1967-68_v8,n14_Chevron

Page 1

Volume

8 Number

UNIVEFUTY

14

OF WATERLOO,

Waterloo,

Ontario

Friday,

U of T report

September

29, 1967

says

Scrap exams, iunk lectures

year generalist courses instead. TORONTO (CUP&The MacPat Hembruff, associate secret Pherson Committee report recomhry for the Canadian Union of mends drastic changes in the students, saw the report when she structure of the faculty of Artsand was working as an executive assScience at the University of Toristant to the U of T student presionto. dent, Tom Faulkner, last year. She Seen only by university presisaid it is likely to revolutionize dent Claude Bissell and a few choeducation policies incanadian uni. sen members of the university, the versities if its major recommen= report was to have been released dations are implemented. publicly October 1. The report, containing 96 But the varsity, the U of T newsrecommendations in all9 received paper, beat them to it. 431 briefs, 317 of these from stuThe report’s main recommendadents. tions: The committee was apparently -drastically reduce classroom shocked that so many of these cr% hours and use of examinations ticized undergraduate instruction Quarterback Bob McKillop got lots of blocking as he led the Warriors to a 30-26 win over -include students in policygiven by professors at U of ‘I’.. making bodies of the arts and sciWestern. The Warriors meet Laurentian tomorrow at 1:30. See pages 10, 11 and 13. ence faculty The report was prepared by a (Chevron photo by Glenn Berry) -reduce emphasis on exzuninacommittee chaired by C.B. Mactions pherson of the department of pal--no more than one lecture a itical economy. week in any course Members of the committeewere -abolish exams in second year Frank Buck, a U of T graduate; associate professor of history den of the Village, said that the with option- to write supplementals The new Village constitution election of officers for the first Rarnsay Cook; zoology professor true test for the constitution was in case of failures seems here to stay. A general term. -reduce emphasis on examinJ.R. Jackson3 assistant prof esthe Villagers acceptance of it and survey of Villagers reveals few Opinions on the content range ations in all years sor of chemistry S.C. Nyburg; wasunviolent objections to the actual from apathetic acceptance to en- that a general referendum -term work to make up 5Operphilosophy professor H.S. Harris necessary. constitution. thusiastic support. There is, howcent of final mark of York University; professor of During the first week of operever a widespread uneasiness conHe also stated that the Villagers’ -revise present honors and Greek and registrar of University cerning the legality of the method ation, the majority of floors chose feelings on this constitution or on general courses. College R.M.H. Shepherd, and Paul by which the constitution was ima representative for their specific any future amendments could be At present U of T general and Hock of the political-economy deplemented. quadrant council under the terms readily expressed by their floor honors programs are split, like p-e& When asked about the necessity of the new constitution. Onequadrepresentatives without need for a Waterloo’s, Students taking the The student administrative for a general referendum on the general rant-North--had its first general referendum. This, he four-year council has asked acting president honors program have meeting on Tuesday, including the constitution, Dr. Ronald Eydt, warsaid, would result in a saving of smaller John Sword to issue free copies of classes, better library time and trouble, and shouldnot be privileges, the report to all 8,300 students in and have greater ~CII any less representative than a re- cess to professors than those takthe faculty of arts and science. Students can vote f erendum. ing the three-year general proAll professors are receiving a copy free, and the report will be on When approached on the same gram. The MacPherson report will sale at the bookstore for $1.50. subject, Dr. Alan Nelson, northestablishing three Only 4,000 copies are planned quadrant tutor, refused to make a recommend courses and four+ to be published. statement, saying that he felt the year specialist constitution had received unfair treatment in last week% Chevron Students almost had to go home of revision. Saxe said Judge and that he had no desire to be misto vote October 17. Writs for this quoted. Charlton was skeptical about the election were issued before fall magnitude of the problem. CharlIt appears, however, that at registration forcing most eligible ton voiced uncertainty about whe least one formal protest against They sang 11We shall overcome” LONDON (CUP)-University of students to be registered in their ther the court would benecessary, the implementation may comef rom and chanted criticisms of the proWestern Ontario students march home riding. But he discussed it with the other the north-quadrant council, with a ed on campus and of the adSunday and held a vincial government But the efforts of Pete War&+ members of the board. They derequest for a general referendum ministration. tent-in to protest lack of suitable sociology 3, and Stewart Saxe, ap= cided that a special court of reopen to all Villagers. Organisers said the tent-in was off-campus housing. plied political science 3, will let vision will be convened on campus When asked about the vagueness, to demonstrate the need for more About 150 students set up five students register in this riding on Monday. in parts, Dr. Eydt stated that this and better off-campus housing. small tents on a hill in the shadow Monday. The eligible students must sign was intentional and that it was came to gothic tower of Twenty city householders The returning officer of Wate+ an affidavit saying they are over 21, hoped that students would add as of the collegiate University College, the campus* s the tent-in with offers of accomloo North said that a student would have lived in Ontario for one year many of their own amendments oldest building. modation Tuesday. have to present a letter from their and are British subjects. Further and additions as desired. This, he Housing research committee The tents remained on campus home riding returning officer information can be obtained from felt would be easier under the new Janina Smolen, her until Tuesday, and were used by spokesman saying they had been struck from the board of external relations, system for amendments. seven members o.f the hastily for+ voice husky from a cold as a rethat list or not registered yet. 744-6111 local 2814. The two petions against the new med housing research committee, suit of two nights in the chilly But, W. B. Common, the chief There are more than&O00 studconstitution seen around the Villtent, said a survey done last week a student group that had led aproreturning officer for Ontario said ents on campus eligible to vote. It age’ last week seem to have dishad turned-up 56 students with no test parade with a long banner proit was up to Judge Charlton, chair+ is expected that over half of them appeared. permanent housing, claiming “Housing Crisis? man of the Waterloo North board will register to vote.

Vi//age

Register revision

OKs Eycft constjtvtion

for Ontario wte: court on campus

Tent-injxotests pinch in housing at Western

l

- Political-science Tables have been turned in the political- science department. Students are presenting their opinions and professors are listening to them. The department wants to rev& its slate of courses. Theyareanxious to hear student opinion. So the political-science union was formed on campus this week.

students

The ‘union organized by Joe Surich, poli-sci 3, and Grant Gordon, poli-sci 3, will enable all political science students to express their opinions as a group and represent themselves to department heads. At the organizational meeting Tuesday afternoon, Gordon praised “Most people in the department: the department are topnotch peep-

organrze

le, really responsive to students.a’s TVe have fewer grievances than many other departments,” he added, Don Lee, poli-sci 4, proposed an undergraduate journal, consisting of student term papers, to serve as a forum. A discussion followed about the advisability of the group% becom-

0

vmon

ing involved in non-student questions. Dave Young, poli-sci 4, urged the passing of resolutions on all kinds of political issues: “There is great danger in trying to box off our lives into certain roles.” “1 wouldn’t be at all opposed to affiHating with the CanadianLabor Congress,” he asserted.

Gordon suggested a list of immediate priorities. The union decided to relegate the question of general aims to an aims committee. Elected to the committee were Don Lee, Bob Garthson, poli-sci 3, Grant Gordon and Joe Surich, who will negotiate with thedepartment heads.

.


Chvrch and &dents to draft-resistancfe TORONTO (CUP) - The draftresistance movement incanadagot a shot in the arm last week. A U of T student group and the United Church of Canada both passed financial support for draftdodgers. The University College Literary and Athletic Society of the University of Toronto voted to support American draft-dodgers coming to Toronto. After considerable debate the society voted 11 to 5 in favor of a four-part motion last Thursday. Supported by the society for the Draft Resistance Program inToronto, a non-partisan humanitarian group to help draft-dodgers adjust to Canada: -A contribution of $250 to the organization; -A petitJonto the u of T Students Council for support of the program in draft-resistance Toronto materially, financially and vocally; -Further SUPPOI~ from individual society members. The society invited executive members of the draft-resistance program in Toronto to the meeting to present an appeal for University College support. A motion to give support to the Toronto Anti-Draft Committee will be debated at the next SAC meetim Wednesday. it that time- Mark Satin, direct-

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or of the program, will ask council to approve his program inprinciple and ask for a SAC contributiqn. The representatives of the re sistance program, all professors at U of T, included A.M. Wall of the psychology department, Prof. Paul Hoch physics, and E.E. Rose, history. Prof. Hoch told the society that five to ten Americans normally 25 years of age come to their Toronto office each day. On reaching Canada they need initial financial help, information, legal help and a placement service. Prof. Wall called these people, who he has accommodated in his own home, c4lonely, frightened people who want to succeed very much in their new life. They are assimilated quickly into Canada.” The representatives stressed that the draft-resistance Program was not politically aligned with SUPA or anY other group&though welcoming their support. Prof. Wall said: “We are trying to make this an independent We are not taking sides thing. with those who have a political axe to grind by stressing the humanitarian aspect.” Speaking against the motion, society member Arthur Kaell said the draft-resistance program had unsavory political connotations

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At the close of the sessions, sponsored by the university, the Canadian Indian Youth Council and CUS, proposals advancing closer relationshi’ps between the two segments of Canadian society will be made. 9t is easy to talk**’ Flott concluded. 4rBut we would like to make resolutions concerning possible courses of action which students could take back to their campus or reservation.” The university hopes to send at least seven delegates. Interested students may pick up application forms at the student federation,

board Faulkner disagrees: 44We think a notarized statement is sufficent”, he said The SAC p&s to send a lawyer around to residences to notarize their applications. The election board ruling affects about 2,000 students who were not enumerated on September 5 when the writs were issued.

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hen&e and detailed developtient, The co-op course takes longer than other architecture courses. The university hopes that, because of the experience provided on work terms, the Ontario Association of Architects will shorten the period between graduation and registra. tion. At present the University of Toronto has the only other school of architecture in the province. The Waterloo school is intended to appeal to a djfferent type of student. Courses will be more unstructured. Students will also cover areas of study not required by other architectual schools. Prof. George Soulis is acting chairman of the executive committee.

, TORONTO (CUP) - U of T president Tom Faulkner has moved to simplify change-of-riding applications for out-of-town students who want to vote in Ontario’s October 17 election. The provincial election board ruled that students must appear in person before a revising officer to change their riding.

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Is the ignorant society white or Illdim? This is the theme of a workshop which will explore Indian-white $relationships at Paradise Lake camp October 15-22. The workshop 4s a response to the resolution passed at the recent Canadian Union of Students congress in London” Supporting an active student role in Indian and white relationships.” The meetings are designed to promote interaction between an equal number of Indian and white delegates. Resource people, mostly Indian, will discuss such topics as Indian organizations and Indian youth today. These resource people, actor+ ding to Stephen Flott, chairman

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The new school of architecture starts on campus this fall. Because of the large number of applications, enrollment was five over the projected figure of 30. The new course is split into two stages based on the co-op plan. The first stage, lasting for six terms, leads to a bachelor of environmental science degree. After this, students may transfer into such related fields as planning or industrial design, or continue to the second stage. The second stage consists of five terms leading to a bachelor of architecture degree. fn the second stage, work and academic terms will last eight months to allow more compre-

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whether council liked it or not. He urged council to defeat thB motion on grounds that members could not represent the college in this matter. The United Church of Canada Monday issued a statement recommending that Canadians welcome American’s who”for reasons of conscience refuse to do m&tary service in the war in Vietnam.” The board of evangelism and social service passed a resolution which suggested that Canadians should give.the Americans: Temporary residence in their homes; practical and financial support during the time of adjustment to their new surroundings; and employment according to the individual*s training and skills and the job availability on the Cd labor market. The board also suggested that coming to Canada Americans should apply for proper legal status as landed immigrants and that a $1,000 grant be given to local volunteer groups who provide assistance to them. In January the U of W Student Council passed a motion supporting draft-dodgers. A petition with over 800 names was then submitted to the judicial committee calling for a referendum on the issue.

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Waterloo and currently chairman government’s of the provincial committee on university affairs. An honorary member will also be installed at the banquet. He is Prof. James Church, formerly with the department of design, and now president of the Conestoga College of Applied Arts and Technology, Kitchener’s community college. In a North American first, EngSot hopes to recruit a full fivemember women’s boatrace team.

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Cookie .gone fishing, quits kan7pus kops By Bob Verdun acting

entertainment

editor

The kooky kampus kops will fade into oblivion with the retirement from active duty of their fearless and jovial leader, Sgt. Fred Cook. 54-year old Cook is leaving the security department today. Cookie expects to leave for Victoria, EC about October 12. He plans to take a couple of months vacation to do some salmon fishing, Not quite retired, he probably will go into real-estate. Cookie first joined the staff of the university inNovember 1958 as a day porter under the late Dr. Bruce Kelley, first dean of science. Six and a half months later he was made the entire security force. The university security force grew until there were 15 men and two dogs under him inNoven-+ ber 1966, when ex-RCMP man Al Romenco took over the job of security director.

