14
Volume XXVIII OCTOBER 14th. 1964 No. 4 Pam Thomson Frosh Queen SIR GEORGE WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY She was very thrilled and hoped to fulfil everyone’s expectations of her. Following the coronation Mr. D. B. Clarke had the first dance vith the new Frosh Queen while her escort Gord Kelly (Execu- tive Vice-President of S.U.S.) looked on enviously. The re- mainder of the evening was spent dancing to the lovely music of Joy Nielsen and her all male orchestra. Prior to th Ball, a cordial cocktail party was held for the Faculty, Administration, Prin- cesses, and Student Leaders. This gathering gave everyone an opportunity to meet infor- mally. The turn out for the affair was extremely large and Fresh- man Committee Chairman Jawaid Khan called it a com- plete success. The dance ended at approximately 1 p.m. Key Club In SGWU The Garnet Key Society was first conceived of in 1956 by two fourth year stu- dents, and their plan was implemented with much as- sistance from the faculty council under whose au- thority it continues to operate. The sole purpose of the So- ciety as stated in the Consti- tution is: “to provide a welcoming and ushering service for tne Univer- sity and its legally constiuted entities; to orientate students to University life, and to provide general assistance to the univer- sity . . .” The Society also aids shut-in students, by attempting to keep them in touch with the class room lectures they have missed, as well as supplying library books and other essentials. Both Day and Evening stud- ents are eligible for membership in the Garnet Key. Any mem- ber of the student body may nominate a candidate for mem- bership, and the nominee must then be interviewed by a Selec- tion Board consisting of mem- bers of tlie Faculty, as well as the Garnet Key executive, and the President of the SUS. Each year a new society con- sisting of from ten to twenty students is chosen. Since the term of office runs from Febru- ary to January 31 of the next year, members must be in-their second or third year upon nom- ination to the Society. Nomina- tion is based upon a reasonable academic average, as well as a stipulation that the candidate should have made some out- standing contribution to the Uni- versity in either the Academic, Athletic, or Extra-curricular field. Members who have com- pleted their term of office then become Garnet Key Alumni. Members in the Garnet Key Society gives the student an opportunity to serve his Univer- sity on both the academic and extra-curricular levels. With the opening of nominations during November, the Society hopes to find many interested nominees. 14 x . ...................... Sports — Photo by John Vincelli Pam Thomson, a striking brunette, was crowned Frosh Queeirof Sir George last Friday night at the Sheraton Mount Royal Hotel. This marked the cul- mination of Freshman activ- ities for 1964-65 and was the climax of a great deal of dedicated work on the part of Jawaid Khan, John Watson, and the entire Freshman Committee. Such dignitaries as Vice-Prin - cipal D. B. Clarke and wife, Dean Peets, Registrar, and wife, Dean Greer, the Dean of Com- merce, and wife, Mr. Treffle Lacombe, the Director of Public Relations, and wife, Mr. C. F. Barrow, Student Administrator, and wife, and a host of Stu- dent Leaders. Principal Rae unfortunately was unable to at- tend. The highlight of the evening came with the crowning of the Freshman Queen, Mr.. D. B. Clarke doing the honours. As Freshman Queen, Miss Thomson received a beautiful bouquet of red roses, and a host of compli- mentary gifts donated by Mr. Steer Steak House, Don Bel- vedere Florists, B e n ’s Delica- tessen, C l a y t o n ’s Record Bar, the International Music Stire. the Classic Little Book Store, and Frank de Rice Restaurant. The remaining four candi- dates became Queens of Sir George’s four major faculties. They were Marilyn Anstey, Queen of Arts, Wendy Foot, Queen of Commerce, Arlene Snyder, Queen of Science, and Heather Harding, Queen of Engineering. V- Miss Thomson stated that she thought this was a wonderful way of entering Sir George. . 2 .................... Lesage Speaks 4 .............................. Editorials 7 ........................ Georgiantics 8-9 .Our Source of Revenue 10-11-12 .................... Features 13 .................................... Humor Arts Freshette Pam Thomson is crowned Sir George Freshman Queen ’64 by Vice-Principal Clark as climax of the Frosh Ball last Friday evening in the Sheraton Mount Royal Hotel. New CUSO Committee A local committee of 'Canad- ian University Students Over- seas (CUSO) was formed sev- eral years ago at SGWU, as at several other universities, to re- present the administration, fa- culty and students. The purpose of CUSO is to co- ordinate, develop, and promote opportunities for Canadian gra- duates to do overseas service. CUSO gives many graduates the opportunity to serve for a period of time in other countries. It also provides a national office through which requests for such services may be channelled. The CUSO committee at Sir George is not solely a faculty organization as students must take the main initiative for CUSO programs. To this end, a student committee' is in the pro- cess of being formed. This com- mittee will work in co-operation with the university committee of which Dr. Hall is Chairman, Professor Lamb is Faculty Re- presentative, and Mr. Jack Skene is the Administration Re- presentative. Interested students are urged to submit applications to the External Vice-President, Ron Moores. Applications are avail- able at the Students’ Reception- ist. sT? < I

SIR GEORGE WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY Volume XXVIII ......The Georgian, October 14, 1964 Lesage on Confederation Ed. Note: The following is a statement on Confederation by TheHonorable JeanLesage

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Page 1: SIR GEORGE WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY Volume XXVIII ......The Georgian, October 14, 1964 Lesage on Confederation Ed. Note: The following is a statement on Confederation by TheHonorable JeanLesage

Volume XXVIII OCTOBER 14th. 1964 No. 4

Pam Thomson Frosh Queen

SIR GEORGE WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY

S h e w as v e ry th r il le d a n d h o p ed to fu lf il e v e ry o n e ’s ex p ec ta tio n s o f h e r .

F o llo w in g th e co ro n a tio n M r. D. B. C larke had the f irs t dance v ith th e new F ro sh Q u een w h ile h e r e sco rt G o rd K e lly (E x ecu ­tiv e V ic e -P re s id e n t of S .U .S .) lo o k ed on en v iously . T h e r e ­m a in d e r o f th e e v en in g w as sp e n t d a n c in g to th e lovely m usic of Jo y N ie lsen a n d h e r a ll m a le o rc h es tra .

P r io r to th B all, a co rd ia l cocktail p a r ty w as held fo r the F acu lty , A d m in is tra tio n , P r in ­cesses, a n d S tu d e n t L ea d e rs . T h is g a th e r in g gave ev ery o n e an o p p o rtu n ity to m e e t in fo r ­m ally .

T h e tu rn o u t fo r th e a f fa ir w as e x tre m e ly la rg e an d F re s h ­m an C o m m ittee C h a irm a n Ja w a id K h a n c a lled i t a com ­p le te success . T h e d a n ce en d ed a t a p p ro x im a te ly 1 p.m .

Key Club In SGWUThe Garnet Key Society

was first conceived of in 1956 by two fourth year stu­dents, and their plan was implemented with much as­sistance from the faculty council under whose au­thority it continues to operate.

T h e sole p u rp o se of th e S o ­c ie ty as s ta te d in th e C o n sti­tu tio n is:

“ to p ro v id e a w e lcom ing an d u sh e rin g se rv ice fo r tn e U n iv e r­s ity a n d i ts leg a lly c o n s tiu te d e n titie s ; to o r ie n ta te s tu d e n ts to U niversity life, and to provide g e n e ra l a ss is ta n ce to th e u n iv e r­s ity . . .”

T h e S o c ie ty a lso a id s sh u t-in s tu d e n ts , by a tte m p tin g to k eep th e m in to u ch w ith th e c lass ro o m le c tu re s th ey h a v e m issed , a s well a s supplying lib ra ry books a n d o th e r e ssen tia ls .

B o th D ay a n d E v en in g s tu d ­e n ts a re e lig ib le fo r m e m b e rsh ip in th e G a rn e t K ey. A ny m em ­b e r of th e s tu d e n t bod y m ay n o m in a te a c an d id a te fo r m em ­b e rsh ip , an d th e n o m in ee m u st th e n be in te rv iew e d by a S e lec ­tio n B oard co n sis tin g o f m em ­b e rs of t lie F a c u lty , as w ell as th e G a rn e t K ey ex ecu tiv e , an d th e P re s id e n t of th e SU S.

E ach y e a r a new so c ie ty co n ­s is tin g o f fro m te n to tw e n ty s tu d e n ts is chosen . S in ce th e te rm of o ffice ru n s fro m F e b ru ­a ry to J a n u a ry 31 o f th e n e x t y e a r, m em b e rs m u st b e in - th e ir second o r th ird y e a r upo n n o m ­in a tio n to th e S ocie ty . N o m in a­tio n is b a sed up o n a re a so n a b le acad em ic av erag e , as w e ll as a s tip u la tio n th a t th e c an d id a te sh o u ld have m ad e som e o u t­s ta n d in g c o n tr ib u tio n to th e U n i­v e rs ity in e ith e r th e A cadem ic, A th le tic , o r E x tra -c u rr ic u la r f ie ld . M em b ers w ho h av e com ­p le te d th e ir te rm of o ffice th e n b eco m e G a rn e t K ey A lu m n i.

M em b ers in th e G a rn e t K ey S o c ie ty g ives th e s tu d e n t an o p p o r tu n ity to se rv e h is U n iv e r­s ity on b o th th e acad em ic an d ex tra -cu rr icu la r levels. W ith the o p e n in g of n o m in a tio n s d u r in g N o v em b er, th e S o c ie ty h o p e s to f in d m an y in te re s te d n o m in ees.14 x. ...................... Sports

— P h o to b y J o h n V in c e ll i

Pam Thomson, a striking brunette, was crowned Frosh Q ueeirof Sir George last Friday night at the Sheraton Mount Royal Hotel. This marked the cul­mination of Freshman activ­ities for 1964-65 and was the climax of a great deal of dedicated work on the part of Jawaid Khan, John Watson, and the entire Freshman Committee.

Such d ign ita ries as V ice-P rin­c ip a l D. B. C la rk e a n d w ife, D ean P e e ts , R e g is tra r , a n d w ife, D ean G re e r , th e D ean of C om ­m erce , an d w ife, M r. T re ff le L acom be, th e D ire c to r of P u b lic R e la tio n s , an d w ife , M r. C. F. B arro w , S tu d e n t A d m in is tra to r , an d w ife, an d a h o s t o f S tu ­d en t L eaders . P rin c ip a l R ae unfortunately w as unab le to a t ­tend.

