c Volume
THE
8, number
UNIVERSITY
l.lA
Griees unheeded
OF WATERLOO,
Waterloo,
Editorial
Pa@3
More Council ----------------------------
news
Pa&
2
board would take complete control of the university% athletics program-varsity, intramural, recreational, services. The proposed board hadbeen rejected by President Hagey after last month’s Council meeting, To.m Patterson, the Federation% university-relations officer, told Council on Saturday that Hagey had rejected it without discussion with the Federation. ‘(The university would be ill-advised to turn over either the financial or operating controlof one of its divisions to an organizatlon of students which is seperately incorporated,” said Hagey in a letter to Patterson, The Federation has been incorporated since April
27.
Top im
.The board of athletics is seen as a long-term solution for removing emphasis from varsity sports to intramural, recreationsil, and service programs. Council was also concerned about the problem for the 1967-68 academic year. lCWe want a committment that every need in intramural, recreational, and service programs be. met,” said Federation president Steve Ireland Sunday. But Stewart Saxe, chairman of the board of external relations, and Patterson cautioned that if Council asks for too much there would be a long, hard fight and nothing would be accomplished. ‘l We should try to satisfy the student’s minimal needs for this war, ” said Patterson. He presented a specific motion aimed at partially solving theproblem this year. The resolution, passed unanimously’ by C ouncil, called for immediate assurance from Hagey that the university will meet its responsibilities in athle tics by providing seven specific things in 1967-68: 1. A minimum of four-hours da& ly unscheduled time in the gymnasium after 4 pm, as well as all other free time. 2. The gymnasium open for student use until 2 am. 3. Availability of equipment at all times that facilities are open.
Ontario scholar pulls nonchalant
by Donna Chevron
Pickel staff
9% 98, 97, 97, 95. With these marks Ian Morrison, 17, of Toronto, stood first in the ranks of Ontario’s grade 13s. Hired by the math faculty for the summer, Morrison has been on campus since June, and has joined the organized confusion of the Chevron as a ‘I mathcot”. His individual marks are English 95, math A 97, physics 97, math B 98 and chemistry 99. This produces a weighted average of 97 percent. rcIt’s about what I expected,” (( although English said Morrison, is higher and math B is lower.” This is not the result of hard work-rather of brilliance. Ian estimates flippantly that he spent one hour a week on homework. He attributes his success to“aheightened awareness of his environment
What
This year for the last time grade 13 students sweated through departmental examinations. Of about 40,000 students who wrote these exams, approximately 2,300 received 80 percent or better. This means that about one in 16 grade 13 students will receive an Ontario Scholarship: Next year
studentswill
write
ex-
August
18, 1967
0
looming I
4. A schedule, published weekly in the Chevron, showing times that athletic facilities. will be open. 5. Rental of all available facilities throughout the city, with ade quate publicity. 6. Free time for swimming at Breithaupt pool (a city pool), a minimum of four hours, two nights a week. 7. A guarantee that a minimum of 50 percent of the revenue from ticket sales will be reserved for unbudgeted activities in the clubs, recreation and services field.
intents and purposes, none&tent,” said Bill Snodgrass, engineering rep. ( ‘It’s ridiculous.” Patterson said the athletics department’s excuse is that there is no money for individuals’ recreation or service because it has already been allocated. “The same
thing will happen next year,” said Sue. Ireland said his research showed the problem has existed since 1961. %xneone from Totzke’s department was invited to talk toCouncil every year but things haven’t improved,” he said.
