1964-65 v5,n19 coryphaeus

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  • 8/14/2019 1964-65 v5,n19 Coryphaeus

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    VOIJJME 5, NUMBER 19 UNIVERSITY OF WATERLO O, Water loo, Ontar io THUR SDAY, DECEMBER lo, 1964

    TV Replaces Blaikboardrbadcast lo:05 -The programme also can bring outpoints of controversy, and studentswishing to express a v i?wpoint onany subject of interest on campus areinv i ted to phone in during the show.

    The Club , known as the RadioBroadcast Club of the Universi ty ofWaterloo , came into existence afteran of fer by a local radio s tat ion CK-KW to carry a s tudent program me.The ini t ial intent ions were to sharethe three hour spot wi th the LutheranUniversity. B ut complica tions arose,and the Lutheran Universi ty has ashow over another s tat ion.

    The U. of W. is now us ing c losedcircuit television to overcome a criti-cal priblem in the teaching of engin-eer drawing.

    Organizers of the Group at pre-sent are Dave Brow n, Jon Keeble,Gerry Moel lenkamp, Phi l Mahon,and Pete Calvert , al l f rom the Engin-eering Faculty. If any students th atwi l l be here during the winter term(f rom now t i l l May) are interested inbecoming part of the radio pro-gramme, please contact ,, one of theabove people, in care of Annex 1.

    Twelve 23-inch monitors have beeninstal led in the drawing room to helpprofessors direct their demon strationsto small groups of six students in-s tead of us ing a blackboird to in-struct classes which run as high as72 s tudents in a s ingle four-hourgraphics session.

    The teaching problem was com-pounded this fal l when the U. of W.enrol led the largest f reshman engin-eering c lass in Canada. Graphics,forkerly known as draftin& is taugh tto al i 537 f reshmei each week.

    The Club was organized to pro-vide a source of news a nd sports ofthe campus for the s tudents , and topresent an entertaining programmefor the Student body and the resi-dents of the twin c i t ies . The l ink be-tween the Universi ty and the c i t iesof Ki tchener and Waterloo is pret tyweak, an d this programme is serv ingto i t rengthen i t . Many res idents havephoned in during the show to com-ment on the show, and the majorityof the comme nts are very favourable.

    The programme is heard weekly ,Saturday evenings f rom 1O:OO t i l l1:OO over CKKW, 132OKcs. Musicrequests, edito rials or other corres-pondence should be addressed toRadio Broadcast Club, Care of An-nex 1, or phone in during programme.

    The c lass is broken down into ninegroups so that each group can re-ceive a four-hour weekly session.This does not leave much t ime toint roduce al l the material which isbeing adde d to the curricula of al lscience subjects.

    In addi t ion, Professor JamesChurch and lecturer Paul Meincke,who instruct the graphics classes,were concerned that students sitting60 feet away had di f f icul ty in fol low-ing blackboard instruction. ProfessorChurch said this new method al lowsmore material to be covered in amore complete manner.

    New Televisions for instruction in the drafting rodm.

    The 1964 Treasure Van, biggestGordon Opens

    undertak ing to date of the WorldUnivers ity Serv ices of Canada groupat the ,University of Waterloo , open-ed Monday night . Regis t rar A. P.Gordon cut the cord o$ening thesale before a large audience whichinc luded Mrs. Ethel Mulvaney, foun-der of Treasure Van, Mr. Jacques

    dancing group combined talents wi thsingers France

    Treasure VanMil ls , Bonnie and

    Wil f , and emcee Don McLaren toproduce this program.

    Principal Rees:

    The ent i re Treasure Vah sale wasorgan ized by Marty Kravitz whotransformed a large s tore in WaterlooSquare into a pleasant set t ing for thedisplay and sale of foreign goods. As-

    EngIishma,n TrueAddTess ini the Canterbury Club at

    McGill University last Friday, Pro-fessor Wyn Rees, princip al of Reni-son Col lege, s tated that some On-tario attitudes towards Quebec paral-lel the Engl ish feel ings in the past inSouth Africa.

    the French here, were able to retaintheir ident i ty and the Engl ish saw no

    Separatistobl igat ion on their part to learn thelanguage and his tory of these people.

    The Engl ishman is the t rue separa-tist, said Professor Rees. He saidthat af ter their conqu&t ot SouthAfrica, 60 years ago, the English as-sumed that the conquered world as-simila te themselves. I think tha t iswhat happened here, he said.

    The Dutch in South Africa, l ike

    Profsesor Rees taught in a SouthAfrican University for several yearsand when he came to Canada fouryears ago, he said that he was as-tounded to learn that French was be-ing taught as a foreign language inOntario and not as a language of thecountry.

    We must overcome this. The uni-vers it ies are doing the best job, but i tmust be extended.

    Twelve 12-inch monitors have nowbeen instal led in the room with amon itor for every six drafting tablesso that no s tudent is more than 15feet f rom an overhead monitor. Costof the project is $7,000. .

    Fi lming is done by a smal l t ran-sistorized camera with zoom lens,mounted in a f ixed pos i t ion over amoveable draf t ing table. The camerais control led by a remote control uni tand a smal l eight-inch monitor en-ables the lecturer to fol low his ownwork.

    SC 0 Two NewMembers

    For CouncilOn Wednesday, December 2, St .Jeromes Col lege held their annualelect ions for their Students Counci lExecut ive. Eleven candidiates werenominated for the s ix avai lable pos i-tions; the Executive Preside nt was ac-claime d. After three days of veryspir i ted cam paigning the new execu-t ive emerged:Pres ident -Patrick ONei l lV ice-Pres ident -Vic tor A . BotariSecretary -Diane EtchesTreasurer -Jean SkeltonExecutive President-Wm. P. MackesySecond -Representat ive

    New Grad RingStudents Counci l las t week ap-

    proved the recommended des ign fora Universi ty graduat ion ring, af ter thering had already b een ordered. I t wi l lbe avai lable af ter Chris tmas and wi l lcost approx imately $30.00.

    It was decided to ask C.U.S.~ tosend help to the Vietnam Nat ionalUnion of s tudents. The Union hadpreviously sent a letter to this Uni-versity asking for support, but coun-c i l fel t i t was the job of C.U.S.rather than any indiv idual universi ty .

    -Esert ino DonaCont d . on Page 7

    Demonstrat ing by TV instead of ona blackboard is like having six stu-dents lookin g over your shoulder,says Professor Church. The studentssay they can see the drawings somuch more c learly ; we have moret ime to give personal at tent ion tostudents wi th problems and we canmore than double the amount of in-struction we want to give. Questionshave been cut to a minimu m as aresult of this.

    Treasure Van with its goods from many countries.sistance w as given not only by stu-dents , but also by members of Stu-dents Wives Club, by local businesseswho donated equ ipment , and by Mr.Lou Orbath who prov ided space inWaterloo Square for the sale.

    The Treasure Van wi l l be open un-t i l 1O:OO tonight and tomorrow andwi l l c lose at 6:00 p.m. on Saturday.

