1967-68_v8,n03_Chevron

Page 1

8:3

UNIVERSITY

Ceremonies

QF WATERLOO,

Waterloo,

Ont.

Friday,

May26, 1967

go back centuries

. World’sfirst mathdegrees’ at weekend’sc.onvocations

Jom’Bruckler and Elsie Mason display a colorful new d oi W tenth&niverl$ary banner, while Frank Brewster helps - or something. The banners, flanked by blub Canadian Centennial emblems, went up in the arts quadrangle for cotlvocation andwill remain all year. Rehular convocation banners are up all over campus. The bookstore’s selling them for $10.

Big bwilding xsmoothly The present campus buildingprogram is on schedule,. believe it or not. In fact the largest expansion program in U of W’s history is running smoothly compared to previous expansion programs ewhere late starts and lack of tradesmen caused delay’s, said Arthur Lappin of the physical plant and planning departmerit. Most of the buildings presently were started under construction early last summer. Thismadecompletion possible for the fall term. The food-services I building, to contain the cafeteria and bookstore is to be ready by September. The biology addition will be ready for occupancy by late August.

PERSONALIZED

The first bachelor of mathematics degrees in the world will be conferred today at Seagram Stadium. Proud parents from across the country will converge at the stadium to see junior graduate. The faculty of the university will assemble as a body, their rainbow of academic robes and the ancient ceremonies recalling half a milleniutn of scholarly tradition. One by one, the graduating students in plain black gowns will be called to kneel before the chancellor, who will “‘admit you eo this degree.” At the same instant the registrar will drape the colorful hood--whose colors and pattern identify academic rank and alrna mater--around the shoulders of the student. The parents will beam and flashbulbs will pop. Some students either not the type to enjoy ceremony or too far away to return for it, will not attend. If past convocations are typical, there will be a high percentage of names called without response and degrees) granted “in absentia”. The university’s fall 1967 convocation--math, arts and phys-ed today at 2:30, eng@Fering and s.ciena ,omdr tiow-&$ll ‘award niore than 800~degrees. ?biSidud~ about 633 bachelors’ degrees and 175 graduate degrees. -

proiect

The BMath degree will be presented to students who have completed their courses in the arts or science faculties and requested the new degree after the faculty of mathematics was established inJanuary. As well, several master of mathematics degrees will be conferred on postgraduates. . Two honorary doctorates will be awarded by university chancellor Ira G. Needles. Michael Langham, artistic director of the Stratford Shakespearean Festival, will address today’s convocation and receive an honorary doctor of laws degree. Tomorrow p the research manager for the Noranda Research Center, Dr, William Henry Gauvin, will address the engineering and science -

convocation and receive anhonorary doctorate of engineering. The ceremonies will be held outdoors at Seagram Stadium bothdays if the weather permits. Alternate arrangements have been made indoors. Several social functions willcomplement the colorful proceedings, including a chancellor’s luncheon for the honorary graduands each day, university receptions after the ceremonies, an alumni-association hospitality room in the VillageHall both afternoons and the Grad Ball at the Victorian Inn in Stratford tonight. At the 1966 convocations, exactly one year ago, 528 degrees were awarded at all levels. This year’s total of over 800 represents an increase of over 50 percent and sets a new high for the university.

Fall housing shortage d,emands action -WOW Some Waterloo co-op student out in Labrador thinks it’s going to be a long, cold winter here in Waterloo.

moving out at the end of the term, please contact the university housing office at 744-6111 local 2586. ,“The housing shortage in the fall

Can you help him--and hundreds more in his situation? If you’re living in an apartment now and will be

filled, and e<eryqne is triing tofind apart&ents. “We’ll act as a clearinghouse for addresses ,” said Mrs. Beausoleil.

on schedule The need for math and computer facilities in the fall calls for completion of the first and second floors of rhal: building by Sept. 15. The building is to be complete in December. In the phys-ed building, delays were encountered at: the start of construction, but it is expected the building will be ready for January 1968. The contract completion date for the campus center is in December. However construction is ahead of this and the building may be completed for October. In addition, landscaping work has starred around the engineering buildings. This is expected to be completed in a few weeks.

