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Volume 7, Number 5 UNIVERSITY OF WATERLOO, Waterloo, Ontario Friday, July 8, 1966 The new central services complex, now under construction in the area between the eng- ineering building and Columbia Street, will cost $4 million. The largest single heating plant in the Twin Cities, it will supply heat and other ‘services to the entire campus. Main- tenance, stores and commissary buildings complete the complex. ‘Most beautiful vii Simon Work is well underway on the new $4~million central services complex. ‘Fhe complex contains a $2.60 million mechanical services ten- ter and a $l-million ‘maintenance, stores and commissary building, three giant boilers and a network of tunnels radiating from it. The most sophisticated feature of the complex will be its ultramodern data-control center, which wti en- able an operator to check tempera- tures, steam pressures and alarm systems in all buildings, without moving from his chair, At any moment he can get detailed information on conditions in any building, and receive instant warn- ing of developing dangers. The sys- tem is connected to the Waterloo fire station and in the event of fire the loCation is automatically regis- tered, Expected to be the largest single heating plam in the Twin Cities, and mechanical services center will contain steam, chilled water, water softening, and cooling systems to service all university buildings, present and future. When completed in the fall it will have the capacity to heat 2,200 fair-sized homes. Equipped with three oil, or gas- fired boilers with a capacity of 220,- reasy smelly gas . 000 pounds per hour, the center will handle the heating needs of the un’i- versity until 1970. At that time, the building may be extended and further boilers added to meet the demand 0 Repeating this process, this single plant will be able to ser- vice the future campus north of Columbia Street as well as thepre- sent University Avenue campus. From this mechanical heart an arterial system pf one and a half miles of service tunnels and miles of pipe will carry steam, cold wa- ter and compressed air to buildings all over the campus. Towering over the complex is the boiler stack, which at 200 feet will be one of the tallest chimneys in the Twin Cities area. It has been de- signed to comply with new smoke- abatement regulations now being formulated by the provincial gov- ernment. With the mechanical services center as one side, the maintenance, stores and commissary building completes the central services complex o The latter provides a cen- tral receiving and stores area as , well as maintenance workshops, open storage for sand and gravel, and a new security office. The comn$ssary will act as the main distribution center for all food outlets on campus. tion From the above photo anyone would think that the Shell Oil Com- pany was trying to buy a whole un- iversity. Simon Fraser University stud- ents seem to think so as they sit-in on a proposed Shell gas station site, Apparently a gas station was needed on campus because students were paying $50 to have their bro- ken down cars hauled away to the nearest station in Burnaby. d After negotiations with the uni- versity, Shell paid $116,000 in pre- paid rental for a 25 year agreement which the university used as down payment on a new men’s residence. Shell also donated $15,000 to the re- sidence fund on condition that it woul d be called Shell House. SFU students are primarily ob- jecting to the location of the station on the grounds that its site offers ‘&the most beautiful view in the after several students were scooped wor Id”, and a greasy smelly gas up by a front end loader B then drop- station just cannot compete with a ped four feet and half covered with spectacular vista, per haps un- dirt, The students sat in ditches, matched in North America. walls, and in front of surveyors. Recommendations for moving the site were either not acceptable to Shell or SFU on grounds of project- ed general traffic, unserviceability because of the high level of the sew- er lines and poor foundations. Work has stopped on construction The delay is costing Shell $1,000 a day plus a lot of harmful adver- tising. Changing the direction of the bay doors, adding 6,000 yards of earth and hiding two walls with shrubs will cost Shell an additional $25,000. The company has also redesigned the station to match university ar- chitecture and excluded all signs displaying the Shell name. Yet no alternative plan has been accepted by the students. At one demonstration 300 stu- dents and faculty milled around while a plastic Shell gas pump was set fire. Preparing to immolate himseif, Ombudsman elect Stan Wang was dipped in Shell gas.
4

1966-67_v7,n05_Coryphaeus

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From the above photo anyone would think that the Shell Oil Com- pany was trying to buy a whole un- iversity. Simon Fraser University stud- ents seem to think so as they sit-in on a proposed Shell gas station site, Apparently a gas station was needed on campus because students were paying $50 to have their bro- ken down cars hauled away to the 7, Number 5 The company has also redesigned the station to match university ar- chitecture and excluded services complex, now The new central Volume .
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Page 1: 1966-67_v7,n05_Coryphaeus

Volume 7, Number 5 UNIVERSITY OF WATERLOO, Waterloo, Ontario Friday, July 8, 1966

The new central services complex, now under construction in the area between the eng- ineering building and Columbia Street, will cost $4 million. The largest single heating plant in the Twin Cities, it will supply heat and other ‘services to the entire campus. Main- tenance, stores and commissary buildings complete the complex.

