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Thumbs upraised, 360 fresh serenaded university president J. G. Hagey from the arts quadrangle last Friday. He came out on the library roof to take the salute. (Chevron photo by Glenn Berry) VOLUME 8 NUMBER 13 UNIVERSITY OF WATERLOO, Waterloo, Ontario Friday, September 22, 1967 Use fresh power to ask Why abotit the U, Ireland urges “1s the education you are about to receive giving you the ability to do the things you really want to do?” With this, Barry McPeak set the scene for ‘The university- an event’ a a Tuesday-night orienta- tion program in the arts quadran= gle. -Monique Oullette, president of the Ontario Union of Students foll- owed with an attack on an educe tion system which has been”turn- ing out engineers, lawyers, doc- tors and professors to fillthe eco- nomic slots of society? But then came the climax, Steve Ireland, president of the Feder- ation of Students, gave what a- mounted to a major policy speech, Ireland lashed out at some of the deans for their attitudes toward students. He predicted conflict between (( those students and fac- ulty and administrators who are anxious that this place become a vital active institution3’ and’%iose faculty members, administrators and students who find questioning and confrontation threatening.” Ireland stressed that when stu- dents talk about government, they are emphasising power and res- ponsibility as well. But, he stat- ed, “‘The system does not allow US to be responsible.” Contrary to certainopinions stu- dent activists do not want &- en& to decide university policy, but rather that “we should have a voice, a part in these decisions,‘b he said, Ireland concluded with an invi- tation to frosh to actively partic&- pate. ‘&That struggle needs you. That struggle needs all the fresh- ness* the vitality, and the organi- zation of FROSH POWER:” Miss Oullette also gave avid support to frosh power, She at- tacked the silliness of orientation and told frosh they weren3t wel- come to university. 8dYou are given a beanie and a pin to set you apart. You are told to do all kinds of silly things. Is this real& the place where you learn to think for yourself?‘$ she said. She urged frosh to ask why they should wear beanies and go to classes * She told them to accept answers which were compatible to a set of human, not economic, . . values. gd We may seem far from grade -school discipline, but we” re not. I’m glad to hear the words frosh power.33 She attacked modern education as a production system. Educa- tion should more realistically come under the minister of reform institutions, the department of manpower in Ottawa and the de- partment of labour, she suggested, Barry McPeak on the executive of Carleton student council and head of the free-highschool pro- gram there, suggested that the type of highschool education one isgiv- en *‘has done little to explain how our society operates the way it does.” . There is no actual chance of $‘doing your own thing,‘j McPeak said. To develop a creative andthink- ing person, he went on, the educa- tion system must provide for cre- ative activity. The aim and goal must also encourage the students to ‘Pbecome human beings capable of intelligent choice and self-de- termination,3P In the Qttawa free school, Mc- Peak said, students have set up their own timetables, hired their own teachers and selected their own subjects, There are no ex- ams, for, as McPeak puts it, %o one can attest to the degree of self-development of an individual but the individual himself.” T o stress the points made by all of the speakers, the Toronto Mime Group on the steps of the art&heater building presented a silent play which showed how the education system stifles crea- tivity. / More yeHow books If you didn’t get them at regis- tration, extra copies of l A guide to student activities’ and’411--in- formation please’ are available in the hallway of the Federation build- ing* The first of the yellow booklets, put out by the student board of pub- lications, lists student organiza- tions, tells what they’re up to and who to contact. The second, pub- lished for the first time this year, does the same for the administra- tion. Editor of the handbook series is Ross McKenzie, electrical 4A, who doubles as treasurer of the Feder- ation of Students. President Ireland’s address at The university--an event on Tuesday night called for ‘(open, rational, PUBLIC de- bate on the governing of the university that means so much to OUR education. Wcwcfen’s new constitution raises V;//cfge storm Returning Villagers this fall found a new unexpected constitution The new constitution, drawn up awaiting them. by Dr. Ron Eydt, Village warden, and his four tutors during the sum- mer, was presented to the dons - in a orientation meeting on Septem- ber 5. The power structure of the new constitution starts at the basic social unit of the Village. Each floor--l6 residents-- elects one ~,,arson to sit on the council for t.leir quadrant, for a four-month te -y. Trp .’ ,quadrant councils must ne gotiate with the warden every term for its budget. Out of this budget ‘the count ils are responsible to pay for all &Images in their quadrant, assessing‘ the offender if possible. The council’s responsibility is to supervise all activities such as The next higher level of gov- ernment is the Village council. It is composed of three members sports, on the quadrant level. each from the North, East, and West quadrant councils, and four members from the South quadrant council (one member for two hous- es), The Village council, which will receive grants from the quad- rant councils, appears to have al- most no powers. Its duties are to supervise social life in the whole Village, and to arbitrate in juris- dictional disputes among the quad- rant councils. 0 The balance of power rests with the warden, Dr. Eydt, who has complete control over finances and the constitution. In a memorandum dated Septem- ber 11, Dr. Eydt described the payment of damages: ‘&All damages or incidents cre+ ting an extra workload, which cannot be assessed to a particular individual, will be charged to the appropriate council, which will be obligated to pay it from its term ,grant,3’ he said. “It must be understood that the Village office (which assesses damages) is in no way capable of debating damage costs, and it is expected that council will accept such bills....“’ In the same memorandum, Dr. Eydt said if damages decrease, then further responsibilities and powers will be given to thevillage councils. In a later memorandum to the Villagers, September 15, Dr, Eydt gave his reasons for the new con- stitution. In reply to this, Stewart Saxe, last year% Village council speaker and chairman at the con-= stitution committee issued -a gen- eral memorandum to all Villagers in rebuttal. Here he agreed with Dr. Eydt that a new constitution is needed for the Village and not just amendment to the old. However he disagrees with the totalitarianism of Dr. Eydt’s constitution and says that the principals for the new constitution should be decided by the Villagers in a general refer- endum. “As Charles Frankea saidinthe conclusion of a defence of Demo- cracy: ‘one of the great reasons to opt for democracy is that itpro- duces democrats .) If WardenEydt and the tutors really Wish to Pro- duce responsible democrats, then they should abandon totalitarian methods of doing it,” said Sax% In a discussion of the new con- stitution at Student Council Monday night, Provost Scott said that the warden’s intentions were good. TO this, John Shixy, chairman of the board of publications replied,“The best of intentions are no excuse for arbitrary actions.33 At this meeting Saxe said that Ron Trbovich, last years Village council vice-president, had told him no real effort had been made this summer to convene the philos- ophy committee, hand-picked by Dr. Eydt last spring to study the Village constitution. At present, there are two peti- tions against the new constitution being circulated in the Village. . ..
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Contrary to certainopinions stu- dent activists do not want &- en& to decide university policy, but rather that “we should have a voice, a part in these decisions,‘b he said, Ireland concluded with an invi- tation to frosh to actively partic&- pate. ‘&That struggle needs you. That struggle needs all the fresh- ness* the vitality, and the organi- zation of FROSH POWER:” The next higher level of gov- ernment is the Village council. It is composed of three members Thumbs
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Page 1: n13_Chevron

Thumbs upraised, 360 fresh serenaded university president J. G. Hagey from the arts quadrangle last Friday. He came out on the library roof to take the salute. (Chevron photo by Glenn Berry)

VOLUME 8 NUMBER 13 UNIVERSITY OF WATERLOO, Waterloo, Ontario Friday, September 22, 1967

Use fresh power to ask Why abotit the U, Ireland urges “1s the education you are about

to receive giving you the ability to do the things you really want to do?”

With this, Barry McPeak set the scene for ‘The university- an event’ a a Tuesday-night orienta- tion program in the arts quadran= gle.

-Monique Oullette, president of the Ontario Union of Students foll- owed with an attack on an educe tion system which has been”turn- ing out engineers, lawyers, doc- tors and professors to fillthe eco- nomic slots of society?

But then came the climax, Steve Ireland, president of the Feder- ation of Students, gave what a- mounted to a major policy speech,

Ireland lashed out at some of the deans for their attitudes toward students. He predicted conflict between (( those students and fac- ulty and administrators who are anxious that this place become a vital active institution3’ and’%iose faculty members, administrators and students who find questioning and confrontation threatening.”

Ireland stressed that when stu- dents talk about government, they are emphasising power and res-

ponsibility as well. But, he stat- ed, “‘The system does not allow US to be responsible.”

Contrary to certainopinions stu- dent activists do not want &- en& to decide university policy, but rather that “we should have a voice, a part in these decisions,‘b he said,

Ireland concluded with an invi- tation to frosh to actively partic&- pate. ‘&That struggle needs you. That struggle needs all the fresh- ness* the vitality, and the organi- zation of FROSH POWER:”

Miss Oullette also gave avid support to frosh power, She at- tacked the silliness of orientation and told frosh they weren3t wel- come to university. 8dYou are given a beanie and a pin to set you apart. You are told to do all kinds of silly things. Is this real& the place where you learn to think for yourself?‘$ she said.

She urged frosh to ask why they should wear beanies and go to classes * She told them to accept answers which were compatible to a set of human, not economic, . . values. gd We may seem far from grade -school discipline, but

we” re not. I’m glad to hear the words frosh power.33

She attacked modern education as a production system. Educa- tion should more realistically come under the minister of reform institutions, the department of manpower in Ottawa and the de- partment of labour, she suggested,

Barry McPeak on the executive of Carleton student council and head of the free-highschool pro- gram there, suggested that the type of highschool education one isgiv- en *‘has done little to explain how our society operates the way it does.” .

There is no actual chance of $‘doing your own thing,‘j McPeak said.

To develop a creative andthink- ing person, he went on, the educa- tion system must provide for cre- ative activity. The aim and goal must also encourage the students to ‘Pbecome human beings capable of intelligent choice and self-de- termination,3P

In the Qttawa free school, Mc- Peak said, students have set up their own timetables, hired their own teachers and selected their own subjects, There are no ex-

ams, for, as McPeak puts it, %o one can attest to the degree of self-development of an individual but the individual himself.”

T o stress the points made by all of the speakers, the Toronto Mime Group on the steps of the art&heater building presented a silent play which showed how the education system stifles crea- tivity. /

More yeHow books If you didn’t get them at regis-

tration, extra copies of l A guide to student activities’ and’411--in- formation please’ are available in the hallway of the Federation build- ing*

The first of the yellow booklets, put out by the student board of pub- lications, lists student organiza- tions, tells what they’re up to and who to contact. The second, pub- lished for the first time this year, does the same for the administra- tion.

Editor of the handbook series is Ross McKenzie, electrical 4A, who doubles as treasurer of the Feder- ation of Students.

President Ireland’s address at The university--an event on Tuesday night called for ‘(open, rational, PUBLIC de- bate on the governing of the university that means so much to OUR education.

Wcwcfen’s new constitution raises V;//cfge storm Returning Villagers this fall

found a new unexpected constitution

The new constitution, drawn up awaiting them.

by Dr. Ron Eydt, Village warden, and his four tutors during the sum- mer, was presented to the dons

- in a orientation meeting on Septem- ber 5.

The power structure of the new constitution starts at the basic social unit of the Village. Each floor--l6 residents-- elects one ~,,arson to sit on the council for t.leir quadrant, for a four-month te -y.

Trp .’ ,quadrant councils must ne gotiate with the warden every term for its budget. Out of this budget ‘the count ils are responsible to pay for all &Images in their quadrant, assessing‘ the offender if possible.

The council’s responsibility is to supervise all activities such as

The next higher level of gov- ernment is the Village council. It is composed of three members

sports, on the quadrant level.

each from the North, East, and West quadrant councils, and four members from the South quadrant council (one member for two hous- es), The Village council, which will receive grants from the quad- rant councils, appears to have al- most no powers. Its duties are to supervise social life in the whole Village, and to arbitrate in juris- dictional disputes among the quad- rant councils.

0 The balance of power rests with the warden, Dr. Eydt, who has complete control over finances and the constitution.

In a memorandum dated Septem- ber 11, Dr. Eydt described the payment of damages:

‘&All damages or incidents cre+ ting an extra workload, which cannot be assessed to a particular individual, will be charged to the appropriate council, which will be obligated to pay it from its term ,grant,3’ he said.

“It must be understood that the Village office (which assesses damages) is in no way capable of debating damage costs, and it is expected that council will accept such bills....“’

In the same memorandum, Dr. Eydt said if damages decrease, then further responsibilities and powers will be given to thevillage councils.

In a later memorandum to the

Villagers, September 15, Dr, Eydt gave his reasons for the new con- stitution. In reply to this, Stewart Saxe, last year% Village council speaker and chairman at the con-= stitution committee issued -a gen- eral memorandum to all Villagers in rebuttal. Here he agreed with Dr. Eydt that a new constitution is needed for the Village and not just amendment to the old. However he disagrees with the totalitarianism of Dr. Eydt’s constitution and says that the principals for the new constitution should be decided by the Villagers in a general refer- endum.

“As Charles Frankea saidinthe conclusion of a defence of Demo- cracy: ‘one of the great reasons to opt for democracy is that itpro- duces democrats .) If WardenEydt

and the tutors really Wish to Pro- duce responsible democrats, then they should abandon totalitarian methods of doing it,” said Sax%

In a discussion of the new con- stitution at Student Council Monday night, Provost Scott said that the warden’s intentions were good. TO this, John Shixy, chairman of the board of publications replied,“The best of intentions are no excuse for arbitrary actions.33

At this meeting Saxe said that Ron Trbovich, last years Village council vice-president, had told him no real effort had been made this summer to convene the philos- ophy committee, hand-picked by Dr. Eydt last spring to study the Village constitution.

At present, there are two peti- tions against the new constitution being circulated in the Village.

. . .

