Twostudents members of admin bookstore probe Two students will sit on the administration committee investigating bookstore operations. But there has been no guarantee from the administration that book prices will drop. At a meeting Prof. William student affairs, day’s bookstore would get their sentation.
Cyril
Levitt,
background ment. Tom
arts 1, si,ngs “We are the protesters” at last Friday’s sit-in-or on, obviously enjoying a member of the bookstore staff looks Patterson, bookstore sit-in leader, stands at left. For more pictures
Bryce, Ftied Council reps in light vote Only one out of seven arts students voted in last Thursday’s arts byelection. Bill Bryce was elected arts representative on Student Council. He got 142 votes to 63 for Andy Anstett and 56 for David Blaney. Of the 1,925 students eligible to vote, only 14.8 percent turned out. In the grad election, Peter Fried of the psychology department, defeated Stanley Munoz also psychology, by a margin of six votes. Turnout in the grad constituency was A recount has been 22.5 percent. ordered on this vote. Some students classifed the poor turnout as a typical example of student apathy. Shelley Hogg, arts 1, commented “Nobody knows anything that’s going on around here. You hear about everything after it’s happened 0” Others complained there was not enough publicity, due partly they claimed, to the poor communications between the Student Council and the students. Pat Hume, arts 1, admitted, “I didn’t know anything about any of the candidates, so I didn’t vote.” Sever al of the candidates handed out mimeographed sheets, explaining their views and intentions, but they didn’t reach many students. One person suggested that firstyear students should not be allowed to vote, unless the present situation is improved.
sing-in. In t-he the entertamsee page 10.
late Monday night, Scott, provost for told leaders ofFrisit-in that they demand for repre-
Wednesday, student president Mike Sheppard received a formal memorandum from universitypresident J.G. Hagey confirming that two members of the six-man administration committee studying the bookstore can be chosen by Student counc.il. The decision fills one of the two demands made by students at the mass bookstore sit-in last Friday. But the first demand--that book
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Bookstore protesters storm Hagey’s More than 200 students invaded the office of university president J. G. Hagey last Friday protesting high prices and a $67,000 profit at the university bookstore last year. Many more crowded around outside listening over the inter corn as the president attempted to j-ustify his policies to the protesters. Leading the students was Tom Patterson, speaker of Student Council and chairman of its bookstore committee. Demonstrators were demanding a 150percent reduction in book prices and student membership on the administration committee studying ancillary services--the bookstore, food services, printshop and athletics . The highly organized demonstration began as a bookstore sit-in. At noon Friday about 50 students sat down around the bookstore cash registers and blocked the exits. University police s toad guard ov-
er the demonstrators but did not attempt to eject them. Theprotesters read books, sang freedomsongs and played cards--and hissed anyone attempting to make a purchase. The bookstore staff sat backandenjoyed the excitement. Within an hour the number of demonstrators had swelled to almost 300. Demonstration leaders read out a books tore invoice, found by a demons trator inside a book, that showed book prices marked up 69 percent. President Hagey agreed to meet leaders of the demonstration in his office. But he refused to come down to the bookstore. “If he won’t come to us, we’re going to him--all of US!~* Mr. Patterson told the crowd. Demonstrators paraded across the campus and into the library. University police counted 210 students entering the president’s office. ‘The president refused to make an
on-the-spot comrnittment to the students. “I don’t say that your demands are unfair,” he said. “But I don’t say that they are fair either.” After an hour of discussion, President Hagey agreed to reply by the end of the week to the students’ demands for two student members on the committee to study ancillary operations. The demonstration climaxed four years of discontent over bookstore profits. Many students were left unsatisfied by their leaders’ apparent compromise. Grad psychology student David Andres said , “We’ve been put off for four years and we were put off again.” Others were more optimistic. ‘We’ve showed them that we’re mad. They will have to do something. This is bad publicity for the big tenth-anniversary fund drive next year ,I’ said one.
prices by reduced 15 percent by January l--remains unanswered. The student committee on the bookstore has made two interim appointments to the ancillary operations committee. (Ancillary opera-tions include bookstore, food services, printshop and athletics .) Tom Patterson, speaker of Student Council, and David Andres, a grad student in psychology, will serve until Council makes the final choices for the committee at its meeting this Monday. During the confrontation between students and President Hagey last Friday, the president refused to make an on-the-spot committment on student demands for the ‘books tore. But he promised a reply within a week on the committee request. President Hagey tookonly three days to make his decision. Referring to a story in the K-W Record which branded the arrangement made Monday night a “compromise”, Mr. Patterson said, “There has been no compromise. “We have made progress and we’re happy with it. But there hasn’t been any promise of lower bcokstore prices. “If we can’t come to reasonable conclusion, we’ll be forced to try to achieve a solution through other means .” Administration members of the ancillary operations committee are A.K. Adlington, operations vicepresident; A. B. Gellatly, treasurer; John Brow ii, secretary to the board of governors , and Provost Scott. Student president Mike Sheppard said students are “generally satisfied with the agreementda9
Co-ops iunk
can
iobs
Co-op students needno longer accept jobs if they find the jobnotices deceivingly inviting. Through negotiations, the salary survey committee of Engineering Council A persuaded the co-ordination department that a student should have the right to reject a jobfollowing the general and personal interviews. Formerly a student who signed up for an interview was committed to accept a job if the computer matched him with a company. Now he can indicate his rejection of a company by a special mark on his blue interview rank card.
KODS eniov sit-in, urovost suggests ‘Other methodspossible’ I
by Eva Chevron
I
Mayer staff
What was the effect of the sitin at the bookstore last Friday? Was anything accomplished or was it only a waste of time? “It certainly pointed up a willingness on my part to set up this commented univer committee,” sity president J. G. Hagey to the Chevron. * * * Prof. William Scott, provost for student affairs, believes other methods could have been used. Only if all other channels of communication fail, should a sit-in be attempted. If a student has anything on his mind, he should make this evident to those affected. ‘“The adrrnnistration9’, says Provost Scott,)’ will go to some length to solve any problem as long as it is clearly evident and responsibility is
sIIowll.9'
Stildents must make sure tllcy are
using the most effective approach. Prof, Scott does not believe there is sufficient evidence that the students at this university pay any more than students at other Canadian universities. In his opinion, the administration is very sympathetic with the studen ts . “There is a climate of opinion here that may not be found at many other universities,” he said. Provost Scott commented, however, on the dispatch with which President Hagey decided to admit students to the committee. “I hada call at 9:30 Monday morning from the president. He acted quickly.” * * e “It certainly is one of the more effective methods of getting something across’, replied Mike Sheppard, Student Council president, when questioned about the issue. The bookstore committee had been appointed by Student Council. This committee decided on its own iutiative to take Friday’s action.
This was within its terms of reference. Mr. Sheppard was pleased to see people starting to do things alone, without being pushed by the Council. he did voice some However, doubt. Was the sit-in a success only because it had something to do with the students’ pocketbook? How will similar issues be treated in the future? As far as President Sheppard is concerned, the administration generally moves quite slowly. “It is hard to say what effect the sit-in will have on any decision.” * * * Sergeant Fred Cook of the’kampus kops did not give his men any special instructions. They were to keep their eyes on things, stepping in only if there was damage to university property. “The students were free to have their sit-in. They were not restricted in any manner,9’ he said.
“The students did a very good job. It’s a real credit to them. No one caused any damage and the students’ conduct was quite orderly. As a matter of fact, we even enjoyed it ourselves,” said the sergeant.
* * t
“It’s not right that the bookstore should make such a profit ,” said Dr ,, Stanley Sandler, a history professor. He has seen the books here marked up 30 to 40 percent over the price put on them by the publisher. “I would have joined the students had I known about it sooner.” He had apparently gotten a Chevron too late in the afternoon. * Q * Mrs. Elsie Fisher 9manage.r of the refused to make any bookstore, comment at all. (President Hagey emphasized that Mrs. Fischer is not the person responsible for bookstore policy: (‘Clertainly the department
heads--such as the person in charge of the bookstore--are not responsible for the university policy on markups , or even for the stock offered for sale,” he said.) * * 9 Tom Patterson, head of Student bookstore committee, considered the sit-in to have been The students there quite orderly. were genuinely interested in the issue, he said. COLUIC~~'S
‘*Most students seem to feel that the outcome was a sell-out. We got what we were initially after and lnade headway.” The issue now has priority onthe administration’s schedule. Mr. Patterson. is convinced that a form of communication has also been established wirll theadministration. llowever, he is not collipletely satisfied and has hinted tllat if no pi-ogress is sl1owii, liis zonilllittee may have to resort to otller IlleL1ns.
a-
M&i11
MONTREAL (CUP)--McGill student council last Thursday fired McGill Daily editor-in-chief Sandy Gage. The newspaper’s entire staff resigned on the spot. UNIVERSITY
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Daily reporter said Wednesday and Montreal the U.S. embassy RCMP have “denied any knowledge of U.S. financial aid being given to Dr. Yang, or of his having under gone a security clearance.” Two weeks earlier, council took over responsibility for appointing the Daily’s editor. It also refused to approve the paper’s annual pOlicy statement.
“I am not going to resign--you will have to fire me,” Gage told council after it passed a motion demanding resignations from the paper’s entire editorial board. Internal affairs vice-president Ian McLean declined to vote on the issue, saying: “Council doesn’t BULLETIN A Canadian University Press investigation commission will probe the McGill student council’s firing of the editor of the McGill Daily, Sandy Gage. The commission was called Tues day by McGill councilpresidentJim McCoubrey.
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resident students, said the protest had the initial support of at least a quarter of the 600 resident students. “The food poisoning issue is now the focal point of a long Xst of grievances against the cafeteria,” he said. I am sure we have all found tobacco shreds in our coffeeor such things floating in the milk, he added. He said the protest was against operational standards, the attitude of the catering staff “who don’t even attempt to befriendly,“andthevariety of food served. He said there had been many complaints about unsanitary conditions in the cafeteria in the past. A resident student pays $1.92 daily for meals from his total tuition fee.
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TORONTO (CUP)--The University of Toronto’s sex-oriented comdating program matched a puter male student with his sister, aprogrammer reported. Programmer John Pullman said the brother-sister match is theonly “honest objection” he has received to the Engineering Undergraduate Society’s computer campaign to share funds for SHARE. Pullman, who is planning a thesis on computerized dating said reports of requests for homosexual dates were unfounded. Only one such request was received and it proved to
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have the right nor the privilege to sit as a judiciary body.” The paper’s long-standing feud with student council boiled over Nov. 11 when the Daily published an article claiming a McGillprofessor is conducting a research project designed to aid the U.S. war effort in Vietnam. The story in question was headlined-“Researcher aids Viet war “, and alleged a civil-engineering professor, Raymond Young, is working on a method of determining soil solidity from the air which would permit U.S. pilots to make emergency land-
When you turn 21 you’re no longer covered by your parents’ Hospital Insurance. To keep insured, you must take out individual membership within 30 days. Get your application form at a bank, a hospital, or from the Commission.
WINDSOR (CP)--Resident students at the University of Windsor picketed their cafeteria in protest against operational standards. Almost 200 students werestricken between last W ednesday andF riday with cramps, nausea, dizziness and other symptons after, they claim, they ate meals in the cafeteria. Because of the widespread sickness, which medical authorities here have not yet traced to a source, a meal served to the president of Zambia Saturday was prepared off campus. Dr, Kenneth Kaunda, who received an honorary doctor of laws degree at a special convocation Saturday, dined with university officials at mid-day, but the roast prime ribs of beef served were prepared across the city at the General Motors of Canada plant. Dr. John Howie, director of the Windsor-Essex COLlllty Metro Health Unit, who ha s been leading the investigation into the mass student sickness, said on Saturday that although the cafeteria has not been shown to be the cause of the outbreak, anoutside caterer was sought “because we thought it would be the wise thing to do.” The GM plant caterer, however, is the same organization which provides food for the university.
