coryphaeus

12
Coryphaeus May ‘62: ‘Campus center - when’ Chevron six years later: WOW-COfyje ;nJ Come on in-it’s open. The long-awaited campus center is now ready for you. The first and second floorshave been opened to students* faculty, Challenge new PM on Viet. role Anti-war demonstrators plan to converge on the Liberal leadership convention in Ottawa Saturday to challenge the new prime minister about Canada% complicity in the Vietnam war. u We’re not pl&ning any kind of illegal actioq” SaidTedHougham, a U of T English student andanor- ganizer of the Spring Mobil&&ion Committee to End the War inViet- nam. 441t3s just a mass ral? in Lansdowne Park across from the convention site with an inform% tional picket line.” Any group opposing the war is free to join ill. Hougham said response in Tor- onto has been considerable0 Buses have been chartered to Ottawa to- morrow night at $8 a round&‘ip ticket for students. Ticket infor- mation is available at 5765797. Hougham outlined the plans to a meeting of about 15 people Sur+ dY* The group named itself the Kdtchener-Waterloo Committee to End the War in Vietnam and chose Gray Taylor, former WLU psy- chology lecturer, ‘as spokesman* Plans were made for publicity and selling bus tickets locally for the Saturday demonstration, Further demonstrations are planned for the end of the month, to coincide with American student organizations’ plans called 4‘Ten days to shake the empire? U.S* anti-war students plan to boycott classes on Friday, April 26, and stage an international day of pro- test April 27 with mass rallies in New York. In Toronto, the Spring Mobiliza- tion Committee plans a march from Queen’s Park along Univer- sity Avenue to the U.S. consulate on April 27. Some highschool stu- dents hope- to hold speak-outs in their schools and a rally0 Discussions for local action at the end of the month ranged from marches to a tag day to education- al displays on the war. The group will meet again at 1:30 on April 15 at the Unitarian House on Allen Street to finalize plans. staff and administrators. The Gerster hopes to have a night su- basement will probably be ready pervisor to control the rooms and in two months. aid people after hours. Although many students have been using the building for the past two weeks only the federation and Chevron offices and the great hall were in use. Now the lounges* meeting rooms, games room and other offices are open. Paul Gerster, director of the center, said these rooms will be open only from nine to. five until &dwe get budget clearance for a person to work from five to twelve. b4Then we can leave these rooms in use all the time the building is open.@’ Food services won’t quite be ready for the opening. Somebody forgot to install gas lines for the stoves and the loading docks ar- en’t ready yet. Bob Mudie* direc- tor of food services* said he can’t guarantee anything before Monday. He hopes to have french fries* hot dogs and cold snacks in the coffee- shop by then. Meeting rooms and lounges will be available for study use in the next few weeks while the building is open. Gerster explained, 14This won’t be a regular thing-the campus center is supposed to be a place where people can get away from all ---------------------- - - - - - Jumping the gun Page 3 Through the Jens . Page 8-9 It’s for everybody Page 11 -------------------------- - - that-but we’ll let people use them for studying this month? Groups wishing to bookroomsin the campuG center can do so through Gerster% office beside the main entrance. There are thoughts of also renting out the great hall but Gerster mentioned some of the problems connected with this. cdThe great hall is more than just the center of the building,” he said. fc One must pass through it to reach any other room or office. Therefore we can’t just rent out the hall for a dance and have them charge admission to get into the building. What about people that have offices and want to go to them and work?” He did point out the advantage a building such as the campus cen- ter for events like dances0 dtThis is the only place that can offer more than just dancing. If you meet someone and want to do something more than just dance you can go to the coffeeshop or one of the lounges.” Volume 8, Number 37 UNIVERSITY OF WATERLOO, Waterloo, Ontario For once the balI to the Waterloo jire department wasn ‘t a false alarm. A 1 O&year-old .farmhouse on the north campus-used jar storing grounds equ@ment-was completely gutted Tuesday morning. A spokesman said the j?rc probably started when sparks jiom a nearby bonfire were blown onto the ro0.f: remove several pieces bejtire the fire took over. Equipment worth $1 S, 000 was lost but PP&P workers were able to -Bob Smerdon, the Chevron by Ken Fraser Chevron staff “This institution is subsidized by public monies without being accountable to anyone except its American operators In New York? With this Dr. George Haggar launch- ed a new attack on Waterloo Lutheran University in a pamphlet published this week. Haggar says WLU is not a real uni- versity and shouldr?t get funds from the government. He bases his position on the opinion of U of T law prof Dr. J. Milner, who was on the Canadian Association of 440ur complaint is that no university worthy of the name should narrow the prin- ciple of academic freedom4 as Waterloo Lutheran has cone, beyond any reality. g4As a taxpayer, I have grave doubts about the propriety of spending public money to promote this association and employments” Milner said. . Haggar has sent a letter to the On- tario legislature asking that Lutheran’s $1.5.million subsidy be revoked. He says WLU% policies are opposed to 44the spirit of secular humanism which characterizes the Ontario system of education.” ges-has been banned from the WLU book- store but is being sold at the University of Waterloo%. Haggar said downtown book- stores have been somewhat reluctant to carry it. any further name+alling with Dr. Hag- gar2’ Haggar roundly condemned the quality of education at WLU. The pamphlet will form the nucleus of a book Haggar is writing on academic freedom. It will be called #Hubri%the revolt agtinst the gods’ and is due to be published in the fall. It will contain es- says on education and freedom and his own case history, complete with docu- ments which Haggars promises will dis credit the Lutheran administration. None of the Lutheran contact- &‘Lutheran is an academic slum.” The faculty needs upgrading, he said, but he berated the present policy of trying to attract just any PhD to the campus. “No amount of PhDs from third-rate universities can cover up the intellectual inadequacies at Lutheran? On his future, Haggar admitted* #4Pm finished in Canada. w He said he answer- ed 13 advertisements for positionsacross Canada and received 13 refusals* The pamphlet, titled %particis& ed had seen the pamphlet and no one was tains the letter to the legislature* several willing to comment on HaggaYs charges. * This is it; The last issue until allegorical fables and other letters vd Dick Taylor, head of WLU%informa- articles outlining Haggays case against tion office, said the official policy was Lutheran. %o comment.” The pamphlea8 mimeographed pa- u We do not intend to get involved in ing list on the bulletin boards. University Teachers investigation com- mittee which upheld WLU’s right not ‘to renew Haggays contract. In a letter to Haggar, Milner says he would prefer that WLU not be called aun- iversity.

