studentpro test wednesday: meet in room 231

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StudentProtest Wednesday:meetIn Room231 Frustration is ------------- WILLIAMS s SIR GEORGE WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY 1fi£ving old bus tickets VOL. XXX TUESDAY, JANUARY 31, 1967 No. 32 SA Elections set for Thursday and Friday, 6 positions now open Only six of thirty-six positions will be contested in the Students' Association Elections this coming Thursday and Friday. ^ A D lffl# Af DDiUfffCEf One of these six beautiful belles will be selected as vHAIII V M L I llll! Carnival Queen. The rest of the girls will reign over the Carnival for one day, under the watchful eye of the Queen, of course. The girls, from left to right, are: Linda Blais, Jeanne Buchanan, Daria Kiperchuck, Pia Kofman, Jane Richardson, and Maureen Tobin. Voting this week will take place on the Mezzanine until Friday. Arts Faculty Auction Following is a list of the art- icles to be auctioned off on Fri- day in Room 110 at 2:00 for the Arts Faculty Auction: Mr. A. D. Insleay: two tickets to a Forum hockey game (2:30) Mr. P. Arsenault: a trip to Clark- son, N.Y. on Saturday Feb. 4 or two tickets to a OSLAA playoff game plus a role of tape and an autographed hoc- key stick (4:00) Prof. P. Laszlo : dinner and drinks (2:30) Prof. J. Whitelaw: dinner at a French restaurant (3:45) Prof. L. Bergeron: a meal in the cafeteria (3:45) Prof. H. Angell: drinks in the Faculty Club (3:30) Mr. Bob McWilliams: an original nude painting (2:30) Mr. Brian Seville: a free ticket to the Carnival hockey game (3:45) Dr. G. R. Mitchell: supper (3:45) Prof. E. Zurif: supper (3:45) Mr. Jack Hopkins: NHL hockey game tickets (2:30) Mr. Barry Barnes: dinner (2:15) Mr. L. Gifford: Charcoal portrait (2:15) Prof. F. Bedford: 10<‘ on the dol- lar and shoeshine (2:30) Dr. G. M. Mahoney: Tour of psy- chology laboratory (2:45) Prof. M. Brian: drinks at his home (2:45) Prof. N. Compton: will hand over English D e p t , for one day (3:30) Prof. A. Brune: antological an- alysis and a drink (2:15) Dean Brink: lunch at Altitude 737 (3:30) Marilyn: surprise to any normal young man (2:45) Prof. Adamson: 10 cents on every dollar raised up to $100, and ticket to Carnival Hockey Game. (3:00) Joan Richardson: 10 cents on every dollar raised and one ticket to the Carnival Ball (3:00) Sally Kemp: Any boy or girl can be cheerleader for a day (2:15) Dean Mag Flynn: 10 cents on every dollar raised and will take winner to Carnival Hockey Game (2:45) Dean O'Brien: 10 cents on the dollar and five tickets to the Night Out. (3:00) Dean Madras: An original paint- ing of his creation (3:00) Prof. Arnopoulos: A few tickets to the Stormy Clovers (2:15) Keith Crouch: 10 cents on the dollar and four tickets to the Carnival Basketball games. (3:00) CARNIVAL NOTICE Car Rally forms must be re- turned by Feb. 3, 1967 to the Student Receptionist on the third floor. When nominations closed at noon Friday only 26 candidates had filed their nomination papers. In 17 positions there are no can- didates whatsoever, including the entire Science Students’ Associa- tion slate. The contested positions are President of the S.A. with Jeff Chipman and Peter Fenwick; In- ternal Vice-President of the S.A. with Chuck Axlerod and Bert Young; Arts President with Sel- wyn Carrington, Wayne Forbes and Barry Hill; Commerce Pres- ident with Joe Angelus and Geof- frey Southwood; Engineering President nee Executive with Peter Mojassamian and Patrick Menegoz and Executive Vice- President of the S.A. with Robert Joyce and Sherry Rubenstein. No candidates entered the race for Engineering President there- fore the Executive race becomes the Presidential Race. Andy Young, the outgoing president commented on the lack of candidates in the Science Fac- ulty and said that it was a pretty good indication of the way in which Science students regard Council. There were f o u r candidates for the Athletics Council this year, marking the first time that all four positions have been fill- ed. The Council is composed of the Editor-in-Chief of th« geor- gian. The Managing Editor of the georgian, the Sports Editor of the georgian as well as one of the Desk Editors of the georgian. That with the recent conflict be- tween the g e o r g i a n and the Athletics Department this Coun- cil promises to become a rather interesting board next year. The Athletics Council is not the only place in which staffers of the georgian have run for of- fice. The presidential race as well as the Arts President race both have candidates from the geor- gian. The Treasurer who has been acclaimed is Robert Simco, the georgiantics columnist for this year. There will be a meet the can- didates meeting on Tuesday, Jan- uary 31st at 1:00 p.m. in room 110. Waterloo confrontation fizzles WATERLOO (CUP) A threatened sortie into the realm of closed decision making at the University of Waterloo sputtered and died Wednesday night. Waterloo council president Mike Sheppard, who planned to defy university authorities by attend- ing a closed board of governors meeting Thursday (Jan. 19), fail- ed to gain support for his plan at an llth-hour council meeting Wednesday night. The confrontation, billed as the first attempt by Canadian univer- sity students to gain entry to a closed board of governors meet- ing, flopped as the result of the plan’s rejection by council. The idea arose from a program outline issued last October by the Canadian Union of Students. The outline suggested councils press for open decision making in their university community by engag- ing in similar confrontation tech- niques. The student leader had hoped to take part in a board of gover- nors discussion arising from a student-faculty committee brief on possible changes in university government at Waterloo. But the council’s failure to go along with Sheppard’s plan sent it to the wastebasket — at least temporarily. Reaction at the CUS secreta- riat in Ottawa Thursday was one of disapointment, with one CUS spokesman calling the council’s action “reactionary”. Student protest The students of Sir George Williams University and McGill Uniyersity have planned a demonstra- tion to protest the recent hike in MTC fares. The action is being taken under the direction of Mr. Michael Glassman, a third year Science student at Sir George, and some staff members of THE GEORGIAN. The Sir George students will meet at 2:30 p.m. on the mezzanine outside the georgian offices. From there they will march to a meeting with McGill students, and all will proceed to City Hall. Room 231 tomorrow at 2:30 The Waterloo committee, which included three students, was formed after publication of 'the Duff-Berdahl report on universi - ty government in Canada last year. The study group was mandat- ed to “bring forward proposals for desirable reforms of the exist- ing structure of government at the University of Waterloo”.

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Page 1: StudentPro test Wednesday: meet In Room 231

Student Protest Wednesday: meet In Room 231

Frustration is

------------- W ILLIAM Ss

SIR GEO RGE WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY

1fi£ving old bus tickets

VOL. X X X TUESDAY, JA N U A R Y 31, 1967 No. 32

SA Elections set for Thursday and Friday, 6 positions now open

O nly six of thirty-six positions will be contested in the Students' Association Elections this com ing Thursday and Friday.

^ A D l f f l # A f D D i U f f f C E f • One of these six beautiful belles w ill be selected as v H A I I I V M L I l l l l ! Carn ival Queen. The rest of the girls will reignover the Carn ival for one day, under the watchful eye of the Queen, of course. The girls, from left to right, are: Linda Blais, Jeanne Buchanan, Daria Kiperchuck, Pia Kofman, Jane Richardson, and Maureen Tobin. Voting this week w ill take place on the Mezzanine until Friday.

Arts Faculty AuctionFollowing is a list of the a r t­

icles to be auctioned off on F ri­day in Room 110 at 2:00 for the Arts Faculty Auction:Mr. A. D. Insleay: two tickets to

a Forum hockey game (2:30) Mr. P. Arsenault: a trip to Clark­

son, N.Y. on Saturday Feb. 4 or two tickets to a OSLAA playoff game plus a role of tape and an autographed hoc­key stick (4:00)

Prof. P. Laszlo : d inner anddrinks (2:30)

Prof. J. Whitelaw: dinner at a French restau ran t (3:45)

Prof. L. Bergeron: a meal in the cafeteria (3:45)

Prof. H. Angell: drinks in the Faculty Club (3:30)

Mr. Bob McWilliams: an original nude painting (2:30)

Mr. Brian Seville: a free ticket to the Carnival hockey game (3:45)

Dr. G. R. Mitchell: supper (3:45) Prof. E. Zurif: supper (3:45)Mr. Jack Hopkins: NHL hockey

game tickets (2:30)Mr. Barry Barnes: dinner (2:15) Mr. L. Gifford: Charcoal portrait

(2:15)Prof. F. Bedford: 10<‘ on the dol­

la r and shoeshine (2:30)Dr. G. M. Mahoney: Tour of psy­

chology laboratory (2:45)

Prof. M. Brian: drinks at his home (2:45)

Prof. N. Compton: will hand over English D e p t , for one day (3:30)

Prof. A. Brune: antological an­alysis and a drink (2:15)

Dean Brink: lunch a t A ltitude 737 (3:30)

Marilyn: surprise to any norm al young man (2:45)

Prof. Adamson: 10 cents on every dollar raised up to $100, and ticket to Carnival Hockey Game. (3:00)

Joan Richardson: 10 cents on every dollar raised and one ticket to the Carnival Ball (3:00)

Sally Kemp: Any boy or girl can be cheerleader for a day (2:15)

Dean Mag Flynn: 10 cents on every dollar raised and will take w inner to Carnival Hockey Game (2:45)

Dean O'Brien: 10 cents on the dollar and five tickets to the Night Out. (3:00)

Dean Madras: An original pain t­ing of his creation (3:00)

Prof. Arnopoulos: A few tickets to the Stormy Clovers (2:15)

Keith Crouch: 10 cents on the dollar and four tickets to the Carnival Basketball games. (3:00)

CARNIVAL NOTICECar Rally form s m ust be re­

turned by Feb. 3, 1967 to the Student Receptionist on the third floor.

When nominations closed at noon Friday only 26 candidates had filed the ir nomination papers. In 17 positions there are no can­didates whatsoever, including the en tire Science S tudents’ Associa­tion slate.

The contested positions are President of the S.A. with Jeff Chipman and P e te r Fenwick; In­ternal Vice-President of the S.A. with Chuck Axlerod and Bert Young; A rts P residen t with Sel- wyn Carrington, Wayne Forbes and Barry Hill; Commerce P res­ident with Joe Angelus and Geof­frey Southwood; Engineering President nee Executive with P eter Mojassamian and Patrick Menegoz and Executive Vice- President of the S.A. with Robert Joyce and Sherry Rubenstein.

No candidates entered the race for Engineering President the re­fore the Executive race becomes the Presidential Race.

Andy Young, the outgoing president commented on the lack of candidates in the Science Fac­ulty and said that it was a pretty good indication of the way in

which Science students regard Council.

There were f o u r candidates for the A thletics Council this year, m arking the firs t tim e that all four positions have been fill­ed. The Council is composed of the Editor-in-Chief of th« geor- gian. The Managing E ditor of the georgian, the Sports Editor of the georgian as well as one of the Desk Editors of the georgian. That with the recent conflict be­tween the g e o r g i a n and the A thletics D epartm ent this Coun­cil promises to become a ra th e r interesting board next year.