Page 2: n13_Chevron

Housing office commended l Federation president Steve Ire- land commended the housing ser- vice and the provost’s office in handling this fall’s housing crisis. He also commended the co-opera- tion between the University of Waterloo and Waterloo Lutheran housing services to find accomo- dation for students. He suggest- ed that the two housing services amalgamate to serve all the stu- dents in Waterloo. “Why should hey work in competition?,*’ he asked. l Mike Sheppard, St. Jerome’s rep, made three motions to help make students more aware of the local candidates and platforms for

the October 17 election. + There were three resignations and two appointments at Monday’s council meeting. Peter F ried) grad rep, Mike Sheppard, past president of the Federation and St. Jerome’s rep and John Wilms chairman of the board of stu-

dent activities and science rep all resigned because they are grad- uating this fall.

DaveBlaney was appointed chairman of the creativearts board to replace Paul Olin&i. Brian Iler, engineering rep, was app- ointed to replace Wilms. Iler was vice-chairman of BSA. 0 Council set up a committee to study the quality of education at the university. Many people volunteered for *e committee headed by Chalmers Adams, which Steve Ireland, president of the council, said must be composed of committee and interested people. * By-laws which should allow. a fair degree of latitude for theday- to-day operations of the Board of External Relations were proposed at the meeting. This latitude is needed because emphasis on dif- ferent things changes from year to year in the board.

However Peter Benedict, grad

rep, didn’t want the by-laws pass- ed because some of the council members had not had time to read them properly.

A straw vote showed that the council wanted a delay. Ireland, president, was disappointed saying it took a lot of work to do the by-laws thoroughly and he had had a chance to check them. However he did agree to postpone the by- laws to a special by-law meeting. l Dave Blaney , chairman of the creative arts board, presented a budget outline for the Federations exhibit, a slide profection andtape show, for TenthAnniversaryWeek. Saxe wanted to know if the show would only be a show of student activities or if it would present the other side of- university and show the problems. He was as- sured that this would happen by Blaney. Brian Iler, chairman of tenth anniversary week, said this was a fantastic opportunity.

Campus-center bricklayers back They’re back! Itmight havetak-

en the bricklayers three hours to sweep the ust off the roof of the campus center when they finally came back to work today-- but they’re back.

After striking for 13 weeks ,they have come back $1.35 an hour richer, over their previous $3,45 an hour, but they won’t get it all

for three years. It seems the strike was worth-

while for the bricklayers *who went out asking for a $1.10 increase over two years, while the mana- gement was offering 90 cents over three years.

Now the only holdup is thatthere aren’t enough bricklayers. Of 200 who went on strike in the Ki-

tchener-Waterloo area, only about 40 hadn’t found other jobs. The strike has delayed the completion date of most of the buildings on campus. The $1,800,000 campus center , orginally slated to be com- pleted in November, now will not be finished before late February.

Also dalayed was the new math building

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Morton’s pot pies l . . . . . . . . . . 5 8 oz. $1.00

Campbel I’ s tomato soup . . . . . .2 10 oz. 2%

Fro& power in harness tomorrow 57,600,OOO frosh-secons of

frosh power will be contribute towards charities tomorrow, dur- ing Slave day.

She day is destined to be a success ,” commented coordinator Ross McKenzie.

Telephones in Slave Day head- quarters have been ringing all week and early reports’ indicate that hundreds of jobs are avail- able for frosh. Pear-picking, chicken-plucking, car-wash- ing, earth-moving and ironing are among those listed.

Frosh will be available to re- sidents of the Twin Cities for 75 cents per hour per slave from

9 to 6 tomorrow. Orders can be placed by phoning 744-4461.

Last year’s target of $4,000 was easily met. This year the target is $6,000. Proceeds will be given to local branches of the Canadian National Institute for the Blind, Canada Save the Children Fund, and Canadian Mental Health Ass- ociation.

All frosh will meet at Seagram Stadium at 7:30 a.m. Saturday from where they will be trans- ported to the twelve carwash and distribution point locations.

Slave Day is only one of the many activities organized by the Circle K club on campus.

b- God Crosby VOLKSWAGEN 1 1-

.

Kam luncheon meat 1202.43g

Prime rib steaks . . . . lb. 84

Let’s all go to the lovey-in Say man. Be at the Water- at the university, has consented IO

loo Centennial Band Shell on Sun- share some of his Poems, All day at 1:OO. There’s goin’ be are cordially invited to come and a love-in. participate, to bring flowers, gui-

Orientation 67 and the K-W Peace Movement are sponsoring this love-in to create a situation where people can be human, be creative and be communal.

tar, paints and so on for an &er- noon of creativity. A limited num- ber of media such as paints, paper and wood will be available for self- expression.

So come on, baby, Let‘s get Earle Birney,poet-in-residence hip! ”

I

Can frienck/fo~s find/fone you? Have you moved since regis- please pick up one of these cards

tration? Have you finally learn- and drop it into a mailbox, They ed your phone number?

The registrar’s office is provi- are self-addressed to the regis- trar.

ding cards for address corrections “The accuracy of the student at a number of eating and loung- directory will depend on these ing places around campus, If listings, so please cooperate,‘” you have changed your address or said publications chairman John phone number since registration, Shiry. The directory should be or did not fill it in at that time, published within a few weeks.

L

New council controls intfamurals

Representatives from 15 intra- mural units met for the first time on Tuesday as the new men’s intramural athletic council.

The council has reps from the church colleges, the Co-op, the faculties I) physical education and each Village quadrant. Coach Paul Condon of the athletics department

i s ex-officio. The council is re- sponsible for all intramural activ- ities.

On this year’s executive are Jud- son Whiteside as president, F ras- er Barnes vice-president and Ran- dy Houghton secretary and public- relations officer e

Activities for all students have been planned during the past year but the council welcomes any sug- gestions to improve its intramural program, Persons wishingto con- tact the intramural council can do SO through their unit’s repres- entative,

950 fresh enrol/ at Lutheran The little red &hoolhouse up Graduate members of theschool

the street is also experiencing an influx of fresh last week.

of social work have already begun

About 950 freshmen enrolled at classes,

Waterlootheran in arts, science Parent’s orientation day was and the school of business, Total held on September 16. me day

enrollment at WUC this year is about equal to last year%, 2500,

is a publicity gimmick design&

This includes 150 graduate to attract the friends and kin of

students. students .

400 science fresh need brothers

The Science Society needs big brothers and sisters for the 400 science frosh.

A big brother will be somewhat closer to the first-year student than the faculty advisor would be. He will be an upperclassman with the same fields of interest and will be available to give a little

help, a little advice and a lot of encouragement e

At the expense of a bit of time. a big brother or sister will save the freshman much of the u:ual trouble with ,university.

Interested science uppe. $ass- men should contact DcA4 Coukell at 576-0124 or Da& Leeder at 576-9818.

A subscription fee included In therr annual student fees entitles U of W students to receive the Chevron by mail during off-

2 126 The CHEVRON’ campus terms. Non-students: $4 annually. Authorized as second-class mail by the Post Office department, Ottawa, and for payment of postage in cash. Send address changes promptly to: The Chevron, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario. , .

Page 3: n13_Chevron

CUS creed passed easily

Barry_ Takayesu searches the classified ads for a place to stay.

Drutdcs for cellmates better t/km no room

One U of W student isn’t cow vinced that the housing situationis as good as some people say it is. Barry Takayesu, science 1, spent Tuesday night in the Kitchener police cells because he couldn’t find a place to stay.

tTve tried, but I just can’t find the type of housing I need. l?ve been looking for something inlight housekeeping for the last three days but there’s nothing ava% able,‘* said Takayesu.

He claimed that people with ap- artments and houses for rentwere hanging up as soon as they found he was a student.

The YMCA, the Kent, the City and the Walper hotels were all fill- ed Tuesday night. The Waterloo police turned him down because their cells were full. “So then I went to the Kitchener police and I was put in a cellwithfive drunks.~’ said Takayesu. ‘#They were OK though, since they were return cus- tomers .‘I

A Kitchener police spokesman said that Takayesu was the only

’ student who had gone there for lodging. he said there was noway

Brian ller

they could separate him from the prisoners. “The young fellow was

.in’ with drunks, winos, rubs, the whole bit--and there was nothing we could do about it, although we did let him come upstairs for a while so he could read.”

Waterloo police said that there

had been four or five students stay- ing overnight in their cells last week

When he learned of the incident, Prof. Bill Scott, provost for Stu- dent affairs, said, rcI think he’s being a little too choosey in a tight situation. I can understand his problem, but many landladies just won? rent to students because they don’t look, after the stoves, pots and pans and other things. I would say he’s being a little too damn fussy.”

Where does Takayesu go from here? “Well, I found a girl, a friend of a friend, who will let me shy at her place tonight. I guess I- just start looking again tomor- row. I can’t afford to pay $2 a day for meals like some people have to?

by Student Council They did it again and this time

it+,- better. A revised Declaration of the c anadian Student was passed at a regular Student Council meet- ing Monday night. The declarz+ tion had been passedtwo weeks WiTO by the penary session of the CUS national congress.

Pete Warrian and Steve Flott, both members of Waterloo’s dele- gation to the congress, made intro- ductory speeches. After War&u? s speech Chalmers Adams, Renison rep, moved to table the resolution. He said some members hadn’t had ___-________--------. Text of the declaration and congress wrapup: Page 7 ----------------- - - --

enough time to consider it. For the second time that night some members were rebuked for not doing their homework.

In his opening remarks Flott stressed that the student has a responsibility to education and so- ciety. “The student must work to create a society of free and equal members,$’ he said. 44For instance, the social barriers to education must be removed.”

He said that no position can de fend the status-quo of society. “Change is necessary and good. Students are part of a society they must help direct changes,” he said.

Several reps raised objections that had been raised at the conge ress. Peter Fried, grad rep, said if the student was to direct sociei ty he must be a listener aswell as a doer. “This resolution doesn’t define the student as a listener,” he said.

Tom Patterson, the Federation% university-relations officer and another delegate to the congress, said the preamble of the resolu- tion said this. “The student must discover, examine and assimiue the knowledge of his environment,‘2 says the preamble.

Bill Kirton, president of the sci- ence socit!y, said that students shouldn’t be directed by this resol. ution. tWs the students’ right to want to make better money by get- ting a degree. Possibly, we should educate them to other alterna- tives such as their responsibility to society.”

Flott claimed that no one has the right to opt out of the human race. He said closed minds were

host for 20,000 Have you seen 20,000 people crammed

into one area before? Well, we have one man on campus who hasn’t-and he is in charge of the whole project.

This project will culminate the Univer- sity of Waterloo% tenth4nniversary activi- tieran entire week of scheduled events.

The student organizing this is Brian Iler, a third-year- civil engineering student. Iler has been connected with many more university projects in his past years on campus but this looks like his biggest and best.

Being the quiet and reserved type that he is8 it seems hard to see Iler organizing the number of people that Tenth Anniversary Week requires. Yet his manner demands immediate respect and attention.

This attention he has got. After work- ing all summer, he has assembled close to 300 people, most of them university staff,

What kind of thing has he cooked up for the university% birthday? A good question.

To start with, he asked university de signer George Roth to create a symbol, and has splashed it over everything in sight. All the letterheads, all the envelopes, zill

mail put through the campus postage macho ine, all posters bear the distinctive and - colorful symbol. It incorporates the uni- versity colors, the dates 57167 and UW.

Next Iler established a core of work- ers to handle different segments and a&iv& ties. From here he is able to coordinate events.

Tenth Anniversary Week itself will begin October 22 and end the 29th, both Sundays.

October 24, Tuesday, the church coll- eges will sponsor a “Consultation on the

CYf

useless. But Adams said the stud- ent should be able to decide why he came to university. tt Wi should- n’t arbitrarily decide for them,” he said. War&n rejected this saying the declaration was a pole icy statement attempting to give direction to student opinion and goals. He said that it wasn’t deal- ing with students as individuals.

Several councillors objected to the apparent ambiguity of the doc- ument. They wanted more specific statements of policy, especially on the sectionconcerning univer- sal accessibility. Bob C avanagh, vice-president of the Federation, said the resolution was not a prw gram of action. rcIt simply states what the aims and directions of students should be. The program

Ffovosf’s

should flow from this document,” he said.

He emphasized that one of the points of the document was its generality. He said its flexibility allowed students from acrossCan- ada to accept it. 9t says we’re working toward some sort of goal.”

Mike Sheppard St. Jerome’s rep, also gave strmg support to the de- claration. “The purpose of coun- cil is to organize students for collective action$99 he said. 4f We must get involved in social action. We- must debate this resolution and pass it now so the Federation is committed. Then we won’t be debating policy on each resoiution brought up this year?

At the final vote only two reps were opposed and there were no abstentions.

office to control sports

Control of the athletic depart+ ment has returned to the pro- vost’s office. Prof. WilliamScott, provost for student affairs, told Student Council Monday night. Pre viously the department had been responsible to the director of the school of phys-ed.

The shift was caused because Student Council had demanded con= trol of the department through a board of athletics. The council had also demanded a better a& letic deal for the individual student this year.

The biggest complaint was that students weren’t getting their mon- ey’s worth from the $22 athletic fee they paid. They also claimed a conflict of interest in the athlee tic department because many of the staff were also teaching in the physical and health-education de partment .

Scott gave a short history of the athletic department and explained the present situation. He said that responsibility for athletic organ& zation had shifted periodically. First it had reported to President Hagey, then to academic vice president T.L. Bathe, then to pro= vast Scott, and then to the director of the phys-ed school.

“Reallocations area again net+

u of w - ’

university and the church? All the church grapher, on the role of the universities and colleges will take part in this evening. the social sciences in Canadian society.

Wednesday night will feature Dr. Earle Birney. Birney is our poet on campus, one of Canada% best-known poets. (What better way to spend an evening since itwon’t cost you a cent,” said Iler.

