1971-72_v12,n42_Chevron

Page 1

See how they ran

n n

...see how they also-ran

n

BLANEY

MOORE

188 4 7 131 3 259 5 51 174 5 89 1 4 24 288

325 9 9 223 8 253 8 150 348 5 169 5 76 70 185

8 0 0 1 24

0 21 0 18 0 1 8 19

Arts U G Arts grad Ir@eg. studies Sci U G Sci grad Eng UG, Eng grad Phys Ed U G Math U G Math grad Env. St. UG Env. St. grad Ren ison St. Jeromes Off Campus

-

SIMPSON

WEISFELD

6

28 0 0 18 0 6

Total U G Total Grad

1215 18

1808 35

64 3

119 1

Total

1233

1843

67

120

56

2

4

per cent of Popular Vote

38

_

;

SPOILED _

ELIGIBLE

8 6

566 15 16 393 12 553 16 227 567 13 306 6 82 111 522

2167 461 74 1503 ~194 1474 424 606 1867 237 877 ‘106 d29 411 1554

137 5

3343 62

10,662 1422

31 4

142

3405

12,084

28

19 1 0 14 0 28 2 21 18 2 22 0

.

;

\

_ Federation

12 number

presidential

42

8~. 4 february

election

The highest voter turnout in a federation presidential election since 1969-31 percent of eligible undergrads-has affirmed Terry Moore as new federation president, Moore defeated current federation vice-president Dave Blaney in Wednesday’s election by 610 votes:

1,843 to 1,233.

Spoiled ballots ran third. Moore, 21, is a third-year applied social science student who eventually plans grad work in the pshychology department’s new division of human relations. Blaney led Moore in only two divisions-engineering and offcampus ; Moore captured 56 percent of the popular vote. The new president, who takes office march 1, wasted no time in suggesting his plans hinge on a hard-line towards the university administration. “We are going to find any means possible to squash the university of Waterloo act,” he said, “even if it means taking a delegation to open party caucus meetings at Queen’s Park.”

The chevron printing schedule calls for one more tuesday chevron and it will appear in two weeks-february 29. There will be no tuesday chevron until then, and none after that date. All things must pa,,.

There’s going to be an adversary system,” he went on, commenting on how the federation will deal with the administration. Priority action, though, , will concentrate on winning the february 23 co*mpulsory fee referendum before the university act can be challenged. Also high on Moore’s priority list is a federation policy decision on the hiring of professional personnel and the establishment of a board of student grievances. Moore said the board would act on any complaint received fromstudents and would be the first step in developing a real “union”. Moore stresses increasing “personal” communication between the federation and students; a policy certainly characteristic of this year’s election campaigning I

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A’

1972

L

Moore wins with 56 percent by alex smith the chevron

26 3 22 26 6 38 4 37 30 5 35 6 64 27 34

-

the-ch\ volume

PERCENT TURNOUT

TOTAL

-

\

of vote

with its vigorous verbal camconducted by Moore and Blaney. paigning was the main factor in Both had heavy speaking his election; at least ten pf these schedules with clubs, societies and people will be running for student classes. seats later this month, Moore, who said he had “good ’ council though Moore says he is not adadvice” in this aspect of the campaign, also had an information vancing them in any kind of slate. Moore declined to name his new booth in the campus center and a executive, stating he would first task force of about ten people who personally telephoned over 2,000 talk to current executive members in addition to his campaign people in the last three days before committee. the election. Moore hopes this same approach _ Blaney commented after the can be utilized to keep students election that he was surprised regularly informed of federation people should elect someone with events and issues. no expe-rience but that he would He implied the federation would help Moore as much as he could seek more media coverage in the until he leaves campus at the end chevron and would open new of the summer. He anticipated channels for feedback with the there would be very few exvarious society organizations. perienced people in the new Observers commented Moore’s executive. well-disciplined core committee Commenting on the fees

referendum, Moore said all presidential candidates had indicated willingness to campaign on behalf of compulsory fees. Plans include addressing classes and both distributing material and sponsoring discussions on a floorto-floor and house-to-house basis throughout the university residences. Moore said he feels the 31 percent undergraduate turnout for the presidential election in--dicates students are interested in preserving the federation. ‘Last year 23 percent of eligible voters cast ballots; the year before only 20 percent did so. Moore’s 56 percent of the popular vote compares with 34.7 percent for Rick Page last year and 61.7 percent for Larry Burko in 1970. Abie Weisfeld, who pulled 120 votes, said the incereased voter turnout shows greater interest in federation affairs, Weisfeld regretted he *could not make students more aware of various issues than he did, expecially in the area of war research.

The results of the campus center board elections, held simultaneously with the federation presidential, were simplistic as only one seat was being contested. In the arts constituency David Chapley won over Bob Lovejoy, 250 to 149. This was the only one of seven student seats that was contested. All other seats were either acclaimed or had no nominations.

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+


This week on campus .is a free column for the annotincement of meetings, special seminars or speakers, soCiai events and other happenings on campus-student, faculty or staff. See the chevron secretary or call extension 3443. Deadline is tuesday afternoons by 3 p.m.

.

,

TODAY Free concert “Flower Travelling Band”. Humanities theatre 12 noon. Sponsored by federation of students.

’ I

Linda Blackwood from Toronto Women’s Coalition for Repeal of Abortion Laws. Everyone welcome. 7:30pm AL105. Sponsored by K-W Women’s Coalition for Repeal of Abortion Laws.

Movie “Lawrence of Arabia” AL116 8 pm. 50 cents federation members; $1 non-members. Sponsored by federation of students.

International Potpourie folk and songs. Admission $1 student; $2 others. 7:30 pm Humanities theatre. Sponsored by; International Students Association.

Pub with-Walrus. Festival room 8:30 pm. 25 cents federation members; $1 non-members. Sponsored by federation of students.

Pub, Hard Water. FestivafRoom. 8:30 .pm 25 cents federation members; $1 non-members. Sponsored by federation of students.

Cap-Au-Vin “Eric Andersen” Wine and Fondue. CC pub area 8: 30 pm $1 federation members; $2 non-members Sponsored by federation of students. -Concert withCactus and Spirit. Physed complex 8:30 pm $1 federation members; $2 non members. Sponsored by federation o$ students. Warrior swimming vs Eastern Michigan State university in dual meet. 7pm physed pool. Movies: Reevers and Boys in the Band. 7 : 30pm Waterloo Lutheran University 1El. Admission $1.

English and Drama Society are showing the White Oaks of Jalna. Free. 9pm EL209. Movies: Reeversand Boys in the Band. Admission $1,. 7 : 30 Waterloo Lutheran U. 1El. Toronto express bus leaves lslington subway station for campus center at 9pm. Highway coach tickets $1.95 one way and school bus tickets $1.25 per ticket. Sponsored by federation of students.

University of Waterloo high school invitational swim meet. 12 noon, physed pool.

Federation flicks: Lawrence of Arabia. AL116 8pm. 50, U of W undergraduates; $1 others. Sponsored by federation of students.

International Potpourie folk and songs. 7:30 pm Humanities theatre. Admission $1 students; $2 others. Sponsored by ‘International Students Assoc.

White water club pool session Physed pool. lam-lpm. Enter only through blue north.

Movies:Reevers and Boys in the Band. Admission $1. 7:30pm Waterloo Lutheran University 1El.

MONDAY Faith Missionary church, 110 Fergus avenue invites you to their youthtime. 7:30pm. .

SUNDAY Chapel service. 7 pm St Paul’s College chapel.

lxthus coffee house. Come talk about life, love, God. 9 pm CC snack bar, Free. Free.,

Movies: Reevers and Boys in the Band. Admission $1 7:30pm Waterloo Lutheran U 1El.

Cccc

Toronto express bus leaves campus center 11: 30am, 1: 30 and 4: 30pm for lslington subway station. Highway coach tickets $1.95 one way or $3.50 return and school bus tickets $1.25 per ticket. Sponsored by federation of students.

English and Drama Society are showing Henry 8th series and Elizabeth Rex series. 9pm EL308.

Inaugural meeting of the Photography Club. All welcome photographers and beginners. 9:30 pm CC211.

Faith Missionary Church, 110 Fergus avenue invites you to their services. A bus will call at campus center at 9: 15 am.

Waterloo Universities Gay Liberation movement general meeting. Everyone interested welcome. 8pm CC1 13.

BUYS A GREAT

Monday .

thru Saturday

11 a.m. to 4 b.m.

AT PONDEROSA Family

Chopped

Stc

International Film Show sponsored by the International Students Assoc. Free admission. 7pm EL211.- This week: also Engineers Diary (The High Dam).

Dept. of English lectures in criticism series no 2 of 4. Pr-f H.M. Logan demonstrates the techniques of linguistic criticism and their application 7: 1Opm AL105.

Pub Dance with Amish in Village II great hall. 8:30pm Admission 25 cents village II residents; 75 cents others. Sponsored by Village II council. WEDNESDAY

Seminar on Wolves at 4:30pm., It will include the National Film Board movie Death of a Legend as well as presentation of slides by Dr. J. Theberge. BIO l-271. Sponsored by KW Field Naturalists.

Public lecture with Prof. James Eayrs, Prof. of Pol. Economy, U of Toronto, “The Impermanence of Power”. 8pm AL113. Sponsored by History Dept.

Hellenic Canadian Students Assoc. meeting. All Greek students are encouraged to attend. 8pm CC113. Refreshments will be available.

Ukrainian Students Club general #business meeting. Everyone welcome. 9:30 pm HUM260.

Federation flicks: Bananas and When Comedy Was King. 8 pm AL116. 50 cents U of W undergrads; $1 others. Sponsored by federation of students.

Egypt,

Ski Caledon ski club. Bus leaves from the Ski Shop, Union and Moore, Waterloo 9am returns 5pm. Transportation and all day ticket $7.50. For reservations call 579-6070.

SATURDAY Free concert with Kit Karson, Theatre of the Arts 12 noon. Sponsored by federation of students.

THURSDAY ISA night Humanities theatre ’ $1 federation members ; $2 nonmembers. Sponsored by federation of students.

Public lecture. Prof. Craig Brown, U of Toronto will speak on “Sir Robert Borden”. 8pm AL113. Sponsored by the History Dept.

Movies. Lawrence of Arabia. AL116 8pm 50 cents federation members; $1 non-members. Sponsored I by federation of students.

Lecture by James‘ I. Stewart, Land economist and lawyer, Dept. of Urban and Regional planning, U of T Topic; Land Issues in Urban Development. 8:15pm MC2066. Informal wine and cheese reception for speaker 9: 30 pm MC5135. Sponsored by School of Urban and Regional Planning.

Cap-Au Vin Eric Andersen. Wine and fondue. CC pub area. 8:30 pm. $1 members; $2 non-member. Sponsored by federation of students.

Radio lutheran/ 90.9 grand river cable fm

monday 9:00 a.m. - sign on 9:05 a.m. - del bopper 11:45 a.m. -, world news 12:00 p.m. - ‘afternoon. music 4:00 p.m. - music for dinner-rick dow 6:00 p.m. - unicorn news 6: 30’p.m. - jazoo with tim cooper * 8:30 p.m. - exposure-derek reynolds. 9:30 p.m. - a bit of alright-andy whittaker 11:30 p.m. - mack’s music till two. t uesda y 990 a.m. - sign on 9:05 a.m. - barb ‘kerr-light 11:45 a.m. - world news 12:Ol p.m. - afternoon music . ._ -IL -.--

music

Sirlo er

FAMILY

STEI h

PONDE We want

!n

morning-anne 9:OS a.m. - good stewa rt. 11:45 a’.m. - world news 12:Ol p.m. -peter hunt 2:00 p.m. - greg connor 4:00 p.m. - elaine 6:00 p.m. - unicorn news 6:30 p.m. - the rounds with bill faulkner 9:00 p.m. - mor- -phi1 turney 1l:OO p.m. - john snider and madness till two friday 9:00 a.m. - sign’on 9:05 a.m. - ernie fish (h2o) 11:45 a.m. - world news 12:Ol p.m. - brad Oliver 2:00 p.m. - art kumpat 4:00 p.m. - larry halko 6:00 p.m. - unicorn news 61-30 p.m. - dave helm 9:00 p.m. - gary ware 1l:OO p.m. - peter nieuwhof Saturday 9:00 a.m. - sign on 9:05 a.m. - children’s hour with barbara IO:30 a.m. - music for Saturday 12:OO P.m.‘- alan buchnea 2:00 P.m. - calypso with george ‘mccalman 4:00 p.m. - al foerster supper rock 8: 00 pm. - space probe 9:OO p.m. - stop at struens 11 :OO pm. - mark sully sunday 9:00 a.m. - sign on 9:05 a.m. - classics 12:00 p.m. - smokey valley 2:00 p.m. - jenny 4:00 p.m..- gord and or mark 6:00 p.m. - blues with jim Collins 8:00 pm. - sunday night 9:00 p.m. - dilemna 11 :00 pnl. - vie ragozins.

