1967-68_v8,n16_Chevron

Page 1

Volume

8

Number

UNIVEFiSITY

16

A Lutheran

OF WATERLOO,

Waterloo,

Ontario

Friday,

October

13,

1967

first

Students help choose preg -

-

Waterloo Lutheran University broke precedent this week. a student was appointed to an administration committee, following a request made earlier by student council. The special committee was fom med to find a replacement for Dr. William J. Villaume, who resigned as president of WLU in June. The lone student on thecommittee will be joined by four governors, three faculty members, one alumnus and the president of the Lutheran synod. The position of student representative will be open for nominations next week. The final choice will rest with a select committee of student council. Dr. Henry Endress, acting president, said students were allowed a representative because of ad4 r+ tional and responsible request by student council”. This request was in the form of & letter from student-council pre= sident Jim Griffiths to the board of governors, which asked that students be allowed to 14take an

Constitution The first meeting of the Village council October 5 decided to hold a general referendum on the new constitution. The informal meeting opened with election of officers, followed by a general discussion of the new constitution. Out of this came a ---m-m---Rikk0; -~iilk&referendum Part A no Part B yes --------------------___ decision to hold a referenaum, held yesterday. decided it must have overall student acceptance of the intentions and general principles of the constitution before beginning to work under it. The referendum itself consisted The first part dealt of two parts. with the method of implimentation

active and responsible part in the decisions affecting the type of education, the mode of university government and the.future physical plant envisioned by WLU? In addition to the seat on this special committee, Griffiths also requested student representation on a committee which will deal with the plans of WLU’s future. This plan was developed by a consulting firm over the past five months. participation on this Student latter body was delayed for action until the next board of governors meeting. G riffiths, however, is confident that students will be asked to sit on committees studying this report. The firm which drew up the report, Booz, Allen and Hamilton, has delivered the paper to the board of governors. The decision to allow a student representative on the presidential selection committee is a landmark in Canadian university government. It is the first time that students have been allowed avoice in the selection of a university president.

vote and the second with the principles contained in the constitution. It’ the students accept the principles, the council hopes to amend it before passing it as complete. To this end, a constitution committee is being formed consisting of roughly a dozen people, half from the Village and quadrant council,s remainder other Villagers. The council expects that all problems will be dealt with and all amendments finalized before Christmas, so that next term% council will have a complete, acceptable constitution to work under. It also hopes that all dissension will be resolved by this re ferendum, regardless of the outcome.

The swimming pool in the phys-ed building is full, but it’s not ready for use as Barbara Brown, arts 1, found. The contractors filled it with drainage water to test for leaks. (Chevron photo by Glenn Berry)

Poro Seco's cancel, Phil Ochs booked by Andy Chevron

Lawrence staff

The Pozo Seco Singers, will not be coming for the October 27 concert as announced by Homecoming ‘67. After two weeks of humming and hawing, the singers told Marty McInnis, arts 1, homecoming chairman, that they will not appear here. They refused because they cannot get other bookings in the area. They are playing in the southern U.S. on October 28 and did not consider the $2,000 offer enough for the trip. Phil Ochs has now been booked to take the singers’ place for the concert.

Homecoming% reason for the great last-minute rush to get an entertainer is that Tom Close, math 3, resigned in August as chairman because of poor marks. McGinnis and Joe Recchia, vicechairman, tried to book Petula Clark, but she did not want to come at any price. Then they tried Peter, Paul and -Mary, who held out for weeks before refusing a booking. Finally came the Pozo Seco Singers, who said they would come if they could get another booking in the area. McInnis thought he might be able to book them at U of T, but this was impossible and last week the singers cancelled. Ochs is available at this late

date only because he stoppedplaying concerts for the summer and has been working in California changing his style. This year is much like last year, when Gordon Lightfoot was supposedly booked for a concert, and then wasn’t told about it. The

1The University of Waterloo t celebrates its tenth birthday ~October 22-29 with a full week including fall convo,cation, Homecoming, a major open house-and the North American tiddlywinks championships. _

Mitchell Trio for $2,200,

was finally

booked

Last year however, U of T was not quite as lucky and was forced to cancel its homecoming concert because it couldn’t get a booking. McInnis

said the situation

should

be improved next year.“ We should have next year’s orientation and homecoming booked by the end of this month? He said the main problem at the university is lack of a large hall to book a big-name group and break even on the ticket sales. He said he has used Seagram gym this year in an effort to get to the student without transportation. Steve Ireland, president of the Federation of Students, reacted to the cancellation, saying, ((Marty will work it out.” Brian Iler, chairman of the board of student activities, agreed with McInnis’ comment that acts for homecoming should have been booked earlier,


Maybe

the. arts theater

Confusion reigns supreme. The physical-plant and planning emphatically denies department the existence of the as&&heater building. The registrar and book+ ings office both agreed with the Chevron’s recent decision to call the arts theater the arts cheater, The October 9-15 issue of the weekly events bulletin, published by the bookings office, declared,

f ( ( I ( I/

\\I

isn’t

Who knows what happened? According to PP&P the proposed arts IV building will have a 70% seat theater. Since it will be twice the size of the present theater$ PP&P reasons that it be called the arts theater, But that wouldcr* te confusion as a theater already exists in the original arts theater which is labelled the arts and theater building. (Follow?) A solution to the enigma! Call the new Arts IV building 44Humanities”. Call the arts theater-ooops-modern - languages building by its rightful name, the arts and theater building. Engineers, don’t feel left out by all this talk of arts buildings.Your buildings are not up to PP&P star+ dards either. A plaque on the engineering I building identifies it as the themistry and chemical-engineering building. The plaque on the physits and math building is now technically obsolete. If this news of confusion and anarchy infuriates you so much that you intend to picket the third floor of the library, don’t bother. To make it easy for visitors to get lost in the right buildings, PP&P has promised that new selfilluminating ‘signs, with the proper names (whatever they are) will be erected for Tenth Anniversary Week. After that they may go back to the confusion-plus system. After alla only students will be oncampus.

“The modern-languages building will henceforth be known as the art&heater building.” The October 16-22 bulletin meekly pointed out that, #(due to a discrepancy in information received by the bookings office, the modern-languages building will not be referred to as the art&heater but will retain the name modern lax+ guagessg.

William Lobban, director of physical-plant and planning, says illuminated signs will identify all campus buildings.

Candidates

draw

All of 30 students jammed a 300-seat lecture room this week to hear candidates from the three major parties present their party policies. For those who have heard these men before, there were no surpriw es. “The Conservatives”, said Don MacPherson, %re proud of their record of achievement in Ontario over the past few years. They are now asking the public for a mandate to continue their work.” Liberals, like Ed Good, believe that the 44status quo” Conservative

Students

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said one regular court of revision at Waterloo city hall could have easily handled all the students. She estimated only 27Oofthepotential 2,800 student voters made use of the special court of revision on campus to enter their names on voters lists. 9?his is a waste of money,” Mrs. Cotter said. “University students are the most expensive voters we’ve got.”

two revising officers “and I don’t know how many clerks and constables.” She added, (&Pll figure out the cost per student when Ifindtime.” She criticized the board of external relations of Student Council which handled some of the e rangements here, butpraised Waterloo Lutheran University officials for “excellent cooperation.~s

\ (Fall) in line with fashion . . .

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The British tear-n-George Hannon Raphael Rose, an OxPord student and moderator of the Oxford Debating Union, and Colin McKay from Glasgow University-ill parry words with Joe Surich and Andrew Anstett, both political science 3. The British team will argue for the resolution “Youth is na.turally revolting’J while the U of W team will fight it. ’

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Friday the 13th gets celebrated tonight at the Village withYSupe~stitches”, a coffeehouse hoot.

Waterloo

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KING

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registered motorcycles, can ne parked in a specified area of lot B. Village motorcyclists can use an area of the staff parking lot. Thus, in return for the high fee, they are at least getting better locations. Motorcyclists must howeverpay the regular parking fee for the whole term. If, when winter comes, they discontinue using their vehicles, they can get a partial refund. This will involve going to security to get proof that the decal is removed, and then to the business office.

Friday the thirteenth is going to be an unlucky day for two young men at the University of Waterloo, At 8 tonight in AL116 a debate takes place between a two-man team from Britain and two University of Waterloo students. tiernational debates between British and Canadian students have become almost a tradition here and at other Canadian universities over the past three years.

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You’ve got to pay to park your wheels, baby, even if you’ve only got two of them.. Thats the word from security head Al Romenco. In a policy from above, the university security department was told to enforce a motorcycleparking fee of $2 a,month, the same as cars. This ruling has been in effect since October 1 and somecitations have been issued for nonregistration. Because the fee is proportionally unfair for motorcycles, which can be parked six to eight in one auto space, Romenco has ruled that

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party policies should be replaced by Liberal policies. The Liberals are convinced that they are the only alternative party for those who believe in free enterprise. The New Democratic Party strongly denies that it is against free enterprise and boasts thatthe CCF and NDP had been proposing a medicare program, similar to the newly introduced OMSIP program,. for more than 20 years. With an NDP government, certain services will be t4given to all at a price they can afford to pay,$’ Ted Isley promised.

Student agitation for special courts of revision on campus was called era big bag of wind.”

Motorcycles

FAMOUS

only 30 to forum

the 73th

Lawrence Jones, an Ottawafolksinger, is featured. Jones has performed at Carleton, McGill, Toronto and Waterloo. He is currently working on a master% in English at Carleton. He likes to do his own interpretations of ballads, ords he put it;--‘%terpretations of Baez’s interpretations of Dylan? He will also sing some of his own songs tonight. Admission is free to anyone who dares to risk anything on Friday the 13th. (Coffee and donuts extra). Supe,rstitches is sponsored by Inter-Varsitv Christian Fellowship and will be held in the blue dining hall at the Village between 8:30 and midnight.

Authorized

as Waterloo,


after

a

by Doug Seaborn Chevron

Librarian

Caroline Pawley

hasn’t been told, “It’s too short. ”

00 mini?

One mini

t

When is a mini-skirt too mini? At the University of British Columbia, according to Ruth Butterworth, head of the library cti culation department there, it is when the length of the skirt is not “‘decent beyond doubt? A memorandum issued by Miss Butterworth stated,” While matters of dress are normally left to the individual discretion, some of the short short skirts which have been seen lately make it necessary to remind staff that in a public service position, you are expected to be decent beyond doubt. “Generally speaking halfway between the hip and the knee is too short. “Knee length or up to three inches above the knee is preferable? But at Waterloa, Mrs. Doris Lewis, chief librarlaq said, “1 don’t feel we have this problem. Maybe the librarians are more conservative in the east. (‘Maybe we should screen the

legs, rather than the length of the SW if We’re going to check anything at au.‘* Librarian Dorothy Schlos ser, wearing a skirt four inches above her knee, said JrAroundherewe’re trained to dip and dive when bend= ing, so nothing shows. Besides, short skirts help to bring the circulation up.” Mrs. F. Toyota commented, 4‘I like the short skirts. As soon as they go down the economy may get worse. There’s a correlation between skirt length and the economy? A Chevron reporter-photograt pher team checked the skirt lengths of most library employAll but a few had skirts ees. which conformed to the standard conservative image of librarians. Rumors of a Twiggy-like employee who regularly sports minimini-dresses were heard, but she could not be found. “Away at ExJIO”~ they said.