Councillors expressed anger at the attitude of the athletics department to programs other than var sity sports. “$10,500 of the athletics department’s $155,000 budget isfor student activities,” said Ireland. “The rest is for varsity sports. I agree that the varsity isvaluable, but not that valuable.” Both Ireland and Saxe gave examples of Seagram gym and the track being closed to students at scheduled recreation times. “We had to go to WUC to play basketball,” said Saxe. “They have facilities and supervisors on hand and no regular students on campus.” “The intervarsity takes 90 percent of the budget, intramural takes 10 percent. The service and recreation programs. are, for all
on campus 97 average
and the .Ahtman of its being!” Ia3n--“The three is silent”--is a barrel of fun, as the C hevron staff well knows. He has the ability to talk paragraphs of sheer garbage. (‘Tis further said by his fellow Villagers that he prefers leopardspot nightshirts to pajamas.) Morrison attended University of Toronto Schools for the past seven years. In September will take a math course here or enter the math-physics-chemistry program at U of Toronto. Ian’s goal in life, he said, is to achieve happiness. However, after his degree in mathematics he has not decided whether he will continue in mathematics or become aUnitarian minister. His interests include bridgeaccording to conventions which he has developed himself. He is a member of the Rasqui, a Toronto group which at intervals produces
to grade
happens
Friday,
since 1961
Sports fight The administration is in for a stiff fight with the Federation of Students over athletics. Student Council says students are getting a raw deal from the athletics de partment in the recreation and service programs. Council took its toughest stand yet on athletics Saturday and Sunday when it met at the Village. It demanded that university president J. G. Hagey meet with the Council athletics committee to discuss the proposed board of athletics. The - sa& th;ig -;;; west- - -pale -2 .
Ontario
an evening of plays. He is minister of propaganda on the eastern Canadian executive of Liberal Religious Youth, the Unitarian youth organization, and a member of Strawberry Cradle, which is presently producing a film. Ian’s other interests are rounders, girls, swimming and public speakm Morrison has participated in the well-known math contests. In 1965 he stood first in the Junior Mathematics Contest. This year he stood third in the senior contestmuch to his humiliation beaten by a grade-11 and agradestudent.
(( Toli atwan, Kahatchapecl
13?
ans set and marked by their teachers. The Service for Admission to Colleges and Universities is now developing standarized tests for all Canadian students who plan to enter university, to compensate for varying school standards. This would be the equivalent of College Entrance Board Examinations in the U-S.
Ian Morris
on
”
Brick walls hardly compare with a tennis court. But unless adequate recreational facilities soon replace them, students will continue wasting their allowances to replace lost balls.
FUND DRIVE
MUST
RAISE
$13 MILLION
Uneeds$65 million for next five years BY 1972, there will be another $65,000,000 worth of campus stap ing students in the face. Eight days ago, Carl Pollock, chairman of the U of W board of governors, announced a five-year capital expansion plan for the university. The university has to raise $l3,000,000 to meet its share of the cost. $7,500,000 of this will come from Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation and funds remaining since the 1962 campaign. The university will put the squeeze on industry and individuals to raise the remaining $5,500,000. Standard grants from the province will make up the remainder of the $65,000,000. The fund drive, under the title of Tenth Anniversary Fund, is headed by W, H. Evans of Honeywell Con-
tm~Llmitedandthelma.niob~vernors. Chancellor Ira G. Needles is in charge of the local drive. John Motz, publisher of the KitWill &enerWaterloo Record run the national paign*
information
the mathematics
and athletic
The expansion
program
cam-
includes com-
plexes, already under construction, and the underground engineering hall, now finished. Further construction will include humanities, health, architecture and optot metry facilities. More buildings are needed for the 7,000 students who will be on campus this year and the 10,000 who, will be here in three years. The federated and affiliated church colleges will receive half a million dollars under the construction program.
BRIEFS
COUNCIL
Freshmen scour c ity for housing
Still 500 beds short Among the items discussed by Student Council at its meeting Saturday and Sunday: l The lastest housing figures estimate a shortage of 500 spaces for the fall term, said vice-president Bob Cavangh. Campus residences are over full and private hones are the only rerriainingpossibility. “Anything that% left is farfrom the campus,” he said. “The best we can do is provide adequate know-
ledge of city bus routes. If we are still short in two weeks, we will go on a door-to-door canvass as a last resort.” Converging probably the Forest Hill area of Kitchner-was Cavanagh’s suggestion. The area is so far relatively untapped, he said, and the bus service is fairly direct, and there would be social advantages in concentrating the student population, he said.
l
-
Sheppard won’t
_
resigns return
l Cavanagh said he hoped workers would be hired the housing office in the come. l Council’s programs for
seat,
to campus
Mike Sheppard, past president of the Federation of Students, has resigned his Student Council seat as St. Jerome’s College rep because he will not be returning to campus this fall. Student Council was informed Saturday. A byelection will be held early. next term. Three other positions are open: Tom Close has resigned as homecoming chairman, Rick Schuett as chairman of clubs and organizations under the board of student activities and Paul Olinski as creative-arts chairman.