8~


Reeve

disowns

affack

chief ’ of ‘creeping Police

warns citizens commundism’

releasing the report before the Waterloo Township police chief had a chance to see it. Tom Livingstone, who released a councillors private report slandering corn- 1 “You can only go so far to curb freedom and then you’re abusing lmune dwellers tuesday, was legislation. Once you start publicly censured by township governing the whole of man’s life reeve Ted Isley Wednesday. defeating the Livingstone gave the report to on paper you’re whole purpose of goverthe local aboveground media without first giving it to the ment.. .these people are in communes because of a lack of township council, to whom he was freedom .” supposedly reporting. Isley said he does not agree with In the report, Livingstone warns the chief’s view that the township in good Wallacite-parahoid ter- should control to whom a property minology that unless something is may be sold. done to stop the spread of comWaterloo township pass&d a bymunes in the township, it will law last fall defining what kind of become a “breeding place for “families” may live in one undesirable characters. ” dwelling. He added that commune University of Waterloo students residents “often lead a life of were among those who opposed the crime, ” not making it clear how by-law before an OMB hearing. this made them different from The by-law defines a family as other people. “one or more persons living in as a “If something is not done, we single and non-profit-making will have a slum condition in a housekeeping unit.” good community,” he -warned, The OMB ruled that the’ then appealed to the capitalistic “family” term meant two or more interests of the good citizens by explaining that “speculators” will * buy up the land and rent to “people who don’t take care of the A former LSD therapist, property”. helicopter pilot, radio station “Land values will go down,” he manager and teacher at the Ontario college of art will speak at prophecied. 11:3O am Monday on education and Reeve Isley said he was “very disturbed about comments like other facets of the world. this.” Frank Ogden, sponsored by integrated studieS, will be in the He said that the chief had acted in “an irresponsible manner” in undergraduate lounge, humanities

IS invites

CAM-PUS FORUM: Miss E. Reaman circulation - arts

c In other words, the council now has the power to discriminate against communedwellers while allowing large farm families and helpers to go on as before. Reeve Isley pointed out to the local media Wednesday that perhaps chief Livingstone’s invective’s were a bit out of line. j He astutely obgerved that commune tenants are sometimes not to blame for the dilapidated conditions of the farms they buy or vnrrt lcllL* The chief also pointed out in his report that crime was on the increase and that his unit had helped in two raids on motorcycle gang gatherings, netting arrests. He did not specify whether this was part of the commune crime problem.

eclectic

What do you

educator

building. His aim is to expose students to a wide range of experiences. “You cqn’t teach anybody anything. You’ve got to set up an environmental clitiate that’s like a smorgasbord. Then if something turns them on, they learn,” he says.

At your

own

Waterloo authorities have set up “No Stopping” signs along University avenue and King street at University, among other places. In other words, at your and my favorite hitching spots. You can still stop and pick someone up, but at your ow? risk; and if you’re not pulled over by a cop car, don’t think you’ve gotten away-s’ome people are getting tickets in the mail for picking someone up as far back as two months ago. They’re sneaky.

the library

is experimenting

arts

,

3

I disagree with it. Two weeks is long enough. lf you still need a book’ after two weeks you can renew it. lf YOU can’t finish it in four weeks you have no business keeping the book as YOU are only depriving others of its use. Most PeoPle will say they wit1 return the’ book but will forget out of general apathy. lf a Person is not using the book it should be back in the library. lf thq books are out and not in use, that is poor library policy. With regard to reserves, often they have four or even five copies on reserve even if there is no heavy demand. They should check the demand and allow these books out. The old policy was fine.

with? Hagan Stockl-St. arts 3

Maria Nepyjwoda arts 1

Jeff Atkins

Fisk...

think about the new circulation policy

library

I would certainly like to see it work. This system is working well at Simon-Fraser university and I see no reason why it shouldn’t work here. It all falls back on the borrowers. It is up to the students to discuss the return of books among themselves for it is to their advantageto bring them back. lt is not less work for us but a rearrangement of the work. Where we used to be buried in paper work related to fines, we now have to cope with the flood of requests. The volume of the circulation is people are still not different; taking out books as before, only the stuff is not coming back as fast. Like with everything else, you have to trust people to bring the books back when they are through. lt is all a matter of cooperationand we are doing our darndest to get the books back.

people related by blood, adoption or marriage and not more than three people who need not be related by blood, adoption or marriage.

I don’t think it should be like this. I like the idea, but I don’t find it practical because it is difficult to get books when they are not in. It’s a pain requesting them. I’ve Anne Wagner arts 4 looked for about ten books, and haven’t found any of them, nor I don’t think it’sa very good idea have I seen any of the ones I if it means that some of the books requested. Lending them until april is too which other students will need the term will be long. Something shorter would be throughout missing. much better... people just don’t The library is for everyone’s use not just for a few. bring books back. I sort of got the impression that the library wanted Unless of course they have enough to extend the loan period because copies so that there will be one of the hassle involved in getting available for this purpose. It may books back, and fining people. It be a good idea in that some may be more convenient for the students will be able to save the eight oi nine dollars they pay for a library, but it’s definitely not for is not really that useful the students’ convenience. I bookwhich for certainly haven’t found it very .to them, but which is necessary convenient. a course.’ *

Lawrence

I think this is very bad for the very simple reason that it prevents you from going to the library with the full knowledge that the book you want is really there. If the book is on the shelf, you can take it out, read it and put it back. This way you are robbed of the chance to look at a book and decide whether it is useiul or not. When you have to request a book, and then see that it is of no use to you, you have wasted five days to find that out. Not everybody can afford to do this. It is definitley detrimental to study. If anything the loan period should be shortened. At U of T it’s 24 hours. I think that this is sufficient. Let’s say three days at the most. If. a person cannot make use of a book in three days he shouldn’t be here.

friday, february 4 J972 (12:42)

831

3


,fee-db@i.

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 character tipe. For legal reasons, letters must be sighed with course year and phone number. A pgeudon ym will be printed if you have a good reason.

Chevron mentally unbalanced?, . Recent issues ,of the Chevron -seem to be implying that the administration is going to impliment some sort of outrageous ‘comptilsory fee of its gwn if the studerzt activity fee is made voluntary. However, the term voluntary fees does not mean that the 22 dollars will not appear on the tuition fee statement. In reality, it will place the activity fee in the same class as the tenth anniversary ‘fund; that is, it will be

’ The Right Price For Ekyone .

tip&R \

ELECTllBMCS

L;I‘D.

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Dundas Gait, Ont

in Waterloo

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College

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KINGSTON,

ONTARIO

I

I -

-r)-~-I)-,~---~--Ip~

the -chevron.

-.

kArth’ur

Applications to the Faculty of Education, Queen’s University, are being invited from university graduates throughout Canada. The eight month program leads to a Bachelor of Education degree and basic teacher certification at the secondarjr level; additionally, -an elementary option is available. Now in its fourth year of operations, the Faculty of Education features the following conditions: (1) An emphasis on the human dimension in education; (2) A forward-looking program, in line with current and emei-geti educational needs; (3) Considerable flexibility in candidates’ program design; ’ (4) Continuous assessment (de-emphasizing terk examinationsl) consistent with the stress on personal and professiona I development; ‘. (5) Participation of candidates in administration and planning of the Faculty of Education; (6) Unexcelled facilities in the new academic-residential complex, Duncan McArthur Hall. Applicants must already hold an undergraduate degree or be elbible for graduation by September 1972. Elements emphasized in the selection of teacher candidates include professional motivation, academic competence, and

communication

skills. .

1

when you are talking referendum, let’s have and less paranoia. /

Paul Englert English

To: Up your Amps, cock-rock musicians; From,: ERG. Squeeze my lemon, baby, Till the juice runs down my leg. (From Robert Johnson’s “Travelin’ Riverside Blues”, 1937)

You assholes have screwed up again. This time it’s in the campus forum on page 22 of the friday 28 january issue. The picture you show under “Jim MacKeracher” is really that of Art Phelon. I ‘don’t look anything like that ugly 6.o.b. For .this I pay 22 dollars per year??

No, the 22 dollars is for the moiies, concerts, dances, orgies, smoke-ins, federation partges and Rick Page’s chewing-habit. The chevron operates entirely on donations from retired United Church ministers. By the way, rumor has it that you won an ugly contest by edging Phelon put a couple of years ago. The chevron apologizes to Phelon for the mistake-the lettitor. \

Learning is fun After reading the article concerning Nathari IEpstein’s lecture, I felt that I could add something to the “unpopular generalization” Epstein made of students. When students’ work is c&sized, the initial reaction of most students is to feel‘guilt, guilt for not working hard enough. That’ is not the problem. Students work too hard for too little or nothing. Learning is fun. If it isn’t, then that is an error. If learning isn’t fun, if it doesn’t get you off, then it is not being done properly. I’m not accusing students or administration separately of ariy wrong doing. I accuse us all. Guh Kantakis

,

4

Paranoia? Why do you say we’re paranoid? Who are you working for, anyway? Why are all you guys out to get,us?-the lettitor.

Jim MacKeracher Mech 4B

QUEEN’SUNIVERSITY

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CYCLE I I I I I

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,competent ought to solvent. Please, about the more facts

Up our amps?

The Hylands Tavern

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collected in full by x the administration who will then turn it over to the federation who will refund it on the request of e&h individual student. As far as the administration is concerned, the fee will still be collected in full and it is ,unlikely that they will add another to it. The four thousand or so frosh coming on campus each year are unlikely to demand ‘a refund and

.


Symposium simulateslack of pa-rtitipation in urban development The ‘High Rise Game’ is a two day symposium on urban development to be held at the arts lecture bu;lding during the weekend of february 12 and 13. This is the third annual symposium organized by the fourth year students in the school of Urban and Regional Planning. The symposium will simulate four steps in the planning and development process to try to show how and why citizens are not being involved in these process and to try to find out how the city’s population can be involved. The four steps to be simulated are the creation of the plan and presentation of the development; ‘the technical planning committee stage; the meeting of the committee of council; and finally the Ontario Municipal Board hearing. The development in question is a big highrise complex to be on George St. in Waterloo. The architecture school will be providing a model and plans of the buildings. Ihe conference has been purposefully structured in such a way as to permit the maxim& participation by the audience, and this participation will be encouraged. It-is important that the audience put constant: pressure on the simulators to find out how, when and where citizens can and should get involved in either stopping or participating in the proposed development. There will also be several informal meetings, coffee-breaks and dinners at which the audience can meet and talk with the-invited guests. The symposium will start Saturday morning at 9:00, with the presentation of the development idea and plans. The developer will be David Greenspan; the lawyer will be Michael Vaughn and the architect giving the presentation will be uniwat’s prof Don McIntyre. This should take about an hour and a half and will be followed by a half hour coffee break. At 1l:OO the technical planning committee will meet. There are six members. Chairman and planning director will be Wojciech Wronski; Development director will be Max Bacon; Legal department director will be William Archer; Traffic and roads director will be Hans Blumenfeld; Finance department director will be the representative -

I

from the community planning branch of the department of municipal affairs, and the welfare department director will be Ken Cameron. As usual _ there will be no representation from the citizens either official or otherwise at this meeting-but that should not restrict people from questioning , why. Assuming the plan passes the committee of council stage and citizens are by now beginning to get a little upset, there is a committee of council meeting at 200 (following lunch). At this meeting the citizens will be Larry -Martin, Tim Burton, Arthur Whealy, David Freeman, and R Irving. The politicians will be represented by Joe Curtin, mayor; Ralph Krueger, Len Gertler, Bill Shalinsky and Bob Dunn. The developers at this meeting will be David Greenspan, Michael Vaughn, and Don MCI ntyre. There will be an informal Saturday night, to which everyone is invited. The time and place of the event will be announced during the day. ETy this time the citizenry should be mad’enough if not from the development then from the hangovers, to call in an Ontario Municipal Board hearing, which of course will take place sunday morning at 10:OO. Official presentations to be made to the hearing will be made by: for the citizens, Authur Whealy; developers, Michael Vaughn, and the city alderman William Archer. The Fearing will be chaired by the head of the OMB, JA Kennedy. At the end of this meeting Kennedy will hand down his decision as to the future of the project. Following the hearing there will be summation of the simulation to be made by Hans Blumenfeld, Wojciech Wronski, Max Bacon, and David Freeman. The moderators during the two day affair will be Lynne Dale and Bob Ward. For those students who attend the conference who are worried about their stomach as well as their mind the Environmental Studies Society will be operating its coffee and donut stand in the arts lecture building during the entire affair. There is also a planned lunch for Saturday. c

Invited participants The people responsible for organizing this conference have done an incredible job of collecting people for the various positions in the simulation. Through collecting on past favours and using every connection possible they begged, coerced and pleaded the following people into participating without paying them any honourarium except in the form of transportation and accommodation. commodation. The most important part of the group participating in the simulation will be the audience. The audience will be called upon to be citizens, unorganized and unknowing at first, but finally catching up with the developers, lawyers and politicians; challenging berating, fighting, encouraging, until finally the decision is made at what will essentially be an unrigged OMB hearing. Only with a high degree of participation from the student audience will the simulation be anything of a success. To act out the parts in the simulation there are twenty-two invited guests. Several are active students and interested professors, necessary not only to fill out the many roles but also to add their experience to the conference. @-Alderman William Archer, of the Toronto city council. He is the alderman responsible for th,e Yonge street mall during the summer of ‘71.

l Max Bacon, who is a consultant engineer and planner for the firm of Proctor, Redfern, Bonsfield and Bacon, of Toronto, and is considered to be one of the more respected influences in Canadian planning. l Hans Blumenfeld, who is the world famous urban critic, consultant and author of many books including ,the “Modern Metropolis”. l

Ken Cameron, of the municipal research branch of the Department of Municipal Affairs, He will probably be accompanied by a representative from the community planning branch of the department of municipal affairs. 0 Professor Tim Burton of the the school of Urban and Regional Planning, uniwat.

l

Professor

Bob

Irving

friday,

of the

february

department

of Geography,

uniwal

l Professor Larry Martin of the school of Urban and Regiona Planning, uniwat. l Professor Ralph Kruger of thl department of Geography, uniwa’ l Professor Don McIntyre of thl school of Architecture, uniwat. l Professor William Shalinsky ‘1 of the man environment depart ment, uniwat. l Mr J A Kennedy of the Ontario Municipal Board, who consentec to come as long as he could ac hjmself. l Mr Authur Whealey, who is i lawyer from Toronto and chairmar of the Metro Toronto’Resident ant Ratepayers Association. l Professor Len Gertler dIrector of the school of Urban ant Regional Planning, and big dadd: of us all. 0 Wojciech the metro Board.