‘Most beautiful vii

Simon

Work is well underway on the new $4~million central services complex.

‘Fhe complex contains a $2.60 million mechanical services ten- ter and a $l-million ‘maintenance, stores and commissary building, three giant boilers and a network of tunnels radiating from it.

The most sophisticated feature of the complex will be its ultramodern data-control center, which wti en- able an operator to check tempera- tures, steam pressures and alarm systems in all buildings, without moving from his chair,

At any moment he can get detailed information on conditions in any building, and receive instant warn- ing of developing dangers. The sys- tem is connected to the Waterloo fire station and in the event of fire the loCation is automatically regis- tered,

Expected to be the largest single heating plam in the Twin Cities, and mechanical services center will contain steam, chilled water, water softening, and cooling systems to service all university buildings, present and future. When completed in the fall it will have the capacity to heat 2,200 fair-sized homes.

Equipped with three oil, or gas- fired boilers with a capacity of 220,-

reasy smelly gas

. 000 pounds per hour, the center will handle the heating needs of the un’i- versity until 1970. At that time, the building may be extended and further boilers added to meet the demand 0 Repeating this process, this single plant will be able to ser- vice the future campus north of Columbia Street as well as thepre- sent University Avenue campus.

From this mechanical heart an arterial system pf one and a half miles of service tunnels and miles of pipe will carry steam, cold wa- ter and compressed air to buildings all over the campus.

Towering over the complex is the boiler stack, which at 200 feet will be one of the tallest chimneys in the Twin Cities area. It has been de- signed to comply with new smoke- abatement regulations now being formulated by the provincial gov- ernment.

With the mechanical services center as one side, the maintenance, stores and commissary building completes the central services complex o The latter provides a cen- tral receiving and stores area as , well as maintenance workshops, open storage for sand and gravel, and a new security office.

The comn$ssary will act as the main distribution center for all food outlets on campus.

tion

From the above photo anyone would think that the Shell Oil Com- pany was trying to buy a whole un- iversity.

Simon Fraser University stud- ents seem to think so as they sit-in on a proposed Shell gas station site,

Apparently a gas station was needed on campus because students were paying $50 to have their bro- ken down cars hauled away to the

nearest station in Burnaby. d After negotiations with the uni- versity, Shell paid $116,000 in pre- paid rental for a 25 year agreement which the university used as down payment on a new men’s residence. Shell also donated $15,000 to the re- sidence fund on condition that it woul d be called Shell House.

SFU students are primarily ob- jecting to the location of the station on the grounds that its site offers

‘&the most beautiful view in the after several students were scooped wor Id”, and a greasy smelly gas up by a front end loader B then drop- station just cannot compete with a ped four feet and half covered with spectacular vista, per haps un- dirt, The students sat in ditches, matched in North America. walls, and in front of surveyors.

Recommendations for moving the site were either not acceptable to Shell or SFU on grounds of project- ed general traffic, unserviceability because of the high level of the sew- er lines and poor foundations.

Work has stopped on construction

The delay is costing Shell $1,000 a day plus a lot of harmful adver- tising. Changing the direction of the bay doors, adding 6,000 yards of earth and hiding two walls with shrubs will cost Shell an additional $25,000.

The company has also redesigned the station to match university ar- chitecture and excluded all signs displaying the Shell name. Yet no alternative plan has been accepted by the students.

At one demonstration 300 stu- dents and faculty milled around while a plastic Shell gas pump was set fire. Preparing to immolate himseif, Ombudsman elect Stan Wang was dipped in Shell gas.

Page 2: 1966-67_v7,n05_Coryphaeus

For the over 1800freshmen pre- dicted to register in the fall, the orientation committee has prepared an events-packed one-and-a-half- week program.

Beginning on Friday, SeptY 16 with a day-long scavenger hunt, the1966 orientation will end with a Mardi Gras costume ball on Saturday Sept. 24.

The charity drive, to be held Sept. 3.7 will see f reshmen dispensed throughout the Twin Cities, acting as slaves-for-a-day in homes and industries, performing all kinds of odd jobs. Organized by the Circle K Club, the charity drive will place the freshmen in jobs obtained the weeks before during an intensive community-wide publicityprogram. Car washes set up at each of the 10 slave-distribution points will help reach the primary objective of $3,. 000, which will be donated to sever- al local charities .,

A football game is tentatively scheduled for the evening of the 17th, and will be preceded by a rousing pep rally, run by Circle K, Plans are underway also for a late-night (or early-morning) dance after the game.

