1968-69_v9,n32_Chevron

Page 1

Volume

Two

9 Number

Wuterloo

Students

32

UNIVERSITY

students

Background

and analysis

page 3

The 19-member guild of reporters and sub-editors has been on strike since November 2. The main cause was the purchase of the Examiner by multimillionaire newspaper baron Lord Thomson of Fleet. The staff of the Chevron had been approached by two Toronto members of the guild to help the Peterborough unit maintain an effective picket line. Because of the small size of the guild, members of the craft unions-typesetters and pressman-have been crossing the lines. They are sympathetic with the anti-Thomson cause but face action from the publisher if they won t cross a thin picket line. Members of the Chevron staff, along with members of the radical student movement, joined student journalists and others from University of Toronto, York, Ryerson, Trent and a participant from Waterloo Lutheran, in a student contingent of about 110 that arrived by chartered -buses early Friday morning. They were joined by the local guild and Toronto guild members and managed to keep most of the craft workers out of the plant for several hours. The publisher, determined to break the picket went out several times in his car to pick up the workers who still lingered in the

Canadian University

Press

BURNABY (CUP)-Simon Fraser University students staged a teach-in massive campus-wide yesterday following their rejection of a strike by a 2-l margin Friday. The vote, 2,428 - 1,181 against the strike, reversed a decision of about 3500 student.s at a general meeting Wednesday. There were three underlying issues in the abortive strike call: 0 administration use of the RCMP to arrest 114 students occupying the administrative center. l dissatisfaction with the university senate’s treatment of the admissions policy issue. 0 acting administration president Ken Strand s repressive handling of the whole affair. - The mood of the campus has fluctuated wildly since the bust over a week ago. It was clear in

news

area going through the formalities of checking the size of the picket line periodically. Picketers attempted to impede the car s progress, but police converged on them and the car usually got through without incident. The occasion when the arrests occured, the publisher had been particularly aggressiveto the extent of physically pushing slow-to-clear picketers on the sidewalk with his car. The student picketing which had begun 6 am was given up in early afternoon when significant numbers of workers were in the plant. The Toronto students had a previous commitment and had left at noon. The picketing action was reasonably effective, but the Examiner still appeared-late, without any local news, and smaller than usual. Nineteen of twenty-two eligible reporters and sub-editors are members of the guild, and a twentieth joined Friday. Previous to

U of T sit-in TORONTO (CUP)-University of Toronto students have threatened a protest sit-in for tomorrow unless the university administration makes public a secret document on long-range development plans at the univessity. Over 500 students voted overwhelmingly at a Friday general meeting to go ahead with the planned sit-in. The meeting took over three hours and finally set two demands to be met by 6 pm Tuesday or the sit-in will take place. They want the brief published and a discussion of it at an open meeting of the president s council, (the council consists of seven students and seven professors. It is expected the students will not have to sit in because the executive committee of the board of governors may accede to their demands.

Tired SW ballot by Allen Garr

Waterloo,

Ontario

Tuesday,

December

3, 1968

arrested

sumort

Waterloo students were arrested Friday while picketing with a large group of university students supporting a strike of the newspaper guild against the Peterborough Examiner. John Bender and Rod Hay were arrested when a group of picketers on the sidewalk tried to prevent publisher W.J. Garner from entering the parking lot. They were charged with obstructing an officer and impeding the public. Both were released about four hours later on $250 bail each. The newspaper guild raised the bail and will provide legal defense.

OF WATERLOO,

Friday s effort, the guild had kept workers out for about an hour some mornings and one whole Saturday with the help of local labor. Last Saturday, they would have prevented publication of the paper except that the publisher ha-d the Saturday paper made up the night before with old news. The only other arrest during the strike was another studentfrom Trent University in Peterborough arrested on a similar charge the Saturday previous. Police have been very cautious in handling the guild members themselves. Besides picketing the Examiner plant, guild members have been canvassing subscribers to cancel during the strike and picketing major advertisers to put pressure on them to withdraw ads. The guild claims 2000 subscriptions out of a total circulation of 26,000 have been cancelled. The publisher denies this.

possible The disputed brief outlines development plans for U of T over the next seven years and discusses : 0 changes in the medicine and engineering faculties l plans for reduction, expansion and elimination of various faculties 0 new structures for university government 0 construction priorities Administration president Claude Bissell had originally asked s t u d e n t president Steve Lang-don to attend a confidential meeting of the committee on university affairs to observe discussions on the brief. Landgon rejected the invitation and said students and faculty should have the opportunity to discuss the proposals before they went to the committee.

against

Friday s meeting of over 2000 students called to announce the strike vote, that students were tired of the crisis and had chosen the Students foGa Democratic Society (SDU) as target for their abuse. The SDU contingent of about 100, including many of the kids busted by the RCMP, filed into the meeting led by a student carrying a large wooden cross. They all intoned, in a Gregorian chant style, Strand s latest decree, this one about the teach-in. The march-in came more as a musical interlude than an impressive political action. Their playlet seemed absurd in the midst of the many very tired students who loudly applauded the results of the strike vote. Student president Rob Walsh said, “‘it was unfortunate strategically to have a strike vote now. Because it was 2-l against the strike doesn t mean the issue has

cwilcik

strike,

been resolved.. . .114 still face charges. Student senator Stan Wong, one of the main driving forces behind the mass student organization over the past two weeks, agreed the strike vote had been called far too soon. He said students voted against the strike because they were worried about its effect on their futures. The term at SFU ends next week. All students must write exams in this trimester university. The latest in a series of offensive administration declarations hit the campus just as the strike vote ended. It followed an information office handout last week that presented a distorted; pro-administration picture of the crisis. In Friday s statement, Strand said he “whole-heartedly supported the teach-in as a means of unearthing and discussing the