    The only other thing that counc i laccompl ished was to defeat a mot ionto have a dinner for the Internat ionalb Students Union. A hal f hour wasspent discuss ing the mot ion, whichhad already been -defeated at theprev ious m eet ing, and just before thesecond vote, Dave Young pointed outthat the reopening of discuss ion on a

    mot ion already de feated was impro-per procedure. Counci l voted againanyway, and deefated the mot ion asecond t ime.

    WARRIORS PLAY McMASTER TONIGHT AT WATERLOO ARENA

    Bouche r, Treasure Van supervisor oncampus, and Len Got tzelig, chairmanof wusc.

    The opening ceremonies inc ludeda 20 mniute program of folk songsand dances, a prev iew of entertain-ment to be of fered every night of thesale. The University of Waterloo folk

    Professor Church also said thatthis would be the forerunner of amuch exp anded system since severalother departments are also interested.

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    Letters should be Girected to: The Editor, Coryphaeus, Annex I, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario. Unsignedletters will not be accepted. ,

    Publ ikhed every Thursdai af ternoon of the academic year by the Board,of P@licat ions, under authorisat ion of the Studen ts Coun cil, Universityof Wbterk io, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.Subscriptio ti $3.50 Memb er: Can adian university press Chahman, Board of Publ lcat lons: Gordon L . Van Fleet .Editor: J. D. GrenkieAuthorize d as second class mai l by the Post Office De partmen t, Ottawa;an d for paymen t of postage in cash. -Engl ish Courses St. Jeromes Elections 86%. Sure our pol ls were open long-er but this is the result of a wiser an d

    better f acuity.ear Sir: IDear Sir: Al though not wishing to take any-thing away f rom our wonderful spir-ited Enginee rs w ith their fantastic69% turn out of voters, I wou ld liketo point out a few facts about a muchsmal ler and much more spir ited fac-ulty, St. Jeromes.

    The St . Jeromes Students Coun-c i l has jus t, a l i t t le under 200 mem -bers, relat ively smal l , but we managedto come up with eleven candidatesfor six positions - granted one ac-c lamat ion, but the Engineering facul-ty has well over lOO() voting mem-bers. This great 69% voting turnout

    , s very impressive but wha t about our

    As for campaigning, al l I saw were8 T%ime To Move The number of the foreign-s tudentsat the University of Waterloo is ?n-creasing every year, But many ofthem d o not possess adequate know-ledge of En gl ish and i t causes a greatdeal of hardship to them in their aca-demic a nd social circles. Therefore,the necessity of some special Englishcourses at our University for the for-eigners is highly fel t . A lso i t wi l l bedesirable to offer these courses in the

    a few posters conceived in the formof a s late - authori tarian? At St .Jeromes , each campaigned for him-selc the& wasn t an inch of displayon the Monday and Tuesday beforeelections.

    Our election itself was extremelywel l -run by the Chief Returning Of-ficer, Mike Birtles, and I would alsolike to take this opportu nity for apublic thank-you for a job wel ldone.

    Last weeks Coryphaeus summarized the results of the Novembe r meet-ing of the &tario Region of the Canadian Union of Students (Qk.~.U.S.).. This organiza tions primary purpose, ind eed its raison d&re, is to represent

    the collective voice of Ontario students to b rovincial organizations in aneffort to. improve the life of ,those students in matters of tiances, health ,academ ic freedom , ands0 on. That students should have this represen tationis both important and t imely ; important s ince< burgeoning numbers of s tudentsput undue strains on universities, often inten sifying many of these problem s,t imely s ince the prov inc ial government , in establ ishing the Department ofUniversity Affairs, shows evidence of lend ing a far more receptive ear tosuch representations. ,\

    Yet despi te the fact that . G.R.C.U.S. at las t months meet ing accepted a

    night . Spec ial Engl ish courses are al-ready offered at the Waterloo Luther-an University which are open for allthe foreigners. But it is very incon-venient for many foreign-students liv-ing on the campus of our university .to attend class& in, WLUd speciallyin winter, because most of them are ,from the tropical countries. I hopethe Arts Faculty will take some in-itiative in this matter.

    W. Pat&k MackesySJ,C.

    constitution and decided on a numbe r o f very praiseworthy studies and pro-jects (student men tal health studies, lobbying for the lowerin g of student fees

    , and hospi tal&ion insurance, an examinat ion of year-round operat ion of uni-versities), the organization is, as in past years, well o n the way to failure.

    The reasons for this failure are two fold: publicity and direction. First ofall, how can an organiza tion purport to represent the students of this provincewhen i t is v i rtually unknown to them? O.R.C.U.S. has also los t a powerulwedge of publ ic i ty wi th prov inc ial newspapers by i ts fai lure to fol low up themanda tes accepted at last years confeernce and by its failure to give regularnews releases of its activities. This p ublicity is necessary if there. it to be any

    . weight behind i ts deal ings wi th prov inc ial authori t ies . Secondly , in deal ing w i thprov inc ial bodies, the organizat ion must present mature, informed opinionthat shows evidence of support and need by the majority of Ontario students.

    by A. J. Kdlingworth, llLast weeks Coryphaeus carried a letter from Arun Gupta sug-gesting that the CoryPhaeus could be de-zomb ie-ized (sorry, Dr. Thomas)

    through the injection of regular w eather forecasts. Mr. Gupta furthersuggested that the forecasts could be sponsored; with the large numbe rof advertisers clamou ring to use the Coryphaeus in spreading joy, thismight , indee d, be a poss ibi li ty . Zippo Lighters might want to say some-thing in the nature of When you want to l ight a cigaret te in tomorrows90 m.p.h. w ind (E.S.E.) while the scattered snowflurries fall,, use aZippo. Or, perhaps, Bob Wagner might warn: When you leave yourroom tomorrow to brave the twenty-three-point-two-d egree weather ,you might fal l on one of the icy patches or be blown away by . the hur-ricane (small craft warning s have been issued). Play it safe; buy awho le rat of insurance? A further possibility migh t be : Be the firstkid on your block to have your seven-story library comple ted beforenext weeks eighty-mi le-an-hour winds s tart blowing and the groundfreezes in the ten-belo w cold. Do nt wait for spring (vernal equino x -4:21 P.M. E.S.T., March 20, 1965); do it now. This forecast compli-ments of J. Robarts Buil ding Contractor.

    Ani l Kumar JagotaDept . of Chem. Eng.

    Music 2000Dear Sir:This means that briefs m ust be based on properly des igned and executed

    sampl ing procedures and presented by indiv iduals wi th sufhc ient pol i t icalsavoir faire -that briefs will have maxim um effect. To co-ordinate this? O.R.-

    ~ C.U.S. needs direct ion by t rained and experienced personnel and the Francesto make i ts paper plans ope rat ional . None of these are prov ided for in i ts

    With its return to a weekly publi-cat ion, the qual i ty of The Coryphaeushas increased surprisingly-with oneexception. Mu sic 2000 says nothin gbet ter than anything we have read,and says it in .so many beau tifully illchosen words. The Coryphaeus as

    Lf Speaker of the people has a respon-sibility to its readers not to, clutterthe paper; if H.B.s efIort w as proper-ly edi ted i t would warrant only threelines in the Notices column . We donot know Mr. Bs qual i t ies but i fthey run paral lel to his qual it ies as a writer< his days as .a musician are,numbered.

    prebent constitution. ,Despi te good intent ions .at McMaster a year ago, Ontario Region of

    C.U.S. , ailed to produce results. If noth ing better comes of this last effortat Toronto, perhaps s tudents should look to some new provinc ial organizat ion,independent of the Ont&io Region of the Canadian Union of Students i fnecessary, to represent its views with authority and with accom plishmen t.

