& P.I.L .T .
Oct. 1 5 -1 8
^ F E S T IV A L ,
Wed.-$at.
ELIZABETH
Friday, Oct. 31 • 7 PM
2NDFRET
Jam s Joplin
JOB cocker
B. B. King
Santana
1902 SANSOM ST
L0 3 8 2 9 6
TRECK
P h o to G ra p h ic
i
Sat., Nov. 1 • 7 PM
Canned Heat
The Youngbloods
Chicago Transit
Authority
Santana
In c.
W elco A ie s
Y ou
T o
O ur N ew
P h o to
D e p t.
CONVENTldN HALL
32nd and R a c e S ts,
3 4 th & Civic C e n t e r B lvd., P h ila.
P h ila d e lp h ia
T icket^ $ 4 • $ 5 • $ 6 • $ 7
VERSAILLES by Albert Lamorisse, Par/s/ELEGIA by Jan Huszarik, fiudapest/TONIGHT LETS
ALL MAKE LOVE IN LONDON by Peter Whitehead, London/PHENOMENA by Jordan Belton,
San Franc/sco/LA VITA—Life In a Tin by Bruno Bouetto, M//an/MIRACLE by Istvan Ventllla,
Budapest/PAMS MAI 1968 Produced by the Film Cooperative of Paris. Anonymoua/TWO
GRILLED FISH by Yoji Kuri, Tokyo/LA POMME by Charles Matton; ParisHHE LAST TRICK
OF MR EDGAR by Jan Svankmajer, Pragiie/GAVOTTE by Walerlan Borowczyk, Par/«/WHAT
DO YOU THINK? by YojI Kuri, Tofcyo/MARIE ET LE CURE by Diourka Medveczky, Paris/
SAMADHI by Jordan Belson, San Francisco. . . AND MANY OTHERS.
From the Preview:
“Anyone Interested in the possibilities of movies should not miss the show. The Kinetic Art
reprosents. . . the most interesting things being d o n e . . . things that cannot be duplicated in
FrU, Oct. 10-So K 11
War—Eric Burdon
Ravan
any other art form.”
Fr«., Sot. Oct. 1 7 - 1 8
Aum
Elvin Bishop
p.m. &
Vincent Canby, THE NEW YORK TIMES
» . . . a three-day minifestlval. . . from innovative film makers around the world. . . a brilliant
8
p.m.
Th« Who
Amorlcon Droom
Oct. 31 ond Nov. 1
3rd Quokor City Rock Fostlvol
Nov. 2
assemblage of short creative films.
Sweeney. THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR
••The show was extraordinary. . . delightful, exhilarating, deeply moving. Congratulations,
gratitudes, huzzas, three cheers and a tiger."
Benjamin Forgey, THE SUNDAY STAR, Washington, D.C.
On Sale a t Electric Factory, 2201
Arch • Classman's Ticket Agency •
Gimbel’s Chelt. & Center City • Wanamakers • 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. Lan­
caster, Ardmore • All TRS Locations
PoHorn Auditor lorn
Mothoaon Hoi I
Tuotdoya
mmrnM . mm.. ^ fmm.,
PROGRAM THREE
PROGRAM TWO
NOV. 11
OCT. 28.
8 P.M.
SINGLE ADMISSION for PUBLIC $2.25, $6.00 for aarlai
SINGLE ADMISSION for STUDENTS $1.25, $3.00 for aarlaa
PROGRAM ONE
OCT. 14
!•
>
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
C lip a n d M ail to:
ELECTRIC FACTORY
2201 A rch St., P h ila . 19103
In f o rm a tio n : P h o n e LO 3-9284
Enclosed is check or MO payable to
Electric Factory f o r _____
$ _________ ea. totalling $ _______
for performances checked below:
n Fri.. O c t. 31 • 7 PM
□ S a t., Nov. 1 • 7 PM
PLEASE PRINT
DT 1010
N a m e _______________
^Q u o k o r City Jazz Fostivol
i
:
CIVIC CENTER
KODAK
4
a
Light Show by Electric Factory
Sound by Festival Group
P h o to fin is h in g by
Sun., Oct. 19
Two Shows Only
t
I City
I
I State & Zip_____________________
I Day Phone ,
I Enclose Mlf-aiktresstd stamped env.
■
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jI
DREXEL
DREXEL
TRIANGLE
O rto b fr 10, 1969—Pago 9
TRIANGLE
Pngr H—OflobiT 10, 1969
The King is dead -
W F E D W X 'S
Student Congress, which met this past Tuesday
evening In the DAC, was a mayhem of resigna­
tions, automatic move-ups and appointments. A new
scorekeeper for the oieverending game of politics
(in front of and behind the podium) would have
found himself in a fog of parliamentary procedure
that made B ritain's House of Lords look like the
local girl scouts’ weekly meeting.
The sound of the gavel opening fall te rm 's ego­
tistical escapade was delayed because a suitable
candidate for Speaker had not yet been decided at
the caucus in the first floor DAC men's room. Not
to be dismayed by such “ diddily," Matt Kokoska,
outgoing Speaker, proudly announced that business
could commence when Tom Gottshall sauntered into
lOlN bearing the coveted gavel.
With a commanding voice that reverberated into
my right ear and no further (I, luckily, was sitting
next to him), our Drill Sergeant called the chaos
to order. From this point on, Mimi, the new and very
competent Secretary, scribbled away, (in shorthand
no less) transcribing yeas and nays into a complete
diary for use in the future by weary yet always smiling
congressmen.
Due to academic p ressures from the R e g istra r's
Office, Dan McCarty was forced to resign as Junior
C lass President, dumping the load into Wynn Zinnem an's lap. Wynn announced her appointment of Tom
Gottshall (that name again) as Vice President, but
left his Congressional seat open. Suggestions, p rece-
living in the h e a rts of every
t Home EC, etc. All Idiots
[in of V.P. should contact
tf Men's Office todayl Your
appreciated (by the wailing
nAC—the Congress office).
Shm idt (just who IS Nathan
^ a l l addressed the eagerly
L tin g Congress. Tom, who's
hunched-over an,
smiling becai,^i tv e(“ askany of my frien d s"),
silence by “ telling It like It
broke his IomJ
i s .” He laid^ ^ and he laid It on strong. Tom
bations lines between him self
noted that
pen and he, too, urged Conand Rick are jl
p^auracracy at D rexel cannot
gress to do th(,
Jcongress Is in Industry and
work when h;.
live a flying Dutchman. Tom,
the other half,
Igressional Comm ittees to get
therefore, urg',
[omework; pay attention; and
a move on;'’( J
(horrors!) thin
Silence, has obviously thought
Tom, in hisi
Bsponsibilities as a “ student
about his dut>
being. His force, never once
lead er" and
(n chilled the most bored of
stopping to biij
rep o rters." Undoubtedly, his
Congressmen "
legislators to a keen pitch of
idea was to
enthusiasm (anj Ity hard to come by at 10:30
[espect, and above all, instill
p.m.); inspire;
a sense of fr,^ [omplishment. Tom, Rick and
but unfortunately tim e Is at
the Congress i
g ress alive , , ,
Drexel Etigii*
Interested ir *
Rosemary
concern wm
m asses in 2
Quoting frr.
Schmidt, Tor.
Long live the King
By E llis Cohen
Widely heralded by the Philadelphia p re ss as D rex el's first
black Student Body President, Mel Brooks resigned for more
significant reasons. A president m ust motivate the people that
he works with. He didn't.
Tom Mendenhall, vice president for academic affairs, told me
that “ The future of student government is not In p eril. The people
who elected Mel gave him no support while he was in office—had
they supported him, and had they left with h im -w e would have
p ro b le m s." C ongress' mood might best be contained in one con­
g re ssm a n 's rem ark that, “ It was perhaps the most statesmanlike
thing that h e 's done. No one will m iss him because no one knew
that he was th e re ." And Sam M esslnger, elder statesm an and
re tire d Student Body P resident, expressed disappointment. Yet,
all that happened cannot be blamed solely on Mel Brooks. From
his election, many congressm en openly admitted that they were
hostile to a black man as president. It is hard to imagine some
congressm en ever accepting him. Perhaps he was right in not
wasting the effort on a body that can too often be compared to bad
“ Comic S trip " G uerilla T heatre. Triangle editor. Jay Lockman,
w rote this: “ Considering the number of white students at Drexel
and the number of black students, it Is fitting that student govern­
ment should have a black m ember for only ten minutes of its meet­
ing. The problem a rise s in planning for the next meeting. Where
will Congress come up with a black to appear for only ten minutes?