Renison leads residences in 70th Anniversary plans have been refined to Dances, tours, and films will preparations include photos and slides of Village highlight residence activities du+ activities, tours of the available ing Tenth Anniversary Week, Ccfacilities and diagrams ofthevilltober 22-29. The four church colleges are age layout. St. Paul’s will give an audio= working together to present a of the various church-college day with U of T visual presentation aspects of college life with slides, philosophy lecturer Emil Fachenposters and pictures. Parents will heim. be given an opportunity to see the Renison has shown more spirit college and meet the staff in a in its preparations for Tenth Anspecial program on the Sunday. niversary than any of theother reThe Co-op will show rooms and sidence s with a film, 4Renisaction’, other facilities. It hopes to show and a dance in food-services fe that it has been successful in its turing the Reefers. Renison di+ project. plays include an abstract mural of unique cooperative St. Jerome’s will display its the college’ s social and intellectual historical gmwth in an open house activities. A huge papie-mache on Sunday, 10 am to 6 pm. Bullwinkle will adorn the Moose Conrad Grebel will also have an (music) Room, and the snackbar open house. Tours will be conductwill be transformed into a hippie ed Friday and Saturday. haven. Renison% dance wffl be held A preliminary report on Village Thursday, Oct. 26, arriProf. Fackpreparations stated that a room huwould be displayed with (‘Books on enheim’ s lecture, d’Mysticism, and Judaism”, will be the shelves and actual garbage in manism, held October 24 at 8 pm in AL116. the wastebasket,)’ These Village

staff

The Waterloo Co-op, after abad year, is back with a plan for a future that’s better than ever. Alarming financial losses in 1967 forced the Co-opt0 confiscate all standing member loans at the May general meeting. And general manager Al Wood, who sees himself as a spark plug to keep the Co-op running smoothly was absent, for almost eight months. But optimistic plans brightened a review of the gloomy past at the Co-op’s general membership meeting Wednesday night. On Cct&er 1 arrangements were comp&ted to purchase Hammarskjold House, from Co-op College resicknces, a Toronto-based syndicate. They built the residence three years ago. Rent payments over these years had dragged many Co-op budgets into the red. As treasurer Earlby Wakefield put it, “We’ve finished a rough year but have optimistic plans coming up.*’ Wood addressed the membership with his challenge: “Working together, taking measured steps,the co-op can do almost anything it wants. It must be responsible for its actions and proud of its part in today’s world. “1 have unlimited faith in your rosy future.” Not all rosesa however. Early in the meeting near;unanimous consent pointed a censure motion at the Co-op% board of directors. And true to Co-op tradition, less

Village

roughyear /

than 120 members appeared at the meetingdnly a third of the current member ship. In some early remarks&WRecord columnist Sandy Baird expressed his own surprise at the Co-op and spoke of a “growing awareness of U of w” in the coma munity. Sweetening an earlier rem-‘1 have somewhere else Pd rather be tonight’*-he praised student managers. He said the Co-op is acting as a pattern for other developments across the country. Later discussions revealed the Co-op’s current plans for its Phillip St. project-a hybrid comples of 64 apartments and four single= student buildings off University

Avenue. Lee Tokar presented plans that would c‘ correct mistakes made in Hammarskjold House.” Referring to broken walls, he mentioned that Phillip St. would contain exercise rooms, adjacent workshops, carpeted music rooms complete with stereo, and recres tion and commonrooms. The proposed prices too make Phillip St. attractive. They are $360 for a single and $340 for a double. Elections were held for two v% cant positions on the board of digectors. Stan Jasinski and Peter Dunn ‘were the successful candidates. The meeting was then quickly adjourned for want of a quorum, the lengthy business of amending the Co-op bylawspostponedfor the third general meeting ina row.

Group against Vietnam war plans march next Saturday A joint U of W-WUC committee to end the war in Vietnam was formed last week. Organized chiefly by Gray Taylor, the committee’s immediate purpose is to organize for the International Day of Protest. Plans are under way for a march down King Street next Saturday morning. Organizers hope that between 200 and 400 people will meet at the Waterloo cenotaph at 11 am to march to Kitchener city hall, where speakers such as H.D. Wilson and Dr. Walter Klaasen of Conrad Grebel College have been

ruf evicted

asked

to address

the marchers.

The rally will be followed by a bus-and-car cavalcade to Toronto to join the march from Queen’s Park at 430 pm. Demon,strations are planned that day in ebery major city across Canada, the U.S. and Europe. The purpose of the march will be educational, to appeal to peep le’s humanitarianism and rationality. It will also serve asa mo* ale booster for future anti-war activity in the area.

by acimifi

The second floor of North 6 in the Village servedausefulpurpose for the last few weeks. It provided Ratius Gzonivich with a place to livci, free of charge. Unfortunately for him, one of the maids recognized him as a nonresident of that floor and reported him. (North 6 is a women’s residence.) The matter was turned over to the administration. Gzoni, described by Provost William Scott as a crratty type”, was ordered to leave by Saturday. This is not the first time the Village has had trouble with freeloaders. Scott emphasized that taking care of these freeloaders adds to the cost of running the Village, which adds to the fees of the legal residents. Now that Susan Leiberman has to let Gzoni go, she wants to be a,+ sured that he gets a good home. To get this highly intelligent rodent, phone his owner at 576-1749,

TB x-ray van

time on campus

The university population is hereby alerted that it% TB TIME. The Freeport Sanatorium van will be on campus October25-6-7 from 9 in the morning Wl5 inthe p.m.situated in the bus area by the Chem Biology Link. Faculty as well as students are encouraged to take advantage of thisopportunity for a chest X-Ray.. Don’t forget to complete the necessary cards before entering the van.

This evicted Village resident does not want to go0 Friday,

October

13, 7967 (8: 76)‘ 787

3


Co-op corner

Guzzlers get troph) Practice paid off once again as the Co-op walked off with the Beer Barrel and a lot of the beer at Engineering Night. The first Co-op Boat Racing Team consisting of Mike Woolfrey, Don Wea= therbe, Al Bailey, Dave Wilson, and Lee Tokar (anchor) kept alive the winning tradition of the Co-op with a time of 23.2 seconds forthe ten draughts. The second Co-op team lost out in their bid for the Tugboat Tr* phy when they were disqualified

for d( non-continuous drinking”. It seemed that the output of two members of the team equalled previous input. The three consecutive victories entitle the Co-op to possession of the trophy but as they needed something to win next year’ the trophy was returned to the Engineering - Society. Engineering Night also pointed out the new status of Blake House, rest home for refugees from A.A to TV,e annoyance of some of thZ residents. Neil Walsh was elected chai* man of division B council as a re= sult of the elections of Oct. 4. VANCOUVER (C UP)-$lO,OOO On Wednesday, October 11 the from the board of governors for free athletics. ThaC)s what the Co-op held a general meeting in ELlOl. The guest speaker at the board at the University of British meeting ‘vas sandy Baird* Columbia decided. With thisgrant This Saturday the Co-op is holdUBC students will see allon-caming a mortgage burning celebi%+ pus men’s athletics events. free. tion at Hammarskjold Residence, University of Water100 students The Co-op has acquiredownerPaY a $22 a Year athletic feebuton ship of Hammerhouse from Co+ Colleges and is now in a much top of this must buy$5 season ticket to watch “their” athletes play. better financial position.

Free athletics

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ION THAT CAN’T BE ASKED AT THE U OF W. You’ll be free to ask why Plato said something, why copper sulphate turns blue in water, or why your computer program didn ‘t work. But you’ll probably have some difficulty asking why you’re taking lectures with 400 other bodies or why you%e being b.ored’ to death by some incompetent boo b-of-a-& turer or why you’ve got to memorize a profs notes and regurgitate his opinions to get that all-important B.

mouth

BRIDGEPORT (Staff)-% is with considerable regret that I must announce my declining the wst of campaign manager for mowho intheupcoming Fedem tion of Students presidentialeE, &ions. Won’t be long though till the February snows bring the ximpus politicos out on the nlstlings. l

True, last year’s poll was a trifle nonexistent+ as Firebrand Ireland was acclaimed. One cannot criticise the peapie’s prez overly because he has brought a semblance of order to student government. crhey spend more of our money, but they do lt more quietly and Pas& er). But I still can$t believe that Stephen Walter Ireland is really such a quiet conservative activist, 1 Perchanced upon the ultimate in proof of Firebrand?s chicken extremism last weekas I plied the rustic waters of the Grami River near Bridgeport in my gondola, I was passing behind the City of Kitchenetis official incinerator when I spotted a little red book with burned corners. Further inspection showed it to be none other than the Orientation handbook. What in Hades was it doing here? It then occured to me to compare the contents to those of an externally similar copy Oh the emotionaltension when I realized there was a radical change in the text of the presi* dent’s address to the froshl: Instead of the limpid statements the fresh finally received,were these words:

By popular demand, this is reprinted from my very first column (June 9, 1967): “DO you remember the good old days when the local pop&+ tion wouldn’t spit on university students? Well thanks to the efforts of our worthy adminitrailon, things are looking upnow at least they spit on us. (‘Take, for example, Tenth Anniversary Week. A telephone survey of 500 homes indicated that 60 percent of the area% population might attend the open house. Can you imagine 70,000 people trampling over our sitccl red mud? We can*t allow itfs# Well if not prevent it, at least control it. We need every ablebodied body we can conscript. Not just the 1As but even the 2Cs and the 4Fs. We need tour guides who’ll fight for the heart. This is for UniWat, JerryHagey+ Cookie and’ the engineering commonroom.

Such radicalism, Stephen1 And then you have to go and spoil it all by burning a cornplete printed’set of the booklets because you chickened out. Bur Firebrand is making it all up with his travelling-circus itinerary for student council. This way the politicos havelost their security blanket. It was impossible t0 heckle the boys in the plush board room. The last meeting was at Renison and no significant audience reaction was noted, but the circus moves to the l&age this Tuesday9 and the show shouldwarm up a little. Firebrand even has theC*op on the tour! That one I won’t miss. Shades of the Christians and the lions?

WORDS AND ENDS= George Bernard Shaw was at a cocktail party where he asked a society women, “Madam* would you sleep with me for $lOp” 44Of course noti” she replied. 44$1,0001” ’ “1 think not. “Well then* would you sleep with me for $10,00016t VVhy, urn, I think so.” 4dWould you do it for 10 cents?@* 44Neveri What do you think I am?“’ “Mladam thathasalready been e&l&shed. We’re now just quibbling over the price.**

l

THERE

IS NO

Speaking of humor, FASS Nite promotions have made their first appearance. For the fresh and the optometricksters. FASS stands forFryerAdlington&af$ and&dents. My subconcious tendencies would rather call it PHASS night, but then Pd have

QUEST-

You don’t have to be a Presbyterian to enjoy Knox Church, 50 Erb St. W., Waterloo (opposite Waterloo Square and Angie’s), $30 AM and 11 AM Sundays. Study and music rooms available weekday mornings., Phone 745-9843. The Rev. Albeti E. Bailey, MA, ThD, pastor.