-Dave

X, the Chevron

No it’s not Sonny Vern and his harem. Its not e~en a darkhorse candidate for administration president displaying his assets. It 2 only Treasure Van, just in time to gire your sweetyoung-thing a useless knick-knack for Christmas. It’s JYXU last chance since World University Service packs it in this year- the bureaucracy was too expensive.

heads

into exams

problems of the university and SOciety, but insisted classes must go on during the teach-in. While encouraging faculty members to attend the teach-in, Strand insisted faculty members give lectures for those who want them. It had been the. intention of students, teaching assistants and arts faculty, who voted Thursday to support the teach-in. to replace normal classes with the teach-in, and continue until the issues were resolved. . Ed Gibson, a senator and geography professor, told the Friday meeting he strongly resented Strand s attempts to “subvert the teach-in and insisted the affair was urgent and took precedence over regular course material. The school s senate met last night to discuss the week s turbulence. It was expected to review

again its study of admissions policy at SFU, the issue that began the crisis two weeks ago. . At its meeting November 20, senate set up an admissions review and grievance committee made up of two faculty members and two students. Of the two students one will be a student senator appointed by senate and the other a student elected by the student body at large. As well, the senate launched an investigation in to admissions policy discrimination unearthed during the three-day occupation last week. The investigation will be conducted by a faculty member who will be “advised by a committee of three faculty. members and three students elected by their peers. The senate decisions were taken after a militant group walked out of the meeting and took over the administration building.


‘_ i’ L’

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CAROL Universit>y

r--

_*

‘failed miserably _in U.-S: election 1

.)

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‘Junior-Choir

Carol

Singing 1

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by Jane Schnkder

r’

Chevron staff

‘“Eazh candidate >.1 beaten ”

.

face change. Power is still firmly . in the hands of the well-fed’ and well-housed. Those devoted to party chose the one and law and order hold most likely to be stability the status quo.

-Why not abolish the electoral college? All observers say it should go-but what would go in its place? “Nor are the blacks mu,ch of a revolutionary _ force,” Craig says, “for% most want ’ to get further into the middle class, so they. supported Humphrey overwhelmingly. ’ I The new politics failed here.

SO said Dr. Gerald CFaig, ‘guest.. “This was sup--rposeaiy - _da-- me L1-_ year ______ speaker for the historty ‘society ’ of the new’ polit ,ics, ’ ’ said Craig. ‘i __._ last Thursday. ‘ 6It was said the h32tUri~g t0 an candidates must audience of about 90, he pointed take a &-CL:‘e~irute -stand on the Vietout the nature and shortcomings -1 the nam war, ana understand elections _ plight . of American presidential of ‘the blat ks. The old issues as seen in 1968. new goals ‘were dead. New style, Craig’s disarmingly frank apand objectives-w He ex.pects the old systems Jere needed. But, , proach to introducing his topic be kept for a long it was the old ’ will. probably in eachparty, caught the attention of those precomtime. Why? Its intricate, politics which pr evailed:’ ’ sent. He-began by. saying it is a plicated nature - has withstood 8 , . questionable pleasure .to talk on ’ One reason for this could be the much buf.feting. People don t topic for “does anyone really median age of. U.S. voters-45 want to. see power unduly conwant’ to remember the 1968 years of age. They are@not young centrated and centralized. And elections? They were so depress:, people, even if they all agreed ~ Americans still want to limit ing and dull. , . and all voted. Therefore if a the role of government in their i I An election, he said, should candidate appeals only to youth, lives. i give the voters a chance and a he won’t make it.‘, As Alexis de Tockville stated choice. This one didn t. It was “University people of my age, ’ in the 1830’s, “the American tradi. ,.marked by assassination and brumentioned Craig, “never liked tion of limited government detality. Its candidates were left Nixon much. The familiar stranger pends on strong non-political over from the late forties. All has been around a long time, but institutions.” were losers, none could win. li lost-but it would be what do we know about him?” Nearly all of these are indecline = / j too“Humphrey much to say Nixon won. AltoWithout conviction, Craig conor decay in the U.S. today. *gether, it was hardly democracy s ceded l&xon’s desire to succeed Craig ended with an quote from ) finest hour.” and to work hard may make him Lyndon Johnson’s Thanksgiving ; Craig said we can t 2 good.nresident. L However, speech one year ago, in which he ignore, what happenned, for it is Craig questionned the estaasked for God’s merciful guidance of intrinsic importance. The elecblished electoral machinery. Why to provide a “more just society tion has to be observed and not hold national presidental prifor the -American people where analysed. . rather - than state-level tolerance and respect for life were The ‘American .-example of a -maries conve%tions held in smoke-filled upheld. democratic system shows a most hotels with police brutality out- b striking determination of the midThus the lecture ended, on a side? This would require a rundle-class American to stay in the note of slightly bitter humor, off between two major candidates middle of the road;<with no swing / on the sad state ’ , of two extremes and ’ would not a commentary to the right or left. This results necessarily represent the wishes I . of today’s elections. in a tradition of “impressive of the voters. ppli tical’ stability despite sur-