And how, in the name of the unnamable, would they throw him out
if he decided to stay longer than his allotted tim e?"
Mel B ro o k s
'" A
So now E ric Roberts is Student Body President. He inherits a
Congress that looks toward him for constructive leadership. Will
he succeed?
Matthew Kokoska, speaker of the Congress, last
sum m er, feels that Roberts will undertake “ a quiet and efficient
reorganization which will put student government back on Its feet. ’
Mel has forced Congress to do one thing—It has finally realized
that it must stand on its own and not depend on the lead of the
president.
1
Sam M esslnger, once the most flamboyant leader that Drexel
has seen, commented, “ M r. Roberts has a great deal of drive
which, if properly directed should yield considerable resu lts to
his fellow students. The immediate problem 1 see confronting him
is getting other m em bers of the government to work in concert
with him. With a unified effort, no w ell-reasoned proposal could
in good conscience be turned down by the adm inistration."
E ric Roberts is a man who believes in communication and unity.
His way will be subtle. He told me that “ what Is essential now Is
to make ‘Joe D rexel' aware that he can participate and control the
‘D rexel P ro c e s s.' Student government has awakened to the fact
that it does not rep resen t ‘Joe Drexel,* but is self-directed. We
m ust bring student government to the students through forum s and
Town Meetings so that they can contribute to the solution of Drexel
p ro b lem s."
E ric R obert's problem may be with the Congress. Whether he can
motivate them depends on whether he can slow down enough to talk
to them in th eir language and whether o r not he can make his em phasis
on communication work to achieve action from a slothllke Con­
g re ss and adm inistration."
As Jay Lockman commented extemporaneously, “ These are m deed troubled tim es. Unquote.'*
If P . T . B a r n u m
W e re a liv e to d a y ..
JOHN-BROWN
By M ichele Krahn
•dents, and personalities plagued Wynn as rum ors sped
through the Congress like wildfire.
Our F earless U a d e r, Rick Roberts, aw e-inspiring as he entered the meeting to Ellis Cohen's contra­
bass humming “ Hail to the Chief," addressed the
Congress as the new President of the Student Body.
Rick walked to the podium bearing his new title
sraoeM ly and confldenlly. A . he sp o L , his prepared
fhr
commented) speech
was thrown to the floor and his ideas poured out to
the respectful Congress. He asked for unity of mind
and
differences be put aside;
sol,-appraisal
FHl<:h:nMAN
E ric
R o b erts
“ d Tom Mendenhall, V.P
for Academic AHalrs, have been happening for the
ing
a J l r rCav’s,
“ 'l and the SAT chouse.
h a n c eUnitv
lit!
wgs *Inr the"
the T
hails,
of p u ^ o s e must tille r down from the Executive be
m eet"l;“
if 1
(often) dirty laundry
^
T h f ‘"'“ 1“:“ '^
eaptriiurn^x^rhL*^:^"^^^^^^
-
and the ever-criHoai
but to Congress
help i i e s 'r : h T s S c u t r ? o m m S in need of a competent V p
7 ^
now. Positive a c t L t I - L ^ “
^ 0 ^ ^ S .‘
a premium. Fa
o r the executii
noticeable (yets
A stranger to
the hallowed
as none other tl
A ffairs. Jerry
New York and
presence known
p ast bookkeepini
sibilities, he no
long enougli, am
obsolete markin
by the previo\„
mination to gett
in the Drexel 0
and sweet. Km*
shirked his dutii«
abundance of ca
people here at U
^r-Evaluation can be the saviour
of Student Congress and the
faint) “ activism ."
r shores Tuesday evening entered
I legislation. He introduced him self
Jerry Collins, V.P. for Financial
lained that he*s been hiding in
not feel conapelled to make his
itil this time. Having nothing but
^cords to tell him of his responthat he has pondered over these
5 now stumped completely by the
in the ledgers. Not to be outdone
eakers, Je rry , too, showed d e te r­
i job done, although his tim e spent
munity will be of necessity short
ig for certain that J e r r y has not
tills this “ re p o rte r" with an over­
dence and assurance that the little
xel will not be forgotten.
The meeting < led with a resounding thump of the
plven to the P.R.O. by the Speaker
gavel. A
requested tliat tt “ re p o rte r" remind all enthusias­
tic students to
up for the following com m ission
chairmanships: Elections, Homecoming, Auditing,
and Organii^atio il.
lease (pretty please with a
virginal cherry »n top) bring all statem ents of in­
tent to Ro (^■he’^ still in the Dean of M en's Office).
D u e
to
th e
r e s h u f f lin g
t h e
of
y o u r
p o s itio n
S t u d e n t
G o v e r n m e n t
of
VICE-PRESIDENT OF STUDENT AFFAI RS
IS n o w v q c a i
T he
S tu d e n t
filling
this
inten t
to
the
5 :0 0
office
p .m
C o n g r e s s
p o s itio n
th e
of
to
S p e a k e r
th e
D e a n
, M o n d a y ,
in v ite s
a n y o n e
s u b m i t
a
of
C o n g r e s s
of
th e
M e n
O c t o b e r
in te r e s te d
s t a t e m e n t
n o
13,
la te r
1 9 6 9 .
in
of
c a r e
t h a n
of
in
DREXEL
TRIANGLE
Page 10—O rtobrr 10, l% 9
a quick
and dirty
history
of Vietnam
by J a y
Lockm an
F or our purposes, contact between the west and Vietnam began
during the sixteenth century when European traders made contact
with what was then called Annam, In the wake of the traders came
French m issionaries. Their zeal did not, however, make much of an
impression on the generally anti-foreign Asians, and many were
killed by local tribesmen. It was at this time that Britain was s e r­
iously capturing trade concessions in China, and a French fleet out
to do the same used the imprisonment of a French bishop as grounds
for intervention. During a series of weak emperors the French
consolidated and expanded, until by the early 1880s, they had Viet­
nam effectively under French rule.
Though the occupation went along mildly enough, with only minor
resistance from the population, the J ^ a n e s e expansion of the early
twentieth century had profound effects on all Asiatic peoples. Na­
tionalist groups began to spring up. With a wave of prosperity after
World War I, the gap between the white French ruling class and
the Vietnamese serving class became more apparent as Vietna­
mese were blocked from rising above a certain state in the colonial
government. There was a growing realization by the Vietnamese
of their status. Nationalist groups set forth demands which by mod­
ern standards were quite modest, only to find them rejected by the
rigid colonial government. Alienation set in, and some of the grow­
ing nationalist groups turned to the communists for support.
Ho arrives
During World War II, Vietnam was ruled by the Vichy French
and the Japanese, through the puppet em peror Bao Dal. During the
war the “ League for Vietnam Independence" (shorted to Viet-Minh)
became the dominant nationalist group, and by the time the end of
the war came they were highly organized and had carried out raids
on the weakened Japanese forces occupying the country.
At the Potsdam Conference it was agreed by “ The Powers” that
Britain was to occupy Vietnam after the war up to the sixteenth
parallel. China was to occupy Vietnam north of that line. However,
when British troops arrived in Vietnam, they found the French
colonial government virtually gone, and were met by the VietMinh who declared Vietnam a free republic. Their leader was a
wiry man named Ho Chi Minh.
The French ran into trouble after the war when they tried to
reestablish their previous position in Vietnam, The Viet-Minh were
the only organized political group and they wanted independence.
In the context of both colonialism and the racial and cultural dlf.
ferences Involved, the situation rapidly became uneasy. The lun
was broken late in 1946 when a F rench c ru is e r fired on a group of
Vietnamese killing six thousand civilians in the shelling and ensuing’
panic. The Viet-Minh struck w herever they could find foreigners.
The war had begun.
'
French co llap se
The war ended at Dienbienphu, and the collapse of the French left
the emperor, Bao Dai, caught on the R iviera, w here he had spent
much of his tenure. Going into the Geneva conference it would seem
that Ho Chi Minh had all the cards on his side,'^Ie had clearly de­
feated the French army, was the overwhelming favorite of the Viet­
namese people, and had control of the only re a l power in the nation.