- students:
U
of
W students $3
annually.
to
$5.00
916,000
stolen,
five
others
charged
Printshouheadpleadsauiltv -
- I-
Bruce Kurschenska, 34, manager of the University of Waterloo Press, Tuesday pleaded guilty of conspiring to steal university funds totalling $16,000. Also charged in Waterloo magistrate’s court with conspiracy to
Admin won’t no FM radio The university has vetoed any support for anFM radio station.The station had been planned to start in 1967. Peter Calvert, engineering 3, president of the university Broadcasting Association, was notified of the decision this week by Alan Gordon, assistant to university president J. G. Hagey. A memo from Mr. Gordonstated, “I have been requested to report that the University of Waterloo is not in a position at present to undertake the establishment of an FM station on this campus”. The memo stated that the subcommittee charged with the investigation of establishing an FM station had met with all thosepreviously concerned with the project in an “all-embracing discussion”. The main objection raised by the administration was to the proposed $60,000 cost of the station. “I was more enthusiastic when the figure was $14,000,” President Hagey told the Chevron. He was disturbed at some of the statements made by Gerry Moellenkamp vice-president of the university Broadcasting Association, in
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commit theft were five others: former U of W Press employees Stanley Guthrie and James Warmington, their wives Georgette Guthrie and Diane Warmington, and Edward Crane. Sergeant Kenneth Schneider of the
pay; station the newspaper (November 11). Mr. Moellenkamp had estimated the cost at “well over $50,000.” President Hagey said theadministration had never agreed to pay this much. “I’d like to see a radio station,” he added. ‘But I just can’t see that $60,000 at the present time.” The memo explained that the extra cost would have an adverse effect on the university’s $lO,OOO,OOO fund-raising program for next year. The proposed FM station was intended to present a complete crosssection of music,.as well as student lectures and labs. Ryerson Institute of Technology in Toronto is now considering satellite outlets for its station CJRTFM--one in Peter boro and another here. The outlet would be financed by Ryerson, who would then have the right to demand up to 22 hours of broadcast time daily. This would leave only two hours of programming time for the university. The Ryerson venture would probably prevent the future establishment of an FM station by the university.
Science Society threatened by apathy Will the new Science Society succeed or oollapse like its predecessor? 35 students turned out for thenew society’s inaugural meeting Wednes day night. The society will coordinate the activities of the science faculty and students e It hopes to provide social events superior to the record hops and other events at present on campus. Course clubs will also come un-
der the society’s jurisdiction. The Science Society plans to be active during orientation, acquainting frosh with the faculty. They also hope to prepare the anticalendar for the science faculty, Two committees were established at Wednesday’s meeting. A constitution committee will attempt to have a Science Society constitution by Christmas. A “something” committee will begin arranging a big bash for February.
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\I-
1
Waterloo police department, the investigating officer, testified that Kurschenska author&d over time pay for hours that Guthrie and Warmington had not worked, The money was divided between Kurschenska and the employee concerned. Guthrie and his wife were both paid salaries while they were not employed at the university at all. From November 1963 to January 1964 Guthrie received pay checks from the university totalling $561, although he was working elsewhere at the time, said a representative of Clarkson and Gordon, the university’s accountants. Mrs. Warmington, never a U of W employee, was on the payroll for a year. Paychecks signed by her--or by Kurschenska in her name--were divided between Kurs chenska and Warmington, testified Sgt. Schneider. Edward Crane claimed he was put on the payroll by Kurschenska without his knowledge. When he received an unexplained income-tax form from the U of W he asked the reason why and was cut in by Kurschenska. During 1966 Crane was paid $2,017.50 by the university. He split this money on a 50-50 basis with Kurschenska, the sergeant testified. Kurschenska was remanded in custody and will appear in Kitchener magistrate’s court December 8. Stanley and Georgette Guthrie,, Warmington and Crane will appear before the Kitchener magis tr ate December 1. Crane was remanded without plea until then. Charges against Diane Warmington were dismissed by Magistrate Alan Barron.
LSD weekend What is the meaning of a “religious” experience? Come and have an experience, sing and talk, without the use of drugs 0 The Student Christian Movement is expropriating the Y carnpat Norval until Sunday noon8 Thecost: $6. “Phone 576-9981 r i gh t now, “cause we’re leaving tonight at 7,“’ said Marg Dyment.
Nabbed lifting banners, Court fines fresh $150 by Chris Chevron
Swan staff
Seven frosh who yielded to temptation and got caught were fined a total of $150 by University Court for theft of convocation banners. Their cases were heard on Tuesday at a two-hour court sitting in which 10 cases were heard. Ron Cooper and Dave Smith, both science 1, each pleaded guilty to a charge of theft and possession of stolen university property and were fined $25. Don Smith, co-op math 1, their look-out, was found guilty of attempted theft and was fined $15. Their greed was their downfall; they were caught on a second try to secure more banners. Four students who accompanied them on their first trip were not caught. Mike Rolt, arts 1, pleaded guilty to theft of banners and was fined $20. He was with four others when a plainclothes kampus kop appeared. He surrendered in the library parking lot after spraining his ankle atternpting to run away. Pat I<udka, science 1, was up a
light pole when Brian MaGee, engineering 1, alerted him of the approach of a policeman. They were caught hiding with the banner under the steps of the social sciences building. They were each fined $25. Robert Lornie, science 1, and Peter Gibson, arts 1, pleaded guilty to theft of a blinker sign near the Bank of Montreal. They were apprehended by both kampus kops and Waterloo police. No charges have been laid by the city. Both were fined $35. The court spent the longest time deliberating the case of Bill Royds who pleaded guilty with mitigating circumstances . Royds claimed he picked up one of four banners lying on the grass where the workmen had placed them after convocation. A workman seemed to give Royds tacit approval by looking in the other direction while Royds appropriated one of the banners, which he believed were goint to be discarded. That night, poIice drove by Royds’ Renison College room and noticed the purple-and-white standard on the wall.
The next morning Royds was told that he should not have the banner. He returned it to the provost’s office and left his name and address with the secretary. He and his roommate, Bill CMningham, were charged with possession of stolen U of W property by the provost’s office. The charge against Cunningham was later withdrawn but Royds was found guilty and fined $15. Also presentwas Provost William Scott, who said he was only there as an interested observer. Provost Scott told the Chevron a report on university judicial structure, largely prepared by Dave Young, a former student, now vicepresident of the Canadian Union of Students, will soon be tabled in the president’s advisory committee on student discipline and university regulations . This report envisages an appeals court composed of students andfaculty. The University Court suggested the fines collected by the court be used to pay for the missing banners.
Rain
New editor, new staff, Ryersonianhas returned TORONTO (CUP) - -Students and Ryerson Polytechnical Institute representatives recently worked out a partial agreement to end a twoday walkout by 18 student editorsat the Daily Ryersonian. A new publishing boardsuggested by Ryerson’s director of student affairs will give the paper”s student editor final say in all editorial content disputes. The walkout was sparked by the announcement from principal F .C. Jorgenson that in future Lloyd Lockhart, the paper’s professional managing editor, would review all copy. When the system of having the managing editor review all copy was tried before, he had censored some material, former staff members claimed. The Daily Ryersonian is produced in conjunction with the journalism course offered at the institute. Ryerson*s administration claimed that because the paper was a journalism laboratory, it should be more professional in nature and copy should be run under the managing editor’s authority. Len Coates, who resigned as editor-in-chief of the Daily Ryersonian, says he will put in his one evening a week on the paper-- just like any other journalism student.
The third-year journalism student said although his resignation achieved “something that should have been done years ago, it would clear the air if I stayed resigned”. editor John Newly-appointed Hewer said the question of editorial control has been entirely resolved* The final say over any material is “mine and strictly mine,” he said. “If I think something should be published, it gets published, but I have to appear before the newlyestablished publishing board later to justify it if it draws criticism.” The only point of disagreement remaining is makeup of masthead staff for the next term and method of selecting new editing staff. Plans to launch a new weekly student newspaper at Ryerson have r eportedly been sb.elved f or the time Ryerson student council being. earlier this week demanded the return of student funds channelled into the Daily Ryersonian by the school’s board of gcvernors. The walkout had prompted quick action from Ottawa, where Canadian Union of Students President Doug Ward urged council presidents across the country to cancel subscriptions to the newspaper and write to Mr. Jorgenson requesting the return of student funds invested in it.
437 donated blood; 50 more tried to Fifty blood donors had to beturned away from last week’s blood drive--it was that successful. Due to the Circle K Club’s publicity campaign, the Red Cross ran out of plastic containers e 437 were brought from Hamilton to the clinic. But they weren’t sufficient. The biology corridor) where the clinic was held, was swamped. Some waited in line for an hour and a half, despite the rainy weather to be able td give blood. Frank Olender, one of the university’s maintenance men, made his 156th donation to the Red Cross blood bank at the clinic. According to Mrs. Phyllis Livingston, the university nurse, it was a gratifying turnout. “Credit should be given to the university people for Friday,
the outstanding response,” she said. But it proved the need for improvement. Mrs, Livingston feels the drive should be extended to two days. Better facilities are another must, for the room was too small. Those who wer unfortunate enough not to donate at this time, will have the opportunity early in March. 286 students donated at WUC. 3
c
Staff
party
tonight
November
25,
1966
(7:17)
3
PROBABILITY
Prints by nun in theatergallery ‘Serigraphs Sister Mary Corita will be shown in the theater gallery until December 18. Sister Mary Corita is one of the foremost printmakers in the slikscreen medium. Her prints are in the Metropolitan Museum and the Museum of Modern Art: in New York and in many other @lection$
Creative TUESDAY
A professor of art at Immaculate Heart College in Los Angeles, California, her work has been shown in over 70 one-man shows. She IS as widely known as a teacher as sheis
p.m.
- Theater
of the
- 12:15
p.m.
- Theater
Noontime Session: ISLAMIC ART Mrs. Nancy-Lou Patterson, Director will lecture and show slides. THURSDAY
- P2:15
p.m.
- Theater
Noontime Drama: ‘“DUO David Hutchison and effects of man on man the Twentieth Century peare, Wilde, Anouilh, SATURDAY SUNDAY
- 8:OO p.m. - 3:00
p.m.
of the
hand takes careful play to make. South plays 4 spades and the opening lead is the king of diamonds . How should south plan the play? The main problem is to keepeast out of the lead so he can’t lead
Presents TOMORROW at 8:30 ST. JEROME’S SANS
COLLEGE
ANIMAUX
ME KADWELLTRI
Arts TIES
of
FOR
TH E GUYS
Arts, SKIRTS
Arts
With
Arts
AT MIDDAY” Fred Nobes trace the from Roman times to in scenes from ShakesMcLeash and Albee.
FOR
NOTICE
THE
GIRLS
Without
Cards
50$ single $1.00 couple
$1.00 $1.75
single couple
- Theater
TUESDAY,
- Theater
CAROL FANTASY - directed by Alfred Kunz This year’s presentation promises to be a most brilliant production with University of Waterloo soloists, choirs, band and orchestra combining for this concert. First part f the programme will present sing-along carols as well as performances by all groups of unusual Christmas music and the second half will be a performance of the first part of Handel’s “Messiah”. SPECIAL
R. Wise
*ARTS SOCIETY
Arts
of the
Michael
Today’s
Desert, Fathers
Tuesday Film Extra: “LEONARD COHEN”’ - a study of the poet from Montreal but now resident of Greece, at age of 30. This film was made on one of his brief visits to his <home city to which he comes from time to time “to renew his neuroti,c affiliation” he says. He is one of the very lively young poets on the contemporary scene in Canada or, if you will, “the last word”. WEDNESDAY
by
shows
Though she used modern imagery, her work is based upon the concepts of centuries of Christian mystical writing and shehas drawn on themes from St. John of the Cross and the
Arts Calendar
- 12:15
A ducking
a an artist. This exhibition some of her latest work.
In her work a note of religious joy is combined with imagery drawn from contemporary themes.
SEMINAR
NOVEMBER 29
Richard Needham
-
Auditions for the major production of the winter term “VOLPONE” will be held by the director, Ron Hartman, on November 28, 29, and 30; December 5, 6, and 7 from 12:OO noon until 2:00 p.m. Every one interested, please report to Arts Office, room 254 in Modern Languages ing to arrange a time.
AL116
8:30
play hearts through your weak holding and beat the contract.