‘Campus

sound’

The new force will be more professional to meet the security needs of the campus, especially the research projects. Cookie noted that the new force is wellorganized and will be well-dressed too with their new green uniforms. The campus will lose a bit of its still-scarce heritage. Cookie% colorful humor was always around. Wednesday before he was interviewed, he was in theprocess cf telling some poor freshman that he had 20 tow trucks lined up to start towing away vehicles. “Could I have an interview with you, Sgt. Cook?’ I began. “No, you want to speak to my twin brother. And don’t print that bit about the tow trucks. You want to get me fired?’ Cookie was sad at the thought of leaving. “Pm going to miss the students after all these years. Every once in a while you’ve got to give somebody hell. But when it’s

silenced

Radio station kills university progrum %ampus sound’ dies tomorrow night. The U of W student program, broadcast on radio stations CKKW and CFCA-FM every Saturday night for the past three years, has been cancelled by the station’s programming director. The final show will be heard tomorrow night from llpmtill2am. The reason, as given by general manager William MacGregar, of CKKW and CFCA-FM, was lack of student participation coupled with the accusation, St The show has been

Council meets at Renison Student council will hold its biweekly meeting in the dining hall of Renison college this Manday evening. The meeting will start at 7. Holding meetings at the various residences is part of a Council plan to acquaint students with Council activities. President Steve Ireland said at the August meeting of Council that he hoped no one would think of calling it a travelling circus.

C/T&T

given over to the continuous playing of LP’S for 25 to 30 minutes. Richard Mills, program director of Waterloo of the University Broadcasting Association replied that there was a lack of student participation in the summer and the five weeks between the endof summer term and registration. This was the same period when music was dominant during the show. “In the spring thiswasmentioned to Dan Fisher (CKKW’s program director) and there was no objection made at that time,” said Gord Dearborn, assistantprogram director of %arnpus sound% The cancellation leaves 25 or so members who have already joined the club this year in a lurch. The move may increase more interest in the proposed campus FM station. Mills said, “What is important now is the Broadcasting Association’s future. If interest in renewing a show on an AM station or in working towards the FM station increases, the association will carry on. If no interest is shown then the association too will die.*’ ‘Campus sound’ will be replaced by a program of dance music.

department

A university janitor claims he has been blacklisted by the physical plant and planning department, and that no one will tell him why. Bob Robinson, 53, janitor for the Federation building and the Theater of the Arts for 18 months, until June, says he applied in February for a three-month leave of absence in order to go home to England. While here, he occasionally brought in little gems for the Chevron, and was appointed the paper’s CIT&T departmentcleaning, ideas, tea and typing. It was not until May 22, only a week before he was to leave, that Alexander Cairncross, assistant director of the physical-plant and planning department, wrote him refusing the leave. “You may on your return reapply for a position,” the letter said, <‘but we cannot at this time guarantee . . ..any suitable opening.” Robinson returned September 7 and applied for a job. Arthur Taylor, an inter-

done, it’s over with.” I asked for some of the best pranks that were pulled. *( Painting BEER on the water tower was pretty good. The boys turned themselves in the next day and were let off because the tower needed painting anyway. “In my first year, I was called up to the Lutheran college on a Sunday morning, It seems that six or seven pieces of women9 undergarments had been run up the flagpole. I had to take them down, but I waited until after dark. That was in the falL I found out in the spring that it had been done by the characters I had originally suspected? “Did you ever get lost in our tunnels?’ “1 don’t even go down there.” Cookie was questioned about any funny incidents involving the campus canine cops: some students were 4eOnce Johnny-on-the-Spot stealing a from a campus construction site for a parade, We took one of the dogs-Jet-out to save it so nobody would be caught short the next &Y. ‘*Then there was a basketball game at Seagram Stadium where about 25 McMaster students were refused admission to the alreadypacked game. One guy challenged the whole security force to try to keep him out. When we brought Jet over, the Mat students walked away.” His opinion of Chevron columnist Ed Penner? g1He% all right--an interesting column. I get a big laugh out of some of the things he’s said about security.

Mrs. Hi/da Ta?jlor has been appointed assistant dean of women.

wants

viewer in the university personnel department, assigned him to a job at Seagram Stadium. It was not until after spending a day at it that he was toldit would be steady nights, said Robinson. He resigned and applied to personnel for another job. “Taylor apologized for his lack of information on the job,” said Robinson. (Taylor, however, said this week that he had emphasized it would not begin until the new phys-ed building opened, and that it would be steady nights until then. “Robinson seemed reasonably happy with this,*-’ he said, #‘but he could have made a genuine mistake.“) Robinson says he asked for his old job back, but Taylor told him he had orders from Cairncross not to rehire him for PP&P. Robinson was told he could have a job with the computer center,-to be settled that Monday evening--“ but Taylor would have to tell them what it was Cairncross had against me.”

his

Cookie reminisces over his era, trademark

Meals

stogfe in hand.

cost more

Prices for meal5 on campus this year are slightly higher than last year. This is the first increase since 1963, and the uti versity administration blames higher cost of food supplies and labor since then. The new food-services building also opened this month. The Carnival Room, on the main floor, is open Monday to Friday, 7:15 am to 8 pm, sells sandwiches and other soda-fountain items. Saturday, Sunday and holidays this room is open lo:30 to 6:30. The main cafeteria, as yet unnamed, serves lunch from 11 to l:45 and dinner from 4:30 to 6:30. The cafeteria will not be open weekends. Soon to open is the Laurel Room, “a dignified dining-room service with menu selections to satisfy the most discriminating in contemporary surroundings,~~ according to an administration bulletin. The arts coffeeshop is stillopen Monday through Friday from 10 to 4. The price increases were an-

janiting

nounced after a careful review of the situation by the senior adrninistrative officials of the university and Steve Ireland and Tom Patterson of the Federation of Students. Al Adlington, university vice-president foroperations, gave final authorization. This review found that prices would still be lower than commercial restaurants. The standing committee on the university% ancillary enterprises-athletics, food-services, bookstore and so on--will review results periodically to ensure that the new prices will meet the objective but not be excessive.

Library closed for holichy Plan to do research next weekend? The assistant librarian says you won’t do any on this campus. An announcement this week f rom Helen McKinnon says the arts library will close Friday at 5. The library will open again on Tuesday at 8:30.

iob buck

The apparent bad record with PP&P bothered Robinson, who wanted to know why. “So I decided to put my case before the union and on Monday morning I phoned Mr. Taylor asking him to disregard my request for a job on the computers, so that he could let somebody else have it 0’)

Robinson’s case is now before the union-the Canadian Union of Public Employees, which bargains for about 100 plumbers, electricians, carpenters, groundsmen, janitors and boiler operators on campus. “It looks to me as if he left of his own accord,” said union president Thomas Collar, a campus plumber. ‘<There are one or two things--on this apparent discrepancy between when he asked for this time off and when it was refused himthat we’re still trying to look into, but I don’t hold any hope at all.” “1 just want my name cleared,” said Robinson. The university, however, is apparently open to Robinson. ccIf he applies and we need a man of his caliber, I don’t see why he shouldn’t get it,” said Taylor. “1 appreciate that he doesn’t like nights, and I told him he’s welcome to come see me in case anything new comes up.”

“Now they are telling the union that they offered me two jobs and I refused them both.” Ernest Lucy, personnel director, said Robinson’s word blacklisted is inappropriate. “If this had happened, Taylor would not have referred him to other departments. Carncross denied that he had entered a bad recommendation against Robinthere% son. “As far as Fm concerned no mark. against him. If another company asked for a recommendation, we’d have nothing bad to report.” Friday,

September

29,

1967

(8: 14)

147

3


Better

by Harold the

D. Goldbrick

mighty

mouth

(BRIDGEPORT (Staff) -tTis time to clean out my notebook of little gripings and stuff because I ain’t got nothin’ deep to espound upon. First, I can’t cut up Sandy Baird because Baird wrote a pro- student article which we Second, I can’t cut reprinted. up the editorials of Baird’s journal, the Kitchen-Water Rehash, because some of ours weren’t too hot last week, especiaIly the line about vicious initiation acts by certain sophomores. The closest thing to vicious I heard of was kicking the twoby-four out from under some frosh who were crossing the plumbers’ pond in traditional UniWat manner. The frosh needed to be punished for coloring the pond and throwing in the soap which killed the remaining fish. And then when I heard about frosh power I thought it was a description of the smell from said pond when it was drained for cleaning. Something like Polack power. One comment about Slave Day, WUC out-shineramaed us by a couple of thousands. The difference should be made up out of clever Trevor Boyes” salary, because the registrar scheduled engineering registration on the first Saturday of frosh week--and this meant Slave Day had to be held when frosh power wa s showing its true color.

Rhodesia

Earlier this year Imentioned that Carl Totzke, head of athletics, was an ex-highschool teacher with the mind of an exhighschool teacher, and rather unfit to administer our athletic fee. It might be of interest to note that Trev Boyes used to be a highschool English teacher, and he gets to play with your tuition. 0

The housing shortage is so bad I heard that the cockroaches are doubling up at my old boarding house. As a matter of fact (and money), I’m considering renting out the basement of my outhouse down here at the At least Bridgeport bureau, the facilities are handy and you won’t have to put up with a German landlord. And while I’m thinking about it, I could take in a whole bunch of students co-op- style. Then I could really bring the profs over to schoodt the schidt. Best not to rush into it the; better to sit on it for a while.

0

WORDS AND ENDS: At the CUS congress at London a couple of weeks ago, a Waterloo leftwinger was elected president for 1968-69. Well not really a leftwinger-more a socialist- humanist But back to the punchline. One of those CUS idealists was heard to say, ‘<I haven’t got time to learn anything. I came here to get an education.” Pm not even Sure it% funny, but this column sure doesn’t need a dirty joke this week.

Now that everybody is discussing risque subjects, like f rinstance university physician Helen Reesor’s sex-education lecture, I think Vis time I started my lectures in EngPhilSocPsych 15-69, a sort of underhanduate course in sexual symbolism, The vernacular name of the subject is “Phallic symbols are where you phind them.” The obvious phallic symbols

gives

on campus are, of course, the smoke-abatement phacility (that 200-foot. chimbley) and the non-denominational spire at the Village. They represent the dynamicnes s of Uni Wat ‘ But look around you. I think More and Shove-it, the archichokes, were perverted. The library, when it makes ten stories, will be just one great big phallic symbol, And then the food-services building and the campus center, with their brick-and-concrete vertical afterthoughts or phocal points or something. Even the physics building is getting into the act with that puny little observatory, But while on the subject still, I might mention a couple of personal phallic symbols. First there is the one belonging to this year’s Orientation head: that little red book, And then there is mine which usually appears at the end of my column and it’s called...

l

monkeywrench

TORONTO (CUP)--The third he tried to leave the country to international teach-in, October 20speak at a similar teach-in. 22 organized by university of TorTodd said he was recently warnonto students is getting static from ed by the government he would be the Ian Smith regime in Rhodesia, similarly restricted again if his The teach-in theme is the role activities became ‘&a threat to the nation” of religion in internationalaffairs. Teach-in organizers have invitTeach-in’ organizers have also ed former Rhodesianprime minis- . asked his daughter Judy, an outter Garfield Todd to address the spoken girl living in London, to gathering, but Ian Smith’s governspeak in his place if he cannot ment might prevent him from leavattend. ing the country. Teach-in co-chairman Mike IgIn 1965 they confined Todd to natieff gave details on the theme: his farm for a full year when “This isn’t about theology and

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Items

For Opening

Playboy

Contraception misconception Dr. Helen Reesor spoke to a packed dining hall at the Village Monday night on the most universally interesting subject: sex. It was the first of aweek-long series of discussions, q(Sex on campus?, sponsored by the Student C hristian Movement and the provost# s office. In her dry but lively style, Dr. Reesor, the campus physician, began by expIaining the necessity for information on sex. Too many guys, in her opinion, derive their whole impression of the female from the centerfolds of gPIa.yboy’. So she proceeded with a concise lecture on male and female anatomy, for the benefit of the moreor-less evenly mixed audience (including the attentive C o-op delegation at the front table). She commented on various methods of contraception. The rhythm method she called very unsatisfactory because even a regular cycle can be upset by severe weather or emotional tension, Pregnancy can also result from an accidental ejaculation, even without intercourse, or from the unsafe ((in-and-out” method of coitus interruptus. You can “Put all your faith in the Pill” if you can get a prescription and if you want to risk an accidental memory lapse, suppres sion of female hormones and side effects like nervousness, weight gain and varicose veins. A condom, she said, is very safe if tested and used properly. While Dr. Reesor recommended

man of ‘another religion? Ignatieff says he can’t predict the outcome of the teach-in sessions. ‘We may even discover that religion doesn’t matter,” he said. Preteach-in activities include panel discussions and lectures, all free. A drama and film festival that is part of the teach-in program will be held October 10-14. Paddy Chayefsky’s aGideon’ and Samuel Beckett’s’ Waiting forGo& ot’, various noonhour productions

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- - Sweatshirts

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and about a dozen films will be presented free. Tickets for the weekend sessions will go on sale in early October at $2 for students and $5 for non-students. Other speakers will include Canon John Collins, leaderof the British Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament; Trevor Huddleston, a Tanzanian priest and author of dNaught for your comfort’, and several other internationa.IpoIiti* al and religious leaders.

