1967-68_v8,n31_Chevron

Page 1

Volume

8 Number

UNIVERSITY

31

OF WATERLOO,

Waterloo,

Friday,

Ontario

February

16, 1967

rop fees this July by Ron Craig Chevron staff

Profs don’t like paying to park their cars. Tuesday, the university operations council agreed with them. Reversing its decision of last summer, the counc$l recommended parking fees be abolished July 1. Now the faculty association has to convince President Gerry Hww. The council debated two and a half hours before voting ten to three for parking as a free service to all university members. In August 1967 the operations council recommended parking fees for everybody. It said then that users, rather than government grants, should pay parking costs. This meant, it said, more academic funds for professors and libraries. Only the faculty association acy lively spoke out against the fees, angry that professors were not told of the change ‘until they returned to campus in the fall. Since then, the association has demanded justification’ of the parking rate, and acting .president Howard Petch set up a committee to study the issue. This committee issued a report on parking costs late in January. A faculty-association brief replied to the report at the operations council Tuesday. Prof. Robert Huang, chemical engineering, president of the facul. ty association, said he was SUI’~ prised at the reception he got. “But I was quite disturbed at

Marsh 173; Aston Muet ler 57.

CO-OP MATH 35.5% turnout 45; Stevason

40;

Em-

ARTS 27.9% turnout PATTERSON 177; LEVITT 166 CUBBERLY 161; DlLTS 158; Shiry 123; Gordon 105; Read 99; Morris 40. SCIENCE 26.6% turnout CLAVERT 196; ROULET 126; NELSON 125; Tuck 109. PHYS-ED 41.4% turnout LAVlGNE 56; Lenssen 21; Law 18

SUDA

the rather negative attitude the student federation showed.” Not so happy with the decision was student president Steve Ire land, one of the three who voted against the motion: “We’re looking at parking as an ancillary-enterprise type of You’ve got to look at the thing. total financial situation of the university-you can’t subsidize those who drive dars? These are the faculty association’s major reasonsforfreeparking: l Users fees for parking are a totally unnecessary and undesirable imposition on the university community. a Parking costs can easily be absorbed in the university’s total operating budget: e Taking parking-costs from operating monies would be cheaper, more efficient and easier to administer than the present fee

the mesident’s F&n these

council approves the m‘otioz? to drop *fees. This cars alone $h340 will not be in next yeah coffers.

Economies should be system. made anyway. The brief also included specific for reducing recommendations parking operating costs. Cutting down on security-=-64.4 percent of -all parking cost+i~ the association s main suggestion. removal raised many Snow embarrassing questions. The physical-plant and planning department apparently spends ti bout as much for overtime as for regular men and machine time to remove snow according to the brief. The parking committee report used 20 weeks-almost five months -as the standard period for es& mating snow-removal costs. A city works spokesmti said three and a half months would be more rea&tic. As its coup-de-grace the faculty brief compared snow-removal costs of the university and the city of Wtierloo: The university spends

would

on snow remOVa from parking lots alone, plus $1000 for The city spends $20,000 to salt. clear snow from the entire city, plus $18,000 for salting and sanding its 75 miles of roads. Although o,nly 2735 parking depals have been purchsed, the pre sent fee maintains all 3880 campUS puking spaces, the brief says, on a user basis, the lJ estimated maintenance costs per available space per annum” is ParMng $14.64for the fiscal year 1967-68 the brief says. Yet users are charged $2 a month-$24 a year. Official student council policy is to support paid parking in principle. All users should pay a fee, but this fee must be publicly justified, said Ireland. The federation’ s rationale is that if parking costs are paid from general revenue, that much less money is available for academic use, he said. l<They can argue about efficien$16,613

mean

less IIW~~~~

in tlw

Chevron photo by Gary Robins

said Ireland, “<but not the CYp9’ philosophy of the principle. I voted straight in line with council PotiCY. ‘<I’ll vote for a fee decrease if it9 s justified. It’s got to be on a bre&-even bas$s,j9 Ireland pointed out that abolishing parking fees will hurt students who don’t drivdhey’ll have to help pay for the lots through their tuition fees. Vicepre sident Bob Cavanagh backed Ireland. ‘(Ifthe users don’t pay* then every student pays for parking.” Ireland rejected some examples in the faculty brief, and accused the faculty of ‘L not being intellectually honest.9 9 The next student-council meeting will discuss parking, The operations counci19s recommendation now must pass the president9 s council, the university’s budget committee and the president.

140;

REGULAR MATH 29.8% turnout LIEBERMAN 150; BELFRY 100; Moir 74; Guy 39; Cohen 25; Wyatt 18; Slivka GjQ

BERRY bury 28;

Free parking j?w everyone-i.f mivehity ‘s operating budget,

RENISON 74% turnout 31; Johnson 24

Voters dump count31 cr experience paces the polls by Bob Verdun Chevron staff

The Valentine’s day election chose a council just like last year’s-the two members seeking reelection got it, and those crib icizing the outgoing council bombed. One third of the students voted, 36 candidates became 16 councillors and the Chevron)s choices filled ten seats. The two reelections were Tom Patterson in arts and Bill Snodgrass in engineering. Dick Kinler, aI?-u returning, had been acclaimed in grads. Retiring president Steve Ireland said the election vindicated the policies of hiS council. “The candidates that said coun-

cil wasn’t doing its job got absolm utely whomped.9p The bottom-runners, Bob Morris in arts, Max Slivka in math, and George Tuch in science had been the strongest in criticizing the retiring council. Engineering won the faculty turnout trophy Wednesday with 45.1 percent. Bill Snodgrass, civil 3B, led by 113 votes with 337, Twomembers of the plumber power party came next with 224 and 216 votes. Elected were GregAstandRichardDurrant, both mechanical 3A. Only four votes separated winner Larry Strachan, mech 3B, from powerplumber Richancd Allen for the fourth seat. In Science--with the p o o r e s t (26.6 percent) turnout--Ian Cal-

ve& physics 3, was the walkaway favorite at 196. The out-term vote decided the other two seats: Geoff Roulet, chemistry 2, 126; and Richard Nelson, physics 3B, 125. Regular math elected abroadsecond-year student Susan Lieberman got 150 votes, 50 more than the second choice Jim Belfry, math 2. Geoff Moir missed a seat by 26 votes. Glenn Berry, computer+ci 2A, took the co-op math seat. Berry, with 45 votes, five more thanGary Stevasonq math 3A Arts returned Tom Patterson, history 2, and elected second year pol$= SC% students Cyril Levitt, Dave Cubberley and Kathy Dilts. The totals were bunched between Patterson9s 177 and Dilts) 158,

John Shiry, poli-sci 3, and public% tions chairman came fifth, not forth, missing a seat by 35 votes. Phys-ed elected Pat Lavigne. He had 56 votes against runners-up Willy Lenssen (21) and Peggy Law (18). All are in first year. Renison, who alone could vote at home, turned out 74percent strong to pick Stan Suda over Paul John= son. The score between the two arts freshmen was 31-24. Four candidates had been pre viously acclaimed: grads Richard Kinler, psychology, Garth McGeary, engineering, and Robert Tokarsky, physics; St, Jerome’s Adrian Bernardi arts 2. Elections will be held in the .summer term for three sea.ts in engineering, one in co-op math a.nd one in environmental studies.


w/ice a L of u pooland it’s almost done

Well, . . the!* ‘w back. After a m’on th of confusion, petitions, requisition order, antipetitions, Campus Qucstiom, ad hoc committees and Witty remarks the long-lost tables have been retwmd to the arts coffeeshop.

MORROW CONFECTIONERY

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466 The CHEVRON

class

- Phone

r&cription mail

by

fee the

in Office

debt,

their department,

annual

student

fees

entitles

Ottawa,

and

for

U of payment

W

students

to

of

postage

in cash.

receive

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clause ensures no students will suffer because of the switch, Brian Ingram, associate registrar, sees no admission problems with students from other universities because the faculty admissions committee will act on individual cases. It is also unlikely that exactly equal courses will be needed for transf ering students to get credit. Ingram predicted the new system will probably mean more failures in individual courses . P rof s will be less hesitant.

say

get

McKenzie

the budget. $3000 was left unused in the contingency fund. Other money was saved when funds budgedted for parttime staff were not needed and when the creative-arts board curtailed some of its plan. McKenzie noted council fee income periods were ahead of their expenditure. He recommended that council next year use only thefees from the fall and winter terms SO that income and expenditure periods will coincide.

free

fees

Three U of W students were chosen as the universitites representatives in the Interregional Scholarship Exchange program this week. Universities participating in this program agree to waive tuition for a certain number of Students each year from outsidetheir immediate region. Selected by the s tudent-admini-

s tration selection board, these students are John McMullan, geography 2, and Susan Kaufman, psych 2. Joyce Buhr arts 2, of St. Paul’s was chosen as,a substitute in case one of the other

Chess

championships

men

hosting

The U of W chess club will host 69 eastern intercollegiate tournament next January. Ten or more universities are expected to send eight-man teams $ said U of W president Walter Kosmin, grad Russian and German. For the last ten years the tonrnalnent has circulated betweerf!% ;nto and Montreal with one year at Queen’s, he said.

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Last August council decided to try recouping thedeficit over three years. But for a variety of reasons, the entire deficit was almost wiped out this year. Income fromfees was $7000 over

LAUNDERERS AND UNIVERSITY

10% Student

is creditable

the 66-67 council.

SWAN CLEANERS LTD. CORNER

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The Federation is almost out of the red. Treasurer Ross McKenzie reported this week that student council has almost eradicated the $23,000 debt that it inherited from

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You can flunk that course and still get back in next year. English prof Jack Gray told the Chevron Wednesday the arts faculty council voted to make the course system apply to this year. By March 31, arts students will have been asked if they want to be assessed under the old year systern or the new course system. Gray predicted over 90 percent of arts students will opt for the new system. Students will receive credit for all previous courses at this university. A guaranteed-justice

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base, which is 42 feet wide. Over the rest of the L the water depth is only four and a half feet, leaving a 360~square-foot area for recreational and competition swimming and instruction, Department of health authorities gave the pool a private classification but the university can still invite outside groups in to swim at any time. The sharp drop-off in water depth to 14 feet at the diving area rules out the possibility of a public classification on safety considerations. Without this status it is unlikely that admission can be charged. While no schedules have been drawn up for pool use time will be provided for recreational, teaching, and intramural swimming. Even now, more than four months before opening date, workmen are beginning to add the finishing touches3wiring harnesses and floodlamps. When they’re finished the water-all 280,000 gallons will pour in.

Happiness is having the campus pond all to yourself. But Watfor’s composure would change if he heard about the new swimming pool opening this June in the phys-ed complex. With complete underwater lighting, two viewing windows, threemeter diving boards and anunderwater sound system the L-shaped pool must rate as one of the best available. That’s right-sound system. As phys-ed director Dan Pugliese ex= swimmers in synchronplained, ized motion need to hear the music underwater. The underwater speakers are sealed just like thelighting system and play along with speakers placed over the pool. The pool is designed to be functional for competition but should be excellent as a teaching pool also. Already near completion, the ho long sides measure 25 yards and 25 meters. The diving boards are mounted over 14 feet of water in the L’s

off-campus to:

lhe

terms. Chevron,

Non-students: University

$4 of

Waterloo,

annual/y.

tW0

go.

The Waterloo team, to practice hosting, has challenged Lutheran, Guelph, McMas ter and Western to a match here March 2. “That’s the one we expect to win BS said secretary Dave Roberion, engineering lB. The team finished tournament 1968 last month.