    /-

    I will personally sponsor the CoryphFeus first weathe r forecast. Ihave consul ted the Old Farmers Almanac, the Ontario MeteorologicalInstitute and Marty Kravitz bunio n. All sources indicate that, for atleast the next ten days, Waterloo wi lL be plagued by a rash of weather,Nice out, wasnt it? :

    \The other m orning , I awoke to find that I was suffering frompart ial amnesia. Apparent ly , the Congolese army had marched throughmy mouth whi le I s lept and someone had injected i tching powder under

    the surface of my teeth. I could no t recall the& events. Nor had Inot iced that someone had painted the whi tes of my eyes with red inkand had stabbed my nose with several hundred t iny needles. .

    I .was calmly brushing my upper l ip when I began rememberingsometh ing abou t a black horse; I then realized that he was ,still tryingto kick his way ou t of my skull. Am I dream ing? I though t that Iwhispered. Shaddup down there, yel led my k indly landlady, i t wasbad enough when you t r ied to smash the door down last night . ! Onlythen did I ful ly real ize what had happened: I had taken a s tudy breakat the Waterloo Hotel the night before. P

    , ,The results of the Kampus Kop Kontest were astounding. Three

    thousand. copies of the Coryphaeus were dis t r ibuted and two thousand,nine hundred and ninety-nine bal iots were received. U nfortunately , al lhad to be disqual i f ied becaus,e none contained al l the s tipulated require-ments , namely the dime. I t was o,bv ious that something had gone amiss;wropg, eve?.

    But wait; wh at have we here? The last entry h as just arrived. Itsays My favourite Kamp us Kop is Jet. Well, tha t settles it. Just amom ent - the letter is signed with a paw print. Sorry, p al; this is notplay ing the game. Human voters only . , (Now, where would a dog get a

    (dime?)

    ,W.L.U. hd, U.S.-At the recent regional Canadian Univers i ty Press Conference in London,

    Ontario, the Waterloo Luthera n University campus newspaper, the CordWeekly, suggested that it and the University of Waterloo Coryphaeus shouldworks together to forward co-operation betwe en the two universities.

    . This seems a rather ho l low propos i t ion in the l ight of events which havecome to pass during the past few weeks. - , s

    On Friday, Novemb er 6, the Coryphaeus issued a ,plea for increasedassistance from students inthe production of the newspape r. A front pageedi torial s tated that the Coryphaeus, i f i t cont inued to be publ ished, wouldcont inue only as a weekly newspaper. The next week, the Cord appeared withthe headl ine, U . of W. Coryphaeus Folds. Fol lowing was an art ic le whichhad been pieced together wi th smal l i tems of purported news and, supposedinside informa tion divulge d by a University of Waterloo student. If the- editors of the Cord had bothered to check their facts, or if they had be en alitt le less @ous to down grade the University of Waterloo, the article wouldnot have appeared. And yet i t was publ ished. The art ic le made some verycutting remarks about the Coryphaeus and the University of Waterloo in gen-eral . We demande d, and were promised, an apology for the art ic le. The fol -lowing weeks edt ion of the Cord contained the apology-which merely sneeredat the Coryphaeus more by stating that the University of Waterloo newspap erhad muddled through i ts cris is and now had scraped up suf f icient ~staff tocont inue publ ishing.

    . Whatever may be the ideas of the Cord edi torial board concerning co-, existence, #is was certainly not an idea l way of increasing coopera tion be-

    W.T. 1T.R. 2

    , 1

    Coryphaeus StaffEditors:Toh Rankin, W ayne Tymm , J im Peden, HaroId - Diet rich,Ted Walsh, Bob Clandf ield.Staf f

    Darkroom Tech. - Jim West,Arvertising Mgr. - Dave Witty, ~Circulation Mgr. - Dick Mon-dous, Ian Page, Ann Staples,Vern Wi lson, Bob Warren, Bi l lHodgson , John Shiry, DaveGrafstein, G lenn Patterson,Lesslie Walz, M. Kravitz, Jean-et te Dunke, Carl Si lke, DougG arsen, Doug Weir, Dave Rup~ar, Nei l Arnason, Doug Gauk-roger, John Clarke, P. Hurlbut,Dave Clark, Vic Botari, DaveTrost, Macey Skopitz, EdFedorowski , Errol Semple,Dave Young, Margaret Shaw,Marian Hale, Bi l l Pet ty , FredWatkinson, Fred Girodat, DougMuir, Ron Saito , Terry Joyce,Tex Houston, Hazel Rawls,Sandra Smith, Paul Mi l ls , ChrisBennet t. 2.. .A. ..,. .....s...*%%+.,..A,p.T&ajp&...p...p*.>.*.. . . 88hw-.~,*.-~.*8.~.,..~,...................~.....~..v& + . v . yw. wd~.~.........*.~..~.,.~.........~........ ...~.~......a...&...~.~~.~..........~~.%%v.v . ?&***w&.*8d

    tween the two universities.At the Can adian University Press conference, the Cord had an opportun- Tis truly better to give than to get. - L. Allen Wise.\IIn the t rue spiri t wi th which this s tatement was\ made by my pal L. ,this space wi l l contain a bagful of Chris tmas goodies next .week, al l of

    which I might have bought had Lester Pearson not reneged on his. scholarship promise. Watch this spot closely next week. qbserve care-ful ly - at no t ime do the f ingers leave the hands.

    ity to chat with other campus n ewspape r staff membe rs, includin g those of the Coryphaeus, and to discuss mutu al problem s. Did th e Cord staff membersthere take advantag e of this opportun ity? No. ,

    I f anyone at W.L.U. is interested in furthering cooperat ion between thatuniversity and the University of Waterloo, let him speak out, but let himspeak truthfully.