Also on Thursday PDQ Bach will ap- pear. This is a hilarious rendition of the classics by 27 of New York’s finest musi- cians. Even Thinking of this event, Iler had to smile, “Theyare great.”

Thursday is well-packed, according to the chairman. It will include the dedication of the new social-sciences building. It will be called the Isaiah Bowman Building ofthe Social Sciences, after an eminentgeograph- er born in Waterloo County. Connected with this, there will be a public lecture by Dr. F.K. Hare, internationally known geo-

Then come the big events that have tak- en up so much of the chairman% time. Fall convocation is on Friday afternoon-but all day there will be tours of the campus for highschool students. There will be five separate tours: one of the campus in gen- era& engineering, math-and-science and arts.

essary,~~ he said. Dro Howard Petch was recently appointed ac+ demic vice-president to replace Batke who moved to vice-president for university development. Scott said Petch agreed to take thephySr ed school but didn’t feel he should be responsible for the athletic de partrnent. Petch felt athletics should perhaps be in student af- fairs.

Scott said Hagey had discussed the situation with Dan Pugliese, director of the phys-ed school. 44Pugliese said student control of athletics may be good in the fu- ture but not immediately because it could be upsetting psychologically for personnel in the athletic de- partment because they% wearing two hats,” said Scott

Then Pugliese andScott got to- gether on Monday and suggested that an ad-hoc committee be set up to study the athletic director- ate’s constitution. There would be four members from the Federa- tion, four members from the de- partment and the physred school combined, and the provost. Tom Patterson, arts rep, Gary Wed&k* eng rep, and Wayne Watts,science rep, were appointed to the commit- tee. Another student will be named later.

,

open house The tours will be continued Saturday

and Sunday in a public open house, another university first. All academic departments will put up displays along with other exhibits such as food services.

In setting up such an ambitious pro- gram, Iler has tried to show all aspects of the university community. Not only will the visitors be shown the buildings and equip- ment, but will meet students who will be stationed at checkpoints all over campus.

The thought behind this open house is

to acquaint the community with the expan- sion of the university, said Iler. “Long- term results may be a decrease in the housing problem and a better attitude in the community-of which we play a definite WIV

Finally on the agenda is the NorthAm- erican championship tiddlywinks tourna- ment at the Village. This is the first time in Canada. Iler said teams from M1II’, Columbia, Cornell, Harvard and U of T would squop off against the University of Waterloo club, defending champions.

Asked if there was anything further he would like to add, Iler said, ttHelpI We need help to make this thing work.”

- Friday, September 21, 1967 (8: 13) 127 3

Page 4: n13_Chevron

by Harold D. Goldbrick the mighty mouth

Yea wearily, Ws full three months and a couple of paychecks ago that the words first began to wag on.$ Twas in a moment of weakness that the editor-in-chief first allowed such agripist-trip- ist as H.D. Goldbrick to be turn- ed loose on UniWat.

Now must I accept my destiny in a position somewhere below poet-in-residence Dr. Earle Bi* ney, architects-in-exile More and Shove-it arid philosopher- in-prominence Ed Penner. After long and tedious striving I have finally attained my nirvana: Hail Harry, Resident Ass on Campus.

0 In the surprise of the decade,

a university publication is almost reaching the bestseller list loc- ally. No, it% not another math text by Ralph G (for god)Stanton. It’s a nonfiction novel-type his- tory of our institution, entitled for want of a better euphemism, ‘Of schidt and corruption*. It sells for $3.75 in local&ores. Theun- iversity bookstore has an unlisted pricetag so far because ips a- waiting a policy decision whether the book is required mate&&

0

As Orientation 67 is about the only thing happening this week, I suppose it?s my turn to give its chairman some publicity. Stew- art D. Saxe, or Stuart de&de as he is termed by the staff ideolog, has dropped below LBJ, George

Hees and registrar Trevor Boyes in the latest Corrupt Poll.

It seems that Stew was begging to be captured. At last when sci- ence fresh came to his rescue and caputred him, Lord Saxe be- friended them--and he had a bodyguard to take him to a secret committee meeting.

When some upperclass plumb- ers and one woman arts archon came to liberate him, Stew be came *most indignant. They left in disgust, perhaps planning to liberate Saxe of his beard next time. Incidentally, science was awarded 5,000 points in the sca- venger hunt for Saxe as an orig- inal item.

As for the Saxe philosophy on orientation, I have yet to believe that so many people were so emo- tionally involved in the big-bro- ther theme. About a hundred of them (the archons) had intimate relations with Laurel Creek.

While we’re on the topic, I might prudently mention that if the seats had been crammed in any closer for the Lightfoot con- cert, there would have been a pregnancy rate of about one per thousand. Fortunately, Lightfoot provided enough distraction.

Back to Saxe: It is obvious that Stew wanted the frosh to become involved and aware and unapath- etic and active andintelligent and a whole bunch of stuff like that there. But only 200 showedup on

Tuesday night for ‘The univer- sity-an event’, the main purpose of which was to make activists out of them all.

I shall refrain from comment- ing further on this pseudo-re- placement for a kangaroo kourt. Instead I offer a constructive al- ternative for the frosh who wants to know what activism on campus means.

with E without

To help gerrymander this re ferendum, you see below the Vir- gin Saxe. Doesn*t he look pass- ive? Without the mask he’ll ne er murder anybody in a Student Council meeting. To further simplify things and in particular to help math frosh who can? make Xs, you may vote for Saxeg‘with- out” just be tearing it out and mailing it to me ai the Chevron.

9 projects ider way

Health, womeds res ups building to $Wm

Two new buildings now under construction on campus raise the total number of current building projects to nine, at a cost of over $19 million.

Contracts for the Miriota Hagey Residence and for the health-se* vices building-between St. Jer- ome’s and the Villagerepresent an investment of almost $1 mil- lion.

The residence, costing $598,443, is being built by Ellis-Don Ltd. of’ London, and the health-services building, $324,834 , by Monteith- McGrath Ltd. of Waterloo. Con- tract prices, which were the lowest bids submitted, do not includefur- nishing and site work costs.

With the completion of these . buildings, only the third arts build.-

ing remains to complete the pre- sent development stage of the uni- versity’s 250-acre south campus.

The Minota Hagey Residence for graduate women is being erected as a memorial to Minota Hagey, the late wife of university president J.G. Hagey. Much of the required financing to start the building was raised by donations within the com- munity, including a major gift of $50,000 by Mrs. A.R. Kaufman of Kitchener.

Initial plans are for a single threestorey residence as the first building in a fouehouse residence complex. The site is a knoll at the southwest corner of the camp us, at University Avenue and the arts driveway. The brick and ex- posed concrete structure will fete

ture paved terraces complement- ing this natural setting overlooking Laurel Lake.

The 75 residence bedrooms will circle Minota Hagey Hall, a large two-storey meeting place and lounge area. On the upper levels, lounges overlook this main hall area. There will also be a small kitchen and dining room on the main floor fox private dinners.

Each of the three floors, with facilities for 25 women, will be divided into ‘two wings by a central staircase. Each floor willhave its own washrooms and service core.

The health-services building will also have a pleasant lake setc ting, located beside Laurel Creek across from the campus centre, al- so under construction,

Essentially a onestorey buil& ing, it will be a clinic for the south campus, including six two-bed wards, two isolation wards, five do’(?tors’ examination rooms, and five day-care rooms, one for em- ergencies.

The lO,OOO-square-foot building is to handle the health needs of the south campuspopulation-over 7,000 students and 2,000 faculty and staff this fall. By 1975, the population is expected to be 15,000 students and 7,000 faculty and staff.

In addition to the main clinic area, there will be a second-storey apartment for the nurses who will staff the building 24 hours a day.

The architect for both projects is Raymond Moriyama of Toronto.

BE A TENTH ANNIVERSARY WEEK VOLUNTEER

APPLY NOW OPPORTUNITIES AFJALAWE

for Students interested in l PHOTOGRAPHY @ ART e CONDUCTING TOURS 0 MEETING PEOPLE

Application forms are available at T!enth Anniversary Week office

(7th floor, library), society reps & Federation building

4 128 The CHEVRON

Page 5: n13_Chevron

Students. refused housing; OTTAWA (CUP)-Patrick Wat- intellectual adventure if you act

son last week: urged Carleton now,*’ he said. freshmen to revolt against the He attacked professors who lag-

president charges racism administration and faculty. ily believe that to impart knowledge

Watson, who co-hosted the cm all they need to do is stand up in

troversial ‘Seven days’ TV show front of a class full of students -

vides. However, since campus ents should be located in homes with Laurier Lapierre, told 500 and give the same lecture they WINNIPEG (CUP)-University

of Manitoba student president residences can only accommodate where both parties are going to be first-year students to workthrough gave last year.

Chris We&&l said Tuesday that about 1300 students, it is neceS- congenial. their student association to gain a The time is gone when student

the university is “participating in sary to rely on downtown accom- Dr. Saunderson said there was bigger say in the administrationaf government% major role was or-

g-ng dances and football discrimination against non-white

modation for several thousand little likelihood that the present their university. games. 14Now they are workingfor students.”

more who come here from outside system would be changed. “You can convert the next four Greater Winnipeg.

political reform within the univer- In an open letter to Dr. Hugh H.

Saunderson, president of the uni- versity of Manitoba student union that the university majntains dis- criminatory off-campus residence T4 A.,

The reply said, 46 We have a great deal of difficulty in finding enough homes to accommodate this num- ber of students.

Montreal backs T-up strikers

years of drudgery into a socialand sity”, he said.

ENJOY THE CONGENIAL ATMOSPHERE

OF THE “We rarely get enough places to

Manitoba housing crisi.s Wafson urges fro& revolt

USLS.

14The university lists accommo- meet the entire need. If we would

dation that is available to allstud- refuse to list those people’ who

ents, regardless of their race or express a preference for women

eolor, and maintains a second list or men, for older students or for

of accommodation for white stud- freshmen, or for overseas students

ents only.” or Manitobans. we would have to shorten

In the letter, Mr. Westdal said ’ ,idc out ’ already-too-short

he believed the university “must -we* not be a party to discriminatory

“That would not be of any ser- _. -- vice to those students who relv on

practices.” w

The letter concluded, “It sad- our help in finding accommoda-

dens me to think that an-institution A:,,, 33 uU113g--

such as the university which by de- Dr. Saundersonsaid/~Ifahome-

finition, cannot subscribe to any owner tells us that he is prepared

practice of racial discrimination to take any student and then refus- es any category, we has stooped to accommodate the name from our Hst

strike that

racial prejudices of others in our “But if a prefe&nceis extxess- community?

The letter was released to all ed at the &me of listing wi try to

local newspapers, radio and tele- make sure that a person of that

vision stations. type i s given the name and a&

In a written reply, Dr. Saunder- dress of the homeowner.

son said the two lists maintained <‘Some of our studentshave spe-

by the university actually differ+ cial dietary requirements, and it is a waste of effort to send such

en&ted between people who pre- a student to a home where those ferred to take inoverseas students and people who had not expressed

needs can? or won% be met.

such a preference, (‘1 am not naturally unhappy if

Dr. Saunderson said the univer- some homeowners have special

sity does not practice discrimina~ preferences in &dents

tion in any housing which it pro- “But it seems to me-extremely

important that nonresident stud-

WIPARE PRICES!! OURS ARE LOWER

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4. IF YOU DON’T SEE WHAT YOU WANT

WE’LL GET IT F;OR YOU

5. SPECIAL ORDERS SENT DAILY -

NO EXTRA CHARGE

MONTREAL (CUP)--The stud- ents at the University of Montreal are supporting a strike at Seven- up by banning all of the company% products from the campus.

The Union Generale des Etu& ants du Quebec have also urged a general all-Quebec boycott of Se- ven-up products.

The company has continued op- erating despite the strike by work- ers, which started June 15. Nego- tiations have not been held as yet.

The U of M student association controls most retail sales outlets on campus.

.

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offering a STUDENT MEAL CARD

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your host, Chris, and hostess, Anne, would like to meet you.

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Friday, September 27, 7967 (8: 73) 729 5

Page 6: n13_Chevron

The thrill of victory is evident on the faces of Robert Stanfield, his wrte and hrs supporters

at the conclusion of the uleek-long PC convention. (Photo by Bruce Lawson)

we311 anti your Inmu fmvouif

wi~ersity ave. & phiLip st; k-b Arthur Thompson, manager

But the old Diefenbaker magic was gone. From where we sat behind the podium, we could see his hands and body shaking. Palsy, someone whispered. His face was grim. ‘lit’s a hot, hot nightab’ he

6 130 The CHEVRON

by Donna Mc#ie Toronto new editor

TORONTO (Staff)-The Tory image will never be quite the same in Toronto again, To rontonians watched with fascination during 1 the Conservative leadership ex+ vention, September 5-9, as the party faithful threw off their in- hibitions and jcined in the general merrymting.

Kilts flared and white boots flashed as Robert Stanfield’s pip- ers, clad in Nova Scotia tartan, marched around the convention floor at the Royal York. On the same floor, an AlvinHamilton jazz combo provided entertainment, while George Hees’ supporters,

‘placards waving, staged-a stand- in-=-or perhaps they were just en- joying the music. ’ Behind ail of the hoopla, how- ever, the future of the party was being hammered out in policy meetings. And one question dom- inated all proceedings-would the Chief run again or would he step down with dignity?

By Thursday, when Diefenbaker -was due to speak, the tension was

almost unbearable, Outside the Gardens, bands played and plac- ards waved, while hundreds of young people, / mostly highschool and university students down for the excitement, added to the con- fusion.

Inside, there was the hush of expectation. The chants and yells had been stilled-all of the action seemed to have been left outside.

As the .Queen was played, the audience, staunch Tory party members, stood respectfully. Then the band moved into ‘0 Can- a&P, and in an impressive display of Canadian nationalist feeling, the Gardens burst spontaneously into song.

