1968-69_v9,n34_Chevron

Page 1

Volume

9 Number

34

UNIVERSITY

OF WATERLOO,

Waterloo,

Ontario

Friday,

December

13,1968

-.

Presidential

nominating

Students without

commitfee

won’t power

participate and - openess

by Bob Verdun

ing participation unless students. faculty and staff each held veto over possible candidates and all Student council decided Monday meetings were public. night it would not. appoint students The first proposal was moved to the administration president by federation vicepresident Dieter nominating committee unless minHaag and seconded by president imum demands of democratizaJohn Bergsma. tion and openness were met by the This motion objected to “the board of governors, manner in which the board of The subject of student participagovernors established the nomini tion in the nominating committee ating committee” for selecting involved almost three hours of an administration president. Howdebate Monday night as council ever, the motion recognized” the moved from an original nronosal urgency that candidates for the of accepting the offer of the board presidency be nominated expediof governors ‘to a position rejecttiously” and .called for council to advertise for applicants for the two student seats on the fourteenman committee. Arts rep Tom Patterson said the action of the board of governors called for a stronger stateDEADLINE NEWS-Adminisi ment of where students stand. He tration vicepresident Howard singled out the board’s requirePetch has withdrawn his name ment for nominating committee from the list of potential replacemembers to swear an oath of secments for president Hagey. recy as particularly unacceptable. Petch informed Hagey today ‘If we say we don’t like it but go that he did not wish the selection along with it anyway, the board of committee to consider him availgovernors will continue to do able. things this way, ” said Patterson. He was making this statement He called on council to refuse in light of much on campus specu-’ to appoint students to the commitlation about his intentions he said. tee because it was a question of Petch explained that his decireal demokracy. sion was based on a desire to re“We should try to persuade the main in the academic vicepresiEven radicals like Christmas. Ecstatic over their campus cen- dency during a time he considered faculty association to refuse to ter tree are -Mike Corbett (left, aren’t they all?) and Tom challenging and full of potentially appoint people,” he added. Some councillors felt they should Ashman. They re.fused comment on any symbolism ez(ident. great changes. Chevron managing editor

Pet& is out of, prez race

Clashes erupt on news gtiild picket line 75 arrested, police brutality charged ._-

PETERBOROUGH (Staff )Clashes between pickets and police at the Peterborough Examiner resulted in the arrest of 14 university students and one printer last Friday. The clashes occured when police took the initiative in breaking up the picket lines. Their behavior was termed brutal by spokesmen of the striking newspaper guild and resulted in the hospitalizaJion of two girls. About 250 students from Waterloo, Toronto and Ottawa massed on the picket lines attempting to prevent publication of the Thomson-owned Examiner by keeping out typesetters and printers. The Friday paper appeared although none of the printers and only a handful of typesetters crossed the picket line. It had been printed the night before with old news. The reporters and subeditors, members of the Toronto Newspaper Guild, have been on strike since November 2. They are pursuing a first contract, with wages, transfer conditions and job security as the main issues. The effects of Thomson ownership on quality and morale are important considerations. The student pickets are on the lines at the request of the guild. Because of their small nurnber, the guild members haven’t been able to maintain a large

enough picket line to prevent the printers and typesetters from entering the plant. These mechanical workers are sympathetic, but have no clause in their contracts to prevent them from handling strikebound copy. They must also sacrifice their day’s pay if they don’t cross. Throughout Friday morning, Peterborough police took the initiative in breaking up the students’ picket whenever possible. Normally in a strike, they do not intervene unless a citizen requests an escort across the line. At one point police used a car as a battering ram to break up pickets in a public laneway. Most of the arrests were made in a random method of harassment, where individuals were arrested. although their &tions were the same as the majority of the group. Most were charged with creating a disturbance. The guild bailed them out; court appearances are scheduled to start in January. Students from the University of Waterloo. arrested were Jo Surich, Sydney Nestel and Paul MacDonald; all for creating a disturbance, MacDonald also for obstructing an officer. Early in the afternoon, about 150 of the pickets massed at the entrance to be used by distribution trucks. When the trucks

arrived, 35-40 police- waded into the crowd, shoving and spinning students out of the way. Although several students fell to the ground, none were injured as the trucks inched into the loading area.. After the trucks were through, the students mocked the police by forming their own lines on either side of the entrance. They chanted “law and order, law and order” and sang scattered lyrics of Christmas carols. The trucks left without incident, but the picketers shouted “scab, scab.” About an hour later, a new element was injected into the conflict. William McKelvey, a typesetter, made a dash to enter the plant at one of the loading, ramps, apparently attempting to report for work. Police: however, treated him like a picketer and grabbed ‘him at the door. McKelvey resisted and was pushed from the fivefoot platform, landing face down on the ground. Four police converged on him and he was held down for several minutes. He emerged handcuffed behind his back, apparently unconscious, and was dragged by his clothes to the patrolwagon. Two of his fellow workers, members of the International Typographical Union were prevented by police from going to his aid.

Two students who were close enough to indentify the individual policemen were arrested. (Peterborough police do not wear numbered badges. ) One of the students was charged with creating a disturbance and the other with assault and obstruction. Witnesses reported neither had been physically involved. Police chief Jack Shrubb told a Globe and Mail reporter Friday night that McKelvey had been charged with creating a disturbance and released on bail. Since then, Peterborough police have denied McKelvey was ever arrested. Guild official Jack Dobsoc sent a telegram to attorney-general Arthur Wishart asking him to *see Newspaper

strike,

page 2

not give up any opportunity for student participata Patterson replied the participation of students would be negligible in the situation and they would not be losing anything. Haag said the board had the legal power to appoint the president. and if students participated in the committee. they would be winning a change as far as the corporations act was concerned. Patterson noted there was no necessity for the-board to exercise all its legal power. He said students would be winning nothing by accepting two out of fourteen seats on a committee that was to be completely secret. He reminded council that half the committee members were appointed by senior administrators and that decisions of the committee were advisory to both the senior-faculty controlled senate and business-industrial board of governors. Bergsma suggested secrecy was acceptable because the committee would have to discuss personalities. He and Haag reworded 1 their motion to provide for openness as long as personalities were not under discussion. Patterson countered it was not acceptable because they were essentially ‘electing someone to a position where he has decisionmaking power. “Whether it is the president of the Federation of Students, the university or the country, the discussions have to be in the open. The candidates must publicly articulate and defend their positions,” said Patterson. Grad rep Nick Kouwen favored student participation, saying student presence would ensure the committee couldn’t nominate someone who is not acceptable students. Out-term engineer Pete Huck suggested he look at the university government study committee where the student reps were regularly voted down. Discussion wandered considerably on the merits of students compromising principles for a questioned value of participation. Engineering rep Bill Snodgrass offered a compromise motion, seconded by Haag. calling for students to participate as long as the board of governors agreed to waive completely the demand for the oath of silence. Again Patterson took the offensive, questioning whether the committee would be sufficiently *see Students Paw 2

won’t

participate

As you have probably guessed, this wraps it up for the term. The Chevron will be back on Friday, January 10. Reminder to co-op students-send in your job card to the coordination department as soon as possible. We get out-term mailing lists from them; And a message to all our readers-what the Chevron prints is the result of what our volunteer staff- will work on-if you don’t think some aspect of campus activities is not being properly covered there is only one way to make sure the situation changes.


, *from page 1 Publications chairman and science rep Gerry Wootton said stu-’ open even if members could report out, or even if it were open- to dents should take what they could Chevron reporters. He appealed get in this case? ’ that allowed people .. . for structures Patterson reminded council to get involved. that student seats on committees Patterson said it was not enough were now commonplace, and they --to demand corrections in the prowere even getting a majority posicedure just over openness. tion -On SOme And that openness \ . was no longer something to be “I can’t think of anything more fought for, noting the open-meeting important than the election of the precedent of the senate. administration president,” he said. ‘After further debate, a vote Patterson said the selection pro_was called on the motion to accedure .must be modified SO all cept the student seats as long as groups in the university-faculty, the oath of silence was waived. students and staff-who are afThe vote was taken as a roll-call fected by I the selection can be after a procedural motion to do so assured the candidates are acceptbarely passed. able to, them. The vote to accept seats ‘Speaking from the gallery, Grad.. Society council rep Gord Doctorow ’ without the silence oath was defeated 11-10. toldcounci’l that the Grad Society had condemned the board’s proOpposed were arts reps Sandra posed procedure and recommendBurt, Dave Cubberley, Tom Pated the Federation of Students not terson and Jim Stendebach, enappoint any students to the nomgineering reps Barry Fillimore ’ who had inating committee as, presently and Bill Snodgrass, ’ structured. moved the motion, reg math rep

John Koval, co-op math rep Glenn Berry, Renison rep Paul Dube and science reps Ian Calvert ‘and Geoff R&let. In favor were president John Bergsma, grad reps Nick Kouwen, Dieter Hgag and Dave Gordon, St: Jerome’s rep Doug Richardson, engineering reps Tom Boughner and Don Greaves, science rep Gerry Wootton, re math rep Jim Belfry and out-term engineer Mike Martin (proxy for Bill Fish). The grad reps were challenged on their representivity considering the stand taken by the Grad Society. Both Gordon’ and Kouwen are members the Grad Sot council. The matter was not debated at f that time. A new motion moved by Wootton and seconded by -.Patterson was then debated. This motion rejected the board of governors’ selection procedure completely. A new procedure would increase numbers on the search committee for students, faculty, university staff and the outside community and provide for veto power

..

