1965-66_v6,n04_Coryphaeus

Page 1

Volume

6,

umber

UNIVERSITY

4

OF

WATERLOO,

Waterloo,

Ontario

Thursday,

September

30, I965

HOUSE IS EXPROPRIATED

Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Dotzert, longtime residents of Waterloo, have been left homeless by the expansion needs of this university.

Their land on Columbia Street was expropriated by the university to allow the city to widen the road. It is now up to the courts to decide

Needed for road widening on a fair price for their property.

Lectures may be cancelled for Nov. 8 to enable eligible students to travel to their home ridings to vote in the federal election. The university administration has been approached on the question, but a decision has not yet been reached. Registration at the University of Waterloo occured two days after the issuing of election writs. As a result, about 1,600 students are unable to vote in the Waterloo North riding. The Canadian Union of Students has listed the qualifications required for a student to vote in Waterloo North.

JO STOQDY, CHAIRMAN MITTEE, IS PLAYFULLY

ROASTING (For more

OF THE THREATENED

BY UPPERCLASSMAN pictures and a summary

omen’s

A women’s residence has been chosen as a memorial to Mrs. J. G . Hagey, wife of the university president. Mrs. Hagey died two weeks ago. The residence would be named the Minota Hagey Memorial Residence to honor the memory of Mrs. Hagey, who contributed so much encouragement and support to the early years of the university’s development. The residence project was chosen at a meeting of representatives of faculty, staff, students, alumni and board of governors. It was one of several suggestions. The residence will house 40 or 50 women graduate students and upper year women scholarship students. The building will be erected in an area independent of the student village.

NOT BAD Students sometimes have problems with languages. Last year a French student not well versed in his vocabulary, translated the following Latin sentence into good poetic English: Omnibus repletis, Caesar in Gallum de igentia revenit. The students answer: The autobuses being filled, Caesar returned to Gaul on a deligentia.

ORIENTATION WITH

FRANK of orientation

A

COMFIERY

BREWER. see pages 4 and 5).

residence proiect to s. tiagey The committee, headed by Mrs. Dorothea Walter, dean of women, is continuing to work on the project and intends to contact all members of the university and friends of Mrs. Hagey in the near future.

HEY GUYS: More

co-eds

than

ever

TORONTO (CUP) Enrollment in Canadian universities may spiral past the 200,000 mark this year, Final figures won’t be known until October, but the Canadian Universities Foundation is predicting that fulltime enrollment jwill shoot up from last year’s 178,238 to 200,900 - with men outnumbering women by more than three to one. Co-ed enrollment has been rising in recent years, however. Last year the number reached 53,000, nearly 4,000 higher than expected, while male enrollment fell by about the same amount. Montreal, Toronto, British Columbia, Laval, Alberta and McGill the six largest universities in Canada - will again probably educate more than half of this country’s collegians. Last year 54 percent of Canada’s college students attended these institutions.

If you meet these requirements, you may take your case to the Court of Revision on Oct. 2 1, 22, 23. You may be found eligible to vote. However, the courts may reject your appeal and so you should have made sure that you were registered in your home riding before Sept. 25. If not, you are eligible to vote there if you present yourself at the poll with another registered voter of the same poll who will swear that you are eligible to vote there. If there is an objection, an oath may be required. Any person taking the oath is entitled to a ballot.

Up up up goes our enrollment totals Canada’s soaring college enrollmerits‘ are reflected in the 38 percent increase in preliminary enrollment figures announced by registrar Alan P. Gordon. The 1965-66 full-time enrollment at the University of Waterloo totals 4,339 students. To date 3,829 undergraduates are enrolled. An estimated 510 graduate students will register next week. When the university was established in 1957, it was predicted that 2,500 students would be enrolled at Waterloo by 1965. That mark was reached two years ago. Despite the record enrollment, campus crowding is alleviated in that 500 students enrolled in co-operative

72 girls u faend? TORONTO (CUP) - University of Toronto engineers are excited this year because there are eight girls registered in first year. That makes 12 girls for the entire faculty. Last year only four of 1,525 enrolled engineers were female. “That’s fantastic,” said Engineering Society president Frank Vallo. “That’s more than we’ve ever had in all four years at one time. Maybe it’s a trend of things to come.”

programs are not on campus but are taking training terms with industry. Waterloo is the only university in Canada offering co-operative courses. NEW

Mr. Dotzert, a former Waterloo postmaster, is disturbed by the fact that he feels he has been offered unfair recompense for his ,expropriated land and house. FIRST

APPROACH

First approached in November, 1964 by A. K. Adlington, vice-president, finance and told that the university would be needing his land, Mr. Dotzert heard no more about the matter until an appraiser appeared and offered him $15,500 early in February. Mr. Dotzert said be had paid $14,000 for the house and land in 1954 and had since made many improvements. He refused the offer. According to Mr. Dotzert, the appraiser immediately added a 10 percent compensation for the inconvenience of moving. Mr. Dotzert still refused. A week later, the appraiser returned and increased the offer to $16,365 plus 10 percent. Mr. Dotzert still refused, asking a high price in hopes of getting a better offer.

BUILDINGS

LAST

OFFER

New residences and teaching buildings are now nearing completion to provide more classroom and accommodation space.

Once more the appraiser phoned and asked if the Dotzerts were willing to settle. That marked the end of any offers.

This year there was a 25 percent increase in the number of Grade 13 students in Ontario secondary schools.

On March 5, a sheriff’s officer informed the Dotzert’s that the University of Waterloo had expropriated their land as of March 2, 1965.

As a result, the university has enrolled a record freshman class of 1,750 students, compared to ‘1,299 last year. This includes 707 in arts, 659 in engineering and 384 in sceince. Faculty totals are 1,323 in arts, 1,648 in engineering and 808 in science. The arts enrollment also includes students who are registered with the church colleges.

The Dotzerts, who now live with their son, have not given up hope of getting a better price for the property where they had hoped to spend their retirement. Their own appraiser estimated the value of the land and house at $22,746 minimum. WANTED

EQUALLY

DIVIDED

The 3,829 undergraduates are aboht equally divided between students in conventional arts and science programs and those in the year-round co-operative programs in engineering applied physics and mathematics.

TO BUY

He pointed out that the Dotzert’s didn’t want to sell - the university wanted to buy. Mr. Dotzert had a construction company estimate the value of replacing the house. Their figure was $27,566.

In addition, there are 50 graduates in the one-year physical education degree course. This is the second year for the program.

The university also had the land re-appraised and found their second appraisal to be in line with the original one.

Finalized enrollment figures for the university will be announced later in the fall when late graduate registrations are compiled.

Further, pointed out, settled for one offered

a U of W spokesman other people in the area prices comparable to the the Dotzerts.