The A thletics Council is not the only place in which staffers of the georgian have run fo r of­fice. The presidential race as well as the A rts P resident race both have candidates from the geor­gian. The T reasurer who has been acclaimed is Robert Simco, the georgiantics columnist for this year.

There will be a m eet the can­didates meeting on Tuesday, Jan ­uary 31st at 1:00 p.m. in room 110.

Waterloo confrontation fizzlesWATERLOO (CUP) — A

threatened sortie into the realm of closed decision m aking a t the U niversity of W aterloo sputtered and died W ednesday night.

W aterloo council president Mike Sheppard, who planned to defy university authorities by a ttend­ing a closed board of governors meeting Thursday (Jan. 19), fa il­ed to gain support fo r his plan a t an ll th -h o u r council m eeting W ednesday night.

The confrontation, billed as the f irs t a ttem pt by Canadian univer­sity students to gain en try to a closed board of governors m eet­ing, flopped as the resu lt of the plan’s rejection by council.

The idea arose from a program outline issued la st October by the Canadian Union of Students. The outline suggested councils press fo r open decision making in their university community by engag­ing in sim ilar confrontation tech­niques.

The student leader had hoped to take p a rt in a board of gover­nors discussion arising from a student-faculty committee brief

on possible changes in university governm ent a t W aterloo.

But the council’s failure to go along w ith Sheppard’s plan sent it to the w astebasket — a t least tem porarily.

Reaction a t the CUS secreta­ria t in O ttaw a Thursday was one of disapointm ent, with one CUS spokesman calling the council’s action “reactionary”.

Student protestThe students of Sir George Williams University

and McGill Uniyersity have planned a demonstra­tion to protest the recent hike in MTC fares.

The action is being taken under the direction of Mr. Michael Glassman, a third year Science student at Sir George, and some staff members of THE GEORGIAN.

The Sir George students will meet at 2:30 p.m. on the mezzanine outside the georgian offices. From there they will march to a meeting with McGill students, and all will proceed to City Hall.

Room 231 tomorrow at 2:30

The W aterloo committee, which included th ree students, w a s form ed a fte r publication of 'the Duff-Berdahl report on universi­ty governm ent in Canada last year.

The study group was m andat­ed to “bring forw ard proposals for desirable reform s of the exist­ing structure of governm ent a t the University of W aterloo”.

Page 2: StudentPro test Wednesday: meet In Room 231

2 /th e georgian January 31, 1967

Sick students lack facilitiesVancouver (CUP) — The rapidly increasing Canadian university

enrolment and resulting empersonality of stu'dent-professor relation­ships is leaving a void which must be filled by increased health and psychiatric facilities on campus.

This is the conclusion of a report released Friday on university health and psychiatric services, prepared for the Canadian Union of Students by Dr. Conrad J. Schwarz, consultant psychiatrist for the student health service at UBC.

In a survey of 49 campuses conducted during the spring and sum m er of 1966, Dr. Schwarz found only one university (Dal- housie) whose health services approach the ratio of one phy­sician "and one nurse per 1,000 students recom m ended by the American College H ealth Asso­ciation.

The survey showed 38 of the 49 universities have some sort of health services (28 out of 30 for campuses of more than 1,000 po­pulation) and only 22 oT 40 have a psychiatrist availible, for

“Increasing class size and varying periods of time, sharper refinem ent of areas of specialization by faculty mem­bers have led to a w idening of the gap between faculty and students, Dr. Schwarz’s repport said.

“In addition; as faculty mem­bers develop narrow er fields of in terest, they become less able to com municate w ith each other and consequently t h e r e are few er people available to give students a broad overview of any subject.

Faculty m em bers are often concerned about the ir lack of rapport w ith students, bu t “are fully aware th a t if they begin to give individual attention to each student th e ir already heav­ily-overloaded schedules w i l l become unbearable”.

The students, says Dr. Schwarz, are in the m idst of a search for a personal identity, and are ex­ploring areas such as th e ir re ­ligious, political, social, and sexual views of life.

“Since learning the course content does not seem to be all that is involved in going to uni­versity, the studen t should at times feel a need to check up on w hat his teachers th ink about life in general,” he said.

“The student does not neces­sarily have to accept the facul­ty m em ber’s ideas bu t even in the process of disagreeing, he helps to define his own a ttitu ­des.”

As faculty m embers become less and less available fo r this kind of interaction, the student tu rns to o ther ways of dealing w ith this aspect of his deve­lopment.

The studen t may go and talk with a dean, clergym an, o r re­sidence don, go to the counsel­ling office for an aptitude test or try LSD.

"He may develop m ore se­vere physical o r psychological symptoms and take him self to the health service and perhaps to a psychiatrist.

Dr. Schwarz cited figures from a 1963 Canadian Union of Stu­dents survey as showing th a t ap­proxim ately 55 p er cent of stu ­dents a t one tim e had fe lt a de­sire to seek advice regarding em otional or psychological pro­blems.

Students questioned l i s t e d the ir th ree serious problem s as(1) despondency and depression,(2) lack of self-confidence, and(3) relations with the opposite sex.

On an average about 60 per cent of those who answered the above question affirm atively ac­tually w ent to someone for ad­vice. The usual person consulted was a friend, but about one-fifth had gone to a professional person (physician, psychiatrist, counsel­lor, religious advisor, or faculty member.)

Dr. Schwarz reports tha t fa ­culty members in general do not w ant to get involved in solving the personal problem s of stud­ents—not th a t they are uncon­cerned or unwilling, but “most of them realistically feel they do not have the necessary pro- fesional train ing to offer per­sonal counselling.”

The purpose of a student health service is to encourage the optim al conditions for phy­sical and m ental well-being on the campus so tha t students will be able to pursue the ir academic and m aturational tasks with the least possible in terference from extraneous factors.

“This purpose can only be adequately achieved by a th ree­pronged attack of treatm ent, p re­vention, and research .”

The psychiatric service, ideal­ly functioning as an in tegral p a rt of the health service, should be involved in the same way.

The prim ary function is to make medicals facilities availa­ble to the sick student as quickly as possible, requiring a 24-hour service with a physician an d /o r nurse being at least on call for emergencies.

The psychiatric service would also provide 24-hour coverage for emergencies.

“Facilities should be provided fo r adequate individual assess­ment, including psychological testing when indicated.

“Infirm ary facilities should be available to the psychiatric ser­vice for well-supervised m anage­m ent of patients w ith mild and m oderate degrees of anxiety and depression.”

P reventative aspects of the health and psychiatric service program may include advice on precautions which m ight be ta ­ken to minimize athletic in ju r­ies, comment on food standards and residence standards, and ad­vice in laboratory work involv­ing the use of noxious chemicals.

“The preventative aspects of campus psychiatry are equal in im portance to the prim ary trea t­m ent aspects.”

The service can “in te rp re t to the university adm inistration in m eaningful way how the univer­sity atm osphere may be made

less emotionally stressful to stu­dents.

“A dm inistration and faculty m em bers can be educated to re ­cognize early signs of d istu r­bance in students and to assess w hether these signs be of signi­ficant m agnitude to require psy­chiatric referra l.

“If only downtown physicians are used by the students for problems, the university itself receives very little in the way of feed-back of general health principles in relation to the to­tal university atmosphere.

“A psychiatric service co­operating in research w ith other departm ents of the university such as medicine, psychology, sociology, education, and coun­selling, can contribute a great deal of studies such as motiva­tions for learning, teaching and techniques, small group work, and from such studies the uni­versity as a whole can obtain considerable benefits.”

Dr. Schwartz’s survey consist­ed a five part questionnaire sent to students representatives on each of 49 campuses, requesting details on the ex ten t of facilities

offered, and general characteris­tics of the university, to f it the inform ation into context.

All 49 universities replied, of­fering some indication of the universal concern about health on Canadian campuses.

The report covered two gene­ra l areas, health services and psychiatric service.

Dr. Conrad Schwarz

The health services report was broken down into five areas: staffing, infirm ary facilities, stu­dent utilization, physical facili­ties and financing.

Some campuses have fu ll 24- hour coverage, some only nurse or physician on call.

N ineteen campuses of the 49 provide beds on campus for treatm ent of students with m inor ailments.

On the campuses w ith psy­chiatrists available, the ratio p e r 1,000 students ranged from .01 to .52.

“A psychiatric service should consist of a team of professional people under the leadership of a psychiatrist.

“It would appear that about five p er cent of the student population will need to use the facilities of a psychiatric service directly, and will require an average interview time of six hours.

“Each m em ber of the team should spend about half his time in individual trea tm ent of stu­dents and the o ther half in liai­son activities, so the required ratio of team m embers per 1,000 students work out at .5.”

Saigon: The City TodayPart II

EDITOR'S NOTE: TH IS IS THE SECOND PART OF A THREE-PART FEA TU RE BY HOW ARD MOFFETT, CO LLEG IATE PRESS SER V ICE COR- RESPO N DENT IN SOUTH V IETN AM .

By HO W ARD M OFFETT (Special to Canadian University Press)

SAIGON (CPS) — Saigon is a jaded city. There are no innocents here, not even little kids. Every­thing happens in the streets, and a ten-year-old Vietnamese girl is likely to know more aoout the way adults behave in the dark or under stress than a 21-year-old American college boy.

Layers of dust give busy stree ts the sam e dull yellow look as the stucco walls around French villas and office buildings.

F or lack of private toilet facilities, many u rin ­ate or defecate in alleys and streets. A year ago piles of garbage lay ro tting on Saigon’s main boulevards, and even now in some places the trucks can’t cart it away fast enough.

On Tu Do (Freedom ) Street, once a fashion­able office and shopping district, scores of bars now ra th e r to American G I’s. The dull, inevitable pump of Nancy Sinatra or the Beatles last from three in the afternoon to eleven at night, when m ilitary police move through to hustle lingerers home before curfew.

Inside, a young air cavalryman down from An Khe tells a sad-looking girl the same w ar story he told another girl last night, and wishes he were telling it to the girl back home. For h e r part, the b a r girl te lls him in broken English about her divided family — maybe the same story she told last night, maybe not — and wonders if he will take her home. She made more money last week than her father did last year. Prices are higher now though.

Outside, teen-age boys peddle pornography and young men with m otor scooters and old men with pedicabs offer a ride home, and a “nice young girl— cheap”.

S tudents dodging the draft buy forged creden­tials, and money changers — who often tu rn out to be sleight-of-hand artists or secret police agents— promise double the official ra te for greenbacks.

The refugees and the poor live in th e ir alleyson the perim eter of the middle-class city. These thoroughfares, some of them all of three feet wide, wind in interm inable mazes w herever there is ground to build a house.

D espite the weariness, the closeness and the

heat, Saigon’s culture has a spontaneity that twenty years of war has not stam ped out.

* * *

D elta hospitality is famous throughout South­east Asia; any guest is given the best in the house.

N ight life is tinny, but those who frequent the city ’s clubs give it a pulsing rhythm of its own. Any soldier lives close to the surface, and the Vietnamese infantrym an tends to be m ore fata l­istic than most. A te rro ris t grenade or a drunken officer’s pistol shot could end it any time. P rivate dance parties require a permit, but many young hosts and hostesses take the ir chahces and often wind up with the police as uninvited guests.