    The .+CORYPHAEUS

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    by H. BehmannWant to buy a girl? Sorry, it s too

    late! The boys at Renison did theirChristmas shopp ing early this ,year.Last Tuesday night an auct ion washeld in their cafeteria and sevenbeaut i ful ly lusc ious females were sold.Diana Bennet to, Kathy Staskeiwicz,Susan Tyrer, Pamela Tal lon, Susan

    P H O T O B Y B E H M A N NYoure certainly worth $19.DUPLICATE BRIDGE CLUB

    Bad weather fai led to dampen thespirits of the participants of thethree teams that sk idded to RochesterSaturday to match wits wi th the as-pir ing American Bridge players . Theteam of Chuck Arthur, Brian Monk-house (NS), Bob (Harry) Schives,David Weber (EW) picked u p 26%out of 48 points for f i f th place in theA section and a good overal l s tanding,whi le the other two teams were play-ing below average bridge. The East-West pair of Glen He a an d SteveLazier play ing s teady bridge man-aged to pick up a point for their teamon this hand.Both Vulnerable

    NorthS. A Q, 9, 8, 5H. K9, 8, 6, 3

    D. KC. A, 2West East (dealer)s. - S. J, 10, 4, 3

    EL Q, J, 7 H. A, 10, 4D. J, 9, 6, 4 D. A, 8, 7, 3C. Q, 10, 9, 6, 4, 3 C. K, 8

    Sout hS. K, 7, 6, 2H. 5, 4D. Q, 10, 5, 2

    C. J, 7, 5B idd ingN. E . S. W.

    P P P1s , p 2s4S D 5 :P P i ! i PP P

    North opened his s ingleton k ingof diamonds which dec larer won ondummy. A smal l c lub f rom dummypicked u p East s ace. East now ledthe ace of spades which declarer ruf-f led in his hand. The four of c lubswas led to dummys k ing and a spadereturn was ruf fed in hand. The queenof clubs picked up souths la st trump,and the heart que en covered theNorths k ing was won in dummywith the ace. A smal l diamond lostto Souths queen and Glen spread hishand show ing two good hearts , a c luband a good d iamond.

    Sale, Laurie Risk, and Maureen Bur-ket t , of Renison and Notre Damecolleges, offere d themselves to besold , o the boys in order to raisemone y to sponsor a .Christmas partyfor the chi ldren of St . Agathas Or-phanage.

    The cafeteria w as jamme d withprospective buyers, who greeted eachi tem with bois terous cheers andwhistles. The girls came out bravelyin their various costumes to face thesharp-eyed bargin hunters. Each resi-dence f loor threw their money to-gether and then drew for the gir lthey had bought . The auct ion s tarteds lowly wi th bids of one l i re and twoyen, but the ction picked up fastand the fel lows went wi ld as theydesperately t r ied to raise enoughmoney to buy a girl for their p articu-lar f loor. Even Rev. Finlay, Dean ofStudents , threw in his two bi ts . Thesharp auct ioneer, Ed Butz , urged onthe bidding wi th such s ly commentsas Did I hear twenty-five dollars?and Come on, guys, i ts for the or-phans. The c l imax came wh en a bidof nineteen dol lars ended the auct ion.This was the highest bid, and i t gain-ed for the bidder a pair of black lacepant ies. The highest bidder for eachof the lovely creatures was given adate wi th her, a l l expenses pa id. Theauct ion was termed a complete suc-cess since $90.00 was raised for theorphans and there were no unsat is f iedcustomers.

    The organizat ional work for theauct ion was done by Ed Butz , PeterBenedic t , and John and J im, theBlackburn Brothers . Congratulat ionson a very successful effort!

    Five mice were caught at RenisonCol lege three weeks ago. The micewere then f reed in the WomensResidence.

    3. Theatre Ne,s 64,@5- *$ p y?by Paul Berg, Theatre Administrator

    The fal l theatre season, now drawing to a c lose, has been a most act iveone. A total of 30 events took place in the theatre at tended by 7640 patrons.Except for . the Two Celebri ty Concerts and the, .Two Playhouse Series the re:maining events were ei ther Universi ty or s tudent sponsored. * The winter season which opens in January promises to be equal ly busyand interest ing.

    Sunday af ternoon, January lOth, the theatre w i l l be the scene of thesecond JAZZ C ONCE RT, sponsored by Circle K. These concerts are free.On Friday, January 22nd, the MICHIGAN STATE PLAY ERS wi l l v is it ourcampus with a ful l product ion of TAMING OF THE SHREW. At four in theaf ternoon the director and some of the performers wi l l conduct an informalseminar on the various facets of play production. This sess ion wi l l be opento al l those on campus who are interested in the techniques of production.Tickets for the evening performance are now on sale in the theatre box of f ice,prices are: ,756 s tudent , $1.00 adul t .

    72 -3 I2On Tuesday, January 26th, those fabulous Frenchmen, CHANTEU RSDE PARIS wi l l invade the campus in a theatre program of the s ights , soundsand joys of Paris . Student a dmiss ion for this concert $1.00.

    The annu al Winter Fest ival wi l l be held o n January 29, . 3Oth, 3 1st .* -A 72INTERNATIONAL FILM SERIES . Season t ickets at hal f price are nowon sale at the Box Of f ice. These wi l l be for the remainder of the series of f ive

    f i lms at the Waterloo Theatre o n Monday evenings. Ope ning on Monday,January 4th wi th VIVRE SA VIE (France 1962), the series inc ludes: MIRA-CLE OF MILAN (I taly 1951) on January 18th; ZAZIE DANS LE METRO(France 1962) on February 8th; A TOUTE PREND RE (Canada 1964) onMarch 1st; YOJIMBO (Japan 19 61) on March 15th. Half season tickets arepriced at $2.50 for s tudents , $3.00 for adul ts . Two showings are held eachevening at 7:00 and 9:15 at the WATERLOO THEATRE.

    * * c?Maestro Ernest0 Barb ini , who conducted his s t r ing orchestra in a con-cert in our theatre las t spring wi l l conduct the annual performance at theMESS IAH in Massey H al l on December 22nd and 23rd.

    72 * *The Mousetrap, Londons long run champion, began i ts 13th year thelat ter part of November. I t wi l l play its 5,OOOth performance on December 9th.CURTAIN

    Faculty and Staff Share for WUSCContrib utions from faculty, staff

    and grad students are starting to ar-rive at the W. U. S. C. office in A n-nex 1. Over on e hundred dol lars col-lected in the first few days will re-present jus t over 10% of the goal setby the Share commit tee.

    Monies thus raised wi l l go toWUSCs Internat ional Programmefor Act ion which aids s tudents andfacul ty in the developing nat ions ofthe world. This programme prov idesthese faculty and student g roups withaid: f rom m edical insurance to T.B.clinics; from text books to who lelibraries; from the basic necessitiesof food a nd c lothing to a ful l scalecafeteria; from bursaries and scholar-

    ships to their ow n universities toscholarships to universities in the de-veloped nat ions.Not only do we gain indirect lyfrom the better standards of thecountries which eventua lly resultf rom such help but we are of ten en-riched in our own universities by ouracquis i t ion of some of those whomwe have helped.

    Let ters have be en sent out to al lfaculty, staff, and graduate stude ntsrequest ing their help. PLEASESHAR E so that others may have op-portunity to receive a nd give a bet-ter educat ion.

    Please forward al l contributions toSHARE CAMPAI GN, ANNEX 1 .

    by Wayne Tymm .So we are back to the f lag f ight again. Or had you notheard? The issue has been so badly be aten and rehashed thatmost pe ople are completely fed up with the idea of a dis t inc-t ive Canadian f lag.