Published every Thursday afternoon of the academic year by the student Board of Publications, under authorization of the Student Council of the Federation of Students, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada. Letters should be addressed to the Editor and must be signed. Member: Canadian University Press Telephone 744-0111 Chairman, David

Board of Publications: R. Witty

Editor-in-Chief:

Tom

Rankin

Staff this issue: Wayne Braun, Alan Glasgow, Bob Hague, Nick Kouwen, Stewart Saxe, Jack Smye, reporters. Barb Frost, Fred Watkinson, Dave Youngs, typists. Dianne Cox, Bob Davis, Francis Goldspink, Nadia Pawkyk, copyreaders. Errol Semple, layout. Professional consultant: Ray Stanton

Editors: Leslie Askin, news. Hazel Rawls and Wayne Houston, sports. Jerry Rupke, photography. A. E. J. Brychta, fine arts. Doug Gaukroger, features. Jim Nagel, production. Authorized as second-class mail by the Post Office and for payment of postage in cash.

Department,

Ottawa,

Criticism our right “Let

sleeping

“Let

the truth

dogs lie.” be known.”

Qne of these phrases must be considered newspaper or, indeed, of any citizen.

the policy

Here, in this country, on this campus, it should second. Yet after only a few days we find ourselves which slogan best fits the University of Waterloo. The right ot present verbal opposition forms of our democratic way of life and government.

of any

only be the wondering

the backbone

The university should be the teacher, not censor, of this right. Here we should be encouraged to criticize constructively even if in the end we prove wrong, so long as we thought we were right and justified. Yet both faculty and students have referred to the administration as being oversensitive to criticism and many a student has accused the faculty of being extra harsh towards a student who has expressed criticism of its members. The standard staff and faculty reply, that the.y are “only human,” is not good enough at an institute of higher learning. Campus should, campus must, be a centre of questioning and debate. Is this muckraking? Then what muckrakers to keep the dirt from our our house.

we need is more dawn and the dust

good from

Switch if you must The procedure for switching 19, 54 and 77 of the university make use of it if necessary.

courses calendar.

is set out on pages Don’t be afraid to

The course a particular lecturer begins teaching sometimes sounds quite different from the description of the same course in the calendar. Or, a freshman is often disillusioned with an entire field of study, such as philosophy, because of an intereststifling lecturer in an introductory course. The student in such cases should not be too reluctant to substitute some other course for the unfortunate one. He can try it again next year with another professor and perhaps more maturity on his own part. The universities of Victoria and British Columbia have published an “anti-calendar,” describing courses and lecturers from the student point of veiw - in an objective, constructive, responsible way. This is a venture that Waterloo students should consider imitating for next year. In the meantime, the little forms are available in the registrar’s office. You have until the end of the third week of lectures to think twice about using one.

2

The CORYPHAEUS

Comments on the Protest March To the Editor: While reading “Comments on protest march, Sept. 23, I felt that some facts had been omitted from the headlines. The protest march was not the first action taken to* try to change that with which we disagree. Our government leaders were approached by written word to give some explanation and instruction regarding the Nov. 8 election. Other legal alternatives were examined - but to no avail. The fact that students must return to their home ridings in order to vote meant that many would not be able to vote. As a result there was major concern by students, of magnitude which could be expressed by means of a protest march. Not only did the students make their disagreements publicly known, they also proved that students can conduct themselves in a responsible and orderly fashion. Had there been any display of violence or aroused aggression - Then I might condone Mr. Gravitz’ criticism. I was sorry to see the students’ feelings towards hanging omitted. At a meeting of the orientation supervisors, it was made clear that hanging is archaic and opposed by the student body. It was to be made known (I thought) that it too was being protested. Only a crack was promised it was cracked. - Ed.

-

and

There was some comment about students under 21 years of age being beyond their rights in protesting something which didn’t concern them. Again, I understood that the political society on campus is in support of lowering the legal voting age - another reason for protest. In my opinion this march was the right way to make known our concern in these affairs as citizens of Canada. KEN HANCOCK, EE 2B. To the Editor: I watched with great interest the protest demonstration in Waterloo Square last Monday. The students who took part are to be congratulated

on a well organized, orderly and effective parade. This is the kind of activtiy which adds some meaning and purpose to student life. Judith Wintermeyer asked why students couldn’t use absentee ballots. Miss Wintermeyer should be aware that, apart from members of the armed forces, there are no provisions for absentee ballots in the Canadian election system. Doug Gravitz disagreed with protest marches as a form of political activity because there were many other channels which might have been used. If Mr. Gravitz read his newspapers, he would find that most other legitimate channels have, in fact, already been used without much effect. An orderly protest march is a perfectly acceptable form of democratic political action. The most serious criticism of the demonstration was not raised in any of the comments. It is that the majority of those demonstrating so earnestly for the right to vote were actually too young to exercise that right. T. H. QUALTER, Dept. of Political

Science.

To the Editor: Our Student Federation leaders deserve congratulations for Monday night’s orderly demonstration. I do not think our point could have been made in a more effective manner.

Copy to Cory Any clubs, organizations or individual students wishing notices, want ads or publicity stories printed, are asked to submit copy by 5:00 p.m. Friday of the week before publication. All such copy for next week’s per should be in tomorrow.

pa-

To facilitate ease in handling your copy, please submit it prepared in our standard form. Instructions for the preparation of copy can be obtained from the Coryphaeus office.

Students in Canada are just begin- ’ ning to realize that they can be a pressure group, a political force in themselves - as students - and thus protect both their own interests and those of society. It is through such joint action that democracy on and off campus can be encouraged whenever it shows signs of weakness. I would also like to commend the TV-13 people on their sympathetic coverage Monday night although it was unfortunate that we were relegated to the tail end of the local news. Good

show. JIM

CROMBIE.

Friday, October 1 4:00 - 6:00 Workshop, Opera chorus 7:00 - 9:00 Al 17, Twenty Minute opera rehearsals. Saturday, October 2 Warriors vs. Ottawa Gee-Gees Ottawa. Track and field - RMC Invitational - Kingston. Monday, October 4 4:00 Discussion on directing. Parti’ cularly aimed at potential student-faculty directors. 7:30 .2nd casting session for November production. Tuesday, October 5 Track and field T Seagram Stadium. 12:00 Discussion with faculty on faculty play reading. 4:00 Discussion on backstage requirements. Particularly aimed at potential backstage crew. 7:30 Third casting session for November production. Wednesday, October 6 4:00 Discussion on front-of-house requirements. ,Particularly aimed at potential management. 7:30 Concluding casting session and first play reading for November production. Thursday, October 7 Tennis - Waterloo Tennis Club. 12:00 Second discussion on faculty play reading. 4:00 The Traditions, Manners, and Customs of the Theatre.

OUTSIDE GREENWICH VILLAGE & WAY OFF BROADWAY by A. E. 1. Brychta The University of Waterloo now has its own director of music, Alfred Kunz. His plans for our university theatre are colossal and enthusiastic. A recent audition for the concert band produced a wealth of talent and some of those attending were so enthusiastic they wanted to buy their own instruments. This concert band could result in the formation of other groups, such as a football band, dance band, and a chamber orchestra. Mr. Kunz said that since he is starting from scratch everyone in any way interested in music is welcome. (See him at the arts theatre). Plans include an opera by the Glee Club for which auditioning is still taking place.