T h e h ig h lig h t of th e ev en in g cam e w ith th e c ro w n in g of th e F re sh m a n Q u een , M r.. D. B. C la rk e do in g th e h o n o u rs . As F re sh m a n Q u een , M iss T hom son re ce iv e d a b e a u tifu l b o u q u e t of re d ro se s, a n d a h o st of co m p li­m e n ta ry g if ts d o n a te d by M r. S te e r S te a k H ouse, D on B e l­v e d e re F lo r is ts , B e n ’s D e lica ­te s se n , C lay to n ’s R eco rd B ar, th e In te rn a tio n a l M usic S tire . th e C lassic L it t le B ook S to re , a n d F ra n k d e R ice R e s ta u ra n t.

T h e re m a in in g fo u r c a n d i­d a te s b ecam e Q u een s of S ir G e o rg e ’s fo u r m a jo r fa cu ltie s . T h ey w e re M a rily n A n stey , Q u een of A rts , W endy Foot, Q u e en of C om m erce, A rle n e S n y d e r, Q u e en of S c ien ce, an d H e a th e r H a rd in g , Q u een of E n g in e e rin g . V-

M iss T hom son s ta te d th a t sh e th o u g h t th is w as a w o n d erfu l w ay of e n te r in g S ir G eorge.

. 2 .................... Lesage Speaks4 .............................. Editorials7 ........................ Georgiantics8-9 . Our Source of Revenue10-11-12 .................... Features

13 .................................... Humor

Arts Freshette Pam Thomson is crowned Sir George

Freshman Queen ’64 by Vice-Principal Clark as

climax of the Frosh Ball last Friday evening in the Sheraton Mount Royal Hotel.

New CUSOCommittee

A loca l co m m ittee of 'C a n a d ­ian U n iv e rs ity S tu d e n ts O v e r­seas (CU SO ) w as fo rm ed sev­e ra l y e a rs ago a t SGW U, as a t se v e ra l o th e r u n iv e rs itie s , to r e ­p re s e n t th e a d m in is tra tio n , fa ­cu lty a n d s tu d e n ts .

T h e p u rp o se of CU SO is to co­o rd in a te , develop , and p ro m o te o p p o r tu n itie s fo r C an ad ian g ra ­d u a te s to do o v erseas serv ice . CU SO g ives m an y g ra d u a te s th e o p p o rtu n ity to se rv e fo r a p e rio d o f tim e in o th e r co u n trie s . I t a lso p ro v id es a n a tio n a l office th ro u g h w hich re q u e s ts fo r such se rv ice s m ay be ch an n e lled .

T h e CUSO c o m m itte e a t S ir G eo rg e is n o t so le ly a fa cu lty o rg an iza tio n as s tu d e n ts m u st tak e th e m ain in it ia tiv e fo r C U SO p ro g ram s. To th is end , a s tu d e n t c o m m itte e ' is in th e p ro ­cess o f b e in g fo rm ed . T h is com ­m itte e w ill w o rk in co -o p era tio n w ith th e u n iv e rs ity c o m m ittee o f w h ich D r. H a ll is C h a irm an , P ro fe sso r L am b is F a c u lty R e­p re se n ta tiv e , a n d M r. J a c k S k e n e is th e A d m in is tra tio n R e­p re se n ta tiv e .

In te re s te d s tu d e n ts a re u rg e d to su b m it a p p lic a tio n s to th e E x te rn a l V ic e -P re s id e n t, R on M oores. A p p lica tio n s a re av a il­ab le a t th e S tu d e n ts ’ R e ce p tio n ­is t.

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Page 2: SIR GEORGE WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY Volume XXVIII ......The Georgian, October 14, 1964 Lesage on Confederation Ed. Note: The following is a statement on Confederation by TheHonorable JeanLesage

The

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Oct

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64 Lesage on ConfederationEd. N ote: The following is a s ta te m en t on C onfederation by T he H onorable Je a n L esage .

P re m ie r of Quebec g iven in an ad d ress to the C anad ian Club in M ontreal, S ep tem b er 28. In atim e when the daily p re ss dw ells on the s ta tem en ts of Quebec S e p a ra tis ts , re a d e rs m ay forget th a t the Quebec G overnm ent, w hich still com m ands a wide support, re m a in s firm ly m o d era te .

Moved by a deep historical sense, many Canadians are now making efforts to come to grips honestly, frankly, and realistically with the great issues that are to deter­mine the character of Canada tomorrow. I will not expect, therefore, that what I say today will find agreement everywhere or that everything I saw shall have the same general reception. But, I hope that my endeavour to state the position of Canadian federalism at this time, and to mark out the tendencies suggestive of its future, will be taken for what such statements really are, namely, a serious, determined effort by myself to share fully the responsibility in the present Canadian dialogue, where we are all participants whether we like it or not.

T o m e, th e p r im a ry h is to ric a lle s so n of C o n fe d e ra tio n , a t i ts fo u n d in g , w as th e se rio u s an d f r a n k e f fo r t to e m b ra ce tw o p e o p le s w ith in a com m on sys­te m of f e d e ra l g o v e rn m e n t, w h ich im p lied b o th a com m on p ro g ra m a n d a la rg e m e a su re of p ro v in c ia l a u to n o m y fo r th o se v ita l c o n ce rn s fo r w h ich th a t a u ­to n o m y w as in d isp en sab le .

W h at h a p p e n e d to th is p o li­t ic a l u n d e rs ta n d in g im p lic it in 1867? In a w ay, th e re w as fro m th e b e g in n in g b o th su ccess a n d d i f f i c u l t y . W h a te v e r th e s tre n g th a n d w e ak n e sse s o f th e B r itish N o rth A m e ric a A ct, i t w as c le a r th a t i t sp o k e th e d if ­f ic u lt a n d n e c e ssa ry lan g u a g e of co m p ro m ise : a s tro n g fe d e ra l g o v e rn m e n t w as to be b a lan ced by e ffec tiv e p ro v in c ia l a u th o r ­ity .

B u t re g io n a l o r p ro v in c ia l g o v e rn m e n t in 1867 w as no t y e t by its e lf a p o w e rfu l in s t r u ­m en t. W eak b u re a u c ra c ie s , l im ­i te d f in a n c ia l re so u rc e s , m o d es t e d u ca tio n a n d w e lfa re p ro ­g ra m s , little o r no econom ic in ­te rv e n tio n in th e m o d e rn sen se — a ll of th e se w e re c h a ra c te r ­is tic of Q ueb ec a n d o th e r p ro v ­inces.

H ow ev er, no p ro v in c ia l a d ­m in is tra tio n h as e v e r accep ted to b e c o n s id e re d as a su b o rd i­n a te in stru m en t of th e cen tra l g o v e rn m en t, an d C a n ad ian p u b ­lic o p in io n h a s a lw ays b een s tro n g ly o p p o sed to an y fe d e ra l a c tio n w h ich co u ld hav e b een p e rm a n e n tly d e s tru c tiv e o f ge ­n u in e p ro v in c ia l au to n o m y . T h is basic re s is ta n c e to fe d e ra l c la im s to su p rem acy , co m b in ed w ith th e ju d ic ia l in te rp re ta tio n s of o u r co n s titu tio n , has f irm ly e s ta b lish e d th e e q u a lity of s ta tu s o f th e fe d e ra l an d p ro ­v in c ia l g o v e rn m e n ts an d th e in te g r i ty o f th e i r re sp ec tiv e pow ers.

Post-War PeriodT h en cam e tw o g re a t e x p e ­

rie n c e s w h ich ag a in a lte re d th e p o litica l a n d c o n s titu tio n a l b a l­ance of o u r C a n ad ian ex is ten ce : th e g re a t d e p re ss io n of th e 1930’s fo llo w ed a n d te rm in a te d b y th e w a r a n d p o st-w ar “fo r tie s a n d f if t ie s ” . B o th p e ­rio d s in v ite d v a s t p ro g ra m s of fe d e ra l ac tion . T h e p ro v in ces w e re u n a b le to cope w ith u n ­em p lo y m en t a n d th e fe d e ra l g o v e rn m e n t h a d to ta k e on m an y b u rd e n s in f ie ld s w hich w e re o f p ro v in c ia l ju r isd ic tio n . B ecau se i t co m m an d ed th e to ta l re so u rc e s of th e n a tio n , th e la s t w as re q u ire d a h ig h -ce n tra liz ed sy s tem of g o v e rn m e n t a n d a v e ry s u p e r io r b u re a u c ra c y th a t c a r r ie d i ts co n cep ts f a r in to th e p o st-w a r p e r io d in th e m an a g e ­m e n t o f th e C a n ad ian econom y. T h u s, a few y e a rs a f te r th e w ar, w e f in d th a t th e f e d e ra l a p p a ­ra tu s , th e fe d e ra l in te r e s t in loca l a c tiv itie s h a d ap p ro ac h ed p ro p o rtio n s th a t cou ld have in ­d e f in ite ly in c re a se d th e scope of f e d e ra l a d m in is tra tiv e action .

I t w as th e n th a t new econom ic a n d p o litica l re a l i t ie s e m e rg ed to ch a llen g e th is lo n g -te rm t r e n d in th e g ro w th of fe d e ra l p o w er. T hose r e a l i t ie s h ad to do w ith c e r ta in u n fo re se e n d ev e l­

o p m en ts in th e C a n ad ian eco­nom y, in th e o rg a n iz a tio n of th e p ro v in ce s’ p o litic a l life , in th e c h an g in g w e lfa re d em an d s of th e p e o p le an d , above all, th ey h a d to do w ith fu n d a m e n ­ta l so c ia l p re s su re s a n d ch an g es in Q u eb ec itse lf .

O n th e g e n e ra l econom ic side , w h a t w as h a p p e n in g in C an ad a w as th e fa sc in a tin g — if d is ­tu rb in g — e x p e rien c e w h e reb y a fflu e n c e w ith u n e m p lo y m en t, r a p id d ev e lo p m en t w ith re g io n a l p o v e rty se e m e d to b e b eco m in g a f ix ed m o d el fo r o u r lan d . R e ­g re tta b ly , a v e ry la rg e p a r t of th a t p o v e rty a n d o f th e u n e m ­p lo y m e n t h a p p e n e d to b e in th e P ro v in c e of Q u eb ec a n d in th e A tla n tic P ro v in ces . N a tu ra l eco­nom ic po licy , m o n e ta ry an d f isca l po licy , w e re th em se lv es u n a b le a p p a re n tly to m ak e a m a jo r “f in a l” a s sa u lt on u n ­e m p lo y m en t a n d re g io n a l u n ­d e rd ev e lo p m e n t.

