1966-67_v7,n19_Chevron

Page 1

Volume

7, Number

Nelson

UNIVERSITY

19

wants

raises based

OF WATERLOO,

on merit

Waterloo,

Ontario

Friday,

----w-m

8

--

-

--

by Sandra and Grant

Ken Long - Vietnam--the

(left)

and Rich

Peterak,

draft-dodger.”

At right

participate sits

Danny

(Photo

in ,a talk-in

here

Drache,,

a U of

by Brian

Clark)

Draft-dodgerscometo K-W Waterloo students have been asked to help political refugees from the United States find new homes in the Waterloo area. Making the appeal was Rich Paterak, a 23-year-old American who fled the U.S. with his wife in September. He was here Monday representing the Stars andBars Travel Agency--cover name for the Canadian draft-resistance movement. With him were two other Stars and Bars workers, Ken Long, a Cornell graduate, and Douglas Drache a lecturer in politics at the&riversity of Toronto. The three spoke here Monday at “Canada-Vietnam--the a talk-in, ” attended by about 35 draft-dodgers students. Mr. Paterak told the students Waterloo was an ideal area for draft-resisters to settle. Job opportunities are good and there are two universities for those who want to continue their education. Pete Warrian, sociology 2, domestic affairs commissioner for Student Council, has urged the Waterloo Student federation to become the first in Canada to support a program of aid for draft-resisters. Council passed Mr. W arrian’s first proposal for aiding draft-dodgers at a recent meeting, when it approved minutes of the external relations board. But it is awaiting specific proposals for the Waterloo station on the underground r%lway for draftdodgers. Only one voting member of Council was at the talk-in Monday-Frank Goldspink, chemistry 2, a science rep. Also present was

9, 1966

eeniure pres to resign

Haaev faculty

Two draft-dodgers and a sympathizer, Tuesday. The subject was I( Canada T lecturer.

December

John Clarke, chairman of the external relations board. The RCMP has never questioned him about his draft status said Mr. Paterak. At the moment, both he and his wife are landed irnmigrants. In five years they will be eligible to apply for Canadian citizenship. The Stars and Bars Travel Agency for which Mr. Paterak works is run by the Student Union for Peace based in A ction, an organization Toronto. Mr. Paterak said over 6,000 pamphlets on immigrating to Canada have been sent to the U.S. He estimated there were 1500 to 3000 draft-resisters in Canada. In dramatic contrast to the clean-

14 universities

cut, Boston youth who spoke first, was the second speaker, Ken Long. Mr. Long proclaimed himself an anarchist and told the audience he was sick of a long list of things American--from violence to prosperity , from TV dinners to “capitalism, capitalism, capitalism.” Clad in a plaid shirt, long-haired and speaking with a tough voice, Mr. Long was an obvious example of Mr. Paterak’s point that "‘YOU can not type the kind of person who is a draft-dodger. They are all kinds of people. The third speaker *Danny Drache, a Canadian leader in SUPA, gave a long account of Canada’s position in the Vietnam conflict.

-may U of Ontario--Waterloo A merger of all 14 provincially supported universities into one University of Ontario has been proposed to the Ontario government. The new superversity would be similar in principle to the University of California:~ an amalgamation of separate campuses under one main administration. One of the major purposes of this plan is eliminating wasteful duplication of graduate-study facilities in the province. University affairs minister William Davis has refused comment until the report is officiallyreleased to the public. When questioned Wednesday by the Chevron, President J. G. Hagey

Savlov Gordon

A motion by the executive of the faculty association to censure university president J. G. Hagey was defeated by four votes at the association’s last meeting. As a result Dr. Allan Nelson,political science, president of the .asso&ton, will announcehis resignation Monday in an open letter to the faculty. The bitter battle, whichthreatens to divide the university, has been waged between the old guard--mainly deans, administrators, department heads--and the younger members of the faculty, who this year gained control of the faculty association executive. “I was ready to tell the executive and Nelson to go to hell,” said Dr. H. G. McLeod, head of the chemistry department, and a key figure in the dispute. Commenting on Dr.Nelson’s resignation he said,” One is free to pick up one’s marbles and gohome. It’s his own business.” Replying to Dr. McLeod’s statement Dr. Nelson said, “Dr. McLeod has been, in effect, telling us to go to hell for weeks. Needless to say the feeling is reciprocated.” But he added, “I don’t feel it’s appropriate to decide this case in the press.” Dr. McLeod was head of the faculty association’s salary commit-, tee. The committee was intended to’ prepare the faculty position for this year’s negotiations with the adrninistration. The key issue. as the liberals in the faculty saw it, was the department heads ’ obligation to look faculty members straight in the eye, tell them they weren’t good enough to get a raise and why they weren’t. The faculty association executive ordered the salary committee to include a clause in its brief order deans and department heads to sit down with each member of the department and explain what his raise would be and why.

fng

be fused:l canrpus

of this university took a similar stand. “I’ve had the report for a month now, but since it had been given to me in confidence. I feel that it would be inappropriate for me to comment onits recommendations at this time.” Among its proposals, the threeman commission, headed by Dr. J. W. T. Spinks, president of the Universlty of Saskatchewan, suggested that the central campus be located at the University of Toronto. The other universitys would become satellite campuses. They would keep their own president and senate however, who would decide on academic policies. In addition, a massive central re-

search library for the whole province of Ontario would be established at U of T, making it the center of research and study in the province. Only two of the 16 degree-granting institutions in the province are not affected by the proposals. They are Royal Military College in Kingston and Waterloo Lutheran,&hichis church-affiliated. All other Ontario institutions are affected.

Send

in your

In previous years, a prof could go on for years with no promotion and yet no word of explanation or criticism. ‘YIOW,” reasoned the executive, “can a young prof improve himself if he doesn’t get a raise anddoesn’t get a word of help or appraisal?” But department heads and deans are reluctant to face professors and have to tell them outright what they think of their work. The salary committee, whose five members included three department heads and two deans, prepared a statement of salary policy deleting the promotions clause. The executive returned this statement to the salary committee rem questing reinclusion of the vital clause. The clause was reinstated and the policy statement presented to President Hagey. All signs of a split had seemingly disappeared. The salary committee, however, wavered in its presentation to the

What’s faculty association

do?

The faculty association is a voluntary organization of faculty members affiliated with the Canadian Association of University Teachers. The faculty association--somewhat like a trade union-- expresses the feelings of the faculty to the administration, especially on salaries and job security. Most of the University of Waterloo faculty are members. university. President Hagey announced that becauseof the apparent dissension he was accepting the statement of policy without the clause about promotion explanations. President Hagey said, “We acted as we did with the approvalof the salary committee.” Many of the faculty members sided with Dr. Nelson. At a special meeting of the faculty association, a motion was presented which “condemns the manner in which the university carried on salary negotiations with the faculty, and rejects President Hagey’s suggestion that the university was not presented with a clear mandate by the faculty association.” This motion was rejected by a vote of 26-22. One faculty member stated, “Failure of the censuremotion does not necessarily mean that people are happy with the way negotiations were conducted.” President Hagey declared, ’ ‘The administration acted in goodfaithin dealing with the salary committee. We knew there was trouble in the faculty association, but they’ll have to iron it out for themselves.”

iob

card

To- co-op students wishing to receive the Chevron in the mail next term: be sure to sendinyour job address card. Your student fees included the subscription. The Chevron will use the coordination department’s address file. Next issue: Friday, January 6, 1967

,


Tutor ,

SHIRT LAUNDERERS Corner King and University 10% Student Discount

, -

service

for

failing

outderm

the Engineering Sodety, will be given the names of students in their home or work areas who have previously passed the same courses.

Engineering Society A is currently working on a project to aid studems who fail the final year exams. Failing students, on writing to GERRY’S

SHELL SERVICE 100 King St. N. Phone Ontario Licensed Mechanic

Waterloo,

742-1351 RATES FORCHEVRON WANTADS: first 15 words 50 cents each additional word 5 cents. Ads for articles found are free.

TABLE SERVICE Mon. - Thurs. 11 EL~L ta 1 a.m. Fri. & Sat. 11 am. - 2 a.m. SUll,12 noou - miduight New Waterloo location THE DUGOUT Juiversity at King Phone 744-4446

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Ontario

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m Engineering

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engineers This idea originally p&posed by Prof. Church of the department of design ‘may even be extended t providing students on work terms with the names of fellow Waterloo students inthenearby areafromall courses and all years.

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call

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19

(no children) requires l- or 2- bedroomfurnished apartment near tiversity for spring term. Phone 744-3638 after 6. 19

Personal BIRTH--Bouncing 4.4.Mlogram boy for Diana and Peter StevensGrille, baby brother for Claris-

sa, on December 5.DeepRiver, Ont. Lorraine B, please phone me. Get my number from information Not in directory. Rod C. Call

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The story behind these hands could be the story ahead for you

‘For

2

The CHEVRON

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for interview

appointment,

as second-clasr mail by the Pbst Ofwe Ottawa, and for payment of postage in cub.

January.16,

Finest

Foods’

247 King St. N. Waterloo Phone SH 2-7964 Free delivery on orders over $5.00

1967

A subscription .fee receive the Chevron

your

Round, Sirloin, T-Bone, Potiterhouse and Wing Steak . . .. . . .. . . .. . .. . lb. 89c Morton’s Meatpies, beef, chicken, turkey ..,.,.r............. 4 for 99c Red Grapes .. . . 2 Ibs. 29c

vr,r it~li)rlllatioIl 011 a rcwardillg C~IXTI-, plcasc collsrllt yor~r Uni\u-sity I’lacc1;mlt ( )Ilicc*1. orwritc to the I=lllployIllcllt ()IIiccr, l’rofcssiollal a11cl Mailagcillcl\t StafT, Ontario I lyclro, fi20 LJIlivcrsity AVCIIIIC, Torot1to 2, 01ltario. office

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Twenty sulnlncrs ago, these hands Inined for arc. When fall came, they becalm the hands of a student. Long hours of study Inadc theIn the hands of an engineer. Through the years, they have runaincd the hands of a Inusician. Today, they are the hands of a Director of Ontario H)-dro. They arc strong, confident hands which tell of a keen Illind that wclco~~lcs challenge aild the opportrlllity to work with other Lital people . . . Engineers . . . Scientists . . . Physicists . . : MathcIllaticians . . . Accollntants . . . people in the very forefront of thcil professions. ()Iltario Hydro provides this cnvironIllcnt and, lxcat~sc of its vigororls qowth, Ilccds cvcn 111orc strong, confident hands.