The repertoire this year includes the Lord Nelson Mass by J. Haydn (one of his most beautiful works) and The damask drum, based on a Mozart chamber opera and written by Mr. Kunz. The damask drum is about a gardener who sees a princess in the garden. He falls for her and wants her and her station in life. The princess hears of this and asks a courtier to tell the gardener that if he beats on the damask drum hanging on a laurel tree, she’ll come to him. The flaw is that she knows the drum won’t make make a sound. The gardener is told and starts banging on the drum. He gets all frustrated and drowns himself in a gooey pool. After this, naturally, his soul goes

after the princess and drives her crazy so that she hears the drum beating all the time. The gardener’s ghost also wants her to beat the drum herself but she refuses. On this, the ghost himself comes out of the pool clothed in goo and slime and comes after the princess. In the end the princess herself gets killed and dragged back into the gooey pool. This has every indication of a very imaginative mind and coupled with a good musical score, looks to be one of the highlights of our theatre season. Mr. Kunz is going to make a sound on this campus that will undoubtedly show us all what one man with the aid of lots of talent and enthusiasm can do.


Montreal by Ed Penner

-

student

emeritus

The night of Sept. 20 found your intrepid columnist in downtown Waterloo, purposely unshaved, flask of Chianti in hand, sandals on feet, tattered jeans and T-shirt covered with oil paints, ready to join what promised to be a gas protest march. What a disappointment to see a bunch of rather snappy dressers complete with ties followed by a mob or sober freshmen without beanies on their heads. There was nothing to do but go back to the Birch Room., We made perhaps thirty gone farther, ihdignation at indignation is Perhaps

the Kitchener-Waterloo Record, and a picture and words in the Globe and Mail. The story may have but I failed to detect even a slight ripple of public the students’ loss of franchise - and a lot of public needed to change an Act in this country. we were

too orderly,

too sober,

too polite.

Picture if you will about 100 instead of 2000 demonstrators. Not worthy of even a single sentence in any paper you say. Aha!, but now let us color the demonstrators somewhat drunk. Headlines in every major newspaper across Canada: DRUNKEN ACT.

WATERLOO

STUDENTS

PROTEST

ELECTIONS

To carry the matter a little further, let a couple of the brave 100 throw a stone or two. This time we make the front page of every major American newspaper as well: ENRAGED ;WATERLOQ

DRUNKEN STUDENTS ACT - ELECTIONS

Now if all this fails we have colour the demonstrators pink. A phrases like “Marx is the most,” or beard too,” and the dogs of war are All over the wrold ENRAGED DEMAND United case they American is sure to Act is still pictures of

headlines

RAVAGE BLAMED.

DOWNTOWN

a final trick up our sleeves: we couple of vehemently shouted “I like Fidel Castro - and his loosed.

shout:

LEFTIST CANADIAN STUDENTS RESIGNATION OF GOVERNMENT.

RIOT

-

States masses its troops on the border near Ottawa, in should have to march into the capital - to protect the Embassy and citizens of course. But the final blow, which make the government capitulate and change the Elections to come: Life sends a photographer to Waterloo to take the damage.

Yes, I say all this and more it not been for the shortsightedness large peaceful protest.

could have been accomplished had of a few organizers in planning a

Information used in this column is drawn from bulletins released by Canadian University Press and from The Student Mirror, an independent press service. Column is prepared by Wayne Tymm. ..c+&J. .@i-a.. CANADA The Quebec General Union of Students began publication this month of a periodical similar in format to such political magazines as L’Express and Time. The magazine is planned as a completely new venture in student publications and will deal with student problems and general topics of natiohal and international interest. And UGEQ has been established for / only a year. , **-**@--*

Film Festival

INDIA The government of the state of Madras, in an attempt to prevent another outburst of violent protest against the designation of findi as the national language, has arrested and interned 10 student leaders. The action was taken under the Defense of India rules, which give the government the power to suspend normal civil liberties in times of emergency. The students were suspected of plotting new demonstrations on the language issue and their arrest was intended as a stern warning to Madras students not to repeat the violence of January 26 when 52 persons were killed in protests following the proclamation of Hindi as India’s official language.

by Dave

Denkan

Spend a whole week watching movies? Yes indeed, and despite the questions regarding my sanity, the Montreal International Film Festival proved well worth the effort. As usual, there were some duds but the average was very high. The organizers assumkd that all their patrons were bilingual and so didn’t bother to subtitle films in French. This slap at the “maudits anglais” was carried no further but still it was infuriating to have to miss several films. To be fair, films in English were not subtitled either and if one could handle the limited vocabulary of subtitles in French, only a few films are lost. * * * One lost film, to me at any rate, was the prize-winning La vie heureuse

e ma who died by Grant

Gordon

How

many of you avid D. H. (Lady lover) Lawrence fans have heard of a little novel called The man who died? Nobody? Why isn’t that strange! What may be his best work - one certainly essential to the understanding of Lawrence has never been mentioned to you as an example of his art. This book has been ignored while people were arguing about the virute of one Lady Constance Chatterly. Before I ask why, I would like to give you a quick synopsis of The Man who died. The book is divided into two parts. In the first, we are introduced to a Man who “awoke from a long sleep in which he was tied up. He woke numb and cold, inside a carved hole in the rock,” and felt the sickening pain in his hands, and feet, and sides. From this point we follow the Man through his torment till he finally perceives the world as it really is. “There was nothing he could touch for all, in a mad assertion of the ego, wanted to put a compulsion on him, and violate his intrinsic solitude. See Review, Page 7 Chatterly’s

de Leopold Z.” But even without titles, the warmth and charm of this technically superb film are easily felt. A dubbed print is to go into general release soon. Another loss was Jean-Luc Godard’s Alphaville. As always with Godard the visuals are startling and impressive. But even the most dedicated artsman would have qualms at this attack on science. But who can resist a hero who qubtes Pascal and carefully arranges his enemies under his car before rolling forward? Foreign films were at Montreal only to advertise them. Just Canadian films were in competition for money. Cash went to Gilles Carle for La vie Heureuse but only a pretty scroll to Larry Kent for his scathing Smelt substitute. However this film has been bought, at least for U.S. distribution, and soon Mr. Kent will be well

Eros in E by Richard

Boettger

The first beauty the lad awakens to is probably erotic beauty, and there is no hierarchical scale to measure the level of the beautiful; only a puritan or a astronomer would attribute to the moon a beauty higher than the silky haunches of his ladylove. Eros is never very far from artistic creation, and, in my opinion, romance and lust are, surely, works of art. For each erotic masterpiece that the artist presents to the public, he offen retains a more daring, less publicly acceptable work for his private pleasure. Creation needs room. The artist intimidated by the social conventions of non-artists has never been born. Mr. Lev’s work Adam and Eve is part of an exhibit fairly representative of his paintings; it is pretty, infused with erotic warmth, pretty in the sense that drawings by Ingres or passages of Jane Austen are pretty. Lev makes Adam and Eve beauti-