New NeedsA t th e sam e tim e , c e r ta in

s ig n if ic a n t p ro v in c ia l n e ed s b e g an to a p p e a r e v ery w h ere . T h e p o p u la tio n c h an g es in C an ­ad a, th e n ew tech n o lo g y and au to m a tio n , a ll to g e th e r d e ­m an d e d of p ro v in c ia l a n d m u ­n ic ip a l g o v e rn m e n ts a ra d ic a lly new a p p ro ac h to e d u ca tio n and t ra in in g . A nd, w h ile i t w as tru e th a t som e f in a n c ia l su p p o r t was co m in g fro m fe d e ra l sou rces , th e m ain b u rd e n s h ad to b e b o rn e by th e p ro v in ces. M ore­over, to th is e d u ca tio n a l ai^l p o p u la tio n c h a llen g e w ere ad d ed th e p ro b lem s of ru ra l d ev e lo p m en t and th o se o f u rb a n exp an sio n .

B u t now le t m e tu rn to th e e v id e n ce th a t Q uebec , th o u g h t i t m ay o p t o u t of “jo in t p ro ­g ra m s” , is n o t o p tin g o u t of C an ad a — w h a te v e r m ay be b e lie v ed by th e u n in fo rm e d and th e tim o ro u s . I f th e re is d e b a te o v e r f isca l a n d m o n e ta ry po licy , if th e re a re re se rv a tio n s a b o u t th e size a n d cost o f m ilita ry ex ­p e n d itu re s by th e fe d e ra l gov­e rn m e n t, su ch issu es a re n o t ra is e d to in tru d e upo n th e p re s ­e n t fe d e ra l ju r is d ic tio n , b u t th ey a im e a t o p e n in g th e door to a new te c h n iq u e of d iscu s­sion w h ich so f a r o u r fe d e ra l­ism h as n o t p ro v id ed fo r e x cep t th ro u g h th e m ech an ism of p o litic a l re p re s e n ta t io n a t th e fe d e ra l lev e l i ts e lf .

T h is is n o t th e p ro p e r tim e to d iscu ss th e re q u ire d chan g es in any f u tu r e C a n ad ian c o n sti­tu tio n , c h an g e s th a t w ould r e ­f le c t th e p re s e n t d ia lo g u e and th e p o litic a l e x p e rien c e th a t is now in th e m aking .

M any s tu d ie s a re no w u n d e r way, in R oyal C om m issions, in p ro v in c ia l a n d fe d e ra l leg is la ­tiv e o r sp ec ia l co m m ittees, an d in o th e r e f fo r ts th a t a re b e g in ­n in g to re sh a p e o u r u n d e rs ta n d ­ing of the m in im um re q u ire ­m en ts of a new C a n ad ian con­s t i tu t io n . Y ou w ill a p p rec ia te , there fo re , why I m u st speak w ith th e c au tio n an d in d ee d w ith th e h u m ility th a t m u s t s u r ­ro u n d so g re a t an e n te rp r is e b e fo re i t is in fa c t b ey o n d th e s tu d y in g stage.

B u t, th e p ro b lem has a lre ad y

b e en su ff ic ie n tly a ire d fo r a n y ­one to see c le a r ly th a t th e re a re a t le a s t tw o m in im u m c la im s w h ich a v e ry g re a t m a jo r i ty o f F re n c h -C a n a d ia n s m ak e u p o n o u r C o n fe d e ra tio n . T h e f i r s t of th e se is a s ta tu s fo r th e F re n c h - sp e a k in g C a n ad ian e q u a l in a ll re sp e c ts to th a t o f th e E n g lish - sp e a k in g C a n ad ian . T h is m ea n s in th e im m e d ia te fu tu re : F re n c h a s a w o rk in g lan g u a g e in th e fe d e ra l a d m in is tra tio n a n d F re n c h as a te a c h in g lan g u a g e fo r F re n c h m in o rit ie s o u ts id e Q uebec . T h e seco n d c la im is th a t o f g e n u in e d e c e n tra liz a tio n of p o w ers, re so u rc e s a n d d ec i­s io n -m ak in g in o u r f e d e ra l sys­tem . Q uebec , I h av e o f ten sa id , b e lie v es in h a rm o n y th ro u g h c o n su lta tio n a n d d iscu ssio n am o n g eq u a ls , n o t th ro u g h a u n ifo rm ity im p o sed by a n a ll- p o w e rfu l c e n tra l g o v e rn m en t. A t th e m o m en t, w e b e lie v e o u r p o litic a l f ra m e w o rk to b e f le x ­ib le en o u g h , e sp e c ia lly i f i t w e re to b e a d a p te d to p re s e n t c irc u m s tan c es , to a llow fo r a c e n te r in g in th e Q u eb ec g o v e rn ­m e n t o f a ll th e m ea n s n e ce ssa ry to h te d ev e lo p m en t o f a F re n c h - C a n ad ian n a tio n m ain ly con­c e n tra te d w ith in o u r b o rd e rs . T h is p o litic a l f ram e w o rk , g ro u n d e d a s i t is on h is to r ic a l, g eo g rap h ica l a n d eco n o m ic r e a l­itie s , is r e s i l ie n t en o u g h to se ­cu re th e p e rm a n e n c y of a c o u n ­try th a t s tre tc h e s fro m c o as t to coast.

SolutionsI b e lie v e th a t w e w ill n o t

so lve o u r p ro b lem s by se e k in g so lu tio n s th a t m ay d iv id e p e o p le s a t a tim e w h en e v e ry ­w h e re e f fo r ts a re b e in g m ad e by o th e rs to f in d re a so n s to u n ite — re a so n s th a t a re econo­m ic, p o litic a l a n d o f te n sim p ly h u m an . W e m u s t see th e C an a­d ia n c h an g e s o f th e f u tu re in th e c o n te x t o f a w o rld s itu a tio n w h e re a v a s t r e sh a p in g of th e co n sc io u sn ess o f m en is now u n d e r w ay. In d ay s to com e, c o m m u n ica tio n s and n e e d s a re b o u n d to b r in g m en of a ll la n ­g u ages, re lig io n s an d ra ce s c lo se r to g e th e r th a n e v e r b e fo re . P e rh a p s ev en th e e x p lo ra tio n of sp ace a u g u rs w ell fo r o u r com ­m on h u m a n ity b ecau se fro m som e p la tfo rm on th e w ay to th e m oon, m an w ill h a v e an ‘e x tr a - te r r e s t r ia l v iew ” of th e m ­

se lv es a n d th e re b y g a in a new p e rsp e c tiv e a n d a new h u m ility .

L ad ie s a n d g e n tle m e n , w e a re , a ll o f us g ro p in g fo r sen sib le a n d c rea tiv e an sw ers. I re g a rd m y se lf as so m eo n e o b lig ed to seek p e rh a p s ra d ic a l so lu tio n s b u t a lw ays by m o d e ra te m eans. T hose w ho a re p e r tu rb e d by th e id ea th a t C o n fe d e ra tio n m ay som e day h av e to y ie ld to th e p re su re s o f re v e n d ic a tio n s fro m Q u eb ec sh o u ld hav e th e p a ­tie n c e , th e c o u rag e a n d th e s tre n g th to t r y fo r th e h ig h e r p rize , th e p rize of u n ity am id d iv e rs ity , o f a com m on n a tio n a l s tre n g th , s id e by sid e w ith th e o p p o r tu n ity fo r us, Q u eb ecers , to d evelop o u r a sp ira tio n s and o u r tra d it io n s so th a t th e y m ay be fu lf il le d in th e i r m an y ways.

If th e p a s t g e n e ra tio n of an im m e n se ly f lu id C a n ad ian p o li­tic a l e x p e r ien c e has ta u g h t us an y th in g i t is th a t th e c re a tiv e p o litic a l im a g in a tio n can p ro ­v ide m o re th a n one a n sw e r to w h a t m ay seem in so lu b le p ro b ­lem s. I b e liev e th a t th e c rea tiv e C a n ad ian im a g in a tio n is now a t w o rk a n d th a t i t w ill give u s a n sw ers — som e now in th e m ak in g — th a t w ill som e day m ake th e p re s e n t t ro u b le d d e ­b a te a p p e a r to hav e b e en a v a lu ab le , h o n o u ra b le t ra in in g g ro u n d fo r th e C a n ad ian fu tu re .

W e a re b e in g tr ie d , b u t we sh a ll n o t b e fo u n d w an tin g !

Look, Ma, I’m not freckled ALL over

Get With It!“Yoga will add a new dimension to the life of a

university student and better equip the person for the challenge and discipline of study,” said Mrs. Diane Blachley, Director of the Yoga Society of Quebec.

M rs. B lachley , in c o o p e r a t io n ---------------------------------------------------w ith various associations, includ­ing the M ontreal YMCA, is teach ­ing Yoga E ven ing C o u r s e s throughout M ontreal during the fa ll and w in ter season. These com prehensive courses consist of 60 m inu tes Yoga exerc ises , about 40 m inu tes lec tu re , and 20 m in­u tes re lax atio n and concentra tion .

R eg istra tion is now open a t any of the following locations: W est- m ount YMCA, 4585 Sherbrooke St. W. — M onday evenings (Tel. 93”-3917); U niversity of M ontreal — T uesday (Tel. 733-9002); In te r­na tional YMCA, 5550 P a rk Ave.— W ednesday (Tel. 271-4639); an d a t a not ye t announced location to se rv e th e su b u rb s of St. L au ren t, C artie rv ille , Town of M ount R oyal, L akeshore , Roxboro, Cho- m edy — T hursday (Tel. 932-9090) or 744-2039.

M rs. B lach ley w as in itia ted to the Science of Yoga a t an early age when she lived in th e F a r E a s t w ith h e r D utch Colonel fa th e r. She believes in scientific

reason ing a t ev ery s tag e and for ev ery step h e r pupils take . R a th ­e r th an follow th e ritu a lis tic ex er­cises au to m atica lly , M rs. B lach­ley h as ad ap ted he r p ro g ram to th e W estern w ay of life . . . a p ro g ram th a t excludes E as te rn r ite s and cults.