*from page 1 ! investigate the allegations of behavior of police. Shrub said of his police force, “Our job is to enforce the law. We are tolerant of both sides.” Several incidents throughout the day seem to show otherwise. On . one occasion, they volunteered to escort two advertising men through the picket line. A melee developed and one. ad-man-turned to leave. He was grabbed by a policeman and shoved b.ack - into the crwd in front of the door, with the @oliceman $aying, ‘“You’re +-:. a -. -going in. ” ,Because. of police treatment of McKelvey, the ‘Friday evening 1 shift of typesetters did not even attempt to. cross the picket line. The printers, however, persisted in making peio&c checks of the. line. The foreman and his assistant slipped in later in the evening with the help of police. Pickets were pulled back because it was then physically possible for the Saturday. paper to: be printed with the two printers in to complete the work done by scabs and strikebreakers during the day. The -main action on Saturday was public distribution by pickets of a -one-page paper ‘Stop the Press’. The guild is now faced with the eventual extension of’ the st,rike past Christmas. / ‘They have not been able to stop publication and cannot -count on further student support because of exams and the end of the term. The Examiner still has not begun any form of negotiation. The guild has been waging an uphill. battle on other frontscanvassing subscribers to cancel during the strike and picketing major advertisers. They have experienced the greatest difficulty with the news 1 media themselves. In Peterborough, theExaminer is the only newspaper, and Thomson also owns the only TV station and one of the two radio stations. Typical of the kind of coverage the guild’s strike has been getting was the Thomson radio station’s report of the arrest ‘of the typesetter McKelvey. They said, “McKelvey was alleged to have . been beaten up by the picketers; they have denied this.” Coverage outside of Peterboro hasn’t been much better with the exception. of the Globe and Mail. The Globe is the only paper to have a reporter on the

2, 578

rules for r the game

class

subscr;ptionfee mail

by

the

included Post

in Office

their-&nuaf department,

The ‘procedure in question was drafted by a board of governors committee ,after Hagey “requested theboard to seek his successor’ ’ . The procedure calls for a nominating committee to submit two to four names to the senate, who will pass them on to the board with their preferences noted. The board will make the final decision, holding the option of rejecting the whole slate. The whole procedure will be in secret, with the nominating ‘committee members swearing an .oath of silence, and the selection _

procedures in senate board completed in secret. The nominating committee of fourteen calls for the chancellor as chairman, two board of governors members, an alumnus selected by, the alumni executive, two staff selected by the operations vicepresident, two students selected by student council, two faculty members appointed by senate, two from faculty association, ‘one faculty appointed by the academic vicepresident and a member from outside the university - appointed by the rest of the committee.

for eachof the student, faculty and staff delegations. Only candidates cleared by this committee could be appointed president by the board of governors. The motion also stated all meetings of the nominating committee must be open. I Patterson clarified the motion as taking away some of the power of the board, but not being the ideal of having those people who

made the decisions selected directly by those who are affected by them. He summarized the intent of the’ motion as being minimum demands of complete openness and the power of veto foreach groupfaculty, students and staff. ‘This motion carried without opposition, the following abstained: Bergsma, Greaves, Haag, Kouwen and Gordon.

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I SECRETARY TREASURER . MINISTER OF E&J&ION MlNlSiER. OF,, EXTERNAL 1 3 ,itELA~lONS MINISTER OF INFORMATION INDlAkl AFFAIRS COMMlSSlOti~R SOclkL CHAIRMAN PUBLICITY CHAIRMAN , -

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scene, and was the only paper to carry any mention of police brutality. The Canadian Press has not even been approaching the guild for their side of the story. The last guild demand was for a minimum of $156 a week for a reporter with five-years experience. A story in the Globe and Mail said, “The Canadian Press has reported that the company offer is $133 a week for senior reporters in ’ the final year of a three-year agreement, and a spokesman for the national news-gatheringorganization said (Dec. 6) this figure had been confirmed by Examiner executives. “However, the guild- says the company’s mimeographed offer, in the guild’s possession, puts ‘the figure for reporters at $125. The publisher of the Examiner, William Garher, asked (Dec. 5) if he could .clear up the discrepancy said he couldn’t remember the exact terms of the offer.” The Toronto Star has \ covered -of the Examiner strike worse than the Thomson radio station. They made absolutely no mention of possible police brutality. For example, the Star reported, “During a series of melees through the day, girl students flung themselves in front of trucks and cars and across the hoods.” With mass picketing a limited possibility until January, other tactics are being considered. Student journalists, headed by the University of Guelph Gntarion, are starting a three-times-aweek tabloid newspaper, the Peterborough Free Press. The guild’ is assisting in financial backing and striking reporters will organize local news coverage. Thomson’s awesome financial power will never be defeated, but guild. members are hoping his desire for maximum profit will lead him to settle the. strike

KING

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is here-4

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GIFT PROBL&S? --

Psych exam+ves

I

Wednesday-at noon 300 students iushed into AL116 trying- to get a’ seat. As a psychology exam was to be FJitten, the idea. was to get a seat between two brains. The lecture hall was filled to capacity and after the -usual explanations on how to write a computer-marked exGrn, the proceedings began.

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was arrived at. To check this--- -- Meanwhile people trying to answer one had ‘only to -look to get more comfortable were bimpboth sides to see if other people ing neighboring ‘students arms. The result was a large line across were answering the question the same. If they were it would be the page ending with a hole through the sheet. Anyone who reasdtiable to assume the original answer was correct; if not,‘serihas ’ ever written a computertest realizes the frustaous re-consideratiibn wotiI‘b‘ be marked called fqr. ’ tionS that result. The only ’ valid result of---- theAfter all this intellectual labor te$ is proof of some psychology it was time to mark an answer department sheep theory. on the scoresheet. -

The‘,exam must have been an experiment to show students- are really sheeplthey will do ahything they are told to, regardless -of its value. This is the only justifiMC&S able reason for holding an examr\lrhn#xLlr\ ew-+“A:c:*.mNurle=lr rhemist.ry (them 331) under such de The’ possibilii ;y the _exam was -with Dr. Hari Sharn na concluded __ Wednesday night with a problems held (9 test the knowlkdge df the session. students is too ridiculous to con. sider . For two- and a quarter\,ho&s Sharma was with The procedure used in writing _._ bombarded --71 I . ,* question! like, “Wnat is on tne the exam was as follows: after exam? ” “Do we haye ,to know seriously consideritig all of the‘ltiabout detectors?” “Will constants possible answers to a givenbe given on the exam?” ple guess question, some ans T&i? r

s&m- the-

p1u1

- / ~ Aliend&d - Irritated Frustrated Excited Puzzled

.Dovou-have Peikh p&i&

ClUlC

CUllUlLlU11S.

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god

A classroom of third-year stu-. dents strained to see the general so1y1ons --‘--*‘-I - I.0 ‘- the example problems and wrote down the all-important answeres. Not that anyone really gave a damn about the answer ,*br its conseauences. but there was a final eiam coming up in -three days and the’rewere those’ all-important marks to be gained.

-Professor Edmund Vaz strode more urgency. “Please-do a proAll I wanted -you ‘to, do was to blem like....” j into his sociology 252 class (juveproduce; and “Where does _ and tomorrow night nile delinquency) on Wednesday, the course material end and the you’ll get your chance.” junk that we don’t have to know with an unusually beaming smile. At question. 25, Vaz charted: __t He plopped his books onto the “I$s moments like _ this that begin?” desk with a flouish, and marched make my two ,-months of hard Finally Sharma gave up and to the blackboard. . There, -he ,work’in this course worth it.” declared, “I don’t care about wrote in large bloc_k capital max@, I. only want to know if At question 35, a meek voice letters: EXAMINATION, AL 116, from the audiencewhined : you have learned something.” THURS. DEC. 12; 7 TO 10PM. “I’m not an adult.” But the class shouted: back, He turned, still smiling broadly. “We care about maiks.” After question 50, ban an hour “I hear that you are frightThat ended k the fall term .of after he began, the *professor ened,” he began. ‘!I hear that I walked chemistry 331 and Sharma’s tit, reminding _his intimidate you. I hear that you attempt at P’eal education. class of their date Thursday night. --are afraid to ask questions. Thiq is the feedback I’ve been getting. Well, that’s tough! ” Vaz then commented-he couldn’t give a damn about feedback. Not only was the co-op profrom the textbook, which proved “I’m treating you like adults. gram math 131 term exam very - relativ@$ simple. Many of the hard -to-pass, it w”&s also, inconque&tio@s --on the hard test were This is what you’ve been clamoriri‘g about for the last three sistent with the exam given to of a development nature, which several of the other sections-i w&e rather -hard to complete in years; well,-I’m not a guidance . counsellor. Now, here is what - taking the course. the time-limit. Many students had\ left many of the questions uni you should know forthe exam.” Approximately ten questions Vaz next launched into, a rapidwere to be answered within the -answered for this reason. fire dictation of some fifty quesIt is hard to see how an accu75 mintites alloted. Possibly contions, from which, he said, he tributing rate mark can be obtained from to the difficulty of the would choose seven fey the exam. the variety of results and-tests, exam was the generally acknowAt question 5, Vaz repeated:, however the ‘iilodern wonder ledged inferiority of the course known as the bell, curve will “This will take work, but you textbook; Alegebra and Wector don’t *mind this because you ar% Analvsis. bv Stanton and Fryer. -probably out s$l$!e method. , -i . .. .figure . . adults. ” Until it does, many students Only three df the sections wrote . At question 15, he smiled and will be worrying that they really of the exam, said: .“I said at- the begifining of the hard version don’t know so much after all whereas meqbers Of -Several About modulo and complexnumthe year that I didn’t care if you other sections received questions attended a lecture or read a book. bers -.as they thought tl+y did. -. , . . ____ Fe-. ,...-*

.-a

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.73, 7968.-(9:34)

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feedback Work you

hard, too

can

publish,

iudy,

join

Society

Rainer Baehre should be advised that the only criterion for membership in the Society for Research in Psychophysiology is a demonstrated competence in the field. The purpose of the Society is “to foster research on the relationships between physiological and psychological aspects of behavior “.