Highlights of the next week will

be the outdoor day, folk night and a steer roast and hootenanny.

The outdoor day, on Tuesday, Sept. 20, will run all day, and in- clude a greased-pole climb, boat race (on the lake!), a river tug-of- war, and hole digging.

Folk night, scheduled for thefoll- owing Friday, will feature top en- tertainment , which may include the Beach boys. It will be held in the Kitchener Auditorium, open to the public, with students receiving the first opportunity to buy tickets (freshmen admitted free).

Other events scheduled include a jazz concert, faculty and talent night, campus tours, club displays, and college night.

Freshmen will be supplied with one of three types of caps, one for each faculty.

To supervise the proceedings and to keep freshmen in their place, one upperclassman will be recruitedfor each 6 freshmen. All supervisors will be issued with a new, unique identification.

Suggestions and ideas which you may have, can be submitted in the Federation building to make this year’s orientation the best and big- gest yet!

Mike Cleary, winning driver of the Engineering Weekend car rally organized by Circle K receives the Orr Automobile Trophy and a ring from Brian Iler, vice-president of Circle K’s Summer Club. Nlike and his navigator, Tom Stiff, lost only 1.6 points.

The last bash before theexams-- Engineering Night--comes up July 14 at the Schwaben Club on King Street East in Kitchener.

Guest speaker for the evening is Mr. W a L. Bradley, city engineer for Kitchener , oneof the most inter-

Six students from Toronto, Otta- wa* Peterborough and Ridgeway shared $550 in prizes as Ontario winners of the annual physics com- petition sponsored by the Canadian Association of Physics.

A total of 1590 grade 13 students from 240 schools took the examina-

tion, which this year was conducted by members of the physics depart- men t here.

The first-place prize of $250 was won by Albert M. Semelman,North- ern Secondary School, Toronto.

James R. Gillespie of Peterbor- ough Collegiate and Vocational School finished in second place and received $100.

Third place was a four-way tie with $50 prizes awarded to Roy G. Blake, York Memorial Collegiate Institute, Toronto; Ian R. Graham, Lawrence Park Collegiate Institute, Toronto; Frederick J. Tomlinson, Hillcrest High School, Ottawa and John F. Tribou, Ridgeway and Cry- stal Beach High School, Ridgeway.

esting speakers in the K-W area, The bar opens at 7:00 and supper

will be served at ‘7:30. All winners of trophies and a-

wards from the Engineering Society will be honored and presented with their trophies.

Boat races start at 10:30. The en- durance trophy is up for grabs, since the old champs have moved on. The winners will be crowned Kings of Up and Down ‘em Land Summer ‘66.

Talented minstrels are invited to

A group of teen-agers who still have three years of high school a- head of them studyed collegemathe- matics here recently.

The students are the top 43 of 7,500 Ontario boys and girls in grades 9, ‘10 and fl who wrote the Junior Mathematics Competition last winter, During their week at university they s tudyed calculus n combinatorics and problem-solving in the mornings and computer sci- ence in the afternoons,

Arnold Greenspoon of Bathurst Heights secondary school, Toronto came first in the province-wide competition and Grant Roberts of In- gersoll finished second,

Third-place finisher Randolph Franklin of Lisgar collegiateins+ tute, Ottawa, held a specialdistinc- tion. He just completed ’ his first year of high school.

Three of the youngsters were from Barry’s Bay, a small com- munity north west of Ottawa, All

three were in the top 15 of the pro- vince,

Only five of the 43 were girls.

winners The winners of the Engineering

Weekend motorcycle rally were Da- vid Ness in the under-IOOcc class with but 41 points, Garth Johnson in the 100-to-300 cc class with 80

for PhD Two of the six winners of Cana-

dian Good Roads Association schol- arships will study for PhDs at the UofW.

Ralph C. G. Haas will conduct re- search on the performance charac- teristics of bituminous materials, while R, W. Cockfield will special- ize in transportation. Both are / members of the engineering faculty of Carleton University in Ottawa.

The $2,000 post-graduate schol- arships are offered by CGRA from funds donated by industry to promote highway sciences. .

come along and bring their instru- points, and J. LaCombeintheover- Members of the University of ments to add to the life of the party. 3OOcc class. Earl Hart took the ob- Waterloo examination committee

Tickets, if any are left, are avail- stacle course prize with brilliant were Professors N. R. Isenor able from engineering reps at $2.25 bike handling outside the K-W drive- (chairman), J. L, Ord, B, H. Tar- apiece 0 in theater. rie and K. A. W oolner o

Co-operative Education Programmes I

University of Waterloo

Department of

Co-ordination

and Placement

Waterloo Ontario

Volume 1, number 10 July 8, 1966

A. P. Gordon,, registrar, has announced the undergraduate results of the winter term final examin- ations in the cooperative mathematics and applied physics programs:

Two professors are conducting research on the characteristics of pedestrian circulation in downtown business areas using Taronto as a model,

Professors W ,, A. McLaughlin and B, 6. Hutchinson, civil engineering, are working closely with the Metro- politan Toronto plannin.g board and its consultants who have recently initiated a study of downtown tr ans- portation.