JAPAN Another copy? perhaps, but one sorely needed in the world today. Japanese students have shown strong interest in their Japanese Youth Overseas Cooperation Corps, a sort of Oriental Peace Corps, which forms part of the technical support Japan offers to developing nations. The first volunteers, a group of about 60, ‘will travel abroad in November. Already, the JYOCC has received over 4000 applications. ..w.

enough established to leave Canada to work elsewhere. This seems to be our way with talent: ignore it until too late. The theatrical title of his film is to be Caressed and it will no doubt have lurid ads. Don’t let these scare youit is not a cheap potboiler but an honest (and btiter) look at the world of teenagers. This is only Kent’s second film (his first, Bitter ash, occasioned some comment in last year’s Cory) but he is in almost complete control. Once he loses hold and the actors overplay badly for several minutes. Then he regains command and the characters plunge on to their doom. The other Canadian features, Running away backwards and Za Neige a fondu sur la Manicouagan,’ were not good and very bad respectively. Continued on Page 7

.*..

POLAND The greatly increased number of students in Poland has led to a shortage of accommodation. According to Polish newspapers, newly enrolled students often spend their nights in railway stations and parks. Some even ave up their studies when their search for a cheap room proves fruitless. Last year, a record 96,000 students packed Polish universities, 6,000 more than planned. The ‘excess’ had to find lodgings for themselves because student accommodation was not available. Because planned construction of student hostels will not satisfy the needs of students, Polish authorities are considering ejecting students who fail to complete their studies on time, from hostels as well as reducing the living space of lecturers and other academic personnel also living in the hostels. And students here complained about the new residences!

ful because they are the archetypes of all transgressors - erotic beauty and enjoyment of it are among the most personal, and most easily depicted of the gifts bestowed by their maker upon the first man and woman. They have already eaten of the forbidden tree’s fruit (although an uneaten apple remains in Eve’s palm) and are startled by the sudden light of knowledge into which Adam’s eyes search, as his hand already moves to cover Eve’s nudity. He is ashamed, not of their nakedness, but of their enjoyment of a gift the donor of which they have betrayed. Most artists, including such men as Pollaiuolo, Michelangelo, and Milton, avoid making Adam and his mate into ugly Neanderthals. The story of Adam and Eve is not an excuse for painting sexy nudes; Adam and Eve were meant to be infatuated with each other. How else could they endure the boredom of Eternity?

UNITED STATES Four turbanned students from India on an official tour of the state capital of Baton Rouge, Lousiana, were attacked by a crowd at a segregationalist rally. Two of the quartet were beaten. Both were students at Louisiana State University. The Indians had paused to hear a speech by a former Army major, and, police said, were mistaken by the crowd as negroes. No arrests were made but the incident is under investigation. The attack Day, July 4. Meanwhile,

took

place

on the Americans’

on the lighter

Independence

side . . .

It had to happen. A group of scholars and poets who feel that American higher education is intellectually bankrupt have created their own “university.” Known as the Free University of New York, the school is intended as a clearing house for the more radical concepts of politics and education. The evening university opened its first S-week session this summer with 45 students in three classes. Registration grew to over 200. The 30-member faculty includes Dr. Allen Krebs, a former professor of sociology who says he was “fired” by his college after travelling to Cuba last summer, and Gerald Long, described as stevedore and philosopher. Mummmph. Oh well, nice work if you can get it.

Thursday,

September

30,1965

3


ha t

e 0 OrI entat lion not all Confusion To freshmen, orientation and initiation program often seems to lack general direction and purpose. It can be compared to the proverb of the forest and the trees. In spite of the seeming confusion the various individual had some general direction. Orientation implies the introducing of a novice to some new and relatively strange atmosphere. Initiaiton refers to a memorable introduction to the same atmosphere but with an added purpose - solidarity. The protest march, (formerly intended to be a pyjama parade) though rather impromptu, was an attempt to introduce the new student to the idea of social responsibility. Certain of his fellows are unjustly being deprived of the vote, though he was not directly affected, the new student was asked to support his confreres by marching with them. College night was designed to permit the new student to meet and socialize with his particular residence associates. In a way he is reminded that not only is he a member of the University, but also a member of a residence college. The dance at the gym was for non-residents and was to serve the same purpose for this group as the college orientation would for the resident.

Everyone

worked

hard

at the

carwash

Talent night was conceived as a time for the Frosh to demonstrate his creative talents to his fellow frosh. The Kangaroo Court was a lighthearted way of impressing on the newcomer the idea that he, like everyone else, has to start at the bottom. Once the Frosh has tasted of the more humiliating and serious ends of college initiation he is entertained and feted as a new member of the student community. At the Frosh Hop the Freshman is welcomed as one of the guys. All through these programs the Frosh is encouraged to meet new people and new things. He is given the chance to meet others of his year and those of advanced grades. Through faculty orientation, a new member is brought face to face with his particular faculty, its uniqueness and its offerings. We hope that the newly “Christened� members of the University of Waterloo felt at home and welcome and that they are aware of potentialities of college life. University life is a completely unique experience.

4

The CORYPHAEUS

V8’s -

Compacts

-

Imports

-

but this

is ridiculous!

on Cocktail

Bars?


B

ion

6

n

n

Freshman looks at Orientation by Sigmund Permit

Kasprowicz

me to introduce

myself.

I am what is affectionately known by the U of W sophmores as the “scum of the earth,” “the lowest of the low,” and in their kinder moments as simply “frosh.”

Nothing

the

Health

Department

can’t

clear

Forced to sum up my feelings on the practice of conducting an orientation week for my benefit in two or three words I would have to mention embarrassment and bewilderment, above all, fun.

up.

Registration day wasn’t a manufacturing process I was the raw material.

“You’ll

love

double-mint

gum?”

a day but for which

From the moment I was pushed through the gym door until I found myself outside again, clutching a huge armful of papers and labeled with a badge on my chest and a beanie on my head, I can only remember filling out enough papers for a master’s thesis on bureaucracy and running a seemingly endless gauntlet of flailing arms and grasping hands which is sometimes called the student activities row. I must have been handed information on everything from Aunt Matilda’s haven for frustrated students to the definite advantages of having a skunk as a mascot in the co-eds’ dormitory. Next came my introduction dent campus life.

to stu-

As my first lesson in psychology I had to lay on the ground with my hands and feet stretching skyward in a concerted effort to understand the workings of the mind of a dirty dead horse.

Down “Tiptoe through the tul . . water-liIies77 kept gallantry alive - at least among themselves. n

Frosh

periscope!