Unfortunately, Ho placed some tru st in the negotiations and was
severely let down by the resulting treaty and the p a rt the Russians
played in the negotiations. Ho ended up with the north under his rule
and the south under Ngo Dinh Diem, a V ietnam ese who had been
called from the U.S. by the French and given th eir support. Diem
got rid of Bao Dal in a blatantly rigged election in which he got 98,2%
of all votes cast.
In the Geneva Accord it i» stated that the seventeenth parallel
was to be the dividing line between the two sections of the country
but, “ (this) should not in any way be interp reted as constituting
a political or te rrito ria l boundary,’* If general elections would have
been held within two years as recommended by the Geneva Accord
there is little doubt that Ho would have united all Vietnam under
him. Instead, Diem flatly refused to hold nationwide electio^)6
and the temporary partition became a re a l dem ilitarized zone be­
tween warring factions.
U.S. aid
Diem was helped very much by the fact that he was a favorite
of the local CIA representative. Through him, aid of all so rts poured
into Vietnam (the South that is), U.S. aid was nothing new there
for by 1954 we were furnishing an overwhelming m ajority of French
war costs there. As a Catholic in a Buddhist country Diem had his
problem s. They were compounded by some of his “ re fo rm s”
which were blatantly offensive to the cultural standards of the ma­
jority.
Though there was no official request for troops, at som e point we
got 500,000 of them into the South, thus involving us to a pretty
l a r p extent. After the fall of Diem, we practically controlled the
politics of the South. And that’s where we a re today.
THE DREXEL TRIANGLE
M«mb«r
USSPA, ACP
E s t a b l i s h e d 1926
A goodcry
cleanses the soul
O fficia l n e w sp ap er p u b li s h e d by th e s t u d e n t s o f Drexel
In s titu te o f Tech no log y, 32nd and C h e s t n u t S tr e e ts , P h i l ­
adelphia. O pinions e x p r e s s e d in s i g n e d co lu m n s are not
n e c e ss a rily tho se o f the I n s t i t u t e or o f T h e Triangle.
Phone: BA 2-1654 or E V 7 -2 4 0 0 ,( E x t e n s i o n 2118).
R d ito r -in -C h ie f.............................................. Jqy Lockman
B u s in e s s M a n a g e r ........................................Lynn K. Lauderman
Managing E d i t o r ...........................................Mike K y le
Ed i to r ia l Board: J a y L o c k m a n , L y n n K. L a u d e r m a n , M ike K y l e ,
Jay Freedman, Nancy K olk eb eck , J o e M cGowan, C ra ig N ygard,
E l a i n e MaGuire.
iVew.s; E l a i n e M ag u ire, n e w s e d i t o r ; J i m K i t c h , Kathy K o w a i c zyk, M ich ele Krohn, J im L e w i s , L a r r y M a rio n , C r a i g N y g a r d ,
Joh n S i l v a s i , J a c k G e d i o n , B a r b a r a H u d d l e s t o n .
F e a t a r e s ; N a n c y K o l k e b e c k , e d it o r ; L i n d a T h o m p s o n , a s s ’t
e d it o r , E l l . s C o h e n , J e a n n e K y l e , Tom J e r e m i a h , A l e x T u r f a .
Sports: J o e M cGowan, e d it o r ; J i m B u d l n t x , A r n i e Riewe, S t ^ v e
o c in o , Mike C h a i n , D a v e S t e in , D a v e U r q u h o r t ,
A fte r all is s h e d a n d
done, your soul m ay be
s a v e d . . but yo u r c o n ta c ts
n e e d help. T h e y n e e d Lens i n e . L e n s i n e is t h e o n e c o n ­
t a c t l e n s s o l u t i o n fo r c o m ­
plete c o n ta c t c a r e ... p rep arin g ,
clean sin g , a n d soaking.
T h e re w a s a tim e w h e n you
n e e d e d tw o o r m o r e d i f f e r e n t l e n s
s o l u t i o n s to p r o p e r l y p r e p a r e a n d
m aintain yo u r c o n ta c ts . > J o m ore.
L e n sin e . from T h e M u rin e C o m ­
p a n y , m a k e s c a r in g for c o n ta c t
le n s e s a s co n v en ien t a s w earin o
th em
^
II,
J u s t a d r o p o r tw o of L e n s in e
c o a t s a n d lu b ric a te s y o u r le n s.
T h i s a l l o w s t h e l e n s t o flo a t m o r e
f r e e l y in t h e e y e . r e d u c i n g t e a r f u l
irrita tio n . W h y ? B e c a u s e L e n s i n e
is a c o m p a t i b l e , " i s o t o n i c " s o l u ­
ti o n , v e r y m u c h lik e y o u r e y e ’s n a t ­
u r a l fluid s.
C l e a n i n g y o u r c o n t a c t s w ith
L e n s i n e r e t a r d s t h e b u i l d - u p of
fo re ig n d e p o s its on th e le n s e s .
A n d s o a k i n g y o u r c o n t a c t s in L e n ­
sin e b e tw ee n w earin g p e rio d s a s ­
s u r e s you of p r o p e r le n s h y g ie n e .
You g e t a free s o a k in g - s to r a g e
c a s e w ith i n d i v i d u a l l e n s c o m p a r t ­
m e n ts o n th e b o tto m of every b o t­
t le o f L e n s i n e .
ings permits the
g ro w th of b a c t e r ia o n
t h e l e n s e s . T h i s is a
s u r e c a u s e of e y e ir­
r i t a t i o n a n d in s o m e
cases can endanger
y o u r v is io n . B a c t e r i a c a n ­
n o t g r o w in L e n s i n e b e ­
c a u s e it’s s t e r i l e , s e l f - s a n i t i z ­
in g . a n d a n t i s e p t i c .
Copy;
MoryonoH, copy head; Iv, Fleck, Carol Harris,
erry Kyle, 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 ! , J o c k T o o l e .
Faculty Advisor . . ...............................................
Roymoad Lorantos
L e n s i n e . . . t h e s o u / u t i o n for
c o m p le te c o n ta c t len s care. M ade
b y t h e M u r i n e C o m p a n y . Inc.
utrriL
PlV f
It h a s b e e n d e m o n s t r a t e d t h e
im p ro p er s to ra g e b e tw e e n w ear-
not your
confects
WXDT/RADIO 8 3 0
D .I.T , v s , L a f f a y # f f 9
S a t , O c t , 11 a t 1 : 3 0 p . m .
D REX EL TRIANGLE
O c t o b e r 1 0 , 1 9 6 9 —P a g e 11
iij L < 3 .im
A Perspective On
A S n HF.RF.'S A TROOP RED UC TION A N D H E R B S
NO D R AFT CALL FOR OCTOBER A N D HERE'S . . .'
The October 15 Moratorium
By Jim Kitch
Leaders and organizers of the October 15 Na­
tional Moratorium against the war in Vietnam have
picked up im portant support from some prom i­
nent congressmen and from the student and ad­
m inistrative leaders of an increasing number of
the nation’s colleges and universities. Among
those endorsing the function are Sen. F red R.
H a rris CD-Okla.), the Dem ocratic national chair­
man, Sen. Mark O. Hatfield (R-Ore.), Sen. George
McGovern (D-S.D.), Sen, CharlesE.G oodell(R-N Y )
and Sen, Eugene McCarthy (D-Minn.),
President Nixon may also have unintentionally
given a boost to the anti-w ar movement, which
until recently had been unable to m uster as much
popular support a s ’ it had during the Johnson era.
In response to a news conference concerning the
m oratorium and other anti-w ar activities, he said
that he expected opposition to the w ar to continue,
but that *‘under no circum stances will I be affected
whatever by it.”
The arrogant attitude and declared indifference
inherent in the P resid en t's comment angered many
anti-w ar activists and, in many cases, strengthened
th eir resolve.
Don Gurewitz, a national spokesman for the
Student Mobilization Committee to End the W ar
in Vietnam, said Mr. Nixon's statem ent indicated
an attitude of **total and u tter contem pt" for the
American people. Gurewitz announced that his
group is planning a “ no-peace-for-N ixon" cam­
paign to insure that in the future all of Nixon's
public speeches are accompanied by p ro tests
against his w ar policies.
The Student Mobilization Committee is p a rt of
a la rg e r coalition known as the New Mobiliza­
tion Committee to End the W ar in Vietnam. It
is planning a strike of high school and college
students on November 14 to accompany the la rg e r
organization's m arch on Washington on Novem­
ber 15.