S 64 H AQ6 D KQJ1054 c 95
s H D C
Km 753 A6 AJ743
S 52 H 51098 D 9872 c QlO6
S AQ10873 H K42 D3 C K82 Looking at all four hands, it doesn’t seem possible todo this and set up your club suit at the same time, since east appears to have a sure club entry. The key to this problem’s solution occurs at trick 1. You must not win this trick with the diamond ace. This ducking play will keep west on lead and also assure you of making ELEVEN tricks. Let’s see why. West will probably lead another diamond. Now you win the ace and on it YOU throw a club from YOUIT hand. Then pull two rounds of trump, followed by the king and ace of clubs (endjllg in the dummy). Now you ruff a club in your hand,as the queen falls from east, and reenter dummy with a trump to discard two hearts from your hand on the es ta blished clubs. At the end you concede a heart trick to west’s ace. If west doesn’t lead a diamond at trick 2, you can still play as above; if west actually plays a heart at trick 2 (other than the ace), the above line of play will net you 12 tricks. Here’s another homework problem. Anyone wanting the solution should see me at the bridge club’s weekly game. Diamonds is trump and south must lead and make 7 tricks with the best defence against him. S e-B H Q108 D J S 654 S J98 H 975 C 10985 H J D 10 D8 S 41073 C K43 CQ H A4 D m-m
C AJ
Coffee
Creative Build-
TED, Arts
Cards
hour after
MITCH
Carriers
AND
CAROL
Have
TO SING
Free
25$
without
you heard?
The NEW THE COMITATE PRESENTS
sound
MIDNIGHT MAGIC
‘CAMPUS SOUND’ 3 hours campus
at
special
THE VILLAGE DANCING TREY
9:00 BENNETT
- 2:00
Recorded
BUFFET
LUNCH
BREAKFAST TH E CO ST? -----JUST
AT AT
$8. A FULL
TO
CONTINUOUS
QUINTET
AND music
from
2:00
12:30
ENTERTAINMENT ’.
4
FOR
THOSE
WHO WILL
THE
DANCE
AT
The
CHEVRON
BE COMONG
THECO,ST
OF $3.25
FROM
OUT
A PLATE.
GINNI to
OF GRANT
5:OO
THE TRIO
of news sports events
WEEK:
Why Vil lage fees jump $50. U of W’s own Ted, Mitch & Carol Complete reports on Thursday hockey and Saturday soccer. In concert: l:O5- 1:30--a different arti st each week.
Saturday
4:30 EVENING’S
THIS
MUSIC
THE
of
OF TOWN,
A DINNER
PRECEEDING
nites 11:15 to 2 on Radio 1320 CKKW
By Drama
Society
this weekmd
Afun play entitled ‘Shestoopsto conquer by
Ann
Foerster
Tonight and tomorrow night, ‘She stoops to conquer’ is beingpresented at 8:30 in the Theater of the Arts. The University of Waterloo Drama Society under the direction of Malcolm Waters will perform this un: ique comedy. The play is essentially a straightforward comedy, combining elements of sentimental comedy and the liveliness of the restoration plays. This play caused a considerable reaction when first presented in 1773, as it departs so violently fromprevious concepts of domestic writing. The hero, Charles Marlow, and his friend, George Hastings, are travelling from London to the country home of Mr. and Mrs. Hardcastle. A proposed marriage has been arranged between Marlow and Kate Hardcastle. They lose their way and stop at a roadside inn to ask for directions. Tony Lumpkin, Mrs.Hardcastle’s son, directs them to the home but he tells them that it is another inn. They arrive at the Har dcastle’s home and still under the illusion that it is an inn, they treat Mr 0Hardcastle as the innkeeper and mistake Kate, their daughter, for a barmaid. The result is a hilarious case of mistaken identities which lasts throughout the play. One must see everything that hap-
pens to actually believe that people can become so confused. There are no deep, underlying motives to the It is a play to be enjoyed. Play* Eighty people are involved in the production, including a full cast of 23, eight stage attendants, and approximately 50 people behind the scenes. Some of the major cast includes John Turner as Charles Marlow, Steve Chalmers as George Hastings, Pat Willis as Kate Hardcastle and Jerry Parowinchak and Avon Bechtel as Mr. and Mrs. Hardcastle. The play, which has been in r ehearsal sinceOctober, is performed in the traditional manner of the plays of the 18th century. Full period costumes are being used and all of the scene changes are done visually. The set is the most complicated ever used at this university. Problems in production have been encountered, but the enthusiasm of the society members has done a great deal to surmount these. Difficult to attempt ‘She stoops toconquer ’ is basically a play of ideas and manners, which the cast has never encountered before. Tickets are available at thetheater box-office. Admission price-s are 50 cents for students, $1 for adult non-students.
John two
Turner and Barb more performances,
Foe11 star tonight
in a scene from She stoops to conquer. The comedy has (photo by Brian Minielly) and tomorrow, in the Theater.
‘Midnight magic’ New Year’s Eve and small tables, the third for dancPlans are rapidly progressing buffet is planned for 12:30 and for Midnight Magic”, a New Year’s i.ng. Elaborate decorations for the a breakfast for 4:30. two rooms are already under conA
St. Aethelwold’s in Toronto by Marion
Vale
The warmly enthusiastic applause of an appreciative audience greeted St. Aethelwold’s Players at Trinity College last Friday night. And this despite many rather unexpected difficulties ! The original sponsor for the Waterloo group’s production, the Medieval Dramatic Society of Trinity College, withdrew its support WedThey apparently decided nesday. St. Aethelwold’s visit (to be reciprocated) would ruin their own appeal in Toronto. No reception was given the Waterloo troupe. Welcoming statements were ‘71’0~ can’t park your bus here” and “You can’t smoke here.”
Eve dance to be held at the Village.
The players’ props, makeup and costuming departments were all forced to work out of one room. Chaos was avoided only by splitsecond timing and the stationing of “traffic cops” at strategic intervals in the hall. Lighting problems nearly blossomed into catastrophe with only five spotlights available to produce the outstanding staging effects achieved in our Theater of the Arts. (Here the stage crew had lights to cover every inch of the stage.) Yet, under Dr. Cumming’s capable direction the makeshift arrangements sufficed. How welltheysufficed could be gauged by the hearty approval given the players’ efforts by the audience.
Plea:‘why
modern
Tickets will go on saleDecember 5 in the engineering, arts, and physits foyers at $8 per couple, All three Village dining halls Will be utilized--the second for the bar
the
master
utters:
Magenta
peanut
butter!”
For anyone who are planning to come back to the campus from out of town--and the comitate Club feels there will be many--a dinner preceding the dance is planned for 7:30 at $3.25 per person.
Nothing happenedat Mm’s happening -- but what has the U of W ever tried? by Tom Butler What do you wear to a happening? This and many other questions were in the minds of the eight or nine hundred people who arrived at the new gym at McMaster Saturday to see Andy Warhol’s Expolding
art?” RANDOM THOUGHTS CONCERNING THE PAINT ON THE WALLS IN THE LOBBY OF THE ARTS LECTURE BUILDING by H. C. Mecredy Can you spare for an old greybeard A plaintive plea, ‘cause he wants to be he’rd. He’s weary and pensive and for his part He wonders why is modern art? Can no one paint a tree or bird Or slowly wind a lowing herd? A house, a barn in simple essence Or even one that sports somecrescents. Is it that we strive to please By smearing with paint stained elbows and knees Our canvas ? Then the master utters Eh bien ! - magenta peanut butter 1
“Then
s truction. Alternating every half hour from 9 to 2 will be the Ginni Grant Trio and the Trev Bennett Quintet. Recorded music will follow from 2 till 5 in the morning.
Fashion us something we understand Like a child clutching his mother’s hand Or a peasant woman wrinkled and grey Stooped with hardship kneeling to pray. So treat our eyes to a sylvan scene A flower, a child, a rushing stream Must we forever be assailed By melted neapolitan on the garage floor impaled?
plastic inevitable’. Few peopleknew what to expect. Most of those attending hadheard about happenings and were curious what one would be like. Others expected to see Mr. Warhol of tomato-soup-can fame. Relatively few were of the “beat” element if, indeed, there is one. Many arrived in shirts and ties, with suit coats or jackets, many others in sports shirts and sweaters. A few came Mod--more girls, naturally, than guys* House lights dimmed. A revolving arrangements of lights and mir rors threw red spots of light on the walls and ceiling in a randomeverchanging pattern. Three different underground movies overlapped one another in simultaneously projection on screen in front of us. Two of these were taken in a coffee shop, or someone’s pad, theother at a jazz session with four or five guysplaying guitars and a girl beating lethar gically on a tambourine. All three were pointless. All the while various noises and mutterings could be- heard from speakers at the back of the gym, sounding vaguely like film soundtracks. After an hour of this, the “musical” group, the Velvet Underground moved on stage, turned their amplifiers up to full scream and began assaulting our eardrums. Actually, they weren’t bad at all. Their drummer set a pounding rythm which could be felt through the floor as much as it was heard. This more than anything else made their music more rythrn than actual melody. Mica joined the group a few times to sing a song or two, a beautiful Friday,
woman with an excellent voice. She blended with the Velvet Underground quite well. There was also a “go-go dancer”, Note the quotation. It was a guy.He danced under a couple of strobe lights (lights that blink on and off regularly and rapidly) which made his motions jerky rather than smooth. Meanwhile, the screenat thefront switched from movies to colorful patterns. Dots o stripes , diamonds, squares, triangles flashed simultaneously in erratic patterns. The evening ended with a 20-minute song in a pounding rhythm which seemed to drag on intermidably. This was the happening and it seemed to me no one knew what to do. When the Velvet Underground began their numbers, the audience made a few scattered and rather timid attempts at applause. But does one applaud at happenings ? The way I’ve heard it, one characteristic of such an event is audience involvement. The size of the gym, and the nature of theaudience made this impossible. A few couples began to dance near the end, but many had left long before the two and a half hours were UP* One notable exception was one girl who joined the male dancer during the last number. Except for this, nothing happened. This audio-visual experience seemed rather pointless, was very loud. It went on and on until you wanted it to stop. Still, in some cases there was a definite fascination. All criticisms discounted, Mat TRIED to have a happening. What has Waterloo tried? I November 25, 1966(7:17) 3
drama,‘ko
noontime
Unique by
Mary
Chevron
Bull
The play runs just over an hour and has no elaborate sets. The two actors--there are only two--are in modern dress. It begins with a scene by S. MacLeish based on the creation of man, proceeds through medieval society with bits and pieces by Shakespeare, continues on to Sivnovilh and Oscar
Nobes ’ noontime drama production ‘Duo at midday’. It will be performed in the theater on Thursday.
staff
So I asked them, “Why so yourehearse in your bare feet?” The joking answer was “Because we’re poor starving university students who can’t afford shoes.” This is not the only unique feature of David Hutchison and Fred
This particular production was created by these two students and directed by Malcolm Waters. It progresses in a chronological order through representative scenes of the evolution of society.
at midday’ W tide, ending up with modern man--
the scene between the two professors in %/ho’s afraid of Virginia
wo rtf?’
rough these six scenes, the actors hope to portray important mome.nts in history, such as Shakespeal-e’s scenes between Henry II and Becket as the latter changes roles from the power behind the throne to the power frustrating the throne.
Also, Dave and Fred often change roles. For instance, Dave as Henry and Fred as Becket later becomes Dave as Beckett and Fredas Henry. Two people carrying the load of pace, variety and audience impact in a one-hour production will beintrigufng for the watchers as well as challenging for the actors involved. What results should be highly entertaining.
Have you considered the opportunities of a career with The Mutual Life? Why not obtain a copy of our Career Opportunities booklet from your Placement Office. It describes the many rewarding positions available this year. We would
be pleased with
to discuss you on
these
careers
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30th when a personnel representative will be visiting Please contact your Student your campus. Placement Officer for an interview.
The Mutual ASSURANCE HEAD
OFFICE:
WATERLOO,
COMPANY ONTARIO/
Life OF CANADA
ESTABLISHED
1869
David Hutchison and Fred Nobes practice VIII for Thursday’s noonhour drama/Duo
a scene from at midday.’
