6
VOLUME 5, NUMBER 8 UNIVERSITY OF WATERLOO, Waterloo, Ontario FRIDAY, ‘OCTOBER 16, 1964 QUEBEC “POLICE” OUT IN FORCE , Quebec (CUP) - Widespread police brutality Saturday turned the Queen’s visit to Quebec Cjty into a major moral victory for the independence movement in French Canada. The ancient city of the St. Lawrence became a military fortress and lived in a virtual state of marshal1 law during the Queen’s two- day stay. Lava1 students, reinforced by students from the Universities of Montreal and Sherbrooke, were harrassed, bullied and beaten by riot squads during their efforts to carry out peaceful demonstrations against the royal visit. Six newsmen were seriously injured while ten others received the blows of nightstick-wielding police who bore down on the de- monstrators at least five times during the day. This writer *was chased two blocks down a side street by the Orange-clad squads who clubed indiscriminately at bystanders, newsmen and demonstrators. About 50 students were arrested by Quebec City Police assisted by the RCMP and Quebec Provincial Police; constantly in the back- ground, though never active against demonstrators, were the several thousand army and airforce personel who lined shoulder to shoulder along every foot of the Queen’s route through the city. Quebec City police refused to disclose the names of those ar- rested or the charges against them. On Tuesday most were let out on $25.00 and $50.00 bail. Six times during the day the Queen passed through the streets of Quebec. Angered by police, the demonstrations grew larger and more determined as the day progressed. But the protests were peace- ful to the last. At lo:30 a.m. when the Queen arrived at the Legislature Build- ing there was only about 50 Vociferous demonstrators and several hundred passive supporters. They chanted “Le Quebec au Quebec- ois, ” “Lesage est responsable” and Sang Vive les Quebecois and other French-Canadian Songs. As soon as the Queen entered the legislature, plain-clothes police and one RCMP officer in uniform began siezing demonstrators and carrying them away. Incensed, the crowd shouted “Gestapo, Gesta- po.” Within seconds sirens screamed from all directions and white wagons bearing the name ‘protection Civil, appeared. Orange-clad police swept from the trucks swinging their sticks furiously and driv- ing the crowd before them. This was the first time the police turned a peaceful demonstra- tion into a *riot, but the scene was repeated again and again during the day. Girls of 17 and old men were slugged and pushed as they stood in shop doorways. It was unsafe to walk anywhere in down- town Quebec. At 3 p.m. after the Queen had arrived at the citadel to inspect the Royal 22nd Regiment, 75 demonstrators retired to a nearby .park. They sat on the grass and chanted “Quebec Oui, Ottawa” non and sang songs. Ten minutes later eight truckloads of police arrived and climbed the hill towards the demonstrators. The 75 young people arose and .began a brisk walk out of the park. The police cut across their path and then one boy lying on the ground with his-hands behind his head was lifted and brutally slash- ed with a nightstick. A policeman grabbed a young girl and chocked her until she cried. An American Newsman taking notes at the scene was beaten and arrested. At 8:45 p.m. the Queen was driven to the Chateau Frontenac for a reception attended by Prime Minister Pearson and Premier Jean Lesage. By this time, the number of active demonstrators had swelled to several hundred. At the Porte Saint Louis, (Gate to the Old City), their chant became a roar as the royal car passed. Moments later the police clubs were swinging and more arrests were being made. This time a 12-year-old girl had her face slashed open by a nightstick’s blow. Saturday, October 10, 1964 is now an historic day for the inde- pendence movement of Quebec. On the narrow streets of the old city behind police barricades, dozens of students turned against the Lesage government. Many were moved to shout independence slo- gans for the first time. But the demonstrations were not anti-English. Their wrath was not for English reporters and spectators in the crowd; it was not -- even against the Queen. Their protests were directed against the Lesage Government, the Federal Government and increasingly against the police forces themselves. Also on Friday, students at Lava1 University staged a satire on the symbolism of the Crown before a crowd of 1,000 in -a campus auditorium. A Lava1 group of about the same size was on hand Sunday to demonstrate as the* Queen passed the Lava1 Campus on her way to the airport. Two students were arrested in a Lava1 Chapel washroom on this occasion. Editor’s Note: Although it may sometimes be in bad taste, students and any other person in Canada must be allowed freedom of expression of their views as long as it does not injure any other party. Go to Hell Do not pass go; go directly to hell; give up your $18.00. That is the attitude of the stu- dent body towards recent at- tempts by the Pro Tern Stu- dent’s Council and this news- paper to create an interest in capable students to enter into student government. This atti- tude of the students is directly stated in the fact that for the seven vacancies to be filled on council in the October 21 election, ONLY 2 nomiations had been received by the Re- turning Officer, Tom Rymer, as of Wednesday, October 14, one day before nomination closed. These two nominations were for president, Dick Van Veldhui- sen, and for Vice-President, Joe Recchia. Two engineers. There were no nominations for Facul- ty of Engineering Representa- tive; no nominations for the one arts vacancy; no nomnia- tions for the one St. Jerome’s vacancy. The meetings held all over the campus for all faculties and colleges were well-attended (ex- cept for Science - no one came) and much interest was shown towards entering stu- dents council. However, this enthusiasm must have died as soon as the meeting was over. Therefore the question arises “Do you want Student govern- ment?” On Thursday, many people were approached to run for Students’ Councli. We will have a council, but a last minute council. This council, I -am sure, will prove to be very capable of handling Students’ Affairs. However, it’s first job must be to set up a committee which can study the student attitudes on campus in order to decide whether or not student government is wanted. Do students want to be sheep or do they want to be helpful shepherds? Shepherds learn how life works - sheep merely follow the line. 5C s ompendiums Available f s All copies must be claimed by Friday, October 23, 1964. s After this date all unclaimed s § copies will be sold at $3.00 a s 5 COPY* § cLAw!xammm Photo by Uubbledam Parking Problems Again There is no relief for the student’s parking problem. The law is that no student may park his car on the campus during the day. After five o’clock, the parking spaces on campus may be used by anyone on a ‘first come first served basis. Where is the sutdent to park? Third and fourth year students with park- ing stickers park in lot G which will be expanded next week to accommodate 120 cars. Stickers may be obtained from Dept. of Buildings and Grounds at no charge. However, if a car does not have a sticker, then a ticket will be issued starting at one dollar and going up to five. Parking for first and second year students and left over third and fourth year is confined to Seagram Stadium lot. Lot G and Seagram Stadium have a capacity of 620 vehicles and to date 538 students have applied and received permits. Students are reminded that they must obtain these permits immediately if they wish to park in these lots. No provisions will be made for parking in the field when the snow comes. Staff and faculty parking is a mess too. Mr. Vindicomde, manager of the proposed University village, has been assigned the task of straigtening out staff parking. Many of the faculty and staff have not yet obtained their new permits for 1964; however, they are still parking on campus. The Chemistry- Biology parking lot has 142 places, but only 33 permits have been issued. Thus, according to the rules, most people in that lot are parking illegally. For the past weeks these illegally-parked cars have been tagged with warning stickers. As yet, no fines have been levied against these cars. Some students have received parking fines after three warnings or less from the University police force. Furthermore, the Waterloo Police Force, having allowed overparking on University Avenue for three weeks, have started issuing tickets for overparking. Lots are available for students to park in. If a student is fined, it is his own fault. However, how long are the faculty and staff going to be allowed to park illegally? I feel that student and staff should be treated alike, but maybe I am an idealist. The Library by B. G. The Reference Department is con- cerned with (a) maintenance and de- velopment of the Reference Collec- tion itself and (b) giving assistance when needed to faculty, staff, and students in discovery and use of lib- rary resources. The modern university library in its attempt to make available to the scholar the heritage of the past and the mounting knowledge of the world today, collects materials of varied types and forms: books, journals, newspapers, pamphlets, government reports and documents, microcards, microfilms, recordings, etc. Confronted with this array of re- sources, the problem of the reader as he enters the Library Reading Room is to define his question, the area of information he hopes to en- ter, and the amount, depth, and vari- ety, of discussion needed. The con- cern of the Reference Staff is by en- quiry, use of the Catalogue and knowledge of library resources, to assist him to recognize material rele- vant to his subject, to discover what and how much is available, where it is to be found, and, in the case of involved works, how they may be used. Study of the Card Catalogue (which is the Collection, analyzed by author, title, and subject) will show that resources are divided into three groups: (a) the main body of the collection which circulates, that is, may be borrowed for use outside the library, (b) that of rare and valuable works which are used in Restricted Circulation, (c) Reference works which, except for unusual circum- stances, must be used in the Reading Room in order that they may be available at all times for consultation. This third group, the Reference Section, is made up of works which tend to be comprehensive in scope, quite condensed in treatment and ar- ranged so as to enable the searcher to find readily and accurately the in- formation he is seeking. Their out- Cont’d. on Page 3 LOYOLA TRIP OCT. 24TH, TICKETS PHONE 742-6232

