1967-68_v8,n22_Chevron

Page 1

Volume

8, number

22

UNIVERSITY

OF WATERLOO,

Waterloo,

Friday,

Ontario

AI/ double

November

24,

1967

rooms

960-bed res for fd -‘69 The Village parking lot will turn into a new 960-bed residence complex by August 1969. Design proposals for the complex are now being invited from construction companies by the Ontario Student Housing Corporation, a new, provincial housing authority set up to provide more economical residence construction. There will be 465 double bedrooms in the complex, plus selfcontained suites for 20 dons and two masters. 240 residents will be women. Under the new OSHC system, the university submits a set of requirements. OSHC then calls for proposals from construction companies, which work with their own architects. The deadline for proposals is January 31. The corporation and the university will then choose the design they like besti--not necessarily the least expensive-and award the tender.

Beverly Smith, English 3, was crowned the Miss Engineering at Saturday’s engineering semiRunners up were Cathy Gre-y, architecture 1, and- Charlotte Cahill, English 3.

formal.

Chevron

photo by Pete Wilkinson

An ear/y Christmas gift, the directory is reudy

OSHC will offer a lOO-percent mortgage for the residence, extending over 50 years. Ontario universities hope to cut costs by consulting with OSHC through the design and building stages instead of just onfinancing. Only three other university housing projects have been started under this plan. The frst was at

Hagey off 2 months for voice therapy

i

by Andy

Lawrence

Chevron staff

Finally, a month late and full of mistakes P the student directory has ar rived on camp us. Originally due in the middle of October, the first copies were obtained Wednesday evening. The bulk of copies should be available for general distribution on Monday in the Federation of Students’ off ice. Dave Spencer, English 3, editor of the directory, said the main problem in getting it out on time was obtaining the printed lists of students from the registrar’s of-

fice. This problem, Spencer conthe first week of October as oritinued , came from delays at the ginally planned, the directories registrar’s office in gathering would have been out by the middle local and home address, faculties, of October. Spencer, angry, said the whole and listings for other years, process of obtaining the lists departments. This tape is re“should be handled better next quired by the printer to prepare year, I hope.” the directory. Even though the directory is Because of delays in the regislate, Spencer has succeeded in trar’s office and at data prochanging the format. The new cessing, the first printed listings directory is divided into several from this tape were not available sections, the faculty members, the until the first week in November. students directory, thedepartment The printer had to add an extra of co-ordination and placement I week to the production time for residence telephone the directory because of thedelays o and the If the lists had been produced in listings. Last years directory had the same divisions except the faculty was listed with departments 8 and the home and local addresses of the students which were in separate sections. Taking a hint from Western’s that business ethics should be imdirectory Spencer printed the proved. The second candidate is Mike name, faculty, year, local phone

Sheppard and WLU prof run for city aldermen A background in political science is a qualification held by two of the candidates for Waterloo aldermen in the December city elections. Dr. George Haggar, assistant professor of poli-sci at Waterloo Lutheran, has decided to seek a seat on Waterloo city council at official nominations tonight. Dr. Haggar was born in Syria and is now president of the Can&=+ dian Arab community. He has been a professor at WUC for three years. Dr. Haggar believes the Waterloo universities must be made more democratic. He wants to end land speculation and plan regional government. He also feels

Sheppard, past president of the number, local address) and home Federation of Students. Sheppard address on the same line. is married and is an assistant The directory, because of the manager with Imperial Life Asrush to get it out before term’s surance Co. end, contains many errors and Sheppard supports a system of omissions. The average page contains 43 regional government with enough names s but (r 16 local phone numbers power to cope with such problems are missing as are 9 home addas air pollution. He also supports resses and 3 local addresses. urban planning on a regional basis, Of the few who have so far seen but he maintains that Waterloo needs careful planning to force c the directory about 20 percent business and industry to clean up have found factual errors. shabby appearances. Spencer attributed this to lack He is particularly concerned ova of information given to the regiser secret meetings by city council. trar at registration.

Western to house 1,400 students. Two other smaller ones are at Lakehead and York. The new complex will be considerably less expensive than the Village, which cost $8,000 a bed. Some features, such as kitchenettes, have been sacrificed. (But) The new residences will have some social and recreational facilities which the Village lacks, according to Allan Adlington, the university’s operations vicepre sident. The university’s brief calls for a 2.5-t-3.times turnover in cafeterias, instead of an individual seat for every student as at the Village. Target cost is $4500 per. bed, for a total of about $4,500,000. The proposal asks architects to pay attention to the internal environment of the complex, including pedestrian circulation, functional suitability of the planning and longterm maintenance requirements. It must harmonize with the existing Village, yet be self-contained and have its own identity. The proposal does not limit the planners to low-level walk-up buildings. Medium-rise buildingswill be considered. Dining facilities and some cornmon space will be shared by four separate “halls” of 240 students plus dons. The entire complex must be linked by heated corridors.

University president J. G. Hagey on atwo-or three-month leave of absence for therapy following recent throat surgery. The announcement was made by Carl Pollock, chairman of the board of governors. Dr. Howard Petch, academic vicepresident, is acting president until Hagey re turns. President H ag ey underwent throat surgery in Toronto on October 5 that left him without a voice. He remained in Toronto the rest of October, though he kept in touch with his office. He was present for the Homecoming convocation. He had been suffering from throat cancer for several years, and underwent an operation some years ago. He took a month’ s vacation in June to rest his voice, on medical advice. At that time doctors hoped he could entirely recover his voice by resting it completely. No recurrence of malignancy was discovered then. (It was apparently Hagey’s own surprise idea to remarry June 16 and make the vacation into a wedding trip instead.) A routine examination in early October revealed more cancer, SO the president opted for immediate surgery to remove the rest of his larynx. He had been offered is

the possibility of thisoperationfor two years, he informed the Chevron, and had prepared himself for it mentally. When he returned to his office fulltime early this month, President Hagey was in remarkably good cheer, although he could communicate only by writing and gestures. He is learning a method of esophagal speech, whereby air is swallowed and released from the stomach instead of the lungs to speak This method has been perfected by others, notably Jack Hawkins, an actor who appeared in ‘Bridge on the River Kwai’ and other films. In the meantime President Hagey is using an artificial-larynx device developed by Bell laboratories. About the size of a small flashlight, it is I held to the throat to provide the vibrations necessary for speech. The board of governors decided at its November 9 meeting, aftera report on Hagey’s ability to carry on, that he should continue, with authority to delegate some of his responsibilities at his discretion. Hagey informed the Chevron on Tuesday that his surgeon felt the tension of his job was hindering his therapy. The official announce ment came Wednesday. .


*ccmada without

isn’t world voice foreign policy basis, but now that she has the bomb, she has become a strong power in the world.” Canada cannot raise a strong voice in ex&rnal affairs as long as we have problems such as Canada can only useseparation. fully mediate when she is asked. We have often been looked upon as moralistic busy-bodies. Mr. Macquarrle M.P. for Queen’s P.E.I. said attheluncheon at Renison College that for- 100 years Antiamericanism has been the “raison d’etre” for Canada. To be antipeople is considered shameful and sinful while antiamericanism is accepted and good, he said. M.P,‘s have even said ‘&Why not accept Red China to prove to tie Americans that we are inde~cmrl ant SB p&UCJIb. Canada should adopt a realistic rather than an idealistic or moral approach to foreign policy and put this to work today, he said. The afternoon session dealtwith domestic policy. Alvin Hamilton, M.P. and ex-minister of Agriculture called for a realignment of government spending “Money should be alloted regionally in dabs, not spread over the entire country in a blanket programme,” he said. “Spending should be a combinatio? of economics and geography applied sociologically.”

in the world due to a large postwar break-up of forces and a small concentration of funds and Canada is no longer a middle t ethnology towards war matpower in world affairs. We have erials .” diminished in world importance Dr. Aun of WLU maintains that since the Second W orld War econoCanada must be more independent mically and in the eyes of other mntlr\mrP and flexible if it hopes to function as a middle power. Canada has At the P P caminar nn Panada? Second Century held jointly by the acted too long as a proxy for the U.S, and Britain ti world affairs, U of W and WLU ProgressiveConhe said. s ervative Clubs and the KitchenerWaterloo Young Progressive ConMr o Nyiri of W LU said that . s ervatives ; a panel on interclassification is a 19th century national affairs discussed the idea. “There are nosuperpowers “Is Canada a Middle question and middle powers because of the great interdependence of foreign Power?” Dk, Wade of the University of policy in the world,” he said. Western Ontario said that he was ‘Canada should act as a moral highly skeptical of Canada’s posiforce because she does not have tion in the world. the military might to back up her In 194lCanada served as a “lynch foreign policy by others means pill” and interpreter between the and is dependent on the U,S, for U.S, and Britain. But after the security.*’ War at the $ban- l-l ..--1--- TT r ranc1sco u. ‘hv IV. “Canada should makeits foreign meeting Australti LUUK uvw UK POtiCY in the East Block* not in position d internatiod interwashhgton, ad act as a modprete$’ he said. crating power in the world.” ‘Canada was second only to the Dr. Wade thinks there is too U.S. in benefits received from the much emphasis placed on military war o Most nations in Europe were hardware when Canadais embartotally devastated by the warwhile rassed by a great lack of qualmCanada was in a strcn--mifl people-for Peace-Keeping ~r\~:f/r-m wcrct Pm -“l’ulllAti J+ua+uu11* vv ti3 L f?n ,-nany made a fid Population cannot be remarkable recovery with Japan Operations* Overlooked as a power, he saido becoming a major leader in world China was rated as a weak trade. . on a population power purely “We are militarily insignificant by Pete Wilkinson Chevron staff

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Alvin Hamilton, federal MP and former agriculture minister, said Saturday that government spending in depression areas should be alloted regionally rather than in dabs.

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truly ingenious ideas. John Hoika, who is iq charge of the MathSoc opening ceremonies , then launched his speech which rmor has it, was ghost-written by the computer. The first part of his oration dwelt on the general incompetence and degeneration the engineers who conducted the opening. Finally, he declared the math building closed and presented the engineers with an empty pop bottle and a WE DON’T TRY VERY HARD button in memory of their failure.

Authorized Waterloo,

the

and will be put on a new waiting list. A free-lance bookie should be available to give odds on acceptance. As rooms become available they will be assigned by date of application. This means the fall term policy of not admitting repeaters wffl be set aside. Repeaters currently on the waiting list will be accepted before any new applicants are considered. Anyway, the cold inclementwinter should be alittlemorecomfortable for anybody who rushes right up to apply.

Stanton

So, commandeering a math 130 class on the way, the math brigade marched into the engineering common room. Jim Belfry berated the engineers for lack of ingenuity and originality and promised an official Math Society opening on NOV. 27 which would feature some

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F rench francs per month in addition to tuition, room and board, and various other expenses such as the cost ,of typing your thesis. , Other Commonwealth scholarships finance studies in Hong Kong and P~stan . The Italian government also offers assistance to students wishing to study in Italy. Within Canada, programs such as the Bank of Nova Scotia Bilingual Exchange Scholarships allow English students to study atF rench language university and vice versa. A corm-non feature of all these programs is theinsistance onfacility in the language involved. -

available

After the engineers opened the math building last week, the Math Society was forced to find some way of saving face. So the mathmen went to their great god, the IBM 360 and devised a plan. They would close the building.

Top valu apple sauce 14 oz. tins 6 for 88c

REPRESENTING

rooms

Math

1

men

fate. The profs will talk for their lives in AL 105 next Wednesday at 4:oo. This event is being sponsored by the Student ChristianMovement. Bob Verdun, Chevron Features editor, is betting on engineer Sherbourne tit Nancy Murphy, entertainment editor, disagrees, “I would put my money on the philosooher Narveson.”

and

The village admissions department is apparently running out of students who want to live in luxury in a house on the hill. A large number of winter term applicants have either cancelled or failed to reply ,so far to the offer of acceptance. The existing list of surplus applicants is diminishing rapidly, and so a limited number of rooms may beavailable to students who have not applied yet. Any interested males should submit an application to thevillage

- TV

Advertisers

God

scholurships

Several scholarships for stud’y in various foreign countries are available to graduate students ,and in some cases, undergraduates. The Swiss government is offering four scholarships worth between 550 and 700 Swiss francs per month. Commonwealth scholarships offer two years of study in Australia and New Zealand tocanadian postgraduate students. German University Fellowships offer approximately $1,450 to s tudents pursuing further studies in West Germany. The French government, under its cultural agreement With Canada, offers to pay students 480

CUISINE

RECENTLY

OUT ORDERS PHONE:

BARRY

FOOD

four

A philosopher, an engineer, a mathematician an a theologian will volunteer Wednesday for a most desperate venture--adrift in mid creek on a raft with only enough supplies for one. Potentially overboard are Dr. Jan Narveson, Dean Archie Sherbourne, Dr. E. T, Davies and Dr. Tom Tredway. The audience wW. decide their

as Ontario.

second-


Hospital

epic

stars blood by Dave

PLOT

Wilmot

Chevron staff

It has occured to me that Hollywood might make great use of the Hospital Epic. The idea is an amalgam of old movies I saw recently. In a Cecil B. (load) DeMille extravaganza 10,000 extras hacked each other to death on MGM’s back lot. By the time all the cadavers had been removed Burt Lancaster had saved the entire Christian empire and the second movie had begun. This one was about a crop of hellraising interns destroying the reputation of doctors and nurses alike. Here then is a copy of a script I sent to Hollywood.

CONCLUSION

SCENE

An extraverage university campus. A blood-donor clinic has been imported. CHARACTERS

A cast of thousands

as students,

this is not a Vietnam hospital shelter-it is the blood-donor clinic room in the cherrbtry. ever eager to let blood, stream to Chevron photo by Barry Johnson biology link. Linda Allen is being lead to the reuperation bay. the clinic. The campus scenes

No,

Coud McGill

OKs Daily, takes acfmin

court

to

MONTREAL (CUP)-The McGill administration to drop charges Daily has been cleared. At least against Allnutt, Pierre Fournier the student-council judicial cornand John Fekete of the Daily.They made the request to university mittee has cleared it. In a unanimous decision the principal H. Rocke Robertsonprevious to the university senate comcommittee said publishing the article from the Realist 4Qlid not conmittee on student discipline hearstitute an act of bad faith.” On the ing. part of editor Peter All&t. Robertson replied to council% However six of the seven memrequesting a letter saying the adbers of the committee did feel that ministration would not comply with All&t’s decision to print the arstudents’ demands to drop charges. title was extremely irresponsible. In his letter Robertson cited a They feel %.ny suggestion that the university statute which gave the editor might only be dismissed besenate “general disciplinary authority over the student body.*’ cause of an act of bad faith e The senate committee met and pears erroneous to this commitheard the Daily’s case, then decidtee.” Only .Peter AllThe Daily’s editor and two staf- I ed to reconvene. fers have been severely criticized I nutt was asked questions by the committee, Pierre Fournier, the for printing a portion of Paul Krassner’s article <The parts that supplement editor was ignored. John Fekete, in whose column the were left out of the Manchester The part which has been alledgedly obscene article was book.’ printed did not appear before the called by some obscene centred He is taking the adaround an act of necrophilia by committee. ministration to court. President Johnson following the Fekete’s lawyer feels there are assassination.

Mudie

rejects

five points of contention. These are: -the meeting must be held in the open because the administration has made accusations which have carried the weight of McGill’s prestige behind them. -anyone accused of specific violations has the right to face his accusors. In this case principal H. Rocke Robertson is the accuser but he was not present at the senate committee meeting. -several committee members have been present at faculty and administration meetings and thus have endangered their impartiality. -there should_ be a severance of cases because the three students (Allnutt, Fournier, Fekete) are contending different aspects of the situation. -Finally, because the Daily is under the jurisdiction of the student council and not the administration the senate disciplinary committee does not have the jurisdiction to hear this case.