F rench influence is still evident everywhere. Those city boys who have managed to avoid the d raft often affect French styles in dress, haircuts, and speech.

Weil-stocked French bookstores bear testim ony to a large class of people who continue to enjoy European literature for its own sake. A t this moment, controversy rages over w hether to ‘ per­m it the French to m aintain their prestigious ly- cees,, and w hether or not to substitute Vietnamese — or E n g l i s h f o r French as the language of instruction in the universities.

The perform ing arts have been h it hard by the war, b u t every week or so a concert or recital is announced, and Vietnamese plays draw large audiences.

Buddhist activity has waned considerably since Prim e M inister Ky’s successful crackdown on the Struggle Movement in_ Hue last spring. Still, the pagodas are filled with saffron-clad monks trying to patch up or widen fu rth e r the rift in the Buddh­ist Unified Church. Buddhist and Confucian funer­als periodically fill the streets with color.

The newspapers are still subject to govern­m ent censorship, but political discussions in res­taurants and cafes are often heated and free. Unlike the last days under Diem, students now do not hesitate to criticize the regim e, and charges of corruption an d /o r incom petence are regularly if quietly flung at some of the D irectory’s leading generals.

But political discussions, even those involving the new Constituent Assembly, inevitably smack of resignation. South Vietnam is at war with itself, Saigon is under siege, and even the most hopeful know that as long as this goes on, and maybe longer, the generals will wield effective power.

Page 3: StudentPro test Wednesday: meet In Room 231

the georgian, January 31, 1 9 6 7 /3

i # p*

Slh<e < g ® © r e p auraSIR G EO RG E WlLUAMS UNIVERSITY

BC Minister refuses to meet students

SNCC Leader

ASA to host Carmichaelby Clark Kent

S t o k e I y Carm ichael, the

N egro leader w ho coined the phrase "B lack Pow er" will be

speak ing here on February

24th. His visit is be ing sponsor­

ed by the Arts Students A ssoc i­ation under the Presidency of

Steve Bernhut.

Stokely Carm ichael a s cha ir­

m an of SN C C (Student Non-

V iolent Co-ord inating Com m it­

tee), has been instrum ental in

focussing attention on the pre­

dicam ent of the Am erican

Negro. He graduated from

H ow ard University in Philoso­

phy in 1964. By June '6 6 he

had been jailed a total of 27

times, usually for charges a ris­

ing from his participation in

activities pertain ing to the

Civil Rights Movem ents.He has been genera lly ac­

credited with splitting up the

Civil Rights m ovem ent with

his opposition to M artin Luther

K in g 's non-violence cam pa ign

of integration. King, in referr­

ing to the s lo gan "B lack

Pow er" sa id that it is "a n a p ­

peal to the N eg ro not to be

a sham ed of being black".

Evidence of rising support for Stokely Carm ichael's "B lack Pow er" segm ent of the Cvil

Stokely C arm ichae l. . . jailed for stirring up trouble

Rights M ovem ent w a s show n in the Ch icago riots of sum m er 1966.

A foe for Me georgianA new publication has appeared on campus fo r the first

time, under the auspices of (he W inter Carnival Committee. The title of this journal of crashing prose is Ye Olde Georgie's Almanack.

The book details the activities of this year’s Carnival for all students who have been walking around in a stupor for the last six weeks and may have missed the point of all the publicity. Eight pages in length (plus cover) the book is being distributed freely to any unsuspecting frosh who hap­pens to stumble past the Carnival Booths on the Hall Building mezzanine and in the lobby of the Norris Building.

All sorts of funny pictures that can be coloured in by the Fine Arts students decorate the pages and between the pictures there arc stories to gladden the hearts of all English 211 nannies.

Calculated to stir students to fever pitch in tim e for the biggest hash of the year, the book details prices, times, and places for all the events as well as providing even the most obscure of facts about them, (e.g. “Radio communications are being handled by the A m ateur Radio Emergency Corps . . . ” re. Car Rally.)

Publicity Chairman Ivan Hubschcr of the Carnival Com­m ittee adm itted th a t the publication will possibly not become as popular as the georgian but he feels that it will probably be an effective inform ation vehicle.

The festivities for th eanual event begin on Monday with the Place des A rts Variety Show at which lim e the queen will be crowned. Voting takes place this week in the queen contest (see page one).

Further notice w ill be post­ed concerning the place and time of his appearance.

CUS Official:

Vancouver (CUP) — British Columbia’s education m inister, Leslie Peterson, has refused to receive the B.C. Assembly of S tudent’s m arch to the provincial legislature Friday.

A brief outlining the need for a grants commission, fee abolition and equalization grants was presented to the m inister a t the mass meeting.

But in a le tte r to University of Victoria S tudents’ Council president, Steve Bigsby, 19, Mr. Peterson said he could not “in good conscience condone or par­ticipate in your m arch to the le­gislature or the mass m eeting

ORCUS Conference

TroublePORT ARTHUR (CUP) — La-

kehead University students, an­grily claiming they were being “blackm ailed” into financing a student conference here, have unilaterally cancelled the m eet­ing.

A t a m arathon seven-hour council m eeting Monday night, they voted to pull out of playing host to the Canadian Union of Students Ontario regional m eet­ing scheduled for Feb. 24-26.

“In actual fact, we have been blackmailed,” one irate council­lor said during the meeting. “We have in effect been told tha t we couldn’t host the conference un­less we ra ise d '$3,000.”

A nother reason behind the council motion was said to be the recent resignation of Lake- head’s local CUS chairman.

Lakehead originally had plan­ned to divert money from a $6,000 slush fund into the confe­rence project, but this plan went out the window Monday night.

Council president Wayne To- chcri nearly went with it.

you propose in fron t of the le­g islature”.

Mr. Peterson, in refusing to greet the students F riday sad they “should understand I can­not make com mitm ents to see delegations during the hours when legislature is in session.”

He offered to accept the b rief from Bigsby at 9:30 a.m. Friday.

The B G A S brief asks for equalization grants to cover tra ­vel expenses and extra living costs for out-of-town students attending university in an ' u r­ban area.

It suggests they be issued to students beyond a 40-mile ra­dius from an urban university center. These students would receive a maximum of 600 dol­lars.

The brief cites the fact it £Osts ru ra l students $600-700 annually while students living at home pay about $200 for extra living costs.

Meanwhile, U B C P resident Pohn MacDonald last week said the BC governm ent would be guilty of dereliction of duty if it doesn’t double grants to BC universities this yerar.

He urged doubled aid for uni­versities and an Independent grants commission, and term ed this yar’s provincial budget 1 critical one for BC universities. He said BC institutions will need $66 million fo r the 1967-68 fiscal year instead of the cu rren t $33 million.

“This $66 million isn’t ju s t a pipe-dream. It is w hat this pro­vince’ universities m ust have to do the ir job properly,” said Dr. Macdonald.

“Any lower level of ^ lp p o rt will handicap them in meeting rising operating and building costs, in elim inating present de­ficiencies and in getting addi­tional buildings and faculty to cope with the enrolm ent explo­sion.

'Withdrawls healthy sign'REGINA (CU P)—A Canadian

Union of Students official has term ed the recent withdrawal of eight universities from CUS a “healthy sign” tha t students are trying to relate to the ir acade­mic communities.

Students are beginning to th ink realistically about what the academic community is, and how they can best rela te to it, field secretary Rolli Cacchioni said in an interview here last week.

Some universities feel they can’t re la te through CUS, Cac­chioni added, and this is why they have withdrawn.

The field said CUS will only become relevant to Canadian students if local students’ coun­cils rela te its program s lo fheir electorates.

“W hat the SRC is doing at "Re­gina campus is quite irrelevant to the individual student,” char­ged Cacchioni. “They arc tied

up with petty adm inistrative m atters.

“U ntill they realize th e diffe­rence between being a legislative ra th e r than an adm inistrative body, they can’t be active on this campus. The student coun­cil must realize it is an integral p art of the university community —not an ad junct to it.”

Cacchioni claimed Canadian ghettoes which funchion like corporations in which the raw m aterial — students — is fed in one end, computerized and processed, then exuded a t the o ther end as university students who have achievevd the union ticket necessary for success in our society.”

He called on students and fa­culty to become responsible for making the university “a more homane place” in which to live.

“Students should be working

on program s such as universal accessibility and democracy in the university to achieve th a t end,” he said.

Pressure Protested

REGINA (CUP) — University of Saskatchewan students de­m onstrated here recently in an attem pt to get university officials to ease academic pressures to which they have been subjected.

The students, carrying p lacards reading “We Like Our Sanity’, ‘A Care fo r today is a Cure fo r Tomorrow’ and ‘Down W ith the Sem ester System’, sat in the

halls, waiting to air th e ir com­plaints and to get university au-. thorities lo agree to fu rth e r con­sider the ir requests.

Page 4: StudentPro test Wednesday: meet In Room 231

4 /the georgian, January 31, 1967

ed i t o r i a The Health Service...In a report published this month by the

Canadian Union of Students it w as found that every university in this organization has inadequate health and psychiatric serv­ices. University of British Columbia psy­chiatric consultant Dr. Conrad Schwarz found that only Dalhousie University had even close to the 1 doctor 1 nurse per thousand student ratio recommended by American College Health Association. Sir George has one part time doctor, two full time nurses and five part time nurses for approximately 23,000 students, faculty and staff at the university and its schools for the calendar year. There is also a guidance staff of one psychiatrist and four psycholo­gists, the ideal being one of each per 2000 students.

According to Dr. Schwarz, the purpose of a student health service is "to encourage the optimal conditions for physical and mental well-being on the campus so that students will be able to pursue their academic and maturational tasks with the least possible interference from extraneous factors". The university must do all that is within its power to prevent a health factor detracting from the academic and personal perform­

ance of a student and provide facilities for the research and prevention of this and related problems.

Even though Sir George does not stand up particularly well in terms of ideally re­quired facilities, considerable progress has been made with the services in the recent past. The Health Centre has explanded its physical facilities greatly and is now staffed with two full time and five part time nurses as opposed to two part time nurses last year. The guidance service handled almost five thousand cases last year alone, an increase of six hundred per cent from ten years ago. Considering that over 50 per cent of the universities polled had no guidance services at all, Sir George is certainly above average in this respect. It must also be remembered that Sir George is a non-residence university in the heart of a great metropolis that pro­vides these services to students anyhow. This relieves some of the absolute necessity of providing these services because of their general accessibility anyhow.

There are still many areas that require immediate attention. At the present time there is no resident or even full-time doctor for approximately 23,000 people, including many foreign students and out towners.

There should be at least one full time doctor and a 24 hour emergency service. There should be an infirmary with a nurse con­stantly on duty where someone needing attention for a day or so could be cared for without the expensive proposition of send­ing him to the hospital. This would be a tremendous psychological boost for many students who would know that there are free health services available instead of the necessity of going to an expensive, imper­sonal general hospital.

There is also much room for improvement to the Guidance Centre. When asked the question "since entering university have you ever felt a desire to seek counsel or advice regardinng emotional or psycholo­gical problems ?", 50 to 69 percent answer­ed in the affirmative. This leads one to the assumption that were the guidance services doubled next year, there would be a sharp increase in the number of cases treated.