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For once the balI to the Waterloo jire department wasn ‘t a false alarm. A 1 O&year-old .farmhouse on the north campus-used jar storing grounds equ@ment-was completely gutted Tuesday morning. A spokesman said the j?rc probably started when sparks jiom a nearby bonfire were blown onto the ro0.f: remove several pieces bejtire the fire took over. Equipment worth $1 S, 000 was lost but PP&P workers were able to

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Coryphaeus

Coryphaeus May ‘62: ‘Campus center - when’

Chevron six years later: WOW-COfyje ;nJ Come on in-it’s open. The long-awaited campus center

is now ready for you. The first and second floorshave

been opened to students* faculty,

Challenge new PM on Viet. role

Anti-war demonstrators plan to converge on the Liberal leadership convention in Ottawa Saturday to challenge the new prime minister about Canada% complicity in the Vietnam war.

u We’re not pl&ning any kind of illegal actioq” SaidTedHougham, a U of T English student andanor- ganizer of the Spring Mobil&&ion Committee to End the War inViet- nam. 441t3s just a mass ral? in Lansdowne Park across from the convention site with an inform% tional picket line.” Any group opposing the war is free to join ill.

Hougham said response in Tor- onto has been considerable0 Buses have been chartered to Ottawa to- morrow night at $8 a round&‘ip ticket for students. Ticket infor- mation is available at 5765797.

Hougham outlined the plans to a meeting of about 15 people Sur+ dY* The group named itself the Kdtchener-Waterloo Committee to End the War in Vietnam and chose Gray Taylor, former WLU psy- chology lecturer, ‘as spokesman*

Plans were made for publicity and selling bus tickets locally for the Saturday demonstration,

Further demonstrations are planned for the end of the month, to coincide with American student organizations’ plans called 4‘Ten days to shake the empire? U.S* anti-war students plan to boycott classes on Friday, April 26, and stage an international day of pro- test April 27 with mass rallies in New York.

In Toronto, the Spring Mobiliza- tion Committee plans a march from Queen’s Park along Univer- sity Avenue to the U.S. consulate on April 27. Some highschool stu- dents hope- to hold speak-outs in their schools and a rally0

Discussions for local action at the end of the month ranged from marches to a tag day to education- al displays on the war. The group will meet again at 1:30 on April 15 at the Unitarian House on Allen Street to finalize plans.

staff and administrators. The Gerster hopes to have a night su- basement will probably be ready pervisor to control the rooms and in two months. aid people after hours.

Although many students have been using the building for the past two weeks only the federation and Chevron offices and the great hall were in use.

Now the lounges* meeting rooms, games room and other offices are open.

Paul Gerster, director of the center, said these rooms will be open only from nine to. five until &dwe get budget clearance for a person to work from five to twelve.

b4Then we can leave these rooms in use all the time the building is open.@’

Food services won’t quite be ready for the opening. Somebody forgot to install gas lines for the stoves and the loading docks ar- en’t ready yet. Bob Mudie* direc- tor of food services* said he can’t guarantee anything before Monday. He hopes to have french fries* hot dogs and cold snacks in the coffee- shop by then.

Meeting rooms and lounges will be available for study use in the next few weeks while the building is open.

Gerster explained, 14This won’t be a regular thing-the campus

center is supposed to be a place where people can get away from all ---------------------- - - - - - Jumping the gun Page 3 Through the Jens . Page 8-9 It’s for everybody Page 11 -------------------------- - -

that-but we’ll let people use them for studying this month?

Groups wishing to bookroomsin the campuG center can do so through Gerster% office beside the main entrance. There are thoughts of also renting out the great hall but Gerster mentioned some of the problems connected with this.

cdThe great hall is more than

just the center of the building,” he said. fc One must pass through it to reach any other room or office. Therefore we can’t just rent out the hall for a dance and have them charge admission to get into the building. What about people that have offices and want to go to them and work?”

He did point out the advantage a building such as the campus cen- ter for events like dances0

dtThis is the only place that can offer more than just dancing. If you meet someone and want to do something more than just dance you can go to the coffeeshop or one of the lounges.”

Volume 8, Number 37 UNIVERSITY OF WATERLOO, Waterloo, Ontario

For once the balI to the Waterloo jire department wasn ‘t a false alarm. A 1 O&year-old .farmhouse on the north campus-used jar storing grounds equ@ment-was completely gutted Tuesday morning. A spokesman said the j?rc probably started when sparks jiom a nearby bonfire were blown onto the ro0.f: remove several pieces bejtire the fire took over.

Equipment worth $1 S, 000 was lost but PP&P workers were able to -Bob Smerdon, the Chevron

by Ken Fraser Chevron staff

“This institution is subsidized by public monies without being accountable to anyone except its American operators In New York?

With this Dr. George Haggar launch- ed a new attack on Waterloo Lutheran University in a pamphlet published this week.

Haggar says WLU is not a real uni- versity and shouldr?t get funds from the government. He bases his position on the opinion of U of T law prof Dr. J. Milner, who was on the Canadian Association of

440ur complaint is that no university worthy of the name should narrow the prin- ciple of academic freedom4 as Waterloo Lutheran has cone, beyond any reality.

g4As a taxpayer, I have grave doubts about the propriety of spending public money to promote this association and employments” Milner said. .

Haggar has sent a letter to the On- tario legislature asking that Lutheran’s $1.5.million subsidy be revoked. He says WLU% policies are opposed to 44the spirit of secular humanism which characterizes the Ontario system of education.”

ges-has been banned from the WLU book- store but is being sold at the University of Waterloo%. Haggar said downtown book- stores have been somewhat reluctant to carry it.

any further name+alling with Dr. Hag- gar2’

Haggar roundly condemned the quality of education at WLU.