For gymnastics I had the good fortune of reviving that old forgotten sport of walking the plank. The alternative was to take swimming lessons in the fountain. Two sophomores were even kind enough to offer their services as a human diving board if I decided not to walk the plank. Somehow, I couldn’t find it in me to resist walking the plank after they had carefully and almost physically explained their springboard technique. I can still remember the smiling faces of the students in the clean dry halls as I stomped past with the water gushing out of my shoes with each step. On behalf of the entire freshman class I would like to thank JO Stoody and the many sophmores and senior students who contributed to the organization of what I believe was the highlight of the entire week - the student protest march. I feel almost sad in saying good bye to that week of fun and celebration: I haven’t even finished measuring the window area of the arts library yet; I ran out of matchsitcks and am presently resorting to toothpicks.

“Please

-

don’t

eat the

daisies.”

So it is with a heavy heart that I officially join the university student body; but before the midnight deadline I want to triumphantly raise my arms and legs to the sky and shout out to the world for the last time: “I’m a dirty rotten dead horse and I stink!”

Thursday, September 30,1965

5


by Don

SC Thursday,

Gribble

To promote dancing in its many forms and to preserve a segment of the various cultures of the world are the aims of the International Folk Dance Club.

September 30 A.S.M.E. student-faculty night. Oct. 15, 16, 17 ENGINEERING WEEKEND Fri., Oct. 15 Course clubs sponsored evening. Oct. 15, 16, 17 ENGINEERING WEEKEND Fri. Oct. 15 Course clubs sponsored evening. Sat. Oct. 16 Car rally (100 cars) football game semi-formal dance Sun. Oct. 17 Jazz concert football band Sat. Oct. 23 Chemical Engineering club to visit McMaster Thu. Nov. 18 Engineering banquet at Schwaben Club Thu. Dec. 23 Engineering exams end.

For three years we have taught and performed dances from over 20 countries. But this year we offer much

Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship is an international organiz,ation. The group on this campus is a local chapter of the Canadian national organization which has its headquarters in Toronto. The aim of each member of IVCF and the group as a corporate body is to make Jesus Christ and His claims known to the students and faculty of the University of Waterloo. To this end the program of IVCF is designed to allow one to investigate the truth and relevance of historical Christianity as it has been set forth in Scripture. At noon every Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday through the year IVCF will be sponsoring three Bible and book discussion groups. The Tuesday group will discuss the letters of St. Paul in CB266.

h

more. To promote dancing for dancing’s sake we have, in addition to our regular Wednesday night get-together, two Saturday night dances. Live music will be featured in a wide variety of dances as well as the popular hits of today. For those daring few, dance instruction will be given on the spot. The two nights to remember are the Saturdays of Jan. 29 and March 12. In the culture preservation and promotion department we introduce the “Ethnic night.” These will be several Wednesday night meetings that have been dedicated to a particular country or group of countries. Each night will feature dances, songs, and food from the chosen culture. A short film will complete the glimpse into the tradition being depicted. Our usual practice of getting together once a week has not been neglected. This year the night has been changed to Wednesday, from 7:30 to lb, and will be held in the arts coffee shop. Guest teachers as well as Marty Kravitz will teach new dances and lead the familiar ones. In past years the dance club has had a performance group, performing in FASS Night, at Treasure Van, and many other social functions. Though the performance work is only for those who want a little more, folk dancing has something to offer everyone - it’s cheaper than psychiatry!

The Wednesday group will be studying J. B. Phillips’ book Your God is too small in A338.

The American Society of Mechanical Engineers Student section is again sponsoring a student-faculty night this evening at 6:00 in the Bavarian room of the City Hotel. The purpose is to bring together the faculty and the students of mechanical engineering into a technical - social atmosphere. Tickets at $2 each cover the cost of the dinner and are available from the ASME reps in Mechanical Engineering 2A, 2B, 3B, 4A, and at the door. A series of films of technical and general interest is being sponsored by the section every Thursday at 12:lO p.m. in E109. All are welcome.

Secular city, a new book attempting to analyze the role of Christianity in an urban society, is being discussed Thursdays in P228. These group studies are open to all. A sports night at Seagram Gym is planned for tomorrow. The evening commences at 7:30 and will consist of, among other things, volleyball, ping-pong and dodgeball. This will be followed by a clear, concise and complete presentation of the history, organization and the aims of IVCF. 25 cents will cover the cost of refreshments.

The University of Waterloo branch of the Engineering Institute of Canada invites all year 2, 3 and 4 engineering students to become members of this organization at some point in your career and some of the advantages of diong so now are: Student membership dollars per year.

WHILE I’M AWAY

AT UNIVERSITY, HAHN’S

They sell me Jade East, Old Spice,

IS MY MOTHER Elizabeth

Arden

They fill my prescriptions They have razor blades

for me, hair spray for my sister

They have candy for me to send to Mom at home They tell me what kind of perfume

to get for my new girl.

They will gift wrap

Hahn’s isn’t really as helpful get along without them.

as my mother,

HAHNS REXALL P

but

I coulldn’t

ACY

Free Delivery King and Erb St. in Waterloo

6

The CBRYPHAEU$

SH 4-8177

is only

LENNOXVILLE (CUP) - The Canadian Union of Students is considering withdrawing from the American-financed International Student Conference. The ISC is one of the two major international student unions. The resolution stated the ISC must show it is a politically viable organization and that its policies are not inconsistent with those of CUS. The opinion of delegates was that @US would remain a member of the ISC and if the organization fails to “fulfil1 the purposes expressed in its charter,” CUS should withdraw.

CUS, told the delegates they were participating in a congress to obtain universal accessibility to higher education and the time was not ripe for a decision on membership in the ISC.

At the same time the congress served notice it would continue its role as an observer in the East Europeandominated International Union of Students.

Jean Bazin, past president of CUS would have to study the problem of their position in the IUS and the ISC very carefully in ‘the next year.

It was hoped CUS could serve as a bridge between the two ideologically separated unions. Douglas

Ward,

president-elect

of

A University of Waterloo delegate said, “Most of the emerging AfroAsian nations belong to both the ISC and the IUS and if we are to have influence with these nations we must be in the same position.”

SELF-HELP PROJECTS (

LEIDEN, Netherlands (ISC)-This summer students from twelve countries gathered at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem to participate in an International Seminar on Student Self-Help and Cooperative Projects. . The seminar, from Aug. 27 to Sept. 20, was jointly sponsored by the International Student Conference and the National Union of Israeli Students.

tion by participants of papers on selfhelp projects which might be implemented in their home countries. These papers, which were presented to ‘the entire seminar and subjected to critical scrutiny, detailed plans for concerted student action on projects ranging from a student cafeteria to a student hostel to a national literacy campaign to a national student travel bureau.

It aimed at providing technical and theoretical expertise in organizing student co-operative and self-help activities in national situations. To this end seminar participants heard lectures and talks from cooperative experts on a wide variety of topcis, such as questions on organization, management, objectives and finances.