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A veteran of the student move. ment in the United States will be speaking in the-campus center ; Wednesday at 4: 15. Art Goldberg was one of the leaders, of the Berkeley free speech movement in 1964. The rebellion at that University of .s California campus was one of the first mass actions of the stu, dent movement in North America. Goldberg will talk about the development of the movement and why it rsCnow being driven underground in the United States. He will also talk about the -current ), ,- direction of protest against cam/ pus military training centers, a*nd what new forms of protest will take shape in the next four .1, 12

years

with

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presi-

ANY

dent. The event is sponsored by the board of education through what spokesman Ron Rumm called “the” lets get a commie on . campus speaker series:’ ,

Student coukil meets tomorrow Student council meets tomorrow night (Wednesday) at 7:,30 in the campus center. ‘The . meeting will be the last meeting of the old council and first meeting of the new. . Federation president John Bergsma is expected to announce his eXWUtiW IlOmitlatiOIlS.

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FLIGHT OF THE PtIOkNlX - Wednesdiry, December 41 NON

MEMBERS

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Examinqr

staffI

after. pure-h&e by Bill Sheldon adi Bob V&dun

‘.

l

Cheyron staff

Exi aminer staff demoralized’ after ; purchase j by Thomson Thl e trouble at the Peterborough Exar niner can best be seen by exan lining what Thomson NewsPaPe rs Ltd. has done to the paper. Lord Thomson of Fleet, a multimilli onaire, recently bought the 1 pape r.’ Th e change in ‘the newspaper was (disasterous. ’ acquired the . ’ Be fore Thomson news ipaper; the staff tooka great deal of pride in their work. There’ were ! good relations, in every de‘staff part] nent. 1The reporting was encouraged to take part in the determination of editorial’ polic ‘Y: Cl; aude Ryan, one of Canada s . %leading journalists rated the Petterhr “__ _ orough Examiner as seventhCanada. . ’ /best newspaperin

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Heavy-falling snow and s@sh. didn’t help the ‘rookie: student pickets at the parking 6’t entralzce where arrests oc&rred. . .

.

received -$75 to $96 ’ and sub-editors - can be transI depending on ability. A-’ five-year ’ ferred at will to break up the. i staff to form a union. Everyone group that wanted a guild. .’ ; ’ ’ 4 . man got a minimum&1’20.. was paid reasonably well. A Thomson has still refused to 1 Thomson bought the pa.per in negotiate, giving the dissolution March , for’ a- three-an&a-half 1 I of the guild as a necessary condi,million dollars from the Davies tion to begin. The pressmen and . ‘i family. -typesetters’ are concerned about x Thomson was the only .major the security o’f their unions. when i buyer contacted about the sale i1 of the paper. Potential purchasers _their_ contracts run out if the guild is beaten by Thomson. Southam, Maclean-Hunter, the 1 The last time Thomsoh battled a Toronto Telegram and Siftonthe guild was in Oshawa in a simii Bell were not approached. lar situation.. That time he ob; Immediately after the sale of tained a court injunction to limit 1 the newspaper, the working pickets, but local labor-the 1 conditions on the paper -went angered ’ downhill. The official policy of _ strong autoworkers-were at this tampering with union ’ Thomson Newspapers Ltd. is not freedom. They turned out in I_( to interfere with the policy of the newspaper-they2 are simply ‘new.. . j such force the paper was. not only shut down and Thomson owners. capitulated to the guild, but the 1 But such was not the case. provincial attorney-general took j Pages and features began to get no action against. the injunction1 cut. Space reserved for news There has been no i was diminished to the I point _breakers. injunction asked for in’ Peter,j 1 where during the. assas‘sinaborough. \ tion of Rob&t - Kennedy, the 1 new! s staff ’ “” could- - not get two Lord Thomson of Fleet is known / _ extr a pages to ‘cover the situaas one of the stingiest capitalists1 tion on an already tight-forin the world. He buys up smallI space day. and turns them 1 \.When a staff member quits he town newspapers into financial successes -by using ./ is not replaced. His job is eliminathe tactics described above-cut\_ / ted to save money. ting newsnace and salaries, eli- - i ’ Thomson has increased adverminating jobs and increasing ’ , J - tising space, and gone to ridiculII adspace and rates. ous lengths of requiring paperHe normally exploits monopoly / clip rationing and cheaper paper situations ‘-as fully as possible, x* ’ , towels. - buying newspapers only in oneAs soon as Thomson ,bought the :I paper towns. He’s been aiding his : newspaper, 19 of 22 reporters and cause ‘by buying radio stations I sub-editors formed a Peteras well (he has one in Peter-.’ .: boroughiunit of the Toronto News_ borough ) . paper guild. When the guild. tried _j _ij their demands, they Thomson has been using the <I:,<:, ‘” &.yyy>,;~~ y:,v %$,q;:, && could not get a meeting editorial page of the Examiner to, ;“ ; with the +s~ >f give the striking guild bad ‘pubof -the newspaper. -.k&i management lies. The guild ’ i -- i - ^,Finally, on November 1, /a day licity through,basic 1 _. .a has only been- able to combat Doiz ‘t walk-shujjle. A @$t 1 before the strike ~was to start, I ‘, a_ management’ came but’ with a this by personal canvass. knot bf pickets tri+o dodge The guild ‘hasnt been’ &ble to _ i ’ statement. the freezivigrain at theirfront-’ , There were no provisi6;s for get support- of’ large groups. of : e&an& picket. bI ,_j local ‘labor, to, man physically and the guild. to remain, ._no jobmorally effective picket.. lines, i transfer security, I no severance This is why the guild*, turned to . j pay, no pension for anyone under student journalists and students ., the rank of supervisor and the in general man the lines. * old pension .plan was to be cut. Most of the guild members were \ Thomson demanded a six-day before coming 1 week with ‘no limitations on openly conservative face-to-face with Thomson’s im-. i hours to be worked in any day,personal imperialism. They now and no overtime pay. : jdecrying the lack 1 Thomson offered $117 for a find themselves of militancy in Canadian labor, ,, five-year man and $60 a weeksomething they probably would I for new reporters.’ These are all havecondemned a year ago.: , minimum salaries; lower than the ’ Students from Waterloo 3and LA ; existing scale at the Examiner Toronto ‘hope to double or triple. ‘I and. -Thomson, rarely p.ays above .Ii thei.r contigents this weekend in st$t&d minim$n,:. :’ ’ ‘, . -5 a return to Peterborough. Any ’ ” i Th”ese%alaries are ‘meager com,Waterloo student I interested -&an $~?&f’tg ‘the : $kj.‘25 : A week the get details. through, the Chevron -- ,. ’ cexpe@ienced typesetters and pressoffice. .The guild will provide manget paid.. 1 ; ‘7: ’ . transportation and food as - re-, . T@e. -transfer . clause: is. imporquired: _’ , ~,tant. Withoutp$otec&n; reporters - . .. nn 11” ~++~rnnt. ulrur---r- on --- the ---- nart. rT‘-- of-- the ----