Sam Brown and David Hawk, lead ers of the
A n n o u n c e m e n ts
Drexel Institute of Technology,
through the joint efforts of the De­
sign Department and the Student
program Board, will p re se n t a
three-day film festival on kinetic
art at 8 p.m. on O ctober 14, Oc­
tober 28 and November 11 In P a t­
ten Auditorium, M atheson Hall,
32nd and M ark etS treets. A single
admission will be $2.25 ($6 for
the series) for the publicj $1.25
for the student ($3 for the s e r ­
ies).
These three p ro g ram s will in­
clude 26 short film s by leading
film makers from nine countries.
Many of these film s have won
prizes in European film festi­
vals. They include both experi­
mental and documentary film s,
“ pop” films, ab stract, kinetic
and animated film s,
* * *
At this m onth's meeting of
Drexel’s Young D em ocrats, the
guest speaker will be F ran k
Finch. Mr. Finch, p a st p re s i­
dent of the Temple Young Demo­
crats, is currently heading the
Democrats fo rS p e c to r, a Repub­
lican.
A one-year free m em bership
will be awarded to freshm en who
attend this meeting, at 3:30 p.m .,
October 15 in Room 215 DAC.
All 13 films in the F la sh Gordon
series will be presen ted at the
Hovel on Sunday, O ctober 12.
There will be two showings, one
at 1:00 p.m. and one at 8:00 p.m .
The Hovel is located at 3309 P e a rl
Street; admission is fre e .
Head of the Civil Engineering
Department to become dean of
the new College of Engineering
Technology at Temple Univer­
sity. The acting department head
of the Civil Engineering depart­
ment will be Dr. Samuel M er­
c e r, A ssociate Dean of the Col­
lege of Engineering.
P ro fesso r L ester Stradling has
been appointed Acting Head of the
Mechanical Engineering D epart­
ment, after the death of D r. John
Agnew. D r. Frederick B. Hig­
gins J r ., joined the Civil En­
gineering department as As­
sistant P ro fesso r of Engineering.
D r, C. William Savery joined
the mechanical engineering de­
partm ent as an Associate P ro ­
fe sso r, D r, RichardD.W oodring,
P ro fesso r of Civil Engineering,
just returned from a Ford
Foundation residence in en­
gineering practice with a civil
engineering firm.
You
and the
Establishment
* * *
Dr. John Rumpf resigned as
S o y o u d ig D y la n , T o y o u , h e
B LO W
Y O U R SELF U P
m e a n s s o m e th in g .
B u t y o u d o n 't d ig t h e E s ta b ­
Vietnam M oratorium Committee, which is organ­
izing the October 15 protest, also had something
to say about M r. Nixon's rem ark. In making the
comment, explained Brown, Nixon displayed “ the
kind of rigid stance which contributed so much
to the b itte rn e ss " which accompanied the Johnson
e ra . Hawk said that the President displayed an
“ evident cynicism " and that his attitude was giv­
ing the anti-w ar movement **a new and growing
constituency.”
Within the past two weeks, the number of stu­
dent body presidents and student newspaper edi­
to rs to have signed a statement endorsing the
m oratorium grew from 300 to nearly 600, accord­
ing to the committee. At the same time, some
college adm inistrators have closed their schools
for the day, while many others (including Drexel
P resid en t W.W. Hagerty) are perm itting student,
faculty and staff who wish to boycott classes or
work in support of the moratorium to do so.
The New Mobilization Committee, which claim s
to have chapters at over 900 colleges and about
seventy high schools, predicts that well over a
m illion students will join in the moratorium activ­
ities, The group's long range plans include a twoday p ro test in November, three days in December,
etc. for as long as the w ar lasts.
W hether o r not the m oratorium draws a mil­
lion participants nationally, it nevertheless is c e r­
tain to reinitiate a vigorous dialogue concerning
the w ar on campuses acro ss the country. It will
provide an opportunity for m em bers of the aca­
dem ic community to learn m ore about the war
and to discuss it with th eir associates during such
activities as panel discussions, speeches, rallies,
teach-ins, etc.
All persons, no m atter what their current
feelings about the w ar, are being urged to attend
the day 's events. Why not participate? Learn
something, make yourself heard, and show your
concern about the w ar.
C 'Ittfinity
O
pleasedour
parents,
one inch
looks good
to us. ”
e. e. Cummings
lis h m e n t. T o y o u t h e E s ta b lis h m e n t
m e a n s a lo t o f th in g s y o u q u e s tio n .
T h e y c a ll t h a t t h e g e n e r a t i o n
gap.
A nd
i t 's
one
o f th e
b ig g e s t
b e e f s in h i s t o r y .
A n 1 1 -p a rt
S p e c ia l
R e p o rt,
s ta rtin g
in T h e
P h ila d e l­
M onday
p h ia In q u ire r, g iv e s y o u t h e s to r y .
Y o u r s id e . A n d th e ir s id e .
I t 's c a l l e d
Black and White
2ft.x3ft.Posterdniy$0
^
($4.95 value)
" T o d a y 's S o c ie ty ;
T h e R e b e ls a n d T h e ir C r itic s ."
A n d in i t , t h e r e b e l s a n d t h e i r
with plastic framt $4 (|7.95 valu«)
c ritic s d e b a t e th e w a r. T h e d r a f t.
Send any black & white or color photo
up to 8" X 10" (no negatives) and the
name "Swingline" cut from any
Swingline stapler or staple refill package
to: Poster-Mart. P. 0 . Box 165,
Woodside. N. Y. 11377. Enclose cash,
check or money order (no C.O.D.'s) in
•5
0* $2.(X) for each blow-up;
♦4XX) for blow-up and frame a s shown.
Add sales tax where applicable. Original
material returned undamaged. Satisfac­
tion guaranteed. Allow 3 0 days for delivery.
The
N eg ro .
C o lle g e
u n re s t.
He also knows the exact
importance of having financial
security. And he’ll stait to plan
for it now— by Investing in a
life insurance program th at
p ro v id e s fo r now , an d th e
future.
At Provident Mutual we have
the precise program for col­
lege students. For detailed in­
formation give us a call. Or
stop by our campus office
today. Don't wait ad Infinitum.
L aw
a n d o r d e r . D ru g s. S ex. H ip p ie s . R e­
l i g i o n . - T o d a y 's
h e ro es.
C a n th e g a p b e c lo s e d ?
R e a d b o th s id e s o f th e s to ry
in t h i s e x c i t i n g S p e c i a l R e p o r t .
THE
GREAT
SWINGLINE
And today we’re infinitely
more realistic. Today’s college
student doesn’t deal in inches.
He uses millimeters, and mi­
crons, and millimicrons.
lo n a th a n
S.
C o rle
I t 's a b o u t y o u .
P R O V ID E N T
TOTSTAPLER
The world's largest:
sUpler yet no larger than a
P«ck of gum. ONLY
with 1000 FIIEE sUplttl
THE GREAT NEW
SWINGLINE
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DESK STAPLERS
ONLY I1.M eK h.
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y only l l . M each.
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MC.
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MUTUALiMMi LIFE
IN SU H A N C I O U M M N V o r
S ta r ts
M
o n d a y
in
yfiilabtlpfiia |ni(mr«r
SUITE 1919 3 PENN C E N T E R P L A Z A
PH ILA D ELPH IA , PENNSYLVANIA 19102
LOcvst 8*0535
•t
DREXEL
TRIANGLE
Pagp I2 -0 c to b p r 10, 1969
Selecting the Dean of Students
The new committee to select
the next Dean of Students to re ­
place Donald Belneman held its
first meeting last week. The com­
mittee consists of three students,
two adm inistrators and one fac­
ulty member. Dr. McGuire, VicePresident for Student Affairs, is
chairman of the committee.
T he
th re e
stu d e n ts
The three students were chosen
by E ric Roberts, formerly stu­
dent V ice-President for Student
Affairs, and now President of the
student body. Roberts chose him­
self, A1 Rudintsky (President of
Community Relations Commis­
sion) and this w riter. All three
are acting as independent stu­
dents; their organizational affil­
iations are not related to their
positions on the committee.
The two administrators will
both work under the new Dean of
Students; G. William Zuspan,
Dean of Freshmen and Shirley
Welsh, Dean of Women, will help
choose their new boss.