Ask now at placement

42

in eluded by mail

in thei r annual student fees en titles U 0 f W students during off - campus term s. Non- students: $3 annually.

to

1


World

nuclear

“If somebody pushed the wrong button, the first thing they would do would be to call up the other side and say: ‘We pushed the wrong button, and something is coming your way.’ ” General E .L.M. Burns t Canada’s chief negotiator at the Geneva disarmament conference, stressed his feelings that mankind is onthe brink of nuclear war. Speaking to about 301 at a colloquium held by the political science department on Monday, General Burns indicated that the nuclear situation in the world was worsening and only a total test ban and a treaty - _ _to end the proIiferation of nuclear

No

Xmas

banquet

The Christmas banquet has been dropped this year. The Circle K club regretfully felt that there are not suitablefacilities on campus at present to make this the big event that it should be. Next everyone should year, however, make plans for attending Christmas banquet in the new food-services buil.ding.

No bridge

is worsening

situation

weapons could stave off even for a short time the possibility of a nuclear holocaust. At the same time the general indicated that things were not as hopeless as they had appeared in the fifties. Since 1963, the world has

seen a partial test ban, a hot line and the Soviet-American pleges not to orbit .weapons of mass destruction. In the first half of his talk, the general traced the development of the 18 member Geneva conference.

He pointed out that such nations as Japan, India, Israel, the UAR, and South Afri& are on the verge of achieving nuclear arms in order to underline the pressing need for treaties for a total test-ban and nonproliferation of nuclear arms.

at lunch in eng commonroom

in We&es&y the executive of Engineering Council A put upnotices announcing a $15 fine for anyone playing bridge in the engineering commonroom noon hours from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30. The councilwas supported by Dean Sherbourne of eng&ering. Vern gave a report to council about the action and the lunch-hour ban. Notices put up last Sunday asking people not to play bridge during lunch were ignored on Monday. On Tuesday and Wednesday Dean Sherbourne visited the commonroom. ’ Both days he met with rude opposition from arts and science students. Vern said that he had encountered

the poor behavior of arts and science students would be noted. Bill Siddall then moved that fines be levied for littering or defacingof the commonroom. He said that it could be enforced the same as the bridge fine and recommended that it be effective immediately.

’ the same behavior on Monday. Dean Sherbourne was ignored twice on Wednesday by one group. The first tirnehe warned them to quit or suffer drastic measures. The playing continued and resulted in notice of fines. The council executive hoped that

To incoming

co-op

If you think you have had a good place to live for the last four months on your work term, share your good fortune with those going outin January. Mail information to the Campus Circle K Shop at the university. will sort out the forms and place them in ride-card service cabinet

Thrgughout the meeting, General Burns reiterated that the differences bet ween ti Soviet and American blocs tended to be more a matter of degree and method than actual aims with Canada, England and Italy often ganging up on the Americans to force them to change their stand. A lively question period followed. In reply to a question from professor J. M. Wilson of the political science department who asked why the British had not disarmed unilaterally, General Burns said: “they don’t want to get rid of their nuclear weapons until the others do.”

students

in the hallway of the Federation building. Send name, address, phone, landlord’s name, phone. Also amount of rent and how much inadvance. Give a general description--furniture, kitchen and washroom facilities, number of roomers, general in-ipressions.

ATTENTION OUTGOING CO-OP STUDENTS

Compendium

‘67

on sale

94.50

at the Federation building from publications secretary. Official sales campaign for the rest of the campus begins in January. UNITARIAN

FELLOWSHIP

Subject: “Realities of Canadian Geography” Speaker: Arnold Boggs Sunday,

December lo:30 a.m.

11,

136 Allen St. East (at Moore Ave.) Waterloo Ontario

10-O

I

optdmetrist MURRAY S. MUNN 2A King Street South Waterloo - 743-4842

MORROW CONFECTIONERY 103 University Ave.

POST

W.

OFFICE

Groceries Phone

- Sundries 742-2016 _

WATERLOO

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SH 4-2781 Custom gunsmithing Rebarreling Rechambering Restocking

Guns and shooting supplies is our business, not a sideline.

What

it means to work where things

are happening

Popular Folk

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Classical Jazz

-

GEORGE MADWELL RECORDS It’s having ability-and using it. It’s a feeling of personal pride. It’s doing something really meaningful. It’s challenging and changing the world. It’s living. And doing. And professional growth. It’s excitement. It’s now. What’s happening at IBM? Just about everything under the sun-and beyond. Twenty years ago, the electronic computer was just getting off the ground. In this short time, it has come to be called the most beneficial invention in history. The pace of new applications is literally fantastic. Business, government, law, education, medicine, science and the humanities. All are affe%ed by IBM’S information and control systems. Posi’tively affected.

Chances are there’s a place for you in the growing world of information and control applications. / Whatever whatever of what’s

Special

Your Placement Officer can arrange an appointment for you. If you cannot attend the interviews, please write or visit the IBM office in Kitchener at 259 King Street West.

Discounts

2 LOCATIONS Waterloo Fairview

your educational background, your discipline, you could be a part happening at IBM.

Make it a point to investigate the advantages of this growth company with the IBM representative who will be visiting the campus January 20.

Student

Square Park

744-3712 742-1831

M

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undy’s

150 King Kitchener,

IBM

Owned

shoes Street W. Ontario

and

operated

bY Wm.

Friday,

A.

December

Coons

Shoes

9, 1966 (7: 19)

Ltd. 3


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RESTAURANT Waterloo

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Faclaris Waterloo

THIS WEEK: * 1. The WINNERS of the “Waterloo Girls Are Charmers” Contest. 2. Wrap-Up of Hockey games. 3. Feature on U of W’s Ted, Mitch and Carol 4. Reports from Student’s Council

744-4782

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Open 4p.m. to 1 a.m. 361 King St. West, Kitchener never

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Phone 744-6392 at station for comments, requests, etc.

gooc

R. Wise

Last weekend I was in Pittsburgh attending the Fall Nationals. Of all the hands I saw or heard about, the best-played occurred in a qualifying round of the open teams. South, the declarer at four spades, was Mel Norton, a U of W alumnus. His technique on the hand enabled him to make his contract, win the board for his team, and thereby eliminate the strong team headed by Becker and Jacoby, fellow column-

ists of tie. The two-club bid is the Drury convention, asking partner if his third hand-opening bid is weak or not. The two-spade responseshows that south indeed holds a sound openfng bid. So north, Bob Chow of Toronto, bid four spades. S Q,10,8,4 H J,7,5,2 D A,5 C K,8,2 S. K,7 S 5,2 H 9,4 H K,l0,8,3 D K,8,4,3 D Q,9,6,2 C J,lO,7,6,3 C A,9,5

S A ,J,%6,3 H AsQv6

On Profile: 1: 05-l: 30 Bobby Darwin

Phone 57611630 “You’ve

OF

D J,10,7

C 414 North PZ 2 clubs 4 spades

IZast Pass Pass Pass

Why you shouldconsidea

played!’

nicely

south 1-e 2 spades Pass

Pass pass Pass Pass

The opening lead was the nine of hearts, an obvious doubleton lead. North and east played low, and Mel won with the queen in his hand. Note, however, that there is still a heart loser, for east holds both the king and the 10. Along with the three sure losers in the other suits, this would seem to doom the contract to defeat. But also note that east himself cannot lead the hearts or south will play low and dummy’s jack willwin; so he must rely either on his partner or on declarer to do this for him. At trick two, Mel led a club to the king, and east’s ace won the trick. Mel’s queen won the club return, and a diamond was led to the ace. Next dummy’s last-diamond was led, and east played the king (for fear south held the queen). Mel ruffed the club return in his hand, and then ruffed a diamond in the dummy. Now the queen of spades was led, and, when east played low, Mel played the ace, refusingthefinesse. Now the ace of hearts was cashed, and a spade led to west’s king, leaving this position: s 10 H J,7 S --D emS -me H --I C -we H K,lO D9 D8 . C 3,7 C *-S J,9 H6 D --C -NW West now had to lead arninor suit card, allowing Mel to ruff indummy while he sluffed the heart from his hand. The jack and nine of trumps took the last two tricks. The contract was fulfilled because Mel broke that old “rule” about pulling trumps early, even though there were only four of them out. It was first necessary to strip both his own hand and dummy of diamonds and clubs, while stripping west of spades and hearts. “Very nicely played”, e&aimed west (Jim Jacoby) in appreciation of his opponent’s technique. My sentiments exactly.

UNIVERSITY BILLIARD ACADEMY Corner

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University LADIES


Lacked ‘an -undefinable

piquance’

Carolfantasyshows . effects of.director’shardwork -

by John

Chevron

Beamish staff

Though lacking an undefinable piquance, the Carol fantasy performance last weekend was, on the whole, a good, well-rehearsed production. First auditions were held when classes started and the university production gave evidence to acareful selection of voices especially in the tenor and bass sections. The Madrigal Choir, which opened the program with XaudateDominum’, was one of the few dlsappoint.ments. In attempting several tricky passages they tried too hard to stay in harmony and went flat two or three times. The Chorus, on the other hand,

with a professional ability that was The next afternoon astounding. the words and notes were there, but unfortunately piquance andfeeling were not. The second half of the program was the Christmas ,part of The Messiah. Robert Reimer, bass, and Karen Stearns, contralto, shone through a haze of uncertainty created by the rest of the performers. Heather Hymrnen, soprano, sang beautifully with a voice that reached every person in the audience. It is to be hoped, however, she will stop trilling her Rs, which, while adding a personal note, merely detracted from an otherwise wonderful performance. Charles Martin, tenor, appeared

was blessed with a body and dmbre that belied their small number. The accompanying children’s choir with its timorous voices was a pleasant addition to theuniversity choir and chorus. Stephen McLachlin and David Parkinson performed their solos like professionals in everything but volume. David, who went flat twice on Saturday night, did not let that faze him and Sunday afternoon he performed excellently. Joan Venn, soprano soloist for ‘I wonder as I wander’, came up with two fine performances, full of feeling. They were beautiful. The final mumber of thefirsthalf was the Carol of the Drum. OnSaturaday evening, the Chorus sang this

intimidated by the music he had to sing and, whether by accident or chance, had two poor performances--Saturday evening was particularly gruesome, The Chorus, which backed up the soloists, performed on Saturday evening but were obviously tired the neit afternoon and their performance testified to this. The singing of notes and the mouthing of words was, for the most part, there. But the feeling for the music which they had had- the previous night was sorely lacking. In spite of all the drawbacks--‘ which may seem too numerous-The Messiah was well produced and was ably reinfor ted by the pianist, Carolynne Stickney. A

standout both nights, Miss Stickney turned an otherwise good production into enjoyable entertainment. In brief, the Card1 Fantasy was a very good performance, indicative, I’m sure, of the work that director Alfred Kunz put into the rehearsals. Tonight the Chorus will carol at Waterloo Square. They are well worth going to hear. See youthere, 0 A professional long-play recording is being made of excerpts from the Carol Fantasy performed last weekend in the Theatre of the Arts. One side will be composed exclusively of chortis’ from Handle’s Messiah. The other will contain the best of the selections performed by the Unw iversity’s concert band, Choral and Madrigal groups and the choir of faculty and staff children. The recording costs $3 and can be ordered, for delivery in January,at the Theatre Box office, This record will be a valuable addition to any collection whether you missed the past performances or want to relive them.