EngSoc claims

’ Monsters Have you been getting shortchanged by the monster machines lately? Have you had to stand by and watch ten cents worth of cola* orange or whatever pour down the drain when no cup fell into place? Did you ever try to put a dollar bill into the sandwich machine? Engineering Society B apparently has. They sent a list of complaints against the whole vendingmachine set up to food-services manager Bob Mudie, Among their complaints were lack of change-making machines, no price lists on the sandwich machines, recent high price increases on sandwiches, a frequently malfunctioning Coke machine, a Pepsi machine that “frequently loses cups, “‘poor choice of chocolate bars, and stale bars. The Eng Sot letter concluded

gyp

stucients

“we hope the whole vending-machine program will be reevaluated so that students will be assured of better service in the future.” Mudie replied to EngSoc% letter explaining the policies of the vending operation. He said that change machines were removed quite a while ago because people were using slugs to cheat the machine. ((If Engineering Society B would be willing to assume in writing the’ responsibility for any such losses, “Mudie continued, (‘1 will gladly arrange to have a coin-changing machine installed immediately.‘s In reply to the criticisms that there are no price HstsMudie said these have been removed several times by “person or persons m kIl0WI-Q’ The price increase had beenap-

proved by a joint student-administration meeting this fall. Mudie offered to provide cost figures to substantiate the selling prices. With reference to the statements that the pop machines were often out of order he said that if anyone loses money or finds a machine inoperative the matter should be brought to the attentionof the manager. Mudie asked EngSoc tod’be more specific in the statement poor choice,*’ #‘ sales volume indicates this cannot be a serious problem. The most recent data shows sales of some 6,000 bars a month,” John Bergsma,president of EngSOC B .saSd this wasn’t really hacative because “these machines are a monopoly. If you’re hungry You have no choice but to select one of these bars.98

must include all the normal trimmings-hippies, beats, neurotic students, worried females, activists. ACTION

The actual bloodletting must be in great quantities. This insures the movie will be a hit. THEME The poignant

resultant struggle & love, honor.

The everfaithful dedicated nurse (possibly Connie Stevens or Zasu Pitts), the pride of the nursing profession, falls in love with the campus hippie (possibly Walter Brennan or Peter Lorre) who only wants to use her. Then comes the conflict. . The hippie tells her that in order to keep his love she must get him some dope. She is torn between love of profession and love for the junkie. The resolution (dramatic organ music.) When the nurse inserts the needle and turns on the spigot she finds out too late that her hippiejunkie lover is a hemophiliac.

love story and the between loyal-

All% well that ends well. The campus hippie, epitomized by the St Paul’s group, turned on to the tune of 70.7 percent. This put them-far aheadof any other campus group. With their successthey will keep the Emmy of the blood world, the Circle K Corpuscle Cup. Running a distant second to hippiest Paul’s group was Conrad Grebel with 51.9 percent. St Jer-’ ome% and Notre Dame blooded for 32 percent. In the Village, Waterloo’sHollywood, South quadrant was bled to the tune of 21 percent of its resb dents. For the off-campus groups the science stars and starlets turned out for a total of 14 percent.

SpMs speaker wants national health plan Optometry schools in Canada need to graduate 30 more people per year just to keep up with deaths and retirements in theprofession and the population increase according to Dr. Hugh MacKenzie, president of the Canadian Association of Optometrists. Dr. MacKenzie was on campus earlier this week to take part inan open house at the new optometry clinic of the School of Optometry. “A complete and comprehensive health care plan would beadvantageous to the people of Canada. This must of course include vision care,” said Dr. MacKenzie. c‘ We anticipate that when the federal health care plan is brought into effect, vision care will be provided. But this is up. to the provinces to decide.” Edward Fisher, director of the

School of Optometry said, ‘<If medicare comes into effect we’re going to need even more students. This is one of the reasons that we moved the school here to Waterloo.” He said that the school hopes to double their size in the next few years. The open house followed a meeting of the Province of Ontario% Committee on the Healing Arts which took place Monday in Toronto. At the meeting, the School of Optometry at the University of Waterloo was one of several optometrical organizations presenting briefs to the government committee. The committee is studying various professions within the healing arts field in relation to the government operated medical insurance program.

Oh well, there goes another dime. Don Winter, engineering I, watches several ounces of his second-favorite brew flow away. Why? No cup. Friday,

November

24, 1967 (8:22)

307

3


Students picket in BC by Harold the mighty

and nobody showed up* but neither did I. This is one of the AAC% desired aims anyway. * The SDU claims to be unstructured. Well by that standard, theAryanAffairsCommission is without substance. Immaterial even. With the exception of a couple of self-professing 1 e a de r s, there is officially square root (of the limit of zero as N approaches infinity) as far as organization is concerned. So far we have a perfect record of never holding a meeting. However, certain militant and anarchistic acts by the SDU may force us to institute some organization if we are to keep them under control. After all, the SDU’ s chief shitdisturbers also run the NDP on campus, the political- science union, the house of Debates, the tiddlywinks club and the folksong club. So now the Aryan Affairs Commission has its r al 1 y march, Waspland, and we’re busy forming the BerlinandElmiry marching band to strike fear in the hearts of musiclovers and pinkos everywhere. They have enough potentialof negative talent to make it into PHASS night. The repetoire will probably include a school song for dripouts and a song for world war 3. @f it P&t done soon we will never get the chance). Also in the works are a unit of calm troopers (an Amishactivist committee) to take the responsibility of a disorderly retreat If their pacifist fighting skills are ever required. The uniform tentatively selected consists of a black cloak and a hunQ hat.

D. Goldbrick mouth

BRIDGEPORT (Staff)-The thought for the week was offered by an ex-plumber journalist now turned artsy-crafty (by academic necessity). He shall r& main nameless lest he take advantage of the publicity and decide to run for some stoodent politico off&. Anywah, said “arts number cc1’* remarked that I suffered from constipation of the mind and diarrhea of the mouth. And for that, McG, shalt thou be nominated for the fall- term HDGeeBees (Gold-Brick awards) in the category of most profound pseudo-political pronouncement. Seems I can’t get off politics so l?m seriously considering renaming this catharsis Choke point or Never Right or whatever. I think it’s about time I said something about the Aryan Affairs Commission. It was first formed as a backlash to Afghanistan power and various other preversions of the bored of intimate relations. However, since then we have gone so far afield and attracted such wide membership interest that the name of the group is losing its meaning. .It will, of course, be retained to be consistent with the other meaningless aspects of the group. Projects have ranged from multraviolet anticommunist McCarthyism to superpinkantifascist damnation of German NDP leader Adolf Von Thadden, as in this week% lecture at the Federation Auto-Stade, Of course, apathy was active

Our mobile division, the prancers, will be equiped with self-propelled wagons, a drastic step made necessary because horsemen have fallen into a certain pottish disrepute (snarc, s-narc). The ultimate weapon will be, of course, control of the press. Not only the’ Coryphaeus (oops the Chev-what-ever-thehellit is) but now we havea controlling interest in the Village Misinformer. Next we’ll go after St. Pauls’ Eyewitless, Enginews, the coordination-department newsletter and theUniWat quarterly. The final step will be a column in the complete and unabridged minutes of the setret meetings of the committee on university government. It% election time again, and there be lots of bright young reformers on the scene. But the same dolts will get returned Favorite reformer NDP Morley Rosenberg is running for Kitchener city council. Having suffered numerous wipeouts in federal and provincial elections, it was only a matter of time till he got down to city level. A few of the more foolish for IdW council candidates seats will talk about merger of the Twin Cities, but it won’t make any difference. Thepoliticians once elected will never do anything to alter their comfy positions. Besides it’s traditional. The Aryan Affairs Commission has a solution to the whole deal= Amalgamate the two cities, but build a wall down the border and give it the original name of the bigger partnerBerlin.

Dow

interested

in participating

VANCOUVER (CUP) --Vancouver’s mayor has changed his mind. Now he’s praising the University of British Columbia student newspaper, theUbyssey,for not printing a Playboy picture of a woman masturbating. “The Ubyssey is a responsible newspaper, *’ said Tom Campbell. “You censored yourselves by picking the best four Playboy pittures 2’ The Obyssey reprinted fourpictures from a stag series featuring Candy Barr. These and several other pictures were removed from V&couver*s supply of Playboy after Campbell hinted his displeasure. Thephotos accompanied a serious article on

to come

to a meeting

10% STUDENT

Indian

High school

Nominations for representatives from the students registered in the Faculty of Science will close on Tuesday, November 28, at 5 pm. c Two vacancies have been caused by the graduation and consequent resignation of the following Councillors: John Willms Terry Taylor Nomination forms are available in the federation Office from Miss Helga Petz and should be returned to that office. Only those students duly registered in the Faculty of Science as of September 13, 1967, are eligible to vote in this beeiection. Eligible voters must present their identification cards at the polling station.

at 5 p.m.

4

school

High

school

are interested,

Susan Peters

.

research

High

308 The CHEVRON

Seminars

uffairs

Community

If you with

Teachers

project

Visitation student%

please leave in the Federation

\

Programme Tutorial

your name, Office.

Programme address

and phone

DISCdJNT

Notice of Byelection

of the following

H&h school’ Teachers Would-be

SHOE STORE

.

Nov. 27

Monday,

DEB “COSSACKS”

now at

PROGRAMM,ES OF THE FEDERATION OF STUDENTS are asked

the histOry of stag movies. “The press is free to criticize anything in Canada, ” Campbell said, “but it does not have the right to subject children of a tender age to obscene literature.” Campbell feels that the university student press should be able to print anything it wants because students are adults. “They are past thepoint ofbeing corrupted. These students have been through years of learningand are becoming professionals. They should be exposed to sex andother facts of life.*’ Campbell has since asked for a subscription to Ubyssey which the editor says, will probably reprint everything else the mayor bans.

“APRE” SKI BOOTS

MEETING

in any

versity Teachers Committee on Viet Nam issued a letter urging every one 4‘to consider carefully the uses which his employer may make of his knowledge and technical skills. The development of techniques of chemical and biological warfare, the perfection of nuclear weapons, and manufacture of napalm are all shameful examples of the misues which is sometimes made of skills and knowledge. JtWe believe that people who contemplate working for companies like the Canadian subsidiary of the American Dow Chemical Corporation, which manufactures the napalm dropped in huge quantities on defenceless Vietnamese women and children, should consider soberly the moral issues involved?

Mayor praises Ubyssey for Playboy pictures

See the latest in SNOW

A meeting will be held in room P145 at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, November 28 to organize a student chapter of the ACM (Association for Computing Machinery). All students interested in association with thigprofessional society for computer specialists are invited to attend.

All those

attaek

VANCOUVER (CUP)-Dow Chemical is under attack again. At the University of British Columbia about 300 students peacefully picketed the university% placement offices. At first the doorway was not blocked but soon about twenty students led by one of the senators, Gabor Mate, refused to let students pass. Mate said he was acting only as ’ an individual and not representing a group. The students were joined by faculty members and some Simon F raser University students. Besides DOW, ten other companies will be picketed. Stan Persky, arts president, said, ‘(we will picket any company that manufactures war materials.‘* A group calling itself the UniL

STUDENT CHAPTER OF THE ACM

0,RGANIZATION

under

number

The election will be held on Tuesday, December 12, 1967. The polling station will be located in the foyer of the , Chemistry-Biology Building and will ,be open at 9 am and close at 5 pm. Note to out-term sciencestudents: out-term students registered in the Faculty of Science must have their ballot (Which will be sent to them,by maii) returned to the office of the Federation of Students by 5 pm, December 12. by order of: THE JUDICIAL COMMITTEE M.L. FELD.STEIN, CHIEF JUSTICE’


March

7

comdetion

Cm& by Doug

cenfer

Seaborn

Chevron staff

Today the campus-center build-ing stands knee-deep in mudbut its doors will open by March 1, fulfilling plans that began almost 10 years ago. While muddy dreams have been Waterloo% story this one is special. It began with students. In 1962 four years of self-imposed fees, specifically for a center, were raised and given to a university fundraising drive then in progress. A completion date was set for fall 1965. Then the delays began. A project committee took over 11 months to prepare a brief for the campus center. Construction was started in December 1966, and was running two weeks ahead of schedule until a bricklayers’ strike this summer prolonged the completion date by 11 weeks. Now, finally, there% only three months to go. Proposals for the finishing touches, furniture and drapes, will be complete by midDecember but a handful of la& minute changes could prevent the building, all $2 trillion of it, from The

Chevron I

on

shows

Elvis slides into the Odeon this weekend until Tuesday as an oil millionaire’s son in ‘Clambake’. Our boy goes through the usual motions, complete with patented sneer and wobbly hips. At the Fail-view they feature George C. Scott as ‘The flim-flam man’ . . . . ..whatever that is. At the Capitol they have resurrected’ ‘Tarzan and the Great River ‘. and to supplement this they launch ‘The sea pirate’ until tomorrow. Things improve slightly Sunday-Wednesday with ‘Perils of Pauline’ and ‘Tammy and the Millionair e’. t

I

being entirely complete on opening -¶a-, uay. Despite the obviousprogress inside the building Ron MacDonaId the Bail Brothers Ltd. building superintendent, flatly refused to allow any photographs to be taken inside, even on request from Ed l$norr of physical-plant and plant is the adning” cCThe university ministration-not you studentsand you have no bushess seeing inside until it% finished,” said MacDonald. Nearly everyone involved with the center is enthusiastic. Paul Gerster, its director, is looking forward to next spring as much as anyone. “Do you realize this is the first time the university will have facilities for cocurricula.r activities ?’ Meptioning three new projectsphys-ed complex, food- services and campus center-he expressed hope that, “‘Now we cantemptpeople to stay on campus. I hope to generate an opportunity for students to use and develop the skills they-have-gW the classmm.’ they have gained in the classroom? As director, Gerster works with the provost’s office, and will mm age and develop programs for the center. His new office will be there. Pride in the building has even spread to the workers. “1 can Pretty well see what this building will be like...you students are going to have a really nice place here,” said one. Work, however, has come to a standstill in many areahin most cases a result of last-minute re== quests or dlterations. Most are difficult to accomplish because the contingency fund for the building ran out long ago. Knorr felt this matter would be settled at a meeting today. One of the center’ s biggest prob-

along

crawling

A completion date of March 1 has been set for the campus center. Don’t hold your breath waiting for a pub in the building because it won’t be there. Liquor regulations won’t allow it. lems is the bank-and how much space it will be allowed to take. As planned the bank will occupy more space in the basement than any of the other facilities, The advantage is that it pays rent, thus defraying costs. But the Campus Shop, a hairdresser% and a barbershop are still wrestling for more room. On the main floor smaller design changes are being made to board of publications offices and ideas for an art studio are competing for space set aside \

for a general purpose darkroom. Not far from the center’s focal point-the great hall-more improvements have been made. Two walls dividing the seniorcommonroom, the faculty lounge and the dining hall have been eliminated. While most of the projects have raced along lately, one of the old, est-the campuspul+is still dragging its feet. Under LCBO regu& tions the university cannot qualify as an institution worthy of aliquor license. A similar problem is en-

c o u n t e r e d at food-servicesa special permit must be obtained for every occasion. A study is being made of similar problemsin the United States and Britain. Both problems may be solved together but no definite action is being taken now. . With any luck, we can expect to be in the campus centre by the end of next term. Gerster summed it up: “1 would really like to see the present Federation people in a new building. They deserve it.”