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TRANSPORTATION Driving to Passenger Wanted: University of Western Ontario every Friday. Leave early morning, return in evening. Phone 57 8-0414.

1967 Suzuki motorcycle, Best offer. 576=8666

Red MGA, good condition. $350. New shocks and brakes, phone daytime 669-5521, evening 669-2767 Elmira. HELP WANTED Two girls to make coffee morning and noon in engineering faculty lounges. Reasonable rate of pay. Apply Faye Armstrong, dean of engineering office, phone 3137. LOST One Horse-thoughbred Clydesdale stead j GT stripes and fake MG shoes. Required for midnight ride. Apply Fass Knight, Studville. 1961

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Starting Indian institute at Rochdale College LO.

Brenda Wilson and Homecoming

‘6 7 co-chairman Marty McGinnis in another publicity

caper?

BEEP- BEEP

The ROacirunner

philosophy

Canadian Indians may soon have a university of their own. The CanadianIndianYouthCouncil has voted to support an Indian institute to be set up at Toronto’s Rochda.le College in hopes it would later become an Indian universitv. 1Rochdale doesn$t grant degrees and students can select their own study courses. In a brief to the congress, the council~s past president, Harold Cardinal, and Rev. Ian MCKenzie of Rochdale said the institute will 44provide an alternate source of education for Indians.” Tony Mandemin, member of U

A Parital Analysis of the n-owed gldng eyes ar?dlong ters, dressed and painted as a He touches her, she exe Roadrunner Cycle in Ameri- phallic nose* --Soon hf wiy reveal harolot. __ Ns nature as the frustratedengik plodes and Roadrunner% counter can Animated Arts. eering type, showing the brutality attack succeeds.

by Bob Fisher The Roadrunner cycle-coming to Homecoming 67- is one of the best known series in animated films. The secret of its success stems from its appeal to both sixyear-ok& and the Fore sexually aware university group. Now I believe ihe appeal to the younger set derives mainly from the slapstick humor of that mean ole coyote being thwarted at every tur.&-but one should remember Freud’s ideas on six-year-olds. Since this story is intended Iargely for the university reader, I will attempt to deal with the fattor that should make the Homecoming festival a sellout: blatant sexual symbolism. sequence The consistent throughoui the film is that of Wile E. Coyote chasing headfirst after the roadrunner. You will note first that the roadrunner figure is a classic example of the nubile long skinny legs, young virgin: minimal chest, everpresent smile, The coyote follows as the lecher:

of the rapist rather than the subtlety of a seducer. Immediately after being outdistanced by the roadrunner hereturns to his hole to plot his next attempt. He paints out a strip& the highway and leads the picture into an apparent tunnel-in reality solid rock. me roadrunner% naJ+ vity allows it to follow the new road (or morality) unscathed but Wile is mangled when he tries to follow. Next the cpyote sets up aguillotine arrangement on the road that fails as Roadrunner passes. Then as Wile tries to do the same, he is chopped’squarely on the nose, Wile resorts to other aids. He uses a rocket and roller skates in his pathetic attempts to catch Roadrunner. A born loser, Wile finally attempts destruction of his love object. He creates a dynamite loaded decoy to attract Roadrunner. A knock is heard at his door, and a gorgeous female coyote eti

of W% Indian-affairs commissiog agreed. 84Education for Indians is now not tailored for Indian needs. It is an assimilation process* “Rochdale should provide an alternative to learning about their own culture at their grandfather’s knee,” he added. Mandomin emphasized that segregation of Indians into a university of their own does not exclude Indian-white cooperation. 4%2.nada is not a melting pot, but a mosaic,‘9 he said. “Each piece contributes to the whole.” The Rochdale approach is better than other approaches.”

Dief back to college

OTTAWA (CUP)--Dief will Other sequences will come to probably stay in Ottawa. However the Chief won’t be there as a mind even more at theRoadrunner festival at Homecoming 67, but member of Parliament. He has been invited to joti the now explanations of Roadrunner% Institute of Canadian Studies at campus appeal are in order. Carleton University to work on The primary appeal lies in idenDr, Pauline Jewett, tification of a sexual nature. The his papers. a former cabinet minister under campus artsies can identify with Diefenbaker $ and now director this nubile, virginal character, of the institute, confirmed ‘%4r. having read The Book recommendDiefenbaker has been invited to be ed by the good professor. This, of course, leaves Wile as - the resident fellow .” the engineer, frustrated but still plotting for aprize. There is an exceptional lack of wild life in his deserLan exceptional lack of the fernale in the engineering faculty. He therefore turns to companions outside of his immediate circle: the arts faculty. His failures only drive him harder in his .pursuit. He has been trapped by fate into the vicious tip cle of I4 try and fail and try harder”. However there is doubt that he will ever succeed even though his unlimited capabilities should lead to final success.

There has been no definite response from the former primerninister, but several weeks ago he indicated that several secretaries and assistants would s o on be needed. The student newspaper, the Carleton, has found another reason to believe that Dief will be joining the institute. When he vacated the parliament building last month all of the Chief’s debris from the past six years was left in Ottawa.

A bank is a bank is a bankbank.

ExceptTheRoyal. Wdre . a people bank. -Come on in. You’ll seewhat we mean.

Students will find the Yellow Pages one of the most useful reference books around. Looking for Beethoven? Y6u’ll find his records at music dealers and record stores. If you want to hear his works, check under hi-fi-stereo equipment. And, if you’re anxious to play Beethoven’s 5th, look under musical-instrument dealers, pianos or organs. Yes, to bring everything you need out of. hiding, it’s- sound advice to look first in your local Yellow Pages.

RoYALBANI<> We’re approachable.

let your fingers do the walking Friday,

October

13, 9967 (8: 16)

189

5


Paperbucks

Creative

Arts- Calendar

Strictly for squares

.

with

8:00 *p.m. Theater THURS. OCT. 19, of the Arts “‘FOLK FESTIVAL” With performers from many Ontario Universities. All Tickets .50$

MON. OCT. 16, 12il5, Theater of the Arts Dr. Earle Birney Lecture IN HIS WORKSHOP*$ Writer-in “POET Residence of the University of Waterloo Free Admission Tickets TUES. OCT. 17, 1215 Theater of the Arts “A KINGROM FOR A STAGE” A dramatic presentation of scenes from Shakespeare by David & Mita Scott Hedges. Free Admission

AL116 FRI. OCT. 20 12:15 p.m. 4‘BALLERINA” A Film of a day in the life of Canadian Ballet dancer Margaret Mercier. Free Admission

TUES. OCT. 17, 4~15 Theater of the Arts Boris Nelson LectuLe “The Art of Criticism” President of the Music C ritics Association. Free Admission Tickets

FRI. OCT. 20 8:30 p.m. Theater of the Arts ‘(BERLIN PHILHARMONIC OCTET” will play works by Brahms and Schubert. Students $1 .OO Others $2.00

WED. OCT. 18, 1215 Theater of the Arts “CHAMBER* CONCERT” Students from our own campus play works by Mozart, Beethoven and other composers. Free Admission

SAT. OCT. 21 2:30 p.m. Theater of the Arts “A WILDE EVENING WITH SHAW”Richard Gray & Mayo Loiseau dramatize the lives and wit of Oscar Wilde and George Bernard Shaw. Students $1.00 Others $2.00

WED., OCT. 18, 4:15 Theater of the Arts John Ciardi Lecture “WHY READ” Poetry Editor of “The Saturday Review” and former host of theC. B.S. Television Network weekly show “Accent” Free Admission Tickets

SAT. OCT. 21 8:30 Theater of the Arts “COWARD CALLING” RichardGray & Mayo Loiseau present the songs, poems, sketches and plays of Noel Coward. Students $1.00 Others $2.00

THURS. OCT. 19 12~15, AL116 “THE RAILRODDER” A new classic film starring Buster Keaton who rides across Canada on a railroad jigger. Free Admision

“THE EMILY CARR will be open to view Theater of the Arts to 5.00 p.m. 9 a.m. 2-5 p.m. All tickets from the AT254 Ext. 2126 Federation of Students

THURS. OCT. 19, 4:15 Theater of the Arts Rebecca Sisler Lecture “THE MEANING OF SCULPTURE: SCULPAND TURE IN CANADA”

ART in the Mon. and on

EXHIBITION” Gallery of the to Fri. from Sundays from

Theater

be a welcome addition to any chessplayer’s library. Chernev is well-known as the master collector of chess lore. In this work, he dips deep into his massive chess background to provide a compilation of the best chess combinations of all times. The first four chapters consist of little-known gems followed by three chapters on combinations that never happened, combinations that would have been fatal if they had been attempted and combinations that boomeranged.

The man who

all of us

Dynamic chess, by R. N. Coles, General publishing, $2.10 These two new Dover books will

“NUBIAN TREASURES ON THE NILE” Miss Sisler will illustrate her lecture slides. Free Admission Tickets

1215 AL116 MON., OCT. 16 Art Film Series “TOTEMS” North West Pacific Indian Art. “KLEE WYCK” The Life, work and techniques of Emily Carr. Free Admission

The last 14 chapters are devot ed to the combinations of individc ual grandmasters. Unfortunately this 1960 work does not deal with the masters of today. Coles’ book is also historical in nature. It traces the history of the style of chess and goes a long way towards explaining the Russian dominence in chess. Coles begins with the nineteenthcentury combinational style, and shows how Morphy and Steinitz led the way to the classical style of Capablanca and Tarrasch. The author then chronicles the rise of dynamic chess which involves permitting weaknesses to give opportunities winning from the early hypermodern school to today.

Combinations the heart of chess, by Irving Chernev. General publishing, $2.20

Fesf~val Week

hfs

by Charlotte

Helping

CANADIAN

SCHOOL

UNIVERSITY

A HIGH THE THE

Foi those engineers who have watched it and who still don’t know what it’s all about--it% about US. Everybody is a prisoner to some degree in relation to some- or all of his fellows. McGoohan is fighting the System. Zlm watching to see whether he wins. I hope he does* This show will last only one season. The ratings will cut it off. For yourself, watch it just once.

CONTACT:

ryc Enjoy

MR.

the congenial

HATTON

AT

576-1020 . . .

7e

SCHOOL

PROGRAM

SERVICES

TUTORIAL

OVERSEAS

COMM

ITTEE

PROGRAM

CHINA STUDY PROJECT CANADIAN INDIAN PROBLEM

(y..*yp-J-

across from

J

Waterloo

Square

STUDENT TRAVEL IN EUROPE A STUDENT DISCOUNT SERVICE A SEMINAR

OF

INTERNATIONAL

THE STUDENT UNITED A FOREIGN STUDENT

STUDENT

NATIONS WELCOMING

AFFAIRS

Offering

ASSOCIATION PROGRAM

$10.75

a STUDENT worth

MEAL

CARD

of meals for $10.00

A HIGH SCHOOL VISITATION PROGRAM A SEMINAR SERIES FOR FUTURE TEACHERS These

programs

the Federation

and many

more

are sponsored

by the Board

of External

Affairs

of

We at the

of Students.

YOUR HELP IS NEEDED Or many

of these

lack of workers’to

programs

will

have to be dropped

this

year simply

because

Plum Tree Too

of

do the job.