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VOLUME 5, NUMBER 8 UNIVERSITY OF WATERLOO, Waterloo, Ontario FRIDAY, ‘OCTOBER 16, 1964

QUEBEC “POLICE” OUT IN FORCE , Quebec (CUP) - Widespread police brutality Saturday turned

the Queen’s visit to Quebec Cjty into a major moral victory for the independence movement in French Canada.

The ancient city of the St. Lawrence became a military fortress and lived in a virtual state of marshal1 law during the Queen’s two- day stay.

Lava1 students, reinforced by students from the Universities of Montreal and Sherbrooke, were harrassed, bullied and beaten by riot squads during their efforts to carry out peaceful demonstrations against the royal visit.

Six newsmen were seriously injured while ten others received the blows of nightstick-wielding police who bore down on the de- monstrators at least five times during the day. This writer *was chased two blocks down a side street by the Orange-clad squads who clubed indiscriminately at bystanders, newsmen and demonstrators.

About 50 students were arrested by Quebec City Police assisted by the RCMP and Quebec Provincial Police; constantly in the back- ground, though never active against demonstrators, were the several thousand army and airforce personel who lined shoulder to shoulder along every foot of the Queen’s route through the city.

Quebec City police refused to disclose the names of those ar- rested or the charges against them. On Tuesday most were let out on $25.00 and $50.00 bail.

Six times during the day the Queen passed through the streets of Quebec. Angered by police, the demonstrations grew larger and more determined as the day progressed. But the protests were peace- ful to the last.

At lo:30 a.m. when the Queen arrived at the Legislature Build- ing there was only about 50 Vociferous demonstrators and several hundred passive supporters. They chanted “Le Quebec au Quebec- ois, ” “Lesage est responsable” and Sang Vive les Quebecois and other French-Canadian Songs.

As soon as the Queen entered the legislature, plain-clothes police and one RCMP officer in uniform began siezing demonstrators and carrying them away. Incensed, the crowd shouted “Gestapo, Gesta- po.” Within seconds sirens screamed from all directions and white wagons bearing the name ‘protection Civil, appeared. Orange-clad police swept from the trucks swinging their sticks furiously and driv- ing the crowd before them.

This was the first time the police turned a peaceful demonstra- tion into a *riot, but the scene was repeated again and again during the day.

Girls of 17 and old men were slugged and pushed as they stood in shop doorways. It was unsafe to walk anywhere in down- town Quebec.

At 3 p.m. after the Queen had arrived at the citadel to inspect the Royal 22nd Regiment, 75 demonstrators retired to a nearby .park. They sat on the grass and chanted “Quebec Oui, Ottawa” non and sang songs. Ten minutes later eight truckloads of police arrived and climbed the hill towards the demonstrators. The 75 young people arose and .began a brisk walk out of the park.

The police cut across their path and then one boy lying on the ground with his-hands behind his head was lifted and brutally slash- ed with a nightstick. A policeman grabbed a young girl and chocked her until she cried. An American Newsman taking notes at the scene was beaten and arrested.

At 8:45 p.m. the Queen was driven to the Chateau Frontenac for a reception attended by Prime Minister Pearson and Premier Jean Lesage. By this time, the number of active demonstrators had swelled to several hundred. At the Porte Saint Louis, (Gate to the Old City), their chant became a roar as the royal car passed.

Moments later the police clubs were swinging and more arrests were being made. This time a 12-year-old girl had her face slashed open by a nightstick’s blow.

Saturday, October 10, 1964 is now an historic day for the inde- pendence movement of Quebec. On the narrow streets of the old city behind police barricades, dozens of students turned against the Lesage government. Many were moved to shout independence slo- gans for the first time.

But the demonstrations were not anti-English. Their wrath was not for English reporters and spectators in the crowd; it was not -- even against the Queen. Their protests were directed against the Lesage Government, the Federal Government and increasingly against the police forces themselves.

Also on Friday, students at Lava1 University staged a satire on the symbolism of the Crown before a crowd of 1,000 in -a campus auditorium. A Lava1 group of about the same size was on hand Sunday to demonstrate as the* Queen passed the Lava1 Campus on her way to the airport. Two students were arrested in a Lava1 Chapel washroom on this occasion.

Editor’s Note: Although it may sometimes be in bad taste, students and any other person in Canada must be allowed freedom of expression of their views as long as it does not injure any other party.

Go to Hell Do not pass go; go directly

to hell; give up your $18.00. That is the attitude of the stu- dent body towards recent at- tempts by the Pro Tern Stu- dent’s Council and this news- paper to create an interest in capable students to enter into student government. This atti- tude of the students is directly stated in the fact that for the seven vacancies to be filled on council in the October 21 election, ONLY 2 nomiations had been received by the Re- turning Officer, Tom Rymer, as of Wednesday, October 14, one day before nomination closed. These two nominations were for president, Dick Van Veldhui- sen, and for Vice-President, Joe Recchia. Two engineers. There were no nominations for Facul- ty of Engineering Representa- tive; no nominations for the one arts vacancy; no nomnia- tions for the one St. Jerome’s vacancy.

The meetings held all over the campus for all faculties and colleges were well-attended (ex- cept for Science - no one came) and much interest was shown towards entering stu- dents council. However, this enthusiasm must have died as soon as the meeting was over. Therefore the question arises “Do you want Student govern- ment?”

On Thursday, many people were approached to run for Students’ Councli.

We will have a council, but a last minute council. This council, I -am sure, will prove to be very capable of handling Students’ Affairs. However, it’s first job must be to set up a committee which can study the student attitudes on campus in order to decide whether or not student government is wanted. Do students want to be sheep or do they want to be helpful shepherds? Shepherds learn how life works - sheep merely follow the line.

5C s

ompendiums Available

f

s All copies must be claimed

by Friday, October 23, 1964. s

After this date all unclaimed s

§ copies will be sold at $3.00 a

s

5 COPY*

§ cLAw!xammm

Photo by Uubbledam

Parking Problems Again There is no relief for the student’s parking problem. The law is that no

student may park his car on the campus during the day. After five o’clock, the parking spaces on campus may be used by anyone on a ‘first come first served basis.

Where is the sutdent to park? Third and fourth year students with park- ing stickers park in lot G which will be expanded next week to accommodate 120 cars. Stickers may be obtained from Dept. of Buildings and Grounds at no charge. However, if a car does not have a sticker, then a ticket will be issued starting at one dollar and going up to five. Parking for first and second year students and left over third and fourth year is confined to Seagram Stadium lot. Lot G and Seagram Stadium have a capacity of 620 vehicles and to date 538 students have applied and received permits. Students are reminded that they must obtain these permits immediately if they wish to park in these lots. No provisions will be made for parking in the field when the snow comes.

Staff and faculty parking is a mess too. Mr. Vindicomde, manager of the proposed University village, has been assigned the task of straigtening out staff parking. Many of the faculty and staff have not yet obtained their new permits for 1964; however, they are still parking on campus. The Chemistry- Biology parking lot has 142 places, but only 33 permits have been issued. Thus, according to the rules, most people in that lot are parking illegally. For the past weeks these illegally-parked cars have been tagged with warning stickers. As yet, no fines have been levied against these cars.