No more $1 lunch

Alfred

Cupid’s by Mary Chevron

Kunz,

university

darts Bull

staff

Cupid’s arrow hit many U of W students last week. Those whofilled out the application for Cupid Computer, an advertisement in the Chevron earlier in the year, received reams of paper with names, addresses and phone numbers of their computer -matched mates. Theoretically these people would like the same activities and have basically the same moral and political ideas. A few of the morepertinentquestions on moral behavior are: --Would you try LSD if you had the chance? (1) No; (2) Yes, but only under proper supervision; (3) Yes. --If your date suggests a swim ‘au naturel’, you would: (1) readily agree; (2) suggest you get your swimsuit and decline if you didn’t have one; (3) be offended andnever see the date again. --If you had a chance ,to see a stolen exam paper in a subject you were weak in, you would: (1) look at it; (2) definitely not look at it; (3) report its existence to the professor. There was also a scale system on which you could rate yourself from l-5 (5 being definitely not such-and-s uch). Your sexuality, your personality and your talents were questioned. However, like Ann Landers, Cupid can be hoodwinked. Two jokers from the Chevron staff played God for a while and created a fictitious character. “Joseph Birch” was a North American Indian, the embodiment of a sexmaniac, a sadist, a Casanova, Muhammed Ali and Albert Einstein. Vital statistics: male, 5’ lo”, 20

director

of music,

leads

the

go wild

years old, and in second-year university. He drinks and smokes heavily, but is a talented athlete (somebody is pulling the computer’s leg or lever). If a dog got in the way of his car he would “runitover rather than swerve and risk an accident*‘. He is definitely a comformist and yet is definitely not ethical. Headmits he is a genius. Sex is very important in his relationship; however he is “moderately experienced sexually”. All in all he seems to have more personalities than Eve White. Just think of the headlines: “Multi-per sonalitied student found at U of W.‘) Our headshrinker would be famous as he discovers six people wrapped up in one lonely body. For this schizophrenic, the computer, not realizing that anyone could be this bad, selected three After all, with this fellow girls. you could pick whatever character you wanted. However this doesn’t say much for the three girls who were mated with him. Of all the girls who completed the questionnaire, how many would be six-foot-two in hei@t?’ At the time this kook was manufactured the jokers, getting carried away with their sense of power,produced another fake. This time their sights turned on afemale character by the name of Linda Crawford. A close look at the answers assigned to both make them quite compatible. Linda will date other races and Joe is an Indian. They both smoke and drink although Joe does this to excess while Linda more moderately. Both consider themselves average in appearance and Lin feels a car is necessary for dating only sometimes. This is just fine for

choir

and

arc hestra

when

in last

weekend’s

computer

Joe because he can only get a car sometimes. They both dislike music, dancing and sports, both participating in and w at thing games. Linda is quite passive in her ideas and morals. She is a totally average kind that crops up occasionally. Joe wants someone he can run, whowill agree quite readily to his own misguided ideas. Linda Crawford received seven names of ideal mates. The phone number given on the application belonged to the photography editor of the Chevron--and he was swamped with people ‘asking for Miss Linda Crawford. He began to relay all these calls to a woman member of the staff--but now all concernedfeel that the joke has ceased to be funny. So to whom it may concern: please stop calling!) From this much information a match of Birch and Crawford is rig!ltly to be expected. However a Linda Crawford-Joe

carol

Hoping to expand business, the proprietor of an Italian restaurant in Montreal hung up a sign saying: “All the spaghetti you can eat for $1.” In came three students who paid a dollar each and wefit through 11 plates of spaghetti, three loaves of bread and half a pound of butter. The sign came down before they’d finished.

fantasy.

mates

matched Birch combination was furthest from the computer’s wavelengths. This mechanical know-all, by some fantastic coincidence, matched Birch with one of the woman members of the Chevron features staff. The only attribute she’s got that approaches his requirements is that she happens to be close to six feet tall. She’s rather formidable, not passive in the least. There is nothing average there at all. She never agrees with anything--as the features editor can attest. It is- almost irnpossible to dominate her. She is not the type of girl that Birch wants. She doesn’t consider herself socially and intellectually inferior as I think we can assume Joe expects. The computer seems to have matched two people with completely different ideas over the whole spectrum of thought. AndBirchsaidthat he expected the girl to have the ideas similar to his own. But her

ideas are entirely opposite onmany essentials. She’s not a nymphomaniac, which is what Birch needs; she doesn’t believe in sex more than five times a week. They just don’t fit together. The possibilities for personality conflicts are fantastic. Both are arrogant, sure of themselves, active and not passive and definitely not aver age. And yet the computer matched the two. As amatter of fact, she was Birch’s first choice; the one most there is likely to fit. Obviously, something wrong with the way the thing matches dates. It would be interesting to find out how many more such mismarriages were set

..-

Maybe they just threw all the cards against the wall and matched the ones that fell closest together. Anyhow, the likelihood of Chevron headlines reading “Great romance results from Cupid Computer” are slim.

Freefun for all this week at the Mall by David

Hut&son

The free entertainment of the week is currently available at the Waterloo Mall, where Treasure Van has noisily unfolded its tents once again. Persons of all ages visit this transient exhibition, a bazaar of dust catchers, marvelling at the many tiny wonders of the world. Cigaret boxes for anything but cigarets of American length; fans that tatter to shreds if unfolded in air; incense sticks with no burners; incense burners with no in-

cerise; do-it-yourself jewelry; camel saddles guaranteed to give saddle sores to any camel. Picture skinny George Harrisonin his underwear: that’s a fertility symbol. Picture any misshapen object, and it is a fertility symbol. Mead and Freud have been forgotten somewhere along the line. And one of the greatest tragedies is the revelation that those who buy from Treasure Van in other countries see nothing better of Canada. The products of a Cub Scout craft day are the representatives of native Canadian merchandise. Friday,

There may be some vicarious pleasure to be obtained from the proximity of objects with foreign names and more foreign pricetags, but there is moredelight in watching others as they react. Poking, caressing, handling everything (except the fertility symbols) the curious at the Mall are exactly thus.

Wrong

name

The writer of the story “NotIling happened at Mat’s happening” (page 5, November 25) was Tom Britton, not Butler. OK, Tolls? December

9, 1966 (7:19)

5


Atomic

where wjU you hang your

Energy

of Canada will

INTERVIEWS on

haf

staff

River,

Ontario

OF

KIMBERLY-CLARK

PULP

By nature of their growth Clark and its associated portunities for graduate

CANADA

LIMITED

& PAPER

CO.

& PAPER

* WHITESHELL NUCLEAR Pinawa, Manitoba

\

be

interviewing

LTD.

Kimberlycareer op-

ONTARIO

GENERAL

2 Carlton

Street,

at

your

Toronto,

Consider Chemcell!

Careers:

Reputation:

Kaleidoscope co-stmnsor~d

expo67 by Ctwmi-ell

Toronto

Young, aggressive, rapidly expanding-one of the four largest companies in Canada’s chemical industry.

its

CAMPS

throughout

Ontario

personel:

COUNSELLORS

in formation

apply

to:

17, Ontario, Phone

1965: Net-sales $108 million (10.9% increase over 1964) Net profit $10.5 million. In 8 years sales have doubled, profits tripled. Pioneering in the chemical industry has been continuous. Extensive export programs to 46 countries have -been maintained. Benefit plans and personnel policies have been increased to supply 7000 employees with the best in the business. Salaries and salary policy have advanced with the progress.

In Business Management: Finance, Administration, Employee Relations, Marketing

CHILDREN

SUPERVISIOR OF‘CAMPS ONTARIO SOCIETY FOR CRIPPLED CHILDREN 350 Rumsey Rd.,, BOX 1700, Postal Station “R”

Current

In Science: Chemistry, Physics, Mathematics

& DRAMA

for further

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please

ARTS & CRAFTS COUNSELLORS SECRETARIAL ASSISTANTS _ REGISTERED NURSES KITCHEN COUNSELLORS

Trademarks

Management Sciences Marketing Production Engineering Research Finance Employee Relations

The CHEVRON

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_

In Engineering: Chemical, Mechanical, Electrical, Industrial, Textile

(And carry this advertisement to your interview as a reminder to discuss the questions important to you.)

ESTABLISHMENT

PROGRAM DIRECTORS WATERFRONT COUNSELLORS (Red Cross Instructors) CHAUFFEURS (Males-21 years) SENIOR COUNSELLORS

Canada’s most diversified manufacturer of chemical and fibre products, with operations ranging from organic and inorganic chemicals through plastics to man-made fibres, finished fabrics and carpets.

Graduate and Post-Graduate

for

SUMMER

the following

univ-

Requirements:

6

strategically

Ontario

:$ Registered

Intent on creative performance?

