1968-69_v9,n27_Chevron

Page 1

John Bergsma

Vern Copeland

Larry Burko

UNIVERSITY

Volume 9 Number 27

OF VVATERLOO,

Waterloo,

Ontario

Five to run for council by Jim Allen Chevron staff

Five candidates have been nominated for the presidency of the Federation of They are former president Students. Brian Iler, Vern Copeland arts 3, Larry Burko arts 2, John Pickles architecture lA, and John Bergsma eng 4A. A sixth nominee, Bob Verdun, eng 2B, withdrew Wednesday morning. Iler felt his views are well known on campus. Basically, he commented, they involve freedom in the university and freedom for the students to control what happens to them. “This is the goal towards which I’ll direct my policy at if I’m elected. The university should be a community ; it’s not now. I’d like to get rid of the idea of labelling, tagging things like professor, student and administrator. Then we’d have a community,” he stated. Iler also said he hopes for a mutual veto arrangement to enable faculty and students to veto any administration decision affecting them; he stressed the importance of getting together and talking with faculty.

He added: “We’ve taken our actions to the students through the general meetings because I think they get more students involved. I’m willing to talk to the administration if the channels work, but they won’t work as now defined by the administration.” Burko said his campaign is designed to give the apathetic, non political students a voice. “The students don’t want to think politically. It’s their right to be apathetic. They want the federation to concentrate on social life; I’m running because I feel they have the right to voice this feeling.” If elected, Burko said he’d dissolve the board of education and the board of external relations since they force students to think. All $22 paid by each student to the federation would be placed at the disposal of the creative arts board, the board of publications and the board of student activities. “This would enable us to sponsor dances and concerts with free admission,” Burko explained.

John Pickles

Brian Iler

Friday,

November

15,19a

presi

He added: “The administration is older and wiser than the students. Therefore, they know what’s best and we shouldn’t question their judgment.” Copeland said he was running on a moderate platform. “A major component of knowledge is experience,” he said. “Therefore, on that premise, I think the administration people, who do have more experience, feel more competent to make decisions in the university structure. Therefore, I oppose the student power movement.” He further stated his belief in a democratic system of student government. He felt the majority of students should have their views represented by their council. “Council should be concerned with those problems pertaining directly to the university community, such as academic reform. I don’t agree with the left wing’s view of the university as an instrument to change and socialize society. ” Bergsma submitted a written statement of policy to the Chevron. It called for cooperation, mutual trust, and a reopening of communication lines to develop a community of scholars,

where necessary changes must occur within the existing structural framework. The. board of education should be a forum for presentation of problems and accomplishments in this area, the statement continued. It stressed the need for two-way communication between students and professors concerning course and professor evaluations. Furthermore, Bergsma feels faculty societies should be autonomous in dealing with problems within their faculty. A council forum would correlate ideas and publish findings. The statement advocated temporary withdrawal from CUS to initiate a reassessment of the organization and its principles, since student dollars are not well invested at present. It concluded : “Students at large must understand the basis for council decision making. We must ensure that leadership remains sensitive to student wishes.” The fifth candidate, John Pickles, stated: “My platform is non-existant.” He is running on a basis of noninvolvement in campaigning.

Only an exumple

Nupalm by Jim Klinck Chevron staff

-Morris

A flurry of signs, posters and buttons heralds the coming of presidential . . . . . . . . . . . .._._._ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-~-*~*-~-*-*-~-~-~-.-*-*~~-*~* . . . . *. . . . .. . . .. . . . .* . . . .. ..I...............................................................~. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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According to its editor, the Kitchener-Waterloo Record considers it “standard newspaper practice’ ’ to hound people for photographs it’s been refused permission to print . On Friday November 8 the Record published a photograph of Rhea Palmer, a Waterloo student who had been shot in the back the night before while escaping from an would-be kidnapper’s car. A Record representative first

victim’s

contacted Mrs. Palmer to obtain a photograph but was refused and asked not to publish a photo since it might endanger the girl. The kidnapper is still at large. The Record persisted. “They bothered us and the nurses many times and argued with us when we repeatedly told them we didn’t want a photograph published”, said Mrs. Palmer. The Record finally went to the university information-services department for a picture.

photo

Jack Adams head of the department’ found a photo in the registrar’s files and turned it over to the paper. “I didn’t know at the time that the parents had refused the Record permission to publish a picture, ’ ’ said Adams. “I’m a little surprised at the Record,’ ’ said Adams. Record editor Carl Schmidt called the whole affair standard practice and refused to make any further comment.

Wednesday’s noonhour gathering in the arts quadrangle dragged more students out into the cold than any general meeting in the past two months. And merely to see a dog. Not just any dog. This one was to be napalmed to point out the atrocities of the Vietnam war. However the dog didn’t show, nor did it ever exist for that matter. The whole affair was planned by the radical student movement to point out the incongruency of people ignoring the napalm deaths of Vietnamese, while turning out enmasse to stop the burning of a dog. The person most in charge of the affair was Glenn Berry, co-op math, recently acclaimed member of the new student council. “The students should be allowed to decide if we are to become a recruiting grounds for industries directly associated with mass murder through war,” he said. “It is unfortunate that several students felt compelled to heckle before we had a chance to explain our-proposal”, he continued.

dog saved The burning of the dog received wide publicity in the local and Toronto press. Local radio sta. tions, the humane society ant police departments of both twin cities were bombarded with phone calls Tuesday and Wednesday. The Toronto Humane society phoned to find how they could stop the demonstration, and promised to be in Waterloo. Approximately 30 plainclothes men, both university security and normal police, were present at the noonhour meeting, to prevent any outbursts of violence. After Berry finished his speech, (most of which was drowned out by hecklers) 7 radical student movement members moved throughout the crowd distributing leaflets. Several students theatrically tore up their copies without reading them. Another group of students felt it would be more fitting to burn a person instead of a dog, and attempted to throw Chris Swan, sci 2 into the burning pile of leaflets, as he distributed more of the flyers. A general meeting was called for Thursday in the campus center to follow up the demonstration.


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Get your bldod out of ckculation

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Who will win the Corpuscle Cup and ~the Blood Bowl? Each, year Circle K awards these trophies to the residence and the faculty ) which has the largest percentageturn out to the-blood donor clinic. , ,The clinic is Monday. Tuesday, and Wednesday from, 12: 30-4: 30, and 6:30 to 8:30 in the campus center. Students can’ enter .both‘ * the faculty and the residence races. The groups for the’ Blood Bowl are: arts, math, engineering and

architecture, s&&e, optometry, andphys-ed. r . ’ _’ . The groups for the Corpuscle Cup are: the four Village quad‘rants, St,: Paul’s, I St: j Jerome’s and Notre Dame,. Conrad Grebel 1 and-‘Minota-Hagey Residence, and, Renison. The Co-op has been split 1,i into three sections, * University 1 Ave., houses Al and /AZ,. / and houses’A3 and A4 on Phillip _ _ St. ! Last clinic’s -‘winners were St. Paul’s and math.

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Psychology students met yester- . dents who organized the meeting feel a union of psych students _ day to form a faculty student would offer an effective forum for I union. . . student opinion. ~ .Union ‘membership is, open to - . .Constructive criticism of curevery student, from a fourthyear riculum dialog within the departstudent majoring in psychology, ment were also held to be major to a,firstyear math student taking -‘_> issues. _ it,as a minor. The meeting ,yesterdw. in the’ ’ ’ The meeting ‘also served to elect students to existing positions campus center was to move. thr:. within the departkgh the ‘basic steps necessary to .on committees . set UP this-organization: The stu- .m&t: L .

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Anyone who. was recently busted on drug charges, yet still wished to “expand his ,mind”, and others. . interested or curious had his chance yesterdav. ‘ ~. _

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Transcendental meditation, “as taught by’ the ,Maha~rishi Mahesh Yogi” in the form of an introduc~ tory lecture was discussed yesterI dav in the arts lecture theater. Joseph Barr, the lecturer, des-

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cribed the technique as a natural, spontaneous method to allow each individual to expand his conscious ,mind ‘and ‘improve all aspects .of his life. Barr is an instructor ’ w,ith the Students ‘International Meditation Society.

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Maharishi Yogi the most, reknowned of the gurus advocating the technique, is one of the’chief idealogs of the group.

- sWaterloo

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Three -bridge players from- Wa terloo placed high in the rankings at last weekend’s open bridge championship held at London, Ontario. Gord Chapman. math 2, and Doug’ Smyth, physics 2, were second in a fie’ld of 38 pairs in the men’s pairs event. Wayne Smith. electrical 2A, I’ .( . (.

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The 95mile course is open to all cars except four wheel drive models. * , The navigator-driver teams will be attempting to briqg their cars back to the finish line with the least number of penalty points

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playing with Bruce Roberts of ‘St. Thomas (ex-Waterloo student) was third in the open pairs. This event was played in two sessions against one hundred and 35 other pairs.

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-Bettina Apthecker. a’ former Berkley student will be speaking at Waterloo Monday. November 25. The daughter of Marxist-scholar Herbert Apthecker. and mother, of one. is presently studying at the University of San Jose. where her husband teaches engineering.

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after touring the poorer roads of Elmira, Elora, Fergus .and Erbsville, . Parts, of the course will also take the form of a cross country rallv. as fields are included at times in place of roadbeds. A bull has also been reported as one of the obstacles. Cost of the rallv is one dollar for non-members and 75 cents for , a members. rallyists

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The tournament was the largest ever held in London with a total of five hundred ‘and two pairs.

course through

Anvone interested in a quiet. Sunday afternoon drive in the country is all set for this weekend. The Waterloo College Auto Sport Club is holding it’s annual fall rally. starting at 1 pm Sunday.

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A lovely strawberry milkshake, campus center cojJ’eeshop variety, holds on to iVancWvPhiypen, math 11. The milkshake can be had from eight to ‘midnightS,. Mondays to,

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46 to run for council

AII nominations

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Elections will be held November 27 to determine the president of the Federation of Students and the When reps for student council. nominations closed Tuesday at 5 pm six students had been nominated for president of the federation. A total of 46 students are running for the 2o seats available on council. The only acchmation - was for the co-oP math seat. Students running for president are John Bergsma, eng 4A, Larry Burko, arts 2, Vern Copeland, arts 2, Brian Iler, civil 3B, John Pickles, arch lA, Bob Verdun, civil 2B, who filed a nomination, and Reuben Cohen, who had previously intended to run, have withdrawn. Elections will be held in all constituencies except co-op math, where Glenn Berry has been acclaimed. Berry was running for re-election. In regular math five candidates are running for the two seats available. James Belfry, math 3, is running for re-election. Other candidates running are Bob Brown, John Koval, Jack Lubek, and Sydney Nestel. In arts there are 12 students seeking the four available seats. The nominees are Sandra Burt, Dave Cubberly, Robin Fennell, John Gartner, John Gilbank, RobAlexander Macert Kilimhik, Gregor, Tom Patterson, Andrew

Stanley, Jim Stendebach, Murray Underwood and Steve Weatherbee. Cubberley and Patterson are the only two running for re-election. In engineering Bill Snodgrass is the only rep running for reelection. Other candidates for the four engineering seats are Renzo Bernardini Tom BoughnerMike Corbett, Barry Fillimore: Don Greaves, Richard Lloyd and Dan Mueller. None of the former grad representatives are running for reelection. Six students are running for the three available seats: Hugh Brown, Doug Gaukroger, David Gordon, Dieter Haag, Nick Kouwen and Bill Webb. In science two members of council are seeking re-election: Ian Calvert and Geoff Roulet. Other candidates seeking the three available seats are Charles Gallagher, Bruce McKay, Jim Wight, and Gerald Wootton. Three weeks ago Paul Johnson was acclaimed for the Renison seat in a by-election but Paul Dube has decided to oppose Johnson in this election. At St. Jerome’s four students are seeking election to council: Dexter McMillan, David Miller, Doug Richardson and Gino Tedesco. In phys-ed there are two students&eking the one seat available: Hugh Cuthbertson and Marilyn Hunter.

The radical- student movement has chosen a slate of eleven candidates to contest the council elections. At a Monday night meeting the following students were selected: arts-Sandra Burt, Dave Cubberly, Tom Patterson, and Andrew Stanlay ; engineering-Renzo Bernardini, and Mike Corbett; graduateBill Webb ; sciene-Ian Calvert and Geoff Roulet; regular mathSydney Nestel ; co-op math-Glen . Berry. The platform was paper examined at the meeting. Changes and additions were suggested for the final form which was to be completed Wednesday. One member noted that Dow Chemical was on campus and suggested that perhaps some of the radical. students should protest. The idea of publicizing the burning of a dog by napalm was taken up. It was decided to publicize the idea to the outside

community in hopes they would turn out to protest. The burning would not take place but instead a speaker would suggest that protesting the &palming of a dog should be taken a step further to protesting the napalming of people in Vietnam. Wednesday night the radicals approved their platform paper and indicated that it would go to press Thursday. 10,000 copies of the one page paper will appear on campus Monday. * * * THE RADICALS ARE RUNNING The radicals are off and running. After several meetings the radical student movement has completed its statement of principles, chosen its slate and organized for the election. The closely-knit group is now moving out into the election arena under campaign coordinator Jo Surich, arts 4.

-Tom

Purdy, the Chevron

Brian Mallabon, 4A electrical, adjusts the Radio Waterloo console. Broadcasting will resume when the station moves to more permanent quarters in the memorial campus centre.

‘Responsible action’ nominates Bergsma The meeting of students for responsible action, Monday afternoon nominated John Bergsma, eng 4A, as its presidential candidate. Former presidential nominee Rueben Cohen has bowed out of the race in order to support Bergsma.

slate Their statement of principles is due to appear on campus Monday-10,000 one-page broadsheets. With their platform set down the radicals are developing their theme on many fronts. ‘They have a door-to-door campaign ready to go. Posters are beginning to appear. Classroom schedules are being studied and arrangements made to have radical candidates speak before some of the larger classes. Debates have started. Handcrafted Iler buttons are showing up but, as yet, no great number have been seen. The two engineers on the radical slate have prepared a broadsheet to carry the radical line to their constituents. The radicals are even looking into the possibility of closed-circuit TV. They hope to run taped interviews on the classroom TV’s during the five or ‘ten minutes before the classes begin.

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90 students met in the arts theater at the organizational meeting of the responsible action group. Andy Anstett, speaker for the organizers, explained they wanted to provide a responsible alternative to Brian Iler and his council. “We are not necessarily against the aims of the previous council. What we oppose are the confrontation tactics it used. This group is interested in the university as a community of scholars, and we feel that this concept is now headed for disaster. The student council was being decisive instead of constructive.” The principle objective of the responsible action group is the establishment of a rapport between the students, administration and faculty. A member of the audience asked how this would differ from the rapport set up by past-president Steve Ireland and continued by Iler. The answer was they would meet the administration with strong student body support behind them. Members of the group added, “They have been going to the faculty and administration with the wrong attitude,” and “Their aims should not be so vocal and demanding.”

The group stressed the importance of a liaison between students and faculty on the subject of education. They propose the establishment of a student-faculty committee in each faculty to obtain ground level contact and agreement. Each committee would come to a forum of the board of education to exchange ideas with the other committees. The responsible action group had considerable criticism for the methods of the previous council. council. “The channels open to the council were far from exhausted. ” “The only way to accomplish anything is to keep hammering away through the proper channels. ’ ’ “If the president of the Federation of Students has the support of a well-informed student body then he can accomplish something without backing the administration into corners.” Near the end of the meeting the group put forward the nomination of Bergsma as a presidential candidate. Bergsma is a past-president of Engineering Society B and has been a student council member.

