Fcdty by Rich
dumps
Mills
loneliness is putting forward a motion-with backing from several quarter+then sitting back and watching it get shot down as you alone vote for it. Prof. William Abbott of philosophy sat by quietly as the arts fa+ ulty council Tuesday defeated his motiobwhich opposed Federation of Students%, status as a closedshop union, It was no contest when the final vote was called* Up went Abbott’s hand a.nd*&nd .“and‘*.no others. The defeat of the motion wasn*t really a surprise. From the questions and discussions that preceded the vote it was evident feeling for his motion wasn*t too high. The motion almost fell flat on its face at the meeting’s beginning* No one even wanted to second it. 44My motive in putting this for+ ward was that it was represented to me that the matter needed some discussing,” Abbott explained a% ter the meeting, % wasn? that I
Gmcihouse
cfttempf
had some particular point to make, but that some people wanted it dis+ cussed.” Finally Prof. William Needham of economics agreed to setond Abbott’ s motion* If passed it would have requested the board of governors to make changes in the way student activity fees are collected. It would have created mandatory and optional portions to the fee. Federation of Students president Brian Iler saw the motion, if passeds as 44seriously weakening the federation**# In presenting his motion, Abbott said the situation by which the university required its students to be members of the federation is somewhat anomalous. Before wrapping up his opening remarks Abbott agreed there are several arguments against his motion. Iler then outlined the agreement bebeen the university andthefederation. 14The university has agreed to collect compulsory fees for the federation. The fee is then turned over entirely to the federation*$*
stcwts battle
to
The federation has a simple method of opting out of membership, added Iler. 4gU anyone notifies us in writing of his intentions we will strike his name from our roll& He can opt out of membership in the federation but the fee is compulsory because every student benefits under it? The student can affect the ways in which his money is spent8 Iler pointed out* 44He can make recommendations to student council by petitions* referendums, by the way he votes& even by coming into the office to balk with us. He can run foroffice himselfss’ 44This motion as it now stands is like be piece of the iceberg a+= bove water,p’ said philosophy prof
UNIVERSITY
835
ill federation Leslie Armour. tlIt reflects growing concern about the relationship between the university and the students? Armour proposed sending the motion to the faculty council’s excommittee for further ecutive This amendment was set+ study. onded by English prof RobertGoselink. Judith Wubnig, another philow phy prof8 was 46perplexed why the federation decided on incorporation. pd like to know the practical reasons* aside from any theore& cal ideas? answered-practicallyIler 4%corporation in no way changed the relationship between the fed= e&ion and the university0 We% always been autonomous.‘* Then the one* simple reason for
OF WATERLOO,
Waterloo,
Ontario
incorporation: 44We incorporated because we are growing. The capital flow this year is over $300,000 and it would be fiscally irresponsible not to incorporate. Incorporation relieves the officers of fiscal responsibility for all contracts. It% the trend in Canadato incorporate once you reach a certain size.## James McKegney, a Spanish prof, asked Iler what the money was being deducted for. A copy of last year% federation budget was produced andIler startee
44From federation fees we get approximately $131,000. The Canadian Union of Students got 75 cents a student* Ontario Union of Students got 25 cents a *Continued
Friday,
on page 5
March
15, 1968
over b&get
power:
reps
demunal
fees
by Bob Verdun Chevron
staff
44This is not a move to force student council to give $6000 to the grad house. It% farther than tu The object is to have the administration turn over the $22 activity fee to a new graduate-student governing body? Grad rep Richard Kinler shocked student council Sunday night with this cry of 4*grad power.** Grad Sot president Brad Munro, philosophyP began the grad presentation by briefly askingfor$6*290 instead of the executive board% recommendation of $780 to cover operating costs of the grad house* He concentrated on what he thought were theproposed budget% misplaced priorities. &cYou spend more for highschool students and Africans than you do on graduate students* I think it’s deplorable. 4tWe’re asking for money to make the necessary conversions to have liquor in the house. The campus center will not provide tie same atmosphere? Federation executive officer Ian Calvert and creative-arts chair= ma Dave Blaney pointed out that federation programs are for evw aybodym Anybody can benefit from programs such as the Chevron and creative arts. Grads too can par+ ticipateO Math rep Jim Belfry askedMunro how many people use the grad house. Munro said he had no idea* The house is currently open only to grads unless specially booked* President Brian Iler said 64We can sit here and argue all night. We are a federation of all students* and provide benefits to al4 not just a certti group. I can$t support a special status? Munro replied that the grad stw dents are dLfferent and that they are not a faculty* and thus are not to be compared with other faculty societies. Kinler continuedP gdDon*t get the idea we’re trying to pull a power play. For the first time graduate students are becoming interested in their role in the university? He went on about how the federation isn’t fulfilling its role and then told of G radSoc* s plans to take over the federation activity fee.
--Gary
Munro said, 44The grad students@ as a whole8 object to compulsory feesa Two years ago President Hagey said we should work under the federation to prove ourselves? Munro noted that he does not agree with arts dean Minas’attacks on the federation and that hefavors the federation being incorporated‘(Maybe the federation needs reorganizing to provide stronger so= cieties and better programs? The essence of the GradSocplan was to take the federatior? s activity fee and distribute it as they felt would be of most benefit to gradsMunro said there would be some new grad programs and theywould &‘buy in? to federation programs khey liked. Dave Young* chairman of the board of external relations$himself a grad, offered the federation$ s side. 44Many programssuch as lectures* housing-that GradSoc could do have merit8 but that also applies equally to undergrads. Why did we get a submis=+ sion for $6290 worth of atmosphere and no plans for these other progl?aIrxP Young thoughttheGradSoc%idea comparable to the top=ten=percent bracket of taxpayers demanding to
opt out or control the spending of their tax dollar% Kinler said they are going to each grad student personally this week with a questionnaire and a petition. The questionaire is 44to ascertain the degree of graduate participation in the programs of the Federation of Students? Some of the questions: l Indicate how frequently you used the following activities during the past yem (a list of creativearts programsa folkdancing andthe House of Debates)* a As a graduate student* have you ever benefitted from member?= ship in CUS or OUS (eg& life insup ance8 overseas flights* literature)? Grads are also askediftheypick up federation publications or a& tend any of the federation’s breakeven social weekends. GradSoc also distributed an open letter under the title&Gradpower? which claims it ‘%as been thwarted since its inception..&ecause it must submit budget requests to the federation councils a body cornposed mostly (gopercent) of undergraduates* k{The Federation of Students u* es funds collected from graduate students (next year over $l3$000) for general campus-wide prog=
rams& which we fell are of far more interest to undergraduates44The federation policy has been that it would not support any a&vi= ties programs for graduate stu=+ dents. We feel that the graduate student activity fee shall be a& ministered by the graduate st= dentsa.*supporting only those pro= grams which are of interest to graduate students*)# Later Iler replied to the ques= tionnaire and the letter. He noted first of all the questionnaire on participation is meaningless una less the results are compared to the same questions asked of allthe student body* 441n any questionnaire it isdiffim cult to effectively cover all programs and activities. They+e left out a lo&-concentrating mainly on social benefits. The Canadian Union of Students and Ontario Union of Students have done a hell of a lot more than provide life insup ance~ overseas flights and liter* ture?$ Iler commented on the grad con&ntion that federation programs were aimed only at undergrads* &:There are agreat number of ways grads can influence these programs and in fact do. I think you
Robins,
the
Chevron
will find g rad participation in every level of the federation* &#It has always been the fedem tion% policy to support the autonomy of each society by leaving them alone to conduct their own -Se 44We are presently negotiating for the university to collect society fees* but GradSoc has not participated in these negotiations. 44W-e’ve never tried to thwart GradSoc activities. They got money last year for a tutorial program and an experimental film series= And most of the evil-landlord ca+ es we handled this year were to protect grad students? The executives of the GradSoc and the federation met Monday night at the grad house to discuss the situation. The grad executive voted %2 to support Munr~?s d* mand that Chevron reporters leave the meeting, overIler% objections. A statement issued Tuesday said g 44Much more discussion of the issue of the status of the gram hate students is necessary. All alternatives must be seriously considered*$’ The Chxdsoc executive felt it nW3t COm3dt its council before further precipitant action i&t.ka
Computer programmer required APRIL 29 to AUGUST in conversion to IBM model 360/20 RPG language. Minimum
requirement
would
be a second-year
INTERVIEWS
WILL
TUESDAY, starting
.
at 9 am,
Contact
student
in computing.
Society
Secretary, Treasurer.
March
It’s bloodcurdling
20
ELECTIONS HEl.D MONDAY, forms available in Federation
/MNKH
25
of Students office-
hieither mR
CONFECTIONERY 103
University POST
Ave.
FAMOUS
W.
OFFICE
Groceries
-
for
UNDER
TAKE
&
GERRY’S
For
the
best
FOOD
AND
SIIELL
ORDERS
AND
and
St.
,~ CUlSlNE
RENOVATED
RESERVATIONS 742 - 4489.
Eleven
N. Phone
courteous
742-1351
10%
ii%!!&5 STEAK
Host: Peter Shopping Centre,
Waterloo
DISCOUNT
ON
HOUSE
Faclaris Waterloo
STUDENT
MEAL
CARD
BARRY
University
LADIES
Business
I&g
and
KEARNS
576-4950
The two million mark was passed this week with a gift of $90,000 from Bell Telephone and Northern Electric. In making the presentation a company official said the companies were greatly influenced by the Federation of Students own
WELCOME
confectionery
- TV
Rechambering
Phone
and
Duke
Top Valu choice 4 28 ounces
Streets
742-1404
Mans
unsweetened
Chter-cut
A
534 The CHEVRON
class
subscription mail
fee by
the
included Post
in Office
their department,
annual
student
fees
entit/es
Ottawa,
and
for
U of payment
pork
W students
to
of
in
postage
~
receive
chops
the Send
Chevron address
by changes
during
off-campus
promptly
to:
terms. The
Chevron,
Non-students: University
$4 of
nor sleet
Waterloo,
annualy.
CM0
wor&
“He usually feels he got more out of the experience than what he gave. His CUSO experience makes him quite an asset to Canada. The eleven chosen from Waterloo are : Bob Oram, a British engineer* Ron Brown, grad geography and planning, Ravinder Pasr icha grad enginee rings Mr. and Mrs. David Ness* science 4, and Joan Becker* Others chosen were: Gord Wagar, geography 3# Joanne Jessop, psychology 3$ Cam Bowes, poliosci 3* Mary Lynn Moxon* psychology 3, and Barb Hummel, English 3.
donors
commitment of $500#000 as well as the large number of computer science students enrolled here. Murray Davidson, public relations director for the Tenth Anniversary Fund said it is unusual for a donation to be so publicized. “Most companies ask that their pledge be kept anonymous. One such anonymous pledge received just this week added $50VOO0 tothe fund,‘* he said. The International Students ’ Association on campus added $200 to the fund at their last meeting*
mud
-
teaching facilities will be included in humanities--or arts 3--which is to be larger than any of the present arts buildings. Humanitites will be just south of lecture and joined to social sciences with another tunnel. The university will recommend its choice--usually the lowest priced--to the department of university affairs for approval.
Authorised Waterloo,
...
‘Meaning and End of Religion’, Vhrist and Culture’by Niebuhr and the ‘New Testament’, and then send critiques to Lochhead. When school resumes in the fall the fifteen will be in qeeklyseminars starting with the broad topic ‘4The Christian faith and theworld around us .” Lochhead will be taking applications from students until March 310
ussures more
opening
Arts is proliferating. The newest building in the arts f acuity--Humanities--will soon be on the way. Tenders for the$3&00,000 home of the English, history and philosophy departments will be opened Monday and--hopefully--the building will be ready for the fall of 6% Faculty accommodation and
apple juice
loin
cash.
Tender
tomatoes 99c
The clinic will be held in the chemistry-biology link from 12~30 to 4~30 p.m* and from 6~30 to 8:30 Pm0 on Monday# TuesdayandWednesday* The campus record of 856 pints should fall easily during the three-day clinic.
impresses
That half-million dollar gift to the university’s Tenth Anniversary Fund has obvious/y impressed prospec tive donors. Recent donations have pushed the fund up to a tota! of $2,164,772.
“Enjoy life today while saving for tomorrow”
UNIVERSITY BILLIARD ACADEMY Corner
fof
gift
uguin
the coveted corpuscle Cup’. Traditionally, St. Paul% has been the bloodiest but, according to rumours they lost some of their best hemophiliacs last term. Also here is a move afat to blockade that residence during the clinic.
snow,
volunteef
Federution
Ontario
nof
Faraway places have lured eleven Waterloo people. Canadian University Services Overseas has made its selections for overseas volunteer work. Successful candidates fill professional positions which natives cannot. They are chosen basically because of a real concern with the underdeveloped countries. CUSO pays for orientation and return fare while the government of the country where thev work pays salaries- and gives -them a place to. livea The chairtnan 0 f Waterloo% CUSO committee* Renzo Bernardini, engineering lB, says of return volunteers.
service
the !&6$%@!?$~ &
hail,
If you think you’ll be missing the enjoyment of classes this summer, try this. Summer seminars. Philosophy prof Dr.David Lochhead of St. Paul’s College is leading a mail-in seminar with 15 students. They’ll read books like McLuha& ‘Understanding Media’, Tolkien’s ‘Lord of the Rings*, Smith’s
T---
RESTAURANT
time
SER,VICE
100 King Qntario
food
AMERICAN
RECENTLY
R-ION E: 742 - 4488,
TAILORS
Waterloo,
7NR
LCBO
OUT
BELMONT CLEANERS
(3-iM!ZSE
FOR
LICENSED
Sundries
Depot
i+o#%
in wfll be Dr. Russell Kirk of the States, Peter War&n thepresident-elect of the Canadian Union of Students, Reverend J. Macken== zie of Toronto’s Rochdale CMlege and Eddie Stewart the deputy minister of university affairs* The University of Waterloo’s quality of education committee is planning a Teach-In for late this year or early nexL
There’s a new trophy up for grabs at next week’s blood donor clinic. The ‘Blood Bowl’, aCircle K donation, will go to the faculty with the best percentage turnout of donors. In previous clinics both faculties and residences competed to win the ‘Corpuscle Cup’ but since the latter hid a definite advantage due to smaller size the new competition has been set up. The residences are not to be forgotten though@ The colleges, the co-op, and units of three houses from the village will bleed to win
18 and March
e&We?