The German Club will hold its first meeting tonight at 7:30 in A117. The meeting will end wtih coffee, cookies and songs. Everybody

is welcome.

Harry’s Barber Columbia

Seminar participation consisted oi students from Tanzania, Zambia, Sierra Leone, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Cyprus, Greece, Belgium, Yugoslavia, India, Costa Rica and Chile, plus representatives from the ISC and NUIS.

Closed

One highly important aspect of the seminar’s activities was the prepara-

28 King Waterloo,

Shop

& Holly Mondays

OPTOMETRI Office

Street S. Ontario

743-4842

103 UNIVERSlTY

three

AWE. WV.

No initiation fee of eighteen dollars is required when you become a member while still an undergraduate student.

BARBER

You will receive the monthly EIC Journal which contains articles on current engineering problems and projects. Professional contact through gional meetings of the local branch. EIC

membership

Prestige-e.g.

reEIC

lapel button.

Charlie

Brown,

SEIC.

For additional information see Prof. Meikle of the Electrical engineering department, or N. Kouwen in the engineering study room.

Columbia

FROSH There will be an organizational meeting of the Curling Club Thursday, Oct. 7 at 5 p.m. All curlers are asked to attend for the coming season. Girls and beginners are especially welcome. All those interested in varsity curling are asked to be present. Please watch the bulletin boards for location.

St.

,’

HOP

.. -36s

SHOP and Lekter


60-hour

week

“When all is said and done, learning is a very personal process,” said Dean McBryde in his lecture to science freshmen on Sept. 17. He offered some very good advice: “You will not hear in lectures everything you are expected to know. Because of the amount of material to be carried, there will be little time for repetition or review, or for drill. You will be expected to do your own review. “I can sit in a classroom by the hour, but what I learn there depends altogether on my attitude and my effort. Most of the chemistry I know

continued

from page 3

The shorts - almost all from the National Film Board - were eneven but generally good. Of special note were 60 cycles by Jean-Claude Labreque, Phoebe by George Kaizender (both NFB) and Howard by Leonard Gasser. This last, a cartoon, concerns Howard, Howard and Howard, the last people left after the world disappears. The foreign films had a tendency to dominate the week. This, I suppose, is to be expected as they are representing their country. But one could hardly say that John Schlesinger’s black and cynical Darling gives a favorable impression of Great Britain. But it is very well made, borrowing some dash from the current cinema veritae. Indeed, in his introduction, Echlesinger said how much he admired Canada’s film makers. Darling has already run into censor trouble (being cut for Moscow by the British censor) and will probably be badly hacked for Ontario (and publitally burnt in Alberta). Still, it is worth seeing, if only for the virtuoso performance of Julie Christie and the marvelously corrupt Lawrence Harvey. Also from Great Britain was Anthony Simmon’s Four in the Morning. A ticket mix-up caused me to miss it but it was apparently nothing special. The greatest disappointment of the festival was Ernest Pintoff’s Harvey Middleman, fireman. Everything about it was slack and weak. Supposedly a comedy, it presented its few gags so badly that many people gave up and left. But there was plenty of laughter in Montreal. A sneak midnight preview of Monicelli’s Casanova 70 nearly brought the roof down. And Karel Zeman’s A jester’s tale was filled with great sight gags and quips while it showed a soldier’s complete indifference to the Thirty Year War. Spain presented Game of the goose

REWE continued from page 3 It was the mania of cities and societies and hosts, to lay a compulsion upon a man, upon all men. For men and women alike were mad with the egostic fear of their own nothingness. And he thought of his own mission, how he had tried to lay the compul. sion of love on all men. And the old nausea came back on him.” In part two, we are introduced to a young Egyptian priestess. We learn of her parallel struggle with herself that has led her to serve Isis in search of

expected

I have learned; nobod,y has formally taught it to me. “Somebody has said that the human mind is not a vessel to be filled, but a fire to be kindled. Our task is to catalyse for you the efforts that you must yourselves make to gain knowledge. Don’t forget this: when you finally emerge from university your education will not be complete; and the most important thing you can learn here is how to manage on your own to tackle problems, how to become a self-propelling individual. and sent over its director, Manuel Summers. This started as a risque comedy but soon lost the light touch and plunged into melodrama. Good performances carried what became a rather dull story of adultery. Apparently this is a great breakthrough for the Spanish censor who has previously banned any story of this sort. Despite this and other relaxations of ontrol, a girl’s “innocence” can be lost only from the purest of motives. This provided a great contrast to Valerio Zurlini’s bleak Camp followers. If I understood his French correctly, this is based on personal experience while he was fighting for Italy during the Second World War. In it, a young lieutenant is put in charge of 13 girls being sent to the army-run brothels in Yugoslavia and Greece. This was not any explanation or excuse for facism but an outcry against the irrestistable logic of war. Good acting and the use of the bleak countryside made this film extremely effective. Roberto Rossellini, who was one of the judges, was supposed to have brought his movie about St. Francis. Difficulties with the print forced the substitution of a “spectacular” about Garibaldi’s unification of Italy. Directed in a detached style, it was just a colourful history lesson. Portugal sent Carlos Vilardebo with his first feature, The enchanted Isles. Loosely based on some stories by Melville, it was the most beautiful of thep films screened. The plot is very slight - a woman marooned on an island - and is just an excuse for the Agfacolor pictures of the sea and islands. This is one of the few films to which I would ascribe the word “lyrical.” Russia, predicably, sent yet another feature full of dedicated young men and women. That guy presented a hero who looked slightly interesting as he had several faults. These he courageously mastered by the end. The sexual puritianism of the Russian film was relieved by the HunOsiris her dead love. Chance brings the Man to the temple imploring shelter. Then follow the agonizing contacts and stirrings till the celibate and the virgin reach a living understanding of life - “And his death and his passion of sacrifice were all as nothing to him now; he knew only the crouching fulness of the woman there, the soft white rock of life . . .” “On this rock I built my life.” And “he felt the blaze of his manhood and his power rise up in his loins, magnificent. ‘I am risen! Father!’ he said, ‘why did you hide this from me?’ ”

of us What you have to cultivate is selfdiscipline discipline to get your work done on time, to read beyond the lectures, and to get full value from your instruction. This isn’t easy. There is a tremendous total effort in a university year. Do your realize that you are expected to put in a 60 or 70-hour week here? If you think that is ridiculous, you may be in for a shock. But it is a common rule of thumb in universities that you should put in two hours outside of classroom for every hour spent in it. You work it out. And if you put in less than this amount of time you are shortchanging yourself. garian Age of illusions. Here too were bright-faced young men and women but they at least had problems. Career, love, sex all tormented them. As an ex-engineer, I couldn’t help laughing at the problem of the girl friend whose engineer-lover would rather fix a radio than talk to her. The director of photography, Tomas Vamos, was present and spoke of the universality of these feelings. And to a certain extent he was correct. Just as it was possible to identify high-school friends in Sweet substitute, so too I found myself and many friends in this film. But in contrast to Kent’s film, this treats its characters with sympathy and occasions little real pain.