The one faculty member is Dr.
Karl Gelslnger, Head of the De­
partment of Psychology and Edu­
cation.
I asked Dr. McGuire if he was
a voting member of the commit­
tee. He replied that technically
he was the^e to break a tie if
necessary, but hopefully the new
Dean of Students will be chosen
unanimously.
From the tone of the first
meeting it seems that Dr. Mc­
G uire's hope will be borne out.
The seven members of the com­
mittee had sim ilar Ideas of Just
what a Dean of Students should
be. All the members were in­
terested in getting a dean who
would be very active in his duties
and develop strong communica­
tion lines to the students and ad­
m inistration as well. The four
non-students seemed very anx­
ious to hear the students* views
on qualities a dean should have;
the students were in turn equal­
ly receptive to their viewpoints.
R esp ect
is
needed
In general, the committee is
looking for someone who will
respect students as people, a
quality too often lacking in ad­
m inistrators. This respect Is
vital If the new dean works close­
ly with students; without it, he
turns into a dupe either for the
administration’s ends or his own.
Some of the duties of the new
Dean of Students, such as hous­
ing, activities, liaison and work­
ing with the Deans such as Men,
Women, and Freshm en who must
report to him, are already spec­
ified. However, his degree of in­
volvement and his acceptance of
other duties will be his own deci­
sion. This decision will be one
member of the man.
In case you have received the
im pression that the new Dean
must be a man, forget it. There
will be no discrimination as to
sex or anything else. In fact, a
C o m p u te r-a id e d d e sig n
D o u g T a y lo r
in E lec tro n ics E n g in e e rin g
in 1967.
Doug is already a senior associate
engineer in Advanced Technology at
IBM. His job: designing large-scale
integrated circuits that will go into
computers five to ten years from now.
T h e c h a lle n g e o f LSI
"Most of today's computers," Doug
points out, "use hybrid integrated
circuits. But large-scale integration
(LSI) circuit technology is even more
complicated. 1 have to design a great
m any m ore components and connec­
tions onto a tiny monolithic chip.
*"I'm one of a five-man team. When
By
Doug regards the computer as his
most valuable tool. "It does all of the
routine calculations that could other­
wise take hours. I can test a design
idea by putting all of the factors into a
computer. And get an answer almost
instantly. So I can devote m ost of my
energies to creative thinking. It's an
ideal setup."
V is it y o u r p l a c e m e n t o ffice
Doug's is just one example of the
m any opportunities in engineering and
science at IBM. For more information,
visit your placem ent office.
Kyle
Uon will, of course, be held con
fldentlal.
The com m ittee is also lookinc
for any suggestions as to what
qualities and talents it might
•look for in the applicants and
what duties he should perform.
Again, any m em ber of the comJ
m lttee is open for these suggestions.
Jea n n e
supply suitable land.
Mr. X went secretly to the city
fathers at about the same time
and convinced them that they
could, at no expense to the city,
both help the city and put the
Main Liners on the spot. They
also quickly jumped at the chance.
Mr. X’s suggestion was that they
offer to supply land for an a rt
museum If the citizens of the
Main Line would come through
with the money.
And it came to pass that the
offers were made public sim ul­
taneously, to the consternation of
those involved, and Mr. X was
appointed to head the project.
While the land was p erfect—
part of Fairmount Park and with­
in walking distance of city hall—
we're assigned a project, we look at the
overall problem first. Everyone
contributes his ideas. Then each of us
takes over his own part of the project
and is responsible for designing
circuitry that's compatible with the
system."
g o t h i s B .S . d e g r e e
Mike
female Dean of Students might
be an enjoyable change for DIT.
Applications for the positions
are welcome immediately. Any­
one may apply whether they are
from Drexel or not. Any mem­
ber of the committee will ac­
cept a resume o r application
can be made In D r. McGuire’s
office. All names and inform a-
diversions
Once upon a time in the nottoo-dlstant past Philadelphia’s
city fathers and the citizens of
the Main Line did not see eyeto-eye on the problem of sup­
porting the city. A remarkable
man, whose name eludes me at
present, came upon the scene
and used this opposition to make
Philadelphia’s coup of the cen­
tury.
This Mr. X went secretly to the
citizens of the Main Line and con­
vinced them that they could at
once both help the city and make
city hall look bad. They naturally
jumped at this chance. Mr. X’s
suggestion was that they offer
to supply a certain sum of money
for the purpose of building a
museum of a rt if the city would
By
Kyle
th ere wasn’t enough money to
build the building that Mr. X had
hoped for.
Undaunted, M r. X proceeded
with the p ro ject with a slight re­
vision in plans. He constructed
two rectangular buildings, quite
obviously disjoint.
The city was outraged! They
would not put up with having two
se p a ra te buildings; so they quick­
ly provided M r. X with enough
funds to build a connecting build­
ing. The completed stru ctu re just
happened to follow M r. X’s orig­
inal plans.
This is the histo ry of the U shaped building at the end of the
Parkw ay. Go v isit it sometime.
If you get th ere before Novem­
b e r 3, you will be able to enjoy
the B rancusi exhibition.
This exhibit is a compre­
hensive one, including over 70
pieces of sculpture in marble,
alab aster,
lim estone,
onyx,
bronze and wood as well as
drawings, w aterco lors, and a r ­
chitectural elem ents of the late
Roumanian a rtis t.
In addition to special exhibits,
such as the one on Brancusi,
The Philadelphia Museum of Art
has enough in its perm anent col­
lection to keep you absorbed for
th ree to four hours every three
months fo r the r e s t of your life.
The museum naturally has a
very fine collection of paintings
and sculpture, but it also abounds
in such different form s of a rt as
a Japanese teahouse, a knight’s
shining arm o r, G race Kelly’s
wedding gown, an 18th century
Pennsylvania Dutch table and a
Chinese Buddist Tem ple.
A n E q u al O p p o rtu n ity E m p lo y e r
IBM
T m helping to advance LSI technology."
A re you
g e n u in e ?
an acto r?
O r th a t
O rm e re ly
A re p re se n ta tiv e ?
w hich
ed?
In t h e
are
m e re ly
is
re p re se n t­
en d, p erh ap s
a
copy
of
you
an
a cto r?
N ie tz sc h e
Robert Dove
GL 5.5496
MASTER KR A FT
ENGRAVING
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D R E X E ). T R I A N G L E
October 10, l% 9 —Page 13
Brow nm en show b a l a n c e d
aftack in d e f e a t i n g So. Conn.
C o n t i n u e d from pa ge 16
Dubas took another Schwerlng
nass to the twelve in the second
Diay of the final period. F rom
there Ed Wieland came in to at­
tempt an apparent three-p o in ter.
The attempt failed with holder
schwerlng trying a p a ss.
The Owls w ere again th reat­
ening eleven plays la te r on the
Dragon twenty-five until Paul Lit
dropped quarterback Bloomingdale twelve yards behind the line
of scrimmage on the fourth down.
The Dragons took possession for
six plays until forced to punt.
From the twenty-four the Owls*
QB Bloomingdale dropped back
and was him self dropped by blitz­
ing linebacker Ed Mattio fo r a
loss of seven. Five plays la te r
they had steamed up to the D rag­
on 33, threatening to sco re. The
Dragons apparently didn’t ap­
preciate this as FeUx (The Cat)
Salvi racked the quarterback
from his blind side, causing an
almost vertical p ass to be fired
by Bloomingdale. The entire de­
fensive line sm ashed Blooming­
dale again for a loss of five.
Salvi couldn't be satisfied with
all of the hitting so he picked off
a pass on the 30 after Paul L it
hit Bloomingdale for the la st time
in the se rie s.
D rexel took over, but only for
seven plays. They were forced
to punt with fifty-six seconds left
in the game. A short boot put
the ball on the Dragons* own 38,
A pass play to the 29-yard line
stopped the clock with 41 sec­
onds left. The next play, end
Ken Guest and Paul Lit rocked
Bloomingdale, foiling a pass at­
tem pt. With twenty-nine seconds
from the 29, fourtti down and one
yard to go, the Owls, in a vain
attem pt to score, attempted a
pass. It was incomplete, leav­
ing the Dragons in possession
for the last 20 seconds with a 14-7
victory under their belts.