Sir George has come a long w ay recently but there is still a long w ay to go. The administration must realize that there is a pressing need to bring the health services up to the needs of the students of this university.

Letters to the Editor.VIETNAM

Sir;Energetic sophomores pcrenial-

ly fill your le tters column with a Vietnam debate which is both superficial and nonrational be­cause:

(1) they presum e tha t a capi­talist two-party system not only is a democracy, but the only kind of democracy. Actually America should be called a plutocracy, while governm ent “by the people, for the people” is more nearly reached in Socialist Sweden and monarchy Cambodia.

(2) they spell communism with a capital “c”, ignoring the vast differences among Titoism, Sta­linism,. Trotskyism, Maoism and the revolutionary communism of Cuba and Vietnam. As a result they do not see the e rro r in men­tioning Hungary, T ibet or Russia in a discussion of Vietnam.

The V ietnam ese communists have no more in common with Russian communists than the Americans have in common with the people in capitalist Haiti. Such presum ptions confuse ra­ther than clarify.

(3) they use cold war seman­tics borrowed from the head­lines, which have no place in university-level discussions. The outside aggression in Vietnam is American. Several little-publish­ed facts should be noted. F irst, there are not two Vietnams as our governm ent and press tell us but only one. This was made clear in the Geneva Accords of 1954 when the French surrender­ed to the Viet Mihn (now called Viet Cong) and the concept of

• • •

a “South” Vietnam is strictly an American idea. In 1955 the American government, working through Ngo Din Diem, cancell­ed the scheduled all-Vietnamese elections because Ho Chi Mihn had the support of an estimated 80% of the people (from Eisen­how er’s Mandate (for change). The revolution in Vietnam is neither a Chinese invasion nor a subversive movement, but a popular uprising. Read R. Scheer’s How the US Got Involv­ed In Vietnam.

(4) they assume that the war is simply a confrontation between “communism” and “democracy” when in fact it is a complex com­bination of many factors. First, it is a w ar between the rich and the poor, the exploiters and the exploited, those who rally around the ju n ta in Saigon (10-25% New York Times estim ate are extrem ely rich by Vietnamese standards). The strongest opposi­tion to reunification and the National Liberation F ront comes from landlords and merchants.

It is also a religious war. Viet­nam ’s th ree million Catholics (10% of population) support the Americans and the junta, while the Buddhists (over 65% of population) oppose the war, the Americans and the Saigon gov­ernm ent which is largely Catholic run. Most of the guerrillas are Buddhist. The split is historical in origin: the litera te urbanCatholics had been educated in F rench confessional schools and so received prized civil service jobs, while the Buddhists receiv­ed less education and had to take poorer positions. The Ca­tholics speak F rench while the

Buddhists speak Vietnamese. In the war from 1945 to 1954 the Catholics were allied with the French against the other Viet­namese. No wonder animosity exists.

It is also a war between the urban population (only 20%) and the ru ra l population (80% ). W hile the Americans are sup­ported in Saigon this is not true in the rest o f the country. The war has made Saigon rich and ruined the countryside. Signific­antly, American newsmen who think they are so popular in Vietnam, rarely set foot outside Saigon.

The idea that the war in Viet­nam is a struggle between “de­mocracy” and “communism” is bogus. Actually it is a contest between a popular dictatorship and a puppet regim e represen t­

ing American capital and a feudal oligarcy. Both parts of Vietnam are police states, al­though the International Control Commission has found less re ­pression in the north. About three-quarters of the land area has been under communist con­trol for over twenty years. W hat the Americans have branded “aggression” is really nothing more than Vietnamese national­ism. If the people must keep using the bad analogy between Vietnam and World W ar II, then we must realize tha t WE are H itler and the Viet Cong gueril­las are the patriotic resistance.

The National Liberation F ront deserves our support not because of its cold w ar brand name, but because it happens to be morally right. ~

Cynthia Tracey, Arts III

SHORTSIGHTEDNESS

Dear Sir,This le tte r is in reply to the

editorial in the georgian of J a ­nuary 27, 1967 concerning the “myopic gaze” of our security guards.

Presently, to my knowledge, nothing has been stolen or bor­rowed indefinately since the f ir ­ing of the previous “detective” force in the la tte rp a rt of 1966 by the adm inistration.

The adm inistration, students and, most of all, the georgian should feel proud of the ir secu­rity s ta ff and tre a t them with the respect given to any human being.

H arry B. Hoppenheim,

Comm. II

T h e g e o rg ia n is a n e d ito r ia lly a u t o n o m o u s n e w sp a p e r p u b lis h e d by the P u b lic a t io n s B o a rd o f the S tu d e n t s A s s o c ia t io n of S i r G e o rge W il l ia m s U n iv e rs ity . T h e o p in io n s e x p re s se d a re th o se o f th e e d ito rs a n d d o no t n e c e s s a r i ly re p re se n t the v ie w s o f the a d m in is t r a t io n o r s tu d e n t g o v e rn m e n t of S G W U . A u th o r iz e d a s s e c o n d c la s s m a il by the P o s t O ffice D e p a rtm e n t, O ttaw a, a n d fo r p a y m e n t of p o s ta g e in ca sh . T h e E d ito r ia l O ff ic e s of the g e o rg ia n a n d n e w sro o m a re loca ted in R o o m s 231 a n d 2 32 of the H a ll B u i ld in g , M o n t re a l 25, Q u e b e c. T e le p h o n e 8 42 -6461 . T h e A d v e r t is in g is lo ca ted in R o o m 233, te le p h o n e 8 42 -6461 , ext. 37. M e s s r s . T im o th y I. Pe rv in , G a ry R e in b la tt. a n d A lle n E. N u t ik a d v e r t is in g re p re se n ta tive s. S u b s c r ip t io n s a re a v a ila b le a t $2 .50 pe r year.

M A N A G IN G BOARDED IT O R -IN -C H IE F ................................. M IKE TAYLOR

M A N A G IN G ED ITO R .................M O R R IS R O S E N F E L D A S S O C IA T E ED ITO R ........................ H O W IE KRUPP

SU P P L E M EN T ED IT O R ..................... F R A N K B R A Y T O N N E W S ED ITO R ............................... PETER F E N W IC K

E D IT O R IA L B O A R D

Features Editor ......... JO H N SA K E L LA R O P O U L O S

Research Chief ................................. BO B ROLL

Desk Editor ................................ A L LA N H ILTO N

Desk Editor ........................... G IN A M IE D W IE C K I

Sports Editor .............................. D A V E B O W M A N

Photo Editor .................................. R IC K ST R O N G

Circulation M anager ...... J A C K BERKE

Newsfeatures Editor .................. H O W A R D A R F IN

STAFF

Estelle Geller, Steve Richman, Brock W eir, John Lang, W ayne Forbes, D. John Lynn , Tim Ross, Ray M iller,

Cathy Veitch, Juan Rodriguez, Sandra Stock, Sheldon Kirshner, Bob Simco, Paul Markow itz, M ona Forrest,

Harvey Oberfeld, Doug Hutchings, Tim Clark, Jack M iller, Stewart Phelan, Leon Pressman, C laude Lautman,

Linda MacDonald, John Neysm ith, A bo Saiamon, Brock W eir, Scott Thompson, Stan Urman, L. L 'A llie r Foomfah, expensive side of fam ily.

Page 5: StudentPro test Wednesday: meet In Room 231

the georgian, January 31, 1967 / 5

The Election Scene—An Insiders Viewby D. JO H N LYNN

In my four years a t Sir George I have studied and participated in elections and by-elections first-hand. I have managed several campaings (all successful, I m ight add), and have been on the ‘inside’ on many more. I here lay down some of my findings for the belated use of can­didates, campaign m anagers and of course, the voters.

Election candidates of course, evolve from the ‘basem ent’ — a m isnom er this year, but I persist in referring to Sir George’s student leaders this way — the large group of people who are most in­volved in the work of the society. These include the presidents and chairm en of all the clubs, the Seminar, Blood Drive, the georgian, the political clubs, and Council members, the ir executive assist­ants, and committee members.

F or this election, perspective candidates began flying the ir tria l balloons — rum ­ors, suggestions, questions — back in December. Each candidate carefully scanned the political horizon in a search for opposition. If the opposition is too strong, he’ll back off, and we’ll likely have an acclamation.

Basement Mathematics

The first thing a candidate usually docs is find a campaign m anager. The more politically prestigious a m anager he gets, the better it is. I rem em ber several years ago a situation in which a candidate, a political unknown, got virtually all ‘base­m ent’ support because it was let known that so-and-so, a highly respected student leader, was the candidate’s m anager. I was in fact the manager, but at the time I knew I didn’t have the prestige ne­cessary to put the candidate across.

Win the basement and you win the election. Why? Simple. Calculate about 150 people who are deeply involved in student activities, know who’s who, and are concerned about who accedes to power. If a candidate can secure the support of 125 of this group he could reasonably assume at least four good friends of each of them who will be directly influenced to vote by the guy who ‘knows’. This gives such a candidate a hard core vote in excess of 500.

If you ‘have’ the basem ent these votes are yours before the campaign even be­gins! You thus sta rt the campaign with this kind of edge, and it takes a veritable mass student movement (which rarely happens) to shake this kind of lead.

Platforms

Most rookie campaign m anagers and candidates usually put a lot of effort w riting a platform . So do I, but fo r differ­ent reasons. W hile others are try ing to write a program which will s tir the im aginations and fire the hearts of the electorate, I instead spend my valuable tim e composing the most inocuous and platitudinous platform possible. This is the ‘yea m otherhood’ approach, and I use it because I have observed in past elec­tions this one basic fact — campaigns are rarely won on a particular issue, though many have been fought by some candidates on that basis. This is not to say that some excellent ideas have not come fo rth through campaign promises — I cite the course evaluation program currently being prepared as a case in point. But by-and-large issues confuse and alienate as many voters as they at­tract. Also, progressive ideas regarded as progressive by candidates are usually regarded as radical by voters. I avoid these situations like the plague.

A Popularity Contest

It is another fact that should not be forgotten (attention, m anagers a n d voters) th a t a candidate’s personality and /o r personal reputation is probably the single most im portant variable when campaigning before the general student body. E ither a man im presses you or he doesn’t. On the other hand you may have a favourable opinion or not — tha t is, you have heard through the grapevine that he either is or is not ‘with it’, or you have m et the man and either been im pressed or not, or you have a m ental image of the man through the georgian, through association with what he stands for, or some other means. We are now speaking about voters’ general im pres­sions of individuals. In this context the campaign between Jawaid Khan and Ron Luciano for the Presidency last year comes to mind.

Khan had the advantage of more exper­ience in student politics. Luciano had the advantage of m ore recent public ex­posure as a CounciL-member. They s ta rt­ed even, probably splitting the im portant ‘basem ent vote’. The results of a very high turn-out showed Luciano the win­ner by a m ere 67 votes. Why? He was ju st 67 votes more widely known. The campaigning was the fastest and most furious I’ve ever seen, and the margin of difference was slight. (In this case there is reason to believe that his athletics background secured the ‘athletes vote’ tha t put him over the top.)