.

If these are his goals, he is welcome to become a student member of the Society. Whenever he will have demonstrated competence in the field, *he will become eligible for membership, and as a member, will contribute to making policies fostering the aims of the Society. ’ WALTER D. FENZ associate professorpsychology member, Society for Research Psychophysiology

Baehre

pulled

letter

sho’wed

in

all

the’ stops

little

feeling

I don’t wish to defend Dr. Lefcourt’s ideology, nor his relationship with the class (psych 351). It is up to Rainer Baehre to make a convincing case against him, if he can. Two points, however, in reference to the fee-dback letter “Which of us is the psychotic” (Dec. 6). First, show me the revolutionary who justifies his reference to a sacrificial lamb (his terms) in the terms with which Rainer Baehre referred to the death of Dr. Walters. There is very little feeling in those lords. Surely our readings of Dr. Guevera and Malcolm X (Little) can’t be that different. Secondly, neither Dr. Lefcourt nor the contea of the letter lend themselves well to the attempt to pull an Eldridge Cleaver on Dr. Lefcourt-i.e., play musical diagnosis of psychosis. It seems that Baehre is just a little too wrapped up in his own definitions. Having just arrived from a campus which is suffering from a blatant show of force by the provincial government, ( Regina, Saskatchewan), I cannot fully sympathize with Jhe flavor of his letter, since what he’s done is tried to pull all the stops he can to rise to an issue which is daily surpassed outside the university. I

Picture needs

PAUL GRONNERUD grad psychology

of Indian more

marriage

thought,

study

Teddy Singh, hold it! It is nice that your name appears occasionally!/ in the Chevron staff list. Though I am not an Indian, still I request that you please don’t give a picture of a very insignificant past of your social system. Your caste system, marriage system, problems of eating cows, etc. are highly misunderstood in this part of the world because people like you write an instant paragraph on such subjects without thinking or doing any research. Ads in the newspaper are placed by not even one in a hundred thousands in India and only by

6

578 The CHEVRON

FEDERATION Of STUDENTS

socially dislocated ones. Please look at K-W Record, personal column, you will find two or three such ads everyday in this city of a hundred thousand people, but only in different language. The Chevron comment “Cheaper by the dozen” should put you and your people in shame. Please think, do some study on this sr:bject and present it properly. I am sure ‘then others will understaJnd your system better. They will understand why 99.9 percent of your marriages are successful. They might envy the prestige, honor and security enjoyed by your women. GRAD more feedback

i 4 4 4 4 4 4 : 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4

University

of Waterloo

Applications are invited from both undergraduate and graduate students to fill the nine positions on the Campus Centre Board. This Board will make all final decisions on policies concerning the operations of the Campus Centre. Written applications stating undersigned immediately.

qualifications

John

should

be submitted

to the

.

Bergsma, h President

’ Federation

of

Student-h

STUDENT on page 21

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+$TERN$lP PLAN , \i I .,f& ELEl&NTARY SCHdoL TEACHERS

, in the \ -. r ,.{< ,’ .’

_ ’ .’ , Applicants must have the following qualifications; A 40year Honour Degree or‘ a general BTA., with a minimum (‘ . \ .I _’ age of 25’ as’of September 1, 1969\ 1 L \ ’ OR‘ .,: / _ Anacceptable uni)versity.degree plus one year of post graduate; study such as Bachelor of Library-Science;‘graduation from the i’ Institute of Child Ftudy; A.F&C;T., etc. .. The- “Plan” includes: ‘/- . ’ - ’ --initial orientatjon of 20 con&utive-days during May and June, 1969. Candidates to be pa’/d at the rate of $20. per __ day-a e-week summer course, July 2 to August 8, 1969,, at -’ Lakeshore Teachers’ College. Cost of course to be’borne by the Department af Education.

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A large number on the newspaper lines, as- members

j”Pracpice” teaching experience under supervision, September to December, 1969. Salary at the rate of, $400. per month. ’ Thereafter, satary according- to qualifications-and responsi_ /-: _ bi I i’ty assu med .-a final summer , ’ session in July and August, 19X9. i I, ’ WR lyTTEN APPLICATIONS shou Id be sent before/January / 31,1969, to: __ I’,<, \ Dr. H.R. Partlow SupeAntendent of Professional Development / 15 Oakburr-i Crescent, Willowdale, Ontario. F.W. Minkler; B.A.,‘D. ’ Director of Education

Paed.

I

,

’ 5

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Bruce C. Bone, BA, C.A. Chairman ’ ’

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by Cyril’ Levitt Chevron staff

What is happening. in Peterborough is a very common situation. The striking workers at the Examiner’ see their problems do not originate at their -Iplace .of employmentbut stem from th e

I

,

by the Thomson

- - - - r , - -

- - “ - - I -

of modern-day industrial organizatidn, we, find that there are many Lord Thomsons-men who massively reap the benefit of those who work.. There individuals haveessentially the. same -interests at. he&rthe preservationand expansion of the empires they ‘control. Similarly, the people who form the tools for that *expansion and - preservation-the workers-have a common interest which’stands inopposition to that of_ the x owners.

A;s -siftware

The workers’ interesr, is conunion organization, where an incerned with the preservation of ’ jury to one becomes an injury to his ‘rights;- which !.in the process all, ‘no employer could force-. one, of profit-making get trampled by group of workers against another the boss. ‘Workers” desire l for for action would be put.,on an rights wfi always be opposed by industry-wide scale. Furtherthe profit-needs of the boss. rriore; workers everywhere would Trade unions have recognized - be part- of the One Big’ LJnion %his but have been unable to which would be labor’s answer to international corporate capital. 1u11y ut: vt!:Lup cl11 Ul ~cllllLclLlul~ I nffnntirrnlxr finht fnv .Ir Jf GLICLLIVCIJ “6&&b I”1 - &ha 1.‘1L .ricrhtc I l~“Ki Although many skilled workers labor. Craft unipns sim’ply cannot ’ in Canada have enjoyed high cope with the power of managewages in the recent past, real. ment., Although the craft otganizaz-. wage&buying power) havegenetion may have the power of the rally declined due _to. the increase shop behind it, the owner has the of wage-taxation’and inflation, power of national and ,internationFurther, the instability of the al capital as well ‘as a rigged international monetary scene / c * legal system, z-offers an ominou\premonition of future crisis. ’ ’ .4 : 1I It can then be seen the prob! lems of. the worker do not origiI Jf working people’ are ‘to comnate at his place of employment bat these trends, -they must be: ’. ! but rather are due- to the national prepared to look for more effective and international organizatisn of forms of organization. 0 _capita! ip-industry., .,.. ’ The concepts of tthe Industrial . ) ’ hot only do craft unions1 fail to ,Workers of the World arei one adequately protect the rights of way to achieve these ends.- . \ ._ C..ll,.

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Squeixeby Wayne

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THE ROGUES 111 A GO-GO

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pass

Regardless of which card West discards on South’s last trump, South must make the last 4 tricks (2H & 2D, if heart is discarded or 1H & 3D if diamond is discarded ). For a squeeze play, the declarer must know how the cards are distributed, either from the bidding or counting the hands or both. If West leads any card but the A of hearts, West. can be endplayed. The hand from the quiz two weeks ago : North-( Alan)

Opening lead - Ace of Hearts s5 An opening bid of 3 hearts by H A,J,7,6,5 West made it very difficult for N,S D K,Q,lO$,W . to bid accurately but they ended c7 . up in 6 spades. West (Freddy) -East (Sonny ) West leads the A of hearts and s 10,8,6,4 S A,$,J,%3 switches to a club (if he leads H4 H-9,3,2 another heart, South plays J and D J,9,8,7,2 D -makes contract with 5S, 2H, 2D, 3C:) c 10,9,5 C KQ,W,2 l South has lost one trick and it South (Howard) appears that the contract depends _. S K,7,2 on a diamond finesse -but South ’ H K;10,9,8 _ knows that this will fail from the D A,3 bidding. C A,J,6,4 South decides that the onlv Correct written solutions were way to make the contract is with received from: Jim Barney, chema squeeze play on West. A squeeze ical ; Tom Ledwell, mechanical ; play is when one (or both) opponS. Gangwell, grad; Tom Hicks, ent( s) must protect two suits math; Doug Smyth, physics; Gord but is forced to discard protection Chapman, math; Randy Houghof one suit. ton, St. Jerome’s Many people On __this hand, South draws also spoke to me who had the cortrumps,- and plays 3 rounds of rect answer. clubs and the remaining 2 trumps _Duplicate bridge will resume’ and the position before South on January 7, 1969 in the.SS lounge plays his last trump (spade) is _ at 7 pm sharp. - a following: -

_- THE KENT HQTEL

needs leader

_

Orientation 69 (or ‘252 as it was Work for 69 as been proceeding known) needs a new leader. Jim in some areas, but a new chairChorney, phi1 3, had been appointman is needed soon. Applications ed chairman just after finishing ’ are open till January 10. -Orientation 68 asvicechairman. He has since decided he’d like - Application can be made to the to spend- an academic sabbatical board of education in the federa.,in Europe. tion office.