design lamps

cards,

WRAPPINGS

At a recent women’s club meeting, it was estimated tl-& 20 percent wore rouge, 35 percent of those present tinted their har, 80 percent had permanent waves, 90 percent wore fingernail polish, 85 percent wore eyeshadow, 100 percent used lipstick, 75 percent plucked their eyebrows, and 10 percent wore false eyelashes and other cosmetic camouflage.

cases

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WOMEN’S

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abstinence as the best contraceptive method, she offered the girls another one: Tf a guy wants to make out, make him sign a state merit that he will bear financial responsibility for any pregnancy in the next 11 months1 She gave an emphatW‘no’$ when asked if she would dispense contraceptive devices. Her reason is personal conscience. “I would have blood on my hands” she re marked. The series continues tonight with a discussion on sex from the moral viewpoint, and tickets will be given out for the showing tomorrow of the movie ‘Alfie’. A panel will discuss the movie, tomorrow afternoon, followed by a be-in tomorrow night at Conrad G rebel, Books on sex available f rom SCM include such titles as ‘Human sexual response$, ‘Abortion and the law’, ‘The French art of sexual lo@, and PThe American sexual tragedy9 by Albert Ellis.

to Toronto

the problems of a few monks around the world. P5We’re doing a dangerous and exciting thing-we want to analyze what the human conscience is made of .” Ignatieff hopes religion and international affairs will ask questions relevant to everyone: --Can a rnan fight for his country? -When should he fight in a revolution? -What can he do for peace?: --How is it possible to hate a

The Book Store made the move, in the nick of time With

than

stickers

food-services

_’

building


-._. . Ache -delegation S congress standout BY

Frank

Goldspink

Chevron

staff

could be active in saying we had one of the most active delegations at the CUS congress,” said Pete War rian, president-elect of the Canadian Union of Students and a Waterloo delegatetothecon“Waterloo and University gress, of Toronto.” The Waterloo delegation went to the CUS congress at Western with the purpose that the union must take a definitive and direct stand on education and society, Before it was over the seven-man delegation was involved indrafting most of the “guts resolutions” of the congress, “We also wanted to get any action from the resolutions started atthe local campus level,” said Steve Flott, a Waterloo delegate. ‘Xvery resolution stressed this.” The whole delegation worked on the critical Declaration of the Canadian Student. ‘We did ‘four drafts with one group and twomore with the U of T delegation;” said Steve Ireland, president of the Federation, “YOU

The Waterloo delegation was one of the most active at the CUS congress plenary. At the table are Bob Cavanagh, U of W, and Jim Griffiths, WLU. Behind them are Ireland, Flott, Saxe, Patterson and Lindsey, all of the U of W delegation.

Wishart to investigate Birth control support TORONTO (CUP) -- Support of birth control education may send University of Toronto’s council president Tom Faulkner to prison. The U of T SAC voted Wednesday (Sept., 20) to support a committee which will make birth control information available to

co-eds.

Faulkner told council, “I may go to jail over this, but it is very remote and I am prepared to risk it.” He said later he had doubts charges would be laid. “The planned parenthood association has been doing this sort of thing for seven years and nobody has persecuted them O” Ontario Attorney General Arthur Wishart said Friday Sept, 22 he will investigate the program after obtaining a copy of the resolution adopted by SAC, “There are going to be changes in the law on these matters, but I’d like to know exactly what they”re

going to do” he said. Section 159 of the criminal code make it an offelnse to sell or dispose of any instructions*’ intended or represented as amethod of preventing contraception.”

National .

opinion

polled

A surprising 80 percent ofthose approached were opinionated. The mass media have been successful in creating an intense interest in national affairs, said Grafftey. Based on the poll and on his own opinions, Grafftey suggested a list of issues which should be given top priority in the federal government. The costs of education should be a number one priority for the federal as wellas theprovin&i1 governments. TheCanadian constitution should be changed. Federal-provincial communications should be improved. Improved understanding between French

By Les Rose There are four main issues that concern Canadians from coast to coast. They are, in importance= foreign affairs, taxes and the cost of living, and national unity. This conclusion is the result of a political poll conducted by Heward Grafftey, ConservativeMPfor BromeMissisquor, Quebec. Grafftey, who spoke to the student PC club Tuesday, travelled across the nation sampling public opinion, He asked only one question: . “What do you think are the most important issues facing Canadian politicians now?”

IMPORTANT

“We rejected syndical&m because it had some dangers,“hesaid. “While syndicalism is opposed to the idea of a student beinrr onlv a student, there is no difference of values between the two ideas. The student is still working for something instead of being something.” Ireland said there was also the danger that a syndicalist student union could co-opt with another union and lose any power it had. ‘We tried to take the best of John Cleveland’s syndicalist resolution and make something of it by introducing an ideology,” said Flott, “This ideology would guide The sixth draft the congress.” was passed in commission and in the plenary with only minor amendments. All seven members of the delegation have long experience in student affairs. President Ireland has been on council for three years and was at last year’s congress. Vice-president Cavanagh has been on council for four years. Tom Patterson was speaker of council last year and is now the Federation’s university relations offi-

and

English

must

be achieved.

pm

Canadians

Centennial

Arnold Les

does not, however, exclude the state’s stepping in to help where needed. In the area of foreign affairs, \ Grafftey suggested severalimprovements in the present federal government policy: 1. Canada should recognize its responsibility as an international mediator and peace maker. 2. Its policy should be better clarified. 3, Canada’s NORAD committments must be honoured, but the government should stress economic assistance to underdeveloped countries. 4. Mainland China should beadmitted to the United Nations.

Players

had two wives fourberies

MP

Company by Aviva

de Scapin

Rave

by Moliere

Theater of the Arts K-30 p.m.

2,

Students Theater

2-4

speaking

Grafftey believes that the P.C. thinkers ; conference at Monternorency Falls, P.Q. was beneficial but did not go far enough. KC. thinkers should meet regularly to re-examine their goals and principles. Describing the Conservatives Grafftey said *‘the Conservatives have a body of principles rather than a doctrine.” Conservatives strive to create “an economic and social atmosphere where individuals can develop.“he added. This

NOTICE

October

IO-I 2 am,

They all made big contributions to the commissions they sat on as well as helping to draft resolutions. Yom Patterson wrotethe universal accessibility motion singlehandedly,” said Flott. Flott was important in drafting the resolutions on the Canadian Indian. Saxe and Lindsey worked hard in international affairs, especially on the resolution for membership in the International Union of Students; The highli@t of the congress for the delegation was the presidential election race. Pete Warrian, a Waterloo delegate was nominated for president. His policies, combined with the delegation’s hard lobbying all week, won the election forhim.

by Quebec

On Monday,

cer. Stewart Saxe is in his third year of council and is chairman of the Board of external relations. Pete Warrian has been involvedinmany social action programs and is a member of the Federation’s executive. Steve Flott was a member of the Federation executive, a St, Jerome’s rep on council, and is head of the Indian affairs program.

and

7-9

$1

Others

box-offi

PRESENTED

pi

ce

$2

744-6932

BY THE

FEDERATION

CREATIVE

ARTS

or locd OF

2126

STUDENTS

BOARD

L

an extension

COURT

of the

Physics

OF REvlslonl

DR. BRODlE For

the

provincial

riding

of Waterloo

Noeh

will

be held

will be available

Monday

in the Federation

-

- “Energy bands and trapping effects in solids”

on campus.

Students who were not enumerated in Waterloo North but who now wish to vote here, may be placed on the revised list by swearing out an affidavit saying they are 21 years of age, a British , subject and a resident of Ontario for at least one year. Information regarding the exact place of the court Students offices, or-call 744-6111 local 2814.

Club

of

OCTOBER 5 P145 8p.m. All members at the former astronomy

club welcome.

New members also welcome (This ad is sponsored

by the board of external

relations

of the Federation

of Students)

Friday,

September

29, 1967 (8: 14)

149

5


600

&west

By Andy

Lawrence

Chevron

--

staff

A flop? Well, not quite. Even though the turnout at Slave Day this year was disappointing, those frosh who did attend earned about five dollars apiece, more on a per capita basis than ever before. Of the 1,800 frosh on campus, -only about 600 turned out for Slave Day, together earning over $3000 with a little bit more coming in every day. Proceeds will be donated to Canadian National Institute for the Blind, TheCanadianMental Health Association, and thecanada Save the Children. Officials hope this sum will increase and ask anyone who has money from Slave Day‘ to hand it in to the Campus shop, Susan Peters in the Federation of Studenti; office, or Richard Cameron, I 209 North 3 at the Village. Also, for any articles lost or found from Slave Day, see Cameron.

$3,000

co//ect

Co-operation was received from even the Athletic department who, in response to a request fromMcKenzie, arranged to hold last weekends’ football game away. The Orientation Committee also did all they could. At first, they asked the registrar’s office to change engineering registration from Saturday to the preceeding Tuesday leaving the Saturday, during ix&i&ion, open for Slave Day. However ,the registras office replied that this was impossible because they would not have time to process the grade 13 marks and get the acceptance forms out. After this, the committee gave McKenzie the option of holding Slave Day during the engineering registration. But, with only &lo0 other frosh on campus, giving a proble recruitment of less than 800, McKenzie decided against this.

Last year about 1,300 frosh raised $4,700 and this year 850 WUC frosh collected $4,800 in a for the local Big shinerama Bfothers Association. There was no shortage uf jobs this year, and almost requests for slaves on Slave Day were turned down. However all the jobs which had advance bookings were completed. Though most jobs were just the usual cleaning windows, washing cars, etc., there were sorne very unusual ones. A group of small children banded together, pooled 75#, and hired a slave to push th&n on swings for an hour. Concerning the poor turn-out, Ross M&&e, co-ordinator of Slave Diy, said that if it could have been held during initiation, the goal of $6,000 would easily have been reached.

February

L

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ground and second floors. Completion of th& other floors has been delayed until March. Subject to approval by the department of university affairs, offices on the sixth floor of this building will house the physicalplant and planning, _counselling, marketing and extension departments. An engineering, math and sciwill occupy the ence library fourth floor until a permanent library building is built in 1971.’ Reprogramming by the contractors, could set back dates for the campus center , physical-education and mathematics and computer buildings even further. Some work still remains to be done on the biology addition because of delays in manufacturing and construction have left the bioIt’s logy addition unfinished. short some lab equipment and reThe Minota search facilities. Hagey residence and the healthservices building werenot affected by the bricklayers strike. Tenders wffl be called in November for the arts lll(humanides) building. At the same time the Ontario student Housing Corporation will be calling for tenders for a single student housing development for August 1969. This development, which will accomodate 960 students, will be on the south campus, east of the Village. To accomodate the 10,000 students expected on the south campus, agreementhas been reached to construction of additional stage buildings. Engineering IV, a chem-

Co-op ModelTR110300

barefoot

for campus

lack of activity on the physicaleducation building. For the Dast Chevron staff two months, witi” no end in sight, Set back Your deadlines again* this strike has prevented delivery The university conmdcm SCae of thesteelcomponents ofthespace is still not back to normal, frame which will roofthegymOnly 40 of the 80 previously mium areas, employed bricklayers have retuThe mathematics and computer rned to work on the dUOO&OO building was also affected by the campus center. The -.budhg bricklayers strike. The first two should befinished FnlateFebruarY. floors to have been dons by midNovember was the original target September will not be finished undate. till November The steel-erector’s strikelnthe Construction was for enough to Toronto area is responsiblefor the allow partial occupancy of the By

When you turn 21 you are nb longer covered by your parents’ Hospital Insurance. You must rake out individual membership within 30 days. Get your application form at a bank, a hospital, or the Commission. ,

A traditionally Day.

is behind

Campus construction

off

istry addition and a science lecture building should be finished in 1969. By the fall of 1972,anotherfoodservices building, arts IV, earth scie~rces and biology building, a campus center addition and a fourth dining hall for the Village wffl be finished. The scope of this program and the financial problems relating to it have made it impossible to set. earlier completion dates. The university is also faced with the problem of providing buildings and facilities for the newly acquired schools of architecture and optometry. A detailed development plan of the south campus, showing present and future buildings, can be found on the center spread of ‘A guide to student activities’which was issued at registration.

Math votes

Society Thursday

The newest of societies on carnpus, the Mathematics Society, is holding elections for some seats on the council on Thursday. The positions up for election are the society president, four council members for regular students and four council members for co-op students. The elections are going to be held in the foyer of the physics building from 9 until 5 and to vote, alI society members must present their yellow tuition-receipt slips.

corner

to u flying

By Ian Leacy The co-op residence is off to another flying start this term. Management is under control and social activities have started. Orientation provided the occasion for much amusement and soon brought the frosh into active participation in the co-op. Two frosh residents of Blake House (blonde, female) counted coup on four Archons before the week was The Village sent down over. a large group of Frosh to give a midnight serenade. The chanting of the group was hospitably received with a fir e hose baptism. Last Thursday theCo-op went on masse to St. Jacobs for the first

start

pub ni@t of the term. It was enjoyable for all and the sounds ufmerriment could be heard throughout the evening as they drank 900 draughts. The true glory of Co-op was not real&d until the Frosh Hop when Donny Cogdon was crowned Frosh Queen and Jo-A nne Firby was first runner up. Both are co-opers. House elections were held this Monday and election fever still is evident. Preparations are now being made for Division Council elections. The first Coffee Hour was held in Hammarskjold lounge on Wednesday. They will be held every Wednesdayfor the rest of the term.