Some students have received parking fines after three warnings or less from the University police force. Furthermore, the Waterloo Police Force, having allowed overparking on University Avenue for three weeks, have started issuing tickets for overparking.

Lots are available for students to park in. If a student is fined, it is his own fault. However, how long are the faculty and staff going to be allowed to park illegally? I feel that student and staff should be treated alike, but maybe I am an idealist.

The Library by B. G.

The Reference Department is con- cerned with (a) maintenance and de- velopment of the Reference Collec- tion itself and (b) giving assistance when needed to faculty, staff, and students in discovery and use of lib- rary resources.

The modern university library in its attempt to make available to the scholar the heritage of the past and the mounting knowledge of the world today, collects materials of varied types and forms: books, journals, newspapers, pamphlets, government reports and documents, microcards, microfilms, recordings, etc.

Confronted with this array of re- sources, the problem of the reader as he enters the Library Reading Room is to define his question, the area of information he hopes to en- ter, and the amount, depth, and vari- ety, of discussion needed. The con- cern of the Reference Staff is by en- quiry, use of the Catalogue and

knowledge of library resources, to assist him to recognize material rele- vant to his subject, to discover what and how much is available, where it is to be found, and, in the case of involved works, how they may be used.

Study of the Card Catalogue (which is the Collection, analyzed by author, title, and subject) will show that resources are divided into three groups: (a) the main body of the collection which circulates, that is, may be borrowed for use outside the library, (b) that of rare and valuable works which are used in Restricted Circulation, (c) Reference works which, except for unusual circum- stances, must be used in the Reading Room in order that they may be available at all times for consultation.

This third group, the Reference Section, is made up of works which tend to be comprehensive in scope, quite condensed in treatment and ar- ranged so as to enable the searcher to find readily and accurately the in- formation he is seeking. Their out-

Cont’d. on Page 3

LOYOLA TRIP OCT. 24TH, TICKETS PHONE 742-6232

Editor in chief: A. 0. Dick Editok: Tom Rankin, C.U.P.; Doug Grenkie, News; Mike Edwards,

Production; Harold Dietrich, Sports. Staff: Terry Joyce, Dave Kirshenblat, Vic Botari, Barry Rand,

Bruce Durrant, Dave Trost, Dave Denovan, Chris Heft, Macey Skopitz, Hazel Nawls, Bev. Grant, Steve Alsteader, Marilyn Vranch.

Published under authorizatioi of the Students’ Council, University of Waterloo, representing the jreedonz of a responsible autonomous society. Subscriptions $3.50 Member: Canadian university press Authorized as second class mail by the and for payment of postage in cash.

Post Office Department, Ottawa,

GET WITH IT!

The time for criticism has not come to an

end but it is now time to get to work. If the same

amount of student interest continues as has been

shown in the meetings that were held, this could

be-the best year ever.

No longer can we use the excuse that this

is “a new university.” A large number of clubs

and organizations exist on campus; each wel-

comes new members. The Board of Publications

has made available a list (with brief discriptions)

of all clubs on campus. Sample freely, but choose

carefully. We don’t care what you do but do

something. No chain can be strong with even one

weak link. _

‘Sir,

LETTER’S TO THE EDITOR

tt Correct ion” “Theatre of the Arts” Sir,

We would like to issue a correction regarding the letter-to-the-editor sub- mitted by Mr. Bill Webb. The ineb- riated female on the freshman de- capping line was in no way connect- ed with the University of Waterloo Cheerleaders.

. Thank you though, Mr. Webb for a fine article.

Connie Graham Jan Hagyard . Linds Hucko Mary Mixer Judi Wright

1963-64 Cheerleading Squad

There are three positions available for student representatives on the University Committee for the Theatre of the Arts.

This Committee shall be concerned with the extacurricular use of the Theatre for the performing arts, shall review Theatre programming from time to time and shall be responsible for advising the Manager of the Theatre as to the interests of the University community in the Theatre programme.

Interested students should apply in writing, stating their qualifications, to:

David R. Young, Chairman, Board of Student Activities.

Argot in the Common Room

“My predecessor was unjustly per- secuted by this university” Mr. Vergo H. Argot, newly elected president of the I.S.U.G. was quoted as saying to- day. Ray, (Smoothy), Ganiff, former head of the International Students

U. of W. campus. He subsequently escaped to the University of Kitch- ener, where deportation possibilities are now being investigated. “Under my leadership” Mr. Argot said later, “the I.S.U.G. will continue its in- tensive efforts to close down the En- gineering common room and thereby force the University to build a stud- ent union building.”

Union Group, officialy resigned his After some prodding, Mr. Argot position two days ago, after being went on to describe the highly suc- convicted of illegal parking on the cessful tactics used by Smoothy Gan-

2 . The CORYPHAEUS

To the Freshmen

A Letter from Yale University and an editorial

from the Queen’s Journal In entering college you have no

doubt been looking forward to four years of immersion in the knowledge process, in which your mental horiz- ons will be broadened, your parochial background will feel the cool breeze of social, cultural, and ideological diversity, and in which you will be-

iff in his campaigns to close the com- mon rooms in the Math and Physics building and the Engnieering building. In both cases, mmebers of the I.S.- U.G. organization, dressed to look like ordinary students, spread candy wrap- pers, empty paper cups, and crumpled Corypheii about the common room areas from day to day. Eventually, the Math and Science common room was converted to a reading room, but the Engineering common room managed to survive. Seeing that the engineers were not about to give up their singular possession without a fight, Smoothy added a little fun to his mission. Sporadically, he would send I.S.U.G. people in to attack the dispensing machines in order to make the engineers look bad in the eyes of the university officials. After all, he would reason, the officials can’t trust the students with a whole room to themselves if they are going to try to break open the machines to pay for their tuition, and pour cod-liver oil down the coin return slots.

In the past few weeks before his conviction, Ganiff observed consider- able opposition to his efforts.’ He dis- covered a small body of students who were determined to clean up the common room; but it didn’t take him long to convince them that their efforts should be applied elsewhere.

Mr. Argot now feels that the uni- versity officials suspect the existance of his group; therefore he plans a last ditch campaign to gain his aims. Although there were hints that he had a large number of additions to his overall plan, Argot would only reveal three: the establishment of a dog park where pet dogs can be left for the day, standing on pages from the Coryphaeus to protect the com- mon room floor, the importation of tipsy students from the various night spots to the comfortable furnishings of the common room, and finally, a serious attempt to dispose of the shovels and rakes, used by the jani- tors, to clean the common room after the I.S.U.G. men have done their work.

. . . somewhere you will stay up all night and probe your own goals and motives with a friend . . . somewhere the myriad injustices of the world will set your soul on fire with indigna- tion . . . And somewhere, you will read a book you have not read be- fore, and wonder at a new thought fully phrased by an extraordinary thinker, and you will in spite of your- self be driven to question what you have believed all your life.

As a demonstration of his secure And before you plunge back into

knowledge and understanding of the the inanities of American college life

student mind, Mr. Argot explained you may perceive what education is

that the only thing that could defeat about and see why men spend their

his organization, a general willing- lives teaching others.

ness to cleanup his pet project, could May these moments in the arid never arise because of the laws of wasteland you are now entering be inertia. many.

come an individual well-educated and well-prepared for your role as community participant and good citi- zen.

Forget it. Unless you are one of the rare ones, unless you are either so equipped that college will not cripple you or make you so cynical that you are unburdened by the illusion of the Academe, these four years will be” more dull grey markers on the road to comfortable mediocrity.

Your four years will be spent in the company of little minds on both sides of the classroom lectern. You will be scribbling notes in the com- pany of “students” whose every thought and every deed is a mockery of that term, whose capacity for in- quiry and questioning ends with the material on the final examination, and whose world is bounded by clothes, sports cars, the football games, and a shallow, mechanistic obsession with sex.

1 Your comrades are the Takers - the generation spawned by prosperity and complacency, for whom obliga- tions do not exist, commitment is a joke, and concern for others a waste of time.