FOR CRIPPLED

FIVE

Toronto, Ont., St. Catherines, Ont., Kapuskasing, Ont., Terrace Bay, Ont., Longlac, Ont., Winnipeg, Man., St. Hyacinths, Que., Lancaster, N.B. OFFICES:

SOCIETY

requires

JANUARY 24 - 25,1967 OPERATIONS:

RESEARCH

For iob descriptions and interview appointment, vi sit your university Placement Office.

LTD.

CO.

Manufacturers of newsprint, high-grade pulps, and 22 brand lines including the well-known Kleenex* tissues, Kotex”: napkins and Delsey” bathroom tissue, Kimberly-Clark and its associated companies invite you to examine their brochures and get specific information at your Placement Office about openings for 1967 graduates in Chemical, Eelectrical and Mechanical Engineering. will

Ontario

leading

and diversity of products, companies offer excellent engineering.

Company representatives ersity on-

PRODUCTS

PROJECTS

Toronto,

POWER

at

LABORATORIES

Ontario

*POWER

find plenty of opportunity in Canada’s - Pulp and Paper - particularly with:

available

NUCLEAR

* COMMERCIAL Ottawa,

ENGINEERS MATHEMATICIANS METALLURGISTS PHYSICISTS

appointments

RIVER

Chalk

FALLS

16, 1967

ADMINISTRATORS BIOLOGISTS CHEMISTS COMMERCE GRADUATES * CHALK

SPRUCE

- JANUARY for

Continuing

KIMBERLEY-CLARK

conduct

CAMPUS MONDAY

You will industry

limited

Performance:

Company

geography:

In Quebec: Montreal, St. Jean, Sore/, Drummondville, Montmagny, Coaticook, Valleyfield In Ontario: Toron to, Cornwall In Manitoba: Winnipeg In Alberta: Edmonton, Two Hills In British Columbia: Vancouver

Any

487 - 5311

m CANADIAN CANADIAN DIVISIONS

HEMCELL

CHEMICAL COMPANY CELANESE COMPANY

OF

CHEMCELL

questions?

For information on a career with Chemcell, contact your university placement office, ask for a “Chemcell Careers” brochure and make a date for a campus interview.

Interview

date:

Jan.16,1967

At Chemcell, creative competence counts!

LIMITED


/

CANADA

EMPLOYMENT INTEFtVlEWS Our representatives to inverview graduating in a career in industry: Regular Employment:

alid post-graduate

will be visiting students

the campus

in the following

disciplines

who are interested

Mechanical Engineering Electrical Engineering Industrial Engineering Chemical Engineering Mining Engineering Engineering Science An interview appointment can be made at your Placement Office on cqmpus where you may obtain position descriptions and information about the Company. If supplies of these are deplete& please fill in the coupon below and forward to us for immediate atention. Summer Employment: We will have a number of interesting openings for undergraduates in chemical, mechanical, electrical and industrial engineering, one, two, and three years from graduation. ’ &&nmer employees, particularly those who will be entering their senior year provide the additional technical manpower required to carry out many important investigations Of a challenging nature. DU PONT OF CANADA Personnel Division, P.O. Box 660, Montreal, P.Q. . . . . . . . a . . . . . . . . . . . . *..*a***........*............ . . . . . . COUPON Dear Sir: kindly forward immediately information on openings for 1967 graduates and a copy of your booklet “From University to Industry with Du Pont of Canada? Name . . . . . . . ...’ . . . . . . . . . . Faculty&Year . . . . . . . •*o-*o~~~.-~-Address

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I6 To bear ders

or not

a fertility

to bear” doll

from

wonders

Ellen

Taiwan.

Treasure

Van de Kamer Van

as she

continues

pon-

until

tomorrow.

If you can help, us move faster we needyou

Graduate VALUE

These course ing.

are McGill leading to

Applications to:

Northern Electric is moving faster today than any selfrespecting 70-year-old should. Away back in the late 1800’s, before autos or airplanes, or radio, or television were invented, a few men started a business that later grew into Northern Electric. For years we relied upon American sources for most of our technical development. But back in 1958 a rather disturbing thing occurred: Linus threw away his blanket. Northern began to do her own research and development: began to plan aggressively for technological change and an active penetration into world markets.

to become

part

of Northern’s

Interesting in the Oil

Interview

dates:

_

Register Limited

1967,

Geophysics,

by a group

of Can-

and rewarding careers are available Industry for final year students in:

now for an interview with BP Canada representatives who will be on campus

Monday

LIMITED

January

Applied

4,

Chemical,. Electrical and Mechanical Engineering, and Science, Chemistry and Mathematics.

future,

Aiiixifbefn Hecffic COMPANY

&

February

LIMITED

but those disciplines.

exciting

Engineering

before

’BPCANADA

And because we’re pushing into so many experimental areas, in the pure and applied sciences, we need Master’s and Ph.D.‘s, people who can spearhead the attack on the more complex problems that face us. want

be made,

I

We need B.Comm.‘s-mostly for accounting and business administration, but our Marketing, Production and Personnel departments are always coming up with requirements for a good B.Comm.

If you

scholarships in advanced degree in mining engineer-

These scholarships are sponsored adi an Mining Compani es.

We need engineers-electricals and mechanicals especially, but we’ve room for civils, metallurgicals and chemicals. None of our departments has asked for a mining or forestry man yet, but don’t bet on it!

see your Placement Officer. He’ll give you more detailed information and arrange an interview for you with one of our recruiters who will be on campus soon.

PER ANNUM

University a master’s

should

Chai rman: Depf. of Mining McGill University, Montreal, P.Q.

The last eight years have been exciting: ones. A new air has permeated the atmosphere at Northern .and developments are taking place that present a challenge in every sphere of our activity. To meet this challenge we need university grads-top-notch university grads!

We need B.Sc.‘s-not only honors grads, majoring in chemistry, maths, physics and related

$6,000

A number of scholarships, each of $6,000 per annum (tax free), are available to suitable graduates in any branch of engineering - mech., elec., civil etc. - or applied science who are interested in a career in the Mining Indu stry.

(An open letter to ‘67 grads)

.

Scholarships

and Tuesday

JANUARY

30th & 3ist

17, 18, i9 6066-l

1A

Friday,

December

9, 1966 (7:19)

7


Threeshort periodsof timeI bombsandkillingagain by

Joachim

Chevron

Surich

Feature

editor

Three Christmas and New Year’s truces have been declared in the Vietnam war. For two days, during Christmas, New Year’s and the Chinese New Year there is to be total ceasefire in the country. Bombing raids over the North will stop-and the Viet Cong , Americans and South Vietnamese will stop hostilities. For six full days thekilling and themurder will be a away for the people of little bit further Vietnam. A small breather will be allowed before the guns and the bombs and the assassinations and the napalm will start again. All will be quiet. And when those two days have passed, death and destruction will again be commonplace. This kind of pause is to occur three times within three weeks. And then all will be forgotten again, and the cruel war will continue. Perhaps we ought to ask ourselves what the purpose of the whole war is and what each one of us, collectively and individually, can do to alleviate the situation. The International Control Commission, of which Canada, Poland and India are members, was set up in 1956 to supervise the

/

ceasefire line betweentheNorthandthe South and to ensure that the provisions of the Geneva convention are kept. It has been a miserable failure. The treaty ending the war between the French and Viet Minh established a ceasefire line between the North and the South. It did not create two separate nations in Vietnam. The establishment of this was never envisioned. The South-Vietnamese government was created mainly at the instigation of the AmAnd it was the American state department. ericans who continued to supply arms to the South, against the provisions of the treaty. The U.S. had, of course, never signed the treaty. The ICC did nothing about the influx of American arms. It failed entirely tocontrol At the same time, it failed to their entry. stop the movement of North-Vietnamese regular troops south to aid the Viet Gong. It has not even been able to control fighting and bombing within the buffer zone between There is, therefore, no the two regions. element of international control in Vietnam. The world today is faced with an explosive situation. Further escalation of the war effort on the part of the U.S. is likely, and it can be assumed that the numbers of North-

Vietnamese regulars will continue to increase. Estimates of their number vary, but they are believed to move south in excess of 35,000 a month. There are now 400,000 American troops in South Vietnam. And there have been indications that more will be sent within the next few months. U.S. troops have been requested for the Mekong Delta area, which has up to now been held by South-Vietnamese army units with American advisors. It is estimated that at least 150,000 Yanks areneeded to hold this area against the Viet Cong. Escalation seems to be the watchword of the American effort in Southeast Asia. The objective is control of the area and the containment of Communist China. A poll taken recently in the U.S. showed an overwhelming majority of the American public in favor of escalating the war effort. Hence, the number of draftees will continue to rise, and manymorewilldie. And it is becoming increasingly apparent that negotiations towards a peace settlement have several times been hampered and turned down by Johnson. A recent radio broadcast said U Thant had- claimed that peace negotiations with North Vietnam had been possible in Rangoon just before Johnson went on his latest Asian

Vi-et ma ‘Your

simple

war’

One of the most complicated and

agonizing

situations

today An American citizen, Moffett has lived in China, Japan and Korea, where his father is superintendent of a Presbyterian hospital. He was 1965-66 editor of the Yale Daily News. This is the first of a series of introductory articles written by Moffett in Saigon for CPS, an agency of the United States Student Press Association. He describes the social context in-. which the war in Vietnam is being fought. by Howard special

(bopyright

8

The

visit. The orfly condition was that the bombings of the North stop. But Johnson refused to even acknowledge the offers. He went on his Asian tour with the goal of swinging the other Southeast Asian countries to his point of view. He refused to engage in peace negotiations, and it is now a wide-spread belief that the U.S. will not get out of Vietnam until the North surrenders to American pressures. The specter of widespread war is becoming ever more imminent. The small periods of truce for the holiday season may appear filled with hope. There seems a chance that they can develop into a widerspread ceasefire arrangement. But in the light of recent developments and on examination of the somewhat foggy American position on Vietnam and all of Asia and of the evident determination of the North to hold on at any cost, they hold only little hope. The periods of truce are just a few days in which the killing will stop. Possibly they are just a lull before an even greater storm. A major change in the attitudes of the opponents in the war is needed before any sort of mutually acceptable solution can be found. And we move into the Christmas season with the possibility of a major war on our minds.

1966 Life

magazine.