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A competitor comes home on the freestyle leg o.f the women’s IOO-yard individual medleJ/ in last week k co-ed swim meet. Toos Simons won this event for Village North in 1:30.0.

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the fourth quarter but by the end of the game, the Athenas were on top. The wornens varsity teams Stueck scored seven points for travelled to McMaster last weekWaterloo. end to participatein a five-school The game with Guelph seemed sports day. to be an easy win with Waterloo The host school, McMaster, won leading all the way. Guelph was the tourney. with 24 points. The allowed only two points in the Waterloo teams picked up eight first half. This led to their 29-12 points in volleyball, five in basketdefeat by the Athenas. ball and one in badminton. This Top Waterloo scorer again was gave the Athenas an overall Stueck with ten points. ‘ score of 14 points to place third ’ The badminton team came up in the tourney. Windsor was secwith only two, wins in the twelve - I ond with 17 points and Guelph games played. and Lutheran trailed. In doubles play, Norma DryIn basketball, the Athenas lost den and Sally Roberts defeated their two Friday games and then Lutheran and in the first singles came up with two wins on Satdivision, Janet Pelletier ‘defeated urday. the Windsor contender. No games Against Windsor, the Athenas were -won by Wendy Fraser in took plenty of shots but just could second singles. not score. Windsor was leading The volleyball Athenas tied for . 18-13 at the half and then broke ’ first with McMaster in their diviaway in the final half , to gain a sion of the tourney. They defeat47-25 win. ed Guelph 15-13 and 15-O and Bev Stueck and Betty Etue also took Lutheran in two games each tallied six points-for Waterstraight. loo. Their Windsor match was a The story was similar in the toss-up as Waterloo took the McMaster game. The Waterloo first game 15-5. girls were still in contention at Beauty tattoos on your hand Windsor came back to take the half time when they were trailing and knee. What a with-it second .game 15-12. The two ’ 23-16 but Mat came up with a. way to have fun! teams battled to the end in the strong second half to win 44-27. There’s another witti-it way, third and deciding game but -Again, Stueck and Etue led the Athenas finally won 16-14. too. For those so-called Waterloo with seven points each. This was by far their best game “difficult” days of the month. The team came alive at 8:30 of the tournament. They won’t be difficult any Saturday morning to gain their Their only loss was to McMasfirst win, defeating Lutheran - longer with Tampax tampons. ter. In the first game of the 22-19. They’re the modern sanitary Mat set, the Athenas came up The two‘teams were tied at the protection. Worn internally they with a 15-4 win. McMaster took half and again at the start at leave no tell-tale signs. You put the second game 15-6. Mat: then the half and again at the start of on what you want to wear built up a 13-2 lead in the deciding with nolwrinkles or bulges. game before the Athenas began to Kampus kop hops move. However, the Athenas Nothing can show, I started their comback too late f no one can know. run by racfical and Mat took the game 15-7. Tampax tampons are made of Coope.ration between student Waterloo s loss to, McMaster pure surgical cotton, lightly radicals and cops is not a myth. and McMaster s loss to Guelph compressed. They give you Larry‘Burko, unsuccessful federaleft the two teams tied for first tion president candidate, is runall the comfort and protection place in volleyball. ning a series of dances for -the Waterloo also sent a swim team you want and need. Without international police association to the meet but the swimming any give-away odor or irritation. in cooperation with the kampus was not included in the overall Your hands need never touch kops. totals. In this section however, the the tampon, and there are no Burko was quoted as saying it Athenas placed third behind Mat is actually like working for their disposal problems. The Tampax and Windsor. . union. tampon and its silken-smooth Sue Robertson led the Water“Hopefully I will remain in container-applicator can both loo swimmers with a second in . a favourable lightwith my fellow the loo-yard freestyle and a third be flushed away. members of the radical student in the 200 freestyle. Kathy ParThere’s another great thing _ movement despite my actions, rish finished third in the 50 freeabout Tampax tampons. he stated. style but was‘ disqualified on her They’re small enough to tuck The dances are being run to turn. I offset a loss incured this summer away in your purse- Olinka Gorazdowska gained a when the IPA ran a formal which along with your extra tattoo. third in the back crawl and Cynhad an attendance of only sixteen thia Holly was ,fourth in the breacouples. To make up the loss the stroke. Joyce Matthison placed kampus kops -asked . Burko to fourth in the butterfly and the run an animal dance. The first individual medley. one was only partially successful Sandy Lake came fourth in the SANITARY PROTEiTlON WORN INTERNALLY and another dance will be held 100 yard breastroke. The medley MADE ONLY BY CANADIAN TAMPAX CORPORATION LTD., BARRIS, BNT. next term to make up the relay team come second and the ~ difference. freestyle relay placed third. ’