But where was Dief? As chair- man Edwin Goodwin’s voice droned monotonously through routine mat- ters, Diefenbaker had still not ar- rived. Then, with a fanfare pro- vided by ten highland pipers and five bandsmen, complete with bus- bies, in marched the Chief. On stage, Dalton Camp, author of Die- fenbaker’s downfall, looked fur- ious. From the crowd came shouts of “We want DiefI Give us DiefIg’

said, and everyone present ltnew he meant more than the weather,

It is as an orator that Dief comes alive, He had to brace his hands on the podium to stop them f ram shtiing, but the familiar voice thundered 3:hrough the Gar= dens as he lashed out at French Canada and the two-natifx con- cept, which had been adopted earl- ier by the policy committee. ‘fIts~ time French Canada started op- ting in, instead of opting out. The aim of Confederation was not to produce Siamese twins?

Then his voice softened and be came almost apolegetic, as though he had been betrayed and couldn’t quite understand why. “I’ve tried to lead this party faithfully; I haven’t mislead you. In thenormal course of events, I would have been retiring in two or three year&J gave loyalty to leader after lead- er--I believed there was no other way for a party to carry out its responsibility.”

Yet it was apparent that the crowd was not with him, The Die- fenbaker magic no longer worked.

Whatever the speech accomp- lished, it did almost nothing to end the guessing game of whether or not Dief enbaker would run as a candidate for the leadership. Pre mier John Robarts of Ontario ex- pressed his bewjilderment, ((1 real- ly don’t know what he will do. You heard what I heard--draw your own conclusions.”

By ten o’clock Friday morning, the answer was in--the Chief was indeed going to run. Many of the other candidates seemed stunned by the news. Yet mixed with dis- may was a certain amount of ad- miration. Alvin Hamilton, a Die fenbaker supporter, told me later, LIHe’s a master of managing apoli- tical convention. He always knows how to be the center of the stage. And if I had a thousand newsmen running after me, Pd do it too.”

And what did Diefenbaker have to say about it all? “The world is full of surprises,” he quipped.

Dief may have been relaxed and confident, but many of the other candidates certainly were not. Be hind the stage, George *Hees, his joviality gone, was pacing back and forth memorizing his speech and making hurried changes. He told newsmen he had rewritten his entire speech after Diefenbaker entered the race. Later, he came backstage, again. His shirt was soaked and sweat was running down his face. “We’re in the fight now!” he said, after making oneof

the best speeches of the nigh in defence of the deux-nations policy, CJAfter three strtie-outs in a row, I bow I had to pull myself out/

By Saturday, the funeral pall that had hung over the Gardens the night before had disappeared, The noise outside was deafening as the candidates made a last-ditch effort to attract delegates. In a preview of the main battle to be waged on the convention floor, an 18-piece band campaigning on one side of +he street for Manitoba premier Duff Roblin was out-per- formed by a 3%piece band and 12 majorettes on the other side for Nova Scotia premier Robert Stan- field, Roblin’s chief opponent and the eventual victor.

All the action missing in tne stands earlier in the week was there Saturday. Multi-colored placards for the various candi- dates blanketed whole sections.

The first vote was aformality-- Mrs. Mary Walker-Sakwa, a last- minute entry, was the first name to be dropped from the ballot. Yet that ballot told the story of the convention. Sta.&eld, at 519 votes, had a clear lead over runner-up Duff Roblin at 349, and maintained his early lead through all five ballots necessary to declare the winner.

Yet every eye was focused not upon Stanfield, but upon John Die fenbaker. The old Chief was clear- ly defeated. Incumbent party lea- der, the man who only nine years ago had set the country on fireand scored the most resounding elec- toral victory ever, he had polled only 271 votes, 12 percent of the total.

In the stands, Diefenbaker sat motionless, his expression non- committal as the TV cameras zoomed in for closeups. But des- pite the effort, his distress was apparent and the characteristic confidence, even cockiness, had vanished.

The second and third ballots spelled the end as Dief’s total slipped to 172 and then 114. Still followed by a coterie of newsmen, Diefenbaker slipped out of the stands and headed for his hotel. “He’s going to have dinner and then go to bed,” an aide announced.

On the other side of the Gardens, Stanfield, his early lead still in- tact, sat unperturbed and confident, an aura he had managed to exude throughout the convention. It ended like that, after five ballots, With Stanfield acting as though he had expected it all along.

Page 7: n13_Chevron

j &xlarxtion unifies London congress

CUS Splits furl7 into Solidarity \ Solidarity was the word at the

end of this year’s national CUS congress. It was an amazing re- stit for a week thai began with deep splits among several student factions.

CUS delegatesfrom acrossCan= ada arrived at the University bf Western Ontario on September 2 thinking in any of three ways. By September 9 a revised Declaration of the Canadian Student had bound them into a strong union. All the congress legislation was based on the declaration.

John C levelan? and the syndical- ists had taken a hard-line leftist stand on CUS policy. Syndicalism describes the student as a young intellectual worker who forms a union, which allies with other un- ions or groups to seekfundamental social and institutional changes. Cleveland, a CUS &sociate sec- retary last year, had draftedaDe- claration of the Canadian Student based on syndicalism.

Bob Eustace, president of the University of Calgary, led a group of more conservative schools that wanted to base policy on the stud- ent being only a student and not a member of society.

Finally, there were schools like U of W and U of Toronto who were looking for a compromise between the two stands.

Discontent among smaller schools, that they were being push- ed around in CUS, added to the pro- blem, like the financial troubles of some schools.

Cleveland’s declaration was presented to the Union-affairs Commission during the week and commission during the week and was thrown out. Eustace’s view was also rejected.

“The two viewpoints turnedpeo- ple off,” said U of W president Steve Ireland. l&C leveland’s dec- laration was written in Leninist jargon. It had a lot we believe in but you must watch how you say it.

“The important points were in- dividual awareness of the student and the idea of his valuable con- tribution to society,” he said. This ,is a complete rejection of Eus- tace’ s isolationist theory.

After C leveland’s declaration was defeated much work was put

DECLAUATION OF THE CANADIAN STUDENT What is a student? What should his concerns be.? mote consequent action to bring reform5 This definition was the unifying theme for the into practice;

recent national congress of the Canadian Union of Students in London and the justification of all its

d. Playing a full part in the life of the

actions there. community as a citizen.

It passed strongly at the U of W Student Council The Canadian student has the right to est- meeting #onda y night. ablish democratic, representative student

Education is a contributive social process, associations. Realizing that educational

the essence of which is an expanding aware- reform will not come in a vacuum or with-

ness of man’s social and natural environment; out a continuous examination and poss-

through dialogue and cooperative intellect- ible transformation of societal valued and

ual effort. The principal goal of education institutional arrangements, the associations

is to develop the full potential of all citizens must be free to ally themselves with other

as free, creative thinking and acting human groups in society which have similar aims.

beings and to serve society by helpingto achieve equality of the essential conditions The Canadian student is a member of a

of human living. The student must discover, global society, with the right and duty to

examine and assimilate the knowledge of be concerned about his fellow citizens, and

his environment and must develop the ab- with the responsibility to promote human

ility to cope with and transform it. rights and mutual understanding,

The Canadian student, as a full member of tht The Canadian student has the right and academic community and society, has the duty to imporve himself as a social being right and duty to participate in shaping an and to contribute to the development of environment conductive to accomplishing society by: these aims and to make basic decisions a. Expanding knowledge through re- about the conditions and nature of his in-

search and the objective analysis of tellectual activity and the goals served by

existing hypotheses and ideas and the educational system is accessible and dem-

formulation of others; . ocratic so that it will serve the interests of the whole society.

b. Learning by sharing his perceptions and thought with his fellow citizens and The Canadian student has the right to be constructively criticising theirs; free to continue his education without

C. Engaging in fundamental action, as an and material, economic, social or psychol- individual or in a group, to confront ogical barriers, created by the absence of society with discoveries and to pro- real equality of essential conditions.

into writing a compromise, After six drafts a new declaration was presented to the commission, It was passed in commission and. presented to the plenary s&sion, The final vote in plenary was 36 . for, four against with no absten- tipns. The declaration stresses the students’ duties and rights in education and society.

allowed all the views within one framework,B’ he said.

The declaration became a strong unifying force. “After the declar- ation was passed the congress wan- ted to get down to the work of draft- ing resolutions: said Flott. “The polarization was over because there was room for disagreement within the declara.tion.”

“Some delegations voted against The rest of the congressfollow- it because they said it was too flex+= ed naturally from the declaration. ible,” said Steve Flott, a member In nearly every motion the declar- of Waterloo’s delegation. l( But ation was used as a justification. this was its good point because it This was important for University

mentation of the declaration. The Manitoba motion stressed that the declaration was not a motherhood resolution but a strong motion for action. It passed unanimously.

solidarity was obvious in the commissions and in the plenary most of the time. ‘When some schools came to the finance com- mission with money troubles on the local campuses, the members of the commission were able to compromise to a unanimous de cision on CUS levies,” said Ire land.

Dalhousie, had said he was con- servative at the beginning of the congress,” said Flott. “Later he seconded the declaration and shot down the mandates argument.”

Some delegations had used the argument to support student isola- tionism. This argument says the delegation was not mandated by its campus to come and pass resolu- tions about societal involvement.

“We had no mandate from our campus,” said Ashworth. “The students elected you as leaders and expect you to bring back ideas f rom the congress. %*

“If you accept that you were el- ected by your students on a plat- ’ form, you must realize that other things fall within the framework of that platform,” he said.

“John Cleveland helped us out in the education commission,” said Ireland. “When he dropped out of the presidential race, it was ob- vious that the syndicali& favored the compromise,*’

After Peter Warrian of Water- loo won the election, Cleveland made a speech calling for solid- arity within CUS.

In the 20-hour plenary all of the motions pushed action at the local campus level.

4 (The secretariat should be used strictly for information purpos- es,” said Flott. “The point of the union is to build strong local stud- ent movements around the declara- t ion.”

An important difference from last year was that delegates were responsible. There were no far- fetched motions on international affairs because delegates knew their students were not interested.

Time running out for subject switch

Engineering students have until 5 next Friday to switch courses. Other faculties have another week, until October 6.

Change-request forms are a- vailable on the counter in the reg- istrar’s office. they must be fill- ed in, complete with all the nec- essary signatures, and handed back to the registrar’ s office by the

of Manitoba’s motion for imple “Denny Ashworth, president of deadline time.

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Crested - - Playing cards, wall hangings

1968 -- Beautiful Canada calendars

School rings, pins, crests, decals, bumper stickers

The Book Store - east entrance of the new food-services building

. Friday, September 21, 1967 (8: 13) 131 7

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AI-SO AT THE CAMPUS REST

FREE DELIVERY TO STUDENT

744 - 4446

Open 5 p.m. to 1 a.m. Weekends till 2 a.m.

IF IN KITCHENER PHONE 744-4322

252 King St. E.

ST. PAUL’S COLLEGE SEMINARS What are They ? informal study, discussion and involvement

groups. They meet for one hour a week, for eight weeks during the term. The seminars are designed to introduce the student to areas of concern and interest which he will not normally encounter in his regular academic course. They also provide a meeting place for students from different academic backgrounds.

Who are they for. 7 The seminars are part of the community life at St. Paul’s College. As such, they are primar- ily planned for the residents of St. Paul’s. This year, however, a limited number of non-residents with be admitted to some sections of the seminar program.

What seminars are being offered? There are places for non-residents in the following seminars: OUR EDUCA T/ONA L SYSTEM, Is our educational system producing educated people or technicians? Does it discriminate against children from lower-

class homes? Is it oriented towards the mediocre; uncreative student? A visit is being arranged for members of this seminar to Everdale Place, a rad- ical experiment in education. DRUG ADD/CT/ON, The nature of addictive and psychedelic drugs and the moral questions involved in their use. The seminar will include visits to an _ AA meeting and to Yorkville. THE CHURCH - FOR & AGAINST. Is the Church a captive of middle-class culture? Is-it plagued with a serious problem of hypocrisy? Is it meaningful related to modern life? This seminar will include both a study of the most serious failures of modern church life and an examination of some of the most exciting experiments in church renewal,

What personal commitments do the seminars involve? There is, of course, a commitment of time and interest. Those who register for the seminars are expected to see them through. Participants should also expect to do some preparation for each meet- ing of the seminar. For non-residents, there is a registration fee of $5 to help meet the costs of the program. ’

Who is eligible? Any student beyond the freshman year.

For more information, or to register, CalI or see Prof. David Lochhead, St. Paul’s United College, 745-84 7 7.

Creative Arts Calendar

WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 27 - 4: 15 pm - Theater of the Arts

Lecture by Dr. Earle Birney “Canadian Poetry of the Sixties: Poets over 35”

FRIDAY, SEPT. 29 - 8:30 pm - Theater of the Arts Canadian Universities Centennial Players “Les fourberies de scapin” A Comedy by Moliere presented in French.

“Arnold had two wives”

A satire by Aviva Ravel on modern academia.

Paul Frappier and Bill Lee, two lJ of w w

students, are members of the company

SPNDAY, OCT. 1 - 8:OO pm - Theater of the Arts

jimmy Namaro Trio “Popular music of the Western Hemisphere”

OCTOBER 15 - 21 Arts Festival

FEDERATION OF STUDENTS- CREATIVE ARTS BOARD

Wafrian outlines views

Quality of education to -get top priority

by Frank Goldspink

Chevroi Intercampus Editor

Peter Warrian, sociology 3, was chosen pre- side&elect of the Canadian Union of Students at its annual congress two weeks ago.,

As president-elect of the 140,000-member national student union, Warrian will be actively in- volved with the Ottawa executive for the next three years. Neti year he actually goes to Ottawa as pre-

Are these priorities and CUS representatives of the students?