    That is too bad, for now that the issue is being aired,many Canadians, who at f i rs t forgot their t radi t ional reserveand came out in support of one f lag or another, have s lowlydonned their gray masks of s i lence again. And yet , whi le theyhave s topped discuss ing the f lag, other groups have s tepped into add their two cents (or in the case of Diefenbaker, nosense) worth of opinion on the idea of a new f lag. Conse-quent ly the only voices heard today are those of the im-moderates.What wi l l the resul t be? The f lag des ign last approved bythe government , a red maple leaf on a whi te background edgedwith red bars , wi l l l ikely be made the new nat ional f lag.Diefenbakers t i rades against the Liberal go vernment haveturned so many MPs against him that the Liberals have apromised majori ty i f the issue ever comes to a vote in theHouse.This is al l wel l and good but the arguments waged overthe f lag issue have cast serious doubt on the Canadian systemof elected government . The f lag issue has been fought toothand nai l by a group of men who supposedly represent thepeople an d have a s l ight ly bet ter sense of di rect ion than dotheir countrymen. The only importance of the f lag issue isthat i t s t irs men s blood with i ts appeal to patriot ic spir i t. The

    issue is not pol i t ical . I t cannot disrupt internat ional relat ions.I t wi l l not al ter our economy. Why al l the squabble f romthese supposedly sens ible men. 7 Our idols in Parl iament seemto be developing c lay feet for they are s t ick ing in the mud.And the whole fuss would have been avoided i f 97 yearsago, someone had dec ided that as Canada was becoming anat ion in her own right , she should have a nat ional f lagdivorced f rom that of Bri tain.We should have had a revolut ion.

    72 $2 f3American Nazi leader George L incoln Rockwel l was pre-vented f rom speaking at the Universi ty of Bri t ish C olumbialast month because he is a prohibi ted person under the Cana-dian Immigrat ion Act . Mr. Rockwel l , s lated to speak at UBCat the inv i tat ion of Students Union, arrived in Vancouveraf ter the speak ing arrangements were cancelled and was ,ad-vised to leave the country two days after his illegal e ntry onNovember 24. Roger McAfee, Students Union pres ident saidthat Rockwel l was contacted two weeks before and asked tospeak at UBC on the condi t ion that he entered the countrylegal ly . The Unions purpose in inv i t ing him to the Universi tywas to prov ide a plat form for f ree speech and to give thestudents a chance to hear something they h ad only heardsecond hand. Nevertheless, University presiden t Dr. JohnMacDonald told Mr. McAfee to wi thdraw Rockwel l s inv i ta-t ion. McAfee refused to wi thdraw the inv i tat ion, but bel iev-ing Rockwel l would n ot arrive, assured Dr. MacDonald thatthe American would not speak under s tudent sponsorship. Mr.,

    Rockwel l did arrive, however, and was qui te upset by hisrecept ion. There is nothing immigrat ion can do to keep AlCapone or anyone else who drives into Cana da the waythey ve got the setup now, he said. I think the whole damnborder should be torn down. He should know - he has beenin Canada twice during the past two months, apparent ly un-impeded by immigrat ion of f icers .

    22 f3 -itDiscerning thieves are making themselves known atCarleton Universt iy. Seventeen pies, a quant i ty of ice cream,

    and $123.00 were s tolen by an unknown number of thieveswho paid an early morning v is it to the Carleton Students Union Bui lding. The thieves are bel ieved to be the same oneswho s tole $100.00 a nd c igarettes f rom the union last month.

    Girls at the Univers ity of Manitoba are up in armsabout the new womens res idence, Mary Speechley H al l . Girlson the second f loor are wearing snowboots and parkas tocomba t the cold ice they report forms on their floors at night;gi r ls on the eighth f loor meanwhi le enjoy ninety degree weatherand are so hot a l l they can do at night is s leep: Al thoug hthe heat ing system is being remed ied to regulate temperaturesthroughout the bui lding, the cold feet and hot seats owetheir condition partly to the build ings structure. The firstf loor is set in f rom the rest of the bui lding and the windblows ben eath the second f loor bedrooms.And we thought we had i t bad here.

    Thursday, December IO,1964 3

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    . CUSO - A Golden OppcAu,tiity ,)by D. SeabornA golden opportuni ty ex ists in

    CUSO for those w ho seek to facechal lenge and responsibi l ity . And thisis o,nly the beginning.

    Mr. Bi l l McWhinney, nat ional sec-

    U. of W. Grad Retyns to -Head School in Nigeriaretary for the Can adia n University pServices Overseas, discussed the aims Mr. Peter Reeve-Newson, a graduate of the Univers ity of Waterloo wi thhis M.Sc. in 1962 has returned to Canada af ter a two and a .hal f gear teachingand functions of the organizat ion to assignment in Lagos, Nigeria. However, he is returning in January to becomeinterested s tudents whi le v is i t ing ourUniversity last week His talk was il-lus t rated through f i lms and a series

    For those not fami l iar wi th theplan, i t operates as fol lows: Qual i f iedof s l ides.

    graduates are s tat ioned in As ian an dAfrican countries as wel l as those ofthe West Indies. On request from theindiv idual governments, they serve insuch profession al capacities as tea-chers and nurses for a two year per-iod ass is t ing the cultural and econo-mic growth of their new land . I t isdi f f icul t to overest imate their valueto the country involved, Canada, orthe World as a -whole. Communica-t ion and understanding are a s incereform of brotherh ood. The servicecould be compared to the Uni tedStates Peace Corps, a l though i t isprivately directed and f inancedthrough fund rais ing campaigns.Mr. McWhin ney stressed- that theprogram should not be cons idered asaid. The gains in character and per-sonal development achieved by thevolunteers far exceed what they givein terms of community work an d tech-nical aid. Whi le learning to see prob-lems f rom the other persons point ofv iew, they begin to thoroughly under-s tand themselves as wel l . V irtual lyal l of the/part icipants return support -ing this theory and the plan in gen-eral completely .

    Diversified historical, social, andreligio us backgrounds severely vary%,ths peoples way of l i fe f rom land to land. For this reason, one must adapteas i ly and be flex ible in his think ingin ,order to be successful . Langua getraining is most important , and usu-ally a short orientatio n course isgiven.

    Newly founded in 1961, CUSO isgrowing at an ext remely rapid rate.The original membership was seven-teen; however last year over threehundred appl icat ions w ere processed,and approx imately hal f were sentoverseas, M ore countries .are enjoy-ing the programs benef i ts every ,year.

    , Some new part ic ipants inc lude Peruand Co lombia .More informat ion concerning theprogram is avai lable f rom the Re-

    gis trars of f ice or the Student Center,Annex 1. In addi t ion, Dr. Handa ofthe Engineering Dept . wi l l answerany questions from interested parties.

