1970-71_v11,n33_Chevron

Page 1

, volume

11 number

33

Two-to-one

UNIVERSITY

faculty-student

Federation chevron

-

\

Tormory

staff

The federation of students probably will not object to a student-faculty ratio of two-toone on the university’s proposed unicameral governing body, according to federation president Larry Burko. Burko was responding to a faculty ‘association brief to the one-tier government study committee I wednesday afternoon. _ The association takes the stand that faculty members have more long-term interests in the university decisiori-making than do students. The association’s contention that faculty must live in the future under conditions they have created was challenged by student rep. John BVergsma who stressed that, although the- student does have only short-range

Camnus

4 december

1970

-Gord

ratio

.wodt by Krista

friday

OF WATERLOO,Waterloo,Ontario

center

oppose interests, the years spent at university are- the most important in his life. Arts student Sean Robertscommented that the student’s - flexibility due to his shortterm interests would offset the faculty’s long-term rigidity, but faculty member John White contended such reasons did not justify the student-faculty parity originally recommended by the study committee. One professor said that from past experience he noted student interest usually peters out. He said arguments for parity were only “rhetoric. ” The faculty -association brief was presented by professor John Keeler, and besides the student parity issue dealt with: l the size of the proposed governing council which the association wants kept down to a ‘. ,

faqdty maximum of 49 “for purposes ; ”

the

council’s

practical

committee

The pictures nual pies of the aurmal big miversity effort to be sincere. “Arerz ‘t we simw-e, ” scream the thousands oj' dollars in midway art.

committee.

The motion states the executive “recommends the camnus center board -impose a 10 p:m. curfew on attendance in the building for non-members of the university community.” The execu-

tive said it would recommend exceptions to this rule include guests of students and others who come to the campus center to attend specific events held there. Federation of students president Larry Burko said the executive decided against outright ex-

elusion of non-university peoplebecause many students have nonuniversity friends whom the executive felt should be allowed access to the building. it was just a first step, he said, until results of further studies made other recommendations.

chevron

structure, which the brief recommended should be decided by the council itself. The faculty association requests all council members must have the right to serve on at least one of the major standing committees (specifically, executive, finance and planningj.

Grads .bet screwed “Canadians are only half human and Canadian nationalists are bigots, ” according to Mel Lerner, ex-chairman of the now defunct division of social personality, Psychology chairmail, Jim Dyal dissolved the division two weeks ago and created the new division of social psychology. Lerner has a carte blanche as

C/e&-up The executive board of the federation of students moved Wednesday night to recommend barring non-university students from the campus center each night after 10 p.m. Executive spokesmen said the move follows general concern with the building’s use within the last few weeks, including the campus center board’s general meeting, and the recently-announced campus center study

the

prop&al

l powers of the council-the council is a policy-making and review body and should not be involved in the day-to-day management of the university; and l

Moore,

He said the executive was con‘cemed that university students now begin to use the building and confirmed most students consulted by the executive did not want the building closed down during the late night and early morning hours. As the policy stands, it is only a recommendation. It goes _to the student council at its next meeting and then must be ratified by the campus center board before becoming policy. \ Next week, federation, vicepresident Rick Page becomes interim chairman of the campus center board, replacing Peter Warrian who will resign to finish his master’s history thesis.

chairman of the new department. Members of the division, in operation within the psychology department for ten years, were not consulted about the dissolution. Lemer has not indicated whether they will be accepted in the new division. Both Dyal and Lemer refused to comment. Lemer has constantly alienated himself from faculty and grad students in the division since his arrival on campus. “I owe it to myself to set up this social personality division as I see fit,” Lemer said. This he felt would not exactly endear him to a group used to operating in a democratic fashion. Dyal and Lemer both ignored a meeting called by grad students to discuss why the division was dissolved. Grad officer, Robin Banks said faculty select- -- .- --_._-._________I

Division dissolved - page 19 - ._I__-- -- _____ ed by Lemer will be invited to join the new division. Meanwhile, students will continue to work with their advisors without a division. “Maybe, we should have listened to Matthews and Steele sooner, ” commented one grad student.


This week on campus is a free column for the announcement of meetings, spe&al seminars or speakers, social events and campus-student, faculty or staff. See the caN extension 3443. Deadline is tuesday

.

Soil conseivation \ scholarships given

TODAY

Of particular interest to en- for each SCSA legion, and two will be awarded regardless of vironmental studies students r, area. will be the 1971-1972 scholarships 1 in conservation A student is considered eligrecently anible if he has successfully comnounced by the soil conservation society of America. pleted or will complete by the award date, two years of study at The scholarships are granted school, and if he is encourage qualified stu- . an accredited to enrolled in a dents to increase their interest in an undergraduate curriculum of an agricultural conservation, to obtain technical or otherwise related to competence in some phase of nature conservation and to pursue a natural resource conservation. Application blanks may be ob.career in this area of endeavor. of Twenty scholarships at $500 tained from your department will be awarded. Eighteen will _ study and should be submitted be given out on the basis of two ’ before may 15, 1971.

BAS others.

BSA $1100

Movies. others.

lxthus cert love,

and life

U

8 p.m.

Coffee

W

Free Come cc snack

p.m. I eaves and

1:30

coffee, talk bar.

time

may

be gym

check

Everybody

welcome.

of

W

undergrad;

Radio

$1.00

pre-empted schedule.

by 7-1

other p.m.

1

Waterloo

Ground 7:30

dance.

refreshments holder 8 p.m.

card

Music wil resident

or Blue

by

be

dining

Peece 9 p.m. Conrad

7:30

Pm

CC

University

Rm

135

Flying

club.

welcome. other 1 p.m.

Gym activiphys-ed

Cavaliers,

sewed. of Vilage

$1

Per$2

I;

hall.Vilage

coffee Grebel

meeting. school. MC3027.

p.m.

WEDNESDAY Badminton time may tres check complex.

I.

house. college.

250

admis-

club. be gym

Everyone pre-empted schedule.

by 7-l

THURSDAY

Time ter sored

9

p.m.

from by

bus

returns subway students.

lslington federation

to

campus station.

Lecture Michigan. MC2066.

cenSpon-

by

F.

Harary,

“All

University

about

trees”

of 3:30

p.m.

\ Sunday Sponsored

SATURDAY club Canadian

$1.00 Math

Xmas

Missing sion.

lslington in front

p.m.

complex.

French French

U

SUNDAY club.

phys-ed

5OC EL201.

_

for 4:30

Light sa others.

conabout

center.

Badminton Gym activities

Movies. 8 p.m.

undergrads; Persa

express station. campus

of

EL201.

House. conversation. God. 8:30

and

Toronto subway of

50~

members; faculty

presents Chansonnrer. $1.25

Pierre

Calve. 8

special. by

2

Federation

7

of

p.m.

AL1

Christian formal

16,

Students.

Duplicate

p.m.

bridge.’

Entry

lounge.

Fee

Everyone

IS 50~.

7 p.m.

is

SS

Science

come.

TUESDAY

Admission

non-members.

movie

Exit $1.25; 8: 30

welcome.

lounge.

club

holds

testimony 9 p.m. SS225.

meeting.

The

-

King students buifding

7511 p.m

HUM

weekly All

in-

are

Blackfriars. at central theatre.

wel-

Tickets: office.

box

Catiadian government to \ try new design system In november of 1969 a graphic design consultant, Communication Arts Centre, Inc., of Montreal was retained to study the possibilities for a system of designs to identify the federal government. The chosen system, incorporating two devices from Canada’s flag, a bar and a maple leaf, will be tested for effectiveness in identifying the federal government, its departments, agencies and other units and functions. The coat of arms will remain the symbol of the nation as a whole but it was felt that it did

Astronomer 7977 Hagey Professor Hobert Huang, chairman of the Hagey lecture committee, recently announced that world renowned astronomer Fred Hoyle has been named as Hagey lecturer of 1971. Professor Hoyle will deliver the lecture series, which is sponsored. by the university and the faculty association, on f ebruary 15,16 and 17. The lectures will be given each evening in the humanities theatre and informal discussions for the university community will be held each afternoon. Topics for the lectures will be announced shortly.

not -fill the need for a simple, readily recognizable and easily reproduced design identifying the federal government -and administration as distinct from the nation itself. At present almost thirty different designs are being used throughout various departments. It is expected that with the standardization possible. through this system and the reduction in the number of different forms used by the government (now approximately 150,000), substantial savings can be achieved.

Hoyle is plecturer

Classified ads are accepted between 9 and 5 in the chevron office. See Charlotte. Rates are 50 cents for the first fifteen words and five cents each per extra word. Deadline is tuesday afternoons by 3 p.m.

.

Hoyle is now director of the ’ institute of theoretical astronomy at Cambridge university and is a member of the Mt. Wilson and Palomar observatories. Students may remember Hoyle best for his literary contributions in the field of science fiction. He is especially remembered for his contributions to the BBC television series, “ ‘A’ for Andromeda” . and for his novel, “The Black Cloud. ” ’ He has also done extensive research in astronomy publishing “Frontiers of Astronomy,” “The Nature of the Universe,” and “Galaxies, Nuclei and Quasars.”

FOUND

new or local

Silver monday. center

ring

Chem

in

washroom

november

23.

(men) campus

Contact

Have meals

turnkey.

LOST A

gold

Wittmauer

plex friday, ed. Contact 579-4575 Hand wool

watch

november Ron at after 5 p.m.

knitted mitten.

area. Please! leather

Sentimental

area asked.

november 576-5995.

(right) Campus

belonging wool

gold No

W

winter

term,

Morris

the

apply

578-8885

Furnished approximately room

hungries? 578-2580.

now.

110,

gear $1.300.

condition,

co-op

shift.

22,000 Phone

L

8 p.m.

co-op meals 57872580.

eng. 1501

eng

reward

wallet length

condition.

Student ber

miles, 1497

745-

wil

etc. 8500.

in

the

serve term.

no

questions

to coat.

J.

Snow, 578-

Phone

Female and uary

board 7. Call

cook,

Two

or

ment brecht,

Chuck three

januan/ 454

guys

Apply

to

free

share

aprif. street,

Princess

room jan-

sublet

I

apar-t-

NDP holds election schoo-/ in Kitchener More than 75 new democrats from across central Ontario are expected to register this weekend (dec. 5-6) at an election school at the Kitchener-Waterloo labour centre. Volunteers from district ridings will discuss NDP-style election organization in preparation for the Ontario provincial election expected by most observers sometime in 1971. The Kitchener school is the seventh in a series of election schools scheduled for this fall and winter around the province. NDP volunteerswill discuss voter motivation, the mechanics of canvassing campaigns, sign erection, committee room management, and election fund-raising. On Saturday afternoon (Dec. 5) students at the Kitchener school ( will participate in an election canvassing exercise. They will canvass in Guelph

554 the Chevron

fee

included

in

their

gentleman

a recently maiden

on

come name

(relative)

Mrs.

from

England Miles.

was

Payne,

Wil Victoria

the

Gait.

do

Phone

pert-time or Good

SALE

Ski 578-6658.

boots

supply ful

income

576-9276

FOR

opportunities to

couples for

size

for home part-time.

or

Mrs.

men care

Contact Kingston.

and

one

half.

Tom

AR-1 Contact

5,

perfect Andrey

shape. -7868.

576

Need

do area.

Al-

essay Call

Sailor

LR55

Skis

$135.

Head condition 579-3566.

skis -

200CM. before

579-3976

slalom

-

210

3

cm

-

New 9 a.m.

years 75 dollars

old

-

call

company

Piranha term,

for

fish

for

must

Stereo speakers, II 2356.

sell. ’

winter

$5.

Am

Phone

music amplifier,

term?

typist

Phone

ahd

Apartment term,

good Jim

Toronto ment, winter 744-5790.

Buy

leaving 579-2337.

Bryan system

-

for

a

place for wrnter townhouse. married 744-7663.

Large facilities, 9568.

Ilvlng rnfor.

by

decem-

apart-

furnished

sauna, underground

store

in

build. parking,

month.

to

Phone

live? term.

John

rooms to

close to Come

Co-op 578-2580.

578-

has

$185 tenant

double

at minute street,

of-

home.

become

a

monthly. only, for

owner at

few Three

long

or

rent, Phone

university.

part live

and

essays

wanted

daily streets,

and

9 a.m.

leave

from

thesis. Mason,

at

WANTED

two term.

and Uni-

-

wanted Preferably

Frederick Arrive local 2823.

Kitchener. 5 p.m. Uniwat

in subway.

near

Toronto 576-5089.

(Bloor-Yonge) bedrooms,

sprint

of

kitchen 743-. a

this

corporawinter.

to

2 floor campus,

co-op

or near

Gary

small

one

university Janice

519-

Mammoth Rex

Eng.

Toronto april lease,

Oliver,

One

kOUSlNG

apartment work Phone

for

term, 519-579-3376

prefer

two,

room quiet Single of W. or phone

U

of

your co-op

Try 1.

744-1033. for

couples girl,

laundry. 6481.

$1

Girls bedroom,

available kitchen,

furnished

complete. with double

dent Waterloo.

available

Call

213.

january

to

downtown, (Waterloo).

no

Lester accOmmojan-

Waterloo, month’s 745-l 108;

cooking

742shared linens

room, private

now,

and

Phone

facilities share

to

New free eve-

744-6894.

january. kitchen room

5

204

living 578-2580. available

Waterloo

one

parking. eng.

stu-

from

Mary

needed Sauna,

furnished and with

block

209

girls term. Karen,

at

immediately; living

bath,

stuterm desks,

street,

576-4990.

winter to

co-op winter and

floor,

Columbia

for

room Also

male for

Apply 743-7202.

main

1.

bath,

beds

apartment Birch road, $150.00, only. Days

Silver apartment!

Room

2 home

present this winter.

bedroom

sixplex rent, nings

2 walk for

clean

to Waterloo

TWO

bedroom (january Box

bedroom, minute 228.

Lester.

Available

apartutilities,

occupancy.

Bachelor Write

Thor

furnished kitchenette,

Xmas

double in

Tired dations?

Joyce

2 Five 576-l

179

Two uary

WANTED

apartment april).

work

One dents

promptly during

Woodbridge. 2 See

changer.

a

at anytime.

typing 745-8673

rates.

Wanted Want

pool, per

To sublet apartment. couples only.

page.

evenings.

Reasonable 576-6387.

HOUSING Toni unmounted.

534

per

and 11 1

745-l

Experienced

wat

the

35c

efficiently Wright,

745-l

Ride Lancaster

Heath money.

available

578-2580.

home, 579-2307

area.

done

hours;

RIDE

Phone

my

in south

Marion

Wil avenue

interviews.

nine

typing street

Typing

623-

fice

Full or or women products.

for aldermanic candidates Doris Bannon and Carl. Hamilton who are members of the new democratic party. Instructors will be Gord Brigden, provincial secretary for Ontario,, Michael Lewis, assistant provincial secretary (organization), and Hal Tate, Niagara Peninsula area organizer. Among those attending the school will be Max Saltsman, MP for Waterloo north, John Wilson, professor of political science at the university of Waterloo and president of the Waterloo north NDP association, and George Mitchell, the NDP provincial candidate in Kitchener. The Kitchener-Waterloo labour centre is located at 141 King street east in Kitchener. Hours of the school will be: Saturday 9 a.m. - 5 p.m., sunday 9:30 a.m.1 p.m. A subscription

a

Contact 0895.

roommates bedroom

room, $60

To rent bedrooms, short lease.

Want tion?

TYPING knowing who has wife’s

For

. 2 2

a floor,

Rent

rent, Kitchen, further

1.

questions.

PERSONAL Anyone staff whose

17th games

197 Included.

needs share

to

Need vacancies

now.

Commence

to

5

TV 743-6544.

non-resident

housekeeper exchange. 653-3626.

in

for may.

ment, ing.

)

again winter

rooms with call

mation

or

white vilage

of

Chem

$10

com-

good

got

YOU

1969 excellent after

offer-

very 1.

WANTED U

from

24.

Reward.

ed 3666

and to

579-0558. blue

taken

brown hip

8923.

phys Reward local

black center

value. dark

Return jacket

One one

in 27. dept.,

rec.

battery, 367

King.

street.

to whirlpool.

share $45

apartment month.

579-4557.

Three summer fuly furnished, Apartment furnished,

bedroom term

townhouse 1)

(may $185.

Phone

to

sublet to

close

available Lakeshore 579-4687.

may

vilage . to

university.

septemoer, Phone

579-

4987. Eighteen tired

scents.

Uncounted

candlemaker.

colors.

See

Wende.

titchener

Two

market. Hoover months, Phone

portable reason 578-4843

1967 transmission, annuul

Rambler

American

fees address

entitles changes

used

A bert automatic

miles, U of promptly

W

six

TO

bedroom

university year appliances,

apartment, at

lease. etc.

7

Columbia

and

$150 Phone

Including 579-802

minutes

to

Lester, hydro, 1 or 743-993

one cable, 1.

destitute.

220,

52,000

student Send

tuesday

washer, financialy or thursday.

A\CAILABLE

snow students

to to:

The

and 34

tires, receive Chevron,

the

double street all

wil

by of

mail Waterloo,

be

the

facilities. avenue.

Ezra

Chevron

University

room for

new Phone

during

vacant year

AlKitchen

or

terms. Ontario.

193

term.

742-6165

off-campus Waterloo,

at

aPPjY

Non-students:

after

may

sublet

Sauna

spacious

3

walk

minutes

bath.

Call

579-6347

6 p.m. one

furnished

bedroom january

available

1910office

$8

September lU-15

campus.