Student loses - - - _ lam. ~ _ ____ forced to chop out’ Carl Potter didn’t go to classes this week. Potter, a first-year planning student, withdrew from university early this week after being told he was ineligible for a student loan. Potter came to university this fall after working five years as planning reporter for the Calgary Herald. He said he hoped to get his degree in planning and either return to the Herald or work as a professional planner. Potter said a loan was essential to his staying here. He had originally thought planning was co-op and hoped to go to work in January. He had a part-time job with the Kitchener-Waterloo Record as a reporter. When he couldn’t get a loan, he decided to withdraw and return to Calgary. He said, “There was no wav I could, comfortably stay. Maybe if I wanted to half-starve...” Potter said he was told he was ineligible for a loan because he Friday,

had not lived in Ontario for 12 months. Alberta will not grant a loan to anyone studying outside the province. Potter said he hoped to go back to the Herald if his job was still open. He said he might try to enrol1 in the geography course at the University of Calgary. However, he noted this was not a planning course. Waterloo has the only planning course in Canada. When contacted, student-awards officer Albert Dejeet said he could see no reason why Potter shouldn’t be eligible for a loan and added he would investigate why Potter was told he was ineligible. -

November

15, 1968 (9:27)

44 1

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’ FRED’ERLCTON (cUp+An ad- called. ‘He had witnessed the 13, I( ministration decision to use city. arrests. ’ ’ ’ . . ‘police to quietly end a bothersome Blue said the decision had been made November i on the , 48-day sit-m at the University of advice of the board of deans. New Brunswick has noisily back. fired. I. He said student possession of , . .The Strax affair. almost dead _ building ,keps had been one of the , for ‘three weeks now;, .was ‘,sud- ‘) reasons for the eviction but ad7, denly revived after ‘the. arrest of’ t mitted nothing had been broken)\_ . in Liberation into or taken. He said the! .’ seven protesters administration would have \ to ,s 130, earlySunday morning. . Within 48 ~hours of the police “consider” whether, any action ’ would be taken against engineering : _1 action: I and commerce students‘ who parl the student council at UNB ticipated in raids against bib-. strongly condemned, the use of / . noliice: ’ eration 130 and caused extensive Y damage. . \ j 0 a group of protestors sat in On Monday, 24 protestors, inat a city police station and deeluding Dr. Norman Strax, ,pic-,.. ’ manded they too be arrested. keted memorial services at the I l a conference-of students. from ’ Fredericton’ cenotaph. One placard they carried read: “Was their universities and colleges in the -. ,province announced plans to fight ’ for Democracy in vain?” ‘The demonstration was in supI switch the location of its session this weekend from the U>NB camport of ,theseven arrested. pus to .protest the presence of Ten of them then marched to police at the university. ’ _ city hall and sang “We shall overcome” before moving on to the ” , ’ l two keynote speakers schecity polii3e station’. Three stu. duled to address a maritime dents and Strax were allowed history symposium at UNB, this, into the cell block to visit the , weekend, have refused to ‘speak seven and, once in, promptly on dampus and may force candemanded to be arrested. When’ 6 1cellation of the whole affair. police refused, they sat down . While ’ all, this was, happening, and handed a list of 150 names the- seven arrested Ijrotestors apto ‘the police names of people peared in magistrate’s court Tuesinvolved at one time or another day morning ‘and’ pleaded not in the Liberation 130 occupation guilty to a charge of public misand all requesting arrest. chief. All were released on their Fredericton police chief Bryce 1 own recognizance and separate Neely -refused to arrest them ‘trials were set to begin Decemunless ordered to do so by a judged and had his men carry j - ., be? 10. the protestors out of the station The UNB student council, silent L&er in the’ day, organizers of during the. seven-week protest, the Action converence, a meeting called the police action “unpreof New Brunswick students sche’ cedented, violent and oppres;duled for this weekend, announsive” in a letter sent to administed they would move the confe~ . tration ‘president Xolin B. Macrence off the UNB campus to * ‘Kav. j_ 1 ” protest the police action, ,, The, students said they could Tuesday evening, Michael Cross, not condone “totalitarian tactics a University of Toronto history as part of the regular adminis\ pyofessor, announced he and trative routine” and affirmed George RBwlyk, j of Queens”, the t&right of students to,disagree * would refuse to give, scheduled with. the policies. and opinions of .addresses at a conference on the ,.board’ of’ governors”. Cou,ncil Maritimes this weekend at UNB. 3 then.’ demand,ed the, university He later relented somewhat -drop charges. against those arand said he and Rawlyk did not rested. want to punish delegates to the student-generated. conference and Tuesday afternoon, administra‘I tive officials ealikd a press conwould speak at’ any f off-campus location. However, they - will not ference, to present’ their case. .Du, gald Blue; universityregistrar, put, speak on, campus nor share the forth a statement explaining the ,>odium with any UNB ‘adminis, pro&ess by whic’h the cops were trator. a

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students should have control over find a truely human world, Despite Dr. Ted Batke’s statement that a definition of the uniwhat professors taught. Flott said. Iler tried to explain what he * Following Flott, the discussion versity can’t be found, a number wanted was student control over once again returned to specifics. of faculty and students tried to Tuesday. About 200 students, fat- 4 what they were taught. ProfesAndy Stanley, arts 1, said he ulty, and administrators turned sors wouldn’t be dictated to, but was finding university a useless students would seek out those adventure because it wasn’t dealout at the open meeting in the willing to picture in the Fubcampus center, called to discuss ing with real life things but jects they sought to know more the report of the study committee phony things belonging only about. to books. on university government publishHe said in a condition of mutual Another ed last month. student questioned trust and honesty profe_ssors would Bat&e’s and other senior adminisIn the end the discussion had not have to fear arbitrary meavaried from minor attacks on trators’ right to make decisions the report or on the report’s sures but would honestly be that effected the students lives equals. Narveson remained dis-. without consulting them. attacker, to major presentations turbed by the\ prospect of student Batke didn’t seem to underon the purpose of life as related to the campus and on the theory control over his course content. stand and the discussion sideHe suggested he had never fortracked in a loud verbal exchange of interpersonal relationhhips. Batke, chairman of the study comced an idea upon any of’ his over Batke’s right to make deciclasses and didn’t want any of sions. mittee, opened the five-hour meeting with an introduction to them to force ideas on him. “I wasn’t appointed by God, but Stephen Flott, a masters graby Dr. Hagey” said Batke at the report and its history. duate who had sat as a student one point. It was to be his only speech representative on. the “And who appointed Hagey” during the evening that didn’t study committee, tried to return the came the reply. find him on the defensive. for discussion to the level Ireland had the whole administration. Fol“He’s the chief officer in the introduced. Flott felt that in any by-laws’ ’ said Batke, who then lowing Batke’s introduction both discussion of structures it was first student representative Brian Iler didn’t answer the question, “Who necessary to understand how strucelected them to be?” and faculty representative Robert ture placed barriers in between Huang attacked the report. Judy Wubnig, philosophy prof, men. made the point that she didn’t The brunt of their criticism was levelled at two points. think the university was a place Powei’ separates people where man should be considered First they criticised the report “Many things separate people” !or not dealing with the crucial with learning to live, as it is a said Flott, “but the quickest thing place only for academic studies. area of the department structure to separate people is power.“_ and other iow4eve1, but close to She couldn’t understand, she Flott, now teaching in Toronto, said, why Flott worried about the people bodies. showed how titles and statues Secondly they were highly cri“marrying Dr. Batke”, referring help to separate man from man. tical of the reports support of a to Flott’s call for one to one In his classes, he said, his stutwo-tiered governing system. relationships. dents reacted to him in a certain Miss Wubnig was followed by the Batke agreed with the criti‘way because he is classified as longest plea for understanding cism of the two-tiered system and teacher. The same happen in the among men made all night. said he too favored a single-tier university in both directions. Chevron editor Stewart Saxe government but felt it should be Abolishing titles and status did brought about slowly. made the final attempt to place not mean abolishing respect the university in perspective Committee tinkered. based on real reasons, Flott from the view of mens’ lives. Further debate on specifics said. Batke deserved and would “Our first problem,” Saxe was interupted by past student get just as much respect being said, “is that none of us really council president Steve Ireland called Ted or Dr. Batke, he know to what degree our ability who made a plea to put things in pointed out. Once men are able to to even conceive of certain a perspective. ‘The com’mittee redeal with each other on the alternatives has been cut off by fused to come -to grip& with the primary level of two then and our socialization process.” real problem it faced, said Ireonly then will they be able to The socialization process was land, because it insisted on tinkering with structure instead of considering people and purposes. Ireland quoted from an address he had made last fall to senior faculty and administration in a last ditch attempt to work with them. Speaking about the need for change he had said, “It’s going to take either a long,‘hard, dirty battle or else a basic- change in personal relations”. Looking back Ireland felt- few had understood the message, backed up at the time with examples, that some people were treating others dishonestly. Ireland concluded by saying he was fed up with people a-voiding Development vicepresident Ted Batke, who chaired the study the real questions. eminent, says he favors a single-tiered system of government Jan Narveson, philosophy Prof., attacked Iler’s suggestion that to the problem of adapting the university to its role in society.

the means whereby man learned all his basic assumptions. He pointed out that people react to each other in patterns set out by society and that in our society one of these patterns was basic mistrust. “My mother teaches English in a highschool,” he said, “and she told me that when she was teaching Julius Caesar not one person in her classes believed that Brutus could possibly, have killed Caesar for any reason other than personal gain. Saxe said the basic beliefs we have that separate us from our fellow man can only cause our eventual end. Yet he pointed out that too was obscured from our vision by a society that taught us things were only getting better. Most all men proceeded honestly, Saxe said, not realizing they are part of an unknown plot of structures. “No one has -seen the light. But a few have seen the cracks.” These few are trying tsl- bring about, but not force, this awareness upon others. “Most will go away from here laughing at me,” he said, “We’re not supposed to talk openly and honestly in public, we’re supposed to be political.” No one laughed, and Saxe finished. A few more speeches on specifics followed and the meeting ended after five hours of discussion, with the final speaker from the floor referring to Saxe’s speech. “For most of you, tonight will be just like the annual factor! picnic-the workers, foremen and owners together. But the process will continue as normal tomorrow because you have to. It’s all the system’s taught you, it’s all most of you know.” said the student.

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Election poll shows wide cross-section of opinion by Bob Johnson Chevron staff

Two weeks ago the students in a general meeting, voted the student council out of office. The council followed this directive, put itself out of office and called an election. Last week nominations began for the upcoming election. While this was going on, the Chevron was conducting an interview-poll to see what students felt the issues would be in this election. Radicalism, representation, student control and student activism were the majoy issues mentioned. ed. Opinion on these issues varied with the years such that first year students expressed one opinion, second year students another, and so on. First year students were not as concrete concerning issues as were more senior students. Most freshmen feel representation and student power will be the issues. Harry Solterdijk, science 1, said the major issue would be “To get all the students off their fat asses”; while Bruce Richardson, co-op math 1, claimed the major issue would be representation-“Has the past council been acting in the best interests of the student body in general?” Second year students, on the other hand, felt that CUS membership and quality of the last council were the major issues. “Getting the students to think about their relationship to the un-

-

iversity ~ and what they can get out of the university, will be a major issue”, said Richard Chambers, arts 2. Jim Wight, who is also running for science rep, summed up the third year students view: “the radicals will be presenting the hard-line ‘let the students decide’; while super-liberals will run in agreement with past council aims while emphasizing a disagreement in their tactics”. Wight said that he was sure this “election will be run on issues and not personalities”. The only fourth-year student interviewed, Greg Johnson, psych 4, said the major issue would be “whether or not John Bergsma can put up a better program than the last council”. Grad students are concerned with one thing, and one thing alone. As Lea Wawrykow, grad psych said “We need to settle down and elect a council that is representative of the student body. This means that we must first find .what actually is representative”. Some students feel the past student council was voted out only because they pushed their activities too far and thus alienated themselves from the student body. Others felt lack of communica.tion with the students brought the fall of the Iler council. Ian White, engineering I between ‘Communication with the students will be the issue. Doing -

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what the students want, instead of what the council wants, will be the issue the students will favor”. There were, of course, those students, who when approached said they didn’t care and “there wouldn’t be any point in interviewing me”. These were few in number, but very apathetic nonethe-less.

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-advertishg _by Mark Starawicz The McGill Daily special to CUP

October 22, Charles Peters, president and publisher of The Gazette, called together the reporters working in the newsroom, and in a ten-minute speech announced he had just sold ‘his paper to the Southam chain. He apologized that he had no time to answer questions, urged the perplexed staff to “work harder” and departed. - ’ Gazette management underlings were . quick to assure all the staffers that “nothing will change, The Gazette will remain the same”. _ As rationale for the sale, Peters said it was difficult these days to sustain a newspaper as a one-family business. Peters, ironically, was telling the truth. But only part of it. The sale of The Gazette brings to light other facts: 6 Two powerful newspaper chains are eating up Canadian newspapers and now with The Gazette’s purchase, are close to sewing up monopolies. l These two chains are locking into a newspaper war, scrambling for advertising. l These and oth,er Canadian newspapers are struggling for their lives because American publications are sweeping the advertising market. I _ Fundamentally, the sale of The Gazette is a victory of -powerful monopolistic interests over independent ( outlets (no matter how_ unpalatable The Gazette is, up to now it was independently unpala1. table). Southam is one of three’very powerful newspaper chains that account for ‘(about 35 percent .of all newspaper circulation in Canada. The other two are Sifton-Beli papers and the Thomson chain.

Fighting for control of the metropolitan newspaper’ market are Southam and Sifton-Bell. Thomson’s , empire, rests on smaller papers not in major urban concentrations. Let us therefore look closely at these two competing (and frequently cooperating )) empires-on-the-make : The Southam complex is still basically family-owned, although it i.s listed as a public company. Three Southams sit on the Board of Directors.Southam directors hold, or at some time held, three bank directorships, three directorships in insurance companies, and four other directorships in large corporations. It is a somewhat schizophrenic empire. John Southam, the most powerful man in the operation, does his business out r .’ r . . ..: ._,.

of Ottawa, while keeping an eye on The Ottawa Citizen, which Southam owns, and which is commonly known as a Liberal government mouthpiece. There is a Tory side to The Southams, however, which operates through the Hamilton Spectator, and there is even a Social Credit side: The Edmonton Journal, virtually a party organ for Alberta Premier E. C. Manning. The Southam Company, including Pacific Press Ltd., of ‘which Southam owns 50 per cent, controls the following newspapers: Wholly owned: Ottawa Citizen, Hamilton Spectator, North Bay Nugget, Winnipeg .Tribune, Medicine Hat News, Calgary Herald, Edmonton Journal, Montreal Gazette ; with total circulation between 800,000 and l,OOO,OOO. Partially owned: Vancouver Province (50%)) Vancouver Sun (50% )-these two papers put on a mock show of competing brands- put out by the same manufacturer-London Free Press (25% ) , Kitchener- Waterloo Record (47 % ) . Beyond this, Southam controls 21 business and professional magazines, and has large interests in at least seven television and radio stations. , Southam has strong links with Great West Life, as does the second chain, Sifton-Bell (F.P. Publications Ltd. and Sifton Group). SiftonBell is also linked with oil interests in the West. Victor Sifton operates out of Toronto and is in partnership with Max Bell, best known as a race-horse owner. Bell has myriad interlocking corporate interests in the West, and negotiates many. of the major oil sales to the United States,. ’ The’Sifton-Bell empire outrightly owns ’ the Winnipeg Free Press, Ottawa Journal, I Calgary ’ Albertan, Lethbridge Herald, Victoria Daily Colonist, Victoria Daily Times, Regina Leader-Post and Saskatoon Star-Phoenix. ,

It. owns Canada’s most “respectable” paper, The Toronto Globe and Mail, but ’ in circuitous way. Here we get into an interesting and” relevant analogy with Southam’s purchase of The Gazette. A couple of years ago, the Sifton group purchased all shares of The Globe and Mail, owned then by Charles Webster. Webster simply exchanged the Globe shares for Sifton shares, and thus passed ownership while retaining “con/ trol” of the newspaper. Southam did the same thing with tke Gazette. Charles Peters ‘exchanged all

I

Gazette shares he held for Southam shares, on condition that he be allowed to operate the paper “independently”. The Gobe and Mail did not change when it switched hands and, most likely, neither will the Gazette. (Webster, incidentally, is representative of the people who control our media: he owns the Dominion Square complex and the Windsor Hotel here, and is one of the top men in the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce. During the Depression, he controlled all the coal on the Montreal waterfront. While people were literally starving, he raised prices twice. The federal government fined him for the illegal aspects of this, so he raised the price of coal a third time to’pay the fine. ) Obviously the technique of buying a newspaper and leaving its control to the past owners is simply a holding tactic. ‘Webster would do everyone a favor by leaving Sifton’s way clear at The Globe,, and Southam has a very decent sort of

cities until Sifton got The Globe and M&l. Southam has now. grabbed The Gazette after wooing it for,a,long time, and thus the two empires have broken through on a country-wide scale. Why this desire to get a Montreal paper and to break into the large eastern urban .I, ” market?

-One of the most desperate battles &. Canada is being waged against Time and Reader’s -Digest, who threaten the very lives of these newspapers. There are two levels .of advertising in the newspaper racket: regional and national. Dow, Chrysler, Canadian National, Coke-all these ’ products span the country and constitute “national advertising”, which is the most- lucrative.! Simpson’s, Steinberg’s, Dupuis and Mr. -- --Muffler are regional,-and less lucrative. Time and Reader’s ,Digest are both nationally-circulated magazines, with a combined monthly circulation reaching three million. By simple arithmetic, they can reach more people faster. So they attract the national advertising to the extent that any independent newspaper has to try to survive mostly on regional advertising.

Canadian magazine supplement, and Sifton, which publishes Weekend, are pouring vast sums into their respective magazines to try to outstrip the two American giants. A Canadian-Weekend circulation war is already brewing.. Another corollary of this infringement b3 . Time and Reader’s Digest and the need . to attract national advertising, is the ex-. pansion of newspaper chains. That is why Southam ogled The I Gazette for years. ,That’s why Sifton went for The Globe &nd Mail. A newspaper chain has an infinitely betnational adver. ter chance of attracting tising (offering the advertiser a nationif it can become national , wide package) itself. Hence thedevelopment of a Hearst Scripps-Howard style dual monopoly that will spawn a stiff advertising war. The purchase of The Gazette by Southam signals the intensification of that SouthamSifton war, and also the war of both against Time and Reader’s Digest.

The way magazines like Time andReader’s Digest are allowed to choke Canadian journalism is another example of how the public comes second. This excerpt i from ‘John Porter’s The Vertical MOSGC ti .s ’ brings out the point: 1 Anyone familiar with the reading habits of Canadians

knows

that the handful

of mao-

widely

than do ,those of Canadian origin. The qf American periodicals in Canada is an -ideo&gical counterpart 0~ the ; external cqntrol of the economic spstem.

,cokmp tion . Tx-*

Yet the Canadian government, which has frequently debated taxing Time and Reader’s Digest as it does other foreign 1 has allowed this cultural im1 publications, perialism to flourish by ‘accepting the absurd proposition that Time and Reade,r’s Digest can be considered Canadian _ because of their throwaway “Canadian Content’ ’ .As fdr The’ Gazette itself, it is insignificant what happens to it. Whether Charles Peters owns it, or whether -Southam owns it, the public is onl’y a consideration on the balance sheet. Anywhere in Canada, to produce an- independent and putspoken press is an uneconomical proposition, based on poor business logic. ’ Star Weekly magazine folded this year . It requires a courage. and a dedication because it could not get the national adverto the ideals of journalism that few Canatising. dian publishers possess, and that certainly Both Southam, which ‘publishes The* do not e.ncumber Charles Peters I

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President

nominees

debate

Only two can&dates Only two presidential candidates, Brian Iler and Larry Burko, showed up for a debate at the campus center Wednesday afternoon. The meeting was sponsored by the House of Debates. Each gave a brief statement of policy and intention, after which they fielded questions from ‘the audience. Burko stated he was conducting a campaign for the non-political students, which, he claimed, constituted the majority on campus. “The administration is older and wiser than the students. Therefore, they know what’s best and we shouldn’t question their judgment,” he said. Iler began: “My standais well known. I believe in freedom, both in the university and society. We should have the power to control what ,happens to us here. I’ll work toward this if I’m elected.” He felt the administration didn’t have any conception of student wishes, using the example, of G Monday night’s general meeting on university gov, ernment. “Students raised issues but received no answers from administration members present.” The two candidates were then questioned by the audience. Iler restated his feeling on the value of general meetings’: “More people are involved now than at any time since I’ve bee,n on campus. Apathy is a product of our society because we’ve never had the opportunity to decide things for I ourselves in the education system.” He was asked if he considered one Ahundred people at a general meeting representative of the ‘student body. “I was elected last year by 75 percent of 37 percent of the student body. Was this representative? If not, there’d be no student government. Council

ihow

decided those who came to the general meetings were the ones interested enough to make decisions.” Iler was also asked several times about priorities of council; one question involved CUS concern with international political situations. He emphasized he was concerned with issues affecting the university before anything else; all his resources . are concentrated on university issues, he added. Both candidates were asked whether the university itself contributed to student apathy. Burko responded: “Students have a right to be apathetic. Confrontations make for bad relations with the top. They are older and wiser and we have , no right to question them.” Iler felt the questioner had a good point since -apathy is a product of a repressive society or institution, like the university. He also promised to try to turn the Chevron into 8 a bulletin board because this is what the students want. He indicated freedom of the press was guaranteed in the bylaws. Burko saw no contradiction in running for a political position on a non-political platform: - “As long as the administration wants student political positions, they’ll be there. We must respect their judgment. ” Both were disappointed about the absence of fellow candidates Vern Copeland and John Bergsma. When reached for comment, Bergsma stated he was not informed about the meeting. “I learned about it when I came to school Tuesday afternoon and my afternoon was already booked up. I intend to debate with the other candidates later in the campaign.” Copeland commented he was unaware of the meeting until a few minutes after it had started.