    Radio Broadcast Club has a radioShow on CKKW for three hours everySaturday night f rom 10 to 1. Theybroadcast al l the latest news fromLhis campus. If your club or activityneeds a plug, see Pete Calvert mAnnex 1. . -

    Chris tmas DanceBridgeport Cas inoFriday, December. 11Open 7:3O Cof fee, Pop dl Ba rDancing %:30 to 1:00Music by the SilvertonesTi i rket inc ludes Buf fet Lunch atM idn igh t \Sponsored by U. of W. Tech.Assoc. for Faculty, St& andStudentsTickqts $2.5 0 per personpckets may be. purchased fromAlI DepY. Secretaries, RaySchrader and Joy Hoshoqley

    princ ipal of Ibibio Col lege in Ikot Ekpene, a rural community in Eastern Ni-geria. Why? Because there is a great need and the chal lenge is far greater

    ,than that involved in coming back and teaching a high school c lass wi th

    t He is the fis t Canadian Univers ity high places in the country s govern-Services Overseas volun teer to work

    suburban chi ldren, said Mr. Reeve-Newson,

    ment . One is a cabinet minis ter;in Africa. For the las t two and a hal f another is chief jus t ice of Uganda.years, he has been tea ching physicsand mathemat ics in a high school in ClearerLagos, Nigeria. Mr. Reeve-Newson Mr. Reeve-Newson said that heset up the curriculum in these two can see the problem of Canada moresubjects and also s tarted a junior c learly now af ter his t ime in Nigeria.French course. The school itself is He s tated that C.U.S.O. and thelocated in downtown Lagos and i ts Peace Corps have much m ore contactgraduates inc lude such personages as with the t rue fee l ings of the nat iveNigerias pres ident , Az ikwe. people than the diplomats, and thus,an important aspect of their work

    is to create an understanding of Ni-gerias s i tuat ion back hom e. He feelsthat returning volunteers can make avaluable contribut ion in explainingAfricas pos i t ion.

    Mr. R eeve-Newson is paid by theNigerian government and his t rans-portat ion is suppl ied by C.U.S.O. Heearns-$2500 each year and is suppl ieda house f ree of charge. During hisass ignment , he t ravel led throughoutNigeria and also to such places asTogo, Ghana, and Ferdando-Poo withother C.U.S.O. volunteers in groupsof two or three. Th e main vehic leused is the scooter, al though in Lagosit is just as cheap to travel by taxi.Mr. Reeve-Newson said, Lagos hasthe best col lec t ion of outdoor, nightclubs and dance spots ever.

    cuso

    New Assignment

    There are present ly 30 volunteersof C.U.S.O. in Nigeria. C.U.S.O. spurpose is to supply any help thatoverseas governments might request .Each assignm ent lasts for two years,as i t takes that long to understandthe s i tuat ion ful ly and to become ac-quainted with the geople. Foreigngovernments are making requests fordoctors, nurses, teachers, and com-

    The boarding school , of which Mr. munity workers . C.U.S.O. Repre-Reeve-Newson wi l l be the head, is sentatives on campus. are Dr. V. K.more remo te. I t was s tarted by the Handa and Dr. McKegney.people themselves, who chose mem- Mr. Reeve-Newson describes the Ibers f rom their own t r ibe to go as ignment as two years wi th someabroad, become educated, and then adventure, exc i tement , and t ravel l ing,return to found a col lege. Prev ious al l the. whi le kno wing 1 hat you areprinc ipals of Ibibio Col leg e now have doing something useful .

    IGR ENSLEEVES

    ARTS .SOClETY - CHRISTMAS DANCE Anderson,director-ge neral of the researchei ther. General ly speak ing a Dean ofWomen is responsible for creating a branch of the federal dep artment ofagricul ture, on the s ituat ion in Cana-c l imate whic~h encourages the ful l da - I do not think we can longdevelopment of the wome n students , cont inue to make less then the bestacademical ly and soc ial ly . She can use of our bri l l iant intel lec tuals mere-contribute a great dea l to the Univer-s i ty community by making hersel f ly because they occur in female bod-ies. avai lable , ,whenever adv ice or sug- The Dean of Women would l ike togest ions are requested. In order to beuseful both to women students and see more women students serv ing onthe University at large she must keep the executives of various student or-informed and >be interested in al l ganiza tions. This sort of \experience

    and off-campus activities, can help to develop sound judgm ent ,campusfrom po litics to art. pract ical qual i t ies and the abi l i ty toThe Dean of Women is usual ly an be art iculate in express ing opinions.ex-of f ic io member of Commit tees Mrs. W alters, office is in, room 233deal ing wi th those projects and act i - in the Arts Bui lding and her local isvities of the University which con- 235. S he can also b e reached thoughtern the whole s tudent body, such e , her secretary, Mrs. Hayde n, who is atas . t levelopment commit tees and Uni- the second desk in the gene ral of f iceversity discipline committees. in the Arts Bui lding through the doormarked Dean of Arts ( phone localNatural ly , though the Dean of 429).Women has an interest in al l mem-bers of the s tudent body, she bel ievesthat her first respon sibility is towards Have yo.ur note-essaysthe women students. She would l ike typed duwn~ M3Holldaysto feel certain that they al l real ize. Mrs. S: Hesch .she is eas i ly avai lable, ei ther to helpc larify the normal problems of Uni-versity life, or just merely for an in- MORROWSOWF.formal chat .

    At the moment she is busy set t ingup a series of interviews with first-year women students , f rom out oftown, who are not l iv ing on campus.However, she is f requent ly cal led on

    :by women students f rom the upperyears, who come for advice on acade-mic problems, or informat ion, or en-couragement . The range of subjectsdiscussed is wide and the indiv idualsvary great ly in their degree of matur-i ty and ini t iat ive.

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    4 J The CORYPHAEUS

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    I ,1 by Arun Gupta -1 by H, I&ditqs Nater Mr. Gupta is a first(year student in the Co-op M atherizaticsxourse . -.at this uqivers ity , Helcame to Canada. two years ago from New - Delhi , India. \ . . New Hall Honors. I Compdser *

    Many of you must have\ heard a before them . As a -mat ter of fac t , destroyer of the world. They are cal- Dr. Claude Champagne, dean, oflot of s t range things about this Indian there are many people in India who led Brahma, Vishnu and Mahesh. Canadian composers, has, at the agereligio n for instance: its adheren ts pray wi th nothing before them. My Then the s tory goes that when there of. 73, been honored by construction

    grandfathe r, .for examp le, is a typicalof a new concert hal l erected by the

    bel ieve I n a _. umber of Gods; they was too much s in in the world. These Vincent d Indy School of Music incons ider the cow a sacred a nimal; Hindu, and he does not use these Gods, dec ided to be born on earth Montreal . Ithey don t eat meat ; they bel ieve in imagined forms of God, but concent- and show the people how to l ive. Born in Montreal : in 1,891, Dr.rebirth and souls in creatures as well rates on God with nothing before This paral lels the Chris t ian bel ief Champag ne composed his , f irs t seriouswork in I_ ,9 18. Then he sai led foras hum an, they have statues and him. Thus, al though a majori ty of that Chris t was born and taught the France. and in i92 1 entered the Paristemples; i they are a nti-Christian etc. Indians use these symbols to pray people to have fai th in God through Conservatory; . ,etc. Well, most o f these things are through these ,symbols certainly do , him. Then God was said; to be born For twenty years, he was vice-exaggerated tales. Indians, them- not in themselves represent God. and was cal led Rama, s imi lar to