GUE LPH (Special)--The 4 question may finally be answered. A Ta&in at the University of Guelph March 22 and 23 will examine the possibility of a university contributing to education* Friday will feature a film and debate while Saturdays session will be devoted to a seminar. Among those attending the teach-
for appointment.
Arts
close Wednesday,
Nomination
DQ universities
19
office
for Monday,
2 courses
with
MARCH
Executive, President? Vice-president,
Open
to assist
BE HELD
placement
Nominations
30 inclusive
as Ontario.
second-
tie bucfget Well, the bailiff won’t be tacking ‘a notice of foreclosure on the university door this year. The budget committee earlier this week was able to approve a balanced budget when the province increased its basic unit grant by 10 percent. d&It was slightly better than we expected#” said treasurer Bruce G ellatly . The university had been expect. ing about a seven percent increase in the unit grant. The 10 percent increase raises the unit grant f ram $1,320 to $1,450.
Keep
bus surprises
Another piece of good news inthe provincial budget was the 95-5 formula for capital expenditures. Under- this plan the province will pay 95 percent of the cost of approved building projects. Since 1964 buildings have been financed under a variety of formulas ranging from 85-15 for teaching buildings to 5&50 for the center and other non+ campus teaching buildings. Now a.ll buildings except residences will be under the new formula. Residences will be financed by the Ontario Student Housing Corporation. While details on the new form-
ula are not due for about two weeks& Gellatly seems to feel that it will be retroactive to 1964a This would mean the university would only have to pay five percent of the cost of the campus center* But university president Gerry Hagey said that this does not lessen the need for the TFnth Anniversary fund drive. tlThe new formula means we can proceed with our plans to provide tie facilities that will be required for the 11,000 students we expect within the next five years.** But the university is hardly roll.
l
for th
Ul7 I V
ing in money. The budget is still tight a.nd most departments wffl have to curttil some expansion of programs. President Hagey said9 t4 Waterloo% position as a fairly new university but one with one of the largest enrollments in the province as well as extensive research and graduate study programs9 has imposed a severe strain on budgets. We are in a position in which we must allocate our resources over a wide range of projects* all of which are essential to keep pace with the increasing needs of our
fS
ities
students and faculty.” The university budget has still to be approved at the board of governors9 meeting April 4. The provincial government has also made a provincial grant of four and a half million dollars to promote the development of computer facilities at provincial universities. This grant will be used to develop regional computer tenters in the province; Waterloo will almost certainly become one of these centers and remote terminals may be set upat other universities.
out furrhers
REGINA (CUP)-A provincial legislator doesn*t like the number of foreign students at the University of Saskatchewan. E.F. Gardner stid the univer&y’s 400 foreign students cost provincial taxpayers QV~ $2million a year. In addition they take up time and facilities which could otherwise serve about 1$5OOSaskatchewan born undergrads. Speaking in the legislature Gardner said he didn’t want to appear critical of the university% policy
toward foreign students but asked 64Are we justified inutilizing these scarce staff and facilities to train so large a group of foreign students mther than train an additional 1$500 of the sons and daughters of Saskatchewan?’ He sa.id the students* mostly from the ti ea+ are takingpostgraduate work. These arefa,r more expensive to educate because of small classes and the attention they get from the highest paid profea sors, he said.
ArtsSoc reshffIes That di sorganized, unpopulated body known formerly as the arts society has changed* Basing itself now in eleven d* partmental clubs the arts society will be made up of representatives from each of these. From this arts society assembly members will be chosen to sit on an entirely new joint student-facm ulty council. Joining the students will be an equal number of faculty members selected by the artsfaca u1ty council. This joint group will be at first an advisory body to the dean but Arts Society president R,onTrbvich hopes to see it evolve i&o a policy making body getting into such things as term length and curricu1Lln-L &&Eventually we hope to become involved in electing the dean,” added T rbovich. Dean Minas sees the bodyworking to solve many of the planning problems and then perhaps going on to problems such as curriculume The new Arts Society Assembly has the tentative approval of arts dean J@ Sayer Minas and expects to be constituted next fall. Trbovich sees the Arts Society Assembly as primarily promoting student and faculv relationships both academically and socially.
Butt/e
To help carry out programs the board of governors will be asked to collect a three dollar per student fee thus providing some $6000. Areas in which the Arts Society hopes to work include influencing the design of new arts buildings from the students* point of view, acting as a pressure group much like the present arts faculty council and publishing an an&calendar. Minas doesn’tforesee realopposition from the faculty members. ‘dThe real problem is just bringing it about. It takes a lot of time to get things going? Last summer various work groups were set up within the de= partments and the chairmen dis= cussed a joint faculty-student setup* kdMost were in agreement then,*9 said Mina& Elections from the arts student body for Arts Society Assembly executive are on March 25 with no= minations this Monday to Wednes= The executive-president# &Ye vicepresident, treasurer9 secretary-will head the assembly made up of the president and a repr+ sentative from each year in the eleven departmental clubs. Arts students ‘voted yesterday on this new constitution andorganization for the Arts Society.
Read)] center
for the first occupants next week-or Even the stoplights is waitiflg patiently*
BooIcing circuit from wee&em! Joe Reccw them eng 4B$ recently hired Ls entertainment coordinator for the board of stub ent activities* has started work by trying to create an organ&&ion to co-ordinate the booking efforts of Ontario% universitiesa Says Recchia$ #&We want to trade information with other uniw versities$ and tie everybody together so tight--they become de= pendant on us for a source of informatiob Then next year they% ‘have to come backa We hop e to become affilliated with a US co& ege booking organization which has been tremendously helpful in ad-
the one after that-the long awaited campus have been turned o.ff jkv a few daysa
could result conference
vising me on acts* saying things which are dependable and good? ~QI the past we got stung badly. That% why I#rn here? To get the organization going% this weekend there is aconference here of booking representatives from most Ontario universities8 only Queen’s is staying out* The purpose of the conference is to provide background knowledge on available contracts8 facilities and inform&io& Major record companies and talent agencies have provided the conference with in= formation on available groups and pricess As well members of the
conference were asked to fill in forms rating the performance of all enterttinment booked over the last two years on their campus0 Recchia wants to get thisorganization going to pkovide universi=ties with @e vastly cheaperpricqs that result when a group can be given several bookings inthe same area. Talking about the old systems of everybody for himself* Recchia said, ttToronto has been getting killed* They9ve been paying prices that are too high, getting bad acts3 and acts that sometimes have not shown upea m9’
of
The spectre of grad power dominated Sunday9s council meeting but other business did get attention. Listening to various groups ask for budget restorations was chief among these. A brief report from the OntarioUnion of Stidents9 conference held last weekend in Guelph was given. Tom Patterson* federa.tion vicepresident was chosen a mem-= be-at--large on the OUS executive* The proposed budgets for the VdOUS boards and committees were presented for questions only* This year9s budget will take in fees only from the fall 68 and winter 69 terms as well as about $7#000 from the summer 69 terme Treasurer Joe Givens ex.pW.ns this as a measure to get the federationjs fiscal year-May l-April 30- and term
of office into better balance. Revenue to the federation will total about $309,000$ of this about $l299OOO comes from student fees. The remainder comes from such areas as advertising* campus activities the campus shop and creative arts board actititie% Expenditure* in Givens9 proposed budget* will be $3099000, The board of student activities will get some $95$00 in federation money@ publications is next3 getting $78$OOOe Administrative and general expenses total $39?000* Creative arts and the campus shop will get about $35$000 each while the board o!? extern~..l re= la,tions gets over $10~000~ --------------------------------see story page one “-----~----“------------~----~--~
Rick explained
Powell of the House 01 debates how other universities in Can-
ada devote a much larger portion of their per student budget towards debating* He requested council restore the cuts made in earlier stages* Ron Krieg$ history 2# representing the Flying club said their reduced budget would force the club to slice ifs planned mg program this summer* Ron Golemb% psych 2$ a member of the World University Services of Canada group asked council to reconsider its decision to drop all support of the group* He mentioned the services the body provides oversea The WXSC body requests $100 OpZdJ& expenses8 $500 to send de& gates@ and a levy of ken cell& per stude& Council noted a $l’vicious circlePP within WUSC of raised money just barely paying administrzztiJx ex~enses~ This Sunday tight council sits down
to attempt a finalization of this yeaps budgetGroups making representation to council for money will be heard. The Canadian Union of Students will receive $5,000 and its Ontario counter. part OUS gets $1,700* The graduate house has been alloted $780, charitiesa guts8 honoraria and doations fund gets $450, and a big jump from last year gives the quality of education programs under Ei.n Calvert $6~OO00Communication s$ including several more Council News, council forums a,nd re.. search gets $la200a groups made budget pleas be= fore councilBrad Mum0 and grad COWcil reps asked for a restoration of thei original request of $6290 instead of the alloted $7 80e
One
child
or a hundred,
the General’s
got
the cars stopped-eve?1
copcar.y-
to /~~a/<~~ swe
“his
kids”
(WI ~ros.s. -Brian
tv
by Rich Mills Chevron
news
you’ve P(h
editor
driven
through
Bridgf+
Remember the old guy who’s al= ways helping kids across the street or sitting in front of the postoffice? That%
the General.
Most people going through the town pass him off as an eccentric* some kind of nut or just the village character* Some even look onhim as Bridgeport% hippi+crudely painted letters on his house call him that. Bridgepo
rt9 s hippie?
Not according Norm Klaehn. Perhaps you think 18-year-olds should vote, your curfew should be lifted and math be outlawed forever. But there’s one ’ thing on which you agree with millions of women in 106 countriesthe modern internally worn sanitary protection -Tampax tampons. Why does a girl with a mind of her own go along with women all over the world? Tampax tampons give total comfort, total freedom. There are no belts, pins, pads. No odor. They can be worn in the tub or shower -even in swimming, . There’s nothing to show under the sleekest clothes. And Tampax tampons are so easy to dispose of, toothe con!ainer-applicator just flushes away, like the Tampax tampon. If you haven’t tried them already-get Tampax tampons today.
to chief
4dHe% no different
from
of police a lot of
those characters standing around the pool halls downtown He just stands out in this small villageP There is one difference between Bridgeport9 s General and the downtown boy&e% over 60. The General-F rank-has been a Bridgeport institution for many years walking through the town in heavy clothes winter and summer* Weekdays-morning3 noon and night-he’s standing on the main intersection helping g*his kids across the street.99 Cver 100 children a day from Bridgeport9s two elementary schools cross in front of theGrand Hotel and in the ten years Frank has been on the jobnot one has been hurt*
at
SHOES BARRIE.
4
USED
EVELOPFD B Y MILLIONS
ONTARIO
536 The CHEVRON
BY
A OF
DOCTOR WOMEN
leYou get used to it. Pd like to see some of you guys working up at the old incinerator on Guelph Street0 With the tin roof with the sun beating on it9 the fire going fulls I’d like to see somebody now working in therea That was over 30 years agoeP9 Apart from helping Uds in the day he. spends most of the time 66just seeing what I can find. Some days I don9t get anything but on others I find lots.99
Most
PARR &WALLE NOW
SO what9s dlfferent about the General? Not much. He has a beard, wears a long heavy coat, heavy cap, high rubber boots and several shirts,, Comforts able for winter-but this is yearound wear* Doesn9t it get hot?
The kids he helps “are pretty good* but there’s a few lemons.99
Available
the
Chevron
e
eport’
0
Clark,
drivers
don9t give him too
much trouble and it9s a good thing because, as Klaehn says9 14he9d probably jump out in front of a car to stop it from hitting a kiL99 Chief Klaehn finds the General obliging to do anything at all to help in the town. A bachelor all his Hfe-at least so far9 he says-Frank lives alone in an unheated3 two-storey9 crumbling-plaster house on Bridgeport% main street0 He says there9s no need for heat9 even in the winter-=Jg besides wintefls almost oveY9-but a nearby resident says he9 s ’ really afraid of fire* Most of the kids--especially the younger ones-like the Generale He9s often good for a pop bottle or two so they can run to the store and get candyQ At an age when many people have retired to the farm or nursing home Frank is helping the kids.