GO-0 AM -

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Shindo’s mainobjective and hs rarelylets us losesigh5of it. Shindois a disehmingandcmpassionate artkm in histreatment of the theme.” ,

REXHARRISMINA

-

TECHNICOLOR0 A PARAMOUNT

2nd color

hit

“TARZAN Sunday

-keiler,

N. Y. fiper

PICTURE

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& JUNGLEBOY” Mon., Tue.

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20thCENTURYFOXpresents

A UNIVERSAL

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2nd HOR-ROR

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Both adult entertainment

0-UTSTiNDlNd DEAN MATT

MA-RTIN HELM

“THE

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onTECHNICOLOfV

COLON

HIT

OF DRACULA”

CHRI ;TMAS ATTRACTIONS

, -m\ Playing-At

The ‘liwin

“ONE OF tHO;E PERFECT FILMS SHMDO’S FilM IS ONE -- ’ TO SEE” - me ww lug -

Cities

Leading

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as . , DIANE

BAKER

1N

IN PAUL

AL-MOND’S

CREW”

University ->

a

530 The CHEVRON --

-

-. and ’ Weber


m@‘-‘;Y’ a : re;cid,ivistieable~~agreement thatchrist had a’ lvlessage; i k .There are son%e who vvould claim that ,t ; .-?s,(move,m$!nt; - % 5 :ft ,is;;.admittedly; and gets only grudgihg support ‘,:lthere is.. e&emely little’ agreement’ on . Santa Claus. is a tool of the boyrgeoi$ies, i ;.:.~~~o~.,ThePebplB,~ and then ,only in their ~what~pre~isely. it is su~l&&l~ 30 i have j j &s e&en& b$ the 1f&‘@at he is to< be:. _/ .zc ~n?onthsTld . .._-‘, t&iden,$y .< i’ tov@$rd;-bq!v$t$, ” 1 : s-d. in; _ .&ore ~- L.*dour moknents, _ ,..., .I ; : ” .,’ 1: ;’ ’ . ‘\’ _.lbeen,,or whether it&as accurate, or even’ ’ found 4n the liallk,~ of $rerv.-Jdepartme~nt. relevant, kkto.mentioh in good taste: ’ storeand’.‘shopping mall d‘&ing-business’ $J.‘“.’ ‘..‘~“.;-“ ,;*; “: ‘. ‘, ;, .;,-(,.!,.‘.; i i whi)? h ; iii-~_ ,m~&.ey ,,.‘l:he FeopW ai%e,in2-f ..)r’\s: 1,l%&n khris&o$,n-iords, for ,e$ample, ‘~~hours in the Christmas;sea,sqn. j - , I 5-1 ” 1‘ * ,a ~~.~cda’s,i’dK~or,~c~l~~,ra~~~ \ :::x,on is *$la$@ theright. .= ’ : , ;’ *. ’ .” ,.’ ; +f-_/‘.,.‘. :,I, .; i’t ,-appkars,he The &idente ban hardly be denied; ;but, wished to sa.ve our %ouls 1 i&;: hati] been it@& c$‘i+: I The origins of Santa Claus a@ l&%sant~~~: ,.: fromG$r;.rnore than anyth&ig’else.. ‘. :. ‘- I* :J< ’ it. is’not~ clear that the[conclusion follows; , ~fi?f&,ii.$$~&fjd~ $$r iseveral t&m- i ,’ ,’ Ijr .‘~@+ir& I if, *@d&d he h&-ah3 ‘,a$ $1;: ._’;‘ . , nr---, .- A’, -” CL-,-- ‘.Lli- Pf _. 11 “&“.I 1 .. ix -. nor-if it did-that it *tiould,be he’cr&a’rilv !.,. .

$rs.

,*-:

,/ .\ trorj31 sin :’ ,:.“’ : p ,“, lt ‘is. true-that glittering toysand~choqo-. .*7*.1 Mr. _, wnateyer ,qr.z m . any case, are _j. _- Christ . ,.+. 1a,t es and such doled-oat at Christmas

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in a really distinguished performance. especially in the-‘Esurientes’ section; and the two ladies agreed with each other most satisfactorily - in matters. of -.. The Carol Fantasy, which first appeared on the intonation and dynamics. Waterloo-scene in 1966, has evidently become an anI Another item on the program deserving notice was nual affair. It is good to be able to report that it gets the ‘0 Magnum Mysterium’ of Cittoria. Here one of better every year. This year’s version saw the usual the most serious challenges to an amateur chorus. forces-the university chprus, assisted by half of control of dynamic shadings, especially in the pian- the new little symphony,’ and by the junior choir, issimo department, presented itself in force, and which consists of seven-to-ten-year-old offspring of G was surmounted very capably. university personnel, all under the direction of Alfred Kunz. Finally, the ‘Hallelujah’%f Handel rang out with security and balance, which, coupled w’ith the enthuBesides the inevitable traditional carols, with ausiasm Handel’s masterful way with choral writing dience participation down to verse umpteen, this always engineers in amateur singers. and most year’s program featured works by, among others, stirringly supplemented with the efforts of the two Praetorius, Buxtehude, Bayh, Tomas Luis Victoria’ trumpeters in the little orchestra. made for a deser(Spanish, 16th C.) and Handel, whose hallelujah vedly enthusiastic reaction from the audience. chorus is evidently also slated to become a fixture in this event. _ Then there is the kiddie choir. Caroline Boslev piped up with the’ ‘Huron Carol’ well enough.‘and the - Kunz’s labors withthe chorus are, at length, being other perform,ances of the junior group were OK; &owned with success. In every way this year’s but the gap in listenability between the youngsters chorus is an improvement over those of previous and the chorus is beginning to yawn rather wide. years.’ The usual problems of imbalance are not Inclusion of a. good deal of reading from the nearly so serious as they have been previously, and Bible, as well as exclusive employment of religious the security of intonationof the various sections is rather than secular carols, brings up the question much improved. As a result, a fairly difficult piece how much like a Protestant church service we want like Buxtehude’s ’ ‘Magnificat Anima Mea’ was - \ find that managed with comparative-ease and was a pleasure , this sort of event to become. Fran-1 the line is definitely overstepped with this sort’of to hear.’ thing: let’s leave that to our friends down the street. Special mention is due here to the three soloists It is nice to‘ be able to report on a performing in this piece, Neil McLaren, Joan Vern,-and Melanie , group that is coming along pretty well. At this rate. , Telgdi . it will be in order to think about exposing it around the neighborhood a bit. YOU can see the care/ FanMcLaren, who has been the mainstay of the bass tasy on Channel 13, Christmas day. section since the beginnings of the chorus, turned by Jan Narveson

ChwJon

Then$eatywrself toa chat with Dr. i-ioward Fetch,Vi~ePresident (kademic) - . __

staff

.

Little 5 symphony _-by Jan Narveson Chevron staff

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-I

-- GRAD

SOCIETY

PRESENTS --

.-

A

z_

- Friday,- December -

.

r- _

13d

‘CAMPUS CENTRE, 9:oo - too

.-.. $1 .OO Admission \

I Bar

, ’ ALL WELCOME DOqR PRIZES DONATED BY Eaton 3, Walters Credit Jewellers, Lyric

Theatre,-

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sence,’ due to pneumonia, of, the principal second violinist ) , somehow the event came off without disaster and even with, here and there, a modest measure of listening pleasure. Enough satisfactory

--

debut -2

chestral contribution being- relatively undemanding. Here - the extremely difficult trumpet part was handled intelligently by David Greenberg whose occasional excursion into the high o& tave was welcome. -

Last Thursday evening brought the first performance of the university’s newly formed little symphony orchestra to the arts theater, under the direction . of Alfred or better playing from various inKunz. An extremely ambitious A modest harpsichordwould dividuals (among whom%ne must program ‘for the purpose-included single out the oboes, and especial: have been welcome, please-a the Beethoven’s ‘first _symphony, piano just won’t do here. ly the-principal, Pierre Lemieux, Bach’s second Brandenburg and the first flutists, Chris Benconcerto, Beethoven’s Egmont Finally, the performance of -to demonoverture, and Kunz’s work, the sin- ’ nett). was forthcoming Kunz’-s - work surp_risingly came strate that if a lot of reliable refonietta no. 1. -. off least well. It began all right, hearsal time could be found, the v_ ‘What one remarks at 0% an oc-m little symphony would be a group with rather a nice first movement casion of this kind is not; as Sdm of which the university could be with some interesting touches Johnson said of the talking dog,’ proud. I * , \ Trouble set in, however, in the that it is done well, but that it is done at all. The university of Wat_So far as the program went, the r midQe movement , whose occasional felicities were ’ nearly lost erloo is and has been since its inprize for -most-nearly successful in the shuffle; and was compoundception without a music. departperformance doubtless went to ed in the last, which just didn’t ment; without any facilities for the Beethoven. fir&symphony; in hang together. This no doubt was formal training in instrumental which false entries and serious dismusic, and indeed without any real cord were infrequent. A serious b because of the more contemporary harmonic structure of the work, encouragment for the production error’ in the performance of this conservative as it ‘was by, today’s of high-quality musical programs _ work with this group came in the standards. from its own resources. .’ andante, which was taken too slowly for amateur strings, What we can conclude is what .The little symphony, under the whose unb-eauteous tone is most everyone with any experience circumstances, is one notch up distressing at this pace. knows: that short of the most infrom a patchwork organization.. credible luck, an amateur group The Egmontoverture ’ was, One rehearsal a week, nevG%-a rewith no. real time to prachearsal with all players reliably somehow, just another amateurtice, drawn from a university with orchestra performance, to my present, no section rehearsals-gino special pretensions to culture, ven this background, what can- we ears.,But the-Brandenburg, though is not going to be able to compete expect? Intonation little short of doubtless not quite as well lived with a group backed by a develop_ up to in its demands as the symintolerable,,ragged section-playing,_ ed program with real support,- . inept and impromptu entries, es- phony, emerged as the most mu-sacademic and otherwise. ‘ically satisfying work of the evenpecially in the less prominent sec--irig. ’-. , tions, and so on. A big difference would plainly Possibly this is because it is be made if the orchestra members Yet, even withthe expected lastminute disasters (such as the’absustained by its solo work, the orcould make their efforts count as part of their academic programs. Until the production of great music is allowed at least this small status. we will not have reallv enFor those who can enjoy your holidays. In January, just as you are joyable productions of large-group ooming -back to enjoy the second $art of this year’s vacation, there music at Waterloo. And that is a will be-a few interesting things on tap. A few of them ar;e Russ Burgess tremendous pity. for this year’s the’ mind-reader, the Government Inspector for play rovers, and Chanventure shows that the talent is teurde Paris, for all you ribitters. See you there. here. could we but exploit it. -- , A. .-