The research study is limited to the three most important trip types:

the journey to work by downtown em- ployees o the lunch-hour trips by

tation sys tern configurations .” Survey data for the first two trip

types will be obtained by means of a ques tionnaire. It is planmed to dis- tribute the survey forms toselected office locations and request that each employee complete the form the same day.

The researchers have obtained the support of the Board of Trade of Metropolitan Toronto, and through it, the co-operation of 70 percent of the downtown employers.

The data received from the sur- vey will be processed and analized Iusing the university computers.

1 CO OP MATH 1ST CLASS HON

KE Robins PD Snyder BE Uttley JA Wallace

DS Thede DF Thomson C Van Bolhuis BD Wagner BD Wiens A Wolder JM Younger

BD Veitel MB Walker RD Weaver AJ Weis GM Wilson CD Wright

-S -S -S

-S DM Almond Y Avital DL Bond SR Brubacher JA Bryant KW Butcher JP Cluchey ’ MB Doran KG Duncan PD Ford BJ Howard DR Hunt WD Jack FS Johns JG Lawrence m Lewandowski BA McDona Id DA McKenna DL McKie DM Nielsen JW Pitkin JR Pitruniak AlhA Rais C.22 fieier

2ND CLASS HON J Bart DW Brown BA Burgetz TR Close FM Davey DV Erler EG Grabb ML Hewitt JM Hogg S Kasprowicz BL Kaufman JA McVicker TF Muskiluke CK On0 GA Patterson EM Rablen GG Reading DA Sandham RJ Slaney DG Stevason MS Sutherland

2A APP SCI 1ST CLASS HON

WT Diamond LE McGann RJ Nelson

3RD CLASS HON KE Bowman AE Christopher DM Dubecky NG Fadelle GJ Fitzgerald JA Gardiner AM Gekiere CI Harwood S Howe RJ Kennedy W J Lancee KC Lichti BA Muir LP Mulligan MJ Mus zyns ki AP Parkin FB Smith BB Towner

$2ND CLASS HON D Barnard DS Dick W Deussing CL Hunt GD Masales DW Netherton DR Renton

downtown employees o and shopping trips by persons from outside the downtown area. ‘“The primary ob- jective of the study is to formulate some analytical tools for planners, About 160 elementary and secon- not only in Metropolitan Toronto but in other urban centres,” said Prof,

dary school principals are attending

Hutchinson. ‘“these tools could be a four-week course on campus.The

used to estimate pedestrian circu- courses centered mostly in the arts

lation requirements for various de- B building, is arranged and conduct- ed completely by the department of

velopment proposals and transpor- education, not by the university. -S

3RD CLASS HON RB Bamford J Briante. _ -S JA McDonald -S TJ Ra jnovich

Authorised as second-class mail by the Pose Office department. Ottawa, and for payment of postage in cash.

Page 3: 1966-67_v7,n05_Coryphaeus

co-op am As the title would suggest this

first column will be about co-op arts. I This new faculty, though small now, is destined to revolution&the Canadian university system.

Two years ago I qualified for this select co-op plan, by attaining@ as the calendar says, not less than 27 percent in three grade 13 subjects with at least one subject over 36 percent. As I received 37 percent in English lit, I could see that this was my field--so I quickly enrolled in co-op English,

The school term passed swim- mingly, and I studied hard,learning all sorts of interesting facts about literature, Such things as George Bernard Shaw was Celibate, Ernest Hemmingway was Prolific and Per- cy Blithe Shelly was a Pansy.Arm- ed with such knowledge, I faced my

first work term with confidence, nail-in-the-end. I am told that this knowing I could not possibly fail to equipment once belonged to that&n- succeed at whatever job the coordin- mortal U of W paper-picker, J. ation department decided to stick Pickwick Ragbag, who died with me wi..uh..assign to me. great honour in an attempt to clean

Well, all that hard work paid off, u.p those vast quantities of redtape and I got the job Iwas after--a work which lie scattered in and around term that would warm the heart of the planning department, With such

an English major. I became’ an a noble symbol of office, I deter- OPP which stands for old paper- mined to make good onmy first day, picker o Yes! I am now employed I had not picked up half a bag of by the Kitchener parks department. paper when I ran my trusty maple

The very first day I was assign- shaft, with its gleaming three-inch ed my own park and issued myvery mktal tip, through a couple of cop- own canvas sack and stick-with-a- ies of ‘Cavalier’, ‘Ma&stag’, and

pages 1 through 6 of “Hush” which some fellow lover of literature had left under a park bench. I couldnot’ resist such an opportunity for study and quickly laid down my equipment to peruse these learned journals.