Wronski, Toronto

director c Plannin

() lnssrs David Greenspan an Michael Vaughan, they are th current advocates of the Chines Canadian Association an professors of planning law at th school of Urban and Region; Planning, uniwat.

l Joe Curtin, graduate studer 1t of the school of Urban an Id I Regional Planning, uniwat. l Bob Dunn, graduate student ( the school of Urban and Region; Planning, uniwat. l David Freeman, an architec :t from Toronto who is presently th le chairman of the Confederation (If Resident and Ratepayer ‘S Associations of Toronto (CORRA >, and the successor to Coli n Vaughn. l Lynne Dale, a graduat student in the school of Urban an Regional Planning at uniwat, wh IO is one of the co-ordinators of th ie symposium, and will be one of th e two moderators. l Bob Ward is also a graduat student in the school of Urban anI Regional Planning, uniwat, is 01 the symposium committee, an will be a moderator along wit1 lynne. c page was arranged by ross perry and bill Sheldon, the chevron 4 1972

(12:42)

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THIRD

by pad stuewe the chevron

a film of Istartling

-

POWERFUL WEEK suspense andinvalvement,

The Last Picture Show The Last Picturejhyw comes to Toronto accompanied by a fistful of rave reviews, many suggesting that it is the best American film . since Citizen Kane, and thereby creating an almost impossibly high set of expectations: if one expects perfection, anything less seems such a disappointment that there is a strong temptation to react by panning the film for not living up to one’s preconceived ideas. Well,The Last Picture Show is not the greatest thing since Citizen Kane, but it is certainly one of the best films of the year. Set in a small Texas town in the 1950’s, it powerfully contrasts the realities of adolescent “coming of age” with the death of the mythic “Old West”, and largely succeeds in the difficult task of representing its characters realistically but without condescension. Director Peter Bogdanovich’s decision to make the film in black and white is indicative of his neoclassical approach to problems of pacing and development, which is _both leisurely and extremely careful. The influence of John Ford and Howard Hawks, about whom Bogdanovich has written excellent critical pieces, is evident in the lyrical, elegaic images which punctuate The Last Picture Show, contrasting with the apparent poverty and ugliness of ._the town of Anarene. Although there are “leading” and “supporting” actors, all _ - performances are so uniformly excellent that one is left with the impression that this is a veteran dramatic ensemble at work. The nominal protagonist, ‘ ‘Sonny Crawford”’ (Timothy Bottoms )?

is no lonely existenial figure but rather a man growing up in a community of varied human types : no heroes, no villains, just plain folks trying to make it through another day. As reasonably normal American adolescents of the 1950’s, Sonny and his best friend “Duane Jackson” (Jeff Bridges > spend much of their time pursuing their substitute for the Holy Grail, The First Lay. Both are successful, but find that sex is only superficially a consummation: it begins a new and confusing kind of emotional involvement, one which destroys their “best buddies” relationship and leaves them wary, if still respectful, friends. This loss of innocence stems from their mutual adoration of “Jacy Farrow”, the incarnation of that blond coquetry which meant SEX APPEAL to a generation raised on Marilyn Monroe and her imitators. Jacy is played by Cybill Shepard, and she is overwhelmingly credible : after using Duane solely for the purpose of defloration, for example, she punctures his naive post-coital euphoria with ‘Golly Duane, I don’t even think you did it right.’ You can do what you want with me, baby, just don’t get any of it on my new dress. (Went out with her New York cousins myself. > Sonny’s sexual initiation comes at the hands of “Ruth Popper” (Claris Leachman), the middleaged wife of the high school football coach. Ruth is a sickly, repressed woman who was the real heroine of Larry McMirtry’s novel, but has here been shunted into the background; a bit of a copout,

perhaps, given her relatively unphotogenic appearance vis-a-vis Jacy. The film’s emphasis on Sonny’s very real attraction to Ruth (well developed in the novel) tends to make their relationship more one-sided and conventionalbored housewife seduces callow youth-than it really is. Another problem in the novel-tofilm transition is the compression of significant events, which here results in Jacy making it with three different guys during less than five minutes of running time’, on the screen. Although Jacy has definite motives in each case, these are lost in the rush to get her. out of one bed and into another; prurient interest supersedes character exploitation, and adds an annoying chauvinistic note to a generally intelligent film. In fact, The Last Picture Show’ exhibits a rather consistent promale bias in selecting particular chunks of the novel. The character of Jacy’s mother, “Lois”, has also been deemphasized, and there is only slight indication of the motherdaughter conflict which motivates Jacy’s behavior. This is especially regrettable because of the fine performance of Ellen Burstyn in the part. Bias and all, however, The Last Picture Show remains one of the few recent films which provokes reflection and discussion, and this without the sort of wild straining for effect of a Drive, He Said or a Straw Dogs (right on, Deanna). It’s a good, solid piece of filmmaking, conservative in the best sense, and I look forward to seeing it again.

in SAMPFCKINPAH’S

“STl’tAW DOGS” IS A BRILLIANT FEAT OF MOVIE-MAKING. HOFFMAN’S PERFORMANCE IS SUPERBLY REALIZED!” - “IT IS HARD TO IMAGINE THAT SAM PECKINPAH WILL EVER MAKE A BET’TEZR MOVIE. IT FLAWLESSLY EXPRESSES HIS BELIEF THAT MANHOOD REQUIRES RITES OF VIOLENCE!”

--Newsweek

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.\ Captain Poetry Michael Ondaatje is a very finally ate the vomit. Everyone versatile young man. Born in clapped at the end of the show Ceylon in 1943, Ondaatje came to including my stomach and I. Canada in 1962 and has since Despite all this, the reading and published three books of poetry: film were very enjoyable. Captain The Dainty Monsters widely ac- Poetry is concerned with concrete poetry, its beginnings, horizons claimed as a very strong first book, The Man With Seven Toes, and limitations, and stars or features B.P. and The Collected Works of Billy Nichol, Victor The Kid which won the Governor Coleman and the voices of both, as General’s Award for Poetry in 1971 well as the acid drone of Margaret and which Al Purdy called “a flat Atwood. Barrie Nichol has been in this business a long time, exmosaic of different colours which blend into a shimmering kaleidperimenting with a poetic form in oscope as you near the end of the which sound and sight prevail over book”. all else, perhaps sense included. Captain Poetry is about Barrie Michael Ondaatje has also produced one film, Captain Poetry, Nichol, but actually Captain Poetry is more than just one which was shown as an added treat at his poetry reading in biology II person; it is that elusive thing-the 350, thursday nov. 18th. Because poem. It seems Ondaatje has the reading and film were given in become intrigued with the the biology building and in a room mysteries of concrete poetry. One in which another class was could hardly tell from his reading. scheduled an hour later, and Ondaatje reads in low-key in fact _ because these things never start on all his poems, though anything but time the audience was presented ordinary, and more often than not with a twenty minute reading, macabre, sensational, are often (five or six poems) and then a low-key. If Ondaatje is crusading short film. Somehow the event still ‘for sight and sound over meaning, ran over into the next hour, and then he is keeping it well hidden. then Ondaatje was sent on his way. Nichol in the film was often seen For about ten minutes of the poetry engaging in chant sessions, reading a dog disdainfully chewed primitive, perhaps African in a piece of yellow paper like a origin, which, though pale compissed-on bone, vomitted the paper pared to the real thing, neverup, circled the vomit menacingly theless represent a new wave, a for several minutes while my neti slant in the art form. In dinner struggled to escape and contrast Ondaatje read solemnly friday,

february

4 1972

(12:42)

835

but loosely. He was rarelyanything near dramatic. He left the poem to the audience to unravel. Instead of dragging the listener through the poem, Ondaatje left it to him to find his own way. Underkill was the word. Still perhaps Ondaatje isn’t so much interested in following Nichol’s school himself as he is in making people aware that it exists, aware that there is more to a poem than the “what does it say”. John Ciardi has maintained this for a long time, particularly in his essay “How Does A Poem Mean” in which he probes the technical and structural aspects of- the poem, things many people ignore. As it stands, concrete poetry (at least the type most often seen these days) doesn’t stand much chance of making it. There is too much accent on the sound and sight (perhaps more on sight than even sound). Someone who sits down at his typewriter and types the word apple into the shape of an apple then types the word worm isn’t writing a poem. It’s an art form, fine, but it’s not poetry. More thought has to be given to other aspects besides just mimicking the object. A fine marriage of thought, sound and sight make a poem and nothing else will do. draig

’ timTOM .LitIGhLIN vDiLOREi,TAYL@

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One goes to.Cap-au-vin to sit and relax and enjoy the quiet, restful music. The fondue is there to provide something to keep your hands busy, the music to keep your ears’ busy and the wine to keep you from getting carried away with being busy. Eric Andersen (bottom photo) was up to the usual high quality of Capau-vin entertainment and if you have ever heard him I need say no more about that, if you haven’t heard him then I urge you to do so in whatever manner strikes your fancy (you can still go to Cap:au-vin tonight or tomorrow night 1. The only discordant note to the nights enjoyment was the noise emanating from a table near the front, which forced Aridersen to ask for quiet. If you are one of those souls who enjoys a quiet evening and some good music then I sincerely urge you. to attend one of the two remaining performances at the campus centre. David Rae (top photo) Toro,nto based folk-blues-rock performer was one of the acts that played daily at noon in the humanities theatre as part of winter week. Fare ranged from rock to folk to jazz. Good stuff, and free.

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Disappointments Tim Hardin rolled into Waterloo Lutheran University, Jan 27, second on a bill to Ruth Copeland, which also included Johnathon Round, a native of Detroit who lives there but records on GRT and therefore was billed as Canadian _talent. The show got off to a fine start at eight oclock (starting time was seven). Ruth Copeland was hung up at the border for obvious reasons. She should have known better. I sell whiskey to the Indians And I smuggle in the gin. If you want anything illegal, Just .ask ole’ Timmie to bring it in. Jonathan Round opened the show and did a fifty minute-set and he was very entertaining, if not good. Highlights were a ten minute story all about-shhh-dope. These stories are the standard repertoire of all performers. To be good you have to know oodles of them. Surprisingly enough Round’s story ‘was funny but then Round is. funny. About five foot four and one hundred and sixty pounds or so and 1with a black beard and longer frizzy black hair he looked like a beer gussling hobbit or the better

-

Disappointments

half of tweedledum and tweedledee. Another highlight was Round‘s version of ‘Sympathy For The Devil’ which, eyes aglow and hair flying like a dervish, he delivered in all its satanic majesty. At eight-fifty, Round went off and Hardin came on fifteen minutes later. True Hardin fans know all about his heroin days, his marriage to and divorce with Susan Moore, the albums which followed in which he lamented her loss, “Suite For Damion and Susan Moore” and “Bird on the Wire”. True fans also remember Hardin’s boast: They call me long, tall Timmie cuz’ I know what love’s about If my baby leave me Old Timmie he ain’t gonna do without. They know how Hardin kicked the drug and returned to the concert scene. And so they and I came prepared to see the new, old Tim Hardin. Well it seems long, tall Timmie is doing without, but, not without that good woman booze. A man came on and asked if anyone knew “Misty Roses” and amid great applause on. staggered Hardin, hopelessly plastered, sang

his hits or a few of them and staggered off drunker still forty minutes later. Between songs (which didn’t include Misty Roses) Hardin rocked on his heels or, drank “the reeeel thing” from a pepsi cup. Complete with country clothes and a beer belly and a guiter which he couldn’t find the handle on half the time, Hardin was a sad, sad man. At eight-forty he was gone and the great people who organize these things came into their own. The second show was scheduled for ten o’clock and Ruth Copeland showed up a little later. From ten until eleven-thirty equipment was set up, thirty odd amps and speakers included. You could tell they were a good band just by counting the speakers. And none of those horns and things to get in the way just loud, loud, loud-uhmusic. However they tell me Ruth Copeland and crew were good. I wouldn’t know. I left at eleven. Later on Round and Hardin came back for second shows, Copeland didn’t. Round was fat and stoned and funny and Hardin was drunker. A good time was enjoyed by all.