    -director of the provincial Conserva-tory of Music and (Dramatic Art, a nd

    selves, often think this way because Then you may ask; Why are there so Christ in Christianity; Then, some in 1951, he succeeded Sir Ernest Mac-ei ther they are so f i l led wi th these many di f ferent pic tures and statues people bel ieve that this Rama per- mi l lan as honorary pres ident of theanc ient ideas that they are in doubt to represent o ne God? W el l , people formed miracles (similar to those Canadian Arts Counci l . Dr. Champa gne received the hon-of what they bel ieve in. . have di f ferent v iews regarding this . I f read in the bible), and this R ama orary degre e o f Doctor of Music.* you tel l someone that this is the form took forms of different Gods; (the from the University of Montr eal inHere I am go ing to try to- clarify of the God of educat ion, then thesome of the misconception s. most of kind I described in the previous para-

    1946 and an honorary degree f romI the Chicago Conservatory Col lege,students would mostly pray through graph) in order that people could one of America s oldest conservatories.you have. First of all, Indians or Hin-

    dus bo not- bel ieve in a numbear of this form because they wo uld feel f ind i t eas ier to pray to God through in 19600that pray ing through that form w ould them. By the way, you may be inter- To recognize the high distinctionGods. , There is only ONE God and help them have a s t ronger fai th than ested that this Rama, al though he of his contribut ion to the Canadianhe is inv is ible; he has no body or arts, the composer was given a -form, (the pictures -or statues; of God any other. For simila r reasons they paralle ls C hrist in many respects, did

    Canada Counci l medal accompaniedare imagined forms that some of our ,have imagined di f ferent forms for not die as Chris t did, but one day

    by a $2,000 cash ,award in 1962.ancestors m ade and represented as \ Gods of weal th, intel l igence, forgive- when he was with his wi fe the earth

    The Sa l l e C laude Champagne,which can seat 1,000 persons, hasness, strength, etc. , opened and swal lowed Rama (s imi larforms of God.) T he purpose of these been constructed by the Sisters of

    Some people have a di f ferent v iew. to the ascension of, Christ). It is be- Jesus:Mary ,with the aid of loans. Itpictures is to pray through them not cost $2,500,000 and took four yearsto them; Simi larly , the Roman Catho- YOU. would f ind in most rel igious l ieved by a few people, that when to bui ld. In 1960 when the Ecole de.lies pray thro ugh statues or saints to books that people original ly imagined Rama was about to - fal l into- theearth, S i ta, his wi fe, ran to help him,

    \ Musique Vincent d Indy moved intoYtheir God. They feel they can con- many forms of that one God. Three

    its new yellow-brick quarters on Bel-of which the creator of the world, _but by the t ime she came, she could

    l ingham Road, the audi torium was .amere skeleton. 1centrate far better on God if they only grab his hair. The bel ief is thathave some k ind of a representation the protector of the world, and the Construction of the rotunda -likethe lines w e have on our hands hal l began in earnest in November,9 ,

    \

    GRADUATE STUDY.abat McMaster _,. IUniversity., I . .1 /

    _ ! , O ne s tudent in eight at McMaster is a graduate s tudent ,studying for a masters or Ph.D. degree in an Arts, Scienceor Engineering Department ,l Most are receivinggene rous yeartround Scholarsh ip or Fel-lowship f inanc ial support .l Most -of those h olding, N at ional or, Prov inc ial hwards havealso been granted supplem entary University Scholarshipsor Assistantships.l Al l are enjoy in the many benef i ts of c lose indiv idual guid- ante and regu ar personal consul tation wi th their facul tyisupervisors, a si@ua tion .made possible ,by a 1:2 Instructor-Student rat io. I /0 Many are part ic ipat ing in exc i t ing an d chal lengingnew pro-grams of interdisciplinary research in fields such as Che mia 1cal Physics, as wel l as in Biochemistry, Biophysics andMolecular Biology. , , L i0 Au have the rare opportuni ty of extending their cul tural andintel lec tual boundaries as #members of a graduate s tudentbody that . is ,haI f Canadian and hal f f rom foreign countries . 0 Sc ience and Engineering s tudents have avai lable to themthe most advanced research facilit ies, such as the Nuclear/ Reactor.

    0 Mo st are gainingu niversity teaching expe rience by partici-pat ing in an Ass is tantship program.; -Interested students should write for further, . informat ion and appl icat ion forms to- 5 THE DEAN, \ -GRADUATE t STUDIES OFFICE,

    .- McMASTER UNIVERSITY, , ,HAMILTON, ONTARI.0. \ -

    (through which some people can fore- I 19623 according to the directress

    . .B.. ,I /4White House last spring, their Cape- -,gie Hal l debut in October and they.opened their f%rst night-c lub engage- .ment anywhere recently at the Vi l -lage .Gate in New York. / .The reason our performancesswing,. said Swin gle, is partly B achand p artly the singers backgrounds.Theyve -all had both classical an djazz experience.

    /The Nat ional Youth Orchestra ofCanada announces a Special Teache&

    Seminar, July - 19 - 31, 1965, at 1 heEdward Johnson Bui lding, *Univers i tyof Toronto. This seminar w i l l runconcurrently with the final two weeksof the trainin g session of the Na-t ional Youth Orchestra.

    Participa ting music teachers willaudi t _ orchestral rehearsals; observe Iorchestra players be ing coached, bythe faculty in section rehearsals andchambe r music classes; *attend special demo nstration lectures for teachersby each member of the faculty ; haveinformal sessions on inst rumental in-struction with the faculty; attend gen-eral meet ings where play ing and or-ganizat ional problems of symphonicorchestras - school, I university and \professiona l - will be discussed. IApplication procedure: orchestral instrumen t teachers and conductors, ,in sc,hools, conservatories, universitiesand private studios m ay apply for thisse-minar. The all-inclusive fee is $50.The Nat ional Youth, Orchestra or-ganizat ion, wi l l prov ide room, board,and round t r ip t ransporation f rom theteachers home ci ty. Enrolment wi l l 1be limite d to twentv-five teachers.

    tel l a persons future) are formed be- whose dreams of a new audi toriumhave now been real ized. , I t was Sis ter For appl icat ions wri te _ o; The Na- cause of Ramas hair sl ipping out of M arie-Stephane who founded the t ional Youth Orchestra, 2 15 Vic toriaSi tas hands. That s jus t another of Street, Toronto 2, Ontario. \Ecole Superieure de Musique in 1932, ?,t _I the many t r iv ial bel iefs people ha d having bee n directress of music for

    , Iythe Jesus-Mary Sisters commu nity * * *in anc ient t imes and, unfortunately , /s ince 1922. I t was also her idea toone which a few ,people bel ieve today. name the new hal l af ter Dr. Claude /

    So these .pictures and s tatues are not Champa gne* Theri are over 1300 symphony or-chestras in Uni ted States and Canada. * 1God, but merely imagined forms of *** rGod to help people to have a s t ronger Just a\ litt le more than a year ago . * * *fai th in that one inv is ible God . . . a record bearing the anachronis t iccont inued next week . . . , . t it le, B@s Greatest Hits, sudden- Two Canadian representat ives. havei ly appeared am idst the bleat ing, wai l -ing f ront-runners on thepopular music been in Europe to make arrangements *, best-sellers lists. It presented, as in- wi th opera companies to perform at I \dicated, works of Bach interprete d by the 1967 Expo in Montreal . The

    the.Swingle Singers, eight highly sk i l-V. lenna Opera haa been inv i ted to

    led Parisians w ho vocalized excerpts $erform representative :works of Aus-f rom The Wel l -Tempered Clav ier trian music, mostly likely :one operaand The Art of Fugue. They used each by Mozart, Richard Strauss, and ;such lyrics as dabba -dibba-d ab, Alban Berg. Conferences with the sAustrian Consul , Drl George M&t- j- do-do-do and bum-pah-dah whi le,a string bassist an d a drumm er swung ner Markhof appare ntly w ere verya 4/4 bea t behind them . successful. / .