Relatively little construction will be under way next year, Threebuildings are presently in the design stage and construction should start this summer : --The arts IIIbuildingwillprovide facilities for theEnglish,historyand philosophy departments o Plans for this building are approved and tenders are to be called next month. Completion date is for fall 1968. --The health-services building and the Minota Hagey Memorial Residence are still in thedesignstage. Completion is also scheduledfor fall 1968. These last three would complete phase 2 of the university’s expansion program.

WEDDING

This doesn’t Watfor sees W atfor got married ! Well, not really, but his originator did. Don Kerr and Mary Robinson, both graduate students in the design department, were married in a unique ceremony Saturday. The two designers decided that their marriage would be more meaningful if they designed it themselves. The ceremony was performed in the chapel of Conrad Grebel ColJege by a Unitarian minister with poems read by Roman Catholics and apoern composed by a rabbi. Don and Mary combined mod and traditional customs:

very

often h-is father

--poetry and philosophy readings --renaissance music by harpsichord --a mini wedding dress The bride wore a whitedress with the hem four inches above theknee. Her waist-length hair was intertwined with daisies. The groom wore a blue pinstriped Edwardian suit. Don and Mary’s hands were bound by the mmon ofhonor,Wmbo~~~Y representing the conjunction of opposites. The minister raised their tied hands saying: “I join these hands in the symbouc

happen: married sign of the conjunction of opposites, of male and female, of sky and earth, of life and death, of dualism and separation.” Prof. Larry Cummings, Paul Frappier and Peggie Larkin read poetry chosen especially by the bride and groom. At the end of the ceremony, the marriage certificate--both the stancl& pri,nte.d form and a mdevallooking parchment copy hand-lettered by Don--were signed publiclY* Every guest later added his signature.

The design department designed a Watfor wedding on Saturday. Don Kerr and Mary Robinson, both grad students in design, were married at Conrad Grebel chapel in a traditional-gone-mod ceremony.


b

- Co-op students causeown fireworks by holding sit-in in carpark driveway

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Co-op residence students made their own fireworks Monday night. Twenty students--both men and women--sat in the co-op driveway and blocked cars leaving the Seaeram Stadium fireworksdisplay. v The cars had been parked in a field near the stadium, acessible only by the co-op driveway. The I students thought the cars were trespassing on the co-op’s private property and decided to protest. They sat for 30 minutes and celebrated the Victoria Day holiday by sparklers and throwingfireI waving crackers. A proposed hootenanny did not develop. A burly policeman who had been directing traffic approached the group and strongly suggested that The students claimed : they move. the cars were trespassing and fin-

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The Village council is back inmotion for the summer* Movies, a hayride and a serniforma1 are under consideration--and further suggestions are welcome. “The Village council this term isn’t ;;oins to be a protest group or anything like that,“said RonDaminato, physics lB, chairman of the summer council. “‘A lot of people have been complaining about, the food, though&is summer , ” said Daminato. “‘Weare going to talk about a formal protest about that. The food’s worse than in the fall term.” ’ - The summer council is set up with two reps from each house, who elect a chairman. (Only the north quadrant and a few west houses are occupied for the summer .) The next meeting is Tuesday at 8 in rhe red dining hall.

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ally convinced the dubious officer. The policeman realized that orders wouldn’t remove the students and he resorted to begging and pleading with them. Ten minutes later the students returned to the residence satisfied tha_t the protes t hadn’t gone unnoticed. One angry woman had berated the students for the full half-hour ,making somescathing comments on their intellectual abilities. The same woman wrote a letter

N RC has world’s

to Sandy Baird, a columnist in the K-W Record. His Wednesday column branded the protestors “a group of semi-addled university students” and also cast some doubt on their intelligence. The driveway the cars were using is the private properw of Waterloo Cooperative Residence Inc. WCRI is owned and operated by students living in its residences. All students involved in the protest were members of WCRL

best

“The National Research Council physics labs are unmatched in the world ,” declared a prominent astronomer at a U of W-physics-department seminar last week. P. J. Fitzgerald of Clevelandalso said he was amazed at thestartling growth in teaching and research facilities across Canada--the 1000 inch telescope in British Columbia for example. His lecture was sponsored by the physics department to keep faculty and students abreast of the latest development in their field. Fitz-

$5=million

fund

Scholarships

in the for-

in fall

The funds the university in immediate in long-term

are sorely needed, as owes over $l,OOO,OOO debts and $14,000,000 commitments.