Their lives revolve around them- selves, confined as narrowly as pos- sible, and their universe, which ends with what they can possess. The thrill of dissent, the sparks of intellectual challenge, the lust for inquiry, is ab- sent - because it cannot be hung from a wall, worn, driven, or shown off at a dance.

Your teachers are a breed of men too often forced to an obsession with the trivial. Plagued by the need to publish for the sake of publishing, untutored in the responsibility of of- fering value in what they write, the guardians of your minds are them- selves men who delight in artificial constructs and in clever word games.

The classroom for many of them, is a way-station between the library and the faculty club, a whistlestop where they cast their artificial pearls.

And yet . . . somewhere in this desert of Summer Proms, Greek Weeks, Pep Rallies, Kampus Karni- vals, Fall Proms, final papers, Fiji Island Romps, Winter Proms, mid- term examinations . . . somewhere a teacher will strike sparks in your mind

Lord of the Flies by Dave Denovaa

“Don’t forget we’re English.” So .begins this film adaptation of William Golding’s brilliant novel. And with sickening inevitability the boys do forget that they’re English and even that they’re human. Slowly their rules are broken and slowly but surely they slide into complete savagery, destroying all those who do not re- vert to a primitive archetype.

. That this is inevitable is the major premise of the nova1 and the film conveys this with frighting power. Writer-director Peter Brook has oc- casionally been forced to put unnat- ural dialogue into the mouths of the boys but if his control of them is unsure, his control of the camera is not. He also acted as editor and has put together some very powerful se- quences (particularly the hunt of Ralph at the end) that grip the audi- ence.

The dialogue and acting are at odds with the reality of the shooting and detract from the over-all effect, but in total the film is an important (if minor) piece. Brook has made very good use of the locale (an island near Puerto Rico) and the visual ef- fects are excellent. Raymond Lep- pard’s score is used sparingly but very well.

The result is a haunting film with important implications for all of us. In the film Ralph ends weeping for ,his lost innocence but it is an inno- cerise about ourselves that we all must lose. More so today than ever before, when the hunting is done, not with spears but with intercontinental misseles.

Films Galore by Dave Denovan

The study and appreciation of films as an art form has taken a great up- swing in the twin cities and, as uni- versity students, we should be pleased and we should take advantage of it.

One example is the Waterloo Thea- tre, which re-opened last year on an “art” program. Upcoming films this year include a Bergman festival, Or- son Welles’ “Macbeth” and another chance to puzzle through “Last Year at Marienbad.”

Professor MacQuarrie has had a great deal to do with this iupswing. He has created and maintained the Film Society on campus. This year it has moved to the Waterloo and is showing a mixture of classics (like W.C. Fields) and more recent but otherwise unobtainable films.

As well, this year he is running two other series, one of films for his English 101 class and one on “Basic Patterns in Literature.”

This latter is a survey of many forms of communication, ranging from poems like “The Divine Com- edy” through comics (Little Ab’ner) and plays to novels and, of course, films like Fellini’s “81/2”

All this is (or should be) rather ex- citing. It is another indication of the dynamic growth of the University of Waterloo.

JJBRARY Cont%i. frbm Page. 1

standing - characteristics are that they (a) are written to be consulted for immediate definite information rather than consecutive reading, (b) offer information gathered from many sources, and (c) are arranged for convenient reference and rapid use. They may supply information direct- ly, or as in indexes and bibliographies, direct to other sources where informa- tion may be found. Acknowledgement of the importance to modern scholar- ship of these, latter - the directing services - must be made later when actual services can be named and de- scribed.

‘Reference works on the whole tend - to be studies of authority, scholar-

ship and distinction. Factual informa- tion such as found in national year- books, almanacs and directories, handbooks, single volume subject en- cyclopedias, guide books, and diction- aries tends to have the authority of government departments, internation- al institutions, learned societies or dis- tinguished editors, e.g., Canada Year- book, United Nations Statistical Year- book, Statistical Abstracts of the Unit- ed States, Whitaker’s Almanac,, Fra-

* ser’s Canadian Trade Directory.

Other works, the well-known en- cyclopedias and dictionaries, the great geographical, historical and literary studies are valued not only for the immense amount of factual informa- tion to be found in them but also for the interpretative comment and discussion contributed by scholars and specialists in the field. These while intended primarily to be read through for information and pleasure are so comprehensive, accurate, and distinguished in level of discussion, so well-provided with indexes and tables that they serve as references. Examples of such .books in our col- lection are : Cam bridge Medieval His- tory (8 vols.), Nouvelle Gkographie Universelle ( 19 vols.), Canada and Its Provinces (23 ~01s.).

The great encyclopedias and dic- tionaries, established as tools for ready reference, have made such seri- ous and fine contributions to know- ledge as to establish - themselves as authorities. A check of famous for-- eign encyclopedias - French, Span- ish, Portuguese; Russian, or our more familiar Amerciana, Canadiana, Bri- tannica (1 lth edition accounted by many the most scholarly work in the English language), would be reward- ing. Examination of any or all will reveal why they are accorded the re- spect they receive.

In spite of variety of form the re- ference tools of our library may be readily grouped, their special char- acteristics recognized and utilized. Next week the. following will be an- alyzed by type, discussed briefly, and techniques for use recommended: (1) Encyclopedias and dictionaries (2) Biographical works (3) Indexes and abstracts (4) Yearbooks and director- ies (5) Guidebooks,, manuals and handbooks (6) Serial ;publications (7) Histories (8) Atlases, maps, gazetteers (9) Bibliographies.

by A. J. Kellingworth, I II . . The old Dominion-Provincial Loans, which offered slightly more

advantageous terms than the new Federal Loans, have been discon- tinued. It will be interesting to observe whether or not the amount paid out in bursaries has been decreased and, if this is the case, how the Government will justify the decrease. Presumably the line will be that fewer people applied for bursaries. But it is difficult to believe that stu- dents with the necessary academic requirements would forego money which is not repayable in favour of a loan which will cost at least 5% % interest.

During her visit to Quebec last week, Queen Elizabeth expressed the hope that “the centenary of our Confederation will be a symbol’ of hope for the‘ world. To fully succeed it must produce an effective. and freely consented-to agreement that will be the expression of the maturity of our country.”

Good for you, Queenie. Now, if only the little children on both sides of the fence will grow up and take a look at what they have to * offer each other, all this nonsense about two separate and irreconcilable - cultures will stop.

. \ The other day, my roommate and I dug into the beer pot in order

to partake of the culinary efcellence of the Ali Baba Steak House, (He didn’t know what I meant by that last phrase, but he came along any- way.) At any rate, “excellence” was far from the truth. The least ex- pensive steak dinner, which was priced rather high for Joe Student, was drab and unexciting. The service was rather slow and the only saving grace of I the evening was the fact that the waitress managed to bend over just far enough to provide an interesting topic of conversation.

It seems that the local brew halls have begun to hit their stride; relaxed bull sessions over eight ounces of good stuff is becoming a pastime enjoyed by the multitudes. In fact, the usual run of pranks such as an attempt by an enterprising group of lads to drink one establish- ment dry of its wares has also provided many evenings of merriment.

However, when such insane antics as boat racing become the stand- ard fare for the evening, I for one retire to my tomes. Just because I cannot slosh my ale back in one-point-two does not make a damn bit of difference to me, but it does to most of the idiots who comprise the regulars. If you are going to drink, there is not much sense in not en- joying what you are doing, and I frankly cannot see how anyone can enjoy an activity which lasts less than two seconds. .

HOW’RE THEY- GONNA KEEP

‘EM DOWiN ,OZV THE CAMPUS OR. . .

WHAT PTAYBOY- MAGAZINE I -CAN DO FOR YOU.

by Patrick Mcfadden from the McGill Daily

‘iOne thing you must avoid this year is falling in love.” - (The scene is the lower campus. 1 The trees are green and the birds and

squirrels are really chugging away as hard as they can. -The air- is pregnant with excitement. And everything. There are billboards on the trees reading “Keep off- the Grass.”