The pamphlet will form the nucleus of a book Haggar is writing on academic freedom. It will be called #Hubri%the revolt agtinst the gods’ and is due to be published in the fall. It will contain es- says on education and freedom and his own case history, complete with docu- ments which Haggars promises will dis credit the Lutheran administration.

None of the Lutheran contact-

&‘Lutheran is an academic slum.” The faculty needs upgrading, he said,

but he berated the present policy of trying to attract just any PhD to the campus.

“No amount of PhDs from third-rate universities can cover up the intellectual inadequacies at Lutheran?

On his future, Haggar admitted* #4Pm finished in Canada. w He said he answer- ed 13 advertisements for positionsacross Canada and received 13 refusals*

The pamphlet, titled %particis& ed had seen the pamphlet and no one was tains the letter to the legislature* several willing to comment on HaggaYs charges. * This is it; The last issue until allegorical fables and other letters vd Dick Taylor, head of WLU%informa- articles outlining Haggays case against tion office, said the official policy was Lutheran. %o comment.”

The pamphlea8 mimeographed pa- ’ u We do not intend to get involved in ing list on the bulletin boards.

University Teachers investigation com- mittee which upheld WLU’s right not ‘to renew Haggays contract.

In a letter to Haggar, Milner says he would prefer that WLU not be called aun- iversity.

Page 2: Coryphaeus

WiII dig the scene

Six loecds ufe set OO=m,ile trip

Four Waterloo Lutheran stu- dents> their professors and a Uof W staff member leave June 10 for one of the longest undergraduate field trips in Canadian history- .6,000 miles to the site of an an- cient city on the banks of the Jar- dan River.

The group will take part in the final excavation of a site 10 miles north of Jerusalem that flourished during the great age of pyramid building in Egypt. The city* now known as Deir Dibwan, (site of the monastery), was destroyed in 2000 EC.

‘Tve neve r done this type of work before, but Pm looking for- ward to it. It% an interesting ap- plication of art,” said Steiler.

Wagner said the students are financing their own travel to take part in the field tripe

&&It is significant, too& that this field trip is usually the kind that only graduate students could take. And even they often work as labo= rers but our students will work as supervisors?

Each student will have about 10 native laborers working under Mm.

Dr. Norman Wagner, chairman Wagner will be co-director of

of the department of Near Eastern work at the site under the general

studies at WLU. is in charge of the supervision of Prof a Joseph C alla= previous diggings at Deir Dibwan prove a massive city of 27 acres was thriving 5QOO years ago. WL U prof Norman WagneT says it may have been an outpost to recruit slaves.

field trip. He ‘received i $6,500 waY from Louisville* Kentucky. -

Canada Council grant toward his Students participating are carol tive sites be considered as pass- , - * * - in western Asia. At this time Jer= site was occupied once again* then

work. H icks, David Newlands, Derrek usalem covered about 10 acres later deserted/’ ible locales for Ai, or to suppose

Earl Steiler, technical director H ines and Lex Groppere All are $&It is reasonable to suppose that The site* known in antiquity as that the conquest has been pro-

of the Theater of the Arts, will be students in Near Eastern studies0 Deir Dibwan served as a signifi= Ai (the ruin)* according to Hebrew jetted to a former period in his= &Awn, 99

draftsman and artist for -the exm Evidence from former excavae cant Egyptian outpost during this tradition, was conquered by mili- WAY e

pedition. tions at Deir Dibwan lead to the belief U-d zi nmdw CitY a-

period, perhaps to recruit Asiatic tary ambush in the 13th century BC. The work this summer, in whiph

He will be responsible for pr@ sbves. ~~ 2000 BC the city was 44 This is rendered improbable by the WLU students will part~~~fl~~~9

ducing a pictorial record of the isted there during the latter part is expected to shed further light

finding s. This includes sketches of - of the third millenium before destroyed ?# Wqner said. 9 results obtained to date, since Deir on alternative solutions and publi-

artificats and detailed plans of the Christ and that it covered about27 He added, ttIt was not until the Dibwan was deserted from 2000 to cation of results is scheduled for

Wagner said. “It is acres, virtually unrivalled in size 10th to 8th cenury BC that the

1000 BC,” walls. therefore imperative that alterns

shortly after the conclusion of the expedition.

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It% official. Math is the bloodiest faculty on

campus and it has a trophy tc prove it. Math is the first holder of the newly-instituted Blood Bowl, awarded to the faculty with the highest turnout at the bloDd clinic.

Math was first with 22.8percent turnout but science was a close second with 20.2 percent.

As expected, St. Paul% took the

Corpuscle Cup-now only for resi= dence c~~mpetition-for the Nth time. St. Paul’s had a turnout of ‘75.3 percent. The runner-up was a group of Vi&ige houses west 4# 5$ and 6# who had a score of 64.5 percent.

Approximately 20 percent of students turned out to give 1057 pints of blood.

Fro& to be wecmed by Mothers SQBs, archons# big brothers et

al--but guess what they came up &ifs up for everyone interested0

with this year* ktIn addition to mothers there

Orientati0n groups each ye= will be about 30 grandmothers to

like to find a catchy name for oversee operations. We do have

the fresh leaders and Qrientation one great-grandmother to help out

68 people are no different@ the mothers and that will be Reuben Cohen. oh yes, in case any fresh

Their meetmg this week* at- should get lost or forget their tended by about 150# voted in the mother we911 have an adoption name Mothere center.99

After the meeting* chairman If you were a frosh this year and George Loney explained9 “We need harbor memories that need r* about 300 mothers-they can be venge9 find one of those lists and men or wome+oand we911 have sign it.

Let industry fincmce universities

shou1d the public9s money be Waterloo registrar. Now working used to finance universities? for the university-affiars depart-

Not according to Peter Warrian, ment in Toronto9 Gordon said he the president-elect of the Canadian felt university degrees were simw Union of Students.

At last weekend’s Guelph teach=- ply a matter of snob appeal.

in Warrian suggested industry University research* according

should underwrite university to Gordon9 should be moved to in= dustry to avoid conflicts with

costs and the public’s money be teaching in the university. spent elsewhere.