Ottawa ment Wanted ter brook,

to

apartment

bedroom from

to

apart-

april.

Call

576-

hours. 3 term. lslington annually,

bedroom Write

Paul or

$3

apartment Greig,

call

a term.

Toronto

for 15 233-49

Shadow16.

win-


Student

council

Profiteers b eware The federation of students moved a step closer monday night to assert control over individual campus profiteers “tak- ing advantage of students’ pocketbooks,” by approving a fourpoint policy for the running of campus events. Highlights of the events policy state: @only the federation of stu-dents, faculty societies, and clubs and organizations recognized by the federation and societies shall ( be allowed to run charged events on campus. (Residence councils are free to do what they want in their own residences but cannot attempt to earn money for their own interests from the general campus population. ) l clubs may, if they wish, be subsidized by the federation-in which case the federation will set the-price of the event in ques: tion. (The federation will pay a flat rate to clubs for running events and can decide the proportion of’ profit (if any) to be returned to clubs. Both the flat rate and the proportion of profits returned to sponsoring groups will be decided by the board-of student activities-largely influenced

-

Consulate

Paper

\

fire

by student societies. ) othe federation will offer the service of a central booking agent to all clubs, a move designed to force agents promoting groups to reduce group prices to a reasonable level. @only the federation and organizations given permission by the federation can charge admission to campus movies. (Breakeven endeavors could continue to operate as they do now. ) Though all these measures were approved by council, they still require official society ratification. In other business, the council gave approval to the recommendation by the consultant’s report on university administration which would establish a vice-. president of personnel, programs and services; agreed to spend no more than 15,000 dollars for a second system to pay for itself on a rentout basis to other universities, and voted to donate 350 dollars to the “Drop in the bucket fund”-an organization raising money for the Save the children fund. A request by the Canadian Television *Network (CTV) for cooperation in filming a special program on the campus center was refused.

bombing

raided

TORONTO (CUP)-A series of raids in Toronto tuesday, apparently in search of the source of firebombs thrown through the windows of‘ the US, consulate saturday, netted 11 arrests, all on charges not related to the bombings. A bookstore for the communist party of Canada (marxist-leninist), the home of members of a small radical group called Rising Up Angry and the offices of the underground paper Guerilla were all. hit in the raids by police carrying warrants entitling them to look for arson devices. None of the arrested were taken from the rising up angry coop house. Two men and four. women were charged with obstructing police during the execution of a warrant. ’ Another woman and two men, in addition to obstruction charges, were charged with possession of marijuana and posses-

sion of a weapon public peace.

dangerous

to

Two more women were charged with obstruction and assaulting police at the Gerrard street bookstore. Guerilla staffer Ken Hutchinson said about 10 plainclothes officers spent about 45 minutes at the Guerilla offices checking files, taking samples from typewriters and questioning staff members. Typewritten notes were directed to‘ the police after the consulate firebombing and the tossing ‘of a smoke bomb into the CBC studios here. A staff member‘ for guerilla commented “anyone who really knows what our goals are would never logically connect us with the firebombing incident. ” Guerilla has printed the texts of the front de liberation due Quebec and the war measures act. Since that time several street vendors for the &OOO-circulation paper have been hassled by police.

Lone dissenter OTTAWA (CUP)-The war measures act will now soon be gone, replaced by the less offensively-titled public order (temporary measures) bill. The house of commons voted 174-31 tuesday in favour of the bill that outlaws the front de liberation du Quebec specifically, and also makes it illegal for anyone in the country to be a member of a group attempting to change the structures of the country through revolutionary means. The following are excerpts from a Montreal Star story written under the byline of Brian McKenna : “And so it was recorded that 31 men voted nay. “There would have been others-but for politics. “Its name is as unwieldy as its power is great.. . _ “When it was brought to parliament to be approved in principle 30 long days

-Bryan

For only $5000 this can grace Mathematics building, this piece

WW

your apartment now resides in

Douglas,

or residence. Under consideration the fa&lty lounge in that building.

the

chevron

for -the I

dinner

M&y

‘knocks Ontario

One of the advantages of attending a school like Waterloo Lutheran University is that everyone gets to eat together in the gym once a year, with waiters running like madmen to beat their serving-time record of previous years. This year, 1200 people attending,, the 18% minute record was not challenged at the Boar’s Head dinner. However, Morton Shulman, famous for his book, “Anyone Can Make A Million,” and for his rabble-rousing in the Ontario legislature as an ,MPP for the New Democrats, made up for the disappointment by giving an eyeopening speech on organized crime, specifically the Mafia, in Ontario. According to Shulman, organized crime h,as reached serious proportions in areas throughout south-western Ontario. It seems that the greatest problem in this regard right now is the provincial authorities, as apathy in the legislature is rampant and the Ontario provincial police force- is incompetent. Shulman cited. examples where the attorneys-general of Ontario for ten years have either ignored the evidence of Mafia activities or been fired for -doing something about it. Arthur Wishart, the present attomey-general, claims _that there is no problem. How serious a problem is it? Shulman gave accounts of proof being presented to the authorities

confronts

ago, only one man stood against it. “At that point even the NDP, who had voted against the war measures act, be: gan to palpitate at what they saw emerging from the dark places of the Canadian personality. Feeling their political lives in danger, they swung into step with the government. “The lone dissenter then was a young conservative backbencher from Prince Edward Island, a united church minister named David MacDonald. “Show me the apprehended insurrection,” he said. “Show me the 3,000 members of the FLQ. Show me the-plot.” The government didn’t, he felt. So, being a man more of conscience than political instinct, he stood against them. “For what earthly reason,” he asked, “does the government at this point, some five weeks after the imposition of the war measures act, now ask for the continuation of this legislation until the end

that illegal str i kes were set up by means of perjury, and no action being taken “because no one has lost by -it”. In court, when he asked a man who had attended a meeting of Mafia heads in Acapulco3 why he had gone, the judge quickly protested that Shulman was infringing on the rights of this man and should not ask any such questions. Ontario is becoming a haven for Mafia criminals, according to Shulman, since the OPP will not arrest anyone unless he has committed a crime in Ontario. The FBI has been hampered many times by the OPP in capturing such criminals because of this attitude and because of grose incompetence. The OPP is the only state or provincial police force in north America without one university graduate. The speaker told stories of great mistakes being made by the intelligence division of the OPP. It is his hope that the NDP’s will be elected next election and that he will be made AttomeyGeneral, in which ‘case, he promised some extensive changed being made in the area of justice. Apart from this taking place, Shulman sees little hope of affecting any significant change. He said, “The only way to get anywhere against crime is to get into power. ” He has very little respect for the legislature of Ontario claiming that the average I .Q. of On-

tario MPP’s is between 80 and 90. Asked how many MPP’s are concerned about the organized crime issue, he said, “You have a dozen men in the legislature who haven’t the foggiest notion what it’s about. And the ,rest are sheep who come in and vote when they’re told to.” Even the NDP members only support him “quietly”. He suggested, “If you want to be elected, don’t get involved in any issues, send out birthday cards regularly, and attend all the local Kiwanis meetings, making speeches on Dominion Day about all our british traditions. ” Shulman took on the whole house in his comments and understandably stands alone most of the time. -He was asked about his future in politics and replied that this would be his last election. He hopes to go and “spend his million bucks in Acapulco” when he’s finished here. Asked why he would quit when such an important cause is at stake, he unashamedly stated, “My life isn’t dedicated to a /great cause. I’m willing to give a few years, but not my whole life. There’s more to living than fighting for other people.” And on that note he closed. Ontario is in serious danger of being infiltrated by the Mafia, the police force and law-makers are completely incompetent, and Dr: Morton Shulman is itching to live it up in Acapulco.

L power of unwieldy

of anril next year?” “Then, perhaps reflecting the mood of the country, the dissenters began to pop up in the commons as debate on ‘the ‘temporary measures’ began to roll. “Fire returned to the belly of the new democrats, and almost to a man, they began their assault on the bill. “But the most startling and courageous dissent of all came from a man deep in the backbenches of the liberal government. Pierre de Bane, whose riding of Matane is one of those stricken areas in the Gaspe, turned maverick. “To the embarassment of justice minister Turner, he said the language of the bill rang like it was addressed to colonial people. But that was only the start. “On amendment after amendment, he voted with the opposition. His colleagues on the liberal benches began to whisper vilification.

police

1

bill

“A saboteur, they said. A disrupter, they said. A sell out, they said. “De Bane,” justice minister Turner was overheard saying, “is screwing up the whole debate.” “...And so yesterday (tuesday), when the roll was called, he was absent from the house. “Almost without exception, the new democratic party members were in their seats as the chamber echoed with the vote. “One by one, the members whose persistent questioning of the government got them labelled ‘hysterical’ by justice minister Turner stood and bowed their ‘nay’ to the speaker. . “Among the dissedents was one surprise-ONTARION MP Gordon Aiken, the conservative party’s pollution critic. Not the kind of guy who would stand out in a crowd, he represents the middle canada riding of Parry Sound-Muskoka. friday

4 december

1970 (I l-33)

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Vigorous

by Shakn

and Myles

chevron staff This is the second ii three articles on natural food adapted from Food Thing, by Mick and Lini in The Mother Earth News, no. 4.

Vegetables Canned and frozen vegetables have little resemblance to their fresh counterparts. The main reason many people do not like vegetables is, because they know only the overcooked, stale,, tintainted, chemicalized variety which ‘lack both taste and nutritional value. Even fresh frozen vegetables come nowhere near having the de‘licious flavor of really fresh produce. (-If you must use some canned vegetables, try the Le Sieur peas or beans. They are more expensive than others but are worth every penny. - s&m) Unfortunately, many American cooks do not know the first. thing_ about preparing fresh vegetables properly. Throwing a bunch of vegetables in a pot of boiling water not only renders them tasteless but it also destroys much of their nutritional value. If you like to boil some of your vegetables then be sure to add salt to the water, keep the cooking time at a minimum and use the remajning colored water for soup stock. This water ‘contains important nutrients from the vegetables.

Cutting

Vegetables

Peel vegetables only when you have to. Try to use the whole food whenever possible. Peelings and roots are invariably rich in minerals and these minerals are lost and wasted if they are not used. For cutting vegetables, a heavy, square, sharp knife is desirable. This will make the vegetables easier to cut and will prevent tearing and cutting pieces unevenly. It takes a while to learn to cut vegetablespropei9y but once mastered, the job becomes easy and fast. To prevent the loss of finger tips and nails pull the fingernails in and rest the first knuckle above the nail against the knife while holding the vegetable. Cut straight down in an even mbtion - not back and forth. It will seem awkward at first, but once you get used to it you will be able to handle the knifi3 safely and rapidly.

It is important to remember that all vegetables that are to be cooked together should be cut in the satie way. If they are not, vegetables will not cook evenly; some will be too well done and others raw. When cutting vegetables, the idea is to get a little of the top and bottom in each piece. This proirides more nutritional balance. Therefore, for long root vegetables such as carrots, slice diagonally, not straight across. For other vegetables such as pumpkin, squash, turnips and onions, slice from top to bottom.

Cooking Vegetables Sauteei’ng There are many factors that . must be considered when sauteeing vegetables. For instance, when sauteeing more than one vegetable the order in which they are sauteed is of the greatest importance. Here are general rules to consider:, l It is best to saute onions first, since they have a strong flavor which sliould blend with the other vegetables. l Leafy green vegetables whichhave a high water content should be sauteed longer to expel1 excess water than root vegetables. l Root vegetables which afe fibrous, such as pqrsnips, are harder

and therefore need to be sauteed the longest. They also require slightly Fore oil to prevent sticking. To sautee vegetables, heat a -small amount of oil (usually about 1 teaspoon) in a pan. Add vegetables one at a time and gently toss so that each piece is l coated with oil. This seals in the vitamins, minerals, aroma, color and flavor. Cooking chopsticks are especially good for this process since they prevent vegetables from breaking up or tearing. Each vegetable should be sauteed until it ‘changes color before the next vegetable is added. There are two basic ways to continue cooking the vegetables once they have been sauteed. One is to gently stir vegetables for about- 15 minmedium-high utes over a flame until tender. The other is to cover vegetables with l/2 - 1 cup of water, -depending upon their moisture content, cover and let simmer for 3049 minutes or until tender. Since salt draws the liquid from the vegeand juices tables, it. is desirable to add salt only towards the end of cooking, usually about 5 minutes before the vegetables are done. The same applies to the adding soy sauce.

Deep

frying

-This is one of the most delicious ways to prepare vegetables. Because of the amount of oil used it is advisable to eat only a small portion at a time and not too frequently. Prepare batter from] flour, water and a pinch of salt. Dip vegetables into batter and deep fry until golden. I

Vegetables Deep fried

rceipes carrot balls

carrots whole water pinch

grated) pastry flour

(finely wheat

unvcmquished

Variations: Use different vegeBeans -tables for stuffing. Add roasted The general rule for cooking sesame seeds, sunflower seeds or beans is to use 3-4 cups of water Tamari soy sauce. Use different per cup of beans. For pressure binders such as leftover creams, ‘cooking, use 2-3 times as much becharnel sauce, etc. water as beans. In order to insure tenderness, first soak beans overnight. To Cauliflower becharnel speed up-this soaking time, cover 1 czjuliflower washed beans with water and bring to a boil. Cover, lower flame Bechamel sauce (see below) and cook about 2 minutes. Then Steam cauliflower in about let the beans stand for a few l/2 inch \;vater for 20 minuhours. tes. Pour To prepare the soaked beans, add them to the required amount half the bechamel in a casserole of water and bring to a boil. Cover, dish then add the cauliflower. Cover this with the rest of your lo.wer flame and cook for 2-3 hours, depending upon the beans. During sauce. Sprinkle top with bread the last hour, add salt and cook crumbs and Tamari soy sauce. so that excess liquid Bake until top is brown at 350 de- uncovered \ evaporates. grees Fahrenheit. If pressure cooking, lower Variations : Add pureed banana flame and cook\ l-2 hours, again squash or carrots to your sauce; upon the beans. Let use other vegetables such as depending return to normal, add broccoli, summer squash or Swiss pressure salt, and continue cooking uncochard; sprinkle top with toasted covered until liquid evaporates. rolled oats; add roasted seasme seeds, sunflower seeds or whatever else sounds good to.you.

Bean Bechamel

sauce

1 cup rice flour 3-4 cups water l/8 cup sesame l/4 tsp salt

patties

cooked beans Bechamel sauce (see above) whole wheat pastry flour .

Mix cooked whole beans with bechamel sauce and add enough flour to form a mixture that holds together. Drop about 2 tbs. at a time onto -hot oiled skillet. Pan fry on a low flame until crust is golden brown. Variations : Instead of using bechamel sauce use any leftover cream. Wheat cream is especially delicious. Lentils can also be used to advantage in this recipe.

oil

Heat pil, add flour .and saute. (Do not brown flour since this is a white sauce. ) Let flour cool before adding water to prevent lumping. Ghadually add water and bring to a boil while stiring. Lower flame and simmer l/’ hour. Add salt towards end of cooking, (Becharnel sauce has many varied uses. You can also use whole wheat pr buckwheat flour for a darker stiuce and add roasted sesame seed,s. )

Lentils 1 cup

_)

d l/2 cup barley (Soaked night) 5-6 cups water 1 burdock (gobo) root on diagonal) , 1 onion (slivered) i tsp &same oil l/2 tsp salt

over-

(sliced

Saute vegetables in oil. Add to lentils, barley and hater. Bring ingredients to a boil, lower flame and simmer, covered, until tender (I-2 hours). Towards end of cooking time add salt. Variations: Instead of using burdock, add l/4 bay leaf and a pinch of thyme.

Re-fried

beans

1 cup kidney beans overnight) 4 cups water l/4 tsp salt I- onion (slivered and in sesame oil) 2 tsp. sesame oil

(soaked

sauteed

Add beans and sauteed onions to water. Bring to a boil, lower flame and simmer 2-3 hours until tender. Last l/2 hour of cooking add salt and cook uncovered so excess liquid evaporates. When beans are done, puree about 3/4 of them in a Suribachi or blender. Put whole beans in oiled frying pan and saute for 5 minutes. Mix in pureed beans. Cook until crisp and dry. Variations: Cook beans with a pinch of thyme and l/4 bay leaf, or 1 sprig of parsley. Try this re- ’ cipe using different beans.

and Barley lentils

of salt

Combine grated carrots and salt with enough whole wheat pastry flour and water to be able to form into small balls. Deep fry until golden. Drain on absorbent paper. Variations: Add roasted sesame seeds or grated squash such ai banana, acorn or butternut. These can also be made into small patties about the size of a half dollar, dusted with flour and pan fried. When patties ,are done, before removing from, pan sprinklewith Tamari soy Suace and serge.

Stuffed

a!corn

,

1 Chairman

of Technical

1 Chairman

of Summer

1 Chairman

of Orientation

Services Weekend

‘71

squash

I carrot (chopped fine) 1 onion (chopped fine) 5 cabbage leaves (choppedfine) 2 acorn squash (cut ‘in half) whole wheat pastry flour water bread crumbs salt I

Cut squash in half, remove seeds and cut off a small portion of the bottoms so that they stand up by themselves. Sprinkle with salt and place upside down on paper towel. Save the seeds. Later you can roast and eat them. Saute vegetables in 1 tsp. oil. Add enough whole wheat pastry flour and water -to form a thin paste. Continue to saute. Add salt to taste. Stuff squash with vebetable mixture and sprinkle lightly with oil. Bake at 450 degrees Fahrenheit for 45 minutes.