FOR SALE Owner transferred and must leave this lovely cated in Beechwood. Close to campus. Call
John
7440 5311
BANK
OF Canada’s
H. Busbridge
Real
743- 0625
Estate
Insurance
home
Henry
lo-
Broker Agent
MONTREAL First
Bank
invites graduating seniors in Arts, Business and other faculties interested in new challenges in banking to meet its campus representative on -
TUES.,
DEC. 6,1966 Reminder: To the graduating class
Learn what the Bank of Montreal can offer you Interviews
Interviews for possible careers in
MANPOWER
may be arranged through your Placement Office
will be held on the campus November
28-29-30
See your University Officer for Application
E3k&3
6
The
CHEVRON
DEPARTMENT
OF MANPOWER
Placement Forms. AND
IMMIGRATION
4 CD:
question byvic peters
Campus The University of Waterloo is reputed to be one of the last strongholds of ugly girls in Canada. This week our man in the street risked life and limb (and camera) to pop this question:
Sandra
Willis
They’re not a bad bunch. There’s not enough of them to provide competition.
Marisa Castellarin
Sharon
Wardle
Derrough
I’m a girl. It’s not fair to ask me. I don’t honestly know.
Zelda 6
Cynthia
Who said they were There are a lot who are kind of sharp.
ugly?
library
ine is to establish a better and faster communications system for research resources. A graduate student can track down source material in a matter of minutes * He dials a Iibrary to ask if it has some particular material. If no answer is received, the library has the resources, When the student wants to know whohas particular research resources phe calls the national office. The office tells him which of the 135 member Ilbraries has the needed material. Telex saves time. It is efficient. It ls more economical than telephone or telegraph. Telex gives access to
It’s food.
Ball
Some of us aren’t
Jane
Grassleaves
speeds
A voiceless telephone is the university’s latest cornmunlcatlon device. In October, the library rented Telex from CN -C P Telecommunications for the first time. It joint a growing number of Canadian libraries. Telex, which resembles a typewriter, is similar to the telephone But messages are in operation. typed, rather than spoken. Bydialing another Telex machine, messages can be sent immediately. With a flick of a switch, the machine is ready to receive an answer. The purpose in renting the math-
Carol
Most are quite cute. First get us somegorgeous guys.
Anonymous
What a question 1Common ugliness makes for togetherness. It makes for great look-alike couples.
T&x
Are U of W girls really that ugly? bad.
Storey
Oh goodness. There’s no point in trying. The boys all go home on the weekends to their girlfriends.
‘cause of the bad
communication
research resources from great collections. In the near future, it is hoped that both Canadian andAmerican universities will be able to communicate with this system. Once sources have been traced, usually xeroxed copies are sent to the person requesting the mate.rial. Cost only begins here, for maintenance and staff are the real expenses. But the librarians feel that Telex’s * advantages are worth the expense. At present, the library, graduate students, and faculties are able to make use of TeIex. Waterloo is one of the first universities wlth Telex.
Snrottarmointeddeanof math -I--
-
II
Dr. David Sprott has been appolntdean of the new faculty of mathematics, as reported in last week’s Chevron. “Mathematics has taken a leading role ln the development of academic programs at the university,” said a public release.‘* Under the leader ship of Dr. Ralph Stanton, the former chairman of the department mathematics has become one of the
LSD and God What is a religious experience? Is God a chemical reaction? The Student Christian Movement is sponsoring a weekend in the countryslde--‘We shall perceive wlthout LSD? Rev. Al Evens, a qualified socldl worker and a university chaplain, will lead the discussions. Informal hootenannies and the Ilke will make it a lot of fun. The cost of the weekend--November 25-27--1s $6. Thelocatlonls the Norval YMCA camp. The weekend will end Sunday atnoon. Anyone interested should contact Mary Dymerit as soon as possible at 5760 9981.
-
largest departments ln the unlversity and has received national and international r ecognitlon.” The senate and board of govemors this fall decided to expand the department into a faculty of mathematics. Dean Sprott’s appointment becomes effective immediately. He will organize the new faulty to become operational by July 1, 1967. Dean Sprott, 36, joined the university as an associate professor in 1958. He was appointed prom fessor of mathematics fn 1962. A specialist in statistics, he also holds a joint appointment in the de= partment of. psychology. A native of Toronto, he received his BA, MA and PhD degrees from the University of Toronto. Followlng a year of research on a postdoctoral scholarship at the Galton Laboratory of the University of London, England, he joined the department of psychiatry of the Unlversity of Toronto as a research statistician ln 1956. Dean Sprott’s special fields of interest, in which he has published papers, are stamany research tistics, probability, genetics and related areas of mathematical blol-
ow He ls a fellow of the Royal Statistical Society. In addition, Dean Sprott is a noted nature photographer and is an associate of the Royal Photographic Society. His wife, Dr. Muriel VogelSprott, is an associate professor in the department of psychology here.
Dr. David A. Sprott is the new Dean of the mathematics faculty at the U of W.
A Telex machine has been installed in the library. It will allow graduate students to communicate with other university libraries across Canada in their search for important research material.
Fertility dolls for all when Treasure Van comes If you want to drink from a Spanish wineskin or a Japanese *Soki set, smoke from a Polish pipeor an Indian huka, come toTreasureVan. If you want to have your very own boomerang, a fertility doll or your own private camel saddle, come to Treasure Van. The World University Service committee wlII present its sixth annual Treasure Van sale ln Waterloo Square December 5 to 10. A completely new s cock of exotic goods from over 30 countries throughout Africa, Asia, South America and Europe will be available. The Treasure Van sale of lnternational handicrafts is an annual event of W US committees on campuses across Canada. The sale was lnltated by a Canadian nurse, Mrs. EtheI Muloaney, shortly after the Second World War. It began a c ;1
Friday,
very small project, aimed at helping some of the poverty-stricken villages of India. The Treasure Van project has since been taken over by WUS of Canada, and has grown into a largescale operation involving thousands of dollars per year. The aims of Treasure Van are to arouse interest in crafts and cultures of other countries ato ald these craftsmen by providing a market for their goods. The WUS committee will again need the assistance of several hundred able-bodies volunteers. An appeal for workers 1s now in progress. All those interested in participating in Treasure Van--lncIuding sales assistants, decorations assistant--are urged to contact Andy Tomaino at 576-64-58 or Bill Baler at 576-6308.
November
25,
1966
(7:
17)
7
‘Thoushalt not kill’ -- so he’sa draft-dodger . by John Forde (Reprinted from the Gazette, University of Western Ontario)
ed his anti-war school.
“‘1 don’t beIieve in kiIl.ing people out of anger or hate. I will die for what I believe in but I won’t kill for it.” This is why Dawane Cristy, a22year-old American, is in London. He is a draft-dodger. His name is fictitious. Cristy, a university student from Illionois, was planning to major in He had a 2-S rating (stubotany. dent deferment) for 16 months. Apparently it ran out for him while he was working during thesummer. He was to report last July 21. Rather than serve he temporarily left his country and took refuge in near by friendly Canada. He did this because of his antiwar convictions. A Roman Catholic, he believes in i‘Thou the fourth commandment: shalt not kill.” “Grant said ‘war is hell’. There is no God in hell,” Cristy says. “My views prior to leaving were now they are much more political; personal.” A former member of the Student Peace Union, Dawane has maintain-
LAURIER
position
sincehigh-
* * * He came to Canada two days before he was to report. He had no visa but applied for a work permit. He’s working inconstructionnow, waiting for his social insurance number. ‘“Technically, I’m stiU not cleared,” he says. Is the life of a draft-dodger furtive, cloaked in the fear of an FBI knock on the door in the night? No really in Dawane’s case. He’s taken no elaborate precautions to conceal his whereabouts. He even wrote his draft board,asking what would happen if he came back, but received no reply. Dawane doesn’t think he can be deported from Canada because he had no criminal record when heleft the United States. His offense came two days after he was in this country. He is quite open about being a His friends , both in draft-dodger. the United States and Canada, know about it. One American buddy wrote on the back of a letter: “The person to whom this letter is addressed is a draft-dodger and a former SPU
member. As of now, he has no religion. Won’t you please come home, Bill Bailey, we need you in Viet Nam (CIA).” However, because this story and picture are being printed, certain about Dawane have been figs changed. 8 * 9 Dawane is just one in anever-increasing number of youngmen called up as the Vietnam war escalates and reserves are used up. The draft is now at the highest rate per month since the Korean war. Men between the ages of 18 and 25 are issued a draft card witha particular classification which will determine the date of induction. The Selective Service Board does not immediately draft all those reaching the age of 18, but gives some a deferment. A single, physically healthy man of 18 is given the 1-A status, indicating he is top draft material. Students or married men will be issued a deferred status. Members of certain religious sects can also avoid military service. The process is not easy. Called a “conscientious objector”, or CO,’ the applicant must
seniiities’
ST. JOHN’S (CUP)--Canada is presently governed by “two senilities “, Laurier LaPier re told Memorial University students here recently o And our present parliament is achieving nothing, the former co-host of the now-defunct ‘This hour has seven davs’ chareed. Speaking at a meeting sponsored d
govern
by the New Democratic Youth, LaPierre told students how they could build a Canadian identity. A country is “the sum-totalof the willingness of individuals to work and live together in peace and brotherhood--and these must not be cliches ,” he said. “There must be a rewakening of nationalism. Not a nationalsim of
Canada identity-- this is negative--but a nationalism of committment.” Canada has 20 million people who must pool their resources to make a mark in the world. Canada has no concrete image abroad, he said. The first thing a Canadian says about himself is, “I’m not an Amer ican. Negative again,” LaPierre said. This man There are
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The association was intitiated by Dr. J. C. Naidoo of the psychology department here at Waterloo and the seminarians at St. Eugene% College. Robert Bisch, is the chief coordinator of activities. Recently some members of the International Student Association and the IndiaCanada Association have joined the cause. The man they have chosen to work with, Father Abraham, a Jesuit, is a native of Halifax. He began his work
ARTS
BOOKS
GUARANTEE PROFIT
Cannon
is a right.
Father J. M. Abraham, a school principal in Dar jeeling, says ‘It is not our duty to solve all the problems of India. It is our duty to do what we can.”
THE ST.
PRICES
YEAR)
SOCIETY
DANCE at ST. JEROME’S
SECOND FLOOR OFBOOKS ‘N “THIN6S”NOWOPEN The
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the benefits of an education who are not.
This belief is the reason why the International Dar jeeling Education Association (IDEA) was formed--to help the deprived people of Darjeeling, India, to educate themselves.
so
KING
is receiving many others
in India.
IDEAaims to give India the right to education
YOUHAVETHE RIGHT
8
Various organizations have been set up in Canada and the U,S. to aid draft-dodgers. Some, like the 43year-old War Resisters League do so for reasons of conviction. Some, like the May 2nd Movement and the Maoist Progressive Labor Party do so out of anti-American sentiments. One of the best known in the U.S. today is the Students’ Democratic Society set up three years ago and labelled a “broad-spectrum leftwing organization” it is present on 88 American campuses. Scorning fraudulent means of evading the draft, SDS counsels men to “make a sincere case for themselves as COs willing to do volunteer work in the Peace Corps “.
LAPIERRE SAYS
‘Two
38
establish that he holds some consistent religious belief against bearing arms. A strictly personal moral code won’t pass muster. This bothers Dawane. Just because he is Catholic and other Cath0I.ic.s have not objected on moral grounds to serving, why shouldn’t he get a deferment like theQuakers or Mennonites, he asks. 6 4 * The applicant must withstand a rigorous FBI investigation and crossexamination. Unless he can further convince a hearing of his draft board he opposes any kind of military service at all, he will be drafted and used as a non-combatant medic or orderly.
Tomorrow
COLLEGE 8:30
in India in 1948 and has been there since. For the past three years he has been building a new school that will eventually accommodate 1200 boys, many of whom walk from two to four hours a day to and from school-some without shoes. Half of the new building has been completed. It includes a library of 10,000 books--all donated by Calgary residents-- dedicated to the late President John F. Kennedy and Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru. The first major project toprovide funds for this cause wilI take place Saturday, December 10, at 7 p.m. in St. Eugene’s College. The proceeds will be sent to acanadian-sponsored school in Darjeeling under the direction of the Canadian Jesuits. The evening wffl begin with an Indian dinner, followed immediately by slides on life in India. The very colorf til and interesting Father W impenny will comment on the slides and answer all questions on life and eduation in India. Tickets can be obtained from the box-office in the modern-languages building or from Dr. Naidoo at St. Jerome’s College (7444407). This wffl be the most valuable and appreciated Christmas gift YOU will give this year. The price will be $2. for a very enjoyable evening. If we believe education is a right, then we must also believe that we who are able have a corresponding duty to provide the means of obtaining it. Ideas are essential to education and education is essential to IDEA.