IAN AND SYLVIA

‘A/I our son s are Cancdh7’ By Mary Chevron

The

Bull features

amplifier

blared

editor

out that

distinctive sound. The sound that has spelled fame for Ian and Sylvia and drawn crowds from all over. Those who saw the Orientation 67 concert last Friday night at the Kitchener auditorium saw two of the most creative Canadian artists. They have done quite a few C entennial tours but have not written anything special for Canada’s birthday for as Ian said: “All our songs are Canadian”. Sitting in their dressing room before the performance, I found out a bit about this husband-andwife act (plus two excellent background musicians). Ian is a confident, vital young man. He has strong opinions about world affairs and politics at home. “‘Dief the Chief was definitely a great Canadian but he has outlived his usefullness.” Ian was born and raised in Vancouver and originally cameto Toronto to gain fame as a painter. He had never really considered earning his living as a.writer or performer. However this all changed one evening when he met Sylvia in a coffeehouse in Toronto. Sylvia is a quiet, intense girb with dark hair hanging to her waist. During our conversation she brushed her hair at least five times. It was as if the motion of brushing relieved the prestage tension. Sylvia was born inchahthamand went to Toronto when she was 19.

Ian and Sylvia- enjoay a relaxed moment with their back-up men before they go on at the Kitchener Auditorium last Friday. Dave Rea (left) plays lead quitar and Kenny Kalmusky, a Stratford native, plays bass. They find college audiences the most responsive. She had always been interested in singing and went totheplacewhere the songs were being written and sung. The Tysons, as they are in real life, began singing together eight years ago. Since then their style has changed or as Ian puts it e volved into “that sound”. They have also acquired a 149month-old son by the name of Clay. They live in Toronto and have just gone through the rigors of moving. (“Our new house has six phones in it and I hate phones. But

Sylvie likes them so fguessthey’ll stay”.) Although they mainly do their own writing they both have favorite writers. “I go for Dylan and the Beatles but I don’t think Sylvia would agree. Remember she started out with rhythm and blues whereas I began with the western style? Both of them are fascinated by the evolution of the beatles. Sylvia didn’t think they would be heard of after their first rise to stardom, “But look at them now. They are

really

creative?

However

Ian

added that they were first accepted because they were of thiscreative sort. “They are able to change and this indicates more than monetary ability. You don’t have people with no talent making real money.” However when asked about the Monkees’ sudden rise, they both laughed, “This is the one example to blow my theory out the window,” said Ian. Sylvia felt that the Monkees “filled a void left in the rockand-roll world by the Beatles? The Tysons

are both well aware

of the political affairs of their 44We were on tour during country.

the Tory

elections

but from what I

heard, if the hippies inyorkville had actedthe way thePC voters did, they would still be in jail.*, Sylvia shrugged when asked about Stanfield’s election. t’If it wasn’t him, it would be someone else,” The hippies in Toronto seemed to interest them both. Although they have only played in actual Yorkville once, they feel that the Village types are not as original as those of the Haight-Ashbury

variety. be?‘,

&‘But you said Sylvia,

must remem ((that

in

pre-

portion there are many more hi-+ pies in the States.”

Jimmy Namaro opens free Sunthy series

The Canadian University Centennial Players Company presents two plays tonight in the Theater of the Arts. In Arnold had two wives, U of W students Paul Frappier plays a police sergeant (second from left). The 25 members of the company were chosen after Canada-wide auditions. The second play tonight is Les fourberies de Scapin. The production starts at 8:30 The Yanks

ain’t

what

they

used

End of cm em: Decline and fall of the New York Yankees, by Jack

Mann. Reviewed

Musson $4.95 by Howard Pike

Chevron

staff

The title of this book limits its interest to baseball fans and rightly so because to read it thoroughly requires a reasonable knowledge of the many terms, concepts and d

The first of the new SundaySer= ies programms for the 1967-68 season-this Sunday--in the Theater of the Arts will feature the Jimmy Namaro Trio. The program will be a lectureconcert presentation popular music of the western hemisphere and will include jazz, tin-p-alley, latin and experimental. Jimmy Namaro is known and admired by Canadians coast to coast as a most outstanding performer, concert and recording artist, conductor and composer. As a result of many years study and research, he has developed a deep and broad knowledge andunderstanding of music with special emphasis on the history of JZUZ and popular music of the western hemisphere. The Jimmy Namaro Trio has played prestige engagements in New York, and has appeared fre quently in many prominent locations in Toronto as well as on nun-+ erous radio and television programs.

Free admission tickets for the Sunday Series are available in the theater box office. The program begins at 8.

Jazzman Jimmy Namara presen ts a lecture-concert program Sunday.

to be

the mighty

personalities that make up the game. Basically it is a history book about baseball in general and the Yankees in particular. Its scope is from the Yankees mighty-mouse beginnings in the early 192Os, through 45 years of almost complete dominance of the game until 1965 when their era came to an end. Throughout this period the

Stengal

organizational changes of the team, both subtle and radical, are examined in detail. Baseball is viewed as a system made up of many componentseach club having its own personality (notably the Yankees) and each member of a club being an influence on the whole system (such characters as Casey Stew gel, George Weiss, and super-

has snuck stars gio.

Mickey

Mantle,

out

Joe DiMag-

The book is very well-written by a sports editor and writer of obvious experience and insight. Humor abounds and a group of excellent photographs completes the feeling that one L%now s*’ (is familiar with these players. However many prewar personalities are Friday,

referred to and due to lack of background material some settions of the book are difficult, For the average Canadian base ball fan--interested in closing pennant races and keen on World”eries) this book is enjoyable and e& ucating reading. For the dedicated Yankee fan it could be read a dozen times.

September

29, 1.967 (8: 7’4) XV


project

Centennial

Arts festivcd theyearof

.

Centennial year, Expo 67, has also been a year in which the creative arts have gained a prominence never before experienced in Canada. Special music, drama and art programs commemorating Canada’s hunclredth birthday have been initiated the country reminding across Canadians of the ri& he&age of their forefathers and the growing reputation of Canadian artists throughout the world, In keeping with this spirit, the UniversiQ of Waterloo, with the assistance of grants fromthecentennial Commission and the Federaaon af Students, has programmed an Arts Festival featuring the international and Canadian talent. The festival will also help celebrate the university’s tenth anniversary. Throughout the week of October 15 to 21, the university will feature all phases of the creative arts-drama, music, art’ films and poetry--in offerings by professional and university / groups. The Festival will get underway Sunday, October 15, with theopening of the university art gallery’s Centennial exhibit, “Emily Car r”. Emily Ca..rr was one of Canada’s most important painters who captured on canvas much of the beauty and power of Canada’s northwest as well as the life and art of the Northwest Coast Indians. The exhibit will be publicly opened by Doris Shadbolt, acting director of the Vancouver Art Gallery, who will speak on “Emily Carr, the lonely giant “* Mrs. Shadboldt, the author of ‘Emily Carr’ has just completed the organization of ‘?the arts of the raven” an exhibition of master works by the Northwest Coast Indians, the Centennial offering of the Vancouver Art Gallery. The Monday will mark the first of a series of noonhour programs and afternoon lectures which will continue through the rest of the week. Two films on Emily Carr,

*Coffee and spaghetti house’ 32 King (3rd

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Monday

Street

South

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Friday

-Saturday

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‘The heart of the thing’ and ‘Klee WY& will be the first offering and the afternoon lecture will be given by Dr. Earle Birney’ prominent Canadain writer and poet’ and campus writer-in-residence. Dr. Birney is the holder of many literary awards inCludi.ngtwo Governor-General’s Medals for Poetry and a Stephen Leacock Medal He will speak on for Humor, “The poet in his workshop’*o ‘A kingdom for a stage’ is the noonhow offering on the Tuesday’ a dramatic presentation of scenes from Shakespeare by David Hedges and Mita Scott Hedges,well-known Shakespearian scholars. Prof Hedges has recently joined the English department and Mita Scott Hedges is the drama director-in= residence for the 1967-68 term. 1 That same afternoon the lecture will be given bY Boris Nelson speaking on the art of criticism, Dr. Nelson is music critic for the Toledo (Ohio) Blade and director of fine arts and university convocations and professor ofhumanities at the UdVemkY Of ‘I’Okb A student music offering bY the Varfms university mudc groups under the direction of Alfred Kun~ is featured on Wednesday’s noon program to befollowedintheafternoon by a lecture by another poet, this time an American, John Ciardi, who will ask the question ‘Why read?” Ciardi is Probably bat known for his regular column in the Saturday Review called ‘Manner of speaking” but he is also poetry editor of the same magazine as well as an excellent writer and Poet in h-is own right* Thursday will feature three separate programs, including a noon film presentation of the ‘Railrodder ‘, a new classic’ starring Buster Keaton who rides across Canada on a railroad jigger. The afte’moon lecturer will be Rebecca Sisler’ Canadian sculptress, who will present two illustrated talks on: “The meaning of sculpture: sculpture in Canada” and ‘Nubian treasures on the Nile”. Miss Sisler is an industrios sculptress who has travelled widely throughout the world, taking inspiration from her travels. It is the art of Egypt, however, which has had the greatest influence on her

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Short 18 council members, the Science Society is holding an election on October 12. The Science Society council needs are one upperclassman rep each for physics, biology, chemistry, applied physics, applied &a-nistry and optometry, plus three Freshmen reps. Also the applied-science council needs a vice-chairman, atreasurer, a secretary, three appliedchemistry reps and three appliedphysics reps.

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steal concert Verduri

for I’m off to join the IRA and do a bit for Carling’s beer.

staff

call their songs “folk They Chorus: knock )‘. Andso we/t-e off to Dublin Canada’s singing satirists, the with the green, with the green, Brothers-in-Law, made an impressive showing at Orientation and the money’s jingling in 67’s superconcert last Friday our handsnight. Many people thought they where the arc lights burn and stole the show from thebignames. the cameras turn on stage after the coming and the sponsor’s a Canadian. F rench-Canadia.n Ouatre-V-t’ Incidentally, Carling’s turned one of the Brothers-in-Law ask& down an offer from the Brothers‘Do these mikes speak English?” They began their first song in-Law to do their version for a ‘Come up to Canada’ and most Commercial, They have had two lawsuits so of the audience got their first tas te af a c&b viewpoht h satire, fart but not over words, me publishers of Woody Guthrie’s ‘This m group originally consisted land is your land’ sued them for of four Windsor area policemen who formed anamateurfolksinging setting the tune to Other words (‘This land is whose land’). They group, There have been two memperformed it Friday night in the bers drop out and one new additversion, and if it The key man P ost-lawsuit ion, a teacher. sounded the same as the familiar in the group is Windsor detect‘This land’ tune&% because Guthive Alex Some&&, whose satirrie used an old hymn tune with 1~ poem about the RCMP became their first original song, He turns minor changes* out new lyrics regularly now, as The other lawsuit concerns the well as the occasional tune, music to ‘Gerda it’s simply m&a, They continue to keep their old ’ what the Liberals were d&g to jobs, fitting concerts inwherethey you’. This was a particular audcan, especially at universitfes. A ience favorite. There have been recent appearance on the Pierre no slander suits because as Alex Berton show has helped record Somervffle said, “‘What we are sales but the best publfdt~fsword saying is just the truth, You of mouth. ‘The Pill’ has been can read it in the newspapers.” most useful for this. * When the group came on to do ‘Ihey are not the most polished an encore, they answeredthechant musicians, but their showmanship of “W e want The Pill” with *‘That’s and versatility make up for it. quite a prescription. I guess we’ll When a mistake is made, they have to administer it awaUy.‘* rescue quickly and plausibly with They of course sang it, adding no SiP of it being a Plant as their Centennial verse which does some groups do. not appear on the recording: Their rendition of ‘Off to DubIf the Pill had been here for a lin WITH the green’was particulaxly funny, as Bob Lee, the six- cen tufyt foot-four bass player’ donned a Ywould have ruined it ail, that’s a kerchief, sang falsetto and played fact* There’d have been no new nation the mandolin.

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Arts Calendar

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The Bra the&n-Law, Alex Somerville (left), Larry Reaume and Bob Lee, are Windsor policemen turned satirists.

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works, many of which exhibit the same heavy sfmplicityofformevident in ancient E,gyptiansculpture. The evening offering will be a folk festival featuring young talent from several of Ontario’s universities Friday marks the beginning of performances ‘by professional companies. The noon film ‘Ballerina’ which deals with a day in the life of CanadainballerinaMargaret Mercier, will be followed in the evening by the Berlin Philharmonic Octet appearing as part of their North American debut. Firmly established in the musical hierarchy of Europe for many years, the Octet is comprised of members of the famous Berlin Philharmonic Or&e&a. Dramatic presentations byRichard Gray and MayoLoiseauscheduled for afternoonandeveningperformances on Saturday, October 21. The afternoon offerhg will be a ‘A Wilde evening with Shaw*, a moving, laughing-provotig, warmly human story of two fascinating men, Oscar Wilde and George Bernard Shaw, whose minds meet and clash on every major subject, In the evening, the duo will present ‘Coward callhg’, a program whi& rang- over a diversity of Coward’s work from early sketches to mature reflectfon, Gray and Loiseau are a highly skilled team whose polished performances are a delightful experience and an excellent way to brfngdown the curtain on the Arts Festival, Tickets and information for all events can be obtained from the box office of the Theater of the Arts.