The Cavalier * was somewhat disappointing, being cluttered up with illustrations of semi-draped females and very little else,

The ‘Male stag* proved much superior, especially a short story entitled ‘How I saved 40 female lust victims (white) and wiped out a regiment of dirty japs with an only my bare hands and the ass-bone of a jaw-bird’*. It was sort of a re- vers al of the old Samsonmand-the- Philistines bit, It was subtitled “A gutsy story of raw courage by Sgt. *Killer Joe’ Mushnik 83rd Mar- ines”.

It is saddening to think that many sadistic-minded people read thzis

little journal i-nerely 60 giffle at ei:.c: vivid descriptions of blood, pain and death and fail to see the true worth of the articles which only my- self as co-op English student can.

Now, every day Bs I make my rounds8 stick and bag in hand, I never fail to pick up some little

piece of literary excellence which I devour with great rapidity.

Yes ) the coordination department, as always, has succeeded in finding me a job which is both interesting and relevant to my studies. I don’t know how they do it!

Next issue I will write to you of the greasers-- “Satan? Choice”-- and other non-literary types who in- habit my park and my efforts to in- terest them in the world of fine lit- erature, Efforts which, I will tell you ahead of time, were only partly successful.

U. S. A. ties in Vietnam, agitated because there are negro ghettos. They donor

The use of drugs on KS, Camp” get the best grades, but they do not uses is becoming a growing prob- get the worst, either. lem. Actually, no one knows, how many students take drugs. But ev- eryone agrees that the number is rising, that it has been for several years, and that no one is quite sure what to do about it,

Indications are that %ard” nar- cotics, for instance heroin, are not used and that m&rijuana and LSD are the drugs most commonly rem sorted to,

Visits to a half-dozen campuses show that the most consistent users are graduate students) but that more often than not the pattern among un- dergraduates is this: The drug-- takers are majoring in the hurnani- ties or social sciences, with more in english than any other subject. There are few consistent users in the sciences or in the professional schools , Proportionately, a great many seem to show up in anthro- pology. They are no churchgoers and no dedicated communists, either m They are vaguely leftists, disenchanted with american poli-

Dissatisfaction about the purch- ase of a computer is rife amongst students at the new university of Essex, The computer, which is in operation for 3 hours a day at the most, cost $20,000 pounds and had to be fixed up in a half-finished building owing to lack of money. Previously, the 400 students put up with studies in provisionalpre-fab- ricated structures and in Nissen huts e

As a result of the lack of space, a night club in Stockholm is to be turned into a lecture-hall by day. Since the students may only use the “Roy@ Library” to borrow books,

an emergency solution had to be found to provide the steadily in- creasing numbers of students with

L Letters should be addressed to the

editor. The Coryphaeus reserves the right to shorten all letters submitted.

Letters must be signed, but a pen- name will be printed on request.

Change our name? To the editor:

My first reaction (on seeing the Coryphaeus for the First tirne last week) was a pair of raised eyebrows triggered by the name of the paper, “Co 1-y-W HAT?” I asked myself, deciphered it, repeated it to myself several times, then wondered WHY in heaven’s name it shouldbe called THAT. I thought it rather preten- tious, rather like something a high- school literary committee would choose for its publications,

And this went on in my mind before I had read a wordinthepaper itself,

You asked for my reaction to the name--you have it, And this reac- tion is in isolation from any senti- mental %lma mater ‘* emotions which your students would feel.

Viola Wiens UBC

To the editor: As far as the name of your ragis

concerned,- I like it, I didn’t, but I do, I mispronounce it, and usually only say ‘Gory’ anyway, butmlikeit,

The best name in Canada has to be the Ubyssey--but it doesn’t fitWat- erloo.

LEROY ISAACS MSc (math) 1966

the corresponding reading-roome The Frescati University outside Stockholm, at present under con- struction, is an attempt to meet the growing need for libraries and reading-rooms.

USSR A Leningrad court has passed

prison sentences on a group of young people - most of them are chemistry students or lecturers at institutes - because they had pub- lished without permission two num- bers of a “liberal” newspaper en- titled “The Bell”.