Storm
siipds
Constitutional froth ls foaming agaIn in the Village* In a marathon l&hour session Monday and Tuesday nights8 Vi& age council approved major revisions to the constitution. Council was presented with its constltutlonal committee% report which took four weekBs work.Vlllage council plodded through the proposed constitution section by section, making only minor chzu+ ges. There was some strong opposb tlon to the new judlclzU structure* mainly from judicial committee chairman Mlke Corbett‘ But the article was flnallypassed with only a few amendments‘ The article onflnancespromlsed
Detcding
the
cppeur
to provoke even more opposltlon because lt made major changes to the present system and had lmportant impllcatlons for the quadrant councils. But after much dlscusslon Vi& age council accepted the finance article. Brian Brown3 chairman of West quadran& approved of the gene& content of the article but warned that flrmer guarantees of quadrant rights might have to be w&ten into the constltutlon. Considerable opposltlon was ex= petted from the quadrants and according to a Village council motion passed four weeks ago aU revlslons would be submitted to the qua& rants. Warden Ron Eydt would.n$t com-
new
After four weeks work the Village constltutlon committee has submitted a revised constltutlon* Village councq after a twelve hour session, accepted the new set of laws with only a few changes* The new constltutlon$ as approved by Vlllage coux+ cq left the quadrant councils l&act but made major changes in the Village counclI~ The president will now be elected by popular vote while otner executive members are nominated by the president and approved by the councll~ Members of the Village council will be partly elected and partly appolnted by quadrant councils= Each quadrant appoints one member to the council and 13 others are elected by Village popular vote= The judlclal system on the Wlage level will be
*
Ftxdty
dumps
head8 World University Services got $700# $lsOOO for gifts* char% tles and honorari% the grad house got over $1800$ quality of eclucaw tion got $400&$ And on he went through the crea+= t&e-arts board8 board of external relations and the board of publ.lca= tlons until finally the coughs& ahems$ and enough8 enoughs showed the faculty council was satisfied* McKegney sald# 441get the message@ I merely wanted to beassurm ed the students were getting con= Crete benefits from the fee and I now know that for sure. tdPerhaps on the same prlnclple faculty members should be con+ pelled to joln a faculty assoclaa tion. u Heart hear*” came from se+ eral areas of the council. IIer concluded, &4We feel we have real benefits for everybody* It promotes student responslblIltys Students can run for council and change programs they don’t like. I think this is the best way? At this point arts dean J* Sayer Minas said there was no point sending the matter to the faculty’ s executive unless it had further guldellnes for discussion* Father Hugh MacKlnnon$ history prof, opposed sending the motion to the executive committee* wanting to settle the matter immedlat ely. Iler too wanted to settle the questlon without delay* &4t this point in the discussion a former member of student council and present historyprof, Leo JohI-+ son, rose and blasted the motlon and its supporters. &‘I find it very painful to return to Waterloo and find that so much innuendo has grown upagalnst stw dent councll.$* Johnson sald ln his years on council-he was treasurer ln 196% 64 under president Jim Kraemerthey had carried on exactly the same type of programs as now, with the unlverslty’s blesslng. l?ve noted one very curious thing about the klnd of people who want
l
ment proved
in East Qucdmnt
on the revisions by the quadrant
untll apcouncils.
4tI don’t know what the quadrangles are going to do with lb and untlI the quadrangles have studled 1% I am not making any dlsposltion towards it? Village council Tuesday calIeda joint meetlng of !he four quadrant councils for Iast night* The North quadrant council approved a jolnt meetlng Monday night when it was onIy a recomof the constitutional mendation Wednesday East cow committee* cll shot down both the joint meetlng and the proposed constltutlon. East
tutor
Dr.
Jim
Van Evra
constitution
to undertake this sort of lnvestigatlon* Not one member of the fae ulty-outslde of Provost Scott and myself”has ever attended a stu= meeting-meetings dent-council which are open to everyone= tJThis motlon as it stands looks like a statement of fact when ln fact lt is not a statement of fact= It is nothlng but an attack on the present student council and its role within the university? As Johnson sat applause spread through the faculty council. Tom Pattersont f ederatlon vlcepresident* stood before the faculty and sald the federation is con= cerned about the relations between faculty and students. g41 think this is a matter for the students= They can look after it I would Ilke to see themselves* this particular matter dropped for the time belng and see ourdlscu+ slons focus on how to make thls a better unlverslty. The best way to do this is not to put thls motion ln the hands of the executive committee but to discuss it here and defeat it.** Patterson emphaslzed that stud= ents are able to infIuence the way their money is spent. &‘In the past students were mostly wllllng to go along with what student council dide There were no complaints on the fourdollar fee hlke last year? Prof. Wilhelm Dyck of German and Russian suggested voluntary fees and, a membershl~card systern* JdThis can be successful~ Fke been where it has beendoneePP Father MacKlnon stopped ~yck d4He% opened up a great big issue that% no concern of this body.*’ Sociology prof Ronald Lambert declared* diWhat the issue is, is that students are mindlng their own business= The faculty should do the same? A mid shouts of “put the questlonp put the question,” the chairman called for a vote on the amendmern+to send the original motion on to the executive committee. It was defeated with only about 10 profs supportlng 1t*
At one point, North chairman Larry Caesar asked the council lf it was golng to attend the jolnt meeting* Some members indlcatw ed they would attend. Van Evra# however* put forward a motion, which he laterwithdrew, forbidding o u t sl d e r s-meanlng Caesar-from addressing the East councll~ In a flnal
changed slgnlflcantly . A VlIlage court of senlor studen& with the five justices appointed by Village council from a Ilst submitted by the court, will hear appeals and decide on constitutlonti issues. AIthough the new constitution gives Village council power to form uniform judicial poIlcy it leaves most of the actual admlnlstration to the quadrants* A particularly contentious lssue was the problem of finances‘ The constltutlonal committee suggested finances be handled by the Village council and outlined a detailed budgetlng procedure& Each wlnter term Village council will appoint a budget committee to draw up a lamonthbudget plan0 The quadrants would be guaranteed a specified portion of Village income-
eo from page
moved that the East quadrant operate as in the past and maintain the same reIatlon to Village cow cll in finances and representation on VlIlage council. After some dlscussion this passed. The only-amendment the East council approved was the provision for an popularly elected VlUage president.
slash at the jolnt meet...
YOUNG
LADY SUMMER
from
April Must
lng# East Van Evra rant would cisions of
Warden Eydt was asked lf lt was proper for a tutor to influence councfl meetlngsr %ertaln.Iy I would think a tutor has a proper right to speak up and put forward motions. The other members of council can then vote as they wish. This government system alIows student and don and tutor to interact?
Ldieffe
typist
Some business
REQUIRED
FOR
MONTHS
September
and good
experience
Call 744- 1872
ui WLJC
with
figures,
preferred.
8 a.m. to 5 pm.
7. . .
Abbott% motlon was thenputand it too was defeated= ‘dI@rn not really dejected about lt#*$ said Abbot& after the meet= *% a way Pm happy* My lr4s motive primarily was to brlng out discussion on an issue on which people seemed to have some kind of oplnlon? In a post-meetlng lntervlew Johnson sald he felt student coux+ cll is in a $4much better position now than it had been before any kind of declslon had been made&dProf. Abbott told me he felt he had been used,” said Johnson= h He felt there were serious things to be d&cussed and that he volm teered to put the moflon forward 0nIy to get dlscusslon going? Dean Mlnas sald after the meeting, *4Thls vvasn?t my motlo& I dldn*t put it forward although I seem to have cilf2iculty convlnclng people of that. I dldn3 have any strong desire to put this before the CQuncll~~ Dean Mlnasabstalned ontheflnal vote. 4tMy own feellngs wouId be dip ected at those people who said they wanted it d&cussed and then didn? say anthlng$*’ said Profa Abbott af’a ter the meeting Tuesday0 Early last year federation of& cers began to feel pressures from the general dlrectlon of the arts dean% offlcee C rltlclsms of the federation8 s proposed lncorporatlon were aired ln the university operations council in AprlI--exactly the same mlsglvlngs about fee collecting asAb= bott’s recent motion Informal meetlngs in the summer of 1967 produced the same doubts about the f ederationuunlm verslty agreement from Dean Mlnasa He felt some type of unlversitY ControI-perhaps through its budgets commltte&would be ln order. In December Mlnas suggested divldlng student fees into compulsory and non-compulsory parts* The federation would also be made responslble to the whole unive&y-not just to the students*
As you know, Grok is a Martian word that means “to have an awareness and complete understanding of everything around you”. To achieve this state of mind, students have learned to Grok the Yellow Pages. They know it’s the one sure way to find everything they need quickly and easily. Whether you’re a native, or a stranger in town, turn to the most reliable information source of all the Yellow Pages. Wear out your fingers instead of yourself. Grok?
let ytmr
fingers
Friday,
-
Laurier LaPierre wlll speak on “The new parasites ‘* Monday night at 8 at the WaterIootheran TheaterAudltorlurn. Hls lecture ls spansxed by the NW.
20 to early
be competent
council passed another motion saylng East qua& not be bound by the dethe joint meeting.
do the walking
March
75, 7968
(8:35)
537
WATERLOO makes delicious Charcoal
Broiled
Hamburgers,
Hot Dogs,
French
Fires, Milksh
The Ontario Human Rights Commission in co-operation
The International
with
Students Association of the
UNIVERSITY
OF WATERLOO invites
ALL OVERSEAS
SWlXlVTS
to an
Informal GebAequainted Evening TUESDAY,
MARCH
CLASSROOM
26,1968
246, MODERN UNIVERSITY
at 8:00
p.m.
LANGUAGES OF WATERLOO
BUILDING,
PURPOSE OF THE GATHERING To enable the Commission and the students to become acquainted with each other and to exchange ideas on the Commission’s program, particularly in the areas of employment and housing. LIGHT
REFRESHMENTS
WILL
BE PROVIDED
Forfurther information, contact Mrs, Edith Beausoleil, Foreign Student Office, University of Waterloo, Telephone, 744-6111, ext. 2586 or Miss Esther Brandon, Associate Dean of Students and Foreign Student Advisor, Waterloo Lutheran University Telephone 744-8141, ext. 236.
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Though some only building
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lecture
building
for human
is the beings.
There they are, the latest accomplishments in modern architecture. It may be the New Brutalism, a Frank Lloyd Wright special, or a 20-th century filing box. Some buildings show imagination, others are a bore. But then it’s a matter of what you like. 0ne important consideration seems to be missing-the micro or total architectural environment. Is there a single element in the math building to connect it to the rest of the university ? Are asphalt paths and miles of sodded hills the only unifying link? It seems the mathematicians have built a fortress for themselves. In his 1965 review Ted Batke, university vice-president for development, emphasizes a “human-scale environment”. The engineering lecture building, more than any other campus structure, provides this kind of scale. What other building includes gathering areas on its roof? What is the overall theme of architectu re on this campus? Maybe a group of inquisitive architec ture students will be able to tell us someday.
photostory Compendium
Some
by Pat Sweet
Massive concrete ing. On& small
and Pete Wilkinson
forms glass
lend doors
a stark at the
quality bottom
to the new math buildindicate its’ for people.
of ways:
this new shower
‘68
people
prefer
to use a single
form
over and over.
Result:
a filing
cabinet.
One form
can
be used
in a variety
Friday,
March
75, 7968 (8-35)
system. 539
FAMILY
I
TOWERS OPEN
Chevron on Recorcis
RESTAURANT PLAZA
Bridgeport
8: 30 a.m. - 12 midnight
Rd.
8: 30 a.m. - 1 am Fri. & Sat.
10% DISCOUNT
by Ron Sai-to
FOR STUDENTS
Chevron staff
Paul Mauriat and his orchestra: Philips PHS 660-248
Gord
Crosby
2500 KING
hhotors)
Central
FOR AUTHQRIZED VW SERVICE With CI ‘Student Discount COMPLETE COLLISION SERVICE E. THEATER
Friday,
OF THE
March
745-688
I
ARTS
15, 8:30
pm
The Lovin’
Admission Theat,er
Federation
$2.00
Students
$1 .OO
Box Office
ML254
744-6111
of Students
- Creative
Your Invitation
Ext. 2126
Arts Board
From
LUBETTE DE PARIS COSMETIC BAR Personalized Consultation Care. Exciting Selection
on Corrective Made-up of Boutique Gifts,
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performance: varied, hashed recording: good stereo quality: acceptable They call themselves the Spoonful, but with Zal has tarnished0 Yanov.sky gone, tie bright silver Perhaps it’s intentional, because with the myriad of instruments--pianos p oboes, violins pand typewriters included, and the arrangements built around them9 it’s unquestionably not the ‘Do you believe in magic’ group. They may be trying to find a new sounde Among the 11 cuts is present4 the country-styled @Borethe light-classical ?Foreve?, the folkisk dom’, younger generationB, the soul-styled ‘Try a little bitB and the hits Money’ and *Six oBclockBe With no consistent sound, listening to the alburn is like taking pot luck --everything is playing*
“The glories of the literature of vocal chamber music of the last 400 years”
from
Spoonful:
Kama Sutra
THE RIVERSIDE SINGERS
Tickets
Hits.
performance: .sweet recording: crisp stereo quality: good Upon popular demand* here it is-- the ‘Love is blue* album., It’s been in my collection for over a month now, and almost went to the ‘one good cut’ pile. But after the second listening came a third, fourth and now* uncountable generations later, it%
Volkswagen
( formerly
Blooming
a top instrumental lp. men people started asking for a i-eviewa Alright, but you wanted this... Take number-one iop hits--‘Something stupid*, ‘Penny Lanes9 ‘This is my songB, *Puppet on a strin$ Add a da.sh of love--%euls au mondeB, ‘L%.mour est bleu’ (that% ‘Love is blueB). Color it Mauriat. Stir well. Press onto vinyl. Play. You’ve got an album serving an infinite number of people. The melodies are familiar but the orchestrations remould thern--the harpsicord, brass and strings are strikingly combined into lush, soaring fullness labelled ‘yeelingBVe So buy the album& listen to it twice; and when you’re back buying more mauriat, teX them I did it to you.
and Skin
Fran Morris
TOO street 743-2362
78 Albert
Creative
Arts
Calendar
F R I. MAR. 15 8: 30 Theater of the Arts THE RIVERSIDE SINGERS Six beautiful voiced performing vocal chamber the last 400 years, Admission $2.00 Students $1 ,OO
music of
SUN. MAR. 17 8:30 AL116 INTERNATIONAL FILM SERIES “The Passenger” Admission by Series Ticket only TUES. MAR. 19 12: 15 Theater of the Arts NOON DRAMA: part of the Workshop ‘68 series “The Hole” - by NSF. Simpson Addicts will get another “fix” Free admission ,THURS. MAR. 21 12:15 AL116 SPECIAL FILM: “Soccer - European Championship” - shown by Mr. Bill Shayler - second of two parts - This game, played at Hampden Park in Scotland, has been rated the greatest exhibition of soccer skill and fitness. Free Admission FRI. MAR. 22 7:30 Theater of the Arts CHILDREN’S THEATER presents: “PINOCCHIO” Admission $1.25 Students $.75 SAT, MAR. 23 2:30 Theater of the Arts CH I LDR EN’S TH EATER presents: “PI NOCCH IO” Admission $1.25 Students $,75 Tickets from Theater Box Office M L254 744-6 I I I Ext. 2126 CREATIVE ARTS BOARD - FEDERATION OF STUDENTS
University
parish
(St Jerome’s
CoIIegeI
PRESENTS GUEST SPEAKER - Mrs. Laura Sabia alderwomen TOPIC - “The Role of Woman in the Church Today” TIME
Notre
8
540 The CHEVRON
- 8: 00 p.m-
Dame
Lounge
‘Yt’he I-IoleBB is a hole in the road. Down in the depths of it workmen are doing a job of work; at the top% on its periphery9 a man, with his camp stool, his vacuum flask, his haversack* and other evidences of a long vigil, the nucleus of a is ‘*forming querie? Round him gather from time to time other watchers, curious folk, who wonder what is going on below, and each of whom, as hew or she--gazes into the hole,sees a different significance in the events down theree Noon drama addicts will get ano&er ‘%xii Tuesday, March 19 when ‘the hol$ is presented as a part of the Workshop ‘68 series* at 12:15 pm in the arts theater. Admission is free. Produced in London with great ‘the holeB is written by success, N. F. Simpson9 Called by the Lendon Observer 9 The most gifted comic writer the English stage has discovered since the war?