Looking~- to neti!. terni ’ .y-.

Capitol

Theatre,

Graduq te Stud&n t Society. \.

I

10

532 The CHEVRON

,

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i \ a

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i” ,Ht :U!

ANAMERICAN iNTERNATIONAL IN

a

,

Among the proteges of Manet &he great ‘tuner ‘and’ arranger) must be counted the talented j arrived, and rum surfaces were arranger Selwyn Griffith who armade concave with notes standDuring World War ,s II an Ameq in contrast to the , rived at Gu&ph a year ago; with ’ ican base was established in _ ing upwards over a decade of arranging exTrinidad and with it-tremendous 1 general depression. The modern perience. quantities of fuel oil ’ were . im- 1 steel band was now possible. ported /to supply the base. The Immediately ,the . second year . Tuning started out as an un. containers were 45 gallon drums =I- compromising agriculture student started a band art in w&h the : which, were emptied and discarded. anb within months they were play‘hapless tuner with hammer,, chisel * >These derelicts were i rescued \ i d g at dinners, dances and conand fire :and a keen ear had to incor- ’ by Trmidadians . and certs. ’ out a range ‘of notes: porated into their bands, creating’ fashion ’ The band was well received The pans were givennames in the prototype of the modern steel and -one may attribute this to accordance .with a regular ortheir rendition of “Somewhere my band. - .+: chestra. Large uncut drums with a : The steel band of today bears Love”, ‘-‘Hey Jude’?, “For Once few notes on the surface were little relation to these crude “one on My Lifetime”, current hits, called base drums, next came the note” drums that ,were ’ merely ageless melodies like cellos, the second pans and finally Bubbles’ ‘i “Theme. From a‘::’ beaten on- the top with a rubber the much advertised tenor pans hammer. The first step was ( containing mer Place” or their marathon over 20 different notes made ‘when the pans were cut at 20 minute jump-up called “Fire, and light enough to be borne like various heights in. an attempt to Fire”, but really a consortium a guitar. \ produce, ,different . sounds. ‘of everything from limbo to . . came the idea of using ham::? 9 x_ ‘Traditionally the‘ tuner and mambo. ,Iichisel, and .heat to gouge- otlt arranger was the same person. The Guelph Steelband has two different size patches on the drum Nowadays with the sponsor,ing ‘U. of 0W. students in its numsurface. This herald@ the creaof these’ bands by large business bers and they wiqbe at the camtion .of individual notes but still * concerns this is rarely so. The pus centre this Friday from 9 p.m. more had- to be done. The surtuner with the aid of guitars,’ -1, a.m. for the graduate Christ. by Delf King Chevron staff

kin

a doll house -- ;--

. ----I

CO~ORSCOPE BYPERFECT . . *.

ADDED HIT! “BLOODY SUNDAY “MARYJANE” “+I;KL’& FING-ER

ALLENS’ APP,&Ei

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b

PIT

OF

\ -

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in

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STOKELY, fancy ho,pei-pod- k

_

With the ‘proper exposurer’ this group show go .’ far. They posse&all the qualities of the better groups ’ -around: ‘excellent vocals, imaginative writers, and _I original instrumentation. Thei chase, as opening song. strongly points out . the whimsical but powerful voice of lead vocalist.L Roger Chapman. I \‘ The harmonica plays a strong part in a lot of the songs by the group. Violi n, saxophones and a cello improve the rock sound of the group; without making it sound like soul or classic ta1 music. ’ \ Me my friend, US$S i 1. very;: imaginative Lstyle ’ of’electronic altering, to.providea wierd and enjoy&* . I _ .’ able song: . Several songs with the bluesy harp round off this * ,6side of’the album. .. .A t Side two contains a little too much”‘of ’ the vibrato ‘voice style’, .’ but. remtiins wbll ’ instrumented’and ’ ” I.. j li , . . _+ I>;,’ ‘pr&j,@i,;: > A, ‘On then -whole, the album is very ?magina*e, .I * original;‘and’welldone. . L ’ 8 2” . I.-

’ ‘, Britain’s -answer to /, ‘the’ Ultimate’ Spinach , They are one of the I infu$e the traditional . forms into a-pleasantly

the Jefferson, Airplane and has. to be the Pentangle. few’ groups around who&n ..-jazz, folk, blues, and rocks , I arranged album. L?et no. man steal ,-yotir thyme,’ immediately es- p tablishes femaie singer Jacqui McShee as a top .I notch vocalist. ’ ‘Her’ subsequent-‘handling ” of )rear my c&f and -several , other Songs on the album: show her to. equal the quality,ii,not the power of Grace Slick of the ,Airplane: L -Song two,” Be//s, “contains a - syt drum solo to add a touch of spice to the song. It is quite a strong instrumental andsounds fresh. Way behind the sun fea’tures a l&s. Robin&, style guitar track, as well as a solid drum backing: ’ The final song Waltz, caps off a very enjoyable, , \ easy listening, album. ,

Is yoi~r life wdrth a BLIaNKI-LUX? _-

__/KS .p,nly at Birks. --The first fully a&omatic tranststorized Flash Warning Signal. 11 h’as so,’ many uses for motorists and pedestrians yo$d better come in and see:.it !. Great gift idea. 9.95 \,.* %.,’

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beginning --gbove ten ter and continuing clockwise are from international Workers of tile World songbook-“Christians at- War” by John Kendrick; the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam; -Infern0 by Dante; and Ljontavles (Winter ‘68)-‘*Xmii’s”: by Dean

. _- u-

tider the banner of Chr’istiamit.y have been fought the world’s cruelest, most deva-stating -.wars.. That &di-. tion continues. ’ . :

I . T

J

12

534 The CHEVRON

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l ‘...and remember, friends-the makers of Sprinkle Flakes wish you ii merrier Christmas than the makers of any other detergent. I’

0

h if the World were but to re-create, might catch That we ere closed the Book of Fate, And make the Writer on a fairer leaf.Inscribe our names, or quite obliterate !

-F

rom where I was now standing I could stare _ Deeply into, the trough before me spread And watered by the anguish of despair. And I saw through the curving valley’s bed Silent and weeping throngs approaching me Slowly as in our litanieswe tread. And, when I peered more closely down to see, From each one’s chin to where the chest began All of them seemed distorted monstrously. For twisted round was every face to scan Its loins, and backward had they all to go, Since none could look before him like a man. It may be that paralysis could shew Deformity like this, but never I Have seen it, nor could believe it so. Then, Reader, so God grant thee profit by Thy reading, picture how it must have been Impossible to keep my visage dry When at my hand our human form was seen So warped, the tears that should have bathed the breast Coursed down their buttocks by the cleft between.

Z

ounds, the Inconceivable cbncep tion Is once upon us again. The City Hallis All decked With barstool Santa: The Devils Yule Is trussed with Black PO wer rags. A ngelic designs of Napalm jelly, With permissive poli$icians ’ Vying for Black-berry sauce And Hahnaka presents. The boys at the station Sip draughts from A decanted Mace. Children lie peaceful/y In their beds, In their fields, Dead. With fragrant odors c Of defoliation sprays Blistering their lungs.