’ 1 Chairman

>

‘71

of Home Coming

‘71

Applications for these positions will be accepted until 500 p.m. Friday Dec. 11 at the federation of students office in the campus center

friday

4 december


by Gabriel

GETYER

of westmount

place

YA-YAS

OUTI-ROLLING

Dumont

STONES

The latest Rolling Stones album is alive and great. It was recorded at Madison, Square Gardens back in november of last year around the time of the Altamont disaster. ‘The Stones haven’t been playing too many live concerts within the past few years, spending, however, a lot of time in the

mentum found on the originials. What may have been lacking here however is not too prominent through the rest of the cut. This perhaps is the first good opportunity to hear Mick Taylor with the Stones. Having served time with John Maya11 he is a very talented artist surpassing perhaps the late Brian Jones

recording studio and coming out with excellent works such as Let it’ bleed. But while in North America they produced their second live album, Get yer ya-

who was noted for his stage performances. Taylor’s guitar work I is comparable to that lead Keith Richard who is a known C&W fan. Together they perform some of the best songs with great skill and precision. Take for example Midnight rambler or Love in vain where each comes into his . own with brilliant guitar work. The only person who might seem to be having any difficulty in staying in line with the rest of the band is drummer Charlie Watts, who gets an occasional rib from Jagger. He does however maintain really solid drumming, and along with bass keeps the rhythm moving steadily and precisely. Billy Wyman, the bassist, is probably the least prominent of the Stones yet is as vital to their sound as any one else, including Mick Jagger. Jagger has probably become a main attraction for many who see the Stones in concert. And from this album one can easily imagine his performance, for his biting voice is well used in all their songs, no ta bly Jumpin * jack flash and Honky tonk

mottled tan s-oftee, Fleece-lined

yas out!

And live it is. There is an excitement which isn’t only incited by the Stones but also by the crowd. In contrast to the Got live LP, the quality of the production is by maintaining much superior better balance between the vocals * and instrumentation and between crowd sounds and the band. , There can be no mistaking the sound and enthusiasm of the Rolling Stones. This album really brings this originality out. They do mostly their own music with a couple of Chuck Berry numbers added. The song Carol is one of the old ones renewed and in it can be detected that basic Berry Sound. The same with Little queenie. With their own songs they run into a few snags. A couple of their things are best suited to be done in the studio especially, Sympathy for the devil from Beggars’ banquet. There is a definite lack of the initial mo-

From ~

558 the Chevron

women.

to fashion

by Ernie Lundquist chevron

6

flesh

.

staff

Yes, WLU Winter Carnival is almost here, and . . . what’s this? No Miss Canadian university beauty ,pageant? Oh horrors! You don’t mean that crazy broad from Simon Fraser last year has had an effect .on the good people that plan their joyous festivities. Is it true? ‘ What’s that? Oh I see, what with bad publicity and all, you decided it would be more in keeping with fine lutheran tradition to have a fashion show instead. And what else is in store for US during this oh-so-special week? Why, if it isn’t Chicago, in concert at K-W auditorium. That’s on Wednesday, january 27, the day after we all get our jollies at the fashion show.

Then it’s an animal

dance with and Smile on thursday, and a whole slew of great flicks friday night. We can see the graduate again. -. And Bonnie and Clyde again. And2001 again. And. . . Then the big day, -Saturday, january 30. A giant cook-out, with broom ball and (here’s a switch) a co-ed football game. Freeze your ass on the quadrangle, and the rest of you on a hayride to a beer and steak dinner, the Moo and Brew. Then on Saturday night, get it on at Mardi gras, where you can move and groove to two canadian rock groups before letting it all hang out at the fireworks disPlay Gosheroonies, you’ve guys,done it again this year.

two

groups,

Milestone

;


lwson f

I

Do you think the university

should

a da y care center?

provide

< Maryanne ret

Chuck

Schuett

sci

1

Yes, but I would never send my kids because I wouldn’t go to university if I got married.

Steve 1

env

I don’t think it is the university’s responsibility. If the school provided an area, the parents involved should provide the personnel.

Try our delicious

Terry kin

,.

peach

Curtin stud

Rrllro

I.U”V.

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..U.

1

I feel they should because the students do not have money and they can’t go to school if they have to worry about babies.

Joy Stratten

Little

int

‘I

stud

1

The university should allow those concerned to run a day center in their interest.

I think the university should supply the area but the parents should supply the management.

Yes; most married students live on loans while coming to university and it should supply some place for the kids.

Pat McKinty math

Fletcher

1

Brad Walker --,

arts

1

I think it’s necessary because if students have children it is difficult to keep the kids.

Yes, mainly because the government has put such a thing on education, they should supply a place for children of married students.

roll-ups

Led ,Zeppelin

III..

PANCAKEHOUSE

westmount

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Representatives of THE INTERNATIONAL OF CANADA, LIMITED

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will visit the university to discuss career opportunities at Copper Cliff and Port Colborne, Ontario, and Thompson, Manitoba. Positions will be of interest to graduating and post-graduate students in L ENGINEERING ‘U mining m metallurgical n chemical a electrical H mechanical H civil CHEMISTRY, GEOLOGY and GEOPHYSICS

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We invite you to arrange an interview university placement office.

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friday

4 december

1970 (I L-33)

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by Eleanor and Gord

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Hyodo Moore

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Production, discussed by members from Hair

shopping

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560 the Chevron

.

The mood-of each show is dictatMeeting some members from by the toronto production of Hair, the ed by the feeling generated each audience. When some auensuing interview became a quickdiences, especially on Sundays, ly paced rap. The show is planare a little up-tight in responding ning to close on december 20 with to the actors, the actors have to all members in the group that give a little more. This makes it came to Waterloo going their difficult for the actors to give the own ways. impact they feel necessary to Robin White, who plays Burger in the show, talked about the Hair. John Stainton, a tribe member, -meaning of Hair. He said, “It reoften remains in the background. presents a sub-culture of society. He is a brilliant personality. John Therefore it is impossible to ask has definite views and likes to everybody to like Hair. They’ve talk about them.- when asked. He got to take the time to find their sees Hair as the best way of exown meaning. pressing himself to the largest Hair is a clean and honest pronumber of poeple. From first duction as opposed to Oh! Calcutimpressions it would seem that ta. The nude scene, which lasts a major contrionly for about thirty seconds, is in John is probably butor to the antics that prevail no way pornographic. Done under offstage. His quick one-liners consoft lights, there is no physical tinually keep the members in good contact”. Robin believes Hair doesn’t affect the morals of so- spirits and ready for a laugh. The members of Hair are united ciety as much as everyone thinks. “Hair is open, free and sincere ; by the many themes of the show. They are making an effort to reit is to be enjoyed”, he said. move some of .our ridiculous inLaura Gauthier, 18, with Hair to free us from ourfor the last six months, used to hibitions, selves. Other than the perforwatch Gale Garnett in Sheila’s mance itself this appears to be the role. She felt she would get to play main challenge for the actors. Gale’s part. When the time came After their discussion with stuto come through she was slightly dents at WLU, the group said they insecure, for she felt she couldn’t would have liked to have been play Sheila as well as Gale did. able to get into deeper discussions. From performing came experience and confidence ; Laura now How do people feel about Hair feels she’s really into the role. and its message ? What does this .; she said acting in Hair could be- mean to society? Robin said Hair come a rut if a performer let it. could not change people’s lives. It could only make people more After almost a year the actors feel their parts come as second. aware of how free they can be. When the show closes, Walter nature. They can focus their attention on getting at the feeling Cavalieri, Hair’s stage manager, will be looking for work. In his and meaning that is a part of each role. Robin believes everyprofession he’s used to short layone’ in Hair is a good actor. He offs and will use the spare time to feels this is exemplified by the catch up on his reading. quality of the show. Laura intends to cut some reIt’s simply a good free-and-easy cords as does ‘Robin White. Laura feeling that prevails throughout Idoesn’t see herself returning to the tribe as indicated by all the high school, nor does Robin to members I talked to. They love university. A summer trip to Engthe show and love acting in it. This land seems to ,be in the mix for feeling is needed to bring the cast Robin and his wife. John is plantogether. ning to travel with his guitar.


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THEACTOFTHEHEARTThe

act

bf

the

heart,

playing

at the Waterloo theatre, has been characterizd as a film which deals * with specifically Canadian prob’ lems and themes (Guerilla - november 13. ) This is a misrepesentation. Canada forms the physical backdrop against ‘which Paul Almond’s award winning epic unfolds. The movie would seem. to be an attempt to comment on human suffering. Almond restricts his’ vision and concentrates the mov- , ie’s development in the activity of one individual, portrayed by his wife, Genevieve Bujold. As a character study the movie fails; Bujold’s personality. is poorly developed and we are given none of the background information nec-

essary to that kind of technique. Her part lacks depth and compensates by an abundance of emotional and overly dramatic scenes. The act of the heart, fails in that it portrays an almost entirely subjective agony throughout and at the last moment attempts to identify it with the world at large. Miss Bujold’s immolatidn as a ‘positive example’ to mankind, done for her husband because of his desire to aid huanity, is patently absurd; it has absolutely no relation to anything that precedes it. The film’s virtues live . . inA.the less important scenes anCL in tne more The choir minor character. scene and the choirmaster are skillfully handled. Almond man-

ages to capture the essence of a high anglican service - incisively conveying the ‘typical’ with an economy of footage. The filming is excellent in spots, especially in the paralleling of weather and emotion. Byjold’s involvement with her benefactress is certainly ’ the most developed relationship in the film. Moniqe Leyrac is excellent in her portrayal of the aging, female entrepreneur. She conveys a depth and sincerity which make her the most credible character in the film. The good father is played by Donald Sutherland, one of the lat& film giants. However, his role is a disappointment in that it is rendered entirely subservient to the central figure.

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APPIICATION

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The battle’to , 1

GARBAGE????? We generate 350 billion tons of what we call garbage each year, and this is only the residential contribution. We consider this a travesty on nature and an utter waste of resources. “But,” says the voice of logic, “waste is inevitable.” Package food clothes wear out toys break and so on’. It is unfortunate’ but inevitable. I This is quite true. We agree that a certain amount of waste is inevitable, but we don’t have to make garbage out of it. The oxford dictionary defines garbage as filth, refuse. Refuse is defined as that which is thrown away as worthless. This is where we dra\iv the battle line. It is not j worthless.’ Let’s examine the major constituents of what we commorily call garbage. Fifty per cent of all domestic waste is paper. It costs nature a fantastic price to grow the seventeen trees required to produce one ton of paper. Not only is the face of the earth scarred by logging operations, in the process thousands of animals lose their homes - sometimes their lives. Rich topsoil, no longer held together by root systems, is washed out by rain to silt up rivers and destroy more wildlife. In the process of reducing a proud, tall tree to a piece of bleached paper the environment is fur-, ther polluted by the pulp and paper industry. Then, when we are through with it, we throw it away, worthless. But it is not. Every scrap of paper can be reused. Twenty per cent is’made up of metal, tin cans, old appliances, and so on. We go to a lot of trouble to sink deep shafts to get out the ore. We build huge refineries which not only cover the land-

recover garbage scape with slagheaps, but also the product ‘of the land is eithkr pollute the air with corrosive thrown away in our garbage cans gases and the water with acids. E flushed untreated into lakes and Then when the usefulness of the rivers, or treated in sewage treatmetal product is over, we throw it ment plants and then thrown aaway, worthless. But it isn’t. It way, worthless. can be refined and reused. We have a group of people bus‘iThe remainder of the garbage ly digging up resourdes -and anis organic matter, mostly unused food. This 105 ‘billion tons per other group just as busily Ijurying them. Isn’t it a silly situation : year can go a long way toward eliminating artificial fertilizers. Our garbage is not worthless. At the present time we are digIt must be recycled, so that ging huge pits in the earth to re- nature’s bounty is conserved, not move phosphates and nitrates’ scattered all over the face of the for the production of fertilizers. earth. We must act soon or our We spread these fertilizers on our children may curse us as they fight fields to grow our foods. Then oier our “gaI’bage” dumps.

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hoses to clear pollution. “Create artificial wind and rain for fifteen minutes twice a day ’ and stop all motor traffic for the same period,”Wodzianski advises. The helicopters could bore holes in inverted layers of warm air that kep polluted air hanging around. Giant fans on tall buildings could whip up winds to blow away the dirty air. Fire hoses could pour water into the air to create “rain” and launder out the filth.

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the real Santa is -Eaton’sbout

I

>

. Hallelujah -E

LEVATED TO THE STATUS of a native aristocracy, possessed of one of the greatest fortunes in the country, close to the seats of pow. er, the Eaton family and company were the object of a virtual conspiracy of silence by the press. And still are. - To this day, a story on EatonS that deals with anything more than some trivia about Santa Claus parades must be passed through the highest editors ‘of any of the english papers in Montreal, Toronto or Winnipeg. Assignments to cover Eaton events are generally assigned by the publisher or managing editor, with the addendum “Must Go’: In the Montreal Gazette, a reporter who wrote a

humorous article on the Santa Claus parade of 1967 was banned by the then managing editor, John Meyer, from writing any articles not directly assigned by the editors, and-from writing any features. He was informed that the article had angered Eaton’s very much, that the publisher, Charles Peters, had received complaints from two Eaton’s executives the day of the innocuous article’s appearance, and that “this causes the Gazette great concern”. Eaton’s is one of the Gazette’s major advertisers. porter was fired three weeks later.

The re-

All Eaton’s events, even the most trivial and the most blantant publicity gimmicks, are mandatory coverage, particularly in the Montreal, Toronto and Winnipeg press. - The ban on mentioning Eaton’s in any unfavorable light extends to the point that in court stories in the Toronto papers, if a shoplifter is tried for stealing from Eaton’s, the store must not be named, but referred to as :‘a downtown department store.” The Eaton’s main store in Toronto is right across Queen street from Simpson’s main store. Only a - few years ago when a .holdup man murdered a finance company manager downtown and fled through Eaton’s lobby and then into Simpson’s in an at, tempt to get lost in the crowd, the dramatic and sensational flight was described in one Toronto paper as being “through a downtown department store and south across Queen st. into another downtown department store. ” During the startling testimony before the Stevens committee in 1935, all the Toronto papers produced the most incredible record of omissions in their coverage, which bear little relation to the actual testimony-not, at least, the damaging testi-many. The files of the Toronto’ and Montreal papers on Eaton’s are replete with notices of their “generous donations to charity”, “sparkling party”, and “the family beloved by Canadians”. Last year, to honor the 100th anniversary of the store, both the Toronto Telegram and Toronto Star ran multi-part series on the history of Eaton’s with sidelights about the family - a sycophancy rarely achieved even in the Canadian press. This is not surprising, since it is commonly known . that a vast part of the money that permits John Bassett, publisher of the Telegram, to keep the paper alive came from the Eaton family, and that the terms of succession for the Telegram specify that after Bassett’s death or retirement the paper shah be turned over to the sons of John Bassett and John David Eaton. Although the Toronto Star once allowed its excolumnist Ron Haggart (now with the Telegram) to

run columns critical of Eaton’s, its series early last year on Eaton’s centenary was substantially less critical in its outlook than the series the Star ran on itself in 1968. An idea of Eaton’s continuing labor policy,, and the sycophancy of-the Toronto press, comes from the