I can describe the game best
in the words of Coach Brown who
said after the game, “ It scared
the daylights out of me.*' It went
right down to the w ire, but Drex­
el pulled through with a com­
bined effort of the defensive line
and backs Enoch, Wieland and
Ferguson. But still there is credit
due to the yet unmentioned. The
offensive in terior linemen who
gave Bill B aer and Jim Schwering those extra few seconds to
effectively throw the ball. These
men are the w orkhorses who
stopped the Southern Connecticut
defense cold. They include jguys.
O ld - T im e r s
C on tin ue d from page 16
like Dan Wilson, Joel Speigal,
Pete Sculley, A rt Swiatkowski,
P a t F red rick and Mike Johnson.
Without these men, who rarely
receive any mention, there would
be no team, let alone a victory.
As Dan Wilson told me, “ They
w ere pretty tough, but the con­
centration on pass protection the
entire week helped quite a b it."
Anyone who attended the game
could agree to that statem ent.
S pirits are high for the upcom­
ing game against Lafayette at
their field. Drexel defensive back
Bob Enoch verified this by tell­
ing me “ If we continue to hit as
hard as we did last week, we
can beat any team on our sched­
u le ." If Baer continues on his
rampage of completions (18 of
26 for 187 yards) and our of­
fensive and defensive backs and
lines keep hammering away as
they did last week how can we
lose? And if Greg Dubas keeps
hauling in passes as he has
been, breaking the Drexel c a re e r
reception record with 45, how can
anyone stop us? Come to Easton
next week and see what I mean.
There will be eight buses going
out and a visit to the G reat Court
will surely lead to a ticket.
don't any of the alumni goalies
show up?*' A snappy answer shot
back, “ They know b e tte r."
“ Hey Red, (referrin g to a gen­
tlem an who seemingly had not lost
any of the fine physique he posessed in his days at Drexel ex­
cept that his short-cropped h air
had lost much of its c a rro t color­
ation), who*s that fat old man
standing behind you?"
“ When we were^playing the refs
always looked so old."
Following a chase for crisp
pass which proved too crisp for
added y ears and poundage was
heard “ That was beautiful—ten
y e a rs ago."
If these examples a re n 't enough
for you to see the agreetnent,
then dig this clincher which came
after the competition had ended,
“ That was the g reatest tim e I've
had in y e a rs ." “ Yeah, sure was
one helluva lot of fun."
The common misconceptions of
today will not be too easy to
change because they are imbed­
ded into the minds of American
sp o rts fans. Collegians have
enough p re ssu re on them from
too many other sources as it is
to w orry about having a power­
house for a team. The solutionis
sim p le --le t the professional ath­
letes p re ss for the victories, re ­
lax a little, and enjoy yourselves
at the field on Saturday after­
noons.
Oh, by the way, the final out­
come of the game was 2 -to -l
in favor of the varsity.
Buses to Lafayette
Tickets Available
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DREXEL
TRIANGLE
Page 14—October 10, 1969
Greeks begin football leagues; TC and PKP Impress
By Bob Coward
TC and PKP, last y ear's league
champions, began this year's IF
football season with deciding vic­
tories over SAT and “ Sammy.*’
The results of this week’s games
a re as follows:
T C -3 7 , SA T -0
What can I say, TC, la sty e a r's
IF champs, completely demolish­
ed the spiritedSAT football team.
TC scored by every means pos­
sible. Butch Raupak threw three
touchdown passes, two to Tom
Kearney and one to Paul Gordon.
Even when TC didn't have the
ball, they were still able to
score. Steve Centrella scored on
a pass interception, a punt re ­
turn and a safety, while Brent
Berti also had a safety. From
the way TC played, I think SAT
should have stayed home.
P K P -3 9 , SA M -13
I think Pi Kap wanted to re ­
deem themselves for last y ear's
tough loss to TC. They took
charge, and showed the rest of
the league that you can't take
them lightly. Mike Altimore
threw for four touchdowns, one to
John Shiveri and Tom Schneider
and two to Jim Miller. Mike
Varzally scored on a punt return
and Mike Blouse finished off the
scoring by intercepting a Sammy
pass and returning it for PK P's
sixth touchdown. F o r Sammy,
Joe Gekoski managed to throw
two touchdown passes to Mike
Tell, but a strong pass rush
forced four in te rc ^ tio n s, and
that was all Pi Kap needed.
D S P -2 1 , P L P - 1 9
PLP started off with a bang
by scoring 19 points in the first
quarter. Bill Cline ran the open­
ing kickoff back for the first
score, Brobst scored minutes
la te r on a five'yard run and Balalik intercepted a DSP pass and
returned it for a TD. But then
DSP's defense settled down to
hold Pi Lam 's offense. Mean­
while, Joe Anthony scored in
the second quarter, Weaver scor­
ed in the third, and Bob Pollili scored with only three min­
utes left in the game for the
clincher. Both teams played a
fine game, but it was DSP depth
which won the game.
A P L -1 8 , P S K -2
The defense won the day for
**Apple P ie " Sunday as they shut
out PSK's offense. APL used a
strong pass rush and Dick
H eintz's three interceptions to
stop Phi Sig. Three times in the
f irs t half, Phi Sig was inside
"Apple P ie 's " ten yard line,
but could not score. F o r Apple
Pie, Jim Moore threw a TD
pass to Figliola and Heilderb erg er and scored the third him­
self. Jim Brown intercepted three
p asses and played a fine game
while L arry Lehman caught
Moore in his own end zone for
Phi Sig's only score.
T K E -2 8 . L C A -7
LCA came to play football,
but TKE proved a little too much
for them. Rich Tedesco threw for
three touchdowns, one each to
Don Rocklage, Ed Totten and
J e rry Madden and ran for a
fourth as they scored in every
period. TKE's defense scored
two safeties and set up their third
touchdown on a fine kickoff re ­
turn by Bob Annetti in the sec­
ond quarter. The ex tra point
was from Sasin to Blanchard.
F o r Lambda Chi, Dick Cum­
mings went both ways and play­
ed a fine game while Totten and
•Bill Puntin gave Tedesco excel­
lent protection in TKE's backfield.
S P -3 0 , T E P - 1 4
SP jumped right at Tep by scor­
ing on the first play on a 40yard TD pass from Thompson to
Balagh. Right from the start, you
could tell SP meant business.
Thompson threw for one m ore TD
to Katawczik and ran for a third
before relinquishing his job to
M urray, who also threw a touch­
down to Katawczik. TEP scored
in the fourth q u a rte r on a Gross
to Gisbon TD p a ss and an inter­
ception by Sobel. The biggest exi
citem ent came on a re v e rse on a
punt re tu rn by Burk for SP»s
second touchdown. With PKP sp
and TKE in one league, look for
som e good football In the coming
weeks.
V a r s i t y Club
F i r s t m e e tin g o f F a l l T erm
w ill b e h e ld on
Thirsday
Oct. 16, 1969
ot 7:30 P.M.
ii the DAC
Room 216
If.
The Burgundy Street
Singers werejust
10unknowns from Kansas.
Then th^ entered
the Intercollegiate
Music Estival.
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A ll V a r s i t y l e t t e r w in n e r s
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PERSPECTIVE
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D REXEL TRIANGLE
O c t o b e t 10, I 9 6 9 ~ P a g e 15
O p in io n s
and
g r ip e s
by both sides.
One other observation I wish
to make is that the enlargement
of c u rric u la r offerings in the
lib eral a rts area is not a guar­
antee of g re a te r humanization in
a university. A Uberal a rts pro­
fe ss o r might very well handle
his cla sse s in a dehumanizing
way. F o r example, course con­
tent can become a means for
the expression of teacher su­
p erio rity ra th e r than for stu­
dent growth. Even if the liberal
a r t s curriculum w ere not ex­
panded (though I hope it is),
the way a teacher in any course
re la te s to his students can be
ju st as humanizing as any hu­
m anities course. It is these ob­
servations which come to mind
when I ask myself, “ What does
it mean to humanize a school?*’
L a rry Besnoff’s article is im­
portant in term s of its having
pointed to such a question at
this tim e.