A committee of rhe board of governors is being set up to determine campaign objectives and to enlist leadership at both the national and local levels as soon as possible.

in mining

Two Gardner-Denver Canada s chola rships ) each of $1,000, will be awarded in 1967 to students in Canadian universities planning careers in mining, petroleum or direct.connected related industries. The scholarships are to enable students who have completed two years in a recognized Canadian university to continue careers leading towards bachelor degrees. They

labs

His work led to the discovery of new interstellar clouds as well as a better definition of their location and nature. Raised and educated in Toronto, he obtained his BSc at the University of Toronto in 1964. He then moved to Cleveland but plans to return to Canada soon for teaching and research. He describes the situation here as “bright and challenging.”

drive

The University of Waterloo will kick off irs nation-wide fundraising drive in the K-W area in the coming fall. The university urgently needs over $5,000,000 if it is to continue the current rate of growth. The federal and provincial governments provide only 85 percent of the costs of construction of academic buildings .

physics

gerald, considered an expert subject, spoke on interstellar mations.

and

oil

will be awarded on October 1,1967. Interested s tud&nts should request forms of application from J, R. Henderson, secretary, GardnerDenver Canada Scholarship Committee, 1800 Ellesmere Road, Scarborough. Their letters should include outlines of their hopes and plans and how they relate to mining, petroleum or related industries.

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Besides this list of 2,500, the final three summer issues will be mailed to highschool graduates who plan to enroll at Waterloo in September.

articl-

Today

WAITRESSES WANTED work at. Wasage Beach. 7185.

as secondclass mail Ottawa, andforpayment

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as supplies permit--will be mailed to co-op students separately from today% paper.

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Housing

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WANTADS: each addi-

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APARTMENT WANTED--Men students wish to rent apartment in Waterloo for fall term. Interested parties please contact D .M. Blenkhorn, general delivery, Labrador or G. W. Durward City, Nfld. RR 1, Kingsville, Ont., (519 7-23~ 5 4942.

FOR

Out-termers

The thousand co-op students on today’s Chevron mailing list brings the postal population up to almost 2,500. Co-op mailing labels were received this week for the first time from the coordination and data-processing departments. The previous two issues of rhe Chevron--as far

St. N. Waterloo

A subscription receive the

fee Chevron

included by mail

FILMS

in their during

annual off-campu?

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Creative arts board in P145 at 12:15 noon. ‘Tanker engineer’ features life at sea as an engineer.

Dates

to

remember

Thursday, June l--A meeting of students interested in forming a Committee to End the War in Vietnam-- in SS210 at 8. The program of such a committee will be discuss ed, as well as proposals for future actions on this campus. June 15-18 --Summer weekend. J une 17--CAR RALLY. Maximum of 60 applications available from Federatton office. (Entry fee is $1. Make checks payable to Engineering ‘lass ‘68m)

student fees en titles terms. Non-students:

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W students annually.

to

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4 The bias comes through persons who do not seem to fit into this club for dreary demi-tycoons are the only two persons who it could be said are representative: the alumnus and the gentleman from the Canadian Labour Congress. Only one member of the board lives further away than Toronto or Sarnia. What a cosmopolitan assemblage! The board contains no scholars no medical men, no social workers, no political personages and no educators.

If YOU believed the K-W Record, YOU would picture the board of governors of the University of Waterloo as a group of typical taxpayers. As expected, editorially day, brief on university

the Record last Thursattacked the student government.

The editors scoffed at the proposal that academics should run the university: “‘(the lunatics should operate the asylum”. Perhaps they were afraid the idea was some communist plot like the idea of worker-controlled factories. Oddly enough the Record fails to mention that modern universities operated without boards of governors for half a millenium.

The public interest would be better served by a super-senate backed by an assembly drawn from local &thorities and educators, lo+,, chambers of commerce and labour groups, the churches, and national learned -and professional societies. It is unfortunate that the editors of the Record did not read their own report of the brief which thoroughly described such an assembly.

The worthies at the Record then went on to describe the board as defenders of the taxpayers’ funds. The taxpavers will be surprised to learn who the& piotectors are. Half of the 27 members of the board have backgrounds as manufacturers. Most of the rest are lawyers and other types of business professionals. The only

Perhaps the Record’s hard line against students is dictated by the fact that the Record’s publisher, John E. Motz, is a member of the board of governors.