Enter from stage left a beautiful young girl. Who is dressed, beautifully. In sensible tweeds, which try as they may, fail to hide the lithe young. And everything. She carries, no, bears, a copy of the Student Handbook, a copy of the Daily, eighteen reading lists, fourteen exercise books, four sharpened pen- cils, an eraser. a 700-page American textbook entitled “Canada’s Economy,” six sheets of your Student Desk. Blotter with the compliments of Your .Life Subscription to Life. Oh Time. And eighteen fresh paperbacks. She is in high heels. She is in her First Year. -.

Sings: “Oh, joy to little me - hee I’m in the Arts faculty - hee (la, la) I’m going to get a degree - hee \ And the counsellor at Crumblebum High said I would command a

terrific salary - hee And have a split - level on - oops!” * _\ ,

(A young man enters, sunlight striking off his manly. And everything. He is dressed in quiet flannels and back-to-school quiet grey blazer. And this really slim tie. He is bearing everything she is bearing, with the addition of the New Yorker, Esquire, Playboy, Time Magazine with Canadian Content, five Set- squares and the A to M volumes of the Golden Book of Knowledge. He has . his hands in his pockets. Really non. Chalent. Okay now then. He: “I’m ‘sorry, I appear to have interrupted your - ha, ha - song.

(He is assured, his voice is soft but strong, light but tonal. ‘Very tonal. And he has the winning ways.)

*A - c’

“Excuse me, Miss.” “What did you do?” “Uh . . . nothing, I just wanted to know if the ID cards were

ready yet .”

She: “Oh noooo, indeeeeeed. Not at All, At All? (She blushes. A flush of crimson pervades her features in a most fetching way. She crimsons, is startled, like a young fawn in its lair. Really).

He: “Look‘ here, how about . . . . . . (She looks there. And looks away again quickly.) -having a coffee with me in the . . . . .”

She: “Eeeek, eeeek, eeeek, eeeek:” (He slaps her face sharply - one, two, three and one two, one two, up and down, up and down, up and stop. Down. She giggles hysterically ‘and then begins to sob.

“No, they aren’t, “but if you come in tomorrow, I’m certain that they won’t be ready then either.“.

The sarcasm with which one is greeted at the registrar’s office is inexcusable. As L. Allen Wise remarked after one \ of his recent visits to Gordon’s Gardenof-Eden: “Dey oughta shoot dat broad.”

.Great sobs shake her young frame. She continues through her sobs.) “I’m sorry. I’m such a fool, sniff, sniff, sniff.”

He: (thoughtfully) “Yes.” She: “Only - you know what we’ve been told, don’t you? At the meeting, I ’

mean?” t He: (bitterly) “Yes.”

(She drops her Political Science text. They both stoop to- pick it up and their heads crack together, Rendering Them Momentarily Dizzy. They both collapse to the grass, sit up, gaze at each other, and then suddenly - roll over together in helpless laughter through the Verdant Undergrowth:

I , Music ,.sweels up into wild strings of seamusic. Or seaweed music. Camera zooms to big closeup of the Three Bears.)

He: “Why don’t I take you away from all this?” She: “Oh, yes please.”

!

‘It was only through Divine Guidance that the officials at last Satur- day’s football game found Seagram Stadium, It must have been that, for, during the game, they seemed to have no idea that. there was a game going on or that they were in charge. ’ Congratulations are in order following Warrior’s felicific triumph. Well played, Warriors, but don’t let success spoi’l Rock Hunter.

I Continued on -Page

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,

Friday, October 16,i%d 3

* Athlete’s Foot-Notes &ame&eeabd ,

The C.I.A.U. National Sailing Re- gatta was held last weekend at the Royal St. Lawrence Yacht Club in Montreal. This was the largest inter- collegiate national sporting event ever held; Twenty-two Canadian universi- ties were represented, including every province with the exception of Mani- toba, Newfoundland and P.E.I. This national regatta is gaining more sup- port every year since it was re-esta- blished two years ago. Many univer- sities are forming sailing clubs if they have close access to facilities, or they are forming sailing teams to represent their university at intercollegiate re- gattas.

At Montreal the competition was ’ extremely good, many being class champions in the Olympic trials etc. Five races were scheduled, but due to heavy winds, the last race had to be cancelled. McGill placed first with U. of W. (Jack Haser and Arthur Alyea) 2% pts. behind for second. U.B.C. had a 1st and 2nd after two races, but due to dumping in the third race, was unable to maintain their early lead. Next weekend Water- loo will be sailing at a regatta in London, and the following week at Wayne State U. in Detroit.

The University of Waterloo Row- ing Clulb is looking for fellows with previous rowing experience who would like to compete for this school to help it maintain last years Rowing Championship. -

This years’ crew will have five oars- men returning including Ron Hamble- ton, Phil Hampson, Murray Jones, Pete Lockhart and Bill Morrison plus newcomer John Laroque.

Strong recruits will be needed to challenge top ranking crews from McMaster, Toronto, Brock and Wes- tern. Organization meeting will he held in P-130 on Tuesday, October 20 at 5:00 p.m. Anyone not able to attend the meeting report to Seagram Gym on the following day at 5:00 p.m. with gym equipment. Replace- ments are urgently needed as the time before the big Inter-Collegiate Row- ing Championships is only 3 weeks away.

74e %fi? At one point in the football game

last Saturday the fans had strong cause 3 to believe that the referees were playing for , Carleton. Terry Cooke dropped back to pass, and fired the ball into the arms of a waiting Warrior. The ball was held ’ momen- tarily then fumbled. Another horror stricken Warrior Doug Peacock from down-field came ot the rescue. leap-

WARRIORS ON A’ &Q WINNING STREAK c ing high into the air from about eight feet away. In the middle of this great parabola the referee reached over and wisked away the target of conster- nation. Our high-flying friend, robbed of his heroic intentions, landed ig- nominoiusly on the exact spot where the ball had been. One could almost hear the ref chuckling evily to him- self.

Friday, October 9 was a cold, windy, and cloudy day in London, Ont. A very bad day for golf; Never- the-less all the university teams were subjected to the same conditions. Ten universities competed, with McMaster taking top honours. A Mat player, Bob Jarvis, won individual honours in the tournament. His two rounds <were 72 & 76. Waterloo placed ninth beating last place Guelph by thirty strokes. Creditable showings for the Waterloo team were turned in by Harold Dietrich 79-82, and Richard Tucker 80-83. Because of weather conditions less than half the field were in the seventies.

9!T&st?

On Monday, Oct. 19 the singles tournament will take place at Sea- gram Gym at 7:00 p.m. Entries must be in by 2:00 p.m. on the 19th. The doubles tournament will take place on Thursday, Oct. 22 at 7:00 p.m. In the meantime anyone interested can practice smashing the ball down his partner’s throat on the gym table in the men’s locker-room. Running shoes must be worn. If they’re new wear them a little! To avoid disap- ’ pointment bring your own bat (not the kind you take to a dance). All games go to 21.

An invitatiocal track meet was to be :held at Kingston last Saturday, Oct. 10. Fearing complete humiliation by the U. of W. squad the other uni- versities called the meet off. Never- the-less some of our boys went down just in case some brave souls showed up. It ended up a two-university event with McMaster showing up in spite of our awesome reputation. Our cham- pions faired as follows:

440 yard

Steve Crawford

Harold Armstrong 2nd

3rd Shot-put

880 yard

Mike Milligan

,

1st ,

Adrian Peter

- Mike Milligan

1st Lorie Bridger

‘1st

3rd 1 mile

Discus

Adrian Peters 2nd Harold Armstrong

Actually no reason was given for

3rd High Jump Carson Petrie 1st -

the cancellation.

- - _

I

- _

To The Rhino-Watchers . . .

“The rhino is a homely beast, For human eyes-he’s not a feast, Farewell, farewell you old rhinoceros, I’ll stare at something less prepoceros”

OGDEN NASH

Insurance Is Not Prepoceros!

BOB WAGNER, B.A. - C.L.U. The Mutual Life of Canada- . . .