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Hide,

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Scott leagues

in curling, wrap- up

There will probably be a lot of to miss his take-outs and gave uptalk about curling in the chemissingles in the fourth and fifth betry building this week. Pete fore picking up -a single in the sixth. Hindle and John Scott, both grad chemistry students, lead their He had a chance for a brace which would have tied the game rinks into the varsity curling final this week. The winner will gain but lost it when his shooter rolled out after removing a Scott a berth in the best-of-three playoff next term to determine the counter. intercollegia.te rink. In that end the Scott foursome Scott moved past Wayne Stespulled the rather remarkable feat ki 5-3 in a fine curling-match Sat- , of removing seven of their own stones by one means or another. urday to gain the final. Steski found himself deadlocked Three times they drove, a Steski with the defending champion 2-2 rock onto one of their own while after three ends. He then started rolling out themselves.

up exhibition t

The Warrior basketball team came on like gangbusters in the second half to post a 99-45 exhibition victory over Kitchener-Waterloo Newtex Wednesday night at Seagram Stadium. Newtex, who play in the local intermediate league, was thoroughly outclassed in the game. The Warriors started slowly but scored 64 points-in the second half to pull away. They hit 56% from the floor during that period. The two teams were about equal in height but the Warriors were much quicker and showed a, more tenacious defense. Coach Dan Pugliese substituted freely from a bench of 16 players, -most of whom are freshmen. The whole team looked good in this opening encounter. Play was very ragged for the first ten minutes and scoring was low. Warriors then went into a zone press defense and scored 14 unanswered points. From this point they were never headed. Opening the second half they further widened their lead by repeating with 13 points without reply from Newtex.

Students

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Loyola

and

Scott pulled a tricky double at ’ the back of the house ,on the seventh to blank the end and come . home one up with last rock. Steski quickly built up some cover as Scott’s front end was missing. He then buried a shot rock on the tee-line just outside the four-foot. His last rock was a perfect guard which forced Scott to draw the four through a three-, foot port to avoid going into an extra end. Scott coolly did so to advance to the final. . Hindle has not lost yet and must be beaten twice to be eliminated from the double-knockout tournament. Scott has one loss, a 6-5 setback, suffered at the hands of Hindle’s foursome three weeks

1.ago-

-=.

demand

The two met trouble when they made a request to the administration president at Ryerson asking that all university files be opened to them, in order that they might perform their duties more efficiently. Students fear the two are trying to get access to personal record files of prominent student leaders in order to use the

The two, Gordon Jackson and Richard Finlay, were censured by the student council-last week and threatened with impeachment in a petition making its rounds on the campus.

Orchestra

Steski moved past Steve Wilton 5-2 Friday night to reach the semis. In the last three minutes they League play winds up tonight made a ~great attempt to reach the and Thursday. Next week the magic 100 figure but were thwarted finals will be played in the two by Newtex. , Waterloo : stole the leagues between the top. team in ball about a dozen times during the each division of each league. closing moments of the contest. Rick Cooke has only to defeat Top scorer for the Warriors Dave Cornwall to gain the final was Dennis Wing who pumped in in Tuesday play. In contention if 16 points. Following him were Cooke loses are Wilton, Mel Brock Lorne McEwen with 14 and Jan and Paul Solomonian. Laaniste and Tom Kieswetter Steski leads ‘the second divieach with 10. Keiswetter and Jon sion with one loss. He meets Cam Chalton’ led the Warrior defense Duncan today. A loss would throw in stealing several Newtex passes. it open to Duncan as well as 1 For K-W, Herb Stan was leading other two-game losers Dave Holmpointman with 21. es, Al Sawatzky, Jim Green and A crowd of about 200 was preHugh MeCarrel. 1 sent, excellent considering the Dick Hart sits on top of the size of Seagram and the relative Thursday first division with a unimportance of the game. Warriors - looked strong a- big game against Dave Holmes this gainst Newtex but will face , week. The winner of that one will probably gain the final. Mike much sterner opposition in OnMcKenna has an outside chance tario-Quebec Athletic Association but would have to winbig. league play this season. Their first Green looks good in the second real test will come when they division with. a wrap-up contest go into this week-end s Tip-off against Doug Beynon. Pete HindTournament against seven other le, with a last-round bye, must collegiate teams in the phys-ed hope for a Beynon victory to back building. into the final. Bill Richardson and Tournament action starts at Lee Kirkby have outside chances 2 pm Friday and goes through to of advancing. Saturday evening.