The noorlv attended teach-in ran A vicepresident of Bell Tel*

two days&riday and Saturday* phone9 John Thamer, said univer-

Those who did come saw a film sity research is t6 just piddling99

on new concepts in university edu= when compared with industrial re-

cation taking place in England. search.

A panel discusssion on justwhat -Warrian replied to this by saying a university education should be industry depends on university and what was wrong with it was graduates, therefore they should livened by Al Gordon) a former subsidize the university.

2 574 The CHEVRON

Page 3: Coryphaeus

Stucfet7ts jutnp gun to Open cetljer Daaa-da-da-da-daaa-da-da

: Daaa-da-da-da-w-da-da With the Berlin and Elmiry band

playing t Lapland’ a motley crew led by the Aryan mrs Commission began marching towards the cam- pus center and fame.

The occasion was an unofficial official opening of the campus cen- ter. In the tradition of last sum- mer’s early opening of the engin- eering submarine and the Engin- eering Society’s christening of Fort Stanton, students again beat the administration to the punch.

Master of ceremonies for the opening was Bob Verdun, civil 2A# president of the Aryan Affairs Commission.

. Jim Nagel, edito+outgoing of the Chevron, was introduced and he gave a history of the campus center via headlines from the Corypheus of 1962 right up to the Kitchen-Water Rag, which a,n= nounced the official opening.

Nagel’s history lesson finished@ Verdun introduced the Aryan Af- fairs chancellor* Harold D. Gold- brick, who had sent a taped mes- age to cheer the gathering.

Goldbrick described the great hall as &&the best lounge a bank ever had? (When the centefls basement is completed a Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce will be located there.)

As the rousing speech finished Verdun led the masses in singing hymn 345# the Carling’s Red Cap song& gi dedicated to Mrs. Robarts in hopes she will let John grant a liquor license to the campus cen- te r.$*

Then came the awards. Aryan Affairs registrar Steve

Ireland presented bachelor of jour- nalism degreestoNagelandChev- ron assistant editor Brian Clark. Campus-center director dtPudgy Paul” Gerster was handed one of the several posters which had been

placed in the building earlier that the sidelines another luminary was As events reached a climax Ver= morning. It re% %Xmpus center spotted in the crowd. Provost Bill dun brought forward the assistit not open until further notice? Scott-a regular at these affairs- vicepresident -in-charge-of-v i c e

AS Gerster returned redfacedto agreed to accept an award. Julie Begemann to cut the red tape

Receives highest awad from Pepsi generation

Fust=ucting pop mdiine follows the money by Rufus Higgelmeyer Chevron staff

You’ve heard of marching pi- anos, of course* but what about marching pop machines?

When the old federation building NW goqercent mated Mrs. I?. Epsi became very lonely.

The only remaining humans in annex one are the nurses* Campus Shop operators andchevron photo-

graphers, all awaiting new offices and rooms.

Mrs. P.Epsi, however$ wouldn*t wait0

Two weeks ago Mrs. Epsi made the 300-foot trip from-her oldpost in the musty federation building to a new station outside the Chevron otices in the campus center* While the journey isn’t too long it can be rather hazardous for a 500-pound pop machine-

ose who feel sporty in Y es8 that% right$ sports onpage

three* We got an urgent call from Paul

Condon, intramural director of the athletic department, the other day* Quoth he:

(‘Anyone interested in playing lacrosse or softball during the summer for a varsity team should get in touch with Carl Totzke over

at Seagram? He said this is the first time a

varsity sport has been organized for the summer months and if the plan is successful it could lead to others.

Games have been arranged with teams from Americanuniversities and the Ontario Lacrosse Associ- Zi.tiO&

Sounded like a good story S O we interviewed Mrs. Epsi for details of her unusual journey.

What prompted you to move to the campus center?

Well there are several reasons. I felt left out because I didn’t even get an invitation to the opening cer- emonies* And besides it got lonely sitting in that old office* It$s silent as a tomb now but it used to be a

g c We*re trying to provide some varsity sports for summer stud- entsjp9 he said$ d4and this could expand to other sports like hard- ball8 soccer* cricket and possibly swimming ?’

or working in the Twin Cities area and would like to play lacrosse or softball can contact Totzke at local 2474.

Well. . .you see, Al, it was like this. I was just (riving along when this other car popped up in jivnt o*f me. ” Responsibility for the accident was put on the other cur.

-Brian Clark, the Chevron

Kutustro No, the campus cops haven’t got new riot-control A woman riding in the Ford received a slight con-

trucks. cussion. One campus cop estimated damage to the cruiser

They were forced to use a PP&P truck for pat- at $1000. rofig last week when their cruiser was smashed.

Al Romenco* security director* said the car has now been repaired. He added, Wur people

The accident occurred on the ringroad at the were completely in the clear and as a result the other

entrance to parking lot B. party’s insurance company has accepted responsibil- ity for repairs.”

Security officer William Brockett was driving There was no cost at all to the university as a the cruiser when it collided with a Ford stationwagon@ result of the accident, he said.

hive of activity* But that main reason I moved is economic-you can’t make money in an empty buil- di.I-g*

When did you move over to the campus center?

About 8:30 pm March 22*

Were you traveling alone?

No, I was with about 10 friendsa They were very helpful since I’m not used to much travelling.

Did they provide transporta- tion for you?

Yes, they had a little platform with wheels but it was much too small for me* I was always onthe verge of falling offe And getting over the curbs was a real trick

Was there anything that esp- ecialiy worried you about the trip?

And of course the company was very glad with my initiative in foll- owing the clientelee

Well, my companions didn$tins- The only comment my service- pire much confidence with their constant mutterings about Kampus

man made when he found me was@ ‘{Those guys were lucky you wep

Kops, cars and insurance claims. en? completely full*”

Vote reversal On second thought WLU students

don’t want Roger Sanders fortheir president.

Voters early in March chose Sanders but that election was ruled unconstitutional. The q-i- tions used for the elections had not been passed by student counci$ thus inv~dating all voting.