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loiver than those of the university residences. The single rooms at Phillip- Square, which charges the highest co-op fees, is; $375 a term; the Student Vil‘lage charges $480 per term for a single room. Double rooms are $350 and $460 respectively. _ This difference is maintained despite the fact that residence fees must also absorb maintainance and re. pair costs. The apartment units for married students at the present time are $115 for a one-bedroom and $140 for a two bedroom.

,

A ‘&w -“unit” architectural concept being used in Phillip Square-the latest Waterloo Co-operative Residence complexLmay just iron out many of the managerial’ wrinkles which have been plaguing co-operative ’ movements across Canada. . , Up to now- co-operatives on ~Canadian camnuses have been either - standard houses or’ apartment-like buildings such as Hammarskjold House at the University of Waterloo. Both types interfere with the concept of the student community sharing responsibility for maintenance. I - In Hammar’skjold House for example there are thirtyfive people per floor. Because of the faulty structural . design, this group can be divided at best into -two units. Enforcement of duties (fags) is consequently difficult and social contact too loose and impersonal. The co-op houses present a better alternative because there are usually fewer residents, but because there is only one central kitchen for all houses, again there is the problem of fag enforcement. /

I

Recreation,

.

At the Phillip Street complex however, the students and architects have provided a unit, design which provides for almost ideal commun&m in an- apolitical sense. Each floor is divided into four cells-which are selfcontained and semi-isolated. Six students live in each unit and share a common washroom and inner-lobby. These six share duties wihin their cell, including changing of linen and washroom cleaning. dSince this is a relatively small group there is less need .for centraliiation of power and closer personal communication is maintained. Two units make up a house with one person represent, ’i ing the needs of this group at a division council. X Most of the decision-making ideally occurs at the lowest levels and the mechanics are worked out at the divisional level. These mechanics are co-ordinated into the design of the buildings. For example: each house has -combined‘ ’ common room and kitchenette areas since breakfasts are prepared within these individual segments. There are also main dining rooms in each/building for lunch and supper, which are prepared jointly by fulLtime help and residentsServing of the meals and dishwashing ’ ’ are the responsibilities of the students. : This is the ideal-but why and’when was it conceived? .Howisitoperated? .-. .. ~ L / _ Most important of all;. how close is, the reality to that \ ideal? The Waterloo co-op now- called WCRI-&tarted as a’ branch of Toronto Campus Co-operative residence Inc. in 1964. With $15,000 %hichinterested Waterloostudents borrowed from this corporation two house were bought 3 on University Avenue. ’ These students then formed’ their own company, and I as WCRI, began ,constructionof HammerskjoldHouseL . the1 first student-built residence- in North ‘America. The number of members in the two, Waterloo co;ops has jump. ’ ed from 27 to 510 single students, and with the inclusion of sixty-four married-student units; a possible / ~_ 128 more. Building of the second complex created a definite need for a financial schedule. The ninety percent of the money use3 for construction. _ and maintenance was obtained through ,mortgages; However, since there was no government <grant .of the remaining 10% (as there is wit university residences), WCRI was forced to look elsew 2 ere. The-idea of debentures was adopted and these were sold to members and interested,individuals or groups.’ I This second source of’ capital is in five-year -bond form . repayable, at ‘6%, or as a 10 or 15 year bond repayable at 7%+ This repayment is accomplished by \ raising money through member loans of $25 a year and by the residence fees themselves. I ’ ,Yet with these payments the fees are considerably

the implication that the administration was stepping on the student. “This is why the group from the co-op went down to liberate the Cam-pus Center from the Federation of Students”, he ventured. There are other comments which modify this opinion. An ex-member of the co-op mentioned that relations with the university were good because the administration realized that the codop was filling a need for cheap housing which they couldn’t fill. There is a third form of communication which is vital to the WCRI projects-that of personal relations between members. There are many responsibilities involved in being a member of co-op, but there is also freedom. After Christmas there will be houses which are coed for though this freedom was dangerous, one member commented that this would depend on the personality of the member. “Some never adjust because they are used to a more controlled environment”. He went on to say that the vast majority can handle it well, and the ratio of those who succeed academically would bear this out. 1 Another suggestion was that co-opers mature faster.

music rooms

The facilities at the disposal of the members are numerous. There are large lounges for meetings-such as the Dag Hammarskjoldroom which is used for discussions every Wednesday night with professors and community leaders. , ’ Recreational facilities and music rooms are included in the design of the new-building on Phillip Street. These extra facilities are subject to constant change because the architects of the’ coop residences are not hampered by price ceilings. Design for comfort and wear have priority.over costs. ,, This principIe may be demonstrated : by ..athe Phillip Square floor installation. The original ,plans called for tile floors, but students movingin this past September felt this wasn’t good enough. Since the consensus was for carpeting, the request was relayed to house and division managers: After consultationwith the architects, Tampold /and Wells, a fairly expensive but long-wearing carpet was decided upon. These and other changes are covered by slightly higher’ fees, so it is felt residents should influence decisions. There is constant communication between the professional and the layman. There is also another form of communication carried on-with members of the administration. Provost Scott is one of the ex-officio directors of the WCRI board. Greatly respected by co-op students, he is available for advice at all times, and some residents credit him with the very unit concept under which they are working. Another active adviser is A. B. Gellatly, treasurer of the university of Waterloo. Since finances are his specialty, his assistance is invaluable. The’ WC-RI does have a full-time general manager in Alvin Wood, who also is in very close contact with the students. The’ university administration has, also lent financial and support, , to, the ,movement. 1 ._~~ moral ml\r\ nil\ , ., . 1Not only. . -did it uuy a ~zt~,uw aenenture, but it is also renting one floor of the Phillip Street apartments. Jim Robinson, one of the organizers at Phillip Street cited these and other ~examples of this mutual support, that most members of the co-op resented .’ and commented

?

\

1

Personality

clash

’ One new ‘idea abeing tested centers on -personality -clashes. In such a case, there would be a meeting of the- six members of that unit, including the person who committed the infringement for the purpose of voting on that member’s continued participation in the unit., ’ “Most people would come out of that meeting a, lot older. Every person would have to get down to basic personal relations-no holdsbarred”. , The question of whether the new structureswill actually work is only ,going to be answered in time. But this query can also be directed towards the older structures. -i There are many criticisms about the appearance of the houses on University Avenm Ho-wever, since half of them are to be torn down in January and the- rest in three to five yea’rs, the residents have been reluctant to refurnish the interiors. ’ At Hammerskjold House, some of the rooms are considered by outsiders as hideous. This is mainly because res,idents have the option to paint murals which often lack aesthetic, value.

‘.

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Picture above left: : Reporter Murphy does her thing ih tervie wing residents of the PhiNip street co-op. Note that drawers are placed under bed to save floor qpace. Below Architect’s sketch of a double rtjom. , I \

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i

’ j


ate news and information will be For approximately four years, the main function. the University of Waterloo Broadstressed there Moellenkamp casting Association has’ been atwill be no attempt to sell comme’rtempting to establish a student-run cial time, far the expected reradio station on campus. turns do not warrant the extra The future no-w looks brighter -expense that would be incurred. than ever. Last Monday, the club License fees for a non-commers began closed-ciicqit broadcasts to cial station are $50-commercial the campus center and the enginstations pay thousands. Going eering comme_n room from a temcommercial also means that royalporary studio in the engineering ties have to be paid for records, block. articles and stories used on the Programming terminates today, ..:4 all. but will resume when the associSince ‘the station will not sell ation occupies permanent studios air time, it will have no income in the campus center. other than contributions from - Gerry Moellenkamp, president and co-operating institutions, ’ of the.club, was very enthusiastic consequently would be operating about present achievements and at a deficit. A levy of $50 per the club’s plans for the future. student was suggested; this would amount to,about $4,350 per year. They .managed to purchase $2,Moellenkamp expressed hopes 000 worth of broadcast equipment from CKOC Hamilton for only $100. of reaching a firm agreement with WUC, which also has a broadcast The control and amplifying equipclub, for , sharing transmitting ment included in this bargain set facilities, programming time and the close-circuit system into operoperating costs. at&n. The license bid will be strengthMoellenka!? has plans to make ened by a better financial position application for an AM license upon and ability to increase programbudget approval by stgdent counming time. cil. He feels that initial capital Membership in the brdadcasting cost could be held down to $10,000, association is open to all intercovering the purchase prices of ested students on c&mpus. Anstudio equipment and a transmit- nouncers and technical staff are - ter. Operating expenses will total still required. an additional $5,000 annually. With the AM station hooefullv The station will be operated only a year off, the cl& ,h& with high broadcast standards; plans for expansion into FM at a personnel will undergo extensive later date, broadcasting simutantraining before going on the air. eously with the AM station. Club Programming will cover a broad members are optimistic about the range; however, supplying accurfuture.

C/icmcellor

raps election

-

This election can’t be representIt’s all a plot by industry to get ative-. There is no presidential technicians trained. for nothing. candidate to represent the true The moderate candidates are right-those who would return the dupes of this plot. university-to its real function as , Of course the radicals, as Uncle a free enterprise. Gerry has al\lrays said, are dupes InStead we have universities qf somebody else. supported by taxes from the _ HAROLD ti. GOLDBRICK lower and middle classes-a large chancellor’ majority .of who will never make Aryan Affairs Corhmission it to the hallowed halls. ,

A aro,

MIME’S at

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+. .ANTOINETTE..

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THE KENT-4lOTEL


9 .

., ‘byTed.Lonsdaie ’ Chevrongaff

:, i ., ( :

.- , , ., TheFe. is,‘a broilem in reviewing plays. You have to give an~ppinion. That opinior?may be wrong due to a headache or a particula*r bias iti - the type .of theater You like tq’ watch. I have that problem now. I’m not exactly ,sure whether St. *Aethewold’s Players put on a miserably bad prodtiction or whether it .was just not in the mo&l for attempts tit humor. Thursday night I saw God scrat’ thing an itcky leg, an emporer who seemed to have problems akin to St. Vitas d’ance, .a@ an absolutely nauseous characterization of an Italian (complete with an , American Ita!ian-immigrant ac’cent) messenger who smoked cigars. I know I’m. missing the point somewhere. I can’t conceive of anyone actually placing tragedy in a comic atmosphere that only

*

. . ,

sometimes was ,actually fun,tiy. -, ’ be ip$@e$ in. any &$.~ . Tk;e$ Neither can I coti?eivB of ,@yone _ -*were; howev’er totally’ ;fisrega& playing comedy so ‘badly, ‘. nor ,,df ‘6.d in all four Ijarts oh the progr$& ’ ’ I anyone placing ext’rk,mes df’,both ’ Q&r I ~ugu&& ’ Aitnuh&jation, approaches into on+ production. Stiltitatiqn .and’* “’ Fiist s&apher& Unfortunately only one of .the ai ’ play. .Most not‘icably missing was. -hove choices is open to a revi,ewA stage prevencti and gesture.s. Even , &r’s, stahdpoint. You see that I’m in a stylized form of qcting as this ,tit a l&s as to what to talk about. ,could have been, the motions of ‘I have ,acted. i’rn .not entirely perfor,mance must have either a ,igy-ant of the probrems of pro-, . smboth natural aspect’ or corn-, duction and lack-of-time predicaplete almost’ ballet-like flow. I _.. merits a director cari get “.into, found instead a mixture. but there’s no excuse for misThe result was uncomfortable x casting, or just plain misinterpreto watch. Voices. were terrible’ ih. tation. $ontrdl zind’inflection. The speechI’.m not aware ofthe tradition of es-especially .the long ones-were . this campus event. I don’t know bordering on monotones and they .about the tradition within the prowere ‘de.livefed’ at a speed that duction itself and the way it should induced the soundest sleep. be played. I can only say I was If there is anyone in any compnot impressed by content, producany that is supposed to know his tion, acting techrlique, staging job, it is the electrician. As- soon technique or any other aspect of as the lights came on they bode’ the production. failure for the entire production. Certainly there are some basic A very good ring of li-ght existed principles of acting which must apparen,tly for no particular .

+-

‘,

‘_ :

.

While Sirinius occupies a&die&, rqason on the perifery of the thru$t stage. This caused contrast with the rest of the stag& which was the main acting area but 1in keeping with the i techniqcle of production was left &rite unlit.

emperor relieves ‘itchy ‘toe.

j

costume and .makeup. The sets were a little more than mediocer.

ToNmy way of thinking, a company should endeavor to run on, an attitude of ‘improvement not resting on past laurels and cornp-*” liments. I was told these annual There was one thing that I productions were w-e11 wdrth seelaughed at if you cari imagine. ing. Perhaps to someone else th’ey . . That- Italian messenger was a were. Perhaps to someone else j good clown. He did not fit in the they appeared as more of an in: production though! But according to the style .of direction it was ’ stitution ,on campus and not ‘entirely a performance which the more than appropriate. It would audience paid to see. I expected seeni the purpose of the director’to a good play-not an institution. juxtapose as many t$pes of theater, comedy, tragedy, slapstick Altogeth$r I was confused’ any and god kndws whatelse, into. q,ne mar-$ .‘of y@.r’$.ll think 4 still am, all-round-f$miiy show. It can’t”‘be . but I can’t comorehend the tiesdone. , sage if there I’was one: -and I couldn’t abide the acting if thete Somebody did work -hard on was any. \

White, Marion r‘.*Paul ‘..._

Kdufman

and Richard Ennis pla$,shepherds

s-ffon ‘Butterfly c

Knight

,

in \last part-of performance:

gets . crowds

group and most of the singing too. H,e plays calmly, at least more ,so than the others, but his .organ music seems to climb and climb adding-to the crescendo already built,up by Erik Brann on lead. .( TORONTO (Staff )--An Iron Butterfly came to tie Brann twists. and turns, gypates, screams and Rock Pile on Saturday night. For the uninformed the ; falls to his knees in the expressiori of what he is I( rIrdn Butterfly is a hard rock.grdup from California. ‘doing. ‘Lee’Dormati’s bass sets a weird rhyt’hti-that \ They started out a; covpl$ of: years .igo on the .’ coast and eventually cut tin LP’:called Heavy. It , pounds at. your headand stir? ygur blood. 3 ~” , : The high point ‘of. the’night> was of co$se. /n-adidn’t sell too we?I bat they tiollecte$& hard core of . gadda-da-vida, Int’roduced as what th,e group thinks fans. ‘These fans had a tendency to spread, and they l-ife is.liki! this song was a$ pmotiqnal ex@&i&ce , ; 1 soon-had a i’air‘audience. -, j ’ for the twentyifive ph.@ minutes-it r@.:There was j *Soon the Iron ;Butterfly :%a+ brie of !the h&test a druin solo in the middle that exptiesges yhat ,mtis; I , - j ‘$ , ic has beep -doi@ ,throti&hout timk, Using rev@sed / groups in-{hecurrent @op seer@ ’ Saturday night’s coocerts .werh .;it 8 and 11 l$n. I ” sticks and tQ@tom drumg..&be e@atioh b@ldF .u@il the’ song alniost~ecame religiotislili- #ee]i& I.,‘; : . ’ B-y 7 pm the crowds had, started to gatl$r at Ydnge Tlie end left Erih ,Bra.nfi sprakling on The floar tind ’ and Davenport. ,At eight4he ltne was’ four;deep’ a.n,d,I ‘in exhaqstibn;%ee halfway ai&@ the buildihg. The <bullding was’full: f I Ron Bu$hy rubbing; his f&e+rms 1 The house ‘band came on.z+bout 15 minutes l&W. ’ .Dorman ‘was picked tip, off .$he floqr -and the $0~ ebhtinued:.’ at legst as well ‘-as,, it cduld’,. oler the and left. -1, They played,-a ‘few ‘g&d blues& nu&b& sound of il standing .ovatioii.:-The‘ l&t nutib&:use,d . I Ai nine-fifteen >the four-Brian. @t&fly . titarted- t? a lot ef. electrdnic feed,ba& .an$ *tapRd ebfects. 1 play. The first: numbers ,w,ere very good and they Th&b&d.walked dff ori’e at,a’time,leaving:thi,~ :sound ’ . . +sil,y set the qood.f~k the r$$of t;he shoti- 1 1’ t b.t ._., c’ k ‘. I ’ . , ’ . , ’ Drigmei Ron &@$L @@$ it +ll~h$s. gdt. Doug 1 SO loudit almost hurt.” B$t you do$.t mind. Yah!v&jti$l+l ,’ Jngle. :.on or&), ~.dQeS.,IlJQ$ Of thk talking. for’ the .,. ‘\ .‘ ah experience. ~* by Lynn

._

‘,

.

Chevron staff

-Joh,n

--Joseph looks perplexed I

as Mary tidies I .

Pickles, tb_Chevron

up the ‘stage a bit.