Authorized Waterloo,

c;zMOt

Shortly after April 14, the candidates will be notified of conditional acceptance of refusal by one of their listed universities.

as Ontario.

second-

fifth in the in Montreal


Haggar

fired

Dr; George Haggar stays fired from Waterloo Lutheran University, but the university uses “unacceptably authoritarian” meth-

ods, says the Canadian Association of University Teachers. The CAUT report, released Tuesday, also labels the univer-

km.acceptably’ sity’s Policy on academic free dam Ic decidely unacceptable,” The war between political scientist H%Zgar and WLU has sim-

Renison trooping out again to retain their council seat Next Monday’s general meeting promises to bring Renison trooping out again. The business before the meeting includes four bylaws covering the four Federation boards, abylaw on general meetings and referendums and several amendments to the bylaws. One of the amendments would abolish very small constituencies. The four board bylaws simply define the present structure and make no substantial changes in the board setup. Federation president Steve Ireland commented, (‘People have been trying to write these bylaws for four years and they’re finally done.” The bylaw ongeneral meetings and referendums is based mainly on the requirements of the Corporations Act and the old constitution of the Federation. The bylaw provides for a referendum. at the request of the president, two thirds of student council’ or five percent of the members of the Federation. A referendum will be binding on council if it is called by council or the president. A referendum by petition is binding only if councilagrees to accept it beforehand, s There is an amendment to the board of pubs bylaw which makes Liontayles a permanent member of the board. Previously the poetry magazine had been included under #‘other publications”. The most contentious issue will probably by the amendment to bylaw I introduced by Bob Verdun, civil 2A. The amendment calls for small constituencies to be grouped with other constituencies if they are not entitled to a seat under strict representation by population, Verdun explained the intention of his motion: “It rectifies a situation which could make student council impossible if the university continues to create schools. These schools will be small at inception and their representation will be unfair,, Only when they grow will they get a seat under my proposal. “If Renison is expecting the growth they’re talking about, they won’t lo se their seat next year anyhow.” Ireland explained what the amendment would

mean if passed. If therewere students on camand 25 seats on council, the average constituency would have 300 students. Suppose the school of nursing, if we had one, Then its ratio would be 2.67 and had 800 students. it would get three seats. But if a law school only had 100 students, its ratio would be .33, so it would not get a separate seat. Instead it might be grouped with arts and law students could run for any of the arts se&s. If, in the next year, Law had -150 students, it would get a separate seat, A second part of Verdun’s motion would delete the section prohibiting any constituency from holding more than half the total seats. Ireland, explaining legal points’ said that this section was a hangover from 1964 when engineers had a majority of the students. “But those days have gone. It’s really irrele vant,y’ Ireland said. He explained that when council was drafting the bylaw’ it stuck closely to the old constitution since it felt it had no right to change it. The other amendment from outside council came from Brian Clark, math 3, news editor of the Chevron. His amendment modifies the federation’s membership clause so that the editor of the Chevron could come from another university, Clark explained the reason for hisamendment. elThe motion is intended to allow consideration of a serious applicant for the editorship from outside the university . “As a case inpoint, Jamie Brown’former managing editor of the Cord Weekly, applied this year and was told that this was not possible under the bylaws. I want to see the bylaws changed so that he could be considered. #‘We also heard reports that a senior McGill editor might have been interested in transferring here.” The two other applicants for editor this year are Stewart Saxe and Dale Martin. Frank Goldspink also applied but has withdrawn. PUS

sa)fS CJW~ for one year, the non-renewal does mered since November. The CAUT dismissal, and in report was supposed to end it. not constitute circumstances a- f acuity But on Wednesday Haggar ace, such cused the CAUT of confusing the member has no legal claim on the university.” issues of tenure and academic freedom, waved the report toobliCountered Haggar, “1 did not vion, and regirded his loin. He’s contest the legality, but the morwriting a pamphlet called Hubris: ality of the university’s misdeed.” revolt against the gods. The report censures the WLU Dr. Henry Endress, WLU acting administration for not giving a president, earlier said Haggar’s %lear, unequivocal statement in contract wasn’t renewed last Nowriting of the reasons” for firing vember because the administration Haggar, “The methods in use are felt “Haggar would be happier unacceptably authoritarian, nor teaching elsewhere”. can any degree‘ of benevolence in applying them disguise or justify When Haggar askedfor and didn’t receive full reasons for his disthis fact.” missal he asked CAUT to investiCAUT also criticises both the gate. He doesn’t belong to CAUT. administration and Haggar for Its report says, JdThere is noththeir attitudes toward academic WLU was rebuked for a ing CAUT can do..&he contract was freedom. statement which reads: policy “While the faculty members will possess *the privilege of bringing under comment and criticism all matters of faith and doctrine this is not to be interpreted as liberty to attack or in any way disparage the Christian religion.” This clause cant radict s the CAUT constitution on academic freedom. But CAUT also nailed Haggar for complaining since he had signed a contract,

However, Haggar contends in an answering letter: “1 at no time related my case to the religious character of the institution,..I was dismissed for writing articles on my profession in which I contended that my colleagues were not intellectuals but clerks; for defending the Arab people in their just struggle to stop imperialism in the Middle East and for condemning Am-erican involvement in Vietnam; for attacking the local oligarchy and business character of WLU; and for my general criticism of Canadian institutions.”

WLU’s dismissal of Dr. George Haggar was upheld by the CAUT report this week.

Friday,

Declared making any asked for his and Haggar’s

February

Endress’ “Pm not statements,” when reaction to the report letter.

16, 1968 (8:31)

467

3


FEDERATION University Notice

is Hereby

Given

of a

OF STUDENTS of Waterloo

General

Meeting

of the Federation of Students, University of Waterloo, a corporation under the laws of the Province of Ontario, to be held on Monday, February 19, 1968, at 8:00 porn, in ELlOl, for the consideration of the following by-laws: By-law Number 2, ( ‘A By-law relating to the establishment of a Board of Publications” By-law Number 3, “A By-law relating to the establishment of a Board of Student Activities” By-law Number 4, “A By-law relating to the establishment of a Creative Arts Board” By-law Number 5, “A By-law relating to the establishment of a Board of External Relations” By-law Numb& 6, l( A By-law relating to general meetings and referenda” and for the consider&ion of certain proposed amendments to By-law Number 1, ‘“A By-law relating generally to the transaction of the affairs of the Federation”. The by-laws of the Boards have beenformulated by the Boards, approved in principle by the Students’ Council and passed by the Board of Directors, The content of the General Meeting and Referenda by-law is generally the same as the content of the related sections of the constitution under which the Federation operated from 1964 until the date of incorporation, April 27, 1967, It too has been approved in principle by the Students’ Council and passed by the Board of Directors, Copiesof the by-laws are available in the Federation Office I Proper notice has been given of the following amendments to By-law Number 2, I( Board of Publications”: With respect to Section II l’Membership”: Renumber ‘Lh” as lci”‘, and add (*h. the editor df Liontayles” c With respect to Section IV “Publications8’: Renumber “E’$ as trF” and add “E, Liontayles: a. the official literary journal of the Federation shall be called (( Liontayles” b, Liontayles shall provide a forum for the creative writing of the campus.‘” Delete from E. “Other Publications” article f: “in lieu of the suspension process, the Board may withdraw its support in the event that the contents of a temporary or co-operative publication are felt to be contrary to that permitted under the law,8s With respect to Section V ~‘Responsibilities~~: Delete from B. I ‘The Vice-C hairman’s j article b f l,,except that of initiating the suspension process? Sk Proper notice has been given of the following amendments to Bylaw Number 1: With respect to Section 12 “Composition of Students’ Council”: Delete “and twenty-five elected members” and replace with #‘and a number of elected members as determined in Section 13.” With respect to Section 13 Jf Elected Members of Students’ Council? preamble: delete fgtwenty-five”. 13 (a>, paragraph 1: amend to read: ‘&The fraction composition of the total enrolment formed by each Faculty, School, federated college, affiliated college having registered students, and the aggregate of graduate students, as calculated by the University of Waterloo in the fall of each session, is multiplied by twenty-five,k” 13 (a), paragraphs 2, 3 and 4: delete and insert: “Each constituency shall receive the same number of seats as in the abovementioned product, fractions of .500 or greater being considered as whole numbers and thus whole seats. In cases where a constituency has less than .5OO of a seat, that constituency shall be aggregated with another constituency for the allotment of Students’ Council seats for that session. The aggregation shall be determined by the retiring Students’ Council in accordance with the following criteria: i) where another constituency exists with similar constitution or leaning, the aggregation should be with that constituency; ii) where the Students’ Councildetermines that (i) does not apply, it shall determine an aggregation most rgasonable and consistent with fair distribution.” 13 (b): delete (‘The maximum number of voting members from any one Faculty, School, Federated College, Affiliated College shall not exceed one half the total number of voting members, 13 (c): renumber as 13(b). proper By-law

notice has been given*of the following amendment to Number 1: With respect to Section 27 (‘Membership’? paragraph 3: amend to read: “The President of the Federation of Students, University of Waterloo, who must be a student of the University of Waterloo when first elected, and the editor of the student newspaper published by the Federation, and the Business Manager shall be regular members of the Federation of Students.” Federation of Students Stephen W. Ireland University President of Waterloo

4

468 The CHEVRON

Letters

horn

an ivofy

tower

How many by Henry math

H. Crap0

professor

Given any conceivable map on a globe, is it always possible to distinguish one region from its neighbor using only four colors? Glancing at Oystein Ore’s book ‘The four-color problem’, we see that this celebrated question, which remains unanswered to this day, originated as an inquiry from a student (Francis Guthrie) to his professor (Augustus de Morgan) in London, 1852. William T. Tutte, professor of combinatorial mathematics, is generally regarded as the foremost investigator of the four-color problem. Tutte is a very quietspoken man of 50, with gray hair and blue eyes of a type described by C.P. Snow: r’bright as a bird’n kind of eye not uncommon among those with a gift for conceptual thought.” Born in Newmarket, Suffolk,“ 13 3/4 miles from Cambridge, by rail”, Tutte tells of his early involvement with the four-color problem. “1 think I became interested in it when I was in school, and read Rouse Ball’s book. Three different at-ta& “I?ve made three different attacks on the four-color problem. There was the study of Hamiltonian circuits, and an attempt to use combinatorial topology. Thenthere is this algebraic stuff that I published in the combinatorial journal a while back. “1 suppose you could put down the chromatic polynomials, too. Almost everything you do in graph theory can be interpreted as an attack. I think you might get something by finding the number of fourcolored maps with a given number of faces of each size. You could also count the number of maps with a given number of faces of each

Protests

OK

size, and see if the secondnumber was always less than the first.” I asked Tutte whether he would care to conjecture, for the Chevron, whether the answer to the four-color problem is most likely yes, no or unobtainable.

anywhere in this life. If it doesn’t come easily, it probably won’t come at all.” Tutte’s first book, ‘Connectivity in graphs”, was published in Toronto last year. Vve started on a rough draft of the second volume now. It deals withplanargraphs.”