Judy Dunlop is director production which fatures
of the mem-
hers of a class &in=,
in literary
criti-
sngefs tofight: vufied pfogfcm in 4 lcmguuges appears if? his first Sfzow of the Week presents in colob . Joining Gordon songs will be Ronnie Hawkins and Bonnie Dobson.
[TOSU,
T”*i$t the tiversity hosts the Riverside Singers, a group of six singers which has attracted considerable attention as a concert vocal ensemble. The Riverside Singers haveperformed in inany cities in Canada and the United States. They have not fallen into the habit of singing only a few standards and instead have a varied repertoire. Their concert here wffl feature traditional and more modern songs written by composers of the last 400 years, in four language. The performance begins at 8:30 in the theater. Tickets may be purchased at the box-office, or phone local 2126. Admission $2, students $1.
MJ-mim~ tc spwial whm CBC’S “‘Wherefore and whp “, Mo~lda~i/l inte&wtatiom h-f’ his ma& and T/le Hawks, Jackie Gab&l
144 minutes (not gross) of plunder pillage and rape of the campus. FASS returns with another fantasstic FASS first- the social event of the summer, and spreading rapidly like any other social disease. This latest farce wm be perpetratd by Tom Ashman (producer) and Peter Moore (Director) on or about the llth or 15th of June. So stay tuned, kiddies V for 14 action-packed, spinechillings rib-tickling, fun-filled
minutes of love and laughter. The Son of FA SS ! Tickets will be sold in the =ti half-FASS tradition and all those lucky enough to be on campus this summer are invited to participate as the FASS Knight engages in a battle to the death with the giant 50 -ft. Pig. See the 50,000 maneating chipmunks! And themating dance of the Arctic Lernxning as the FASS Knight rides once again -side-saddle! In ‘Not So FASSB.
Pozo
ecos prove
performers
photos and story by Barry Takayesu
gor? and many of Dylan$s songs8 Williams said it% getting to a point where they have to ask the writer what his song means before they record it.
Chevron staff
New sounds came from the hockey players’ dressing room ThursNot the usual obscenities &Ye but-a woman’s voice.
Something was different at the reception. It wasn? the game of 20 questions you play with most celebrities at press interviewse The Pozo Seco Singers returned questions-not just general ques= tions# not just a fake two=way conversation* but more personal questions+
No, there wasn’t a stag party or orgy. the voice belonged toSusan Taylor of the Pozo’Seco Singers# there for a Village Weekend concert. Backstage* among the basketball shirts and hockey sticks the Pozo Secos were tuning up theirGibsons and Martins.
In 1964, a duo, the Strangers Two (Don Williams and Lofton Klive), and Susan Taylor met at a college hootenany at Corpus Christi Texas. Comparing sounds that evening and liking what they heard, they joined forces. Pozo Seco3 I learned* is Spanish for dry wells* They liked thename and so it stuck.
A tall slim tm strolled over to me and introduced himself, tcHowdy, ah’m Donny Williams. What% yore name? Barry what?$ Five minutes were lost but immeasurable knowledge was gained as he struggled with my Japanese name in his southern accent. As he was called away, a bushy-haired
Ron Shaw, the newest group member, was impressed b-v quality of Canadian beer. He took one along ‘yust j& t?je road. ” discussing the double When with it too,‘$ he replied &eWe$ve been working on a new meanings of songs like *Mr Tamborine mar& gPuff the magic drasound for about a ~ear?~ Williams said$9’ and 1 don? know. 1 think we sorta junked it? Susan mentioned that they expected to release an album i$ at r-no% two months. She added,4‘All we need. is an album jacket* gcWe aren’t really satisfied with ita It% extremely hard to be satisfied with something you’ve been working on for a year off and on because after a while we can9t hardly be objectiv-nymoreheard it so much. It seems like it% taking so long to get it out we don’t know if we want to put it out or try something new.$’ If the album does come out cI believe it all’, tMorning dew’, 4Louisiana ma& Hey babe’ and Donnie Williams was in the &Jet plane’ will most likely be on original group, the Strangers Two, with Lo,fton KliMe, it.
tinfoil
What do fol ksingers do with their free nights? This one listens to other fol ksingerx gent repeated the preformance ddMy name% Ron Shaw. What% yours?e...‘9
are people
Williams rated the Simon and Garfunkle team highly. d$Every report Pve heard about them is just fantastic* In fact it% unbelievable two guys and one guitar can put on the show they do/j 4dPve heard just the opposite#*8 interjected Shaw who had heard them before they became famous and were known as Tom and Jerrya Shaw is a new member of the Pozo Seco+-he joined in early 1967a However he is a longtime professional musicians experienced since 1959 in groups like the Michel Trio and the Brady Wine Sing= ers. In the corner the group with Williams were discussing the impersonal professional attitude of many celebritiesm 8gJust because I*m an entertainer I%e gotta talk weird so% no one will understand me,‘* he spoofed. Suddenly he got up announced* bgHey guys* we% gonna hafta splita99 ldDid I hear the rumbling iant drurn~?~ asked Shaw. &&Don always
does that-he
of dissits
down for a meal* gets up and says let% go? On their departure they shook hands warmly with everyonea A few minutes later Shaw9shead appeared through the door as he asked for one for the road-soon ta be followed by Susan% to beg for one for herself. I couldn*t escape the feeling that I would not forget this trio or would not be easily forgotten by them.
Moments latert a singer in a buckskin coaLby no means a stranger to this campus walkedin. Gord Lighffoot. :‘I thought Pd drop by to wish you luck*‘, he saide In answer to a question on the whereabouts of his third album* promised to be out by the end of February* he laughed t81t’ll be out for sureiin April. They (the record company) are a bunch of liars*‘* After the concert, the PozoSeco Singers readily accepted an invitation to the reception in a Village lowe. The POZQ Secos showed rare form in the lounge. Unlike many they came other performers dressed in street clothes instead of polkadot irridescent shirts with sealskin collars and elephant-hide dungarees. Ron Shaw relaxed on the floor as he commented on the quality of Canadian beer. Meanwhile Williams tucked himself in a corner opposite Susan Taylor. The trio displayed a genuine friendliness as they partook ofthe sandwiches and cookies. “Mmm, I haven’t had one of these sandwiches for a long time peanutbutter and jarn.~.it’s mah favorite. And what do you call this one ‘?‘* Williams asked. me
honey? ‘4That%
h o s t e s s replied
really
‘tThat*s
something-d Friday,
March
75, 7968 (8:35)
54 1
9
rWhen it blows, by Jim Naget Chevron staff
The U.S. isrPt afflicted with a race problem. The problem is racISM* John Howard Griffin says that prejudice exists at the irrational leveLeven in men who might be completely reasonable in every other area of their lives. Griffin ought to know. He% the only white man who% accepted a negro% challenge to &‘wake up one morning in my skin? and see life as the blackman sees it. Speaking recently to over 1000 people jam-packed into the new Rockway Mennonite Highschool gym in Kitcheneq GrWin told the stow of his 1961 book 4Black like m#, and went on to outline his fears for the coming summer ti the U.S. He had a dermatologist turn his skin black with chemicals and ultraviolet, 44Within 30 minutes I had had enough experiences to show I had indeed understood nothing of the practical day-to-day qeriences of a black man.*$ Racism exists massively and in
‘We’re
heeded
different guises everywhere in the world, sad Griffin. 44We hear it everywhere with different victim groups.” The Nazis in Germany spoke of their race problem in exactly the same way the U.S. is always talking of its, Griffin said. The au& ence sat silent* gripped-though GrifYin spoke unemotionally, without gestures* simply leaning over the 1ecterL While studying in Tours in the 30~~ Griffin helped Jews escape the Nazi machine. One time he had to choose between saving a mother and father or their children. “1 could go a city block in any direction and yet find men-decent me-who knew nothing of this kind of tragedy* who would be quibbling, ration-, justifying that very racism that leads to the tragedy we were witnessing. ‘*They were destroyed for one reason and one reason alone: men had allowed an indictment against a whole people. They were members of a victim group.” Back home in the Deep South& Gri8in heard the same talk he had grown up with. Only this time it sounded sinider, because it sound-
ed
like the German reasoning. Itb easy to see the roots of the problem in the southernU.S+Gr& fin said0 44Great numbers of US On w generation) had the experience of being bmught up by anegro kly. Then when we were five or six we were told by the gentle Voice of our granather orgrandmotl-w that we weregetting too old to play with black children or to sit on the lap of our housekeeper. %I brribk? IMng was done to US. IW mm taught to love and then hwht to view others as in-i* tally different. 4*From this the rest begins to grow. *tWe were led to believe w&e not prejudiced? But don’t negroes have a differ ent type of bone structure and build? NO. There% as much ?ELP iation as whites. ~9% qtite openly discussed among negroes just where their white blood came from-what white man abused whose grandmother or mother? fi makes the white racist% WO* ties abut miscegnation ridiculous, he said. Don’t negroes have characteristic speech patterns? 44A massive
for even bloodief
From civil t+ by Chris Swan Chevron staff
Five years ago young black men and women were staging peaceful sit-ins. They endured injury and pain without striking backe Now some of the same black men are using guns to kill police and firemen. What tion?
brought
about the evolu-
Vin.cent Harding, a history prof from Spell-man College in Atlanti, Georgia, spent an hour and a half Saturday night explaining the causes to a packed Theater of the 542 The CHEVRON
nuclecw
Arts, as part of Conrad Grebel. College*s lecture series* . Harding is a rather unusual combinationHe has a PhDa He is black, And he is a Mennonitchurch leader at that. As a Mennonite he is a pacifist, but his quiet8 articulate talk showed he sympathizes deeply with the negroes who have come to believe only force can solve their problems. Nonviolent direct action willnever purge America of its prejudice, More and more Harding saide blacks are thinking this way,, 4‘Too often the blacks’ hopes have been raised and always these hopes have been dashed. Now the dreams have been deferred once
delusion exists that unless you can sound like you% reading Uncle Remus you could never pass? Griffin says he has been asked the same question onCanadianTVm 9 don’t how what we use for @ill-S.** He found there% no public a+ commodation for blacks in most smaJler towns. In a city where once he had been anhonoredgues4 he now found himself sleeping 4th a coffin-like cubicle in an area reserved for a certain C&X of human being s.*$ Try* to find a jobwashis most discouraging experience. Repeal edly, he was qualified over the telephone$ but refused as soon as his prospective employer saw he was bhck. Griffin said# 441f ever you war& to hear your skull crac& stand outside the door of a church from which you have just been rudely expelled and listen to them wo* ship and sing about following inthe paths of Jesus. QThe negro is wondering how the white man can let this attitude contaminate his highest institution% the library* his places of worship, his places of healing.
explosi &9 produces an alienation so profound man can’t bear it. He begins to talk with contiempt about the white man’s God.&* Griffin said he has spent much flme with extremist black-power groups in the last few months* studying last summer’s big-city riots. A nearly identical pattern emerged8 In Wichi% Des Moines, Roaoake and other cities* the mayor received a phone call early one hot summer night that a neighboring ciky was in flames and that 200 cars of armed blacks were converging on his city. Of course he immediately put riot-prevention measures into effect* 44A tremendous tension can be created by that one phone call. Whites armed themselves to the teeth? MansPield~ Texa% typified another pattern. A carload of whites drove through the negro ghetto* shooting guns into the a&. Negroes poured out of their homes. Everyone was trigge+happy. Whites were arrested armed. Negroes were arrested with sticks and stones. Whites were released
times’
C too often,” said Harding. The recent report from the President’s Commission on Civil Disorders officially told the ad-= mInistra.tion what any negro could have told them: conditions are worse now than in 1955. Reports written half a century ago have been written again yesterday0 Still the white structure is unwilling and even unable to move. “The task then for the black is to arouse America’p Economists estimate that giving the black people freedom would cost $10-20 billion for the next 15 years. 44White America is willing to spend twice this amount to fight a war in Vietnam and nearly this same amount in space research.