To refer to election campaigns as ‘popularity contests’ is a tr ite phrase. It is nonetheless true. Platform s being of little consequence, backroom politics be­ing no great factor in the outcome, you come to find tha t the work is up to the candidate. He’s got to get the support. This means being seen and known, or at the very least, identified.

W hat's in a nam e?

The name is im portant. As Time mag­azine pointed out recently, if an election were held tomorrow, Youth’s candidate for P resident would be Snoopy.

The point is this — m anagers and can­didates should use every device possible to get the ir candidate ‘known’ — even if it is by nam e alone.

In a recent by-election, a campaign leaf­let was placed on every desk in every classroom from the fourth to the ninth floor of the Hall building. This, plus the candidate’s great personal popularity lead over his opponent was enough to secure an easy win.

In more cases than you would imagine voters will ‘X’ w hatever names they re ­cognize — be it from a conversation, a ‘b it’ in the georgian, or a campaign leaf­let.

A m em ber of our present council was once elected president of a western col­lege on the strength of a single huge banner bearing his name only erected on the tower of the University building. The name is im portant indeed, for if it isn’t readily recognized by the voter it won’t a ttrac t that all-im portant ballot mark.

Ethnic votes

The Jewish vote is a myth. Because of the large num ber of Jews a t Sir George (as many Jews as WASPS), w hatever discrim inatory voting practices tha t might exist are neutralized by sim ilar practices on the other side. Besides, the list of Jewish losers is as long i as the lis t of WASP losers.

There seems to be only two ethnic votes at Sir George — the Ukranian vote and the W est Indian vote. The Ukranian will invariably favour another Ukranian if only because he is a m em ber of the Club. The W est Indians have the distinc­tion of being the largest campus club of a political nature, and they invariably cast a heavy vote. It rem ains to be pro­ven that they vote ‘en bloc’, though some

claim they do. Suffice it to say that the club Executive has in the past publicly asked the m em bership to support one candidate over another.

The Back roomiPeople have often asked me what hap­

pens in the back rooms. I ’ll tell you — a lot. But i t’s mostly talk. Every now and again someone makes loose -accusations about being stabbed in the back, but this is the exception. The battles usually arise over who’s supporting who, about one candidate campaigning illegally, candi­dates being ineligeable, and other trivia. Backroom politics may influence who the candidates may be, but they rarely have any effect on the outcome of an election.

The only experience of this nature in recent elections was this year’s Ombuds­man election. In this case one candidate made a deal with the other not to run so as not to split the vote against Mr. Gold­berg, the eventual winner. This ended in a farce, because the one candidate who did oppose Mr. Goldberg was la ter found to be ineligeable, while the candidate who backed out was fully eligible, but was no longer able to contest the election.

In conclusion, I would like to clear up a few points that I th ink might be mis­in terpreted . In the above article I did not attem pt to cast aspersions on the electoral system of the | S tudent’s Associa­tion or any candidates. I was simply stating facts as I have experienced them. To my m ind this is how things work. That is not to say th a t this is the ideal way; I would however say that it is in general a fa ir system, one that, in most cases gets the best available people elect­ed.

The im portant factor in any election is, of course, the electors. It is one un­fortunate aspect of the system that tha georgian is not free (nor should it be) to discuss the candidates and the ir platforms upon editorialwhim ; this is a self-imposed restriction, based on the realization that the georgian is, afte r all, a monopoly. The resu lt of th is is th a t the general run of students is uninform ed as to the candi­dates aside from the ir platform s and general inform ation.

To the voter who wants to know how to vote intelligently I offer th is advice — ask the opinion of one of your friends or respected aquaintances in “the base­m ent”. He’s there, he usually has first­hand knowledge, and he knows the ins and outs of the issues facing student government.

JOHN R. EDGELL

Arts IV

COULD I

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Page 6: StudentPro test Wednesday: meet In Room 231

6 /the georgian, January 31, 1967

EXECUTIVE VICE-PRESIDENT OF STUDENTS ASSOCIATON

EXTERNALVICE-PRESIDENT

PRESIDENT OF STUDENTS ASSOCIATION

picture

not supplied by candidate

Jeff ChipmanPENSKETCH

Internal Vice-President 1966-67.Member of Garnet Key Honour Society

1967-68.Chairman Bookstore Investigation Committee

1967.Delegare to the Business Seminar 1967.Delegate to Student Leader Orientation Con­

ference 1965 and 1966.Director of Development 1965-66.Executive Assistant to the President 1965-66.President Beaconsfield High Students’ Council

1962-63.Representative Lindsay Place High Students'

Council 1964-65.President Middleton Regional High, Nova Sco­

tia 1959-60.PLATFORM

Accessibility: Students of Sir George have frequently felt that student organizations are closed groups.

THIS MUST COME TO AN END.Put the Norris Building back on the map :

Restore to the Norris Building the vitality and sense of purpose that existed in previous years. This includes more programming in Birks Hall and REGULAR DELIVERY of tke georgian.

Freeze the fees : With costs of education constantly rising, this question will no doubt arise. JEFF CHIPMAN pledges to continue to OPPOSE THESE FEE HIKES.

Athletics council: S ir George needs stronger students influence on this and other similar councils. Forceful and dynamic leadership is needed to bring this about.

Letters to the President: A new form of communication is needed between the S.A. Executive and the students. JEFF proposes to initiate a "Letters to the President” column in the georgian in an effort to make Council more aware of student concerns.

Peter FenwickPENSKETCH

A strong UNCOMPROMISED CANDIDATE.News Editor of the georgian 1966/67.

Member of the Bookstore investigating com­mittee 67.

Candidate (defeated) in the 1966/67 elec­tions.

Member of the Bridge Club 1964/65.“ B” average student over the last three

years.

PLATFORM : STUDENT POWER

1) Severing of the links between Council and the georgian so that the georgian can serve as an intelligent critic of Council rather than it’s lackey.

2) Elimination of the ‘Organization Man' men­tality from Council that is willing to go along with all that’s been established hut is afraid to experiment.

3) Opposition to all fee increases, including those by Council.

4) Incorporation of the Athletics Council under the Students council so that those who supply the money will be able to control its activities.

Remember STUDENT POWER IS ONLY POS­SIBLE WITH A CANDIDATE WHO HAS NOT COMPROMISED H IMSELF ALREADY. VOTE PETER FENWICK FOR STUDENT POWER I

Rob JoycePENSKETCH

— Age 21.— Arts Faculty III.

— Garnet Key Member.

Though Rob has not served on Council before, (found it difficult to break into the clique) he has maintained constant interest in studentaffairs and has the drive and ability necessaryto perform as Executive Vice-President

Rob’s experience shows he can do the job.His interests are yours A N D . . . he cares.If you care . . . vote for ROB JOYCE.

EXPERIEN CE

Creator of T.V. Sir George, now its set director.

Executive Producer of Last year’s Radio Sir George . . . helped it grow from embyro.

Commissioned Army Lieutenant (1 M SB). Reor­ganized recruiting at his outfit's headquarters.

PLATFORM

ROB JOYCE will :

— Take an active interest in Treasury Board Finance Committee to keep tabs on your money.

- - See that funds are fairly allocated.— Run elections properly without fiascoes

such as the Ombudsman's acclamation.— Push for more student influence on Athle­

tics council.— Fully support the new football team.

— Finalize question of liquor on campus.

Sherry RubinsteinPENSKETCH

Secretary, Students’ Association Council, 1966-67.

Secretary, Constitutional Committee, 1966-67. Chairman, Freshman Month, 1966-67.Member, Bookstore Investigation Committee,

1967.Member, Garnet Key Honour Society, 1967-68. Assistant New Editor, 'the georgian’, 1965-66.

PLATFORM

Shall investigate discriminatory policies in student housing and summer employment.

Shall reappraise the entire mass media system of the university (ie. Radio Sir George, TV Sir George and the georgian) to satisfy the student community.

Shall set up a committee to study the uses and abuses of student programming.

Shall utilize the art galleries of the uni­versity for undergraduate students to exhibit their work.

Shall further the cause of increased student representation on the Athletics Council.

Shall revive the functioning of the Research Board to explore such areas a s :

— student housing and cooperatives,

— the problem of student parking,

— the establishment of a student court,— liquor on campus,

— campus fraternities and sororities,COMMITTEE FOR THE CANDIDATE

Jean Sicotte

pensketch

not supplied by candidate

ACCLAIMED

INTERNAL VICE-PRESIDENT OF STUDENTS ASSOCIATION

Chuck AxelrodPENSKETCH

2nd year Honours Sociology student with i " B ” average.

Social Chairman of the Students' Associa­tion 1966-67.

Social Chairman of the Christmas Ball.

Social Chairman of the F.A.D. (Friday after­noon dances).

Student Billeting for EXPO '67 Committee 1966-67.

Evening Students' Association Electoral Col­lege 1966.

Students’ Council of Montreal West High School 1963-64.

B’nai B’rith Youth Organization, Montreal and Ottawa President 1964-65.

PLATFORM

Alleviation of the Student Parking problem.

Establishment of a Student Court.Revision of the Constitution.

Re : Election By-Laws.Re : Faculty Constitutions.

Re : Research Board.Greater Student Representation in Academic

Government.Liquor on campus.Better orientation of freshmen to student

activity and facilities.Organized book exchange early in the term.As Social Chairman of the Students’ Associa­

tion Chuck Axelrod has shown this university that it is possible to plan and administer a successful Christmas Ball. Chuck has also initiated what Is proving to be a new F.A.D. on campus. He has shown that he can work.

LLECT HIM INTERNAL VICE-PRESIDENT

Bert YoungPLATFORM

Since council has received the Food Services Committee report it is quite clear that food prices will he raised. I feel that careful plan­ning with Mr. McPhie and the Committee could result in a definite alternative program insuring that prices stay at the present level.

The project of the Students’ University Cen­tre Committee is one of prime importance to students, therefore it should be given top prior­ity by council.

Will fight to the letter of my office to stop any increase in tuition fees, in fact a com­mittee should be formed to study the feasibi­lity of decreasing fees.

The role of the student in Academic Govern­ment should be implimented for the 1967-68 session. I feel that this plan should be im­pressed upon the administration as a must if Sir George is to progress in a modem educa­tional development program.

It is a sorry fact that U.G.E.Q. has had but little coverage in the georgian. I believe that if we are to develope an active role in U.G.E.Q. we must inform the student body of important work being done in this organization.

It is surprising that the bookstore made a gross profit - of $20,000 in the past year. In fact it is abominable that students have been forced to pay for the results in this profit. I will work toward a definite reduction in prices.

The Council definitely needs a bearded member, if for no other reason than to add decor to the rather morbid atmosphere of those bashful white walls.

Bob SimcoI am a second year Commerce student who

transfered from the evening division of the University this year. I have worked for a firm of Chartered Accountants and have done audit­ing and bookkeeping. This year I have been a columnist and news reporter for the georgian, a delegate to CUP Conference, and a delegate to the Commerce Business Seminar.

In the coming year I will continue to work with the new Centralized Accounting System and bring it to a higher degree of efficiency. Further plans include the formation of an Office of the Treasurer to lessen the work load everyone warns me about and to obliterate the growing tradition of resigning from Coun- •il.