By

permission)

to

Canadian

Moffett Universty

cal. It may strike some as an intellectual game; I see it rather as an attempt to step back a bit and establish a frameof reference against which further analysis and interpretation may be measured. It may also suggest some of the hazards involved in basing value judgments either on deadline press reports or on personal political preferences. It is based on three assumptions: (1) What is happening here is as important as what should be happening here; (2) What is happening may in the course of time affect what should happen, i.e., the use of power and the objective conditions to which it gives rise may either undermine or create a moral prerogative: morality, like power, is not static, and must sometimes be measured in relative terms; (3) Neither what is happening here, nor what should be happening here, are very adequately understood by most Americans. There is a struggle going on in South Vietnam between two groups of people, each of them numbering several millions: in effect they are two separate societies, co-existing within the same geographical boundaries. Each is trying to organize, strengthen and sanction itself while weakening or destroying the other.

gression, have reduced one most complicated and ag situations in modern hist

Press

SAIGON (CPS)--Last year at this time I was writing editorials calling the American war in Vietnam unjust , illegal and anti-democratic. I could still make a case for the last two (it has occurred to me since that a just war is a contradiction in terms). But after a month in Vietnam, I am clear on one thing: nothing here is that simple, nothing is that black-and-white. Those who talk about Vietnam in these terms, and on the other hand those who mouth cliches about defending democracy and freedom against Communist aggression, have reduced one of the most complicated and agonizing situations in modern history to shibboleths. Worse, they have succeeded in making these shibboleths virtually the only terms of the public debate on Vietnam. The following analysis is quasi-sociologi-

CHEVRON

.

Though each group numbers millions, they are both led by relatively small elites which have developed their own traditions, their own social values, and their own vested interests. The majority in each group are people who, through varying degrees of sophistication, are influenced by the traditions and values of their elite but have little stake in its vestedinterests. They are people like civil servants, interested in salaries and a modicum of culture, personal freedom and opportunity for advancement; or merchants, inter-es ted in the free flow of trade and economic stability; or soldiers, interested in winning without getting killed, recognition for bravery and home leave; or farmers, interested in the weather, the market for pigs, owning their own land and being left alone. These


Lyndon’s ‘prayer by Ian Gentle

Jesus,

We drop

Boyden

bless

today

each

bomb

on Viet

Nam

And keep our helicopters safe From natives they fly low to strafe.

Lord

of Life,

To build

increase

up added

And

let no pacifist

The

stronium-90

Heavenly

Father, sell the

grant

us power

Cubans

the

give

help

Vast

arsenals

Our

allies.

us grace

guided missile race, our scientists amass

And

From

wheat,

to chastise

insubordinate

Spirit,

sky.

we entreat

no one

To win

_

in our

And

Holy

skill

decry

Let All

our Overkill,

of germs

further

and

dwindling,

ever-shrinking

gas

Lord,

gold

preserve

reserve,

And we beseech Thee, come what Let overseas investments pay.

The

world’s

most

We ask these Be Thine When

upright

blessings

the glory,

women

weep

may,

Christian at Thy

land,

hand

Lord

on high,

and

children

die. Amen Napalm

people have been at war for over 20 years, almost all of them are interested in staying alive. This is not to say that themajority in each group do not participate in the culture of their elites--they do, and often by choice. But it seems likely that in a showdown many in either group would be willing to dissociate themselves from their own elite and exchange its culture for that of the other, so long as their own popular and private interests were not seriously threatened. In other words, the ideological and material interests of the two elites are not quite so important to their respective sub-groups, except where expert and intense propaganda has taken effect over long periods of time (as it has in some areas on both sides). This means that fundamentally at issuewithin South Vietnam are the traditions, socialvalues and vested interests of two opposing elites, fighting to destroy each other’s control over substantial protions of the population. In such a situation, the distinctionbetween being supported by, and exercising control over, different elements of the population is at best a hazy one. The question is illusIn

then

effect

and

they

sanction

are

two

itself

separate

while

trated by the importance that both sides attach to the concept of ‘infrastructure” or its equivalent in Vietnamese: ‘ha tang co SO. Broadly speaking, an infrastructure is any system of organized authority. Implicit in the concept is the idea that an infrastructure--whether at the harnlet or national level--cannot exercise control over people without having their support in substantial degree. Conversely, if control can be established, support may be developed over time through popular administration. The personnel of their respective infrastructures are the primary weapons in the power struggle going on here at every level between the government and the Viet Cong.

Major elements of each infrastructure are devoted to strengthening it and weakening the opposing infrastructure. Both sides lay great stress on the development of strong recruiting and propaganda teams and both practice selective assassination to destroy key lines in the enemy’s infrastructure. Furthermore, each infrastructure is said to be heavily infiltrated by agents of the opposing one. Significantly, but not surprisingly, many Vietnamese believe that both Viet Cong and government village infrastructures are now much weaker thanthetraditionalviU.agepower structure prior to the coming of colonialism or communism. To gain its political and cultural ends, the elite infrastructure on each side has mobilized substantial potions of the population it controls. Each has developed weapons--technological, psychological, logistical--which are being tested wherever one side can find a weakness in the other. At the present time, one sidehas technological and logistical superiority within the contested area, whereas the other appears to enjoy the psychological advantage, There is a struggle for power, and no holds are barred. The skill in highest demand is that of employing the appropriate weapon at the right time, whether it be a mortar or a lie. Both sides in the Viet Nam war are using all the available power they can muster to gain support of the population. Yet, there is another dimension to the conflict between the elites of the government and the Viet Gong, and it is best expressed in terms of their values. One side claims a sincere anti-colonialism refined by fire through twenty-one years pi level--cannot exercise people without having

control their

over sup-

of war. It emphasizes social justice andespecially the abolition of privilege. It Fravels closer to the ground, andmoreoften has SUC-

(Photo

by Edmund

ceeded in identifying itself with the simple virtues and viewpoints of the peasantry. Furthermore, it has often succeeded in indentifying all civil authority, which the peasant tends to view as arbitrary and inimical to his interests, with the other elite (both sides try to do this). It stresses the neceshas technological and’ logistical superiority within the contested area, whereas the other appears to enjoy the psychological advantage. There is a struggle for power, sity for social struggle and to wage this struggle it has built up a system of authority which is unified to the point of regimentation. Discipline is strict, and apparently little deviation from the official point of view is tolerated lest the infrastructure’s effectiveness be weakened. Personal freedom and ambition seem to be subordinated (sometimes voluntarily, sometimes not) to the collective goal. The other elite claims nationalism, but has become increasingly reliant on foreign arms and aid to achieve it. It too speaks of social justice and the abolition of privilege, but it lays greater stress on the protection of personal freedoms, fortunes and points of view. As a result, differences often become outright dissension. This elite is anything but unified. It is riddled with factions competing for influence across political, religious, regional and institutional lines. It has maintained a significant degree of personal and civil liberty at the expense of the continuation of privilege and even organized corruption. Yet this elite, heavily dependent on foreign aid because of its own factionalism and widespread corruption, is unified in opposing the regimentation and loss of personal liberty imposed by the other elite in the areas it cant rols . What is perhaps difficult for American intellectuals to understand is that, though they are often abused by those in power at any given time, the convictions of thesecond

Kaiser)

elite run as deep and sincere as those of the first., The issue is better expressed by a ladingVietnamess intellectual, Ton That Thien, in a recent article in the “Asia Magazine’: One may ask why the Vietnamese fight, and what has sustained them for so long. The answer’ can be summed up in two words: liberation and freedom, Those are the aims for which theyhavefought,suffered,anddied, and for which, I think, they will continue to fight, suffer and die. And they have found the strength for it in the belief that they fight for a right cause (in Vietnamese ghanh nghia). So long as they continue to believe that their cause is right, they will persist. And who can convince them that to fight, suffer, and die for a right cause is wrong. But the tragedy of Viet Nam is that the Vietnamese are divided into those who believe in the primacy of liberation, and those who believe in the primacy of freedom. Themajority of the first are in the North, and the majority of the second are in the south,Neither the North’s nor the South’s government offers the Vietnamese people both liberation and freedom. Each offers the Vietnamese only half of what they want. This double half-offer, which gives the Vietnamese a sense of half-fulfillment and unfinished business, is the major cause of prolonged division and war, with all its terrible consequences. For not only is Viet Nam divided, but each Vietnamese is torn internally by violently conflicting desires. As a citizen, heaspires toward liberation, and as an individual he aspires toward freedom. He cannot give up any of those aspirations without feeling a deep sense of partial alienation. For a man is both citizen and iiidividual, and without bothliberation andfreedom he is only half a man. It is against the above background that one can appreciate the cruel fate which has befallen the Vietnamese people--a victim of the mistakes of the statesmen of the great powers, as well as the follies of their own leaders. Friday,

.

December

2, 1966 (7:18)

9

.


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Taylor leads men’s swimming

Sportspioks of the week

Tony Taylor of arts picked up two firsts and a second intheintramural swim meet last Thursday to lead his team in the comp&ition. Taylor won the 50-yard backstroke and butterfly events as well as takingthe runner-up spot in the loo-yard freestyle. Dave Van Sickle, science, took the 50-yard breaststroke while Warren Page (Village SE) won the loo-yard freestyle. In the 2000yard relay the team representing arts was victorious. Gary Stevason (arts) won the diving. Records were set in all events except diving,

Well readers, you’ve got to admit we are improving. Last week we co_mpiled a 10-3-3 record running our total for the year to an almost respectable 107-66-12 and a 62percent average. Since this is our last issue till after Christmas we’ve got a lot of predicting to do. * * * In the NFLthe Packers wffl clinch a birth in the Super Bowl semifinals by whipping Baltimore by 10 points. St. Louis will remainin contention in the east by bombing Atlanta by 14 points while Dallas will~cUnch a tie for top spot by scalping the Redskins by 13. The following week in the NFL, Cleveland will hose out the season by edging St. Louis by seven points and therefore move into second place. Dallas will win their first conference title, trouncing New York by 17, while Green Bay will cap off a successful season by edging Los Angeles by three points. It wffl be Green Bav and Dallas in the NFL championship game. z4+t * In the AFL this weekend Boston will almost assure itself of a shot at Kansas City in the AFL final by whipping Houston by nine. Kansas City will tune up for the title game by smashing the Miami Dolphins by 17 points. Oakland will have an easy time in drubbing Denver by 16 points while the NY Jets will dump San Diego by 11. In the last week of the seas&, Boston will edge New York by seven points and win the eastern divi-sion title and a birth in the Super Bowl semifinals. Kansas City will show their power by trouncing San Diego by 13 points. Buffalo will niike it a close race in the east by thrashing Denver by 18 btit to no avail while Houston will end their season by beating Miami by nine points. So it will be Kansas

by

The faculty and staff have again begun a program of guided exercises and games to shed pounds and have fun. Sessions are held every Tuesday and Thursday noon from 12:lO until 12:50.