12

564 the Chevron

following item which appeared at the end of jan- Stephenson writes: -uary in the New Lead, house organ of the Toronto “Thereafter, Eaton’s dealings with the fourth newspaper guild, the reporters’ union : estate became virtually non-existent. Even journalists known to love and admire the firm -found Does anybody care? EATON’S FIRES 200 that they could not even interview the janitor. AnyIs it news that the T. Eaton co. ltd. is firing 200 thing Eaton’s had to say to the Canadian public, RY made it clear, would be said in its own advermaintenance employees? _-The mighty retail chain is one of the biggest ad- tisements...” Eaton’s stands as an untouchable, not required to vertisers in the country. reveal its assets, its business dealings, requiring a What clout- the ad dollar holds over local news press to send its reporters as lowmedia is debatable. But the Eaton story shows a brown-nosing paid public relations men to glorify any event Eattangible sensitivity in Toronto to the department on’s chooses to “suggest” to newspaper publishstore’s power. of The first story written - and squelched - ap- ers they should cover. Even on the background a Canadian press that has n_ecver shone for its darparently was at the Telegram and not surprisingly. The Eaton family - mainly the founder’s great ing or public responsibility, this stands as a monugrandson - controls a large chunk of the Tely and ment of silence. _ of Baton Broadcasting Ltd., which owns Television ’ ’ station CFTO (the Telegram’s TV outlet in Toronto). Briefly, the developments are that 196 maintenante workers at Eaton’s downtown and College street stores were to be taken off the payroll jaiHE POWER EATON’S WIELDS through its uary 12. . vast wealth, and the abandon with which the The maintenace work is being contracted out to company exercises it, isillustrated by its masa private housekeeping concern, Consolidated sive land deals over the past decades. Building maintenance ltd. In several cities, EatonIs has amassed large According to Eaton personnel chief Gordon El- ‘segments of vital downtown land, kept it unusued liott, “10 to 20 percent” of the laid-off employees and frozen by not developing it until it suited its purwill go to Consolidated - at lower pay than they poses, and when it finally did, forced the local city were making at Eaton’s. . . Tely reporter Marc councils into rezoning surrounding areas to accomZwelling wrote the story on december 15, based on modate the company’s needs. local labor union sources. The most glaring example of this corporate citHe describes his story as “an interpretive piece” izen’s behavior, which’ casts further doubt on its that revealed a drive had started by the building “greatest good to the greatest number” myth, is service employees’ international union to organto be found in Vancouver. ize the “new” Consolidated-Eaton workers. In march of 1948, Eaton’s bought the old Hotel It also pointed out the reduction in wages and the Vancouver on the city’s main corner, and unleashloss of the ten per cent Eaton employee discount ed its publicity machine with the promises of suffered by the transferred workers. building a huge department store that would transIt touched on the last big drive at Eaton’s in 1953 form the city center. It demolished the ancient (sic) and speculated that attempts might begin to structure. carve out small bargaining units of catalogue emFor the next 22 years, the site remained a-vacant ployees, warehouse workers; truck drivers or reslot, used for parking, a gaping hole like a missing taurant workers. tooth in the centre of the city. For 22 years, the “Oddly enough,” says Zwelling, “the first tip I downtown development of Vancouver was stunted got on the story was from Tely management. Simby the presence of this huge parking lot on Granultaneously, I picked up the story from other sourville and Georgia, Eaton’s was powerful and A--- wealthy enough to do what almost no other corces. ” Two days after he handed in his story, Zwelling poration in the country can-hold on to critical was told- the paper’s “Eaton’s censor” had veoted development land against all pressures, public and it. otherwise, until it suited their own purposes to de_ The Eaton dismissals did not die, however. velop. One of the fired caretakers, Irene Goncher, Finally in 1968, Eaton’s with its developer Cemp went to see controller Margaret Campbell at her (owned by Seagram’s liquor magnate Sam BronfCity Hall office ondecember 22 to try to enlist Mrs. man), put it to the city of Vancouver; it would deCampbell’s help. velop the/square block if the city expropriated the Mrs, Goncher related ~to the City Hall press corps block to the north and join it to the Eaton complex. that “500 employees” had been laid off.:. * That block, comprised ancient, family-o,wned busAgain a Tely reporter snapped at the story. Jake inesses, small but not without charm. The city auCalder of the paper’s City Hall bureau filed a piece thorities were forced to go along with this economic as a hardnews story, and it was quickly smothered. blackmail, because Eaton’s held that prime land By way of addendum, two days after this copy of which it threatened not to develop unless it got New Lead was distributed within’ the newspapers, what it wanted. . the Star, obviously goaded, ran a brief item, with no Furthermore, Eaton’s played its old game of anpoint of view of the workers quoted, on an inside nouncing its splendid plans in the press to whip up public enthusiasm, and then use that as leverage PageTelegram columinst Ron Haggart, the only journagainst an,y city authorities who had silly ideas alist in Canada who has ever successfully put Eaabout planned downtown development. In 1965, ton’s under a microscope, and who writes in the three years before the city capitulated, the VanTelegram under a great deal of editorial liberty, couver Sun ran a story seen frequently in other citalso wrote a column on this incident. The column ies where Eaton’s has done the same thing: was killed by superiors. By the end of January, the $20 Million Tower Telegram had not yet acknowledged the existence Planned by Eaton’s of this incident. * In april of 1964, the following headline in the But the silence that has reigned in the press a- Toronto Star: Eaton’s, Argus plan. round, Eaton’s is far from being a new phenommammoth downtown project enon. -----After referring to R.Y. Eaton’s attempt to get $200 million complex a retraction from the Telegram for noting Labor . in Queen-Bay area Day marchers dipped their flags in passing Eaton’s ’ VY

John David T

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127th

SECTION:

RATKINS ReDoTter

I .

The depths and depravity of William Johnson’s mind

MAGAZINE:

Gutter ........................ .30 Church exposees ...... .3C Doubletalk ................ 30 Tits and ass .............. Bl 0

FEATURES:

ENTERTAINMENT & TRAVEL: Greek saunas ....... ...23 Orgy scene .. ......... ...25 Stag review ... ......... ...27 Queen’s Park cruising ........ ........... ...3 1 Maryann’s Mountains .................. 33

1HOURLY-

YEARS, No. 37, 743

FRONT

BUSINESS

Judge’s secrets *..........7 Quebec sadists .... .......8 Greek homosexuals ....9 Child molesters ..... ..... 1 1 NOBODY’S Pornography ............... B 1 Getting high .............. B5 Flesh market ............. B6 LSD highlights ........... B9 GAMES & CLASSIFIED: Bedtime throes ........ .37 Boobs ........................ .40 Sickening topics ...... .41 Injuries in bed ............ .42

Tail

to unionize all the prostitutes into three separate locals. Watching over yesterday from behind the one way mirrors that lined the walls, were the ghosts of those who first took part in the ancient ritual, and one was heard to marvel at the progress. The sisters all expressed surprise that a public opinion study commissioned by the Vene Real D’isease Centre revealed a marked degree of disfavour of the diseases that are running rampant in the area. Miss Raygun admitted that her. .personal . , .attitudes r

Menages-a-trois gain ap,proval in Maritimes and

By MINION Boob

HARLOTTETOWN , Canada’s three Maritime Prostitutes yesterday took the last faltering steps toward the long discussed union of the three into a single sex act. Rolling in the elegant guilt and white anteroom of the spot where the Sist- ers of Prostitution met in 1864, the three hookers have guarded approval of the 2% year sexual union which study suggested many things. One of the three, Rinetta Derbvnasture of New

Sizeable

and

Tail

Reporter

DALGLEISH

offer Boob

By PERSIMIA

*

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-:---

I--

LA

L-Z--

From of

TORONTO,

needed

the Twattawa the Boob and

0

Bureau Tail

TWATTAWA i Pervert Minister, Jack Meninorph, yesterday announced increases in time allotments for sex perverts. This was aimed at stopping the cur-

SATURDAY,

‘28,, 1970

i

for increased-

NOVEMBER

“I ‘fear men won’t take this lying down,” he said as he lit up a ‘joint,” its about time we organized for Men’s Liberation.” Twattawa sources have suggested the legislation will recommend a similar selective approach to the present system of family puberty situations, with higher payments and size requirements being set for those over the age of 14 and under the age of 25. Typical i6 - year - old Fauna Fondle -was oversexed at hearing the news and tripped over her bellbottoms as she struggled to remove the pre-bra she had worn for the last ten years. “Right on! “-, she freaked. Her brother Stan, TOO BAD - Page 69

When asked for comment the Minister whimpered,” I never dreamed it could be like this.” The only ones excluded from the increases are cherry pie virgins with pulsing honeypot crevices. The

Sex perverts arm rn force

social welfare spokesman warned his party would resist any plans the government had to split the population into the haves and the have-nots. Troll said that as yet no research had successfully promised the same benefits for male members of society as it had for the female members, so to speak, and that the government should channel more of its time and resourses to building up, so to speak, a stock of such devices. He suggested the large allocation for fertilizer research in the department of health and welfare be cut substantially to provide the fun-rather funds -for the development of sizeable genitals for both sexes.

payment

boobs

TWATTAWA ,- The federal government will adopt a new, selective approach to old age puberty in legislation to be introduced in the Commons early next week. More than 800,000 needy old age people will receive sizeable boobs in their guaranteed monthly goodies box to replace the lack of built-in ammenities that have ‘declined over the years. Benefits for the 860,000 persons who received the universal rate to remain flat will stay frigid. The new, plastic wonders, curren tly ad justed to a size of 31 inches will be boosted to a required 41 inches, Twattawa sources indicated last night. Other. sources suggest the increase could be as much as 15 inches, puffing the maximum bust-waisthips allotment to 46-46-46. The increases will be effective april 1. , “It will do wonders for me when I go to the Post Office to play,” said Rosemary Ilk, age 84. “Them boys really know the ins an’ outs and the ups ‘n I downs ya might say, h-haha, ” she continued. She claimed the increased payment. the govern-- --

84 PAGES

+ PRICELESS

\

l

DIRT COSTS EXTRA

size


+.

z-c

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n

I

ENTERTAINMENT

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FRONT SECTION:

. . . .

Bl B5 B6 B9

37 40 41 42

MAGAZ’NE: , The ravines and bridges of Hugh Hood’s Toronto

Crossword , . : : : : 30 Stamps and coins BlO

FEATURES:

Judges’ seminar . . 7 Quebec health . . . 8, Greek election ... 9 Children needed . . 11

.. . . . . ..

Weather woes . . . . ‘00~s . .. . . . . . . .,. Sports medicine . . Injuries in common

SPORTS & CLASSIFJED:

The economy . Aerospace .. . Commodities . TSE highlights

REPORT ON BUSINESS:

TRAVEL: Greek nightclubs . 23 Theatre scene 25 Mdvie review . : : : 27 Caribbean yachting 31 Skiing the Rockies 33

W,EEyLY

127th YEAR, No. 37,743

1

Globe

and

Ma,il

Reporter

ByLYNDONWATKINS

I(rn4+;-*

rrn;nn

P),dT,

f3f

the

thrpp

PrPmiw

HA-

and a stern and aging John A. Macdonald. The Premiers all expressed slurprise that a public opinion survey commissioned by the study group revealed a marked degree of support for union among all age groups in the Maritimes. Mr. Regan admitted that his personal attitudes toward the question have changed considerably since the study was begun in 1968. “My initial reaction to it wa$ not one of very great enthusiasm.”

‘Maritimes plan for mien gains ’ partial, approval

_

..ilrn"

CHARLOTTETOWN - Canada’s three Maritime Provinces yesterday took the first faltering steps toward the long-discussed union of the region into a single provin?e. Sitting in the elegant gilt and white anteroom of the Frjnce Edward Island Legislature, where the Fathers of Confederation met in 1864, the three Remiers gave guarded apprpval to the report r:f a r1/

,

*

TORbNTO,

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER

Sizeable boosf fo 800,000 v needy

28, 1970

84

l

,

15

Details on page 2

PAGES

CENTS

* AIRCOSTS EXTRA ’

Ottawa ’ to’ inc-reibse ‘pensions; and

Mail

Reporter

\

ment plans to divide citizens more and more into two grouts--those who have and ~hvh0.s~ who have not.” Mr. Knowles said the new bill would also trim to 42 cents a month the amount of increase to which pensioners getting I the,, flat-rate will be entitled. Under the old costof-living formula, they would have been entitled to at least $1.20 a month in January, he said. The Government skrved notice of the pensions legislation is a resolution on the Com-

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From The Ottawa Bureau Mr. Macdonald said the inof The Globe and Mail creases would provide a &esh incentive for re-enlistment in OTTAWA - Defense Minister Donald Macdonald yesterthe forces and he added that the department is cGntinuing day announced pay inc&ases a study designed to evolve a for the armed forces averaging slightly more than 6 per better formula for relating cent- and boosts in allowances forces pay to salary levels in for personnel in special haz- the public service and the private sector. ard categories. The increases, retroactive Under the changes anto Oct.1, will cost the Governnounced yesterday, increases ment $20-million in the curin the basic rates for corporal rent fiscal year and $%milrange from $28 a month in the lion in the full 1971-72 fiscal less technical trades to $43 a year. month in the more technical But Mr. Macdonald and De- trades. The highest-paid corfense Department officials poral will receive $633 a made it clear that the in- month. a boost of $43. creases vi11 be met within the A piivate who has just encurrent annual expenditure tered the forces will receive - Ceiling Of $1.“.billion set for I $250 a *month, up $10, and a

Pay raise given Canadian forces

mons order paper yesterday, but there were few details. Health and Welfdre Depart- 3 ment officials refused to elaborate until the legislation is introduced. The Government’s longawaited white paper on SOL cial security will be tabled at the same time. Ottawa sources have suggested the white paper will recommend a similar select;ive approach to the present system of universal family allowances-higher allowances PENSION r Page 2

adopt new.’ payment ‘,formula Globe

ByMURRAYGGLDBLATT OTTAWA “-- The (federal Government will adopt a new, selective approach to old age pensions in legislation to be introduced in the Commons f early next week. More than 800,000 needy old age pensioners will receive a s i z e a b 1 e boost in their monthly guaranteed income supplement and a bettq built-in arrangement to take cafe of cost of living increases. 1 , But benefits for the 860,000 persons who received the universal flat-rate old age pension without any supplement will be frozen at $80 a month, adjusted slightly from the current figure of $79.58. . The supplement, currently paid up to ,a maximum of $31.83 a month, will be boosted by at least $10 a month, Ottawa sources indicated last night. Coupled with the $80 universal flat-rate pension it would, give needy pensioners up to $120 a month. Other sources suggest the increase in the supplement could be as much as $15 a montl$ pushing the maximum monthly pension to $125 a month. Within this framework, needy married pensioners could qualify for up to $3,000 a year. In addition, the legislation will contain a pew and more generous , formula for adjusting pensions rather than subjecting them to the current ceiling on increases of 2 per cent in any me year. ’ ’ Roth the increases in thti


JOHNSON

----

WATERLOO - The Campus Centre at the University of Waterloo has become a drop-in centre for sbciety’s dropouts. The sleepless, the hsomeless, the jobless and the: friendless from the Kitchen&r-Waterlao area gather after dark in the $2-million university building which opened in the spring of 1968 as a student centre. The centre, owned and operated by the university, was ‘Yiberated” by students in the fall of 1968. The eff&ts of the administration-appointed manager were put outside the building on the grass, and since then, Larry Bilrkti, president of the Waterloo federation of students, said yesterday, “the centre has never closed,” $ %@

Glabe and Mail Reporter

By WILLIAM

Waterloo

It has been run by a board one which students have a controlling voice, and the guidi prinpiple has been that the centre is f community resource rather than a sanctuary for studeqts. “The building was built by taxpayl ers’ m’oney and so’:it is open to every ‘body.” But problems arising from the open-door policy have led the board to ask for a review commit@ to be set up to make recommendations for tli’e future operation of the centre. The committee will be set up next week as soon’as the federation df students has nominated two members, according to ‘Waterloo’s president B. C. Matthews. During the day; the centre has a mixed clientele, harboring as it does a ’ bank, a post-offic’e, a barbershop, a cafeteria, a day-care centre, a birth-

U.. centre

_.

the 91,000 in t,‘le arr%ed forces and comparable boosts have been approved for members of the, reserve force. The only ones excluded from the pay revisions are officers of the rank of brigadier-general and above. They received increases in September on the basis of comparisons with salaries at senior levels in the public service. Percentage increases vary with rank and occupation. The higher percentage boosts go to no&commissioned personnel, particularly cor@orals. A. sergeant at the top level will get-$729 a month, iip $45, and a chief warrant officer $930 a month, an increase of $48. A chief warrant officer who ~is also a flight engineer or observer will get $1,005 a month, a boost of $48. Pay for a captainlwith two years at that rank will be $830 a month, an increase of $41, and a .major with three years at that rank will go up $53 to $1095. A colonel’s new rate will be $1,635 a month, up $78. The irtcreases announced yesterday were the fourth in a series of annual stepups since the department revised the basic pay system for the forces in October, 1966. Pay increases provided in October of last year averaged about 6 per cent-almost the same percentage as the boosts announced by Mr. ,Macdonald. Answering questions in the C o m m o n s from Michael Forestall (PC,‘ DartmouthHalifax East), Mr. Macdonald said some of the increases are designed to keep special trades competitive with their counterparts in non-military ocupations. The Defemse Minister said the department hoped to have its comparative review of pay practices And levels inside and outside the forces, completed in time for any increases next year.