qual,ity
edu&tion
needs
student to help rush to better-
immed&&
cooperation from the faculty, said Chalmers Adams, RenisonCollege rep, who is in charge of the program. “The more cooperation from the faculty, said ChalmersAdams, Renison College rep,, who is in charge of the program.“The more cooperation, the more impact our suggestions have, the better it is for radical faculty members to make an impact,” he &d. “This is one issue that can’t be politics-it must be academic.”
l Dean David Sprott of the mathematics faculty took up Student Council’s invitation to attend the Saturday meeting. In a low-key question-and-answer session, Sprott discussed the reasons for establishing a faculty of math and the value of a B Math degree, the controversial Rene Descartes Foundation, student participation in faculty affairs, highschool students employed by the math department for the summer and the teaching option being tested in co-op math. Council will continue with its plan to have such discussions with various university personnel at each meeting.
The lucky ones with early final admission could search with lists from the housing service. The others who have not yet beenadmitted
Deal with kops? No, Toad learns The Toad has lost prized possessions,
’
BURNABY, BC (CUP)-LThe physical-education department here has been charged with disregarding some sports such as soccer and rugby to concentrate on the big three-football, basketball and swimming. Because of delays in processing equipment requests the soccer team lost $200, and because of petty bureaucracy and indifference the rugby team has been forced to
co-op.
Athletic
of Campus-
problems at Simon Fraser
OPPORTUNITY
TO BECOME
SIDENCE
LATER
ACQUAINTED
YOUR
NAME
WITH
COULD
CO-OP-STYLE
RE-
BE RECOMMENDED
OURADMlSSIONSCOMMITTEEASHAVINGSOMECO-OP
TO
EXPERIENCE.
duties
body of the university. Opposition to this bid was voiced by Premier Daniel Johnson; the university% rector, Roger Gaudry, who said that greater student participation in the administration would harm the academic standards of the university; and the head of the university who sta.ted,“Students should concentrate on learning rather than on the admini&.-a.tion of the universitv-*’
Council OF
required
THE
WaterlooCooperativeResidencelnc, AVE.
The suggestion that an athletic board be formed with full representation has been turned down by the PhYs-ed department.
Students’
Applications
139 UNIVERSITY
FEDERATION
for the
CHAIRMAN will the
W. 7452664
be deceived office of the
OF
position
OF THE
CREATIVE
until 5 president
p.m.,
Century
Cotkert”
$1.50 main
NOTE:
f rom office
FRESHMEN THEY
the or MUST
WISH
TO
Federation the
ALSO
102 The CHEVRON
Authorized department,
Students arts
cheques
branch
TICKETS
THIS
September 8, in building.
Federation
‘7
Ian and Sylvia -
fl
TheBrothers - in - Law
1867 t 1867-
office
board
ORDER
ATTEND
Out-of-town
2
of
creative
A
Aiiiiivm
SEPTEMBER I4 - Theater of the Arts _ either
BOARD
and
TheHart HouseChamberOrchestra
Tickets
ARTS
Friday,
in the
announces
Eighteenth
STUDENTS
of:
, - ORIENTATION ‘6 ‘An
on a small patch of grass.
Students met recently to discuss action when a cricket player had his jaw-broken while playing on an unprepared field. Yet the university is rumored to have morefootball equipment than the BC Lions.
tries for student voice
Fees $17000 per term ne fag
practice
QUEBEC CITY (CUP&The private bills committee of the Quebec legislature is being pressured to have student representation of the administrative council of the University of Montreal. The committee is now studying 8 bill to establish a civil charter to replace the papal charter of the university, Under the new charter, the administrative council would be the highest governing
- not fancy but good meals I
Good-quality
LIFE.
center
late May. The students also released two rabbits in the bookstore but left suitcase behind when the kampus kops arrived unexpectedly . The jacket was taken in hopes of a swap for the suitcase--which had been u&d to carry the rabbits. An engineering student brought the jacket in to the security office last week to make an exchange, and he was handed over to the dean of his faculty.
The campus police have recovered a police jacket stolen by the Toad-the cover name for a group of students operating out of the
Montreal -3 minutes from
one of his
The Toad piled several hundred library books in front of the elevator doors near university pre sident J. G. -Hagey% office on the fourth floor of the arts library in
to eat at our cafeteria
were forced to search at random for their accommodation. Mrs. Edith Beaueleil, director of Housing Services--on the top floor of the arts library-said these students would receive their lists when they had been formally accepted by the university. She added that this policy had been set up to ensure that students would not rent from homeowners on the lists and then be unable to use the rooms because the university had rejected them.