Great female vocalists in the folk-rock field are hard’to’ come by these days and the music industry seems to be dominated by a select few. Included in this upper echelon of super talent are the names of Carole King, Saint-Marie and Melanie. This Joni Mitchell, Joan Baez, Buffy predominance of excellent female songwriters and singers tends to make it almost impossible for new performers to break into such an exclusive bracket. Enter Carly Simon! With her nomination for a Grammy Award as Best Female Vocal Performance, due to her efforts in her first record ‘That’s the Way I’ve Always Heard It Should Be’, an addition to the top rank is imminent. Following up her initial success with the release of her second album, Anticipation (Elecktra EKS -75016), the proof is offered that Miss’ Simon will not remain a one-record artist. The album has several merits which must rank it as an especially good. recording. Firstly the vocal stylings seem to combine the best qualities of Joni Mitchell and Carole King and round them into an unique style, that of Carly Simon. In selections. such as ‘Our First Day Together’ and the ‘Garden;’ the listener is presented with a haunting melody inter-twined with simple, plaintive lyrics. The’effect is one of setting your mind at ease and of perceiving a vision of tranquility and peace. In the cut ‘Summer’s Coming Around Again’, the latin tempo and the use of flamenco guitar seems strongly reminiscent of early Sergio Mendes or Stan Getz. Miss Simon’s performance is strongly enhanced by the superb production techniques of Paul Samwell-Smith (late of the Yardbirds) and more recently, producer of Cat Stevens albums. The entire recording is void of any harsh electric sound and the fine blending of percussion, piano and acoustic guitar creates an easy listening, simple type of music. String arrangements ,in ‘Share the End,’ and a strong perfromance by percussionist Andy Newmark in the tracks ‘Anticipation’ and the ‘Girl You Think You See’, are other high points in the album. What has been created depends on no frills or gimmicks, but relies solely on Miss Simon’s musical ability, beautiful simplicity and homespun style. Thus it is with no uncertainty that Carly Simon is here to stay. A great effort by a greater artist: Move over Carole King et al; reserve a place for one of your own kind. short NOTE The Outsiders who appeared on the commercial music scene a few years ago with ‘Time Won’t Let Me,’ and then dropped into oblivion, are back on the charts again. The group has a new name, sound and label. Listen for Climax and their new release, ‘Prescious and Few’. The song contains tight harmony and a beautiful orchestral arrangement. One can make a close comparison to it and early Association material. -john

carter

crossword - solution by lynn bowers the chevron

.

The Monkey’s Paw

. .

If the object of the performance of The Monkey’s Paw was to suggest the a,wesome power of the supernatural, the performance failed. Too often there was no contrast of natural with supernatural, for the natural or ordinary-in the play, represented by a prosaic family scene-just was not developed. The ‘monkey’s paw’ was just that, a wizened black object which could grant three wishes to a certin number (I forget how many) of people. It had been used several times before the family of the play, the Whites,. used it. According to a Sergeant-Major Morris who had been one of the the users of the paw, it granted ‘wishes in unexpected and sometimes terrible ways. But the Whites, particularly Herbert, the son, were incredulous of Morris’ awe of the supernatural. Holding the. paw in his hand Mr. White made a wish anyway-for money in the amount of two hundred pounds. The paw squirms. The next day in the morning when Herbert was to return from work, his parents were up and waiting for the postman. Instead, they are visited by a man from the factory where Herbert ‘worked. Herbert, he says, was caught in some machinery and mangled to

death. The factory managers expressed their condolences with money-two hundred pounds. Ten days later and still strongly feeling the loss of her son, Mrs. White remembers that there are still two wishes left to make with the paw. Hysterically, she pleads that she be allowed to see her son again, mangled as he was. In fact, he does return but while she is frantically trying to draw the bolt on the door to let him in Mr. White is equally frantically looking for the paw to make the third wish, this time that Herbert be returned to his grave. When Mrs. White finally gets the door bolt out Herbert has disappeared. All that is visible outside is an empty blue dawn. The play ends. Perhaps the performers were embarrassed by such a plot. They did seem to concentrate on producing british accents (which they did well) and because they did they never interacted fully with what was going on around them, i.e. the supernatural which they seemed to regard as only incidental. Instead of characterizing the hovering supernatural, indirectly, by developing the characters of the play with reference to the active power of the monkey’s paw, the performers

seemed to be trying only to draw out some humour to save the play. For example,’ Herbert was skeptical of Morris’ ‘cautions so much so that his death was not the shock it should have been. His mockery of the supernatural was uncouth so in a sense he seemed to deserve to be punished. Again his death was not the shock it ought to have been because his parents dependency on him was not stressed. Even when Herbert’s death was announced to them, his father asked with anicipation rather than with sorrow and possible bitterness at fate, how much it was that the factory was giving them. For heaven’s sake, the man was not a greedy, heartless, old bastard ! That would be irrelevant to the intent of the play which was to show the cruelty of the supernatural. Saying that, the old man was cruel as well detracted from what properly belonged to the supernatural. So The Monkey’s Paw did not succeed. Granted, a play dependent upon creation of a mood is much more difficult to make succeed than one which has some clever lines going for it. Still it is probably worth a try. The attempt might well be as rewarding as success. I

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MON.%EB.7 12:30 P.M. AL 116 FILM - WEST AFRICA: A cinematic safari to Nigeria, Ghana, Ivory Coast and Liberia capturing the colourful contrasts of West Africa. Exciting soundtrack of African music. MEETING IN DAKAR: Mwsic, dance, sculpture, painting - influence of Negro art and culture on the Western World. Free Admission TUES. & WED. FEB.15 & 16 Drama - THE TELL TALE Adapted from Edgar Allen Directed by Maurice Evans, A story of a murdered man murderer. Theatre of the Arts Free Admission

’ KEN HAM I LTON

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* ‘Ludwig vbn B. Beethoven’s nine symphonies require no extravagantly appreciative remarks from me: suffice it to say that- they are as incredible an exhibition of genius as old homo sapiens has ever produced, neither “culture-bound” nor “of historical interest only”, and immediately accessible to open ears. They have been newly recorded by Andre Cluytens and The Berlin Philharmonic (Seraphim SIG6071) in a y-record set which also includes the Coriolan and Egmont Overtures. This release features warm, full-bodied orchestral sound, excellent notes by Ernest Newman, and since Seraphim is a. “budget label”, a relatively low retail price (about $20). Cluytens’ interpretations, however, are somewhat more problematic, necessitating a symphony-bysymphony examination of what is offered here. Generally, Cluytens exemplifies the “middle ground” approach to the symphonies, avoiding both the exuberant (but often too frenetic) Toscanini, as well as the stately (but of ten lugubrious ) Klemperer , interpretations. In terms of other available recordings, Cluytens’ are perhaps most similar to von Karajan’s, although without the latter’s precise attention to questions of detail. Below, some specific impressions and opinions commencing with : No. 1: The least performed and appreciated of the lot, but inferior only in relation to its older brothers. Very well done by Cluytens, particularly the matching of rhythmic and songful elements in the First Movement. A nice (and all too seldom observed) touch is the audible entrance of the tympani in the Andante, as the work flows on to its majestic, but emotionally muted, conclusion. No. 2: Although written only two years later, a major advance; not terribly.well served here, however. After a satisfactory First Movement, the following ‘Larghetto is vitiated by Cluytens’ failure to bring out its rhythmic variations, resulting in somnambulism rather than sensuality. The Scherzo is perky enough, but the final Allegro is almost completely devoid of the wit and passion imparted to it by Toscanini, whose recording of the Second is definitely the one to have. No. 3 (“Eroica”): A grand, noble, and not particularly subtle work, torn into with evident relish by Andre and the boys. The Marcia Funebre is graced by lovely woodwind playing, and the opening and closing moyements are as powerfully and vitally performed as one. could wish. Despite some sloppy brass work in the Scherzo, as fine a version of the Third as I’ve ever encountered. No. 4: An enigmatic rather than “minor ” symphony, the Fourth requires extremely careful treatment, lest its abrupt changes in mood and tempo seem completely arbitrary. Cluytens largely ignores this, and his deemphasis on the startling quality of the orchestral “whoops” which mark the First Movement’s Adagio-Allegro Vivace transition is typical: round off the corners, control the fortissimos, and keep things moving at a relatively even tempo. A standard, not good not bad, interpretation, again paling before Toscanini’s. No. 5: Another case of power being more important than finesse. Cluytens imparts a fair sense of urgency to the militant First Movement,’ which contrasts effectively with the lovely, singing

~--Phone l

5 8l -7 :8 -- p 88 I 8 5 l 88 0 88 0 88 8 8 8

8

theme of the foiiowing Andante. The opposing, rhythms in the Scherzo are not sharply pointed enough, to my taste, but the performance is generally well integrated and more than holds its own among some very stiff competition. No. 6 (“Pastorale”): &I embarassment of melodic riches, again featuring absolutely gorgeous work by the woodwinds. The famous “Storm” in the Fourth Movement is more of a Spring shower than a tornado, but otherwise Cluytens’ easy-going approach is just right for this most luxurious of Beethoven’s scores, comparing favorably with that of my previous personal favorite, Bruno Walter’s. No. 7: A more lyrical interpretation than is customary, beginning with a notable abscence of ebullience in the 6-8 meter underlying the First Movement. The Scherzo (which Beethoven marked “presto”) is also taken at a walk, but a rather graceful one nevertheless; if you’re accustommed to hearing the Seventh performed in a Sturm und Drang, dramatically in tense style, Cluytens’ version may seem anemic, although I found it quite refreshing. If this symphony is, as Wagner suggested, “the apotheosis of the dance,” Cluytens has taken it out of the servant’s quarters and into the Grand Ballroom. No. 8: Another so-called “minor” symphony, the Eighth, like the Second and Fourth, separates the men from the boys when it comes to providing a viable interpretation. Cluytens starts well enough with a progressive, notquite-heroic, First Movement, but flirts with torpor in the Allegretto and tolerates some very poor intonation from the brasses in the Scherzo. The Final Allegro is satisfactorily Vivace, but does not redeem a careless performance of a work which deserves better and had received it from, among others, Hans Schmidt-Isserstadt and the Vienna Philharmonic. No. 9 (“Choral”): Not a great performance, but it has its moments. The opening Allegro Maestoso is both majestic and energetic, and although Seraphim follows a sad convention and divides the Adagio between two sides, it is very sensitively played. Cluytens’ omits the Scherzo repeats, however, and his Finale is quite tame: the dissonant fanfares which introduce it have none of the Schrecken (horror) noted by Wagner, nor are the vocal soloists and chorus more than competent. The sort of performance you might hear from the Toronto Symphony on a good night. Thus if you are primarily interested in Beethoven’s “major” (i.e. most popular ( symphonies, the Third, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, and Ninth, this collection might be the most appropiate one. The other readily available “budget” set is Bruno Walter’s on Odyssey,, to whom I think Cluytens is generally superior. If low price and sound quality are not major considerations, a more musically satisfying set could be assembled from the recordings of Toscanini, Schmidt-Isserstadt, Szell, and von Karajan, to name only the most prominent interpreters of the orchestral Beethoven. But by all means get someone’s version of the symphonies-they’ve been old, friends of mine for about ten years now, and I can’t imagine a time when they would ever seem outdated. -pad

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Student,

faculty

and public

power

_-

We are in favor of open decisi-on-making on institutional levels, and we support the increased participation of faculty and students in that process. It should also be pointed out that increased faculty and student particiaption in decision-making at the institutional level must: be accompanied by more concerted efforts of the iay and public representatives to scrutinize the demands of faculty and students. If the-degree of institutional independence is not to be drastically curtailed and public accountability not translated into centralised control, such public participation mu<t become more effective than it has’ been in the past. \ The Wright commission investigating post-secondary education in Ontario has been holding hearings for the last year in oider to recommend the future pattern of education in Ontario. Ttie commission’s draft report, juSt released, contains some startling proposals which, if implemented, will transform “higher education”‘ in this province and effect thousands of people, from administrative staff to faculty. Chevron features writer Peter Warrian has condensed the report on these pages and will ,tiplete this s&al report with comment and an&is in next friday’s chevron.

T -

.HE VERY DIVERSITY of the cultural and educationa/ needs of our population cannot be, confined to the traditional institutional framework. Our definition of post-secondary education, therefore, extends cot on/y to traditiona/ I educationa/ institutions but encompasses cultural institutions as well. What is needed for planning% not a plethora of seeming/y specific, numerica! targets but a process which will facjlitate and encdcirage the responsiveness of post-secondary education to socia! needs. In short, our aim was to study and recommend ‘on those aspects of post-secondary education that make up, as it were, the “inner- logic” of the system: those processes that determ~ine the characteristics of post-secondary education. The commission’s desire to understand and use the “inner logic” of the system has led us tc propose recommendations that form an interlocking whole: when action is taken on individua recommendations, therefore, care shoula be taken to respect this interdependence.

l ‘HE PARAMOUNT

value which the Commi&ion _has brought to its evaluation of post-secondary education is-the commitment to the individual. The commission wants to emphasize the im* portance of the individua/ in education: the individual, must be central. First, education must be man-centred. Second, if the individual is at the center, he! must hauelthe oDportunity and the responsibility to decide what educational experience is best for him. Third, we believe educational services should be available to all citizens throughout their lives, not lust for a nun ber of years immediately following high-school graduation. If education is man-centred, then it shbuld not be limited to a particular age group. Underlying this belief is our deep-rooted skepticism about the value of un’iversal-sequentia/ education for the young. We think that many of the changes which accompanied the growth of post-secondary education during the past decades were desirable. L In fact we, want to warn against attempts to bring

Accessibility:

back some Specifically,

of the features ot previous there are two dangers.:

eras.