Your morning smile

soggy \

tarip

Inn in the Laurentians north of Montreal or at Jay Peak at Jay, Vt., about 90 miles southeast of Montreal. And there’s skiing at Mount McKay and Loch .Lomond resorts at Th’under Bay. while the Calgary Stamped-, ers and- Montreal Alouettes _ will have/ I unstable footing, so -will the horses at Greenwood.

under

hope for a good field would be Ontario y e s t e r d a y also a sudden- drop in temperaended hopes for an early openture. The weatherman, how- ing of the ski season. ever, predicts rain or drizzle Three resorts in the Barrie to accompay temperatures ’ area and three near Buffalo in the 40-45 degree range had hoped to be open this today. There could also be fog weekend. These places had if a weather system passes I more than 10 inches bf snow north, rather than south, of earlier in the week. Toronto. A really determined skier The rain which hit Southern can find snow at Gray Rocks -__I_

Cup\. field

Two Indians from Cut Knife, Sask., Don and Ed Rak, pass the time away on the train from Calgary by drinki.ng it up with other Stampeder fans on their way to see their team play the Montreal Alouettes in- the Grey Cup game. I

Grey

The . 1970 Grey Cup game will be played amid rain or drizzle on a soggy field with some loose sod. CNE Stadium manager Ken Twigg yesterday said there is water on tar, of the farr>aulin covering thk field whcch he said was already sog’gy and loose. ’ Mr. Twigg said the only

yesterday .in A&P stores that this year’s Christmas bonus would be $25, tax free, Meat Cutters’ international representative Victor Pathe said the union will begin conducting+trike votes in the next few days. The current agreement expires bDec. 14. The union claims to represent more than 2,000 A&P employees in Ontafio. It is certified to represent employees of all departments in 55 stores and for meat department employees in other stores, including: those in Toronto. Organi&g is continuing among other employees in the M&o area stores. 1

L Page 2

chain store as a challenge to it in the current negotiations. A week’s bonus is provided for, under agreements between the Meat Cutters and Steinberg’s Ltd., Power Suermarkets Ltd., and Busy B. L iscount Foods Ltd., l%. Pathe said. The ’ aeeement between the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union and Dominion Stores Ltd. also guarantees the week’s bonus’, he added. Fred Kenne’dy, A&P presi,dent, said the bonus means what it says: it is something given at the discretion of the company, based on circumstances.,

WATERLOO

turnkey, the person on duty At the desk who does such things as check out the pool balls in return for g stu\ dent identification card. The regulars actually live at the centre, sleeping each night on a couch. They are generally not students, but young men, usually unemplgyed, who find the centre a convenient place to make their home. Some have been there for a couple of months. “I’m sort of a full-time vagrant,” said Manfred Ullman, 19, as he sat playing bridge, through the night. He finished Grade 13 this summer, but had been ,frequenting the centre for the two previous years. He plans on ’ travelling to Mexico one of these days, but meantime he stays up till night

dropouts

Current weekly rates are $151 for meat cutters, $124 for clerks and $115 for cashiers. Agreements negotiated recently with other supermarkets provide for $158.50 for meat cutters, going&to $178.50 next June; $143.50 for clerks, moving .to $158.150next year and $123.50 for cashiers, with a final rate of $138.50. , The company, he said, “has made it a very unhappy Christmas for its employees and unless the Christmas bonus is restored it will be a very unhappy Christmas for A&P.” Mr. Pathe said the union regards the a&ion taken by the

A& P cuts employees’ holiday ,bonus to $25;,meat cutters’ union plans to call strike vo,+e ’ By WILFRED LIST The threat. of a strike against 100 A&P food stores in Ontario was raised yesterday by ‘the Amalgamated Meat Cutters union after an announcement by the company that the traditional Christmas bonus of one week’s pay is being reduced to $25. The union, which gained its first agreement with A & P one year ago and is still organizing A&P stores, is at the concilliation stage in a dispute over the terms of a new agreement. -Angered by a notice p&ted

i:

wearing a suede jacket and a black - toque, says he sometimes comes to sleep at the centre when he has no other place. ‘Neither Padre nor Tinker has a job. They are looking, they say. A couple of girls accompany the -. seven or eight bikers. One wears a small cross on a chain around her neck. She , says she is 17, but looks younger. Why does she come to the centre? “It’s just a place to be with other people, v she says. It is 3.15 a.m; The music in the Great Hall is blaring constantly from four’ enormous speakers fixed into the wall. A halfdozen people are asleep on couches. Another half-dozen are sleeping in a dowhstairs lounge. Several of the sleepers are regulars,) according to Eugene Besruky, He is a

of society’k above the elbow, and slotily pre’sses the plunger down. He stiffens, holds his arm for a few seconds, then slowly, smiles to himself. He is watched by a cluster of four other people, including a reporter. Across the hall, a gathering of “bikers” are sipping beer out of bottles, talking and joking. They are members of the Chosen Few motorcycle club. They do not mix with the students who are playing cards or chess in the middie of the room. Tinker, a burly fellow with tattooed arms and a crest on the back of his black shirt, explains why the club members hang around the centre. “Mostly we come here becauSe there’s nothing else doing, and this is where everybody gets together.” Padre, a stout unshaven fellow

mecca

“Yeah,” said the college sophomore, ’ “when I first came here I yas pretty conceited, but they knocked that out of me and now I’m one of the best fellows in the whole university? ’

/

control-information centre, the offices, of the student newspaper Chevron and the offices of the federation of students. Most evenings, a pub serving beer and liquor caters to a range of students who writhe and twitch to hardrock music from @ tape recorder, driven at full volume through two five-foo.t-high speakers propped on chairs. But at the hour qf midnight, the straight students disappear and the Campus Centre is transformed. It becomes a combination flophouse, cdsino, speakeasy and drug haven. In a corner of the centre’s Great Hall, in the early hour’i of yesterday mating, (a fair-haifed, bearded young man bares his left arm, inserts the needle-point of a syringe in a welt

nocturnal

Today 5,000 security policemen were placed tin sharp alert for the - rest of the Pop&s visit. The eIaborate system of colored badges and armbands for important ‘persons an4 newsmen was being rigidIy enforced. ’ The Pope will leave tomorrow for Sydney, the next stop on his eight-nation tour of Asian and Pacific nations. His schedule today calls for an address to students at the University of Santo Tomas, a meeting with Asian bishops, and another Mass. Student pickets were expected at Santo Tomas to protest against what they say is the use of callous wealth by the Philippine Roman Catho, lic Churtih. Police were concerned with the motorcades through the streets where a would-be assassin or militant demonstrators could lurk in the crowds.

Security tightened in iAani Ia ’ as -Pope forgives knif ‘e attacker

----b

Asked his rca&onl to the re- effective April 1. But the ,legislation will port, he said “I like it. I think Slie cost-of-Iiving the commission has given us eliminate whi& stiggested full political benefits for the 860,000 who do a vehicle that we can use for u&m within 10 years. a serious discussion of politi- not receive the income suppleOn& of the three, Premier ment. Richard Hatfield of New cal union of the three provStanley Knowles, New Dem‘Brunswick, came closest to inces. ocratic Party house leader’ “I think this machinery endorsing the ideal of political and social welfare spokesgives us in the Maritimes our man, union. His two colleagues, warned that his party Premier Gerald Regan of best chance of having some would fight any attempt to control over OK own destiny Nova Scotia and Premier Alex Campbell of the host in our future relationships 1 split the pension&s into two with the Government of Can- groups. province were more reluctant “We will have to wait to see ada.” to make any firm commitbill but from the notice on I$e believes the first essen- the me&. the order paper it would seem Mr. Regan endorsed closer to ,be a sign that the GovernMARITIME - Page 2 administrative integration in the region and accepted the wommendacommission’s tion for the creation of a council of Maritime Premiers. L Mr. Campbell was reluctant to commit his province to any course of action and said its decision will depend on a detailed review of the study MANILA (AP) - Manila The Pope told President group’s findings and on the police tightened security mea- Marcos that he forgave his of the island’s sures today to prevent any assailant and he blessed .the response llO$OO people. He, too, en- more attempts on the life of crticifix Mendoza had used to dorsed the creation of the the Pope. They were sharply conceal a foot-long’knife. premiers’ council, ‘which is to criticized for laxity at the airPalace sources said 53meet in Ja’nuary to discuss port when a man tried to stab year-old Mr. Marcos helped td tecommendati6ns’ for union the pontiff. save \ the Pope’s life with a bontained in the report. The Pope, 73, showing no kick and a karate chop that While ‘seeming to favor the signs of his ordeal (or the disarmed his attacker. brinci le of union, Preniiers fatigue of his long journey to Stephen Cardinal Kim of Hatfie Pd and Regan would not Asia, went serenely about his ‘South Korea ‘said he instincgive it qualified endorsement. program yesterday. Both backed away from iniHe celebrated Mass in Ma- tively shoved the Pope away ’ tial expressions of enthusiasm nila Cathedral, received for- from the lunging assailant,. The cardinal was cut on the about the report but the com- eign diplomats and met Presimitments they gave were con- ’ dent Ferdinand Marcos, who hand. Bishop Anthony Gavlin of si@erably greater than most was credited with helping to Borneo, a missionary, was peo le expected. ward off the assailant. T x e three Maritime leaders A million people jammed. seen wrestling with the man sstt around the table used by the streets to watch the on the ground. the 1864 meeting, which was Pope’s motorcade pass. It has been centuries since originally called to -chart the The assailant, identified as the last violent attempt on a 11 course, of Maritime union. Benjamin Mendoza Amor, 38, Pope’s life. The last pontiff to Watching over them yestera paintkr from La Paz, Bo- die a violent death was Luday from the walls of the livia, has been charged by po- cius II, who fell in a battle chamber were portraits of a lice with attempted murder against anti-papal forces in demure young Cjueen Victoria and assault. Rime in 1145.- -

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who turned out to witness the event. Her two adversaries, Sister Geraldine Raygun, and Sister Alma Havenchime of the host boudoire were more reluctant to take on anything but ‘firm commitments’. Miss Raygun endorsed oral investigation in the ceremony but rejected the voyeur’s recommendation for the creation of any offsprings. Miss Havenchime was reluctant to commit her customers to any further filming and said her decision would depend on the new increase in her fees and the reaction of her house mother. She too denounced the creation of an off-spring, which would be used as a promotion gimmick ‘to push the new act, and also serve as a warning to those who wished to partake of it. While seeming to favour the orgasm Derbypasture and Raygun would not give it qualified endorsement. Neither wanted, to back away from the initial orgasms, and the expressions of satisfaction were greater than most expected. The three hookers rolled around the bed used by the 1864 orgy, that was ‘called FESTERING

- PAGE

87

begun as a junior prophylactic installation servicegirl in 1943.’ I never thought I would get this far in the profession’-

dards will “get ‘em where ’ it hurts-or Nhere it used ‘t hurt, ha-ha-ha,” she add. ed. _ Standish Troll, Nude Democracy house beater and’

mphOS and studs. The increases are retroactive to Oct. 1 and will cost the nation about 20 million time units in coming time.

x

control-information centre, the offices of the student newspaper Chevron and the offices of the federation of students. c Most evenings, a iub serving beer and liquor cater,s to a range of students who writhe and twitch to hardrock music from a tape recorder, driveri at full volume through two five-foot-high speakers propped on chairs..But at the hour of midnight, the straight students disappear and the Campus Centre is transformed. It becomes a combination flophouse, cdsine, speakeasy and drug haven. In a corner of the centre’s Great Hall, in the early hou,r’s of yesterday morting, a fair-haifed, bearded young man bares his left arm, inserts the needle-point of a syringe in b welt

addicts

At the stroke of midnight, a goodnight beer and liquor to the hardrock blaring

HARDY

-Boob

and Tail,

kiss is in order after writhing and twitching all night while of fo’ur enormous speakers in the local-cum-casino-cum-speakeasy,

/

H.D.

Goldbrick

drinking

to the store so that we could try a new group position. When I got to the store Barbie - and Rodney were out in the, back, but Harry came to the front door to let me in. AS we were walking to the back Harry explained the new position to me. “First, we will form a human link triangle pyramid with each other’s BALLS - Pace 69

him in favor of Tiger, Pussy could not restrain his seething discontent. Hence the vengeance ten years later. Commented the presiding judge, a 280 pound weakling from Brandon, Manitoba, “be careful the next time you get the hots.”

gay couple.

ordeal by shooting peanut butter into the lion. Yesterday, Hotz identified in court the whipwielding stranger as his exroom’ate a 130 pound elevator operator whom he affectionately called Pussy. Pussy claimed he had been neglected by Hotz, and when Hotz dumped

WATERLOO

- Page 2

turnkey, the person on duty at the desk who does such things as check out the pool balls in return for h student identification card. The regulars actually live at the centre, sleepirig e+ch night on a couch. They are generally not students, but young men, usually unemplgyed, who find the centre a convenient place to make their home. Some have been there for a douple of months. “I’m sort of a full-time vagrant,” said Manfred Ullman, 19, as he sat playing bridge, through the night. He finished Grade 13 this summer, but had been frequenting the centre fop, the two yprevious years. He plans on travelling to Meyico one of these days, but meantime he stays up all 5night

dsropouts

Rechim,, the store manager, watched in horror being unable to do anything after his recent hernia operation. If you’ve gotten this far in the story, good. The first part of the story was just a ploy to stop the editor from letting me tell you what really happened in the store; Barbie, Hardy and Rodney called me yesterday and asked me to come up

pdls’ boner, dull cleavers

side his room-mate, a 400 pound African lion named Tiger, with whom Hotz had been living for the last ten years. * As the situation grew hotter and hotter, Hotz screamed with pain as the ’ stranger slowly thrashed, the couple into grovelling submissibn and ended the-

Stra<ps groggy When Herman Hotz yeturned home last thursday a wet drizz!e dampened his already tepid mood. Hotz, no sooner inside the door of his suburban Gaiety Heights home, was accosted by a whip-wielding stranger who led him to the basement and tied him to the furnace along

by PAULA

store of the Debauchion Stores earlier today. Harry Ball, a butcher at the’ meat market, pulled a _ bone right out of some beef. He was,forced to use a dull cleaver to fight back at the side which had not been completely killed before it came to the store. Barbie Boobson and I watched the ’ whole thing and Barbie said, “I’ve never seen anything like this can I do.” Even Rodney

Meat cutter strikes with This story was intended for all you real perverts who thought you could get further perverted ideas out of this page. As the headline to the story suggests this sounds like an article about some guy who pulled a boner and was forced to use a dull cleaver to carry out his future sexual acts. Actually what I saw occurred at the city north

wearing a suede jacket and a black toque, says he sometimes comes to sleep at the centre when he has no other place. Neither Padre nor Tinker has a job. They are looking, they say. . A couple of girls accompany the seken or eight ‘bikers. One wears a small cross on a chain around her neck. She says she is 17, but looks younger. Why does she come to the centre? “It’s just a place to be with other people,” she says. It is 3.15 a.m. The music in the Great Hall is blaring constantly from four I enormous speakers fixed into the wall. A halfdozen people are asleep on couches. Another half-dozen are sleeping in a downstairs lounge. Several of the sleepers are regulars, according to Eugene Besruky, He is a

of societv’s above the elbow, and slowly presses the plunger down. He stiffens, holds his &m foe a few seconds, then slowly smiles to himself. He is watched by a cluster of four other people, including a reporter. Across the hall, a gathering of “bikers” are sipping beer out of bottles, talking and joking. They are members of the Chosen Few motorcycle dub. They do not mix with the students who are playing cards or chess in the niiddle of the room. Tinker, a burly fellow with tattooed arms and a crest on the back of his black shirt, explains why the club members hang around the centre. “Mostly we come here because there’s nothing else doing, and this is where everybody gets together.” Padre, a stout unshaven fellow

mecca

I

to sex voyeurs

Your morning tthll Pat: What’s purple and has hot quivering lips wherein lies the most exquisite treasure chest of passion’s sweetest delights, moist with desire for the noble pulsteed, unsheathed, sating, charging -toward its oasis with all the unbridled fury .of a bull elephant after its mate? Mike: I don’t know. Pat: Fanny Grape.

meant by those not receiving the extra time. While the extra increases came at a time when the perverts were just about to overthrow the present government structure to give them more time, Mr. Meninorph said that they were forthcoming regardless of what pth& events w.ere taking place at the time of their announcement. Mr. Meninorph said the increases would - provide a fresh incentive for reenlistment in the forces and he added that the department is continuing a study designed to evolve a better formula for relating erectional forces to time levels of both the voluptuous nymphomaniacs and the thrusting ramrodding studs of the nation.

From ‘dope

icent, security chief, in atget a doctor here to examtempting to the justify the ine the body,” commentadtions of his men, said .- ed Magnificent. He still that the owners of the refused to comment furChosen Few were not givther on the murder of ing his men the promised ’ Pope’s guard. six gallons of spirits daily Pope will leave the counthat had been promised. try tommorrow for CyanThe owners, brothers Conide, the next stop on the ferdo and Hermando Few rare wines tour of various declined comment on the distilleries in the world. basis that the town’s six Great crowds are expectbillion people might be’ ed when he lands at Cyandown their backs demandide airfield in the early ing security jobs. hours of this morning. Magnificent is still wond“We .are increasing seer&g how the gang could curity measures here to .possibly get by the sixty avoiding the disaster that ’ foot baby tarantula that, happened in Musca tella, ” was guarding Pope. Traces said Hung Over, president of diasylformatula’te, a of the Drug Republic. sleeping drug, were found While the search continnear the body of the spider ues, the Hole-in-the-Side-of but no direct link could be the-Barrel gang continues made between the drug and to plunder and purge the the body. wine country-side , of this “It may be weeks or evpeaceful drunken nation. en months before we can

Manila hun knifes Pop,e security men get drunk MUSCATELLA (AA) Muscatella locals tightened wine bottle caps today in an attempt to prevent further drunken outbursts by security men at the local winery. While security men were on their binge, - drinking beer and liquor - Manilla the hun, notorious leader of the Hole - in - the - Side of - the Barrel gang, knifed Pope, the most treasured of whines at the Chosen Feti distillery. This is the six-hundredtwenty third time the gang has attacked the winery in the past two weeks. “It’s getting so that we begin to set our daily lives by the arrival and departure of the gang,” remarked one of Muscatella’s more prominent citizens, Jose Houchabana. Fernandez the Magnif-

It has been run by a board on which students have a controlling voice, and the guidi principle has been that the centre is T community resource rather than a sanctuary for students. “The building was built by taxpay; ers’ money and so it is open to every- I body.” But problems arising from the open-door policy have led the board to ask for a review committee to be set up to niake recommendations for the future operation of the centre. The committee will be set up next week as soon as the federation df students has nominated two members, according to Waterloo’s president B. C. Matthews. During the day, the centre has a mixed clientele, harboring as it does a bank, a post-offic’e, a barbershop, a cafeteria, a ~day-care centre, a birth- _

Wa ted00 U: cm tre nocturfial JOHNSON

Globe and Mail Reporter

By WILLIAM

WATERLOO - The Campus Centre at the University of Waterloo has become a drop-in centre for society’s dropouts. The sleepless, the h,omeless, the jobless and the friendless from the Kitchen&-Waterloo area gather after dark in the $&million university building which opened in the spring of 1968 as a student centre. The centre, owned and operated by the university, was “liberated’* by students in the fall of 1968. The effests of the administration-appointed manager were put outside the building 00 the grass, and since then, Larry Burko, president of the Waterloo federation of students, said yesterday, “the centre has never closed.”