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In the NFL final Green Bay with their diversified attack, ball control and a tough defense will outclass their opposition from Dallas and win a rugged defensive battle by nine points. In the AFL Boston and Kansas City will put on a high-scoring affair in which thestrong Chiefs will prevail over the Patriots and win by 10 points. In the Super Bowl Green Bay will again prove that they are the class of pro football and dump Kansas City in a gruelling and tense affair by nine points. So ends pro football for this year. * * * By the time the Chevron hits the stands the hockey Warriors will have beaten McMaster by three goals. In other games this weekend U of T will whip Lavai by five goals and Montreal will dump McGill by three. Later Lava1 will bounce back to edge Queen’s by one m-61

‘jVU’

* I 19 In basketball, the Warriors wffl win both their games this weekend with a 15-point win over Carleton and a 25-point victory overQueens. During the Christmas holidays, the Warriors travel down to Kentucky and face Pikesville State Teacher’s College (really--we’re serious) and we figure the Warriors should win two ,out of three games over the instructors. This will give them a 6-1 exhibition record before the OQAA Season opens next month. The answer to last week’s question is Gayle Sayers of theChicago Bears who gained 176 yards against the Atlanta Falcons two weeks ago. No one got the correct answer. This week’s question is: When was the last year that Notre Dame was the number-one-ranked football team in the United States?

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Warr iorS tie Defeat WW 7 - 3 Tuesday

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Chevron

by

Webster staff

The hockey Warriors travelledto Montreal and Kings ton. last weekend and returned with two ties. In contests the Warriors were leading in the third period and both times they blew the lead. Friday night the Warriors led 3-2 until Rick Moore tied it up for the McGill Redmen at the 12:12 mark of the final frame. It was his second goal of the game. Bob Taylor opened thescoringfor the Redmen early in the first period. That goal stood alone untilmid-way through the second stanza when Jerry Lawless tied things up for the Warriors. Rick Moore put McGill back in the lead at 6:06 of the third period only to have Bob Murdoch counter for Waterloo 41 seconds later. Marc Ruest put the Warriors ahead for the first time in thegame when he stole a rebound and drove it home past goaltender Jim Tennant. Saturday night it was the same story. The Warriors opened the scoring at the 2:12 mark ofthefirst period when Orest Romashyna scored his first goal of the regular season on a pass from Ron Smith. Norm Douglas of Queen’s and Waterloo’s Arlon Popkey -turned the game in to a goaltender’s duel until the 8:32 point of the third period when Bob Clayton finally beat Popkey to tie the scoreat l-l. Jim Tait drew the assist. Mel Baird put the Warriors back on top at the 16:00 minute mark on passes from Neil Cotton and Bob Murdoch. It looked like the Warriors had things all wrapped up at this point but in a last ditch stand Queen’s pulled Douglas in favour of a sixth It paid off--Bob Pond attacker. scored the tying goal at the 19:21 mark. Clayton and Walker got the assists. Coach Hayes reports that the Warriors out played both McGill and Queen’s but just couldn’t put thepuck in the net. According to Coach Hayes, the officiating in Montreal was “the best we’ve ever had”, while it was exactly the opposite in Kingston.” They were justplainincompitent ,” said Coach Hayes. Including -some of the prize calls were three misconducts to Warriors Lawless Don Mervyn andRon Smith. The real gem was the one to Lawless who was sent off for “insighting a fight” --But there wasn’t any fight I

Ken Payne, Waterlootheran fied Lutheran defensemen

1Yiiiage

goaltender, kicks move in. (Chevron

aside a shot from Orest photo by John Nelson)

SW takes

Five-to-one was the score and V illage SW’s record, due to this S core, is four played and four won. s W remains the only unbeaten team ir 1 the circuit. In the first period SW completely blombed the college with the Vanaltrio leadS' tine, Vanstone, Nishizaki Intheend,however, il lg the victors. tl lree defensemen got most of the goals . Wark, Watt and Petuniak each scored a goal on shots from tl ne blueline. In the second period there was a :omplete reversal of form with St. ‘s pressing hard. Finally Voisin :apitalized on a scramble in front of he Village net to put the college on he score sheet. SW was hampered

first

by several penalties in this second frame, especially on Voisin’s goal, as they were playing their fifth minute two men short. St, J’s goalie was rather weak on some shots while EricDrumm,of the Village, was lucky on several shots. With a 3-2 victory over Village NE, Engineering moved into second place with six points. in a high spirited game, marred by three major fighting penalties, Engineering came back from a 2-l deficit by scoring two quick goals in the final set. (Only 38 seconds separated these goals.) Trevisan, Connelly, and Davis scored for Eng,

(11) as two unidenti-

place with Boyle and Miller points for NE.

getting

the

In basketball, the standings remain very tight as only two games have been played. Renison is on top by percentages oply , with Science and St. J’s having the same number of points. All three have won two straight games. Jim Henderson (science) and Dave Connell (Renison) are the main reasons for these teams being on top. They have 39 and 37 points-respectively. (Both tallies are greater than one third of their teams’ point totals--bothhave 99 points). GAPS & LOOSE ENDS:...There will be no games in either hockey or basketball until after Christmas.

B-ball Wtwriorswin secondstraight by Frank

Bialystok

Chevron staff Saturday night the b-ball Warri)rs turned in their second straight double-header victory of the exhizition season with a win over the daterloo Lutheran Hawks. The jay-

vees trounced the Lutheran junior team 63-43 and the Warrior varsity defeated the WLU varsity squad 78-65. It was the second win in as many starts for both Warrior teams. In the junior game, thewarriors,

Bennett0 stars in swimming Di Bennett0 from Renison was a standout in the Women’s Intramural Swim Meet held last Thursday. She , came first in the 500yard backstroke, loo-yard freestyle, thirdin 50-yard freestyle and helped Renison win the loo-yard rela”y. Others on the relay team were Sue Sale, Sandy Snell and Barb Finlay. Roslyn Livingstone of the Village won the 500yard freestyle, Judy Dunlop from St. Paul’s took the 500yard breast-stroke and Jocelyn Bates from Renison won diving. In overall results Village placed first, Renison second, St. Paul’s third and fourth place went to the university unit. ****rot** In women’s volleyball the physical education unit wcn the tournament by beating all their opponents. Second place went to Conrad Grebel, third to the&University and fourth spot to St. Paul’s.

Romashyna

Mike Power (11) goes up for a shot in exhibition basketball action against Lutheran on Saturday. Making an attempt to block the shot is John Zentins (23) of Lutheran while Bob Bar+ (4) and Cliff Lebrun (15) look on. (Chevron photo by Ralph Bishop)

with a stronger squad than the Hawks, had trouble with their shooting and play-making and held a slim half-time lead of 32-28. Lutheran stayed in the game until thelasttwo minutes, trailing 48-43. In the opening minutes, poor shooting and a lackadaisical defense by the Warriors resulted in an early 16-15 lead for the Hawks. The Warriors shooting improved in the latter part of the first half but they continued to be slack on defense. They led 38-34 at the half. In the second half the Warriors took command. Switching from a man-to-man defense to a zonepress and a 1-2-1 zone, the Warriors befuddled the Hawks. Fine work on the defensive boards by Pando and Neil Rourke set up the Warrior fast break and resulted in a 66-48 lead after three periods. Three of the Warrior frontline, however t fouled out in the next three and one-half minutes. But fine ball-handling by Pando, Cliff LeBrun andMikePower prevented the Hawks from making any serious threats on the Warrior lead. Power lead the Warrior scorers with his second consecutive 17 point performance. Pando was the leading rebounder and threw in 13 points. Sol Glober also had 13, but was in early foul trouble inthefirst half and fouled out in the second. Rourke, Bob Jansenburger and LeBrun added nine, eight and eight Rourke and Jansenrespectively. burger both fouled out while LeBrun was in foul trouble for most of the second half. DaveBowenlead Lutheran scorers with 17, Norm Cuttiford hooped nine and Dave Bain and Sandy Nixon each added eight. Friday,

Wayne

Braun

Chevron sports editor The hockey Warriors made ittwo in a row over the Lutheran Golden Hawks in an exhibition game at the Kitchener auditorium Tuesday night. Playing before a small crowd, mainly Hawk supporters, the Warriors held their own for two lackluster periods. They then broke out in the third to win 6-3. The Warriorsfellbehind bya onegoal margin three times in thefirst two stanzas. They found the range late in the second period and finished the frame on top by a 4-3 count. Lutheran opened the scoring early in the game on a power-play effort’, John O’Flaherty was the marksman. He took advantage of some sloppy clearing by the Warrior defenseand slid the puck past goaltender Larry Copeland Captain Ron Smith knotted the score for the Warriors late in the period when he took a pass fromBob Murdoch in front of thenet andfired the puck along the ice to beat Hawk goalie Ken Payne. Payne dropped to the ice to block the shot but it dribbled through his legs. Just 27 seconds later Pete Minnerson put the Hawks back in front. He scored on a hard shot to the corner after taking a pass from Eric Pass just inside the Warrior blueline. Copeland was cleanly beaten on the play. Don Mervyn tied the game less than a minute later onanunassisted goal. Payne stoped Mervyn’s first shot but was foiled on the secondas Mervyn picked up his own rebound and tucked it in the corner. Bob Seager vaulted the Hawks into the lead in the early minutes of the sandwich frame. The goal carqe on a power-play as Seager deflected Bill Watts’s hot past Arlon Popkey who played the final two periods in the Warrior net. Veteran Jerry Lawless came back for the Warriors to tie the score. Lawless’ marker came ona deflection of a drive from the stick of Smith. The W-arriors wereplaying shorthanded at the time. Murdoch put the Warriors into the lead for the first time on a goal late in the second. Smith again was the workhorse as he stole the puck in the Lutheran zone and flipped ‘a perfect pass to Murdoch ‘in front of the net. George Workman and Rae Clark rounded out the Warrior scoring. Workman’s power-play goal was a low wrist shot from the point. Clark scored on a pass play with Ron Lane and Laverne Miller. Lane relayed a Miller pass to Clark from behind the net. Clark madeno mistake as he rifled a high shot over Payne. SUMMARY FIRST PERIOD 1. WUC-O’Flaherty (unassisted) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. . . 4:36 2. U of W - Smith (Murdoch, Romashyna) ..* . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17:lO 3. wuc - Minnerson (Pass, James) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17:37 4. U of W- Mervyn (unassisted) .. . .. . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18:19 Penalties: Copeland, 3:44; Seager, 7:20. SECOND PERIOD 5. W UC- Seager (Watts, Tucker) . . . .. . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7:35 6. U of W- Lawless (Smith). 11:31 7. U of W- Murdoch (Smith).. 17:36 Penalties : Ruest, 6:07; James, 9:18; 0 Tlaherty (misconduct) 11:31; Watts, 11:57; Banks, 13:58; Workman, 15:48. THIRD PERIOD 8. U of W- Workman (Lawless, Mervyn) ................. 7:lO 9. U of W- Clark (Lane, Miller) 10:51 .