T/ HE FIRST

danger which could accompanv the desired increased accessibility to post-secondary education would be the continuation of a c/ass system in education. We fear the development of sharp social distinctions between two or three types of institutions, such as colleges of applied arts and tec’hnology and-universities. The second, and a/ready obvious danger is the way in which the privileged, publicly licensed, monopolistic professions are respdnding to the breakdown of the screening process. As a-ccessibility to post-secondary education has in-. creased the number of eligible members,-sotie .professions have tended to respond not by in: creasing their memberships but by increasing the educationa! requirements needed for admission to professiona/ membership. The cost to both the ‘individual and society are considerabie: the public cost of profeSsiona/ training has been increased while the -Qumber of practitioners has been limited. The educationa! goal of post-secondary education is to prepare citizens for life and work. 7his, in turn breaks down into two subsidiary categories of educationa/ goals. One, the genera/ and traditional aims of education: to transmit know/edge, to create and transmit new know/edge, and to stimulate- the development of critical attitudes -habits of mind-in students. Second, equally traditiona! and admixed with the first one, i’s preparation for a career through training. We have formulated a set of principles by which we believe these goa/s should be accomplished in our society; our recommendations, as we// as our criticisms,. are based on these principles. ’ Universal accessibility: We have accepted the need for universal accessibility to post-secondary education at all ages, as our first principle. Hence ou‘r recommendations in this area stress the enGouragement of life-long ed’ucation, part-time school attendance and new ways of delivering educational services. Openness: We have adopted the principle that all educational services should be more and more opev to the public and, indeed, integrated within the general cultural and educational activities of the community. Diversity: As lifelong opportunity for education becomes more of a reality, there will, be a need for even greater diversity of educati9nat services than we have at present-diversity not ,only of institutions but of admission standards, programs, length of courses and so forth. Plexi bility Transferability: We are convinced that, even if

P ERHAPS THE MOST fundamental sing/e characteristic ot recent developments in post secondary education is the trend toward universa, and sequential attendance. It seems to us that the reasons for this mass attendance at post-secondary educational institutions are a/most who//i/ social: they do not appear to stem from any inherent attributes of oost-secondary education as such, a/though they do have profound implica trons for ‘ our educational institutions. Certain/y the dearth of desirable and viable alternatives to postsecondary education tends t_o prolong school attendance. Undeniably, young people leaving high school face an increasing/y limited choice of alternatives to higher education. More and more jobs in large corporations and in government are defined in terms of escalating educational requirements; even more important, large structured organizations ‘use forma/ educationa/ attainment to determine the career paths of their employees. Any scheme aiming at breaking the sequentia/ nature of post-secondary education must offer increased opportunities for people to return to educational institutions later in their lives. Pr6posed fees and’ grants education services, .Ontario colleges (for two semesters; at

Enrolment

categ&y

1,250

Universities: - Honours Arts, Commerce, Law etc. Colleges of Applied Arts and Technology: Technology Universities: Engineering, Architecture, Colleges of Applied Arts and Technology Applied Health Universities: Medicine, Dentistry, Graduate Study

per ktudent fdr universities and 1970-71 cost level)

Total educational cost per student $

Universities: General Arts and Science Colleges of Applied Arts and Technology: Applied Arts and Business

.

exam on demand .

In order to satisfy our educational needs we will .have to -relax a nmber of bureaucratic propensities and abandon some of our shibboleth of “academic standards”. The ‘commission’s answer is that “degrees” should be awarded-not &nly for work accomplished within the walls of our educational institutions; they should also be abailable on evidence of comparable accomplishment achieved bv individuals not fbrmally associated with a university ora college. We are proposing a general evaluation servicethat would provide examinations on demand and award degrees on performance. Secondly, we are.recommending a scheme of “transfer” (“add on”) cPourses that would allow people to change fields, programs and profession$ withoirfgoine through the unnecessary and wasteful process of repeating requirements that have already been fulfilled in another-context. There has been a tendency to increase the number of years of schooling required befroe a candidate is allowed to be licensed as’ a professional practitioner. While the arguement for this increax, is based frequently the increased requirements on “excellence” and “safeguarding professional standards”, merelv stipulate additional years of-schooling or additional deplomas or degrees, often in any field at all. Si&e host of these changes have been introduced by self-policing professions, it. is hard to avoid the suspicion that some of the impetus came more from self-interest than from concern about the public welfare. Efficiency.demands that we make use of the natual talents and cultivated abilities of the people of Ontario as they can-be demonstrated, without respect to chronology, and certainly without paying for excessive amounts of post-secondary education designed rpimarily to serve as an initiation process for -. an iticreasingly rigid social structure.

wide accessibility and even diversitv were achieved, our purpose would be deteated if there were insufficient opportunities for transfers from institution to institution, from program to program, from profession to profession. We are advocating an “accessible hierarchi” of educational services. Public accountability: Both political principles and reality den;land that we recognize the public nature of postlsecondary education. The f&t that practically all the direct costs of education are, borne by taxpayers is alone a forcefull arguement for public accountability. What makes the acceptance of it necessary is, and must be, our faith in our democratic political institutions.

Post-

The ‘/acX of viable 8 secondary education, ther scripts” our ybuth into stitutions. ‘.

1

The government of Ontaric its own actions and throug approhriate policies on the. ments and organizations (bol to provide socially usefuP , seconcjary edycation. Inc programs such as Canadiz overseas, frontier college a youth would benefit society viable, paid alternatives to I

2 The alternatives for your funded as realistically and,& dividual per annum as are * secondary education. 6

3 The Ontario government : and example, provide oppo~ ployment of secondary-schoc pursue post-secondary educ basis. This should be ‘ac

provision of patterns of em1 intermittent and part-f$nc should be made for employee time-off for study without.should have special subsiqie to participate in co-opt programs.

The purpose of Recommen put very simply: there is a ( viable alternatives open graduate except to go QQ educational institution. As \ situation is undesirable I educational grounds. What is whole new policy of> providi with viable and constructive tinuous schooling. c

4

Proposed basic grant $

Proposed fee $

625

625

Formal programs in univ should be more fully intq portunity for experienc_e a pertinent practical expetie formal institutions may be ventional laboratory and prac the providers of such traininl to those now prevailing fol struction in practical subject in cost levels should be @3s 5

1,500

750

750

2,200

1,100

1.100

etc.

3,000

1,500

1,500

Elementary, secondary l teachers and administrator: school work experience re@ should be given preference lacking such experience.

6

\

Short courses for inter retraining for profession* and periodically reviewed b) ordinating board to ensure

rc

The Wright reps Don’t look now, ‘but yo; being folloi, _e

5


ternatives to 1 effectively iur educational

should

past“cqnin-

seek, through

h encouragement

of Iart of other governI private and public), Ilternatives to posteased support for n university service id opportunities for as well as providing emaining in school.

g adults should be r generously per inormal types of post-

Ihould, by legislation tunities for the emleavers who wish to Hion on a part-time complished by the lloyment that permit study. Provisions s to have the right to pay, and employees 5 or other incentives rative educational jations 1 to 3 can be ecreasiqg number of to the high-school tp a post-secondary re have argued, this 0th on social and leeded therefore, is a rg our young people alternatives to con-

10

I

In order to facilitate the return to learning opportunities for all professionals, salaried employees, and wage earners, legislation and/or structures should be devised for the purpose of investing funds and/or percentages of income, salaries or wages, annually in order to provide for periodic study leaves where it is so desired bv the professional, salaried employee or wage earner. (For example, an employee who has foregone 10 per cent of his salary would be able to take a study leave of some six months every five years).

14,

18 All citizens of Ontario should have access to all libraries including those in provincial educational institutions such as universities, colleges of applied arts and technology, and secondary schools.

21 We recommend the creation of a “university of Ontario” which would : l provide via television, radio and correspondence, educational services at the post-secondary level to the people of Ontario; l provide a testing and evaluation -service available on demand to the people of Ontario; l award formally earned degrees and, on the basis of services stipulated above, degrees and diplomas where appropriate without formal course requirements; l co-operate with other educational and cultural institutions in the broader provision of educational services.

nd post-secondary who have had nonant to their specialty in hiring over those

sive upgrading or should be developed the appropriate coontmuing relevance.

wt

:

led. 4

The colleges of applied arts and technology should be granted the right to award distinctive bachelor’s degrees, such as-bachelor of technology (BT) and bachelor of applied arts (BAA), to students successfully completing their present three-year programs in the appropriate divisions.

28 The degrees of doctor of literature (D.Litt) and doctor of science (D.Sc.) should be established at the following large and centrally-located uriiversities: McMaster, Ottawa, Queen’s, Toronto, Waterloo and Western. These degrees should be awarded on evidence of contributron to our knowledge and understanding of the arts and sciences, both pure and applied, as made by persons who are not regular candidates for an existing degree.

29 The should

present grade I3 standard of attainment be available in twelve years, allowing entry

research and instruction

costs

The heart of the cost problem lies in the structure of unit costs: how we deliver our post-secondary educational services and what we consider to be the appropriate elements of these services. In postsecondary education this determination will largely hinge on how we incorporate or reconcile the cost or research and the cost of education.Fee scales hide considerable differencesbetween ljr.ograms. As a rule it can be said that the longer the student stays in university, the larger the average public Subsidyin other words, each additional year is more expensive; furthermore, the higher average, costs are f hat show greatest returns associated with professional training, the greatest being in those professions to individual graduates in professional earnings. In summary, then, the Commission concludes that we need a new method of providing the pub,lic subsidy to post-secondary education; that this new method must attempt to separate, at source but not at the institutional level instructional costs and other costs including research; that the distribution of the cost for educational services between the individual student and the public could be more equitably and more reaso&!y distributed; and that *additional” efforts should be made to provide financial support for those students who come from lower-income families.

.

Wherever possible, student housing should be made part of general-purpose public housing, and public support provided on that basis. Recommendation 14 confirms two basic aims of the commission. First it would eradicate the distinction between “students” and other members of the community, thereby helping to integrate education and society. Second, it would permit a better assessment of overall social needs in housing.

26 rsities and colleges rated with real opId _practice so that lee gained outside substituted for con:ice work. Payment to could be at levels up institutionalized inalthough decreases I;t le.

Divide

lo all forms of post-secondary education after twelve years of schooling. We anticipate that the recommendations of the Hall-Dennis Report, aimed at achieving a level of academic competence in four rather than five years of high school, will be accomplished. In any event we view a fifth year of secondary education as being educationally unnecessary .and a socially undesirable barrier to wider accessibility of post-secondary education. Much of the social screening that is now-attributed to post-secondary educational institutions occurs, in fact, by grade nine when the streaming of students starts. By abolishing the thirteenth year, and without diminishing the quality of education, we will be increasing the educational opportunities of our students and decreasing the social distance separating the different kinds of post-secondary educational institutions in our province.

30 Where student intake quotas are for the present unavoidable (probablylin medicine- and dentistry), admission should be determined on the basis of a lottery conducted among those qualified applicants whose aptitudes and attainments indicate a reasonable probability of success.

31

35 In each, “professional” area including architecture, engineering, law, medicine, psychology, social work$ and teaching, there should be a spectrum of practitioners including specialists, general practitioners, para-professionals, technicians, assistants and aides.

36 There should be ready opportunity for‘people to proceed through the spectrum of skills and responsibilities represented it-i each professional area, with specially designed transfer courses which would build on the knowledge already accumulated.

37 Refresher courses should be developed to provide for the continued competence of people operating at all levels. Such courses should be open to people of “lower” levels, with full opportunity for their advancement ,to i’higlher ’ levels, on the basis of performance standards similarYo those required for reregistration of previously qualified practitioners.

38 The sex or age of a student should have no bearing on his or her acceptance into any course of studies, eligibility for financial aid, or rights of, access to student centers, housing and athletic facilities.

Admission to professional practice in Ontario should be judged solely on the basis of written and oral examinations and experience. There should be no exception from examinations because of degrees or diplomas held. Re-evaluation every 10 years should be necessary to maintain registration for the purpose of professional practice. The examinations used for initial qualification should be of the same standards as those reqhired for re-evaluation.

Commencing in 1972, new appointments to academic positions in universities should reflect the proportion of women receiving Ph.D’s in that year.

33

40

Legislation should be enacted to preven’ discrimination in employment because of attendance or non-attendance at educational institutions. This legislation should reflect certain features of such contemporary human rights legislation as the act to prevent discriminationl in employment because of sex or marital status. In . particular, the establishment and maintenance of rigid employment classifications or categories, maintenance of separate lines of progression for advancement in employment, or separate seniority lists on the grounds of educational certificates should be prohibited.

By 1976, universities in Ontario should achieve a: percentage of women holding tenured positions at least equal to the percentage of woman holding Snon!tenured positions‘in 1971.

39

41

.

By 1981, the proportion of male and female faculty at each level in universities in Ontario should at least equal the proportion of males and’ females receiving doctoral degrees in Canada in ,197l. continued

on page 22~


II

place ” coffee & morning

“A fi&ndly

Complementary

The program will be an .international potpourri of folk songs, music and dances. Participating __groups include Arab, Armenian,

Y paper

The “Nights” will be held in the Humanities theatre at 7 : 30 pm on Saturday and sunday, february 5 and 6. Admission for students one dollar : for non-students two dollars. Tickets are available at the central box office.

cl.

Ukrainian The Ukrainian Students Club will be holding a general business meeting on Wednesday, february 9 at 9:30 pm. This meeting is to be held in the Humanities undergrad Lounge, room 260. Membership cards will be available. Everybody is welcome to attend.

A motorbus,a

jug of wineand thou in the wildernessb

Fat Angel goes underground The Fat Angel drop in centre plans to go underground with some of its programs. The Fat Angel plans to renovate the basement of the centre at 42 College St., in Kitchener to provide space for its free medical clinic and new young adult program. A dance to raise money for the renovation will be held Saturday from 9 p.m. to midnight at St. Mary’s Hall in Kitchener. The Islanders will provide the music. The Fat Angel estimates it will need at least 700 dollars to renovate the basement into a TVrap room, recreation room and possibly a workshop. The young adult program (YAP) is an attempt to provide an alternative to those willing to learn but who have failed or been unable to cope with the present school system.

The cost is ultra reasonable. And we’ll get you to London from here just as cheaply as is humanly possible. We’ve got a booklet that fills in the details and prices. If you’re single, under 30 and slightly adventurous, send for it.