COME

TO

A MEETING

ON 0

Monday, IN

6

190

The CHEVRON

I.

atmosphere

With: A FREE

THE

been some exceptional shows on, at times, but they’re rare, There has never been a series like this One* . It isn’t really a series. The set of programs is like each individual program--it doesn’t matter when you enterWe theall scene. there are You’re always

Help Wanted

Arts Board

ARE YOU INTERESTED?

is

Bezond

We have an opening for an aggressive student to act as our part-time-sales representative within the university complex. Here is an excellent opportunity to subsidize one’s income by a little effort and, at the convenience of the individual. We are a large and well known international organization.

Bo x Office

1 Creative

von

It% about everything (really) in society-any society. ‘The prisoner’ is an hour-long program on the CTV network at 10 Tuesday nights. It is produced (and, it is rumored, often written) by its star, Patrick McGoohan. Anyone who may have been adversely prejudiced by ‘Danger man,, should try to eliminate this bias-just watch him once. Maybe you’ll change your mind. It doesn’t really matte: when you start to watch this program-you can come in after five minutes, or after half an hour-you won’t have missed anything. Don’t misunderstand mcI, please. It is the most worthwhile show on TV that I’ve seen this year. In fact, r 11 risk it-any year so far. There have I

r

In

in review

October AL

105

AT

4 p.m.

16

Gift boutique invites you to brouse through our full selection of different and interesting items at 18 Albert Street in Waterloo. Or visit the small parent shoppe at 4 Erb Street East.

.

*


People In keeping with centennial year, the University of Waterloo has decided to stage an arts festival. The festival will be a week-long affair run.@%? from Sunday October 15 to Saturday October 21. The federation of students and the Centennial Commission are financing the festival. The festival is being held prior to and in conjunction with the tenth anniversary celebrations of the university.

make

A program of first-rate talent with broad appeal has been arranged by the creative arts board of the federation of students on a modest budget. They are the people behind the people you see on this page. Birney

Earle Birney will tell all in the Theater of the Arts on Monday at 4:15 when he speaks on the ‘(Poet in his workshop”. Dr. Birney is Waterloo’s in- residence and visiting sor at this university.

Shadbolt

Doris Shadbolt, acting director of the Vancouver art gallery will be the guest speaker on Emily Carr at 3 Sunday, in the AT building. Mrs. Shadbolt is the author of the definitive biography of BC% greatest landscape painter. The Emily Can? exhibit, which will be in the Theater of the Arts gallery until November 12, is the only major Centennial exhibition of this great Canadian painter’s works. Emily Carr was interested in the landscape of the Pacific Northwest and did a good deal of work in the forests of BritishColumbia She was influenced by the art of the west-coast i&ians.

festival

All events, except the films which are in AL116 and the Mon teverdi quadracen tennial _ which is the PI45 are in the Theater of the Arts.

Earle

Doris

the arts

The popular Berlin Philharmonic Octet will perform selections from its broad repertoire the Theater of the Arts next Friday night at 8:30 as part of the arts festival.

in

Boris Nelson Dr. Boris Erich Nelson will speak in the Theater of the Arts on “The art of criticism*’ Tuesday afternoon at 495.

Writerprofes-

Earle Birney is noted for his outspoken stands on such subjects as the lack of involvement of academics in the real world and has come in out of favor of legalizing mari juana.

Dr. Nelson was borninGermany and holds a certificate from the Munich Conservatory of Music and doctorates in philosophy and literature from Heidelberg and-Goe&. ingen.

Bimey is one of Canada’s few outstanding poets and is well-I+emembered for his novel ‘Turvey’.

He is music critic for the Toledo Blade and is also theater critic for the Newport news. Rebecca Sisler Rebecca Sisler will speak on “The meaning of sculpture: sculpture in Canada” and~~Nubia.n treasures on the Nil@’ in the Theater of the Arts next Thursday at 4’15. Miss Sisler, a sculptress in her own right, and a resident of Terra Cotta, Ontario, attended the Ontario College of Art and went on by scholarship to do two years of postgraduate work at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts. She is primarily interested in Egyptian art, having visited the Nile Valley by Canada Council grant.

John

Ciardi, a native Bosonian, has degrees from Tufts and Michigan and is widely published.

October

Thisis the SUNDAY Opening of the centennial art exhibition, “Emily Carr’ by Mrs. Doris Shadbolt at 3.

Ciardi

John Ciardi will attempt to armwer his own questionL(Why read?” in the Theater of the Arts Wednesday at 4~15. an American poet of CiZLrdi, some note, is the poetry editor of Saturday Review. His column in the magazine, &‘Manner of speaking*, ambles through the English language with amused detachment.

15 - 21

week

that will be

SATURDAY Gray and Loiseau in the dramaUzation “A Wilde evening with

Shaw*’ at 2~30 Gray and’L&eau tization “Coward

in the dramat calli&’ at 8~30.

MONDAY Art films at 12:15-d‘The heart of the thing*’ and ‘( Klee WY&~. c6The poet in his workshop*’ with Earle Birney at 415. TUESDAY “A kingdom for a stage”Shakespearean readings with David and Mita Scott Hedges at l&15. ‘The ad of criticism” with Boris Nelson at 415. WEDNESDAY Music program with Alfred Ku.nz at 12:15. r&Why read” with John Ciardi at 415. Monteverdi quadracentennial in P145 at 8, with records. THURSDAY Buster Keaton in “The de? at 12115. Rebecca Sisler lectures meaning of sculpture: in Canada” and “Nubian es on the Nile” at 4~15. Amateur folk festival

Richard Gray and Mayo Loiseau present two dramatizations in the Theater of the Arts next Saturday. A Wilde evening with Shaw (2:30) and Coward Calling (8:30) above.

Railrodon“The sculpture treasup at 8,

FRIDAY “Ballerina”-a film at 12.15, The Berlin Philharmom~ Octet in concert at 8:30.

David and Mita Scott Hedges will read from Shakespeare in A kingdom for a stage 12: 15 Tuesday in the Arts Theater.

Vi& tong tactics for concerts Keep Your eyes for live noontime at various outdoor pus. The creative-arts soring the best in

open this week entertainment spots on camboard is spob student ttient Friday,

in a special week of action while the weather is fine. If all goes well there will be an increase in noontime concerts in the various amphitheaters throughout the campus. October

13, 1967 (8: 16)

191

7


.DePoe-the

hippie’s

spokesman by Sandy Savlov Chevron

David DePoe, spokesman for

Yorkville’s

hippie

population sounds off in his apartment. (Chevron photo by Dave WiZmot)

DIRK BOGARDE STANLEY BAKER and JACQUELINE SASSARD’in the JOSEPH losE!podUion l

NOW PLAYING

staff

TORONTO--“The ordinary cola lege student today feels that sex should be kept within marriage or perhaps within thecontext of a good relationship, a continuing relationship. “I don’t feel that relationship is necessary. sex is something that happens.” said David DePoe, a member of the Company of Young Canadians working with the hippies cd Yorkville and himself very much a member of Toronu?s flower people. The articulate youth with the reddish beard and slight build has become the spokesman for Toronto’s hippies--interpreting their philosophy to the adult soci~ty around them. To DePoe a hippie is U a person who has dropped out of society and is doing something socially or personally to change sotiety. He’s dropped into something else. Hippies are not created by Yorkville but by society.” Like the hippies he represents, 229year-old DePoe has dropped out. First out of university--after two years he was @tier notably active nor sucessful--then out of the business world. *‘Actually I was fired-1 guess for insolence. I went in and told the personnel officer I didn’t like the cruel way he was mistreating the girls.” For the salary of $35 a month plus rent and food provided by the CYC DePoe has become a father-figure community organizer and liason officer for the hippie community--composes mainly of 17 and 18 -year-old boys with long hair and scruffy clothe% DePoe himself lives in Yorkville in a tworoom flat above .of a cartage company. offices There he held court--among old newspaper clippings and gedleral clutter, to the music of mothers of Invention and Country Joe and the Fish, beneath the watchful eyes of Barry Goldwater, Alan Ginsberg and Chairman Moastaring out from oversized wall posters, each with a sequin between the eyes representing “metaphorically the third eye”. Seated opposite us, DePoe attempted to justffy the hippies’ way of life. ‘vorkville is one of the few

places where kids have a chance to learn. We are a group focusing attention on society as it exists and calling sdety into question, True ‘hippies in Yorkvllle are a minority taking part in a measure of involvement concerned with making our society a better place to live. Music has changed, has content. “I don’t believeindrugs-they’re an escape. For maybe 20 percent it’s a meaningful experience, ,for 60 percent it’s a.n acapes for 20 percent it’s harmful and therefore should be controlled.” Have you ever taken

LSD?

“Yes, I have taken it, but the only reason I admit it is because it fs legal to take LSD. I took it under the care of a psychiatrist, “After I’d taken half a dozen people to the Ontario Hospitalwith LSD phychosis I felt it should be controlled and used only under a psychiatrist. Would

“No, reports

you take it again?

not nowI not with all those of chromosome damage.”

If you don’t believe in drugs why do you back the movement to legalize marijuana?

“Marijauna is not harmful, but the movement is a helpful experience in changing the law”. “‘I know the drug market in Toronto. I know how it operates and 90 percent of the drugs never reach Yorkville,” DePoe defined love in terms of community responsibillry. ‘%rkville is the only place I’ve ever been that -people do try to understand love. It has nothing to do with sex. It’s based. on understanding or clear perception of situatfons. You can love without liking. It involves respects responsibility to the other person. Then broaden the concept to other people.” He saw Yorkvffle as a place for young people who cannot or will not fit into society. “To what kind of society and why should people adjust to it, when that society is so unsatisfying. Yorkville is a symptom of greater problems .+’ But Yorkvillestillhas problems, judging by DePoe*s daily routine. Most days are spent solving the basic problmes finding kids places to stay, clothes to wear and food to eat.

_I

Feature

Times in sand, brushed leather ( genuine plantation crepe rolea)

MADE

IN ENGLAND 4laks

“Like a punch in the chest. Put together breath by breath, look by look, lust by lust, lie by lie. A compelling film.” -Newsweek

ODEON

Magazine,

THEATRE

312 King St. W. Phone 742-9161

8

192

The CHEVRON

Parr k Wailer Shoes 150

King

W.,

Kitchener

745-7124


Ifs and butts dep’t

The cigarette--a by Nancy Chevron

Men of action A recent sm

Stanfield’s headquarters conta menace and requiring a notice on ed 32.7 percent more cigarette every package of cigarettes: CAUbutts, 14.2 percent more pipeashTION-THESE MAY BE HARMes and 3.8percent more cigar stubs FUL An ominous attempt to than those in Pearson% offices. deter smokers. It was also noted that the Rt. Speaking to chemists on the subHon. John Diefenbaker has recent+ ject, however, we are presented ly given up smoking. with a more logical danger. Some Actually though, this subject, of them contend &at the combuswith its effects and side-effects, tion of the nitrogq hydrogen and has been a source of studyforpsyw carbon compounds in a cigarette chologists, sociologists, chemm may result in vertigo. This slight ists and medics for a number of dizziness may be the result of years. Surprisingly enough the carbonyl hemoglobin en t er i ng consensus among these learned parts of the brain. Inotherwords, men is that smoking presents a you get a form of carbon-monoxide hazard to mind, body and soulpoisoning similar to a sealed car with no ifs and butts about it. also burning carbon, hydrogen and You are well acquainted with nitrogen compounds or like being the deathly verdict handed downby poisoned by the smoke of aburning the medics. They contend that the house. Explained In lay terms this smoker has a significant chance theory is quite plausible. of contracting cancer. This is not Now we must consider the SOI a haphazard guess but a theory ciologists’ view. To him smoking supported by experiments. If rats is a social disease. For instance, who smoke can get cancer, why the woman smokes because she can’t we? lives in a society which stresses The U.S. government has erased By forfeiting some of equality. all doubts by recognizing thepublic her femininity in the act of smoking, she is set on the same level as man. PRESTON PUBLIC As for the psychologist, he gives LIBRARY

capital has confirmed this theory which psychologists have sluppori+ ed for some time. Results of the survey showed that ashtrays at

Murphy staff

smoke more! in the n&o&

curse to man?