bourd

TO.RONTO (CUP)--The first students on a Canadian university board of governors are in trouble at Ryerson.

phony

recall

-

information against them. In addition, the board members say they -are governors first, I students second, and have refused to take directives from the schools student council. The student council will -make presentations next week to the board of governors asking the body to have the student reps impeached.

I QudeA

Three. more university OTTAWA (CUP)--Three more university senates have been opened. The schools are Calgary, Loyola and Queen s. I

At Calgary, the motion passed without dissent. The action followed a report froman ad hoc committee composed of three *faculty members and one student, which recommended open meetings after a month of- closed discussions. The committee was formed after-40 students staged a sit-in at a general faculty council meeting There are three in September. student representatives on the 50member body. The GFC will be

senates

opened to students and faculty only. The Queens senate will be opened to 35 students, 10 faculty members and five press representatives. The students and -faculty will have speaking rights and will be able to bring legislation to the senate, but only by adhering to a set series of deadlines of notification. There are now ’ four students sitting on the 50-member senate. The Loyola senate will be opened on a trial basis until spring and‘ then a final evaluation will be m,ade of the desirability ‘of openness.

opened.

NOTICE Faculty and administrators for racidal actJ ion desperately need to field a candidate for administration president. Must believe in confrontktion with wishy-washy student presiderits. Send replies to box Q. the Chevron.

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The destruction’ df, g mighty nation may well be, approaching decaus& of the activities of one’ person. He .haS encouraged ‘leaders to tranquilize’ the -populace with half-tiuths. -He ha5 ‘Itired the press into inatt&tion and has assisted the people in duping t&&elves. He has persuaded his fellow .. citizens to c@ncentrate qn life’s comic. strips ‘and mindless entertainments ‘, Grid toavoid the bruises of reality. .a The culprit is the person whose eyes scan these words, and whose

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p“I never read any’.of. the copy’’ . ’ (servi& f& .the ..iake & servi&. -,: - zl*’ ; ’ has no place in, Thom,son;:sworld) 1 ; ’ )’ in tiy “newspaperS bu% I alw&i When he buys a paperS:>h&ihrriedi-. - “i,-’ measure the adverQsing contentZ! . That is on& of the more famous d, ately reduce* ‘news,$&tent, ifi+ .. , :,I ad i-ates‘and holds ,$alaries’ ; -r* statements attributed to. one of_ ’ creases to a mifiim&m.“, , ’ ‘,I 1I ..=”‘: : / -1 -,; ‘5ii the wdrld’s last robber b~~%rG‘ Wh& unioni.exi$t ihe’.i~~i~ts&. *:-.1 :,;?I: Lord Thomson of .Fleet. . a tran.sferability clause in, their I ’ .:5 Thomson is the embodiment ‘of the American dream come true ‘+ contracts that ‘allows him to s&d- -+_. 8( in Canada. Born pdor h?struggled . .trouble-making members off.. to -I- ’ up through the ranks buying first ’ any of his most distant h$pers. ‘j Thomson is rapidly becoming. j-f one newspaper and Pinally nearly an anackronism in our societjr-..Y. ,r..,’ f-ifty of them (to date) -along with radio ‘and television sta&ns _ . The fights against the status-quo;x- :->( are now fights against a-grey-&& _1’ and numerous other iGve$Qnents. M-suit ethic of replaceable pa& Thomson is !a good example of I- r&-i ‘.: in a teehnocra’tic society, T that dre‘arr;’when it becomes teal-. But Thomson and the other very . -=‘;I ity. few who hold so much power ovbr’ His -climb to the top was made 1 / -jS_ the very/inany must be stopped. . . .-: not on a path of gold’ but on a -/,; , path of inen. Behind ‘him he has . He didn’t .get where he,is because of sdme fantast& ability- that. ‘, .j strqwqmatiy a broken, editor and should be rewarded, :with nj’illi~ns . - rlC’ , _hundreds of underpaid reporteW who o&e -had:pride in th.eir work j .-cibdollars. He &t to -the top by . .I- Ybut no lori&er~cared’when Thomsojn .’ being willing to step ,har&r oni : ,?’ :,was . These. ,were. ‘mei - %&herpeople’s heads. ’ ’ ’ ; . ’ ^ =-I ’ br’oken not beeaus&they cduldn’t . +- The reporting staff of $he Peter: - &~’ cgm@te but b&&e they ‘choose bourougb &aminer ha&. decided. . r_I , t6 se.rvetheir Small town / @.Mics-: thi.ough.-