I

in sand, brushed leather

Toffee

and

(genuine

plantation

crepe

de+

MADE IN ENGLAND

spaghetti house” Tuesday - Thursday Impromptu entertainment 5Oc minimum Friday --Saturday - Sunday Professional entertainment $1 minimum

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you

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32 King Street South (3rd floor) 744-2911

to .keep, your

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Charles Robertson %iday,

Saturday

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Open Tues. to Sat.

a whole

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GET THEM The Campus

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Cheap Friday,

November

24, 1967 (8:22)

309

5


EYES RIGHT: flower Is it happening? Have the flower people, the loveinners, the hippies hit the campus? Tuesday in one of theartsbuildings some artsy students became canvases and were painted upon. Of course this exhibition of the latest 4in’ thing was only to promote an upcoming play in the Arts Thea.tre. One isn’t alarmed at this invasion by the flower power gang. It was all in fun, However it is symptomatic of a much greater illness in the contemporary world. That illness is the hippy. These dropouts from civilized society congregate in their own little worlds. Their vice- ridden, diseased little dope-addicted, worlds. Yorkville, Haight-Ashbury, Greenwich, all have been

power is~blsoming

turned from respectable living areas into dumps. It’s not hard to figure out what causedthis change. Each one has been invaded by the hippie.

from these centres and infectsevery area of the country.

troyer of young wiped out.

Young girls from throughout Ontario have heard and read the glorified reports of Toronto’s village.

Yorkville’s restaurants

Throughout tie past summer and early fall the newspapers and magazines glorified the hippie life. Stories of, the painting sessions, the love-ins, and the flower handout’s gave only one side of hippie Me. Then just recently came the real facts. Fourteen year old girls running away from home, living in common with the dope addicts, pimps, draft-dodgers, transients and idlers. Frantic parents searching the streets of Yorkville symd bolize the entire end product of the whole hippy episode. The hippie holes of Calcutta must be cleaned up. The hippy as a des-

They must be made to see their wrong ways, that flowers andL-OV-E on a placard mean absolutely nothing. They protest that they have lost faith in present society. This too is nonsense. They have lost any will to work foranything. They want to loaf off the rest of the society which is willing to work for itself,

pleasant houses are now slums.

and

Citizens of San F rancisco are afraid to walk the streets anywhere near Haight Ashbury. Its row houses are inhabited by filthy crowds of society’s failures. Greenwich, in New York, although an earlier version of hippie-ville is New York’s centre of marijuana, heroin, LSD, venereal disease, prostitution and all the other evils that the hippie world can produce. The malignant growth of hippies is not confined to these three areas. The disease, and that’s what hippie-ism is, a disease, radiates

you to brouse

through

18 ALBERT

our full selection

STREET

of different

ents who completely blockaded the University of Toronto placement building because a man was interviewing graduate students. The students and the few junior faculty members who were there, actually prevented the recruiter, university officials, and student applicants from leaving when the interviews were over. Is this the way they see ademocracy? The University of Toronto administration showed its true colors by knuckling under the student extremist demands that Dow be refused permission to recruit anymore. The administration also virtually agreed t o let students help decide recruiting policies. One wonders if such concessions would have been made if Claude Bissell was still at Toronto.

OF THEAR’TS

CAROL FANTASY and interesting

in WATERLOO

Or visit the small

Parent Shoppe at 4 ERB STREET

be

Although the one fiasco at Waterloo was bad enough (see last week’s column) I must wonder at the mentality of the Toronto stud-

THEATRE

PLUMTREETOO invites

must

Let’s hope that the cold winter will make most of the hippies go running back home and begin to lead useful and intelligent lives. Back to a recurring theme in this column, The Dow Chemicalpicket-protest syndrome. .

WE AT THE

Gift boutique

society

danger

EAST

items at

Premiere of “The Big Land” Selections from the Messiah Audience Participation Carols Fri. Dec. 1 8:00 p.m. Sat. Dec. 2 8:00 p.m. Sun. Dec. 3 3:00 p.m. FREE ADMISSION Tickets from Theatre Box Office AT254 Ext. 2126 . Federation of Students - Creative Art Board.

Department

of Manpower

and Immigration

ARTS & SCIENCE GRAD CLASS

Rewarding are

open

Graduatingstudents are

INVITED to discussnew opportunities in banking with

Bankof

Montreal

for

Careers a limited

of graduates Manpower in the

number as

Counsellors

challenging

field

of

MANPOWER The Federal Department of Manpower and Immigration has been assigned the task of achieving better and more efficient use of our manpower resources.

on

As a part of this plan we require a number of University graduates, interested in working with people, who will be located in Canada Manpower Centres throughout Ontario.

MOIL, DEC.4

They will assess the potential of employees and the needs of employers. They will assist employees to attain their maximum potential either through re-training or assistance in geographical mobility. No written examination is required and successful applicants will have the satisfaction of knowing that they are making a significant contribution to the prosperity of their fellow Canadians and of Canada as a whole.

Consult your placement office for complete details

Remuneration and opportunities for advancement parable to those offered by business and industry.

Interviews will be held on Dee 7th, 6th floor administration library building. For further information see your University Placement Officer.

DEPARTMENT

6

310 The CHEVRON

are com-

OF MANPOWER

AND

IMMIGRATION


‘Africa

is a complete/y

different

‘wodd’

Africai perhaps with a similar Doug Tennan t participated in program, CUSO--Canadian Uni_ the Operation Crossroads A frica ’ versity Service Overseas. Many project in 1966, working in Kenya Canadian Crossroaders have taken on a bridge and a mission school. this course - for it leads back to Graduating this year, Tennant Africa. hopes to pass on some of his enThe first experience can be thusiasm and tell a bit about a called %nnerving”. You’re in a 1967 Crossroads participant, John group of about ten, with great Ta y/or. by Doug

Tennant

Operation Crossroads Africa: it’s a name that means a great deal to those involved in it. It is an orgadzation created nine years agoto send North American university students to Africa. To an orthodox rabbi and a Presbyterian minister in Harlem, it seemed to beonewaytomakeNorth Americans aware of Africa’s life, problems and challenges. The students would not be tourists studying from a distance, but laborers helping Africans to build their own projects. In building together they would come to know each other. The contact is person to person--building bridges of friendship is theCrossroads motto. This past surnrner, a Uof Wstudent, John Taylor, biology 2, participated in Crossroads, spending two months in the town of Bechem, Ghana. Carrying blocks and cement, he helped in building an addition to a Muslim school and finishing the local public school. Why did he go? “I don’t really know. Perhaps it was a desire to see another culture and to travel. Ihadn’t been outside Canada or the U.S. It was a place I knew little about. Crossroads will give you this knowledge first hand,” said Taylor. It is a chance to learn about a country and its people. Africa is a completely different world. The culture is primitive by our standa rds and it faces real problems. How far can Ghana and thecountries like it develop on their own? How will they meet the needs of the people? Both help’ and answers have to be found-and both must be based on the type of understanding Crossroads can provide. John Taylor intends to return to

problems .of adjusting to the environment . Few Crossroaders live in luxury. The budget is low and the food makes any Waterloo residence’s seem gourmet quality. Crossroads does not end there. It . is a task you take upon yourself to tell others of your experiences. Make Africa live for them through you. Part of the task is giving 50 talks toany interested groups within two years after your return. It’s a job, but in giving knowledge it is worthwhile. What does it cost? $500. This is about a third of the actual cost, and the Federation of Students will pay $300 of it. A Crossroader is not paid; he must cover his own expenses. There are other costs. You are not likely to be the same person when you return, for your perspectives, not just on Africa but The village children also on life and its values will change. Author ofalleged Still interested ? There is a great deal more to tell, JohnTaylor will be giving an illustrated talk on his summer in Ghana on Wednesday, November 29, at 8:00 pm in SS 350. Come on along. by Ellen Roseman,

eagerly

greeted

obscene

Krassner

The McGill Daily, Special to Canadian University

Foreign aid for us INNER UBANGA (CUP&Chief Olah Ogopiyu today pleaded with the members of his tribe to help Canadian students. In a tear-filled speech he harangued the warriors to list all empty rooms and apartment with the national housing service. He said, vacantly,“Thepoor underprivileged co-op students at the University of Waterloo will need rooms in danuary. If you will be moving out of apartments (IT rooms at the end of this term why not do a plumber, a sci-er or a mathcot a big favor. Phone the housing office at 744-6111 local, 2715 and 28252

the Crossroads

Press

in Bechem,

Ghana,

this

summer-

article

runs

Paul Krassner is a realist, He believes existence has no meaning, but he intends to enjoy every absurb moment of it. He is 34 years old (but looks like 20), has a 3 l/2 year-old daughter and confesses that he is He has no vices--“1 very happy. don’t drink, smoke or do crossword puzzles .** He started his career as Paul Maul, a stand-up comedian performing at hospitals * colleges ,and in arrny camps. He did some night club work, but felt it was snobbish to make people get alldressed up and buy a drink in order tohear him.

group

Reaht

He then became a free-lance writer for Mad magazine and the Steve Allen shcw, but left them in 1958 to become editor, publisher, and Ringleader of the first American satire magazine for adults. ‘I felt that America needed a Punch.” His objective was a magazine that would communicate without compromise or condescension. He wanted to “fill the void sponsored so successfully by the socio-cultural-politico-religio-e c0n 0m i c Association for a Dynamic Status Que.*’ In 1961, the Realist had 3,000 subscribers. Today the number stands at 100,000, and the magazine is sold at newstands all over the country. Not everything in the magazine is satire. Krassner also publish-

for fun es straight articles when he feels the material war rants it. For example, in past issues, he ran an article implicating the Central Intelligence Agency in the murder of Black Muslin leader MalU.S. colm X, and another revealing that the United States maintains six concentration camps to be used in a crisis for containment of “enemies of the state.*’ His critics accuse him of irreverence and bad taste. He thinks taste is extremely subjective and says in his defense, ‘When I become unaware that civilization is sick, then I myself become part of its sickness .” Anyone with a cause amuses him; he dislikes selfrighteousness or pomposity. Krassner takes no salary from the Realist.

Y

AIR CANADA SERVING

CANADA.

U.S.A.

l

BERMUDA

. BAHAMAS

. CARIBBEAN

. IRELAND

l

ENGLAND

. SCOTLAND

@ . FRANCE

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SWITZERLAND

. AUSTRIA.

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Friday,

U.S.S.R.

November

24, 1967 (8:22)

377

7

.


THE MOST TALKED

ABOUT

PICTURE

OF THE YEAR?

SOME PEOPLE GET UP AND WALK OUT! People wait in line to see WARRENDALE. Even in the rain. Enough people to break attendance records. That’s marvelous, But every now and then someone stalks out before the picture is over. That’s a’shame. Not because they were upset, But because they didn’t give themselves a chance. Look, a new shot at the truth is always a jolt. But it’s usually well worth it. Ask anyone who has seen it.

The Magic Circus, formerly the Creeps, relied heavily on Four Seasons, Beatles, and Byrds medoiies and- origninal compositions to fill their show at the Village North dance Saturday night. Chris, Boz, Jim and Al were accompanied by their hippie lighting assistant and sound technician to produce a first-class performance. Chevron photo by Pete Wilkinson

Macpherson

jdeashg, by George

Loney

cartoons

funny, -

Chevron staff

Macpherson made it1 Aftervam ious unavoidable delays, Duncan Macpherson% exhibit of cartoon art was opened in the art&heater gallery Tuesday. Duncan Macpherson was trained at the Ontario College of Art and the Boston Museum of Art and joined the staff of Macleans magazine. In 1958 he went to theToronto Daily Star as editorial caw toonist. He won Canada% highest journalistic award for the Starin 1959, 1960, 1962 and 1966. He has also had his work reproduced in seven other Canadian newspapersaswell as Time magazine and the New York Times. His cartoons are instantly pleasing, often funny, sometimes biting and always art. The group of 27 drawings being shown in the gallery until December 17 repre sents his best. They are international and national in scope range and technique, from wash to pen-and-ink to pencil, Nancy-Lou Patterson university art director, is showing the carSI toons in the same way they are

Math Society w&omess

you

fo the

opening

~STANTON

Of

HAM

MONDAY 72r30

noon

-_ Creative MON. NOV. ART FILMS

Arts

27 12:15

sent to be Printing Process--with Macpherson’s comments and pre HminarY sketching still showing

‘The big

on the border. The effect is really tremendous-you almost feel Macpherson is there with you.

land’

Our story told in sdng by Loraine

Marrett

Chevron staff

The time draweth near for the Centennial oratorio/The big lax&, to be presented next weekendFriday, Saturday, Sunday-at the, Theater of the Arts. The eight-movement libretto was written by Dr. Larry Cummings, Englishprof at St. Jerome’s who has been instrumental in the successes of St. Aethelwold?s Players. The libretto is Cummings’ own interpretation of Canadian history. The first three movements portray courageous and adventurous peoples leaving their homes for a destination which we can identify as the New World. The nation Canada actually arose from defeatedpeoples. The defeated colonists of New France formed the core together with the United

Empire Loyalists who settled in the ’ Canadian Maritimes, the Eastern Townships

and OnbfiO.

The fifth movement describes the hope the children of these sad discouraged peoples managed to find. The sixth, chorus of nations, . tells of the great flood of many nationalities into Canada after Confederation. They somehow re ta.ined their national identity and language and yet were able to build a nation together. Although things seemed to be looking good for the Big Land, the world wars troubled her people. ‘*What is man trying to do? Have we built a nation only to destroy it?In the final movement, Dr. Cummings offers his final solution: love, in its infinite varieties.

DRAWINGS”

CRADLE

OF MAN’S

ART”

(Prehistoric

Free Admission

TUES. NOV. 28 12: 15 Theatre WORKSHOP ‘67 “CATHLEEN NI HOULIHAN” Yeats set in Ireland in 1798. Message. Free Admission

of the Arts A one Act play by W. 6. This play has an Anti War

WED. NOV. 29 12: 15 Theatre of the Arts NOON CONCERT The STAGE BAND present a programme Jazz Oriented Music. Free Admission

of Popular

and

SUMMER WEEKEND 68

THURS. NOV.30 12:15 AL116 THURSDAY FILM SERiES “SI LKS AND SULKI ES” The thrill of harness racing on Prince Edward Island. “60 CYCLES” The 1 Ith. St.‘Laurent long distance bicycle race through 1,500 miles of the Gaspe Country - Side. Free Admission FRI. DEC. 1 8:00 p.m. Theatre of the Arts SAT. DEC. 2 8:00 p.m. Theatre of the Arts SUN. DEC. 3 3:00 p.m. CAROL FANTASY Premiere Performance of the Bjg Land. Christmas Carols and Selections from the Messiah. Free Admission Tickets from the Theatre Box Office AT254 Ext. 2126 Federation

0

art

TACHISTES”

LASCAUX,

Arts)

biting-but

-

AL116 CHILDREN’S

“UNDERSTANDING

“LES

Calendar

in gdery:

312 The CHEVRON

of Students

- Creative

Arts Board

organizationa-l

Monday, \

meeting

Nov. 27

SSc 357 at 7:30

pm.

.- JOIN THE, COMMITTEE -k


Wcwrendale .-poses questions By Gord

Wilkinson’

Chevron staff

Tony, a patient at Warrendale, complains vilently of a worker’s bad breath and eventually has to be forcefully subdued by three members of the institution’s staff. Patrick Watson and Allan King .made the documentary for the CBd, which refused to show it, it won awards every where else.