“Fourteen people came up to me and asked where the housing office was,” said Paul Cotton, a student working on campus for the summer. ((And it was closed.”
0 “The registrar has ruined Orientation,” said Saxe, who is also chairman of Orientation. He complained that university regi& trar Trevor Boyes had extended registration to Monday and Tuesday without warning, and had threatened to bypass the student-activities desks in the registration procedure in case a lineup developed. Council unanimously requested the registrar to reconsider.
. CO” - ,OP Space for non-residents I
Last weekend the Waterloo area swarmed with freshman students looking for housing.
THE
CENTENNIAL
CONCERT
IF
TheOuatre- Vingt TICKETS FROM
SERIES
STILL:
$3.00
FEDERATION
OF STUDENTS
OFFICE.
CONCERT.
must
as second Ottawa,
include
- c lass mail and for payment
1.5~ exchange. by
the Post of pos tage
Off-campus Office in cash.
orders A subscription receive the
must
.nclude
fee Chevron
a stamped
included by mail
in their during
self-addressed annual off-campus
student terms.
envelope. fees en titles Non-students
U of W students : $4 annually.
to
NewStratfordplay: the mediumhasno Mrs. Kerr, a gradu:i t t’ s t IIdent in design 22t U of IV, holds ~2 bcschelor of fine ‘?rts degree from the Vniversitv of , Manitoba. by Mary
Robinson
Kerr
‘Colors in the dark,, which opened July 25 at Stratford’s Avon
Theater is, unfortunately, not a significant piece of theater. James Reaney, the author, is essentially a Western Ontario poet and English professor who is collaborating with former Manitoba Theater Centre director John Hirsch on this first-of-this-kind pro= duction, Reaney himself calls it
ontreal scene: wherethe birds are by Wene Chevron
Legrand staff
MONTREAL (Staff&A recent survey showed that more than half of Expo visitors are Yanks. The typical American will arrive at Expo first thing in the morning and spend the whole day visiting pavilions and making comments on their “quaintness,,. Come 9:30 at night, he can be found walking the main streets of Mont real--especially St. C atherine Street West, looking for something to do. So any night of the week you find many American birds--girls--in Montreal’s night If you are not used to spots. plucking feathers off the street here is a guide to Montreal’ s beta ter discotheques and clubs. One of the most famoushangouts is the Copacabana, downstairs at 1112 St.Catherine West.Compared to most others its dance platform offers at least some room in which to move around. About a block away, upstairs this time, at 1200 St.-Catherine West (above Madame Tussaud’s Wax Museum) one finds the Chez Pierre Legrand discotheque (no relation). This place is bound to make you forget your worries since the loudness of the music does not allow you to hear yourself think. The atmosphere at both of these is strictly English (as opposed to F rench). Go-go birds abound at both, especially on weekends. Moving farther west you find French atmosphere at Le Cachet (1204 Drummond St.) and, parallel to it on Mountain St., La Bastille. Le Cachet is decorated like a jail with forbidding brick walls, bars and waiters dressed in striped convict threads. The dancing area at both places is about ten feet by five feet so that slow dances give you an excuse for getting acquaint ed. La Bastille is in Little Bohemia. a French night strip on Mountain Also here is the Le Drug Street. At Le Drug the doordiscotheque. man opens a little hatch to check
Whodunit news and features: FrankGoldspink, Mary Bull, Andrew Lawrence, Marshall R. Egelnick, Trevor Howes, John Helliwell, Ian Morrison, Donna Pickel, Richard Swan, Bob Verdun sports: Paul Cotton Photography: Trevor Howes, Marshall Egelnick, Thor Paulson cartoons: Don Kerr
you over before he lets you in (somewhat like the “green door,, of old). The interior of this place is something else; in the flower craze of late, it is decorated with a psychedelic floral arrangement. Also in this general vicinity (at Crescent and Maisonneuve) is a way-out place called La Mousse Spacteque. The sense of vision is also set to dancing here by the sculptures, mir’rors, ceiling decorations and lights which flash at you periodically. The floor is metallic, making an excellent dance platform. Turning east you soon bump into the New Penelope (378 Sherbrooke St; West). All summer this coffee house features the Sidetrack, a fantastic rock group. Older members of the go-go Set willbeinterested to know that the Playboy Club is situated in this area (on Aylmer Street at Sherbrooke). Opened July 14 by Hughie himself, this club has proven to be quite a novelty so far. Time will show how Montreal acm cepts it. Directing yourself now to 190 Dorchester St. East you will soon find Snoopy, s Psychedelic DiscoMontreal’s tap groups theque. have so far been featured in its month or’ so of operation, and re ports on it have been good. Two other places worth considering are Don Juan’s on the northwest corm ner of Stanley at Maisonneuve (the place is supposedly very dark and cozy) and Le Metro Discotheque in the Berri-de-Montigny Metro Mirrors are the feature station. of this place-- including the dance floor. Beware mini-skirts! So that’s the discotheque situation. If you believe in the straightforhowever, let me ward approach, clue you in on a little secret. 