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‘The adjacent book department (in the Montreal store) is also huge, but may be moved to the fifth or sixth floor. The reason: so well-educated are todays Quebeckers that books are no longer the “‘impulse buys’ they once were, so need not be offered only the hurried, helter-skeJter main floor. *’ -The Store that Timothy Built, p. 169 “We always knew that Eaton-s Santa was the real one, though, recalls Toron to-born Rick Rabin, now living in Gander, You can’t fool kids about anything as important as that. ** -The Store that Timothy Built, p. 233 “But what to do with her (a shoplifter) if she’s caught? How to punish her without cutting the store off from all legitimate purchases she might make in the future -the dining-room and kitchen suites she’ll need when she marries, the sheets, drapes, baby clothes, her husband’s shoes, suits, guns and fish/i7s rods? ” -The Store that Timothy Built, p. 226

bargaining almost unmatched by any corporation in Canada. A family that has distributed millions through ? official charities, that builds churches and monuments and finances entire machine-gun batteries for the war, yet used its financial leverage to work against the public good, ‘control newspapers, and erect its splendid cathedral of opulence on a mountain of poor wages and arbitrary, dictatorial and paternalistic management. A vast empire whose moguls steadfastly refuse to allow any encroachment. of american capital, whose laird, John David Eaton, asked about rumors. that the firm might sell to an american concern, declares expansively: “There isn’t enough money to buy the Eaton name.” It fits well. -For here is an empire-feudal in its myriad fiefdoms, in its stratified authority, its vassals and satrapies, crowned with an all-powerful gilded royalty. It is an empire with an ideology. Labor is not enough to earn the worker his wagesloyalty is required. Wealth is divine right. It is not a company, but a “family”. (Employees were once called “associates. ”) Its charities, apart from being convenient for tax purposes, are gifts’from the king and queen, and the buildings and statues and church are monuments erected by them to the propagation of their own memory. The Eatons were not interested only in making money. The Eatons wanted, and got, power, influence, and-like all merchants who. made their money in not the most glamorous field of capitalist endeavor-prestige and status. Lady Eaton is not an abberation, but the logical development of what this empire was founded on. Timothy Eaton built his empire on his life’s savings. He didn’t inherit it or even exploit it out of anyone-his first $6,500 of capital were, to use a Calvinist ph.rase, “reward for virtue. ” And to use another Calvinist phrase, the Eaton’s are the “elect.” Profit. is the prime goal, but not the only one. And oncewealth is attained, as with the Carnegie and Rockefeller fortunes, come the philanthropy and sponsorship of the arts, and the titles. Above all, rich and powerful, the Eatons w_anted to be respected, even loved by the little people of Canada. But Eaton’s never lost sight of the dollar all the while the family was pursuing prestige. In a manner that is truly mercantile genius, they devised the career girls’ clubs, the junior councils of clean. cut high school boys and girls, the Santa Claus parades. One wonders they never got, into pee-wee hockey. In places Eaton’s has successfully resisted history-it built an empire entirely on indigenous capital, enshrouded in a native Canadian nationalism that betrays some contempt for the crass profitmaking-only corporations that wiped out all the , other Eatons of-Canadian commercial and industrial history. It also resisted thelabor.uniGn movement with a tenacity that spared no expense, and created its own internal welfare state without. Collective bargaining would have destroyed the intricate “family” structure within. Like an ancient institution that history long ago decreed should have died, or at least transformed, it maintains its stresses within’ in order to resist change. The oft-expressed proposition that “Eaton’s is Canada” is a facile caricature. But Eaton’s is something that grew in a manner peculiar to Canada, and it stands as a Canadian institution, the highest development of canadian capital. It is a museum piece in a day of pleasant young men from New York and branch-plant managers.

OW DOES IT FIT? A company that has, admittedly, in the past led the way in such things as shorter hours and pension schemes, yet possesses a terror and hatred of unionism and collective

Those6 who today seek truly Canadian institutions should not tarry before coming upon this monument to what our native wealth and power had erected. And may it be a sobering discovery.

_ And the following

year:

Malls, towers and spaces in Eaton’s downtown plan.

“We always knew that &on’s Santa was the real one”, recalls Toronto-born Rick Rabin, now living in Gander, “You can’t fool kids about anything as important as that.:’ This article is the sequel to last tuesday’s which delved into the history of the Eaton empire. The following looks at the aristocratic nature, the kingdom and the ultimate deification of the empire. This article has been adapted from ‘The Company’, researched and written by editors of the -Last Post, Montreal.‘-

Just one catch-Eaton’s wanted the city to turn over the old City Hall building for demolition. This ancient, pseudogothic structure and clocktower is the only bit of color and style to be found in the barren office-building face of downtown Toronto. But again, through a publicity campaign in the press, through pressure on City Hall, Eaton’s got what it wanted. Then came the big surprise: Eaton’s backed out because an economic survey it had done after it had made all the plans and gotten what it wanted showed that it would not make enough profit from the venture. The company told everybody to forget the whole thing. Eaton’s owns most of the property between Queen and College, along the central downtown strip, and its old factories, offices and sweat shops have frozen all development of any significance in the surrounding area for decades. . In Montreal? Eaton’s ‘has a parking lot in the heart of the downtown area that blocks several arterial downtown routes, and leaves that area useless for development. Its development plans have also gone askew, and a minor item in the Montreal Star last year informs us that Cemp Development is suing Eaton’s for several million dollars. Another example of Eaton’s hit-and-run project tactics is to be found in Hamilton, Ont. There, in 1955, the company arranged to buy Hamilton’s city hall and some city land, on a promise to extend its store in two stages-one by 1957, another by 1962. A special law had to be passed by the Ontario legislature permitting Eaton’s to go‘ ahead with his deal. But unfortunately Eaton’s only completed the first part of the bargain. So the city passed another special law making it all legal and giving Eato.n’s a six-month extension. Even that extension didn’t prove sufficient. In 1963 the city council passed another three-year grace period, putting the deadline back to 1966. Work on the old city hall site is just getting underway now. Not even the Canadian pacific railway, the second-largest employer in the country, has been able to get away with keeping the grubby hands of public need and civic planning off its lands to the extent‘that the Eatons have with their leverage of wealth, influence, and power.

-

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(7 7:33)

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10%

Malzaq

The division of social psychology and personality in the department of psychology has been disbanded by the American chairman of psychology, Dr. Dyal, with the acquiescence of the american head, Dr. Lerner, of the division. This was done without the consent of the division, and was announced at the first full division meeting since DR. Lerner took over. DR. Dyal made the announcement. DR. Lerner was not present at the meeting. Both DR. Dyal and DR. Lerner were approached for interviews but refused to discuss their decisions. DR. Lerner excused himself on the ground that he was new here, and still feeling his way around. (This piece of humility on his part seems to be a singular event. ) Only Professor Lambert was able to provide the Chevron with a reason for the dissolution of the division. Accordingly, this account is written from the’ point of view of those Canadians and others in the division whose studies and careers have been put in limbo by the insolent, arrogant action of these two men. \ (One might well ask, for example, why a tenured Canadian social psychologist like Don Amorose has so far been left out of the new social psychology “division”.) The story behind this is a minor classic in the long annals of american (and other) takeover of Canadian universities, and will be read with interest by those Canadians who are a little sick and tired of being pushed around in their own country. Let us go back to the “beginning”, last year, when the division was, according to all accounts (except Lerner’s and Dyal’s) functioning as a relatively harmonious, semi-democratic unit. In fact, the division unanimously agreed to operate on a consensus model, so that the head needed the consent of the division to make decisions. I Enter DR. Dyal, who informs the division that it had better accept DR. Lerner as head, or face the possible consequence of the division being dissolved. Although some members of the division were greatly concerned that yet another american would take up yet another important position in Canadian life, they foolishly consented, under this ‘threat, and in the belief that their division would acquire a great and noted academic, in the person of Dr. Lerner. (The deal involved DR. Lerner being given the right to hire, later,, a senior, and presumably american, faculty member, and providing his wife with a faculty appointment in man-environment. He was also, incredibly, given absolute power by DR. Dyal to run the division precisely as he saw fit, without the knowledge or consent of the division. ) DR. Lerner was at the time employed at the prestigous university of Kentucky. He eventually accepted the offer from America’s favourite colony, and he was across the (unfortunately) undefended border and at Waterloo this fall. Things did not go swimmingly well between the distinguished DR. Lerner and his Canadian underlings. DR. Lerner, for his part, gets pretty uncomfortable at any mention of Canadian control of Canadian universities, and is known to believe that americans in Canada are persecuted. (Perhaps he would be happier if the University of Waterloo flew an american flag. It is quite possible to argue that it should.) The Canadians, for their part, got somewhat upset over some of the learned DR. Lerner’s pre-. liminary conelusions on the native (Canadian) population. The sagacious DR. Lerner found the restive, sullen natives to be “acting half-human”. Taking an interest in our -pretty, parochial concerns he was soon able to proclaim that “Canadian nationalists are bigots” and “job protectionism in Canada is just bigotry, because Canadians can’t. compete on an open market.” (Like the US open market, with its 15 month wait for a working permit, and its law that no foreigner be hired until it be known that an American cannot be found.) His outright refusal, to accept the established democratic decision-making model, and his unwillingness to even call a full meeting of the division, caused an increasing alienation and lack of communication. Well, it was not long before relations cooled between the renowned DR. Lerner and his class-mates,: Indeed, the good DR. Lerner deserted his office with his division in the humanities building and took up headquarters in the psychology building, to the great consternation of no-one in particular. Never during this period, or later, did the emminent Dr. Lerner call a full meeting of the division. We are brought nearly up to date with the - news

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Dr. Dyal, chairmarl of the department o~f‘psychobgy s that DR. Dyal has dissolved the division of social psychology and personality, and announced the formation of a new divisionof social psychology. The only reasons advanced for the move so far were a lack of harmony in the division, and the necessity of demonstrating that the illustrious DR. Lerner, was, in fact, totally in charge. As for the first reason: The main divisive influence seems to have been the formidable Dr. Lerner. Should the division be punished for his inability to function with Canadians? One is led to the unkind suspicion that DR. Dyal is.not much interested in the opinions of his Canadian hosts. Is “Social Psychology” just a new name for an old division? Well, the word is that graduate students and faculty will be invited to the new division at the whim of the great DR. Lerner. But nobody seems to know for sure except, of course, for the inscrutable DRS. Dyal and Lerner. And they seem -\_ not to be talking. Is all of this further evidence of american arogance in Canada ? We have on campus colonialminded Canadian academics aplenty to tell us that it is not. We will be reminded, by people who otherwise regard themselves as liberal and democratic, that departments and divisions are what their chairmen choose to make of them (in the name of “excellence”). Seen ‘in this light, the august Dr. LernerY‘carte blanche” to deal with his division precisely ashe sees fit is amply justified on the ground that only the great academic himself can conceive the master plan which will lead to scholastic excellence. Indeed, there is a phenomenon to be found now in many departments which is deserving of examination: It is the recent emphasis on finding and hiring, in a worsening job market, only senior academics. Through the sixties, when Canadian applicants could be ignored with impunity, junior academics could be imported in droves. But now that it is clear that Canadians cannot any longer be shuffled aside for the junior positions, the cry goes out to find senior people who, in many instances, will likely have to be (or will be) recruited from abroad. What are the reasons for hiring these senior people? First, to get accreditation and stature as a graduate school, so that the department can add to Canada’s growing army of unemployed phd’s. (A phone call to Toronto revealed that U of T last year produced 7 PhD’s in the area of social psychology. Other universities are doubtless producing more. Of the 7, one was lucky enough to get a post-doctoral fellowship. ) The second reason is simply to build a prestige department, so that faculty members can enjoy the priviledge of being in a status situation. (They will tell you that it’s really for the good of the students, the university, and the country. Don’t believe them. ) When are we Canadians going to stop looking always outside for excellence, and simply get down to work producing it here (which we sometimes have) and respecting and employing it? When are we going to realize that no self-respecting people in any other Western country would permit a man like DR. Dyal to behave in such a contemtuous fashion? Where else would we find citizens (in this case Canadians) to pander to their colonial bosses in such a shame-faced manner as to welcome the dissolution of a division? It &all ve,ry strange. Dr. Maizan is director of the Canadian Research Committee.

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In what cannot be termed a top caliber basketball game last Wednesday night, Warriors outlasted the Yeomen from York. It took the Warriors five extra minutes of game time in order to defeat the Yeomen 94-85. The half time score was tied 40-40 and after 40 minutes of play, the scoreboard read 78-78. The five minutes of overtime pretty well belonged to the Warriors by virtue of a fierce ‘fullcourt press and close checking. The first half of the game progressed slowly with both teams looking very sloppy with the

take

win

from / York

court press by the Warriors, enough room for themselves to work the ball. Rebounding was , which has worked so well in games exploded into poor on the part of both teams as passed. Kieswetter good form and made many steals the ball managed to squirt from which made the overtime all player to player. No one seemed Warriors! to have any authority under the Bill Hamilton fouled out early basket. Bilewicz of the Warriors in the overtime after putting 19 was impressive a few times, points on the scoreboard. His tipping in missed shots and grabexit was quickly duplicated for bing rebounds, but did not have the same reason by Sandy Nixon the! confidence to maintain this of York. Nixon’s absence fired authority for the entire game. the Warriors and it began a downNixon and Raphael with 17 and hill slide for York as the War14 points set the pace for York riors forged ahead. as they skillfully managed the Jaan Laaniste was the game’s ball against the Warriors on many I top shooter with 28 points. His occasions. v final points came on two foul The overtime session brought shots, that tied the score 84-84 the return of an impressive full with less than two minutes to go in overtime. This was followed by a steal by Kieswetter which he turned into an easy lay-up. From here on,, your correspondent was able to find his pen (previously stepped on in the excitement) and relax as time ran out for the Yeomen. The team has bench strength this year in persons such as

ball. Kieswetter’s passing and floor play at guard left much to be desired. No one was hitting well as the ball just did not seem to fit the hoop. York was playing the same type of game looking sloppy under the basket, but managing to break the full court press quite often. The breaking of the press left the- Warriors with too few men back, consequently giving up a few too many points. ’ The second half saw the Warriors press holding together much more effectively as the checking became closer. The Warriors looked too crowded under the basket as they did not leave

WALT.ERS 9.

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e the

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Hadju, Ignatevicus, Bigness and Lance. The starters consisting of Kieswetter, Laaniste, Bilewicz, Hamilton, and Dragan still require more of the unity that is only slightly present. Ed Dragan was very impressive with his constant hustle and rebounding. A probable reason for such a strong overtime is the tough conditioning the team is put through. Your roving reporter feels coach Lavelle is molding a team that will be a top contender for the Canadian championships because of their great conditioning and the b-ball knowledge being imparted to the team. . The Warriors will next see action this thursday, when they face Detroit Tech. These teams have met before with both having gained a victory. War- . riors won handily last Christmas . in the Bliss College tournament, but dropped a close game to the Tech. bunch on Detroit’s home court. Player to watch for ’ is Ike Bundy, reported to be their top scorer.

team

Mazur staff

Tonight the Warriors will face the McMaster Marlins at 8 p.m. in the Waterloo arena. By the time this copy reaches you the Warriors will already have gained their second win of the season by virtue of their victory over Western down in London. The Warriors will be using these matches both as a tune-up for their first big ’ meeting of the year, next Wednesday night against the Varsity Blues, and as an atonement of their Frustrating weekend at Laurentian. Taking a brief look at the Marlins, we see that they have’ an overall record of 1 win, 1 loss Considering these ‘and 2 ties. games were played against the bottom teams of the league, name-

warms

up

ly Windsor, Western and Guelph, I’m not impressed. On paper, tonight’s game doesn’t appear to be a very tough contest. The thing to remember is that coach McKillop will be pushing his charges to- the limit, in case they tend to let up and blow this game. It would be very easy for the Warriors, as their minds must be on the big game next week against the Blues.

Slapshots: ’ Jimmy the Greek says odds . are 9 to 1 that Marlins don’t even get a tie. Obviously these odds are influenced by the return of top scoring right-winger Ken Laidlaw.

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Warrior Paul Bilewicz eludes ex-Hawk Sandy Nixon and jump-passes to Bill Crash Hamilton . who in his first full game of the season hit for I9 pts. before leaving because of fouls.

Western

Two determined Warrior players stopped a Yueman in a qommie conspiracy to deflate the basketball in Wednesday’s game.

here tomorrow:

Swim Athenas The university of Waterloo Athenas swimming and diving team continued on its winning ways tuesday dunking Buffalo State 60-43 at a dual meet held in Buffalo. * The gals, lead by Joyce Matthison and Joy Stratten who each broke a team record, won six of 11 events while Marg Brown, the defending O-QWITCA diving champion took first place in the one metre competition with a solid 138 pts. Laura Martin, the other Athena diver in the meet placed third after leading the contest up to her last dive. ~ Joy Stratten continued to

win

break her team record for the 200 yd freestyle. Its now 2:18.8 down 3.2 seconds from the record she established just two weeks ago at the McMaster Invitational. Joyce’ Matthison shaved off four-tenths of a second in the 50 yd breast stroke to set the other team record which now stands at 36.1 seconds. Other standouts at the Buffalo meet were Chris Lutton, winner

at Buffdo of the 50 butterfly in 33.2, and Lee Fraser, winning the 100 backstroke in 1:14.2. Fraser also took the 50 backstroke in 28.0 which tied the existing team record. Judy Abbotts and Laura Folley came in one-two for Waterloo in the 50 freestyle in times of 2810 and 30.0 respectively, while the Athenas 200 freestyle relay team came home first in the final race of the meet in a fast 1157.3.