We are involved in value judgements here. At the congress we tried to state the legitimate con- terns of the students. Now we try to establish a broad base of support by getting students involved in the suggested programs.

Our experience with these programs will be a test of our judgement. In this way we’ll be demo- cratizim cus.

side& and the year after he remains involved as a board member.

Before coming to U of W, he studied three years in a Roman Catholic seminary. He hasbeen on the national council of the Student Union for PeaceAc- tion, a controversial New Left organ&&on based in To ronto.

On the Waterloo student government executive this year, he heads Council’s community-action program-setting up tutoring programs andaposs- ible free highschool among other things.

Three words were kicked around a lot at the CUS congress: syndicalism, consciousness and expertise. Could you define these terms and explain how they apply to CUS’s program this year?

Student syndicalism is students acting collec- tively in terms of their rights and interests--first in education and then in society. This is implied in the revised Declaration of the Canadian Student.

Syndicalism is actively applied in Quebec now but will not be in the open for a few more years in English Canada. This is because culturally the English are significantly different from the French and don’t have a base of support for syndicalism.

Consciousness is awareness of the self andits social situation. The student must become consc- ious and act so in terms of his position in education and society.

(‘ Expertise is competence inaparticular area. We would use expertise in the area of learning to get at the guts of the education system and try to change it. The student-centered teaching resolution is a good example of where expertise would be used.

Peter Warrian, a U -of W sociology student, addressing the London congress, was elected 1968-69 president bf the Canadian Union of Students. (Cup photo)

How do you intend to implement education policies passed at the congress?

There must be a complete change in the insti- tution. Students aren’t strong enough to turn over this system in a frontal assault. Change has to be approached selectively-in particular crucial places. It% a type of guerilla warfare. The stu- dentmcentered teaching resolution is agood example of this.

Curriculum committees are also and area of crucial juncture. We must get studentsinvolved and things may change. We must get rid of this passive prof-student relationship in the classroom.

What is your plan of operation when you become president of CUS?

As president I can only facilitate getting the fiel&,rofi done--making sure individual campuses carry through with the projects planned at the Congress. There has to be someone strong in the presidency to get it done and I feel I have the ex- pedence in fieldwork and projects to help the sec- retariat.

The secretariat (the CUS staff in Ottawa> will

How important is an international-affairs program? This program is necessary because society is

involved in international affairs, We can’t cut it off but the program must make sense, Last yea there was a high-quality internation&affairs pro- gram but it didn’t make sense at the local campus level.

I’m happy that we’re retaining our relations in the international student movement,

be chosen from people who are Presently active with campus projects. These are the Only People capable of doing the fieldwork.

1 won’t be making the Grand Tour ofCUS CaW- uses. pve never found the Grami Tour helped to build a strong base for CUS.

DO YOU anticipate any trouble in implementing the human-rights and education resolutions?

The human-rights question must be addressed squarely, Society may come crashing down on our heads but I don? think the reaction will be so se- vere that CUS will lose members.

What are your priorities for action by the Can- adian Union of Students?

MY first priority is quality of education, mY

Education will be an area of considerable con- trOVersY. Highschools are becoming more author- itarian all the time, into cops.

The system turns teachers

second is social action and the third is international affairs. Social action includes the human rights motions passed at this year’s congress.

The Program must develop consciousness in People by linking their personal experience to public life.

. . L and now, through a simple process of cross- pollenation, Waterloo has grown another

Plum Tree Now open, the

Plum Tree Too at 18 Albert Street will carry a complete line of dresses, jewelry and boutique items. Or visit the quaint parent shoppe downstairs at 4 Erb Street East for a complete selection of dainty and . . . well . . . different gifts.

8 732 The CHEVRON

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T/beater booked sol;d for whole year .- There’s a busy season coming

up in creative arts this year. 125 programs are plannedalready, and more are being talked about. At this time last year, only 85 events were booked.

And this does not include a sex+ ies of 11 musicalevents sponsored by Conrad Grebel College ,or five programs by poet Earle Birney of the English departments.

Paul Berg, creative-arts dir- ector, was enthusiastic about the plans. “The theater will be book- ed solid this year,” he said.&‘With the success we’ve had, we’re hop- ing for a really successfulseason, The student support has been grow= ing every year?

The events include both profes- sional and student productions in

Company chooses two from U of W

Waterloo will make up a good proportion of the Canadian Unia versities Centennial Players corn= pay when it comes to campus next Friday.

Paul Frappier, familiz from several campus productions last year including Pinter’ s ( The dumb- waiter’, FASS Nite Shatis ‘You never can tell’ and St. Aethel- welds production, is on the cast.

Bill Lee, another Waterloo stud- ent, is on the technical crew.

Frappier and Lee were chosen after Canada-wide auditionsforthe company, which totals only 25. They will return to classes on campus when the company% tour ends in late October. ~

everything from medieval drama to folkmusic to psychiatry.

Next Friday, the Canadian Uni= ersities Centennial Players pre-

sent two plays: ‘Les fourberie de Scapin’ and ‘Arnoldhadtwo wives’.

October 1, the Jimmy Namaro Trio--jazz-performs at 8 in the Theater of the Arts. 44ThisSunday series is a new ide%** said Berg. crItts free, for one thing, and it covers a wide variety-jazz, op- era, chamber music, concert bands. Each concert provides a good contrast to the others.”

John Ciardi, poetry editor of Saturday Review magazine, opens the Distinguished Lecture Series on October 18 with a talk called

Hart House

pro Bach, a New York comic ensemble, romps merrily through the masters, including a bicycle siren added to the score. The group wili be on campus for a concert on October 26 - and it won’t cost you the five or six do,llars Carnegie Hall would charge.

rrWhy read?*’ This series is also new for the creative-arts board. Last year, under theboardof stud- ent activities, it flopped.

This lecture is a part of the Arts Festival, a fullweekof events October 15-21 including lectures, concerts, drama, films and afolk- music festival. The next week is the university’s tenl&anniversary celebration.

PDQ Bach, acrazy,mixed-up orchestra from New York that does fabulous things to the classics, rounds off October with a concert on the 26th.

Besides these high points, there are regular noontime series of drama (The seven agesof cheater), music, films and art (exhibitions, ktures and films). There will also be two Sunday-evening film series: the international series and the experimental series.

St. Aethelwolfls Players, a group of St. Jerome’s College stu- dents, will again present a medie- val Play, <The first shepherds Play*, in early November. Cast- ing sessions were held this week for this and the university drama company% mad, modversion of ‘As you like it*, to be presented in late November.

Rchxum.ls have also started

concert at7 enormous treat reviewed by Prudence Edwards

English 3 Anyone who was not there, missP

ed a treat when the Hart House orchestra gave a concert last Thursday in the Theater of the Arts.

The first number was Alfred Kunz’ s ‘The black, white and gold’ played in the patriotic tradition of 4Hearts of oak’.

Boyd Neel, the conductor, has a spirited: and entertaining platform manner, and his remarks about each piece were informative and amusing. The orchestra is Dr. Neel’s own instrument and reflects his very personal approach to music.

The program consisted entirely of music of the eighteenth cen- tury, made to obey Neel’s roman- tic bias.

In the first piece, the concerto

in G minor by Vivaldi, there was a lyrical* romantic feeling given to the second movement, not in keeping with the complexity and dazzle so characteristic of Vivaldi.

The tempi of‘Trauersymphonie’ by Locatelli dragged a bit, tending to tedium rather than to elegaic sorrow. But the director% ap=

preach was justified in Handel% operatic Concerto Gross0 opus 6 no. 8, especially in the beautiful solo by two‘ violins and cello.

The symphony in E flat byFil& written for the Mannheim orches- tra of virtuosi, was sheer delight.

Stradelltis Concerto Gross0 in D was predictable but charming, and the program finished with the sinister sparkle of Vivaldi% co*. certo in D minor, which exhibited the enormous and thrill@ sound of which this small string orchestra is capable.

for then university chorus, the chamber orchestra, the concert band and the stage band. A carol fantasy on December 1,2 and 3 is the first major musical event besides the noon series.

A brief listing of later events: --Profession concerts: operatic

signed MarthaSchlamme (NOV. 17), Fernando Valenti (Feb. 16), the Riverside Singers (March 15)

-Professional dram@ Mich& gm State Players in Wcin of our teeth’ and ‘Romeo and Juliet’ (Jan. 1143)

-University drama: ‘Antigone’ (Feb. 29-March 2)

-Music: mid-year concert (&IL 28), closing concert (March 10)

-Sunday music series: opera quartet (No% 12), woodwind quintet (Jan. 21), U of Toronto concert band (Feb. 18)

--Distinguished Lecture Series: gVhat to do until the psychiatrist comes” by the Bob Hope of the psychiatric world, Dr. Murray Banks, (Nov. 1), 41 Peace andpow- er puzzle” by the dean of the UN

correspondents, Alexander Gab- riel (Jan. 17), ccLSD and the he ven-or-hell drugs” by Sidney Katz of the Toronto Star (Feb. 21).

A student &&n&or from an appropriate academic course will be needed for each of these dis- tinguished lecturers, to set up a program of activities forthewhole day--including a tour of the cam- pusa dinner and press interviews.

Each lecture will be followed by a question period or a panel. “All have been asked to bepreparedfor questions from the floor, said Berg. “This will probably be the best part.”

Student tickets are exactly half price for all events where admis- sion is charged. “We’re very conscious that the grant from the student federation allows us to hold our admissions down to area- sonable amount,3a said Berg.

“Something like PDQ BachatCa- negie Hall would cost something like five or six dollars. Pve al- ways thought admissions should be an absolute minimum?

\

The creative-arts board, one of the boards of Student Council, has both students and faculty on it, Its production budget is paid by the F8deration of Students, while the university pays salaries of the directors and office staff.

Berg said he is often asked why programs are scheduled on week- ends, when many students go home. “We feel that good programs will keep students here. (There are very few weekends with no major events.) And it does-our student attendance has been building all along? The audience for the Stockholm String Quartet last year was 80 percent students, he said* and almost IOOpercentfor the Michigan State Players. “It% a relaxed time of the week-free from lectures.

48You?re between the devil and the deep blue. Other students com- plain there’s nothing to do here weekends and that% why they go home.”

An attractive brochure outlining all events is available at the tick- et office attheTheateroftheArts,

‘Theskinof our teeth’ by Thornton Wilder will be presented on campus in January by the Michigan State Players. Last year the Michigan troupe played to sellout audiences, almost I()()% students.

Ftiday, September 27, 7967 (8: 73) 733 9

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Hans Wobbe is given some help in hi: Symons and Donna Rives. Above, Science) care fuuly guard their ‘orig,’ I, school miss, nicknamed “Check?

Engineering registration ended a six day push to enroll as many as possible undergraduate students. About 7200 made the Seagram Sta- dium standoff.

Judy Roth well leads her merry band of minstrels in joyous song. They are Donna Pen telo w, Jan Meyer, Barnadine Roslyn, Linda Nantais, Clarie Moska! (Prof. Ed Moskal’s cousin), and Bonnie Al- Ian. The main section of the choir is backed by an even larg- er but unidentified band of new- comers to the campus. When not kept too busy, the FROSH was busy plotting against the MAN and even other first year students, Gino Super- Frosh played the part of a first year student inperson- ating an Archon and that of an upperclassman impersonating a Frosh. However, such crimes did not go unheeded. Gino (of St. Jerome’s) was brought to court on Tuesday night and sen tented to the supreme agony. As no one could find a rusty knife, the sen- tence was reduced to a liberal soaking with several gallons of the cheapest mix available.

The Village opened up with a twc Arts Freshette seems to have forgot horses.

134 The CHEVRON

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:h for pine cones on the Scavenger Hunt. Assisting him are Bob Do wie, Santo Giora, Chris Cooper, and Bob Severdon (all in

s’. Rla th’s contribution to the booty was a bikini-clad local high

IN The photographs for Orientation ‘67 were taken by the old and new members of The Chevron photographic staff. ln alphabet- ical order, they are Glenn Berry, John Chandler, Ken Collins, Don Dowie, Paul Fraleigh, Richard Na- ncarro w, Don Pe ttit, David Pren- tice, and Marty Ward.

’ dance last Saturday. This *eady about the woes of dead

Outdoor days saw liberal contamination of Laurel Creek with Fresh and Archons alike. Above, Jim Oatman is getting the heaveho.

Gordon Ligh foo t introduces his new pro test song, “‘Black Day in July” at the Glenbriar Curling Rink

Friday, September 27, 7967 (8: 73) 735 11

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Athletic Events this Coming Week

September 24 - 30,1967 INTERCOLLEGIATE

Friday, September 29 - Track & Field, Warriors at McMaster Saturday, S eptember 30 - Football, Warriors at Western (2 pm)

INTRAMURAL Sunday, September 24 - Soccer, Columbia Field

1 pm North vs South 2pm East vs West 3pm Con. Grebel vs Co-op 4 pm St. Jerome’s vs St. Paul’s

Monday, September 24 - Golf, Rockway Golf Course Flag Footbal I, Columbia Field

4:30 pm Arts vs Engineering 5:30 pm Grads vs Mathematics

Lacrosse, Columbia Field 4:30 pm North vs South 5:30 pm East vs West

Tuesday, September 26 - Golf, Rockway Golf Course Soccer, Columbia Field

4:30 pm Arts vs Engineering 5:30 pm Grads vs Mathematics

Wednesday, September 27 -IFlag Football, Columbia Field

4:30 pm North YS South 5:30 pm East vs West

Lacrosse, Columbia Field 4:30 pm Conrad Grebel vs Co-op 5:30 pm St. Jerome’s vs St. Paul’s

Tennis, Men’s Intramural, Waterloo Tennis Club. 4:30 pm

Thursday, September 28 - Flag Football, Columbia Field 4:30 pm Conrad Grebel vs Co-op 5:30 pm St. Jerome’s vs St. Paul’s

Lacrosse, Columbia Field 4:30 pm Arts vs Engineering 5:3Opm Grads vs Mathematics

Tennis, Women’s Intramural, Waterloo Tennis Club. I’ 4:30. pm

* * * Basketball practices - See blue posters around the campus.