\

\

: Concentus Musicus is dedi%cated in Size to 20, members, but it prbto playing baroque and clas&$ vided thkir fin.est performance. music qn the original instruments. .Among the instruments used by . . . The enseFblei .,yhich- i’s &pp+rthe’ ensemble are Baroque lviolc ing in Guelph, tHls’ Tuesday, .plays ’ ins, recorder’, oboes, dther strings. music from the’ 13th to the 18th ‘a bastion, a-transverse flute and ,, century. 1800 is the limit where All of’ them, are harpsichdrd. mbdern instruments must, be used.. either originals of very clos,e ~cop- . . 1 In 1962 the group was comtiis-. ieq of the originals. /‘\ Sksioned to perform all of Johanti . -The en,semble will be ‘appearing Bach’s Brandenberg. concertos for next, ,Tuesday night at the- Char’ 1 ’ the, firs& tirnc on the original in’ ‘: ‘c&&lents:

-This

led

f’o’&:‘inc&se’:’

Memoi;ial

Hall

.ifi

&elph.

.I’# ’


ssss DANCE GIRLS CHOKE

FRI. NOV.

Knock,

knock.

8 8 m m lrnwho’s

head?

TONY

by John Goyeau I never really believed in police brutality. I have always sympathized with roung people and demonstrators, * nit I felt that police were good beople who prdtected little skids _ amd kent streets safe. But I changed my. mind Tues- lay evening at 10 pm, after of Detroit appeart he University at&e of George Wallace. Crowds C)f youngsters milled * about in I f ‘ront of the building, occasionally 5anting anti-Wallace slogans. The streets were clear, the generally orderly. But ccrowds C)ne bottle was thrown from a (crowd of at least a hundred and, Ininutes later, the Detroit Police (charged across the street with (flubs raised. Several policemen were knocking reads indiscriminately as they advanced on the youngsters. As long as the police had gently moved forward, there had Deen no trouble. The .youngsters were clearly terrified. Whenever the police advanced they fled. So I think that using clubs on people to punish them for a bottle thrown. which missed by ten feet is a little brutal. But I now believe in police brutality. When the police later intimidated everyone in the area to get them out of the area, I immediately thought of the Chicago chant “The streets are for the people”. They weren’t in Chicago, and they weren’t in Detroit last Tuesday. Even after the~crowds had been shattered by police charges, individuals who refused to run and tired to “talk back” to police were pushed and clubbed. In one charge, youngsters were pushed over a twelve-foot drop by police who could run faster than packed crowds. It was clear that the object was more than to clear the streets. Seeing police beat people may ,not make you a “radical”, but ,

?; tF I ___-

---

r-

---

-

-_-

--.~

> 1

Id

I

MICHAEL I

-

C

MONJANARO assisted

, it sure helps. I know. And the middle-aged square-looking man I talked to in front of the university’s Cobo Hall Tuesday night thought so. The entire evening raised a lot ~ of questions-tough ones. Was Wallace just one more candidate? Was - voting against him the extent of one’s reaction? Should it be? And how could people vote against him when the other candidates are 1960 vintage reruns? IIo,w much meaning is there in an election when the majority of, electors despise all the candidates? Voting has always been a quietening influence in democratic countries. People vote a couple of times a year, and feel good; their duties satisfied. They’ve done all they should. Even though everyone realized that voting provides almost no power except through institutions, &ke parties, it was sort of fun. This year the U.S. election wasn’t even fun. It provided pretty clear condemnation of the entire presidential election system Students who drove hundreds of miles to shout “Sieg Heil”. “Rascist”, and “Wallace Sucks” didn’t really think that a vote for Humphrey (and especially Nixon who sounds more like Wallace daily) is the kind of politics they wanted. , So radical and newly-radicali’ zed students demonstrated and did not vote. if I were American, that’s what I would have done. By the way, at one. scuffle inside Cobo, several of-the Wallace supporters wore University of Windsor: Ijackets. Another Windsor s,tudent later got pushed off a ledge and broke his leg. Somehow homecoming f queens and sports rah-rah doesn’t keep me awake all night. Wallace and his police did.

22

by

*

HENRY

“A MIME’S EYE VIEW” THEATRE

OF THE

University

ARTS I );

of Waterloo

A program of comical, tragical, comical-tragical mimes and pantomimes.

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--

Record reviews

good

Fugs the Byrds .

limes by Jim Klinck Chevron staff

Sweethiafl

of the rodeo,

I

by

A Monday!! EVERYONEWELCOME!

I-

-----

UNIVERSITY

SERVICE

rrrrrwb

rrlyrl,

but so is a banjo and

One song, with its’ sliding steel directly out of Don Messers Jubilee.

guitars

sounds * ,‘

,

$. The comedy everyone’s talking about is -

a hospital BEDPANORAMA’ of frantic fun.! *..

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Phone 742-9361

1

Phone 742-9104

- Children

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lyrics--Blah!

lt cra.wlid into my hands, ho&t, by the Fuss (warner, , Broihers)

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is still there,

KEEPITIJNDERYOUR HAT L. \

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WATERLOO’

I

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VI.

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CAMPUS PUB t MON. NOV. 18

PUB NIGHT f-12 A WORLD

.

Tambourine

The Fugs, long known for’their blue music, seem to have changed At first listenSide one sounds exactly, like the effort any clean-dut.group -would put out. It is also one of, the bestinstriimental efforts ‘of thegroup to date _1‘. . ’ ‘I’ ’ I ’ Fortunately, the group $oon retdrns’ to their old style on side !.wo. The label on this side reads like a poem, with sixteen separate titles listed. The lead song, The Red Angel me&s’ Johnny Pissoff, is a. very ,humorous selection,. . Robinson Crusoe, starts with “Friday, I’ve been on this island a iong time now without thecompany of women, and, well.. , er.. , how many coconuts.. .. ? ” and continues from there. All songs on side two are along this line; yet still remain in good taste. As such they are very entertaining. Frequent snatches of excellent instrumental work also pop up, much as they do in songs by the MothQuicksilver Quicksilver

CONTINUOUS FROM I:30 pm DAILY 1 , SeanGonnery Is SkAlAKO! SHAIAKO Means , . A&it@ActimMim bdut!

I

by WayneSmith

AS ADULT

ENTERTAINMENT

~~

Based

on the

novel

by

SW

HOI+

by (Cap&().

,

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I’ \North decided to bid 6NT with his .large hand. East’s double is the It $3 ’ ;’ .3NT . .. I ZD topic of this column. Dealer West; both‘ vulnerable P P 6NT * Dbl. P North<. When the opponent bid a sla‘m P , P ‘< S A,J,lO$ I . freely, it is I very seldom that I H.A‘. /I‘ Opening lead-8,of clubs . . you will .make.a double for pen$lI North% opening bid of 1 club is West . D A,K,Q,lO;? East ties, so this bid ‘can be reserved s 4,3 an artificial bid used to show a ’ for a spec,ial meaning. The Light;‘i;‘77$ $C &,9,7 ’ , ner Double ,is the name given to “D,8345’343’ strong hand ( 17 or more points) D 8,i ’ <I south’ . and is forcing for one’round of bid- j the double of a slam that requests c 8,5,4 . ’ K+&5 ‘c A:g,6,3 . d’ing. South’s bid of 1 heart shows ’ _ partner to make an unusual lead ~I-I K,Q,J,%5 at least 8 points and is forcing to (usually dummy’s first bid. suit 1. . D 9,6 game. After South’s jump to 3NT, 1 This use of the double is played by C J-10.2 ’ I most players but do not know it r I Now if.just one person dpes it, they might think he’s.realli dick and ’ r ’ * they wqn’t takeShim. And-if two people do it, they might think thejl’re both , , ~ ._.by this name. Notice Lthat if East’s can not faggots and they won’t~take either of them. And if three people do it-can donble for a club lead this slam . you imagine three people doing it? -walking in, singing/a bar of Alice’s t ’ , . will make (‘4S,5H,3D’j :when West R&taura’nt and walking but: They q-tight think it’s some kind’of‘an org’animakes his correct lead of the 9 of zation. And if fifty p’eople-t mean fifty people a day-walk in, sing a bar of . spades. When East doubled he Alice’s Restaurant and walk out, they might think it’s a movement, an‘d ’ knew that he would get a club ~ they’re right. it’s the~alic& restaurant anti-massacree movement, and lead and West made the correct ’ all you gotta do to join‘is sing out the t-&xi time it comes around, with feeling.. lead. You can g.et anything you want, at Aliq.e’s Restau!pn$. ,, ., Y&I can get a’nythin,g you want...at’Alice’sRestaurant,‘. I I. ’ ’ ’ . ’ All bridge players are invited to \Riilkright in, [t’s arbund’thk b.ack,’ ’ L ’” ’ play duplicate bridge in the SS I: ’ . .- ‘. Just a half a mile from the railroad track, lounge at. 7 ,pm sharp every Tuesday night for, only is@.

Chevron staff

R~CDMMENDED

Messengir ‘service, Mess&g&Service,

Another of the acid rock groups’has a put out a competent album which will probably never be heard on radio. Quicksilver Messenger Service has provided one more twist, to the style of groups like Big Brother and the Holding Co., the Jefferson Airplane, and the Grateful Dead. The opening song, Pride of man, is a study in change of pace and emotion. It elusively switches between the melodic lament ‘of the verses to the solid, jackhammer beat of the chorus. I Light.youi W@C/OWS, the second song on the record, further shows the groups versatility. An autoharp-sounding guitar alternates with the screaming Clapton-style guitar, for further wierd effects. Probably the best song of the album is Dino’s song. A strong drum part sets the song high in originality. Harmony between guitars and singers is an excellent feature of this track, and typical of the quality of \ the album as a whole. stereo-very good ’ ,1 ’/ I ., instrnmental-excellent vocalfgood‘ ”’

THE STAR TEAM OFTHE YEAR!

fl

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.

,

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.

,

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up ) I $H


bv Kenneth Eble

A -time .

and a p/ace _

.

for learning. --

-_--

_

What

would

a person

have

_

First, I think, the time should not follow hard upon public school education. The effects of twelve years of formal education need to wear off somewhat. The continuity of learning in some subjects, such as a foreign language or mathematics, should be sacrificed for the gaining of wider experiences of other kinds. The entrant should have had s’omebattering against the world, partly just to be exposed to less desirable alternatives than further learning, but also to c&tribute to the

I .

Roughly speaking, he should have done enough useful work to make it economically feasible for him to remain largely idle for a number of years. For many, such experiences’in the world has usefully broken in upon the enclosed .world that may have defined their family experience. The world is a less expensive, if not mor’e undekstanding place than college to begin to assuine a life of one’s own, and the college could benefit from not having to cope with . the effects of first separation from home and family. The

I

_

world

would

have

confronted

the student

with

the need

-

out. It might even have aroused idealism them sufficient to encourage the youth to attempt something other 1than thq. which is forced. upon him by necessity, -1PA.

find

The school would be a residential co/lege, it would provide a place bf residence, not confinement.

in the sense that force a piace of

.

Its isolation would be that of any enterprise that requires quiet, communing, and freedom. However, such isolation would not be such-as to deny easy accessto the world. Ideally, it might be a bit of greenery and space se’tdotin in some area other than the blighted-area of a large city. ,’ I Or it could as easily be removed from the city, although then it must,create an excitement of its own or give. ready accessto some great metropolitan area. Space and shelter would guide one aspect of its architectural design., As places of instruction’ and study, its buildings would give the distinct sense of being. enclosed, being sheltered. They would provide places within that could be drawn around one’s shoulders. Yet that cloistering should be so designed that, moving outside, one would feel that sense of space as providing freedom to moveJo stretch, to let the eye roam and the mind expand. In theiir total order, they ‘shouldnot dominate the individual either by \their magnitude or by their fastidibusness of arrangement. If the setting is urban, then nature has to be brought in, not with fake mountains or babbling brooks, but with honest courts of-grass and trees and shrubbery, suited to its urban existence. If the setting is rural, then buildings should be placed .with respect for geologic time and geogra--’ I phic place-wind and water, sun and rain. The calendar would be regulated ate by the seasons in the Country life, which is only partly seasonal,

-

I

J4

452 The CHE,VRON’

I .

by the surrounding climand by the ‘movement of in thp city. And within

-

the calendar, the work itself woul@seek to I of the long stretches of winter, the early rainy season. There would be flexible schec ,ain tasks, with some allowances fOr human f would be a, close relationship between wr. learned and the time necessary to such.learnl; There would be no pegular march through hours, but fixed and regular times for stud from such hours an&varying times and *pli that need variable hours. Students would be guided in using the scrat] our’ rough schedule tiot only permits but. c the fifteen minutes tomdrill on a language, 4 walk that shapes a composition, the befc filled with discourse. My

university

would

be one

you

walk

into.

some kind of wall around it, and lots of grass, and enough architecture of a tradition ’ teal the fact that it was just built yesterday. would be open wide-not wide enough for but sufficient for humans. ’ Permitting the automobile has not only ca and increased noise, it has supported the ic vice-station university where young men gc I of intellectual gas and get greased for a :sr through life. So my university is a walk-in place. Having taken the effort to. walk in, thr might decide to stick around awhile. Once there, the student certainly wouldntt erican universities now have him do, wit1 What a dispiriting introduction to college life The only useful function it serves is to e: who can’t find their way through the process< My universitv would begin with through, we of the university-students felt classes were necessary.

‘classes,

.i’f, d and

It might be quite feasible to begin with let sors would certainly rather talk than issue they would rather talk than do anything. The professor might announce that at SUI hour on such a day in such a place he would t his favorite subject and continue as long as h ents wished to stay.

Stamina varying among the faculty and of boredom varying amoung students, this rr to destroy the present pernicious structur most all learning presented in fifty-minute p; As to students, they would walk into these interested, come back if excited; eventually themselves when they felt they had sow and could prove it. Under this system, some vexing problems if not solved. The dull might be chastened, the glib migl the university might become more conce drop-ins-the students who keep coming ba than the dropouts. ’ I Without the obligation to live tip tq the ide;


! the most I ights, the ; for cert!gs. The-ire qas <to be rly spaced hat profit for those

ould have ing green nd to conthe gates gmobiles,

groups could, discourse.

problems f the sermped full i passage

‘As to what

n, as Am- j istration. ate those it

_

J such an la/king on ’ his stud-

threshold Feenough t has al:es. ls, stay if I lecturing g to say t be met, detected, with the r morezested by

when

the

excitement

occasioned

it, continue

In time, these might be called classes, but their growth would be slow and capable of being checked, so that their harmful effects would be minimized.

dent just

;. Profess cards-

Very soon, I’d hope, the lectures would give way. to the kind of interchangwhat must be at the heart of a university. -

The best professors would get tired of hearing only their own voices, the most excited students-and that’s the kind that would be sticking around-wouldn’t be able to keep their mouths shut, and pretty soon there would be discourse, people learning from each other-a condition that is the “unifying” principle-of the “university. ” I At this point, administrators-and these might come from among the professors whose lecture halls were by now empty (it would give them gainful employment and in time would likely .developin them a strong sense of-doing worthwhile work)--would probably begin by lot or color of eyes or by initial letter of last name (as is now the prevailing practice) to arrange place and time where small

time that ?nances3i-minute : inner lull

rhinking ty-really

class cards and credit hours, the inept, the bored, and the ,impenetrable might abandon university life, and neither ’ /the senseof guilt in the student nor the senseof frustration in the faculty would be aroused.

1In my preserve

is being

taught,

nothing,

quite

obviously,

is.

Some things are being learned. Under this system, a good many subjects wouldn’t appear at all-those for examples, that now infest college catalogues, about which Socrates himself could not be interested. The Administration of the Elementary School Lunch Program, for example, or An Introduction to Indo-European Phonology. or Managerial Functioning of the HomeOwned Retail Mercantile Establishment. How could even the people doing such things be interested? These -are things human beings tolerate in order to do other things that do engage’their interest. The university has no businessbeing as dull as life. The other large group of things that would not be taught are all the things that one should and can learn by himself or with the help of books or machines. The grammer of a language, for example, and the principles of sociology and most other such subjects. Much that involves counting might be so learned-not .basic mathematics, which requires a teacher sensitive to the aesthetics of numbers who is capable of communicating that sense, but the many other counting chores that involve putting things into columns and boxes and applying them to1merchandise or machines or mankind. t_ And much dear to the defenders of the liberal arts might be -partially removed from the classroom: books, music, drama, art would be removed as objects of study in favor of their becoming objects of doing and love. university learning.

we

might

have

to

sacrifice

classes

to

If we did get rid of classes, we might not only develop the mind but preserve its sanity. A national magazine writes about how Time, high school honor society. president, didn’t just walk into Yale and

\

start learning, but was screened, registered, and matriculated in the manner of our’best universiti.es. His beginning French class was conducted entirely in French, and after a few days, he began to fear he might flunk out. Quite obviously, the trouble was classes. A halfway bright student might walk into a lecture in French and sit there wholly unable to understand what was going on. A very bright student might even sit there 1 long enough to flunk But the fault is that there is such a class. Of course one learns a language by exposure. A child, abandoned in France, should/end up as a French-speaking adult. But a formal college class can only faintly copy such an experience’%nd at the peril of driving the student away from language study altogether. In a proper university, the student would depart at once and come back to class, if he came back at all,when he’d mastered-with the aid of obliging electronic devicesenough french to understand and be excited by what was’ going on. ~ Or better still, he would have a constant informal exposure to a foreign language which came much closer to duplicating experience abroad. Not that the student in my university wouidn’t work. However, I’d like to think that the student spent long hours because he was on to something he just couldn’t let go of, and that the flexibility of the university would permit his doing so without interrupting him by vexing matters such as classes. . Our course of study be even more arbitrary is now.

would have than the

a termination,

four-year

degree

Such a place come back

of learning, frequently-not

alumni

and

.

but it you/d program

It could be determined by one means as well as anotherby. the financial ,resources available (an extended period in good years, a shorter period in lean), or by determining when a student actually reached a level of accomplishment. It would necessarily be a matter of, years, for a student needs to see how one year’s studies carry over into the next and to experience the kinds of development that can take place only over a year or more. At would

.

deserving

friends

for reunions and alumni weekends, not for degrees or certificates, but to finish up projects that they had to abandon when they left the first time or to take up studies that years later seem to have great relevance to what they are doing orfeeling or wanted to be about: Properly conducted, universities’would be most exciting for those whose additional experience enhances their learning and the university’s as well. These returning students would pay for the privilege, and their employers would provide the time. And when they left, as when they returned, they would be going as students just carrying their learning to another time and place. ’

-

l

Kenneth Eble is chairman of the English department at the University of Utah- An outspoken critic Of Americtin education tradition, he is the author of A Perfect Education (Collier, New York), from which this article is adapted.