Playboy
The great The
profits
It was
are
the
just
greatest
too
bookstore Shin
high
social
The administration
event
of
the year
provided
intellectual
food
lo:30 a.m. First copies of the Chevron arrive on campus. “Bookstore strike today” is the headline. 12% Students start arriving at the bookstore. “Let’s sit down,” says one. They do. 12:30 The lone exit is blocked by a tangle of legs and bodies o People are playing cards, talking. There are about 50 students on the floor of the bookstore, I:OO. Cyril Levitt comes up with a guitar. He lads the demonstrators in protest SollgS like ‘I’m just a stu‘Changes ‘, ‘We shall overcome’, Soon two more guitars and a microphone dent, sir’. It becomes the best hootenanny in the uniappear. versity’s history. The bookstore makes its last sale of 1:15. the afternoon. F rank Brewster , a demonstrator, buys a deck of cards to play bridge on the floor. 2:00 Tom Patterson, sit-in leader, phones university President J. G. Hagey and asks him to come to the bookstore. The president replies that he will see sit-in leaders in his office. 2:15 Before Patterson is off the phone, Prof. William Scott, provost for student affairs, arrives His job--to assess the situation at the bookstore. for the administration and act as student-admin. liaison. 2~30 President Hagey phones student president Mike Sheppard and asks him to come to his office on the fourth floor of the library and discuss the situation. 2% Sheppard phones Hagey. Allthe students are coming or none at all, he tells the president, 3:oo Over 200 students leave the bookstore march across the campus and up to the fourth floor. 3:15 President Hagey sits at his desk and begins discussions with the 210--a kampus kop counted-students who face him. 4~20 The Hagey meeting ends in compromise. Students are promised a decision within a week on their demand for student members on the committee studying bookstore, food services and printshop. Monday night, 9:00 Students meet withProvost Scott. He tells them there will be two student members on the admin committee out of 5 or 6.
. e.
l
Friday,
ee
November
and
the 25,
1966
students (7:17)
9
Sporfgpioks of fhe wee&
SoccerWarriorswin, tie four of their regulars, played the opposition to a 5-5 standoff. Sunday they handed the University of Toledo team a resounding 6-O defeat. In Michigan, the W arriors jumped to a quick 2-O lead after ten minutes, on goals by Fleming Galberg and Martin Bissell. Michigan came back at the 27-minutemarkandtied the score on a penalty kick that resuited from an obviously unintentional hand ball.
Last weekend the soccer Warriors proved they can field a team worthy of representing theschoolin that sport, whatever league it may be in next year. The team, led by assistant coach Ha jo Hennecke, travelled to AM Arbor on Saturday, to play a return against the University of game Michigan. The Warriors defeated Michl~an 6-2 the nrevious week. The”
Warriors,
playing
without
The second half saw the W arriors scoring three quick, successive goals in the space of 12 minutes. They were scored by Mike Default, who got two, and George Abwunza. Michigan dpulicated this featwith three goals in five minutes. Toledo is a school where soccer has varsity status. This was evident in its equipment and coaching staff, both of which are excellent. The Warriors, however, surprisingly scored their ‘first goal after only two minutes of play, Toledo was counting’on a weary Waterloo team. The score at half-time was 2-O on goals by Jostein Hellesland and Fred Grossrnan. The second half should haveproven tougher for the Warriors, but they surprised everyone by scoring four more unanswered goals togive Philip Hughes his first shutout. Neville Weeks, George Abwunza, Fleming Galberg and Fred Grossman, with his second, were the marksmen. Tomorrow night at 6 the return match will be played against Toledo , in Seagram Stadium under the lights . The Warriors would like the support of everyone who wants to see something besides the Grey Cup game. They hope to present Coach Norman McKee with a win. This may be the last game of the year. The team could be a strong contender in the OQAA, according to Jim Sarnow s coach of U of Toledo, who said, “You are the best team we have played for a long time.”
COMEAND MEET TUE AUTUOR Edna THE
Staebler
WELL-KNOWN
will
be
WATEIRLOO WRITER
in
the
COUNTY
BOOKSTORE
on
onday Afternoon ove to autograph
copies
a 28
of her
recently
published
minton
book
uetktaut AVAILABLE
IN
THE
b
Wednesday night is badminton uight a Anyone with his own raquet can play at W aterloo Collegiate on Hazel Street, from 9 until 11. Anyone without his own racquet can obtain one and play from 8 until 9 at Seagram gym,
BOOKSTORE
dSD
by
Frank
Bialystok
Well folks, it was one of those weeks! An outstanding 2-5 week in the NFL gave us an *overall 8-8-3 and 88-57-9 for the year and a 61percent-right record. We are seriously considering giving an award to anyone who can get over .500 in picking the NFL conFor instate, will the retests. surgent LA Rams, winner of their last two games, beattheBaltirnore Colts, who had one of their worst days in recent history last weekend? We don’t think so. The Colts by ten. Detroit will win their third straight over San Francisco by five while Green Bay will move closer to a divisional championship with a ten-point win over the Minnesota vikillgs . In the east, the Browns will beat the Cowboys by a field goal tomove into second place. St. Louis will benefit from its week rest with a seven-point win over the surprising Steelers from Pittsburgh. Washington will beat New York by two touchdowns and the Chicago Bears should win by the same margin over the Atlanta Falcons. * * 8 In the AFL, the Buffalo Bills will all but sew up their third straight eastern championship with a six-. point win over Oakland while San Diego will maintain a slim hope of repeating in the west with a 12-point drubbing of the Denver Broncos o In a big game, Kansas City will beat the New York Jets by four and Boston will trounce Miami by 14. . *e* The Toronto Rifles play the Philadelphia Bulldogs for the eastern division championship of the Continental League this weekend at Varsity Stadium. With a healthy offensive line to lead the blocking for Joe Williams and Bob Blakely, they should win by five. Out in Vancouver, the Grey Cup
and
Chuck
Kochman
will be played on Saturday. It promises to be one of the mos t exciting ever, as the two most explosive teams in Canadian football since the Alouettes of a decade ago battle it out. Look for Russ Jackson’s hot passing arm and the tough Ottawa defense cool out the scrambling of Ron Lancaster and win by a to&hdown.
* * *
By the time the Chevron is on the stands, the hockey Warriors should have their third exhibition win in four starts with a two-goal margin of victory over the Lutheran Hawks. Our basketball Warriors should have their first winin their first start with a ten-point win over the Senior -A Kitchener Coronets. This edition of our top ten collegiate football teams in the land will be our official close totheseason. The show put on bySt.Francis Xavier on Saturday proved thatthey could give any team in the country a run for their money. Also, the Argos would be advised to do some scouting down in the Maritimes. Last week’s ranking follows in the par entheses : 1. Queen’s (1) 6. Lutheran (4) 2. Toronto (2) 7. Manitoba (6) 3. St. Francis (5) 8. Mat (7) 4. Western (3) 9. Sask. (9) 5. St. Mary’s (8) 10. Ottawa (10) Honor able mention: UBC , Alberta, McGill, Waterloo p Carleton. 4 * xc Question of the week time. No one answered last week’s question. The answer was Don Hutson of the Green Bay Packers and the years were 1941-45. Surely everyone knew that o W ell, we hope this week’s ques tion is easier: Who holds the record for lnost points scored in the Bluenose football conference? How many did he score? In what season? With what team? Anyone wishing to submit an ans wer should leave it on the sportsdesk at the Chevron office.
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Diane Dawes goes up for a shot in practice for sports day beginning today at Seagram.
L
X-Men
win 40-14
- Hawks’
wings
clipped photostory by Brian Clark and Wayne Braun TORONTO--The St. Francis XMen came all the way from Antigo&h, Nova Scotia, to prove they were number one in the nation. Whether or not they accomplished this is a question no one can answer. But the X-Men showed that eastern football is a power to be reckoned with as they simply outclassed the W aterlootheran Golden Hawks 40-14 in the second annual College Bowl at Varsity Stadium. Right from the second play of the game when they picked off a Lutheran pass, St. Francis stunnedtheestin-rated 8500 fans. The largely proWaterloo crowd had expected a decisive victory for the Hawks but they soon began to wonder as the X-Men took complete control of the game. Midway through the first quarter Terry Arnason struck for the first St. Francis touchdown as he combined with quarterback Terry Dolan on a 250yard pass-and-run play. Dolan was playing his first game as a starter. He got the call whenfirststring quarterback Dick Pandolfo incurred a knee injury. Near the end of thequarter Terry Gorman, named outstanding player of the game, hit for the first of three majors. It came on a pass-and-run effort again as Dolan threw astrike to Gorman on the 12-yard line. Gorman walked over with no Lutheran defender near him. Xavier ran the score to 27-7 before the half-time ceremonies began. Paul Brule scored the first of two when he galloped through the middle for a 380yard TD. German
Paul Brule (30). workhorse of the St. Francis Xavier X-Men, is hauled down by an unidentified Golden Hawk in College Bowl football action at Varsity Saturday. Moving in to help out is Tom Allen (73) of the Hawks.
Barb Chevron
Mikulica staff
This weekend teams from Windsor , MacMaster , Gueoph, WUC and Waterloo will vie for the sabertoothless tiger --the trophy donated by Windsor at last year’s sports day. The action will take place at Seagram and at Lutheran gym. Each university will send a basketball, volleyball and badminton team. The Waterloo entries have a better than average chance of winning the trophy. The basketball team has lots of potential and experience. Most of the players were on the team when they won all their games in a similar tournament held last year. The guards--Di Bennetto, Karen Reinhardt, Marg Gray and Marg Sprung--have good ball control when they bring the ball up aurt. If the forwards--Carol Jackson, Lib Uttley, MaryAnn Gaskin, Di Dawes, Charlotte Shaule and Cassie MacDonald--are on, their shooting will be hard to beat. Carolleads the forwards with experience. Last year she was playing coach for Lutheran and has played in a city league. The two freshmen on the team should not be underestimated, judgin from the game held earlier this
week. They were the top scorers in the game. The team is rounded out with hardworking Fran Allard, who is unlikely to see action this week end because of a knee injury. With the depth and potential of this team, it may go all the way this year. The volleyball team is alsopacked with experience. There are only two new members on the squad this year--Linda Hickey and Sandra Stinson. Last year’s members returning are Anne MacDonald, Bonnie Bacvar , Bonnie Smyth, Lynda Byte, Eleanor Koop t Bonnie Veitel, Roslyn Livings tone and Allyson Edward. If they settle down and use their potential they should prove to be the team to beat. Jean Richmond--last year’s winner should repeat her performance in badminton. Linda Dunn, if she
from behind Stadium on
watches her backhand, should place well in the tourney. If the doubles team of Brenda Wilson and JanMinaker watch their positions and place their smashing drives, they will be in contention for first place. Our teams have the potentidl to win the trophy. All they need is moral support.
B-ball team beats WUC Our women’s basketball tearn started out the season on a winning note by defeating WUC in an exhibition contest 39-12. Top scorer was Cassie MacDonald--a freshman--with 12 points. Another first-year player, Charlotte Shaule, was second with nine Jackie MacKillican was poillts. tops for Lutheran with seven points.
Intramural swim meet Thursday For all non-land lovers a women’s intramural swim meet wffl be held Thursday, at Breithaupt recreation center on Margaret Avenue. There freestyle, loo-yard
are
six events--50-yard 500yard breaststroke, freestyle, 50 -yard back-
stroke, loo-yard relay and diving. Each intramural unit is allowed two entries in each event. Any one swimmer may enter three events plus a relay. Every swimmer must be present and ready to swim by 7 o’clock. Entries must be listed by Monday at 5.
Dave .. .. . .