Patrons stand around about six dark brew in the glasses in the

La Rode’s by Bob Verdun Chevron staff

A Chevron first: selecting the best drinking spot at Expo 67% amusement area, La Ronde.

The Brewers’ Pavilion may have been a hands-down favourite in the exhibit area, but the British

Compendium ‘67 ’ CENTENNIAL EDITION

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deep at the bar, typical for the popular Bulldog pub at Expo. The foreground is stout--definitely not for Yankees. (Chevron photo)

best pub: Bulldog Bulldog pub was a winner at the jects were set up at British weeks other end of the fair. (government trade and touristpro-

The pub is a genuine replica, motions) in the last two years in complete with dartboard, fireplace some of the world% major cities. and a large comfortable bar to The atmosphere in the Bulldog lean on. One departure from makes anyone feel at home just a common British custom was the short time after he arrives. The beer on draft. It was cold. staff is friendly and singing is

Prices in the pub were aver- age for Expo, but considering the expense of the building and the good service, the cost was quite reasonable. The products sold were those of Whitbread Brewers and the Distillers’ Company of Scotland, co-sponsors of the pro- ject. The Whitbread beer, inci- dentally, is to Canadian brew a- bout as American beer is to Can- adian.

I learned from the manager, James Salandin,~ that his company has operated pubs at other world fairs, In addition, smaller pro-

encouraged. Even the separatist- minded Montrealer in the crowd, you’ll see, is quite passive during a song such as ‘The maple leaf forever?. The crowds are equally capable of singing i Alouettti .

As the summer progressed, a problem developed. Many of the tourists were more reserved and didn’t get into the swing of the singing, To overcome this, apian- ist was brought in to provide a focus for singing.

The pianist, Graham Upcraft, is a story in himself. A classical piani& he studied for four years at the Royal Academy in London.

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12 136 The CHEVRON

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Warming for Western

Bulls better than Goodies

Doug Pilkington of the Bulls is rushed by Peter Dallas (36) as halfback Enzo Seco (22) gets ready to block. The Warriors split into two factions last Saturday for the annual in trasquad game.

‘Go Goodies got Go Bulls go!* Those were the yellsfrom the ben- ches last Saturday at the Warriors intrasquad game.

The game started very slowly but then the offenses got rolling. The Bulls, guided by rookie QB Doug Pilkington, struck first after a47- yard passing march. Walt Finden caught three important passes in- cluding the touchdown pass.

intercepted a Pilkington pass on the Bulls’ 42 and went all the way for the touchdown. The convert was unsuccessful and the score stood at Bulls 13, Goodies 12.

The fourth quarter was plagued with broken plays and as a result there was no scoring. Alast-rnin- ute Goodie rush was spoiled by blind passing and hastily carried- out plays.

The Goodies threatened immed% ately-only to be stopped on the one-yard line. But on the next exchange last year’s varsity QB, Bob McKillop, led his team on a 40-yard touchdown march.

The players did very well for having been in camp for only two weeks-especially since some of the players had only a week of practices. The team was prac- ticing five or six hours a day and this week from 5 o’clock until dusk.

On the last play of the second The Warriors’ first intercoll- quarter rookie Ian Woods of the egiate game is tomorrow against Bulls returned the kickoff 92 yards the Western Mustangs in London for a touchdown. The halftime at the Little Memorial Stadium. score was Bulls 13, Goodies 6. This exhibition game should prove

In the third quarter Hugh Heibein a good test for the Warriors.

Something for all in ‘67 intramurak

Another innovation of the intra- mural department this year starts tomorrow: Saturday - morning tournaments.

The activities, though still of a sporting nature, are somewhat removed from customary athletic activities.

The first tournament takes place tomorrow on the practice field at the end of the parking lot at Sea- gram Stadium. \

The tournament will be a nine-

ing golf at other times are re minded of the arrangements made by the intramural department with two local golf courses. Students may play golf at reduced rates at Grand River Golf and Country Club in Bridgeport and the Merry- Hill Golf Course just past Breslau off highway 7.

iron contest. Golfers will warm up and then hit fivenine-iron shots at a golf flag approximately 100 yards away. The total distance of the three closest shots will be the competitor’s score.

At the Grand River, students may play for $1.50 if they tee off before Monday to Friday. At Merry-Hill the fee is $1 and tee- off time must be before 11 Mon- day to Friday. at both golf cour- ses students must show identifi- cation cards to obtain special rates.

U plans can be finalized the three top scorers will hold their final round at halftime of the War- rior-Laurentian football game in Seagram Stadium. Nine-irons and golf balls will be supplied by the int ramurai department. TN s nine- iron tournament is open to both men and women students.

BASKETBALL Basketball workouts start next

week. A schedule of practices was drawn up earlier in the year, but some revisions will be neces- sary because Waterloo Collegiate

has cancelled some dates and times in its gym,

Sunday the intramural soccer league starts. Four soccergames will be played on Sunday after- noons and two on Tuesdays after classes. AH soccer games will be played on Columbia Field, situ- ated across from the Village on the north side of Columbia Street. GOLF subhead

The intramural department is negotiating once again with the highschools. Watch for announce- ments on bulletin boards around campus on blue paper headed bas- ketball. All practices ,scheduled for Seagram gym will go as plan- ned.

TENNIS The men’s and women’s intra-

mural programs swing into action next week with a full schedule of

, events. On Monday and Tuesday the in-

tramural golf tournament will be held at Rockway Golf Course, just off King Street East in Kitchener,

Golfers wishing to participate simply report to the golf course and pay their green fees in the normal manner. Golf clubs may be rented at the course. A starting time will be assigned. This start- ing time will be as close asposs- ible to sign-up time.

Arrangements have been made to refund half of the green fee when the golfers return their scorecards to the pro shop.

~~.I-IQUS tennis buffs also move into action next week with the men’s intramural Tournament on Wednesday at 4:30. Women’s will go Thursday at 3.

Entries will be accepted up to the sht of the events. Both tournaments will be held at the Waterloo Tennis Club in Water- 100 Park, adjoining Seagram ~t,a,, dium.

Warriors will reap

Golfers may play on both days if they desire. The top male scorers at the end of play onTue+ day will take part in further play- offs to determine Waterloo’ s in- tercollegiate golf team.

All students interested in play-

When the Warriors meet the Western Mustangs this weekend, the %tangs will be out to avenge a loss to Waterlootheran last Sat- urday. The Mustangs outrushed Lutheran 226 yards to 169, out- passed the Golden Hawks 102 yards to 39, and had 22 first downs to Lutheran% 13. Yet Western came out on the short end of the 30-21 score.

The Warriors are anxious to

[f this is what the Western Mustangs do. to themselves in practice, what will their team be like after the Warriors meet them tomorrow? The game starts at 2 in London.

Alberta attempts non-activist union LONDON (CUP)--In an attempt

to thwart the activist efforts of the Canadian Union of Students, the University of Alberta is trying to found a breakaway, right-wing, non-activist union.

The U of A withdrew from CUS after the congress last year in Halifax, opposing the move toward student involvement in society at the national and international level.

CUS told U of A that one obser- ver would be tolerated at the Lon- don congress this year but five delegates came to spend the week,

Western’s revenge make a strong showing against the OQAA team. This is one of the teams Waterloo will have to play next year when they go up to the big league.

The Warriors also will be out for a revenge this weekend: -A strong victory over Western could be a sign of a victory this year in the Homecoming game against Lutheran.

lobbying for non-involvement in a@Mng but affairs immediately and directly concerned with stud- ents.

Al Anderson, president of U of A, said: “CUS should limit itself to areas of direct student concern. We are against the concept of the student as a citizen.”

Anderson said he found this year’s congress no better than last year’s,

“Although we might recommend full membership sometime in the future, w@re certainly not thinking of applying this year,” he said.

Realizing the value of collective bargaining and sensing a certain amount of dissent within CUS, the U of A observers used their time to approach several delegates to urge a new association of stud- ents.

Anderson said the dissent is has- ically the ideological activist ver- sus the non-activist.

Rod McKenzie of the University of Calgary, one of the councils partially in sympathy with the U of A, said CUS should be a ser-

vice and education organization. &‘To use an example, we should

act on improving Indian education but not on improving Indian hous- ing,” he said.

Despite interest from four un- iversities, A.csldia, Calgary, St. Patrick% College and St. Mary%, the proposed union did not get off the ground.

A meeting called for all those who had been approached over the week was not held as the right-wing supporters lost in a battle with the CBC to gain student attention.

So they adjourned to the televi- sion cameras in an effort to get their ideas aired outside the con- gress. Attempts to present their ideas were booed down by other delegates taking partinthe discus- sion.

Greg Warner, vi&president of Acadia, said, “The University of Alberta really has no clear concep- tion of what their new union would be like,” and interest has waned.

“St. Mary’s does not intend to withdraw from CUS,“’ said Mike O’Sullivan.

Friday, September 21, 1967 (8: 13) 137

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Lightfoot-- the person I

by Patricia McKee Chevron staff

this, He is a very cautious per- enjoyed recording? He seemed

ent&tainment field yet is in no hurry to ‘do so.

son. determined to net aheadinthe &Early morning rain’. At present he likes to do ‘l!tiuad triology’ and*‘Last time’ both of which were

quite definite in his choice of

included in his concert here.

44The world’s in a hell of a skde.~’ Gordon Lightfoot, writer and singer expressed his views on todays world and youth at an int- erview Sunday night.

After completing a highly suc- cessful concert, Lightfoot talked for a half hour with reporters at the Glenbriar curling rink. t4The hippies in Canada are wrong”, he said.” They have no reason for what they do”. In the U.S., how- ever, they have a legitimate axe to grind because of the state of their country, he added.

He feels the universities in the country are constantly improving and that this will have a wide- spread effect. In his opinion,there should be more opportunities for today’s youth to have an education.

As far as his own philosophy on life goes, Lighffoot said only, “1 believe in writing honestly and putting something down that means something.”

Lightfoot% appearance on stage is deceiving. At Sunday% concert, he wore striped pants and apolka- dot shirt, which might class him with many of the teenage groups today. But Lighffoot is not like

He wants to make his way main- ly as a concert artist and so has turned down many engagements. He ha s few single releases for he is not chiefly concerned with the top 40.

At present, Lightfoot’s popu- larity is revealed by the record sales for his latest LP ‘The way I feel#. In Canada sales are over 50,000 and in the U.S. 100,000.

There is another album planned for release within the next few months which will include more new songs written by Lightfoot himself.

Next spring Lightfoot will be buring the west coast in the U.S. on the Berkeley Folk Festival. He prefers, however, to perform in Canada where there is room to spread out. His next step will be to expand into the U.S. and then to Europe.

In Canada, his tours will take him out west where his October concert in Edmonton is already a sellout. A television appearance on ‘Show of the week9 is also plan- nedbyCBC.

Which song has Lightfoot most

of the new songs introduced, Gord seems to have a future hit in &Black day in July% He refuses to class this as a protest song. It is, he says, a (( sodial commentary*‘.

While hi s philosophy and views are worth listening to, Lightfoot% main attraction is his singing. He is so popular that he has been re- sponsible twice within this year for stopping traffic.

When he was petiormfng in the Centennial Park in Hamilton to an audience of 35,000, the traffic on the Queen Elizabeth Way was tied up for two hours.

Sunday’s show was another traf- fic-stopper. Over 2,000 U of W stu&ents marched from Waterloo Park to the Glenbriar curling rink to hear Lightfoot perform. Need- less to say they stopped traffic on University Avenue.

The show was, in fact* a complete sellout with 3,000 peoplefilling the hall to hear one of the best con- certs ever held here attheuniver- sity.

“Yes you can mm contmue vour educatior?

This booklet shows you how you can get financial help.

Do you plan to attend a university or other post-secondary institution? Do you need financial assistance?

To learn whether you can qualify under the Ontario Student Awards program, obtain this brochure from your secondary school, or from the institution of your choice or write to:

I I Student Awards ( ~$!$$I# Department of

&@$a University Affairs, ,,DCL,, -*I- oNTAR~o 481 University Avenue

Toronto 2

Lightfoot: i ‘The world is in a hell of a state.”

(photo by Robin King)

KITCHENER-WATERLOO

COMMUNITY CONCERT ASSOCIATION

Opportunity to hear artists of international renown limited number of season membership (four concerts) are available to students ($5) and new university staff members ($10)

November 1 Leopold sinsimoneau, tenor January 8 American string quartet

, February 15 Witold Malcuzynski, pianist March 5 Vienna acadamy chorus

CONTACT - MRS. M.J. SMITH,

153 JOHN BLVD, WATERLOO, 745-8704

CREDIT JEWELl+ERS

Drama tic New Designs for the Young at Heart

Model TRIO8200 $200.00 from the Diamond Treasure collection

created by

COLUMBIA See this and other

glorious diamond treasures priced from $100 to $5,000.

Walters ~ Credit Jewellers

phone 744-4444 / 151 King St. W., Kitchener

Visit us for your free brochure “How to Select your Diamond”

L

WALTERS CREDIT JEWELLERS

presents Drama tic New Designs for the Young at Heart

Model TR107150 $150.00 from % Diamond Treasure collection

created by

COLUMBIA See this and other

glorious diamond treasures priced from $100 to $5,000.

Walters Credit Jewellers

Phone 744-4444 151 King St. W., Kitchener Visit us for your fret: mochure

1 “How to Se/&t your Diamond”

14 738 The CHEVRON

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2 e

2 FORMALS - ROAD RUNNER FESTIVAL ’ r ; d ii

PSYCHEDELIC DANCE - COFFEE HOUSE E IO n

POZO SEC0 SINGERS - BARN DANCE - P.D.Q. BACH

JOIN THE.COMMITTEE SUNDAY 2pm P145

P.S. THIS-IS HALF THE HOMECOMING COMMITTEE

Friday, September 27, 7967 (8: 73) 739 15

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. . . For a Cab at Your Door . . .