Friday,

Nownb~r

15, 7968 (9:27)

453

15 i’ , , . .

3


Alienated A hitated ,A Fmtrate

Dovou #havea: Then,treatywrsetftoachatdii yjDr.Ho\ivard FQtch,VicePr@ieht (Academic) Mondayspo6p.in. Campus Centre(PubArea) /

,

-

’ ‘-

>

Student& inteiested in investjgatil!g prospects of profe’ssional training ‘in public accounting, leading to qualification as a‘ CHARTERED LACCOUNTANT, are invited to discuss career opportunities. Clarkson, Gordon representatives will be on campus

*. I,

N-oveinber ’

20th

Their

fight fight

t

CHARTERED

1QtCa.

ACCOUNTANTS

I

Halifax Saint John Quebec Montreal Toronto Hamilton Kitchener London Port Arthur Fort William Winnipeg Regina Edmdnton Vancouver Victoria

Ottawa Windsor Calgary .

(

1

Donor

Clinic-

12:30-4:30 ; 6:30-8:30

I.6 454The

CHEWtON

A_

.

I I. / ,- :

clear,

their

is &might forward-a of freedom against

1956. Their aims are clear, their fight is straightforward-a fight of freedom against tyranny, and they arouse our immediate and unqualified admiration. Elsewhere the issues are more complicated, and it is with a great deal of bewilderment that the adult westerner, whether of conservative or, that liberal inclination, witnesses a generation

a . . . . ..JUST FOR ONCE Blood

are

tyranny

I

Gdrdon

aims

1

/

.

In its mass form. the present student revolt in the west can be dated fr:qm 1964, when the studentsof Berkeley protested against the administration’s infringement of free speech rights on the campus of that massive and phenomenally wealthy university . Since Berkeley, the student protests have varied in their immediate academic-_ _ objectives. In France the students have been fighting against an antiquated, authoritarian system dating from Napoleonic days, under; which the universities have been subordinated to a strict, centralized and inflexible governmental cdntrol. In the United States-and increasingly in Canada-the main target has been the kind of university which has developed since the last war under a, dual impulse: the Jdemand of the state and of industry for san ever-increasing trained personnel, and the Pemocratic conceptionof equal opportunity which demands that every

Student militancy and student revolt have. become the commonplaces of the 1960’s. In the w&t and the east, among countries dedicated to gree enterprise and countries dedicated to communism, and in the nations of the third world as well, students have risen in revolt so frequently over the past five years that those who see life in terms of conspiracies find little difficulty in perceiving a sinister combination against their way of life, a new International rising as a spectre to haunt their tranquillity. But, though the methods of the student rebels throughout the contemporary world are often similar, ranging through various forms of direct action, sit-ins, and strikes, to riots and barricades in the,classic revoluL tionary tradition, their unity is of spirit rather than organikation; and their aims have shown considerable variations. Student revolt, like the conflict of the generations, is nothing new, though the scale on which w’e are eirperiencifig it is unprecedented, for the very good reason that there are sd many more students than ever before. In the middle ages, tile Sorbonna was noted for the fury with which its members would defend-if necessary with sword in hand-what they regarded as their special rights and privileges. In Tsarist -Russia the universities were often closed down because of studeht unrest, and young men and women who could not get the education they desired, frequently migrated to Switzerland or Germany, where they studied in freedom, often lived in communal poverty, and conspired against the Romanov tyranny at home. The universities manned the Populist movement, and it was as . students that both Lenin and Kropotkin developed -into active revolutionaries. in the post-war years student revolt @s. often developed along fairly traditional political lines. The action of the Indonesian students who played a key role in the overthrow of Sukarno’s regime is a good example. And there is a sharp and evident difference between the aims of student rebels in totalitarian countries and those in the free enterprise countries bf the west. In Warsaw and Prague, in MOSCOW and Madrid, the students have fought on simple libertarian issues. They are demanding a freedom of speech ’ and of thought which have long been denied them, I and in this -they are carrying on the tradition for which many Hungarian students gave their, lives in

Interview appointments may be made through the gffice of the Student Placement Office. If this time is inconvenient, please contact us directly. Phone 744-f 177 -

‘Clarkson,

enjoys more wealth and more apparent freedom of action than its predecessors, rebelling against the values of its age, and in its apparent confusion of motives, often raising up as heroes spch figures as Che an4 Mao, the very tyPes of the rigid dogmatists against whom the students of Warsaw and MOSCOW are today fighting for their intellectual lives.

This article is from the administrationpublished WC Reports, from the informa’ tion office of the University of British Columbia. Originally titled Student red-so what takes another view else is new. 2 the author at what many consider a --a detached lookpassing phenomenon. by George Woodcokk

_~

Buieaucracy is, one, of the greatest enemies of free-’ dom

and

fertility

I

of thought

young person should be given as’much education as he is capable of obsorbing. In current jargon, this new type of university is called the inultiversit’y, and during the past decade the University of British’ Columbia, among others in Canada, has been developing rapidly in that direction. In the multiversity, there is a fatal tendency for thk multiplicatidn of snecialisms to create the necessitv for ever A ----~~ greater bureaucratic co-ordination, and b;reaucracy is one of the great enemies of freedom and fertility of thought. ’ As a pair of younger educators has stated%: “The result, of! these ten$encies is, t&e -series of paradoxes which frustrate evefyone at the’ multiversity. There are more top scholars ,availabl-& &J’(; the student, yet he is lucky if he meets a single one personally during his undergraduate years. There are far more courses and resources than at a university, yet most classes are so large and imper-: sonal that the students have trouble taking advantage of what is being offered. The teacher is courted and paid on all’ sides, yet cannot get a say in running the university, or cannot get time to do his. own work, or cannot do it without being (forced to publish in season and out. Education is lauded on all sides, and huge sums of money are pumped into* its development. Yet a great many people report a basic disillusionment with the quality of the education in which they are engaged.“--me university game, edited by Howard Adelman and Dennis Lee, m

-

Toronto, 1968.

Few of those engaged in one of the major North American academic communities would deny the justice of these strictures, or that the conditions they describe do result in at least some sense of alienation among both%faculty and students. By now even administrators are beginning to seek ways by which the worst effects of the multiversity can be

,

’ Among both faculty and students...-demands for democratization of , university , government neutralized, and among both faculty’ and students there have been growing demands for a democratisa& tion of unitiersity government, though these two sections of the academic community have not often seen eye to eye on the way in which’ such’ power as is wrting from the administrators and ‘the governors or regents should be divided. This brings us to the wider dimensions of student protest. By 1968 there are links between the leaders of student resistance in America, Canada, France, Britain, Holland, Italy-but all the movehents they represent arose autonomously out of the special circumstances within their own countries, and if there is anything that has up to the present characterized the world ‘movement in general, it is its reluctance to become centralized. Revolts at particular universities are #still organizationally local affairs, though they are undoubtedly affected by example and even, to an extent, by the interchange of evangelists who spread the doctrine that what is wrong with the universities is a reflection of the sickness within society as a whole. It is true that only a minority, even ~of the students who

.

‘I il

ti(


HELP. US M/N!-

derived f&m the syndicalists, and their theory <of participatory democracy is a direct though usually unacknowledged borrowing from the anarchists. Overlaid on all this, a lurid decoration, is the incon- , sistent cult of romantic totalitarians like Che Guevera and Ho Chi Minh.

. struggle for greater poker within the universities, are social revolutionaries, but the great majority have a receptiveness tq new ideas and Bn easily aroused‘solidarity whidh distinguish them from the buttoned&up classes of the 1950’s. -

In a rough way, one can divide the present gen- . Thus the ideology of the student r&volt, though eration OS students into four categories. The professionals are there for training rather, than eduin theory it rejects history in favor of the snapshot vieiv, the instant solution, in fact draws its ideas cation; and are mainly’ concerned to master the from the long tradition df the Old Left, just as the body of- knowledge necessary to get fheir degrees and,start,work; they remain generally aloof from1 Diggers delve back to a seventeenth-century protothou& ndt ’ necessarily unsympathetic c to-the anarachist for their name and some of their philomovements 1of .protest. Next come -the many stusophy. But one lesson of radical history the petier dents ta.l&g’&s and sciences 7courses, ‘either beradicals may be -i&-need of iearning: thh ease ca&e they -ha& ‘nothing better !o do, or because a with which a class ‘of revolutionary militants can BA has become the minimum ticket to most worthhard& into a potentially reactionary elite. It is diswhile white-collar jobs; these are the silent ones turbing that the near-Nazi NPD has cordially’welwho may feel a vague sympathy for the rebels,‘but corned the student revolts in Germany. And even in’ are generally inactive, even“in student elections, North America there have been disquietingly totaliunless the administration goes out of its way to @retarian implications in the strategic plans for using ate martyrq, when-as happened at Berkeley and the mass of the,students as shock troops published later$ at McGill-the student mass& join in the + in some New ‘Left ‘periodicals. and in +the kind of demonstrations of protest. manipulation bf situations and people that has f >. taken place.on some campuses. . The main inspiration and a&iGity of student reAs a-libertarian, I sympathize with the. desire of volt comes everywherk from a relatively small students for a f$reer and less materialistic society, minQrity. It is &&imated’ thata core of little more than’ 500’students out of l?,(lOO was mainly responsible for the recent, conflict at Columbia. This nucleus can again *be divided intd two groups. There ’ are the disillusioned . idealists, those who came to the multiversity seeking, out of love of learning: a genuine educat&n. Most- student disaffection Gi .this’ kind scomes from the arts and the social _ sciences, the neglected areas in ‘larger universities; the, .faculties whose ordinary graduates have the 1 least prospect of profitable employmedt, the heart I of darkness where th& teaching assistants per- ’ form with least’ encouragement “; the ,apprentice as a member df an academic community I think. drudgery.of their profession. I their grieyances against the multiversity are in 8.’ . the main justified; I believe universitv government +’ must be radically changed. But I thi&.i<is time the Cheist and Maoist and Hoist myth-making and . sloganising of the activist wing were abandoned to .\ consider some of the practicalities of- the situation. : For there are genuine problenins involved in .demo- ’ cratising a university, even with the best will and I catian ’ j ‘._Y: :. ,: _: __ ,‘, ’ :., I .I -: -‘ the~ost,li@zrtarianir$ent. .: \ Y : - :‘ . . I . . HOW, assur&g power is to be vested in active ’ members. of the ‘academy, is it t6 be. divided bet. TOO often &ucl&~s~ find‘ the y&y disciplines that ween those who represent iontinuity .(the faculty) should reveai-. the‘. wonder ‘?f the world. and the and those who are temporary and constantly recreativity and ‘dignity of .man reduced to niggling placed (the students)? How can ti freshman be reanalysis and uninspired .pedantry, foe. &en where the dead hancl .of speci+iza+?, has; r&ched in. ,I garded as competent, to decide how or what, he Some accept and., carry an io profess’orship. Some 2 should be taught in a field of which he is ignorant? \ How are those who, now fight for power to avoid the drop out into tin& of 4he lesser confortiisms ‘which corrup’tion they now see in those who at presetif are ‘the badges’of non-con_fortiity in our age. Some wield it? enter the struggle for student power, in the hope of Given the sad history of trade unions, what a . winning a say’ in their academic destiny. ‘And -a guarantee do we have that student c;ommittees%will minority within that minority, drawn aespecially .be any less authdritarian than faculty or adminis! from the sbcial scie&e$ become militant radicals,; tration committees? Is not less, power, based ,on a wielding an-iFfluence disproportionate to .their numchange in the direction of the university towards bers. ..’ less complexity, a better aim than the multiplication It is these radicalq -Gho provide what ideology of powers? These are random questions, and many exists in a movement that has been lacking in the theoretical fervors which characterized the Old others like them might be asked, but the way they are answered lies at the heart of the problem Left of the Thirties.’ Most student radicals would regard themselves as part of the New Left, though ’ of liberty and authority in this. aS in anjr other sittia\ tion within human society. they eschew orthodoxy and: d&precatC the gectarian witch:hunting that characteriged the Communists George Woodcock, in addition to j being an English - and Trotskyites of j the past. Yet they. have their own conformity, ‘afid their basic viewpoints are professor at UK is editor of the journal Can&i& easily defined. They. Lbelieve that contemporary Literatqe, and a noted author and Iite,rary critic. -l-le . western society is sick, infect&d by the materialism has written -a’ highly-praised Study of British novelist; of its way, of life, and that; 4sd far as North George -Orwell entitlgd The c/lstaj spir;‘t,’ _and es&St , and a book on anarchism. America is concerned, the Vietnam war and the ., . . race:war ‘arti the great’- manifestatidns of. that _ . . , I sickness. (Student radicalism .in , its ‘present form r actually emerged from the Atierican civil’ rights campaigns and many pioneer activists learnkd, .their‘ militancy in the streggie, in-the deep South. ) . * , The sQuctur& df th,e uniqetsity and 9; s@iety js a whole hre, ,authbrita’&& based oh iilegitirr&e power, *tb be rep@ced , by ,a ,participatory democracy, -iG $v,hi?.h ,,&e people, zict&ly inydltied in ‘any process (tea&hers and$u@ents in the cage of learn/ ir)g) ,shall control it, ,Since. most &$ent &tivi& a?? neither el.oq,&nt in sp&h‘ qr .tiCting,‘ ‘62 even v&y .well+ead_and indeed oft&i julti;vate ati ,affection of contempt . _ for such qualities-it’is not always e&y tq decide where they derive their ideas., particularly as tinother of the affectations which is part of- their special patter!, of’ conformity ‘. is a contempt-for

-*We need:

- I.

posted--tiakers cqnvassers : ieafleteers ad-men .

. workers . \ ’ y(jUR

.‘..

t

‘.

,$UPPORf: ..r*-^. _ ~ 1 \

1 addressand

phone with the.‘. _! ,I‘1:_

I t.hink their grievances against the multiversity arein the main justified; university government m.ust be raid-lcally changed.

I

i The !disiI]u.si&qed- idealists who came to,$he multiti6r-.:S sity. Seeking~,-a-.genuine;~eduj :rr...,’ .t:1I.I,.,,’.,, - -: -, ?>.$ -, ., _

But they -do-derive a great deal from the ‘. less abthoritarian a,spects of Marx I . I history. But they do derive a gi-eat deal from the less authoritarian aspects of Marx, some of them ackbowledge that ‘theit ideas of direct action are I

j< ;, ‘;

--

c

-. ’

7=30 pm

. .

..

*


-.

.,I

--

--

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I I \

i

,

/

Forwards Pete Miller (193 and Pete Visser (18) perch on the Carleton goalie’s door-step looking fat a possible rebound durfng Friday’s exhibition game. Warriors didn’t score’ in scrambly situations such-as -’ this. Two goals came while penalties were being killed.

:

Fkdeiqhon

of. Sttidents

.

The following nominations have l beek received to fill the Sttiderits’ Council vacancies: / y&EStDENT: , John Bergsma ” aBrian tier ’ Jbhn Pickles Larry Btirko . Vern-C&&nd , .-Bob Verdun STUDENTS’ COUNC-jL: ” ’. Arts: 8 i

.

TO’TAL 6

Vacancies \ 1/

Pi& win;

Warriori fake thiRJ 3-7 over Cadeton i

by Phil Ford

off and teamed up to produce the staff _ first goal of the game.- Robinson -The hockey Warriors chalked stole the puck behind the Carleup their third con’secutive exhiton goal and centered to Rudge bition win last Friday night as who scor,ed on a backhand. -they edged the Carleton Ravens Later in the period Rudge 3-l. counted his second goal, again was marked The game while killing a penalty. On a penalties, many of which were df two-man break, Ken Laidlaw the chippy variety. The Warriors neatly drew ,the one’ defender, to had 15. his side and then‘passed, to Rudge Neither offense &as able to who beat the Carleton goaltender. mount anything resembling a cleanly. consistent attack as the defense Near the end of thb -peqiod, dbminated throughout. Carleton scored their, lone marker The Ravens started quickly and while playing with four inen to hemmed the Wqrriors in their Waterloo’s five. Wayne Small own .zone fop about two minutes was the marksman with a long forcing them to take a penalty. shot from outside the blueline Ron Robinson and Dave Rudge which handcuffed goalie Mark : ._ .did an’ excellent job of killing it Jacobson. I r.m‘m~C)~~~~*~~~~~~~~m~m~m;m~m~m~ - - - - - - - - - _- - - - - z- _- - - - __- - - - - - - . Chevion

Alexahd& MacGregor Tom Patterson > ’ Andrew Stanley 12 i 4 *Jim Stendebach / Murray Underwood ., Steve Weatherbe s \ . .’ Engineering: . R&o &r&r&i Doll .&heS” . . . Richard Lloyd ‘. ’ ;’ Toin Boughtier. ’ 4. D. Mueller .I I ‘7 6.’ Mike Corbett . The first season of the expanded seniorintercolleBill Sntidgrtiss I ‘. 3 ‘.BarryIillimore , , giate football league is over and the traditiona/ ’ .lists, who no. doubt .fondly recall two-bucks-and;rad&qte: ’ a kick battles 1betw,een Varsity an’d Old McGill back in the 20’s, ‘will .be sitting ,aroupd their priHugh &own j \ Diet,er h:C. Haag vate.clubs saying “I told you‘so.” . Nick Kouw& . Doug Gaukroger 16 3, What the traditionalists were. telling ,us wgs ’ David A.. Qorifon Bill .Webb ’ ” *, c . , \ , * that those, Upstarts from. Waterloo and kamilton 1 would get, trampled . @to the collective mud *of Co-Op Math: \ Molson, Richardsoir, Varsity and Little stadiums Glenn Ber~ry - acclaimed by the “Big Four” I At first, &r&e tlie standings would seem to p’egi Math: ‘. / be& them”out., Ri&,ht. up on ‘top are Queen)s and Jameb Belfry Jack Lubek I\ , Toronto (or Toronto and Queen’s-it -doesn’t much matter to the traditionalists) followed by Western Robert L Brown 6 ’ * Sydney Nesjel with McGill ,bringing up ‘the rear. John Koval ’ _ 1 Well, not quite. McGill ‘was saved f&m last Renison: , ’ j spot by, ydu know it;McMaster and Waterloo. The Warriors had one of those seasons,. to be * ” 1 Paul Johnson PBUl &be \ expected with a large crop of rookies, a .new head. j cogch and moving into a tougher league. Phy&-Ed. & Rec.:_ . ,. , They dropped a tough one to Western 31-27 before Hugh Cuthbertson Marilyn hunter 2 #notching their or@ victory in a 30-C; Homecoming 1 victory over the Mustangs. They highiigfited the \ St. Jeraqe’s: , : season’ with a 19-19 tie against the runner-up Blues. They tiere in the game against the champ‘Dexter MeMillan . doug Richardson - ’ 4 , 1 ion Gaels until the third quartet. Let’s not menDavid A. Miller Ginii Tedesco . ‘ I tion two-bucks-and-a.-kick McGill. ‘ ., The Warriors’ problems -centered around two a* ‘Science: ’ . areas, both of which will *probably .keep coach . R. Geoffrey Roulet Wally Delahey awake nights this winter. lqn,C&vert One is the team’.s inability to beat the var6 C, G&J&her Jim Wight %3 atiders, who have now racked up 13 straight \,wins : Bruce.&Ka’y I G.R. yootton \ , ” against,. Warrior squads, -arid the other was a tenden’cy to give the ball, away to the opposition The out-term,seats are not being contested. \ Sandra Burt ‘David Cubberley Robin Fennill John Gartner John. Gilbank ’ . Robert I(ilimnik

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Rudge was the outstanding forward for Waterloo. In addition to his two gdals, ‘he killed penalties superbly and generally ’ gave “afine two-way performance fenceman ian McKegney ’ ik’ another offensive threat ’ as he led many rushes and demonstrated fine stickhandling abilitv. (‘_’ The Warriors open the regular 'SeaSOn at home next Friday agginst the expansion Windso; ’ Lancers at 8:30 pm. ‘ *

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After a scoreless second pe&d Waterloo scored an insurancd ~- -_-_- goal early in the third. Bod Reade broke into the clear and ’ neatly slipped the puck past %he Carleton ‘netminder who had little or no chance on the play.