ACCLAIMED

Bonnie CameronPENSKETCH

Bonnie is a 22 year old Arts student entering her fourth year. Although Bonnie has not had the opportunity of participating in student go­vernment before, she has maintained a strong interest in student affairs. She feels that she is well enough acquainted with the problems, issues, and functioning of the S.A. to represent the student as Secretary on the Council.

PLATFORM

1) Plans to represent to the best of her ability as a voting member of Council the student of S ir George Williams University.

2) Plans to keep the student body informed of what is going in Council by posting Council agendas in the mezzanine 24 hours prior to the meeting and also by posting Council mi­nutes in the same place after the meeting.

3) Plans to establish a secretarial pool to aid the Office of the Secretary and furnish secretarial services to those clubs and organiz­ation which require them.

COMITTEE FOR THE CANDIDATE

ACCLAIMED

POSITIONS NOT CONTESTED

Clubs Commissioner

Arts Faculty:Internal Vice-President

SecretaryTreasurer

Science Faculty

All positions

Commerce Faculty

Secretary

Treasurer

Engineering Faculty PresidentInternal Vice-President

MINOR

ACCLAMATIONSExec. Vice President of ASA: A lan S. Zweig

Exec. Vice President of CSA: Andrew Cam pbell

Internal Vice President of CSA: Brian Steck

Treasurer of ESA: Jose Bakker

SeceratSecretary of ESA: Carol Ham a

Page 7: StudentPro test Wednesday: meet In Room 231

the georgian, January 31, 1 9 6 7 /7

ATHLETICS COUNCIL REPRESENTATIVE

ARTS FACULTY PRESIDENT

picture

not supplied by candidate

W ayne ForbesWayne Forbes is a second year student of

Arts. He is not a professional student politician.

If elected Mr. Forbes promises t o :

(a) institute a series of weekly lectures given by personalities from the government and society of Quebec in particular and Can­ada in general.

(b) make French-Canada Week” an annual event.

(c) foster increased cooperation with other faculty associations.

(d) develop a formula for compiling the pro­posed course guide to ensure that analyses of courses will be objective and honest.

(c) vote for any legislation furthering student power in academic government.

Committei for the Candidate.

Barry HillCANDIDATE

— 23 years old

— entering fourth year arts

— political science major— publicity chairman of S. G.W.U. FLYING CLUB

1964-65-P re sid ent of the S.G.W.U. FLYING CLUB

1965-66— BLOOD DRIVE 1965-66— co-chairman of BLOOD DRIVE 1966-67

PLATFORM— active ARTS WEEK— speaker per mohth-FRUSTRATION DAY

-— Professor vs. student sports events— student representation on faculty

David Bowman Allan Hilton Selwyn Carrington

ACCLAIMED ACCLAIMED

pensketch

not supplied by candidate

picture picture

not supplied by candidate not supplied by candidateACCLAIMED

Morris Rosenfeld Michael Taylor

ENGINEERING FACULTY EXECUTIVE VICE-PRESIDENT

picture

not supplied by candidate

picture

not supplied by candidate

Michael GourlayPENSKETCH

3rd year Science student majoring in Math­ematics

1. Carnival Committee2. S.C.M.

3. Convener of Douglas Hospital Project PLATFORM

The Ombudsman and his committee should be an active organization on campus. Due to the fact that our offices is a newly instituted one and that to date little use has been made of our facilities, I feel that in the coming year it will he the Ombudsman’s duty to make your business his business.

To encourage participation in our program I have appointed a committee of six comprising a representative cross-section of the student body thus ensuring that each of your problems will be given maximum consideration before action is taken.

You may be assured that our efforts will be guided in your interests, uninfluenced by any established groups.NOTE :

I would like to thank Todd Sloan and Richard Adams for having encouraged my candidacy. P.P.S. 4 D.

Present Ombudsman's office to be found at room 631, Hall Building

MAKE USE OF IT

Joe AngelusPLATFORM1) To firmly establish the university’s chapter

of the Society for the Advancement of Management.

2) To put out a regular newsletter to keen students informed of what their association is doing.

3) Summer employment: to help you get a job through U.G.E.Q.’s student placement service.

4) To establish a continuing dialogue with commerce faculties of other universities, including participation in the annual Congress of Commerce Students of the Province of Quebec.

5) To have regular speakers, films and ex­hibits throughout the year.

PENSKETCHInternal Vice-President — C.S.A. 1966-67Member — Garnet Key Society 1966-67

Treasurer — Social Committee 1965-66

Reporter — The Georgian 1964-65

Delegate — Student Leadership Orientation Conference 1965

EXPERIENCE W ILL GET THE JOB DONE

VOTE

JOE ANGELUS FOR

COMMERCE PRESIDENT

Geoffrey D. Southwood

PENSKETCH

Third Year Commerce Student.

PLATFORM

IF ELECTED I PROPOSE TO :(i) Seek closer ties between the Commerce

Faculty and the rest of the university.(ii) Collaborate with faculty more closely in

planning of commerce student activities.

(iii) Act as liaisan between students and administration.

Patrick Menegoz Peter Mojassamian

pensketch pensketch

not supplied by candidate not supplied by candidate

ACCLAIMED

Page 8: StudentPro test Wednesday: meet In Room 231

8 / the georgian, January 31, 1967

Crossroads, a living symbol Active Season Ahead For'Students of Social Action'by Cathy Veitch

"Crossroads is a living sym ­bol by which all people can meet each other in order to learn to like and to help each other," stated President Houph- pouet-Biogny of the Ivory Coast last summer. His state­ment symbolizes the purpose of the newly-formed organ iz­ation, Crossroads Africa.

Crossroads Africa is a project by which Canadian and A m er­ican students go over to Africa, and work there in communittes with African students.

This organization was formed by it’s present chairm an, Dr.

Jam es H. Robinson. His daring

SCIV Infiltrates Quebec For Action

EDMONTON (CUP) — Second Century W eek’s director, David Estrin , may realize his Centen­nial dream by the tim e the m am ­moth $290,000 A lberta student Centennial Celebration r o l l s around in March — if his infil­tra tion into Quebec student ranks goes as planned.

But an interested h istory de­partm ent official a t the U niver­sity of M ontreal m ay help the 21-year-old director tu rn his fo rm er defeat a t the hands of disinterested French - speaking students into victory.

Susan Robertson wrote to E s­trin , intrigued by is “baffled to ­ne” of voice on a CBC broadcast. Mrs. Robertson, who had never heard of SCW before the radio interview, supplied E strin with the nam es of three history stud­ents a t U of M, and requested fu rth e r SCW inform ation.

E strin , who was in M ontreal during the Christm as holidays, also contacted students a t Laval University and the U niversity of Sherbrooke — two insitutions whose students’ councils had fa il­ed to reply to E str in ’s correspon­dence.

E strin says he has high hopes th a t these students will help get the 35 Quebec participants he seeks fo r the project’s key aca­demic sem inars a t the U niversity of A lberta.

experim ent in in ternational in­terracia l brotherhood began in 1958, and the resu lt was the founding of Crossroads. Dr. Ro­binson’s visit to the laymen of the United Church of Canada resulted in the form ation of the Canadian Committee.

The success of Crossroads since then has disarm ed most critics, and the desire of our young people to take p art in this kind of service guarantees tha t there will be no shortage of candidates. This desire to be­come involved has m anifested itself in spite of the fact tha t each Crossroader not only does not get paid for his sum m er efforts, but has to contribute $500 of his own money towards his expenses.

As well as learning about the many problem s, students also learn som ething of the modern­ization and boom in A fric a /a n d of the heritage of art, music, folkdram a a n d religions of Africa

MONTREAL (PEN) — The Students of Social Action which became a perm anent group this year forsees a particularly active season this year. The responsible people of the organization have launched Operation 67 which be­gins May 8 and will extend to Septem ber 15. The group has a variety of in teresting projects planned.

For several weeks, students will be setting up a program of- medical inform ation in St. Henri. This consists of theory given by medical students in rotation for two months of the summer. Un­til now, this project has used six participants under the responsi­bility of Jean F ortier.

In collaboration with the Com­m ittee of Economic and Social Education in the east of Montreal, six participants are giving cours­es on family economics in this sector of the city. This project, it is hoped, will surpass the as­pect of family economics and head towards community action.

An evaluation session will take place next March for participants of the projects who are opera­ting on a perm anent basis.

Certain projects are still in the process of elaboration:

— Unions for restau ran t em­ployees

— social action in St. Henri— student syndicalism— family economy planning in

Drummondville.Young ruralists are preparing

projects of Student Social Action which will be realized in 1967.

__________ Headquarters for

PHILIPS I PHILIPS^ B r ' N Tape Recorders

Record Players X J 1 jB yy Stereos • TV v : —y Radios • Shavers

SALES & SERVICE

Radiola Ltd.1401 Peel Street — 288-4161

(Corner of St. Catherine)

c o in p u d a t e

COMPUTER DAT ING

CALL «44-0M2 (24 brs) OR MAIL COUPON

Compudate, PO Box 159 Victoria Stn, Mtl 6 Please send free booklet on computer dating t o :

N A M E : ..........(Please print)

ADRESS : .......

DONOVAN'Sfor

Pants & Jeans

$5.98 & UP

Free5 min. Service for Turn ups

DO NOVAN 'S MEN SHOP INC.

1608 ST. CATH ER INE ST W. (a t Guy)

932-7718

DO YOU NEED A HAIRCUT ?

the ARTS barbershop 2300 G uy Street

(corner of Sherbrooke)Guy Barbershop

1445 G u y Street(near the Metro entrance)

Both ju s t around the corner from Sir George

Page 9: StudentPro test Wednesday: meet In Room 231

Georgiantics/

T O D A Y

NEWMAN CENTRE — A Gab session on “The Church's Role in Todays A ffluent Society”, will be held at 1452 Drummond at 4 pm. The program will consist of Mass, supper, and discussion in a purely inform al atmosphere and everyone is welcome.

INTERNATIONAL SEMINAR — A m eeting will be held in H-359 at 1 pm to select a chairm an for the 9th annual seminar. Anyone in terested in this position or inany other position on the committee is asked to present a brief outlining of his or her plans.

W ED N ESD A Y - FEBRUARY* 1S.N.A.X. — The next the next play play is called Is called “Try, T ry” iitt iiss iinn tthhee Basement Theatre at 1:10 pm. sssooo gggooo. I will, I will.

SCM — F ather Paul Doucel, A ssistant Editor of “M aintenant” will discuss “the Church w ithdraw n” in H-529 at 1 pm.MID-WINTER DANCE — The Sir George W illiams Business School girls have come out of hibernation once again and are here to trap the guys. It is free,, it is fun, so come to Birks Hall from 3:30 to 6 pm and win a prize.

BIOLOGY CLUB — Revision of the constitution and other per­tinen t m atters will be discussed in 11-1209 at 1 pm for all members and interested Georgians.

GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY — All students arc invited to Rm. 2F of the Norris Bldg. at 1 pm to see 3 films: 1. Black Forest Voyage (Captain Kangeroo teams up with Blackbeard to sail in to the forest afte r Robin Hood) 2. Cheta (starring Tarzan and THE PHANTOM) and 3. E lephant Run (the trium ph of a humble tailor over a m arauding rogue elephant in the darkest Congo).