Knight dejecfed
coach
wings clipped. Rich Agro missed a good opportunity for a touchdown when an Xavier punt-return man fumbled a Tom Allen boot into the endzone, Agro jumped on the ball but it squfr ted away. X-Men’s Gary Yabsley recovered to hold Lutheran to a single point. And just as if to prove the play hadn’t shaken them up, the X-Men scored only a short time later. Gorman got his third of the afternoon from eight yards out. Again he scored on a pass from Dolan. Chris Bailey rounded out the Waterloo scoring in the third quarter on a 66-yard pass play from quarterback Dave McKay. Itwas the best play of the day for the Hawks. Brule scored the final Xavier major near the end of the game on a run from the 1%yard line. It was the climax to a rewarding day for Brule, who picked up 172 yards along the ground. He accounted for about a third of his team’s yardage. John Watson of the Hawks managed a five-yard average on ten carries, and John Kruspe picked up 69 yards in 17 attempts.
Sportsdaysstart today by
cis four. Greg n/r@ ueen added a convert for Lutheran. John Burke booted two extra points for St. Francis while Gorman and Pete Sare combined to tackle Jeff Brown in the Lutheran endzone for an X-Men single. The Hawks came out flying in the second half but quickly had their
Don Loney . . . . . . just happy got his second minutes later on a 34yard pass play from Dolan. The Golden Hawks replied with just 18 seconds left in the half, when Murray Markowitz went around the end from the St. Fran-
V-ball,
Don Loney , head coach of the XMen, was happy with his club’s performance. Dave Knight of the Hawks had said before the game hethought his team could beat any in Canada. After the game a dejected Coach Knight summed it up this way: “We simply ran into a better club out there today.”
wrestlers
Last Saturday was a bleakdayfor Warrior teams. The volleyball team wound up last in a six-team OQAA meet at Western, and the wrestling team dropped a 38-8 decision to McMaster in Hamilton. However, according to the coach, Brent Thomas, things don’t look all that bad for the volleyball team. ‘They’ve only been playing together for a week and a half, and they didn’t have any warmup before the tournament started. That makes a said Thomas. It did. difference,” The team, supposedly, has good potential and depth for the majority of the players have played on highranking highschool ball teams. Another pleasing thought is that seven out of the nine players are freshmen. This means the team should have a good nucleus for next year and probably the year after . Friday,
lose
Toronto defended its title with a 5-O record; Western and Guelph tied for second with 3-2 records; Mat took fourth spot with a 2-won3-lost record; and Waterloo was last with one victory in five starts. The one win was over Western with game scores of 3-15,15010,and 150 13. The prospects for the wrestling team aren’t so good, however, says coach Bob Heinricks. ’ ‘We lack depth, and in weight classes under 160 pounds, we’re underweight.” The only victories were by Brian Emke in the heavyweight class, (by a pin) and Tom Burns (130 lb,) with a 4-2 decision. One match was forfeited to Mat because of a practice injury and another defaulted through a match injury. November
25,
1966
(7:
17)
11
PuckWarriorsgainsplit Special
to the
Chevron
The tide was turned by highly ranked Boston University on Saturday. The Beantowners came out on top of a 7-3 score. Bob Murdoch had two for the Warriors while Lawless counted once.
BOSTON-Gerry Lawless, playing in his first game of the season, scored three goals as the Warriors split two contests against American teams last weekend. Friday the Warriors dumped Army 10-5 at West Point. Lawless and Laverne Miller led the Warriors with two goals each. Singles went to Bill Weber, +lel Don Mervyn, Bail-d, Ron Lane, George Workman and captain Ron Smith. Miller also added two assists in the contests. The Warriors, hit hard by penalties in both games, scored five times while playing. shorthanded against Army.
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Results of last week’s hockeyaction left five teams tied for first South-West , Sciplace--Village ence, Renison, Village North-East and St. Jerome’s are all tied with four points apiece. SW has the edge, however, having played only two games compared to three for the other four teams. St. Jerome’s and SW seem headed for a clash. They are the only two teams with two victories to their credit. Both teams look well-balanced. However, engineering’s victory over St. Jerome’s last week has set the college back somewhat. Instead of leading the league with six points they are in a theoretical second place -with only four points. GAPS AND LOOSE ENDS:..... Co-op picked up their first point this week as they tied with Renison 4-4...,Conrad Grebel remains in the cellar--the only team in the league without a point.... Boin of St.Jerome’s is theleader, however, with five goals and one assist. Anyone ~interested in Warrior wrestling (especially thoseover 159 pounds) should takenoteof thepractice times: every night Monday through Friday from 9 to lo:30 at Seagram gym.
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Ash captures Western bonspiel
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LONDON--A Warrior curling team, skipped by Mike Ash, Saturday won the fourth annual Western Men’s Intercollegiate Bonspiel. The trophy-winning team consisted of Ash, Don Cooke (vice), Doug Britten (second) and John Stevens (lead). The bonspiel was run by the U of Western Ontario Ontario curling club and sponsored by Coca-Cola Limited. Fourteen teams from various Ontario universities competed. Waterloo had three teams participating. In addition to Ash’s winning foursome, U of W was represented by rinks skipped by John Scott and Barry Connell. Each of the teams played three games and the two remaining undefeated teams met in a final. Ash defeated John Spencer of Western in the final.
UNITARIAN
CbbLUMBIA See
editor
game of the season,” Terry said. “Waterloo has a great team,” he added, “but last week’s game (against St. Mary’s) was the big game of the year.” Could the X-Men beat Queen’s and Toronto? We doubt it. But we’d have to agree with St. Francis coach Don Loney. His comment was, “If the boys played well we wouldgive them a good run.” * L * Everyone seemed to get intothe act of picking the top ten college teams in Canada at some time thisseason. Being the chicken-hearted soul that we are, we have decided to wait until now--it’s too late for anybody to prqve us wrong. Here they are, sports fans: 1. Queen’s 6. St. Mary’s 2. Toronto 7. Lutheran 3. St. Francis 8. Manitoba 4. Western 9. McMas ter 5. McGill 10. Saskatchewan AFTERTHOUGHTS ---Let’s go, guys. Here’s your chance to see girls in action. They’re coming from McMaster, Guelph and Windsor as well as the local universities. The occasion is Women’s sports days. Basketball is being held at Seagram Gym and the volleyball and badminton are taking place at Waterlootheran. The days are today and tomorrow. Incidentally, the girls are also invited to come and watch. From what we saw on - - a little visit to the gym this week, nobody should have any regrets if they attend.
‘il tender and lusty study of loue.
TR107150
sports
Terry, who at 5’ 10” and 180 pounds is one of the smaller players on a team of giants, is a quiet softspoken man. He looked almost out of place as he talked to reporters after the game while his jubilant tearnates whooped it up. “I’d have to say it was my best
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It was an all-round good day for the German family. No doubt there wasn’t a prouder man in the stadium than Peter Gorman, Terry’s father and founder of the College Bowl. He saw his dream come at least partially true when more than five times as many fans attended as last year. And his pride didn’t suffer when Terry, as the game’s outstanding player, was presented with the Ted Morris memorial troPhY.
Five’- way intramural hockey tie
HOUSE
STUDENT
Braun,
Lawless’ three
RESTAURANT
Wayne
Well, we hope that certain people up the road are happy with the way the Golden Hawks manhandled the X-Men on Saturday. All season long we’ve been hearing about the prowess of the Golden Hawks. “This team is number one” and ‘A team that can’t be beaten by any Canadian college t earn ,” are just a couple of common phrases that filtered down the street. There were several people who thought the Hawks could beat Toronto and Queen%. These teams, in our opinion, are still tops in the nation. But there were those whose swelled heads affected t.hdr eyesight and they forgot about theSt. Francis Xavier X-Men and Terry Gorman. Terry played one heck of a game and if a poll of the fans had been taken, Gorman probably would have been the unanimous choice as outstanding player of the game.
The Warriors weren’t sofortunate with the penalties as they were the night before. Boston managed five markers while the Warriors were playing two men short. The Warriors took 15 of 20 penalties in the contest.
-- w
Waterloo
with
Copyright
SHOW AT 9:30
ODEON Phone
742-9161
“Unitarians Social Action”
Rev. Toronto, 136 Allen (at Moore Waterloo
. 27 and
Alfred Fowlie, Ontario St. East Ave.) Ontario
Council
briefs
Pres may quit by
Dale
Martin
Che\(ron
staff
0 By March 1, Mike Sheppard may no longer be president of the Federation of students. Engineering rep Bob Cavanagh’s omnibus committee on student government has come out in favor of setting the Council year fromMarch 1 to February 28, last week’s Council session learned. This would mean that Council elections would have to be over by February 9 each year. This change in Council sitilgs would enable Council to prepare a budget in March and April to be ready for the budget year which begins May 1. @ Mr. Cavanagh also recommended that the editor of the paper be paid during the summer. Mr. Sheppard hinted that since he was not getting all his Couucfl work done in 50 hours a week, it might be a good idea if the presidaltwere paid all year. $ Stanley Munoz, grad student, assured Council of universal accessibility to the Grad House on Columbia Street. Mr o MLUIOZ requested that Council transfer $750 of the $6000allocated for furnishing the Grad House to ope r sting expenses D This would allow the organizers of the Grad House to refund the $7.50 fee to those grads who have paid their memberships. Thus the Grad House becomes open to all graduates. * CouucLl decided to pay Stewart Saxe, Ranson rep, up to $80 to the cost of publishing his cover broadsheet of Monday, November 7,, l Mr 0 Saxe suggested Monday that it might be a good idea for Council to finance a ski-lodge weekend for itself so that members “could get to know one another better.‘” --F r en& or geography clubs, for example-@ The board of student activities has allocated $5,000 to cover all club expenses this year a The various organizations Will meet to haggle over the division of the lost, l A sharp exchange ensued when JOI-UI Hoicka of Renison College called the board of publications minutes “disgusting.” Board chairman Dave Witty responded by calling on Mr. Hoi&a to ~011s ult with him over problems before making value judgements in
March
1
salary of $30,000 or some of the funds are going to pay for the physical and health education department’s staff. The only thing the administration was willing to admit was that the athletic department was running a deficit of between $19,000 and 22,000. Student Council is planning a board of athletic activities to control all athletic events except varsity sports. To do this council would need at least half of the $14 student fee. 0 ’ Debate on the Federation of Students budget ended with the contingency fund reduced .from $7,000 to $4,376. Paul Gerster, administrator for the Federation, said that the fund “is not a slush fund.” In an evening that saw $1,600 added to the budget of the board of external relations 9 Mr, Gerster asked members to seek funds not in the contingency part of the budget but rather in the paring of other parts of the budget. Stewart Saxe of Renison seconded Mr, Gerster’s sentiments. Mr. Saxe had earlier added $1,000 to the board of external relation’s budget D After two hours of debate, the budget was unanimouslypassed,
building plans do not include significant increases in student residences . A committee was formed to look into the whole problem of housing on campus. l Council passed three motherhood resolutions put forward by Steve Ireland, vice-president. They cant ained protests against secrecy in government and the hours of closing at the arts library. l It now seems certain that this university will participate in the University of Alberta’s centennial project, Second Century Week. Earlier in this term it seemed likely that the University of Waterloo would not send a delegation. 0 The new prosecutor for the judicial committee is Hilda Abt, arts 3, Court clerk is Mike Clarke, arts 2,@ The administration has refused to give any funds to the tiddlywinks club for the trip to the Silver Wink world competitions in Britain. Permission has been granted to the club to seek aid from local industries. 8 Student Council learned what happens to that $14 athletic fee that all students pay, $62,299 goes towards salaries and officials. That means that either two coaches have an average
Chris Bennett, Chevron darkroom manager, at 4 a.m. on deadline ni,ght, works to perfect that last picture for page 1. A thermovalve, donated by Wallacehurg Brass Limited, helps him get the quality of print required.
Retest engineers every five years MONTREAL (CUP)--Professional engineers should be re-examined every five years to make sure they are keeping up with the times, the industrial engineering department head said here recently. At a seminar of the Canadian Council of Professional Engineers, Dr. Arthur Porter proposed a system of revalidation under which the original license to practice would be Restamped after each periodical re-examination. Lamenting engineering back-
wardness he said: “Niuety percent of engineers who graduated before 1960 know absolutely nothing about computers, yet they are already the main tool of engineering design.” Dr. Porter forecasted profound changes in engineering education. He also said heis lookingforward to a time when all professionaldiscipliues # including medicine, law and social work, would share the first three years of a common uuiversity program as a means topromote interprofessional dialog.