We want you to run away to Europe us. We’ll drain our last pint of Guinness at the Tournament pub in Earlscourt, London, hit the road south to the Channel and be in Calais by sunset. A month later, we could be in Istanbul. Or Berlin or Barcelona. Or Athens. Or Copenhagen. Or just’about any place you and your Australian, English, New Zealand and South African mates want to be. On the way, we’ll camp under canvas, cook over open fires, swim, sun and drink in some of the most spectacular settings on the continent. We’ll provide. a small zippy European motorbus and-your camping gear and a young cat to drive it who knows every wineshop from here to Zagreb, plus how to ask for a john, or how to find your way back home to bed, smashed, lateron; You can go for as little as 28 days or as many as 70. Spring, Summer or Fall.

Free poli

with

We’re . .

.

.

.

.

booking. .

.

.

now. .

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

Name

n

Address

i

City’

n

Mail

.

Prov. to: Europe, Going Down the Road, 214 A Adelaide St. West, Toronto, Ontario.

. .

.

..*

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

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.

.

.

..I

L.

Europe, Going Down the Road. A motor

14

842

fhe

chevron

caravan

into

Europe

for

international

.

Okay. Running away to Europe with you sounds interesting. Please send me details, itinerarie? and an application.

.

singles

under

30. Spring,

Summer

and

Fall

‘72.

flicks

A program of free films will be held at 8 pm Wednesday featuring “Burn” with Marlon Brando. The other films will include a movie from the Canadian Labor Congress and some features from Newsreel. Sponsored by the Political Science Union, the films will be shown in one of the large arts lecture rooms. More specific information will be on PSU posters next .week.

,

.

--


; classil FOUND Scarf, brown crocheted about 6 feet &long, outside of Engineering lecture hall about a weekago. Phone 884-1664 and leave message. T.R. I have what you left in Physics 150. Pete 884-7768. Found: One small sheaf of ancient Phoenician manuscripts containing the heretofore undiscovered secret of life itself. Yes, you too can unlock the secrets of your inner being. 50 cents postpaid to Madame Zu, Box 8401, Waterloo, Ontario. LOST Man’s wire rimmed prescription sunglasses in brown case lost two weeks ago. Phone 621-6668 Reward. Wa!let Lost at people’s gymnasium Wednesday nite, probably in men’s dressing room. Keep the money if you are desperate, but, please return the rest ‘cause I am desperate. Bill at the chevron. PERSONAL French lessons by expert native French speakers. All levels, all ages, also conversation circles. Reasonable rates, central location. 576-9120 or

579-6515.

-

-.

.

Passport, job application, and other photograaphic work. $3 for four pictures. Call Nigel. 884-7865. Passport, pictures officially forged, Have camera will photo. Scott chevron off ice 885- 1660. Tired of the same old shit? Try Cousin Nick’s Technicolor Excretory Pellets, and change your life! Get girls, win friends, good jobs! Box 22, lshmah Dangal, Iran. Day-Glo toilet seats, $5 the pair, depicting the disappearance and reappearance -of Howard Hughes. Secular motifs also. Write to The Christian Movement, Charelestown, N.B. Ashamed because you’re undersized in that very special place? Men, your troubles are over: with Jocular Georgie’s Patented Penile Protractor. Satisfaction guaranteed or your sex life ruined. Orders by telepathic contact only to ensure privacy. Toilet paper-1001 varieties. We cater to special tastes, unusual appetites. our ‘Sandpaper Special’. Try Everything goes. Nothing held back. You won’t be disappointed. Write “Le Petit Cochon”, Waterloo Square.

Hostel

MARCH 8,1972 Experienced typist will do thesis and essays. Reasonable rates. Phone 7446235. All typing done efficiently and proniptly. Call Mrs Marion Wright 745-1111 during office hours; 745-1534 evenings. HOUSING AVAILABLE Apartment to sublet may to august Two bedroom, furnished at Waterloo towers. Contact Sally Holditch apt 603. ‘Phone 743-8502. Furnished 2 bedroom townhouse to sublet march or april to july or august. near university. Pool. Married couple. $130. 742-8793.

Do you like us? We don’t want you but we need you. Show your appreciation of our consternation by kicking your parakeet or shaving your legs and send 50 cents (rather more -than less) to “Save the Stamps Fund, but Stamp Out Reality”, purgatory. Building for sale or rent. Comfortable accommodations, plus great and many small meeting rooms. Close to student market. Available soon. Contact B.C. Matthews, Universjty of Waterloo. Yes it’s true!! The hippie ‘chicks’ are more daring! Don’t wait, send away now for a no-holds-barred expose of the swingingest scene on campus. Pix included. Phone George, 885-1660. FOR SALE . Three fantastic cats, one black, one grey, one Siamese. Already shot up. Call 885-0084 anytime. Camera 35mm Trankar f-2.8 45 mm lens w-case and flash unit. $40 (half price).Phone 742-9395. Skiis and boots, Head standards (steel) $75 double boots $25. Phone Jim 578-2304. Skis, Titans, new, fi berglass, 210 cm GS retail $160; accept best offer. Phone 855-1465. 75 acre farm suitable for hobby farming for sale. Ideal country home, 4 bedrooms. Asking price $35,000. For more< information phone 774-5444 anytime. Tea kettles that whistle ‘God Save the Queen’, ‘Okie from Muskogie’, other favorites. Amaze and delight guests. Other tunes $5 extra. Send $15 plus tax (where applicable) to ‘Tea-Tune’, Fred’s Vale, Alberta. No trading stamps, please. Puppies, puppies, puppies! Buy your wife or girlfriend one of these choice animals while they last! Guaranteed free or almost-free from lice, putrefaction and Worthington’s DogRot. Phone or write 744-2444. Ask for Pot. RIDE AVAILABLE

One student wanted to share 2 bedroom apartment. Single bedroom, full kitchen and livingroom, less than 5 minutes walk from Uof W. Immediate possession. Call 884-5925 or 2727. A room available for one male sutdent, parking, cooking, private bath. Phone 744-8023. Summer of ‘72. May to September. Your own bedroom in a furnished two bedroom apartment within ten minutes of any point on campus. All facilities for your use. write Al Lukachko, P.O. Box 595, station “E”, Tor’onto 310, Ontario Looking for a place to live? Co-op has rooms and different meal arrangements to suit you. Phone 5782580. For rent 6 bedroom house on 9th avenue with garage. Steve White 5787771 evenings 578-1463.. Available may and june orily, Westmount, fully furnished 3 bedroom house, garden, cable, all appliances. $200 per month inclusive. No children. Phone 578-0695. Furnished rooms for rent, complete kitchen, linen and towels supplied, males only, close to university. 8841381.

Nomination Forms Are Now Available In M&C 3038 for the Following Positions: President Vice-President Three (3) 2nd year regular reps Three (3) 3rd year regular reps Two (2) 4th year regular reps Office

Term

to end

April

1973

USED: l Typewriters l Desks 0 Calculators

Lockhart’s has them at student’s prices

Room for two students. Broadloom bedrooms and living room. Kitchen included. Rooms furnished. Close to university. Phone 576-4650.

Ride to campus from Lakeshore Village monday-friday to arrive on campu$ at 8:30am Prompt. Phone 884-1664 and leave message. TYPING Willing to do typing of essays etc. Phone 743-7033. Wish to do typing in my home. Call 7451691. Sally come back. I had a long talk with the doctor, and he convinced me to get rid of the spurs. I’ll go easy with the whip, too. I hate you, darling. Harry.

Living accomodations available in coop house in Kitchener. Anarchistic tendencies would be most workable. Call Steve at 576-2640. Beer nuts-we can get them for you in 500-lb bags at prices up to 25 per cent lower than what you would pay for the same amount in small, commercial packages. Send for catalogue-more than 400 varieties! 25 cents handling. 97 Victoria St. N., Kitchener, Ont.

due April

applications

The secretary of state department will make 1.2 million dollars available this year under its Hostels Program -to assist corn‘munity groups in setting up lodging and information centres in communities. across Canada. Last year, approximately 80,000 young people were lodged in 96 hostels set up from coast to coast under the program. The first hostels are expected to open in the first week of june, and each hostel will also serve as an information centre, integrating the services offered last year by the information kiosks. Additional services at the hostels this year will probably require larger staffs. In 1971 around 400 youths were hired by the hostels in operation. Hostel staffs will offer travelling youth information and counselling on local employment op-5 portunities, recrea titin and cultural activities, and will be able to make medical and legal referrals for those who require this type of service. Young people who wish to work in hostels should apply at local or

MATH SOCIETY COUNCIL ELECTIONS

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

15

organiz&ions are asked to submit their proposals for hostels before’ april 15, 1972 to : Hostels Program Department of the Secretary of State 130 Slater Street, Ottawa, Ontario. I

students Canada Manpower Centres or get directly in touch with local organizations receiving funds under the program. The federal government grants will be made to local organizations which can demonstrate that they are receiving local support. The

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Tuesday night, the Waterloo warriors travelled to york with an id.ea of at least tying the league leaders following their upset over Ottawa on the week-end but went down 9-2. The first period was the only one that either team really got at it, with end-to-end rushes and lots of scoring chances both ways. Yeomen took advantage of, a ‘warrior minor penalty at the 17 minute mark and promptly took a 1-O lead. The second period-the black plague of warrior pucksters, again struck the Waterloo squad. A quick york goal at the l’minute mark was enough to deflate the visitors as they suddenly went through an array of figure eights and sloppy execution of basic fundamentals that opened the floodgates for the precision-yeomen. They fired at will and scored five unanswered goals, one of them with the/ warriors with a man advantage. It appeared that with a ‘lot of warriors’ parents and relatives at the game’ they were just trying too hard and it resulted in a horror show for everyone. When the period ended the badly outplayed warriors had again blown a second period and were down 6-zip. The third period was a bit more organized with the first signs of physical contact. Frank Staubitz and Kent Kilpatrick stood a few yeomen on end, but the warriors certainly were hurting from their lack of contact-something 1they are not famous for. Roger Kropf and Jim Nickleson fired a goal apiece and york scored 1 two more in a one-sided contest,

Basketball

,

ath.enas tromp McMdster

-

59-48

1

Little Loretta McKenzie’ impressed. onlookers to a fine basketball exhibition last Wednesday as the athenas walked over the MacMaster team, 59-48. Although gaining only six personal points, freshman Loretta always seemed to be in the right place for pass-reception and interceptions. High scorers for both teams tallied fifteen-Patty Bland for the Waterloo team and Marg. Kennedy, for the losers. Mary Anne Kryzanowski added eleven more athena points while Yonna Luypaert proved. her jumping ability I by pulling down rebounds-galore. New faces on the home team are proving to be rapidly approaching veteranship, but had to depend on the skill of high-scoring Bland and the speed of Sue Murphy to pace the win. McMaster fast-breaked the athenas on too many occasions but couldn’t seem to find the back-, board on drives. t \ Last Wednesdays event represented the final home game for the team, but they still have two road games before the season schedule is exhausted.

Top scorer Patty Bland gazes with Mat-chick as another point is added to the *athena score. ,

16 .

warriors were outshot 49-25. So it’s back to the drawing board for coach Mckillop and team as they try to learn the mechanics of body checking and possibly a long hard look at rearranging the present lines which are so terribly ineffective as of late. In the past three games, usually reliable Dave Simpson and Billy Stinson haven’t managed a scoring point, and centre-man John Hall is unsteady playing a wing position. Possibly the weeks layoff will be refreshing for the warriors whc are at home Friday, February 11 against Carleton. Game time is 8 : 15-it should be a good one.

Warriors 0ffawa

over

Friday night, the barn saw the hustling warriors reverse a trend and refused to ‘fade in the stretch’ as they took the second-rated (in OUAA) Ottawa gee-gees 3-2. The gee-men began the scoring and late in the first period led the home town boys. two-zip. Roger Kropf and Kent Kilpatrick collected late goals for the warriors to tie the score at the first break. The second period saw hard hitting warrior-action but no goals were produced. It took the Waterloo group until late in the third to put away the winning goal which came off the stick of Peter Paleczny . The warrior defense deserve credit for holding OUAA scoring leader Bob Aube scoreless throughout the game.


MATH SOCIETY COUNCIL BY-ELECTION MARCH 8,1972 In and out of ret teams

Other scores 3B Eng West A

On the six recreational team activities only co-cd volleyball has The 10 co-ret yet to start. volleyball teams started spiking on tuesday at 8 :00 pm with the Erbs set to rob Rob’s Robbers and the Math Sot to outpsych the Psych team. All ten teams will play 4 games this evening. The game of the day should occur around 9:30 pm when the Ballers outball Flak Quacks.

Ball hockey

-

The 17 teams enjoyed their first day of action last Wednesday with a few interesting results. Harries Heavies out muscled Franks Freaks in a come from behind victory in the last minute 6-5. In the match up of the year the TNuts and the Erb St. Ballers (fall term finalists) the T-Nuts revenged themselves with a 12-9 victory. Planning 75 out manou‘vered team 10 6-5. $ Other results are: System Des. F. Freaks Mikes Muggers 3B Seives Dolphins 2A Chem Eng NE Nabobs Flying Termites

1

0 1

0 2 0 !I 7

Co=ed broom ball

are: 14 8

Marrauders Choppers Chem Eng 4B Civil

11

1 -1 5

Ret innertube waterpolo In the league opening no official scores have been recorded in the Slideramas vs Furri Freaks game, nor in the Waterbabies vs Titanic Floating Points. It can only be surmised therefore that both the Furri Freaks and highly favoured, experienced and defending world champion Waterbabies went on to further easy victories. In the one honestly reported game the Bio Buggers freaked out Frands Freaks 4-3.