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mi&ng*. \. . Warrior march was aborted by an untjmelp fumble or interception; much to the chagrin of the fans and the defense. It is perhaps facetious to talk of a home-&d-away record after a 2-6-l season, but the fact remains that the’ two wins and the tie came at hdme and \ four lqsses were incurred on the rohd. Great for the home fans; lousyffi>r the record. About the only definite non-returnee appears to ,be Bill’ Hamilton.; Bill Poole will be back if he continues .his course. And 1Gord what’s-his-name will,be around for another shot at’it. . Those traditionalists may have i rough time bf -it in Year Two Don’t bet y&r. student loan on the outcome of fhe Coll$e Bowl playdowns. The Bisons must have come up with something to stop Alberta twice in two weeks. The Gaels may be in for a surprise. TFe Hawks looked strong in rolling over Loyola 40-O. But they play a’ tough brand of ball in the Maritlmes and St. Mary’s will be, favoured tomorrow. They won in a league where the secondplace team rolled up 310 Ijlointg ih six games. Only two rinks remain undefeated in men’s varsity curling play. That numb& will be reduced to one this afternoon when Pete ,Hindle and John Scott meet at 3 over at Glenbriar. Last ,week-end, Hindle’s foursome won their way into an eight-team Golden Triangle major curling league, featuring the top rinks in the area. The competition ‘the? will get there will make them awfully tough to beat in the chase for university -varsity laurels. .Varsit$. ’ curling has the day . off tomorrow c $0 -make waY for the coyed bonspiel but .will resume next Saturday. ’ ,

.


The football Warriors .>probably went up to Montreal last Saturday looking past their afternoon date ‘with the McGill Redmen to a end-of-season wrap-up in the “Paris of the New World”. At any rate they will remember the evening’s I activities long after the memories of the game grow dim. The Redmen handed the Warriors the worst thumping of their maiden season in the Senior Worse,- however, were the six Groves gave up Intercollegiate Football League, interceptions under a strong McGill pass rush. walloping! them 43-8 and. burying them in the cellar of the six-team The interceptions ran Groves’ total to a league-leading 17. ( conference. 1 A win Iwould have given the I The last interception was run back 11 yards for a touchdown Warriors an impressive fourthplace finish but the day bolo.nged with two and a half minutes remaining. Two earlier nabs of to Dave Fleiszer, George Springate and their McGill playmates. errant Groves aerials led to Mcthree minutes The Warriors should have been Gill touch,downs _ . looking for Fleiszer. Going into apart. Th’e Warriors were in the game the game he stood second in total rushing with 627 yards in right -up to, the fourth quarter. 119 carries. A Paul Knill single and two If the Warriors were looking Springafe field . goals gave the for him they had to be satisfied Redmen a 6-l first-quarter edge. Two McGill majors before the with watching him go by as he racked ‘up 298 yards in 30 carries half, one a 68-yard punt return, to win the rushing title and score and a safety touch in the third three touchdowns. . . quarter when Knill had to go into Springate, the “kicking cop” is the end -zone to retrieve a snap something of a fixture on the from center Bob Padfield put the McGill football squad. At 30 he Warriors down 22-8 heading into is .-the oldest \ man -on the team the finhl stanze. and combines football and studyBut four McGill touchdowns ing, for a law degree with being coming off three interceptions a full-t&me sergeant on the Mon- gradually turned the game into a / rout. treal Police Department. Saturday- was his last -day in The Redmen were deep in Watera Redman uniform and he went loo territory when the gun sounded. out booting ten points. It has been a disappointing The highlight of another frusseason for coach Wally- Delahey trating Warrior afternoon was and his squad. Several times the once again Gord ,McLellan. The team threatened to burst out rookie fullback scored Waterbut’ they just lacked that extra. loo’s only touchdown to run his On the average it is a secondtotal to seven to tie- for second year squad and there- will be an in league scoring, despite missing almost complete list of hold-overs for next season. a game and a half and playing only portions of two others. In the meantime, Saturday McLellan carried 14 times for night was quite a blast. \

-Gary

Robins, theChevron

.

Dave Groves (14) jlips a pass out to Gord McLellan (20) as Brent Gilbqrt”(60) forms up the blocking. The Warriois didn’t move the ball very often as they wrapped up- their first S@L campaign l&t Saturday. The Tedmen kept them stifled as they rolled to a 48-8 -.win. _.

Hcwfiets

s&cond

The bubble finally burst for the cross-country ‘Warriors last Saturday at the Canadian Intercollegiate Athletic Union championships in Halifax. Favoured to take all the marbles after their tremendous upset of the powerful University of Toronto squad ^the previous week at the Ontario-Quebec Athletic Association meet, our men met the same fate as the confident Torontonians. The University of Saskatchewan crew ran a great team race, placing all seven runners in ‘the

by Hans Wiesner Ghevron

The coaches $nd players on thk- War&r football team had a little trouble breaking out of this ring of oppon&ts this season,. Wins weve notched against-the Hawks &d the Mustangs while the Hogtowners were tie&. A solid core of returnees should improve thingUn 196%

a

--

in nafional

top sixteen, to take the crown 37-41 over the second-place Warriors. Other schools. entered, representing the five athletic conferences across the country, iwere University of New Brunswick (not St. Mary’s as reported here last week), York and the Royal Military College. Dave Smith and Roger Landell, both of York, finished l-2 with Warrior’s Paul Pearson finishing close behind in third spot. It ’ was probably Pearson’s best race ever. -Two prairie runners preceded Bob Kaill who also ran very well. A U. OF S. man took seventh and Dave Northey and John Kneen kept Waterloo well in contention by I capturing eighth and ninth positions. _ But there it ended as. tenth and eleventh places .were taken by Saskatchewan. Fifth Warrior across the line was Bruce Walker in 15th. Kip Sumner was a. disappointing 19th with Jim Strothard 25th. ,

-

staff

‘The soccer Warriors completed the 1968 campaign’ last Tuesday by dropping a 2-O decision to Guelph Gryphons. The Warriors ended the season’ wi,th one tie to go with seven losses. ’ As in so many of their games, this season, the Warriors started off well but died in the second half. Playing j on a very small pitch with a strong cross-wind the Warriors dominated the play whenever they kept the ball on the ground. Only lack of finesse in front of the Guelph goal kept them from attaining a one.or’two goal advantage by half-time. After a scoreless first-half the Warriors made the mistake of trying to open up the game with long ‘passes in the air. The tall Guelph defensive corps had little difficulty . in - turning these tactics to their advantage. Friday,

In team scoring York was third, U,.N.B. fourth, and R.M.C. last, all well back of the two front-runners. The Waterloo boys were victims of an emotional let-down following the OQAA championship. Beating Toronto was the high spot of the season and the squad was com_ placent heading into Halifax. It was an, unhappy- ending for what has been a very successful year for coach Neil Widmeyer’s cross-countrv squad. The climax -was the OQAA championship and the termination of the Toronto dynasty., ’ Halifax represented the first time that any team from Waterloo has qualified to compete in anational championship. , Looking tot next year, Kneen is the only definite non-returnee‘ (he will be returning to-Australia ) . Widmeyer can therefore expect a solid nucleus back to go’,for the laurels again. . Pearson will definitelybe &leader nerit year and if ,freshman Northey continues to im-, prove the way he has this “fall, he will be tough i to beat. I I _. * i

Towards the middle of the second, half Guelph:got a break when a Warrior defender handled the ball I in order to prevent a goal. ,. Steve Bedford made a sensational save on the subsequent penalty shot but he was unable to stop the shot fromthe rebound. ’ ‘. The Warriors seemed ‘to, lose heart after the Guelph goal and a few minutes late the Gryphons added their second marker., The Last

nightrs

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November

15, 7968 (9:27) 457 rt;rdraid XI; a\\i’ue+ , --*

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Warriors’ fought back bu,t the cold, ‘the wind and the Guelph defenders were too much to over: come. For John (Paddy) MCEvoy this was his last game as a Warrior. By Christmas ‘he will \ be back in 4his .-native Ireland, hopefully having attained his Ph,D. 19 u.r’

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! i ’ I % 3 . ‘_/ 1i ’ - c--i, : ::

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( by NormSe&qnt .‘, , r Chevrqn staff _ I 11. I:/ \ 1 -The ,finals in lacrosse,. soccer, I.,- I, ’ and flag football were /= I I . played last , , week.. I A thor6,ughly,&nmj 1 ~>\ j Engineering 1.. t .:ced South 13-l in the fin& la&&e 1 4 j .game of the seasoni !: -’ .L: _ , ! 7b It was i qyet., rainy- day but that =‘didnot ,deterMusial. from. scoring yI five goals. Other scorers for the ,,engineers were.‘Ashbee with three I,. gdalsG$ Bax and< !Love, each ,with 1,) > _,*.two goals,, atid Cohden with one. 1.: South’s lonescorer,was Kegs. .i 4 1*.. , Each team had two ‘penalties. 1” j Campbell, ofi eng. +A “was penalized 1,:c ~ I1for, ’ ‘holding while ,Fielding was I;‘:: , ‘-’ F, penalized for @ipping., Rick Klinck got the two penalties for South‘I both of them for charging.’ After ,j the gatie the Cail Vinnibomb Troi . I phy was presented to the enginI I , eers. ’ .; j , ‘_ I The so,cceF: final was played between Conrad Grebel and Renison i _ also under miserable and slippery field conditions. Fans from both 1, residences: joined in the vocal competition, but Renison’s *were the. loudest. as their team won 3-I ovei Conrad Grebel. ‘ ’ Mustapha Besar led Renison ’ to victory by scoring two of the #I ,’ three goals, while Jack Brown - ( scored the third. Dennis McGann was the, lone scorer for Conrad 1 Grebel. ’ LI- Renison then received the Mac. . , ’ kay Trophy. The cha-mpionship game in flag I ’ football was played under slightly ;i ’ better c,onditions at Seagram To-Stadium. Phys.iEd won a squeaker over St. Paul’s by a score of 22-21. * , ,; I -9 Gary LM&wen scored twotouch. . downs for ’ phys-ed on a kickoff + return and. d pass interception. ! Dave Martin intercepted another ’ , pass for the third phys-ed major. : j j ‘--;III I St.‘ Paul’s got two touchdowns f%rom Ross McInnis with Jim ‘.) 1 Davidson sco&g the third. Doug ’ Inkster made two successful converts and kicked a single to tie phys-ed 21-21. I : 7 The deadlock was broken in the #. I

i. i

\’

‘; jUten’s. Intramur~ls r / 1HOCKEY: Tues. Nov. 19 at Queens-

I

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’ [’

I

mount, 9-10 pm, Co-op vs Renison; IO-11 pm, Conrad Grebel vs~.St. Paul’s; ‘11412 pm, Eng B vs Arts. Wed, Nov. 20, at Wilson, lo-11 pm, Math vs Eng A. Thurs. ,Nov. 21 at. QueensmounLJO-11 pm, South vs Phgs Ed; 11-12pm, East vs West. I RECREATIONALoHOCKEY: Mon. Nov. 18 at Waterloo,’ 11-12 pm, Headhunters vs I2 Gross; at Wilson, 10-11 pm, RiffRaff vs Mechanical Turbines; 11-12pm. Coopers vs Oaks. Tues. Nov. 19, at Waterloo, 11-12 pm, Moose Heads vs Mech‘anical, Turbines. Wed. ‘Nov. 20 at Water‘loo, 11-9 pm. Headhunters vs Blades, At Wilson, ll-12,pm Oaks vs 12Gross. - practise SWINIMENG AND &ING for male and female intramural swirr team Tues. Nov. 19 and Thurs.. Nov. 21 from 7-9 pm at Athletic Swimming Pool.

; . JNRESTLXNG- Pkctises for tj6Intra - -mural :‘ywrestling Tournanient ,will bc ‘held ’ in ‘the Combatives Room’ of the Athletic Complex Nov. 18, 19 and S from 7-9 pm.- All competitors must at ‘tend at least one, practi& in order tf compete. 1

I

CURLING-CO-ED Curling Bonspiel i bein& held Saturday, Nov. 16 at the Gler briar from 8 am - 5 pm.

last minute of the game whexiKen ~ ity coach Ed De ‘Armonand’ var- . Bonnar kicked. a single to give :sity wrestlers. phys-ed both the.win and the Dela- , I .The competition itself corisists : hey Tr?PhY I’ ’

’ ,- ’

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.

three

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In hotikey’actioh!; , ’ ~ :match. The system is -ba.sic#y East I ,! 0 I- single elimination with a‘ c&@l~aT ; v’$eyth i. , ‘i ,,2,, South,‘.’ I;, 1 I:* tibn round and everyone hillhave ’ . ’ kI St. hr~ti~~s 3 Conrad Greh. OF-;l:;$ least two matches. ’ . ;;;-,:, ,,.:,i ,&.. C0-d~ . ,, “3 ,; ; ~~~~Pa$'s ' 'O 2 +ti ,’ i 0 ‘>;; There is no limit to the number ’ ‘Arts’ .- I ’ 3 . __&&i&e, ,.:,of .entries. All you have to, do, is ‘t ‘8; . '&ig..A ',\‘, ..L," 2 '/ Eng. B _ I show up in the Combatives room mentioned earlx . As of last Monday7 Coop. and>, ? for ‘the practices ‘\ . . Eng. B lead their respective leag- z-k‘ier* , ’ ues with, 4 points, while there was a. l::J’ For two days-Tuesday, Novemthree&way deadlodk in the Village c:: ber 26 and, Thursdqy, November ‘. league. Top scorers: are Bergsma ‘;.; 28-from 7 to 9 pm at the swimming (eng. B) in the faculty loop .with .:;; pool, there will -be a ‘CO-EDUCAJ five goals and three assists \for. ‘.I TIONAL ‘,;s~wimming _qnd 1 div& eight points; and Butis (phys-ed) ;: meet. Any participant can pracin, the -Village circuit. with. th,rYee ‘1: tice on November 18 and Novem- I goals and one ’ assist .for four ‘, ber 21, from 7 to 9 pm. Eventspoints : tionsist of: * 50 yd ba’ckstroke, 50 yd freestyle,,‘,’ On Monday November 25 and - ’ 50 yd breaststorki 5Oyd butterfly,. ~ Wednesday’ November 27 .from -7 100 yd free relq$!; %i$ving;, :lOO .yd: : to 11 pm in the combatives room ’ I, individual medley, -’100:yd medley Z of the athleticbuilding, men’s inrelay, 1~9O-ydco-ed medley relay ; tramural wrestling will be under- 1. ‘. * The- riumb&of -entries per male way. *and female unitis unlimited. with All participants must attend the exception of one team for the .at least one practice in order to rel&..per @it. %u can .enter by 1 compete. These practices will be telephoninglocql 2156 or by visitheld on Monday, Tuesday, and ’ ing the’ athleti& .-building-but all Wednesday nights from 7 to 9 pm. entries must be in by 3 pm,,Tues‘Instruction will be given by varsday, November 26. 1 . ‘_ 1. .

Top Scorers: Queen’s Keith Eqan Toronto Eric Walter Gord McLellan 1 ‘Waterloo George Springate McGill Ottavio Colosimo . Western Toronto Mike Raham H&o Lilles Queen’s Western Bruce MacRae Dave Fleiszer ’ McGill Top Rushers: McGill Dave Fleiszer, Toronto Mike Raham ’ Queen’s Ron Clark Waterloo Gord McLellan Western Bruce MacRae Queen’s Heino Lilles \

51 42 42 38 31, 30 30 30 30

Walt Sehr Passers: Don Bayne ~~~rge~,$7all.