CALGH 5 - 4763

WATERLOO TAXI

21 Radio Dispatched Cars

ElGHT ERB STREET EAST

WATERLOO

OUT-OF-TOWN TRIPS A SPECIALTY

* Want Honor and Recognition?

>)( Need Friends?

* Want to Influence People? BECOME A BULLETIN BOARD POLICEMAN ! ! ! !

Wide personal publicity promised - Remuneration directly proportionate to skill and industry.

Interested and Interesting people can present them- selves to Annex l-Federation of students.

ARRESTING DRESS Such, we have in plenty. The dress shirts shown are of an arresting nature, thanks to their unusual patternings. Stripes, open-faced checks, and the like. And the cloth is worth consideration, for its cotton fine-ness. Arrest yourself, and buy several.

Ail the books didn’t make it to the bookstore shelves. Some of them are stacked almost to the rafters waiting to find their place in the sun. They511 find it the beginning of next month.

They said it couldn’t be done Over 7,000 st~dentswfflbe going proved them wrong.” the bookstore proper on the main

through the university bookstore The shelves were moved over floor. in the next few weeks, buying their Tuesday and Wednesday by Baird The permanent location is ex- textbooks and supplies fortheyeaz ahead.

Movers, assisted by the univer- petted to be ready for occupancy sity$ s receiving skff+dWednes-

The fact that the b&&ore was day afternoon the first of the loo,- by the end of September, and the

’ open to handle this annual rush was

bodmtore in full operation early in 000,volumes and tons of supplies O&ber. started to roll. * a result of the superhuman efforts

‘of the book&ore staff. But ready it was and it opexM last Wednes- day at 9 to serve the first science students who registered that day.

The new bookstore location has 8,000 sqme feet of space on the main floor plus 4,000 square feet of storage on the lower level (the store’s present location). In the engineering building, only 5,000 square feet was available for dis- play a@ storage.

Only a week before, the entire bookstore, stock, shelving et q was still located in the engineering building. Dismantling began on

As the ma&rial arrived, the bookstore staff, 20 strong, began to price the goods and fill the shelves, ready for opening thenext week. They worked until 9 every night and four hours a day on Sat- urday and Sunday to get the job completed in time.

Tuesday morning, August 29, and Because of a delay in receiving With the additional space, the the move was on. new ~~~~, he ~~~~ m to bookstore expects to offer improv-

“1 still find it hard to believe be set up in the basement storage ed service and the six checkouts that we’ve made it,” was the senti- area. This of course means that @our Permanent and two tempo+ merit of Mrs. Elsie Fishcer$ok- when the shelving arrives and is ad Will gre&lY reduce the wait- store manager. 1( Everyone said it set up, another move will be nec- ing time involved in making apur- couldn’t be done, but the staff essary to move the stock up to chase in the store.

Address your Zetter to Feedback, the Chevron

f e e d b a c k

Be concise. TheChevron reserves the right to

‘tii ~~~~~~~~e course year telephone. For legal reasons, uniigned litters c&not be publish-

They’ve taken the creek I oft used to walk on

To the editor= I must prc&est the brutal and

cavalier WayinwhichLaurelCreek has been diverted by the vicious henchmen of the department of physicdl-ptit and planning.

Wecanonlyweapattheirre- parable damage done to one of this campus% most beautiful and - dearing landmarks.

The students of this campus should unite to ensure that further depradations of this kind are not forthcoming from that band ofpi- ates and thieves on the third floor of the library.

May the curse of a thousand camel ticks descend upon them.

M. U. HAMMOND

It’q Greek to me: Saxe can’t spell To the editoR

The word ‘carchon on the orien- tation supervisors’ armbands is

grossly misspelled. This word is supposed to be WribIl with w (omega3 instead of 0 (omicron).

Apparently it is not all Greek to everybody1

One does not need much-Greek grammar (or any other gramrr&) to realize that the nominative form of the noun, not the vocative, must be used when naming something or somebody. Thenominativeform is written correctly as kAPXWV.

will be printed if you have good

political ambitions are making use of the virtually unlimited personal publicity avail&le to those in- volved in these events-even if it means playing down the role of the committee and necessitates political back-biting.

MARti MCGINNIS electrical (7 1

MINAS VASSILIADIS grad physics

Don’t worry about losing your vote in the October 17 provincial

Vote on October 77

election. To the editor=

I feel that Stew Saxe should be complimented on Orientation.

He has not only done an excellent job of carrying out the Orientation under the master plan laboriously developed by last year’s commit- tee but the minor changes he has made have generally beenim- provements.

It is also refreshing to see that people on this campus, like Saxe, who have f-reaching personal

You can vote in your home el- ectoral district, or- else apply to the county judge or revising of- ficer in Kitchener-Waterloo to have your name put on the list of the polling subdivision in which you are living.

In September 1965, Wat+oo students staged a torchlight parade to protest that their votes for the federal election had been lost, again because the electionhad been called after they had left home,

16 140 The CHEVRON

Page 17: n13_Chevron

Fresh queen candidcites If the frosh queens are any in-

dication, this year’s crop cffresh- ettes is the cutest ever. Ian Cal- vert and his committee had quite a time narrowing the candidates down to eight. Their problems will be increased tomorrow as the judges choose the ‘67 frosh queen.

Just in case you haven’t .met them, the Chevron introduces you to the girls of Orientation 67.

ROSEMARY KOCHLER Rosemary who is from St.

Mary’s in Kitchener is in Arts and hopes to major in French or English. She hopes to be an ele- men&y school teacher and has found all the students and theuni- versity itself a lot of fun.

CARLA SMALL Carla, a former GuelphCollegi-

ate student is enrolled in Co-op Math (Stream A). This eighteerti year old is staying at the Village and so far has nothing to complain about university life. She hopes to be a computer programme when she graduates.

CYNTHIA HOWLEY Cynthia is enrolled in P.E and

is staying at the Village. She is from Ingelside which is near Cornwall and attended Osnalruck District High School. She likes the village very much and thinks that Orientation was very well or- ganized.

JO-ANN FIRBY Jo-Ann, a long-haired blonde

from Owen Sound is enrolled in Co-op Physical Education. She is staying at the Co-op and finding it very different. She enjoys sketch- ing and all sports and eventually wants to teach high school Phys- Ed.

ANGELA HAUCK AJxNa, an eighteen-year old

arts student hopes to major in French. She attended St. Mary’s in Kitchener last year and is liv- ing, ’ ak home while she attends classes. She has found initiation very enjoyable and hopes to get some fun out of university.

DONELLA COGDON Donny a seventeen-year old

brunette has come to Waterloo from Halifax where she attended Queen Elizabeth Secondary School. She is staying at the Co-op and enjoys both her residence and campus life. She has her future planned in the computer science field.

LORRAINE MAURXE Lorraine who is from PortCre-

dit and is now staying at Notre Dame is enrolled in Arts. She in- tends to major in geography and English and do research work for a magazine. This dark-haired nineteen-year old whose favorite pastime is sailing has found every- one very friendly on campus.

MARIANNE KIRK Marianne, a blond&aired beauty

from Northview Collegiate inTor- onto is in the co-op physical edu- cation program. This 19 year old candidate is living in Waterlooand came here on the advice of afriend. She hopes university will teach her to disciple herself and after she receives her degree Marianne in- tends to teach physical education.

BRIAN

Friday, September 21, 7967 (8: 73) 747 17

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-CAMPUS QUESTIONS-By Richard Nancarrow

What did you think of registration?~

Rick Panchen science 1 I thought that reg- istration was well run. The only fault that I noticed was that people were standing a- round the exit, making it difficult to get out.

Marge Snyder English I

By the time one interprets the computer results for timetabling you’re a nervous wreck and ready to quit*

Doug Boettger physical education 2A

-There were too many missing forms in the doc- kets. This caused great inconveni- ences, Otherwise it was OK.

Connie Thomas anthropology 2

So many students change their courses. It just adds up to COI&+ . sion and chaos. Registration line ups are just likd Expo’s.

long delays in the form- completion

Rosalie Adams math 7

Registration was l rather confusing

for frosh, especi- ally at the end with the various clubs asking for money. Pm afraid I might, have been rooked.

Lynne McNeice math 3 -_ Disorganized hol- ocaust. Frosh and upperclassmen upperclassmen should definitely come at different times. Mix-ups resulted in a half hour stretching into four.

Fred Baechler earth sciences 2

The lines moved more efficiently than last year. The gym was bet- ter planned this year to handle the students.

Sandy Baird clues us in on ScWsagetown It appears that Sandy Baird, has no real attitude to collegians. be. But the biggest consistent sell- smoke, and LSD is short for Letss natives keep the Sabbath-and ev-

columnist for the K-W Record, As a matter of fact, our Ganter Poll er is still Batman Comics. Save Our Dimes. erything else they can get their

has changedhis attitude toward (it’s much the same as the Gallup Entertainment: The average Religious attitudes: This is a hands on. students. Last year he was Poll but not in such a hurry) re- Twin Citizen’s conception of a deeply religious community. The * often accused of being anti- veals that only 62 per cent of the really high old time and a night on student, but this year Sandy citizenry are vageuly aware of the town is riding the elevator to started the school year off on those clusters of buildings up by the top of the Waterloo Trust build- another note with a column of Buck’s Hill. And 77 percent of that ing and nibbling asummer sausage guidelines for frosh. 62 percent think that it% a new sandwich in the alley afterwards.

by Sandy Baird industrial park. And, if he’s feeling especially

K-W Record city editor Of the 9.2 percent who know for giddy, he may go down to the Wal-

a fact that there’s at least one uni- per and give the revolving door a This week the Twin City’s TWO versiQ up there, 32 percent are whirl.

(count’ em, two) universities are convinced that there just has to be For the university student and enrolling nearly 10,000 students something slightly subversive a- the occasional tourist, there really and you can hock the family jew- bout gals and guys whdd rather isn’t a heck of a lot to & a couple els and bet that at least a couple read books and listen to lectures of rock spots (bring your own ear- of thousand of ‘em havenever lived t.h an build tires and brew beer. plugs), the movies and Woodside in this peerless community before. And a hard-core 33 percent are Park, the former home of William

It’ll be quite a wrench to getad- sure that the books and lectures Lyon Mackenzie King. justed, and even if their initiations can’t include apigtail supper

are just a blind for all the beer swilling, sign stealing and bistro 96

(that’s banned as Cruel3 YOU bow), battling that--or ~0 they say- SEMANTIC& For the first few there are a lot of other local foi- comprise the real activities of the weeks at least the average fresh- bles they should be clued in on. collegians. man may figure he needs aninter-

So as yet another handydandy public service, this pillar herewith *

preter, but once he gets used to the quaint amalgam of Pennsylvan=

presents its first annual Fresh- man’s Guide to Dutchmanville, or

COMMUNITY culture: Don ia-Dutch, Roaring’20s Shag and Messer and his Spud Island Sym- fractured subjunctives, he’ll feel

You May Have a New Beanie, Bennie, But It% All Old Hat to Us:

phony are big, big, big, but Hank right at home- But a word of warning to avoid

I)c Snow has a healthy following, too. On the literary front, Valley of the any linguistic hangups: in the Twin

COMMUNITY attitude to colle- Dolls (paperback, natch) is every- Cities, pot is something you put a

gias: The average Twin Citizen one’s idea of what a book should flower is Seker is s0methi% you “l-*.crjl , , , , Y’ ‘” ., ^ ‘_ ;. . . 1’ s . /. ’ ” , ” ‘.,.,“,, - - ;, ‘. , /.,&X . 35 afficeki khaPs OIL for every

” .,I..’ : ^ ,* ‘: , , .’ :.:. &Ought,

^, ~ . 1 ,-a--- by Ed Penner

their well-run little parking-fee 1 wm s~kply ta4ce out a And another student, soundly new student loan to pay off ‘this beaten, slithered from the office

student emeritus venture. 1200 citizens. That* s something

to think about. debt. So he went to see the Set- of the registrar% Secretary. There is an important matter

Well, let us look at it this way.

which I should have dealt with last We now have 15 kampu~ kops 0 retary. From this terrifying anecdote

week, but I forgot, due to the events whose main duty seems to be co& And not only kampus kops, but trMa.y; I have a student loan and some of my resulting investi-

ecting parking fees and handing also the registrar’s office. form?)’ said he. gakions, I have uncovered some of orientation. out tickets to defray the cost of There is a Secretary there in Tb.ve YOU written proof that &dung facts.