Brown by Sandy

t&s

Savlov

Chevron staff

TORONTO-What% the present status of Warrendale? The Chevron called John Brown, its former director, still highly controversial, to find out. Brown now runs treatment cen:ers headquarteres in Newmark?t under the name Brown Camps Ltd. There are also two in BC, )ne in Saskatchewan, one in Manitoba, and one in the Maritime&, Most of the children who feaured in the film are with Brown Ln his new centers. Only oneTony-is still in Warrendale. And only one-Carol-is at home. There are now over 250 children n Brown’s centers acrossCanada. le has an average increase of 10 ;o 12 children a month. They stay

Carol, a 1 J-year-old death.

on Wurrendale from several months to several years, he said. “There is no limit on treatment time. We take children on the understanding we will keep them under treatment until they are capable of returning to the community”. Two of the staff in the movie (fllmed~ in spring 1966 but not completed till just before the Ontario department of health took over Warrendale in the fall) have returned to school and one has found other employment. The rest are still with Brown and none are at Warrendale. “The methods of treatment used at Warrendale have been adopted to vaqing degrees by institutions caring for children across Canada during the past ten years”. The movie itself was shown in

Britain under the auspices of the three professional societies within the medical profession. When it was shown there it caused much controversy, especially in the newspapers. ‘It has been shown to both medical and film faculties at Harvard, to the staff of Michael Reese Hospital (a big psychiatric hospital in Chicago) and to the U of Western Michigan at Kalamazoo, all by invitation. It was selected for showing in the New York film festival and the San Francisco film festival. New York had to schedule an extra showing-some people broke into the lobby of the theater when they ran out of tickets after the third showing. It won awards from the Cannes Film Festival in France,

patient, burst into tears when forced to face the reality of her friend’s

Screaming oaths and flailing arms and legs, a young girl wrestles with two adults in the opening scene of ‘Warrendale’, playing at the Lyric until Tuesday night. The girl’s arms are pinnedacross her chest and her madly pumping legs are held together as the three people sweat and strain in their mad struggle. The reason forthis gruelling conflict was the young girl% refusal to get up for breakfast. A small boy Tony, about 14, punches and spits at an adult who is desperately trying to force him to the floor. Her pleasand supplications only provoke “You fuck off, you fuck off”, and two other adults leap at Tony. The three drag him down and hold him helpless while he screams and spits in their faces. The cause-Tony’s comment on the girl’s bad breath. Warrendale is not a pretty pitture; one feels slightly nauseated when it is over. You will feel angry, you will want to cry, mostly you will want to help-to comfort a child or sympathize with an adult. The children in this picture are all emotionally disturbed, but they will never experience the torture of shock treatment nor will they know the horror of a straitjacket. They learn very early in their new home that expressing oneself physically or vocally is not only allowe&-it is encouraged. Anygrievances they feel must becommunicated to the staff members. The staff then explores the reacl sons for the outburst by involving themselves in the child’s problem and making it possible for the child to experience personal revelation by this candid relationship. The children usually find that contact with another is repulsive and thus the staff forces and pro-

vokes this contact until it becomes acceptable. Their days are never without games and conversation, although at the beginning It is understood that these will be greeted with violent reaction. It is important that no child be allowed to bottle any p.nxiety and any smouldering emot ons are purposefully ignited to an explosive outburst. The most brutal example of this is $found in the case of Carol, a 15year-old patient who became close friends with the house cook. The cook died suddenly and Carol took full responsibility for her death. As she struggled to keep away from the staff shefoundher efforts futile. Therefore she relaxed, shut her eyes and locked theworld out side. (The treatment staff realized the symptoms of withdrawal and im* mediately began to yell and shout into her face. Carol’s frozen expression shattered soon and she began to scream back. Tears jumped to her eyes as she was brought back to the reality of her cruel experience. Warrendale is not only a docue mentary on disturbed children. Nor does it stop at a comment on society-it leaves the entire audience qluestioning their own attitudes to anger and fear. Try it and see.

goes

Folk

Fuss io All yousongsters,beware. FASS is after your fass-inating voices. The regular meeting of thefolksong club has been changed to the arts theater. The time is noon Thursday. The purpose of the change is the FASS Nite musical auditions. Now don’t be scared off. It is fun to make an idiot of yourself sometimes--as long as you don’t do it very often. All you need is you and anything that will drown out the discord--like a guitar or a zither-

Ann McGillis as Rosalind intimidates Amiens (Colin Maynard) to elecit information on her lover in, 4s you like it this weckend in the arts theatre. Friday,

November

24, 1967 f&22)

313

9

,


Poor Charlie Hark, all ye ardent fans of the 4Mississippi Delta blues’. The Infinite Noodle coffeehouse downtown is featuring a first in your kind of music tonight tomor row and Sunday. Poor Charlie, a seasoned performer, will give you the entertainment which has carried his name throughout Canada, the U.S. and Mexico. Poor Charlie, otherwise known as Charles Robertson,has been professional for three years. He was trained by such old hands as

does fhe blues

Big Joe Williams and Son House. His voice has been heard in Montreal at the New Penelope, in Regina and Winnipeg at the Fourth Dimensions, in Vancouver at the Bunkhouse and Village Bistro and in coffeehouses in Victoria, where he performed alongside Mississippi John Hur vd other blues groups. For the past 18 months Charles and his wife (who cut a record with the Chanteclairs) have been travelling across the continent in their vintage 1947 Cadillac.

Brought here this year by political-science Prof. DonaldGordon, Charles is now doing a makeup year in English at the University of Waterloo. However he is still active in the music world. He appeared on the TV show ‘Take 30’ just two weeks ago. Appearing this weekend with Poor Charlie is Jake Harries, an Irish studentworking on his MA in English at Waterloo. His jugband music is aguaranteed smash.

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of choice

Birney

Yegetit? Look see AMERICA BUILDS BILLBOARDS so billbords kin bill freedoma choice between-yeah between billbores no WAIT its yedoan hafta choose no more between say like trees and billbores lessa course wenna buncha trees is flattint out into BILLB yeah yegotit . youkin pick between well hey! see! like dat! ALL VENYL GET WEEL DOLLS $6.98 or-watch wasdat comin up? . PRE PAID CAT?

Earle shops work,

Birney, poet-in-residence, is featuring a series of workon his poetry at this university. Here is a sample of his reprinted by permission of McClelland and Stewart.

Brown,

James by Jan

and

George

TORONTO-Psychedelic lights flashed in rhythm to the puksing music. Go-go girls in silhouette. People screaming. The stage a fluid sea of motion. And a!ll of this centered around one figure-The great James Brown himself. Overcoming the difficulties presented by the detached atmosphere of Maple Leaf Gardens on Sunday, Blown soon managed to bring the audience to a fever-pitch of excitement. His rousing performance ranged from the old standard-FrankSin-

PREPAID CATASTROPHE COVERAGE yeah hell youkin have damnear anythin FREE 28 INCH TV IN EVERY ROOM see! or watchit! OUR PIES TASTE LIKE MOTHERS yeah but book bud no chickenin out because billbores build AMyeah an AMERICA BUILDS MORE buildbores to bill more sure yugotta! yugotta have FREEDOM TO hey! you doan wannem godam fieldgalsses! theys probly clouds on Mount Raneer but not on MOUNT RAINEIR THE BEER THAT CHEERS and not on good old yealla

Mr. Psyche-ciytmmh,

&a’ s ‘That’s life’-to his own songs belted out with background dances of the Duck, the Bugaloo, the Skate and the Funky-Broadway.

SHELL keepin de windoff yeh from allosc clammy beaches hey! LOOK ywan cows? Zoooom! Them was BORDEN’S CONTENTED Landscapes is fer the birds fella yegotta choose between well like between two a de same hell like de man said Who’s got time fer a third tit? two parties is Okay that’s DEMOC-sure but yegit three YeEOt c~~mie~ I’m tellinyeh is like dose damfool niggers in in Asia somewere all tryin to be nootrul I tellyeh’treesa crowd a crowda godamatheisticunamericanantiBILLBORES yeah an yewanna help Burma? help BURMA SHAVE yewanna keep the longhairs from starvin? BUY HANDMADE TOY SOLDIERS yegotta choose fella yegotta choose between AMERICA and UN-between KEE-RISPIES and KEE-RUMPIIES between KEE-RYEST and KEE-ROOST- ~ SHOVE and brother if you doan pick * RIGHT you better git this heap tahellofn FHRUWAY *EARL BIRNEY

has/ audience

Emotions soared as Brown did his rendition of (A man’s world’ and ‘Cold sweat’-and in the final set his great hits, 4Out of sight’,

‘Try me’ and ‘Please, please, please! infected the whole audience. By the end of the show 44Mr.

in fever Dynamite” was dancing all over the stage, the Fabulous Flames (Brown’s band) playing frantically, the lights bursting around him,

*

Give

u ghoul

to your

The man in the cannibal pot by Gahan Wilson. Doubleday

girl

for Christmas

that of Charles $3.75

Gahan Wilson% cartoons are familiar to anyone who has ever read playboy magazine. HiscartOOnS are alWaYS simple and ghoulW-h Wilson’s Style is ve4 much like

Addams. These h0

al%& over the years have Partrayed the fantastic horrors that lurk around the corners ofAmerican streets and American minds. Wilson is not as great as Addams but his works are enjoyable, His style is simple, with little variety in his characters, His

CANADIAN

this

year’

themes are based mainly on taking a simple everyday phrase or occurrence and finding something

grotesquein it,

This book is an apt item to place in anyone% Christmas stockingif you can’t find a black-widow spider-Dale Martin

The fans, completely enthralled, rushed towards him. Suddenly James Brown, ‘{The King” threw his cufflinks into the mass of people and disappeared. The lights blared on all overthe and the fans, still infected by the magic rhythm, spilled singing and dancing into the streets.

Gardens

UNIVERSITY SERVICE OVERSEAS

UNIVERSITY OF WATERLOO WATERLOO ONTARIO SERVICE UNIVERSITAIRE CAliADlEN NO PROFITS,

NO PROMOTIONS,

BUT

LOTS

OF PERSONAL

If these words have a challenging ring to them instead of a depressing one . . . read on. There is a place for you in CUSO. And you will join hundreds of others who are workDoctors, teachers ing in 35 countries meeting the challenge of a world of inequalities. engineers, technicians, and literally anyone else who has a skill or profession to offer can somtiwhere among the underdeveloped countries offer his or her service to people who are eager to help themselves. The people who joined CUSO took on a tough job. Running a hospital with a minimum of supplies, building a bridge with nothing but timber and sweat,teaching a child who knows only a strange tongue. . . but then no one said it would be easy. You can’t earn a promotion, but you earn a bonous every day in the response of the people you live with, and you will be amazed at how quickly you’ll’ find an opportunity to develop your ideas, your dreams. Willing to work to build a better world? Here is just the job for you.

SATISFACTION

IN HELPING

AUTRE-MER

A DEVELOPING

NATION

But whether or not you are interested in overseas work, the U. of W. local committee extends a warm invitation to all to attend any or all of its functions. Whether you are about to graduate, or are a graduate student, or still an undergraduate, you are invited to attend all the programmes. On Monday Nov. 27 at8:OO p.m. in Al 116 Mr. Jon Church, CUSO regional director for Ontario will be here from Ottawa to show films and slides about CUSO, Then on Wednesday Dec. 6 in AL1 16 at 8:00 p.m. a panel of international students and professors who have. been connected with CUSO will speak on cross cultural communications and the need and role of CUSO overseas, and answer any questions you may have. For any i’nformation please contact: Renzo Bernardini, Village S-2 310, Phone 576-7677 Dr. E.P. Patterson Social Science Room 201.

Friday,

November

24, 1967 (~22)

315

or

11


Dave Quarrie

Hockey

Larry

Wartiors

Depth

Copeiand

‘67~‘68

and

Mel Baird

Vince

Mulligan

Bob

Murdoch

style .

experien-ce

codd

by Pete VVebster Chevron sports

i

Last season was a year of first for the Warriors. For the first time since joining the Ontario-Quebec Athletic Association six years ago, the Warriors went all the way to the finals. For the first time two Warriors, captain Ron Smith and defenseman Mel Baird, were named to the OQAA all-star team. Yes indeed, head coach Don Hayes has done wonders since taking over the leadership of the Warriors only four years ago. Although his first season with the Warriors was not too successful, the last two have found the Warriors in contention for league honors. Aided by assistant coach Cail Vinicombe, Hayes led the Warriors to second place in the OQAA last season. This year Bob Norman, who played for the McMaster Marlins before going to the University of Alberta for his MSc in physical education, will also help guide the Warriors in the role of assistant coach. Built on a solid nucleus of veterans and some very experienced rookies, this year’s edition of the Warriors has more depth than any previous Waterloo squad. There are 12 rookies on this year’s squad but six of these have seen action with other college teams, Goaltending was one of the strong points of last year’s team. Unfortunately Arlon Popkey missed his year and will have to sit this one out. However, goaltending seems no problem. Larry Copeland, who backed up Popkey last year, and Dave Quarrie, who played for Cornell University before coming to U of W, have both played well in the two games so far. One big problem last season was the defence. But again it seems that Hayes has come up with a solution. The Warriors should be extremely‘ strong up the center

12

316 The CHEVRON


. t; ! Larry

Banks

make

Ron

Smith

Dave

Ridge

Waterloo

with the return of captain Ron Smith and Don Mervyn. Another experienced rookie, Joe Modeste, has been impressive so far, scoring one goal and aiding in two others. Modeste played for the Laurentian Voyageurs last season. Returning from last year’s squad are all-star Mel Baird and Bob Murdoch. Vince Mulligan, an all-star for four years with St. Dunstan’s University of the Maritime league will add a lot of strength to the blueline staff. Larry Banks, who played for WUC, and Paul Rappolt will round out the defense. Smith has been teamed up with two rookies, Dave Rudge and Rick Bacon. Bacon has showed good,scoring punch with three goals in two games. Mervyn will center the veteran line with Orest Romashyna and last year’s leading scorer Terry Cooke on the wings. If Romashyna plays to his capabilities, he could easily join , Baird and Smith as all-stars. The third line is made up of Modeste, Doug Jodoin and Dennis Farwell. Jodoin and Stu Eccles came to the Warriors from the Carleton Ravens. Hugh Conlin, Mike Grant and Dan Hostick will spell the regulars. While the rest of the Warriors will be working hard on the ice, two other important members of the team will be working equally as hard behind the scenes. Russ Wolyson is back again this season to manage the teamthis time with ‘an assistant. Ian Young, who starred with the Oshawa Generals of the Ontario Hockey Association Junior A league last season before an unfortunate injury closed his career, will help Russ. This season the Warriors will take on a new role in the OQAA. Instead of being the underdog, every team in the league will be shooting to knock them off. So the Warriors are going to have to be ready for every game. If-they are, the Warriors could finish in first place this season.

i Joe Modeste

Cooke

Don

Farwell

one

number

Terry

Dennis

Mervyn

Orest

Romashyna

.

meHugh

Conlin

Paul Rappolt

Dan

Friday,

November

Hostick

24, 7967 (8:22)

377

13


ENDZONESwith

other words; neither O&AA team was just lucky to beat theiropponent. In the Regal% case, it% lucky for them they weren’t beaten by more than 7-l. The Nationals’ coach, the famous Turk Broda, brushes off his team’s loss stating that it wasn? a serious game. Come again,Mr. Broda, have your boys no pride? These two games have opened up the eyes of a lot of hockey fans but there still are skeptics. Many sports people, for example, think the Warriors couldn’t beat the Kitchener Rangers. Unfortunately we will probably never have an answer to this question. For it seems (although the Warriors are quite willing) that the Rangers have refused to play the Warriors. Why? Could it be that they know they have a good chance of losing? For the past three years, Warrior head coach Don Hayes has tried unsuccessfully to arrange such a contest but the Ranger’s executive won’t touch it with a lO-

Although the hockey season is still very young, it sure hasn’t been dull. A couple of weeks ago the Warriors easily handled the Guelph Regals of the Ontario Hockey Association senior-A league. ,I_Last week, the Western Mustangs of the Ontario-Quebec Athletic Association (the league the Warriors play in) beat the London Nationals of the OHA junior-A loop 8-l. So, although both games were exhibition, they were very important. The Regalsj as a senior+A team, are rated slightly below semi-pro caliber. In fact they have several ex-pros on their squad including player-coach Butch Martin and goaltender Boat Hurley, who played for the world-champion Belleville MacFarlanes a few years back. The OHA junior-A league is the biggest supplier of NationalHockey League material. So look back on those games. It% not merely that the Warriors and the Mustangs beat these teamsii% how badly they beat them. In

Pete Webster,

Chevron

sports

foot pole. Surely, no matter who won, it would be one of the best games the Kitchener Auditorium has ever seen. It would probably draw a capacity crowd, If the Rangers lost, they would have a lot to lose. Their executive estimates it would cost them about 1,000 fans a game. On the other hand, if the Warriors won (t for one think they would) they would finally get the respect they deserve from &W sports fans. If they lost they would lose little-except a great deal of personal pride. Sometime in January the Russian national B team will be in town to play the Rangers, who claim to be the best team in the Twin Cities area. But are they? If they are, then why won’t they play the Warriors to prove it? After all, if you+e the best, you should be willing to take on all comers.