368 girls taking summer courses are living in the McGill residences on University Avenue (just below the mountain). The youngest of the birds have completed second year, and they range in age from 19 on. Thirty-two men complete the class so the odds are in your favor, guys. So there you are--where the Bring lots of money birds are! and happy hunting. Questions or?the Montreal scene can be addressed to us care of the Chevron. All questions will be answered personally by mail. If you tin into any problems while in Montreal you are invited to call us at the Chevron, s Montreal bureau, 481-2590, for help.
c1a trip through the life and thoughts and imagination of acanadianpoet, taking the audience through the incidents, places and people, dreams and experiences” that represent life in Canada to him. However Nathan Cohen, the Toronto Star’s critic, refutes: “This is not a playbox of bright and exhilarating scraps and fancies from the theater of life, but a pudding of mawkish and dehydrated anecdotes about the formative influences on a poet who compares himself to the society of young children in the innocence and purity of his perception and reactions.,, &hen is correct. What is at first charming in the production soon becomes senile regurgitating of youthful memories. In the first half of the production the story centers about the young poet-boy who, having a case of measles, is forced to remain in a darkened room where he learns to see colors in the dark. This half i s more effective than the second, since in it, the author has no oti vious dramatic or symbolic aspirations, and the childlike material consequently achieves a microcosmic symbolism. In the second half, however, he enters more the world scale, and becomes self-conscious of life, death, eternity, sin, big business, the eternal “why? why?,,, and ultimately, and sadly, becomes very obvious, pompous, and tedious. One would in fact, do well to leave at half time. The audience is constantly re-
minded of early television productions and current (Spring thaw, offerings. While all sorts of marvellously Canadian sentiments begin to make you want to burst, it is all so obvious, so repititious, so done-before, It is not Fe&val material. One of the very positive elements in this production is the varying roles for the six principal actors. The framework is very loose, and each actor performs many different roles, although these roles do have a main configuration. The connections from one vignette to another work very well, and each actor moves briskly from oneportrayal to another. Sandy Webster and Barbara Bryne, who carry all the older male and female roles are especially to be complimented on the accuracy of their vision. Bryne is particularily effective in her Granny Crack series, and Webster in his ‘ Ode to a mammoth cheese,. Douglas Rain and MarthaHenry play the young-adult roles, and, while extremely competant, all I could think of was early ( Spring thaw,, which is probably the exact tone of production wanted. Heath Lambert and Mary Hitch, as young people, were both good and earnest. The singers wereone of the more brilliant touches, acting as comic vision characters, whose fine voices at precisely the correct moment would burst forth with such oldtime ditties as“Giddy-up, Napoleon, looks like rain,,.
Eoin Sprott’ of Winnipeg, who did the set design, obviously tried for an open-stage, abstract sort of workable-in-any-situation background set, but unfortunately he didn’t succeed. The main elements in his design were five large back-projection screens which were used very effectively, as in the sun-dog sequence when all the screens were combined to form a massive visual assault on the audience. Yet the majority of the sequences were single- screen things here and there which soon became boring, after the initial interest in the set was assimilated, and the audience begins to ignore the whole effect. It is unfortunate that in this year of Expo 67 cinematic marvels and this age of fantastic technical film progress, that we are presented with this outdated effort as if it were indeed something innovative. It wasn’t. Costumes, on the other hand, were innovative and beautifully childlike. They were treated with ju& the correct touch. The play set is in the time of your parents and mine: early pre-war poor, with buns, housedresses, sensible shoes, double-breasteds, cuffed trousers. The best way to sum up this much-touted effort is to say it is one of the most effectively produced, directed and acted offerings at the Stratford Festival, but the material-alas--has the least to say.