Bus. 744-7325 Res. 7451330

Wow ! ! ! Victories have been few in the past in the Waterloo Warrior camp in past years. If Saturday was to be any indication of the future then there appears to be a reversal of form in store for Carl Totzke and his charges.

For those few hearty souls that braved low temperatures and gusting winds the reward was satisfying. They were treated to an exhibition of run- ning by Dick Aldrige, rookies Brian Irvine and Bob Franks. The warriors de- fense played its usual brand of hard hitting, indicated by the number of Carleton fumbles 5, and determined football. The offense which has been nothing less than spazmodic, was anything but on Saturday. -

Despite the fact that final score was in favour of the Warriors the Carleton Ravens drew first blood. Starting at the Waterloo 26 yard line. Dave Dalton took a hand ‘off from quarterback Ron Stanger, slanted off tackle for 7 yards. The next play saw Stanger keep for 4 yards and the-first down. Lee Hodgins was held for no gain and when Dalton was contained for short yardage it appeared as if Carleton was going to be forced to go for the field goal. How-, ever they came out gambling and the gamble paid off. Stanger dropped back to the 25 yd. line and found Gord Pranschke alone in the end zone for the score. The convert .was blocked by Doug Peacock. Score ,C-6 W-O,

Warriors took until midway through the second quarter to get rolling but when they did there was no stopping them. With the help of an over eager Carleton line the Warriors marched down the field starting at their own 37 yd. line. _

Bob Franks picked up 2 yds., a pass to Doug Cressman went incomplete but’ fortunately two consistent offsides by the Ravens gave Waterloo a first down at the Waterloo 4 yd. line. Franks started the next drive by gaining 3 yards. offtackle, Aldridge bootlegged around left end for 10 yards and a first down. The crowd began to stir as they sense& the possibilities of a touchdown.

The next two plays only picked up 7 yds. and it looked as if another Warrior drive was going to fizzle out. But it was to be a day of gambles. Aldridge came out gambling on the Ravens 36 yd. line. Dropping back to pass he found Brian Irvine alone on the left sidelines with a 20 yard pass and Brian easily went the last 15 yds. without a hand being laid on him. The convert was missed and so the score was C-6 W-6.

The hungry and fired up defense went to work right at the kickoff. The kickoff was short and when the Ravens were slow to pick it up Mike Law certainly. was not as he pounced on the loose pigskin.

Aldridge hit Walt Finden for 8 yds. and Bob Franks carried for 1 yd. Unfortunately Waterloo was offside and when the penalty was declined the Warriors were faced with another third down situation. Aldridge came out appearing to be gambling. Taking the snap he dropped back as if to pass but instead kicked into the Carleton end zone for 1 point. Score 7-6 for Waterloo.

The second half looked even better than the first from a Warrior point of view. Carleton kicking to Waterloo were about to witness a completely new and even more fired Warrior crew. Waterloo scrimmaging on their own 41 yd. line gave the ball to their rookie right half, Brian Irvine. Brian as the second man through battled, bulled and danced his way through the Raven defense before breaking clear and going all the way for a touchdown. But downfield was a referee standing beside a red flag and a very dejected Warrior. Clipping was called and back came the ball. This was not to deter the War- riors. Even though forced to give up the ball they came bouncing back.

-_ _ Carleton beginning at the centrefield strip began another methodical

march downfield. Dalton, who was the bulwark of the Raven offense gain- ing 140 yds. on 19 carries, broke loose again for 21 yds before being hauled down by Dave Aldworth. Successive carries by Ted Miller and MacDonald gave Carleton another first down at the Warrior 21 yd. line. A fitting climax was Dalton dancing the last 21 yds. for the score. Once again the convert was blocked. Score C-12 W-7.

There will be a discussion group Sunday, October 18, at St. Jeromes College. The topic will be the recent- encyclical. The literature and leadership will be provided by the New- man Alumni. All students are invited to participate.

Circle K: Monday, Oct. 19,, 5: 10 p.m., P-150. Short busi- ness meeting, followed by Prof. Handa of the Civil Engineering Dept., speaker for United Na- tions Week. Everyone welcome, especially prospective members.

Waterloo took the kickoff and looked as if they might go all the way. Beginning at the 29 yd. line Aldridge ran wide around left end for 25 yds., Irvine carried up the middle for 11 yds., but an incomplete--pass and short yardage forced Waterloo to kick.

Carleton was not going to play dead as yet. Beginning at their own 53 they began to march. Grabbing the face mask penalty was called on Waterloo

Three plays later Waterloo had the ball back and this _ time there was no denying them. Grosse returned the punt to the Carleton 40 yd line. Dick

giving Carleton a first down at the Waterloo 44. Successive gains by Amer,

Aldridge running around left end as if he owned it went 18 yds. to the 22 yd. line. Irvine, playing one of the finest games ever witnessed in Seagram Stadium for a rookie, followed his blocking to perfection covered the last 22

Dalton and MacDonald took the ball to the Warrior 14 yd. line as the

yds. to make the source 13-12 for Waterloo. Rich Gage made the convert good and so the score was 14-12.

quarter ended. Carleton going for the field goal on third down were about to witness the most spectacular play of the game.

The attempt was short and wide. Glen Rosse attempting to catch the ball

Down on Campus Cont. He: “When, when?” She: “Tonight, now. now ” He: “Where?” She: “I dunno. Anywhere. Verdum.” He: “Oh‘ God! Yes, yes, yes.”

(Loud voice over the P.A. SY- stem in the trees, behind the foliage. Birds and squirrels ra- pidly dechug. All of Nature is stilled.)

The Voice: “One thing you must

Click. avoid this year is falling in love.” -__ _

(She rises slowly, her body wracked with pain, her blonde tresses drooping wantonly, brok- enly, hiding her face. Then she begins the long walk down the campus, out the gates, and care- fully arranging her tweeds, lies down under a Montreal Trans-

NOTICES Art Lab: An eperiment in the practice and study of art for all students (faculty and staff too). Organizational meeting - Room A354, October 19, 7 pm. German Club: Annual Winzer- fest at the Concordia Club, Sat- urday, October 17, 8:00 p.m. Get tickets, $1.00 each, from Werner Klinke, Heidi Lukas, Gerard .Fischer, and the Ger- man Office. Students: The University of Waterloo presents “10.05” - a weekly 3 hour programme on CKKW Radio (1320 kc) de- signed for the people of the twin cities and the student body of the University of Waterloo. Every Saturday night starting October 17, 1964. From lo:05 till 1 a.m. Curlers: First and second meet- ings will be held bctober 20th and 22nd from 4 - 6 p.m. at the K-W Granite Club. All new members welcome. Fee $2.50.

Grad Ball Committee: A meet- ing in El11 at, 5:00 p.m. on Tuesday, October 20.

Bridge Players: Duplicate Bridge in- the Engineering Com- mon Room on Sunday, October 18 at 1:30 p.m.

Lost: Black leather Tonneau cover beside Seagram Gym on Friday, September 25, 1964. Contact: Connie Graham 742- 9826.

The Newman Club holds weekly meetings every Wednes- day evening at 6:45 p.m. in the St. Jeromes College classroom building. All interested parties are invited to attend.

bobbled it a couple of times before finding the handles. Carleton players - portation Commission- Bus. He,

4 The CORYPHAEUS

rushing in to make the tackle .were mesmerized. Grosse making use of his speed and the goal posts started wide about 2 yds. deep in his end zone. As he rounded the corner suddenly there appeared in front of him the ‘empty

in the meantime, throws back his head and drinks a stiff vial of poison from Time Magazine. Leaves flutter down and cover

sidelines with about two Players between him and touchdown territory. Glen easilv out ran them for a tremendous 112 yd. gallop. Gage made the convert. Score C- 12 w-21.

his sensible grey flannels. A mean trombone moans “Careless Love”

Waterloo was not finished yet. Walt Finden surrounded by Ravens went up and came down, with the ball, taking a step he entered paydirt ,and Wat- erloo added another 6 points. Once again Gage added the convert and so the scdrLeewsas -C-f2--. -W-28.

Thanks fellas for a great game, let’s have another one next Saturday when we meet the University of Ottawa Gee Gee’s.

