Homecoming Has Ramsey, Upsala, Pulchritude Hew

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