And as Fred Davis always says, “Remember when you’re smoking deMaurier on a CN train, do it in the smoking compartmen t. ”

l-

Requires

CHIEF

LIBRARIAN

Preference will be given to B.A., BLS but consideration will be given to any qualified Librarian.

Lakehead students to pay for administration gOOf

apply

“It was the duty of the adminisPORT ARTHUR (CUP )-A contration to ensure that the faculty frontation has developed between were aware of academic requirestudents and administration at ment s. We will not be penalized Lakehead University. because of lack of communication The university is trying to have between administration and faculstudents pay for administrative ty”. errors tonne cted with fall regi+ The committee, made upof third t ration. and fourth year students, has deFor some students this means manded immediate withdrawal of changing courses and buying new the memo and its ruling. books or these courses when they Asked about the requiredchangalready have books for the ones es at an open meeting of students they registered for. The problem arose because the dean of arts Gordon Rothney said “This is too bad. But we allmake calendar was issued two weeksafmistakes, don’t we?’ ter registration. Asked who would pay for _new Professors counselling students books if students were forced to at registration had special Xerox change courses, he replied ‘41 copies of the calendar to work can’t help it if you’ve bought the from. But the administration has is- wrong books”. sued a memorandum to students The memorandum has put into saying they must check their coure question the advice given byfaculses against the new calendar, and ty members at registration. The if courses conflict with regub student committee feels the adminshould assume respontions therein the courses must be istration sibility for the error. changed. All course schedules must be The student committee has recI approved by faculty deans. ommended to the administration A hastily-formed student comthat: mittee is protesting the move. -,a student be governed for all The committee issued a statehis years by the calendar issued to ment saying they”...are commithim as a freshman student ted to remain with the courses in -Chairmen of departments be which we are now registered? responsible or all programs ap “Our courses were approved by proved by members of the departthe faculty member at registration. ment’s teaching staff, If the people who approved our -in future, all freshmen be programs were not authorized to counselled at registration by an do so they should not have been at authorized person. registration nor should we have _ The committee met with univerbeen instructed to see them**, the sity president W. 6. Tamblyn and committee’s statement said. arts dean Rothney, withno results,

us the benefit of a doubt and suggests perhaps smoking does facilitate decision-making. In the same breath, he also notes that we smoke in order to conform. We also smoke for lack of anything better to do. Thanking allof theseprofessionals for their dedication, we must now consider the only course open to us-quitting. But how? After lengthy experimentation, we find that complete withdrawal must be gradual. Oh for the good old days? Did you know that they cigarettes I used to spray Turkish With saltpetre? It aided combustion. It-must have been easy to quit under those conditions. However, we have a difficult problem now-so let us again consult the specialists for advice. The medic states that withdrawal should be undertaken only under the care of a trained specialist. Then the chemist came up with cabbageeleaf cigarettes. It’s just as effective as saltpetre, The sociologist suggests that society x-establish femininity as a norm and girls at least will quit.

to

MRS. H. A. BORDEN 666 Queen Street Preston

L.

@Coffee and spagheffi house’ 32 King Street South (3rd floor) 744-2911

Monday

l

- Thursday

Impromptu entertainment .50~ minimum

Friday

- Saturday

Professional $1 minimum

-Sunday

entertainment

Tihr’s week

feafudiag:

See, ii&e bunnies Ba3 for Peal... .

you

Walter Gibbons - Friday & Saturday Greg Herring Trio _ Sunday

The Board of Publications!

New

Literary (a biannual invites

*POETRY

&SHORT

Editor,

in

* ESSAYS

is November

New Literary

PS. Name suggestions

submissions

STORIES

Closing date for submissions

Magazine

production)

*HUMOUR

10, and they

Magazine,

for this new literary

Board

*DRAMA

are to be addressed

to:

of Publications.

publication

will be welcomed.

wwur

I nompsvll,

Friday,

October

Ilailaycw

13, 1967 (8: 16)

193

9


Queen’s

continues

on winning

Seyskutchewan CALGARY (CUP)-The Univer,their third win of the season by sity of Saskatchewan Huskies are losing 19-7 to the resurging Uniall alone at the top of the Western versity of Alberta Golden Bears. C an a d a Intercollegiate Athletic Saskatchewan opened the scoring Association football conference afa quarter when they ter defeating the University of * in the first forced the Bison punter to co* Manitoba Bisons 13-3, Saturday cede a safety touch after a poor for their third consecutive victory On their next offensive SW. of the season. series the Huskies scored again Meanwhile, the University of fieldgoal by Gord Calgary Dinosaurs failed to get with a 33-yard

way

pulls , uhecfd

Garvie. After QB Brian Foley hit Dave Williams in the endzone for a 20-yard touchdown, the Huskies went to halftime with a 12-O lead. After threatening in the third quarter, the Manitoba Bisons had to settle for a fieldgoal by Garry Cobett. Husky punter Al Chase closed out the scoring with a 45yard kick into the endzone late in the fourth quarter. ‘.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-*-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-,~ t...................................,., *.............................

ATHLETIC INTERCOLLEGIATE

SCHEDULES 4 pm-Phys-ed vs Nortn Monday (Columbia field) 4~30 pm-West vs North 5x30 pm-South vs phys-ed Tuesday (Columbia field) 430 pm-Math vs arts 5:30 pm-Engineering vs science Wednesday (Columbia field) 4:30 pm-East vs phys-ed 5230 pm- West vs South

.

TRACK AND FIELD Today vs McMaster-Seagram, Monday vs Western -Seagram, FOOTBALL Tomorrow

Vs.

SOCCER Wednesday

vs Guelph-Seagram,

4:15 4:15

McMaster-Seagram,

1:30 3:00

WOMEN’S TRACK AND FIELD Wednesday at Western

SOCCER Sunday (Columbia field) 1 pm-West vs North 2 pm-South vs phys-ed 3 pm-St. Paul% vs Grebel 4 pm-Co-op vs Renison

INTRAMURAL FOOTBALL KICKING Tomorrow-Bauer BASKETBALL Tuesday 6:30 pm-St.

CONTEST Field, 10 am

(all at St. David%

Sunday (Bauer field) 1 pm-Engineering vs grads 2 pm-Science vs arts Thursday (Columbia field) 4~30 pm-Math vs arts 5: 30 pm--Engineering vs science

gym)

Paul’s vs Conrad Grebel Science vs arts 7:3O pm-Co-op vs Renison Engineering vs grads 8:30 pm-Phys-ed vs Village North 9:30 pm-Village South vs East

Wednesday (Court B) 7:30 pm-Renison vs St Jerome’s 8:00 pm-Co+p vs St. Jerome’s 8:30 pm-East vs West 9:00 pm-South vs West 9:30 pm-Grads vs math 10:00 pm-Engineering vs math

LACROSSE Sunday (Bauer field) 3 pm-South vs East

/

Ski Film! Gmoser

tours

Monday,

CCI FC results

VOLLEYBALL (St. David% gym) Wednesday (Court A) 7:30 pm--Grebel vs Co-op 8~00 pm--Grebel vs Renison 8~30 pm-North vs South 9:00 pm-North vs East 9:30 p-Arts vs enginering lo:00 pm--Arts vs grads

FLAG FOOTBALL (Columbia field) Monday 4:30 pm--Math vs arts 5:30 pm-Engineering vs science Tuesday 4:30 pm--West vs North 5:30 pm-South vs Phys-ed Wednesday 4:30 pm-St. Paul% vs Conrad Grebel 5:30 pm-Co-op vs Renison

Hans

. . . . . . . .

the

Selkirk

November

Range

in BC

20, at 8 in

KCI Auditorium DROP IN FOR DETAILS AND

TICKETS: /

$1 FOR STUDENTS WITH ID CARDS

COLLEGE SPORTS (Kitckener) 38

QUEEN

ST., SOUTH

743-2638 Monday L

10

1!M

The CHEVRON

- Saturday

9 - 6 Friday

9 - 9

LTD.

In Edmonton, three plays were all the Alberta Golden Bears needed to dump the Calgary Dinosaurs. The Bears scoredatouchdown on an 8%yard run by Dave Kates on the first play of the game. They scored again in the third quarter as-Les Sorenson took advantage of a short kick and a roughing penalty to score on a two-yard plunge, making the score 13-O. Their third TD came on a 52yard romp around left end by Larry Dufresne in the last quarter. In the late minutes U of Calgary fullback Ray Boettger ran six yards forthe only Dino tally. The Dinosaurs are protesting their 22-13 loss to AlbertSeptember 30 and their coach, Dennis Ka= datz, is asking for a replay of the game on November 18 if it will make a difference for first place in the WCIAA. In the game, Calgary was leading 7-l when the Bears blocked a punt, kicked it into the endzone and Bear Lyle Culham pulled DinoDon Maxwell away from the ball, allowing the Bears to recover. Bears were called for interference but were given the ball on the Calgary 10, from where they scored the goahead Kadatz said “There’s little doubt in my mind that the play cost us the ball game. Unfortunately it appears a mistake was made.”