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Unless either philosphers become kikgs in their&ountries.‘or those who ark ’ ‘ _ ndw called kings and rulers come to be sufficiently in,spi,red with a genuir$ 11’ desire for wisdom; unless, @Et is td say, political power and phil&ophy : -\ Feet together, while the many natures who now go their several wa$ in < . Page” 7 . r _ Unless either philosph& beco’me kihgs in their tiountries or those who are I now called kings -and rulers come to be sufficiently *inspired with a gentiine desire fqr wisdoq .unless, that is to say, pali&+ power ;and philoSophy ‘, , ‘4 meet tobeth&, while the many natures who- now go their severat ways in _ 2 the one_ or the other direction are forcibly debarred f;om. doing so, therti can be, no rest fro,m troubles, my de,ar- Glaucon. for stat&, nor yet, as I , ’. . beIieve,,foi aH$inankjnfl. 0 , ’ _

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by E)ob Verdun

Loyola ‘s line to - set up a goal Chev’roh ‘staff . scored by Dave Rudge. I The rest of the- second period -The Warriors beat the Warriors 5 lacked highlight. ,Hard, fast play Saturday night in an expectedly --by both sides dwindled as the clock unexciting hockey exhibition. advanced. ’ Waterloo generally - Neither Montreal! s Loyola Collplayed better in the offensive end ege Warriors nor Waterloo’s Warand finished the period a goal riors seemed too interested in ahead and slightly ahead in shots getting injured and the low-key on goal. P game went 4-l to Waterloo. It became more apparent it Deserving mention for good play ,was only an. exhibition gameteam were denobody wanted to get injured and , _ on the Waterloo fenseman Dick O’udekerk with‘a. although play was fairly chippy, no -_ ’ goal, an assist and general good fights erupted. defensive play, and center Ron In the third .period, Waterloo I Robinson with a goal and two again scored an early goal: This ..1Y ._‘. ‘assists. time it. was Roger Kropf from \ Rudge.and Robinson. At the- beginning of the game . .The rest of the third period was . I Loyola seemed’ to have the upper controlled by Waterloo, and Oude’hand, hampered only by the un’ kerk was noticeable on a few good ~.I L-C dersize playing area of the Wat/‘lr: 1 I defensive plays. erloo ice palace. .* The final goal came two-thirds ~. 1‘ . -Waterloo’s Ken Laidlaw was of the way through the period on ‘>r‘, hit with a boarding penalty at 2: 15, a picture play. Robinson scored 1,: ’ ‘I , and the now-famous Waterloo reon a pass from Ian McKegney on >..> was called on, a basic t+woAon-one attack. I/ )I , verse powerplay to defend. Waterloo .played more The ‘final 4-l : score was the re8 s like they had the man advantage sult of. steady play by a well‘2_*and,, as they have several times balanced and apparently well. this season, they picked up a conditioned Waterloo team, goal while shorthanded. Oudekerk Loyola was supposed to be a . scored the game’s opening goal tough test, and while they didnt unassisted from a third of the put up the opposition expected, i 5 way in from the blueline. Waterloo can probably look forward to more successful re_r I Loyola continued to breaksults against the type of fast’ quickly andevened the score I breaking play used by ~Loyola. when ’ Pete Moran easily picked Toronto, of course, uses the same up a team-mate’s goalpost re,Y attack. bound. Coach Don Hayes played Mark After the goals in the first Jacobson in goal in this exhibition instead of first-stringer Arlon .” seven minutes, the period became progressively more dull. Loyola Popkey. Jacobson was steady, I narrowly missed a few scoring opbut was lucky several times not portunities and Waterloo showed to be’scored on while sprawled on some good play in the ,offensive , theice. He also made a potentially end, but failed to take advantage fatal ’ error on the. first penalty of Loyola’s four minor penalties. called in the game. It was a de-* Shots on goal- in the first period layed call against Waterloo and were even. Jacobson left the ice thinking the -\ . ’ referee’s arm was raised against ’ ’ Loyola s fast-break seemed to Loyola. _ die. Their team is apparently The .fans Saturday night were stronger than they showed, but--the combination of a non-league .a less enthusiastic.. than the duilest play of the teams. They lacked game and ‘their 5-l loss the prethe inspirational support of the vious night to_ Toronto accounted Warriors band who - rested their !for the lackof sustained attack. repertoire for this non-league / Waterloo went into the second match. . “period with a man ,advantage and _ playedlike it, Oudekerk was again the’ playmaker:l skating through’ : -t ,

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The gymnasium in the phys-ed building<* will see its first basketball action this Friday and Saturday when Waterloo hosts its first Tip-off Tournament. , Athletic

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--John Pickles, the Chevrori

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A Loyala defender goes down to block a-shot from Dennis- Farwell (14) during Saturday’s <exhibition match at -Waterloo Arena. Looking for a possible rebound are Ian McKegney (left) and Dick Oudekerk. Th e annu&$$p to yestern will @ke place Thursdajt nig&?i.