‘{The country has shown that in times of crisis it can mobilize the whole nation and restructure the whole economy0 During the world wars it took less than a year,” Harding said* Negroes will make the U-S., realize it must attend to the black9 needs. This creation of tension-domestic brinksmanship-is danger ousw However, in the attempt to make America feel that helping the negro is a life-or-death struggle, the urban guerrillas might bring on repression, Harding feared* They could force the government to eliminate the symptoms rather than curing the sicknessHarding predicted the U& might
easily force all joble: into detention camps --cure or camps-the be made in three QT Harding kept alI1 simple things would if five years ago peep Martin Luther King,, I! King as too radical l no choice for the bla come more radical0 Martin Luther King for all Afro-America] ding* Early there weI that non-violence die scope to deal with the hand. As Malcolm X . is dreaming dreams in the ghetto are h mares.*8
ns will 00 bail.
Blacks
required
one single church group* ? single white* opened his 9 L-d not just riffraf& wed about this kind of inGriffin quoted one young ar
ago I knew right from A year ago I wouldn’t reamed of hurting anyone. now now tiIwalkintothat arket and a white lady looks I that certain way andcalls yBa -pm gonna kill. And I’ll ko the poolhall afterwards even shaking.*’ extremist slogan%&e ten$$ not refer to coffeebreaks, &aid. 441t means tiere are ies to every black.Itmeans they get you, get every one .*9 ask for justice and they ; a committee**’ Griffin one black radicaL 44We% verything else and we don’t chance. Did the Nazis kill lion Jews? Well* fool& do nk we’re going to let them to usF9
: men 1 way n will ears0 I how t now ceded ssing k left o be=spoke Harw :tions e the ms at fKiw lacks light=
loo& like The government program to keep down crime in the streets translates simply to the negro: lcGetthe black? ccThe negro believes-and it goes beyond belief, to action-that the white is out to exterminate the blacks. They believe that whites set off the violence last summerbecause the riots followed the ~ same pattern* c4They see the net beginning to close*” New Anti-crime laws in Congm ress have become anti-riot rep ression$ Griffin said+ Cities are spending $75$000 fortanks and maw chineguns* ccThe negro sees this as rapidly moving toward exte r mination 44All this because men look at others and see them as intrinsically different, M Griffin said ctWe see this tragic pattern come io its ~ final conclusion
Harding felt Malcolm X9 the assassinated Black Muslim leader, was one of the noblest heroes of black America* gtHe w-as one of the most searchingly religious men America has known in the 20th centuryQ’p Agitation for civil rights is not a thing that has just materialized in the recent past. In 1928 Marcus Garvey told negroes, ;l Power is the only argument that satisfies man‘*. Such black power should be clear enough to see and8 if it isn9t seen3 to be felt.‘9 The Mississippi Freedom Demw Party-Young, integrata ocratic e&--tried to get itself seatedat the 1964 Atlanta convention@ But the Democratic party refused the demm
c/ii/al’s
44There isn’t any intrinsic other0 Any man who lives and draws a breath is faced with the same h* man problem+loving, suffering, fulfilling human aspiration, dying. And these are hard enough human problems at best without making it more difficult. 44You’re on velvet as a whites” he told the audience. ccYour’chil& ren too& ucBut as soon as I changed to a denser pigment it was like walking through the deepest, stenchiest swamps c41t is folly to go on tolerating a system that prevents any man from achieving full human aspiration? What is Griffin% motive in spea= king to a Canadian crowd if he feels nothing can be done to stop the approaching holocaust in the U‘S. ? ?E what I fear is going to hap-= pen happens in the U.Sa I hope the
ocratically chosen delegates in favor of the self-selected old guard even though they broke party lines3 supported the Republicans and vota ed against civil-rights bills‘g This refusal of the Democratic party to show negroes that they really meant what they said was one of the turning points of the evolution9’s said Harding* Another turning point was the 1963 bombing of a Birmingham Baptist church* Four young negro girls died0 This violent response to the gentle nonviolence of civil rights infuriated many“Time and again white America threw away chances to exhibit in deed what they claimed in word because they claimed demands by
pattern is sufficiently that the same pattern repeating itself.
pluy’ clear here won’t go on
%%at I do hope is that historically we don’t lie, if what I fear happens. ctI want this pattern to be perceived.” What can whites do, short of buying a *303? He said all he could hope is that whites will work to counter racis-in themselves, their parents, their children. Griffin predicted every one of the new civil-rights laws now before Congress will be blocked.ctThey*13 says uwe mustn’tpass anything with a gun at our heads? g4We haven’t seen the worst yeta We% in a tremendous degenem tive cycle right now= And the white hasn’t yet been shocked into realizing ii“’
black people were too extremea Now we consider King conservative* 4cAmerica has no one to blame but herself. Now even moderate middleclass negro professors are aligning themselves with militant groups because when the shooting starts no one’=d going to ask stop and ask if you%e got a PhDe’* Answering a question# Harding claimed there was evidence that police and firemen in Detroit last summer had actually broken into and looted stores that had been spared because they were owned by negroes. He said whites are alwayswant+ ing to help poor ghetto blacks and don9t realize there are more poor
What solutions are possible7 4cIf we had time we could solve the problems. We don? have time. ccWe haven’t got time to start doing anything. What I hope is that we can see the patterns well enough so we don’tfallfor this massive black-versus-white* whiteversus-black thingc4The first thing to go inaracist society is respect for due process of law for the victim group#” Griffin said. He cited block roundups in St. Louis last summer. 44Then those who identify with the victim group get treated the same waya Tt looks very very gloomy* ccI hope our national shame will immunise us for two or threegenerations@ These are ancient patterns and as long as men don’t learn..m*8 He just shook his heada Vd been hoping I waswrongfor all these yearse But when it blows it’ll make nuclear explosions look like child% play?
whites in ghettoes than blackse c‘Too much love, too much love. Nothing kills a nigger like too much love,” he said. Few whites are suited for work in black ghettoes* Canadians will soon have more to worry about than their Indians8 Harding figures. ‘Within the next year Canada will have to ask Itself what to do with the great influx of black rh fugees from the United States.99 In the States itself Harding asks the question: “Where is the nation going when the president and leading Republican candidate refuse to face r* ality? ctI think we%re going into even more bloody timesap Friday,
March
15, 7968 (8:35)
543
11
sytxiicci
ists unite
province to shape policies for Quebec’s future development, which in many cases implies the destruction cbPierre, why do you keep on of the English empire in Quebec making those silly speeches? Why which has run, if not ruled, that don’t you make bombs?$ province since 1759. Pierre Bourgeault$ Quebec’s *** separatist leader of the RassembDelegates at UGEQ’s first conlement pour PIndependence Nagress at Lava1 University in the tionale (RIN) tells this story about fall of 1965 debated membership a friend of his to point up a cerapplications by three English unitain sense of futility among many versities. of Quebecs nationalists who are Some argued if the English enonly too aware of the many contratered the union they could form a dictions in Quebec. Here’s one of voting bloc approaching 4Opercent theme =-at that time-and make UGEQ Eight-five percent of Quebec is another sterile forum for debates Frencha But the English in Monton Canadian confederation This real who total only 15 percent of was not their aim when theFrench the population provide half the prostudents had formed the union six vince% university students. Reamonths earlier at their founding son enough to make a bomb? congress. The phenomenon of EnglishThey had formed a Quebec stum Montreal’s predominance in econm dent union of French members; its om$cal$ educational and other areofficial language was French; its as of Quebec society is not new. orientation was Quebec1 its poliThe English have held sway $nQue= cies uncompromisingly left; its bet since 17 59, the defeat of the philosophy was syndical& based French on the Plains of Abraham‘ on the Chartre de Grenoble of the Like true conquered peoples the national union of students of French retreated to the farm+ France; and they planned to opera partly at the urging of thecatholic ate in the same way as trade unchurch, partly because the English ions, often in direct collaboration took over the reins of industry and with them. The English could force eommercbbut mostly to attempt a compromise on all of this. to preserve their culture. Only Not so* said the pro-English. The now are they succeeding inbreakQuebec French didn’t withdraw ing the English hold on the provfrom the Canadian Union of Studince. In the midst ents because it was dominated by of this struggle English students* It% policies were comes the syndicjudged to be simply not relevant to fdbalist union of Quethe realities of the Quebec situauiu bec students, tion, An% as education is a provinm l# Union G en&ale cial responsibility, a federal lobby Founded des Etudiants du had little relevance to students in 1964. Quebe@GEQ* who saw their main priority as educational and social reform* Formed in 1964 after Quebec% In its application bid McGill acthree F rench universities-Lava& cepted the orientation and policies Sherbrooke and Montreal-withdrew from the Ottawa-based, Ot- of the union, including unilingualtawa-oriented Canadian Union of isma The majority sets the rules* they sail and Students, it now groups 55$000 stuwe’ll join the unidents from Quebec universities8 on on your terms* classical colleges* trade schools, The vote onMcteachers colleg es# nursing w GilP s application schools, and the new general and was not even professional public colleges into a English dose. Sir George want in cohesive syndicalist union. UGEQ is working hard to maintain the Williams and MarionopolisCollege were accepted at the same time. progress of the Quiet revolution soon after8 MCwhich began along with the bang of In a referendum Gill students repudiated their exseparatist bombs over four years ecutive’s move to join the unions 3W* mainly because UGEQ was unilinUGE@s contradiction is the preThe students changed their sence of 22,000 English students in gule its ranks, representing a third of miuds a year later however9 and the union membership. They have McGill reapplied and was accepted joined with other students in the back into the union at the Sherby D. John
Lynn
Canadian University
Press
Akciing at Sir George in February, UGEQ’s third annual gross c?~ose Paul Bourbeau president. He wants to decen ze the union and bring it closer to students.
12
English unci Fret7c
544 The WEVRON
contrali-
Students at UGEQ universities have store sitin at Sir Williams University several other unkrsitiex brooke congress of February$ 1967= Loyola also joined UGEQ# leaving ultra-conservative Bishop% University the only Quebec university outside the union. At the 1967 Sherbrooke congress Sir George Williams prepared a brief calling for recognition of English as a working language* An fll-conceived effort8 the brief cited several ambiguous statements by the retiring UGEQ executive to support its case* That the Sir George delegationfelt a need for such a brief in itself points up a deep feeling of resentment of their new-found minority status in the new Quebec. It is a unique situation where English students are forced to debate in Frenchften stumbling& embarrassed French haJ+Jw* while some Quebecois sit back with a smug smile on their lips, listenFor too long the shoe has WG been on the other foot* After 200 years on the receiving end of un$l$ngualism8 it must have been very satisfying for theFrench to have the English come to them on their terms* The Sir George bilingualism brief never did get to the floor. It was dropped at the request of the McGill delegation, which feared the arguing might harm their chances of returning to the union after their students had vetoed UGEQ a year earlier. McGill% member ship application was accepted at the plenary session, with only one disquieting question from the f100c ‘dAre they db ready to we* *it French now’?9 Answer a The answer was a silent yesquiet yes Isolated instances of French English conflict persist in UGEQ# cropping up mainly at congresses. In February of this year at the Sir George Williams congress McGill tried to place atwo-languages motion on the agenda without first steering it through a commission. They failed to muster the needed majority to place it on the agenda. On the other hand, Sir George% Jean Sicotte stole the show with a motion calling for the teaching of
a feeling of solidarity last. October moral
with one another. and physical support
At the book-
-the
French in English schools beginning at the primary leve4 d’ in order to allow the English community to participate more effectively in the development of Quebec societyQti A half-minute of stunned silence gave way to a loud cheer. The motion passed unanimously but, as one delegate said later& 4( some French delegates appeared to regard the motion as capitulation by the Engl$she*’ Or did he himself regard it as capitulation? Many English students regard UGEQ in this light. But it is becoming increaiingly evident that the union itself is putting off the race conflict in favor of otherMghm+bjectives. Only limited gains are possible on this front, bfW arm+ and tlmse mainly at the qpa-m of the overall effectiveness of UGEQ’s synd$cal$sta&$v$ties* UGEQ’s main concern is educational and social reform* not uTw the Canadian conPlay at stitution. a game It would be wrong to conclude that UGEQ is hung up on the French-English conflict. The opposite is indeed the case* One of UGEQ% greatest faults is the absence of an opposition group toward the union’s methods or objectives,, Delegates rarely come to congress with a bundle of briefs and ideas, Rather, they consider the work of the executive in commissions* arrive at a consensu s3 then play a syntax game with the final product at the plenary session stage before passing it without real modification. Such wide basic agreement on the aims and direction of the union is again evidenced by the acclamation of complete slates of ca&$dates for the executive in the past two years. Selection boils down to the competence of the individualsnominated~ and rarely to their position on WHCY &I many cases the executive appears too cautious or too conservative* prompting delegates to demand stronger action. Normally in such organizations, CUS forexample, the executive must badger -.
l
came
*from
Georgian (CUP)
the members to support morevigorous actions or policies. The Laval delegation was disappointed at the new $1.25 per capita fee. They had authority from their campus to committ $2.00 per capita to the unm ion* and broadly hinted they would kick in the extra 75 cents volunt& flY* Such examples indicate the solo idarity which exists within UGEQ, and it shows itself best in timesof Cl?iSiS*
University of Montreal students and a delegation from McGill showed up at Sir George’s one-day strike last fall to express support. U de M student association president Jean Dare held court for re= porters and others after the strike ended, talking about student powerae English meaning of l*un$versite aux etudiants, he saitid the need for greater inter-university solidarity among theMontreal universities. And the students8 not only their leaders, have now begun to regard UGEQ as their union and its president as their presidenta even if he does speak French to them@ On at least two occasions last fall past president Pierre Lefrancois was loudly cheered after solidarity speeches. At the Sir George shike over the bookstore prices and profits* -and at a MC+ Gill open council meeting where McGill president Rocke Robertson threw his stones at the McGill Daily and its Realist magazine re print, Lefratmois showed himself to be a leader of English students as well as French* The UGEQ *message is becoming clearer. Majority rules, and itrespects as much as possible the rights and wishes of the rn$nority* The age of minority English domm ination is over, at least in student circles* and students on both sides of the linguistic line now realize the new Quebec has a place for them both. ‘Je suis un QuGbecoiY is translatable. Those who do not share a nationalistic feeling for Quebec will drift off into North America. Those who do will stay behind and build a new Quebec.