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THURS., OCT. 5 - 12:15 - AL116 No reason to stay A bright student rebels against the dull round of drill, memorization, routine and lack of anything meaningfu I in the system. OCT. 15 - 21 Arts Festival

Events FEDERATION

OF

STUDENTS

- CREATIVE

ARTS

BOARD


A chat with Nancy-Lou:

the art gdery’s

By Prudence

Edwards

with meetings, also once a month, at Mrs. Patterson’s house. These can be attended by anyone too, by telling Mrs.. Patterson that you’re coming. What happens at the house is really something-audience participation with a vengeance. They’re real hippenings . Mrs. Patterson teaches two courses, art 100 (introduction to world art) and art 200 (modern art), which includes projects such as art works to be put up in the foodservices building, and for theSCM The course gives an happe~g. idea of art as the creative experience. Both these courses are still open.

example the lecture on brass rubbings given by Dr. Larry Cummings, who is a top man in the field. (All gallery events are absoLast Friday, the Chevron called lutely free.) on Nancy-Lou Patterson, to ask The great event of the year her what goodies thecreative-arts board had planned for ~thisyear. will be the Emily Carr exhibition for the opening of the Arts FesThe creative-arts board is asttival, at 3 on October 15, the only udmt board, under the Federation of Students. It sponsors all the formal opening of the year. Mrs. Doris Shadbolt is being flown in fine arts, employing professional to give a talk. She staff paid by the university. The from Vancouver is the curator of the Vancouver board gets a large enough grant from the student federation to alArt Gallery and a specialist in This is the Centlow a high-quality program. It Emily Carr. ennial exhibition, and it tookspecoperates on several different levial persuasion, security and in& els, of which the art exhibitions rance to get it. are the most expensive. The November-December show Mrs. Patterson is proud that will bethecartoons ofDuncanM.acthere is a gallery of professional Pherson, and the accompanying caliber. How did the creative-arts board lecture is to be given by someone get started? particularly interested in politics A few faculty volunteers started and art. the gallery, in quite a small way, The sleeper may be the exhibition by an unknown and very and it just growed, till now there is an extensive program and aproeccentric artist with a lecture on fessional staff,incIudingMrs.Patart and psychology from a proterson , heads as the director of fessor from Waterloo Lutheran. art and the curator of the gallery. There is plenty more. There are The gallery has a policy of fortnightly art films: this year the yearly aquisition, so that apermatheme is primitive and folk art, nent collection is being built up. with two interpolations--one film Mrs. Patterson says that&is on art of the Northwest Coast year, the gallery is being properly Indians, tied in with the Emily decorated and lit, to allow more Carr show, and a group of fanflexible and imaginative hanging. tasy films to go with the last show In connection with the gallery, by the mystery painter. there is a series of programs The art club is also very actthat invites and depends onstudent ive, with monthly meetings open participation, and the creativeto everyone. This year thelectures arts board puts out a complete are on Canadian art, for Cenlist of their activities this year. tennial year. The first meeting There are noontime sessi011~ tied is September 28. in to the current exhibition--for These public meetings alternate Chevron

Nancv-Lou Patterson. the director of art for the university, both -pain ted and 6s pain ted on ai last” Sunday* ‘s love-k

OK

staff

Crosscountry

team wins The Warrior crosscountry team defeated York University 28 to 35 on the local 3.6 mile campus course Saturday. Although York runners Dave Smith and Roger Landel placed first and second in the race, Waterloo placed all five counting runners in the first eight posidons. Top man for the Warriors was freshman Paul Pearson. Coach Neil Widmeyer has high hopes for this young man. Other freshemn to show well were Bruce Walker, who placed fourth, and Henry Martens, who was sixth. Warrior standby Bob Kaill, Ken Sidney and Dave Connell placed seventh, eighth and tenth.

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Bob

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Bob

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Hugh

Heibein

halfback

Brian Irvine, the Warriors’ star fullback evades a Western tackler. Irvine carried the ball 26 times for 196 yards against the Mustangs in Saturday’s surprise upset.

Howes

ten ter

Jim

Manske halfback

Warriors tht team to beaI By Paul Cotta Chevron

Doug

sport!

Shuh

guard

Bill Poole guard

10

154

The CHEVRON

Warrior quarterback Bob McKillop hands off to halj%ack Hugh Heibein before a capacity crowd last weekend in Western’s J.W. Little Stadium. Heibein carried four times for 44 yards.


Brent

Gilbert

tackle

Joe

Sowietha end

Mike

Chatterson tackle

Ole Hensrud halfback

“We can go all the way this year. We’ve got the team and the spirit”. These were the words of the Warriors’ new coaching assistant, Ed DeArmon. This year the Warriors have that real wantto-win spirit. Tomorrow the Warriors open their season in the new 12-team Central Canada Intercollegiate Football conference with a game, at home, against Laurentian University Voyageurs. The Warriors beat Laurentian last year and will be looking for another victory against them this year. After last weekend’s victory over the Western, <the team should have an added drive whichcould push them right into Waterloo’s first foot-ball championship. Coach Carl Totzke expects an improvement on last year’s 4-3 mark but sees McMaster, who beat Toronto 17-l 5 last weekend, as the squad to watch. Totzke does not expect any easy games this year, but his prediction of a 5-2 year is certainly conservative. One game the Warriors will be out to win, is the homecoming match against Lutheran who were last year’s College Bowl winners. WUC is also in the Central Intercollegiate conference. The Warriors’ coaching staff this year consists of Totzke and Howie Green working with the backfield, while Wally Delahey and DeArmon coach the line. DeArmon comes to Waterloo from Missouri. Before that he had coached at Western. ’ There were 70 hopefuls in the Warrior camp ‘the two weeks before classes started and from those the coaches had come up with a definite winner. Most of the players were in camp for the two weeks but quite a few, at a leadership course at Bracebridge, missed the first week. The returnees from last year’s squad include quarterback Bob McKillop and fullback Brian Irvine. McKillopshowed a strong passing arm and good team control against Western and he stands as one of the best punters in college football. Irvine was one of the stronger runners in the conference last year with 6.8 years-per-carry average. Also in line for the QB position are returnee. Bob O’Driscoll and rookie Doug Pilkington. Pilkington showed his ability when he led his team to a victory in the Warrior in-

George

Nogradi

tackle

Don

Dave

Jim

Knechtel

tackle

Fritz

halfback

English ten ter

Ian Woods

Walt

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Fi nden

end

trasquad game. In that game Pilkington showed he had the potential to lead a winner. The offensive team also has returnee halfback Hugh Heibein, who had 42 points last year-fifth-best in the conference. Rookie Don Howes has also shown his ability in playing the FB slot. At one end position the Warriors will have all-star Walt Finder-r, who was a late-cut by the Hamilton Tiger-Cats and has returned to Waterloo to do work on a doctorate in mathematics. Don Manahan, a rookie from Fort William, is likely to get the other end position. His speed and agility were shown in his performance against Western. Doug Shuh and Jim Manske, both all-stars last year, will lead the defense into the ‘67 season. Both defense and offense line will have an average weight over the 200 pound mark. Shuh also plays offensive guard and could prove all-conference in both positions. Also returning this year are Bill Poole, Ed Scorgie, Brent Gilbert, Mike Chatterson, Deryk Weber, George Nogradie and Jim English. Poole has been troubled by a bad knee, but with a successful operation this summer he will be fit by the start of the season. Ed Scorgie missed the Western game because of pulled ligaments, but he too is expected to be ready to play Laurentian. Gilbert, who weighs in at 270, is a mighty workhorse in his tackle position. Adding more strength to the Warriors are Dave Knechtel and Bob Howes. Knechtel, who had a recent tryout with the Saskatchewan Roughriders, is a star tackle and defensive end from WUC. Howes is a former center with the Queens’ Golden Gaels. Coach Totzke will also be watching rookies Joe Sowietha, Don Young and Al Haehn. Haehn showed a needed skill for the Warriors. He had four convert attempts against Western and made them all. The Warriors will certainly have a good season this year and are priming for their entry into the OQAA next year. The team is improved and with a couple of strong games will finish on top of its league. The Warriors will find themselves among the first choices for the ‘67 College Bowl.

Coaches Wally Delahey and Carl Totzke watch the Warriors beat Western 30-26. Howie Green and Ed DeArmon complete the coaching staff. (Game photos by Glenn Berry, Chevron Photo editor)

Friday,

September

29, 7967 (8: 74)

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GIMICS

Gids’ sport rolling but lacks By Karen Chevron

participants

the

track and field hockey, are run on an invitational basis. There is only one little problem ruining this neatly arranged sch; edule. There are not enough girls to fill the positions on either of the teams. The coaches insist ‘that experience is definitely not necessary. Field hockey practices are held on the lower field of Waterloo Park on Monday, Wednesday and Thursday evening at five dclock, Anyone interested in track should come to Seagram Stadium Monday through Thursday at 4, Girls’ intramural sports are starting with badminton singles - on Monday at y. Doubles are set for October 16 and 23. Players

right

held at Waterloo Collegiate on the corner of Hazel and Columbia,

Wanless

IWW,

sports

The Bananas are shorthanded. The U of W women’s varsity s&iedule is ready to roll and there aren*t enough girls to fill the team positions.

Denis Hulme at Mosport.

The University of W&r-loo is a member of the l&member EastWest Conference ofIntercollegiate Athletics. The east section containing Sir George Williams, Ma.c= Donald College, Carleton University and Laval. The west is composed of Windsor, York, Ryerson, Waterloo Lutheran and the University of Waterloo.

streaks by on his way to his third successive win in the Can-Am series for I967 (Chevron photo by John Chandler)

Playoffs

You could trace the progress of the car by watching the smoke above the trees. Through corner nine it went. surely it would enter the pI& and disappear. But no. It emerged on the track past the end of the pits. There was no car there. Only a baJ.l of billowing white smoke. And it was Hulme. His front fender was smashed up against his left front tire. Tension ran high until the ball of smoke took the checkered flag. Hulme was happy but Bruce McClaren beamed, John Cord-& won the PeterRyan, being the first Canadian home. This trophy is dedicated by Roger Penske, Peter’s longtime and Chuck Ra&geb, competitor, owner of the Cornstock Racing Team, in memory of the promising young Canadian who won the first Canadian Grand Prix.

thus leaked, one had to drain both By Dave Spencer tanks. Chevron sports The job norrnally takes two men two hours to do. The whole crew Race day was clear and chilly. Prerace festitities were ending worked on it and did it in 45 and the paddock PA system was minutes. This meant that long after the urging the cars to be pushed out Suddenly pack had followed Stirling Moss to the starting grid. leisurely changed to one of around at a relatively the urging pace, McClaren stormedaround on L‘Please don’t smoke near Bruce his pace lap. McClaren% car? The first 15 laps were fast and Gasoline covered the tarmack near the car. Cans full of gas furious. Hulme was beautifully smooth stood near by. Every one on the The right amount McClaren team worked at fever and precise, ptich. With almost a full load of of power was always on, the car65 gduons of gasoline on board rect amount of lock on to match On lap five his prethe power. a fuel leak was discovered. cision gained him a new lap reThe pontoons on formula-one cord of 1:X2.0 Lstter this fell and group-seven cars aren’t fueltight. They contain rubber bladto 1:20,7. Real drama entered the race der tanks which interconnect. This on lap 79. A huge ball of white means that to change the bladders, one of which had been pinched and smoke crept along the straight.

are

held

The two sports

between

underway

Paper hasn’t arrived season tickets delayed Sorry, said the athletic department, but the season tickets for major athletic events will not be available this week. Jim Hammond, manager of the university*s graphic services, says that a special paper is required so that the book of tick& will not be too thick. Although delivery (from Louisiana) was promised as long as three weeks ago, it will not arrive until this weekend. This Saturday, students willbe admitted to the game against Laurentian Voyageurs if they show their

COMMITTEE

season-ticket receipt. General& mission is $1. Staxting time for all Warrior games will be 1:30, A limited number of season tickets will go on sale before and during Saturday% game. The cost for 37 events is $5, The athletic department en+ phasized that a season ticket does not guarantee admission to every event, mainly because the physical-education complex is not finished. To overcome this, a season ticket can be -changed for a regular ticket on a firstcome-first-served basis.

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Jules Dassin, Greece January 7 The music room; Satyajit Ray, India January 21 Metropolis; Fritz Lang, Germany w 11 You only live once; Fritz Lang, U.S.A 3 Moonfleet; Fritz Lang, u.S.‘A. 17 to be announced Subject to revision ‘s in arts lecture building, room 116 at g:30. ticket only: students $4, others $6. rm age: 16 years

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Team effort

downs

/wine

Western

leads

LONDON (Staff)--?They’ve got a hell of a team,” said Western’s coach Metras after his team had fallen to the Waterloo Warriors, 30-26. The Warriors wasted no time in showing the Mustangs they were not going to be a pushover in Saturday% exhibition game. Western plays in the Ontario-Quebec Athletic Association. The Warriors move to this league next year. On the first play after the Western kickoff, Bob McKillop handed off to Brian Irvine who went off tackle. Starting on his own 26, Irvine went all the way for the touchdown.