OTTAWA (CUPa onesided game the McMaster Marauders obliterated the University of Guelph Redmen 44-O in the Central Canada Intercollegiate Football A strong defense, Conference. which did not allow asingleGuelph first down in the first half, plus strong McMaster running (especially off=tackle) resulted in the lopsided victory. The Redmen never threatened offensively, and the score might have been higher except for a rash of penalties to McMaster in the third quarter which nullified good Marauder gains. In Waterloo, defense and spec, ialty squads accounted for three out of four touchdowns as the Waterloo Lutheran Golden Hawks defeated the Loyola Warriors 27-l. Paul Hendershot scoredtwo touchdowns fortheHawks,oneonanendzone recovery of a Loyola puntreturn fumble, and the other on his own punt return. The other TDs came on a 25-yard pass to Dave Mackay and a 40-yard pass inter+ ception by ‘Adrian Krayvald, Bishops University Gaiters, who led the CCIFC last week, were defeated by the Macdonald Aggies 22-10. Halfback Winston Ingals, the leading scorer in the league last year, scored two TD% in the Aggie victory. The second was a 90-yard kickoff return to open the second half and make the score 21-O. In other weekend play, theLaur+ entian Voyageurs came off of defeats of 60-O and 62-O in their first two starts to lose again, this time by 92-0, at the hands of the Ottawa Gee-Gees. The Gee-Gees compiled over 900 yards offensively in the game. And in Montreal, the Royal Military College Redmen defeated the University of Montreal 35-33, in a closely fought game,

sive 42-14 victory oxr the University of Western Ontario Mustangs. The Golden Gaels built up a 300 score under the quarterbacking of Don Bayne before the Mustangs were able to score on a dive from the two. Bayne, the league’s most valuable player last season, threw three touchdown passes, and backup QB Bill McNeill threw another. Don McIntrye was the leading scorer, picking off two of the passes for TDs of 10 and 20 yards. The second Western TD came in the last minute of play. In Toronto, a casual and sloppy game ended in triumph for the Va+ sity Blues as they beat McGill Redmen 35-6. Neither team showed any stability, but McGill’s seven fumbles and five intercepted passes, made the difference. If Toronto’s timing was bad, McGill% was nonexistent. Varsity defensive halfback Riivo Ilves intercepted two passes from rookie quarterback Steve Reid and took them into the endzone for maAll-star flanker Mike Eben jors. also scoredtwo TDs onpass receptions. The only R e d m an touchdown came on a 64-yard pass-and-run play from George Wall to Pete Bender in the third quarter. It’s not that McGill doesn’t try. The Redmen are feared by every coach in the SIFL. They’ve always tough physically and when you’ve, finished with them you know you’ve been in a game, even if the scoreboard does not say so. But head coach Tom Mooney is faced with the same problems every year. One-third of his players graduate, another third fail. This leaves Mooney with a situation like this year’s where he has 10 veterans compared to 20 rookies and’s team that is smaller in size than the average Toronto high school team. McGill’s defense put on a gritty display before 8,451 opening game fan at varsity Stadium only to have its efforts nullified by an offense that looked like it was forthe Blues.

Last

Saturday’s

games

WCIAA:

Calgary 7 at Alberta Manitoban 3 at Sask. SIFL: McGill 6 at Toronto Western 14 at Queen’s MICA: Dalhousie 8 at Acadia CCIFC: Loyola 1 at Lutheran Carleton 25 at Waterloo15 RMC 35 at Montreal Bishop* s 0 at Macdonald Laurentian 0 at Ottawa Guelph 0 at McMaster

Leaguk WCLAA

Saskatchewan Alberta Calgary Manitoba UBC SIFL Queen’s Toronto McGill Western CCIFC McMaster Lutheran Carleton Bishop’s Waterloo Ottawa SI FL results Macdonald OTTAWA (CUP&-Defending RMC champion Queen% Golden Gaels of Guelph the Senior Intercollegiate Football Montreal League opened the SIFL season Loyola (‘in the winning way” with a deci- - Laurentian

19 13 35 42 19 27 33 22 91 44

standings P W L, Pts 4 3 1 6 3 2 1 4 4 2 2 4 4 1 3 2 1010

F 47 49 52 34 0

A 35 36 49 51 9

1 1 1 1

42 35 6 14

14 6 35 42

1 1 0 0

2 2 2 2 2 2 3 2 2 1 2‘ 1 2 1 2 1 3 1 3 1 2 0 3 0

0 0 1 1

2 2 0 0

0 4 79 15 0 4 39 11 0 4 46 28 1 4 18 35 1 2 75 25 1 -2 106 35 1 2 35 20 1 2 48 54 2 2 72 56 2 2 65 64 2 0 2 29 3 0 0 213


Fumbles

First

c‘

costly loss

for the by Brian

first touchdown of the game at the three-and-*half-minute ma& Another Warrior score failed “Four fumbles in good field to materialize afterthe Warriors position&hai sure as hell hurt had a first down on the Carleton 5. After two downs the ball had been us.)) Carl Totzke, head coach of the moved only one yard and McKillop dropped back for a pass. He was Wa&Xs, seem* disappointed with his team’s performance as chased and threw a quickpassto they were defeated by theCarl* Brian mine, who was dropped well ton Ravens 25-15. behind the line of scrimmage. The “1 know we’ve got a better team Ravens took over on their own 23. than we showed out there. Maybe Carleton began to take control we were a little overconfident a& in the second quarter, but they ter last week.‘? could not get in scoring position It was the Warriors’ first loss until about halfway through the in CentralCanadianIntercollegiate SW. Football Conference play. On a third-and-five situation Carleton end John Rodrique led Gary Lamourie galloped 26 yards his team with twotouchdowns,both to the Warrior 12-yard line. Two on passes from quarterback Al more PJW S moved theRavens to the Morissette in the fourth quarter. one. Other Carleton touchdowns were The Warrior line held them scored by Dan McCarthy and Bruce back twice, but on the third down, Morissette passed tu M&arthy McGregor. Mike Sharpe converted in the endzone. Morissette’s & only one touchdown. Ian Woods and Bob McKillop tempt ti a two-point passing conscored TDs for the Warriors. Al version was incomplete. Haehn booted converts for both, Waterloo maintained control of and McKillop roundedoutthe Scotthe ball through the rest of the ing with a single. quarter but could not score. Early in the game it looked asif Waterloo% first scoring in the the Warriors would have little second half came as McKillop trouble with their adversaries.Ian kicked the ball out of the endzone Woods romped 26 yards for the for a single. Chevron

A weak pass defense hindered the Warriors in their game against Carleton last week. The Ravens won 2.5~15.

Residence by Paul Solomonian and Gord Dearborn

The Warrior’s second touchdown came after a 56-yard drive infour The most spectacular of plays. these was a 4%yard pass-andrun play to Finden. McKlllop then went over from the one for the touchdown. The Ravens finally broke loose in the final quarter with three TDs. Morissette passed to M+ Gregor and Shaxpe converted. The Ravens got the ball across the line again but it was called back on a clipping penalty. It looked as if Lady Luck was sm& ing on the Warriors that time. But she didn’t smile for long, as Morissette passed to Rodrique to make the score 19-15. The conversion attempt was blocked. Rodrique got his second TD in the closing seconds to kill any Warrior chance of pulling the game out of the fire. The Warriors led in the rushing department with 223 yards to the Raven’s 187. But passing is where the story is told as the Ravens amassed 189 yards to the Warriors 94. Irvine led Waterloo in rushing with 115 yards while Finden led in passes with 86 yards. McKillop completed seven of 15 pass attempts with two interceptions.

staff

League

The only other event that produced a near-record effortwasthe triple jump, where Doug Ingster Chevron staff two and a half Two records were broken and turned in 39’8.5*‘, miles short of the current standanother was challenged in the inard. tramural track and field meets Chris Cooper; phys-ed, covered last week. The residence league, the 440 in 57.3. having staged the most successful league meet, dominated the finals Unofficial results showed teams at Seagram Stadium on Tuesday, from the residence circuit winning Paul Driedger of Conrad Grebsix of 14 events, three bjj St, el covered 20’6” in the long jump Paul%. Phys-ed also won three, final, eclipsing the record of 20*- with ConradGrebelandmathtaking l/2’* set in 1963. SteveStruthers, two apiece. phys-ed, pared a tenth of a setSt. Paul’s appeared the overall ond off the IOO-yard mark with a winner with severalp!ace and show 10.5 second showing in the Village efforts. Final and official standmeet. Struthers went on to win ings will appear next week, his event in the final.

wcwriors

Clark

l

tops- In track

Other sports were hampered by defaults and the holiday. Thanksgiving wrought havoc on team sports as games were re-scheduled in all three events. Players are advised to check the schedule printed in the Chevron for future games. Soccer Soccer action produced the only results this week as Village North was shut out 2-O by phys-ed and South topped East 2-l.

league in place of St. Jerome’sand Conrad Grebel. The remaining maih and engineering schedule thus reads: Tues. Oct. 17 4:3&Co-op vs Eng 5=30-Math vs. St. Paul.s Mon. Oct. 23,4r301Math vs Renison Tues. Oct. 24 4t30-Eng vs St..Pauls Wed. Oct. 25 5r3bMath vs Eng, Anyone interested in learning lacrosse skills should attend the lacrosse clinic on Sunday at 1 at Seagram Stadium.

Lacrosse Because of the numerous defaults in lacrosse it has been dw tided to move the math and engineering teams into the residence

Football-kicking This contest, originally scheduled for last Saturday, has been moved to tomorrow. Kicking sbrb rainorshi.neatlOatSeagram Stadium. Finals will be featured at halftime of the WarriopMcMaster game in the afternoon.

must register at these times. Fees will be $5 for both semesters or $3.50 until Christmas. Other events -Volleyball and basketballare underway at St. David% gym, 4 High Street, Waterloo. All players should come out when their unit is scheduled, even if they missed practices last week. -Hockey practices start TuesReferees are needed for &Y. these three sports. Any interesG ed persons are- asked to contact Paul Condon at Seagram gym, local 3152. *mMcMaster and RMC come to town today to compete against the Warriors inatriangulartrack~ and-field meet. Action starts at seagramstadium. m*The rugger Warriors will try to come into being with an organ& s&ional meeting inCB 295 onMow day at 5:15. Anyone interested should contact George Tuckat 576 9257. *-Squash players should note an invItational meet between the University of Toronto and U of W at the K-W Racquet Club, 3’8 Duke Street on Thursday from 7:30 to 10 p.m. Spectators are welcome.

Curling There is still room for about 60 more members in the curling club. Registration forthefall semester will be held at the Granite Curling Club, on Agn&s Street in Kitchener$ between 3~30 and 5:30 &is Tuesday and Thursday. All people interested in curling this term, whether they attended the O?Tg~tiOnal meeting or not,

Mat

drops soccer Warriors

It was a bad weekend all round for the Warriors. While the football Warriors were losing to the Carleton Ravens at Seagram Sb dhun, the soccer Warriors were losing 44 to McMaster in Hamll-

ton,

The 4000 spectators at the Canadian National Hillclimbing Championship saw Iots of spills as compeditors raced their bikes up 220-foot Mount Kuhn at Heidelburg last weekend. (Chevron phdto by Brian Clark)

.

The team -mavery slow S&I% and because of a defensive lapse found themselves behind 2-O after 10 mimttes of play. Both the M* Master goals were unforlamak one went in off the crossbar and be other went iK&cidentally off a stray foot. The MeMaster team led 3-O at the half, but when the teams came back on the field there was a new Waterloo squad. Led by Ed Marc phy the Warrior defense improved Friday,

greatly and the Warriors controlti ed the play for the whole second half. Sieve Bedford played agreat game in god and made a sparkling save in the second half, He stopped a shot with his head only to have the McMaster team score as he was still groggy. Unlike the McMasterteamwhich has played eight games this year, the Warrior squad lacks game confidence. Most of the players have played for semi-pro teams, but the team needs some experienceplaying together. There are two different squads naking upthevarsititeam-atotal of 28 players. Team A played at Western Wednesday at 3 in a league game. Team B met Lub eran on Thursday.