Basketball Everyone has now played half a season and as prediction would have it - no one has been 100 per cent correct. The league has been plagued by upsets from teams that shouldn’t upset a empty garbage can. The perennial powers have become too complacent, while the newer teams are creating a new pressure group in Basketball. Basketball game of the week: monday, february 5th i: 00 pm Arts vs L. Math .-Gym 2 i: 55 pm Jocks vs E. Studies-Gym 2 5: 55 pm V2-SE vs Co-op Math ACourt 3

In the broom and ball league all 24 teams have played at least one game. Action was fierce as the Freak teams - Furr and Frank tied 2-2. In other action Optometry 2 peaked by the Wreckers 1-O. 710 & _Village League Co upset the highly favoured Village 2-NW Village 1-E 2-l. The Iron Broom Co-op Math A liquidated the Ramjets 2-1, Math Village 1-S outstated Mech Eng 4-l. Village 1-N More scores would be given if the Village 2-SE team captains phone in their Village West results to Stu Koch Ext 3532 or Upper Faculty Doug Atherton 579-0201 the day Phys Ed 8r Ret following their game.

Basketball standings

Other scores The Argos Jocks Liquidators VE 2 Duke Manor Fruckers

Minus Pink Upper Eng Upper Math St. Jeromes Ind. Chin. Students

are:

~ -

3 0 6 3 0 ii 1 2 1 2 1 2

2 2 2

5

1 1 1 0

3 2 2 0

1 2 2 3.

2 0 4 0

3 0

Lower Faculty Lower Math Env. Studies Arts Jocks Optometry Lower Eng

Of the 5 games played to date, it appears as if a close league is developing. West A defeated Co-op l-0, BCA chopped the Furri Freaks by an unmentionable score, 4B Civil over 3B Eng 11-6, while Snyder’s Shooters outshot McKinnon’s Marrauders $6. In the final game Woods Choppers defeated Bio Buggers with a sisputed 4-3 score.

-

1 2 2 3 0 3 0

Would you believe Village South won another game? They haven’t even been scored upon. That leaves only Village 2-SE and South undefeated in the Village League. First place will be decided on Thursday, February 3rd at 12: 10 Pm - 1 :OO pm at Moses Springer arena when the two meet head on. Their scores to date are: Village South 4 - VZ-NW Village South 1 - Vl-East V2-SE 3 - Vl-East 1 V2-SE 5 - Vl-East 3

Village 1 -W L. Math

3

1

Nominations

2

Forms Are Now

Available In M&C 3038

The other undefeated teams in the league are Upper Math (3-O) Upper Eng (3-O). It is important to note that Upper Eng has yet to be scored upon. Gord Campbell has 3 shutouts to date: 3-O over Science; 4-O over Phys Ed & Ret; and 8-O over Crackers Club. While Upper Math has a record of 8-l over Grads, 7-l over Science; 4-l over Conrad Grebel.

for the Following Positions: One (1) 2nd year co-op rep \ One (1) 3rd year co-op rep

The game of the year - Upper Math vs Upper Eng will be held sunday, february 13th at 11: 10 pm 12: 00 am at Moses Springer arena.

‘ice Term to end December 19

In residence league, all teams have been beaten. Conrad Grebel still appears the power with a 2-l record losing only to Upper Math, the defending champions. However, pressure is being put by all the others with l-l records. Lower Faculty - optometry, arts and env. studies are undefeated. After tuesday nights games, things should change. now! Many

Floor hockey 0 e

After two weeksof floor hockey there are only 5 undefeated teams. In League A - Village South and St. Jeromes are touting a 2-O record. In league B Rugger 2 and Mucket Farmers both independent teams are also 2-0, while in league C only the Grads haven’t been beaten. The games to watch at Seagrams are tuesday, february 8th Village South vs 4B Mech at 4:00 pm while on thursday, March 10th Rugger 2 must play the Mucket Farmers at 5 :00 pm to determine who is Number 1’ in League B.

Please

Hockey Ret hockey

!I 1

All

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single lens reflex 0 telephoto lens electronic flash l enlargements, etc. Competition Open Only lo Amateurs prints

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All tows - 1 chairlift and 3 T-bars will be open. Ski rentals are available for $2.66 a complete outfit.

-306 3 0 6 2 1 4 0 0

Science Grads

be

& WHITE

submitted Decision

9:3Q w 6 -

no of Thurs.

n

later judges & Fri.

Portraits

than final

0

General

March

9:30

to

11,

1972

9:30

1. Co-ed ski day - thursday, february 16th at Chicopee from l:OO-5:66 pm. The annual ski day has attracted over 200 skiers interested in recreation, instruction or giant slalom races.

3 0 6 2 0

4

Upcoming events

0 3 0

Residence League St. Jeromes 3 0’ 6 Renison 2 1 4 2A Elect 1 2 2 co-op 1 2 2 St. Pauls 1 2 2 Conrad Grebel 1 2 2

Optometry Wreckers ii0 & Co L.I.V. St. Pauls Hammer Math Chem Eng 4B I Chem Eng 4B VE 2

W L TP

Other scores to date: Village North V2-NW

0 0

GRADUATION PORTRAITS

note:

Buy your tow ticket before noon february 10th for a $1.00 discount, otherwise it will cost you $3.00 at Chicopee. Available at pe office. A $1.00 refund will be given to all participants up until february 16th in the intramural office when you return your Chicopee ticket. Buses will be leaving the campus centre at 12:00 noon and 12:45 pm. 2. Men’s curling bonspiel sunday, february 13th at the Glenbriar curling club. 16 rinks can be accepted for a complete draw. Defending champions Bill Ic ton and crew from upper eng are set for the challenge form other superior curling teams. All entries must be in the intramural office by friday, february 11th at 5’:OO pm. 3, Men’s

volleyball

Wednesday, Pm.

february

4. Doubles

squash

league starts 9th at 7 :OO tournament

Entries are due Wednesday, february 17th. Tournament to start Week of february 22nd.

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Wednesday night the Warrior Bball contingent travelled to the home court of the McMaster Mauraders for a O.U.A.A. league game. It was a must game for the Mauraders as they needed a win badly for a chance to finish in the western division playoffs. They were to be denied however, for the Warriors came through with a 88-84 win to gain sole possesion of first place in their division of the league. The Waterloo squad led all the way after jumping into an early lead. They couldn’t stretch it much past five points though-and after a first half which saw domination of the boards by Paul Bilewicz, the score read 40-84. ’ Paul Skowron also played a good initial period, getting up well on the boards and scoring eight points as well. The start of the second half was an example of the Warr,iors at their best. Trying to run with their opposition was the Mauraders big mistake. There are few teams who can go with the Warriors when they want to run. In just four short minutes the galloping gladiators had extended their margin to 22 points. While on their rampage they outscored the Mat team 18 to 2. When the Mauraders finally came to their senses and slowed the play down considerably, the . scoring pace was more normal and more evenly distributed on either side. In that torrid four minutes, Laaniste had hooped eight points and Bilewicz and Kieswetter had contributed four more each. The Warriors couldn’t gain much more ground on the determined Hamiltonians and even though they did lead by 25 at one point, with seven minutes to go they were still leading by 22. At that point they seemed to

Eighth

volleyball

The athena volleyballers stretched their -win record to eight last Wednesday with a toppling of the MacMaster crew. The three-games-straight victory put the home squad in an advantageous second position with only one game left in regular schedule. Jan Roorda put together another good game at the net to lead the Waterloo squad to three straight wins. Debbie Smith showed usual form and poise to lead the athena volleyballers to their eighth season victory. Jane Fraser and Sue McTavish worked well as setters for the seasoned veteran to place ball for spikes which Debbie ripped through the MacMaster defense. Smith bounded high on her shots

18

have the situation reversed on them. It wasn’t that the Mauraders were overpowering them, it was just that they started to play sloppy basketball. a Errant passes were converted to turnovers and the semi-alert Mat players managed to capitalize on enough of them to bring the game within reach. The referees got into the2ct now, as they probably thought that they weren’t getting the attention that men of their position deserved. After a few questionable calls, coach McRae was obviously wondering about the officials’ competence. Then when they missed a flagrant foul completely, coach tried to embarass the referee by doing a suggestive striptease, after which, he tried to kick his chair into the stands for some needy’ fan who was standing. How generous of you, coach. To keep things simple, the Mauraders crept up on our heros until with five seconds remaining they trailed by only five. An illegal substitution by the hapless Warriors gave the Mat team one last hope. They had a land-l foul shot, plus the technical from the illegality and then they would get the ball back at centre. If everything worked and they could score one basket in five seconds they could tie the game. Fortunately, the first foul shot was missed and the Warriors held on to win. The team plays three times next week,-monday, Wednesday, and Saturday, so get out and support our “First Place Hope”. Waterloo Bilewicz Laaniste Kieswetter Skowron Schlote Dragon lgnatavicious Ross Bigness Hamilton

25 20 18 11 4 3 2 2 2 1 88

McMaster Mazza Dignan Kalvaitis Nw Simpson Waugh McCrory Baldauf Rybiak

24 15 11 1L 10 4. 4 3 2 84

-- I

win to overpower the would-be Hamilton blockers and played with experienced coolness in the backcourt controlling many MacMaster plays. Final scores were 15-10, 15-8 and 15-9 in favour of the home team. Judy Wilcox played a strong second game seeming to be always under the ball for set-ups which sparked the multiple-offense. Playing one member short, the athenas had Jane Fraser change roles to spiker and she proved adequate in her new position. In an effort to secure first place in the league, the athenas will be out to depose the western gals in London next Tuesday. The western girls are responsible for the only athena loss, a close 3-2 decision. A win in London will mean first place for the Waterloo squad.

-

846 the chevron c


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 character line. For legal reasons, letters must be signed with course year and phone number. A pseudonym will be printed if you have a good reason.

Yap starts again Thank you for your coverage of the Young Adult Programme (YAP) in the last issue of the chevron. As was mentioned in the article, YAP is again starting a community open to high school dropouts, ages 16-21, who wish to experiment with new interests, new people, and new ways of learning. People who are interested in the programme can contact us at 42 College street, Kitchener, 743-1111, any time from 9 to 5 on week days. One of the most important aspects of YAP is we operate on a shared basis, so that every member of the programme has an equal say in the process of making decisions. There is one point, however, that we would like to clarify: YAP is an independent group which rents space from the Fat Angel. We are not part of the Angel organization and for the sake of both parties, we’ are trying to keep our identities’ separate in the eyes of the public. Thanks for helping us keep that straight. Paul, Bryan, Pat, Donna and John.

Jim,

Gwen,

Matthews the humanitarian Dear whoever the hell is responsible for the policy banning, animals from buildings on cam-. pus-namely : policy no. general 32 _ subject: animals in buildings I have heard rumours that someone with the authority to do so has banned pets and other animals from all university buildings (including residences). As one of the subjects of this policy, who visits the campus with my master when he attends classes, arrd visits friends in the villages, I am wondering where the hell I am to stay when he leaves home for campus. Actually, I know where that leaves me--cooling my ass in a snowbank! Then again, how would you like to catch pneumonia in some mud puddle while you wait for your master in one of the buildings for hours on end? Or how would you like to be led ‘around on a leash all across campus, (village moor, campus walks, etc. 1 when you could use the exercise in running around and exploring? I tell you-some of these policies are (literally? > going to the dogs ! BOW WOW, Manfred

Athletic figures I would like to try and correct any erroneous impressions that may have been conveyed by the use of incorrect figures in the front page article on the chevron of tuesday, january 25th dealing with athletic fees and budgeting. A breakdown of budget costs against the five divisions of the athletic department budget has

been made and the following allocations are indicated. Of the $22.00 athletic fee assessed $5.75 goes to athletics in general (office, administration and etc.) ; $8.06 to men’s intercollegiate program ; $3.95 to men’s intramurals; $3.20 to women’s intercollegiate program ; and $1.15 to women’s intramurals. When income and gate receipts attributable to men’s intercollegiate activities are deducted, their cost drops to $5.66. three “major ‘J inThe tercollegiate sports, football, basketball, and hockey, do of course, cost the most to operate. Similarly, they generate the most of the extra income. Of the approximately $76,006 budget (after income from gate receipts and etc. has been deducted) for intercollegiate sports, football costs 12 per cent; basketball 6% per cent; hockey 15 per cent; (of which almost half is ice rental); swimming 6% per cent; track 7% per cent; volleyball 4 per cent; wrestling 7 per cent; golf 51/2 per cent; and so forth for a total of 18 sports. The intramural budget is approximately $60,000. While inflationary increases and rising costs put financial pressures on .a11 programs within the university, it is our hope that we can continue to operate a broad program of athletics to which all members, of the university community can relate and derive some pleasure and benefit. director

Carl Totzke, of athletics

While Totzke claims the chevron figures were wrong, perhaps he should check his own figures, which leave $2.40 per student unaccounted for.-the lettitor.