Ghosts and ghouls stalked the screen in Kobayaski’s Kwaiden and Wojirek Has’ Manuscript found at Suragosse. The former I missed but the latter held me for its complete three hours. It follows its source (a book by Jan Potocki) and has each character tell his life story in flashback before going on with the central tale. But the continuously stunning scenes in the mountains of Poland are too lovely to miss. So even when the action lags, there are always the beautiful images to watch. Over the whole festival, like a jovial god, sat Norman McLaren. Each feature was preceded by one of his shorts and any missed could be seen again during noon-hour sessions. A display in the Queen Elizabeth hotel explained several of his techniques. And McLaren remains the only man I know of who can explain a fugue visually or draw a court for four-demensional tennis. The separatists managed to restrain themselves and except for a few cracks in La vie heureuse, the hosts and audience were very friendly. From a small backwoods festival, Montreal has become an international event.. The beards were there but so were “civilians” and correspondents from all over the continent, Canada may yet achieve some artistic stature - who can say? But even with this, the Man remembers the evil of creeping compulsion: “So let the boat carry me. Tomorrow is another day.” Certainly the book and especially the second part has been considered sacrilege by the narrow-minded. It took a fervent plea from Lawrence to his publisher in which stated “It’s one of my best stories,” to get part two published at all. Since then the book has been widely ignored - possibly in the hope that it will go away and leave people alone. It would be so much easier than the gnawing suspicion that Christ has been crucified

Linda Dowma, at the University

Miss Canada of Victoria

1965, was a third-year arts at the time of the pageant.

student

Miss Canada winner from this campus? “I’m just an average girl with no special professional talent or good looks . . . but I promised to do my best and work at the pageant . . . and it worked . . . ” So said last year’s Miss Canada, Linda Douma from the University of Victoria. Why not this year from U of W? After all, we have a lot of single girls between 18 and 25 with poise, talent, personality and intellect. Entrants to date have been few and there’s over $1,000 in prizes for Miss Princess Kitchener-Waterloo! $150 cash from CKCO-TV - one of 26 areas sponsoring a Miss Princess, one of whom will become Miss Canada 1966 plus a variety of clothes, jewellery, and appliances.

Winterland

On the national level, Miss Canada will receive over $40,000 in cash and prizes, and here in Waterloo Miss Princess will win over $1,000, besides an appearance on CKCO-TV in a few weeks. There’s everything to gain and nothing to lose. Professional models and musicians are ineligible to enter this pageant. If you are interested, pick up your application at the office of information at the Student Federation Building or call Bill Stoltz at CKCO-TV to mail you a form. All pertinent information is contained on this form. On receipt of the application at CKCO-TV, you will be contacted with regard to specifics of the local pageant competition.

needs chairman

You are the person for chairman of the Winterland Weekend, if you have organizational ability and management technique. It will be his responsibility to select the necessary committees and initiate the overall planning that will provide relief for the frustrations of $4,000 book-weary and winter-worn students. The weekend has achieved renown for snow sculpture, broomball, beauty by his own church and that Lawrence is closer to the truth than we care to admit. Whatever the case may be, it is time that the dust was blown off copies of The Man who died and it was brought out for the discussionand I feel acclaim it deserves. How can the author be understood when the book that G. Hough the critic considers “the consummation of Lawrence’s work” is delicately ignored? In the atmosphere of freedom that is the university campus, this book has a place. The Coryphaeus invites comment by readers on any book review.

queens and those other winter events that just don’t seem appropriate during the rest of the year. Enthusiastic “orgyizers” - the upperclassmen who have decided opinions as to how Winterland 66 will be the best yet, should speak to Steve Flott.

I

MERCHANTS PRINTING CO. LTD. 47 Ontario St. S. Kitchener, Ont. I

Want

Ads

Rates: first 15 words 50~. each additional word 5c. 1961 Austin Healey Sprite, white, with red raang stripes; mechanically excellent, body rustless, 45 m.p.g. $650. I need money! Phone Bill, 576-3858. Anyone interested in receiving the Globe and Mail please call SH 2-9468.

Thursday, September

30,1965

7


aterlo

e The Warriors opened the intercollegiate football season right where they left off last year. They defeated U. of Guelph Redmen 12- 1 at Seagram Stadium on Friday night. A large crowd watched attentively as the Warriors,’ led by speedy fullback Ron Dostal, pounded at the Guelph defense with a consistent ground attack. The Warriors seemed to miss the services of Gord Gooselin who was injured early in the game, and their play was unsteady for most of the first quarter. But late in the quarter they caught fire and started to roll as quarterback Doug Billing combined with Walt Finden on a beautiful 30-yard pass play. Finden jumped high above two Guelph defenders to grab the ball on the Redmen one-yard line. On the next play Dostal plunged for the first Waterloo major. The convert attempt by Terry Joyce was blocked to end the quarter.

Gord Gooselin grimaces from the injury suffered during the game against the Guelph Redmen. Gord was hit from the side and sustained a knee injury. Me is now up and around, but *will not be playing in Saturday’s game in Dttawa against the GeeGees.

tR by HAZEL

Warriors’

other

score

came

Joyce’s touchdown

kick for the was short.

point

after

Defensively, the Warriors were headed by Jock Tindale, Wayne Houston, and Scott Wooding. Pass defenders Pat McMinamin and Joyce also had to be alert against the strong-throwing Jefferies, whose passing and punting kept the Redmen in the game. One of his punts, a booming 45yarder to the Warrior end zone, accounted for the lone Guelph point. The Warriors, on the other hand, at times appeared weak in the passing and punting departments. McKillop and Billing passed 13 times and completed five for 68 yards. They had three attempts intercepted. McKillop

punted six times 23 5 yards.

r for

an average

of

Most of the Waterloo yardage came on the ground with Dostal picking up close to 60 out of the total 154 yards. Other big gains came from Brian Irvine and Doug Mitchell. In total yardage, Warriors o u t d i st a n c e d Guelph 222 to 13 1. The next Waterloo start will be Saturday in Ottawa against the tough Gee Gees.

layers Doug Shuh, a rookie with the Warriors this year, played like a seasoned veteran during the game. His fine two-way effort assured him of a prominent - position in the Warrior plans for the year. Doug Peacock was also a very prominent figure in the Warrior defense. ,He should make his presence felt every game this year.