In the follow-up election Bill Ballard, a second-year student+ beat Sanders by 63 votes* 408 to 345. Only about a third of eligible students voteda

Sanders had received 36percent of the votes in the first election against two opponents8 Ballardand Dave Walker*

In this week% vote, however, Walker threw his support behind Ballard and the combination was enough to beat Sandersa

All councillors elected in early March were returned by acclarn+ tiOlL

Ballard campaigned for more student power. He claims he will try to make student life oncampus easier, hoping to change thedt Vic- torian residence regulations” and initiate a %ew and more reason- able constitutionap’

Ballard has no council experi-

Were there any special prob- lems?

Yes* those. duckwalks up to the campus-center door posed quite a difficulty. It’s a very steep slope and with all the snow didn’t think we would make it0 I thought I might have to stay there all night*

And I was appalled at the ideaof trying to explain to a campus cop why I didn’t have an ID card or parking decal.

What kind of reaction was there to your unexpected ar- rival in the campus center?

As I zoomed through the great hall the janitor% mouth fell open but my old buddies from the C hev- ron and the federation were happy to see me.

ousts Sanciefs ence but says he knows t4what has to be done.” He says he can get more done for the university b+ cause he is not “afraid of the ad- ministration.*’

Ff ee college chooses nafne

Nova Res? What’s that* a new kind of the

W? Not really. Nova Res is the name

of the local Rochdale-type free un- iversity.

The 26-member college voted last week for the name which means %ew thing” in Latin.

All decisions in the groupa based at the Co-op residences are arrived at democratically ingeneral meet- WP.

This week the membership is launching a recruitment drive at both local universities. Application forms and information about this educational proj& will be avail- able in the Federation of Students office8 the arts coffeeshop and en- gineering commonroom.

The college is designed to give a taste of non-regimented education@

Thursday, April 4, 1968 (8:37) 575 a

Page 4: Coryphaeus

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ifor firecf uffer ot7e WINNIPEG (CUP)-- Ron Robin-

son was chosen editor of the Uni- versity of Winnipeg’s student newspaper* the Uniter.

He put out one issue and was fired.

The United sttif then followed with a mass resignation move.

At issue was a front-page article in the Uknighter&n annual end- of-theyear joke issue-=put out by tie &aduating staff. The story’s headline was 44Collegiate students hang dean by balls?

It described hQw students from the university highschool nailed fieir dean to the tower of one of the universitv buildings after he

they had come to class %ude from the waist down” in protest against his dress code*

several times this year the Uniter has run articles criticizing collegiate dean Lorne Tomlinson for his management of the high- school division.

Collegiate students reacted quickly against the paper collect- ing as many as they could when it came out. Fights broke out between college students and highschoolers -including 6 firehose exchange when an attempt was made to burn the papers. Pickets demonstrated outside the school supporting Tom- linson carrying signs which read

expelled the whole school because %top Uniter lies?

Evelyn Wood

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iam Street,

In a packed meeting, the collegi- ate students censured the Uniter and passed a motion in support of their dean.1

Author of the article8 and past Uniter editor, Denis Owens was tVehemently9’ censured by the student council executive. Present editor Robinson was suspended.

At a special student council meeting the executive’s action was supported by a 10-2 vote to fire Robinson. The same meeting for- bade Owen to be involved with the Uniter for the rest of his time at the university*

Attempts to get Owens expelled were defeated.

Council and the paper have agreed to call a Canadian Univere sity Press commission to look into the affaira .

The Uniter staff is split over the matter*

One group, led by Owens* put out a two-page mimeographed sheet8 relating the events and saying they would accept only the judgment of a CUP commission# of the students and of legal restraint as the defi- nition of freedom of press.

The other group* led by inetrim editor Barb McClintoch* published a broadsheet financed by counci$ reporting the events. They admit- ted the article was in bad taste but defended Robinson saying he had no role in its production0

In Ottaws CUP president Lib Spry said the commission will be made up of past CUP bureau chief John Lynna Uby ssey staffer Al Bi* nie and an unchosen local journa- list.

Got a stack of loose news- print sitting around? ~

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you cgn do your thing

This educational project will con- sist of faculty and full and part-tinle students from both local universi- ties, working together to produce a new experience in democratis edu- cation.

The project will bring together persons with varying interests: from anarchism to Zen, from engine de- sign to theatre of the absurd, from linguistics to the Russian Revolu- tion.

Aim of the project: to provide an environment where individuals and groups can create their own educational experiences which will be relevent to them.

Fundamen ta1 principles: 1, Me- mbers will study because they wish to, rather than because they are re- quired to. 2. Members will partici- pate in the decisions which deter-

mine the content and approach of their own studies.

Educational philosophy. The project is based on the ideal of dis- ciplined self-direction in education. It is not a primary intention to pro- vide a better curriculum,nor a more relevent curriculum,nor a more ex- citing one (although all these things may follow from the project.).

This project is a golden tunity for those seeking a different approach to education. Residence life is a valuable aid in providing an educational environ- lnent. Accommodation is available for 136 male and female members and 16 married couples at the Phillip Street co-op residences. However, residence is not essential for membership.

Nova Res is latin for “new thing”.

For further details and application forms, call:

2-5203 57’6 The CHEVRON

Page 5: Coryphaeus

Thefe’s a price to pay for bigness

ally the doer type-me e* couraged to stay onas stafffollow~ ing graduation. Anyone who% been

u of w is slowly falling victim through the complete mill isbound to that inevitable fate of rapidly to have the sympathy rewired to expanding universitie~ss of offset part of the attitude that will personal intimacy. always be try& to diminish the

Nothing gets a student more cheesed off than knowing that he is simply another D3 number, or another Villager or another yell- owjacketir another letter~wr& er to the Chevron editor* for kd matter.

Maiority of stucfents Ii&e war in Vietnam

As the campus becomes more widespread* as fa.culky ages, as student-run organizations grow more sophiskica.ted* a moldy CITE& forms. The whole unit that calls itself a university necessarily d* velops less tolerance for the indim vidual per se.