The initiator was condemned to seven years’ imprisonment, and eight of his colleagues - including two women - to terms of from two to five years,

According to Soviet reports, these young peoplehadestablishednothing short of a secret organization with 250 members and its own hidden printing-press. The accused, it is said, were not against cornmunizm in principle,, but only against its present form in one or two still Stal- inist countries, They are reported to have demanded greater freedom of thought and speech, (PEN, Mon- treal)

The Canadian Union of Students (CUS/uCE) will go ahead with its project to send a Canadian student

to South-east Asia. The date of the trip is still indefinite and depends on the availability of funds. The pro- gram, mandated by the CUS con- gress last fall, calls for sending a student to South-east Asia to make contacts with student groups there and to write reports to increase Canadian knowledge about the Viet- namese war c (Brunswickan, Fred- ericton) o

The provisional President of Santo Domingo, Hector Garcia God- oy, recently met student represent- atives for talks. In these talks the students demanded a reorganization of university administration which would result in the students’ having more rights and opportunities exert their influence.

Apart from that they demanded the punishment of the police officers responsible for the outbreak of un- rest and shooting-incidents, These talks had been preceded by unrest and street-fighting in Sane-o Domin-

go with the workers and students on one side fighting against the police and the military on the other.

Reports on experience in the so- cial and psychological care -of stu- dents have been given by apsychia- trist, a psychologist and a social worker who have been working for two years by way of trial at a so- called studies advisory clinic in Copenhagen,

It appeared that nearly half of the cases treated so far had social and legal problems. These were re- ferred to the social worker who is soon to be given an official paidpo- sition at the university, The rest had either problmes in connection with studies or psychic problems affecting their studies,

The clinic does not deal with fully developed neuroses or even psy- choses (estimated to affect 2 to 470

of students) o All it can and should do is to try andpreventfrom occur- ing. it is estimated that 1570 of stu- dents need such “but-patient’* treatment. There was a further pro- posal to set up a reading-clinic at which the ability to read should be improved, (Norsk Studentforum, Oslo)

Published every second Friday afternoon during the spring-summer term by the student Board of Publications of the Federatitin of Students, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario. Offices are located in the Federation building, annex 1. Telephone 744-6111 local 497; Nights 744-0111. Member of the Canadian University Press, 2,200 copies.

editor-in-chief: Jim Nagel Class, Doug Gaukroger, creative arts board; Tom

associate editor: Stewart George Harris, Brian Iler, Rankin, information services

Saxe ‘Barry MeNicol, Owen Red- fern, Jim Storm circulation: Circle K Club

photography: Dick Siegers- layout: Bob Davis-with Ray lithographed by Elmira

with Jim Alexander, Fred Signet Ltd., Elmira, Ont. Brychta, Robin King, Leong Ash, Rick Kendrick, Wayne

Ramsay, Ray Vilbikaitis car-y-phae-us rn I . features: Fred Brychta L, leader, Br. Gk koryphaios, fr.

cartoons : George Loney k0ryphC summit; akin to L corns

.writing : Brian Armstrong, 1: the leader of a chorus 2: the

Ailev Bailin. Nancy Bloom- liason: Ron Walsh, coord- leader of a party or school of thought

fieldr, Lesley Bur&sh, Allen inati0.n; Marlene Zillikens, -Webster

Board of Publications - chairman David FL Witty, advertising manager Ekkehard Heide- brecht. Advertising deadline: Friday 5 p.m. previous to issue. Classified ads: Wednesday noon week of issue. Telephone 744-6111 local 471.

Page 4: 1966-67_v7,n05_Coryphaeus

A huge inverted pyramid called Katimavik will be the focal point of the Canadian pavilion at Expo ‘67 next years Katimavak is the Eski- mo word for “meeting place”.

Tickets--called passports-- are available for single days, 7 consec- utive days’ or the whole season. Lowest prices are in effect only ulltu July 15:

uly 20 As a further move in the develop-

ment of sumrner program at the Un- iversity of Watkrloo, the creative arts board is bringing a production of ‘Journey to Bahia* to the Theater of the Arts on Wednesday, July 20.

Stanley Richards, visiting pro- fessor of drama at the University of Guelph, has adapted the play from the prize-winning Brazilian play, ‘0 Pagador de Promessas’ by Dias Gomes 0

A film version of the play has won Seven international film festi- val awards including the Grand Prix at the 1962 Cannes Film Fes- tival. In 1963 it was nominated for an academy award as the best for- eign-language film,

Mr. Richards, who directs his own play’ has assembled the large cast from some of the finest little- thfeater talent in Guelph, Kitchener) Toronto’ Hamilton, london , Oak- ville, Sarnia, and Owe11 Sound.