ECONOMICS SOCIETY — Elections for the 1967-68 Executive will be held in H-415 at 1 pm. All members please attend and good luck. PSYCHOLOGY CLUB — A tour of St. Vincent de Paul Penn. — the Leclair Institu te will leave at 1:15 and re tu rn at about 3:30 pm. Only a lim ited num ber can go (they are pretty full up there now) so leave your name with the Student Receptionist on the Third Floor.

SCM-SOCIAL RESEARCH PROJECT — Subject of this meeting is a big mystery. Why not come and find out why it is so Hush hush, confidential, classified info, in H-509 at 3:30 pm. THURSDAY - FEBRUARY 2

STUDENTS RELIGIOUS LIBERALS — A discussion will be held in H-415 at 1:15 pm on “Report from the U .N .: Southern A frica”. FILM DIALOGUE — Dr. Strangelove (the frustra ting story of a sadist who dates a m asochist) will be shown by the ecumenical group in H-110 at 8:30 pm. Prof. S. Lamb will m oderate dis­cussion and comment on the film. Admission is SOC

ANGLICANS — Holy Communion will be held at 1:05 pm some­where.

COMPUTER SOCIETY — “Operation Corral” a film on how to round up crooks will be shown in H-420 at 1 pm. Everyone is welcome.

In NEW Theatreof Hall Bldg.

presenting

"TRY, TRY"W ednesday 1:10 P.M.

only $0.20

PASTOR JOHNSONCKGM's "Ask the Pastor"

to present a challenge to Georgians

Followed by a

Question Period

Friday, Feb. 3 — Room H-110

Everybody Welcome

MARV HAD TO GO TO THE STORE IN THE NORRIS BLDG.He took the stairs to th e^ M ^ lo o r, turned left, walked in, and that's where it happened . .

NOW YOU KNOW WHERE TO GO IF YOU NEED A TEXT FROM THE NORRIS BLDG. BOOKSTORE.

the georgian, January 31, 1 96 7 /9

CabinetAnnouncedThe New Democratic Parly

Club has announced the cabi­net which will sit during the Model Parliam entary Session which to be held on February 17 and 18. The Prim e Minis­ter will be M.D. Neuman, who is also President of the Psy­chology Club.

Deputy Leader and Finance M inister will be Max Ross, who is also founder of the Sociology Honours Students Society. External Affairs will be handled by the chairman of the past Internation Semi­nar, Abe Schwart.

Dung Dialogue’s Doug Hut­chings will act as M inister of Defense and Disarmament. Also featured on the cabinet arc Samuel Tureotte, Trade & Commerce; Graham Dougall, T ransport; Public W orks and Health & W elfare, Harvey Shacket; Labour and Man­power, Joan Ilson; Im m igra­tion, Rose Tekel and the newly created position of Consumer Affairs will be handled by Commerce student Jean-Luc Emond.

Mr. Ross, president of the club pointed out that this is the most prestigious cabinet ever form ed for a Sir George Model Parliam ent.

The new Prim e Minister, Mr. Neuman, stated that every effort will be made to keep the session as fru itfu l as any has ever been.

Pastor Johnson coming

P astor Robert Johnson, most widely known fo r his CKGM pro­gram “Ask the Pastor”, will add­ress Sir George W illiams Uni­versity students this Friday.

The good pastor will present a

challenge to the students in t h a t ' he will answer all types of ques­tions from the floor. The event will lake place in Room 110 at 1:00 p.m.

MARV HAD TO WALK

THRU THE BUSINESS SCHOOL

Last week th-_ ord*-

Marv. f.nallv ^ Sis accouc'

>09 0 0?> V ' ^

r \0J o e l store " •'p Street

didn't have -o, V ' w asn 't in the

paperh c

&

Page 10: StudentPro test Wednesday: meet In Room 231

OTTAWA (CUP) — The unde­feated now num ber two in col­lege hockey and basketball.

The la test g iant to fall is Can­ada’s top-rated basketball team, W indsor Lancers, who w ere up ­set 117-115, in overtim e by eighth-ranked Toronto.

The loss narrowed W indsor’s lead in the Ontario-Quebec Lea­gue’s W estern division to two points.

W indsor’s dem ise leaves ba­sketball’s unranked Dalhousie Tigers and hockey’s Sir George W illiams Georgians as the only undefeated college teams.

Sir George ran the ir unbeaten string to 13 games friday by trouncing Bishop’s 9-3 in Mon­treal. Dalhousie on the other hand w ere idle a t the weekend and saw th e ir M aritime confer­ence lead cut to two points as once beaten St. Mary’s trounced winless M ount Allison 74-55 Sa­turday in Sackville.

The rest of the nation’s top teams used the weekend to strengthen th e ir positions in lea­gue standings.

Basketball’s second-ranked Cal­gary Dinosaurs tool a command­ing lead in the W est by sweep­ing a two game series against sixth-ranked A lberta. Calgary w ere forced to an 81-77 overtim e win by th e ir visitors Friday, bu t won Saturday’s game w ith ease, 94-71.

A lberta’s losses dropped them into a second-place tie with B ri­tish Columbia, who defeated Saskatchewan twice, 92-63 and 104-60. B ritish Columbia trails Calgary by six points w ith two games in hand, and is the only club with m ore than a m athe­m atical chance of catching the defending W estern champions.

The weekend also saw Bishop’s G aiters assume a big lead in Ottawa-St. Lawrence Basketball. The unranked G aiters jum ped six points ahead of second place Carleton by w inning a mid-week game against Sherbrooke, and then saw the m argin hold up at the weekend as Carleton lost 72- 71 to Loyola, and 88-75 to Mac­Donald (L.C. D.) College. The losses snapped the tenth-ranked Raven’s winning streak a t six games and dropped them into a second place tie w ith Ottawa, who defeated Royal M ilitary Col­lege 76-69.

Acadia’s surprisingly fourth- ranked Axemen won th e ir sec­ond game of the season Friday, 51-45 over Mount Allison.

In hotkey, top-rated Toronto rem ained four points ahead of W aterloo in the OQAA a t the weekend by defeating M ontreal 11-2 and Queen’s 4-3. Toronto, who are averaging b e tte r than ten goals p e r game, have lost one of 11 contests.

1 0 / t h e georgian, January 31, 1967

O n ly T

Teams Still Undefeated

WAA Sports Day February 3

Princesses: back to fron t: Ursula (Ulli) Rath ; Jemima (Jeremy) Bake r; Frances (Frazer) Adam s ; Dilly (Dave) Cummings ; Petpula (Peter) Kendall ; Gardenia (Gordon) Jones ; Rosie (Rick) Adam s ; Babs (Brian) Chapman ; Brenda (Brian) Gill.

The b iggest broom ball gam e of the sea­son w ill be held on Friday w hen the En­gineering V irgins meet the W om en 's Ath le­tics A ssociation Bunnies.

Buses w ill be leaving the Hall Build ing at 2:30 pm in order that all students will have the opportunity to see these two great teams in action. Both of the coaches are confident t h a t this m eeting of the g iants w ill produce the real victor since all p layers are in top condition.

The event is be ing held to kick off the festivities for the W om en 's Athletics A s so ­ciation Day.

A n added feature to the gam e is the in ­clusion of the W A A Princesses on the Bun­nies team.

A Bunny Hop will a lso be held at 3:30 pm on the M ezzan ine of the Hall Building. A t that time a Princess w ill be crowned Bunny Queen. This dance is open to all students and should prove interesting with all those athletic type fem ales infesting the area.

Glendon Students Still tack Place On Government

TORONTO (CUP) — Lack of student representation in univer­sity government and closed deci­sion-making were once again un­der fire Tuesday (Jan. 17) a t York U niversity’s Glendon Col­lege.

More than 400 students turned out to hear the adm inistration students’ council a ir the ir views on the university president’s con­troversial Advisor Committee on Student A ffairs.

Sudents’ council vice-president Rick Schultz contended the 18- m an committee required more than 5 student representatives and said he could find no ju stifi­cation fo r holding p rivate com­m ittee meetings.

Speaking fo r Glendon students, Schultz said : “We subm it th a t free inquiry, open discussion, a sense of values and the courage to defend them publicly are in­teg ra l parts of education within the college community.

“Secrecy prom otes d istrust and cleavage w ithin the univer­sity comunity. Such represen ta­tion w ithout openness would, in the words of the Duff-Berdahl report, ‘effectively silence the student representative and drive a wedge between him and his fel­low students’.”

Henry Best, student a ffa irs di­rector, represented the adm inis­tra tion ’s stand on the ACSA is­sue.

Although Mr. B est would not concede to the students’ demands fo r a more representative, open committee, he said he fe lt the university president had accepted the principle of more student res- ponsibility.

“We w ant to see all p a rts of the university take a full role in the decision-making process. That principle is not the problem, but ra th e r the means by which stud­en t responsibility can be best achieved,” he said.

Although Glendon’s ACSA af­fa ir rem ains up in the air, the students have succeeded in gain­ing representation on the board of governors-senate liaison com­m ittee.

The committee says it has not yet decided now the student re­presentatives will be chosen.

Phantom Phoner Swindles Students

TORONTO (CU P) — Two Uni- versity of Toronto students have been defrauded of $200 by an unknow person or persons posing as a representative of the ir col­lege or faculties offices, U of T police chief said la st week.

An unidentified person tele­phoned each student, saying he was calling from his faculty dean’s’ office, Chief J . B. W est said.

The caller asked the student fo r inform ation concerning his bank account saying he needed the inform ation to clarify the student’s records or fo r the stud­ent to obtain a loan, Mr. W est said.

The caller then w ent to the student’s bank and made oid w ithdraw al slips on his accourj

Page 11: StudentPro test Wednesday: meet In Room 231

/IWomen's Curlers Stone Mac, McGill

Girls curling, an unheralded sport until now, came into pro­minence this week when a team from Sir George W illiams won an overwhelming victory in a bonspeil held la s t Friday. The team , made up of Skip K it Me Cune, th ird Jane Doger, second Suzanne McLintock, and lead Ca­rol Shepherd, stole the show as they blanked Macdonald 9-0 and dumped McGill 8-4. Now th a t we can boast a winning team , per­haps we can persuade a few more girls to participate in this sport. E xperts and novices alike are welcome to come and speak to Miss Sally Kemp, Women’s A thletics D irectress, in Room H- 407.

The Women’s volleyball team saw action last Saturday in a tournam ent involving nine team s.

Overall, the Georgians placed sixth, a f te r w inning two gam es aga inst Nationale, losing two to M arguerite Bourgeois, and split­ting gam es w ith M arquette I and Mousseau.

The G eorgettes basketball team suffered a 35-24 loss to Bishop’s on Saturday. M ary Chant w as the high-scorer fo r the Georgettes

w ith eleven points. O ther “tal- lyers” w e r e Michelle Fortier, Cheryl Holmes, Diane Peradeau, Bonnie Hayes, and uth Lucow.

M ary Chant once again led the G eorgettes la s t Thursday, as they trounced the McGill 24-17. Mary counted fo r eight points, and was basked up by D iane P era­deau w ith four and Michelle F or­tier, also w ith four.