The thewem is false Unique lecture style “The hypothesis I favor now is Tutte’s lecture style is both that the theorem is false. Butperhaps the simplest example of a unique and delightful, full of the Increasfivecolorable map has to have a humor of understatement. ingly he is called upon to address very large number of regions.” mathematical gatherings, It is known that any such counHe will speak on the four-color terexample must have at least 36 regions. “Pve heard that Ore has problem in Ann Arbor this month-. “on even and odd four-colorings, put that number up, but I don’t to be precise.” know to what extent, In Los Angeles k March, he will Tf you carried the classical methods further, you might raise tell the American Mathematical that number 36 to 38 or 40. If you Society about ‘I summing chromatic employed a battery of computers polynomials over planar for 30 years, you might raise it to maps”. Then there is the gathering in 100. I would guess we need some May to celebrate Oystein Ore’s new techniques, retirement from Yale. *‘It% conceivable that the probAlso in May, there is a two-week conferlem might be unsolvable. There might be no five-color map, yet ence at Waterloo. Do these conferences help or there might be no way to prove distract? “1 think they do stimuthat. Maybe we’re all too optimistic about the powers of mathelate you to do better work. Not matical proof? always in any way you can pick out and account for precisely, but Many proposed solutions that does seem to be the general Tutte receives a number of proeffect of them? posed solutions in the mail each The Ann Arbor conference holds year, both from amateurs and proa special treat for enthusiasts of fessionals. “A very common er- the four-color problem. Gerhard ror is to assume the four-color R@gel and J.W,T. Youngs will theorem’ follows, once you prove describe their proof of the 770 that you can’t have five regions year-old Heawood conjecture. This mutually adjacent. establishes the number of colors “For those people I can point needed to color maps on coffee to the example of the pentagonal cups with N handles, for all but prism. It cannot be three-colored, one or two values of N. but no four regions are” mutually The umlved cases adjacent.” One of the unsolved cases of On work habits: “1 work mostly is for in the daytime. My principle is the Heawood conjecture N equals zerq, the four-color probto avoid hard workas much asposlem. I asked Tutte why this one sible. It doesn’t seem to lead case seems to be so much more difficult ‘than the rest. 4’We know maps on the torus (N equals one) which need seven demonstrate in support of one’s colors (as predicted by Heawood), belief is recognized, the univerbut in all those there happen to be sity is responsible for the physeven regions that are mutually sical safety of visitors. Petch adjacent. says, “The best possible judge“I think it would be perhaps ment will be exercised in any a more interesting problem to ask action taken to fulfill the utiverwhat is the minimum number of sity’s obligations “. colors you require, to color maps Petch feels if demonstrations in which, shall we say, there are are orderly and do not interfere no five regions mutually adjacent? with the rights, privileges and Put like that, I think all the other niovements of others they need not sutiaces would become at least be crushed. as difficult as the sphere.”

if they’re

The University of Waterloo administration has no objection to demonstrations as long as they don’t rock the boat. This is the gist of a memo to all members of the university community from acting president Howard Petch. Petch says the university has operative and graduating students to see that job interviews are “arranged with maximum effectiveness and opportunity to all.” He said that while the right to

colors? 4 or 5?

peaceful


Awaiting

new chairman, activities slow

boarci’s Facing a mountain of work, the board of student activities succeeded in moving most of it from one spot to another. Much of the agenda before the board was tabled untilanew chaim man takes over. Dave Marks, grad math, rem ported all was going well with Grad Ball ‘68 and its $11,000 budget. After overcoming some initial problems the Village has been made available to house grads for the grad ball weekend in June. The board received proposed budgets from the flying club and the house of debates. The flyers pleased everyone when they restated their plane is making a profit of two dollars an hour with the current club membership of 480. Joe Recchia, coordinator of the entertainment committee, reported that Simmon and Garfunkel are willing to Qerform at Orientation 68 for $7,500, But this is on the condition that a second booking in this area be arranged-a difficult feat, Summer Weekend too is presenting difficulties, Recchia has not found suitable acts within the allotted $1400 budget, At the student activities meetwas given to the ing, approval terms of reference for the ente.w tainment coordinator. He is to act as a central booking agent for all campus activities. Two appointments were made at the meeting, Donelda Leonard, math 2, was appointed BSA vicechairman and head of the clubs and organizations committee. Louis Silcox, Sci 2, was appointed chairman of Winterland 69. A policy for recognizing clubs was approved in principle, Now the only condition is a written guarantee that membership is open to all students. The case of the Aryan Affairs Commission came up again, The board was reluctant to grant recognition until its policy was finalized and so the matter was again tabled. The computer science club met the same obstacle in its bid for recognition. However the board

Attempts

CHINESE

Newly

opened

steamed

AND

BROASTED

CHICKEN

up a menu

- come in and pick

Try our barbecued

budget control which involves the funneling of all campus club business through one office. The second report dealt withthe installation of a printing press by Western’s student cquncil to meet the needs of the students. George Loney chairman of Orientation 68, gave a report on his proposedprogram for nextfall, Likethisydar’s Orientation, it would be anti-initiation and pro-orientation. Films not merely entertain. would t‘Think’9 films such as “The War Game” would be shown.

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(CUP&After taking the universfty to court over the right of the senate committee on student discipline to prosecute him, and losing, John Fekete, a McGill Daily columnist, will finally face the charges, but is stillattacking the administration. The senate committee charged Fekete after his column in the McGill Daily supplement featured an article from the U.S. magazine ‘The RealisY e The reprinted paragraphs describes fictitious act of necrophilka involving LBJ and the assinated Kennedy. When the committee charged him, Peter Allnutt, Daily editor, and Pierre Fournier, Daily supplement editor, with “acting in bad faith,‘$ Fekete took the university to court contending the committee “was acting without jurisdiction or in excess thereof.” Both a superior court justice and a judge for the court of appeals decided the civil courts do not have the right to intervene in the matter, Fekete then appeared before the senate committee but walked out when TV coverage wasn’t allowed as had been in the case of Allnut

China FAMOUS

In-Flight Music by the

to block charges

Fekete MONTREAL

approved a loan of $45 to financea club bus trip. Iler suggested the flying club, the House of Debates, and the record selection committee be re moved from the board and they all be represented by one member at large. After some debate this met with general approval but the motion was tabled until all involved parties ad a chance to consider the reso ution. Joe R n cchia presented two reports on student activities at WestOne dealt with a ceiitralized ern.

ANOTHER

INSTITUTE Street,

41, King William

TELEPHONE

I

I

fail

McGill

and Fournier, who both received nothing more than a reprimand from the senators, C laud Armand Sheppard, Fekete” s lawyer said, ‘6 The three were charged together and we see no reason why they are not entitledto the same treatment /’ Soon after Fekete walked out he was suspended. Acting on the suspension, the McGill student council petitioned the university’s board of governors asking they drop the suspension and allow TV coverage. The senate committee did this and Fekete is now waiting for a hearing. In his latest escapade Fekete wrote a two page expose in the Daily supplement showing over two thirds of the university’s board of governors %re involved-through corporate ties ok professional association-with companies producing war materials? He backed up his assertions with 32 sources-ranging from Ramparts magazine to Moody’s industrial manual (current, unbound), The article clearly outlines each governor’s connection with a company involved in war production,

chrges and states the particular products or parts and their application to the war, with footnotes to his sources. A foreword to the article says: “The majority of the members on McGill University% board of governors are unequivocally implicated in war production through their ties with Canadian and American industry. It is essential to grasp this reality in order to understand the reciprocal relation between the university and the society it serves. In the afterword he says: Where the university% highest authority is a body of men drawn from big business, the university will be implicated in war production, for in a warfare society big business goes to war. This is important to grasp in order to begin to understand the various (crude of subtle) factors which (directly or indire& ly) finally influence university decision making. He says if the social order remains unchanged the university as it is presently constituted will not change.

MATH WEEKEND PRESENTS: Thurs.

February

22

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Friday,

February

16, 7968 (8:3 7) 469

5


\

U of T band The University of Toronto concert bantippearing Sunday at 8, free, in the theater-is one of the leading organizations in Canada devoted exclusively to performing serious music for wind and percussion instruments. Programs stress originalworks for concert band, a number of

T/~Q cast. od’ Royal

Available

at

for the elaborate farm cooperated.

is blowing

which have receivedcanadianpremiere performances by the band. The band’s personnel is drawn entirely from the student body of U of T. The majority enrolled in music. Many of the performers are planning careers as music teachers in schools or as instrup mentalists.

of the sun needed

blunt

Into costumes Basis of play

pheasant feathers in the plav,_ and a local game is Spanish conquest of Peru.

in

Participation in the band is part of the curriculum for all wind and percussion players in music courses. Prof. Robert Rosevear, conductor of the band, is known throughout Canada as a leader in instrua mental music education and as an adjudicator and wind instrument He is a graduate of examiner. Cornell University and the Eastman School of Music. The assistant conductor, P rof, Ward Cole, is an experiencedprofessional trumpet performer and teacher of wind instruments who has been guest conductor at the provincial workshops in Alberta and in many parts of the United States, He is a graduate of the University of Washington and holds the doctorate of Columbia University, The concert band, now in its fourth season, presented the first concert in the new MacMillan Theater of the music building on the University of Toronto campus. It is presenting a concert at the invitation of U of W students. A predecessor of the present band, the RoyalConservatory Symphonic Band, was founded by Rosevear and conducted by him for a number of years.

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‘Smashing time ’ is playing at the Waterloo, starring Rita Tushingam of ‘The knack’ fame and Lynn Redgrave of ‘Georgy Girl’. This is a pretty impressive cast for what has been termed a disappointing movie. The Lyric is breaking attendance records with ‘Grand prix’ so a full review on it must needs be postponed once more as it has been sold out for almost all performances. If you missed ‘Point blank’ at the Capitol you missed a damn good show. Every scenewas a faceslapping shock. Lee Marvin takes apart an organization to find the man who robbed him of $93,000 and his wif&ter leaving him with two slugs in the back. The photography was fantastic, bordering on the psychedelic, with flashbacks, slow-motion shots, and some of the goriest fights and goosepimpling sex juxtaposed to keep your eyes riveted on the screen. This weekend you’ll have to settle for ‘The

smashing

glory’ stompers’ featuring all the motorcycle boots in the world. Two motorcycle “gangs have a gettogether to decide which can wipe out the most punks in two hours. The winner is the gang with any members left at the end of the movie. The Fairview has decided to keepMillie modern until March 1. At the Odeon, Elke Sommer goes through various stages of nudity in ‘The wicked dreams of Paula Schultz’ to aptly display her acting ability. This finishes tonight to make way for the man with no name in his latest and poorest picture. Our hero gets lost in the turmoil of this almost-aspectacular as we have the Bad and the Ugly getting even billing with the Good. The ultrarealistic brutality of the preceding flicks is missingdso the brilliant photography and sardonic humor. The three metonymies vie for a hidden cache of cash, playing an active part in the civil war and killing indiscriminately on the way to the showdown. Much too long and a little overdone in parts, it is still good entertainment and worth seeing.

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Cream: Disraeli gears Polydor, List $4.98 performance: lively, driving recording: usually good stero quality: fair to poor ” Cream, now two years old, have not soured but considerably improved with age since their’ Fresh Cream’ album. This outing includes their latest single, ‘Sunshine of your love’ and 9 other cuts, most of which are driving hard-rock beat blues, charged with the brilliant guitar work of Eric C lapton. Unfortunately, included are an old tavern song, ‘Mother’s lament’ and (We’re going wrong’, imitating the Mothers of Invention. Bothare dragging and strictly one-shot. Otherwise the album is musically well done and recommended. Technically the lead guitar is at times overpowered by rhythm (as on ‘Ulysses’) and the stereo is almost unnoticeable and contrio butes nothing, which is unusualfor Polydor. Blues, psychedelic or rock?