F o r the benefit of those unac­quain ted with Y oga, M rs. B lach­ley explained th a t: “ The aim of Yoga is not m ere ly th e superficial developm ent of m uscles, but the norm alization of the functions of th e en tire o rgan ism . This is ach ieved by p lacing the body in v arious positions while sim ul­taneously re lax ing , deep b rea th ­ing and p rac tis in g concentration. Age, vocation, and occupation m ak e no d ifferen ce .”

“ The sec re t of Yoga lies in the fac t th a t i t deals w ith the entire person , no t with ju s t one of his asp ec ts . I t is concerned with grow th — physical, m en ta l, m oral and sp iritua l. As a re su lt — b e tte r health , sounder sleep, a keener m ind, and a m ore cheerfu l dis­position .”

ASAMATTER

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As a local Sun Life representative, may I call upon you at your convenience?

RICHARD GORDONSun L ife Building, Suite 156

TELEPH O N E:Office: UN. 6-6411 Res.: 482-7716

SUN LIFE ASSUR ANCE COM PANY OF C A N A D AA MUTUAL COMPANY

Page 3: SIR GEORGE WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY Volume XXVIII ......The Georgian, October 14, 1964 Lesage on Confederation Ed. Note: The following is a statement on Confederation by TheHonorable JeanLesage

t IntegrEt ion Of Values

?It

tk

Dr. Karl Stern, an eminent psychiatrist and Roman Catholic layman spoke to the Newman Club on Tuesday on the subject, “Contemporary Man and Him self.” He was the first in a series of speakers on this subject and he discussed the subject in relation to his own field — psychiatry.

H e sa id th e re was a c o n flic t b e tw een th e w o rld o fb e tw een b e tw een th e woTld of C h ris tia n v a lu es and new d iscoveries , th a t is th e y c o n tra d ic t th e v a lu e s of M an as m entioned in th e Gospels. T h e va lues o f M an w h ich w e re ab so lu te in re lig io n b e ca m e r e ­lative. We. as C hristians, he s ta t-

Dial-a-LectureITHACA, N .Y. (CUP-CPS) —

The com puter m a y soon m ake d ram a tic changes in th e m ech an ­ics of u n iv ers ity education .

D ial-a-Lecture, a se rv ice w hich will allow stu d en ts to d ia l by telephone lec tu re s th ey m issed o r w ant to h e a r ag a in , will begin nex t y e a r a t I th ac a College.

B eginning in S ep tem b er 1965, a ll lec tu res to 30 o r m ore stu d en ts will be taped , reco rd ed and filed a t th e college’s e lectron ics com ­m unication cen tre . A studen t w ishing to h e a r th e le c tu re w ill d ial a code nu m b er on a telephone linking h is d o rm ato ry room with the centre.

ed . co u ld re m a in a loof, in o u r “ ivo ry to w e r o f f a i th ,” o r w e co u ld r e je c t th e fa ith , as m an y s tu d e n ts of th e S o c ia l S c ien ces do. W e h a v e o n e o th e r cho ice le ft. W e can in te g ra te th e v a lu es of sc ien ce a n d th e G ospels.

D r. S te rn p o in te d o u t th a t, th is in te g ra t io n h as b e en done before Sain t T hom as A quinas did it in his day. T hen th ey w ere d e a lin g w ith a d ead p ag an ism ; to d ay w e a re d e a lin g w ith a liv in g pag an ism , fo r ex am p le . M arx ism .

In te g ra tio n in a f ie ld su c h as p sy ch o a n a ly s is is m o st d iff ic u lt, h e co n tin u e d , b ecau se th e m e ­th o d s u se d w e re o r ig in a te d by F re u d a c o n firm ed A th e is t. P r e ­la te s su ch as B ishop F u lto n S h e e n co n d em n psych o -an a ly sis fo r th is re a so n . T h e re a so n th a t m u ch of F r e u d ’s p sycho logy is re fu s e d is b e ca u se o f h is p h ilo ­sophy , w h ich m a in ta in s m u ch of h is A th e is tic b e lie fs .

“S tra n g e ly e n o u g h ,” h e a d d ­ed, so m e o f F r e u d ’s th o u g h ts a re co n ce rn ed w ith m a tu r i ty an d its d ev e lo p m en t. In re g a rd to love, h e sa id th a t w h en a baby is born he cannot give love.

"Broadening Its Scope"

CUCNDOne of CUCND’s full time national staff members,

Liora Proctor, is visiting the Sir George Williams Campus this week, as a part of an organizing drive for the organization.

Liora Proctor was one of the directors of the North Bay / ’64 project this summer. This project included a study of the attitudes of a community directly affected by nuclear arms, since North Bay is the location of one of two Bomarc bases.

CUCND m em b ers th e re a lso exam ined the econom ic effects of rem ov ing the base , and have sought witli som e success to con­vince com m unity lea d ers to be ­gin re a l p lann ing fo r d isa rm a ­m en t. The f irs t m eeting of the m ay o r and reeves of N orth B ay, a s well as businessm en, to d is­cuss d isa rm am en t p lanning will be held O ctober 20th. L au ra M ann, a SGWU student, w as one

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of the m em b ers of th e p ro jec t.The organizing cam p aig n h e re

is p a r t of a two p ronged ex p an ­sion p ro g ram m e of th e Com- binde U niversities C am paign fo r N u clear D isa rm am en t.

F ive people hav e been h ired on a fu ll tim e b asis by th e na tional office in Toronto, and an o th er five people a re being supported by b ran ch m em b ers in d ifferent c ities.

CUCND is also b roaden ing its scope. M iss P ro c to r s ta te s : “ It is not enough to p re ac h m ora lism or fe a r a t people any m ore, and no group of people can expect to build an im p o rtan t m ovem ent on

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# #

EXPLOSIVE! CONTROVERSIAL!

MARTIN LUTHERI I

( A Louis de Rochemont film presentation)

St. Andrew's Sunday Fireside 101 Cote St. Antoine Road Westmount - WE. 3-2884

OCTOBER 18, 7 :0 0 -P.M .

You are inv ited ------- No admission

The Profs Say...H e can on ly rece iv e it. W h en he m a tu re s , he can give love w ith ­o u t w a n tin g r e tu r n a n d accep t re je c tio n . T h is d e f in itio n of m a­tu r i ty co n firm s in a d if fe re n t w ay one of th e m o st im p o r ta n t th in g s in C h r is tia n ity — th e p e rso n of Je su s C h ris t.

D r. S te rn s ta te d h is acc ep t­an ce of th e fa c t th a t m o d e rn sci­en ce can be w ell in te g ra te d in to h is re lig io u s be lie fs .

“Be wary of instructors who like only their course!” warned Dr. Samuel Madras, Dean of Science, last Wednesday.

Chairman of a Student Science Association spon­sored, “Meet the Profs” program, he stressed the inte­grative aspects of science in introducing a four-man panel of Faculty of Science department heads, who gave an informal discussion on career aspects of their fields.

In th e d e p a rtm e n t o f B a th e - d e a lin g w ith th e m o re a b s tra c tm atics , D r. N. E. S m ith p o in te d o u t th a t co u rses a re o f tw o n a ­tu re s , — “how co u rses , o r te c h ­n iq u e courses, an d “ w hy courses,

A Scientific Program“Meet the Prof Day” opened this year’s program

for the Georgian Science Students Association last Wed­nesday as an introduction of science students, (especially freshmen), to their professors.

In response to an invita tion by A rth u r M encher, Who eng ineeredth is basis. D isa rm am en t m u st be

m ad e re le v an t to people, even if th is m eans th a t th e p eace m ove­m en t will have to work w ith o ther types of issues, like econom ic p lanning, and b ro ad social r e ­form . This does not m ean th a t th e p eace m o v em en t should chan­nel its en erg y into a political p a rty , fo r we found in N orth B ay a ll people in a com m unity , no m a tte r w hich p a r ty they b e ­long to, can be involved in th ink­ing about d isa rm a m en t and the type of social change n ecessa ry to b ring it about. P e a ce is a ra d i­ca l idea , and it is doubtful w hether a n y p a r ty can deal w ith its im plications w ithin th e politi­cal p a r ty s tru c tu re .”

The focus of th e organ ization this y e a r will be two study p ro ­g ram m es , A P eace R esearch and E ducation P ro je c t (P R E P ) th rough w hich re se a rc h g ran ts will be m ade av a ilab le fo r r e ­sea rc h on w ar-peace questions (m ost of the m oney should be av a ilab le fo r nex t su m m er and th e following acad ejn ic y ea r) and the fo rm ation of rad ica l study groups am ong pro fesso rs g ra d u ­a te studen ts and sen iors, to study the im plications of d isa rm a m en t, and the ro le of the un iversity in b ringing about social change.

I t is possib le in th e ligh t of th is d ifferen t ap p ro ach th a t the CUCND will change its n am e a t th e fifth an n iv e rsa ry confer­ence in th e C h ristm as holidays.

F o r fu r th e r in form ation p lease co n tact:

M iss L io ra P ro c to r 842-0595

orL a u ra M ann R E . 7-8116

L i v in g a n d p r e s e r v e d z o o lo g ic a l s p e c im e n s (fro g s , b llfr o g s , d o g ­fish es. n e c tu ru s , w h ite ra ts , ca ts , e tc .) fo r b io lo g y s tu d e n ts .

I N Q U I R I E S I N V I T E D A n d r e B i o l o g i c a l M a te r ia l s

Phone 526-2277

the p ro g ram , a re p re sen ta tiv e w as on h a n d fro m each of the d e p artm en ts of th e Science F a c ­u lty ; D r. Sm ith fo r M athem atics , D r. R audorf fo r Physics, P rof. H oneym an fo r Biology, D r. Uf- fo rd fo r C hem istry and D ean of Sciences M ad ras a s ch a irm an . E ac h of th e rep re sen ta tiv es spoko fo r about five m inutes on the req u irem en ts fo r and th e ad v an t­ages in a c a re e r in th e ir re sp ec ­tive fields and D ean M adras spoke of Science in1 g en era l a t the U niversity level.