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Sergeant

Chevron staff

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Arts Science

4 1 0 3 4 0 0 4

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2 0

Phys-ed

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will

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Tomorrow night, from 10 to 11, Last week was a very busy one the winners of Series No. 1 and 2 Village in men’s intramural athletes. Phys-ed 4 ‘4 0 0 21 3 8;. will clash to determine who will The fall hockey season is now of Series North ’ 4 2 0 2 6 6 4 play against thewinner complete, except for the playoffs. West 4 2 0 2 10 18 4 .No. 3 in. the finals to be held ‘at South 4 ,1;0 3 8 10 2 Q ueensmount Here are the results for the last Arena from 10 to set of games played : East Residence 4 0 0 -4,z :8.16 .’ 0 12’phcj~T&@day. : i , 1 ; co-op -4 t. 20; Greb 1 co-op 4 4 0 0 13.3 8 -The Bullbrook~Cup~ ’ will be preSouth 6 4 4202 6 7 4 sented at the c.onclusion of East Renison Phys-ed 4 North 0 the game. Last .Tuesday, the in-’ Ct Tnr’c A 9 fi 9 in 7 A 1 tramural /j swimming and ~diving Renison 2 St. Jer’s St. Pauls i. ; 1 i &7v 10 i, meet began and ‘continued Eng. A 5 Arts 1 into Con. Grk. 4 0 1 3 3 ,12 1 0 Thursday. Math 7 s Science As a result, Eng. B plays North Going into .the final event, the The final standings: tonight from 9 to 10 at Queensmedley relay, there were Faculty mount Arena, in Series, No. 1. co-ed two teams tied. in Men’s ComGP W T L FOR.AG Pts From’10 to 11 tonight, at the-same petition-Renison and Phys-Ed, Enb B 4 4 0. 0 24 5 8 arena, Eng A plays Co-op in Serl both with 49 pts. In the last leg’of Eng A 4 3. 0 1. 15, 12 6 ies No. 2. Immediately following this race, a phys-ed girl was 4 that game, Series, No. 3 between Math 4 2 0 2 16 .lO leading’a Renison man, but Renison was able to touch first with ’ a time of 1 f.05.6 to ‘win the event and the meet. The Renison girl was clocked in 1: 05.7 seconds. ’ . - Math won the me&diving championship with “104 points accumulated’ by P. McKinty, while ‘the women’s competition was led by J. Mattheson of physed with 133.65 Swim meet results: Mens 50-yd backstroke (30.‘5) B. Bachert, South-30.4; T. Taylor, Arts. Womens 50yd backstroke (40.0) P. Stevenson, Renison38.5; G. Sparrow: Renison. Mens 50-yd butterfly-T. Taylor, Arts (32.6); B. Bachert, -South. Mens lOO-yd individual medley-B. Bachert, South (1:09.6); R. Avery, phys-ed. Womens lOO-yd individual medley-T. Simons, North (1: 30.0) ; H. Preciousj West. Mens 50-yd freestvle-M. Dare. St? Jerome s -Matti Nieminen, the Chevron (27.1) f R. Avery, ‘phys-ed. Womyard freestyle it last we& intramural swim meet. Marg Hand- ens 50-yd butterfly (53.3)-H. Prec,’

Ub.

UC1

3

hopes to make the event an an- r nual affair’ bringing in top callej 1, +? 2 -Z-L- teams. I-----TT- wouiu ------l-1 even --_-- I:,-L” grate ne l~e iv I go international in the future. The teams lined up for this week’s action include Acadia, , Carleton, Loyola, Sir George _ Williams, Guelph, Mount Allison The start of the wojnen’s 50 and a team of Warrior grads. a- ford won the event ifi a meet record time of 32.9 seconds to help phys-ed nail down-the :- I long with the current Waterloo runner-up spot in the. I-j-unit meet. Rention won the overall title. cage squad. .* Competition will begin-at 2 pm Net, bake. A&.&& ,.&&fea&d _ Friday and continue through to Saturday evening in the champ_ ‘. . , , ionship and consolation events. with .a 4525 win, over the York . by Donna Mc~ollum .’ 15-i; and 15-13 and the kthenas ; . ’. ‘Admission for the two games is Chevron staff -won the next two games 152 a& girls; The Waterloo team led all 6x $2.00. Single game admission .will the way in what appeared. to be a’ In ieague play last:~e&&day, , .15-11. ’ The deciding game was .I -be. 75 cents. The. two final games -- the basketbail and volleyball Ath- I 1 close allthe ‘way but a fine team slow gam.e. @fort ‘gave the -Athen&‘- a 15-12. . Bev Stueck led. the; teain with ..,- I j Saturday will go at’a dollar each. enas continued their winning ways : 1 Students holding, ~SeaSOIl" tickets The -volleyball team worked win and the match, . +>‘.. her best effort of . the season,/will be admitted to all the -games. Fran Philcox _and Jan* Roorda . scoring 15 points hard to come up with the three -,- . . The consolation final will be wins necessary New additions. to the’ team Sue played consistently for the winfor -the match -. over York. played at 7 pm Saturday with the ners. Campbell and Marilyn McLelland championship game going at 9. York took the first two games ‘The basketball team came up- were a great asset. \. _- \ ,‘-

ious~ physced (46.4); L.’ Marret&

math. Mens 50-yd breaststroke (33.2)-M. Marsh,all, Renison (38.0) ; . _ I k.~&fi~~~;~~~~~~~ - , * Mens‘lOO-yd freestyle~ relay-Phys: ed (54.6) ; East. Womens IOO-yd freestyle . relay-Renison‘ (65.9). Womens 50iyd freestyle. (3&O)-M. Handford, phys-ed (32.9); T. Simons, North. Mens lOO-yd medley rela y-Renison ( 1: 03.8 ) 7 ph ys-ed womens 1009yd medley relay-R&ison t 1: 17.5). Co-oped medley- relay-Renison (1:05.6): phys-ed (105.7). ,


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