Petula Clark: The other man’s grass is always greener Wmer Bros-7 Arts, list $4.98 performance: warm recording; good stereo quality; very good Inimitable. That’s PetulaC lark, This seventh American release album shows her off well vocally, but falls down on some arrangement s. Along with the title song, *Cat in the window’ and the first French Warner Bros. number,

Rip-roaring

-

fresh

‘Isle de France,’ are included, Pet’s versions of ‘The last waltz’ ) an up-tempo ‘I could have danced all night’ and ‘Smile’ are among the 11 selections. There are also two by Tony Hatch; ‘The other man’s grass’ and ‘At the crossroads,’ performed with true Petula Clark feeling and depth. Since ‘Color my world’, Pet’s two albums have been similar in that the material and arrangement seems oriented to an older audience, and her performances less enthusiastic than when Tony was doing the arrangini and producing,,

hero is unreal

by Dale Martin Chevron staff

Ramage and the drum beat by Dudley Pope. Ryerson $4.95 At last Dudley Pope has produced a sequel to his‘Ramage’, andproved himself the best living writer of naval tales about the Napoleonic wars. In this rip-roaring adventure, Ramage captures a Spanish frigata with his cutter, acts as a spy in

Spain and damages a Spanish shipof-the-line at the battle of Cape St. Vincent. Ramage is an active and thoughtful hero with perhaps too much of the modern in him. The book is gripping and stirring but lacks the tragedy necessary to make novels resemble reality. None the less, this is one of the best pieces of adventure fiction to appear this season.


A page /

of five

tanFASStic pix

“Calvalleria RusticanopeneY or “Try and Rigoletto that’kame off as the crowning performance. In this segment Pinhead Needles, pkyed , by Dr. Ken Fryer avtd Barb Cline as Mame try to persuade Georgie (Jack Pearse) to join the architectural school. .

Bev Pollock-one of the Nite-sings a Phils Ochs three such performers Charlie Robertson, and images slide show.

four serious performers in FASS composition, Changes. The other were Dr. Murray Young, Poor Dr. Aubrey Diem with his city

Our favorite knight dines elegantly in the sophisticated atmosphere of FASS. Paul Frappier uses his cohort Brenda Wilson as the butt of several jokes.

Counselling services solves the problems of everyone,’ including a virgin, three over-sexed and undernourished engineers and a transvestite. Friday,

February

16, 1968 (8:31)

477

7


ontier

-

cher

borer

e

at’s his classroom? by D. John for

CUP

Lynn

b oxcur

Extra gangs, as well as logging In the spring of 1963, a CNR camps and mines, use a large train lurched to a stop in the wildamount of new immigrant labor. erness somewhere in northern These immigrants-Italians, Canada. A young man got off, Portuguese, Poles, Slavs+ll and the train chugged off around need a basic knowledge of English the corner, out of sight. if they are tofindworkinCanada% It was cold, and checking his industrial society. No other orwatch Vernon Eccles saw that he was early. It was, 2:30 a.m. gan&&ion reaches them, but Frontier College has been doing Four railway cars stood on the job since 1901. a siding, and Eccles looked for some form of life. Finding none, Frontier College annually tours he climbed into a car, stumbled Canada’s campuses early in Febaround in the dark for a bit, and ruary to recruit laborer-teachers, finally curled up on the floor to They ask for men-not milksops. sleep. You’ve got to be able to win a A few hours later, he sensed he man% respect by doing a day’s was being watched. He opened work at his shoulder. Then, at day’s ’ his eyes to find eight-craggy, end, you have to go to workagain, inquisitive faces looking down on him. Eccles stared back, also confusBy combining teaching and manual labor 6 7 year old Frontier College is able to provide at ed. Finally, he struggled to his least a minimal form of education to many in Canada’s northern areas. feet, and introduced himself as the laborer-teacher from Frontier College. Eccles, a West Indian studying at Montreal’s Sir George Williams University, was to live, work, and play with these men for the next three months. An economist for Canadian i Industries Ltd. inMontreal, Eccles Will he have a better chance, by Ian Morrison laughs ruefully about that early cussion on the use of yeast in bread. We spent for Canadian University Press spring morning in 1963. Friday at my place learning how to make bread.” this time on problems of English, “1 must have come as quite a FROBISHER BAY, NWT (CUP&Tuesday #‘Now we eat home-made bread every morning or arithmetic, or geometry. And shock to those me%” he said, morning at nine, twelve Eskimos, books in hand, trek at coffee break,99 he says. the men must feel they can come c4particularly when the first time across the snow to a small house in Frobisher Bay. “Attendance has been almost one-hundred to you with some of theirproblems. they saw me I was curledup under They are participants in a basic adult educapercent thus far,” says Denker, “in spiteof some a table in the dining car.” “Each week I send money back tion course run by Frontier College in thisBaffin particular features of Eskimo Hfe. For example last Eccles was one of about 90 to Portugal for my wife,” a man Island community-one-thousand air miles north of week, Kotako, 23, was away for two days.1 found laborer-instructors working on Mont real. tells you, “But the government out later that he was blunting caribou and was lost in railway rcextra99 gangs, in mines, Michael Denker, now on leave f rom hisuniverwants me to pay tax on that,Do a blizzard.y9 and in logging camps that summer. I have to?‘9 sity studies, has been running this project for the There are two women and ten men on this He worked along with the past six weeks, special course, now in its sixth week. You can find out. men by day, and in their spare Many of Frobisher Bay’s adults have had Denker worked with Frontier College once “1 want to go to Toronto to work. time he taught school. His classalmost no opportunity for education. “They canno before as a labourer-teacher at the GriffithMine longer live by the traditional skills-hunting and Project in northwest Ontario. Because of his says Denker, “but they are unprepared trapping,” earlier success he was chosen to represent the collfor the new urban life now available incommunities ege at Frobisher Bay. like this one.” Frontier College is a Toronto-based adult Denker spends most of his teaching time on education organization. It sends young university basic English and arithmetic. “When I first came gradudes into communities in northern Canada here I was unable to communicate with my basic to work as labourers and to teach in their spare level students,” says Denker. time. He began teaching English to this group. Frontier College intends to run more special “‘We can now talk together in simple English,99 projects like this one in Northern Canadian comhe says. “This is all the proof I want of initial sucmunities, cess.” Few other organizations are skilled at One of his students is the Reverend Noah teaching adults at this basic level. (6 Frontier College Nashook, 52, an Anglican minister from Igloolik. has had 67 years of experience in this field to back Reverend Nashook came down to Frobisher specially us up#*’ says Denker. to take the course. Frontier College ran a similar project earlier Atcheak, 27, from Cape Dorset, andMosesie this year in Frobisher Bay, from February to May. Jamesie, 28, from Broughton Island, have also At that time, Bob Wiele, now studying for a master’s travelled hundreds of miles in order to take part. degree in adult education at the University of “The other students come from F robisher Toronto, ran the project. “The older people tend to have Bay,f9 says Denker. Four of the students in that first course were the least contact with English. I have divided the able to proceed to vocational courses in theSouth. classroom into two groups: one at a beginning The project is financed by the department of After working days on a CNR extra gang Andrew Bland, level; the other - more advanced.” Indian affairs and northern development, which Frontier College teacher-laborer, spends several hours each Since 1954, the government has greatly also pays a living allowance to the students, CU!’ Photo night instructing immigrants in basic English, expanded the school system for children in the eastIn the evenings, Denker’s house is a ern Arctic, but people over 20 have had little second home for the students where they cango to room was a boxcar, andhis subject What’s the pay there?” You9ve opportunity for education. do their homework, to watch films, and to talk inforwas mostly basic English, a got to explain wages and costs of “One of the purposes of this project,” says mally over coffee. special construction of English living in a city, and about the Can+ Denker, ‘ 4is to give these people a basic education to Many of the children of the community also which depends on a core vocabulary ada Manpower program forfinding prepare them for vocational training in the South.” crowd into Denker’s small house. “They like my Most of the students are literate in Eskimo of about 1,100 words and ahandful jobs. place,‘) he says, b8because it has a rug.” The of verbs to make it work. syllabics. So the idea of awritten language is not children call him ‘Mikee’. A worker wants to learn how to new to them. “They catch on very quickly,” “I really enjoy the work here,” says Denker, become an auto mechanic. He also taught arithmetic, how says Denker. “1 hope this project will be able to continue and to to make out an income tax form, YOU can get information on One problem he has encountered is teaching take in more adult students.” Canati history, politics and courses, schools, and financial the importance of correct word order in English. Frontier College hopes to continue this proinstitutions and any other subject assistance. ‘“Pauloosie from Frobisher, explained to me ject when it comes up for renewal in January. for which there was a demand. that in Eskimo you can place the words of a sentence If you run Into a problem, don’t The first white-man came here in 1576. The work was hard-railway in almost any order so long as you don’t leave worry. The head office of the Martin Frobisher was looking for gold. He found no d‘extra gangs” work from dawn to words out.” college is 1,000 miles away in gold but kidnapped some Eskimos, whom he took dusk. They replace old track. Denker has also introduced practical science Toronto. They can advise you, back to England, where they died. The ballast track by raising it experiments in the classroom. On one occasion he but most problems have to be “We discussed in class the irony of naming out of the track bed where it has put a container with awarm water and yeast mixture solved on the spot. this town after Frobisher,” says Denker. “My been pounded over the years by on the table. hope is that projects like this one can assist the Looking for an interesting thousands of passing freights. ((We corked it and soon the air-pressure blew Eskimo to help himself and to compete successfully summer? And they work hard. the cork forcefully to the ceiling. This led to a disin the modern world.”

rading

education

472 The CHEVRON


hnocr

rodU bY

The oscilloscope is regarded as a symbol of the Technocractic state. The symmetry of the wave form stands for harmony, the circle for perfection, the absence of sound for peace. A perfect blend of matter which produces results unattainable by human mind alone.

A bare and dismantled suggestion box can only mean a perfect state has been reached. Has the Village already acheived utopia? No improvement necessary?

Order and peace reign in a society which keeps human involvement at a minumum. tion is provided for all, the basic needs are cared for, the society lacks nothing.

The “Condemn, don’t love� ideology produces a society of zombies working for and under the control of their supreme god-the State. A life in which emotions have no place.

Direc-

Lack of communication among faculties is predominant in a state where all members have been job-oriented. No one is interested in anything not directly related to his own field. Has this already developed? No need to in&form outsiders? Friday,

February

Ef

1968 (8:31/

473


Judo

MR. JOS. A. FRIEDMAN 6655 Cote

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF JEWISH COMMUNITY CAMPS des Neiges No.260 Montreal

Will be conducting

interviews

THURSDAY,

26, Que.

for Summer Camp Staff Positions on

7th, 1968

MARCH

Starting at 9:00 a.m. at LIBRARY BUILDING STUDENT PLACEMENT SERVICE University of Waterloo Tel: 744-6111 for application and appointment. Openings for Specialists, Section Head;, Counsellors and Nurse.