Misi&owetz
by Tom
Rajnovich
Chevron sports
M We got her won.” These were the words of WLU basketballcoach Howard Lockhart tha,t meant w piness to the Golden Hawks. There were only 45 seconds left in the final game of the Canadian basketball championships at An& go&h, Nova Scot+ and the Hawks were ahead by seven points. Though-the Hawks had been rat= ed one of the top teams in the country, it was probably a surprise they were ti the final, except to their faw. The Hawks had all the odds a+ gainst them. They had been placed in the preliminary game* and had to beat the Carleton Ravens to enter the semifinal round. The Rave ens were fresh from a 67-66 vietory over a previously unbeaten Loyola squad in a league playoff. They didt?t stand a chance againsi tie Golden Hawks* however. The Lutheran squad was deadly from the floor in the first half’ shooting 71 percent, and taking an insurmountable 4&19 lead into the second half. They then coasted to a 7&53 wb. The next night the opposition was the UBC Thunderbirds. The Birds had been finalists the year before and had the same team back, , as weall as transfers from Simon Fraser University and U of Calgary. Theyweretheteamtobeaton paper at least. The UBC squad had the advantage in that they had notplayedthe night previously, while Lutheran had played the Carleton squad in the preliminary game. Also UBC had seen the Hawks play, while the T.- Birds were an unknown quantity to Coach Lockhart and his boys. For a while it looked as jf the odds would be right. The Hawks took a quick 1-O lead but quickly That was the last time lost it. they saw the lead tffl the game was over. UBC took a lO=point lead in the first, half and the Hawks realized they couldn’t keep up with thetaller, faster, stronger Birds* who shot a very strong 75 percent from the floor in the first half. Coach Lockhart told his team to stall the ball, even though they
gets MVP
were behind at the time, in an attempt to disrupt the UE3C squad. The strategy partly worked but the Hawks were still down m5 at the l=lf. In the second half the British Columbia team slowly pulled ahead anfj with little more than a minute left in the game led 81.73. Then the roof fell in, Pete Misikowetz scored a 12foot jumper, and when the Thun+ derbirds threw the ball in Bob Bain intercepted and scored a layup drawing a foul in the process. He made the shot and the Hawks were down only threepoints. Now it wastime forNorm Cutiiford. The plan was togivethe ball to him and try to tiw a foul, while scoring. This would tie the game. Cuttiford got the ball but be Birds refused to foul. Cut&
ford delayed the shot in anattempt to be fouled but he got no coopep ation. dJHe kept ti so iong I thought he wsz gob-P to peel it and. eat it@*’ said Coach Lockhart. Finally Cuttiford scored and the Hawks were down *81aOe They fouled to get the ballandNeilMu* ray, UBC’s high scorer8 missed the shot. Misikowetz got the rebound* and fed Cuttiford, who hit a jumper from 12 feet to give Lutheran the lead with seven seconds left. The clock ran out and Wateloo was in the finaL After that thrilling victory* the Hawks were not to be denied the championship* and they defeated the St. Mary% Huskies 66-61 in the final. Lutheran held a 3&31 lead at half&mea even though theHuskies
WL U coach Howard Lockhart holds the WY.- McGee trophy Canadian intercollegiate basketball supremecy# The Golden Hawks bucked the odds to win three consecutive
for
had taken an early 114 lead. In the second ha the Waterloo squad took an 11 point lead and stalled the clock away, winning by the final five point margin. The Hawks played *most of the game without Dave Bair% the teams leading scorer and atop rebounder. He picked up four quick fouls and sat on the bench tillthe second half* when the Huskies managed to take a seven point lead. He returned to the game only to foul out after a few minutes. He was replaced by Herb Stan# a former KC1 star, who; in the words of coach Lockhart, 44did an admirable job, defending and rebounding well.*’ Peter Misikowetz was chosen the outstanding player in the tournament. ’ * * * The Western Mustangs, repro-
senting the ,OQAA$ didnpt fare as well. They- lost to the Huskies in ihe semi-final 6-4. The next night they dropped a 6%56 decision to the Carleton Ravens and were eliminated from further competition. In the second game theywere without the services of Marnix Heersink and Greg Poole, two top scorers: Actually, the Western squad could have been in the flnal with a bit of luck0 They were ahead of the Huskies ti their first game but St. Mary’s ra3lied in the last few minutesa AFTERTHOUGHTS . Lockhart had high praise for several players from the other schools. He mentioned Al Brownof St. Mary’s and Dixon of UBC. Both are strong rebounders and excellent shooters.
by Archie
Bolsen
MONTREALThings just weren?the same at Stiurday~s national college hockey final in the Forum without Toronto% heavily favored Blues sitting on the sidelines. Not that too many people cared about the absence of the defending andperennial canadlan champs. The two teams that were on the ice vying for all the marbles couldn$t have played it better if they had had a script to follow. With only 17 seconds left in regulation time8 Alberta% Ron Cebryk fired a tie=breaking goal past Loyola% Andy Molino to send the hockey crown outwest. The final count was 5-4* Where were the Blues? Seems their luck ran out Friday against a hepped-up . Loyola crew in a semifinalmatc~ The Warriors@ as the L-men arecalled, kept eve-z&even with Toronto for a full three periods and 13:37 of overtime before third-line center Mike Griffin ended it all. Taking a pass from Don McCann, Griffin whistled the rubber past the nor-
may cool-as-ice John Wrigley in the Toronto net. It was the second time this season Wrigley had fallen victim to 1-O overtime losses. The other occasion came against Cornell in a Christmas tourneyatBuffalo. That the Warriors (Loyola brand) should beat the Blues is odd enough* after *the frustrating efforts of the Warriors Waterloo-style. But the fact that aprominent member of the upsetters is one Chris Hayes (cf. Waterloo coach Don Hayes) seems a bit flukey. \ Glare Drake% G&en Machine from Edmonton brought in a team that only hit its peak late in the season. Facing a do-or-die two-game set in Vancouver against British Columbia to close out its schedule, the Golden Bears swept both contests to slip pa& the Thunderbirds into first place. Their final record was 10-4. As did the Waterloo Lutheran Golden Hawks in the basketball finals* Bears had to go through three games before they could claim the title. Thursday they outclassed St. Francis Xavier X-Men 12-3 in a qualifying game.
In Friday’s se&final with Laurentian ihey took early control and eased their way to a 7-2 win. For Saturday afternoon% final the Bears were a little more bushed than the Warriors but still outlasted them, . Blues* meanwhile8 had a chance to show what they can really do when they entered consolation play. They trounced Sk Francis %I and then stopped Law tian 5-3 in the consolation final for thirdplaa Notes l How things have a funny way ofversing themselves. Only a week earlier Blues had scored an overtime goal while Montreal Carabins were shorthanded. This time it was starry Paul Laurent in the penalty box while the Warriors put the knife in the Blues coffin. l Sir George Williams coach Paul Arsenault obviously was not surprised by the upset. Mter being eliminated by Loyola 62 in the league final& he said, W Loyola plays the way they did against us they can beat Toronto, no question about a:
.
reign
l bYda.‘S ’ tiach is Dave Draper. Remember him from the St. Michael~s College Majors’ teams of about seven Yaw l Strong performances by non-WA teams in the hockey and basketball tourneys have made this reporter% views expressed an earlier Sound off look we& At hai time we said that, since OQAA teams clo~inaki national playoffs (?????)* they should be allowed two reps at the tourneys. This radical has just eaten all re~ mainihg copies of that issue. l Wlndsor will have a team in the OQAA hockey league next year. In fact they will also have a football entry in the . OIAA$ which the Warriors said goodbyeto last Seaso% l Look for gcalie Arlon Popkey$ a regular for two years, defensemanGeorge Workman and forwards Dave Henry and Neil Cotton to be back with the team next year. They were all ineligible this seaso& Henry is one of the top scorers in the Cenkal Ontario Junior *B# loop, l Alberta goes to next year’s World University Games in Europe.
Friday,
.
-
games against the best competition in Catiada. Wat&ing on obvious joy are Herb Stan (second from kft,) Sandy Nixon and Bob Bain, all of whom will be back next year. -K-W Record
end ~/u&s long Chevron sports
, -
March
75, 7968 (8:35)
545
13
-
Girls
EXTRAmuds
by Karen Wanless
Fall:
Chevron sports
It ha$ been said that the $ntrz+, program for girls at the university is something less than fascinating. Whether this is true or not is a matter *$ opinion* but it is a well known fact that the
orientation the =%
mural
mpus
latching of registrations week and football SW
extramural program blooms anew. By far the most popsport of the fall term is letterman la& thing. This is also called Warrior watching by freshettes$ who still havetit rid themselves of that last bit of shyness.
EXTRAmural sports program $s one of the most successful in the province.
This
letterman
With the arrival
pmv$desa
fu
winter:
year of entertainment for those girls who wish $t. This is probably because no other campus has conditions so +$pe for the pick $W.?’
YOU
games: dance: bar :
famous
clubhouse
cuddling
With the advent of the snowy sew son, the athletic department cornmences several new sp0x-t~ forwomen. In c-da# sing has alms
CAN
including:
been a favor$te sport. This is true for Waterloo, with only a few var$&ions. Many girls find that one or two runs down the hill are more than sufficient, and the chalet* with its and refreshing bq warm fire seems more and more appealing. It is, no doubt* $.n this way that chalet sk$$ng was invented. With luc% the sport of chalet ~k$ing can be played as a m$xe* doubles compet$tion. @his par+ titular version is called clubhouse cuddling* and the rewards of frequent participation are obv$ous.) Even the festive Chrstmas se son
GAMBOL
blackjack,roulette,chuck
the BLUEFIELD
frosty
in full swing
faworites
the girls, and she’ll
TOO
c!klslm
l.aurale ACIRCLE
single
RAD F’OWER $13,884 OP Bust PETITION
in be Great
Hall at the
big game
sofa-rugby
schedule will be posted.
All
will
pursuing
Spring:
sofa
rugby
Fortunatelya plans are ava$lable for those interested $n el$m$nat$ng exam tensions. A chester%eld-
chatter league has always proved very successful. For those girls who feel skilled in the spoti* a games
be played
in the
other sports.
!
a luck,etc.
SERVICE or
includes
THE
room
WWe. Summer:
In the summer term3 playing dress is important, more or less. Big game hunting is what’s & and it% all in the game. Perhaps the reason the intm mural program lacks participants is that the extramural program is so successful. Basketbal& volleybaJl and the like all suffer because girls are too busy
Dawn Clarke, English 2, tries her hund at Letterman Latching. Unfortunate&, there were no lettermen around at the time, and all she was able to grab was good old Pete Wilkinson, poli-sci 2* Better luck rlext time, Dawn>
im
K by Archie
SIGN
too: buy her something exchange it.
We
by the ext-
FOOD BUILDING
Admission $2.00 coup1 e
546 The CHEVRON
for
mural program. The favorite holiday act$v$ty is g$ft exchanging* simple to play and profitable for
SEXTET
: 1; y&yn~;pe
$125
is provided
cd year
TODAY
L3olsen
HAMILTON-Last weeks s Ca.n~ ad$a.n Intercollegiate Athlet$c Un-. ion swimm$ng and d$v$ng championships at McMaster could easily have been renamed gtHow the West was won*$ Un$ver&y of Toronto Blues8 gunning for the5.r third consecutive national tit& had been fed a lot of propaganda from occidental Canada about the caliber of splashing and dashing out there* This was supposed to be THE year for anew w$nner-Br$tish Co1umbj.a or Albert+ they sa$d. Well* it d$dn*t take long for the fishes from Toronto to make even the most d$ehard westerner forget about 1968 as far as a team t$tle was concerned Blues amassed a large lead afk&r opening day events on Fr$day and coasted to v$ctory. Coach Juri Daniel% glubglubs took e$ght of 16 finals to run up 339pointsJJBC held second spot with 240 po$nts and s$x tifles* followed by Albertawith 163 and one victory* Saskatchewan with 122 and Sir George Will$ams at 117. The meet% top performer was veteran Gaye Stratten of Toronto. Stratten won three races and led h$s teammates to a relay v$ctory* He chopped a second offthe 2Ob yard backstroke mark with a 3:04.8 clocm. In the 400-yard medley relay his
open$ng backstroke leg helped the Blues t$e the Canad$anopen record of 3:48,4* Stratten also swam home first in the IO&yard butterfly and lOOyard backstroke eventsa UBC% J$m Madd$n set a new mark $n the 20syard lnd$v$dual medley and also won the 4OO-yard version of that race* Ph$l Docker$ll of UBC pa$red v$ctor$es in both lOO- and 200-yard breaststroke races$ the latter $n record t$me* Toronto% Rob$n Campbell was another standout as he had a hand $n three recordsIn add$t$on to sw$mm$ng h$s leg on the Blue9 4OO-yard freestyle &y team* which set a new mark of 3:25& Campbell spashed home w$th a record of 1:51.4 in the ZOO-yard freestyle* The rema$n$ng new standards were set by Manitoba% B$ll Coke and Toronto% Theo Van Ryn. Coke* an N-year-old freshmq cut nearly two seconds off thepre= vious CIAU best when he took the 2O&yard butterfly $n 2:06.5. Van Ryn equalled h$s own CIAU record in the IO&yard freestyle w$th a 49.2 time* Diving honors seemed to be the private property of UEK?s Tom D$nsley who nabbed both plung$ng events. Dinsley won the three-meter springboard event Saturday after tak$ng the one-meter event Fr$day.