Friday,

December

13, 7968 (9:34)

589

13


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Chevron staff

Then,treat yourself to a chat with Dr. Howard Petch,Vice President (Academic) Mondays,4-6p.m. Campus Centre (Pub Area)

P

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LES

LESTON

STEERING

WHEELS

PERFORMANCE

PERFORMANCE

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RACING

DRIVING PERFORMANCE

SMITHS

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“Personal

Plus The Famous Globetrotter ADXD ATTRACTiONS I

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536 The-CHEVRON

DEC. 14 8:00

RACING

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14

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INSTRUMENTS

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EXHAUS,TS

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FOR PROTEX

HELMETS

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$3.00 & $2.50 Students $2.00 any seat Children with adults $1.50 Tickets on sale at Millars - Art’s and

WHEELS

Ron Robinson and Bob Reade led the hockey Warriors to an impressive 8-O win over Guelph by scoring two goals each last Friday night. The game. witnessed by 900 enthusiastic lYar:.ior fans. started at a fast clip as Robinson scored his first goal of the game on :I breakaway belore the galne ~;IS twominutes old. The Gryphons then walked into two penalties over’lapping each other by one minute. During most of the time that Guelph was penalized. the \t‘arriors’ power play did everything but score. Their persistence was rewarded when Robinson scored at 4: 28 to make the score 2-O for the Warriors. Ken Laidlaw, assisted by Robinson, made it 3-O at 17:23 to close out the scoring in the first period. The Warriors outshot Guelph 18 to4. The first goal of the second period was by Reade, assisted by George Swanson, about half-way in the period. The Warriors then walked into a string of three penalties and

ice reven

ineffectiveness of Guelph’s poweiplay was demonstrated when Bob Reade made the score 5-O on a breakaway while the Warriors were two men short. At 16: 44 John Taylor scored as the puck u’as shot straight into the net past an astonished ,Jim Horton from the faceoff to the right of Guelph‘s goal. The score was 6-O at the end of the pericx~. Shots on goal were onc,e ag;lin in favour of the Warriors. 17 to 5. The third period saw two additional goals to make h final score 8-O. Gary Robertson, assisted by Rick Bacon made the scobe 7-O at 4:53. Roger Kropf was the final marksman at 8:51 when he scored from a faceoff while the Warriors were shorthanded. A total of 18 penalties was handed - nine to each team. Although there we& not very many solid bodychecks in the game, those that were dealt out, mostly by the Warriors, were hard enough to really loosen up the Gryphons. One such check occurred in the late third period as Tom Borecky of Guelph was really slammed into the boards. He

suffered a cut and had to leave the game. There was altnost a brief donnybrook in the last minute of the game as Taylor wanted to tangle with Bob Stoutenburg after had slashed at Stoutenburg Taylor. Both players were penalized. Throughout the game the Warriors controlled most of the play and, as a result, Jack Weber. the third string goalie. did not have too much work to do. But when he was called upon he made spectacular saves. At the other end of the rink. Jim Horton, Guelph’s netminder. had a very busy time as Waterloo outshot Guelph in the game 44 to 13. Only he prevented the score from going much higher. The win provided a certain amount of solace after, the 6-5 loss to Western Mustangs, Tomorrow night the Warriors face the Canadian National B team in an exhibit.ion match at 8: 30 at Waterloo Arena. The Warriors will also compete in the Rensselaer tournament December 27 to 29. Their first league game after the holidays is January 9 when they host Western.

Scott in curling Defending champion John Scott has taken a large step towards repeating as the skip of Waterloo’s intercollegiate curling rink. He defeated Pete Hindle 4-3 in an extra end last Friday and won the fall semester double-knockout tournament. As a result he nailed down a berth in the best-ofthree final to be contested in late January. The winner of that battle goes on to the western division Ontario-Quebec Athletic Association playdowns at Guelph in February. Scott’s opponent in that final will be determined in a straight elimination bonspiel in January. The final game against Hindle’s foursome was a classic affair which saw two ends blanked, including the eighth. All ends scored were singles. Leading 2-1, Scott had a beautiful chance for a brace in the fifth when he found himself sitting one with his last rock to come. His open draw, however, was 12 feet short and he had to be satisfied with the single point. Hindle used last rock to decrease his deficit to one again on the sixth end and kept the pressure on in the seventh. He was lying two as Scott went

to throw his last stone. Scott could not hit a Hindle rock in the eight-foot and lie shot so he had to play a roll off the second Hindle counter. He punched his target out but rolled out himself to give up one and sit tied 3-3 There were no rocks in play as the skips prepared to shoot in the eighth. Hindle drew to bite the front of the house and repeated the shot when Scott hit and rolled out. , On his second shot Scott tried to chip himself into the h,ouse but rolled out again, forcing the extrr frame. 1 Hindle took advantage of an a+ cidental raise by’ Mike Fenton, Scott’s second, on an opposing stone and started to- throw up guards. Scott’s rink failed to remove them cleanly and when Scott went to throw his last rock he was facing three Hindle counters. He pulled a masterful shot, doubling off two Hindle stones and burying himself in the fourfoot behind the third stone plus some’cover of his own out front. Hindle was forced to play an angle raise on his remaining rock and couldn’t quite do it, losing the end and the game. Hindle had Doug Mitchell at

lead, Brian Fisher -at second stone and Hugh M&arrel at third. In addition to Fenton. Scott had Paul Solomonian throwing lead rocks and Rick Cooke at third. Individuals or rinks wishing to compete in the January knockout tourney to determine the other finalist must contact Scott by 5 pm, January 10. The competition will start the following morning. Scott may be reached in room 226 in the chemistry building or by phoning his home at 578-0653. 0 * James Green and Dave Holmes met this week in the Thursday curling league final. Green ended the season with a 7.38 average. Homes was at 7 even. Green has Marie Murphy at lead, Rob McKellar at second stone and Lois Oliver at. third. Holmes has Bill Benn throwing lead stones, Barb Hall at second and third Bill Richardson. Registration for the winter league will take place at the Granite January/7 and 9. All people wishing to curl after Christmas must register bet.ween 4 and 6 pm. New teams will be formed. League play will commence January 14 and 16.


.

top.play$tis, P@e #%$$zand-John.. fioints $Ong witi I)ayeCrichton. ‘M*&uliffe,’ ,wer&: -in, .;f&$ ,tr@&ie=-.. - ]r &lount_ Allisoxi, their two X The Loyo.la b&ch. cam&on s@@g,’ -guards, Dave ’ @?ood and _ Den __ -. Bowever., and ‘the $Varri‘ors :y?rti -Evans, led them with 15. and 13 . I _ _ _- ..--.. % -f@avi N iemenkn;i’f jwChiw& 1 h_ .e’ ‘. \ able ,-to cowe *bac& atid.. even-gopoints re_$pective& - wmpiors-’ .Da& C&&on ($1 SQila~‘, tb .&a6 of& this rebaund>;rrib~g~ I+&,,‘.~ garnc q&&r eight”‘ up I after ten $&n&s ..$ .- On S? turday -morning the yar--\-f--i ‘I). tb&J~ Mount ~Allisdn% the hp-0 ff tqtirnev, Lti&ing on _Ia&! WaPi’io~~~~~~-~L~~;~;a;!isrc. :. ,- , . _ the’half. ‘-- ;-_ . ,-- ‘x-- riory r% into \I;oyola and ‘in- the .-‘Heaney then%aited (o ‘hit for best game of-, the tournament - Sol& (33), Ken Cripps (&&id -Dhnni.i .Whzg,(44). Alsc%in the +plai$ Dtiug?&$ f34). s-X’ .,- > ._- -.-_’ .- _ I were defeated 98-88. Action was Acadi$- and @oul@ t 1 be- stopped -I - , Startini with only six players, posely playing slow-dowm to cona$ ko$$l% t&d everyone. they just a. continuous blur from In ‘the Ac&‘k game: the. grads _ Bob Pandb; Bob E&n and-frieiids *-serve. energy, the. grads moved - ? had to guatrd him. , _. .end to end and it, was phenomenal fou‘nd that exp&ien& r&e! ’ surprised a& out-played Sir Ge’othe ball well to set up every With 3:_28 to go it w&s! 73-77. that the tw_o teams- could. keep up: were+ . en&g& ‘against ‘&e . the pace for the-whole game. _rg9. WilliBn$ crew 61-42 Fri@shot: Whenthe -c%yrgians came ,Heaney sunk two crucial foul-young and quick A%@neti. night atid lost to eventual win-. up . witk la full-court press to: shots to give’ Actiaa the lead _ The. score was very close ,thfough-. Still pl’auing their sldw methodical ner Acadia 76-69, in the semiloosen, them up, the Warri.orz game, . although ,b@stered. -by a 85-82 and L@qla ’ couldn’t &ore . out as’loyola ‘nursed a tw’o-boint f alumni came’ back with a \i&$ oh a advantage with three. minutes to -_ filial S_atu-rday afternoon. somewhat la.rger bench. the grads last-second length1; ’ The -absence of high-scoring effective fast’ break to’ pull of-the-floor pass. .play. : = _-_ cbifidn’t coritrol -the-‘ bac&boards- -_ Tom Hen4ers;on and Ed-Petryshyn -._even fprtherahead. For soydta, For Loyola I Earl -ietlris, -wid Phipps &had I 27 as they did agains;t-the Georgiansr . -. _ had’ a.‘,lot, to do with - the gra(is . Pando showed he still hid the ’ - ---_ I r- is, 6’1” and dunked the ball withpoints, McAuliffe had i58nd Lewis East&‘ led the grads with 36 ‘- . -. --had 16: Waterloo was led-by CrichT not going ail me way. ’ tricky‘ moves under-the -basket as out trying,- had 16@oints and-McAlthough giving up a lot:. i.n’. ‘suckered the Georgians in to $0~ lpdints in *’ -twd ga-mes. 19 ’ Auliffe, a @$I: qente+.had :. 15 toii -with 19 and .-@i;Eye? r&d .:-.h against Sir, George. Pando scored points. Lewis. and $&Auliffe-made conditioning and height t@the\Geo-.- -;ing- him on several. octisions. He I - -: Laaniste‘with 12-&a& in rebounding -J 14 against ‘the Georgians and : up the remainder qf the all-s&-- ,me_ highlight of -the ‘ t&na’ rgian$, ‘- the, &ads exhibihed fine _lgd both tea& Mike Power-_had 15 in the -Acadia , ball-handling apd crisp shooting to - and. teamed with Eaton [or seveteam.... 1 ’ + -’ ment, ho-wev,er.?;lras the f-&e play -stun -the Montreal boys. Furralpretty - scoring plays. Acadia gained t‘he- -.fi&l by bf the Qarrier grads: Orgtinized gape. , virtue _ of earlier win’s of 91-77 quickly _to fill’ ai v.acanV spot in j over: Ca r!‘et@ t ‘and - 76-69 - against the iiiie-vp, the. grads came within _ . _ the grads. Loyola reached-through seven po@s bf going ‘ta the final. ,-,

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To wind up the fall ietiester we.haye a pot-Murri ,f ^^yu^L -,A AL,,d,,-Lz,A- AlA ----L::.--‘-----le-l

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- York’s K$nsman ‘won’both :-the sWi*_mif+ W+arcidr$ .-were : te?y- l-‘meter-and 3-r&%! diving qvents imnrac$i’& in dr@pi~g a :&ualr- quit@handily. Secbnd-,‘.and’ third n a tinwclrfui ‘ctnrk s&lad~ : SD&&‘ ifi b&h,* c&nt&itions went.