NEW FOR SPRING little sling heels in fashionable

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ATHLETIC INTERCOLLEGIATE

HOCKEY

HOCKEY Fri., Feb. 16, 8:15 Fri., Feb. 23 8:15

BILLIARDS Tues., Feb. 20 Twin 7:OO pm

Queens vs Warriors pm Waterloo Arena McGill vs Warriors pm Waterloo Arena

BASKETBALL Fri., Feb. 16 Warriors Wed., Feb. 21 Warriors WRESTLING FG Feb*

at Western at Windsor

23O.&AA. Champion-

ships at Guelph

WOMEN’S SPORT DAYS Fri., Sat., Feb. 16, 17 Volleyball Championship at MacDonald Fri., Sk, Feb. 23, 24 Basketball Championship at Waterloo [NTUMURAL BASKETBALL Tuesday, February 2Oth, - CourtA6:30- 7:20 pm Eng. Vs 7:3& 8:20 pm Renison %30- 9:20 pm South vs 6:307:30-

10

474

- Court B 7:20 pm Math. 8:20 pm Con. Paul’

The CHEVRON

1968 Grads vs CO-op Phys,Ed

PLAYOFFS City

Billiard:

swIMMLNG Mon., Feb. 19, Preliminaries Thurs., Feb. 22 - Finals At Breithaupt Centre, lo:30 pn RECREATIONAL HOCKEY

Monday,

February

19

10:00 pm Turbines 11:OO pm Fryers cossaks Thursday, February 10:00 pm Misagros 11:00 pm Math 3A

Bolsen

vs Grad Psy Flyers vs 22 vs Machines vs. Grad Psy

BASKETBALL Tuesday, February 20th 8:30 pm 3-ArCivil vs 3&-Mech 9:30 pm Falcons vs Gap The Biggest vs Engine Room Wednesday, February Zlst, 9:30 Pm Oflent vs 3-A-Civil Hawks vs 3-EMech

SKATING vs Arts Gre. vs St. Every Thursday Afternoon s l:oo - 3:00 pm - Waterloo A rem

opponents

Lloyd Steinke shows fine ,form as he tosses John Jacobs to the mat. These two helped the judo Warriors to a secondplace finish in intercollegiate championships held in MOBtreal. The team placed in *five of six events. tie and came out in second place (in the black belt championships.3 Over-all the judo team has shown a remarkable improvement in the past year and the coach experts even better performance next year.

sounds

The only team member that is lea.ving is Lloyd Steinke, who has done very well in his three years with the team. The team works out each week& the Hatashita judo club in Waterloo.

off

bug in the OQAA

li.ng championships at St. Jerome’s high school in Kitchener. SO if YOU notice big Ed prowling around St. J’s The Ontario-Quebec Athletic Association is the gym tomorrow, you’ll know he’s after some fancystrongest college conference in the country. In the dans in leotards. three major sports, football, hockey and basketball, *** the Canadian champion always seems to be a member It’s too early to be thinking about next year for of this grouping. the hockey Warriors, especially when they stillhave It% little wonder then that Waterloo Lutheran a chance to take the league title. If they beat out the basketball coach Howard Lockhart, in his desire to third-place finisher (probably McMaster) in the be part of the best, has applied for entry in the O&AA, semi-final they get a final crack at Toronto’s super Perennial champs in the Ontario Intercollegiate Aths Blues (assuming they survive their playoff, aswe’re letic Association, the Golden Hawks would enhance sure they will). the already high quality of league play. Nevertheless it’s pleasant to think of the players What bugs us, though, is that, of this powerful who will no longer be skating for Ton Watts’ Blueaggregatiog only one team can go on to compete in shirts come (682 69. the national finals, The Blues’ defense will suffer the most, with The representatives of the Ottawa-St. Lawrence, goalie John Wrigley and defenders Pete Speyer, Bob Western Canada, Maritime and OlkA conferences Hamilton and Doug Jones due to leave. Up front invariably suffer humiliating defeats at the hands of Brian Jones and Bob McClelland will be just memthe OQAA champs. ories next season. ‘It’s ludicrous to have those teams vie for the The big question marks, however, have to beGord ’ Canadian title while better teams are sitting on the Cunningham and Ward Passi. These longtime &al= sidelines. warts may decide to pack it in and move on or they Lutheran’ s withdrawal from the OIAA would furmay just as well stay for one last fling. ther worsen the situation. Without them, Blues will be vulnerable. With With such a loaded league the OQAA should be them, it may well be the same old story for the rest allowed to send two teams to the national tournaof the league, including Warriors. After all, coach ment. This could be done jf it were split into two Don Hayes will also be bidding farewell to some key divisions on a fair yet geographically practicalbasis. men. The league actually does have westernandeastAre there any over-age Junior crA” players ern divisions already (and woefully imbalanced ones around who would like to play college hockey next at that) but only one team emerges f ram this setup to 2 year? go on to contest national honors. Let’s have the OQAA executive make an issue of this before the Canadian Intercollegiate Athletic The surest first place for Waterloo and we’re union, not going to get it. That’s about the size of it. Then the Canadian playoffs won’t be 50 anticliBob Finlay, the school’s Jim-Ryun-in-residmatic to the O&AA finals. * *s ence, would have been a lead-pipe cinch to win a race or two at the college trackandfield finals corn= Coach Ed DeArmon of the Warrior wrestling ing up March 1. Yet because he’s committed to run squad is a top-notch recruiter whose efforts should for the Toronto Olympic Club in another meet later begin paying dividends next year. the same -day, Finlay will be forced to forego the colHe didn’t have a chance to recruitanygrapplers lege meet. for this year’s team as he only arrived on campus The bitterness of it all is that the ‘other’ meet in September. will be held in the same building. Tomorrow he can bag some big plus at the Curse, curse and more curse. Central Western Ontario Secondary Schools wrestChevron sports

SCHEDULES

sports

Another by Archie

meals,

belts

MONTREAL-Teams from six universities completed in the annual OQAA judo championships at the University of Montreal last weekend. The schools were Windsor, Queens, McMaster, McGill, Montreal, and Waterloo. Participants from the University of Waterloo included Lloyd Steinke (blue belt), John Jacobs (green), Tom Berry (orange), Brim an b-vine (yellow), Dan Moon (yellow), Dennis Kerr (white), andKen Koprich (white). The team was under the expert coaching of Steve Harris (first dan black belt) and John Hatashita (fourth dan). The University of Montreal emerged the winner inthe team championship s. Waterloo finished a close second. In the individual championships, Waterloo showed its superiority. In the six possible divisions, based on belts and weight, Waterloo took two firsts, two seconds and one third. In the blue-brown belt division, Ken Koprich, who was filling in though only a white belt, emerged in third place in the lightweight class. In the middleweight class, Lloyd Slxdnke placed second, af ew points behind a brown belt from the Uni= versity of Montreal. The lower belt division was a clean-up for Waterloo. Tom Berry won the lightweight class championship and John Jacobs came in a close second. In the middleweight class, Brian Irvine easily outclassed his opponentsforafirst place finish. Steve Harris fought a tough bat-

Chevron

Private RM $347.50 Semi-private RM $310.00

teum


C/h&

second

place

VVaffiors

split

with

Uof T’, Guelph Cooke leads in 6-4 win

Poor showing in Toronto The name of the game is hockey. It consists of three 20-minute periods. When the Warriors learn that they have to play the full time period against the U of T Blues, without letting up1 they stand a good chance of defeating the Blues. Last Friday the Warriors didn’t start playing hockey until the second period, but by that time the Blues had put six goals past Dave Quarrie and led 6-1. Before the first half of the second period was over, the Blues had extended their lead to 8-1. Then the Warriors came to life, outscoring the Blues 4-l in the last half of the game. Last year’s OQAA scoring champ Paul Laurent led the Blues with no less than four goals. Linemate Gord Cunningham added two, while Murray Stroud, Brian St. John and Brian Jones each found the range once. The Warriors leading scorer Terry Cooke scored twice for the u of w, Singletons went to Stu Eccles, Ron Smith and Bob Murdoch. In the first period the Warriors looked more like the Guelph Gryphons than a second place club o They continuously gave up the puck but even worse, after giving it up didn’t attempt to get it back, The Blues exhibited their accurate shooting once again but from the stands it looked as though several of the Blues’ goals could have been stopped by Quarrie if he had played his angles better. But Quarrie wasn’t the only one at fault. Not one of the Warriors was capable of getting the puck out of his own end and for a while it looked as though the fans’ cry of ‘We want 20’ might come true. When the Warriors finally s ta rted playing hockey they showed that the Blues were human. It was visible to most people that the Blues were tired by the start of the third period while the Warriors were fairly fresh. The Warriors lost the services of defenceman Bob Murdoch. Murdoch injured his shoulder when he ran into the goalpost after scoring on John Wrigley. He willprobably be out for at least the rest of the regular season. It was a rough night for Murdoch, earlier in the game he was cross -checked by Brian Jones while he was trying to get up. Jones received a five-minute mjaor for his excellent display of sportsmanship. Things like that are bound to happen though when you get officiating as there was and as there will be every time in Toronto. It was the first time that this reporter has ever seen a Unesman call penalties which he had no business doing, especially since he was having so much trouble calling off-sides. A-F TERT_HOUGHTS ****the Warriors did receive some good news last week. Vince Mulligan had his cast removed from his andle and should be skating by today. ****the Blues outshot the Warriors 47-26. ****the next gamefor thewarriors is tonight against the Queen’s Golden Gaels. Game time is 8:30 at Waterloo arena.

by John

Thompson

Chevron sports

Warrior Doug Jodoin closes in on Toronto goalie John Wrigley as Joe Modeste looks on in last Fridays game in Toronto. Warriors lost 9-5. Warriors beat Guelph Wednesday to clinch second place. Chevron photo by Fred Walters

Lose to Western

Team by Tom

effort

Rajnovich

Chevron sports

The Warrior basketball team played two games in the lastweek, and the games couldn’t have been more contrasting. Last Friday the W arrfors-enterrained the Western Mustangs with a sloppy game by any standards. The shooting and playmaking of both teams was poor, but the Waterloo squad came out on the short end of a 53-48 score. The team seemed to come alive against McMas ter Wednesday , as they breezed to a 89-71 victory over the usually tough Marauders. Actually the game was close until the Warriors blew it wfde open with seven minutes left as they stopped the Mat team cold. The victory put the Warrior squad into a three-way tie for first place with the Western Mustangs and the Windsor Lancers. Waterloo plays Western tonightand Windsor Wednesday. It would be a little ridiculous to try to name any stars in the Western game, None of the players

beats

for either team stood out although Lockhart and Glober got 12 points each. In the Western game the Muso* tangs took the lead early in the and hung on for the win.’ P-me Neither team shot well as the score would indicate. In fact the Warriors only hit 27 percent, by far their worst game of the year. The hard-luck McMaster Marauders, looking for their second win of the season, managed tostay with the Warriors for most of the game, but lost it in the dying minutes The Warriors took a quick lead in the first half but the Macmen stayed with them. The Warriors managed to build a ten point lead with three minutes left in the half but the Marauders got hot to cut the lead to 35-33 at the half. In the second period the teams fought it out on even terms until Andy Martinson, Mat’s leading rebounder, fouled out with 7:15 left. This enabled the Warriors to go on to the final 89-71 win. Leading the way for coach Dan l

Mat

Pugliese’s charges was big Sol Glober . Sol hit for 32 points and 11 rebounds . The JV team played three games during the last week and, although they played well in allthree, only came out on top inthelast ofthese. Last Friday the Pioneers tangled with the Western JV team and lost by a close 71-68 count. At one time the Pioneers were behind by 20 points but they narrowed the margin only to fall short of the win. Al Haehn led the JVs with 19 points and a strong two-way effort. The next day the squad travelled to New York state and were defeated by the Genesee State squad 55-49. Dave Idiens led all scorers with 18. Haehn came through with 12 and Dave Shaloff scored ll points and pulled down 16 rebounds . The fine play of the JVs finally paid off when they met the Mat JVs Wednesday. The Pioneers gained revenge for an earlier loss to the Mat squad by trouncing them 94-64.