“Journey to Bahia’ is a modern tragedy dealing with the confronta- tion between a decandent, orthodox, society and the blind faith of a backwoods Brazilian. Donkey Joe carries a cross 20 miles to the Cathedral of Santa Barbara in Bahia to fulfil a promise made to the saint’s voodoo counterpart.

Tickets are on sale at the theater box office. Admission is 50 cents for students, $1 for adults. The per- formance begins at 8:30.

9 9 We can expect more cool deci-

sions and less heated controversy from Stude.nt Council this coming year p An air conditioner has been ins talled in annex 1 to cool the brows of those who work there.

Unfortunately this conditioner WV’;: s connected to service only one ,.X of the building--the half con-

taining the Student Council offices, University nurse Phyllis Living-

ii rl reports that the temperature tt * d r~ched 87 degrees during the Y, :clit hot spell, an atmosphere not Cclijc-1ci.ve to improving the healtll of et;t :,;‘healt1ly.

ii@

Season Adult $20.00 Youth $17.50 Child $lO,OO

7 day Adult $ 6.50 Youth 5,75 Child 3.25

1 day Adult 1,80 Youth 1.80 Child 30

The youth category applies toper- sons 13-21 years of age as of April 28, 1967.- Prices will increase by about 13 percent after July 15 and will increase twice more to reach the gate price before April.

The Village Council and the Circle K Summer Club present the Barry Wills Trio and Klaus van Graft in a joint concert tonight at the Village.

Barry Wills’ a graduate of the U of W, and his trio have played sev- era1 times in Circle K’s free Sun- day-afternoon jazz concerts.

Mr. van Graft was formerly with the Chanticlairs, one of the folk groups at last year’s orientation fo& night.

The concert starts at 8:30 and admission is only 50 cents per per- son.

tides, sailing ‘Changing city ’ is the offering of

the Tuesday film series for this week. The color film--admission free--will be shown at 12:15 noon in P145. It is an interpretation of how resources of the federal gov- ernment are made available to meet the housing needs of a growing Can- ada.

‘Tides of Fundy’ and ‘Sailing’ will be shown July 19. Both are in color. The first is a fascinating study of the phenomenal tides in the Bay of Fundy on Canada’s Atlantic coast and how they affect the life of the region. ‘Sailing’, in commentary made by music, wind and waves, takes the viewer to Holland, much of which is water carefully contained in a variety of canals. Wherever there is water, there are boats and people to sail them.

Tile Tuesday film series is spon- sored by the creative arts board, one of the boards of Student Council.

\\ F BY I’HREE”

by Ailey Bailin ‘Four by three’, four plays by

three authors was well attended Tuesday evening in the Theater of the Arts.

The four plays were ‘The pro- posal’, ‘A phoenix too frequent’, ‘Sarah and the sax,’ and ‘The bear’. The three authors were Anton Chek- hov, Christopher Fry ’ and Lewis John Carlino.

‘The proposal’ concerns the at- tempts of a hypersensitive gentle- man who is caught up in all sorts of petty arguments with his pros- pective fiancee. The couple contin- ually falls into argument, and at one time Ivan Vassilievich (the suitor) has such a severe case of “palpita- ti0l-d that he collapses and is thought dead. In the end all goes well for the couple.

The strong point of the play was the very fine acting of Ian Gaskell as the suitor, whose performance was sufficient to keep the audience in continual good humor.

‘A phoenix too frequent’ showed the efforts of a beautiful young wid- ow to join her husband in Hades, be- cause of her great lovefor him. Her faithful servant, a most seductive coquette, is quite willing to ac- company the “madam” unto death until a warrior enters upon the scene.

This Roman (or so he appears)-- played by David Sharkey--had an ac- cent reminiscent of French’ Irish and several other things all thrown together, which made his elevated speeches sound even more sham than one was prepared for.

While Doto (the servant)is sleep-

ing off the effects of the wine that she got from the warrior) the other two fall in love with one another, However’ Tegeus (the warrior) is supposed to be guarding six dead bodies and so leaves to check on them. Meanwhile Doto awakens and finally decides to leave in hope of catching the man. Tegeus returns unhappily seeing as how one of his bodies is missing. The final solu- tion is to replace the missing body by that of the dead husband.

‘Sarah and the sax’ was the best all-round acted play of the evening. The story is about anelderly Jewish woman and a negro-beatnik-saxo- phone-,player who meet in a down- town New York park and fall into a dialog. The people are in two en- tirely different worlds. Although they have such vast individual dif- ferences’ they arrive at a social need for one another. Much credit goes to Patricia Conner and Paul

FOR SMOKE, NOT PIX

\ s St The smokestack on the new cen-

tral services building was the scene of another kampus kop spectacular earlier this week.