For services not rendered Our department of athletics is the last bastion of arbitrary power in this university. This department is the only one that can extort money from students for its own purposes without anyone complaining that he is being taken. . Every student is forced term to the department.
to pay
$11.00
At best, the student is receiving $ightly less than a dollar a term in athletic programs. And what programs they are! It is being polite to call the intramural program of the university inadequate. policies
are needed
of is
It is out of the question to raise the athletic fee after its 60-percent jump this year.
a
The athletics department handles over $155,500 a year, and pays out slightly more than $10,000 for its intramural program. The rest of the money pays for intercollegiate sports and salaries.
New
the four hours a day, seven days a week, recreation that student Council thinks a minimum.
to give students
A board of athletics should be created to handle an enlarged intramural program. This would be a board of the Federation of Students operating along the same lines as the creative arts board, which contains both students and university officials. The university should seek new ways of financing intercollegiate sports, even it means Coach Totzke doing beer commercials. Continuing inquiry by the administration and ceaseless pressure by students is needed to ensure that students reaHy get what they a for.
@&L3wP&n
publishedFridays
The Chevrm is University of Waterloo, and Student Council
editor-in-chief: Jim Nagel news editor: Donna McKie photo editor: Glenn Berry features: Mary Bull reviews: Dale Martin
by the board of publications of the Federation of Students, Canada. Opinions are independent of the university, Waterloo, Ontario, Member of Canadian University Press. the board of publications.
\
circulation: David p. Bean advertising: Steve Sostar composed by Elmira Signet Ltd., Elmira, Ontario 6,800 copies (summer)
Publications chairman: John Shiry. Advertising mgr; Ross Helling. Offices in Federation bldg. 744-6111 local 2497 (news), 2812 (advertising). 2471 (editor). Night 744-0.111. Telex 0295-759. Toronto: Patricia McKee, 267-2260’. Oftawa: John Beamish, 828-3565. Montreal: George Loney, 481-2950. Kk@ston-Napanee : Pefe Webster, 354-3569.
Thursday,
August
17, 1967 (8:llA)
103
3
University four-part
The neti food-services building is the furthest advanced of the seven buildings under construction on campus this summer. It will be finished for September. [n front of the building, the new campus entrance, which will be the only way in from University Avenue, begins to take shape,
70 CO-opers
converge
Seventy co-opers will converge on Waterloo in September for the national co-operative housing conf erence. The conference, jointly sponsored by the Canadian Union of Students and the Co-operative Insurante Services, will have as its
from
across
theme “Youth and co-operatives”. Also on the agenda are discussions on the philosophy and history of co-operatives, and “Youth, bureaucracy and co-operatives”. Over $4,000 has been allotted out of the Waterloo Co-op’s budget to bring delegates from all parts of Canada.
Canada
To ready themselves for this national conference the student co-operatives in Ontario are holding a regional conference at the Waterloo Co-op August 19 and 20. About 60 students and interested individuals will meet to discuss the issues to be discussed at the national conference.
film series experiment The third part of the film festival will feature several other productions by Prof. Schleiermacher in a local theater. The public showing will also include his plotless love affair. “It is an abstract college in four reels without any definite order,” said Wright. This will be shown January 28, probably from midnight until the small hours. Experimental films made in Canada will show February 25 as the final part. The design department is now working with its new animation camera to produce a short film for use in the October showing. According to Don Kerr, another grad student in design, “Of the whole festival, this first part is without doubt the most significant. The environmental-studies and fine-arts departments in the University of Waterloo, with financial aid from the student federation, are attempt@ to build a rePuta= tion in this field for the university. We are quite hopeful of Suecess.”
“A plotless look into what constitutes a love affair” will be the subject of a movie preview early next week. The producer of the abstract film is Prof. Denton Schleiermacher of the Institute of Design on campus. The private showing isto be either at the Waterloo Theater or at a movie-house in Toronto. This makes up a section of the four-part university film series devoted to experimental movies. A showing on October 9 at the Village Hall will clarify what is meant by experimental methods, said Walter Wright, a grad student in design. There will be demonstrations of nroiecting techniques, such as m&&, fiiters and split images on several screens at once. Included will be ideas on mixed me&,--slides ad films now being made will be backed up with a band, On November 19 a series of amateur films will be shown in New They are the result of a York. social-work experiment inHarlem last year. .