    This week Bach% Greatest Hits *A---z ,I_ _ _is in i ts 59th week. on The Bi l lboards * * * .l is t of top-sel l ing LPs. I t had been .

    follow ed by another, similar, disk, . * Glee Clu b reh earsals are startingGoing Baroque which, in turn; had 1 aga in next week; Every) one is invit- been fol lowed to the Uni ted States by ed to at tend. Date: December 16th.

    ._10% StudeM; Discount

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    iO% student discomt

    PAPERBACK SALEDECEMBER 14TH TO 16TH

    20% Discount on a ll. paperbacks onexcept UrliversityPressbooks.display, Dont forget to chec k ourSpecials Table\. Thursday, December lo,.1964 5,

    \

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    ,Depe nding upon whether you want pil ls or fphysics at U. of W:,. you. : \,ask Dr; ReesoT. or :Dr, Rce I : UNlIIERSiTY, BlLLlliRDSt ,1 AND ARleiY:

    L&l ies welcOm$ . aIl ,Kihi at WniFe rsit$ ,. A! kaid, Proprietor.. ,,

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    i J 6 -King St. d., WaterlodKeys cut while .YIIU wait 8 I

    1 UniversiW ,Dispouri%- I _/ ,. _. ,, I-* . . .-Ihe &n, Conforinists 1. y _, ,__ard wa6 never the true.lstandard ins* , , , , $JLERd_ .

    - Hard *Trip , l&D: Gee : i i _ ,

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    by Harold bietrich 1f rom Engineering did indeed defeatthe other host of eight players f romGrebel . In the second game the st ra-tegy on both s ides was to prove theirteam had the fanc iest footwork. Onejunior, Arthur Murray, was comapletely faked out by a forward whodid a combinat ion twis t and monkey-s tep; al l whi le chewing his gum an ddoing a two-f ingered set-shot . In theend Arts m anaged a lucky win overthe danc ing school f lunk ies Renison35 - 24.

    liltramural Hockey Tonight , the hammer and tong

    boys ge t their first chance to drawblood; spout their nasty language, andput horror in the minds of al l thosewho hold hockey to be a dear sweet-sport, Immedia tely after the Warriorgame, which wi l l be a mold, wel l -control led ladies tea in comparison,the int ramural monsters wi l l get achance td howl. The f i rs t game (and theword is used in an extremely viciousmanner) wi l l be a blood-bath betweenArts and St . Paul s . Unfortunatelyfor Arts , St . Paul ls have been holding23-hour practices 7% days a week,and everyone expects (not wi thoutsome glee) that the Arts team w i l lhave their clocks cle aned . In fact St.Paul s wi l l not only c lean their c locks,but wi l l rearrange the Arts mechan-isms also. Behold! The t ime has come.The day of , the M au Mau . has re-turned and shal l wreak a vengenceupon the lowly Arts .

    The thi rd game was a bat t le ofgiants between Sc ience and St . Jer-omes , wi th Sc ience ha v ing 13 giantson their s ide whi le St . Jeromes hadonly 9 . Last year the two teams bat-t led di the way for first ,place, andSt . Jeromes came out on top. Thisyear Sc ience got of f to a good s tartby winning their game 25 - 20. Highscorer for the science team was Go-l iath wi th 4 7 points . Hercules was aa close second.

    S&hen the ,organic mess has beencleaned up ,St . Jeromes and ConradGrebel w i l l wal tz around for the re-quired length of t ime, break a fewmuscles, pul l a few bones, and scorethe odd goal to give the game agruesome f lavour. R emember! B .Y.-O.S., (bring your own splints.)

    . Clqange of

    Intramural BasketballBoth Engineering and Conrad Gre-be1 threw a mult i tude of - players into

    the basketbal l breach, in an ef fort tooverpower each other. It is historynow that the host of eight players ,

    Intramural Points As a result of a sneaky play by aWUC student the int ramural swim-ming points are going to be revised.Wal ly Delahey, who is the mens in-tramura l director, to ld this reporter avery sad story abou t how he -has tolift those heavy nu mbers off the scoreboard and rearrange them. Beingclose to tears it was all I could doto ask who gets first place now in the50 yd. Breast Stroke. The honoursgoes to Russ Col l ins who f inished se-cond behind Al t racks.

    by Hazel Rawls 1Monday, November 30; the gir l s

    basketbal l team t ravel led to Torontoto play York University. Imag ine ourteams surprise when their opponentst rouped. out in ident ical ly s ty led uni-forms! T he only difference was in thecolours.

    job of keeping the bal l out of theWaterloo basket and into the eagerhands, of our forwards.

    - P lay ing in the brand new gymnas-ium, U. of W. manag ed to gal lop toan .early lead and win the game 57 -10. The points were dis tr ibuted asfol lows: Fran Ahard, 18; Mona LeeMausberg, 17; Hazel R awls , 11; ChrisBrinkman, 6; Karen Reinhardt , .5., Th e U: of W. guards did a terrific

    As a point of spec ial interest i tshould be noted that the referees forthe game were Miss Ruth Hodgkinson(coach of the U. of W. team) andone of the gir ls f rom the York team.Don t think the coach was any eas ieron her gir ls wi th the cal ls - shewasn t . Not a s ingle spectator showedup to watch the game; but maybe i tis just a s well, as the team s vied witheach other to see which could obtainthe most fouls .

    Disappointing Weekendi For Hockey Warriors

    McGlLi 7-6, QUEEN% 9-4The weekend t r ip taken by the Ed is a f i rst year s tudent in Engin-Warriors proved to be a lost weekend.

    The team was thwarted in a c loseeering, and i t is comfort ing to knowthat we could have his se&c&~ forone against McGi l l las t Friday night .At the end of the second period the three more years in the future. Don-

    Warriors *were behind 1 7 - 4. They Mervyn scored the only. other War-came on s t rong in the thi rd p eriod rior goal . In fact Don has scored inbut could manage only two mo re every game the Warriors have played/goals to bring the score to a f inal 7-6. this year. In the Queens game ourSix Warriors f igured in the scoring, team ,had , to play wi th only f ive hourswith goals going to -Don Mervyn, s leep I the prev ious night . AccordingBruce X att, Terry Cooke, Dave, Pass- to Don Hayes the team skated with1more , A l Poo le : and Ed sDavis, It Queens for? period and a hal f thenshould be a di f ferent s tory w hen Mc- practically fell asieep . Gill visits Waterloo.

    . In Kingston last Saturday only oneWarrior had any reason to feel hap-py. Ed Burforddid as much for histeam as could be expected by scoringthree out of the four Warrior goals . %Iurrent . issues of Educat ional

    by Tex Houston k \

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