30-26

I

Warriors

On the next series, Ole Hensrud blocked a Western punt and Bill Poole recovered for the Warriors on the Mustangs’ 8-yard line. II+ vine carried the ball three times the left side for six points. Waterloo controlled the ball for the next 10 minutes but then Western struck. On a 55-yard passand-run to Dennis Walker from Bob Israel. Jeff Hilton went overfrom the tow-yard line for the TD, The Mustangs started to move strongly, and the Warriors’ pass defense proved very weak. After an exchange, the Mustangs evened the score with two long passes. One pass to Walker for 30 yards put them in the Warriors’

firsf

to

zone and then a pass to Carl Li ndros provided the touchdown. The Warrior defense charged in on Israel, forcing a long loss and a Western punt. On our next punt a Western halfback was caught for a safety touch. The next touchdown proved very costly for the Warriors. Allstar Jim Man&e had to be carried off the field and on the next play the Mustangs went for a TD on a pass completed to BillHendershot. Coach Totzke said after the game that Manske had pulled ligaments in his ankle and might miss the Laurentian game. The convert was unsuccessful due to a strong rush by the Warrior defer-me,

By Gord Dearborn Paul Solomonian

and

Men’ s intramural activity opened on three fronts this weekwith league play in soccer, flag football and lacrosse. At the same time, attention centered on the Rockway Golf Club and Waterloo Tennis Club for the annual tournaments. ORGANIZATION This year, the 15 intramural units are divided into three leagues. Teams from arts, engineering, grads, math and science comprise the faculty league. The residence league is made up of teams from Conrad Grebel, the Co-op, Renison, St. Jerome’s and St. Paul%.

sfarf Each of the four Village quas drants and physical-education rounds out the Village League. First and second-place finishers in each circuit play off to determine a winner with the three surviving teams playing to determine a champion. SOCCER _League play got off to an early (but slow) start. Several games, including both flag football matches, had to be cancelled when some teams failed to appear. These games, as well as the Co-op vs Conrad Grebel and arts vs engineering soccer games, may be rescheduled for a later date. The weather, mainly wind, greatly affected the games which were played.

0

Village South 1 Village West 1 St. Jero!lle’s 2 Mathematics

1 3 1 0

With the goalposts now erected games scheduled for Columbia Field can be played there. TRACK

AND

The second half started quickly with Bill Hendershot of the Mustangs running back the kickoff from his own &yard line for the TD, The Mustangs tried to pass for a two-point conversion but it was incomplete.

FIELD

In addition to theteam competitions the annual intramural track and field meets will be held next week. The various leagues have been scheduled for different days (with Thursday left open in case of any cancellation): Monday the residences, Tuesday the Village and Wednesday the faculty meet. All will begin at 7 at Seagram

Stadium with order listed.

the events

Track 120 hurdles * * lOO-yd. heats 880 yd. 3 mile 220 yd. 1 mile 100 yd, 440 yd. 440 relay

Field long jump shot put polevault highjump javelin triple

Quarterback Bob McKillop remarked, **The Western defense presented us with no problems. Sure we had a few mix-ups but we’ve only been together two weeks. Everyone was nervous today but if we come up with a couple of good games against the big teams we can go all the way.” Doug Shuh and Bill Poole plawd their m.m..l top-notch games, Shuh was in on countless ta&es and Poole recovered tow Mustang fumbles. ’ When the Warriors meet Laurentain Voyageurs tomorrow at Seagram Stadium, ends EdScorgie and Walt Finden will return to the lineup. These veterans will definitely help the overall Warrior game.

activity in the Time 7:oo 7:oo 7:oo 7:lO 7:20 7 :30 7:50 8:00 8:lO 8:15 8:30

jump

discus *

The first two contestants in each event at each meet will assemble on Tuesday, October 10, for the championships. The

Chevron sports editor Pete Webster proves that he not only nags his staff to write about athletics-he himsel$ Webster made himself $2.65 in bets in the annual Cross the Creek in Full Flood derby.

NINE-IRON 9 iron tournament

.

The fine offensive blocking of the Warriors made the march easier. The clock ran out on the Mustangs and the Warriors won by the 30-26 margin. After the game Coach Totzke expressed his views on his team’s victory. “The boys played a good game and I thought the rookies-Manahan and Howe+certainly showed up well. **Both the offensive and defensive lines played well, whereas our backfield did mess up a couple of plays. Our pass defense was weak at the beginning of the game but when we switched to a zone from our ususal man-to-man coverage, improved greatly. **The defense played well as a unit but the high score could be attributed to the fact they were beat individually quite often. The team came through in the end and we showed we could hold on to the ball when necessary and move it for the touchdowns.”

intramural

for men’s Soccer Village North Village East St. Paul’s Grads

The strong Warrior ground attack supplied the next touchdown. A reverse by Heiboin who averaged 11 yards a carry set up the touchdown play by rookie Ron Howes. The convert by Al Haehn was good. -The Mustangs started apowerful march but the defense came through with a strong stand. Poole recovered his second fumble after the Warrior defensive line had knocked the ball loose. The half-time score stood at 23-20.

Waterloo’s offense marched into the Mustang zone twice. Both times had attemps for a field goal go unsuccessful. The Warrior pass-defense showed a definite improvement in the third quarter and held the Mustang offense to very little movement by its aeirial attack. The Warriors proved their air attack was strong when McKillopwho was 6 for 11 during thegame-and rookie Don Manahan combined for a 92-yard pass&and-run play, Mamahan% speed left two Mustang defenders behind. The Mustangs threatened several times in the rest of the game but key plays by Heibein and Aramin France scat stopped the marches. The Warriors gainedpossession with three minutes to go, and showed what a good offense should do. Irvine and Heibein both made key runs as the Warrior’s Offense marched for three first downs.

Warriors’ quarterback, Bob McKillop (1 I), lets loose a long pass in last Saturday’s victory over Western. The Warriors’ next game is tomorrow against Laurentian, at Seagram Stadium, 2 pm..

, Disorganised

victory

will

be

sometimes gets athletic Friday,

held tomorrow morning beginning at 10 with the finals during the half-time of the Warrior-Laurentian game in the afternoon. WRESTLING Head wrestling coach Ed DeArmon asks that all interested persons attend a wrestling meeting on Monday, at 7:30 in the student lounge at Seagram Stadium. Coach DeArmon is especially interested in any person that may have had some wrestling experience-- intercollegiate, highscho01 YMCA or other. Newcomers will be welcomed and they will be given every opportunity to make the squad. A complete schedule of dual meets has been arranged with most o&AA schools. CO-ED GYMNASTICS Any students--man or womenwho wish to participate in a program of instructional and recreational gymnastics (at either an elementary or advanced level) are asked to come to Seagram Stadium on Monday, at 5:30 for an organizational meeting. BADMINTON The service program of the athletics department will again offer facilities for recreational badminton for any interested students. Those wishing to participate are asked to come to Seagram at 5:30 on Monday for an organizational meeting. BASKETBALL Any men interested freshman or varsity are asked to come on Tuesday at 5:30.

September

29, 1967 (8: 74)

in Play%! basketball to CE3518 757

‘I-


Waterloo

Co-op

is ‘u successful By Canadian

Students regular

on the roof of Hammarskjold Co-op happening.

house

take

part

John

Lynn

University

Press

Universities OTTA WA (CUP) across Canada, b=t with a heavy influx of students, can only with difficulty find adequate funds to provide adequate teaching staff, increase classroom space, augment library collections, install labs, and provide other academic needs to wet the demands of a population bent on educatingitsyow+ The universities; resources can barely stretch to provide students with the means to get an education. It cannot provide the services which complement a good education --sports and recreation facilities, student union buildings,diningfacilities, and,most criticalthis year, housing. The above items draw a low priority in university construction, age in Canada now , particularly as the population shifts from the rural to the urban base, the situation now becomes critical. Last summer, all housing in many centres was filled by people shifting from rural areas. This September undergraduate students returned to university to find apartments and rooms werenot available for them, University residences had been bookedsoUdsince early August. University officials recognize the problem, but can do little. Most universities prepare offcampus housing registries, but these are stop-gap measures at best. A possible long-term solution Coin a is student co-operatfveliving, ops have several advantages:

housing

solution

Students living in co-operatives require up to 25 per cent less space than those living in apartments, rooms or university resifknces,

Co-ops do not requirefinancing, at first from either the universitly or the government. If a house rents for $150 monthly and utilities cost another $50 monthly eight students paying $40 per month rent realize a considerable saving over residence fees. They buy and cook their own food in common, cutting down overhead. Even if a student cooperative association gets involved inbuying and building residencest the university assumes no part ofthefinaxial burden. Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation provides approved cooperative residences with loans for 90 percent of the cost of building, on a 500year mortgage. This makes it possible for the cooperating students to realize a saving over residences even while they are making mortgage payments through slightly higher than cost monthly room and board. Cooperative residences are cheaper to design, to build, and to maintain. They are cheaper to design because4hey are spartan in construction and furnishing, and devoid of the frills built into university residences. They are cheaper to build because contractors habitually raise their prices if they know government is paying. They are cheaper to maintain because all maintenance, cleaning, kitchen work+ administration, and discipline is done by the students

Because of the favourableffnancial conditions under whichco-ops operate there is no limit to their possible expansion. The Waterloo Cooperative Residences Incorporated is typical of the speed and efficiency with which co-op housing can be set up. In 1964 several students recognized the need for low rental student housing. Within six months a handful of students rented two houses near the campus accomodating 33 students. Within a year Waterloo Cooperative Residences was set up to operate seven houses with 90 students. Within a year Waterloo Cooperative Residences was set up to operate seven houses with 90 students. At this point they also began construction of Hammarsk jold House, a four-s torey building designed specifically for student cooperative living. It was 90 percent financed through CMHC, and the WCRl talked the contractor into reinvesting his .profit on the project to make up the remaining 10 percent. Hammarskjold House was the first residence in North America built by students, when it opened in April 1966. At present the WCRI owns two houses in addition to Hammarskjold House and rents ten others, accomodating 228 students, men and women. But this does not end the story of the growth of the WCRI corn operative, They are at present awaiting approval of a complex of buildings which will provide self-contained apartments for married students

Attention Sciertce Society NOMINATIONS

Members

ARE NOW OPEN

FOR SCIENCE SOCIETY ELECTIONS ON OCTOBER 12

Nominations

Friday,

Close

9 POSITIONS OPEN: 1 rep. - chemistry upperclassmen 1 rep. - physics upperclassmen 1 rep. - biology upperclassmen 1 rep. - optomistry upperclassmen 3 reps. - freshmen 1 rep. - applied-chemistry upperclassmen 1 rep. - applied-physics upperclassmen

Nomination

158

forms

The CHEVRON

are available

at the Federation

of Students

October

6

IN ADDITION, 9 POSITIONS ON THE APPLIEDSCIENCE COUNCIL WILL BE ELECTED: -vice-chairman -secretary . -treasurer -3-applied-physics reps. -3 applied-chemistry reps.

office

or from

208 South

3 at the Village.

For further

information

phone

576-8537


Flower

power

conquers

the cold

Braving chilly winds, about 300 people mostly spectators, came to a Love-In sponsored by Orientation

tions out of pieces of wood, and to listen to the main attracttn, poet Dr. Earle Birney, the universities

‘67 and tie K-W Peace Movement

Poet-h-residence* Dr. Birney

in Waterloo Park. The flower people came to paint, construct Rube Goldberg contrapt

tV through

clouds afhcme~flow-

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SERVICE

100 King Ontario

Waterloo,

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Licensed

’ ENJOY

THE

CONGENIAL OF THE

arrived about 2:45 some of his lovepoe-

and receited

ers, and long hair to the 50 or so lovers present. Immediately after his poetry reading Bfrney had to hurry away to go to a happening at the University of Western Ontario. The organizers felt that the lovein was a success in acheiving its purposes of giving people an opportunity to be human, creative and communal.