Chevron photo by Fred Walters

ATHLETlC

SCHEDULES

INTERCOLLEGIATE HOCKEY vs Lake Tonight - Warriors Superior 6:30 pm Waterloo Arena. Semi-finals and Saturday, final of Dominion Life Tournament, Waterloo Arena, 6:30 and 9 Tuesday, Warriors vs Lutheran, Waterloo Arena, 8: 30 BASKETBALSL: Saturday; Warriors vs PikeSeagram ville College, 8:30

Wednesday, Warriors vs K-W Coronets, Seagram 8:30. WOMAN’S BASKETBALL: Tuesday, Warriors at Lutheran, 8:00 pm -\ WOMAN’S VOLLEYBALL: Tuesday, Warriors at Lutheran, 8:00 pm INTRAMURAL HOCKEY :

Tuesday,

Nov. 28

9 pm Wilson, Eng vs Sci. 10 pm Wilson, Co-op vs St. Jeromes 11 pm Wilson, South vs Phys. Ed. 11 pm Waterloo, North vs Arts Wednesday, Nov. 29 9 pm Wilson , St. Pauls vs Renison 10 pm Wilson, West vs East 11 pm Waterloo, Con. Gre. practice BASKETBALL: Tuesday, St. David’s Gym, West vs East Math vs Grad Phys. Ed vs South Sci vs Eng. Con Gre vs St. Jeromes Renison vs St. Pauls VOLLEYBALL: Wednesday, Nov. 29 ‘k30 ti. Pauls vs Con Gre., Co-op vs Renison -’ .

When you turn 21 you are no longer covered by your parents’ Hospital Insurance. You must take out individual membership within 30 days. Get your application form at a bank, a hospital, or the Commission.

m

HEW JOB?

To keep nsured follow the instructions on the Hospital Insurance “Certificate of Payment-Form 104” that your present employer is required to give you on leaving.

I-- -I lEWLYWEli

CUM LAUDE

The “family” Hospital t Insurance premium must now be paid to cover husband and wife. Notify your “group” iyithout delay or if you both pay preGums direct, notify the Commission.

The best in traditional

‘.!’:,;;*{f‘1 styling. Longer

,“; points that roll ” 1.,!! i; ;‘. just right. . . front ’ I : i ‘:;1 placket new solid colors and strip I to choose fromin \‘I\ popular oxford fabric. *Featuring Tericota ’ perma-iron tapered

Y

1 ONTARIO’ HOSPITAL INSURANCE Plan

.

OntarioHospital ServicesCommission, Toronto7, Ontario.

Mens and Boys’ Shop

14

378 The CHEVRON

GIMICS

Phys-ed by

Karen

I

phailure

Wanless

Chevron sports

Who is the girlti plys-ed intramural representative? Why was phys-ed withdrawn from the intramural program? What is PESA? These questions stem from the lack of communication among first-year ) co-op and integrated phy sical- education. As it stands first-year and 2A are running the show in phys-ed. They feel the 1A group has no spirit and is uninterested in any activities that they plan. PESA-Physical Education Students Associatiorr--was designed to bring together the threegroups. But 1A hasn’t been informed what happens at these meetings. This isn’t their fault1 But it is their fault if they don? read the bulletin boards in the stat dium along with the PESA activity letter. And what’s IA going to do about it? Basketball officiating A teaching clinic for basketball officiating will be held Saturday, December 9, at Forest Heights collegiate in Kitchener. The fee for this clinic will be 25 cents. Registration will be at 8:30 in the morning and the clinic will run until mid-afternoon. Bring your own lunch. DOMINION

$8.00

fite

Ralph Jones and Maureen Harris took the trophy in the 130mile, five-hour Engineering Society car rally Saturday, despite a too-muddy non-ascendable hill. Poor visibility added to the fun.

LIFE

Anyone interested should come prepared to practice. Bring a rule book, whistle and running shoes. Eastwood collegiate will be the site of a rating clinic on Saturday, December 16. The $1 fee for this clinic a.1~0 includes the price of the exam. Women’s varsity curling Jan Oliver and Cathy Derbyshire won their games in the opening round of varsity curling played at the Glenbriar on Sunday. Oliver whipped Bonnie Allen 1% 6 while Derbyshire crushed Sharon Bean 12-5. The four- team round-robin competition will decide who will represent Waterloo at OQAA play at Montreal in February. Derbyshire wiped out an early 4-l deficit with a three i n the third and a stolen four in the fourth. Bean, who made a lovely shot in the second to get her four, could only manage a single in the sixth. Oliver jumped out in front with a big five in the opening frame and quickly increased her lead to 8-O. After giving up a couple she took four more in the sixth to put her lead out of reach. The second round goes tomorrow morning at the Glenbriar at 8. Allen and Bean wffl tangle in one game, while Oliver faces Derbyshire in the big second match.

INTERCOLLEGIATE

HOCKEY TOURNAMHVT Friday ?

and Saturday,

November

WATERLOO

24 and 25 at

ARENA

Friday, 6: 30 pm - Lake Superior College vs. Waterloo 9 pm - Careltdn University vs. Lutheran Hawks Saturday 6: 30 pm - Friday’s lositig teams 9 pm - Championship TOURNAMENT

TICKET

Warriors

$1.50

University of Waterloo students may obtain a tournament ticket for 75c if they exchange one blue hockey specialevent ticket at Seagram gymnasiumvany time up to Wednesday.


GIober

hits for 37 points

B-ball

by Archie

Bolsen

Chevron sports

Bryan Brown, math I, deflects Richard Maynard’s Brown played a standout game the Warrior hoop. Chevron photo by the backboard.

lntramuml by Paul Solomonian Chevron sports

Don Cooke lost adraw-off toTom Rajnovich on Tuesday to take his first setback in league curling The loss left Dave Hawkins Play as the only undefeated skip in the league. Hawkins held off DaveHolmes to extend his record to 5-O and stay in first place with 43 points. Wayne Steski strengthened his hold on second place with avictory over Steve Wilton. Cooke is now in third. Rajnovich and Cooke had tied their game the previous week. On Tuesday Cooke, with first shotand having no idea of the weight, put his rock through the house.Rajnovich threw lighter weight and barely bit the front of the 12-foot circle to win. Rajnovich lost this week% game to previously winless John Stevens while Cooke handed Hilly GilChrist his fifth straight loss. Last Thursday Jan Oliver suffered her first loss. Pete Finch picked up his first victory by defeating the Nova Scotian miss. Oliver remained in second with 28 points, 2.5 ahead of Bill I&n, who extended his record to 3-O. Paul Solomonian won his fourth against no defeats to remaininfirst with 38 points. Thursday, Nov. 16: Cale 8.5 Weston 2.5 1 Wilton 10 Laking Solomon. 9.5 Trotter 1.5 Icton 10 Chisholm 1 Finch 9.5 Oliver 1.5 Seibert 8 Lomas 3 Holmes 9.5 Leigh 1.5 Cook 10.5 Cornwall .5 l

U of -W

bearhugbeats

shot on guarding Doug Seaborn

Nov. 21: 9 Rajnovlch 10 Gilchrist 7.5 Holmes 9 Bryant 8 Ash 9 Wilton 10.5 Krelove 9 Sweet

Even with three second- stringers on the floor at times, the Warriors did not look out of place against their bluegrass opponents. Junior team wins by 40-point margin In a preliminary game the Pioneers, the Waterloo junior varsity team, swamped a disorganized HZ+ milton Quigley intermediate squad 88-48. With almost a completely new lineup, Neil Widmeyer’s JVs opened an early 25-9 lead and coasted the rest of the way. Widmeyer used two five-man units each playing two and a half minutes, so that he could get a close look at all his men. Particularly impressive in his bid to crack the varsity lineup was clever-moving guard Sauli Ahveniemmi, who weaved in and out of opponents for 19 points, Paul Cotton, who stormed both backboards to pop in 18 points. Coach PugHese was satisfied with the performance of all his newcomers and of the team as a whole in their second game of the year against a team of Pikeville’s caliber.

*University

lends

co-op $700,000 The Phillip Street co-op residence project got a shot fnthearm this month. At its regular meeting the board of governors authorized a $20,000 loan to Waterloo Cooperative Residence Inc. WCRI on a ten-year debenture basis. This will assist primary financing of the project.

g, hockey races tighten

cur/in Tuesday, Stevens Cooke Hawkins Duncan Britten Steski Cede Butteflld

When the basketball Warriorsgo hunting for Pikeville Bears tomorrow they’ll know they can’t get too close to the ‘enemy until the bear is dead. Leading 55-44 with 16 minutes remaining in Wednesday’spreseason exhibition game, the Warriors ran into a streak of fouls. That sent Bear after Bear to the charity stripe and eventually. gave the game to the visitors 91-84. WLU coach Howard Lockhart* a spectator at the games, praised both Warrior teams and looksforward to the December 5 meeting with Waterloo. Lockhart% Hawks bowed reluctantly to Pikeville 88-80 Tuesday night, despite a school scoring record of 41 points by PeteMisikowetz. It wasn’t until the final minute that the outcome was certain as the hustling cagers of Coach Dan Pugliese buzzed around Pikeville players. The Bears ended the game with a stall to kill the clock. However without defensive ace Neil Rourke, who had fouled out earlier, the Warriors could only foul for possession of the balla allowing the Bears to pad their lead, The Warriors never trailed by more than seven points at any time. They fell quickly behind 8-l then played seesaw with the Bears until the dying moments. Pinpoint shooting by Sol Glober from the top of the key plus fine rebounding by 6’8” rookie Bryan Brown brought the Warriors even with Pikeville. Along with the spirited backline play of freshmen Jaan

Laaniste, the Warriors had ahalftime lead of 4240. Pugliese opened the second half by putting his shifting man-to-man defense into high gear. Pikeville lost the ball several times on offense, allowing Glober to move down swiftly for his arching onehanders. A time-out gave Coach Dale Mca chance to- revamp his Neely team’s defense, which now became a full-court press. The Warriors became harassed and lost the ball and their lead, while running into the fouls at the same time. From here on the Bears9 Superior moves on offense drew enough fouls to give them the upper hand. Overall the Warriors showed a refreshing change in their play compared to last year. The effectiveness of Brown, who finished with a dozen rebounds, and Rourke, who had nine, prevented the springy Bears from controlling the backboards. This gave the team plenty of chances for second or third shots. Sol (the Feather) Globerfinished as the game’s leading scorer with 3 1 points, while Laaniste contributed 16. Ty, Burch, who saw lots of relief action had ten and Doug Lockhart nine. Pikeville’s big men were Roger Campbell (18), Jack Bendure (17), Ralph Good (ll)$ Dave Collier (11) and Steve Butcher (9). Pugliese made good use of his deep bench, substituting powerful Bob Howes for Brown several times. Junior-varsity grad Art Webster and rookie Dave Idiens moved into the guard position, in addition to Burch playing forward.

2 1 3.5 2 3 2 .5 2

Basketball Renison defeated the Co-op & 33 to extend their league-leading record to 5-l in the residence loop. The loss left the Co-op in fourth place with a 2-3-l record. St. Paul’s lost its fifth in a row to St. Jerome’s 39-27. The win put St. J’s into third place, one point behind idle Conrad Grebel. Science and the engineers remained tied for second in the faculty circuit with wins on Tuesday. Science beat arts 46-23 andengineering moved past grads 53-26, Idle math leads with a 5-o mark. West was also idle on Tuesday but remained alone in first in the Village league when North bowed to phys-ed 33-26. The win put the Seagram gym boys into a second place tie with North. East dropped into a last place tie with South, losing to that team 45-26. First-semester action winds up next week. Hockey There is an intramural hockey league. After three weeks, results have finally been received at the Chevron. No scores have been sent in, but we do have the standings. Renison leads the faculty league with a 2-O record, notching wins over Conrad Grebel and Co-op. The Co-opers are tied on points

with Rex&on as a result of wins over St. Paul’s and Grebel. Co-op leads all teams with 12 goals scored. St. Jerome% has the best defense, giving up only one goal while shutting out Grebel Fi-0 and tying St. Paul’s 1-l St. Paul% lost their only other start and Conrad Grebeliswinless in three outings. Phys-ed and South are tied on top in the Village circuit butphysed has a game in hand. South has beaten East and winless No rt h while losing to West. Phys-edhas counted victories over North and West.

Smashing

West and East are tied at l-1, East’s victory coming over the hapless North squad, North’s Bob Fawcett leads all players. with six goals, the only markers the team has scored. It has given up 20 goals, tops in that department. The engineers prevail in the fae ulty loop with a l-&2 mark, one point ahead of math. Engineering tied math and arts and defeated grads. Grads won their first outing, beating arts. Science lost to math and turned back the artsmen.

year

This was a year for records on the Wniwat track and field team. Under Coach Neil Widmeyer, the Warriors broke 17 of the 22existing school records. These marks go back to September 1963. All of the track events had new records in 1967. Bob Finlay set a new mark in the mile with 4:08.2 run at the o&AA championship. In the same meet he set athreemile record of 13:50.9. The O&AA meet also saw three other Warrior records fall. Don Lorimer ran the lo&yard dash in 10.0, Dennis McGann ran the 220 in 22.6 and Jerry Krist ran the 4401 yard hurdles in 57.9. Bruce Walker set a mark of 1: 58.9 in the 880 whileGeorge Neeland set a respectable record of 14.5 in the 120 hurdles. Both these records were made at the meet with McMaster. The other track record was set

w 0 3

GP 2 3 2 % 2 3

W 2 2 1 1 0

L T Pts 0 0 4 1 0 4 1 0 2 1 0 2 3 0 0

Engineers Math Science Grads Arts Renison Co-oP St. Jerome St.Paul%g2 Grebel

3 i? 2 $21102

1 1

0 0

2 1

4 3

k30211 8 2

2 2

0 1-O 0 1 3

0

Pi3

4 4 3 1 0

for UniWat

at Windsor in the 440. BobMunday ran the sprint in 51.2. In the relays, the team of Don Lorimer, George Pachovse, Bob Munday and Dennis McGann set a new recordof43,5inthe4by-110. In the 4by-440 Bill Cowan, Ken Nichols, Doug Garland and Bob Munday ran the relay in 3:26.8. The Warrior polevault record was broken three times this year. Hugh Miller set a mark of 12’6”

Mat

Phys-ed South West East North

Friday,

8

2

I% 3

1 0 0

1 1 0

records

twice while Bruce Westell jumped the record height once. S&fried Kindler equalled the 5’10)’ highjump record but also set new records in the discus and hammer throw. At the o&AA meet he threw the discus 130’6” and at the RMC Invitational he threw the hammer 90’2”. . Terry Wilson set anew standard in the javelin in the McMaster meet with a heave of 182’6.5”.

wins Atlantic

by Gary Holt HALIFAX (CUP)-In rain-that at times reached downpour proportions, the McMaster University Marauders showed a very stout defense, and defeated theSt. Francis Xavier X-Men 7-O in the first annual Atlantic Bowl on Saturday. The victory gave McMaster a berth inthecanadiancollege Bowl,

321102

Bowl

where they will meet the Univesity of Alberta Golden Bears. The game takes place tomorrow in Toronto. On a field which had puddles deep enough for the players to wash their hands in (and some did), the Marauder defense held the X-Men to 45 yards rushing and 90 yards passing.