Toiz&e honored
bunquet “This was the first year the tennis team had a coach, and we thought we better give him something to make sure we have one next yearvgv said Joe Meaden as he introduced tennis coach Bob Norman. This comment typified the friendly, humorous spirit that at Tuesd ay ‘s Warrior prevailed athletic banquet at the Breslau Hotel. The affair had to be one of the most entertaining social events of the season. Anyone there was given the chance to say thanks to the many Uhiw wh have managed to make the University of Waterloo one of the most respected powers in Canadian intercollegiate sports. The approximately 250 people who attended the banquets representing every sport from the football squad to the two-girlwomen’s gym team, were treated to an excellent meal* an excellent bar and tie five dancing music of Herb Bunch and his band. On the trophy side of things, several of W ate&& outstanding were honored with sportsters plaques, trophies and pins. Among the award winners were Bode Bacvar e outstanding woman athlete, who was presented with the Dean of Women’s Award, and Bob McKillop* winner of the ‘Tot& trophy as the outstanding male athlete. Bonnie was a member of the girls’ volley ball team which won the OQWCIA championship this
u gooci
year. As well she has taken part in track and field and field hockey. McKillop has had a hand in almost every activity in the book, but his forte was QB of the football team during his three years on campus. As well, he has participated in several intramural sports* The most-valuable -player trophies for basketball, hockey, football* and track were given out by s the various coaches. Neil Rourke carried the honors in basketball, while Ron Srnith was honored by his hockey mates. In football* Doug Shuh’s ability was recognized as he was chosenMVP+ and Bob Finlay copped the laurels as the best trackster. A new award was handed out this year, from the Lettennan Scxiety. Outstanding rookies were honored in football, basketball, and hockey. Don Manahan* Bryan and Paul Rappolt were Brown honored in their respectivesports. St. Paul% took the F ryer trophy* symbolking its domination of the men’s intramural s.ports scene. The Paulies also won the Brownie as top point-getters in trophy women’s intramurals. Dave Connell of Renison was chosen as the student who contributed the most to the intramural program. Special recognition was given to the Warrior band and the cheerleaders. Both these entbusiasdc groups have contributed a great
bug/?
to thesupport of varsity teams at the university. Coach Carl Totzke was presented with a special award from the other members of the athletic department. Totzke retires this year as head football coach, after ten years as head of the team, and his dedication to football was r ecognized by his colkgues . The coaches of the various varsity sports were presented with gifts as tokens of appreciation from their teams. deal
Among players honored at the banquet were Walt Finden* Don Mervyn and Terry Cooke, all of whom received their fifth honor This means these boys letter. have been on Warrior teams for a total of six playing years--a record to be proud of. Chevron sports
banquet
awards
This year for the first time9 the Chevron sport staff is giving awar& not for athleticendeavors, but for spedal or entertaining theatrics during the banquetitself. The Most Drawn-Out Uninteresdng Introduction award goa to Mrs. Hildegard Marsden* dean of women. The Funniest MC award goes to Ed DeArmon+ who kept the drunks laughing, at least” Runner-up is Ken Fryer. (Actuay K.F. wasn*t that humorous, but his feelings wfll be hurt ti we don9 mention b.1 The Introduction of the Year award goes to Joseph Meaden of the tennis team. (See the quote which started this article). The Fire Hazard award goes to Doug Lockhart, who dared to smoke after consuming several pints of combustible material.
Basketball’s MVP was Neil Rourke, captain of this year’s Warriors, and a defensive and offensive star for three years. Neil was chosen fbr the award by his teammates.
$$$ For Toy Soldiers WANTED - toy soldiers - about 2%” high prefer metal but will make offer on all types and quantities. Dinky toy military vehicles also. Send brief description, name, address, and phone number to Box S, The Chevron, U of W. CHECK-YOU MAY HAVE SOlVlE CASH LYING IN THE OLD TOYBOX.
Doug also wins the Dedication award, since he managed to make it to the banquet even though he was suffering from bleeding gums and a sore leg. The MVP award for managers was given to Dave (Do@ Schlei, of the basketball team, mostly because nobody else wanted it. Actually Dot was very helpful to the tarn, as he managed to lose at euchre on every road trip, thereby building up team morale. ‘l%e MVP award fortrainersand tape-men ges to Brian Rose, of the soccer and basketball teams. Brian also wins the Gate-Crashers trophy, as he managed to sneak bto the banquet without an invitation, and still consumed twomeals without exhibiting any feeQ$s of guilt. Last but not least is the ComLightswitch Flickers plusive award* which goes tolightingmanager Arde Webster* who just couldn’t tell the difference between
on md af.
All in all, the crowd a helluva great time.
there had
Bonnie Bacsar was chosen winmr of the &a/l of womm’s trophJ1 at the athletic banquet Tuesday2 T/l e a ward, p resented for the first time, goes to the outstanding girl athlete in the school who is in her graduating year0
Many thanks to those who attended the party Saturday, March 2, 1968.. My only regret wai that more guys couldn’t come because the leftover booze and women are still lying around. Another party, the St. Patricks Day Massacre, will be held Sat. March 16, 1968 at 8 p.m. to dispose of the leftovers. RSVP LARRY BURKO 9835 110 St. Edmonton, Alberta
Sign the petition
Ltd.
Bonanza Drive-h (Under new management)
LINCOLN
Across
PLAZA
from
Zehr’s
on Weber
open 11 a.m. - 3 a.m. daily
SPECIAL MARCH FRENCH FRIES FISH & CHIPS CHAR-BROILED -.
1530
19c 55c HAMBURGERS
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DYNAMICS
WANTED; Interested students to help scout prospective athletic talent for U of W. DUTIES2 Although this primarily involves hockey, all youhave ia do is let the coaches of our varsity teams know of anypromising athletes that will soon be a& tending university. It .is no secret that many of the teams iu the OQAA spend many hours searching for new talent. In the off season most of our head coaches will spend a lot of time as after-dinner speakers at highschool athletic banquets. In the past few years, hockey coach Don Hayes has started his own recruiting system and as the team% record has shown8 it’spaid off well. But as university hockey grows it is becoming harder and harder to bt+t the other teams to the best pmq?wt s. With something like 40*000 grade-13 students graduating in Ontario this year, the task of finding the best athletes is almost impossible for a hanm of people. This is where yoti, the students of the U of W$ can help. There is probably on this campus at least one student from every highschool in Ontario. If youknow of any promising athlete in any sport fern your highschool* drop a line to the athletics department statlug the name, grade sport and if possible mailing address of the athlete. Hayes and the rest of the coaches will take it from there* Remember we%e interested in every sport including track, wres& ling and all minor sports* as well as hockey, b-balb and football. This year has been a very good
one for U of W teams, especially in hockey and basketball. The hockey Warriors haveagain been rated number two in Canada while the b-b&l Warriors were rated sixth. The football team was ah in the top ten and with a few breaks would probably have ended up in the top five. To rriainiti these standings and improve-on them we’ve got to come up with good replacements for our gmlu&ng athletes. So if you want
Gee
Gees
ARE NO IRON,.
14 KARAT
SLACKS
AND
volleyers
Ontario’ and Mount AllisonUnivep sity ti Sac&ville, NB. Sbangely enough tke Uof Ottawa paper, the Fulcrum, did not give the b.xn coverage during its season. Only when the squad was going for all the marbles was th&e any report in the rag. Waterloo’s Bananas took the men’s volleyball crown in their loop* the OQWCIA8 but without national play-offs being held they could not advance.
Baseball It% hard to believe colleges have begun their training for the coming Even in snowy Rochester R is practising indoors aration for a road -trip April 1. The trip will 14 games in eight days include a tournament in The season ends in week of May.
but U.S. baseball season* the U of in prepbeginning comprise and will Virginia. the third
Z Waterloo is fortunate enough to land a baseball team9 that will be the sport to play-what with long road trips to the sunny south in April and May. Athletic director Carl Totzke has been involved in >a bid to have a proposed national team located at Waterloo. Would you believe anAstrodome on campus?
INSTITUTE
. SHIRTS
Pure gold , . . these original, authentic traditionals by h,i,s, never need an iron because they’re Press-Free and they won’t ever crease or crinkle no matter what you do. Others keep trying, to imitate our Post-Grads, but there’s something about ‘em that just can’t be copied!
PLAZA
best
GUELPH (StaffbThe University of Ottawa volleyball team went all the way last Thursday. The Gee Gees dumped the University of Manitoba Bisons in the finals to grab the Canadian I&e* collegiate Athletic Union title. The boys from Bytown went through the day% competition u* defeated# capping things with 15-5 and 16-14 victories over the Bisons. Other schbols entered in the round-robin @‘air were York University, University of Western
It is probably a mistake to look forthe defeat of corporate-liberal-fascism through the failure of American foreign policy. First there will have to be a change of heart in America. The Americans will best help themselves and the world by finding new approaches to world problems. This does not mean the Americans will have to give in to everyone and withdraw from the world. That in itself would be bad. It means the Americans are going to have to show alittle more g&e and humility in the conduct of international &Pairs. Before the world arrives at this state of aff$rs, there is going to be much more strife.
THESE
YOUR teams to be the best in th,e coudryB help out by scouting. NEED MANAGERS Toti Next year the hockey Warriors plan to use a new system of student managers to help the team run more smoothly. To do this, the team requires at least two more student volunteers b help Ian Young next year. If you are interested in helping out contact Don Hayes at Seagram Stadium or phone 744-6111 local2516 for further information.
St., KiTCHEtdER CHAR
GE
j-,-j
+e Previsouly I suggested the Americans will face problems with Russia as a growing nuclearandnaval force* Latin America and Vietnam. Russ&a does not offer much hope fir those seeking an end to American imperialism. What hope is it to replace one imperialism with another? The Russians are currently extending their influence in the Middle East. They have a fleet of 40 or more vessels in the Mediterranean and considerable work is underway in Arab countries to provide the Russians with supply and submarine bases. They have turned Nato% right flank, This is causing the Americans a great deal of embarrassment but does this mean the defeat of CLF foreign policy? Will the world be better off if the Americans and the Russians probeed to grab the spheres of influence they want? Nor is American foreign policy going to be defeated in Latin America. The death of CheGuevara is one indication of how well-trained the elitist armies of South America have become. The Americans are willing to spend millions sending Green Berets and CIA personnel to traJn and organ&e anti-guerrilla forces and providing the helicopters and napalm necessary to crush unrest. The Americans are too well-versed inguerrilla warfare to permit any large-scale insurgency in the near future. For many years to come, LatinAmerica will remain a source of American raw resources
and a market for obsolescent American military equipment* Vietnam may be a turning point, As American foreign policy now stands, a major defeat is in the off@* This became apparent this week with General Westmoreland% request for 206,000 troops (who ’ would need as many more supply troops.) The Americans need this number of men just to hold their own. The troops already in Vietnam are overextended in their present role of seeking out the enemy mainlint troops* holding pacified areas and defending cities and military bases. Already the National Liberation Front has replaced the troops lost in the,Tet offensive in January and the North Vietnamese can sendanothzr qua+ ter of a million men south if necessary. At best, the Americans can only look forwardto continuing the present situation. The only alternative to actual withdrawal is the . formerly ma3igned enclave theory which has the U.SO withdrawing to the cities and its military bases to provide a statusquo position. All this would do is allow the NLF to regain much lost territory and defeat the Americans in detail. So we see in Vietnam a way of discouraging the Americans. * The chief proponent of wars of national liberation* such as Vietnam, is China. This has not helped the Chinese to improve relations with the Americans. In fact there is a distinct hostility in America towards China* The Americans do not realize that wars of national liberation must be based on a resentfulpopulace seeking social justice and cannot be stopped ‘by military might alone. The U.S. will face a growing number of defeats in Ati -Eventually they must make their peace with a large number of national communisms. +6 To conclude: a look at the structure and membership of CLF and suggestions for its internal defeat.
-. --
More
freedom
lost
ringroad by the federation building, reducing the road m only one lane for two-way traffic. And I have just time for one letter pedestrians are continually crossbefore the PASS sy$em lobotoYet the way some of our 4s mizes us all. More and more pseudo Denny Hulmes enter this choices concerning our lives are comer, they would never be able being taken outof our hands. to take avoiding action. Someone If you cant opt for the prof of will eventually be splat~red. your choice you have no control A car is a lethal weapon and reover the quality of your own edu- quires judicious handling. Drunk cation. drivers don’t fill the bill too well. If our all-too-imperfect governMany have beenkilled or injured by ment in Ottawa pulled a stunt a drunk crashing into then-r. Sober like this on the Canadian populace, drivers are lethal enough. our government it would ma-se to It% disturbing that Bill Kirton of be. Why were we not consulted? the president% advisory cornJ. BRIAN WALTON mittee on student discipline could arts 1 refer to drunk driving as trivial 0 (March 8, page 1). People who have It seems the computers had too such a low regard for hutnan life are a menace to society* little to do. The powers above DAVE SPENCER decided to unleash the vast potenEnglish 3 tial of the magical mystery machines and bang we have the PASS system* Here is another Thunks u lot, fried example of sacrificing student - end of cheap freedom on the altar of efficiency. thanks Registration takes place just It seems worthy* interesting before exams when students have is cut of your %ewsplenty of time to think things oute material favor of garbage that% What really bugs me is that you paper” either uninteresting or imperdo not get your timetable until tinent. The Chevron is turning ityou have paid the billy Fantastic! self into nothing but a political We cannot even choose our professors* How ridiculous an l%+ A particular point: your treatyou get? Why must we always conform to the system? Hell, we ment of a letter written to thank people who participated in FASS do not even have any voice in this This job would have been decision from the Federation of NiteO far too big to do individualIy$ so Students. We talk about student it seems such a letter was the bes t power and get machine power. possible means of conveying such PETE KIRBY
, to the
Machines
arts 1 0 .