MORROW’S CORF. 103 UNIVERSITY AVE. W.

post office groceries and magazines

toilet articles

Adoption of year-round operation in Canadian universities could be

POOH 6N :

both coqtly. and detrimental to teach-

ALL YEAR SCHOOL

ers and ,students, a committee of C$n;zim university professors has

The deport, published by the Can- a&m Association of University Tea- chers, says universities would find it cheaper to expand than to tack an extra term onto the present academic year.

HOMECOMI‘NG-

Homecoming week this year will be ‘marked by one of the biggest events ever to hit the campus. Friday night,

OSCAR BRAND

the start of the week-end, will see a return by an already well-known and well liked figure. Oscar Brand of “Let’s S&g Out” fame will be per- forming’ here, on our campus.

Mr. Brand; who last year won the admiration of the student body when he taped three shows of the “Let’s Sing Out” series will be appearing in concert on Friday, October 3Oth, at 8:30 p.m.

Artsmen Awake: On Sept. 21, and Se@.. .22i2‘$ou

the Arts Students h$nded the. sum of c -w-w , $1.50 over-to the Arts Society. This is ydw receipt. . . . ’ , : ~ _

Thank you. .’ You may wdnder what will happen

~eograpky -. j

to your money now. This is what’ will htiepep: It will be administered by e xperimek

What’s What in Clubs and

This will add the perfect beginning to what may prove to be the greatest and most spirited Homecoming week- ing yet. The rest of the bill reads --- -

The committee, headed by B. W. Jackson of McMaster, decided that year-round operation should be adopt- ed only if a system can be devised with scholastic quality as its first considerati@q ’ At present. graduate and extension courses make up the bulk of year-round operation at Cana- dian .. colleges. Since research and teaching are the univer$ity’s main functions, the teacher who cannot do research because he has too many students becomes a “mere purveyor of dead information,“, the committee went on.

The committee mentioned a few of the difficulties that face U.S. uni- versities who have taken a whack at year-round systems. It places greatet: emphasis on “facts and memory work rather than on thought and investiga- tion . . . It puts great pressure on both student and teacher . . . drasti- cally re’duces” leisure time, and re- sults in fatique for teacher and stu- dent alike.

The committee also said the sy- stem could make paper-work reach proportions . “where university ad- ministration- would become an end in itself .”

preson for the Oscar Brand Concert. Don’t miss out; get your tickets earlv.

Organizations? A booklet on

\ Student I Activ%i& is now available *

B l

The Bqard o? Publicati& Offices - Annex 1 any student desiring

’ a copy of this list of clubs and organizations

may have one free of charge

two people - Peter Haeukel,’ dccltiim- ed P&dent of the Arts Society; -and John Clarke, acclaimed rep&e&- time ,to Students’ Council. These. two %l? *be able to use this money for 1 whtitever purpose they wish.

s Such a Democracy. Any cries of righteous indignation

should be strangled immediately by the shroud of apathy w*hich has sur- rounded the Arts Society in the last - few years. It is the same apathy that has scuttled Students’ Council and threatened almost every student acti- vity on this campus.

LangGage was’ no barrier last week- end to learning and enjoyment for 40 visiting Lava1 University geographers. As guests of the Geography Club of the University of Waterloo, geo- grapby became thi common language for the duration of their stay. On Staurday Dr. Erb conducted the visit- ors on a tdur of Waterloo County and surrounding areas. Special sources of interest to the Quebecers were the Kitchener Market and the Mennon- ites. The following day was devoted to a bus tour of the Niagara Penin- sula. The French-Canadian students were amazed to see fruit growing on the trees and vines rather than seeing it on the shelves of suDermarkets.

Much was learned by geographers from the two universities. both about geography and about other facets of Canadian life. The weekend ended with a personal invitation from the Quebec group for the Waterloo geo- graphers to return the visit in three weeks time. Hazel Rawls,

Geography Club

Last year an election was held. Two people were nominated, and thus ad- claimed, to carry on the Arts Society. Out of 800 people, only two were willing to take a’ little bit of responsi- bility and to do a little work. The time for this can easily be deducted from. ,the hours spent in the Coffee Shop or at the Kent, or watching television. All the Arts Society wants is a helping hand to carry out, its planned activities. : We need people tochelp build floats

for Homecoming. We need people to help with Our

Christmas Dance on Dec. 11. 3

just as fabulously. Saturday morning at’ 9:30, the an-

ual Homecotiing Parade will wind its wgy up King St. and into the Sea- gram Stadium parking lot. This par- ade will be highlighted by the float compeiition between the two schools involved; floats can be entered by anyone: check with Garth Wannan, 742-7709. The theme of the narade is MOVIES (all kinds). Anothe? first! Bands!! Fo! the first year there will ik,F,ands m the Homecommg Par-

. . . At 1:30 that afternoon, the Circle

Canada’s “play of the year” this past season, Jack Winter’s BEFORE COMPIEGNE, will be the attraction when the Toronto’ Workshop Produc-. tions company opens the University of Waterloo’s 1964-65 Playhouse Series, Friday, October 16.

Before Compiegne, a new look at the last days of Joan of Arc, was written especially for the Toronto

K Club will organize a pep-rally, fol- lowed, naturally, by the -exciting Homecoming Game in which we an- nually trounce that other place at

L We need people to help build a snow sculpture at Winterland.

company and ran for six weeks when football; Half time entertainment will

Above all, we need people who are %dge -

Sunday’s duplicate bridge he; in it w’as> first presented in the Work- be provided- by The Conqperors a

ienuinely interested and who are vti- shop’s hundred seat theatre last De- brass band from Hamilton.

selfish to help run the society. the Arts Cafeteria was termed a suc- cember. It received ecstatic reviews The wrap-up for Homecoming will

Anyone who is willing to help us, cess by the club president Don Cur- from the critics who cited it as’ the be the semi-formal bn Saturday night.

and who wants to serve on the Exe- ran. Three tables were in play and This dance, every year a smash suc-

cutive Council of the Arts Society mo?e players were kibitzing because most imaginative, ,exciting and chal- cess, will be held at the Coronet

should leave his or her name, ad- they didn’t arrive in time to join the lenging play on the Canadian theat- Motor Hotel: more on it to come,

dress, and telephone number with game. The winners were Don Curxan rical scene. At. the close of the ‘!63- Tickets will be $4.00 per couple

Miss Petz in the Students’ Offices in and David Weber with Bob Schives for the semi-formal. and $1.50 ner -

Annex ‘1. and Dave Robbins in second place. 64 season Before Compiegne’ was sel-

Peter Hansel, ” , Don Curran said the turnout wai ected as the “Best New’ Canadian .

President ‘of k& Soci&y better than he expected because of the Play of the Year” at the annual Tele- Thanksgiving weekend and that the gram Theatre Awards Dinner. ,, Applications will now be accepted for the following positions

BOARD OF PUBLICATIONS Business vanager: duties include all budgeting of Board funds. Advertising Manager: to co-ordinate advertising of all Board Publications. Interested parties should apply in writing to: Mr. G. L. VanFleet / 1 Acting Chairman, Board of Publications,.

STUDENTS’ COUNCIL ’ Ch@rman: Orientation’ Comniittee. Duties include planning dnd

co-ordination of all orientation activities. The chairman would be re- sponsible to council for such programming.

Speaker ;- Students’ Council: -Responsibilities include Presiding over meetings of council and executive board; Call meetings of same: Enforce observance of Students’ Council constitutions and rules of par-. liamentqry proceedure. rl

Interested parties should apply in writing to: Mr. Richard Van Veldhuisen, Acting President, Students’ Council. I

ALittlelnform.ation On Monday evening, October 5, a

meeting of St. Paul’s United College and Conrad Grebel College was held in the Refectory at St. Paul’s.