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t& .- sdk&. 4:‘T& h&e ..-.s tfeam _ * brea& .yfi ths we., M&n& diGin jj$s hav&‘devices tihich, Fontinuoi<ly agi?ate t& surface: of the wateir. . . - ; ‘ -\ -Since this- ‘Was tGe fi<sst .-meet -held- in the ,pO;ol. \a11 winning i itlO-y&d freestyle. _ 1 pg!fgrmances -Itire p&l records. results @’ the vario . ‘b1riT: McMillan Swati a’ great Furthermoi%$ . sin&e **this ’ ~3s .-will be’lbased *on entries. inctu -1,‘participari@-in..,t%m~ -spar@. Ht strategic- -race to .- win’ th~@~fiOO+ .WaterlDo*s first swim ti&t;ever. a41 .top-perfor,mairces‘ by., the Wartires-were ignored in the awar’d yard fr&stylo l’rom two York%t surprisingly tlie standint - ---swimmers. Swimming the tihotc riors are team records. eX Hycrson is arc.. Very. sirnilay. the _ft)$ner.; .-,, .I”U..U,..fi.I.. . .. - way a hotly Iting1.h ‘behind ’ the 1’ A- meet- -a aainst . .C to. ._ . .._ turnouts other words. the units wltl-k the high have did a flip ttieh ;qthcdulcd ior @morrow afternoon. --_- Ic!;~t~~~rl~McMillan .

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16

538 The CHEVRON


LiBRzkIESCLOSED #l’ $&jay, December 27 &Saturday, December’ 28.

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.~games, suffering -one lo& kti’&h j es- of the-three tou.rneys. , - 1‘: \ _ Western ended in a tie with MC;.imb] Master _at ELwins apiece; They-. . f-had. to .beat the Marauders twice- -_ : in i,their. lasttwo. regularly: ---_ _, ’ .” ‘scheduled games- to force the-tie. “ Then- the -Mustangs won .a -best- YIn the meantime, the volleyball ofthree series two straight with _ ‘1 L Warriors have set a new low. - _ scores of ‘16;14’and 15-13 to take Following t&final, di- , __second place-and-earn.western -.-.--.“?-kya++~; a berthL in = . -Vision tOUlmQamf?nt last Saturday _ the final! _ _ in Guelph,~. the,- Warriors had a The *inner of. the -four&_,- Jam record of ‘one win to -go with 23 ---league final in January will ad- ..---- losses. :Their lone victory came vanee to the Canadian Intereoll~~ - i in a game’against Toronto three ‘- egiate. Athletic Urrion finals I in ?, 2 1 1 _ 7 weeks ago. _ -l&&hece -. _‘-*’ _. a I GuelphS‘and Western advancez . Waterloo’s ‘-best‘ performance ‘. _ ; $ to the Ontario-Quebec Athletic .-Asla% Saturday-wasagainst winner ; sociation Januari. final tournament _the in Guelph when they droppd their Ottawa 18 against --1 first game 15~12. The.=scos&in,#,ie ; top two teams-from the.. eastern second contest~was$+l,?S ;I:::;~~~$$ \ ’ division: ’ _ * _ ...L . 7: .Thq$l@t;’ to,:: Wes,te<n-..l&&&idGuelph won -21 -of / .their ’ .24-’ ,I $5~8. ..- _ - -_‘,~~L’-~ ‘. 1’: _ ” k <- ‘.,:: 1 --_ I _ ‘I tXT~-AAA#b~r; i-a-1+.-. CL, &LiLl


. \’ fwo.-nframura/ - 3 \ ,,’ _ Making a_late_ seasonburstinto \

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only. A new’ trophy, donated by intramural prominence, physed Father Bill Townsen pf RenisoR will be awarded on the basis of has won the fail hockey champion+, ship .to go with its earlier football ,,participation, one *point for each i7 ’ ’ competitor in each sport,, includcrown. . I”-, The phys-ed boy; beat Eng. B ing team sports. . 4-2 ,in the fW iast week. They Following are Fryer and Town-, ‘x i ’ were paced by Bob Burns with two-- sen standings after -12 events. , goals. Two phys-ed tallies came in Units are listed on the basis of I the third while they Were short-Fryer position. The second -figure P ’I handed. , is the Townsen total.‘The figure 3 The ‘win brought with it the in brackets is the Townsen -_stand-‘/ ing. i Father Bullbrook Cup. 139; 166 (4) Bhys-ed gained the final -by Math Renison 130; 1x2 (2) beating Eng. A 3-l. Eng. B drew

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offs. The winning goal was scored on a breakaw_ay after 39 minutes ’ of overtime.

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ATTENTION: Students looking for a good place to stay. Rooms now available in house set up entirely -and exclusively for students. Includes. kitchen, living room ‘etc. Non-smok: ers and abastainers please. Write E. &a-yn_e Quirk 231 Louisa StreetKitchener ai call

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Bachelor apartment for 2 &dents wa to sublet. Write Miss J. Brown 1 195 Clearview, Ottawa 13

-2 l/I! apartment to sublet, Montreal suitable 3 or 4 laundry. indoor ~001 walking distance ti?j _ downtown between Guy and Atwater Metro $165 month furnished. Confact Miss J. bannon . 1190 Rue Du Fort Apt 603 Mont_r&al 108-‘Quebet 514-931-6154 ’

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Someone to share large two-bedroom apartment during winter term- .(January to Ap: ril) Call 576-7316 from 5-8 pm or leave m_essage% mail-box of Psych Bldg Mike Stern

_~

ChiEVRON

- ---_ ----

ANNOUNCEMENT Grad Ball ‘69 will take-place on Saturday May 3 1, -1969, Locatioti, dinner, gtiest speaker and -Qr@hestra to be -announced at a later date . _ .-

:

FEMALE,EMPLOYMENT WANTED I am looking for’ a particular type of wo,man who is irR@rested in earning a $150 and up per month* time. Contact .Clievron. Box 543 , MALE~NCPL~YMENT~WANTED . P&t-* time position .&vailable for aggressive personable yqung man. Gust be capable of -r&.rtiiting and managing, women. Contact ,Chevron. Box 345 \ I COST Removed from outside EL105 Tuesday- -a university striped scarf. Phone”744-6860. Ask for Allan . -z _.

Male students wanted large single and douCARS FOR SALE ble rooms behind. Waterloo Square. Common 1964 Volvo Moclel D-51 44 B-l 8 engine. $990 room with TV. Phone 744-3291; between DeBill Abbotts, 94 Victory Drive, Downsview. cerriber 22 to January 2 phone 744-7830 Toronto - / \ A L_

r ’ TODAY K-W Little Theater. ‘No Exit’ by JeanPail -- Sartre, 8:30 pm, arts theater. GfadSoc dance with the Guelph Steel Band, campus center. 9pm. TOMORRDW K-W-Little Theater:’ Licensed dance at St. Jeromek with the

20.541I The_

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Co-op math 2A &dent wants winter term accommodation in Ottawa: dow*s Lake GlFbe area (near Carling & Bronson). in Otta- . - Will consider room and board & apirtment Apt 1516, sharing. Phone Peter & 576-8659 between 6 , -and 8pm or write S8-20& Student Village’ .

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Wanted two students to share I four other students. . Completely close to university and most “CHEAP”. Hurry phone 745=-339 information .

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Orange Tangerine, 8:30pm. Hockey .versus &e Canadian National B team. Waterloo Ice Palace. 8:30pm. Basketball versus Sarnia Knigl&. THURS.DAY Honkytonk returns to the campus center pub. Conversation and whatever-it-is, 4-midnight. .