See you at registration by Harold D. Goldbrick the mighty mouth
A bit of golden bloodshot postexam type afterglow, the editor suggested. Why not something original like the first dose of my own redundant tremi-annual (every term even) anm Ta-dum-ta-dum awards? nouncing the H D Gee Bees. The first Gold Brick is a triple award for the recent visit of CharCredit ming Charlie of Gaulle. goes to the Kitchen-WaterRehash. The local paper has never shown such unity of opinion within itself. Although it was still unable to reErain from editorializing on the Eront page, the opinions were at least similar to those of the editorial writers’ for a change. The second credit is for the Right Hon. John Jowls Diefenbak?r% religious denunciation of de Gaulle” s actions. Who’s he trying to kid anyway ? If Dief was still prime minister he probably would have ridden along the St. Lawrence with de Gaulle. The final credit must go to St, Charles himself for his admirable sentiments. Anyone who w&s to Eree Quebec of the Frenchman is okay in my book. They might really make him a saint for driving all the frogs out of Quebec.
The first on-campusGoldie goes to athletics director Carl Totzke. It will be engraved “Too little, too late, and you might as well forget it altogether*” This is for his plan to sell season tickets to sporting events this year. When is he going to realize that it’s double taxation with that exorbitant athletic fee? Anyway, I imagine we can still watch the games live, dry, free and in living black, white and Carlings at home On ‘hannel 13. It% no wonder that Totzke is frequently referred to as an exhighschool teacher with the mind of an ex-highschool teacher, (Student Council member Stew Saxe hinted that he wanted that put in, but he wasn’t too fussy who got credit
for It*)
0
Other administration Goldies: To registrar Clever Trevor BoYes’ boY s, for successfully holding up the marks longer than last year, without resorting to any new excuses. A special slab of mortar for tall Trev who showed that when You’re number two you don’t necessarily have to try harder, (He was chief assistant to former registrar Alan Gordon.) A little GeeBee to Bill Lobban,
The next issue of the Chevron -will be published at regis tra tion, the week of September 11 - 16. Advertising deadline for this issue is SEPTEMBER FIRST. Regular Friday issue will start September 22. Advertising deadline is ten days previous.
the head of the Physical-Plant and replanting department, for pp and p’s excellent sod-shifting job for the Village football field. , 0
LOOKING
FOR
LIVE
FRIDAY
A special Chevron staff Gold Brick to a certain woman reporter whose efforts in the past term nearly landed her the psition of public relations for theCo-cp residence. Keep up the good work, Sandy. Another staffer, due for an aware for superficially taking the blame for this catharsis column, is F rank Goldspink. Too many stupid artsmen have jumped at the obvious similarity of names. For shame and Frank isn’t even Jewish. The last Goldie for this semester goes for best swan song by a returning columnist. The one and only--yes, you guessed it-Ed Penner. 01’ Penner is coming back to further promote his already badly advanced case ,of literacy. 0 WORDS AND ENDS: These two real cool hippies were sitting in their room. One says to the other: “Go turn on the radio.” *I Okay”. So he walks over tc the radio, wraps his arms around it, kisses it and says,” Hmm, I love you, radio.”
GOOD
ENTERTAINMENT
EVERY
and SATURDAY
FOOD From
Submarine
ESPECIALLY
to Steaks
FOR UNIVERSITY
CORNER
ALSO
Sandwiches
STUDENTS
OF KING & UNIVERSITY
AT THE
FREE DELIVERY
CAMPUS
REST
#
.
-
TO STUDE
744 - 4446 Open 5 p.m. to 1 a.m. Weekends
till
IF IN KITCHENER 252 King
2 a.m.
PHONE St. E.
744-4322
CO-OP STUDENTS .
Her&
how
YOU
can get the Chevron
in the maXiI for the next four months: 1. Paste the coupon below onto your job card (or just copy) in the position 2.
Be sure to mail this card to the coordination department l
4
shown.
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CHEVRON
PROMPTLY.
ON TWS
1
HALF
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