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Four members of the university of Waterloo track club bested an international field of sixty-five runners to carry off the team honours at the sixty-first annual Berwick Marathon, last week in Berwick, Pennsylvania. Dave Northey led the Waterloo team with a second place finish to Jerry Richey of the university of Pittsburgh. Northey’s time of 45 minutes, 51 seconds over a very hilly 9 l/3 mile course was the fifth fastest time ever recorded. Richey timed in 45:29.6 missed the record by 11 seconds. Rounding out the winning Waterloo team were Paul Pearson (10th) in 47 : 58, Kip Sumner ( 15th) in 48: 54 and Murray Hale (23rd) in 49 : 52. .This was enough to give the Warriors a margin of three points over the Lock Haven track club. Third place went to Harrisburg AAA. .

etitetd

streak.

.I

Travelling to Sudbury last weekend to do battle with Laurentian and Carleton in an exhibition tri-tournament, proved profitable for our volleyball Athenas. They trounced the competition and extended. their win .* ~1% streak to five straight matches. The first match of the day had the Athenas face last year’s OQWCIA champs, the Carleton Ravenettes. Definitely ready for the match, the Athenas opened up a quick two game lead with scores of 15-11 and 15-10. before the Ottawa lasses could retaliate 15-11. The fourth game saw . the girls from Waterloo get mad and demolish Carleton 15-3. This set the tone for the day and in the afternoon match against Laurentian the scores were 15-8,15-3, 14-16 and 15-2. Top performers for the Athenas were rookie Judy Wilcox who in the games against the Ravknettes, displayed her fin-e setting ability, 1as many points were with her assist. The afternoon match saw veteran Jan Roorda rise to the occasion and with her aggressive net play force Laurentian into many costly mistakes. Next chance for a look at our redhot volleyers will be this friday; at 7: 30 p.m., when they take on the pesky Windsor Lancerettes.

Sqqdm a’ busy

dub plans pti spring season

The Waterloo .squash team is off to their best season to date. In matches against the university of Guelph, they emerged with 5-O and 4-l wins. This was followed up with a 4-l win over the K-W racket’club. Their -only reversal of the year came in a 3-2 setback at the hands of the LonI don squad. This year’s version includes veteran Dave Harrison who still holds down the number one spot. His position is challenged by promising rookie Doug MacLean. Other team members include T. Crihgan, J. Cushing, P. Ibrahim, G.’ Merei, H. Moore and J. McGorman. The overall strength of this year’s squad suggests a highly successful season. The next outing for the squashers will be on january 10 and 11, this will be the western Ontario “C” tournament held at the Thistle club in Hamilton. Anyone interested in competing should send their written entries to the jock shop by the 22nd of december. Varsity’and club tryouts will be held monday, december 7, at 4.p.m. in court 1015, all interested are invited to attend. The squash club is also active in intramurals. The squash ladder tournament is now posted on the bulletin board opposite court 1014. Everybody is placed in the pool and’positions in the upper divisions will be determined by the number of wins and losses by each player. A new ladder will be posted by january 6th, the results ,of these ladder tournaments will help to determine players for the many matches slated for january and february. . Also there will -be a squash house league invitational tournament featuring doubles and singles ‘events between january 25 and february 5. Details will follow later.

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Well, your ever faithful reporter went out on the limb when he predicted the outcome of the hockey season this fall. Although the results have already fell short of the expectations, with PE & Ret being tripped up in quarter final action 2-0, certain mention has-to be made of their opponents, the Arts-men. This club got off to a slow start losing 3-O to Optometry who finished last in their league. But as the season progressed and players quit or got cut from the Warriors they began to put it ‘together ending with a 3-l-l effort for 1st place. Now this club looks good enough, that the Bullbrook cup may be sitting in the arts society trophy case until the end of the winter term. They have good goaltending, strong defence, and some quick skating, hard shooting forwards. To me, that looks like a well - balanced club that’s going to be a contender. In-other action, St. -Jeromes took the opener defeating a second place Village 1-S 4-O.’ Their _ efforts were not consistent but the solid wall set by Cord Campbell in the net was all they needed to overcome their spotty play. Similarly Village l-N, St. Jeromes next opponents, are bolstered by an outstanding ‘goal-tender who will make it a real battle in the nets, while out in front we should see a hard hitting game between two evenly matched clubs. Village 1-N defeated a frustrated Lower Math team that got behind -5-O in the first period and couldn’t make a comeback in a 6-l loss. The old Engineering hex was on St. Pauls College as they did everything but put the puck in the net. It was the same story that‘has be& repeated since 1968 when the plumbers lost their last game. St. Pauls took the lead twice, but got sloppy around their own net and this is when the Engineers are at their best. With Engineering leading 3-2 St. Pauls shot labled goals at the net but the posts got in the way twice. Something has certainly been lacking in the Upper Eng ‘boys play in the last couple of games and unless they find that missing link very quickly they may be heading for their first big defeat. 1’ Sunday, december 6th, at moses springer arena at 10:00 p.m. we will finally find out who is going to win this mad league which has been filled with the unexpected. St. Jeromes will certainly have an edge in that they have been blessed with two Village team opponents, while Upper Eng and the Arts club have been knocking themselves around the rink in more evenly matched battles. However it is my feeling that these close tough games are only a gromning for whichever club reaches the finals, .

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whereas St. Jeromes hit their peak a long time ago and are on the great downslide. St. Jeromes College have hit their peak, And U. Eng could fix their leak, But the Artsmen never say die, Maybe the Plumbers won’t get by? Now you Bagbitters don’t be bitter, You can win all the marbles in the litter, That is of course if you do not tumble, _ And lose to North with just one stumble. .

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final

Monday evening proved everything we thought it would in the basketball playoffs, with the division champs winning the opener in each of the four series. PE and Ret outhustled and outshot St. Pauls _College 35-26 in series a while Env. Studies put it to Upper Eng. 45-22 in series b action, with Daryl Kreuzer hooping 12 points for the winners. In c division Lower Math led by Pat Fallon’s 10 point effort fell short of defeating a very strong Village 2-SE club 38-32. And in the final series St. Jeromes managed to thwart a very valiant effort by Village 2-NW, 34-15. In the semi-finals held last Wednesday night at Seagram Stadium, things went as planned. In the first game it was Env. Studies led by the twenty points of Barker over the jocks 70-56. Leo McBride threw in eighteen points for the losers. The second game saw St. Jeromes go over Village 2SE by the score of 5848:This game saw Bacarani score 11 points for the winners and Ron Howse throw 12 in a losing cause. This sets up an interesting final slated night at 9 p.m. in the jock complex. This desk still stays with the Bagbitters the Condon cup.

Broomball

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for toto win

of the week

The grudge match of the season will take place today at noon at queensmount arena. The all-star squad of fat-lip Burko, (alias the kleen sweepe), will play the upstart challengers from league b, the Furri Freaks. This promises to be an interesting match, with Laurie Burko promising not to beat the castoffs by too big a score. The term cast-off refers to earlier this term when the main body of the Furries were’judged not good enough to make the sweepes’ team. Thusly the grudge! \

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If the right to private property argument is going to be the criterion for deciding who has the right to use the campus centre, then why is it increasingly being inhabited by non-tax-paying, (unemployed) free loaders who have no interest in university education, and who are making the centre undesirable, unusable and dangerous for taxpayers (such as university students)? Armed violence has been used by speed-freaks, non-tax-paying hood types to deal with students or otherwise who get in their way. One should have to prove his tax-paying status before he is allowed in the centre. GRAHAM WAFER arts 4 pp&P

ties

another

on

Referring to an ad for a transportation planner which was run in the Globe and Mail recently one can see the administration is planning to add another ‘supervisor’ at god-knows-what dollars to our already large bureaucracy. Obviously the top physical plant administrators do not feel that they can trust a study of uniwat’s traffic and parking demands to the university students in any or all of the courses related to such work-planning, architecture or civil engineering. Perhaps they fear that student projects on such topics would advocate such non-conforming (to the administrators) campus traffic uses as protected walkways, total pedestrian right-of! way, and bicycle trails; and prob/ably relegate large parking lots flows to areas beyond the ringroad near major arterials. (ie. by seagrams or north of columbia rd.) Obviously such alternatives have been passed over. The administration wants, someone to tell them how many parking spaces they need on campus and what charges will recoup ‘expenses .for paving, maintenance, policing and automat& parking gates with attendant. Here’s hoping I don’t get run over by this ‘optimum traffic flow’ while I ride to campus. CHRIS SMITH - plan 4 Refugee an urab

problems creation

Like Ramzi Twal, I too recognize the existence of refugees caused by the 1948 Arab-Israeli war. But why does the problem still exist? ’ The armed resistance of the Arab states to the U.N. plan created the refugee problem. At the call of the Mufti, a large part of the Arab population left the territory of the State of Israel, with the intention of returning in triumph to their homes, in the,wake of the Arab armies: Conversely, however, all the Jews who had lived in that part of Palestine which fell to Jordan were driven out. To this expulsion of the Palestinian Jews of Old Jerusalem, He,bron and so forth was added the expulsion of the Jews from the other Arab countries. The number of Jews who had to leave the Arab countries is evident from the fact that today the majority of Israel’s Jews are not of European

24

576 the Chevron

Address letters to feedback, the chevron, V of W. Be concise. The chevron reserves the right to shorten letters. Letters must be typed on a 32 charac ter tine. For legal reasons, letters must be signed with’course year and phone numbec. A pseudonym will be printed if you have a good reason.

but of Asian (Near Eastern) and North African origin. Yet, while Israel has done everything in its power to integrate the newcomers in the life of the state, the Arab states have blocked the normalization of the Palestinian refugees’ life and the productive absorption of these people among their Arab and Moslem brothers. They kept them crammed in barracks and sustained them with UNRWA emergency food and clothing rations. Because only as refugees could they be considered a political asset and did they constitute an instrument of political pressure. The wound was to remain an open sore, as a demonstration to the world and as a standing indictment against Israel. And this despite the fact that Israel had offered, from the start, a variety of compromise solutions based on the recognition of both Arab.-and Jewish rights in Palestine. The Arab nationalists kept rejecting all offers, always insisting on their exclusive rights to Palestine and on the removal of its Jewish society. It is this Arab intransigence, and not any inherent incompatibility with the Arabs on the part of the Zionist movement that is responsible for the plight of the masses of Arab refugees. JACOB PADRO mech. eng. Pfe_cautions necessary rip-offs here on campus

,

There are a lot of things on this campus that I did not Know about. For example, that thieves are living on campus. On Wednesday my friend had his wallet stolen from a gym locker. This afact didn’t concern me to a great extent until I had my roof slashed in lot h on Friday. ‘As a result an expensive ‘wool coat was stolen. Somebody around here sure must be cold, in more ways than one. Please be advised that this is happening here and take the precautions you feel are necessary. In fact six coats were stolen over-the weekend. STUART WHALE student

Poorold wu Be//” you

can’t

win

‘em

a//

Your Friday, - November 13, page 5, article on representation of the Board of Governors should have read that W. M. Rankin, retired Toronto area vice-president -is Bell Canada’s representative. That’s a minor and understandable error. However you go on to suggest that some 12% of Bell Canada’s shares are held by theU.S. owned A.T.& T. Now you can call Ma Bell a mother anytime you please but when you suggest that A.T.& T. has her by the apron strings, that’s going too far. You not only transposed the digits, you forgot a decimal’poin t. A.T.& T. hold only 2.1% of Bell Canada’s ’ shares. Other less timely but equally interesting data regarding Bell Canada shareholders is as follows: Shareholders resident 97.7% in Canada ’ Shares held in Canada 95.4% Shares held by men 25.5% Shares held by women 33.3% Shares held by institutions 33.5%

I hope this confirms our perhaps not often enough repeated statement that Bell Canada is a company built, owned, and managed by Canadians. T. J. TRAVERS Expulsion of non-students w;ll emphasize problem

The Globe and Mail of November 28, 1970, carried a front page story about our’ University of Waterloo ‘Community Centre,’ and surprisingly enough for the Globe it wasn’t entirely wrong. ’ It was pointed out that we allow a large number of non-university people to make full use of the CC. It also mentioned that there is no where else in K-W for these people to go. It seems to me that we are doing. everyone involved a disservice with our open-door policy. We do these kids a dis-service in that they will never have a place in K-W as long as the twin cities can suck us into being responsible for them. If we were to close our doors to these people and they started showing up on the streets of the K-W or in Fairview Plaza (following the -example of kids in London), then the good citizens of K-W who don’t want these kids in public view would soon pressure the local gov’t to provide facilities. ‘Wt-do-not help-the community around us by hiding their major problems in our Campus Centre. It seems ironic that the same people who would like to see more people in the streets drawing attention to Vietnam and other serious problems, are content to let the problem of the local youth be covered up in ourcampus centre. These people allow the local politicians to escape a major crisis in K-W. The open door policy also does the students of U. of W. a disservice . . . we no longer have a student centre, at least one we are willing to use. There was a time when the campus centre was a real student centre, where U. of W. students were willing to spend some time and were not ashamed to bring visitors. This, as most people on campus now realize, is no longer the case. May I suggest /an admittedly unpopular fascist measure as a temporary aid. I think the Campus Centre board should invite the R.C.M.P. to concentrate their efforts on busting the characters using the CC to push ‘hard- drugs. And I suggest the turnkeys be instructed to discourage, even evict, non-university people using the CC as a flop-house and market place for heroin, etc. I realize that I leave myself open to the charge of being a fascist-pig with this suggestion. However, when it becomes clear that hard drugs are being sold, people are being beaten in the washrooms, and students generally are ashamed of the Campus Centre, then I think the Campus Centre board can take some drastic moves to “cleanup” the CC and expect that the vast majority of U. of W. students to support them 100%. - DEREK M. BROWN, poli.sci. 3

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people since the Roman conquest of Israel, was sparsely populated by Arabs, Jews and Christians, Below is a memo that was placand agriculturally neglected. The ed in the mail boxes of students period between 1930 and 1948 saw attending Conrad Grebel College. / the negotiation of separate bordThis will give a little insight into ers for the differing Arab.ic cultural groups of Syria, Jordan, Iraq the way things are at ‘old CGC ! The shit will probably hit the fan and Lebanon. As the imperial so please leave my name off the powers of France and Britain beletter. gan to recognize the right of culA GkEBELlTE turally-diverse groups in the area for self-determination, the requests were granted. When the To: all Conrad grebel college British mandate over Palestine residents. drew to a close, it was apparent From: the faculty that two cultural groups existed in In the light of the recent events the area: Moslems and Jews. In which way would the printhe administration and faculty of ciple of self-determination for all Conrad Grebel College wish to peoples concerned be best servspecify again the school’s position ed: by setting up the majority as being against extra-marital sex’group to rule the minority in the ual relations and wish to be unwhole area, or by partitioning the derstood as prohibiting any such area into two sovereign states acacts on its premises. cording to concentration of popResidents violating this standula tion, so that each ethnic group ard are asked to leave the resimay pursue its rights in freedence, and if apprehended will be dom? The latter was seen as the required to do so immediately. only just solution by the U.N. in 1948. Eaton’s reprentative But the Arab world refused to recognize either the Jewish state of those who fun economy of Israel or the Arab state of PalI just can’t understand how you estine, and declared war upon Iscan imply that Eatons is a big riprael. off. Why, just the other day my Comparison of Zionism to Nazmother wrote me and said that ism is beneath contempt. Zionist she returned a tape recorder to philosophies, be they those of Eatons’ that she had for three monHerzl, Ahad Ha’am, Martin Buber ths and they accepted it with no or Einstein don’t answer, Arab questions asked. pacts with Nazi Germany in World As my mother says, this couldn’t War II clearly reflect the Arab happen in a country other than position. And Arab countries still Canada or the U.S. continue to provide asylum and We, should consider t ourselves protection for’ Nazis. The amount fortunate to live in a country and content of anti-Jewish literawhere the economy is handled ture circulating within the modby such understanding people. ern Arab world is amazing Works Instead all we ever hear is critsuch as “Mein Kampf” and the isizm. Shape up or go back where “Protocols of the Elders of Zion” you come from. have become standard literary fare. ’ ARCHIE DOWN The amount and character of mathematics I anti-Jewish indoctrination in Arab schools, even at the lowest levels Arabs arguments is apalling. Al Fatah, main spokesbased on fiction man for Palestinian revolutionaries, has been seeking and receivIn my previous letter I contending support from Nazi and Fascist ed that Arab hypocrisy is exhibworld organizations. ited by, denouncing political docI would like to reiterate Israel’s uments on one hand and challengguarantee of equal rights to all her ing Israel to live up to the terms citizens, be they Jews or Arabs. of these documents on the other The use of identification cards hand. No rebuttal to this contendoes not impede these rights, extion was offered either by Ramzi cept where guerrilla activity is inTwal or MO Ghamian. Instead, volved. Israel is not proud of such they repeated long-standing Arab measures, but only peace with propaganda. I find. that their argArabs could eliminate them. Critument rests upon three assumpicism of this as a lack of demtions: first, that Palestine was ocracy in Israel has come from Arab land inhabited by Arabs only; and monarchies second, that Zionist philosophy is Arab dictatorships where any word of opposition, esa form of Nazism; and third, that pecially from Jews, is a crime. Arab countries offer more demWhere antizionism may exist ocracy and religious freedom than freely at all levels of Israeli soIsrael. ciety, even in Parliament, Jewish Contrary to’ Mr. Ghamian’s opposition in Arab countries rebelief, there is sufficient evidence as the that the‘ population of Israel in sulted in such treatment recent hanging of Jews in Iraq “time immemorial” was composamidst a festival atmosphere. Is ed solely of Jews. And for the past it under these conditions that 2000 years a substantial communRamzi Twal expects Rabbi Sasity of Jews with numerous culsoon Khadouri of Iraq to express tural and economic institutions free opinions about Israel or Arab existed in Palestine, including Why the needless torwaves of immigrants in the 18th regimes? and 19th centuries. As a case in ture and hanging of ‘Iraqi Jews if Arabs are convinced of their antipoint, I am a Jew born in PalesIsraeli stand? tine with a Palestinian birth cerIsrael is not a religious state, tificate while under British rule. . In terms of immediate lineage, my but a nation of predominantly Jewish culture, as is Jordon of parents and their parents before them were born in Palestine un- Arabic culture, France of French culture, and Japan of Japanese der Turkish rule. The rise of nationalism in the culture. While the principle of separation of church and state is al19th century saw the reawakenmost unknown in the Arab world, ing of national sentiments among the only two states in the entire Jews as well. Their territory, nevMiddle East and North Africa er governed by its “indigenous” Grebel