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lefcourt replies’to of Baehre’s comments

In view of the polemics in which my name has become involved I feel I must respond to the rather long, inaccurate and critical letter printed in your Feedback section of December 6. First I would suggest that the classmates whom Mr. Baehre so quicklv defames as sheep‘ seem hardly that to . me. Since my attendance and discussions with these students are considerably more extensive than his own, I feel my’ impressions are bound to be somewhat more valid than his. And my impression is that the course members are considerably more alert than he would ever know. Secondly, the writer managed to give the impression that I spend my time in classes talking at random about student radicals. In fact, we were discussing Alderian personality theory and the concept of neurosis (not psychosis as the writer implied ) . Adler’s use of the term was directed at the way people regard their own beliefs. He defined neurotics as persons who have no perspective about their own beliefs, who expect that their ideals are obtainable highest and suffer continuous frustration and anguish in face of their inability -to reach their ideals. In this context did I mention the student radicals as being like Adler’s neurotics. In regard to the remarks about. Cleaver I discover I was in error thanks to the New Republic, not student radito any “informed cals”. The newscast had made it appear that Berkeley students demanded credit because they had listened to Cleaver speak about race relations. As the New Republic clairfied the events, the first impression was obviously in error. Cleaver had been brought to U. of C. as a speaker to a course that was listed and official. The students demands were, consequently, correct, and I am glad they made their case. My remark, based on the earlier news item, was that Berkeley students’ behavior was like asking credit for having a thought. In essence, I had interpreted the news item as reflecting a disdain for the scholarly work that should be pursued in academia. In discovery of that error I would not hold to that argument now. In regard to the suggestion that Mr. Baehre was cut off, he needs reminding that he had already taken a half-an-hour while his two co-speakers were waiting for their turns. We had agreed, I thought, that each would take ten minutes. The lack of self-discipline here was the problem. As it is, the third speaker never had a chance to speak. In regard to “my fear of being shot at” I must suggest that the writer is awfully quick to take remarks, received second-hand, and to twist them to his own purposes. I had suggested to a colleague that the behavior of student radicals reminds me enough of right-wing cranks for me to anticipate that their actions may someday lead to shooting at their supposed adversaries.

Skippingdown to the remark about’ Dr. Walters, I would reply that this simply indicates again

Address letters to Feedback, The Chevron, U of W. Be * concise. The Chevron reserves the right to shorten letters. Those typed (double-spaced) get priority. Sign it - name, course, year, telephone. For legal reasons unsigned letters cannot be published. A pseudonym will be printed if you have a good reason.

the bad taste of student radicals. They are so talented at arousing antagonism in others that I fear they will do damage to the very goals they claim to cherish, and which some of us quietly work for. It may be argued that the writer is simply one person so that student radicals should. not be blamed as a whole. But where is the restraint that an editor can exercize? Where is the self- or peer-instruction as to how to say something effectively? ‘Freeexpression and undisciplined expression are antagonistic, ,I am afraid. The latter often causes the demise of the former, such that I sometimes suspect radicals such as Mr. Baehre as being stalking horses for the right-wing. One could go on-the writer’s claim to clear grasp of history’s lessons, his assured understanding of governmental processes, etc. could all be laid open to a barrage of questioning. But enough from me. I hope others will feel compelled to stand up against intolerant ideological movements as they emerge from time to time throughout man’s history. I for one, am sick of holy crusades via which man continuously strains the ties that bind him to his fellow man.

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HERBERT M. LEFCOURT associate professorpsychology

Works own way but won’t support

for justice Baehre

Regarding your Feedback letter (Which of us is the psychatic? -Dec. 6), Mr. Baehre I’d like to say I’m, in arts 3, have no real investment in a career so as to desire stability in the present social structure, attend Dr. Lefcourt’s psychology 351 and take monumental offense at being called a sheep. Perhaps you may like to-know how someone else, one of your peers, observed your attempt to lead the sheep out of the fold-into some sort of ignorant meandering in your conception of a realistic utopia. Your “admittedly unsuccessful attempt” to do so wallows in its own blubber of .understatement. Mr. Baehre you had a glorious opportunity to be effectual in your cause-an opportunity you didn’t deserve, but you blew it baby and you wonder why nobody wanted to find out what you had to say? Well, there are only so many hours in a day and you took about half-an-hour to say absolutely nothing, except to read articles concerning police brutality which were as commonplace as blades of grass in a lawn at the time of your “attempt”. I enjoy Dr. Lefcourt’s classes. I wasn’t shocked as you were when he made some ‘choice comments” in class about student radicals. He makes many comments on relative points in the course of study drawn from his personal history, and I feel the course is enriched by his vast and interesting experiences. The implication that he is‘picking on student radicals is really absurd to one who has attended all the lectures Does his occasional reference elicit some sort of guilt in you, Or. Baehre--why the chip on your shoulder? Friday,

I’m interested in theories of personality too-that is why I took the course. I didn’t join to hear student radicals in the classroom running off at the mouth about injustices in society. Do you think that you have found something new, that we ( the other students) aren’t aware of the inequalities.

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Well I am and I work in my own way to alleviate them. You may feel self-righteous about your attempt but what the hell did you accomplish ? not a damn thing. So don’t call the rest of us sheep for not condoning your chinzy methods. KENNETH A. HARRIS arts 3 Director’s Marxist

bias not Bred message missed

Ted Lonsdale’s (Dee 6th article) condemnation of Good Women of Setzuan’s audience for failing to get the point, is not a totally accurate assessment. I would lay most of the blame at the directors feet. It is a gross error of judgement to attempt a Brechtian play without the commitment (at least the sympathy ’ of) the director of the cast, toward a communist ideolgy. Not only was there every evidence of non-commitment, but a decided lack of knowledge of Marxist Dialectics which is essential to the production of this, primarily political, drama. Unless you intend to satirize a viewpoint in direct opposition to your own, then the botching of a reasonably good ideology drama, through ignorance of that ideology, is reprehensible. It is reprehensible not only be* cause it does discredit to the playwright, but because it slights that political philosophy by an underhanded method. Psuedoliberalism (not even the genuine kind, which is bad enough) has no place in university drama nor should it be allowed to pass by without some comment or some opposition in the form of a totally run student drama performed, if necessary, on the steps of the library. But lets not let the only good ideological drama available to us be dismissed by bad productions, when we have an audience of student radicals and revolutionaries ready to lap it up. Why not a cultural jumping off point for the current round of political discussions and make relevant some of our “liberal arts” education. GLEN RICHARDS Grad English Class of ‘68 Baehre’s comment sup psych udmin

tasteless assistant

In reference to the letter from R. Baehre in -which he refers to our late chairman, R. H. Walters, I am amazed that such a statement would be allowed to go into print. Mr. Baehre’s comment is highly inappropriate, for anyone that knew Dick Walters, from any walk of life, knew him as an enthusiastic person dedicated to helping his fellow man and he was particularly devoted to stutimes jeopardidents-many zing his own personal life. to help these students. ’ To speak ill of the deceased is in extremely poor taste. MADELINE BAILEY administrative assistant-psycholog> December

73, 7968 (9:34)

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.: - --ZRationality, intelligence and; a~ ” Students--donot have theiexper. common feeling of humanity are tise we are told. Wouid the, te&rs * , political-science” graduthe assumptions [theradical makes have onlyi __ I of.man that*he others seem scared - ates elect their government? of believing in. --Where students lack expertise, - When the argument is maie - it’ should be a’ssumed they wit! ’ that beople should have .direct , be’wiilin’g to listen to and be guid- , , control over *their environments; t ed bv those with such expertise. -defenders of the status-quo seem to Rut-no one is “a :better expert s be .greatly disturbed by the :in the way our lives should be thought of the .great unwashed spent.than ourselves, ‘ . ,l _c mass:’ making impertinent ,deci-,. ,\ s$$$ LThey immediately envi$l;on Students :are \toid’- that. iife de- i c$t&trophies . accruing to . the’ &ions should be forced --upon world~from either the obvious (to them- because’ -older ‘pnd .--wiser I @@pi) r&ult of, chaos, or’ the -people have the -experience*-to -ob$&us (to them} result ofdictaDow what is good for the fledg._ f&&hip 1of th&majority,-a rule of. lings. : I ” . ’ the$fty percent,plui one. -But ’ the problem. here is we ~_$f)fi..;&ssence &e y &n9 t believe nev>erreallg make any direction& theycan trust their fellow’ man so . decision on ’ ourown-. AK of. the 'in life.‘ is‘: LimpOs&‘ SC, \ ~-.'. ' I th@~cl@to a system where they SC 1 disci@& ‘_feelC’b&ter,~ able ; to ‘. trust their ’ ’ : self;discipline is never learned. :s -. 1 fellow’elites.. y At Summerhill, t& retQrn”to & : , 1i . ~;$J&shamea of it is, that it -has example, “no pupil ’ is. made ‘to , . : _ &&,the ghost of && ,proven man can live in ‘a .’ study anything.JGventually; how-’ . ’ ’ /’ - :.l-’ _, ~. true.-com,munity and. yet still res- ever, ’ as students progress I6 -’ p&t: the rights ofthe ‘individual. : L the school, some -decide,. for ex; ‘, I ’ -1~ I Indeedif you C-areabout the.rights ample to become doctors.’ They’ ., ’ ‘>L _ @.‘sil igdividuals instead-of .just must then cmpose-on themselves .I , ‘those. who are members of the study-of subjects like -biology - - ‘In the hue and cry for represen,’ elites (and even they are really. ,’ and’Latin. That is precisely what tation on governing boards and’ \ - ’ powerless.in the faceof the math+ ’ does hap@& and ..it3s >mazing, . committees,~::it’s easy to forget ine society that considers indivi-Z how C$CkIy.they C&l'Ch!h~ Up t0 1 . whythe~de~and'isb'eing'~ade. - duals as keplaceable parts) then _ th ose --in the regular schools who ‘)I ‘The ijrimaryreason is the imhave had:.-the de&ion -‘made for L- . pl&n&~fati&h d man’ssight to govern himself. In a counQy :that . accepts) democracy as the best form of government, that form of government should be implemenJ ted ‘throughout, the system. While --

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