November

24, 7967 (8:22)

379

15


End with

Those

SKI ! SKI ! SKI ! HEADS, FISCHERS, ROSSIGNOLS, all the most popular brand names. TYROL WHITE STAG drop COMPLETE

into

K-W’s

SPORT

most SHOP

for

ski clothing and all the accessories. Christmas gift suggestions galore. Thanks to all who came to our ski movie manday night.

College Sports (Kitchener) Ltd. 38 Queen

Y. ‘---‘---.

743-2638

St. South

-

-__-1-, _.,_ _,_._. - -.- ,_.e

one

win,

one

loss

wgged

rugger

garbs wing-forward services and HANOVER, NH-Dartmouth College, New Hampshire was the with a tiring strum the Warriors allowed three tries in the closing site of the rubgy teams’ final games. minutes. The second game featured the The U-hour bus trip down did not dampen the Warriors’ spirits deadly foot of Steve Shelley. The in the least as they took the field . robust Stan-off booted a 69-yard Saturday morning with authority, penalty goal to the amazement of losing 9-o to the Dartmouth firsts. the partisan crowd. Shelley set up However, the Warriors second a further Warrior score feeding Bill Wilson a long ball from strum. team struck back to even the score, Wilson then took advantage of a hole thrashing the Dartmouth seconds as big as a bus to spurt 30 yards 6-5. The first game saw a powerful for a climatic try. pea-green strum push the blackDartmouth then scored an antiand-gold off the ball continuously. climatic try and the garne ended The Warrior three-quarters play65. ed brilliant defensive rubgy, holdThe Warriors were entertained ing the Dartmouth team scoreless royally by the Dartmouth men. until the final 10 minutes of the The team was given 30f ree tickets to the Ivy League football game game. with Cornell. The Warriors did Larry Haggar played a sterling by leagame but was eliminated with a their share of entertaining ding a three-hour singsong session broken jaw. With the lack of Hag-

b If your goal is merely an E-type, sorry you’re not our *type. Successful Great-West agents are different. - First and foremost they look upon insurance as a career which allows them to perform a highly necessary social function. They get wrapped up in insurance for its own sake, and get dedicated to selling the benefits it gives to as many people and firms as possible. Does this bring them E-types, modern apart-

Great-West COMPANY

Life G?;;i

at the Chi-Phi fraternity house. The rugger team is expected to be very strong next year with 21 out of 25 players returning. The Warriors will miss veterans Steve Shelley, Ted Nelson, Bill Wells u and Dave Walters.

Couftmen to 97-23

romp win

The Warriors met an easy opponent in their first exhibition game of the year. The basketball team romped to an easy victory over Brock with a 97-23 score.

The other game was beteeen the 1947 and 1967 Meredith highschool senior teams. The games made up the official opening of a new gy-oath Dan Pugliese’s alma mater.

.

ments, hi-fi stereos and such? Certainly! But that’s not the goal. That’s how they keep score. Interested? Write E. A. Palk, Vice-President and Director of Agencies at our Head O%ce in Winnipeg. Or watch for thevisitofourrepresentativetoyourcampus. ASSURANCE

Warriors

HEAD

OFFICE,

This of our

is

one -IN”

looks for being

out

Look below for some more. Look for warmth mobility and wear, too. Then come in and find a lot of other good reasons for being out this winter.

WINNIPEG

THE DUFFLE COAT (We forgot the pegs) The hooded duffle coats still you best bet on campus, cozy, , warm and real Joe College. Loden shades of Taube, Bottle and navy. From $29.95

Two representatives MONDAY,

will conduct informal discussions on Insurance Careers: NOVEMBER 27 Village Hall at 6:30 p.m.

We’ll be interviewing on your campus on December 5th and 6th. For an appointment, see your student placement officer. 16

320 The CHEVRON

,

Open Daily till 6 pm Thurs. & Fri. till 9 213 King. St. W Kitchener, Ont. 744-527 1


by Paul

Solomonian

Chevron sports

Wayne St&i defeated Gord Runtz of McMaster 10-7 in an extra end to win the UWO Invitational at London last Saturday. This is the second year in a row that Waterloo has won the event. Steski led 6-3 after seven ends in the ten end contest but Runtz came back with deuces in the eighth and tenth -to force the extra frame-. A big miss by the Mat third opened the door for Steski in the deciding end., Facing two Waterloo counters in the 8-foot circle, Runtz asked for a draw to the shot stone, whichwaspartiallyguarded. The over-weight attempt succeeded only in burying the target a little deeper before sliding through the house. Steski then had third man Pete Finch throw his second stone through the house. Runtz’s first rock sat in the front of the 8-foot Steski put it all for third shot. up to the Mat skip when he hit the stone and rolled to the face of his second counter, When Runtz’s draw to the 4-foot stopped short of the house it was all over. In addition to Finch, Steski had Glare Brown at lead and Western’s John Smythe throwing second stones. Smythe and Finch curled

.

,

but counter throuEh the &ES, his rock man:gsd only to” barely rub the shot stone as it went by. ‘Ihe game took two hours and 40 minutes to play, due largely to -the Latta rink’s meetingsbefore \virtually every shot.

led all players with a fine 82%. with Steski in the 1965 Canadian Both Steski and Runtz were far Schoolboy championships. less consistent with Sqo. Steski reached the final by Final Game: moving pastanother Waterloo%nk; Steski 0010212~103-10 skipped by Pete Hindle, 8-7. The RLliltz 110100020207 chances for an all-Waterloo final went by the boards when defending Varsity curling champion Mike Ash losthis second Don Latta scored a big upset in game to Runtz 7-4. Ashhad nipped men’s varsity curling competition Western’s Greg Lawrie, last when he up-ended .Wayne Steski year’s CQAA champion, 6-5 in the - 8-6 last Sun&y at the Glenbriar. opening round. Thk loss eliminated Steski, who That first round featured three had been given a good chance to extra-end come-from-b e h i n d, carry Waterloo’s banner in OQAA steals for the Waterloo contingent. competition. Steski scored a deuce cominghome Pete Hindle was ushered to the and then needed two extra ends to side-lines via a 43 loss to John defeat the Mather rink from U of Scott’s foursome in a fine curling T 7-6. game. Ash took singles on the seventh In other third round play, Mike and eighth to tie and also needed Ash handed B.ob Thompson his two overtime stanzas to defeat second loss 8-3 and Steve Wilton Law rie, Hindle, after picking up lost a big leg when he defaulted to two coming home, stole one in the Bill Icton. first extra end to settle the issue The action left six rinks in the against Western’s Gary Woods. tournament, one half of the or&inumber of entries. Icton nal Wicks and Rolls: and Adrian Lomas are tie only ***Waterloo rinks had a fine time two skips with clean slates, They against Western opponents. Fourin the fourth round toof the six UWO quartets in the tangle In other ga.mes, Scott from the morrow, ‘spiel were knocked championship bracket by U of W takes on Ash and Latta faces Wiltlton. All these rinks must win to teams. *wThe Steski rink curled 63% in stay alive. Steski, who was short one man, the final to Mat’s 5%. Finch gave up a big four in the second end and one more in the third to go down 5-l. Needing points* he pulled off a spectacular shot in the fourth (see diagram) to take a deuce and wiped out the deficit with a stolen triple in the fifth. After giving up one in the sixth, Steski’s earlier take-out woes returned and Latta stole one in the seventh to come home one up. Steski’s last shot in the eighth was an attempt to pass a Latta

Students will find the Yellow Pages one of the most useful reference books around. Looking for Leonardo? You’ll find reproductions of his famous works at art galleries, art dealers, museums, churches and -book stores, Want to paint a masterpiece? All the art supplies you need - oils, brushes, easel and canvas can be found under artists’ materials. Yes, just picture your local Yellow Pages as the handy, helpful guide to all your needs. Now, go on out and paint the town yellow!

The Hidie-Scott game featured three blank frames as both ‘skips tried for a big end in the tightly played contest. The score was 1-1 after five as the first, third, and fifth were purposely blanked, Hindle missed a golden opportunity for a three in the fourth when he missed a wide open takeout on Scott’s second shot stone.

.

Hindle threw his last rockfacing two Scott counters in the 8-foot, He attempted to take out at least one of them> but was narrow and drove the front stone onto the other Scott counter. This banged out a Hindle rock in the. 12=foot, leaving Scott still counting two. A draw to the! open house won the game.

Steski almost avoided-upset loss with this shot in 4th end. He split two Latta rocks (I&2) and stopped at 3, Latta hit 4 and Steski drew #-foot to count 2, dosing gap to 5-3.

.

’ m

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Life would like to talk with you.

Our personnel representative

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He made up for it by stealing singletons in the sixth and seventh to come home two up. Hindle -kad Scott in trouble in the eighth but some costly misses by Hindle’s rink- and solid hittin by second Ted Chase and third Vic Fenton gave Scott an opening.

/

Life OF CANADA

/ ESTABLISHED

1869

8

Friday,

November

24, 1967 (8:22)

32 1

?A

17


Power cut off as pole struck

Planners say size no factor in Me quality

Did someone turn the lights out on you last Friday morning? You weren’t alone. The whole university

had its power

cut off around

2:00 am when a ( 67 Pontiac slammed

into a hydro

GTO

pole carry-

ing most of the university*s electricity, The car was a complete writeoff in the accident which west of the village.

took

place

The village and the university were switched onto auxiliary power for 2 l/2 hours while hydro crews repaired the damage and restrung the wires.

complex

The driver Miss Nola Johnston of the civil engineering department suffered a cut lip andbrokentooth. After the initial impact she walked

a quarter mile to a farmhouse report the accident,

Show some Oh, compassionate

to

space scholars!

Oh

ye of much faith! Where is the truth! Where? The truth lies in the housing office. There is the list for all incoming winter-term students. They will need that clean, heated,

quiet, broadloomed

little hovel that

you call home this term. For verily ye will be out and they

will in. So, if youOre giving .up those cherished flats, tell the housing service at 744-6111 locals 2715 and

The power for the whole university was cut off for two and one half hours when this car struck a hydro pole on Columbia St. west of the Village. The driver suffered minor injuries.

CUSO

changes

The philosophy of CUSO is that you can’t change the world overnight but some good can be doneby trying as best you can. At the last CUSO meeting Jim Weber and Ron Hornby told of their experiences teaching overseas. Weber and his wife Brenda, directors of the residence at Conrad Grebel, taught at a Salvation Army education centre in eastern

world

Nigeria (now Biafra). The centre consisted of primary and secondary schools and a teacher training college. Weber taught English at the teacher training co& ege and Brenda a variety of subjects “depending on the ne&* in the secondary school. Weber said the best thing about his experience was the close personal contact and thereby learning

sloWly of an entirely different culture. He and his wife were not living at a poverty stricken grass roots level as they could not speak the dialect. Most of their contact was with Nigerians of a similar education level. Their home was comfortable and they soon got used to the insects and the heat. Life seemed to be happier there and they felt a liViI@' while Europeans tended to take life too seriously. “You experience the pain and sorrow about you” said Weber.He told of children who can’t learn because of malnutrition, and of bright eager children who won’t go past grade four because their parents can’t afford it. Ron Hornby, a grad student and lecturer here, taught in Trinidad at a government school. He found the racial polyglot most interesting. The people in Trinidad are made up of Negro, Chineses, Spanish, and Indian.

Urban planning and the problem of the expanding megapolis were among the topics discussed at Urbanization 1967, a symposium sponsored by the department of geography and planning. The afternoon sessions revealed that the field of urban planning has more questions than there are anso wers. The field is made even more confused by the fact that there are varying viewpoints among planners. Dr. Aubrey Diem of the university supported the notion of small cities while well-known planning consultant Hans Blumenfeld of Toronto defended large cities. The q.mlity of life doesn’t depend on size alone,*’ he observed, 441t depends more on what we do inside, under the sort of buildings, transportation systems, open spaces, and so on.” Urban sprawb urban shadow, air pollution and loss of identity were other problems which could not be defined, let alone solved. There was general agreement that the growth of cities could not be stopped. But the planners did agree that the growth could be slowed down and controlled. Another workshop decided that present research is inadequate. “Planning research should now be directed so as to inform us about th e needs of life patterns of the variety of people to be found in a modern city .)’ A summary statement declared. The workshop also decided that ‘many assumptions of urban planning should be reexamined. For instance there is the popular impression that people want to minimize the time spent between home and work.

traveling However,

planners have found that many people like to spend a certain amount of time on their way to work.

For budditw Gorens

Signaling by Bruce

on cfefense

Roberts

which

not Chevron staff

like to be a salesman?. Canvassing for Compendium ‘68 has many fringe benefits, in&ding a free yearbook with your name engraved on it. Join Kathy Killey and be one of those swingers who boost Compendium ‘68. To enter the ranks call Doug Squire at 576-9549. Photo by Glenn Berry

18

322 The CHEVRON

You are defending against a 4spade contract and partner leads the king of clubs. You hold Q,J, 8,2. Obviously you want your partner to continue leading the suit, but you must now find some way to tell him so. With A,K,x he may change suits, thinking that declarer has the queen and that by leading the ace he will set up a trick for declarer. Todeter this you must play anunnecessarily high card in the suit, the eight. Partner, seeing this card and noticing that the two is missing from the first trick, will now know that it is safe to continue the suit. Similarly, with 10, 8, 2 you play the two, telling partner that he continues the suit at his own risk. When it is obvious that youdon? want partner to continue the suit led, the card you play may now be used to show a preference between the two remaining suits, trump excluded. A high card would mean “lead the higher ranking of the remaining suits”, a low. card the For example, hearts is lower. trump and your partner leads ace of diamonds. Dummy comes down Here a high card with q&,x. means “lead a spade”, a low card/ 4( lead a club’ . Similarly, whe n returning a card which you know your partner is going to ruff* you can tell him

SXX H 10,s

suit

to return. Example: S A&xx H Q= D K,Qx sx H A,K,9,2 DAxxx

D Jxxxx

C Jxxx

CXXXX SQ=== H Jxx Dxx CAX

The contract is 4 spades andthe ten of hearts is led. You take the ace and king, partner playing the six on your king. The play of high then low by partner indicates that he started with only two cardsin the suit. Therefore if you lead another heart he will ruff it and then must return a card. I&?he returns a club declarer will win it, draw trump, and discard his two diamonds on the queen of hearts and the queen of clubs. However, ‘you can tell partner what to lead back by returning the heart nine. By returning this unnecessarily high card you ask him to lead back the higher of the re maining suits. Thus he confidently leads a diamond and declarer is down one. Similarly, by leading the two to be ruffed you ask him to return a club. Well, there you have it. Perhaps not as obvious as a kick under the table, but a hell of a lot less painful.

.