October

13, 196i

18: 16)

195

11


\

\\

Sk+. a& 2a


, At that Tuesday is election day in On&io. time, the government for the next four years in Ontario will be chosen. It is not hard to guess who will win. The Tories will get back in with a comfortable margin in the legislature. The NDP will form the opposition and the Liberals will be left out with only a handful of seats. The surprising difference will be found in the vote totals of the parties. The Progressive Conservatives will find that they have slumped badly since 1963. The NDP will have made a breakthrough in votes if not in seats, and the Liberals will find that their vote is the old faithful, slightly reduced by attrition. I doubt Laurier Lapierre’s prediction about a minority Tory government, but it sure sounds nice. If the election is so cut and dried, why should I now be suggesting ways for you to cast your votes? The reason is quite simple. Another seat--and that’s what the student vote in Waterloo North could mean-would come in handy for the NDP. 1 Why the NDP? Well, if anyone is happy with the way the present government is running things, they’re a Tory. Pm not happy, and I have seen what has happened to the bright young people who try to reform the Liberal party and try to pretend that the Liberals are not the party of the establishment. The major problem is that the Liberals have muddied the differences between themselves and the NDP to such an extent that it is hard to choose between the two. ’ The simplest way to compare the similar planks of the two parties is to ask two questions: Which party thought of it first? Which party has a base of support that will act against the implementation of this program? This should be of’ some help. The NDP candidate is Ted Isley. @orley Rosenberg in Kitchener.) Happy voting. * They say that Che Guevara is dead. They may even be right this time but it’s not the first time they’ve claimed to have done Che in. Dead or alive, the little Argintinian physician will continue to shake Latin American governments with his ideas. Che fought oppression for the last 15 Years, and it was ideas, not money, that inspired him to continue the struggle. Ten years ago he provided Fidel Castro with

How to grow ivy on Villuge walls To the editor: Physical-plant and plagiarism has done it again. The social-science building-the one without the theater or the big lecture hallswell it’s to be narned the Isaish Bowman building. At last a striking personality has struck our campus. At last the ivy will begin to grow on the walls of our architectural beauties. We are coming of age,

the techniques to oust the corrupt, American-backed government of Cuba. After that, Guevara participated in the successr. ful effort to make the Cuban revolution work, but he felt the call to go to the aid of the revolution throughout South America. He disappeared from the limelight, but his very name caused governments to tremble. The revolutionaries of the mid4960s were laboring under the mis-conception that the Cuban revolution was the prototype for all revolutions. They failed to see that the transfer of power from Right to Left in Cuba was basically a putsch. Although he enjoyed popular support, Castro did not construct the political infrastructure necessary in a people’s war, These revolutionaries suffered heavy losses because they could not defeat the American-trained counterinsurgency forces. The coming of Che meant a change.His strategy could almost be called Maoist in its emphais on the need to win over the populace in the battle against imperialism and its children of woe-economic dislocation and dictatorship. Guevara realized that the only way to defeat the superior arms the Latin American governments obtained from the United States was to establish the great mass of the peasantry as members in the re volution. This is atime forgreat change in Latin America. Che inspired much of what is to come. It’ he is dead, he will still be rememberd as the Latin American Marx. % The Americans seem quite determined to build that surveillance barrieracross South Vietnam. They may even traverse Laos to the Thai border, a total distance of about 200 miles. The Americans hope it will shorten the war. It probably will. The ventual American bug-out will be speeded up by this move. The line proposed would consist of mechanical detection devices and strongpoints to defend these devices and to react against hostiletroop movements. These strongpoints are just what the North Vietnamese regulars have been waiting for. They would become fixed ta=ets for the artillary of the People’s Army of Vietnam and would be chewed up by shell ar&ocket fire. American casualties would mount until the American home front crumbled and the Americans were forced out of Vietnam. It is not in the rice paddies but in the back patios that a decision to end this war will come.

had given you a name and stamped it on every card and form YOU saw? As humans, we are ovep whelmed with security symbols--a student number, a sociabinsurante number, a driver’s license number, a parking decal number, a telephone number, a hospitalization number, a . . . . . . . . The administration could have such fun labelling these houses. They could show their true loyalties. Perhaps a Robarts quadrant, on to six, and a Davis houses quadrant, with possible a Nixon quadrant to appear unbiased, And there has to be a Dief the Chief house (decorated with headdresstit* David Prentice, Fred Walters, es), a Hagey house,.... Marty Ward, Pete Wilkinson But this makes them all sound advertising: Gary Robin, Brian like corner pubs, and such asinful v~@Youtl . association would never do. Maybe sports: Paul Cotton (footbEsll), the House of Eydt would be more Pamomonian and Gord DearOr possibly a more acaborn (intramural), Karen Wanless ,’ tasteful. demic approach might be receiv~intramural), Ken Fraser (layout) circulation: Jim Bowman (maned more readily-how about Plumwwakker ber’s Paradise or the Science Don Kerr, George cartoons: Slough? Yes, I am sure the administraLom;g Koch, Edmund Stan= tioh would receive great satisfaevicius tion from this endeavoq. Or mayToronto staff: Sandy Savlov,Ian be, just maybe, they would let the Mirrion, Ralph Bishop (photo), students name them. After all, Ek Heidebrecht (advertising) we live in them1 Hurrybackgod.lO$~shavingtroubSNU PEE lestayinglC%withoutyou.Youtoo~ civil 3B hatchapek.

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Reflecting on this great bit of new-found class and prestige for the university community got me to thinking. I recollected that the Village has 26 massive slabs of concrete, one for each house, just waiting to be labelled. Maybe they% still waiting until the Village gets “wet” enough for a suitable christening celebration. This bare massive label must leave the building dejected, with a feeling of unwantedness--anoutcast. How would you feel if no one

Whodunit news and feature?: Andy Lawrence (acting assigning editor), Mary Bull, Diane Elder (desk), Bryon Cohen (PP&P), Les Rose (election), Ian Lacey, Doug S~Z+ born, Renzo Bernardini, Eleanor Peavoy, Rich Mills Dave Wilmot @‘enth Anniversary), Nancy Murphy, Julie Begemann, Bob Swift (reTerry Wright, search), Fred Dennis (Village), Virginia--and others whom the editor haeforgotten already (apologies) ‘r entertainment: Charlotte von -.-.-.r-’ Bezold, Prudence Edwards photo: --AC._) Ken Collins, Paul Frac leigha Len Greener, Barry Johnson, Richard Nancarrow, Don Pet-

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(8: 16)

197

13

I


-CAM

PUS QUESTION

Why

did you choose Martin

Connie computer

2A

Judy

chemistry

Paul

3

1 like

Jane ,

I

Dan

Lawson

math

1

Waterloo has the best Math faculty in my opinion, in Ontario.

Barket

, biology

IA

The co-op system at Waterloo made me come here more than any other school.

,

science

Breckenridge

grad ph ys-ed

Kozluk

Because computers.

I-

I couldn’t get into any other school because I didn’t get French in 13

Because I couldn’t get in anywhere else.

University of W* terloo is the best school offering the one year course in phys. ed

of Waterloo?

the University engineering

2

Howes

Nancarrow

Bill Jones

Sharpe

English

Bob

By Richard

freshwater The biology course Offered at Uof Wti terested me.

Storey

phys-ed & English 3 The phys. ed faculty was recommended to me by a professor whom I worked with in the summer.

Trend grows across Ontario

Universities by Rich Chevron

Mills staff

Guelph. Toronto. Waterloo. Western. McMaster. All these and more have seen their students join the established authorities in governing their universities. In what seems an ever-increasing trend, students are being given seats on councils, boards and committees. P r o g r e s s iv e administrators have applauded the changes while others have begun the process of entrenchment against what seems to them an unwelcome intrusion into their backyard.

Waterloo: council

engineering invites students

faculty I

The most recent development at the University of Waterloo, last week, saw two students seated on the engineering faculty council. Although opposition was evident, most of the faculty was receptive to the idea. Dean A.N. Sherbourne reasoned, “We have nothing to hide. It won’t hurt to have the students exposed to our wisdom as well as The students our foolishness.” will be selected by the Engineering Society. The president of Eng Sot B sees the move as a step in the right direction and feels it is more important than a seat on the board of governors, because, “if you want to do something for the students you have to get in on the level where he% being discussed.”

14

198

The CHEVRON

giving

University of Waterloo students are also represented on the senate library committee and the president% special committee on ancillary enterprises. The latter group, with two student members, Tom Patterson and David Andres, was able to bring about a decrease of 15 percent in bookstore prices. The library committee is concerned with both the arts and the engineering and science libraries. The student representatives, Jack MacNicol and Sanjoy Banerjee, are working for 24hour seven-day-at week library hours.

Guelph: report six on senate

suggests

If a recent report from a University of Guelph committee is accepted, there will be six students sitting on that senate, The committee, composed of members from the board of governors, the senate, the faculty and one student, made two majorrecommendations. The first dealt with placing students on the sonate, while the second advised student-faculty committees at the departmental level. Guelph president William Winegard expects some faculty opposition to the first proposal because “a lot of faculty members are afraid it will turn the senate into a House of Commons,” The Guelph committee encouaged student participation in the Senate even though it might, at times, prove embarrassing to have students present when”faculty and

administration university’s

students dirty

are washing linen?

the

Xf Guelph students do receive membership in the senate they will join Western as the only Ontario university with such representation.

Western: legislature is significant

battle

Western was allowed student representatives on the senate ear% Queen’s Park apier this year. proved an act which would have given the students a direct seat. However the Conservative major ity in the legislature later added a rider changing the direct representation to an indirect form. The member must now be a nonstudent, a former faculty member, or graduate student, one year removed from Western. Education minister William D* vis was severely criticized for an apparent change of attitude on this issue but as things now stand the Western students will have to be satisfied with this. They originally had asked for 17 members on the senate and three on the board of governors. Despite this, the‘ Western cision is significant.

de-

The university is situated in the heart of Conservatism-both Pre mier Robarts and Tory whip John White are politically entrenched in the dist~rict radicalism in just about any form is definitely not a popular profession in London.

York: consult

(II voice \ principal students

On the other

promises hand York

to Univer-

sity m&y seem to be just theopposite. Escott Reid, principal of York% Glendon College, told this year% freshman class, “You will have the right to be consulted on college matters as students were last yea.C9 Reid says he will continue to press for student representation on the senate of York as well as the faculty councils of Glendon. “1 shall be disappointed if Glendon College does not have ahigher proportion of restless social activists than other colleges in Canada. If not...it is failing in its task.” In stating that students will have representation at Glendon, Reid went on to say under what conditions. “1 have accepted a post of authority in this college and this university. I arn prepared to share my responsibility with the student I will not abdicate either body. the responsibility or the author+ ity .I’

Toronto: important decisions at departmental level Unlike York, Toronto doesn’t seem likely to get senate seats. However the arts faculty council did approve, in principle, six student seats on the course clubs under the faculty council. These course-club committees are situated halfway in the power

According to the asstructure, sistant dean, W.T. Foulds, “The most important decisions on course content are made at the departmental level Their recommendations are ihen passed to these committees 9) It has not been determined wheth er the student membership will take the form of observers, exofficio members, or full voting members. Although the proposals have been accepted only in principle, students are confident of concrete action soon

McMaster: grads secret meetings

boycott

The situation at McMaster has taken on a slightly different tone. Grad students have been given seats on several McMaster senate and administration committees. However, they have lately refused to sit on them. The grads oppose the in-camera sittings in which they are forced to participate. The Graduate Society executive recently declared, 44free and open decision- making in the university is an essential ingredient of the educational process, or else full

development

is impossible.”