First of all let me express my whole hartd agreement with Mr. P. Wilkins8 complaint about the Coryphaeus (whoops-sorry you changed that too) turning into a political propaganda sheet. (Feedback, March 15).

Be spetiic? Uh-uh. You know whti I mea.

Instead let me offer one sugges- tion.

It isn3 necessary to turn to the editorial page any more to know at least one edWrial will be anti-Vietnam or anti-American in general* In addition Mr. Corn- munist Doctrine Martin always has to get in his two rubles worth.

It would help if as ma.ny Water- loo students as possibk-especi-

Finally* turning to today’s issue in particular. I wonder what business the board of external

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relations of U of W has in heI@ng to set up an unofficial high school newspaper. I suddenly see the light when I read on in the article t.o the mention about “Is it dollar diplomacy?*’ I bet the Federa- tion of Students wouldn’t havebeen so generous with our money if an article was to be entitled, The necessity ofAmericaninv~l= vement in Vietnam.”

The opinion of the majority Of students on Vietnam and similar qmtions has been expressedsev- era1 times. Since all students pay for the paper, isn’t it about time you started giving at lea.9 equal time to the majority opinion?

A LLAN PRICE mechanical 4B

MEMO TO: All Students FROM: Wally Delahey,

head coach. SUBJECT: FOOTBALL

Students who otherwise have not played varsity football to date and who would like to try out for the

team this fail, are asked to leave their names and addresses with Coach Delahey at Seagram Stad- ium as soon as possible.

Math defeated the plumbers %7 to come out on top in the intramur- al curling bonspiel.

The math boys were skipped by Peter Finch. Dave Holmes* Dave Hawkins and Bob Laking made up the team. The bonspiel was held March 24 at the K-W granite club.

T

tling trophy Steski, with Vic Fe&h Mike Fen- ton and Axe1 Larson.

The two teams were tied going Into the last end. Steski had last stone but was a bit heavy.

Finch defeated John Scott of the grads 7-6 and broke a 6-6 tie with Glare Brown of St. Paul’s

The plumbers were skip Wayne to get to the fXnal.

God Crosby Volkswagen formerly Central Motors

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Thursday, April 4, 7968 (8:37) 577 5

Page 6: Coryphaeus

Sneaking behind an old mill-straight out of the nineteenth Century-Carolyn leads Mary, Carol and Gail on their exploration of the Elora Gorge.

fxplofing the Elofa Gofg Fifteen miles northeast of Kit-

chener-Waterloo the Grand River runs through the small town of Elorae Nothing spectacular yet- a quiet town and a quiet river-# un= till the water drops seventy feet.

After thousands of years of falling the waters have carvedfor the Grand a two-mile long scar hewn simply as Elora Gorge.

The - resultant landscape--falls8 rapids, cliffs8 steep paths, Hole- In-The-Rock-has become a fav- orite with tourists.

* * * With the warm air of spring dis-

couraging serious sttid girls turned to the out forget books and exams,

The headed for Elor and an afternoon of l

Snow was still piled d bush* some ice still Ao the river and the trees bare but spring was in

* * * Carol, Mary* Gail ant

were among Elora% earl tars this year-eve2 i tables haven3 been set I there were no broker crumpled lunch bags pop cans lying around.

About a mile-and-a-half downstream jiom Elora a small tri- bute oj’ the Grand j?jams down into the gorge.

Heading upstream towards Elora, rapids become a more prominent feature in the clijr walls get steeper-even overhanging in several places.

6 578 The CHEVRON

Page 7: Coryphaeus

g four 1x-s to

Gorge loring. I in the d iown re still 2e air0

What’s spfing?

Spring is snow melfing.

water running.

sun shininge

people smiling.

pucidese

people loo

afounci hem again.

Explofing.

Discovefing things.

Chevron photos by

Gary Robins

be river while ne Grand starts its foamy ride thrpugh the gorge right in the town, falling first over a spill’dam then tumbling over rapids for a couple of miles. A single core 8f hard rock has resisted the water’s attempts at erosion.

Thwsda y, April 4, 7968 (8:37) 579 7

Page 8: Coryphaeus

Hefe it is ut long lust..a

A dream realized, the almost-finished campus center sits in the contractors’ mud. Workmen still labor in the basement but the upstairs is slowly being occupied.

One early suggestion-not entirely serious yet not en- tirely facetiou-was that this be-a sock-feet campus cen- ter. It is probably the only building in the university which actually invites you to take off your shoes and en- joy the plush acres of carpet.

Well, who’s for shoe racks at the door?

Womens Lounge Room 13-5

(TKs lounge could be used for color TV or as general- purpose lounge, depending upon need)

That’s what the card on the door says. Seems to be a subtle hint from Paul Gerster, director of

the building, that room 135 may find other uses. We shall see,

Despite some early misgivings, the pink chairs in the middle of the great hall have become the jbvorite lounge chairs oj- many students-math-types more than likely.

Qh, we’ve got stoves..e

The campus center will have a coffeeshop much like the arts coffeeshop* Except there aren’t any long tables.

The shop will open for business Monday. The fare will be rather restricted, however. As the memo says: ‘Menu items are limited to those foods not requiring heat.”

The reason is quite simple. There’s no gas. Due to a slight oversight, no gas mains were installed.

But just remember-they did manage to install the electricity okay.

No, FASS Nite won’t be held in the FASS room next year. Actually; the FASS room has little to do with FASS except financially. ’

The proceeds from FASS are being used to outfit a music rehearsal room in the center. A piano is being ord- ered as well as curtians on one wall and rug on the floor to contain its tones.

“It’s just a room to give frustrated musical types a room to pound out their abilities,” said Circle K president Bill Lusignan.

8 580 The CHEVRON

Page 9: Coryphaeus

. ..ouf cutnpus Ii

CCI s pub- well cdmosf

Thelarge lounge next to the as-yet-unlicensed bar is al- ready called the “pub” by many hopeful students.

It promises to become a main gathering place on campus. Its atmosphere is cozier and more congenial to bridge than the train-station great hall.