P re s id en t of the Science Stud­en ts A ssociation, G eorge R eynard and his “ rig h t han d m a n ” A rth u r M encher, defined for the G eorg­ian th e assoc ia tion ’s purposes and outlined its p ro g ram fo r the y e a r to com e.

The p r im a ry purpose of the G.S.S.A. is to prov ide an o rgan i­zation th rough w hich the Science facu lty c a n ex p ress its own in­te re s ts , as d istinguished from those of the A rts and C om m erce facu lties. A secondary but, none th e less, im p o rtan t purpose is to c rea te a closer link betw een the academ ic and in d u stria l a spects of science.

The p ro g ram will consist of a series of film s and guest lec tu re rs illu stra tin g th e in d u stria l app li­cation of scientific princip les stud ied in th e un iversity .

The h ighlight of the y e a r ’s ag en d a , a s i t w as la s t y e a r, will be “ Science W eek” during w hich th e num erous sc ience clubs around S ir G eorge and a n u m b er of p a r tic ip a tin g com panies will exhibit various p ro jec ts in B irks Hall.

Jazz & Coffee

AT "CHEZ MEL"

282 St. Catherine St. W .

Fri. & Sat. nite

asp ec ts of m ath , a n d g iven m ain ly in th e th ird an d fo u r th y ears . “T o do W ell,” h e w en t on, “ a s tu d e n t m u st lik e th e th e o re ti ­ca l a sp e c ts .”

An h o n o rs p ro g ra m co n sistin g of 11 V i c o u rse s an d a m a jo r p ro g ram , 9 co u rses in m a th e ­m atics , a re g iv en by th e U n i­v e rs ity , h e added .

In ch em is try , D r. J . R. U ffo rd c a lled a ttn t io n to th e fa c t th a t th e p ro g ram is so flex ib ly d e ­sig n ed , a n y d e g ree of sp ec ia liza ­tio n can b e ach iev ed .

S tu d e n ts can choose e i th e r a m a jo r o r an h o n o rs p ro g ra m in c h em istry , a m a jo r in b io ch em ­is try , o r p re p a re th em se lv es a t d if fe re n t lev e ls fo r c a re e rs as h igh school te a c h e rs , lab . te c h n ic ian s, o r re se a rc h chem ists .

In v itin g s tu d e n ts to choose b io logy as a vocation , p ro te s so r J . M. H on ey m an s tre s se d com ­p en sa tio n in te rm s of soc iety , say in g th a t, “R e su lts o f a g re a t h u m an in te re s t ,” su ch as th e se fro m c a n c e r re se a rc h , a re o ften d e riv ed .

D r. W. R. R au d o rf, fo rm e r re se a rc h -w o rk e r a n d te a c h e r a t th e U n iv e rs itie s o f V ien n a , B ir- r in g h a m an d B r i tish C o lum bia , em p h asized th e le n g th o f s tu d y invo lved in b eco m in g a p h y s i­c ist.

S tu d e n ts , he ad d ed , a re o ften d isco u rag ed b y in tro d u c to ry co u rses w hich teach th e sk ills o f physics. “D o n ’t lose y o u r e n - e n th u s ia sm !” h e ad m in ish ed , r e ­la tin g th a t co u rses d e a lin g so le ­ly w ith th e in te re s t in g asp ec ts , su ch as P h y s ic s 210, c an on ly be su ccess fu lly tau g h t, i f as is th e case h e re , th e y n e g le c t te c h ­n ica l com plex ity .

CHOSEN KING

ST. C A T H A R IN E S, O n t. — F ra n k , W alsh , 65, o f P o rt' W el­le r , Ont., a fa th e r of 13, w as picked king of th e N ia g a ra P e n ­insu la g ra p e g row ers a t th e ir 13th a n n u a l g rap e and w ine festival. He rece ived the crow n fro m On­ta r io ’s a g ricu ltu re m in iste r, Wil­liam S tew art.

ROOM FOR RENT

Comfortable Room - Residential District - Young Business Woman, Nurse or Student - Good Trans­portation. Board opt. H U . 4-0732

The P ro fs w ere , left to r ig h t : D r. M adras, D r. R audorf, D r. Ufford, D r. Sm ith, and P ro f. J . H oneym an.

The G

eorgian, O

ctober 14,

1964

Page 4: SIR GEORGE WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY Volume XXVIII ......The Georgian, October 14, 1964 Lesage on Confederation Ed. Note: The following is a statement on Confederation by TheHonorable JeanLesage

The

Geo

rgia

n,

Oct

ober

14

, 19

64

The Georgian is published every Tuesday throughout the university year by the Publications Board

of Sir George Williams University, 1435 Drummond Street, Montreal 25, Quebec. Telephone

Victor 9-7515. Authorized as second class mail by the Post Office Department, Ottawa, and

for payment of postage in cash.

Edi+or-in-Chief — D'Arcy O'Connorm a n a g i n g e d i f o r Alex Shenfield

n e w s e d i t o r .............. Maureen Finkelstein

s p o r t s e d i t o r .................................Steve Johnstone

c i r c u l a t i o n m a n a g e r Leonard W olm an

a d v e r t i s i n g m a n a g e r ............................ Tim Pervin

e x e c u t iv e e d i t o r ......................Bryan M. Knight

f e a t u r e s e d i t o r Maurte A lio ff

p h o t o e d i f o r ................. Barry Barnes

h u m o u r e d i t o r ......................... Steve G oldberg

C U P e d i t o r ........................................... Frank Simms

IN TH IS ISSUE: asst, photo editor , . . M a r t y G o l d b e r g ; photographers . . . J o h n M . Vi nee 11 i, M a r y K o s t m a n , J u d y Lo n n , J i m S h e r b u r n , R a l p h G i l m o r e ; artists . . . T e r r y O le lc s iw ; news . . . J a y B a c h a r i e r , M a r t i n B lu c h i t i , Br ia n M a l c o l m , M a r t h a B erstein , A n d r e w E l l iot , M a r c e l l a R e g e n s t r ie f , Ross R o b i n s ; fea­tures . . . M a r t i n B a i le y , M a r g a r e t H o c k m a n , J o h n S a k e l l a r o p o u l o s , B o b B ra n d e is , J o h n H a r r i s o n , K a t h ­leen T h o m a s , M a x L a y t o n , Z o e S i l ic k a s ; sports . . . J o h n Ly n n , A l l e n S a m m y , B ruc e K i d d , D a v e D a l to n , R on S t o c k t o n ; typists . . . G i n n y F r y d , C e l i a S t o c k , T h e l m a R a b i n o v i t c h , a n d a host o f o t h e r h elpe rs .

Letters to tL EditorD ear Sir,

P e rh a p s it is the k iss of d eath for a facu lty m em b e r to speak kindly of a studen t publication. A l l th e sam e, I c an ’t help w riting to c o n g ra tu la te you and your s ta ff on th e f irs t few issues you have p roduced th is y ear.

I t would be u n fa ir to single out an y d e p a rtm e n t fo r specia l p ra ise , b u t even th e m isp rin ts and e r ro rs of sy n tax seem to be less painful th an u sua l. And it is a re lie f to com e ac ro ss u n d e rg ra d ­u a te hum or w hich rise s above the puerilities u sually im plied by the te rm . K eep it up.

Y ours tru ly ,Neil Com pton.

Ed N o te : P r o fe s s o r C o m p to n is head o f th e S G W U E n g lis h D e p a rtm e n t

D e ar Sir,W hat provision is m ade for

those unlucky stu d en ts who w ish to g a th e r in fo rm ally fo r a m usica l session? L ast w eek a friend and I w andered all o ver th e building looking fo r a room w ith a piano in it. W here th e re w ere p ianos th e re w ere lec tu re s . We finally found one in th e YMCA building. B ut th e door w as locked. W e went d o w n sta irs an d asked if w e could hav e th e key. The se c re ta ry sa id , “ I ’m so rry . Only one person is allow ed in th e room a t one t im e .” I asked why. “ R egu la tions,” she an sw ered re tu rn in g to h e r type­w rite r .

“I don’t u n d e rs tan d ,” I said, “ do you m ean th a t I would be allow ed in the room alone if I w anted to p ra c tic e th e p ian o ?”

“ T h a t’s righ t. You a r e allow ed th e key only if you a re alone in th e room .” She p ecked aw ay a t the ty p ew rite r, helpfully. I sh ru g ­ged a t m y friend . This w as im ­possible to believe even if it w as th e YMCA.

"C ould you explain th e reason fo r th e reg u la tions to u s? ” he asked.

“ I ’m a fra id not. I ’m ju s t told w h a t to do.” She pu lled a room - booking c a rd out of a d ra w er and re a d us the ru les . J u s t a s she had insisted . If w e w anted to book a room we could do so — a w eek in advance! I thought of the dozens of YMCA pianos g a th e r­ing d u st behind locked doors.

O utside th e office he tu rn ed to m e and sa id , “ L e t’s t ry th e M c­Gill s tu d en ts’ lounge — th e ir p iano is open to all s tu d en ts .”

E l L ibertador.

D e a r S ir:A ll th e w orld loves a m y stery ,

a n d I h av e a w h o d u n it w hich is o f p a r tic u la r re le v an c e to y o u r la rg e a n d e n lig h te n e d re a d in g pu b lic . T he m issin g o b je c t is a la rg e p o ste r , on w h ich a re m o u n te d v a rio u s p h o to g ra p h s of th e C a n ad ian P la y e rs in ac tion . T h is p o s te r w as le n t to u s by th e C a n ad ian P la y e rs in o rd e r to h e lp in o u r cam p aig n to p u b ­lic ize th e S ir G eo rg e W illiam s M usic an d D ram S e rie s .

T h e p o s te r h a s h a d a cu rio u s

h is to ry s in ce i ts a rr iv a l in o u r m id s t. O rig in a lly i t w as p a r t of a d isp lay o rg an ized by M r. J . P o tv in to p ro m o te tic k e t sa les d u r in g th e re g is tra tio n p e rio d . T h e d isp lay w as d ism an tled w ith o u t c o n su lta tio n w ith M r. P o tv in o r an y o th e r in te re s te d p e rso n . T h e re a f te r th e p o s te r a p p e a re d in v a rio u s lo ca tio n s a ro u n d th e m a in e n tra n c e . S o m e tim es i t w as m o u n te d a lo ft, a ta rg e t fo r e v e ry eye. M ore o f te n i t w as b e h in d a p ile of c a rto n s o r c h a irs . I t ev en had th e p r iv ile g e of b e a rin g , k a n g a ­ro o sty le , l i t le p o s te rs on its f ro n t. I t g re w old in th e se rv ice , a n d i ts b a tt le sc a rs w e re n o t becom ing .