(formerly editor-in-chief: Jim Nagel new and features: Donna McKie, Mary Bull, Frances Anders, Brain Clark, Ron Craig, Frank Go1 dspink, Roger LaFleur, Sandra Savlov, Nancy Sweeney, Kelly Wilson, Dave Your@. sports: Wayne Braun, Bill Snodgrass, Adrian Trevisan, Doug Wooln er.

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Intramural softball finds a home Intramural softball opened for the summer term Tuesday night as mechanical 4A defeated mechanical 3A by a score of 3 to 2, and civil 3A bombed electrical 4A 20-4. The games --on Waterloo Collexhibitions egia te diamonds --were scheduled between teams ‘who showed enough interest by getting their class lists in earliest”, as a poster stated. The stars in the second game started slow, spotting the electricians the first run of the game, but erupted from their sandboi to endit

in grand style. They sent ten men acr&s the plate in the seventh and final inning, Results of last night’s games-electrical 2B vs chemical 2B, physics 3A vsc chemical Z&--were not available at press time. Wednesday night math 1B played their 2B counterparts and mechanical 2B played civil ‘2B. These scores were not available either. Next week’s games will be played on the campus soccer fieldbehind the warehouse, where two diamonds

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are being completed by the athletic department. An official list of u1npires will be posted. * * 0 On the swimming scene, the first period of free swimming will be at Breithaupt pool at Margaret and Union Streets in Kitchener from .8 to 10 Tuesday night. Remember your student’s card to get into the pool. This period of free swimming will continue weekly on Tuesdays throughout the summer.

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Walters So, we made the bi,e; time infootball but don’t-get your hopes up expecting us to come on the scene like gangbusters. It will take a few years before Waterloo can hope to be a power in senior intercollegiate foot-a i ball. But never fear. Our day will come. Warrior teams have shown up well in hockey and basketball so there is no reason to believe that after a couple of years we won’t be &vin,i;; Toronto, Western, Queen’s and McGill the what-for. Yep, sure will be good to get at U of T in football. Seems that they’ve got this thing for us in hockey. This thing happens to be the Monteith brothers and about a dozen other 37-year veterans of the Blues. Can it be that the Monteith boys will never graduate? Rumor has it that they now have degrees in law and meciicine and that U of T will be introducing a course in honors Lower Slobbovian next year just SO the dynamic duo doesn’t have to leave. So it% just a rumor but it starts you to thinking, doesnet it? Speaking of Toronto, hearby let it be hoped that we don’t meet those terrible monsters in a pigskin contest before this, our last seasollin the minor leagues. Good grief. Remember that w alloping they gave our team last year? We only lost Terry Joyce, one of the top Warrior defensive backs, and Mike Cheevers for the season. The score was irrelevant--except that maybe it gave our mighty grids ters a bad case of the blues. (When you’re dealing with the Blues, any case is a bad case.) But golly gee, them kind of games we can do without, Methinks 1968 will be just a great time to face them again. Actually, the best thing about being in the big time is that the Warriors don’t have to play Waterlootheran.

While we’re not on the subject of Waterloo’s summer softball spectacle, we might as well mention-with a little more accuracy than last week--what’s happening on the home front. While paging through the Chevron yesterday (for lack of something better to read) we came upon a headline that struck us as written by somewhat of an idot. It, as far as we were able to de&per, was about aces and diamonds, Being the humble gambling soul that we are, we the engineers have no place in which to bat the round sphere. (And we said to ourselves, we said, “So what’s wrong with a pair of two redundancies I now and then?“) And so we lamented in our tearful heart for the engineers. And we struck upon a masterful idea (if we may Say so ourselves because no one else will), Why not have the plu--, whoops, engineers play on top of that thing over there in what used to be known as the engineering quadrangle (before some nasty soul went berserk at the drawing board). We understand that there are even bleachers up there, What do you guys want, anyway? AFTERTHOUGHTS Woe is us. yes, fans, the column is but one week old and we have made a veritable unforgiveable m.isRemember how we rambled on about the K-W took. Panthers last week ? If not, best you read more carefully. In any case, Saul Glober, Warrior basketballstar over the past season, inadvertantly was left off our list of Waterloo students who are lacing on the baseball spikes this summer. YOU must believe that this was inadvertent because (a) we didn’t know about it and (b) Saul was one of the few Warriors who at one timeor another hasn’t been out to get us. Model

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