>

Q&en’s , I McGill

Vic Alboini, Joe Cipparone Dave *Groves 1 Peter Quinlan

Pass Receivers: Eric Walter I 925 Rick van Buskirk 699 ’ Jay Graydoh‘ 391 Pete Bender 389 Bon ‘McIntyre 386 Don Manahan 367 Al Haehn

Toronto i

359 . s

55.5%

’ 47:9.0/o

Toronto Western WatbfIoo McMaster ’ McGill a Queen’s McMaster McGill Queen’s Waterloo Waterloo

47.1% 46.8% 46.3% 43.6% 377 348 257 266 223 2O!l

178 ’


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I four in. the chase for this year’s on the U ofM campus. / national collegiate football chamThe winners of the two games i pion. will meet in the 1College Bowl Waterloo’ Lutheran University final next Friday night in Toron, j1 Golden Hawks earned a date with to’s Varsity stadium. ’ 1/ i St. Mary’s University Huskies In other conference games last I 1 in tomorrow’s Atlantic Bowl by 8 week, St. Francis Xavier crbshed I/ defeating Loy‘ola Warriors 40-O Acadia 82-0, the wid& margin <of j The 10~s was Loyola’s first of , the year in the Country, St. Quni 30-21 &d the season. They had, gone into”. Stan’s beat Dalhousie I1 the Central Canada:Interbollegiate New Brunswick shut out Mount I, Football Conference play-off as Allison46-0. ’ In this conference, W&tern ‘1 the only undefeated team in. the * defeated McMaster 24-14 while ; country. ’ Waterloo was losing 48-8 to , St. Mary’s, who had clinched the Bluenose crown the week MTGillI before, had ‘the day off by virtue of Final Standings: d a last-day buy in the seven-team Bluenose GP w L Pts loop. r.6 5 1 lQ-: St. Mary’s Gueen’s .Golden Gaels ground St. Francis 6 5 1 10 ’ out a tough 14-6 win over Toronto St. Dunstan’s 6428 ' Blues to win the Yates Cup and UNB 6 3 3 6 advance to Sunday% WeStern -Acadia 6243 .' Bowl. Dalhousie ’ 6 2 4.'4 The game, which Toronto had , Mount Allison 6 0 ‘6 0 _to win in order to take the chamCCIFC-East GP W L Pts pionship, was a defensive battle Loyola 6 6 0 12 played on a muddy field. 6 '5 1 10 Bishops RMC -6428 ; -_ Toronto -- took _ a 6-O lead on two field goals but converted majors 6 2 Montreal .by Ron Clark and Heino ’ Ltiles ‘Macdonald 6 '1, gave the Gaels their win.\In 120 Sir George 6 0 mihutes of football this season CCIFC-West Varsity failed to scored a touch6 5 1 10 Waterloo Luth. 9j down against, Queen’s. Carleton 6 4 2 8, The University of Manitoba , Guelph 6 4 2‘8 Bisons proved their 25?8 victory 6 4 2 8 Ottawa .j over the Alberta Golden Bears 6 1 5" 2 += Laurentian” two weeks ago Was no. accident Windstir ,6 0 6 0 as they canie back last week to SIFL GP W L T Pts defeat the defending. Canadian Queen’s 7 6.1 0.12” ~ champs 10-7 in a sp?C&l play-off ,Toronto , 7.4 2.1 9 game played on the Bears’ own Western 7 4 3 j 8 turf. 7 3 4 0 6 McGill McMaster The win, put the Bisons into the 7 2 5 0 4 Western Bowl against Queen’s. Waterloo .7' 1 --5 1 3 I’ The game was originally scheduWcIAA GP‘ W L Pts led to ‘be played (in. Edmonton X * Mgnitoba ” 6 5 ‘1"lO , but was switched , to Winnipeg Alb&ta Te‘6 5 ‘k -la 6 2 ’ ‘.$‘. . 4” ‘, :, Calgary by Canadian College .Bowl .of f icials fOllOWi!lg Saturday’s result: It Saskatchewan -606~0 .s ._ I w '( )I... ., 1' --. , I-i/l! t I ’

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I GRADUATING IiU1969?

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sand dollars was sooneollected from the soldiers, and the man won the bottle was too:overcome with emotion to drink it. . When The Coca-Cola Company heard of this, they immediatkly sent two thousand dollars td be added to the fund-which means that a single bottle of Coca-Cola fetched six thousand dollars. . A refreshing thought !

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really centre.... wadyathink?..;....don’t campus ._know...couldn’t care less... the way I see it them commie radicals got no _ right to raise shit. ../: mean the admin was runnin’ it okay...no goddam riiht what so ever...just wanna see their names in the newspaper.. .for wat that’s worth.. .. which ain ‘t much...goddam rich bitch commie jewbo y runnin’ . that rag...more like ruinin’it l’d say...nobody gets a say ‘Jcept. him.-.. he just prints wat he damwell pleases..Vietnam...goddam swear words...Dow... student revolts from god knows where...an’ stupid nonsense ‘bout grapes...1 mean does he expect us to believe that crap...1 mean ya’d think from wat he3 printing‘ that we got no brains...christ he’d have uspickitin’ and protestin’ 24 hours a day... the way things are these da ys...cIo wns like him have given us good students such a bad name... why the last company I got interviewed by... they _ were thinkin’ of cancellin’ out...1 had a helluva time tryin’ to convince him I didn’t give a goddam

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. ..that I didn’t care about that radical nonsense... well we finally got ‘round to talkin’ ‘bout important stuff...like money an’ such...soun’s pretty good...shit for 450 a month I’d kiss anybody’s ass... gotta live in a bunkhouse... no -broads for miles... gonna go queer...pay your own way in an’ out . ..should be ‘bout 60 bucks . .. .one wa y...hey... lis.‘n l gotta bugger off....1 and me are gonna try to get smashed tonight..~.try t0 get served atthe hotel...like we did Tuesday...ain’t got no proof... that burns my ass...sure wish I was 2 I...them bastards in government’ got no right to tell me when I can drink... -but we only got hassled once... the guy was pretty -good about it... he let us in the next time...the jerk must figger we’re good customers...these locals gotta be a queer group a bastards...they gimme the creeps...all talkiti like a bunch a DPs...I’ll be goddammed if I can understand my landlord...1 swear he jus’ got offa the bqat...same dam thing with that new GE Prof...

how does he expect me to take notes .from that’ ‘. garbage....Czechoslovakia..there’s a greatexample...goddam tommies forcin’ their will on every\ body else...you’d swear those bastards are every_~ where...christ we can’t even have a Homecoming’ without - commjes ” perverts ‘n’ student, *power radicals all over the schedule...dam shit-disturber ’ chairman himself bin in trouble with the cops si;x . I or eight - times . ..idiots . .. whoring idiots everi, blamed one of them...damned if I can figger out how they get elected.:.can’t be bothered with their , damn elections...knew what they should .be doin’? . ..spendin’ all their time tryin’ to figger out how to get more broads on campus...ain’t pulled ‘offa piece in Chris’ mussa bin two weeks...‘member that .dog l picked up at the Village...what a loser not a bad body- tho’...what can y.ou expect from a‘ place like this...l’m gonna be so goddam glao when I get my whorin’ degree...then I can get the ‘> fuck outa this hole.....

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St. Jerome’s University

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Would

you forfeit

your dog for the burning?

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Maureen arts 2

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Sure, if his name was Shopsy.

Impossible, I just volunteered him last week to the SDS for a poisoning demonstration.

Lynne

Hampton

Mislai

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I would forfeit my mouse for the burning, but I don’t halve a-dog. \

Good grief, no! He’d,never forgive me for it.

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George

Lynn

Major

Price math 1

arts 2

I wouldn’t my dog but lieve in what are trying to

The last dog I had I burned her myself.

I don’t go out with dogs. -

give I bethey do.

this I would want lots of mustard and relish on him before the burn-

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STUDENTS! iAVE

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PERSONAL Any 100 wait future Boys.

.On Every purchase

girls interested bulletins. We’ll

in easy make. Alove all. Renison

Butterfly collection and etchings Saturday night, Renison College. Bring your nets and chooh. Lois + Max + Christopher. Wednesday November 6,7 Ibs I4 oz Fahamas-December 27-January 2, 7 days $195 includes: jet return transportation, hotel act., transfers. Contact CUS. 44 St George. Toronto 5 Ontario. Phone 92 I -26 1 I FOR SALE I pair of snow tires, used one season. for Firebird. 1 suede jacket, brown, size 40. 1 tuxedo with shirt size 40. Phone 743-4532 after 6 pm G.E. Cassette tape recorder with all accessories. Call-Lawrence 576-l 196 Phillips 4 track tape recorder. Cheap. Completely overhauled recently. Call Brendan 745-3501 Typewriter, Royal “Ultronic” portable with case. Fully electric including carriage return. Hardly used $150 742-5369 or Psych Bldg 309 WANTED GIRLS earn in your spare time. Free room and board plus money in exchange fo; light housekeeping duties and baby sitting. Phone Mrs. R.N. Jack 261 Union Blvd 576-25?4 DESPERATELY NEEDED: 4 broad-minded girls (no engineers) to share living accommodations with 4 broad-minded boys. Cannot afford to layout bread. This also is not a puton- Phone 578-4231 (anytime) Luv: Mike, Mick. Greg and Art DESPERATELY NEEDED: 1000 beer bottle caps RCMP, NARCS, and CHICKS welcom‘ed to contribute. Cannot afford to layout bread. All we can give is our love and kisses. Phone 578-4231 between 5 and 9. This is not a put on. Luv Mike, Mick, Greg and Art RIDE A VAILA BL E Residents of Timmins and area who are

Cops invade

going home tor Xmas and wish to save making a long trip by bus or car by flying home. Call 745-5876 Dave evenings TYPING Will do typing in my home for more information call 745-9245 Will type thesis for students in own home. Call after 6 pm 745- 1424 50~ per page HOUSINGAVAILABLE Wanted co-op students to share two bedroom apartment in Toronto for winter term. January to April. Contact John Pitkin 744-8875 Sublet 3 bedroom town house. Refrigerator and stove, to May 15, 1968 available immediately 743-8407 :. 2 bedroom furnished apartment available for winter term. Married couples only. W Steenburgh, 326 Erb Street West, Waterloo 743-9953 1 bedroom furnished apartment, prefer married couple small child. January to April 1969. P. Almquist, 36 Talbot Street, Apartment 407 Kitchener, 742-9 190 Room, board, 3 or 4 students male, winter term I5 minutes to university $18 M. Wellman, 3 I9 Erb West, Waterloo 744-5726 Furnished light housekeeping room for male student to share with another student. Private bath parking. Lakeshore Village Waterloo 744-6849 2 bedroom furnished apartment for mar&d couple. January to April 1969. R.J. Beach 280 Phillip Street B3-16 Waterloo. Furnished apartment for 3 to sublet for winter term 2.8 miles from Uniwat. $165 per month 745-6980 I HOUSING - WANTED One bedroom apartment for married student for winter term. Call 532-4553 Toronto January to April 2 bedroom apartment for 4. engineering co-op students. Call 578-4966 Co-op students require 2-3 bedroom apartment for winter term. Contact Rob Stuart \’ 48 Wilton, Brampton.

U of Madrid

water tanks MADRID (&PI ) -The Univer- _ and two armored sity of Madrid was occupied Monwith jet hoses stood ready to quell day by hundreds of police called any outbreak. on campds by the school adminisLast week, students ransacked tration to prevent further violthe dean of law’s office and burnence. ed portraits of General France. ’ The university has been plagued with student unrest over univer,sity expulsion of two law student - report leaders. About 30 cops entered the The class was scheduled to be school of liw and tore down postmath 340B with prof Paul Cress. , ers denouncing “repression” ‘by The date was Tuesday, 12 Novemadministration officials. ber. Outside the school, two, busAt 12:,20, since the prof hadn’t loads of policemen; 10 police -cars arrived, the class got up and left. ,-

Classroom

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462 The CHEVRON

Credit- Jewellers.

KITCHEN1

club hosfs intercollegiate

The bridge club will host the 1968-69 intercollegiate bridge championship in the campus center Jan. 18-19,1969. Toronto, Queen’s, McGill, McMaster and Bishop’s are expected to’send teams to play. McGill will be defending the championship it won last year in Toronto.

, The University of Waterloo will be represented by four teams. The event is open to all teams but only teams consisting of registered students are entitled to win the prizes and the trophies. There will be no -admission charge to spectators.-


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1 I find xthe viewpoint’ of -many ‘activists refreshing, but there are ,a ,few currently popular kideas. I feel should be challenged. Activists . have deplored the “co,nservatism” of engineers. At some universities, they refuse entry to Dow Chemical interviewers. Perhaps it is significant that Dow is far more. engineer-. intensive than, ‘say, the govern1 ment. The government places the orders and sets the policy-why not keep the government interviewers out? But how many engineers work in teaching and public admini-

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stration? Are the predominantly. Sam McLaughlin ’ would love to build a car that would last forarts-oriented activists letting the ever. But -who would be willing engineers pay for their principles, . to pay for it? ,while. leaving their ~own. future exploit are I How many, engineers jobs secure ? And teachers the working class by selling them probably more responsible for the attitudes that :lead to war life .insUr?nCe? . NOW if you than ,is a Dow engineer making want to harrass an industry, there’s the one to go after. soap. And you won’t jeopardize any,Now the activists have accused one:s job but Your own. Sam McLaughlin of “perfecting If you want to stop the dropping built-in obsolescence”. Engineers design within the cost constraints. of napalm, don’t go after Dow. If you force them ’ to drop the set by sales departments. Sales contract, the government might staff, who are , usually artsmen, make it themselves. Then the are various marketing techniques to determine how much people cost will go UP, and so will The changes you want can or will pay for their pro-, taxes. made must be made by the ,peoducts. Believe me (and I workfor him) Pie or bY their’ agency, the government. Protest within the university is , fine, ‘because it is effective in showing the people and ,, the government what your views are. But picking on individual L companies like Dow; or men like McLaughlin, can only prejudice your cause. . RUSSELL J. BAIRD mech eng 4A , ~

ARTS

Sundiay, INovember ‘h7 4:oo t ‘ADMISSION 5Oc Box Office, ext 2126 t Creative Arts Board, t Federation of Students

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nificant -for me after I’ slipped . back into the crowd. A small orieni ’ > ta1 student came up to me with a big smile on hi-s face and said;. “Let me shake your. hand: That .; _, was great.” The point I would like to make, is this. There will be. a lot of can- ~. didates trying to sell you hotdogs ;,I in the coming election. I dhink everyone should listenvery care- . fully to make sure they know what is being sold before they buy any of it. DENNIS RINDSEM ’ arts 2 , ls ,&

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I am, or at least was, a wishy1,’ washy, middle-of-the-road, semi- b reactionary engineer. I #am completely -opposed to the use of . : 1 , ’ 1 confrontation tactics a la campus’ >i .I center fiasco, and the .brainwash’ ing of the orientation program. .. As such one would expect me ,to j be pushing the Bergsma, band- / \ ! wagon with all my strength. Fortunately, I a,m also in favor of ‘*. : ,: ,, 1 freedom (particularly of speech). y Reviewer got wring soloist , Wednesday I was on. my .way . ’ in, Butterfield ‘concert to hand in a lab when I stopped , I , to hear Glenn Berry, make. some ’ .Congratulations are in orderrather good (though completely the fine reporting staff of the redundant) points about Vietnam. . ‘j, Chevron has done it again. Jim Someone sa.w myllab and my . ’ Klinck has proven himself unqualcoat (activist type) and immedi- ’ : * ified to review any live band. In . ately assumed I was a pamphlei short his article, Butterfield Blues teer. My lab was burned, by this y . .’ , band tops Lightfoot concert blew fellow who later identified himself away any credibility that could as John Bergsma’s campaign be attached to Klinck’s reporting manager . -----’ Y and reviews. I r If you don’t agree’with it, burn I_ I don’t understand ’ how Elvin Ts. @$, .,yh$, Bqggr&s. cam; . Bishq could ; have -whippedoi$ ,:a ‘,‘ it, j I pa@& ’ ,s@Jrs?T That: -is, +f& his ;: L 9 hi0 in ‘I want you’, 6r play a ’campaign rPlanager did! ’ I, “wi’erd solo” in ‘We been driftin” Isn’t this just the same as the as he -wasn’t even there. Buzzy _ Fieton was, ‘though, and should re- policy, attributed to Peter -Warrian ceive credit for his fine guitar Only directed in the opposite ’ direction?- - I’m afraid I can con- work. I don’t know how Klinck \ , missed this point as Butterfield done neither. KELL.Y . B; 1 WILSON i. (’ introduced Fieton to the .authem eng 3B x-e dience . Before, publishing this ,letter- we: -. One ‘more thing-the Butterfield Band didn’t play ‘Get off ’ my checked with Bergsma’s cam. back,. woman’. They played ‘Get paign manager, Andy Anstett, ; and he c&firmed that ’ Jce , had out of my life, woman’,. There is a burnt pamphlets . b&ng handed difference. out at the demonstration., L.~ I don’t know why- Klinck complains about people, leaving the L-the l+ttitor :. I ‘, \I 1 i concert- as he obviously’ doesn’t know what was going on. He : &mti of ‘burn the dog’ should have left with them to &joy something he could have show burbarii);: \ * of campus ’ understood a iittle better, such as The Monkees. ” At the-moment I’m feelitig sick ,I PAUL’DUBE to .my- stomach. ‘, ’ . : ’ arts 1 > r . The Radical. Student Movement ,. . / advertised’they. would burn. a dog .., as a symbol of “protest of ‘Dow ;; . , ~-,This’guy burired the hotdog Chemical’s presence on ‘campus. ‘, und wants toa expkrin-, why The plot was apparently to be ’ quite simple. They hoped to get ., ; I thought the “See a og burned _ -’ ’ with napalm” demons 4ration was a lot of people out who would be of a.dog. ;, 1 ’ a good idea. It showed a lot of upset at the immolation imagination ‘on the part of-. whoHoweber the dog -would not be : I ever thought-it up. burned-instead it’ would be point- . But I felt the ending was a little ed out that keverybody was upset.I .. weak.‘. The students realized’ the about the dog.’ What about the : whole thing was ’ a put-on and a people in Vietnam? ’ _-“I dog would not be burned. They Unfortunately the plan backwere, however expecting somefired. The majority there seemed . thing more than a sermon. determined to see a dog burned. At That is why I got a hotdog from one point there even was an organu. . the cafeteria- and burned it inthe ized chant: “Burn the dog! burn ,c , square in front of the camerathe dog! ” I f men. I realized at the time this , In the face of such barbaric I. i1 was -a rather paradoxical action from the supposedly R which could be interpreted in one behavior of the . \.. ’ ‘I. enlightened f . members of. two ways. I leave it. up to those community, it is hardly . ’ : who did not see the paradox at the, university that nobody gives a . time to figure out the side they ,_ surprising damn about the horrible slaughter, ,:’ ‘s *- missed. going on daily halfway .around ..” ,* ; I -burned the hotdog because I was in agreement ‘with the reathe wor1d* ’ DON GREGOR$ . - ’ *: sons for having the demonstra; arts 2% tion. The whole ‘event became sig. J ‘. / I ”