eats RAWLS

Girls’ intramural and intercollegiate athletic notices, rules and entry lists will be posted in the following locations: -university unit, in the lower corridor of the arts building, and in the engineering building outside the book store. The latter poster site may later be moved to the library if and when a bulletin board is installed there; -residence units, on the main bulletin board in each residence. The intramural golf tournament has been re-scheduled for Monday, providing that the response is sufficiently large. At least four people must enter. The intramural tennis tournament is still scheduled for Oct. 7 with an unofficial starting time of 3:30 p.m. Entrants are asked to be prompt and properly dressed according to the rules of the Waterloo Tennis Club. Playing equipment will be supplied by the athletic department at Seagram stadium for those who do not have their own. Field hockey practices commence on Saturday. All students interested in learning the sport should watch the bulletin boards for exact times of practices. Mrs. Hayes, a U of W phys. ed. graduate, will coach the team. Participating teams in the tournament of Oct. 22-23 will be Guelph, McMaster, York, Western and U of W. Mrs. Hayes will also coach this year’s varsity basketball team. Practices will commence the third week of October, the exact date and time to be posted later. The team will participate within the East-West Conference of Intercollegiate Athletics, composed of 10 universities. This is a new conference initiated and chaired by Ruth Hodgkinson of our phys. ed. dep’t. This year the university is also sponsoring an intercollegiate volleyball team. Coach for this team will be Mrs. Green, a phy. ed. graduate of the University of Alberta. Practices will commence the same week as those of basketball. A student may not participate in more than one intercollegiate sport per season, nor may a student be on an intercollegiate team if she has failed her previous academic year.

The C

The

0

with only two minutes remaining in the contest and climaxed a 3%yard downfield march. Bob McKillop, who had replaced Billing at quarterback in the third quarter, fired an elevenyard end zone pass at Kim McCuaig whose diving catch was no less than spectacular.

HAEUS

In what may have been the best race ever held at Mosport park Jim Hall won the Canadian Grand Prix. Winless in six previous races, he edged out Bruce McClaren by .2 seconds. The winner covered 100 laps of the 2.46 mile circuit in 2:27:27.6. On Thursday, McClaren in his bright red McClaren-Qlds and John Surtees in his red Lola T70 posted identical qualifying times of I:27.2. Hall blew his engine. Friday saw him back after an allnight session to install a new Chev engine in his white #66 Chaparral. He set an unofficial lap record but did not officially qualify. Later in the day, John Surtees lost his left front wheel on corner one, an SO-90 mph downhill bend. The car left the track and flipped end over end, both up and down the embankment. Surtees was pinned under the car. He spent the night in hospital with injuries listed by the radio as multiple fractures of the back, a bro-

ken pelvis and internal bleeding. Saturday the truth was revealed. Surtees sat up in the ambulance after the accident, talked to the crew, and seemed to be in good shape. Later in the day it was announced he was “resting comfortably.” About 11 o’clock, Jackie Stewart, a leading contender, withdrew from the race. It was said by reliable sources that a flaw in the suspension of his car, identical to that of teammate Surtees, was found. A broken suspension forced Ludwig Heimrath’s McClaren-Ford out. At approximately 3 o’clock the field was waved away from its rolling start. While $18,000 worth of McClarenChev owned by Augie Pabst burned completely, Bruce McClaren settled down to lapping at over 100 mph. He quickly lapped the whole field excluding Jim Hall who had started in the middle of the pack due to no qualifying time. David Hobbs was in

creativeArts IEkmrFriday, October 1 noon P150 4:oo All7 Sunday, October 3 2:30 - P145

calendar

First program in the international film series

8:?0 Monday, 4:oo

October 4 Theatre

7:30 Tuesday, noon 12: 15

Theatre Qctober Theatre P145

4:oo

Theatre

Bell ‘Antonio

Lecture aimed at potential student/faculty drama directors ’ Casting session for major drama production

5

Organizational meeting for faculty play reading Tuesdav film series : “Middle East (Asia)” and ‘Farm&

4:oo 7:30 Wednesday, October 4:oo B211 4:oo All7 7:30 Theatre 7:30 7:30 Thursday, noon 4:oo

Events

Folk Song Club Opera ch&us rehearsal

Workshop Coffee Shop October 7 Theatre Theatre

6

of India”

Lecture aimed at potential theatre crew Chamber orchestra rehearsal Choral (Glee Club) , rehearsal \

backstage

Lecture aimed at potential theatre management Madrigal singers rehearsal Final casting session for major drama production Concert band rehearsal Folk Dance Club

Discussion - faculty play reading Lecture - “Traditions, manners and customs of the theatre” This week in the Gallery of the Theater of the Arts, Monday through Friday, 9 to 5 p.m. - LEV: A UKRAINIAN IN CANADA

third place in a Lola T70 Studebaker. drove well until he retired with white oil fumes billowing from his engine. At times, Hall clipped between one and four seconds off McClaren’s lead but then got caught in traffic and fell back. By lap 50 he had moved up slightly. McClaren was still lapping at over 100 mph but Hall began his real drive. In his fight for the lead, McClaren set two new lap records of 1:26.5 on lap 58 and eight laps later 1:26.0. The real race started about lap 70 when Hall got within sight of McClaren. Eighteen, then 15, then 10 and eventually only 3 seconds separated the two. The lead changed twice on the 91 lap. McClaren was on the outside of Hall as they entered corner 8, an He

ys ed camp

- skills

and

55 physical education students gathered at Camp Tawingo for instruction in various phys ed and recreational skills during the week of Sept. 12-18. Camp Tawingo is on Lake Vernon, about five miles from Huntsville, an ideal site for sailing, canoeing, and camping. These activities, as well as field hockey, orienteering, golf and archery, were presented as part of the course. The entertaining highlights of the week included a 3-4 hour canoe trip using orienteering skills (or non-skills) an overnight campout for a few brave THlF?D to share 201 Erb of U. of

80-mph bend, at the end of the straight. He hesitated and then pulled in behind Hall but was back in the lead as they crossed the start-finish line two corners later. Lap 92 saw Hall set a iap record of 1:25.7 (104.15 mph), as he pulled’ into the lead. This was reduced to 1:24.9 (105.75 mph), on lap 94. Two laps later McClaren again entered corners 8 beside the Chaparral. Again he had to tuck in behind Hall where he stayed to the end. Hall won $2,000, McClaren $1,500 and Pedro Rodriguez, the 1963-64 winner, $1,000. John Cordts of North Bay, driving a Corvette, won the Peter Ryan Memorial Trophy presented in memory of Canada’s most outstanding driver to the first Canadian to finish this event.

spills souls (none of the women went); a cook-out with a menu of corn, bread, tomatoes and onions; a camp-fire with skits and a sing-song; a field-hockey game; a war-canoe race and a sinking sail boat. Kim McCuaig was awarded the traditional trophy, (a finished paddle), for all-round proficiency at skill school. The quality of leadership and instruction was extremely high. Jack Pearse, the camp director is a trmendous personality. He instructed the group in golf, and lectured on communication.

STUNDENT WANTED furnished apartment, W. Walking distance W. $39 a’month rent.

SHIRT LAUNDERERS Corner King and University

10% Student Discount


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.