Nativity

scene

in Czech

pavilion

at Expo

Chevron photo by Glenn Berry

DECEMBER 1967 SUNDAY

MONDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

THUiSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

1

2

8:00 Carol Fantasy Theater: “The Big Land” Hockey at McGill Women’s Sports Day

3

4

3:00 Carol Fantasy Theater: “The Big Land”

Only 18 shopping days left.

10

6

8:30 International film series: “Never on Sunday” AL1 16

Would you believe 12?

17

18

19

31 Semiformal-“Midnight magic” 9 to 2 The Chevron comes back from Vancouver with the silverware.

I

14

Men’s intercollegiate basketbail at Sarnia

20 Sweat

Exams begin Co-op sweat

24

8: 15 Hockey vs McMaster Home

13 8: 15 Hockey vs Windsor’ Home

Sweat cont’d

26 Co-op winter work-team begins

1

2

Maybe the WCTU is right after all Football

Coop registration

28

Hanukkah r Village sends all blankets to dry cleaners

4RY 4

3

Keep

------I..

this

calendar

on your

Men’s intercollegiate basketball vs Fredonia State College at Waterloo Colleg giate

22

23

Examinations end.Take a shower Co-op fall work-term ends.

Shopping begins No more food at the village

30

Hockey tournament in Buffalo

Hockey tournament in Buffalo

-

Classes begin - and out-term engineers return to close the math building

up to date--post

Lectures End Artsmen go home

29

New narco squad arrives for 34ay orienteering course

Men’s intercollegiate basketball at Ottawa Last issue of the Chevron till Jan. 5

16

15

21

27

25

Men’s intercollegiate basketball at Queen’s Hockey at Western

Meeting - University Senate

More Sweat

Christmas Day, Invite a #oreign student home Library closed - justifiably this time

8:00 Carol Fantasy Theater: “The Big Land” Hockey at Queen’s Women’s Sports Day

8

Men’s intercollegiate Basketball at Lutheran 8:30

11

!

wall

5

6

First 1968 issue of the Chevron

Are you still writing “1967”?

Friday,

November

24, 1967 (8:22)

323

19

.


Spew &out .arguments

SDU thereto

next

and

set of interviews. February will return to interview more money starved, warmonging co-opers; so get your little crayons out and start making up cute slogans like ?Wouldn? aCarling% go better now?’ JIM DETENBECK CIVIL 2A 30 Dow

To the editor: Good grief and gadzooks, my faith in higher mathematics has been shattered. Until now I always thought that ‘%du” was the derivative with respect to X of the But lo and behold function U.S. it% actually an organization aCANADIAN EMPLOYgajJ=t MENT. If the SDU is so keen on the idea of solving social problems why don’t they do something construcMaybe they tive for Ontario? could help the government find 11,000 or 13,000 new jobs for all the men they want to unemploy shutting down those massive wart factories we have. What they could do is retrain these men in the fine art of protest-placard-making. Also in return perhaps the men could teach SDU the proper way of picketing. Better luck chappies during the

To the editor: The students who protested American and Canadian involvement in Vietnam should realize they can only enjoy the right to dissent as long as there is a democratic society willing to go anywhere in the world to defend that privilege. When we are denied that privilege, we will know that democracy is dead and the communists have reached their goal. RICHARD MUEGGE math 2 To the editor: Concerning your editorial “Monsters and BB gun? (Nov. lo),

let me remind you that one of our major concerns was the attemptto persuade co-op students not to accept jobs with certain companies ‘involved with the war effort. We asked them to consider it as a moral decision. We made no decision for them. We expressedour view in the highest tradition andin my opinion it is a view shared by a good number of people on this campus. We don? for one moment believe we have the monopoly on conscience. What we have donej as opposed to the others with conscience, is demonstrate our concerninpubol lit. Most companies can be seen as contributors to the war effort. Dorothea Knitting Mills makes green beretsl) I feel that those grossly involved in strategic production should be the targets of our protest, for without the materials they produce the war could not go on and the marginal companies’

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COME

PRESENTING

ARE

IN AND

RECORDING

MEET

THE

STARS,

THE

Three To One Smash hit from

McGill

Now on their North Appearing

to UBC

American

with them on a return

homecoming,

the Sensational

tour.

engagement

PHASE

from

111

TOMORROWNIGHT at the FOOD SERVICES

Bldg.

BYERS

To the editor: My major beef is with the students that said thes,e companies should NOT be allowed on campus. Why can’t these companies re= cruit students from this university? They should have the same freedoms as the anti-Dow students. Whether the war in Vietnam is a right or wrong is not the question. Whether .companies should engage in war productionis also not the question. Thequestion is can these companies have the same freedoms as the students? MIKE BIELER history 3

ROOM

38 King St. South

FEATURING:

contribution would be meaningless. Perhaps Dow will not react to a demonstration at U of W. But, talcen in the- total view, I wonder what effect the demonstrations at Oberlin, Harvard, Brooklyn, Prince ton, Berkely, Oakland, Cornell, Washington etc. have on Dow and the U.S. government. The war may not have changed direction, but at least it has slowed down in. its escalationary trend. CYRIL LEVITT political-science 2 (sdu)

FAMILY!

Let’s Into

make another

South Africa Vietnam

To the editor: What a jolly goodideaboycotting South Africa is. Crippling the economy of South Africa, or any other countries we don’t like, is an excellent idea. I have hopes we will extend this to the USSR, China and perhaps even Uncle Sam in Sure, the task is time to come. more formidable, but with powerful economic levers such as re turning Outspan oranges to Ontario grocers (Nov. 17) who could resist? Student bodies following the shining example of democracies such as the Soviet Union andGhana in boycotting South African goods is clearly a force of new significance. What a shame the UN resolution on this matter was killed by fuddyduddy imperialist nations like the U.S. and Britain abstaining. The aim of crippling economies and hence inciting rebellion, bloodshed and loss of life is commendable. If you think about it, we haven*t had a GOOD revolution in Africa for some months, The highminded idealism, tenacity and a-

8:30 to I:00 $1 .oo PRESENTED

BY

LETS

TALKABOUTBOOKS

&hard

wareness which characterize U of W students hold us in good stead to make South Africa into another Vietnam1 Which side will you be on when the Dow Chemical company is picketed? PETER STEVENMUILLE graduate engineering What

for

Lo&man?

Nuremburg

only

lynch

law

To the editor: Your editorial “Nuremburg court~martial” (Nov. 17) lacks even an elemental attempt to present a balanced picture, and is seriously weak in logic. Pte. Lockman was sentencednot for disapproval of the Vietnam war but for refusal to carry out a legal order. No army permits its members to pick and choose which orders they will choose to obey. That goes for your beloved Chinese Peoples’ Liberation Army as much as for the Swiss or theMexican Army. You will probably retort that the Vietnam war is illegal and by the Nuremburg 44law’* Pt e. Lockman is absolved of any requirement to o’bey orders to prosecute thatwar. But, remember, Lockman was tried by a MILITARY courtmartial.’ The members of that court are entirely military (except for def ense counsel) and are obligated to carry out the orders of the civilian government and of their commander-in-chief, the P resident. It would be entirely out side their competence to pass upon the legality of any government directive. Are you seriously calling for are versal of the cherished democratic principle of subordinating the military to the civilian? It seems plain from a reading of the cases tried under the Nuremburg precedents that this culpability applies in the case of deli+ crate atrocities. If Nuremburg established the duty of the military to resist all illegal wars (what’s a “legal war”?) then the Allies would have to try ALL soldiers of Nazi Germany. Many feel today that theNuremburg trials were simply lynch law, applied by the victors to the vanMany of the decisions quished. were to please Stalin, outraged that the Nazis had invaded the Soviet Union after he had done his best to live on the most cordial terms with his ally Hitler. (If it makes any difference, I feel the Nazi swine hanged at Nuremburg got all they deserved.) Pte. Lockman 44doesnjt want to kill” It sounds good, but would you f:el as outragedif he were sent to kill South African or Rhodesian whites? Did you object to the Is-

Needham of

K

NEEDHA/ws INFERNO FAME will be at Provident Bookstore

4 to 6 today

to talk about

books.

PROVIDENT BOOKSTORE 7 77 King West,

Kitchener

300 personality and psychedelic posters available.

Hatashita Art AND

Jewel Shop WATE R LOO SQUARE

20

324

The CHEVRON

576-6953

’ ’

-


” Vietnam

Reminders Be concise \

There’s only so much space. The Chevron reserves \_the to shorten letters. Hopeless casesgo to file 13. it--name, course, year, telephone. For legal reasons, unsigned cannot be published -A pseudonym ,will be used if you can show reason. it--if at all possible. Double-space, 32 characters per line.

right

Sign letters good

Type

raeli war of aggressionagainstthe Arabs? If your objection is to any killing in any war, your editorial doe&t ,nake this clear. Pte. Lockman’s case will probably be taken to the Supreme Court. There a decision on the legality of the Vietnam war may be made. What do you think would have%‘&pened to aNorth Vietnamese Lockman? * I wonder just what proportion of the student body yourpolicies represent. STANLEY SANDLER history professor

adventures within the recent past. A particularly disturbing consequence of these deceptive antics is the needlessly expended effort of unsuspecting and sincere readers who become incensed enough to submit a rejoinder. Learning that the target of one’s firm poke was merely the wind would be irritating*

What prompted this series of columns? Hopefully it was not merely the spo of arousing the opposition. Pe % aps the w-titers felt that the campus, currently dominated by activist colitics, needed to be reminded of rightwing sentiment and so in thespIrit Did this ever huppen to of democracy decided to play devWiIICrrh Lyon MacKenzie? il% advocate. In any case, such = journalistic 4tengineerh@s is in= To the editor: and editorially dishonThe last couple of issues have tellectually est and one wonders on what basis compelled met0 make a few cornit is sanctioned by the editor. merits about the Chevron* s pseudoe MAX MASTELLONE journalism-the first (and let us grad PsychologY hope last) two ( Eyes right’ columns by C4Thomas J. Edward& Using the newspaper for this type of deliDead letters cielj’t berate put-on is at best abad joke; but more importantly it reflects sadly deficient journalistic acu“Chairman EAC”-please send in men. The Chevron obviously enyour name, course, year and phone joys making use of the Big Spoof. number so your letter can be I can’ recallhvo other such misprinted.

despair:

wih~are

LBJ’i chances $n, ‘68?

The war in Vietnam goes on. Andwith the war comes an increasing sense of despair in theunited States,. The hawks are upset because the world’s mightiest power cannot crush an ill-equipped foe. The doves are also unhappy because there’s no progress towards ‘a peaceful solution to the war. There is continuing pressure on President Johnson to stop bombing- North Vietnam. This may actually happen in 1968. There are so few targets left on the Pentagon% restricted list that soon there ‘will be no targets that have never been hit. { At the same time, it is becoming ‘less economical to bomb the North. Losingaircraftworth two million dollars each is one reason why the war is costing America two billion dollars a month. Of course, the moves we will see coming out of Washington in the next few months will depend more on domestic politics than on actual events in Vietman.

*

_

The Democratic party in the United States is deeply divided by the war. A California-based group known a@ dissenting Democrats$* , hopes to get a million Americans to ’ vote for a peace ticket in 1968. Such a ticket would be headed by such >anti-war notables as Dr. Benjamin Speck or Martin Luther King. Eugene McCarthy, Democratic senator from , has announced his intention to contest Minnesota, the presidential nomination. He faces great odds, for it is virtually impossible to deny the nomination to an incumbent president-it’s never happened ’ in the past. The only real .way McCarthy can hope to succeed is through a number of presidentialprimaries in early 1968. To win these p+naries would be a long and costly affair and there is no assurance of . success.

s pFor the Republican party, things look much brighter.-_ Recent polls have shown Practically anYx

.

Republican candidate beating Lyndon Johnson, Never in this century have the party% prospects looked better. And in this lies a real danger. Who will the party nominate? TheRepublicans are *hardly united about a solution !to the war. Reagan and Nixon continue to be hawks and seek support in the South and West. Rockefeller is& talking but he is classed as a mild hawk. Chuck Percy comes o-n dovish, while the only announced&ndidate has come out for neutralizing Vietnam. This is the one surprise in the .entire picture: George Romney’s said that, if elected president:, he will seek a peaceful solution to the war through neutralizing Vietnam. This is not only surprising because it is the most realistic proposal made on the war in recent weeks, but because it comes from a Republican. If the Repulbicans maintain their presentwarlike stance, there is a chance that Romney will not get the nomination. There is also the added danger that Romney’s campaign for the nomination will peak too soon. There are over seven months until . the Republican nominating convention.

We must also not forget that Lyndon Baines Johnson has a number of things going for him-not the least of which is a great deal of political abil-. fiY* ‘There ares number of things Johnson could do in 1968 to improve.,his political situation. A pause in the bhmbing would bring a,great dealof lost liberal support back to Johnson stabilizing the war would mean no manpower increases would be needed and the draft could be kept at a reasonably low level. Johnson could also make some sanenoises about recogni&g the Viet Cong. Removing Secretary of State Dean Rusk from that post would i also help. Johnson also has the built-in’ advantage that twice- as many Americans consider themselves Democrats as Republicans.

ON TUESDAY ,2&h Nova . \. \ 1 i,N’MLl-17 ’ ,. \ : I‘.’ . -AT’ltOOp.m, ,*- - .8,.-i. . ~ ‘IC I

\

/

GRADUATING

’’

STUDENTS’ ONLY; \

..

.

,: 3

,

,*

~RGAN:IZATIQN.AI. ~

MEETING -

I‘ . COMMITTEE .F~R IGRAD~,,BALL ‘. .. ,* t. . . . .“. . . /,SIXTY-EIGHT _. .‘ \

.

.I a .I C’oMMlTTEf MEMBERs.,NEE.DED’.7;ROM Al& FACiJL.llES,~~c.:’

I

I

AND TELEPHONE NUMBER AT THE . *.* FEDERAT~~N.BUILDIN&. Friday,

November

24, i967

~ (8:22)

325

L 1


CARI

Q

PUS

MSDIU

By Richard

Nancarrow

, Christine

Bois

Ron

arts 1

A hunga bulla,

English 2

Well!

Peiter

Van

Do I what? I do lots of things, maybe too much. But if I can do it

c . X

This story was submitted by lndian professor, who says he wrote it ‘70 vent our frustration “1 by C.D.F.

from the Loyal0 News (CUP)

The CHEVRON

Is this a proposition?

Gary

JgDear sir or madam: Your autombile insurance policy Is cancelled since the payment on it has not been received. Enclosed punched card gives you details.,, My god1 I mailed that check in ages ago. In this age ofComputers, anything So, I write them a could have happened. letter of apology, stating a check had been mailed and that I am mailing in another check in good faith. The answer comes in the mail from the bank. The check to the insurance company was sent back. Insufficient funds. But what happened to the deposit I mailed way ahead of the check, for twice the amount of the check? Surely Computers don’t have a selective memory, keeping track only of withdrawals and not of deposits? What do I do? Well in desperation I write an AIRMAIL SPECIAL DELIVERY letter to the bank. (God bless airmail special delive4-it makes the writer feel so good that he is writing something terribly important and expressly urgent, without creating the slightest impact at the receiving end.} The bank doesn’t reply, of course. (‘I suppose the Computer hasn’t told them what the matter was.) After some days the bank sends me a statement, with TWO cancelled checks, both paid to the insurance company, meanwhile bouncing the third check, again fo r insufficient funds1 What on earth can you do? To a human being, you could plead, you could explain that it’s all a very simple mistake. But it’s the Computer1 Even though your deposit went in before your withdrawals, the computer just doesn’t see it that way1 * * * “May I see your identification card, please?,,

If I can find another one to do it with.

not fold

Robins math 2

arts 1

Thou shalt

326

you?