N ow i t h a s v a n ish ed c o m p le te ­ly . S im u lta n eo u s ly , th e re is a r e q u e s t f ro m th e C a n ad ian P la y ­e rs fo r i ts im m e d ia te r e tu rn . T h e m en in G a rn e t, w hose p lig h t w as so a d m ira b ly se t fo r th in y o u r la s t issu e , d isc la im a ll k n o w led g e o f i ts w h e rea b o u ts . T h e S tu d e n t A ffa irs O ffice ex ­te n d s sy m p a th y . So do th e v a r i­ous g u a rd ia n s o f th e In fo rm a ­tio n D esk.

A n d y e t . . . and y e t, I c an ­n o t h e lp fe e lin g th a t som ebody k n o w s w h e re i t is. I t w as pow en- le s s to w alk aw ay by its e lf . T h is is n o tim e to e x am in e th e a n ­a rch ic im p lica tio n s fo r o u r sa ­v a n ts ’ p a ra d is e o f su ch v a n d a l­ism . I s im p ly w a n t th e p o s te r back . O th e rw ise I sh a ll h a v e to w rite to th e C a n ad ian P la y e rs e x p la in in g th a t i t is go n e an d t h a t w e hav e n o p o w e r to r e ­tr ie v e it, o r to re p la c e it, o r even to exp la in th is m ean ing less p e tty c rim e.

I ho p e so m ebody can save o u r co m m u n a l face . In fo rm a tio n can be re la y e d to ROO M 580 by sym bol, m y th , a llegory , e x tra ­senso ry percep tion , p rose, poe try o r telephone.

Y o u rs tru ly ,E liz ab e th M acL ean ,

A ssocia te P ro fe sso r o f E n g lish

D e a r Sir,Why did th e w rite r not pu t his

n am e to the Ja n ito r a rtic le? W as h e o r she a fra id of re trib u tio n by th e J a n ito r o r s tuden ts . The w rite r , if th a t is the co rrec t n am e to use , m ere ly ex p resses a d esire to flash a la rg e vo cab u lary . The au th o r h a s no t re a lly checked the fac ts of his s to ry w ith th e p ro p er sources. The Ja n ito rs of S ir G eorge should be p ra ised and not m ocked for th e ir w ork. The p seu ­do-w riter ex p la in s in th e a rtic le of the t r a s h found a round the u n iv ers ity ; the only tra s h I see a round Sir G eorge is in a rtic le s such a s “ The J a n ito r S to ry .”

D ave M aguire, A rts II.

E D . N O T E : M r. M c G u i r e is o b v i o u s ­ly u n i t e u n a b l e to d i s t i n g u i s h b e t w e e n h u m o r a n d n e w s . ( H i s l e t t e r b y t h e w a y , w o u l d b e c la s s e d a s h u m o r ) . W h e n h e r e p r i m a n d s u s fo r n o t h a v ­i n g “ c h e c k e d t h e f a c t s ’* In a n a r t i c l e w h i c h w a s c o m p l e t e l y f i c t i o n a l and s a t i r ic a l , h e a u i t e c l e a r l y d e m o n ­s tr a t e s h i s o w n s t u p i d i t y .

D ear SirI ’m im pressed!This w eek’s G eorgian w as re a l­

ly g re a t. T he H um or pag e is a v e ry defin ite a sse t to th is y e a r ’s G eorgian . I t is a lso v e ry funny.

G eorg ian tics w as not only in­fo rm ativ e bu t fun to read . I hope R icki H offm an continues to be th is inspired .

The h igh ligh t of th is p a p e r w as v e ry defin itely th e F e a tu re s sec­tion. T he a rtic le s w ere well w rit­ten and th e u se of red ink added m uch to th e e ffectiveness of th e fine layout.

All in all a v e ry in fo rm ative and en joyab le edition.

Y ours Sincerely, D ouglas R . Long, A rts I .

D ear Sir,I w ould like to c o n g ra tu la te the

A rts F a c u lty A ssociation, and in p a r tic u la r , B a rry Beloff, fo r the m ag n ificen t p ro g ram th ey have a rra n g e d fo r th e U niversity .

I feel th a t th e U n iversity and its stu d en ts will g re a tly benefit fro m th e a p p ea ran c e of th e e ight sp eak ers . T his effo rt is ju s t a n ­o th e r ex am p le of th e ty p e of s tu ­den t lead ersh ip th a t is so im p o r­ta n t to th e m odern. U niversity .

P e a r l G rubert,Arts I I . Evening.

D ear S ir,This guy Beloff m u st b e som e

so rt of a m ag ic ian ! H e m u st be honoring in som e re la te d course. T hese n am es a re a lm o st unbe­lievab le . I c an ’t re m e m b e r any M ontreal U niversity hav in g such a d istingu ished lis t of guest sp eak ers .

Anyhow, congratu la tions M r. Beloff.

M arvin B ucovetsky, C om m erce I, (D ay)

D e a r S ir:I w ish to co m m e n t on H arv ey

S h u lm a n ’s l e t te r to th e E d ito r o f O c to b e r th e s ix th in w h ich h e la sh es o u t a t th e p an d em ic A rts co u rses .

O n th e w hole, he m ak es a v e ry good p o in t w hen h e re fe rs to s tu d e n ts w ho re ly so le ly on p r in te d n a te s in o rd e r to avoid th e . . g re a t a cad em ic a d ­ju s tm e n t f ro m h ig h school to u n iv e rs ity .” A ll to o o ften I hav e seen s tu d e n ts in th e se co u rses re a d in g a lo n g w ith th e p ro fe s ­so rs o r b u sily p lay in g Jo tto !!! B u t, d o es th is re a l ly a id th e m in c ro ss in g th e b r id g e fro m h igh sch o o l to u n iv e rs ity ? S u re ly , s tu d e n ts re ly in g on Social an d N a tu ra l S c ien ce n o te s can ob­ta in an a v e ra g e g rad e , b u t does th is m e a n th a t th e y h av e m a tu r ­ed to u n iv e rs ity leve l?

I f an y th in g , th e se n o tes aw ak­en s tu d e n ts to th e re a l i ty th a t u n iv e rs ity co u rses a n d p ro fe s ­so rs v a ry .g re a t ly in t h e i r c o n tr i­b u tio n s to ed u ca tio n . I t a p p ea rs th a t th o se w ho in s t ru c t n o th in g b u t 210 c o u rse s a re ju s t sh o r t of b e in g c la ss if ied as p ro fes -

(C o n tin u e d on pag e 5)

The Quebec FarceWith the events of the past weekend, those self-

appointed saviours of Quebec, the Separatists, have finally and irrefutably demonstrated just what their membership consists of; a pack of maladjusted and politically naive adolescents led, or rather mis-led, by a gutter elite of completely irresponsible pseudo-intellec­tuals, the whole heavily leavened with professional thugs of the worst sort.

But for the damage done to Canada’s world image as a stable and politically mature state, and for the even greater harm inflicted upon that cause whose very vtnguard the Separatists claim to be, that is the cause of the continuing evolution of Quebec, the claims of that despicable little clique to represent the political aspira­tions of over five million people would be merel* laughable. As it was, while the true leaders of the N Quebec were working quietly for the continuing good the Province, or were on hand to welcome the Que (whether in her capacity or Queen of England visitin Canada or as Queen of Canada is immaterial) the separatists paraded their infantile xenophobia for the press of all the world to see.

Thus the harm was done; all Canada and this province in particular were reduced to a laughingstock in the eyes of the world. What the damage will be in material terms, in lost capital investment and franco- phobe backlash in the other nine provinces only time will tell.

... And Another OneThe Day Division Women’s Association (DDWA)

has the dubious distinction of being the only organization with forced representation on the SUS Council. For all intents and purposes, the Association is as extinct as the Dodo bird. Nevertheless, it still has a seat on Council and thereby controls one-twelvth of the students vote.

The DDWA was organized in 1936 when there were only thirty-five coeds registered in the University. For this reason, they were classed as a distinct minority group and, as such, were represented by a spokeswoman on the SUS Council. Today’s coeds can hardly be classed in the same way. For the most part, their interests and activities are the same as those of the general student body and thus there is no longer a need for separate representation.

This fact was realized by the past three presidents of the DDWA, each of whom included the suggestion to dissolve the DDWA in her final report submitted to Council. And, it was also realized by this year’s SUS which held a referendum on the matter last Thursday and Friday. It was a colossal farce.

The SUS failed to properly publicize the referendum, and more important, the reasons for it. Very few students know what the DDWA is, and could not therefore be expected to decide whether it should be represented on Council or not. Also, the single poll booth was cleverly camouflaged behind a cardboard wall in the main lobby. It is therefore not surprising that out of 3,450 students, only 128 voted on the referendum.

The situation however can still be rectified. Rather than allow the DDWA to have a useless but decreed voice on Council, the SUS should accept the fact that the referendum was a legal procedure which was stupidly handled and has proved nothing. It can then call for a new referendum. Only this time, students should be made well aware of the DDWA’s past as well as the arguments for and against its continuation as a voting power on Council. In this way, a realistic and meaningful con­sensus of opinipn can be derived.

Page 5: SIR GEORGE WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY Volume XXVIII ......The Georgian, October 14, 1964 Lesage on Confederation Ed. Note: The following is a statement on Confederation by TheHonorable JeanLesage

ChaplainSurvivesBacklash

OTTAWA (CUP) — A chaplain at Carleton Uni­versity, whose views on pre­marital sexual relations aroused a nation-wide con­troversy last week will con­tinue as university cha­plain.

A six-man committee rep­resenting the United, Angli­can and P r e s b y t e r i a n churches of Ottawa which sponsor Rev. Gerald Paul at Carleton, said this week it will “propose no action” on the matter.

The com m ittee m ade the a n ­nouncem ent a f te r m eeting to d is­cuss an a rtic le M r. P au l w rote for the C arleton, studen t new s­pap er a t C arleton U niversity , and which a p p ea red in last week’s G eorgian.