A liquor license seems rather remote right now. But the “pub” will still appeal to many as a comfortable place to relax and dream of the day when John Robarts and H.D. Wilson will join them for a draft.

The games lounge offers pool tables, chess boards, bridge tables and cozy fireplace.

One thing about the great hall-lots of light. Skylights, tall windows and multitudes of hanging stoplights keep the place well-lit.

photography by Gary Robins and Pete VVilkinsqn

sketches by George Loney

Thursday, April 4, 1968 (8:37) 581 9

Page 10: Coryphaeus

Queen’s gets u rival ‘Journcd KINGSTON (CUP)-Somebody papers the Queen’s Journal* some cents a copy in the city but distri-

out there doesn’t like the Quee$s competition. buted free on the campus. Journal. Parr has put out four issues of

Westfall Parr, a 270year-old u The Other Journal*’ and is The regular Journal has finished

student at Queen’s University is planning three a week for the next publication for this year and won’t

out the give the regular student start until the fa.ll. year* They will be sold for five

Landscape project developed by

Parr and his assistants8 Charles Schwier and Julien Lebensold, both f&t-year students# plan to sell advertising in the city.

A - PEISTER COMPANY LTD. Landscape Contractors

The say they will cover every= thing that even remotely touches student ltie in Kingston and hope for a good off-campus circulationm

Parr was a member of the staff of the Queen% Journal before starting his rival publication.

He said the regular Journal has failed. 4fWe had about two meet- ings all year and we didn’t pull together. There should be a staff meeting every week so we get strong leadership and know where

J we’re going/’

congratulations and best wishes to the

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1 582 The CHEVRON

Page 11: Coryphaeus

Passing the pencil Two years is a long time at this

game, playing editor. In some ways I’m glad it’s over; in others I’m not.

There are a lot of things I’m glad I did, a lot I’m sorry I did, a lot I’m sorry I didn’t do.

Happy memories:

-Finding out that up there be- hind the titles they’re still just people: Hagey, Petch, Scott, Ire- land. Those without great titles are jsut as much people too: janitors, secretaries, kampus kops, printers.

-Seeing the most unlikely types become the most valued staffers. Realizing that most of the staff were complete strangers before they

. just walked in and offered to help. Making lasting friends of some.

-Looking at a stack of about three inches of bound newsprint and being able to say, “We did that.” Looking back to the begin- ning and realizing some improve- ments/zave taken effect since then-

CO-0p evils I don’t like my job here, ‘cause they think I’m a slob here- it’s just as simple as that! But a nosey coordinator, just turned investigator, refused to let this stand pat. So I strung him a line that the women were fine, just to make him believe all the

strife. I’d gone through that summer just trying to woo her- you guessed it-the boss’s own wife!

-Grunt (Matagami bureau)

that some reform campaigns that started off loud and conscious hadn’t really been forgotten, they’d just become automatic.

Regrets: % -All the stories I missed. It’s

at least a consolation that this off- ense by its very nature leaves no written records. All the sensitive probing-into-basic-values things that got written only in my dreams.

-Unresolved bad feelings (some perhaps just in my imagination, but unresolved nevertheless) over some stories or personality clashes.

-Never succeeded in getting or- gelized to the point where all-night- ers became a thing of the past; nev- er learned to dash off brilliant copy without effort.

-Staff turnover. Too many people flunked (my fault? their own?); too many quit just when we were becoming close.

The campus center is both a re- gret and a rejoice. It’s too bad it took SO long, but it’s great to be out of the old shack for at least the last few weeks.

And this is it. The last issue, the last editorial. Another three weeks to clean up loose ends, to make life easier for my successor.

What’s done is done; what’s un- done is still undone.

To you, Stewart Saxe, I throw the big blue pencil. Be it yours to hold it l-&hY to be liberal in cross- ing stuff out with. (You’ll need the dictionary too-still can’t spell.)

In the words of one of my illu- strious and legendary forbears:

Shalom. -I- -3o-

THE

a

A member of the Canadian university Press The Chevron is published every Friday ($except exam periods and August) by the board of publications of the Federation of Students, Uni- versity of Waterloo. Content is independent of the university, student council and the board of publications. Offices in the campus center. Phone (519) 744-6111 local 3443 (newsroom), 3444 (ads). Night 744-0111.

editor-in-chief: Jim Nagel assistant editor: Brian Clark news editor: Rich Mills

sports editor: Tom Rajnovich entertainment editor: Nancy Murphy photo editor: Brian Doda

5B4 pages-that’s it for this year fer dam’shur, to quote Ma Murray. Staff’s considerably shrunk, can’t guess why. News was a ,five-man gang: Ken Fraser’s X stories, Bob Verdun aiding in his way. Dale Martin who missed pizza, Andy (Geranium) Lawrence manning CUP. Special thanx to Ron, Anne and Kuti of the Cord. Photo-nearly deserted ‘cept Gary Robins with 6934 pix, Pete Wilkin- son between Compendium all-niters, Bob Smerdon (the fire bureau) and Alex Smith. Sports wants to graduate-can’t blame you,.Arch and Tom. Ads were solicited by Julie Begemann, with Mike Greenspoon and Ken Baker, who doubles in the circ department with Jim Bowman. Don’t forget pubs chairman Maor (Geoff). And girl friday Peg Gumming. And the two staffers-in-training, Steve ‘n’ Stew. And Spink who blew in again to help out at Elmiry, 9,200 copies

A phrase that should be stomped on every time it creeps into conver- sation: “Student center.”

Our long-awaited campus center is intended to be the focus of the entire university-faculty, admini- stration, staff, alumni and visitors as well as students.

It’s not just a %udent-union building” like those on other cam- puses. Although it contains offices for the Federation of Students and student publications, it’s much more than that.

It’s not just a 9-to-5 operation like the rest of the campus. It will probably become an afternoon-and -evening building-and should be open 24 hours a day for everyone.

It’s not a place for more big groups. It offsets the 300~in-rows- in-an-amphitheater pattern-becom- ing too common-with half-a-doz- en around a fireside.

It’s not the private domain of any one group. There are enough areas on the rest of campus segregated for women or for staff or for faculty.

participation are welcome from ev- eryone in the university.)