No one ever said it would be easy.
coullcil.
l that
Council has expressed dismay the university’s long-range
. . . running
a hospital with a minimum of medical supplies - building a bridge with nothing but timber and sweat-teaching a child who knows only a strange tongue. But that’s what CUSO workers do . . . hundreds of them in 35 countries. They meet the challenge of a world of inequalities - in education, in technical facilities, in engineering and medicine. This year, the Canadian University Service Overseas - a non-profit non-government organization - has already sent 350 young volunteers to countries in Asia, in Africa, South America and the Caribbean .. . a total of 550 CUSO people altogether in the field, or about 1 to every 50,000 people who ask for their help. More are needed. The pay is IL w . . . York won’t make a
profit. Unless you count it profitable to see developing nations master new skills and new standards of health and science. You can’t earn a promotion . . . but you can promote. You will promote new learning, and enthusiasm, and a desire to succeed in people who are eager to help themselves. There are no Christmas bonuses. . . but you earn a bonus every day in the response of the people you work and live with. And you’ll be amazed at how quickly you’ll find an opportunity to develop ___your ideas, your dreams. Willing to work to build a better world? Here’s just the job for you. How do you apply? Get more information and application forms from local CUSO rcprcsentativesatany Canadian university, or from the Executive Secrctnry of CUSO. 151 Slatcr St., Ottawa.
cuso l-11(!
C;tl ~ltl nrl
P(!ac:c! COI],‘,
Friday,
November
25,
1966
(7:
17)
13
Reminders: Be concise. The Chevron reserves the right to shorten all letters submitted. Sign it-name, course, year, telephone. For legal reasons, unsigned letters cannot be published. A pseudonym will be printed if you have good reason, Double-space it. Type it, if possible-32 characters per line. Univac --
but
problem don’t
solved take
bets
To the editor: Well, I guess it finallyhadtohappen1 After six years at this venerable institution, I am writing my first letter to the editor of my favorite student newspaper. And you can guess what has finally driven me to these heights of literary stimulation: that bug-aboo of defenders of human rights and dignities everywhere--univac 1 In the last month, Ihave listened avidly to both sides of the argu-merit, spent hours in discussion in the depths of the engineering tower, and even brought myself to vote on the referendum. Till recently, I found myself slightly right of center in my opinions, and in bitter conflict with my confreres. Well, I am happy to report that you finally did it, boys, I’m convinced. I now realize that I have been playing against a stacked deck from the start, and so, in the form of a peace offering, I offer the following solution to the paradox. First, I agree that it can be for nothing but the benefit of society to educate all the promising young intellects with the ability and the de!sire to learn. I also agree that such people shoti not be barred from an education SOLELY by lack of finances. However, since the abofilion of tuition fees would swamp our institutes’ of higher learning with thousands more education - hungry youngsters , thus forcing the universities to raise entrance standards in order to alleviate the crush, I propose the following solution, which, I am sure, willplease everyone. In lieu of abolishing tuition fees, I propose that all highschool students with an average over 75 percent (or some other acceptable figure) on their final exams beaward-
PC CONVENTION
ed--regardless of the financial situation of their parents--freetuition scholarships by the government, such scholarships to be continued as long as the student maintains Ns aver age. This takes care of all the promising young brains from the poverty belt. An important feature of this plan, however, affects the unfortunates who do not qualify for the scholarships. If, among these, there are any old-fashioned enough to want to work their way through college (or borrow the money), they will still be allowed to practice their quaint old customs . Also, if any parents (who can afford it) want to finance their offspring’s education’ they will also be allowed to exercise their democratic right, i.e. to spend their money. No one can object to this last feature of the plan. After all, Mr. Moneybags wffl already be subsidizing several less fortunate students through his higher income taxes. If he wants to pay double (thesucker), let him! My mind is finally at ease. Ihave resolved this problem to my own satisfaction and to the lastingbenefit and gratitude of society...but don’t take any bets on that. ROBIN M. DODSON grad engineering
Actually going
we
were
to classes
groups are staging love not war” a make-out-in and you’ve decided to participate rather than type? Or is it that student apathy has reached a new nigh and there’s nothing on campus to write about andno one to write about apathy? I know f You’ve run out of gas for your car and can’t get the copy to Elmira for printing. Whatever the reason, please send me more copies of the Chevron. TOM BRITTON applied physics (Hamilton)
To the editor: After over six years of faithful service the noble “Coryphaeus” was retired in favor of a new, vibrant newspaper name more in keeping with the dynamism of the University of Waterloo. Although put out to pasture, “Co ryphaeus ” was retired with full honors . Last week the Coryphaeus was
pulled rudely out of retirement,and its honor blemished by a publication so bad it almost defies description. The “news” copy oftheissuewas so laced with comment that it seemed but the second chapter of the front-page editorial. The rest of the “newspaper” consisted of stolen humor and a story over a month old. If there must be a second newspaper on campus, so be it, but if it continues to be as bad as its first issue, do not call it the Coryphaeus, a name which at one time was respected. Call it The Bootleg,a name more in keeping with its purpose and quality. TOM RANKIN past editor of the Coryphaeus.
Exams
at
unwise
-- nay,
the
Village no way!
One gathers that assigning a number to a student’s achievement in a course of lectures is the overwhelming priority in administrative -g* In contrast, it is interesting to note Stepha Leacock’s formula for building a University--first build a residence, then a library, and then if money is still available hire some professors and give lectures. Examinations are not even mentioned.
busy (Ha!)
I trust it is not beyondthe collective wit of the Villagers to make plain to the administration the unwisdom--nay even the impossibility-- of conducting the midyear examinations in their living quarters. It ill-behooves a non-villager to suggest ways and means. One would hope that moralpressures couldobviate the need for happenings. TWEDDLEDUM
A BATTLE OF GENERATIONS
OTTAWA--Youth. The word took on a new flavor, a new political significance here last week. The “restless” generation--praised by the country’s politicians for being just that-suddenly erupted into a political force at the national Progressive Conservative convention. The historic, but bloody, convention saw a deep gulf open between two generations in a national political party. It also saw the older generation topple into the chasm of defeat at the hands of restless, impatient youth. The hostilities began quite innocently, with the usual platitudes about a new force in Canadian politics. The platitudes came from two men contesting the national presidency: Dalton Camp and A r thur Maloney. Speaking first day, they both mouthed the usual generalities about the need for youth in political life. Half the voters in Canada are now under the age of 35. The pitch was an obvious one. But the student delegates--more than 50 of them--were only listening totheadvertising executive who was re-elected the next day by the slimmest of margins. The Young Progressive Conservatives also were Ieaning heavily toward Camp, One YPC who ought to know said80percent of the YPC delegates voted for Camp. It is probably CHEVRON
description
To the editor: Ha s student apathy invaded the Or maybe there’s Chevron too? been an editorial strike? Or has Laurel Creekinvaded the Chevron offices and washed everything away? Perhaps one of the construction o&its thought the annex was a pile of scrap lumber and burned it. Or has the fire department condemned it? Would you believe some “make
by Don Sellar CUP staff writer
The
beyond
bad
To the editor: I see by the notice boards that the Village dining (55) halls are being invaded by our schoolish-minded (watch it, Mr. Typesetter) adminisE‘xaminations are being trators. scheduled there.
New.politicalaccenton
14
A publication
safe to say youth support was the major factor in Camp’s 62-vote plurality. What does this allmean? Is it enough for political columnists like Peter C.Newman to say this was “not so much a contestbetween the very different personalities of Dalton Camp and John Diefenbaker”, as it was a ‘ ‘clash of generations “. Newman wrote: “On one side are ranged the men and women whose view of Canada is circumscribed by the patriotisms of W.orld War I and the sufferings of the Great Depression. Pressing up against this old leadership, ranging down from the 40-year mark, are the younger Tories who came to maturity in the postwar decade, andnow have grown impatient to grasp the levers of political command. “And ranged behin them, in turn, is a whole new generation of much younger Conservatives--their ranks depleted by the disillusionments of theDiefenbaker Years--who regard the outcome of the current controversy as a last chance to express their beliefs through political action.” Newman called Camp’s narrow victory “a major triumph for a new generation of Canadian politicians .” The new political force manifested itself in several ways at this convention--in the unbridled, saucy display of enthusiasm by in their hand-sittingperCamp supporters; formance during the greatest political em-
essyouth
barrassment ever suffered by The Man from Prince Albert; in the comments from oldline Tories who called them “wet behind the ears ” and in the words of John Diefenbaker himself, who called them “Hitler youth”. The older generation was not pleased. And the youth were trying desperately to contain their enthusiasm and their flush of success. “The relationship between seniors and students is often difficult,” Mike Vineberg, student federation president, said during his convention address. “Our lack of political judgment which may already have been obvious, may lead to contempt, and idealism breeds cynicism. Yet it is essential for youth to convey its ideals with clarity, not due to any necessary perceptiveness, but because they represent the views of a generation which this party must attract .” The 220year-old McGill political science and law student continued: “We are not demanding that youth be served--we are only asking to be heard with a sympathetic ear. Many young Canadians are attracted by the altruism of the Peace Corps or the Company of Young Canadians, However, I can think of no higher mission for youth than working for themodernization of our politic+ processes.” Then a warning: “‘No part can long sur vive without building a firm base among the nation’s youth.”
National YPC president De1 O’Brien put it this way: “The problem resolves itself into a complete loss of confidence on the part of younger Canadians in theleadershipqualities of the Canadian Parliament, dismissing in the process the present administration as being wholly inept and unfit to lead. This profound disillusion has led them to question the value of the party system and the institution of Parliament itself. It reflects itself in a refusal on the part of younger people everywhere to align themselves politically, and in the general apathy of cynicism of this age.” That some of the Old Guard don’t recognize the emergence of youth is patently false. Consider the words of septagenarian senator Gratton O’Leary, who with the flourishes of a Cicero said the O’Briens and the Vinebergs are the type of young men Dalton Camp has been bringing into the Conservative Party: “And Godknows we need them. He (Camp> has been renewing the par!y, refreshing it, revitalizing it. He has been conducting its affairs with energy, understanding, dignity, without malice--and with God’s grace of courttsy.” SenL tor O’Leary knows from a lifetime of experience in-political life why Mike Vineberg received a standing ovation from convention delegates the other night. And why John Diefenbacher did not.