A motion concerning this was tabled, following difficulty in detiding which corn mittee s should be legitimately closed. Before this year is finished there are certain to be student-representation moves at several other Ontario universities. Carleton, Windsor and Ottawa are likely targets.


Let’s impress

the town

What is Tenth Anniversary Week? It is a student-organized rogram October 22-27 to show $ hat has been accomplished in this corner of Waterloo that was still farmland in 1957. The week should show several things. First, the administration should see what students can do when given the responsibility and the money. Second, we can show the more sedate institution down the street that we try harder. Most important, the people of, the Twin Cities should have their eyes opened to the gift horse that so many have been looking so disdainfully in the mouth. The potential benefits are great. Housing, transportation and com-

mercial facilities in the community can only improve. The city constabulary might also take a look. Brian Iler’s committee has completed organizational work for the open house. The only thing wanting is students to make it work. Especially needed are tour guides. One potential problem exists. The committee arranged to have the Tenth Anniversary celebration coincide with Homecoming 67, so that the campus would not be deserted. This was essential if we are to maintain that a university is people. While there will be students on campus, let us hope that we all remember there are going to be a lot of visitors. It will be a wet weekend, at least during the open-house period.

I I

A svstem for bookings J

The homecoming concert has repeated itself, Monday the Pozo Seco Singers cancelled their October 27 concert appearance because of travel inconveniences. At last year’s homecoming it was the same story with Gord Lightfoot. For the past two years there have -been complications with booking and pricing acts for the big weekends and orientation. This suggests a need for a complete review of the Federation’s booking procedures. The procedure now is to leave responsibility for bookings totally to the’ chairman of the event, subject to the approval of the board of student activites and Student Council. The procedure for booking the act is left to the chairman and difficulties arise from methods presently used. The current procedure is to book directly through the American agent of an act rather than use a local agent who may have as much as a 20-percent surcharge. A difficulty here is not knowing how to find the primary agent for a particular act. Thus the Federation may end up paying the surcharge to a secondary American agent. There were four agents progressively involved in the Lightfoot fiasco last year--and it took four days for the committee to get a definite refusal from Lightfoot. This came three days before the concent date.

The Federation should acquire an experienced person to book all acts for Federation events at three or four percent plus administrative expenses. This person should know current prices and the most direct method of contacting the act. The responsibilities of this position could be expanded to include the booking- of all related facilities. There have been countless diffii culties with sound and lighting in the past. This same person could see that proper arrangements are made for booking the hall for a concert. This would insure that concerts are not displaced by hockey games--as at the homecoming concert. It has become obvious from past experience that to acquire at topname act, contracts must be completed at least 10 months in advance, preferably 12. Petula Clark would have been available 10 monIn April she was not ths ago. available--even for $20,000. Acts for 1968 orientation and homecoming should be booked before the end of this month., Chairmen for both these events should be appointed immediately. There is a Student Council meeting Monday night. Council should consider these problems and make a decision to insure that next year’s concerts don’t become repetions of last year’s Lightfoot foobar.

Dull election,

dull voters

fortunately, many U of W students go home on weekends and never spend time during the week getting involved in university activities. Students who live off-campus find there is no place to go on campus to meet other students, and thus few get involved in university life. A solution to the political and social non-involvement of students must be found. The campus center building, now under construction, may provide a partial solution to this problem by providing a place for students to meet. This year’s weekends are more solidly packed with events than previous years-and this may help solve the problem. Political indifference is a threat to our system of democratic goverment. Effective leadership at all three levels of government should be provided by the well-educated members of our universities. Political issues like pollution, financing of higher education and low-cost housing may sound uninteresting to the casual observer, but they are of vital importance to the welfare of all of us in Ontario.

Most students seem indifferent about the provincial election campaign. Few have found political issues they feel strongly about, and many feel the policies of all the parties are almost identical. Student indifference may explain why only 270 of 2800 eligible students from U of W went to the court of revision in order to vote in their campus riding. But why the indifference? Inadequate communications between politicians and students could be one answer. If there were adequate courses in highschool and university about the processes of government, and if continual discussion of current events was encouraged, students might be more interested at election time. (Of course this argument applies to the general community. The average joe citizen equals the average joe student in apathy.) Students on campus, if they felt more united as members of this university, might be more inclined towards social action--on a political and a community service basis. Un-

A member

of Canadian

University

Press

The Chevron is published Fridays by the board of publications of the Federation of the Federation of Students, University of Waterloo. Opinions are independent of the Uni versi ty, Student Council and the board of publications. editor-in-chief: Jim Nagel news editor: Brian Clark in tercampus: Frank Goldspink assigning: Patricia McKee a c ting fea tures editor: Bob Verdun

7’hc only student entruncc to the new muth building is a rump, abruptly tcrminuted b.y u set of #swinging doors which swing-you guessed it--outWU~,Sto Jluttcn students in u rush.

photo editor: Glenn Berry sports editor: Peter Webster acting entertainment editor: Dale Martin advertising manager: Ross Helling

Offices in the Federation building, U of W. Publications chairman: 6111 local, 2497 (news), 2812 (advertising, 2471 (editor), Night 0295-759TORONTO: Donna McKie, 782-5959. NIAGARA FALLS: 5046. LONDON: David Bean, 439-0331. OTTAWA: John Beamihs, THON (!): John Helliwell, 229-0456. BRIDGEPORT: H- D. Goldbrick, copies. Friday,

October

13, 1967

John Shiry. 734744-0.111. Telex Ron Cmraid. .X6525-3565. MARA733-61:?0. S.500

(8: 16)

199


Retifeci Cookie

cited night

at engineers’ by Renzo

Bernardini

Now chairman of the Ontario government’s commiteee on unme password was booze and ivers&Y affairs, Dr* Wright is spirits were high in the Village ex*dean of engineering at U of w* Wright saw in society, ‘a hell blue dining hallduringEngineering of a distortion of values. night Thursday. “The world puts $100 billion The bar opened half an hour ’ in defence and outer space while before the meal began. Before millions of people are starving.*’ the meal was over, bottles crowd‘%e stupidity of those receiving ed the tables, hiding the rest of aid, especially on a militarylevel, the dishes. can only be matched by the stuAfter the me& Terry Cousinpidity of those who give it,” he eau, vicepresident of Engineering said. Society B, presented retiring kamWright spoke of challenge and pus-kop ~ Sgt. Fred Cook with a purpose in life, calling upon all framed citation. engineers to be venturous. “I am sorry to see part of our Students were reminded that they tradition leave,” said Cousineau. “live in an affluent society where. . ‘Cookie was a man who was influences governing our lives are always in favor of a joke-I&e remote, and where events such as vandalism”, he added. are aspects of this alIn reply, Cook ~a@, *_Trt..yu_a;‘s love-ins ienation. great association with you chaps, “Two inescapable things in the I hope you will remember me as world are our richness and other’s I will remember you, a friend.” wretchedness.‘* said Wright. John Bergsma,president of EngAll are part of the same world ineering Socie~B.presented Prof. and should help others, he said. James. Church, president of the ‘Tf this generation won’t, the next new Conestoga College of Applied generation may be too late in Arts and Technology, and former doing it.” U of W professor of design, with an honorary membership in U of W’s engineering society, Bergsma described Church as a man “who has made great contributions to the engineering socLong a strong underground moiety and to engineering undergraduates. He has dlways been vement on campus, the beerdrinkers have recently organizedthem’ a liason between students and facselves into a club. w* Dr. Church mentioned he was Calling themselves the Water“proud to belong to the engineering loo boatrace association, they profession. made their first public appearance “However:’ he advised, “Life at the engineering banquet Thursis not just engineering--you must day, learn aII about it.” They were represented by two. Dr. DougIas T. Wright, guest teams in the boat speaker said “Students tend to five-member races. Team B staggered off coast and to develop an attitude with the tugboat trophy. of easiness toward life.” * Chevron

staff

Some people just can’t be outdone. When one group of civil engineers manages to stack six bottles (bottom-to-top fashion), this civil engineer proceeded to build a better mouse trap-er -tower (top-to-top-and-bottom-to-bottom fashion). Having achieved the lucky. seven mark, silence was called for. He gently positioned the eighth bottle but, . . . Chevron photos by Glen Berry

Suds fans

Attention

unite The teain quaI.ified for the tropy, awarded to theslowestteam with a time of 85.1 seconds. The co-op winning champs won the other trophy-with a time of 23,2 seconds.

The club cIairns amembership of 25, a large percentage from electrical 3B It hopes to sponsor an intervarsity meet in the future. LocaI imbibers will challenge the champions from other universities. Patriotic, arent they?

Graduates

Graduation

Photos To have an event publicized in this column, come into the Chevron offices in the Federation building and fill out one of the formsprovided. Deadline.- Tuesday 6pm.

BV

PIRAK STUDIOS, Sittings

Begin Monday,

350

KING ST. W.

KITCHEhiER

Arts Coffeeshop Bulletin

ARTS & SCIENCE GRADUATES ENGINEERING -

16

ZOO The CHEVRON

16 At

October

Sign for Appointment

PIRAK STUDIOES

The gentlemanly art of public office, known as boatracing, demands long and strenuous hours of practice.

GRADUATES

Photos after Christmas

Board ONLY ;

TODAY # Ontario Region Canadian University Press conference begins in Waterloo. Grad House executive party at 8. The banquet is cancelled. Coffee House with foIk singer Lawrence Jones in Village blue dining hall at 8:30. Dance with Jay.% Raiders in the ViIlage red dining hall. $1.

in his workshop*’ in the Theater of the Arts at 4:15. VOTE EARLY AND VOTE OFTEN in the Ontario general election All day until 8 pm. Dra&-“A kingdom for a stage” in the Theatre of the Artsatl2:15. Boris Nelson on “The art of criticism” in the Theater of the Arts at 4:15. Political science union meeting at 4:30 in SS347. ’ Introductory meeting for C.1~. S.P. in EL108 at 7:30. WEDNESDAY John Ciardi asks “Why read” in the Theater of the Arts at 4:15, Country and western music club at AL105 at 7%~ Flying club meeting with film in PI45 at 8. Contemporary music club in SS351 at 8. Coffee hour at Hamrnerskjold residence, 139 University, at 8. Professors available for convers ation.

TOMORROW ORCUP conference continues on campus. SUNDAY Openingof Emily Carr exhibit at 3 in Theater gallery. Reception for foreign students at Rotary international house, 193A Albert St. at 4 pm. AII Saints Anglican Church at THURSDAY Hickory and Hazel wffl have a A.S.M.E. films in PI45 at noon. service and discussion for uniRebecca Sisler % lectures on versm students at 5. sculpture in the theater at 4:15. A.&ME. speaking series--RobTUESDAY ert Oldman of Ford Motor CO. in Earle Birneypresents “Thepoet EL110 at 7.


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