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1966 (7: 19)

11


Terry

Larry

Rae Clark

Cooke

Mel

Copeland

Jerry

Baird

Lawless

Hockey Warriors ‘66- ‘67

- From

t~he word

go ‘. . . by Hugh Miller Chevron

Bill

Orest

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THE

TIMKEN

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George

Romashyna

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Clark)

IS THE

staff

Why such an increase hockey interest these past two years? The answer is simple. The Warriots two years ago lost 11 of 16 games, tied two and won three. Last year they reversed their record, winning 11, tying two and losing only three. A winning team always d?aws a bigger crowd. And from the looks of things this year the box office will not suffer. From the word go, the Warriors should prove to. be a good team this season. Coach Don Hayes, forced to retire from active participation in hockey when he suffered a knee injury at the training camp of the New York Rangers, is in charge of the team again this year. His background in hockey helped him to success last year. Cail Vinnicombe, assistant warden at the Village, also had an-active hockey career. Once captain at Acadia University, he has also had a successful coaching career. He led the RCAF Buffaloes and a team from Metz, France, to conference titles. The playing section of the team -

*

has an equally solid background. Although only nine of 21 players are from last year’s squad, the rookies have proven themselves to be top-caliber players. Back in the net this year will be A rlon Popkey, alternating with rookie Larry Copeland who played Junior B for Brampton. If last season’s games at Western or Toronto were any example of what we can expect from him, Popkey should be a valuable asset to the team again. With a defense averaging over 190 pounds, Popkey and Copeland should not be overworked. Veteran and alternate captain Mel Baird at 155 pounds is one of the lightest players on the team. Playing defense with Neil Cotton, all-star defenseman from the Waterloo Siskins, 5’4” Mel has often deceived opponents with his speed,, agility and strength. Marc Ruest of last year’s Warriors and George Workman (who played last year for Dixie) make another defense pair. Rae Clark, playing both forward anddefense,is one of the most powerful skaters on the team. At 220 pounds and 6’1”,

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Clark comes from Acadia where he captained the team. On the offensive side of the ledger , the line of Ron Smith, Jerry Lawless and Bob Murdoch should be one of the top scoring lines in the league. Smith, the Warriors’ captain this year, led last year’s team along with Lawless, both of whom compiled 42 points in 24 games. Murdoch was next with 31 points. Also with 31 points last year was alternate captain Don Mervyn. He, along with veteran Terry Cooke, (who compiled 27 points) and Orest Romashyma, one of the outstanding rookies this year, makes another forward string of great scoring potential . There is a third set that has been playing together whose members are all rookies. Laverne Miller, right wing on this lne, is currently near the top inwarrior scoring.Bfll Weber, who played last year for

WUC, seems sition. The Lane, who Georgetown

*

a very valuable acquiline is centered by Ron played last year for Junior Bs.

Spelling the forwards are veteran Hugh Conlin and Dave Henry--and Ron Hurdal on defense. Ian Scott is a third goalie. * * * The Warriors’ season this year will have 16 league games. They play the other eight teams on a home-and-home basis. We can expect Toronto again to be the team to beat and Western to be a close second. With Coach Don Hayes putting the team through workouts five nights a week, we are hoping thewarriors will be able to hold off both these teams. Don’t think this is expecting too Last year, except for two much. bad games--the Warriors were beat by two teams who finished withless

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December

9, 1966 ( 7: 19)

13


Campusquestion byviepeters. The beard has long been immortalized as a source of sophistication and lice. Our bearded wonders speak out in reply to the following question.

Allan

Why did you grow your beard? .

Sandilands Chemistrv

Rolf

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I had one this summer and shaved it off. I missed it so I grew it again. It’s warmer in the winter.

Andy

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I don‘t suppose I can give a definiteanswer. Sex appeal, maybe.

by Grant Gordon Chevron news editor “Bitter? I’m not bitter. “I just want to have children--children who won’t have to go through the same thing.” The speaker is Rich Paterak, the draftdodger ; Rich Paterak the coward; Rich Paterak the traitor, the Commie, the nigger-lover , the pinko.... Early this fall he fled the United States with his wife. He is living in Toronto now and working for the Student Union for Peace Action. Through the Stars and Bars Travel Agency--a SUPA operation--he provides a growing number of Americans with information on an alternative to the army--immigration to Canada. Before draft-resisters discovered the possibility of emigrating there were only two alternatives to military service. A person could apply to his draft board for conscientious objector status. But he had to fill out a form which Rich describes as “like a Selma voting application.” The applicant must have a long history of conscientious objection to war. If the right combination of questions are not answered in the right way, the application is rejected. A second alternative is jail. “You are arrested and thrown into a county jail for six to nine months ,” says Rich. “Then you go to court. The eventual verdict will always be guilty.” Sentences for draft objectors are ap-

of

Ireland

The recent bookstore sit-in received passing comment from a coauthor of the Duff-Berdahl Report, “University government in CanThe CHEVRON

physical

ada ,” at a study of university government held at the University of Western Ontario last weekend. The aside--by Robert 0. Berdahl--came in a panel discussion after a prominent member of the UWO boardofgovernors,A.E.Sheppard, commented that governing bodies of a university should be open to any group’s suggestions. Berdahl, chairman of the panel, replied, “I understand that recently at Waterloo they had 200 students making suggestions in the president’s office.” Presented as “a definitive and up-to-date study of university government in Canada,” by the UWO Students’ Council, Seminar ‘66 never really got off the ground. Representatives of students, faculty and adrninistr ation of all universities in Canada were invited, but attendance was only about 50. Waterloo’s reps were Dr. T. L. Batke, the academic vice-president of the university, and Steve Ireland, student federation VP. Prof. Berdahl led off the seminar

Harriet education

8

with a lengthy but inter sting speech by which he managed to charm all women delegates and mesmerise most men. Declaring that he did not intend to “second-guess the Report” (highly criticized, especially in student circles), he proceeded to enlarge on the three brief pages of the 92-page document which were devoted to students. Berdahl supported (like the Report) students on joint committees at the department and faculty level in consultative, but not decisionmaking, roles. On issues relevant to the whole university, he reiterated the Report’s stand of placing a tokennumber of students on the university senate, saying that students rnay not have wise opinions imrnediately but “we won’t find out unless we open up and allow faculty and students to assurne more responsibility and to present their ideas.” In a panel discussion thenext day, Berdahl’s speech was strongly attacked by Doug Ward, president of the Canadian Union of Students and

2

You wouldn’t believeit but I just forgot to shave.

Grant

Gordon

political

science

2

SO I could get into the pub.

He considered going into the service, but then came escalation and the bombing of North Rich knew he could never fight. Vietnam. So he joined Vista, the domestic peace corps. For a year he workedinthe slums of Philadelphia and Louisville. At the end of a year he got married. .But as soon as he left Vista, he became IA-eligible for draft. So he went back to the slums--this time in Chicago. But he had had enough. H-IS initiative was gone. He was no longer out to help people, he was in Vista to beat the draft. “My wife and I decided I would mail in my draft card and wait for my draft board to indict me. “Then I would go to prison,” Rich says in a matter-of-fact voice. Before he mailed his card in, he saw an article in the Chicago Sun-Times about draft-dodgers and SUPA. He wrote to Toronto and received information on how to irnmigr ate. In September he arrived in Toronto with his wife. “It’s a terribly hard decision to make,” says Rich. “There’s no turning back. Once you leave, you can never go back without being arrested.” What does he think about Canada? “There’s a lot more freedom here to do and say as you wish”’ says Rich. “The cities are safer and cleaner--I like Canada.” “Many draft-resisters aren’t violent leftists,” says Rich.

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proaching the maximum of five years inprison and a $10,000 fine, as more and more cases come before the court. It’s becoming increasingly popular to immigrate to Canada,” says the clean-cut, youth in the tweed jacket. Rich Paterak is the son of a middle-class family in suburban Boston. He grew up like the typical boy, went to what he describes as “a typical high school inhabited by ordinary people.” He adopted all the patriotic anti-Communist beliefs taught to every good American boy. He didn’t give any indication that a decade later- he would be a political refugee from his native land. Rich graduated from high school and went to Marquette University, a Jesuit school in Illinois. The place was filled with the “new bourgesoisie,” people who had just comeinto their money and would do anything to keep it. “I rode the elevator for three years with Patrick Nugent --the one who married right,” he says of Lyndon Johnson’s son-in-law, a Marquette graduate, “Not much rubbed off .” At Marquette he began to reject the ideas he saw caricitured around him. He saw white classmates tolerate the few Negroes who could afford Marquette in pubBehind their backs they called them lic. “coons” and “niggers”. Rich refused to join them and was called a “nigger-lover.” In June ‘65 he graduated from Marquette.