Simply
remove
to decrease
sticker the
price
To the editor: A softcover book, ‘Reading n-Jade easy’, a $1.75 publication by Sir-non and Schuster (New York), fs CUTrently being sold in OUT bookstnre for $6.65. The Suggested $1.75price,neatly concealed beneath a black sticker, is obviously $4.90 less than our books tore price. ,Can the bookstorepossibly justify its decision to more than triple a book’s selling price? Can astudent really find reading easyifheisfirst forced to accept this gross profiteering? The students undoubtedly support Council in an investigation into bookstore prices. Does the bookstore have a logical explanation or will it simply brush this matter aside and eventually print its memoirs on ‘Profits made easy’? DAVID ROBERTSON engineeringlA
Receipt for
three
now
received
Costly
( 3) cents
for
To Mr. Bruce Little, 79 Queen Street, Kingston, Ontario: Dr. Hagey has a.ksed me to acknowledge receipt of your letter of September 30 (printed Oct. 7), and to inform you that the cornrnents which you made appear to be reasonable. I have forwarded payment of your account to the Village adrninistration office and you will no doubt be. receiving a receipt in due course. MARY,BUSBRIDGE secretary to the president
Correcting Rhodesia
2 of our
-icy for several years that allpeople holding the same job shall receive equal pay regardless of race. Thfs is definitely the case in all government-service, and, I believe, quite generally throughout industry too. It is true that the majority of Africans are holding jobs that earn a modest salary and the majority of’ Europeans occupy the more highly paid posts. I have gone into these two points in some detail, because I believe they are important in relationto the international view that theRhodesfan white community intends to consolidate and maintain its positionof power indefinitely. I believe that the white community in+.Rhodesia knows full well that it is a small minority. The evidence proves that political and economic power is being transferred to the Africans, albeit more slowly than some of the latter would wish. C. R. HAMLIN grad chemistry
14
inaccuracies
To the editor: The recent. issues of the Chevron are attaining a high standard, particularly with regard to the reporting of events of international interest--the Hungarian Revolution article (Oct. 28), Rhodesia ‘66 (Nov ll), for example. HoweverI as a Rhodesian student studying here, I feel that two of the 14 inaccuracies in your Rhodesian articles should not remain uncorrected. It stated that “Franchise requireare raised regularly to ments ensure the exclusion of Africans from the voters rolls as their ina coiixes rise”. The requirements needed to obtain a vote have been defined twice in modern Rhodesian history: the first time in the 1923 constitution, the second in the 1961 constitution, when the requirements werewed and the B Roll was introduced. The 1965 constitution, illegal 01 otherwise, retained the requirements necessary to obtain a vote, exactly as described in the 1961 constitution. These voting requirements were printed in the Chevron Nov. 11. I would emphasizethatraceis not, nor ever has been, a consideration. One must register before one may become a voter, but provided onehas the qualifications, the right to vote cannot be refused. There is no aptitude test. HOWever, approximately 80 percent of those Africans eligible to become A-Roll voters have not claimed their vote, as with an unknownnumher of potential B-Roll voters. European incomes in Rhode& were described as being 14 times as high as African. This is no doubt true on average. But then your author asserts that “Even for jobs that entail much more responsibility and power, the African gets as little as one tenth as much as a European that does the least-skilled job available.” It has been stated government pol-
precedent unauthorized
Stay up off our behinds
to pay paper
To the editor: The last meeting of Student Council set a dangerous and expensive precedent. Council voted to allocate funds up to $8) to pay for the publication of the so-called Coryphaeus on Monday, Nov. 7. Although Council seems to regard this sum a piddling, I feel theprecedent that this action has set could be very expensive to the Federation in the future. The issue was published privately, independently of the board of publications and of Student Council, to represent soley the views of the editors. It tias not authorized by any official body of the Federation, I do not feel that we, the students should pay for this publication. That the editor is a Councilmember and that the associate editor is speaker of Council should not justify this misuse of Federation funds, Under rhis precedent, anyone who disagrees with an issue (however trivial) on campus should be able to print and circulate his objections and expect the Federation co bear the costs. I am not against free speech but I do not want to pay for other students’ private views. JOCK MACKAY math 4
trictions in a very dramatic They held a “neck-in” which administration helpless. How
Last Friday 300 students sat down in the bookstore protesting unjust pricing policies. Those students showed a spark of life foreign to the entire history of this campus. The University of Waterloo is known-and rightly so-as the deadest campus in Canada. The administration is quite content to leave it that way. So are nine-tenths of the students. 5,500 students study, drink and complain about how dead this campus is. A few dozen students work their hearts out to provide orientation, homecoming, student government. a campus newspaper, the bookstore sit-in. .How about staying over on our side? How ab.out turning the University of Waterloo into the hottest campus in Canada.? You sat-in at the bookstore. How about turning your energies to other problems on this campus? Queen’s University for instance, solved the problem of resi,dence res-
expel 700 good students? The common rooms on this are
bleaker than a hospital The university administration do anything about it.
library:
Lynn Allen (chief morti-
campus corridor. won’t
Why don’t 10 or 15 students take the matter into their o-wn hands? Talk Student Council into a Decorate-in. Hang mobiles from common room ceilings; spread murals all over those ug;ly concrete walls; make drapes for the windows, maybe even covers for those uncomfortable waiting-room chairs. Sounds ridiculous? Well, why can other, universities have friendly, warm student rooms and not us? Surely this isn’t the limit of student initiative. What about Vietnam, the student role in society, the position
of the
Canadian
Indian?
Can students think and act on these problems? All it takes is a few more vitally interested student interested in better social events, better students and a better university.
It’s just plain ridiculous
Who did it news and features: Barb Belec, John Bender, Ed Benintende, Mary Bull, Martha Brook, Rod Clarke, Allen Class (Toronto bureau), Mary E rba, Doug Gaukroger oVictor Klassen, Irene Lizun, Donna McKie, Lynne McNiece, John McMullen, Dale Martin, Bruce Minore, Jane Nelson, Arla Oja, Vic Peters, Ada Plumb, Sandra Savlov, Chris Swan, Michael Wise, Terry Wright, Eva Mayer, Sir John Beamish, Sue Wilkinson, Rod Cooper photography:Ralph Bishop, Brian Minielly , Ed Toplak, Chris Bennett (darkroom manager), Chris Haber sports: Frank Bialystok, Chuck Kochrnan, Barb Mikulica, Hugh Miller, Peter Webster, Ray Worner, Peter Haensel entertainment: Jerry Pabowiwchak, Michael Robinson, Bob Savage, Peter Soroka, Terry Skeats, Fritz Stockier, Ed Wagner, Robin Wigdor, Gisela Dorrance cartoons: Ross Benn, Paul Grignon, Don Kerr, Peter Stevens -Guille typille Frank Goldspink, Hal Finalyson circulation: Jim Bowman, Keith Gauntlett, Larry Burko advertising: Ken Baker, Norm Finlayson, Ross Helling
way. left the do YOU
0
Penner
thinks
he’s
going
the
to pass.
thing
for
highest A-plus.
a change.
mark
He
on his
scored
blood
campus
willing
He finked out on us this week. (Actually his wife wouldn’t let him come to the office). Nice to get high marks on some-
in December
to handle
the
would
be
job.
0 “Profanity is a sign of a lack of culture. People who use it should improve their vocabulary.” -Pravda
the
test-an
q Dear Mr. Lobban: If we can’t keep that muddypuddly path to the Village clean, could we at least have better lights to see where the puddles are?
0 The Chevron (brag) now has 0ttawa and Toronto bureaus. The creative arts board might also consider seting up a “box office” in Toronto to serve out-term students. Perhaps some co-op student leaving
0 Typewriting should be taught in grade three. It’s a handy basic skill for anyone in today’s world.
(formerly the C0RyPHAEX.W The
Chevron
si ty
of
university, editor-
is
Jim
Grant Brian
or
the
board
Nagel
of
Signet 7,000
-6111
publications
local
2497
(news),
by
the
Federation
obviously
Member
of
not
of
Students,
necessarily
Canadian
Univer-
those
University
of
the
Press.
chairman:
manager:
Ltd.,
of
are
publications.
Heidebrecht lithographed
Heather
744
of
Opinions
advertising
Surich
Davidson Telephone
board
board of publications David R. Witty
Braun
entertainment:
the
Canada.
Gordon Clark
Joachim Wayne
by
Ontario,
Council
in - chief:
features:
Fridays
Waterloo,
Student
news editor: photography: sports:
published
Waterloo,
Ekkehard
Elmira
Elmira,
Ont.
copies 2812
(advertisinR),
2471
(editor).
Night
744
-0111.
cian)
Alittlelessdisorgelizedthisweek.
Chevron
Toronto
Chevron
Ottawa
bureau bureau
chief: chief:
Allen Raymond
Class,
96 Vilbikaitis,
Madison
Avenue, 338
Zephyr
telephone Avenue,
Friday,
924 apt.
November
8,
- 7828. Ottawa
14.
25,
1966
(7:17)
15
Thursday
Another, busy week on campus
Fass needs your stuff Satire, farces , put-and-out slapstick--if you have any ideas for FASS, call the producer or the director at about 12:3’7 tonight. FASS is an annual review sponsored by the. Circle K club. Any groups within the universityareinvited to participate. Ideas for the February the show are needed nm because writing is already underway. The show should be blocked out before the end of the term. Call Ross McKenzie at 576-6938 or Tom Close at 745-5834 (“preferably between 11 and 2 at night”) or leave a message at the Campus Shop. The show this year will run for four performances, February 9-11, with both an evening and a matinee performance on the YSaturday.
Notices for this column should be handed in to the Chevron office on the forms provided. Deadline Wednesday night. (* means every week)
Today 8:OO - Party for all grads. Graduate House. 8:30 - ‘She stoops to conquer’. Theater . Dance: “The E vii”. Village dining hall 3.
Tomorrow 9:oo - Women’s
sports day. Seaggram Stadium. 2:oo - ‘Focus organizational meetEngineering cornmonQ. room. 6:00 - Soccer vs. Toledo. Seagram Stadium. 8:30 - ‘She stoops to conquer’. Theater.
12:lO
8:00 --Morality dlub. P153 Hockey -- Village NE vs. Engineer12:lO - ‘No reason fo stay’, a movSW vs. St. Jerome’s ie on school dropouts. CB295 Qh 7:oo - Stage band recording Wednesday session. Workshop. 7~30 - Apathy club. P130. 7:oo - Student ‘Council. Board and 8:00 - Ski club. CB271 senate room. 8:OO - Student Christian Movement8:00 - Canadian university Service members of various faiths overseas (CUSO) AL213. everyone welcome. Interna‘ 8:30 - French film series: ‘Picktional House, 193A Albert St. pocket’. P145. 8:00 - Badminton. Seagram 8:30 - Prof. J. Wilson speaks to Tuesday ’ NDP club. See bulletin boards 12:15 - Film series: ‘On stage’. for location. Theater . \/J aterloo CI. 9-11 - Badminton. 3:30 - Chemistry lecture: Dr. Kul*g-11 - Where have all the gymjit S. Sidhu--“Primary pronasts gone? Girls too. Watercesses in photo-sensitized reloo Collegiate, small gym. actions .” Cl3295 Hockey -- Grads Vs. Renison, Sci7:30 - Folk dance club. Anex 2 ence vs. Grebel
Monday
Saturday Basketball at Lutheran 9:00 - basketball dance. Dec.
Dates
to
Seagram.
remember
3 - 4 - Carol Fantasy --free tickets at box-office. Theater Dec. 31 --‘Midnight Magic’ - aNew Years Eve dance. Village. Dec. 4--A Christmas party at the Rotary International House, 193A Albert Street. ALLmembers of the International Students Association and other overseas students.
CYNICS WHO DON’T BELIEVE
3 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 c 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
YOU CAN GET YOUR ..--
0 0 0 0 0 D D
AND WE CAN PROVE IT! things wish their sport jacket cut to natural proportions, and priced to the proportion of their wallets , . . as is this
E P
INTRODUCTORY
STUDENT
jacket.
FOR
1
.I-.--
-
-
application LIBRON
b
WATERLOO
SQUARE
Name Maili,ng
C
c
Samsonite smartly
.
-
area
$11.50
OTHERS:
INFOMATION:
PHONE
__________._-_____
SERVICES,
DEPT.
A,
P.O.
BOX
address address
of interest
The
CHEVRON
KITC’HENER,
LIMITED,
ONTARIO
. .. .. . . .. . . . .. . .. . . .. . .. . . ..
...........................................................................................
. .. . .. . .. . .. . . .. . .. . . .. . .. . . . .. . .. . ...~ Check
cost light
STRATFORD,
one:
Student
barrier luggage.
@
Faculty
to
pile-ups and richly lined, beautifully finished interiors. Go happy, go lightly with I new Samsonite Debonair. It’s luxury classat economy price! New happy-go-lightly Samsonite Debonair Made by Samsonite of Canada Limited, Stratford. Ontario
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New Samsonite Debonair is available in seven styles and six new fashion colours. And the colours are infused into the shell to eliminate any possibility of peeling or blistering. Other features include recessed frame with tongue-and-groove seal to protect contents from damp and dust, inset locks to prevent accidental opening or damage in baggage
OF CANADA
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An incredibly tough moulded shell is combined with the famous Samsonite magnesium frame to make this luggage the lightest, best-looking and most durable in its class.
BY SAMSONITE
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Ladies’ Beauty Case, 21 ” Overnite, 26” Pullman, Weekend Tote. In Polar White, Smoke Grey, Fiesta Red and Olympic Blue. Men’s Companion (21 “), Two-Suiter, Three-Suiter. In Bl,ack Olive, Smoke Grey and Seal Black. New Samsonite Debonair is popularly priced luggage that offers a whole new range of advantages for people on the go!
MADE
$25.00
576-5184
fee to:
breaks the styled, strong,
Example: thisZI-inckrcase onlyweighs s1/4 lbs.,costs lessthan$26.,
FEE:
MORE
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Permanent Main
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- Noontime drama: ‘Duo at midday*. Theater 7:oo - Women’s intramural swim meet. Breithaupt recreation center. 7:30 - Bergman f&n followed by discussion with Prof. McQuary. CB271. Hockey - St. Paul’s VS. CO-op
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