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Friday,

September

29,

1967 (8: 14)

159

15


The situation at the Village has, I feel, taken a discuss such matters as examinations and teaching methods. turn for the worse. This could be the most significant happening of Students are now talking of working from within the year if the idea spreads. for reform. They propose that the members elected to the quadrant and Village councils move immediateSuch a union is not terribly necessary in the a ly to change the new constitution. political-science department, but if the ideaspreads In so doing they make agreat error for they legto other departments and faculties, the entire system itimize the new constitution. They approve by partiof university government at the departmental level cipdng and strengthen the evil that they seekto op will be revolutionized. The idea could be a success if the politicalpose. However, it seems that the majority of students science students do not fall into the pitfall that faces who oppose the Eydt constitution have settled onthis all political-science students: a love of politics. plan. These students should strengthen their posh This danger was seen at the first meeting when tions by setting up an underground to swing into acthe members wrangled over the membership of an tion when the councils discover that constitutional ad-hoc policy committee. p change does not come easily. As long as members don3 get involved in 1%hour floor fights over the agenda, all will go well. The Chevron is well-noted for its tendency to understate. Ten days ago, Steve 1relandblastedDea.n W.&E, McBryde of science and Dr. Kenneth Fryer of math for their attacks on the Federation of Students. This attack occupied two lines in the paper. Ireland obviously was hoping to create an issue around the remarks of McBryde, who said parts of the Federation pre-mail was like handing FLQ pamphlets to immigrants from Europe, and of Fryer, who compared local student power to Latin American student power. Such remarks show there is a significant gap between those who hold power in the university and those seek to participate in the use of that power. While Ireland may not have succeeded in stirring up student interest in university government, he did impress those who heard him with the depth of his analysis. Gone is the old we-they analysis with the students ranged against everyone else. Ireland spoke with feeling of “the essential university-those students, faculty and administrators who are anxious that this place become a vital active institution.” This essential university consists of the group that calls for participation in university government by all members of the university community. Such a stand will certainly win Ireland friends among both the students and the faculty. * For a change, someone outside of the Federation of Students is doing something about students in university government. The students of the political-science department are banding together to create a departmental student union to meet with members of the faculty to

* Freshmen who missed John Wilson’s bullsession missed one of the few occasions oncampuswhen you can hear stimulating ideas. of course, Prof. Wilson’s ideas are stimulating more because they are seldom heard rather than because they are especially original. Wilson represents the continuing tradition of classical socialism, and while he has much in common with the hard-line new left, he does not use their rhetoric. For example, his concept of the ultimate -state of man would be described by a new leftist as involving a “change of conciousness”, but I have yet to hear him use that term. * Students in the Ontario riding of WaterlooNorth recently had a lesson in the effects of political patronage. The chief returning officer for this riding, which holds the vast majority of Waterloo university students, indicated that students would have to present an affidavit, signed by their local chief returning officer, that they were not enumerated in their home riding. Fortunately the chief returning- officer of Ontario scotched that idea, but it is well to know that the posts of chief returning officers are political appointments. It i s also well to remember which government is in power Now. * This summer, K-W Record ran ten articles on China by Simon Malley. The Chinese now say that Malley fabricated the articles and that he was only in China for two days. Peking suspects the stories were a CIA feeler. Address your letter to Feedback, the Chevron U of W. Be concise. The Chevron reserves the right to short-

uflivw&y Arthur

ave. & phUp &. 6f-h Thompson,

manager

feed bat k enletters,

Sign it--name, course, year, telephone. For legal reasons, unsigned letters cannot be published. A pseudon ym will be printed if you have good reason.

A//

I want

to work

is u phce in the

U of W

To the editor: Early in February I informed PP&P through my foreman @‘el Johnson) of my intended trip to England for June, July, and August. May 22 I received a letter from A.T. Caimcross of PP&P, saying they could not grant this absence but that I could apply for work on my return, but theycouldnotw antee that there would be work. This letter was dated a week before I left-but all arrangements had been made for the trip. As you know, I returned onsept. 7 and applied for a job on the 12th, I was told there was a job on equipment at Seagram Stadium. I was kept on the wait until Sept. 21 and after spending a day on janitor work I was told that my job would be cleaning the offices on the graveyard shift. So I told them they had the wrong man. I went back in to see Ron Taylor in personnel and he said there was a job on the computers coming up. I said “Put me back on my old job.” He said, #‘I have orders not to rehire you for PP&P.” This is when I found out that I had been blacklisted, and given a

16

f60

The CHEVRON

label. If I go to another department Taylor says he must tell them that PP&P will not have me1 To me this is a dirty business and surely a university is the last place you would expect tofindthis. No reasons are given. No cornplaints have been made against me. The university employees are not insured for unemployment insur ance. They tell us we don’t need it because we will never be out of a job. My case is now with the union. I have asked to be reinstated. They have weighed me in the balance and found’ me unfit to sweep up your dirt. My only course now seems emigration to India where I can join the untouchables, and qualify for a free transitor radio1 BOB ROBINSON CIT&T emeritus Successful brings

orientation freshman

pruise

To the editor: Orientation 67 began with a bang. The pitch of the events grew from the opening dance through the steer roast and concerts, and climaxed with the crowning of the frosh queen at the frosh hop. Those like myself who registered on Saturday missed a whole week of events. Nevertheless, the

rest of the week% programs left all of us completely satisfied and much impressed.. The people who made orientation a complete success were of course the fresh. It was their participation that made orientation asmash hit. Due credit must be given to all archons. The big brother attitude worked especially well. Often it resulted in a swim in Laurel C reek or a shower on the lawn* however. But it was hot and sticky all week and even the waters of the creek seemed welcome. So to the archons andcommittee members a special thanks from me on behalf of all frosh for helping us to get orientated and initiated. The most credit, however must go to the chairman of the orientation committee. He was responsible for the general organization of all events. His efforts, I am sure, were appreciated by all. The participation of all fresh in alla* tivities showed this. So my beany is off to you, Stewart Saxe, for having planneda SUOI cessful week of events and for having helped me and all frosh to become better adjusted in a new community. RENZOBERNARDINI electrical 1A


It was an impossible

Bond

meets

By Dave

Wilmot staff gaze moved around

Smersh

Could you say something tiddlywinks?

Chevron

SOI& the game table. On his right M. Cutau, cold and dangerous, the glint of victory at a decisive play still in his eye, Opposite stood M, Bond’s partner in this game of death. There were beads of perspiration on his head and a shake in his hands. Less confident than M. Gatau, Rapale, the money behind this operation which could spell death for both M and Bond, stared intently at the table. Bond had the last shot at the pot. If he stayed, his one wink in the pot and three squoping would give him six points to Smersh’s six, with two in the To win he would have to pot. pot a squoping wink giving Smersh seven and himself eight. If Bond missed he would maintainhis six but Smersh would have seven. It was an impossible shot for Bond with his wink under the lip of the pot. Bond looked at his jade squidger, the squidger given to him by the prince of Marabingy years before, the squidger that had won him many games, It would now be called upon to win him his life. He flipped the wink, it danced on the lip of the pot-and then fell in! a In an interview somewhat later: Is your

I

shot...

name really James Bond?

“Yes, but on campus I prefer to be known as Ron Rumm, president of the tiddlywinks club.”

“‘It’s

in death

squOp

about

a way of life.”

How do you play?

*‘Well, good...” What

I think

I play

pretty

are some of the rules?

‘YOU choose a color, red or If one of the players is blue. colorblind we give him any c&r.” What do you call it when you put your wink on top of an opponent’s?

“I call you?”

that cheating.

Wouldn’t

No, I mean when you flick your wink into his to keep him from playing it.

“Strategy.” The technical

name?

“Oh, squopping. ‘Vhere are two sides to a tiddlywink-a convex side and a concave side. Did you know a wink has two sides ?” What

are some of the tactics?

‘“A double-squop game is basically a defensive game, while a squidge-squop game or a squop-squidge game or a squidge-squidge game... “Mark1 This is an interview with the Chevron. Mark Taylor.” What

is his position

on the team?

“He% have toimprovebeforehe has a position on the team,” “I’m chairman. Do you work for the CBC ?”

him about winks and potting.” “Oh. We can sing it to him. You sing the winks and I’llsingthe pot.”

“Oh the pot is between the players diagonally oppoite . . . “YOU

No, I’m with the Chevron.

“Ron, he’s not with the CBC.*’ “That’s all right. We’re telling . _

on his forehead, squidgesthe last

James Bond, alias Ron Rumm, with beads of perspiration game of death with his archenemy, M. Cutau of Smersh.

can sing

the diagonal.”

Mr?

“And the winks green and. . . ”

are blue,

BE A TENTH ANNIVERSARY

“Can’t

he sing?”

Could you tell me something about the tiddlywinks championship planned for Tenthe Anniversary Week?

‘Cornell has a good team. Toronto is sending the Lady Godiva Band. We don’t have a band We have a rubber band--for the opponents. At Harvard they put

one of their coeds under the table to disturb my critical shots.” *‘How could they stoop so low?” When will the competition held?

be

‘*Saturday and Sunday, October 28-29, unless we lose onsaturday, in which case we’ll cancel the whole thing and send them home.” “Charles McCleod will not appearinhiskilts. ,

WEEK VOLUNTEER

APPLY NOW OPPORTUNITIES AVAILABLE

for Students

Application

forms

(7th floor,

interested

are available library),

in

9 l 0 0

PHOTOGRAPHY ART CONDUCTING TOURS MEETING PEOPLE

at Tenth Anniversary

society reps & Federation

Week

office

,building Friday,

September

29, 1967 (8: 14)

767

17

.


-CAM

QUESTION

PUS

DO you think Jerry

a campus

Moore

phys-ed

Grace

Grant

The hotels are too far from campus to reach between lectures. A campus pub wouldbe a good idea.

Van

Dinh

Collegiate Press Service WASHINGTON (CUP-CPS) -Politics in South Vietnam in recent years have always had elements of a tragi-comedy. As the main theme of the play is “democracy”, the interested audience “ American” the actors have to wear a mask to suit the purThe mask is ‘(elections.” pose. Balloting would take place, over 80 percent of the people would vote. Washington would call it a success until the stage collapses leaving dead bodies and broken furniture on the scene. For the seventh time (two presidential elections in 1955 and 1961; four legislature elections in 1956, 1959, 1963, 1966) since Vietnarn was divided temporarily by the 1954 Geneva agreements; the tired people of South Vietnam went to the polls. On September 3,from 7 am to 4 pm, 83 percent of 5,853,251 voters proceeded to 8,824polling places to cast their votes to elect a president, a vice-president and 60 senators, The number of registered voters had jumped from 5,553,251 in one month to the present 5,853,251. “We are prolific in Vietnam, but not that prolific,” said Tran Van Huong, a civilian candidate who finished fourth. General Nguyen Van Thieu, the head of state and military candidate replied with a touching candor: ‘(Some soldiers have been given two voting cards? The voter was given first 11 ballots, one for each presidential ticket (two names, president and

18

162

The CHEVRON

vice-president, one symbol) then 48 other ballots, one for each slate (10 names on senatorial each). He had gone over 502 names (22 presidential, 480 senatorial) scrutinized 59 symbols (11 for presidential* 48 for senatorial). He hardly could be that fast reader, but he did not care. He looked at the familiar policeman who willbe around in his locality long after the election day. General Nguyen Ngoc Loan, the chief of police, often c&lled the Saigon Himmler, had declared on August 22: “National policemen would be stationed inside and outside booths all over the country. As the national police are thepeople in closest contact with the lowest echelon, there will be police telling them where to vote, how to vote, and when to vote? (Saigon Post, August 23.) The Vietnemese voter is a captive voter: the police stamped his registration card and anyone subsequently searched (a routine in South Vietnam) and found without the election day stamp on his card will be in danger of automatic classification as a Viet Cong and subjected to prison or death. Even with these precautions, the military junta was not sure. Dictators everywhere and at all times we afraid of their own people or even of their shadow. On the eve of the election day, two dailies in Saigon, the Than Chung (Sacred Bell) and Sang (Light) were closed. Three weeks earlier, another daily, the Dan Chung (People) was shut down. All

Bob

Begemakn

Gladman

economics 2 A pub? What a fantastic ideal I would be its best customer. It could start a trend of campus drunkeness across Canada.

Archer

geography

English 2 Yes. Then we won’t have as far to walk when we want to refresh ourselves after a boring lecture. And, anyway, it’s the spirit of the thing.

Gary I

Musiccd-chair By Tran

Julie

3

I think it would be a fabulous idea.

science

I think it would be an excellent idea, and the best place for it would be the new campus center.

be CI good idea?

Mclnnis

math

Marjorie

Phil Smith

Nancarrow

pub would

1A

It would probably be a good meeting place for students, but might keep them out of classes.

.geograph y 2

By Richard

Y essh

2

shurt 1

Bruce MacPherson English 3 It would be a good idea but highly unlikely.