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Kowaliw

by Steve Ireland vice-president, Federation students

Colin

Hangartner en&n eering

“I just want to have a job. I don’t want to kill anybody’ is their attitude.” Rich Paterak is a landed immigrant. In

Rich

Paterak

five years he will apply for Canadian citizenship. Rich may be a traitor and a coward, a nigger-lover and a pinko. But he is also a university graduate and so is his wife. He will have children who will grow up as Canadians. Maybe they too will be voices of dissent in another age of mass hysteria.

pounded by Howard Adelman’ a director of the co-op residence movement. It Wk3.S vigorously upheld by Western’s Mr. Sheppard and by Dr. J. A. Corry, principal of Queen’s University. Ward maintained that the university is iosing its purpose and end. It has been successful as an institution in the “through-put of the middle class ” and in preparing people for the corporate world. “But can the university of today provide society with critical people who can stand back and criticize?” he Bsked. He condemned the D-B Report for dealing with the “bows” of the university’ rather than the “whys.” Calling the dealing of a few students onto the senate “ceremonial recognition that there are problems ,” he complained that no real thought is being done on the university in our technological society. Dr. Corry followed Mr. Ward’s eloquent and thought-provoking address by saying that he didn’t recognize anything relevant to his uni-

.

,

versity--Q ueen’s--in Ward’s speech. Defining the president’s job “keeping the machine working” (Adelman later equated this deflnition to a “glorified TV repairman”), he emphasized, like Berdahl, “due process” and urged the setting up of “consultative machinery that really works” in areas of direct student concern. Mr. Sheppard of the UWO board described the DB Report as “masterly” and urged the acceptance of all of its recommendations now. Stating that universities have always been difficult to govern, he added, “The natives are restless--and I wouldn’t have it any other way.” Mr. Adelman, speaking last, described himself as “sitting here in anguish” awaiting his turn. Berdahl’s speech was “winning”, he said, “But it missed the point.The real question is ‘What is the university all about?‘--what are the ‘whys ’ involved?” He agreed with Ward that the DB Report does not deal with the fundamental problems.


Be

concise.

The

Chevron

may become, a haven for thesepeople. To be a conscientious objector on the grounds of religious beliefs is one thing and in my estimation this is the only grounds for a moral objection. ’ But the article in the Chevron stated, “If he does not qualify, but objects to all wars on a moral basis or objects specifically to thewar It seems to say that in Vietnam,...” if he does not qualify as a conscientious objector but just does not want to run the risk of being killed in action (especially in a rice padTo me this is a traitorous dy)... attitude against the country of his birth and he should be dealt with like a traitor--shot. If Canada were involved in a war these draft-dodgers would runfrom Canada just like they have from the States. Why should we harbor people who would do nothing to aid our country in a case of necessity? In my opinion those already here should be sent back to the U.S. and no more allowed into Canada--and certainly not into Waterloo. PETER FRENCH science 1

reser-

ves the right to shorten letters. Sign it--name, course, year, telephone. For legal reasons, unsigned letters cannot be published. A pseudonym will be printed if you _have good reason. Double - space it. Type it, if possible -- 32 characters per line.

What

sort

of iustice

in Rhodesia

anyway?

To the editor: Rather than camouflaging the Rhodesia situation, as intended, Mr. Hamlin’s letter (Nov. 25) verified his bias, ignorance and bankruptcy of sympathy for the African. First of all, it is theoretically possible to state that allpeople holding the same job shall receive equal pay regardless of race--but that this statement is carried out inpractice is an illusion as far as Rhodesia is concerned. It is also another matter whether the paths to such jobs are independent of race. In October, Toronto-born Gerald Caplan--a former CommonL. wealth scholar at University College in Rhodesia, but deported because of alleged political agitation--told Weekend magazine, “‘Five Africans graduated last November with a BA in economics. Not one yet has a job--there are virtually no jobs for educated Africans in Rhodesia except teaching in African schools .” I should like Mr. Hamlin to prove whether any Rhodesian whites with such qualifications could stay that long (11 months) without getting jobs and whether teaching in African schools puts educated Africans in the A or B category to qualify for voting. Mr. Han-& might say that Caplan told a lie. But how long will you people go on denying the atrocities you commit in Rhodesia? Mr. Hamlin also alleges that many Africans qualified to vote don’t want their names on the voterslist. But can he actually prove this? I dismiss this statement as hearsay calculated to make Smith’s regime look innocent. After all, in such a dictatorial state is there any necessitytoregister as a voter if the regime only uses force to maintain its power? In short, whether one votes the same regime will be there to rule by arms. I agree with Mr. Hamlin that the whites in Rhodesia are a minority. That is why our beloved Joshua Nkomo, the true nationalist in Rhodesia , is illegally sub jetted to detention. Mr. Hamlin, how many times has the high court in Rhodesia emphasized that Nkomo is detained illegally? What sort of justice do you have there anyway? It is lunacy for anybody to advance a theory that Smith’s regime will allow power to slip to the Africans. All African political parties have been banned, education as apathfor African’s progress in Rhodesia is tightly blocked and employment for Africans is very meager. We still don’t know why the black man should betossedaroundevenon his own continent by a concentration camp of greedy uncivilized individuals like those in Rhodesia. Tell your stories to the marines! You are insulting the African continent by writing such nonsense to the university newspaper. A. R. ESILLU geography 2 ” (home country: Uganda)

Shoot back

$67,000 some

Proposed that the $67,000 beused for a big bash on behalf of the stud-= who gave their hard-earned summer money into the profits of the bookstore. We suggest renting the Kitchener Auditorium and obtaining a weeklong liquor licence for those who say they’re over 21. The Roots of All Evil could play background mus ic. Free liquor, beer, and pretzels for all and everybody can join in singing “Hagey9s a jolly good fellow” amid the tinkle of glass. This program could become an annual event for the sake of tradition and the hottest campus. PHIL SINNER geography 2 FOCUS

States

To the editor: The article “Stars and Bars Travel Agency may sell one-way Waterloo tickets” absolutely disgusted me (December 2, page 1). It appalls me to think that our country is, and that this university

needs

% Please speak out, sir

start

traditions

To the editor:

your

he1 p

The staff of ‘Focus’ is out looking for people interested in writing articles for the engineering joumal. The main theme of the issue scheduled for March publication deals with the first ten years of growth of U of W. Gus Cammaert, editor of Focus, also needs persons to assist in any of the aspects involved in publication.

“The University of Ontario-Waterloo campus. ” How do you like it? We don’t. We’re frightened. So are 12 of the 14 presidents of the provincially-supported universities in Ontario. But is President Hagey ? Wednesday’s papers were full of the story. The Spinks Commission, set up to find ways of eliminating duplication in graduate courses and research in Ontario, has recommended to the Ontario government that the present 14 universities be amalgamated into one monolithic institution: the University of Ontario. Each campus would be directly responsible to the department of university affairs. The .main campus of the institution would be the Universit-y of Toronto, with the others as satellites. There would be one great research library, located (where else) at the U of ‘I: The consequences of such a move are staggering. Loss of autonomy and healthy competition,

uniformity,

ment

of

control

education

govern-

policy,

fantastic bureaucratization and further alienation of students from the governing bodies of the universitythese are but a few of the fears that come to mind immediately. And they come to the minds of 12 of the 14 presidents too. Did they come to President Hagey? The Toronto Star said the renort was sent to the government and&the 14 university presidents a month ago.

The Kitchener-Waterloo Record said, “J. G. Hagey, president of the University of Waterloo, refused comment until he has seen the report.” The Star also stated the President Hagey refused to comment. Even more humiliating is the Record’s lengthy interview with Dr. William Villaume, president of Wat-erlootheran He explained the renort in detail and called it “a possible threat to the academic freedom of universities.” It’s humiliating because Waterlootheran would not even be affected, since it does not receive any financial assistance from the province. We’re concerned. But is President Hagey? .

It’s just plain ridiculous

Who did it photography: Ralph Bishop, Brian Minielly, Ed Toplak, Chris Bennett (darkroom manager), Chris Haber, Barry Takayesu, John Nelson, Julian Sale, Mike Monroe. sports: Frank Bialystok, Chuck Barb Mikulica, Hugh Kochman, Miller, Peter Webster 9 Ray Worrier entertainment: Jerry Pabowiwchak, Michael Robinson, Bob Savage, Peter Soroka, Terry Skeats, Fritz Stockier, Ed Wagner, Robin Wigdor, Gisela Dorrance cartoons: Ross Benn, Paul Grignonmrr 9Peter Stevens -Guille typing:

draft-dodgers to the

could hot

THE “SPINKS”

,

Frank

Goldspink

circulation: Jim Bowman, Keith Gamry Burko advertising: Ken Baker, Norm Finlayson, ROSS Helling, Dan Mabee, Ramamurthy Natarajan library: Lynn Allen (chief mortician), Martha Minaker cleaning & ideas: Bob Robinson Nowthatwe’reorgelized,we’regoingto(a)study(b)gotoMontrealtocollectour t rophies .

I I

A

_ --_C’opynght. Perrntsszon tforn HIS

. magazine.

hh~wron (formerly

the

CORYPHAEXJS)

The Chevron is published Fridays by the board of publications of the Federation of Students, Canada. Opinions are obviously not necessarily University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, those of the university, Student Council or. the board of publications. Member of Canadian University Press. board of publications chairman: editor- in - chief: Jim Nagel David R. Witty news editor; Grant Gordon adverti sing manager: Ekkeh ard photography: Brian Clark Heidebrecht features: Joachim Surich lithographed by Elmira sports: Wayne Braun Signet Ltd., Elmira, Ont. entertainment: Heather 7,500 copies Davidson 2471 (editor).Night744-0111. Teles0295-759 744-6114 local2497(news), 2812(advertising), Chevron Toronto bureau chief: Allen Class, 96 Madison Avenue, telephone 924 - 7828. Chevron Ottawa bureau chief: Raymond Vilbikaitis, 338 Zephyr Avenue, apt. 8, 0ttali.a 14. Friday,

December

9, 1966 (7:~)

15


Sunday

r

3:00--Choral

I

FOR

THAT

WARM AND COZY IN STYLE-CONSCIOUS

Notices for this column should be handed in to the Chevron office on the forms provided. Deadline Wednesday night. (*means every week)

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