Sincerely,
Lionel Etscovitz
Editor, Drexel T riangle:
I find L arry Besnoff*s article
“ What Is Needed?*’ (Triangle,
Oct 3, 1969) to be doubly im­
portant. It is im portant, fir s t
of all, because it highUghts a
major’ theme of c u rre n t admin­
istrative discussion h ere at
Drexel: people, human values
and thus the im portance of the
person. Mr. Besnoff*s a rtic le is
also Important because it points
to a basic is su e which grows
out of this theme, namely, what
does it mean to “ humanize*» a
school? The a rtic le suggests that
the humanization of D rexel would
be g reater if the communication
of student educational aim s to
the adm inistration w ere g re a te r
and If student power w ere thus
increased. The a rtic le also sug­
gests that g re a te r humanization
means making Uberal a r ts co u rs­
es more available to students and
thus encouraging lib e ra l a rts
professors to develop th e ir of­
ferings. I find nothing with which
to quarrel in these suggestions,
but I would nev erth eless like to
make two observations.
“ Student power*’ can have an
ominous sound if m isunderstood
and misapplied. If conceived as
part of a w in-lose struggle be­
tween students and adm inistra­
tion, then “ student power** c e r­
tainly has ominous im plications.
Schools in the news a tte s t to this
fact. But if “ power” re fe rs to
the opportunity for each side to
contribute to the creatio n of an
educational situation in which
students and adm inistration both
have a stake, then the problem
remains one of mutual com­
munication and not sim ply one
of wielding power. Communica­
tion in this sense, then, im plies
a tw o-sided effort. In other
words, if eith er side falls to
recognize the humanity of the
other, then the situation is re ­
duced to non-communication and
ultimately to a depersonalizing
conflict between two “ powers.**
Stated another way, if we think
of freedom, w hether fo r student
or for the adm inistration, not as
being a change to have one*s way,
but rath er as an opportunity for
real communication, then the way
is paved for the tru e humaniza­
tion of D rexel U niversity. Seen
this way, the opposite of freedom
is not bondage but ra th e r the
separation of man from man, the
separation of student from ad­
m inistration. It is t h r o u ^ the
overcoming of th is separation
that g re a te r power is realized
Contradictions
Editor^ D rexel Triangle:
I should like to make comment
on two artic le s I happened to
read last Friday, October 3, re ­
garding the Nixon adm inistration*s “ Operation Intercept** ef­
fo rts to seal off the MexicanA m erican border from illegal
smuggling of m arijuana. The first
one was the features article which
appeared in this newspaper,
“ Contradictions and Marijuana**
by C raig Nygard and the other
w ritten by the editorial board of
the **Wall S treet Journal** en­
titled “ An Illusion on Mari­
juana.**
Both artic le s take issue with
the sagacity and fundamental ef­
fects this program has on the
country and its youth and ap­
p e a r to reach sim ilar con­
clusions. The opening paragraph
of the “ Review and Outlook”
column in the “ Journal** sum­
m arizes concisely the issue by
stating: “ The Administration*s
recent drug control efforts re ­
flect a disproportionate emphasis
on suppressing marijuana, which
makes a good deal of sense as a
way to achieve a political splash
but not much as a way to reduce
the drug problem.**
But yet, the tone of the two
artic le s, w ritten by authors try­
ing as they will to capture the
from
th e
e d i t o r ’s
eyes and time of the readers,
seem as different as night and
day.
Not surprisingly, the **Wall
Street Journal** article, written
no less by a professional with
many years of experience and ex­
posure on Mr. Nygard, seem s
only by its choice of words and
well - reasoned construction to
have much m ore “ effect** upon
the reader, and thus achieving a
main editorial objective; to shape
public opinion.
While “ Contradictions a n d
Marijuana** is only a feature
w ritten by a student whose full­
time job is not Journalistic en­
deavors, I saw many valid and
original thoughts on the same
subject that could have much
m ore effect if they were m ore
carefully explained and articu­
lated for the read ers. The article,
as it appeared, was for me any­
way, difficult to read, contain­
ing quotes that are not general­
ly well-known and dwelt too much
on P resident Nixon* s other
policies and personality; p er­
haps even indiscrim inately so.
M r. Nygard*s first paragraph:
“ President Nixon*s political de­
cisions have thus fa r been bla­
tant contradictions and/or blun­
d e rs—an antagonizing v isit to
Rumania while negotiating for a
nuclear non-proliferation treaty
with Russia, three re v e rsa ls of
Vietnam troop policy, and the
softening of school desegrega­
tion in Mississippi*’ lost most
re a d e rs at the bank, not less in
m id-stream .
I would like to see this pub­
lication “ zero in*’ on the stu­
dent point of view and perception
of national affairs for there is a
lot there which deserves and
needs scrutiny by the educated
youth of the nation; but I sug­
gest that when it does so, a c e r­
tain amount of unnecessary pro­
lific diversity and discourteous
references to our national lead­
e r s be sacrificed for the pur­
pose of achieving clarity and
understanding.
It is my belief after reading
the firs t issue of The Triangle
fall term that you have many
fine and well-informed m em bers
who could do this school a great
service if they would exercise
perhaps just a bit m ore literary
discipline and put their definite­
ly polarized feelings into logical
and well-reasoned opinions for
the Drexel community.
Please try to keep the effect
and readability of an article in
shaping opinion in mind so as
not to deprive us of any insight
m a ilb a g
our fellow students might have on
th eir society.
Samuel M essinger
S tu d e n t Power
Editor, D rexel Triangle:
L ast week I was most pleased
to read in The Triangle an article
by Tom Land and another by L ar­
ry Besnoff concerning Drexel as
an educational institution. This
subject has been a pet peeve of
mine for sometim e.
On the other hand I was most
disturbed at M r. Land*s ap­
parently misguided grasp of the
situation. He makes a mistake
quite typical of many intelligent,
concerned, and idealistic stu­
dents at D rexel in that he con­
demns
and
criticizes the
“ system** on the basis of his
emotional contact with it rath er
than a true knowledge of how the
D rexel system really operates.
L ast week M r. Land stated
“ in the D rexel corporation stu-^
dent power is non-existent.**
Come, come M r. Land, do you,
honestly think the “ corporation**
d ecrees, let there be student
power and there is student power;
only in fairy land, Tom, Student
power r e s ts solely, in the hands
of the students by definition, no
one else. If you don*t see it at
D rexel, look in the m irro r for
your reason why. Taking pot­
shots at Hagerty*s ^ o s t isn*t
the answ er.
Though admittedly the Drexel
corporation has a long way to go
before it reaches perfection,
about a zillion l i ^ t y ears as the
b eer can flies, POTENTIALLY,
and that*s a key word, students
have m ore power here than at
the m ajority of college campuses
throughout the country.
The idea expressed in the last
paragraph of Tom*s article “ that
D rexel seriously consider in­
cluding a representative body of
D rexel students in the corporate
stru c tu re at the h i p e s t levels
so that they may voice student
opinion and have the power to
implem ent that opinion** is ex­
cellent, It is so good an idea
that it was implemented by Dave
Jam ieson a year and a half ago.
The truth of the m atter is there
is a student counterpart fo r every
m ajor adm inistrator from the
Deans to the P resident, Even
m ore interesting is the fact that
students sit as “ voting" mem­
b e rs on the once exclusively
faculty comm ittees which handle
everything from curriculum re ­
form to lib rary books in the
AL C O O PER
The
( F o im e r ly o f B lo o d , S w e a t a n d T e a r s )
P anhellenic C om m unity
and
supports a n d urges
B IF F ROSE
all D r e x e l S t u d e n t s
OCT. 11, 1969 8:30
to p a r t i c i p a t e in t h e
t k m p l e u n iv e r s it y
m itten
hall
’ B R O A D AND B E R K STS.
T I C K E T S A T M IT T E N H A L L MAIN D E SK
add
.
various colleges. I*d like also
to remind M r, Land that all the
candidates for VP of Student Af­
fa irs w ere screened last year by
a committee of students and that
the candidates for the recently
filled VP of Academic Affairs
post w ere 'screen ed by a joint
faculty - student committee of
which Dave Jam ieson and I sat as
voting m em bers. Tie this in with
tiie students sitting on the vari­
ous planning com m ittees with the
T ru ste e s and you have enough
POTENTIAL student power to
fill all of Kennedy Stadium,
I agree with you, Tom, there
is a lack of student power here,
but it*s the students, not the ad­
m inistration that a re to blame.
The truth of the m atter is there
just aren*t enough interested stu­
dents to fill the above positions
effectively. Some go unfilled
while others a re filled by glory
see k e rs merely looking for an­
other position to add to their
activities record. So the process
just does not work.