In a s ta tem en t to the p re ss the com m ittee sa id , “ The views ex ­p ressed by M r. P au l a re his own, not the official views of the spon­soring churches. They do re flec t, however, an aspect of the c u r­ren t debate on sexual m o ra lity which is tak ing p lace w ithin the church. At the sam e tim e we re g re t c erta in lap ses of ta s te and w eaknesses in th e p resen ta tion of the a rg u m e n t."

A spokesm an -for the six-m an com m ittee which m et to consider M r. P a u l’s a r tic le sa id “ The im ­portan t th ing is for M r. Paul to get back to w ork.”

Mr. P a u l’s a rtic le sa id , in p a r t, “ Only if we are. c e rta in the sexual rela tionsh ip will help m ore th an h a rm our p a rtn e r, in the long run as well a s in the im ­m ediate encounter, a re we ju s ti­fied in p re m a rita l sex .”

In an in treview la s t week. Mr.P a u l explained his position.

“ We begin with C liristian love — not law . We pu t persons on a h ig h er p lain th an princip les.This m eans th a t the law does not re lieve the individual of the re s ­ponsibility fo r m ak ing m oral de­cisions. The decisions m ust be m ade in the light of C hristian love.

“ By C hristian love I m ean — a giving up of selfish in te res ts in o rd e r to con tribu te to the g row th M r. Paul, an o rdained U nitedand value of an o th er person. Church m in iste r, is in his la te

“ This m eans in p rac tice th a t j 30’s. He is m arried and has four p rem arita l in tercourse can never children.

L- 1R abbi G runb la tt ad d resses H illel m em b ers .

— P h o to b y J o h n V in c e ll i

The Jewish Status

Sir George To Host Debating Tournament

On October 30 through October 31, Sir George Williams University will play host to the Second Annual International Parliamentary Debating Tournament.

The resolution to be debated is: Be it resolved that this house is of the Opinion that Race Relations Can be Improved by Legislation.

m eet the conditions set by C hris­tian love.”

He added, “ U nder the ethic of C hristian love, sexual in te rcourse can often be w rong w ithin the bounds of m arriag e . M arriag e does not give m an a righ t to sexual re la tions if lust is the m ain m oving fo rce .”

Looking For Immortality?Prism has come back to you Yes, after years

of incubation, Prism has come home. At this moment it sits down here with a hungry gap be­tween its covers — it waits for you.

Prism is a compendium of the fertile creativity of this University. So, * if you feel compelled to scream, insult, dream, or merely leave your mark, fill its gap with your prose, poetry, and art. This is your opportunity to be published under copyright and to enjoy local immortality. Simply bundle your material together and bring it, accompanied by your name and address, to the Publications Office, Room 27 in the basement.

Submit as much and as often as you like up to our deadline — the Christmas holidays. All work rejected may be collected later and will contain a critical evaluation.

Take up your pens now. We are hoping to unearth everything from talented writers to sophis­ticated cartoonists. If any among you are interested in this search or wish to work with Prism in it, make inquiries directly to Michael Mercer — editor.

by MARCELLA R E IG E N ST R E IF

The B’Nai B’Rith councillorship held the first ofits series of Hillel addresses Thursday, October 8th.Rabbi Joseph Grunblatt spoke about “The EuropeanJew . . . in the Eve of Modernity”.

H e s ta te d th a t th e m o d ern e ra of th e Je w b egan a f te r th e F re n c h R ev o lu tion . In M edieval tim es , th e Je w w as e ith e r a W este rn Jew , liv in g m o stly in th e G e rm an s ta te s , o r th e E a s t­e rn Jew , w ho lived in P o land . T h e Je w ish s ta tu s w as id e n tic a l to th a t of th e N eg ro in th e so u th today . R eg ard less of w hat h e d id o r ach ieved , he was a Jew .

W e w ent on to ex p ress th e p ro b lem s faced by Jew s as a m in o rity g ro u p in a th e n p re ­d o m in a n tly C h ris tm ia n society .

T h e J e w w as a h o s tile e le ­m en t, a r e je c to r of C h ris t. B u t he m an ag ed to e x is t. H ow ? T h e s t r u c tu r e of M ed ieval soc ie ty a id ed th e Je w , fo r a u n it e x is t­in g by its e lf w as n o t fo re ig n to th e tim es . T h e W este rn Je w liv ed in a g h e tto , w hich was a r e s tr ic tiv e w all. T h e W este rn J e w h a d a w all s u r ro u n d in g h im too, th o u g h ncrt a tan g ib le one. T h en , th e g h e tto w as n o t e n ti re ­ly evil, fo r th e Je w s h a d a u to n o ­m ous g o v e rn m e n t in th e g h e tto . In th is way, h is c u ltu re was c o n c e n tra te d zaid th e re w as l it t le ch an ce of an y o u ts id e in flu e n ce s com ing in.

W ith th e R ev o lu tio n and th e r is e o f N a tio n a l S ta te s , th e g h e tto sy s tem h a d to ch an g e an d it becam e d iff ic u lt to m ain ta in - a se p a ra te society .

N ew, b o th co m m erc ia lly and in te lle c tu a lly , th e re w as a se lec ­tiv e p e rm iss iv e n ess tosvards th e Jew . T h e J e w was th e n faced w ith th e p ro b lem of d u a l loyalty . A s a Jew , h e m u st b e loyal to Is ra e l an d loyal as a n a tiv e , to th e c o u n try in to w hich h e is b o rn . T h is p ro b lem h as com e dow n to th e M o d e rn Jew .

T h e m ee tin g e n d e d w ith th e r h e to r ic a l q u estio n , “ Cam a Je w re m a in a Je w a n d s ti ll be loyal to h is c o u n try ” ?

Insurance Plan To Be ReviewedThe SUS Council devided un­

anim ously a t th e ir m eeting last W ednesday to rev iew the Student In su ra n ce P la n p resen tly in oper­a tion a t SGWU. A le tte r to V ern E cc les, P re sid en t, from Don Young, of the S tudent A ffairs Office, p rom pted th is action. The Council m an d a ted Ted Soroczan, E x ecu tiv e A ssistan t in charg e of estab lish ing th e R e se a rc h B oard , to rev iew th e p lans and policies of the C ontinental C asualty Com ­pany , th e com pany now dealing w ith SGWU S tuden t’s in su ran ce , a s co m p ared w ith o th er com ­panies. This re se a rc h w ith its accom panying recom m andations is to be fin ished by M arch ’65.

The By-Laws of the Personnel Selection B oard w ere rev ised a t th is m eeting . This B oard w hich sc reen s ap p lican ts for ex te rn a l S em in a rs and C onferences will now consist of four m em bers ra th e r th an eight.

The Council h as m an d a ted the C onstitu tional C om m ittee to in ­clude the recom m andations sub­m itted by Don Cote, p a s t T re a s­u re r, and those subm itted by M r. B arrow , Student A dm inis­tra to r , in the F in an cia l By-Laws of the SUS Constitution.

Doug A ckhurst, P ub lic ity C h a ir­m an , announced a t the m eeting th a t D ean F lynn will speak to M r. W orrell, C om ptro ller, about m oving the Book Store out of the M en’s Com m on R oom and about fu rn ish ings for the S e m i n a r Room.

Ian W ade. C om m erce R epre-

D elegates from H arv ard , West Point, Cornell and H ofstra a re expected to a ttend , as well as o th er m a jo r A m erican an d C ana­d ian U niversities. The p a r tic ip a t­ing u n iversities will send a m in i­m um of two, tw o-m an team s. T hey will d eb ate in s tr ic t a cco rd ­ance to P a r lia m e n ta ry procedure .

The d eb ating m em b ers will consist of: first A ffirm ative — the P r im e M inister, f irs t N eg a­tiv e — an H onorable M em ber of the Opposition, second A ffirm a­tive — the H onorable M em ber for the Gov’t., and finally the second N egative — the le a d e r of the Opposition,

The d eb ate will consist of four rounds, two on F rid a y evening and two on Sat. m orning. Both tea m s will be req u ired to speak for the A ffirm ative and the Op­position.

L ast y e a r ’s to u rnam en t w inners w ere H ofstra U niversity (Long Is land) and Osgoode H all Law School (T oronto). The n am es of these schools hav e been in scribed on th e John F . K ennedy D ebat­ing Trophy, which re m a in s in S ir G eorge W illiam s U niversity . This trophy will be aw ard ed annually to th e ou tstand ing debating tea m a t the T ournam ent.

M r. S tanley S. R e in b la tt, C hair­m an of th e T ournam ent, h a s p re ­d icted th a t the debate , judging from advance notices, is bound fo r resounding success.

sen tative , announced th a t a p ­proval h a s been rece ived from th e A dm in istra tion , to hold e lec­tions in the lobby.

Letters to the Editor

Tensions In LaborUndeniable facts of history are: that workers have

been exploited; that workers’ rights have been ignored while their responsibilities have been stressed; that workers have been treated as expendable equipment; and that th skill and experience of workers has rarely been recognized as being wealth, as real and vital asfinancial assets. The dominant motive in industry hasbeen, and still is to a large degree, profit for share­holders, rather than service for people.

U n io n s of w o rk e rs b a rg a in in g fo r th e ir r ig h ts w ere b o u n d to a rise . T h ey ow e th e ir e x is ten ce la rg e ly to th e w o rk of m en in sp ire d by re lig io u s id eas of b ro ­th e rh o o d , a n d ju s tic e , a n d e q u a ­l ity in th e s ig h of God.

T h e q u e s tio n is now b e in gasked ; H as th e ta sk of la b o ru n io n s b een co m p le ted o r h av e th e y o u tliv ed th e ir u se fu ln ess? In an a f f lu e n t soc ie ty , ra p id ly beco m in g a w e lfa re s ta te , in w hich a u to m a tio n is p ro c ee d in g w ith b e w ild e r in g ra p id ity , a re la b o r u n io n s m o re o f a d e tr i ­m e n t th a n an a sse t to th e w e ll­b e in g of th e p eo p le?