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I Give~ourselfsome elegant ’ . presence for the hoEdays Give yourself that good feeling that comes when you ’ know you’re right - and you’re ahead of the crowd. I Poised.- ‘Assured. Correct. A double-breasted jacket, ‘>, perhaps, and a ruffled dress shirt. Or a Nehru shirt done’for the holidays in satin. A turtle-neck wornfor it be your evening dress. ‘69 is the year of change-will ~ new year? . 21.3lKing

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During the crisis last July, at Simon Fraser university over the. resignation of the, university’s president, ‘it was suggested that the new officer should be a man such as the progressive, student-oriented critic of production-line .education, John Seeley. Seeley had been- a Sociology professor at York university in Toronto and Brandeis in Boston for the five years preceeding his joining the Ford Foundation’s Center for Democratic Studies-in California. He- has been widely read by both refor-mist students and progressive faculty. ‘Gn, this page, Seeley is responding to the suggestion of his presidency. 4n wlew of the pending resignation of president Gerry

Hagey, the Chevron believes considerable influence when t for the unitiersity of Waterloo

Seeley’s message should have the choice of a new president is made.

faculty: ’ j responsibility AflY there may be is clouded, because everywhere the powers that. belong properly solely to the students and the faculty were usurped by the representatives of power and money in-the boards -of administrations. The sole reasons given for this usurpation are two barefaced lies : that these men *do represent the public interest, and that they (or someone other than : the scholars). must exercise- -oversight over the .money it’ costs the taxpayers* to -operate the universities. \ , The second is the greater lie. The prosperity of every .province and the wealth of every state -rests on its universities-the scholars have made these men rich and powerful. For every penny a scholar has “Cost,” the rich’ and powerful have got back a - dollar or a -thousand. The inventions they exploit rest upon un-iversity-based science. Almost every valid idea’\ they hold was hatched in these halls. y y’ And we even had to teach them at the last how to run their ‘- businesses so that they would not have continuous turmoil in them or bring down their whole economy in -absolute ruin as they nearly ’ did in 1929. Any state or province that lost its university would sink. to the condition of backwoods Tennessee or King Leopold’s Congo almost ’ overnight.

Largelv, no doubt because of and ought to-dismantle and prethe mail strike but also because! , sent universities, just as blacks ‘I‘~-#&e. b&h _ mu& ’ a:away on \ here begin to burn the cities, other business : I have only just unless the authorities involved ’ seen the Sun’s August 1 account _show credible signs of eagerness - of -the ‘temporary settlement of to apply appropriate remedies - SF& , thorny p.roblems. ’ fast. - I have also only just seen other ’ Tn both cases it is “academic” . ‘I documents relevant to the .decisin the wbrst sense of that word ions made. For the sake of _t to ask whether negroes -and stu_ everyone involved I think it imdents are being orderly or nice, partant to make my position , or have well articulated plans as crystal clear-as I -have tried to to what thev want. do in the case of two other ‘universities searching for a .pres- , Five years to go .ident ;’ _What is true in both cases As I said before, during and is that we have a short, period * after my visit to Burnaby, I of time-five years would be a I have not been, was not and am wildly high estimate-to undo not a “candidate” for. anything the effects of a century or two especially not a.university presiof folly, wrongdoing, sloth, blind-dency in these times. ’ ness, arrogance, and blatant My congratulations, but also mistreatment of the powerless my condolences, go to Dr. Strand. because they were powerless. ~ Anyone’ who accepts a university ’ We are closer in both cases presidency, or even keeps one, i to the situation of the Frendh these days, under the obtaining\ who left Algeria too late than to conditions, is either a fool and that of the’ British who left ‘Keep it free villain, or a saint and hero willing India barely in time: . , The only public interest in to -kill himself attempting to And the responsibility in every the university is to keep it free j hold a line that-cannot and ought case is on the b,oards of the .-and -generously endowed so it not to be held. various universities who’ were may be, a bastion ’ of learning, supposed to represent political .The past is dead . social criticism and the initiation statesmanship and the general Nothing like the kind of univerof redemptive-social action. public interest, and the presidents sity that has existed in the past . And it is this these men who who were supposed to represent can, I believe,‘continue much long: represent the powerful private educational statesmanship and the er into the future, andthe changes interests against the public good interest. of vital learning. that are required- are not to be ’ Compared to what -they have _ can neither do nor, so far as ‘ . -. achieved by tinkering with the _ they can prevent it, allow. done, the work of King George /-. - existing structures. I would not again play in that III and Lord North who lost . -- ‘ ~‘Nor is there much time to game, nor will now the best this country needlessly inthe -carry out a peaceful transition students or the best professors. Pursuit of, petty interests,. looks . ’ j as the events& Berkely, Columbia, Nor would. I again try,to reform -1 Stanford, The London School of ’ like high statesmanship.’ a system I deem irreformable. The plight of. our universities Economics, Nanterre, The SobonThree years at “York fighting is. everywhere the work of such . _I ne, and Berlin attest. for the most elementary canons men, and I- should not care to \I believe that students all over &,. of decency and plain-dealing-and i the world and many. faculty. will”join their number., ;a5 ‘464 The CHi%RON \ .

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‘faculty and student rights; and ‘another three years at &and&, similarly engaged, are enough., * Two defeats and ,one &tory. .The victory, at Brandeis, proved that a department can be delight.fully run, (at no loss to scholarship either) as a participatony democracy of students and professors. ’ The defeats-proved the power of those) two administrations-at least, at that time-to force even mild demands for reform either into exile’ or into revolusionary incandescence. My message to Simon Fraser was then essentially this : -function as a center of soci$ critism; attract rn precisely those priceless people it now revolts and forces OM; and become radically- dedicated to playing its proper part in leading the needed revolutions ., in our times.

The free people

, And now a last word to explain the “other business” I have been about (referred to in my first paragraph) because it shows in a measure where I stand. I have been with and among the “Free People” of San Francisco, the protestors at Berkely, the hippies in the communes of love in the of love in the’california hills. And, this week-together with’ a Bishop deported from South ’ Africa for feeding blacks-in Chicage concelebrating a communion and aiding a sunrise service for the children of love and joy and peace in Grant Park AND for the fear-frozen National Gardsmen ’ and hate-crazed Chicago police through the night of violence in which the latter wantonly beat senseless even the “clean for ‘Gene” kinds on the McCarthy staff in the Conrad Hilton hotel Why was the Bishop there? ,Because that’s where the children of God are and the church ought to be. Why was I there? Becausethose are my people, and that’s where the university is or ought to be. If that’ makes me a candidate for any university presidencv anywhere any time some strange, ‘moving and hopeful things ‘will have-had to occur! - ’


The :company he ,

The entrv of John’ Bergsma makes the presidential race real. -Now there is a real alternative. ’ Bergsma is a student who has a comparatively fair idea of how this university operates. i He has some of the experience necessary to handle the job of president. \ j He. also offers the electorate a very different type of leadership than Brian Iler does. Bergsma is openly conservative in his attitude and has longed opposed the extension of the federation’s activities into activist causes. Yet he is no reactionary, believing’as he I does in some qualitv. of education and related programs. ,’ Most important for the upcoming campaign itself-we believe _ Bergsma will be honest. We think he will address himself to the issues under debate and use/ facts not convenient lies. ~ Unfortunately ‘he. may not have surrounded himself with like-thinking and-like-purposed: individuals. One apparant. cohort is Reuben Cohen, ‘a declared ~ presidential ’ &ndidate who didn’t file anomini. &ion. Cohen traded.his support of $&?unified moderate ticket for an anticipated executive post under ’ -Bergsma if he should win. ,Regrettably Cohen is ’ a very : confused fellow right now. ’ While conde’mning the present council for being unrepresentative he has publically called 50 percent of’ the electorate ~‘l= ~.l’anP)-~~fie~~‘“*-. --. -.\I “stupid Ti , .1 *

,’ And although he “has said. he i wants to see honest campaigning, I: ’ he .: , has blatantly told some un-i,‘ I knowing, people that Brian Iler 1’2, controls the Chevron and will ,get --free,ads in it ,when he knows that isn’t true,

Mavbe it’s just double-think ( a severe case of tactlessness but,: 1 if nothing else, Cohen’s professed IllOtiVeS finish him Off. He has told many people he only really wants to hold an office because itpwill look good on job applications when he graduates and _ _enhance an anticiphted political career., , The voters were right when they turned him down at the polls last i year when he ran for math rep . . on student council. Andv Anstett is another member of the’Bergsma team, and another one who should. be ‘thanked and dismissed. Anstett has been trving for a long time to get a senior’ position in student government without I -having to spend the time working his way up- to it or suffering posl , sible defeat at the polls. Bergsma shouldn’t play ladder for him. As campaign manager An&t may also prove to be a deficit on c the balance sheet. He has some politicalabilities but tends to offset them with _huge blunders (like . burning Kellv, Wilson’s lab notes’ see feedback page 25) and a hardto-work-with nersonalitv. Anstett is also at least partially responsible for a Bergsma press release that suggested Iler was running on a pro-violence platform, a -charge not only untrue but also slightly out-of-date as -far-as being.belieiable: - + ..* The president is onlv the team captain on \council. He will be known by the team he leads. Hopefully Bergsma will increase his viability as an alternative by ~~~~~ng he can Pick good Corn.

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. \ \ “Thank you for con&g in, Professdr. I wanted to discuss .~UP method oj ,. ’ - handling student unrest. ” , j/ \

7 Coop,etiation impossible .

There has been a lot of talk Yet $Dr. Ted Batke, who was 3 about respect for and cooperation chairman of the university governwith the administration.. \. -merit study committee, and a : : Radicals feel cooperation is , number of facultv members comT next to imposslbie in manycases pletelv avoided ’ any discussion and respect for many senior- a&a- of such basics. Instead Batke and ’ demic and administrative dimi.n: others insisted on making jokes ishes day by day’. ’ ’ ‘I . p about the obviously sincerely .felt Moderates like to feel there is statements,of students. h--e It is also worth noting the ab-. some hope left and that progress : can be made without recourse to sence from this meeting of m.any. action or reference to any sort of of the opponentsof .activists“ t&ct-: ’ . I) its. They weren’t ,.able (or is it power base. Unfortunately most moderates willing? 1 to hear the many .comA:, 1 1 * have never been, in the I position plaints about the way this, univer‘1 , .,1 to have to, deal with the’ uni-,I sity _.-opera&es.both,r.educa&onally , versitg’s power structure and so and administratively1 It , ,is . ex: have never had to experience the tremelv unfortunate that one .of ! frustrations of. dealing *.with these the,.major presidential candidates c was not there to express his views ’ ,/ men. /I ‘s_Unfortunatelv. too, not too many on.how cooperation can be achievof these moderates or conserva- ed so that the .proper channels . !/ tives were at the meeting on uni- can be productive. versity government in the campNo ‘attempt was made.by Batke’ , _ us center Tuesday night. If they or others Vto discredit, or explain had been thev might have caught away the many complaints made I ; a glimpse of’the total inability of by the-student representatives on senior admin-istrators >and some the university j .- * government cornfacultv members to even compre- mitt&n their minority report. ’ ; but most need not be kept so handhend some of the problems manv.I It has often been shown that - .” ’ ily on file. students were ‘raising. . any student who accepts the &all- ’ ‘! Recentlv the Ontario police The I horrible, thing is /this. The . *enge of a student government poschiefs decided they would like questions being raised were ition and tries to bring about re-:, , everyone to carry an identifica’ basic to anv discussion of how we forms, however minor, will event& ’ tion card-and require it to be ’ live and ‘work together. Thev all? be radicalized by the frustrashown anytime the powers-that-be dealt with interpersonal relation- tion of dealing with an entrenched ’ desire. qhips, with how structures ‘power elite in the universitv.” I An ’ Rather than move in that direc(whether they be boards of gover- elite not of men but of structures I tion, it is time the necessity of ID nors or classroom lecture situacards for students was seriously f tions) ’ affect people, with . how filled by men. We wish those people who- run Ai reconsidered. people learn, .with the future’ of the federation in the future well j , 1 Innocent until proven guiltv is our world, with Iqve, with brother- in their dealings with Batke and i the simplistic way of expressing hood. ’ 1 company. the right that is being violated. Sure a lot of these ‘things would be helpful in apprehending criminais-totalitarian states have . , used them for years. a Canadian hiW3ity PreSS member The Chevron is published Tuesdays and Fridays by the _1 Even if somehow we saw the publications board of the Federation of Students, University of Waterloo, Content :is independent‘ ’ police state tendency as harmless, of the publications board, the student council and the universjty administration, Offices in the campus center, phone 619) 744-8111 ,.locd 3443 (news),. 3444 (ads), 3445.(editor), night-line incidents like Rhea’ Palmer’s tell 744-O111, telex 0295-748. Publications board chairman: Geoff Rouleh, ., 11,000 copies’ . why ,individual rights must be , # protected.editor-in-chief: Stewart Saxe II managing editor: Bob Verdun news editor: Ken Fraser I a

.

An dunce oi prevention ’

l

People who campaign to protect and strengthen the individual’s basic and human rights are usualIv ignored or dismissed’as pathological protestors until a major breach of rights occurs. .‘One of those breaches was the I release of shooting-victim Rhea Palmer’s picture to the K-W Record after her, parent’s refused T to do so. Certainly the information-services depar’tme,nt was wrong to release the photo, but they apparentIv don’t know any better. And-the K-W ‘Rag !_ is too concerned with, ’ the public interest to care about / t the public. \ The real offender is the convenient collection of information the ’ registrar keeps for himself land anybody h.emight confide in. Some .of this information is necessary, .- . \ .

/’ _-

It’s (just plain ridiculous . _,e the registrar’s office has ,to use’ the student, directory’ to find out where students are ’

*aletter-to the editor in the Uni; versity of Western Ontario Gazette began “re - your. , ‘biased / editor-

l

:,197

.

h featureseditor: Alex Smith sports editor: Paul Solomonian. photo editor: Greg Wormald editorial associate: Steve Ireland ’ ‘Noticeable in their presence among the usual gang‘of idiots this issue: Jim Bowman, circulation manager; Jim Klinck, assistant news editor; Rod Hickman., entertainment coordinator; Pete Huck, Toronto bureau; Nivek Nosretep, Soviet Bureau, Jim Keron, Tom Ashman in absentia, Wayne Smith, Alan Lukachko, Nancy Murphy, George Loney, John Parlane apd Anni, Bill Sheldon, Cyril Levitt please come home, Ted Lonsdale, David Youngs, Lynn Knight, N-or-m Sergeant, Hans Wiesner Donna McCollum, Phil Ford, Kip Sumner, Wayne Bradley, Dave Thompson, Dave X’Stephenson, Grass who stayed -all night, Teddy Singh, Tom Purdy,John Pickles, Rob Brady, Hal Tonkin, Crow, Bill ‘Brown, Glenn Pierce, Brenda-Wilson, Jim Allen, Mjke Fagen, Pat Stuckless, Irene Mitchell, Brenda Nicolichuk, Bob Jobnson, Sydney Nestel. ,-

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I / 1 ’ I 1 /


I

The eyes are not. here There are no eyes here In this valley of dying stars ’ _ In this hollow valley , m.. . . . -I tlls broken jaw I pf our lost kingd I

We are the hollow men We are the stuffed men Leaning together Headpiece filled with straw; Alas! . .m - uur dried voices, wher 1 We whisper together Are quiet and meaningless Aswind in dry grass / - Or rats’ feet.over broken glass 1 , In our dry celiar \ Shape without form, shade without colour, ’ Paralysed force, gesture without motion ; , * I ’ Those who have crossed 1 8 With direct eyes, to’death’s other Kingdom Remember us-if at a-II-not as lost V,iolent souls, but onjy ’ As the hollow men / i Y ’ The stuffed men. I

.I

Eyes. I dare not meet in dreams’ In death’s dream kingdom These do not&pear: ’ There, the eyes are Sunlight on a broken’column There, is a tree swinging And voices are In the’wind’s singing More distant and more solemn _ Than a fading star. ’ Lot me be no nearer -. ’ In d-eath’s bream kingdom &et ;me also wear ’ Such deliberate diguises ‘( hat’s coat, crowskin, crossed staves r., In’s field ’ . Behaving as the wind behaves . No nearer1 4 ’ Not that final meeting ’ t ’ In tha twilight kingdom., r t . / r This Is the dead Land .. This is cactus land . Here the stone images Are raised, here they receive r” The supplication of a dead man’s hand Under the twinkle of a fading star:

.

In death’s other Waking aione

kingdom

In this last of meeting places We grope together And avoid speech Gathered on this Ibeach ofthe

.

;

Sightless, unless The eyes reappear As the perpetual star Multifoliate rose Of death’s twilight kingdom The hope only’ Of empty men,. -

,

tumid

H&e .we go round the prickly pear Prickly p&r prick/y pear ~Here we go round the prickly pear d t five o’clock in the morning. I i

Between And the Between And the Falls the

Between And the J t Between And the Falls the J

.

,

river.

.,

the idea reality the motion act Shadow For Thine is the Kingdom .. the conception creation I the emotion response . ! Shadow ’ Life is very long ’

’ ‘Between the desire And the spasm Betweenthe potency I And the existence ’ Between’ the essence And the descent Falls the Shadow For Thine is the Kingdorb 1 . For Thine is . Life is For thine is the This I$ the way the woitd ends this is the way the w&Jd ends This is the way the w&Id ends ’

Thomas

Stearns

Eliot

,

I /


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