Potentially,
the frustration
you*ve found in the system can
be allayed, but the responsibility
r e s ts on your shoulders) not the
“ corporation*s.** YOU are stu­
dent power and if you want to
e x e rt it I suggest you see Tom
Mendenhall. If my information is
c o rre c t he can sure as hell use
you.
Oh, and by the way, the Busi­
ness College offers anything but
the “ b est education at DrexeL*’
I will gladly trade you some of
my business courses for a little
of that Hum-Tech d irt you talk
about.
Lyle Wolf
CBA *70
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YOUR VESTED IN TEREST
War is a v e s t e d i n t e r e s t of t h e
m il i t a r y - i n d u s t r ia l com plex. I t
b r i n g s th em m o n e y , p ro m o tio n a n d
po w e r .
Y ou r v e s t e d i n t e r e s t i s l if e , lib*
erty and the p u rsu it o f h a p p in e s s .
Y o u may l o s e it a ll if w a r i s n o t
stam p ed out.
We n e e d w o rld f e d e r a t i o n .
LOOK IN T O I T !
G e n t l e m e n : p l e a s e s e n d informa*
t i o n a b o u t World F e d e r a l i s t s ,
U .S .A .
Name
O c t. 15 M o r a t o r i u m
Add. .
C ity -
:z ip .
ii
I
(write< W F / U S A , 2006 Walnut S t.,
P h i l a . 19103 * L O c u f t 3-7 0 25
/ '
DREXEL TRIANG LE
Ph>5»* 16—()rlf»b»T 1 0 , l % 9
D ra g o n s d o w n S o . C o n n ., L a f a y e t t e n e x t!
By 3 u c k T a b l e r
The Drexel Dragons played a hell of a game last weekend against
a strongly favored Southern Connecticut team. Outweighed in al­
most every position, the Dragon offense literally flew over S.C.'s
head with the passing of Bill Baer and Jim Schwering. The defense
was unreal with hard hitting and a fantastic display of gan:j tackling
and pursuit. Coach Brown referred to the game as the “ first one"
with an optimistic tone of voice.
Great start
Within the first two and a half minutes, the Dragons were on the
scoreboard by m erit of a Bill Baer to Greg Dubas pass from
the six-yard line. The scoring drive took eleven plays to cover 78
yards, with two runs out of the pocket by Baer as the big plays.
Dubas and soph halfback Dan Miller were on the receiving end of
two Important passes which set up Dubas’ touchdown. EdWieland
added the point after touchdown and the Dragons were out in front
7-0. The S. Conn. Owls took the ensuing kickoff and were soon halted
within their own 30 due to a strong pass rush put on by the Blue
and Gold defense, especially linebackers Bill Geisdorf and Carl
Hertrich. After taking possession on their own 30, the Drexel
grldders showed that the previous drive was no fluke. B aer de­
livered three straight aerials to Wayne “ Root” Huntsinger for gains
of 11, 4 and 30 yards respectively, to move the ball to the Owls’
15, However, the drive stalled and the v isito rs took over.
The following series of downs was an example of tough, methodi­
cal, grind-it-out football. The So. Conn. squad took 25 plays to
move 85 yards against the inspired DIT defense for th eir fir s t and
only score. The PAT knotted the score at 7-7 with 11:35 left in the
firs t half.
With a head full of steam, the Dragons were on the move once
again. Mike Klrwan returned the short kickoff to the 23-yard line.
On a crucial 3rd down and 11 situation, B aer once again scram bled
out of the pocket and got to the 35 for the firs t down. F ro m here he
connected with Greg Dubas to the S.C. 46, Bill M yers to the 41 and
Tom Godonis to the 30. Fullback Steve McNichol took a B aer pass
and bulled his way to the 12-yard line. The most spectacular play
in recent Drexel football history now took place, Baer, showing signs
of a F ran Tarkenton flare, rolled to his right, found nothing but
trouble, scrambled back to his left, shook off two Owl tacklers,
scram bled back to his right and hit McNichol at the 4, On fourth
down and 1 from the 4-yard line, B aer tried to duplicate the p rev­
ious play. He rolled right and evaded a few on-rushing linemen
and coolly motioned to Dubas in the end-zone. He rifled the ball to
Dubas for what proved to be the winning points. Wieland was suc­
cessful on his second PAT attempt and the score stood at 14-7.
D efense tightens
The Owls took the kickoff but the stalw arts of the Blue and Gold
defensive unit prevented any action at all. Tackle B rian Cullinan
and linebacker Bob Migliorino threw Owl quarterback Bloomingdale for successive losses, while linebackers Mattio and Schumacher
stopped everything that came across the middle, both p a sse s and
people. The Drexel squad did little in the form of mounting an offense after Huntsinger returned the punt, but the Owls moved to
the DIT 15. Here Ed Wieland ended the threat by intercepting
an erra n t Bloomingdale pass in the end-zone shortly before the
end of the half.
G ood boll-no s c o re
The third quarter saw no scoring but the inspired D rexel de­
fense was in its glory. The “ D -team ” limited the firs t So. Conn.
the offense the ball on th eir
fn J
visitors’ 42, where Lynn Ferguson punted
to the Owl 5, Once again, the Ed Mattio lead defense halted the
Picked off and the S,C.
squad started to move. With 4th and 6 inches for a fir s t on the
howpvpr M
Owls tried a simple halfback dive into the line;
ball rarH
’ Cullinan, Lit, and Migliorino saw to it that the
ball c a rrie r never saw the line of scrim m age.
RaTr»c
Godonis hauled in one of Billy
®
23, From there another one of B ill’s
passes was picked off by the opposition on the four.
O ld -T im e rs D a y a t DIT
By Kim G e i s i n g e r
Soccer, the predecessor of our
American game of football, was
played in England during the
twelfth century, and Its birth may
be credited to the ancient Ro­
mans. Although it is ob­
vious that none of the original
participants are still around, a
number of past perform ers met
at the Drexel field last Satur­
day morning to engage in this
athletic contest. There were
some recent and not so recent
graduates of dear old Drexel
Tech and her glorious soccer
teams of yesteryear who showed
up to vie with the varsity in the
annual alumni soccer game.
Big deal. Right? Wrong! True
the outcome has Uttle im i
portance, but the contest is quite
significant because it brings to
mind the real reason that sports
a re played in colleges and universiUes (Institutes, too) across
our nation, a fact which becomes
more obscure every year. The
valid purpose of athletics is for
the collegian to learn to work as
a member of an organized team.
Today, it seems the emphasis is
improperly placed solely on win­
ning, The reasons for this situa­
tion, such as the administration’s
desire to expand their school’s
name and fame or the wishes of
overzealous alumni for vic­
torious teams, are numerous.
Naturally, it’s nice to win. Ev­
eryone wants to be the champion
but obviously this feat is im possiole. Of course, every ath­
lete stepping on the field should
t ^ to prevail victorious but it
should not be the major goal of
our teams to t)e number one. At­
titudes such as these now found
among the participants can re­
move the joy of the event for
everyone involved. The coach
feels that he must produce a win­
ner or he may not hold his po­
sition for long. This tension can
easily be transferred to the play­
e r s who then strain so much that
they cannot relish their activity.
Even the spectators are affected
by the current predicament. They
lose deUght in following the play
when their main concern is having
their team be the league’s lead­
e rs .
How did this event provide sup­
port for the well-known state­
ment; “ It’s only a game?” Ac­
tually, the game didn’t but
portions of the conversations
among the alumni before, during
and afterwards did. To prove
that twenty-eight men were suit­
ed up for pure fun, here are a
few snatches of dialogue over­
heard by a snoopy rep o rter:
One a rm y -sty le volunteer
tending the net queried, **Why
onH
The o a
on the
fo r* ^
hoii
ball on
^ a n k s to a hard rush by
MigUorlno and Maltlo.
r
«
Schwering at the wheel
e S ^ vTrn
Tom Godonis
pass play and again to Greg Dubas taking the
the twenty for a firs t down. The quarter ended at'the tw L ty .
L e re to
Southern
T t
Continued on page 13, col. 1
THE CO M PLETE O FFE N SIV E d i s p l a y
W h .rn
O w l. I . . .
and
„
d ™ ,.„
Continued on page 13, col. 4
....................................
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