The f irs t quarte r of the game proved to be the G eorgette’s best of the night, as they totalled twelve points, and according to Coach Sally Kemp, the whole team looks stronger every time they play. They will be facing strong opposition next Thuesday when they m eet the In term ediate team of the YWCA.

Anyone fo r broomball? This F riday afternoon, as p a r t of the

L iv ing and proserved zoo logica l spe­cim ens (fro gs, bu lfrogs, dogfishes, nocturus, w h ite rats, cats, etc.) fo r b io lo gy students.

IN Q U IR IE S IN V IT E D

Andre Biological Materials

Phone 526-2277

Film Dialogue Invites You to

Dr. STRANGEIOVE(STANLEY KUBRICK, 1963)

With Prof. SIDNEY LAMB

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2 - 8:30 PM

H-110 ADM. 50#

CAMP MA-KA-BEEJewish Children's Summer Camp Requires:

ASSISTANT HEAD COUNSELLOR ASSISTANT WATER FRONT DIRECTOR MALE & FEMALE BUNK COUNSELLORS ARTS & CRAFTS SPECIALIST.

For information please call Mrs. N. Shuster at 481-9552

W.A.A. Sports Day, the Engin­eers will be challenging the girls to a contest a t two th irty . Buses will leave the school a t two fo r the rink. Any girls who are wil­ling to show the Engineers up in th is im portant m atch can sign up in Sally Kemp’s office in Room 407. I t should be an interesting exhibition.

Recreational sports are still open to anyone who needs the exercise or to anyone who just w ants to have some fun. Swim­ming takes place on Tuesday, a f ­ternoon a t two th ir ty in t he YWCA pool. An instructor will also be on duty fo r anyone w ants to learn to swim. And don’t fo r­ge t to come to M ontreal High School on Monday nights a t 6 for recreational volleyball, basketball or badminton.

the georgian, January 31, 1967/11

Jay Vees Having Poor SeasonA fter winning the City In ter­

collegiate Basketball League Championship last year, the Jun io r Varsity Basketball team has fallen on hard tim es this year. Their record is a dismal I-II — th e ir only victory being a 59-51 verdict over Loyola in overtime. They have shown a lot of hustle during practices, but according to the Coach, W arren Sutton, the team has not shown this same type of hustle during the games.

Their main weakness seems to be the ir lack of accurate shoot­ing. A ndre Farkas and Richard Poon provide the team with good ball control and dribbling finesse Oleg DeVreeze, Bob Sephton, W ayne Hawkins, and 6’7” F raser Adams score regularly in pract­ice but it seems they can’t find the basket consistently during games. Dave Forest is the high

point getter on the team with an average of ju st under 10 points per game. The potential is there, however, the team ju s t can’t seem to fipd the winning com­bination.

Their next game is against St. Joseph’s Teachers’ College <at the McGill sgymnasium to-night at 6:30.

- ANGLICANS -Holy Communion

EVERY THURSDAY

1:05 • 1:25

Room H-529

(Revised Liturgy)

SIR GEORGE H1LLEL- P0L 1T IC A I SCIENCE SOCIETY

invites everyone to a most exciting PANEL DISCUSSION

on

“The Resurgence of Neo-Nazism in Germany”

PAN EL:

1) PROF. KLAUS HERMANN2) PROF. IRVING LAYTON3) W OLFGANG SCHEUER4) DAVID NOVER

MODERATOR - PROF PARIS ARNOPOULOS

ROOM 110 THURSDAY FEB. 2 1:00

Georgians IEVENING PARKING

5:30 PM TO MIDNIGHT

7 5 *Come in out of the cold. Park in the

STANDARD LIFE BUILDING GARAGE’ Entrance on Mountain abov* Sherbrooke

Page 12: StudentPro test Wednesday: meet In Room 231

1 2 /th e georgian, January 31, 1967

Fred Hands Out Old Port, But Varsity Hockey

Cagers Split Over Weekend Georgians Demolish Gaitersby Carl Law

There is a tide in the affairs of men, which taken a t the flood leads on to victory. So Shake­speare said circa 1600, but tha t tide was out when the Georgians m et the Gaiters a t Bishop’s Univ­ersity on F riday night.

P rio r to the game, Coach F red W hitacre briefed the team afte r a round of rib steaks which helped build up a resistance to the sub-arctic tem perature of the Bishop’s gym. Coach F red preached a stall game, working the offense to search out a weak link in the Gaiters defense, a defense tha t has only crumbled once this year, when the Gaiters took a hiding from the Carleton Ravens. That strategy worked to the coache’s satisfaction, p re­venting the Gaiters from racking up the score that the ir em inen­ce m ight have entiled them to, though the fans were dis­appointed and screeched the ir disapproval.

The odds weighed heavily in favour of the Gaiters from the beginning, due to the ir having more players, a g rea ter height advantage, and a large tu rn out by the fans. The home-town offi­cials called frequently on m inor points, slowing down the rhythm of the game for both teams.

From the opening whistle, the Georgians swept down to the opposing basket but failed to score on a shot. The Gaiters opened the score with a close shot at the four m inute mark, and followed up with a foul shot th irty seconds later. The Geor­gians scored also, shortly afte r the four m inute mark, but failed to hold the league-leading Gait­ers as they surged ahead led by top league-scorer P ete Mun- zar to make the score twenty-five to eleven at half time. During the firs t half, Sir George sank four of fourteen off the floor and th ree of six from the foul line. They pressed th e ir oppo­nents with a five man offense, th ree men handling the ball and two men alternately cutting into the basket. Larry Dallas, ham ­pered by a dry hacking cough gave a brillian t display of drib­

bling when he controlled the ball for one minute, th irty five seconds at the end of the half.

From the second half whistle, the Georgians went into action in a big way, managing to hold the Gaiters to an increase in the ir lead of only six points, m aking the final score fifty-five to thirty-five in favour of the Bishop’s team. The Georgians upped th e ir average to thirty- five percent from the floor and sixty-two percent from the top of the key. Steven K em ner led the over-all scoring with ten

points, followed by Shelley Lieb- man with eight, and Larry Dal­las with seven. Dallas’s lack of height makes him more of an asset at ham pering the opposi­tion than in going in for the shots. All th ree played a hard game against superior odds. Howie Pashlin also did an ex­cellent job of harrassing the op­position.

In the dressing room, Coach W hitacre was all smiles, rem ark­ing tha t his type of ball game was producing the desired re ­sults and would be pursued. F red ’s six year old son gave a dazzling display of two hand, no look dribbling, Harlem Globe- T ro tter style, before the team headed back to the motel through the freshly fallen snow for a good nigh t’s re s t prior to Saturday’s game a t Universi­ty of Sherbrooke. Coach Fred made frequen t stops to pass out Old P ort cigars (large-size) to Bishop’s acquaintances to cel­ebrate the arrival of his first daughter last week. This cor­respondent did not see one how ever, as the coach had given stric t orders against tobacco con­sumption in the vicinity of the team.

On Saturday the proverbial tide came back in. A fter a hearty breakfast, and a ping- pong tournam ent during which F raser Adams dem onstrated his lightning Olympic smash, the team repaired to the spacious confines of Sherbrooke U niver­sity (so th a t’s why there’s no money le ft fo r McGill).

The Georgians opened the

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game with a solid shot at the twenty-second mark, followed a m inute la ter by two more points. Sherbrooke put on the pressure to score twenty seconds la ter and the game stayed tigh t till the end of the firs t half when the score was tied up seventeen all. Sir George scored twice in twenty-five seconds but lost the ir lead by becoming slightly less cautious for a few minutes and shooting long shots.

The game stayed tigh t during the second half with Sherbroo'fce watching Sir George, almost basket for basket. Coach W hit­acre, whose hair seemed to be debating w hether or not to tu rn grey had words with the referee at one point but the disagree­m ent was quickly settled. A S i n g l e Georgian cheerleader

who had w andered in m yster­iously from God knows where punctuated the tense atm osphere with piercing collegiate cries of ‘Way to go Georgians’, and other rem arks of like ilk.

Shelley Liebman racked up seventeen points in a b rillian t display which included more than one long shot. Brian Cun- liffe, who during the pre-game warm-up had to have four stiches put in above his eye, tied with Howie Pashlin in points scored with six. Issie Goldman shot five points, but Steve Kem per and Larry Dallas forw ent the accolades and con­centrated instead on baffling the opposition with fast-moving ball-work. Bessette scored th ir­teen points fo r Sherbrooke, fol­lowed by Bourbonnais and Des- sureault who tied with six points apiece.

The Georgians outshot Sher­brooke by thirty-nine shots to twenty-eight off the floor, but averaged only forty and thirty- th ree against fortv-five and forty-five percent byfSherbrooke.

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by ALLAN HILTONSparked by the six point ef­

forts of Bob Berry and Trevor Kerr, the Georgians had no trouble in swamping the Bishops Gaitors 9-3 on Friday night at the Forum.

The game proved very little except perhaps for one thing: the Georgians have some sort of a- version to scoring the opening goal in any given game. This fact, fast turning into a habit, held true again on Friday as Ed Hebert opened the scoring at the 0:56 m ark of the firs t period on a goal mouth play.

From then on, however, the

Swimmers Improve In Laval Meet

A ra th e r small contingent of Sir George swimmers went to Laval last week. The team, miss­ing all but one of its veterans, showed that what they lacked in skill, they made u p 1 fo r in effort.

F or the ir f irs t crack at the 200 m eters individual medely, Johnny Irving and Jerem y Baker made a fine attem pt with Irving taking th ird place. In Irving’s next event, the 200 m eter back­stroke, he again placed third.

The 100 m eter freestyle found Mike Ranger and Steve Richman in fifth and sixth positions re ­spectively with times of 1:11.4 and 1:16.0.

Dave Champagne and Bob Bruce talked the longer free style events of 200 and 400 m eters with Champagne takihg third spot in the 400.

Jerem y Baker, the team ’s vet­eran, placed 4th in the 200 m eter breast stroke.

In the upcoming OSLAA meet, we can expect a strong showing from the squad and anyone wish­ing to join s h o u l d c o m e

to the practices a t 7:00 a.m. on Manday, W ednesday and Friday at the YMCA.

Georgians turned in the ir habitu­al fine perform ance.

A part from Berry and Kerr, Bill E llyett also scored two goals, while Toby O’Brien, Phil Sutton, and Harry ‘the H at’ W enger add­ed singletons.

Will Mitchell and Ken Chip- man also scored for Bishops.

K err was by fa r the best play­er on the ice as he had 11 of the 41 Georgian shots on goal. He was also effective on penalty killing assignments along with Berry.

The win was the th irteen th straight for the team, and pros­pects for win num ber fourteen on W ednesday evening look very good. The Georgians will go on an ‘extended’ road trip to St. Anne de Bellevue for a game a- gainst Macdonald. Mac is cur­rently in 9th place in the stand­ings, ju st ahead of Ottawa U.

The game could tu rn out to be the long awaited shutout that Brian Chapman has yet to have in his four year OSLAA career. If he misses on Wednesday, Chap­man will have another chance when the Georgians play Mac la ter in the season.ICE CHIPS: Harry W enger re ­gained the lead in the Lem ire - W enger point race on Friday evening. W enger’s goal was his first this year, while Lcm irc has yet to score.

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