Vietnam ekction these despite the fact that officially censorship was abolished and the constitution guarantees freedom of the press. Several officers, among them Than Trong Brigadier-General Chinh *commander of the 25th division near Saigon), and Colonel Pham Van Lieu, former chief of police, were put under house arrest. Several students (mostly Buddhists) disappeared from their some imprisoned, some homes, liquidated. General Thieu, when asked about the closure of the newspapers, de“Even in a democracy, clared: one has the right to suppress newspapers that aid one’s enemies.” Chief of police Loan echoed: “Democracy is fine for the politicians, but me, I favor national discipline.” (Washington Post, September 3.) General Ky much earlier had been more specific on 4(democra.. cy’* and had stated that he (( might respond militarily” if a civilian whose policies he disagreed with won the election. “In any democratic country, you have the right to disagree with the views of others” (New York Times, May 14.) And on July 27, General Ky repeated “If any opposition ticket in South Vietnam’ s presidential elections should win by trickery, we will overthrow it.” Who else in South Vietnam could use tricks but the junta itself? General Ky’s threat came at the time when, at his instigation, a It military committee’ was formed

to serve as a kitchen cabinet for the new military government ifthe Thieu-Ky ticket wins. In the most unlikely case of its ticket losing, the committee would serve to overthrow the civilian elected as Pre sident. All these unnecessary precautions and threats were taken and made even when possible competitors were excluded in advance from the race: General Duong Van Minh (Big Minh), former chief of state, and Dr, Au Truong Thanh,former minister of economy and finance who planned to run onapeaceplatform, were banned from running. SO the stage was all set for the September 3 show. Washingtonput the final touch by sending a 22man presidential mission guided by former ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge, who had openly favored military regimes in South Vietnam, The mission members, feted by Saigon government and the U.S. embassy, escorted by government agents, communicating with people by government interpreters, toured half a dozen polling stations (8,824 in all) has passed its ver+ diet: good show. “Good, orderly, wholesome, )* Ambassador Lodge declared. The results of the elections: 83 percent of the people voted (exactly as predicted by the U.S. embassy in Saigon). The Thieu-Ky military ticket won by 35 percent of the votes. Already seven out of ten civilian candidates lodged protest of fraud with the constituent assembly which will have until Monday to

certify the validity of the elections, Dr. Phan Khac Suu, the civilian candidate who finished third and who is also the chairman of the constituent assembly, complained that in many, many areas, his workers had estimated the turnover at only 10 percent. Lots of complaints to come but it is not going to change the situation anyway. One surprise (to Washington): a Saigon lawyer, Truong Dinh Dzu who campaigned on the platform of peace and anti-military junta in the clearest terms possible, finished second with 17 percent of the votes. Why were Washington and the U.S. mission in Saigon surprised? If there is any indication at all of the mood and desire of the Vietnemese people, it is their obvious concern about the war and about the corrupted dictatorship of the military. Of all the 11 candidates,only one advocated war. Even General Thieu talked about peace and negotiations.But the Vietamese have no voice in this war. Columnist Joseph Kraft lamented from Saigon: “But as long as Saigon (read: the U.S. military establishment in S@pn) thinks vic.tory, it is very hard for Washington to move kVard Settlement. And thus the present outlook despite the new Setting created by the new elections,, remains barren.99 Washington and Saigon do not think only victory but they expect ‘4 representative, democratic government’s to emerge even with the old cast. But the September 3 elections is only the first act of the show. More to come. There will be in the coming weeks adeadly struggle between General Thieu, No. 1, and Vice-Air Marshall Ky, the No. 2 who will try harder. Ky is notgoing to be a figurehead as a vicepresident who should give up both the premiership and the air command with the profits and powers provided by these two functions. But Thieu, cunning and less talkative, may strike first. There will be organized opposition which logically will join the Buddhists who are preparing for their coming struggle against the illegal, unjust Buddhist charter imposed on them by the junta on July 18. This important development will be the subject of another story.

-


Frosh power failure ority of the frosh did not whos up Ross McKenzie, Slave Day coto help. ordinator, refused to call last SatOriginally Slave Day was schedurday’s fundraising project a failuled for the first Saturday of Orure, but we surely will. Only 650 However, since the reof an estimated freshmen class of ientation. gistration that day-without asking 1800 showed up to work for some anybody-it had to be moved ahead worthy charities. one week. The scavenger hunt Those who did help raised a total showed the spirit was high that of over $3,000 (which isn’t bad for Think what Slave the number involved) but then Z- first Saturday. Day could have raised then. gain it was short of the announced Another factor was that beanies, It is interesting to $6,000 goal. predict what the total might have which identified the frosh, had ,disappeared by then. been if all the frosh had shown up. Perhaps the football game at WesA rather impressive sum. tern drew some of the freshmen, It must have been discouraging for the organizers when they had to but not that many. Let’s hope that this display of tell people there were no more slaves to do their work-especially after “frosh power” that wasn’t, won’t continue for the rest of the year. publicity campaign the massive The frosh surely don’t have that which preceded Slave Day. small an opinion of the local charThere may be reasons why a majority of the frosh did not show up ities that they just didn’t show up!

Living

in glass houses

At last year’s Winterland concert, there was no one to meet the performers when they arrived. The loudest complainers against the people in charge included the head of this year’s Orientation. At the Glenbriar on September 17, Gordon Lightfoot waited for half an hour to be let in. Who was early or late is still in doubt. Last Friday’s concert at the Kitchener Auditorium had a similar problem. While the performers were let in without difficulty, there was no one to tell them order of performance and approximate length of sets. To settle the confusion of agents and managers, an ordinary member of the Orientation committee took the responsibility.

Just plain ridiculous i _rDid you ever in your life feel that you were on top of your work? Look underneath--you’re probably sitting on something. u The post-master-general has just raised the cost of our perennial campus referendums by 20 percent. KYDamn Student Council nitwits! ” -Heidi Lukas, don of North 6 at the Village, when Student Council fussed at warden Ronald Eydt’s new constitution from on high.

r ACCEPT0 Eydt

constitution

REJECT

Ballots

Q

printed

by

Village

administration

I

The chairman arrived in time to be master of ceremonies, He did not arrange with the performers about encores, which ended up haphazard. In addition to being Orientation head, he was also concert subcommittee chairman. There details were his responsibility. The main point is that the Orientation chairman was paid $75 a week for 12 weeks this summer for two reasons. The first was to prepare a brief on the philosophy of orientation. The second and more important was to research and report on the mechanics of Orientation as well as ensuring the mechanical success of this year’s program. What happened?

.

Where are the briefs?

The report of the Macpherson committee on the structure of the faculty of arts and science at the University of Toronto will be available Monday. The report will undoubtedly revolutionize university teaching methods in Canada. The University of Waterloo also has a study committee which is working on the structure of our university government. Or at least it’s supposed to be working bn it. It is rather hard to tell how well the committee is proceeding for it hold its meetings in secret a good part of the time. In any case they do not seem to be advancing rapidly and the main trouble seems to be the lack of submissions to the committee. All briefs were supposed to be in by March. None were. The Federation of Students brief was in by early May, and also a private submission by two professors left over from 1964-65. Since then, nothing new has happened and the chief culprit seems to be the faculty association. It is six months since it was supposed to

submit its brief, yet there does not seem to be any immediate prospect of receiving itWhen is it going to come‘? No one knows, but until it does, the committee on university government seems content to sit back and wait. This is in sharp contrast to the Macpherson committee which worked long and hard to produce a report after sifting mthrough 43 1 briefs-compared to two here. * * * The thoroughgoing Macpherson report stands in marked contrast to the only major submission to our university government committee, the Federation brief. But this is not surprising. The Macpherson report is very much concerned with the nuts and bolts of a single faculty, arts and science. ,The report is oriented towards the department, and is concerned with methods. The Federation brief is a philosophical approach to the principles of government anentireuniversitymade up of our or more faculties. And it is concerned with making the university democratic.

No butts about it! What the world needs is a good portable ashtray. Last month the university annouriced a policy limiting smoking on campus to areas wh ere ashtrays * are provided. This exe;,,,, Ill+ most class. . .. rooms-probably be-n= Laud bUtIS and ashes when wellL1-*n gidund in don’t do much to help ti le floors. People are SInnkino 1I”lXlllb in111rlacqooms VIUO, anyway 7 making themselves s look rather boorish and rooms rather pigpenish. (But smoking, of course,

is today an acceptable boorishness, so let’s not say anything about that. There was once a time when no ashtrays meant you didn’t light up.) The design department should gel t t o work. Invent something neat and 1 pocketable that the smoker car 1 carry around with him--another ac-. cessory to add to the lighter and I pack--and haul out when he wants i _ c,, d ia’* Or else bring back cuffs on pants.

- Grunt Grunt has decided to help out this year with criticism unlimitedto make everyone fear his pen and his paper, humor and witconvincing everyone that he’s fullofshit. ViLlage clocks are efrustrating. We just get this picture done, and then they hook them all up to a central control device.

‘fie Chevron is published Fridays by the board of publications of the Federation of the Federation of Students, University of Waterloo. Opinions are independent of the Student Council and the board of publications. University, editor-in-chief: Jim Nagel news editor: Brian Clark in tercampus: Frank Goldswink assigning: Patricia McKee features: Mary Bull I I

photo edi for: Glenn Berry sports editor: Peter Webster con stm ts edi for: Dale Martin acting reviews editor: Bob Verdun advertising manager: Ross Helling

Offices in the Federation building, U of W. publications chairman: John Shiry. 52g/744-6111 local 2497 (news) 2812 (advertising), 2471 (editor). Night 744-0111. Telex 0295-759. TORONTO: Donna McKie, 782-5959. NIAGARA FALLS: Ron Craig, 3546246. LONDON: David Bean, 438-9123. OTTAWA: John Beamish, 828-3565. MARATHON (!): John Helliwell, 229-0456. BRIDGEPORT: H.D. Goldbrick, 744-6130. 8700 copies

Friday,

September

29, 7967 (8: 74)

763

19


To have an event publicized in this column, come into the Chevron offices in the Federation building and fill out one of the formsprovided. Deadline: Tuesday 6pm. TODAY American poet Lucien SWyk reads and discusses his poetry in AL116 at 4:lO. Canadian university Centennial players present ‘Les fourberies de Scapin’ and ‘Arnold had two wived in the Theater of the Arts .-a*o.on Grad House corn roast. and barbeque at 8:30. $1.50 a couple, $1 single. Beverages sold. at.

Q*OV.

TOMORROW Sexual-education the Village, 9 am.

conference

at

MONDAY

Donella “Donny” Cogdon was crowned Fresh Queen ‘67 on Saturday at the frosh hop, the miss decided to come to our campus official end of Orientation 6 7. This Halifax-born (Chevron photo by. Glenn Berry) after seeing a Waterloo calendar. r

THE

.

MOST

COMPLETE K-W

IN THE

SKI SHOP

-CRESTED

SKI

Equipment.

SOCKS, RUNNING

SHOES -

T-SHIRTS,SHORTS

GOLF! TENNIS! SKIING! we have

it at:

COLLEGESPORTS(Kitchener) LTD. 38

QUEEN Mon

20

764

The CHEVRON

in AL116

TUESDAY IVCF book study--Ephesians. AL212 at noon.

WEDNESDAY IVCF bookstudy--‘Guilt by Paul Tournier-

-AI-

and grace’ in AL213 at

IlWl .

Dean of women’s reception for freshettes in SSl40,3-5 pm. Country and western music club ‘meeting in Am07 at 7 pm. Hammarskjold coffee hour, 139 University, at 8. Several university professors will engage in conversation over coffee with students. (The Co-op wanted it Clarified that the faculty will engage in conversation, not “shoot the shit+, . This wording last week was the Chevron’s, not the Co-

at 12:15

THURSDAY Math Society elections for pr esldent and four regular and three co-op reps in physics foyer, 9-5. ‘The gospel according to Peanuts’ an IVCF discussion in B164 at noon. Film, ‘No reason to stay’ in ~~116 & 12:15 noon.

Barb Sills gazes in dismay at a sign telling her that maybe the modern-languages building really isn’t. To conform to the sing, the Chevron is going to call the building by the name that comes most naturally anyway: arts-theater building.

I see flying suucefs when I’m in my cups TORONTO--A special division within the Institute for Aerospace Studies at the University of Toronto has been established to study unidentified flying objects. The United States Air Force and related government and private organizations have been studying the flying-saucer phenomenon for the past 15 years but the subject is new in Canada, The Americans have tended to view reported sightings of UFOs

as hoaxes, hallucinations or misinterpretation, but the new Canadian group, headed by Dr. Gordon Patterson, feels that at leastthree percent of the sightings cannot be explained away. In recent years there have been sightings in more than 84 countries including Canada. The institute is to develop new types of simple spotting instruments to be scattered about the country to investigate all sightings.

$8.95

JACKETS

All Your Gym

SALES & SERVICE

SWEATSHIRTS $3.50

UNIVERSITY

-UNIVERSITY

SHOP

AREA

films

at 7

op’s.)

SUNDAY Folk mass and parish meeting at St. Jerome’s* 7 pm. Jimmy Namaro Trio in the Theater of the Arts, 8. r’ree advance tickets. International film series in . AL116 at 8:30. Art noon.

Student Councfl meeting pm in Renison dining hall.

ST., SOUTH

743-2638

to Sat 9 - 6 Fri.

9 - 9

There’s a coin laundry at 193 Albert Street in thebasement, side entrance. 15 FOR SALE Classic harmony guitar both in good condition Rice, 653-3157.

plus case $35. Edy

1961 Karman-Ghia convertible, rebuilt motor, excellent condition. $600 or best offer, 744-8897. TRANSPORTATION Driving to University Ontario every Friday. ly morning, return Phone 578-0414.

of Western Leaveearin evening. 16

FOUND Tony W--please pick up your wallet from the security office.

HELP

WANTED

Sitar and tabla players for weekends. Phone Bernie at Infinite Noodle, 744-2911. Babysitter wanteu Friday mornings. Call 742-4356 anytime. Two girls to faculty coffee rate of pay. strong, dean local 3137.

serve in engineering lounges. Reasonable Apply: Faye Armof engineering office,

LOST While enjoying three months’holidays in that “sceptred isle”, my job as janitor in the University of Waterloo. Available now. No graveyard shift, please. CITGT emeritus.


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