Warrior starters (I to r) Bryan Brown, Neil Rourke, Stan Talensnick, and Doug Lockhart (front) congratulate Sol Glober on his fine 32 pt. performance in WednesdayS 89-71 win. Friday,

GUELPH--Terry Cooke paced a third-period rally Wednesday to turn a dull Warriors loss into a dull 6-4 loss for Guelph. The U of Guelph Gryphons, who --lost to the hockey Warriors ll-1 in Waterloo--January 18,scared-the Warriors by capitalizing on some Warrior miscues early in the game. W ith Dan Hostick serving a tripping penalty, Rickard of the Gryphons first scored at thel:52 mark by firing one between the pads of Warrior goaltender Dave Quarrie. Don Mervyn quickly knotted the game at one apiece two minutes later, with a blistering slapshot that caught the corner on Guelph goalie Jim Horton. But, 23 seconds later Johnston and Mike Doersam teamed up to give Guelph a 2-1 lead. This stood up until the eight-minute mark when Mervyn tallied his second of the period with a quick backhand after a faceoff. And so, the Warriors, although leading the play in the last half of the first period, were held to a 2-2 draw. At the midway mark of the second period, Rickard struck agains wierdly. He scored by deflecting a shot, which Quarrie juggled into the air, over his head, and down just inside the goal line. Following a tripping penalty to John Rappolt of the Warriors, Guelph pressed doggedly and could have opened a two-goal lead midway through the period but for some stellar netminding by Quarrie. Warriors bounced back to even the game at three apiece when captain Ron Smith poked in Doug Jodoin’s rebound. Jodoin--thedigger on this play, displayed some great hustle in a determined effort to carry the puck into the Gryphon end. The third period was all Warriors as Cooke struck quickly for a pair of goals. Cruising in onhis rightwing slot at the 1:53 mark, he drilled a shot that Horton is still looking for. Four minutes later, Cooke scored thewinner bypicking the top corner from 15 feet out. Leading scorer for the Warriors, Cooke almost earned a legitimate hat-trick as he again broke in-several seconds later. But Horton stopped him. Smith rounded out thescoringfor the Warriors with a screen shot that gave Horton--no chance, The Warriors now have eleven wins against two losses for second spot in OQAA league play. That’s one point behind the undefleated University of Toronto Blues. Cooke, with his two goals and a pair of assists, advanced in the scoring race to a total of 28 points. Don Mervyn and Ron Smithlikewise scored two each for theWarriors, while Rickard with a pair and Johnston and Procktor with one apiece completed the Gryphon scoring. Warrior goalie Dave Quarrie stopped 26 of 30 shots, while Jim Horton for Guelph turned aside 47 of 53. Next start for the Warriors is tonight when they host the eighthplace Queen’s, Game time is 8:15 at the Waterloo Arena.

February

16, 1968 (8:31)

475

1 1


Wutedoo-OQ by Karen

WC/A

Wanless

champs?

The girls proved themselves this year when they beat the Windsor Lancerettes who had been champions for the last two years. The team consists entirely of first year students except for Bonnie Bacvar, Eleanor Xoop and Allison Edwards. These girls are all in their year with the team and thus have a special desire to win,

The Bananas have a volleyball team. Team should be underlined because that is the reason they have a good chance of winning in Montreal this weekend. They are a team, The girls have been working toward this tournament all year, from doing exercises during the Christmas holidays to practicing on Sundavs.

ATTENTION:

sports shorts

The rest of the team are first year phsy-ed’ers. Since they all will be leaving campus for work terms after Christmas next year this might be their last chance in two years for the championship, With this type of incentive stop them?

who can

Besides determination, the girls have a good coach in Pat Davis.

Cigarette

Smokers

If smoking cigarettes is a problem for you here is an do something about it. The psychology department is conducting treatment eliminating cigarette smoking. The treatment will demand approximately 10 hours completed by the end of the school year. There is no service. If you are interested call

opportunity research

Carling’s rugby club? Election of officers of The University of Waterloo Rugby Club was held Feb. 5 in the reception room of Carling Breweries. In return for the excellent hospitality, the fellows generously helped the campany to rid itself of its old stock of unwanted brew. Between rounds of Toby, Red Cap, Black, and Cincy the following people were elected to office. President, Murray Brooker Honorary President: Dr. T.E. Gough Vice President: George Tuck Captain. Ed Murphy Treasurer: Peter Secretary Watson Manager: Rick Franey Entertainment: Russ Crokoszynski Publicity: Dan Monteith

to on

and will be charge for this

Scott leads varsity MISS HOEGLER AT 744-6111

LOCAL 2880

The OQAA curling championships are being held in Guelph today and tomorrow. John Scott is there once again. Scott will be representing the University of Waterloo for the third time. He won the O&AA championship in 1963 but last year lost out in the semi-finals. Scott has most of last years team back again. Returnees are lead

The electees will have a difficult task in matching the performance of the retiring group. A tribute is owing to last year’s executive for a terrific job of organizing and opcrating the club. It has leaked from Russ (sieve) Krokoszynski that the rugger spir= it will be maintained during the off season by a bachanal at the grad house in early March. Rugger will be offered during the summer on a seven-a-side basis, both intramurally and in competition with other universities, if enough interest is shown. Anyone who wffl be in the city and wishes to play is advised to contact Murray Brooker at 742, 1269 or George Tuck at 576-9257, Congratulations to Steve Shelley and Dave Walters on being chosen for all-Ontario trials.

curlers John McDonald and second Ted Chase. New to the team this year is Vic Fenton, replacing Jim Hill who graduated. Last year% finalists, McMaster and Western, are again expected to be strong but Scott’s rink could have a few surprises. Scott beat Peter Hindle’s rink in the U of W play-downs to gain the right to represent Waterloo.

Pros know talent Three members of the Warrior football squad for the last three years may be playing for teams in the Canadian Football League this season. At last week’s college draft in Vancouver three Waterloo stars due to graduate this spring were selected.

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Following a tiring five-hour bus trip, the Warrior track and field team could not be faulted if it had performed Sluggishly at last Thursday% indoor meet in Ypsilanti, Michigan. Yet the Warriors placed ten competitiors among the top six finishers in various events. Most events in the meet held on the campus of E astern Michigan University had more than 40 entries. ‘%onsidering that it was our first indoor meet, I was quite pleased with the results,” commented coach Neil Widmeyer. The leading Warrior wasGeorge Neeland, who had to run ten times before the night was over. He place ed third in the 70-yard high hurdles with a clocking of 8.8 seconds and fifth in the low hurdles at the same distance. Bob Munday, Dennis McGann, and Neeland all reached the semifinals of the 60-yard dash. McGann managed to finish fifth in the final in 6.5 seconds.

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476 The CHEVRON

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The versatile McCann also gained a fourth in the triple jump, leaping 42’ 10”. ’ Warriors’ sprint medley relay team of Munday, McGann, Neeland and Bruce Walker placed fourth in its race. Running in the lOOO= yard event as well, Walker finished sixth. John Kneen, a grad student from Australia, ran third in the threemile event. Another strong effort came from Steve Wyndham, who placed fifth in the one-mile run. Wyndhamwon his heat in 4~30.6 but the standings were decided on the basis of heat time. Similarly Dave Arsenault won his heat of the 500-yard run but placed fifth overall. A toss of 38’5” in the 16-lb. shot put event was good enough to give Gary Stevason ninth spot, Warriors* next competition comes two weeks from todayatthe college championships in Toronto’s Maple Leaf Gardens.

Of The

COMMITTEE of the Federation of Students needs people to participate understanding of the problems, and seeking their solution, Modern Languages Building at 8: 00 p.m.

or contact SUSAN PETERS at the FEDERATION

12

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Track team impresses

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Quarterback Bob McKillop chosen by Toronto Argonauts. KilWs fine punting along

his steady signal-calling will aid his bid to gain a berth on the team. Brian Irvine, a fullback, was grabbed by Calgary Stampeders. Irvine is a Kitchener native. Versatile lineman Doug Shuh, an offensive guard and linebacker, went to Ottawa Rough Riders. Like Irvine, Shuh comes from the Twin Cities. It appears that none of the boys will be draft-dodgers and fail to .report.

OFFICE ext. 2814

in its programs.


Whcfsor ’piof calls for facdty not student power WINDSOR (CUP-dent power hell-the president of the Candian Association of University Teachers wants faculty power. Dr. Howard McCurdy, who teaches biology at the University of Windsor, suggested professionals of any institution should have the most say in running that instit~tion, and in a university the pros are the profs. “In fact the addition of students to the senate in response to student pressure may have been premature. It was done in advance of what should be major reforms in the university government structure,” said McCurdy. d’professors should have the majority of seats on any committee

or organization which formulates academic poky,” he continued. McCurdy thinks students tend to group faculty and administration in the same group, which isn’t true. ‘*Students and faculty donOt know each other, don’t know each other’s views.” He suggested student powervictories mean students will have to accept more control over their activity from other parts of the university structure. “If students become involved in the government of the university they will become part of the gang; and when one part of the gang does something, the other members of the gang ought to have some say in what that part does,”

15 words only 3Oc each additional word 5c extra. PERSONAi First United Square, welcomes yiu. Sunday worship services 9:30 am, 11:00 am, Ksiros: 7:30 pm. Transport& tion? Call 745-6467 or 745-7919. Happy blrthday, Gary. Consider haviw received another cinnamon heart; See you Saturday. Love, SHARYN

-_

thing materials to teachers.Grolier Co. Ltd., Contact reception desk. Waterloo Lutheran for inter views before March 1. Four girls want a ride to Quebec on or about February 23. Wflhelp pay for the gas. Please phone Penny Pollock at 742-9656. Datel ne Toronto - Two promiscuous York wenches (Dot and Sue) lookina for ilicit relatiOIIShiDScall Dot 757-5779. TO MARLENE: I humbly request you to accept my heartfelt and sincere apologies for the unfntentional inferences created by my unthinking remarks. TERRY Take a break-take 5 girls out for a Sunday-driver gets his ‘%unday’* free - Call 578-2726. Attention: Cigarette smokers. If smoking cigarettes is a problem for you here is an opportunity to do something about it. Thepsychology dept is conducting treatmri,t research on the elimination of smoking cigarettes. The treatment wil demand approximately 10 hours and wil be completed by the end of the school year. There is no charge’for thi’s service. it you are interested call Miss Hoeglar at 744-6111 extension 2660. LOST Hughs Owens them-eng SlideNlS Name and ID inside case. Please

Phone 744-6111 local 2812 Deadline Wednesday 5 p.m.

call George 743-9137 tier 6 pm. Reward1 ACCOMODATIONS 2-bedroom student furnished ap artment - ln#uiing desks - available for summer term. Phone 745-2474. Apartment to sublet May 1 to Scot l/66. Unfurnished two bedrooms. Contact Mary Wlffen, 163 Elgln Crescent. Waterloo. 74%9061. Apartnient for reit for summer term-l bedroom furnished orunfurnished. 2-minute walk from university. ‘Call 578-3906. 1 double room, single beds, kitchen and washroom facilities. Call 74P 1526 or apply 91 Blight-wood Road, Waterloo. Split-level apartment for rent3 bedrooms, livingroom, kitchen, 1 l/2 washrooms. $205 - April 1. Call Harrison - 2566. One-bedroom apartment for summer term-five-minute walk from university - 573-5312. Furnished apartment available for summer term. Call 744-5882, write 5 Amos Ave., Apt. #LO, Waterloo. SUMMER TERM STUDENTS. Iapartment, 5bedroom furnished campus, $145/ minute walk from month, Call 576-0717. FOR SALE 1960 Studebaker, standard shift $75. Good ~nnlng condition. Phone Albert Baker l-2 PM weekdays. 5761290. Diamond ring for sale, Phone 57& 4716. 1959 Volkswagen. $100 or best cash offer. Phone 575-8975. 1962 Cadilaodl condition, ful power equipment, new tires, low mileage, 15 MPG, $1695. Call 57a1074.