This is the matter of Parking parking lots. These jolly men in the outer office (we have all run you passed last year? said she. - The first being that there is no regulations. There are INO ways blue (soon green> collect pay- into her) who is indubitably the “No, they will not mail it to me registrar’s office1 That door dir- to beat them as I see it. The first checks of close to $9O,OOO-and cleverest, meanest and most de- until I pay off my $200 debt)’ said ectly behind the registrar% sec- is just to forget about them; sim- thatps a lot of parking fees, V~OUS woman I have ever run into. hea retary, supposedly leading to inner ply do not register your cam- with ,“;, >; I ,. :. ,+ :.“,‘:v?,.~ .:: ’ ,I” ,w,.Y :;~ I_ .’ , ’ , J-:;. :., ’ .; , ̂ *; ,~ . r , .p;> :- >: “Then 1 Cannot give YOU a loan offices, is not a door at all-it is the kampus kops. This way they until you can show mo written merely painted on a cement-block will assume you are a visitor be- \ /

cause you do not have a parking 1 id,, ’ ! sticker. If they give you a ticket .I* throw it away, as they cannot

Ti! fob

proof,” said she. wall. ‘&But I need the loan to pay off It is all so simple, I don’t

my debt. What will I do,” said he. know why I didn’t think of it be- . trWhy don’t you see the promo- w- tion-committee secretary and try

fore-no registrar, no assistants, . trace you anyway. no bOOkkeepersb no nothing-noth-

The second way to beat the bob -* : ’ 4 b - PEAJAE~ to talk her into releasing your ing but a fiendish Secretary who

. bies is to pay your parking fees, admissions dip so you can get a quickly dispatches students and but give the administration the /, ,p:; . ,. ,,*;;‘, ^ ’ ( ” ̂ ‘. L,. 7. .- 1,:. “,’ . I’ c ’ “i* - c . ;, ;a ,.;,,, . .‘:-

-L-..r-, .<i , :i ~.~~.;-~:-~.~,~‘,~~.~” ., .~,r <;+h,, ,;s.. ;<: ;,‘ ~ *‘ ,;” 1 ,A ‘.y \L~“‘ ,,*:,.‘,:. .,.>i‘,.;. 2 , P\( ,” , 1 ’ “:. loan? &id she. places a.U their official records ” . j _ wrong information-such as in-

., .j. . $ :“, ,-,‘,

Soon there will be eight more She has been there as long as c‘G~~sss said he. 84Where can in the side drawer of her desk,

correct make, model and licence number. Then, when you get a karnpus kops at another $48,000 I can remember and the following

I find her?* which leads directly to the fur-n-

to give out more parking tickets. incident will illustrate why. In “Right here,” said she. ‘#What aces of the central services mild-

ticket for parking in the faculty lot when you should be out in the From here it looks like the Purpose her malicious hands, even the most

can I do for you, young man?’ ing. (That’s the one with the ((1, uh, want my admissions slip smokestack, boobie). And with all

boondocks, you can once again of parking fees will be to defray hardened student turns into amass the cost of more hmPus kws. of trembling, palpitating putty.

so I can get a loan to pay the $200 the money saved in salaries and throw it away as they still can’t I owe,” said he. heating costs, they pay the kampus trace you. This year we will have a total In the middle of August pa& a “You cannot have them until kops to give out tickets,

Now the administration will of 23 officers on campus. That’s friend of mine found he still owed you pay US be $200," ad she, If YOU think Pm making this upa wonder as they read this why am one for every 313 students. The $200 in fees from the previous “But . . . but...l&I’* said he . jU& YOU try to see the registrar. 1 going out of my way to spoil whole city of Waterloo has only year's tuition. Noproblem here,he “Ho1 Ho! Ho1 said she. There is no one there...,

, ’ ” , , . . . T ,. ’

18 742 The CHEVRON

Page 19: n13_Chevron

The unlawful document

Tablets from on high!

by C.D. Martin

The Village has discovered that it has a new constitution.

I have never before seen such a disheartening work.

This document ranks alongside such historical abortions as the Articles of Confederation of the United States and the Dual Monar- chy of Hunga.ry.

Financing of the quadrant council is done every term by negotiations with the warden, AL system which would lead to continual doubt and fear.

This const\tution must be op- posed by all members of the Fed- eration of Students. We must not permit a quarter of the student body to be enslaved by this edict.

l The position of the authorsof the new regime, Warden Ron Eydt and the tutors, is laid in the con- stitution itself and in two memor- andums dated September 11 and 15.

The proportional financing of Village council might hurt a coun- cil heavily hit by damages and would not permit the quadrant councils to opt out of any Village council programs.

The section on jurisdictional disputes shows that the adminis- tration expects the various coun- cils to be in continual conflict.

The warden has absolute cant rol of constitutional amendments. There is even no procedure for re- f erendums.

The constitution itself must have been written by a skilled political scientist for it effectively &min- ates the possibility of a strong student political force in the Village.

l The memorandum of Sep- tember 11 makes quite clear that the quadrant councils have to act as a bill-collection agency without questions asked about the justice of the bills.

Elections are held in a period of mass confusion. Sixteen residents who hardly know each other are called upon to send one of their number to the quadrant council, where another 18 or Mtotal sts.%n- gers must elect an executive and appoint delegates to aVillage coun- cil.

The memorandum of September 15 muddies the issue by unsuc- cessfully casting about for excus- es for throwing out the constitu- tion.

Such a system of elections is probably one of the best possible ways of ensuring the election of incompetents.

. The Villagers mustfightback by using such means as petitions.

A boycott of floor elections would be useful-as would mass resig- nations by all elected floor repre- sentatives.

All former Village council mem- bers should form an ad-hoc or in- terim council.

The quadrant councils are sup- If these measures fail+ perhaps posed to be the basic units of the stronger ones will be necessary. Village government* yet they do The only possible solution is the not even have the power to remove return to constitutional rule.

b their representatives on the Vill- age council.

Another method used to disable smooth functioning of student gov- ernment is the appointment of the Village president as council chair- man-a role for which the presi- dent is not suited. This was amply demonstrated during the presi. dency of George Abwunza in 196% 66.

l one no longer need worry * bout the advisability of joining SUPA.

The Goderich meeting led to the findl split between the hard line political ideologists and the ~J-ZL* &&t-populist elements. Disband- ing is in progress.

The constitution gives the five councils the responsibility of serv- ing as bill collector of fines and damages for the Village admin- istration, while not giving the councillorj the right to make laws.

l The full story r-nay never be told but the Waterloo contingent that backed Pete Warrian’s elec- tion to the CUS presidency was one of the slickest organizations ever seen in Canadian student politics.

The financial system isdesigned to give the administration a strangle-hold on the Villagers.

l This column ended last week With the words “ten phony ar& cles? The rest of the body of type was a printer’s error.)

Well intentioned men often do more harm than those who seek to act maliciously.

Such is the case of the new Village constitution. The warden and the four tutors have sought to aid Village life and government by providing a new, and as they see it, better consti- tution.

By these action, the basis of con- stitutidnal government at the Village has been eroded. The principle of self-government has been denied.

The old constitution, which was drawn up by the first Village council, approved by Dr. Eydt’s predecessor, and ratified by a referendum is the only legal basis of student government at the Village.

This same constitution has been found, in the eyes of the Village ad- ministration, to be outmoded, and it has arbitrarily been discarded.

Such a move is tyrannical and un- acceptable.

By this move, Warden Eydt has de- nied the continuity of student govern- ment.

The only proper way of achieving a new constitution for the Village was to form a council under the old co&titution and have the council and villagers approve the document.

This has not been done, but it is not too late to do so.

Warden Eydt should bring the coun- cil into existance under the old con- stitution and deal with them honestly and openly.

Only by this action will he avoid the stigma of being branded a tyrant because he introduced a constitution to help the Village at the price of el- itiinating the principle constitutional government.

A change for quality Quality, not control, is the key

issue in the great debate on athletics. Students have a right to expect value for the $22 fee they pay every year.

The Student Council members who are interested in athletics claim that students have not received value for their money, especially in the field of intramural athletics.

Students may receive value this year, but there is little way of telling if they do, for it is almost impossible to separate the intramural costs of the athletic department from intercolleg- iate expenditures.

Worst, it is difficult to tell who is who in athletics, for the members of the athletic department also wear hats in the, department of physical and health Education.

The solution to this whole mess is clearly the one suggested by the pro-

vost for student affairs, Prof. William Scott.

Provost Scott said the university administration is considering dividing athletics and the phys-ed department Athletics would be placed under his office while the phys-ed school would come under the academic vice-pres- ident.

Such a step would provide the clear separation that is required if stu- dents are to see if they are getting what they pay for.

This program should be implemen- ted immediately. But it will not, because Dan Pugliese, head of the school of phys-ed has managed to de-

lay the move by calling for a committee to consider the whole matter again.

Pugliese ought to know better than to try to hold back an idea whose hour has come.

A few words of praise Last year, we ran an editorial en-

titled “Best orientation over”. ’ We could say exactly the same

tning this year with the added com- ment that there are better things to come.

In saying that there is better to cone, we do not wish to fault this year’s orientation. This year saw a transition from an old to a new form of orientation.

The change from a ridiculous form of initidion for a thoughtful program to make the freshman actively aware

of his role in the university com- munity did not come easily, nor was it total. But it did come.

Future orientation committees have guidelines which will serve them well.

Only praise can be given to Orienta- tion 67, which tried to lead the fresh- man into the true community of the essential, university.

Only condemnation is reserved for those few sophomores who saw the unity of “fresh power” as an excuse to act visciously towards freshmen.

The Chevrw is published Fridays by the board of publications of the Federation of Students,, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada. Opinions are independent of the university, Student Council and the board of publications. Member of Canadian University Press.

editor-in-chief: Jim Nagel new editor: Brian Clark in tercampus: Frank Goldspink assistant news: pat McKee

constants editor: Dale Martin photo editor: Glenn Berry sports editor: Peter Webster composed by Elmira Signet

features; Mary Bull 9,000 copies

Publications chairman: John Shiry. Advertising mgr; Ross Helling. Offices in Federation bldg. 744-6111 local 2497 (news), 2812 (advertising). 2471 (editor). Night 744-0111. Telex 0295-759. Toronto: Donna McKie, 782-5959, Niagara Falls: Ron Craig. Marathon (?): John Helliwell. B’rid- &ePort: H. G. Goldbrick.

Friday, September 2 7, 7967 (8: 73) 743 19

Page 20: n13_Chevron

P P and Pgot fomorrowJs slave day off to a flying advance start by getting Pat Smith of Kitchene to work on cleaning upour messy sidewalks. Circle K is hoping to make $6,000 for charities.

PICK UP YOUR INSURANCE CARD

Any students who registered late should be sure they have aninsur- awe card. If not, pick it up from the insearance clerk in the Feder- ation building as soon as possible. Student health insurance has been paid in your regi’stration fees, and you must have the card as proof of coverage.

STUDENTS’ COUNCIL

ot

The Federation of Student’s

Application for the poiition of

CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD OF STUDENT ACTIVITIES

, will be received until 5 pm Friday, September 29 in the office of the president in the Federation building.

RATES FOR CHEVRON WANTADS: -2

_ first 15 words 50 cents each addi- tional word5 cents. Ads for articl- es found are free.

LOST Andrew, an eligible Australian milliontire. If found, contact Blair, co-op math.

HELP WANTED Babysitter wanted, one child, Fri- day mornings. Call 742-4356any- time. The Infinite Noodle needs you a you are interested in part-time waitress work. Phone 744-2911.

FOR SALE

At tention Club Presidents

1957 PSA 500 single, good condi- tion. Phone 742-7760. 1967 Suzuki motorcycle, 150~~. Rest offer. 576-8666. 15

HOUSING

Please submit your address and a list of this year’s executive to

House for rent in Stanley Park: 5 bedrooms, 2 baths, dining room, large recreation area, landscaped. Ideal for professor and family. Art Pink, local 2464 or 576-1974. 15

Club- and Qrganizations Committee

care of Miss Susan Peters in the Federation office.

Thh week on campus To have an event publicized in

this column, come into the Chev- ron office in the Federation build- ing and fill out one of the forms provided.

tion. 8 pm. in arts lecture build- ing* TU ESDAY

Intramural golf tournarn ent ends ak Rockway golf course.

MP Heward Grafftey speaks in AT246 at 3 to the first meeting of the Young PCs. This meeting will be repeated againat7:30inAT 216.

WEDNESDAY Men’s intramural tennis tour-

nament begins at 430. Dr. Earle Birney gives his first

lecture and reading, “Canadian poetry of the sixties: Poets over 35’$, at 4:15 in-the Th’eater of the Arts. -

Deadline: Tuesday 6 pm.

TONIGHT Ian & Sylvia concert at Kitch-

ener Memorial Auditorium, at 8 Pm. TOMORROW

SLAVE DAY--Compulsory for aJ.l freshmen: Meet at Seagram stadium at 7:30 am and bring a lunch.

Waterloo Warriors play the Ux& -versity of Western Ontario Mus- tangs a$ London,

Frosh hop at Glenbriar Curling R&k at 8. official end of Orient ation 67.

Campus Sound radio program at ll:l5 pm onCKKW 1320, andCFCA FM 105.3. . SUNDAY

A love-in a& Waterloo park a.t 1. Spectators are asked to avoid trampling the participants.

Soccer play begins intramuralr ly on the Columbia field opposite the Village. MONDAY

Graduate registration all day. Intramural nolf tournament be-

gins at Rockway golf course. Lacrosse league play begins at

4:30 pm. New members meeting ofCircle

K men’s service club at AT349, at 6:15 pm.

Organizational workshop at the Theater of the Arts, 6:30.

General meeting of the Mathe matics Society to ratify constitu-

Comitate Club meeting, 4 pm at 101 East 2 in the Village. All welcome.

The House of Debates will have a debate and organizational meet- ing in AL105 at 7.

Coffeehouse-every Wednesday at 7:30 in Harnmarskjold resi- dence, 139 University Avenue. Se veral professors will be available to shoot the shit.

A general meeting of the Inter- national Students Association will beheld in AL113 at 8.

THURSDAY Don MacPherson, Progressive

Conservative candidate for Wat- erloo North will receive the public at 8 pm at 413 Hazel, apt. 12,

Women’s intramural tennis tournament begins at 3.

American poet Lucien Strykwill read and discuss his poetry in

A car smash-in will be held in the St. Jerome’s parking lot a.t 6:30.

AL116 at 4:lO. The event is spon-

Two blows for a quarter with a sledgehammer

sored by the English department,

- Lecture on early Canadian art

in AT244 at 8 pm.

FRIDAY

Monday - Thursday

Impromptu “Coffee and spagheff; ho use ’

entertainment,

504 minimum 32 King St. S.&d Floor) Waterloo 744-2911

entertainment $1 minimum

20 144 The CHEVRON