A UBC undergrad must have missed the mountains while working here in Kitchener and decided to climb our great stack instead, As he reached the summit he was spot- ted by one of our alert detectives who immediately summoned the

Many of you may have noticed a few changes being made to the stu- dent store such as a new front door, fresh paint, new counters and clo- sets. This is the beginning of the great change in management of the student store.

Under management of the Circle K Club, the store will be open four hours, instead of the previous one hour, and will be handling a greater range of merchandise. TheCircle K Club has about 30 members who are active within the club’ led by pre- sident Dennis Pilkey.

The purpose of the takeover is to provide the service to the students with less than 40 percent markup on merchandise as compared to 100 percent in other stores. Also a few job opportunities will be available,

Frappier of St. Jerome’s High School for an outstanding job.

‘The bear’ turned out to be a bit of a letdown following ‘Sarah and the sax’ and because of thegreat simil- arity to the other Chekhov play of the evening. Nonetheless, it did show quite a bit of Chekhov humor and character that brought a good reaction from an appreciative au- dience.

The action concerns a creditor who comes to collect the debt of a man who has been dead for seven months. The widow, who is still deeply in mournirg,is insulted and consents to fight a duel with the creditor. This only serves to make him fall in love with her and event- ually she is likewise enamored.

‘Four by three’ has presented an extra dimension in our summer activities and should prompt simi- lar efforts in the future.

8 eh

ednesday noons An active summer art programis

underway on campus. Students ‘fac- ulty and staff are invited to partici- pate. All events take place in P145 at 12~15 Wednesday noonhours.

Films will be shown on Sydney No- lan and Albert Namatijira this Wed- nesday. Nolan is Australia’s most exciting painter, dealing in Myth. Namatijira, an aborigine, is a sup- erb watercolorist.

Mennonite folk art of Waterloo County is featured on July 20. Slides of the widely-discussed exhibition in

the gallery recently will be shown and the background of this art ex- plained.

Later programs will discuss the art, architecture, gardens, living arts and ceramic art of Japan. r

Waterloo police in case the fellow was a little nuttier than theaverage college student.

Working together the two police departments finally decided to ask the fellow to come on down, After complying with the officers’ re- quest, the student explained that he merely wanted photographs of our beautiful campus o

beneficial campus projects’ with half of the profits above $1,000 going to the Student Counciland the Circle K Club.

As well as extensive renovations, the Circle K will also expand the

Public invited for guided tours Sunday afternoons

The Circle K Club is currently sponsoring a series of Sunday-af- ternoon guided tours of the campus for the general public.

These comprehensive tours begin in parking lot D (arts) at 2 p.m. July 10 and July 17. Visitors view the arts theatre, the arts library’ the 7040 computer and other points of interest. These free tours are guid- ed by Circle K members as a public- service project.

“Many people drive into the cam- pus on Sunday afternoons”’ said Al Brown, third-year engineering’ in charge of the project for Circle K. “We felt that a touring servicemight help visitors to become better ac- quainted with the universitya”

Trip tips On a long trip this summer, eat

a snack before an early start,drive an hour or so, then stop for a good breakfast’ advises the Canadian Highway Safety Council. The com- bination of rising early, plenty of food and relatively light traffic could lull a motorist into dangerous drowsiness or put him to sleep at the wheel. CHSC says the breakfast stop after driving a while breaks the monotony and helps wake up the driver.

le stock of merchandise which now in- eludes , jackets’ sweatshirts’ used books and exam reprints.They hope to also sell school crestmerchand- ise, and assorted confectionery ar- titles.

The grand opening of the store will be Sept. 1, on the expanded basis. As well as parttime student help, a full-time worker will be hired and all will be under the sup- ervision of a three-person coinmit- tee from the club, With the contract for one year, and being very flexible, the Circle K Club is anticipating a successful year with many changes to the stoqe.

Over 2,000 frosh expected this fall

Freshman enrollment this Sep- tember is expected to be 2,000 to 2,100, said Brian Ingram of the reg- istrar’s office.

The figures ‘I which include physi- cal education applicants’ represent an increase of about 14 percent from last year’s freshman class, which numbered between 1700 and 1800. Most of the increase will be in the arts and science courses,

The scholarship, bursary and loan situation on campus for September 1966 will be examined in the next issue of the Coryphaeus.

RATES FOR CORY WANT ADS: first 15 words 50 cents, each additional word 5 cents. Ads for articles found are free.

THREE third-year engineers desire apartment (preferably furnish- ed) for fall term. Contact Rain- er 742-0984. 7:5