Where are we? I have no choice of profs or Stick it all in the times. Great. computer but put In a subprogram to give me the times and profs I wantm SANDY CARRUTHERS math 1
thanks.
By the time you and your cohorts had finished with this letter* it wasn’t worth printing-it said nothing. If you are going to print a letter to the editor* print the whole thing* eh? The most vexing thing about your rag is that I can’t cancel my subscription in protest. PETE WILKINS engineering lI3 This letter was written to us on toilet paper. If you’re going to be this demanding (it says at the top of the page, by the way, that we reserve the right to shorten letters), and if you’re not thankful enough to write your own thank- you notes, you can buy an ad to thank your people. We don’t edit ads. From now on we don’t print free thank-you notes either. -Editor GWICIS hmiied
suffer
from
vocdxh~~
The statement that renovations . to the Grad House would be a waste &ditorial* March 8) is nure conjecture. The reasons you giveare all either hypothetical@ incorrect REID KREUTZWISER or outright falsehoods. In the first plaa, the campus arts 1 center will not be able to provide a meeting place with the Mosport marsh/ type of atmosphere possible in at home here the Grad House. the possibiliv of Secondly, Af%ter marshalling at Mosport from a for three years, I have come to LLB6. static resulting successful Grad House operation the conclusion that certain prinis conjectural* The precedent ciples of driving apply equally well In both cases the might in fact prove of benefit to on campus. driver’s skill determines both the whole campus* Thirdly, judging by past exlength of life for both himsand the perience (the farmhouse on the people on the track or-street with south campus* for exarnple the him. Top drivers go slowly when is not likely todemolish they do& know the conditions of university the Grad House in four years. the driving surface. Unfortunately Finally, your statement that our local world-beaters don’t. Cars park on both sides of the “the number of people who use the
It’s just plain ridiculous that Thus pictoriall~~ complaineth
the
Grad House is about the, same as the number who voted in the last student-council election: 69** is an out right lie. The number of people at single functions often \ exceeds twice this figure and general usage by other organizations increases it consider ably. The story on page one quotes Provost Scott that parental reaction and “other conservative elemerits” are factors contributing to the difficulty of obtaining licenses on ampus. This is hardly applicable to graduate students since nearly all are indepe+ndent and over . 21. However, let it be clear that the Graduate Society is major concern is NOT the Grad House, but the activities fees paid by graduate students are not administered by graduate students. BRAD MUNRQ ~ grad philosophy ANTHONY MUC grad physics WILLIAM GODDARD grad electrical 0 When the Chevron technique of non-objective reporting impinges upon the graduate student body, it becomes time for graduate students to speak outa FUCK YOIJ. ROBERT MERTL EDWARD PENCER grad psych Checkpoint pefplexes
philosophy
phi1
pfofs
We are disturbed by Mr. Martin% column* Checkpoint march I). Mr* Martin seems to regard facuIty and students as two warring parties who are natural enemies.
His
reaction
to a faculty
about the Federation of Students is to urge students to be prepared to fight. To interpret relations among
ther of administration or faculty or student power-is quiteunhelpful. We, as members of the faculty,-
Insformer
can get to Labrador
are teachers* and it isourfunction to help students learn. This role is not that of an enemy, and we ce~ tainly do not consider our students
as enemies. We are happy to discuss contrary opinions both within and without the classroom. If there is disagreement about the faculty proposal* we would like to learn what the cases are for the differing viewpoints. The way to resolve a dispute is to examine vakious points of view carefully so as to come to a wellconsidered* rational solution. The attitude that diwreements must be resolved by warlike fights between enemies hinders rational consideration of problemsa and it in no way furthers the primary aims of a university& study and learn.
ANNE NARVESON JUDTI’H WUBNIG assistant
professors, philosophy
0 Good grief 1 The Chevron and C.D. (Clairvoyant Demagog?) Map tin have opened my eyes at last to the malicious anti-student plotting going on around here. All the while Ithought Dean Minas was out to help the students (backing the change from the year to the course system, studentrepresentation on faculty committees9 re-evaluation of the status of parttime students8 etc.& he was really seeking to u disrupt the student union by making membershipoptionas3
T&nk of it-letting each student FREELY choose to become amember of the student union. Howk4pat-
proposal
various groups a.t the university terms of power struggles-whe-
Village
in
emalistP3 how typically American. 0 Federation of Students~ we stand on guard for thee.
BRlAN assistant
prof*
HENDLEY philosobhy
0 Please say you guys are kidding about Martin’s column. This thing is gettingto be just a bit much to take. I wonder if it serves any purFriday,
and
ihe UMYYNI
calI 7.
pose as far as a university iiewspaper is concerned. How many readers does Martin have? Probably not more than himself and about two, or maybe threes other types. Who cares whys if indeed they do, they want to rule the world? I’m willing to bet a dollar to a donut that nine out of every lOstudents on campus don’t lose any sleep over the situations described in his corner of the page-a corn= that could be much more valuable if it were used by your advertising henchmen. Not only does Checkpoint abound (if that’s the right word) inAfghanis tan&m, in my oh so humble opinion* C.D. doesn’t know what in hell he’s blubbering about half the time@ Who does he think he is* Zeus or somebody? Anyhow, I suppose it3 none of my business but I just can’t hack it any longer. Other than that, I thought the paper this week (Feb. 16) was one of the best in quite a while@ WAYNE BRAUN Enginews isn’t new I was disappointed by the plagm arism in the recent issue of IZI+ ginews. Articles such as l4 Wurdz” and #&A fable for engineers’? were extracted, word for words from the Science Urinal* a publication of the science faculty at Queen% University. I?m sure there are others who feel the same way* and would like to see something distinctly Wate* loo,
SIMON Identify
ALEXANDER engineering 1B
thyself
We still have a good letter here, called “Farber/s plantation revisit&Y-but we can’t print it because we don’t know who wrote it. We need your name. Please remember we need your name, course, year, phone-but we’ll print only a pen-name if you have good reason -Editor March
75, 7968 (8:35)
549
17
.
DO YOU have spring fever? 8i
w+,~~
Margie Creigh ton
Dave W ilmot
biology 1
journal ism 1
phys-ed 16
math 2
GO TO HELL1
We4 I did until it started snowing %Wi Exams kind of killed it too.
No, Pm h-w.
Oh, all the time. . . .what?s
Marianne
qpringf*
ver?
Kirk
lan Baker
alwap
, Jim Sweezie Bonnie
Bill Sheffield math
2
lbn
rwch 3 Hey1 1 don? want to be in the Campus QuesUoa
Yes* but I try to relieve ti these fru&raUons by chasing crickets and Ws.
Teens, reiect Issues is a big thing in Georgetown. Issues is a *page magazine put cd by a group of Georgetown highschool students in cooper% lion with tie board of external relations of the University of Waterloo. I, was star-Led because tie local
Bacvar
Weaver
math 2A
I have a temperature of 102$ my pupils are dilated, and Pm sick to my stomaGh all the time. Hey8 maybe Pm just drunk.
math 2
. Well,
Pm normal. I al. ways have spring fever.
magazine,.
censor-publish
highschool adminIstration censoed the school% paper to &h an extent it was hardly worth reading. The censorship even stopped pub libation of an arUcIe titled %hould physical education be given a mark on report cards?’ In the introductory editorid Tony McCauley states g41ssues is
we have steered and obscenity as
students. The dean would be as&ted by a council composed of el-
Dave creative
many adults fea.red we would noP tiIssues is intended to wake up a genemlly apathetic society and to keep people in touch with YhaPs
ected student members*. McCauley claims students must become an informed and tieres&
azine wrote an article it dollar diplomacy P
not censored,but clear of libel
really happening? The main arUcle$ written by editor McCa.uley$ asks3 4eHow much freedom can be given ti secondary
school
students
responsibility their shoulders
and how much
can be -placed on while they remain
witi the bounds of the second= ary school systemP9
McCauley feels the administration should control the physical an& fiscal policies of the school. He also suggests
a dean of students
be set up to advise and counselthe
ar-&le
cle he felt
hmed magazine jkatures original artwork for the cover and advertising, The hdents “have steered clear of libel and obqnity as-many adults fklt we would not. ”
1%
550 Ttw ’ CUE . VRON
should
have run in his
paper was cut by the administration. It questioned the inequality of fair punishment in the schtiol-wondering why one student received no punishment for taking two weeks off school whileanother who skipped one period was given detentions
for two weeks.
is a book review
&Q
The
magazine
was produced
in’
coordination with the board of ex- ~ henal rela.tions which gave @o()
a varie@ of subjects including Phil.osophys politics8 educatioh ar@ sportss news and music. Oneun-
towards
the
cost
of publication.
The board took the rough draft#put ’ In shape ‘Or ptim and “unda
of
coq3iny
Eaton% catalogue* 4*a pr$me Exe ample of folk art in a technologi-
to run it offa
?%f.ii m3d issue come out in Apti,
cal society?
Censor doesn’t loccd highschool Censorship doesn’t seem to be too much of a problem with local highschool papers e Only one editor felt his paper had been unjustly censored* Frank Carere, who runs the SaJe Cat at St. Jerome*s,afi all-boys Roman Catholic high school, said an arti-
To one in tqhg hum g
The rest of the magazine covers
iqye
called,
Blmey says the United St&es is in Vietnam to keep their own economy booming md to show other dmloping u&ions ihe U.S. suppork sympathetic governments and Will d-mwe qpxing regimes*
ed force by electing and supporting a responsible &dent ~OU.IIC~~. He ends with advice to both S& ti&s anti administration; he says there% no harm b the o&r w fier@s listenInga
BUey, chairman of the a& board for the rnag-
of Issues
will
wqrry editors
The Eastwood Collegiate paper e Student Prince* was not allowed to knock cafeteria food or the administrations The editor felt he should have been able to criticize the food. The Grand Fliver Collegiate Drumbeat and WaterlooCollegiate Norse Star, are checked by a faculty advisor before publication. All the editors did fed there should be some sort of control-either from the administration or a student a&vi@ director--over
the paper’s contente Theyfeelthis necessary to ensure the papers
don’t become too radicaL Most newspapers are paid for by student activity fees but one@ St e Jerome’s * uses school paper and duplicating machines On t-he average the papers run four pages and appear bimonthly* The
editors
wondered
if there
was stificient demand for a university paper to warrant distribution at the hi&schools e Rich Hallman of WC1 was the only editor who favored suchdistribution. The E astw~od editor felt a university paper would interfere with the circulation of his paper--which is now defunct.
The end of it, we hope Aw, poor Mr. Abbott, he’s been taking the rap for this kill-the-fedcration motion. it’s not really him thtit believes all this crap. Any body can guess he’s been put up to it-he’s even said so himself. It’s not really hard to figure out who put him up to it either. There have been rumblings for over a year now about what those politicians, those radicals, those leftists, in the Federation of Students power struccure will do once they get incorporated. The dean of arts is a determined and stubborn man. Several times last year he sponsored motions i n
various bodies to prevent the fedcra tion from retaining its fee collections. Even the operations council had to listen to the anit-federation line. He gets no action working directly through the administration so what’s the next most logival body? Why of course. His own arts facul tvJ council. But wait. Can our fearless Don Q push it through by himself”? Bit of a danger there in getting beaten by your own faculty. So find a Pancho Sanza to hold the lance, Oh, Mr Abbott.
It’s just plain ridiculous a The GradSoc executive closed a Monday-night meeting to Chevron reporters. Then at the end of the meeting they wondered how they could let the press know what had happened, e Isn’t it a pleasant time we live in’? TV news was so gory the other day that people were calling it the ‘X:30 war movie.” l If Chevron staffer Reinhard Opitz ever joins the Kitchen-Water Rag as a cub reporter, they might give him the obituary beat Imagine: Opitz’ Obits.
e To dec i pher a hippie newspaper’s way-out typography you need a magnifying glass and three aspirins. e When maritime pa?ers merge, they have trouble deciding which name to keep. A couple of real gems: the Halifax Chronicle- Herald Mail-Star and the Saint John & Lancaster Telegraph-Journal and Evening Times-G10 be. e We9ve got EngSoc, MathSoc, SciSoc, GradSoc. and almost an ArtsSoc. Someday we911probably get an ArchiSoc and a JockSoc.
Let’s work together Black power! Student power! and now grad power? That kind of cry usually comes from a group that considers itself oppressed. Obviously the Grad Society considers itself mistreated. Maybe it is but there was an error of judgement in the remedies the GradSoc tried. The Federation of Students is responsible to the students and every group is represented on student council. Before flying off to the university administration9 the grads should have used the democratic procedures open to them within the federation structure. The grads have three representatives on student council. They should have been used. The budget has not yet been approved but the GradSoc is trying to look like martyrs.
When the GradSoc executive is trying to present a case, it might use facts-not innuendo. Saying the federation spends more money on Africans than on its own grads will only hurt its cause. It would have been far more useful to have had facts on how many grads use the house. Petitioning for a license for the Grad House would have meant much more than emulating Rene Leveque. The strength of the federation is that it is a federation-a union of students. Working t?gether students can achieve common goals and still provide for specialized activities. Fragment the federation’s financial structure and you destroy most of its effectiveness. Protect your own interests but remember also the common interest. Work within the federation; it was designed to protect both.
FFrimarily unlikely New Hampshire notwithstanding, the chances of Eugene McCarthy unseating LBJ are pretty slim. It’s a rare thing indeed for an incumbent US president to be dumpcd by his party. And the Democrats aren’t too long on innovating. So assuming your friendly Texan gets renominated, take a look at the other side.
The Republican Party offers about as much choice as Time magazine does over State Department press releases. Richard Nixon, the leading contender (whatever happened to Harold Stassen?) if he keeps up his good image will make Lyndon look like the peace candidate. After all, what’s 525,000 men?
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