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Address letters to feedback, the chevron, U of W. Be concise.. The chevron reserves the right to shorten letters. Letters must be typed on a 32 charac ter line. For legal reasons, letters must be signed with course year an.d phone number. A pseudonym will be printed

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declares here

It is unfortunate that I have been forced to address myself to the above points rather than those which would lead to peace in the Middle East and solution of the refugee problem. JACOB PADRO , mechanical eng Pins mis-uses facts to support superiody

The long letter of Mr. Prins which appeared in the K-W record on Nov. 27, seems to have ,been written out of a sheer desire to justify his own preconceived notions of a false superiority with an intentional or unintentional dis- tortion of facts. Does he know that the figure he himself has quoted for the total aid from the west Subcontinent to the Indian amounts to less than 1 percent of the GNP of the region for the same period of time and even to a much smaller percentage of the,, region which provided the aid? Does he think this is too much considering the fact that 80 percent of world’s air, water, and other natural resources are being consumed by the 15 percent of the world’s people who have settled in the latter region? The unfortunate events that happened at the time of the partision of the subcontinent are certainly deplorable. However if Mr. Prins had bothered to learn a little more about the region he would have known that India did not ‘kick out’ all the moslems and that they retained a couple of them to get elected as the President, Vice President, senior ministers in the central government etc. Mr. Prins quotes a figure of 250 million cows in India belonging to nobody. Even assuming that there are no cows that belong to somebody this gives a figure of 1 cow per 2 human beings. Can he explain why there is a shortage of milk which is not certainly prohibited by religion? It is ‘certainly true that many Hindus and Buddists do not eat ’ cows, many jews and moslems do not eat pigs, and many in the west do not eat cats, dogs and horses etc. These customs might have evolved just to alleviate the imbalance of the species characteristic of the respective region. Mr. Prins seems to have spent a lot of time with the cows of India during his visit, in addition to being a guest of a Maharaja. If he had ever paid for the beef he was ’ eating in India he would have realized why the Indians were not eating beef. Mr. Prins advocates discipline for the countries of the ea’st. But alas! What an irony! The advice originates from the continent, which has the highest crime rate in the world. Let Mr. Prins stop boosting his ego and realize that what India lacks is capital and not religious sermons, advice on self-discipline or petty packets of food sent primarily to sup-press incentives. Finally I do agree with Mr. Prins that The governments and the peoples of the eastern countries should make an- attempt to raise themselves and should not be bureaucratic and inefficient as their Western counterparts can afford to be. I

DR..K.

EDFROM 1:30 _ AND SUNDAY

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SRINIVASAN. elect. eng. friday

4 december

1970 (I ~33)

577

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Beware the public or&t act , . HE *BILL

T

Measures

Public Order Temporary Act. 1970 (POTMA) will

soon become federal law in Canada, putting the emergency war measures act back in mothballs fil next time. English Canada will be able to breathe a sigh of relief-and forget all about Quebec again until .the next “state of apprehended insurrection’*. But what does the temporary legislation, POTMA really say? The third and eighth Sections probably contain the most important portions. Section 3 says:

*

I

“The -group of persons or association known as le front de liberation du Quebec and any successor groups or successor organization of the said front de liberation du Quebec’, or any group of persons or association that advocates the use of force pr the commission of crime as a means of or as an aid in accomplishing the same or substantially the same governmental change within Canada as that advocated by the said le front de liberation du Quebec, is declared to be an unlawful organization.” Clearly this is an attempt by the government to smash all real forms bf extraparliamentary opposition. The only legal opposition, in effect, is that found in the house of commons. The people of Quebec are then left to the mercy of politicians who have yet to provide any real solutions to their problems. Neither the Bourassa’nor the Trudeau governments has been able to solve the unemployment problem in Quebec, let alone the problem of language discrimination and its ramifications. The new legislation does nothing to protect the people. It ensures that the Trudeau-style government will stay in pow&r despite the multitude of problems which Trudeau and others like hi? will never solve. Only very fundamental changes in our society can do that. And this is what the politicians are trying to prevent-by outlawing any attempt to oppose their power with action. The only ‘violence’ &der consideration now, is the violence which-in anger and frustration-is directed against a wealthy and powerful few. Institutionalized violence-emofional, psychological, physical, economic-is ignored and allowed to run rampant. According to Quebec-Presse, the FLQ Manifesto received the support of over 50 per cent of the Quebecois (only 25 per cent of the population is english speaking) indicating that the Quebecois know they have been treated unjustly. But no new legislation has been proposed to alleviate their very real grievances. In fact, the reasons behind the actions of the FLQ have been cotipletelY obscured by the publicity given to the ’ ment in its hunt for the kidnappers. The Act deals with law and order in total isolation from the human -needs of the majority of pkopte in Quebec.

either before qr after the coming into force of this act. ..is, in the absence of evidence of the contrary, proof that he is a member of the unlawful association. ” The act is retroactive. Anyone, ever the years who has supported the FLQ through its various stages of development, or has supported similar movements, is liable to five years imprisonment, unless the person can sufficiently convince the courts that he no longer shares the same beliefs (hopes? ideals? ). Section 3 appears to be a complete reversal of the justice system we studied in high school. Or perhaps it just explicitly states what many have thought: the old , addage that a man is innocent until proven guilty just is not true. Under the POTMA, a man is guilty and must prove he is inThe only difference is that nocent. POTMA says it in black and white. Both section 3 and section 8 will be extremely importantin the trials coming up. Visibly or invisibly, they will be the cause of heavy repression throughout Canada, -forcing many people to keep silent about their opposition to- the status quo in fear of being charged with conspiracy or treason. The law is vague enough to aipply to all the different factions of the left in Canada and in Quebec.

The police maintain their extraordinary powers under the new legislation. They have the right to search, ai-rest and seize documents without a warrant. The only actual change with -POTMA is .the reduction of time a person may be detained without being charged and brought to trial. The person arrested has to be charged by the end of three days or released, instead of the seven days specified under the war measures. The maximum period of detention without charges is reduced to seven from 21. But the real crux of the problem has b&en avoided. It is buried. The Trudeau government, has been victorious in decieving the- people of Canada. We no , longer think about the poverty of Quebecpis, but concefitrate on how and order may be maintained.

HE DAILY PAPERS’ coverage of the new proposal has not done much to clarify the proposal. The day after John Turner presented the POTMA to the house of commons the daily papers ran heads like: “Police power narrowed to terrorists”, or “Turner brings in new bill only aimed at FLQ”, and “Slight improvement over war measures”. Why was the War Measures Act invoked in the first place? That question was never answered fully. The papers have said that Montreal mayor Jean Drapeau, and premier Robert Bourassa called for it. The evidence their call was based on has nev& been g&en, yet -without it the representatives of our ‘democratic system’ are going to vote in a law that has the answer to that question at its roots. To this date there is no proof for the people of Canada that the Quebec government was going to be overthrown by a Fevolutionary force within the period of time that the FLQ kidnapped James Cross and the war measures act was invoked.

govern-

*

Section three of POTMA affects all left movements in Canada which support the liberation of Quebec. It- is possible ‘ for any of the provincial governments to charge a left group under the POTMA, citing their-support of the “le Quebec libre” as evidence. If a person ,is charged under the law, it is up to the person to prove he is innocent. The law automatically assumes the person charged is guilty in this case. Which leads to the second very important section of the POTMA, section 8:

“tin any prosecution for an offence under this act, evidence tha+ any person,

26

578 the Chevron

The Montreal Star writes: “The federal government has decided to narrow the extraordinary police powers proclaimed here last month so they apply only to groups seeking the indepen‘dence of Quebec by violence. “Under the war measures act regulations, any group seeking government change by violence was outlawed and extraordinary police powers were permitted to hunt them down. “The new public order (temporary measures) act, 1970 restricts the law to the front de liberation du Quebec and any organization with similar aims. ” These two paragraphs alone are contradictory-the words have been changed around but the effect is the same: any group seeking to change the government by other than normal channels wether it be the FLQ or any other group is illegal and may face the same repression as the FLQ now faces. Both acts say the same thing, but in the first three paragraphs the Montreal Star has mystified the new act for many people and leads them to believe that restrictions on the “left” have been eased. The Toronto Star and the Globe Mail include similar’ analyses. But

the law

Unemployment is still between 12 and 15 per cent in Quebec. Almost all of those unemployed are French and a good majority are under 25 years of age. The public order (temporary measures) act, 1970, will not solve these kinds of problems in Quebec. Law and order cannot deal with the larger social problems.

T

The daily papers, from which most people get their information, have mystified the _meaning of Turner’s proposed legislation.

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,

and the

Toronto another

Star also includes mystification coup.

in their

paper

The heid to the Toronto Star story reads: Turner brings in new bill aimed only at FLQ. The story begins by talking about how the law is to combat the FLQ, and then a few paragraphs down the story explains how the new law will be used against other revolutionaries too, even though it is aimed “only at the c FLQ”. Having ,confused the readers about whom the-law actually is aimed at, and at the same time leading them to believe that this new bill will be better than the war measures, Anthony Westall writes a few pages later: “It appears to do a great deal, but it actually acheives little. ” “But in bleak truth, the emergency powers ;which the government has been using under the war measures act will remain much as before, with slight modifications and clarifications.” Westall’s column has the mo&honest interpretation o’f the POTMA, but its position in the newsDaner.1 I after stories saying that the PO?%lA is a change fdr the better, makes one wonder how the reader is to know where the truth is. And many people never get past the headlines on page 1. ’ -adapted

from

CUP


-The deviance -_ 0 CLAIMLas did the Globe and Mail editorial tuesday (Building education backlash)-that universities in general will have their fund appropriations cut. back by the provincial government unless they clean up the “invasion of permissiveness” supposedly demonslrated by this university’s campus center, is an absurd evaluation of what was, to begin with, outrageously sensationalized news reporting. The Globe and Mail, a newspaper which generally prints reasonable and accurate accounts, has forever tainted its credibility with anyone who possesses an ounce of analytical sense by running last Saturday’s campus center story by William Johnson. And the subsequent editorial in that paper has proved the inadequate practice of the commercial press-admitted by Johnson himself-of presenting only 11description. Without an ounce of history. Without an ounce of analysis. Without an ounce of persepective. If, indeed, the general public called for violent repression of so-called university permissiveness and budgets on the basis of the Globe’s accounts, it would be both unfit to vote in any election and would corroborate the incredible ignorance the Globe implies is the substance of its thought. For the Globe is suggesting the universities be punished by elected public officials for revealing a social situation - created by the general public in the first place and subsequently ignored by the elected officials to whom the public abrogates its responsibility. For the problemis not the campus center. This poor wretched building has been made the scapegoat for the impoverished mentalities of officials like those in Kitchener-Waterloo who prefer to see their policemen drive transients to the campus center willingly in order to get what is their problem-this society’s problem -away from public view. The problem is not that the campus center has become “a temple to the concepts of. ..contempt for laws, craving for self-destruction, cultivation of indolence and an assault on (morality). ..” Bather the problem is with a society that first creates ghetto cultures by its refusal to accept alternate values, and then chastises those responsible when somewhere, somehow, the ghetto can no longer be hidden. What the Globe is saying is this: ONever mind why, but we have in our midst, an undesireable sub-culture. @Never mind where, just get them out of sight. *Punish the university for not successfully hiding what we’ve striven to hide for years. Woe to the society that would accept \ such stupid drivel. Damn the Globe and Mail for perpetrating it. . - ’ What, specifically, was the Globe’s approach that left so much to be desired? The original article by freshman university affairs reporter William Johnson, as well as the editorial that followed gave the distinct impression that student control of the building has been the cause of its alledged degeneration. In both articles, the term “liberated” is used-referring to the physical removal in 1968 of the offic,e equipment of the administration-appointed manager. And in both cases, the derisive connotation of placing the word in quotation marks is unmistakeable. ,

T

The fact, of course, is that the opendoor, 24-hour policy students wanted to implement was one of the first moves on any campus to recognize university facilities as useable by the entire community. The editorial implies the administration should take a hard line in dealing with the “problem” and states “the fact remains that this is undeniably a center owned and operated by the university and that the university-is thereby inescapably responsible for it. ” But who is responsible for the inadequacies of the buiiding itself? Who is responsible for the fact that to cut costs, the administration deliberately ignored the student recommendations for the building’s design, and allowed construction of a 2 million dollar white elephant, complete with wasted space, dark corners, a useless Great Hall which destroys rather than creates the possibility of interaction, and which was built for 5,000-not lO,OOO-students? Where was this information in the Globe’s story? Where was the informaion pointing to the lack of Kitchener-Waterloo initiative in establishing drop-in centers and youth h’ostels for the local population? Herein lies one of the greatest failings of the commercial press-one, in fact, that prompted the late Ernest Hemmingway to leave journalism decades ago.. Hemmingway became disgusted with commercial journalism because in his words, there was great concern with who, what, when and where, but, never ‘any inclination to ask why. We’re sorry, :Mr. Johnson, but your excuse that the story was only intended for description ,just isn’t good enough. Using pejorative words such as “liberated”, “harboring”, “writhe and twitch”., “at the hour of midnight”, “driven at full volume”, and implying that one night’s supposed observations is the behavioral’norm is just too much to comprehend when the context completely lacks any analysis, any history, any purpose other than to sensationalize. The campus center is a mess, if only because last year the university saw fit to award its cleaning contract to firms who paid substandard wages to men who would not show up for shifts. Only now, after continued _ pressure from both the center board and the federation of students, has the administration agreed to give the job back to university cleaners. Further, federation president Larry Burke has stated negotiations begun within the last two weeks with the Kitchener-Waterloo city councils toward the establishment of drop-in centers and hostels, are progressing’ well. The student organizations on this campus have seen the need for changes, and have been working silently for some time toward amelioration of the campus center’s problems. Granted, the campus does not ‘need the pushers, the bikers or the cop-outs. But neither does it need the hysteria of the Globe and Mail or the bandwagon inanities of those who will waste the time of our people nattering about hippies, longhair students, over-permissiveness and corruption. For undoubtedly, the conditions they complain we are allowing to exist are in fact the product of their own intollerance and narrow prejudice.

. . .A /ex Smith,

editor

of a chosen few

thechmvn . ‘member: Canadian university press (CUP) and underground press syndicate (UPS). subscriber. liberation news service (LNS) and chevron international news service (GINS). the chevron is a newsfeature tabloid published offset fifty-two times a year (1970-7 1) on tuesdays and fridays by the federation of students, incorporated university of Waterloo. Content is the responsibility of the chevron staff, independent of the federation and the university administration.offices In the campus center; phone (519) 578-7070 or university Local 3443; telex 0295 - 748 crrculatlon.

10,500 Alex

(tuesdays) Smith,

13,000 (fndays)

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Next week the chevron is sending its special vice-routing squad to the offices of the Toronto Globe and Mail to expose the heinous acts being pertetrated by a corrupt and innefficient system. Complete with photographs ot the cobwebs In the notorious Men’s John, we will brrng live, all the sordid details of the skeletons in the honorable Globe’s closets. See reporters on their beat taking notes, oogle-eyed in the speakeasies and dives of upper Yonge and middle Spadina. See perversions occuring around the newsdesk as the chief copy editor drools’and smacks his puffy lips over the licentiousness-revealing copy turned up ‘by his ghoulish minions. See the CP wire churning out the rapes, murders, attackings. frauds, divorces, extortion, oppressions swindles, big deals and backroom bargains that are all a part of this exciting world and country we live in. Kanada. Is there any place you just might want to rather be? We are much tired this week and are getting little support from anybody because of exams, essays, etc. which only goes to prove this is no way to run a good news-gathering service, which also goes to show that next year there’ll be either a big change for the better or an horrendous change for the absolute worst. The federation of students titilated with admin. pres. Matthews last night and believe us, everything is super sweet. production manager: At Lukachko , coordinators: Bill Sheldon & Bob Epp (news), Tom Purdy & Peter Wilkinson (photo), Ross Bell (entertainment), Bryan Anderson (sports), rats (features). krista tomory, manfred Ziegenhagen, gord morre, ernie lindquist. una o’callaghan. bryan douglas. norm beers, kathy dorschner, dave blaney, paul lawson. dianne caron, bob murray. doug paton, gabriel dumont, Steve izma, brenda Wilson, stu roch, john cushing, kipper sumner, Sharon and my.les genest, tom certain, roger keam (missed last tuesday), Susanne davidson who gave bill moral support this week, eleanor hyodo who joined the illustrious ranks of university personalities (including our dear editor) who have appeared on See-Hear, and here’s credit to brute meharg for eating gord’s pizza Wednesday night (thursday morning). Thought for the week: \ suffer.

friday

4 dedember

1970 (I 1:33)

579


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