This meeting was to inform the students of a ,special election to be held on OFtober 21, aqd to introduce / them to the system of Student ‘Gov- ernment at the University of Water- loo. A panel of five answered ques- tions from the floor. The’ participants were Mr. Dick Van Veldhuisen, Act- ing President of the Students’ Coun- cil. Dr. T. L. Batke, Academic Vice- President; Mr. C. C. Brodeur, Ad- ministrative Assistant to Student Af- fairs; Mr. D. Young, Chairman of the board of Student Affairs; and Mr. R. Wiljer, former chairman of the Con- stitution Committee.

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Aa organizational meeting of the debating society was held last Friday. The purpose of the society it to pro- mote debating on campus and to re- ’ present the University of Waterloo at inter-Universitf debate tourna- ments.

duplicate bridge club would pjrobably be in session every Sunday except homecoming. Notices will appear in the Coryphaeus arid on bulletin boards.

The second production of the Play- house series will be November 20 when the Canadian Players present the FIRST SHAKESPEAREAN QUINTET. ’ -

’ All of the Playhouse Series pro-

ductions will be in the University of Waterloo% Theatre of the Arts -and tickets for the performances are avail- able at the Theatre Box Office in the Arts Building. Tickets for the .s&ies are priced at $7.00 for students, $9.00 for members of the University facul- ty and staff, and $10.00 to the general public. The prices for individpal per- formances are $2.00 for students, $2.50 for faculty and staff and $3.00 for the public. ’ Mr. Van Veldhuisen outlined the

main activities of the Students’ Coun- cil planned for the coming year. Among these are plans for Homecom- ing, a visit of the Toronto. Symphony Orchestra, a Christmas Dinner, Win- ter Festival, and Graduation Ball.

It was pointed out that changes had to be made within the Students’ Council. For example, the adoption of a new constitution. Such changes cannot be effected by the present Council of fourteen members.

There was a suggesiton that if re- presentation to the Councli was ex-

. tended to include more representa- tives from the Student body and the four residences, the many and varied interests of the faculties and resi-

_ dences could be brought to the Coun- cil’s attention.

The society will organize weekly debates among its members. Its plans for inter-University competition are still tentative. The first major debate will probably be at the University of Rochester on Nov. 20. . An executive was elected at this meeting. Mike Sheppard was elected President, Steve Flott, Vice-President, and Craig Parkes Secretary-Treasurer.

The next meeting will be held Fri- day, October 16 at 12 noon. Anyone intereste.d in joining the society may attend this meeting or contact Mike Sheppard by leaving a note in the box in Annex 1.

Mr. - Wiljer stated that it seems ’ Student Government of the Univer- , fewer are willing to work despite the sity of Waterloo can be termed the larger university population. The Col- training ground for the future leaders leges should take a more active in- of Canada. terest in Student Government Activi- L A ties.

A group of hmmittees such as Student Union Committee, Student Residence Committee were mentioned as needing representatives from the

at Regist)ation. Mr. Young explained - student body for Council. By accept- that the present budget of approxi- mately $120.000,00 has been allotted

ing such a position a student is pre- paring himself for the future as the

Each student invested $18.00 in the the Budget of the Students’ Council

to five general divisions: $19,000 to the Board of Publications (Cory- phaeus, Compendium, etc.); $27,000 to the Board of Student Activities for the social activities in the fields of music, art, drama; $10,000 to the Board of External Relations for sem- inars, out of town speakers; and the rest divided between General Admini- stration and Reserve and Miscellane- qls. .<

Mr. Young stated. alsq: that the .l

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1

Overseas Student Views

by Thomas A. de Souza .. Once again after a brief spell of

summer vacations, the campus is hustling and bustling with life. Initia- tion is over and students are seen almost running amuck loaded with text-books, note-books, briefcases, lunch packets etc.

The University Avenue is a busy thoroughfare punctuated with jost- lings and joltings of every conceiv- ble type. The Bank of Montreal is another busy corner and the Bank personnel is kept alert perhaps in- wardly grumbling and cursing at the student rush. Among the students there are the new-comers and parti- cularly the overseas students to whom the new country is a dream and the vastness of the campus is a fantasy. They trudge their way with the hope that they will befriend the veterans on the Campus, exchange views, listen . _. to news and get themselves familiar- ized with the day to day workings of the University of Waterloo.

I, being myself an overseas student, am well aware of the difficult and trying days I had when I first came to this campus three weeks ago. Ev- erything being new and confusing, I had to run from pillar to post, from Business office to Apartment and from Apartment to Department and finally being thoroughly exhausted had to steal a few moments of relaxation sipping a hot cup of coffee in the Cafeteria. The same, I am sure, has been experienced by many a new- comer. The first few days in a new country in new surroundings are baffling and efforts in adjustment are called for.

On my arrival here, the biggest hurdle I had to overcome was to secure an apartment. Being reminded of the Biblical quotation that “the son of God had no place where to lay His head on.” I was too placed in the same, predicament though, of course, I am a son of man. I spent two nights at St. Jerome’s with a sword of De- mocles hanging on my head because the student to whom the room was al- lotted would come at any time - fortunately he must have had pity for me - and I had to make my own arrangements. However, instead of brooding over, I summed up courage and determined to find some place or the other, I combed all the streets of Waterloo, near and far, like a mendicant knocking at every door. I virtually invaded every home and adopting an aggressive attitude said I needed a place, to live.

Canadians are kind and sympathe- tic I feel, because most of the apart- ment owners sympathized with my sad plight and hoped I would be

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successful in my venture. At last at 7:30 in the evening when dusk had drawn its gloomy curtain and erratic cold wind blowing briskly seemed to sap the residues of my energy. I found an apartment. I was lucky. Well, I write this to say that all these trou- bles could be minimized if not avoid- ed if there was an organization of overseas students to help the new- comers. I am given to understand that there is such an organization called I.S.A. (International Student’s Association), but whether it is in function or disfunction I do-not know.

What is needed on this campus is a strong and well-formed Internation- al Student’s Association - I.S.A. or better, Canada - Overseas Student’s Association - C.O.S.A., which not only overseas students but also Cana- dian students will take active part in solving the problems of the new- comers.

Such an organization will, no doubt, fulfil1 the felt need of fostering better, closer and healthier ties among the students of Waterloo University. In my opinion, each student on the campus is indeed, an ambassador in miniature of his country, reflecting his countries glorious traditions, cus- toms, moves and culture. He has come to this land of Canada not only to drink at the fount of learning of the University of -Waterloo, but also and quite naturally so, to acquaint himself with different cultures and thus promote warm feelings and real understanding not only among stud- ents on the campus, but also with community at large.

I trust overseas students will real- ize this and lend their whole-hearted support and cooperation to build up a sound and vital organization on the campus of the University.

Hart House Orchestra Last Saturday evening we were treated to a very enjoyable performance

in the Theatre of the Arts by the Hart House ‘Orchestra - all 200 of us. The number of students attending was particularly small, undoubtedly because most of them had gone home for the long weekend (Theatre of the Arts Planning Committee please take note.) The small student audience must have seemed rather unusual because the group of 13 string musicians took the first half of the concert to acclimatize themselves. After the performance, they admitted that they also had to familiarize themselves with our theatre but that it had a good sound and was an ideal situation for such chamber groups.

Mr. Boyd Neel, the conductor, commented on each work but with a rather bored complacency, for example, “And here is Mr. Fiore with his flute.”

The suite from Alcina lacked the dramatic quality that Handel must have intended for his opera. The Mozart and Telemann showed the brilliant preci- sion of the orchestra. In fact, the few erring moments during the evening could not have altered my impression of professionalism. The flute soloist, Mr. Fiore, in the Telemann displayed remarkable agility although he could not always be heard when he and the first violins doubled on some parts.

The second half presented contemporary works. I found the Freedman and Kennan works perhaps most enjoyable. In the Fantasy and Allegro the concertmaster made the best of his opportunity and both Mr. Neel and the orchestra loosened up enough to care for the subtle tonalities. In the Night Soliloquy Mr. Fiore’s performance was almost exquisite. The orchestra ended the concert with a romp through a Divertimento of folk melodies by Leo Wiener. The audience showed due appreciation and the orchestra played two encores, Strass’ Pizzicato Polka and a Rondo by Mozart.

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