Warriors turn out To the editor: I woke up this morning with an acute hangover because last night was the annual pisser when the pucking about warriors played the much hated blues from U of T. The veteran blues must have had a real laugh when they stepped on the ice last night because the arena was only half-filled. Only half fucking filled for the U of T hockey game. This game has been a traditional grudge match for years and the barn was always packed for hours ahead of game time. But not this year, all the fucking so-called loyal U of W fans have deserted the hockey team because they are not the star-studded team of the past. I hope everyone of you who didn’t make the game is goddamn proud of himself. You have to have a winner or you fuck off. Bullshit, I think you all are a bunch of phonies. For those of you who did make the game. Thanks for your loyal support but I think many of you just came ‘to see how bad the warriors would get beat because the vocal support was also fucked, save for the boys above the no smoking sign and the warrior band. The game itself was good because the warriors played their hearts out against a much superior

blues team. Congratulations warriors on a fine effort despite the insurmountable odds of playing in a half-filled arena against a championship team. I figure the warriors would have at least been two goals better if some fucking fans would have showed up. Even the Waterloo cops were bored by the proceedings. Waterloo’s finest always come out in great force for the traditional game amd last night was no exception. I think there were more cops there than fans. They went looking for people to hassle. Tex got frisked for dope for at least ten minutes and they insisted that Frank should go to the hospital to have his ribs x-rayed after he broke through the railing’ and fell off the balcony above the no smoking sign. But they were their usual good natured selves and did not arrest anybody that I know of. They were just looking for something to occupy the time, because there were hardly any fucking fans to bother with.

r

Enough of the happenings of last night’s hockey , game and the criticism of the fucking warrior fans. What about the team itself? Why has the team lost its greatness of years past? Now I am not going to ramble on about the coaching because as I said in an article about the football team last year, you can not beat athletic department establishment. But I would like to present the following questions : I) Why does the: U of W hockey team have a baseball manager for a coach when there is a much more competent person to coach the team on campus, in past coach Don Hayes? 2) Why is the leading scorer in the league wearing No. 17 for WLU hawks when his initial -desire was to play for the warriors? 3) Why does a certain MA student in politibal science insist that he will never play for the present coadh again? 4) Why is one of the leading scorers in the Ontario senior league playing for the Galt Hornets when he is a student at U of W? Now I am not saying that the coach should be canned because that’s impossible at U of W. But I am saying that he better get off his ass and do some recruiting for next year’s team. U of W has always been a traditional hockey school, but unless the coach shapes up, the team will demise even further than it has this year. In closing, I sincerely hope that the team fares well for the rest of the year despite the coaching problems and the poor fan support. I know that they are trying their best despite the odds. I also hope that things will be better for them next year and that the hockey tradition of Waterloo will resume again. So good luck to the team and fuck the fans and the, coach. I graduate in the spring and I wish I could have left saying the hockey at U of W was always great. Unfortunately I cannot. Phil Stoesser planning ‘72

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All universities in Ontario ’ Operating income plus student finances

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‘72

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42

Americas

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43

Feb 12 oSun Feb 13

&at

Discrimination on the basis of sex in pay, rank and rate of advancement should be abolished.

44

1:30 pm til 10 pm daily Adults

$1.75

Childrentunder Kitchener Visit

the

Students 12) with

Memorial New,

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Free

Continuous

46

Tease \--non-stop -nothing held back -everything goes won’t. be disappointed No

under 18 admitted

one

LA PETITE THEATRE 30 King Weekdays sat.

S -- opp. Waterloo 6: 30-U: 30 2:00-12:30

45 The Ontario manpower retraining program should be open to women who wish to re-enter the labor force but *who are at present ineligible on the grounds of the three year attachment to the labour) force requirement.

Auditorium

Sexciting,

Strip

The biological role of women should be recognized by the provision of maternity leaves, tax relief for child care and the creation of day care centres.

$1.00

parents

Women employed in the field of higher education should enjoy the same conditions of employment as men. Appropriate promotional procedures should be adopted for women employed in research and ,part-time teaching.

Sq.

The-federal and provincial governments should co-operate in establishing a Canadian human resources commission, with the following jurisdiction : l to advise the federal and provincial governments on matters pertaining to manpower projections and related educational planning; l A full-time chairman, appointed by the lieutenant governor in council on the advise of the minister of colleges and universities. & No president or vice-president of a university or similar institution should be appointed to it. Jurisdiction of the committee should be: l To establish new faculties and programs and discontinue unnecessary faculties and programs, at both the graduate and undergraduate level. l To establish a general admissions policy for the institutions under its jurisdiction. 0 To distribute operating and capital funds among the institutions. Pol icy : a The co-ordinating board should hold public hearings from time to time at the institutions under its jurisdiction. l The proceedings of the co-ordinating board should generally be public and held in camera only when the transactions are confidential or imFees and universities semesters,

grants by program and colleges (for 1970-7 1) Total institutional income Grant per per student student $ s

Enrolment category Universities Undergraduate and first degree General arts and science Honours

1,650 arts

commerce,

jaw”

Engineering, architecture, etc. Med-basic science clinic

1,170

a

2,475

1,995

3,300

2,755

8,250

7,575

3,300 4,455 6,600

2,865 4,020 6,165

2,325 2,840 4,700

2,175

Graduate M.A, M.B.A. M.Sc. Ph.D.

DIAMONDS ARE FOREVER -and for her 8 King St. E. Kitchener

‘22

850

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Colleges of Applied arts and technology Applied arts, Business Technology Applied Health

2,690 4,550

Tuition fees Total ordinary operating income Tuition fees as a percentage of total operating income

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$hn

$1;.9m

$64.2m

11.6m

$39.2m

$544.0m

51

45.7

11.8

mediately prior to giving advice to the minister. The minutes of all meetings should be made public. l The board should distribute funds for educational purposes on an objective formula basis for both operating and capital grants. If major changes are proposed, public hearings should be held to justify them. l The board should award five per cent of its operating grants budget for innovation in educational programs and policies. Such grants should, not persist for more tthan five years. Following this period successful innovations and experiments should be viable on the basis of ordinary support. 55 In the governance of provincially assisted institutions there should be direct and significant representation on governing bodies’ of students .and faculty. Meetings of such bodies, as well as budgetary and other information should be open. Such governing bodies should hold public hearings on some regular basis. In order to provide for the representation of community interests, such hearings should be held, on occasion, in the various . communities served by the institution. Reports and financial statements for each institution should be tabled in the provincial legislature.

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Public financing of students attending postsecondary institutions should be accomplished through two schemes: a grant scheme designed to provide increased accessibility to post-secondary for students from low-income groups, - education and a loan scheme to facilitate attendance at petsecondary educational institutions for the rest of the population as well as those who wish to pursue longer courses leading to professional careers. The grant scheme should have the following features: l awards large enough‘ to pay the student’s tuition fees and to provide for his maintenance while at school; l grants extended to any eligible individual for three years or, if taken on part-time basis, for the . part-time equivalent of three years’ full-time study; l eligibility based on considerations of both types, Ontario individual and parental income and wealth and two academic limited to members of families falling below the mean of provincial income distribution; l eligibility not limited because the recipient lives with his parents; l the amount available scaled according to the Average recipients’ parents’ income group; Fee as a student l in paricular, the amount should be determined fee percentage on the basis of a sliding scale, gradually decreasing of income $ from the maximum amount available to those whose families are in the lowest quartile of income distribution in Ontario; those whose families have incomes at or above the mean for Ontario should not be eligible for grants. l the inclusion of parental income in the above calculations should be discontinued if the applicant has lived away from home for more than three 480 29 years and, during the same period, did not attend any post-secondary educational institution. 19. 480 The loan system should have the following features: 545 16 l open to’all students; l not limited in time; 675 8 l interest-bearing; l repayment based on the “ability-to-pay” 435 13 principle and fixed as a percentage of taxable in435 10 come in any year: 435 6 l repayable within fifteen years or forgiveable thereafter ; l the yearly amount of support for which individual students could be eligible should be 150 6 recommended by the respective co-ordinating boards responsible for universities and colleges 150 5 150 3 and the open sector.


I

Big bad wolf?, For a great many years the wolf has been a universal symbol of evil. Even during this century, people who have been praised for their conservation work, have called for the total extermination of the wolf. Thankfully the myths that surround this fascinating animal are now dying. For example, the wolf is often portrayed in movies and on television attacking man. The facts are that there is not even one case of a healthy wolf attacking a person for any reason. None of the so-called wolf attacks have proved to be true when put under close scrutiny.

A different story emerges from environments which have been drastically altered by man and where big game numbers are high. Here the wolves are sometimes unable to limit the big game numbers to any noticeable effect. Both these arguments nullify the facts as presented by many hunters. The effects of wolf predation on prey populations apparently differ with location. Therefore, a policy of wolf removal using the bounty system as practised _ in Ontario is unjustifiable, because this system is not specific to area.

The reasons for dema,nding the extinction of the animal, although-many, are not very sound. Many argue that wolves remove big game animals which could otherwise be shot by hunters. This sounds reasonable but it ignores the true place of the wolf in the ecology of the woods. For example, several years ago the British Columbia government poisoned wolves on a massive scale over large areas. Of‘ course, all animals that ate the bait were killed but that is another story. After the wolves were gone, the ‘moose population increased rapidly until it ran out of food, whereupon it crashed. After the crash, the population of moose was at a level lower than before the wolves were poisoned.

The effects of wolf predation on gene ~001s of prey populations is exactly the opposite to that of hunters. Instead of selecting the biggest and best as hunters do (which has been known to reduce antler size of red dee,r in Britain), wolves select the young, old and diseased because they are easy to catch. Mature and healthy deer, moose and caribbu have little trouble evading wolves. In 1793 a bounty was placed on wolves in Ontario. Since that time a few things have changed in Ontario’ but people can still collect blood money for slaughtering these animals. Last year the government paid 69,996 dollars for dead coyotes and timber wolves, killed by any method at all. Recently two snowmobilers spotted a wolf running on the ice of Lake Simcoe. They ran the animal down and killed it by running over it as it lay exhausted: They

The same facts emerged from studies of Isle Royale where the wolves appeared to be keeping the moose herd within its food supply.

collected the bounty and were acquitted on a charge of cruelty to animals. The bounty-is the most negative tool used in wildlife management. It has been eliminated in all provinces but Ontario. A better policy would include the following goals: first, control specific troublesome animals when and where needed (not when and where wanted) and second protect wolves in all classes of parks. It is not strange that men grew to hate and fear wolves for they were often serious competitors of simple agricultural societies. Man-the-agriculturalist began,to lose contact with the’ natural environment. He depended on vegetable crops and domesticated animals for food and lived a very restricted existence. The world beyond his immediate doorstep was a strange place and he built up a great body of superstition and folklore about it. The habits of the wolf made a ideal subject upon which to build. There is no evidence that the Eskimos or Indians of North America feared wolves. These people were at home in their environment. The big change probably occurred when man became a farmer. As society gradually accepts the fact that man is no more than a superior species of animal, the rights of other species come more sharply into focus. At

. present, we deem to be iorthy of conserving only those things which we consider to be useful to us or which appeal to our gentler instinct. The wglf, one of the most interesting and adapt’able mammals that has ever existed, is stillnot considered to be worthy of our favour. Dr. J. Theberge is a uniwat professor in the school of urban and regional planning. He has done research on wolves in Algonquin park and is . a recognized Canadian authority in this field. In order to give the members of’ the K-W community a chance to learn more about this fascinating animal, Dr. Theberge is giving two seminars under the auspices of K-W Probe and the K-W Field Naturalists. Both programs will include the NFB movie “Death of a Legend” as well as-a slide presentation. Dr. Theberge was also involved in the production of a record on wolf howls distributed under the Columbia label and narrated by Robert Redford. Sections of the record will be played during both programs. The first program will be held february 9 at 8:30 pm in the gallery of the Kitchener public library followed by a similar presentation the next afternoon at 4:30 pm iv room 271, in the biology building of uniwat. A petition requesting the elimination of the wolf bounty and protection of the wolf in all parks will be be circulated amorig those attending. The howl of the wolf epitomizes the wilderness we once fought to’conquer and now fight to save, It warns us not to go too far in destroying natural environments. It reminds us our pact was deep rooted in wilderness. Let us not silence-this symbol of freedom. This article compiled pollution probe.

by University

of Waterloo

,

the dl Graphic paul from

member: Canadian university press (CUP) and underground press syndicate (UPS), subscriber: liberation news service (LNS), and chevron international news service (CINS), the chevron is a newsfeature tabloid published offset fifty-two times ;! year (1971-72).by the federqtion 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.

by geraghty Ontario

Naturalist

circulation

Q

13,000 (fridays)

Congratulations to Terry Moore and all his helpers...Terry now faces a lot of quick decisions, though hopefully he has already given them a lot of thought, and there will suddenly be a lot of people around him with great advice; his toughest decision will be whose advice to listen to...and that comes hand in hand with picking an executive...only one real suggestion from this corner-how about pulling a few people in from outside the people who have helped you get elected, maybe even people you don’t personally know but know can be trusted, and h,ow about some women among them? Terry’s first test will be mounting a fight against the university of Waterloo a&this seems nearly impossible in the face of current non-concern, but then there was a rumor around that it would -have been impossible for Terry to win the election, so much for impossibilities,speaking of impossibilities, here are the friendly folks who brough you this week’s chevron: entertainment-last friday’s exploits included john fraser, rona chilies (twice), roddy hay, who helped, and of course paul stuewe. This week the forces were Craig millage (twice), john carter, lynn bowers, paul stuewe (twice), petit Pierre warrian (pout no more pierre...here it is in print), jim harding who has returned and says hello and more, and liz janzen and mike canivet who enhanced our layout with wine and smiles and cigs and tears even, and david cubberley and jan stoody who loves him dearly. so there...fotogs-sergio zavarella, bob siemon, bryan douglas, nigel burnett, Scott gray, brian cere, gord moore and good old george-jock persons-ron smith, debbie smith, stu koch, wheels, randy hannigan, dennis mcgann and than.ks to the math whiz kids yho did computer analysis of totzke’s figures, and oh yeah there was george neeland (good luck at the gardens, nutsy)...pat reid and john cushing-newsies-deanna kaufman, nigel burnett, bryan douglas, krista tomory, heIrnut zisser, boris the mad russian whose mother makes killer borscht,,kbill Sheldon, alex smith and the chevron’s version of the journalistic rennaisance man, george s. kaufman. joan, quit that low-down galavantin’ about with the theatre-types and come home to mother. gsk.

friday, a.

february

4 1972-$12:42)

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