The campus center is a place to relax. To take off your shoes and wander around in comfort. To study physics by challenging your prof to a game of pool. To discuss the essay over a coffeeshop table instead of over his deqk. Or to’ sit ’ down with him> put your feet up, and study sociology just watching the people go by.

It’s the living room of the univer- -sity. It’s a place to create a sense of community and unity, by encourag- ing the informal interchange-espec- ially between students and faculty- that is so important to a complete education. It can bring greater har- mony in university government if administrators use it to meet the rest of the community personally.

Elucation does not begin- and end in the classroom. The campus center is part of the educational program of the university.

AZZ members of the university are invited to use it and to enjoy it.

Come on in and mix.

Thursday, April 4, 1968 (8:37) 583 11

Page 12: Coryphaeus

Old friends reunited - muil moves Wondering where that last letter ma promises to keep it full of

from the old man is? goodies for everyone. The one with the $50 in it? If your name starts with any of Well the student mailbox has the initials from A to Z and you

joined its old companior$ the Pepsi machine, in the new campus center.

don’t give a specific address, your mail is probably in this box.

It% just outside the federation Ii% a good excuse to come and and Chevron off ices, md the mail= see the new center.

K L Monday is the absolutef final, not-an-hourlater deadline for student submissions to September’s handbook: What’s What at Uniwat. Photos and artwork are requested to supplement your blurb and make communication more effective. Do your duty. Every group and activity should put in their pitch. Ingenuity will be rewarded with more space than might otherwise be al iotedm

Send the copy-and lots of it-to Bob Verdun, handbook ringleader, Chevron office-campus center local 3446,

EADLIIVE

$500,000 mts: donor backs ovt

BOSTON(LNS~5003000 for dead rats.

That% the exchange made re- cently at Boston University.

Maurice Gordon* who owns thou- sands of apartments in the ghetto areas of Roxbury, had offered to

give $500,000 to the university. The new school of nursing was to be named after him and his wife.

A reception for Gordon was greeted by ,picketing students and teachers 6arrying signs and dead rats. The placards read *#Gordon gives BU $500*000 but this is what he gives his tenants (rats).”

The 100 or so demonstrators convinced the entrepreneur th& the situation was embarrassing %nd potentially violent.”

Bo ston University president Ar- land Christ-Janer replied tersely* acknowledging 44with embarrass Rescue operations for Watfor were carried out this week a.fter - - ~~ merit and -apology that Gordon’s his guardian Don Kerr announced the famous fish was lost.

OBL

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I Brigham pipe, black 3-dot ex- ecutive pipe. Return to Chevron or 57&5429. Lost between West 3 and campus center. REWARD11

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Senior student to supervise cam- pus center building, 5 pm to mid- night Monday to Friday, also week- ends; commencing immediately and continuing throughout the sum- mer and fall. Contact P.H. Gers- ter, director of the campus center-

l-bedroom apartment, cable TV, pQOL April 28, Dave Merchant, 36 Talbot St- apt 205, Kitchener, 578-5166.

The editor of recent (this term) 2-bedroom furnished apartment

engineering publication makes love ACCOMODATIONS in Waterlobno lease. $125/ Sublet-summer term-new 2~

in her sleep. THE PHANTOM WanteM girls to share apart- month for slummer term. Call 57~ bedroom apartment, $175. clown-

ment with student from May 1 to 4057. town Toronto near city hall. Call

Any students living or WOrkbIg Sept. 1. Location on .Hazel St. 742-1359 after 12 noon*

in Ottawa this summer* Phone Wes Phone 57a517. %-bedroom apartment, living- 1 double room, single beds2 kit-

578-2711. Purpose parties, etc. Modern 2-bedroom apartment room, kitchen. Very close to un= then facilities. Call 745-8021 or furnished to I& Available May 1 hW3iky. &@y 12 Lodge St. Wat- aPPlY 21 Central St” iVb?rlOO.

from university. $3 O/month* Phone 743-6592 after 6 pm.

washroom, telephone, parking for summer term. Apply 118 Colum- bia Street. Phone 744-7790.

2 students to share two-bed- room furnished apartment for summer term, sauna, pool* cable TV@ etc. $5O/month. Jeff Brown 74&4471 ext 260.

FOR SALE

9x12 blue-green rug with runner; 2 sets 5x4’ curtains (1 set match- es rug)e 57&0427

GUITARZ Gibson D-25, six- string* sunburst finish, must sell or will starve. Call Neil 744-6778.

through August TV, stereo $145/ month. Kitchener 5760329”

erloo or call 74%4815*

2 single rooms for female stu- dents” on main floor in widow’s home, 255 Sunview, Waterloo. Phone 743-7287

Large 2-bedroom apartment, completely furnished, availabiefor summer term* $120* Lancaster- Union area. 742-4225,

Rooms for summer close to campus. Separate entrance, kit- chen and bathroom0 Profe Butler# philosophy or 5760449”

2 single rooms in quiet home a- vailable for summer term for un- dergraduate co-op men. Apply 204 Lester, Waterloo.

Girl wanted to share furnished apt. with 3rd-yearfemale student, starting end of April. Close to

Available, summer term8 3 singie rooms light housekeeping- Man’s Ingo sweater size46. Card- ill C res* Waterloo 742-24780

3-bedroom, 2-bathroom, fur+

61 Sprite, in damn good shape Single rooms on Lester Street university. Write; ~~Apartment?~ ished apartment for summer term8

will take highest offer. PhoneAraa for summer term. Cooking, park- c/o 289 Harvie Avenue, Toronto Erb and Westmount” Phone 578-

5762665. ia Phone 74%8789 after 3 Pm- 10” Cr call 651--4498* 2353.

aterIo Cooperative Residences Ineorp.

*PHlLLlP ST. - 375/term=single * HAMMARSKJOLD - 34O/term=single 3SO/term=double DIVISON 14O/mth-2 bedroom apt.

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Rooms are still available for the summer term

Apply: WCRI office 319 University Ave=, Wm

*Prices are subiect to change

1% 584 The CHEVRON