Why they want

.

to rule the world--part

I

military-industrial-academic complex that emerged out of the cold war. It is this group that is least willing to admit that the cold war has ended. Typical of its- thinking is the philosophy of consensus which prevents radical answers to problems. It insists that solutions include aspects favorable to all, even vested interests. While CLF is the dominant way of thinking in the United States, it does not represent the majority of Americans. They are divided among the radicals, the blacks, the idealists who follow sargent Shriver, the wishywashy middleclass liberals, the Redbaiters-and-haters and the amorphous blob of people who just don’t care,

To understand the world situation it is necessary to real&e the United States wants to be the dominant power in the world and that its foreign policy is directed towards, at the very least, maintaining the status-quo. The United States is the most powerful nation today. It’s fair to say it isthe only first-rate power in the world. The other members of the thermonuclear club can claim, at best, to be numberbnean&a-half. Pll try to present a few preliminary thoughtson why the United States has the foreign policy it does from the point of view of the makeup of the U.S.

The Americans see themselves as having the best social, economic and political system in the world. They wish to preserve this system and to extend its influence to an American world empire. . This whole attitude arises out of the dominant system of thought in the U.S.: avariety of liberalism that might be called corporate-liberal-fascism. Of course CLF is an emotional name but does America really differ from any other system that has enslaved (in the broadest sense) man? I think not. CLF is a product of the modernformof capitalism. This new capitalism is still fond of making ‘money. But this is viewed as along-term goal when compared to a more immediate objective: corporate

On the international front CLF has its largest impact. Its members are interested in money to be made both abroad andinU.S. defense spending. These people want to see Americaprosper at the expense of the Bolivian tin miner, the Dominican f ruit picker, and the Chilean copper smelter (not to mentiontheCanadian auto parts worker who thinks his country is independent.) CLF has an ideology based on the Red menace, more recently redescribed as a yellow peril. This ideology does not say that Americans should be ti gain& those systems which are unlike the American system. Rather it says that systems trying to sup plant the American system or systems friendly to it should be destroyed, whether or not the new system is hostile. This was the rationale behind sending the Marines into the Dominican Republic. It is this system that has put half a million Americans and more in Southeast Asia. This is also the system that backs Franc0 and other “free” nations This ideology also permits friendly relations w& good communists like Tito when necessary. Corporate-liberal-fascism as a system is a very odd beastie indeed, One of its habits is to deny its existence or its necessity. In fact most of its believers do not even know they are believers or that they are members of a group. . I hope in future weeks to speak of CLF% successes and failures, its value as a system and its prospects of survival.

SllrViVal.

This need for survival has somewhat tempered American capitalism and led to the present American welfare state. The trend in American welfare is to make the recipient of welfare a good consumer (but not a producer), Note that Robert Theobold’s book on the guaranteed income is called ‘Free men and free markets’. Corporate-liberal-fascism is not so friendly abroad. The United ‘Fruit Company is not much friendlier now than its predecessors of 50 years ago* In fact corporate-liberal-fascism as it now exists is one reason for the United States’ reputation as a neo-colonialist power. American investment abroad is directed at aiding the U.S. economy no matter what the cost to the developing nations. Corporate-liberal-fascism has its roots in the

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February

16, 1968 (8:3 1) 477

13

_


Tagging parked

the errors in the story

May I correct a few factual errors in your parking story (Feb.

a.

.

First, I am not the president of the faculty association, I am rather a member of the executive committee (and only as of last week). The new president of the faculty association is Prof. Bob Huang, succeeding Prof. HughMacKinnon. Second, I did not say that we met with President Hagey. We talked only with acting president Howard Petch. Third, I would like to clarify my position with respect to the “parking committee” and its reIt is correct that Dr. Petch port. established an investigating committee, of which I was a member. The committee% report is merely statistical data compiled by the business office. As such, it does not include any judgment on the accuracy or propriety of the data and does not include any recommendations for changing either the cost figuresor the policy itself. Such judgments and recommendations will be the subjects of the faculty association’s forthcoming report. Furthermore, I am not a member of a “president’s advisory committee” on parking, I hope the parking question can be resolved quickly and fairly without elabo rating the decision-making apparatus and that I and the faculty association can devote our time to the broader problems of the univerof which parking is only a sity, symptom c The price we pay for progress, however, is constant vigilance and responsiveness to the faculty’s wishes and grievances. Most faculty members, I am sure, do not want administrative positions. Rather, I believe they wish that administration can be given to administrators-but only to those who understand and reflect thoroughly the needs and policy guidelines of the faculty and other academic groups, particularly the student body. Such a positive and constructive purpose is a far cry from thenegative and ill-informed estimate afforded your readers by Dean Sherbourne of engineering. If the dean wishes to correct his misconceptions he might visit the chemical-engineering department and consult Prof. Huang, Prof. DONALD E. EPSTEIN political science Lose boycott

your

heartburn, food

services

Although students are usually exploited off-campus, we now have an on-campus exploiter: namely S

14

478 The CHEVRON

food services. In the last few months, not only has the poor-toaverage quality of the cafeteria and coffee shop food declined but the quantity as well.

example are the french One fries 0 The serving women have been ordered to serve much less,

aware of the seminar, the Chevran is the chief communications medium on campus, the editor of the Chevron assured me that some. staffers would attendsenior

where were they? . JOHN SHIRY, board of publications chairman

The result is just enough fries to cover the bottom of a small plate.

To add insult when

to injury

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20 cents,

a SO-lb.

sack

amount retails

this tiny at a time of potatoes

for $1.19.

Portions of vegetables, as well as pies, hamburgers and other meats have definitely decreased. Whereas last term, the odd, satisfactory supper was available, this term there is no such possibility, The overall decline is atrocious. If this organization catered to the public instead of to students, it would be bankrupt

practically Because

overnight. of the virtual

monop-

oly food services enjoys, an investigation, ff not a boycott, is definitely in order. We students have nothing to lose but our heartburn. I. HAVIS arts 6 More communication on communications seminar Unfortunately this letter arrived a day late to be published last week. It seems that at least once a year the Pubs Chairman is forced to berate the editor of thechevron.

Yank pfof checks Martin’s point again It% only nine years since I too was an undergraduate, but your C.D. Martin could make almost anyone venerable. His substitution of glib epigrams for information and his naive and simplistic approach to matters are incredible, especially for a staff writer for a university newspaper. Martin% article on Puerto Rico (Jan. 12), in the guise of a report, was merely a vehicle for his vituperative private anti-Americanism. It was distorted and uninfor-

mative. In my letter ed to set things

available

(Jan. 19) I attemptright with facts-

in any almanac .

(The

caption you placed above my letter was a gross distortion: “AntiAmericanism is idiotic, )’ says Yank”, The “ quotation” is yours, not mine. Not even the sentiment is mine, but if the shoe fits,,.) For this letter Mr. Martin labled me arr chauvinist9’ (Checkpoint, Jan. 26). I had some neighbors in North Carolina who would have gotten a good laugh out of that on+ so apparently Martin cannot com-

prehenda middleground

Here goes1

Now as to Mr. Martin&n&mapresence in Puerto Rico is for the purpose of menacing Cuba, well, there is no substitue for ignorance, I suppose. U.S. military bases were in Puerto Rico long before the world ever heard of Fidel Castro. They played a role in patrolling the Atlantic in World War 2 And please consult k atlas, Mr. Mwb 0 You will notice that 90 miles from Cuba’s shore lie the resod areas of Florida. Less than 300 miles away lies valuable and vulnerable Cape Kennedy. Meanwhile, between Cuba and Puerto Rico lie iwo stretches of water and the two nations of Haiti and Dominican Republic. Now if Cuba were really to be attacked don’t you think Palm Beach would be a much more members to at- practical student-council point of embarkation? ten&but none of them found it While grabbing for straws inde possible. fense of his Puerto Rico article, I agree there was no massive at- Martin introduced Vietnam. That tempt to get joe student out. The has nothing to do with Puerto Rico. I personally do not afirst aim Of the seminar is to gath- Moreover, er people who have organized some gree with President Johnson’s palactivity md had dsffiCUltY informicy on Vietnam. That's the kindof ing the campus about it or people ‘4chaUvi&tf* 1 am. who have had some experience in It is unfortunately that the Anglocampus communications. Canadian fad of anti-Americanism so many forceFinally-the Chevron was well serves to distract

Your editorial (Feb. 2) claims the reason for poor attendance at the communications seminar pmned for January 27 was poor promotion. Unfortunately you failed to check the facts again-you even forgot to read the Chevron. The communicaties seminar has been reported in three issues of the Chevron (not one as you suggest), it was me* tioned three places in the January 26 issue (not two as you suggest), and contrary to your editorial there was other promotion, Letters Were sent out to club and society preside& three occasions. A number of these people assured me they were interested and The Monday would be present, preceding the seminar I reminded

tion that a U.S, military

ful and energetic young Canadians from the debris in the background of their own glass house divided. MARK E. WATKINS visiting associate prof of mathematic s

Burnt ballot To Stew Saxe When the ballots arrived for the election, the one Iler, Kelley et al were in, I was in an anti-activist mood, I tore up the ballot in a fit of rage and burned it, thinking all the time that it would be nice to use the ballot to light a bonfire around Stew Saxe as he was squirming on his post, But when I found out about Miss Kelley’s (I refer to her as Miss Kelley out of sheer respect and admiration) campaign I felt I did a wrong dooding, for if Pd known what she was up to I would have marked and mailed the ballot with a pure passion never to be equaled by the speeches of S.S. Get the picture? Like Miss Kelley Pm an active apathist which puts me in a similar category of a conforming non-conformist. So as what’s his name said in Lear, “Now God, stand up for... Poohsl” Miss Kelley stands in the category where I stand stillinthewake of the elections and say, “Gee9 I wish I’d thought of that.” JIM GARRETT physics 2A @renton)

despite the fact that its title was so arousing and that it was *%orrowed” from more competent sources. Pm sure many students just glanced at the title and the great length of the article and then promptly turned the page. The title could have serious implications for those who are coloured on campus, or on those who regularly read the Muse but are not studdents, or those who are not affilim ated with the university. Let’s not forget that the Muse represents the university, Let’s not give the wrong impression. I hope no Negroes have been slighted by the sight of such a title, Many American Negroes, it is known for fact, are raised in a hostile climate where they come to

hate and equate such expressions as ‘%igger”, “black boy”, and (‘black bastard.” I realize no harm was intended, but that it was meant in adifferent context. However, Ithinkthe muse should keep it in mind that many people glance through newspapers-just at titles, to get the main idea, Let’s give them the right idea. Sincerely yours, Roen van Berkom Ed. Note: How about a comment what the article said?

F&dance FASS

Wiggef” four-letter

is a word

Reprinted from the Muse, Memorial University.