Pete Wilkinson

Harten

If it is morally right for me, and it does me some good, yes.

22

Do

I guess.,,,,

science 1

Reprinted

Why?

jo-

Finn

engineering 2A

Only on Tuesday and Thursday morning s, F riday nights and any other time I can fit it in.

or mutilate

“Mine isn’t back yet. I mailed it in with my fees.,, ‘<Well, you’ll have to go see the business office. We cannot loan you any books without proper identification.,, “All I have is my last term’s re ceipt. Will that do?,, We cannot help ‘(No, I’m sorry. you.” Off to the business office and a wait in a long line.. (Can’t those IBM machines do something about long lines?) “Sir, I haven’t received my ID card yet.,, “When did you mail it in?,, “A week ago.,, “Did you mailinyourfee cards,too? (Oh, those are the IBM cards with yellow edges.) “Yes, I did?’ Then a long futile search through a deck of neatly arranged IBM cards. ‘(Did you register last semester?,, “Yes, here is my fee receipt.,, Another search through another deck of IBM cards. Nothing turns up. My unpretentious little yellowishbrown paper, the temporary receipt, which I happened to keep, i s now the only evidence. (What letter are you filed under?,, ((Well, the registrar had me under C, admissions and aid had me under D, I don’t really know what your office had me under, but I told everyone that my last name begins with F. Pm not sure if the files have been corrected yet.,, (A suggestion for foreigners with long last names: conveniently scale them down into a pronouncible syllable. If you don’t, the Computer might!) “You’ll have to come back. We don’t have your cards yet.,, At this point, I am on the verge of tears. <(But I need some books from tile libCan I have some identification till rary. then?,, I make a last plea. “1 can pay

my fee again, if the other check could be refunded in a reasonable time.,, (What’ s a (‘ reasonable length of time,, for a computer, I wonder. They taught me in one of those programming courses that you have to think in terms of microand milliseconds when you think about digital-computer programming. But it was the same course that saidComputers would make everything more efficient by mechanization.) Suddenly I have an idea. “The computer printed only the first half of my first name on my cards, since there weren’t enough spaces. May be that’s the word I am filed under .,, I spell that out for them. ‘LDid you have an ID last semester?, rcY es, as a matter of fact, I had three; First there was. my receipt which was temporary. (Th e one I had just given them.) Then there was an ID without my signature. Then there was the one where my picture didn’t come out. You see, by the time I got the right one, it was late December, and it didn’t. get validated for last semester. Meanwhile I used a combination of the other three, as seemed fit for each occasion. That’s why I didn’t have a proper ID the last semester.,, Nostalgically I think of good olddays back home when faced with similar predicaments, the last resort of a five-rupee bill under the blotter of a strategic clerk did the trick. How on earth do you bribe Computers? You could possibly take revenge on them by putting cards with random holes into a deck. Sitting in front of a keypunch, I type one, and quickly make 12 duplicates of it with the DUP key. One for the savings bank, one for the withdrawals section of the checking account, one for their deposits section, one for the insurance-company head office, one for their branch office,....

* **


Cap and gown downtown Waterloo’s university communititics international, national and locies will have a chance this year to al. If he becomes an alderman, ensure they are heard in the city. Waterloo city council will probably have its most radical progressive Two people closely connected with the modern university setup politician in many years. What would be the effect of a have decided to run’ for alderman on Waterloo city council. person such as Mike Sheppard on .Mike Sheppard, last year’s pre- the local governing body? As we said before, he would be sident of the Federation of Students., and George Hagger, a professbetter equipped than most councillors in one field-the university. or at Waterloo Lutheran University are both testing the municipal pal- He would have to be very careful of actions, statements and proposals itical waters for the first time. for he will be looked on as a reIt is a good thing to see members of the university community start presentative of the university, if to take an active interest in local not of the students. If student council passes the politics. For too long we have been considered by many citizens as a motion which is presently before of transient group. We come here, go it, disociating the Federation to school, get a degree, then move Students from any part of Sheppard’s campaign, this will not preon to some greener pasture. Professors have been even more vent him from becoming a “representative” of the students in the mysterious. They seldom appeared in public life and then only to eyes of many citizens-a false impression. criticize. Citizens thought of them Certainly he would be more in the ivory-tower sense, passing down criticisms from on high. m sympathetic than most to student Perhaps all this will now be views but he would have other rechanged if one of these two, or sponsibilities which might preclude both, are successful in their council him being an automatic student bids. channel. True, Sheppard is no longer a With Sheppard on council howstudent or formally connected with ever there would be someone with the university, but he does know a young outlook on life, the city what problems face the universityand the future. At present city especially students. council is dominated by men in As president last year he was able to learn some their 30s and 40s. Without attempof the basic problems. He knows, ing to pass judgement in their past for instance, how critical the stud- record it isn’t unreasonable to think ent housing situation is in this that younger people couldn’t be city. better represented by their own Dr. Haggar is well-versed in pol- kind.

Not in my sandbox Is Village politics just one great The student governing sandbox? bodies certainly have been inconspicuous since Warden Eydt’s constitution was allowed to take effect. The worst aspect is the seeming success of the divide-and-conquer theory. While the quadrant councils made up of reps for each floor of 16 residents, is doing its job, the overall Village council is useless. It is too far removed from the students to be effective. Its members are elected not by the Village residents, but by the quadrant councils, from their membership. The Village president is one step fdrther removed, since he is elected from the Village council, by the Village councillors. The current Village president would not likely have been elected in a direct vote of the people, and most Villagers do not even know who their quadrant members on the Village council are. Symptomatic of this weakness is the complete lack of accomplishment by the Village council. They have no budget and no definite income. But there is no lack of matters requiring action at the Village. * The council should be making moves to form a real union of the Village residents and collect fees directly instead of depending on administration grants. This would remove one of the administration’s biggest weapons.

A member

The administration claims no liability for damages to personal property resulting from such things as water pipes bursting in rooms. The Village council should take steps to have minimum personai insurance for all residents and pressure the .adminstration to own up to its responsibilities. The council should also act on behalf of basement residents, who presently pay the same rates as other Villagers but have no lounge facilities on their floors. The administration has given the excuse of lack of money but they still had the money for landscaping frills. A potential problem exists with the student judicial policy. Each quadrant is responsible for its own disciplinery structure, and the result is a chaotic collection of different committees. The ultimate power still rests with the tutors and the warden. If they reverse the decision of one quadrant’s judicial body, they only have to face a quarter of the students, and not a strong council which directly represents all residents. The Councillors apparently do not want any new rules in their remote little sandbox. This existing constitution tends to protect them because they are not elected by the residents at large, and are not responsible to anyone but their own floor residents.

of the Canadian

University Press, the Chevron is published every Friday (except by the board of publications of the Federation of Students, University of Content is independent of the university, student council and the board of publications.

periods and August)

exam Waterloo.

This steep little pathway from food-services to the ringroad might well be nanzed Lobban’s toboggan slide. A couple slid down it after Saturday’s semi-formal and required medical attention for the cuts caused by a souvenir gluss that broke, The point is not that the path should have been salted-it shouldn’t even have been there. It must have looked nice on the plans.

editor-in-chief: Jim Nagel news editor: Brian Clark intercampus: Rich Mills assigning: Patricia McKee features , editor: Bob Verdun

photo editor: Glenn Berry sports: Paul Cotton entertainment (acting): Nancy Murphy senior reporters: Frank Goldspink Dale Martin Peter Webster

Advertising manager: Ross Helling. Publications chairman: John Shiry Telephone (519) 7446111 local 2497 (news), 2812 (advertising), 2471 (editor). . Night 744-0111. Telex 0295-759. TQRONTO: Donna McKie, 782-5959. NIAGARA FALLS: Ron Craig, 356-5046. LONDON: David Bean, 432-0331. OTTAWA: John Beamish, 828-3565. MARATHON (!I: John Helliwell, 2290456, BRIDGEPORT: H.D. Goldbrick, 744-6130. U OF TORONTO: Ian Morrison, 444-5987, 8,200 copies

Frich y, November

24, 1967 (8: 22)

327

2

3


This week Today DANC-E in Food Services witi London’s top band, THE NEW SET, at 8:30. ST. ANDREW’S DAY PARTY in Grad House at 8:30. Federation building attic. Meeting of all ex-campus cops andfor mer narcs who lost their jobs after last week’s expose. Interviews will be held for the position of Compendium (68 salesman. 3:00 pm.

Tomorrow STAG PARTY for Jim Sweezie somewhere in the Village. Anyone who lived in S6 last year and any other old drinking buddies are welcome. B.Y.O.B. DANCE in Food Services with the Three to One and thePhaseIlI. Admission $1.00. 8:30-1:OO

0i1 campus

PSYCHEDELIC DANCE at the Village red ad green halls* A total environment happening with the Marcatos. 8:30. Admission s1

skjold Lounge at 8:30 pm. membership SAILING CLUB meeting in Al 105 at 8:00 pm. Ladies welcome. Sailing films. Refreshments will be served.

Monday

Wednesday

V. P.S. organizational meeting to organize and discuss the aims of the V.P.S. Biology 295 at 7:30. UNOFFICIAL -OPENING of MC bldg. by Math Society at 12:30. STUDENT’S COUNCIL meeting at St. Jerome’s, room 115, 7~00 pm= Tuesday

Country and Western MUSIC CLUB presentation by Ed. Staples of a sound documentary on Bluegrass Music. Al 105, 7:30. CIRCLE K CLUB. Guest speti ker. Father McKinnon. Everyone

Organizational meeting for the CEBCC in a deserted farmhouse north of south campus. This is a new group unrecognized by the Fed. of Studs. If successful we will fill a hole which exists on this campus. CEBOC-Committee to Estab‘fish a Brothel On Campus. 11:59. Math REFERENDUM and appro-. val of changes in Math Society constitution. Physics Foyer, 9-5. IVCF LECTURE ‘What is the Basis of Our Faith?’ by Dr. J,H. Leith, Assoc, Dean. In Hammer-

A DIAMOND FOR CHRIST&‘lAS? Get the facts on Diamond Buying!! On request we will forward you booklet “THE DAY YOU BUY A DIAMOND”. You can buy substantially below the market. H. Proctor & Co. Diamond and Gem Dealers, 921-7702 131 Bloor St, W., Suite 416

Holiday Season

FOR SALE Radios Record Players, Tape R* corders, etc. at 20($0 reduction orinformation number der and 576 4389 576 4379 anytime. Scott Amplifier Model 222C and Stereo FM tuner Model 350; $320 Phone 576 1006. Cannon F&TL 50 MM 1:1,4 camera. 100% new, $300. Phone 576-6688. FOR RENT Co-op luxury apartment to sublet summer term apply 170 Erb street west apt Pl9 or call 578 2013. HOUSING WANTED A two bedroom apartment with stove and refrigerator, for married student, during the next school term (Jan-Apr). Please write: Paul Harmer, 174 Indian Road South, Sarnia, Ontario.

Be sure to see Helen Anne’s selection of evening two-piece and cocktail dresses of chiffons, velvets, silk crepes, plain and embossed laces. Pink, Blues, Greens, Gold, White, Black, Brown, & Purple. 1 Sizes 5‘to 18 Priced from $26.00 & up.

Be sure of having an apartment afe ter the winter work term. Sublet to a quiet professor and wife (no children) phone 664-2521 or local 2553, Room available in student% townhouse after Christmas. Transportation and cooking facilities included. PHONE 578 0443 Wanted to rent for winter term 2 bedroom furnished apartment. Call D. Walker 576 5915. Two small rooms in private home for girl close to transportation. Call 742 1582. Two senior students require one bedroom apartment. Reasonably near University for January-April term, Contact: D. Pantry, 15 Hill(side Drive, Bramalea Woods, Ontario.

Two-piece imported beaded and plains in silks, wool knits. Evening bags and gloves.

Both Coca-Cola

19 -

King 0~7~

North, Tues. to

Waterloo

Sat., 9 to Closed

Notices for this column are free to campus organizations. Hand them in to the Chevron off ice, preferably on the forms provided, before 5 on Wednesday.

6 p.m.; Monday

743-487 Fri.

welcome.

ssc

350,

6:15

pm.

- OPERATION CROSSROADS AFRICA. John Taylor, Sci 2, will give slide talk on summer inGhana with Crossroads Africa. SSc 350, 8: 00. COFFEE HOURS at Dag Ham= merskjold Res. 4-5 profs available to make with the conversation. 8 pm.

COMITATE MEETING in first floor lounge of E-2 at 6:30. All Welcome. FOLK SONG CLUB. Auditions for Fass Night. All interested larnyx’ s please attend. Theater of Arts. 12:OO.

Friday

Thursday

New Years Eve, in Food Services. Midnight Magic Semi-Formal. Two 8: OO/couple. bands, and buffet.

WANTED

WANTED

Apartment for four girls for sum. mer term in Kitchener or Waterloo. Preferably furnished. Phone Pat: 576 9918 or Bev 576 9959 Three students returning for winter term wish apartment. Prefer 2 bedroom furnished. Reply to M, Lauzon, 2736 Stamford Green Drive, Niagara FdllSj Ontario.

REFRIGERATOR for thechevrondarkroom. It needn’t work - but it must be BIG. Call Glenn Berry at the Chevron, 2497.

Apartment, one or two bedrooms, preferably partly furnished,. Re quired for Jan-April term by two final year engineering students. Contact: Jim Stephews, 199 Upper Canada Drive Apt. 401, Willowdale, Ontario. Tel No. 2221395 RIDE Wanted a ride to Kenora or the Lake Head leaving between the 20th and the 22nd of December. Will Phone Joe share expenses. 744 4506. If you want a ride to OttawaFriday Stanley December 1, Contact: Martin 744 6249. LOST LOST in P145 morning November 13, Yellow U of W winter jacket labelled Math 72, Law on inside label. Phone Steve at 745 5623 after 6:00 pm One Giant Kangeroo last seennear 57 in the Student Village. Answers to the name of Charlie if you have any information please contact Peter Kneen of S7 I “Advanced Calculus” by Kaplan. Finder please return to D. Kennedy at the Math Society office or to Security. REWARD

One Beethoven Bell Telephone ton. Will pay 25$. Extension between 12 and 2 anyday.

Needed Experienced bass player and organ player for ex-professional group Call John: 742 9913 or Dave: 742 9904 WORK WANTED done. Typing Fast, accurate, phone 742 3142 after 6 pm ‘PERSONAL SEX, SIN, and PERDITION will not be a part of the sailing club% meeting Nov. 28 AL105 8:00 pm, Two exciting sailing films will be shown t though, and refreshments will be served. Ladies welcome. Thanks to W42 and S63 for a swell birthday. My room never was so clean. Special thanks to the PINK PHINK for the pink champagne. Proud possessor of the PINK PANTER Welcome back Helga! Office Staff TOM you Welcome.

andCokeareregisteredtrademarkswhichidentifyonlythe productof Coca-Cola Ltd.

1

9 to 9 p.m.

featuring London’s top band the AJEW SET

TONITE! BLDG.

8:30 $1.00 SINGLES

I Would

Like To Thank

Blind dates refreshing That’s why

24

328 The CHEVRON

Federatiog Mary

IN MEMORIAM In loving memory of our dear uncle’s leg which passed away in afit of drunkeness on Friday November 17 at 1:OO am; (z We often speak of days gone by when we were all together, The family chain is broken now but your memory will live forever”. Lovingly remembered by the part-time residents.

Campus Sound Show

U OF w FOOD SERVICES

But2497

are a chance. But you can always depend Coca-Cola for the taste you never get tired things go better with Coke, after Coke, after

on of. Coke.


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