I spoke to many students, whoat first sight of your last article entitled (‘The Student As Nigger”, were as taken aback as I was. I thought it was very well written,

club didn’t

fire

on

quit us

I am a member of the folkdance club which performed at FASS Night on Wednesday. We withdrew from the rest of the FASS perforsll mantes because of conditions that were unacceptable to us. This, I hope, will correct the impression held by many people that we were asked to leave. BENNETT CHRIS math 2A


Lost causes department Artsmen grumble about how the “‘technical” courses are overrunning the university. Since only arts types are in search of truth they should get more representation, they say. Sure they fielded more good candidates than there were seats, but where were the voters? A 28 percent turnout. That slate should have produced a lot more interest. Arts beat only science in turnout. That’s no accomplishment since science is almost a foregone conclusion in the lost-causes departThey couldn’t even find ment. acclamations to fill seats in byelections. Besides there were only four

Marmalade: The Chevron has Marr-ed the university’s image, it seems. We received a very persistent, very anonymous phone call the other week protesting a picture we “It was suggestive and it printed. was horrible.” “I was going to contribute to the fund drive, but if you are the kind of person the university is turning out, I’m giving nothing and telling my friends not to as well.” Would the lady care to identify herself? Write a letter to the editor to make her o.pinion public?

candidates for three seats in science and the campaign was dead. The dumb plumbers stomped all over the arts turnout, and even showed intelligence to vote for members of the plumber power party as individuals and not as a bloc. And phys-ed showed girls don’t necessarily get elected. With such progressive steps by the university community, we won’t snicker at one cynic’s suggestion to appoint arts reps instead of faking an election like this year. While we are bitching, we don’t forget the other alcoves of apathy on this campus-St. Jerome’s and grads. Maybe a constituency should lose one seat each year it has an acclamation.

a tart taste No. And our caller assured us she had very good reason for remaining All we had to go on anonymous. was a phone number we sneaked out of her. Equally persistently, now, we could read the whole phonebook to find that a certain telephone number belongs to a certain board of governors member. An interesting question: how can board members refuse to support their own fund drive?

Symptoms

not even cured

their cake and will scream very The faculty association has made a big deal over a trivial issue like loudly if there weren’t any cops to parking. Free parking is synony- _ protect their cherished parking spaces just outside the doors of mous with academic freedom to hear them talk. their buildings. So it comes down to the faculty They’re right, in that the decision wanting free parking and protection was made by admin types during to reserve it-and hang the students. the summer and the faculty had Special services like parking must little chance to affect it. be paid for by the users and not Instead of concentrating on the come from the general operating university community’s right to fund. If faculty don’t want to pay make decisions however, they confor a patch of pavement then they’d cerned themselves only with corbetter not expect the students to recting the symptom. They aren’t pay the cops that save their status even doing that right. locations for them. They object to the parking fee If academic freedom to our facas it currently exists because it ulty means free parking, the price covers most of the cost of traffic may be a walk to campus from patrol-kampus kops. But we also Seagram Stadium for the late arrisuspect the faculty still want to eat vals each morning.

Editorial? Why bother to write an editorial on the Federation general meeting Monday? Why bother to tell the students that Renison is going to pack the meeting? Everyone knows that. Why bother to tell students how to vote? The principle of one-man, one-vote is so well established that there is no doubt what the outcome should be.

Why bother? Why bother urging students to attend the meeting? It’s perfectly obvious that if they don’t, specialinterest groups will impose their will on them. Why bother outlining the necessity of a wide choice for the Chevron editorship? There’s no question that a good editor is absolutely essential for the campus. So why bother?

A member of the Canadian University Press,the Chevron is published every Friday (except exam periodsand August) by the board of publications of the Federation of Students, University of Waterloo. Content is independent of the university, student council and the board of publications. editor-in-chief:

These ure Jtill cases and they fill this individual’s Village room every week. He gets u dozen or two boxes’ of the golden nectar openly delivered and tucks them awuy for weekend distribution. Resale of booze-bootlegging-is illegul. By george we’ve been wondering about Village politicians und their pursuit of responsibility through obeying the rules.

Jim Nagel

staff-NEWS: Brian Clark, Frank Goldspink, Rich Mills, Bob Verdun, Sandy Savlov, Ken Fraser, Glenn Broomhead, Ron Craig, Donna McKie, Andy Lawrence, Dale Martin, Sandy Driver, Cathy Leeming, Dave Hinks, Rod Cooper, Stewart Henderson, Linda Brox, Gord Cale, Carol Cline, Pieter Duinker, Doug Seaborn, Dave Wilmot, Cathie Schneider. SPORTS: Tom Rajnovich, Archie Bolsen, Karen Wanless, Pete Webster, Bill Snodgrass, Kathie Parrish. PHOTO: Brian Doda, Alex Smith, Reinhard Opitz, Ken Harris, Fred Walters, Clif Proctor, Dave Bernert. ADVERTISING: Julie Begemann, John Thompson, Michael Greenspoon. Jim ENTERTAINMENT: Nancy Murphy, Andy Lawrence. CIRCULATION CARTOONS: George Loney. Bowman, Ken Baker, Phone (519) 744-6111 local 2497 (newsroom), 2812 (advertising), 2471 (editor). 759. Advertising manager: Ross Helling, Publications chairman: John Shiry. Friday,

February

16, 7968 (8:37)

Telex 02958,800 copies 479

15


Students

should

. WINNIPEG (CUP)-Do students work? Rev. Walter Fauntroy thinks they do and should be paid for it. He told a panel discussion at the University of Winnipeg recently that two major changes arenecessary to solve American poverty: a redistribution of wealth and a redefinition of work. “A 17th-century American ethic said ‘if you do not work you do not eat’, he said afterward. et Work must now be seen as ‘that which contributes to society.” “The best thing a youth from 16

be paid

to 22 can do with his time is to go to school.,” he said, “and prepare himself for later service to sociToday ety.” FERNANDO VALENTI, harpsiCommenting on America’s urban chordist, will play works by Hanpoor, particularly black Ameridel, Bach, Purcell and Scarlatti. cans, he despaired of riots as a Admission $2, students $1. 8:30 means of dealing with the black in the arts theater. problems. “You can’t win a riot,” Champagne NITE FLITE, a, He said a revolution is needed dance for couples only. 8~30 in but they don’t (‘ succeed through the Grubshack. black, white or green power but BASKETBALL vs ,Western. 7:30 through firepower, and the blacks at Seagram. don’t have enough of that.” HOCKEY vs Queen’s, 8:15 at Waterloo Arena.

Tuesday NOON DRAMA: ‘Will the real Jesus Christ please stand up’. Free. A play about casting atelevision show. 12:15 in the theater, GROUND SCHOOL for the FlyThis week: meteorology, boys. 7 in AT 117, FOLKDANCE CLUB teaches and dances ethnic, ballroom and square dances in a social atmosphere. Anyone with two or more feet welcome. 7:30 pm in the arts coffeeshop.

Tomorrow WHIPLASH on chym fm, A radio 9 at 96.7 on the dial. program. MISSING PEECE COFFEE HOUSE with donuts, Steve and Paul and coffee. 10 pm in the Conrad Grebel Cafeteria.

and SPORT

THESE’ARE 14 KARAT

NO IRON.. SLACKS

AND

. SHIRTS

Pure gold , . , these original, authentic traditionals by h.i.s. never need an iron because they’re Press-Free and they won’t ever crease or crinkle no matter what you do. Others keep trying, to imitate our Post-Grads, but there‘s something about ‘em that just can’t be copied!

I

II PLAZA SHOPPING CENTRE- 385 Frederick St., KITCHENER

CHA

R G E 1~ 1

DONSHIPS - RENISON

COLLEGE

MARCH

I

Frontier MONDAY, 12-I

p.m.

6th

WILL

Arts

An expanding system requires secondary school teachers in most subject areas. We are particularly interested in applications from prospective teachers of math and science. Representatives of the Hamilton Board of Education will be on campus to interview grad students on

to arrange

an interview

Mr. D.A. Cooper Superintendant

of Secondary

with

up to

In other business the board de layed the date for choosing the Chevron editor until February 22. Applications have been received from Dale Martin, poli- sci 2; Stewart Saxe, pobSci 3, and James Brown; from WLU,

Library

PROBLEMS? exotic

Plum Tree Too Gift boutique 18 Albert St. Wloo

MON., FEB. 26, 1968

be two course critidiscipline, Pike told publications Monday for financial assist-

$500.

BE ARRANGED

Visit the

The engineers will finally have an anticalendar. According to Jim Pike, president, EngSoc A has a pilot project almost ready to run.

The board decided to grant

May to meeting

*FEB. 19 floor

Saturday Math Weekend comes up with a faculty-student hockey game. 2:30 on Laurel Pond. BANQUET with the math socand the profs. Also a demiformal dance. 6pmoninCaesar’sForum.

There will ques for each the board of in appealing ance.

College for period to recruiting

Math Weekend puts on a movie and a tiddlywink tourney. Someplace, sometime, HOCKEY-McGill here. WOMEN’s B-BALL championships here WRESTLING at Guelph SWIMMING at Toronto HUNGARIAN STUDENTS Association meets with-Guelph. Magyar blood not necessary but useful. 8 pm in SS225.

EngSoc gets $500 for anticalendar

IS,1968

BOARDof EDUCATION

We invite you of the registrar:

Friday

The College invites applications for dons (men and women) for the academic year 196% 1969. Forms may be obtained from the College Bursar and should be returned no later than _

INTERVIEWS

.

FILM: Mexico and Orient, culo tural and other comparisons of Indian and Oriental life. Free. 12:15 in AL11 6. MATH WEEKEND BEGINS. Fabulous events funded by the great math sot. Dance to thepaupers from 8:30 in food-services, FOLKSONG CLUB sings and dances and puts on plays and listens to Frank Bialystok’s blues records. Noon in P150.

&h-language poetry of Africa today. 4:15 in the SS faculty lounge. CIRCLE K meets at 6zI.5 in SS350. BASKETBALL at Windsor GUITAR WORKSHOP with Ted I

Needs labourer - teachers September 1968. Come

HAMILTON

Thursday

Wednesday SIDNEY KATZ, distinguished lecturer, talks on LSD and the heaven or hell drugs. Free admission to the theater at 4 15. EARLE BIRNEY. another distinguished lecturer; talks on Eng-

Sunday General kidding session with Chris for getting engaged to Barb. 9 am in AT117. FREE CONCERT with U’of-T concert band. 8 pm in the arts theater, St. - _ Paul’s evening service. 7:30 Speaker is Larry Caesar. Pm. MAX SALTSMAN, NDP MP, will talk on the alternative to continen8 pm in the gloriousMoose talism. Room at Renison.

SH I RTS

Chase. 7 pm in SSl33. COUNTRY AND WESTERN music club meets at 7 in AL105, BASKETBALL at Windsor.

ART FILMS from Poland with archicoking, painting and handicrafts. 12~15 in AL116.

or the small parent shoppeat 4 Erb St. East.

Other appointments: Bob Verdun, civil 2A, handbook editor; Bill Ableson, math 3, directory editor, and Peter Wilkinson, arts 1, photo coordinator. Dave Spencer, English 3, editor of this year’s directory, presented a report to the board revealing that the fall directory cost about 16 cents a copy, accounting for 2000 left over. It was two months late, The winter supplements cost only 16 cents each and were delivered ahead of schedule in only three weeks.

the office

RENTALS .LEAStNCS l PURCHASE l

Schools

UNTRY

Mr, CT. Chairman,

Lowe, Q.C. Board of Education

Mr. G.E. Director

Price of Education

Mail This Coupon Or Phone For

Gord Crosby

16

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( formerly

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