T h ese, an d m an y o th e r r e la t ­ed issues, w ill be d e a lth w ith in a se r ie s of th re e m id -d ay le c ­tu re s a r ra n g e d by th e S.C.M . u n d e r th e t i t le “T en s io n s in L a ­b o r.” M onday . O ct. 19, P ro fe s ­so r G. M. M ahoney w ill sp e a k on “T h e H u m an C o n seq u en ces o f A u to m a tio n .’’ W ednesday , O ct. 21, Ju s tic e A n d re M ont p e tit , (S u e p rio u r C o u rt J u d g e ) , w ill d iscu ss “T tliic a l issu es in C o llec tiv e B a rg a in in g ,” and on W ednesday , O ct. 18, M r. C. H. M illa rd , (M em b er o f th e B oard of M a rtim e T ru s te e s an d A s­so c ia te S e c re ta ry of th e R e lig ion a n d L a b o r C o u n c il) , w ill pose th e q u estio n . “ W hy L ab o r U n ­io n s? ”

(Continued from page 4)siona l b a b y s itte rs .

B ecause, as M r. S h u lm an pu t it, “ . . . a tte n d a n c e an d in sig h t a r e u n n e ce ssa ry h a b its to ac­q u ire ,” I w as v e ry p leased to re a d a copy of E n g lish L ite ra ­tu re n o te s (also on sa le n ex t door) in w hich th e a u th o r c le a r ­ly p o in ts o u t th a t s tu d e n ts w ho p u rc h a se n o tes fo r th e so le p u r ­p o se of b reez in g th ro u g h a re re m in d e d th a t “ . . . . th e only p ro p e r w ay to re a lly u n d e rs ta n d is to a tte n d a ll le c tu re s an d ta k e good n o tes , u sin g th e s e as a g u id e o n ly ” an d “A bove all, r e a d th e books m en tio n ed . R e ­m em b er, you c an ’t c a rry th ese n o tes in to an exam room w ith you. O n ly re ly on w h a t you le a rn — n o t w h a t so m eo n e e lse h a s le a rn e d fo r y o u .”

T h is com m on sen se adv ice sh o u ld seem to h e lp b r id g e th a t gap b e tw ee n ad o lescen ce an d u n iv e rs ity life . L e t us ho p e th a t th e u n iv e rs ity w ill show som e of th e sam e.

G ilbert Block

The G

eorgian, O

ctober 14,

1964

Page 6: SIR GEORGE WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY Volume XXVIII ......The Georgian, October 14, 1964 Lesage on Confederation Ed. Note: The following is a statement on Confederation by TheHonorable JeanLesage

The

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64The Government's Educational Burden

(OTTAWA) — Federal, provincial and municipal governments are accepting an increasing share of the financial burden for higher education in Canada, accord­ing to a statistical report recently published by the Canadian Universities Foundation (CUF).

The report shows that over the five year period 1958-59 to 1962-63, governments’ share in the financing of Canadian universities and colleges increased from 60 to 65 per cent.

In the five year period, federal, provincial and municipal governments contributed a total of $820 million to Canadian universities and colleges. Of this figure, $484 million or 59 per cent was for university operating expenditure, $68 million or 8 per cent was for research, and $268 million or 33 per cent was to assist university capital expenditure.

C o n tr ib u tio n s f ro m p ro v in c ia l g o v e rn m e n ts m o re th a n d o u ­b le s fe d e ra l g o v e rn m e n t a id to h ig h e r e d u c a tio n o v e r th e fiv e y e a r s . M unicipal governm en ts c o n tr ib u te d less th a n 1 p e r c e n t o f u n iv e rs ity re v en u e s . I n 1962- 63, p ro v in c ia l su p p o r t to u n i­v e rs itie s in te n p ro v in ce s re a c h ­e d $662 p e r fu ll- t im e e n ro lle d s tu d e n t o r 2.72 p e r c e n t o f n e t p ro v in c ia l e x p e n d itu re s .

T h e re w e re m a rk e d d if fe r ­e n c e s in th e p ro v in c ia l g o v e rn ­m e n t su p p o r t in re la tio n to p ro ­v in c ia l e n ro llm e n ts an d to ta l n e t p ro v in c ia l e sx p e n d itu re s .

Alberta HighestA lb e rta w as th e h ig h e s t in

1962-63 w ith $1,077 p e r full-tim e s tu d e n t. O n ta rio w as second w ith $753, M an ito b a w as th ird w ith $692, S a sk a tch e w a n w as fo u r th w ith $583 a n d B ritish C olum bia w as fifth w ith $577.

N ova Scotia w as th e low est of th e te n p ro v in ce s a t $178 p e r fu ll- t im e e n ro lle d s tu d e n t.

T he Q uebec figure, not in ­clud ing fed era l tax abatem ents for the b en efit o f un iversities in the province, w as $441 per fu ll­tim e student. O t h e r s w e re P rin ce E d w ard Is lan d $369, New B runsw ick $293 and Newfound­lan d $271.

A lb e r ta w as a g a in a t th e to p of th e l is t in p e rc e n ta g e o f n e t p ro v in c ia l e x p e n d itu re s d i re c t­e d to u n iv e rs it ie s w ith 3.77 p e r cen t. N e w fo u n d lan d w as th e low est a t .56 p e r cen t. T h e o th e rs w ere M an ito b a 3.5 p e r cen t. O n ta r io 2.51 p e r cen t, B ritish C o lu m lia 2.51 p e r cen t, Q u eb ec 2.19 p e r cen t( N ew B ru n sw ic k 1.42 p e r cen t, P r in c e E d w rd Is la n d 1.19 p e r c e n t an d N ova S co tia 1.07 p e r cen t.

T h e r e p o r t n o te d th a t in te r - p ro v in c ia l co m p ariso n s a re a f­fe c te d by d iffe re n c e s in p ro ­v in c ia l e d u ca tio n sy s tem s an d

g o v e rn m e n t p o lic ies to w a rd s u n iv e rs ity aid .

F o r ex am p le , p ro v in ce s in w h ich s tu d e n ts e n te r u n iv e r­s ity a f te r ju n io r m atricu la tio n w o u ld a p p e a r to p ro v id e one m o re y e a r o f u n iv e rs ity in s tru c ­tio n to th e i r s tu d e n ts . A lb e r ta a n d S a sk a tch e w a n a re th e on ly p ro v in ce s in w h ich s tu d e n ts a re a d m it te d to u n iv e rs ity o n ly a t th e se n io r m a tr ic u la tio n leve l.

In ad d itio n , p ro v in c ia l po li­c ies d i f f e r o n th e ty p e s o f u n i v e rs i tie s a n d co lleg es su p p o rte d w ith p u b lic fu n d s . S a sk a tc h e ­w an, fo r ex am p le , su p p o r ts on ly a p ro v in c ia l u n iv e rs ity . O n ta r io su p p o r ts p ro v ic ia l a n d in d e ­p e n d e n t in s titu tio n s , b u t n o t th o se a f f id ia te d w ith a c h u rch . Q u e b e c su p p o r ts u n iv e rs it ie s an d co lleg es o f a ll th re e ty p es .

F e d e ra l a id to h ig h e r e d u ca ­tio n in th e f iv e -y e a r p e r io d w as p ro v id ed th ro u g h som e 20 gov­e rn m e n t d e p a r tm e n ts a n d a g en ­c ies in th e fo rm o f d ire c t g ra n ts , c o n tra c ts a n d a g re e ­m en ts . T h e g re a te s t sh a re , $116 m illio n of 78 p e r cen t, w as a d ­m in is te re d th ro u g h th e u n iv e r­s ity g ra n ts p ro g ra m of th e d e ­p a r tm e n t o f fin an ce .

Federal GrantsT h e fe d e ra l u n iv e rs ity g ra n ts

p ro g ram w as b eg u n in 1951-51. G ra n ts w e re a llo c a te d b y p ro ­v ince a t a r a te of 50 c en ts p e r c a p ita o f th e p o p u la tio n o f th e p ro v in ce a n d d iv id e d am o n g th e u n iv e rs it ie s a n d co lleg es in each p ro v in ce in p ro p o rtio n to th e n u m b e r of fu ll- tim e s tu ­d e n ts e n ro lled .

In 1956-57, th e p e r c ap ita r a te w as in c re a se d to $1. In 1958-59, i t w as f u r th e r in c re a s ­ed to $1.50 an d by 1962-63, i t h a d re a c h e d $2.

U n iv e rs itie s in a ll th e p ro - i v in ces a cc ep te d f e d e ra l g ra n ts

in 1951-52, b u t f ro m 1952-53 to 1955-56, th e u n iv e rs it ie s in th e P ro v in c e o f Q u e b ec d id n o t, a n d th e i r sh a re o f f e d e ra l g ra n ts w as r e v e r te d to th e gov­e rn m e n t’s c o n so lid a ted re v e n u e fu n d .

I n 1956-57, a n a g re e m e n t b e ­tw e e n th e fe d e ra l g o v e rn m e n t and CUF channelled fed era l g r a n t s to th e un ivers ities th ro u g h C U F . T h e fo u n d a tio n held g ra n ts fo r u n iv ers ities in Q u eb ec w h ich d id n o t ap p ly f e d e ra l g o v e rn m e n t su p p o r t in t r u s t u n t i l 1961 w h en th e m o n ey w as w ith d ra w n a n d d e ­p o s ite d in th e n ew ly c re a te d Q u eb ec g o v e rn m e n t fu n d fo r s u p p o r t o f u n iv e rs ity c o n s tru c ­tio n .

In 1961, a g a in by a g re e m e n t b e tw ee n th e f e d e ra l g o v e rn ­m e n t an d C U F, Q u eb ec w as a llo w ed to o p t1 o u t o f th e u n i­v e rs ity g ra n t p ro g ram a n d b e ­cam e e lig ib le fo r an a n n u a l ta x

a b a te m e n t o f c o rp o ra tio n in ­com e ta x e q u a l to th e r a te of th e fe d e ra l p e r-c a p ita u n iv e r ­s ity g ra n ts .

T he re p o rt notes . th a t m un i­cipa l govern m en ts p lay only a m in o r ro le in th e f in a n c in g o f C a n a d ia n u n iv e rs it ie s a n d co l­leg es. I t adds, h o w ev er, th a t in d ir e c t a s s is ta n c e is p ro v id e d by m u n ic ip a litie s to u n iv e rs it ie s a n d co lleg es by p ro v is io n of m u n ic ip a l se rv ice s a n d ex em p ­tio n s fro m p ro p e r tw tax a tio n .

T h e a u th o rs o f th e r e p o r t conclude th a t w h e th er th e gov- e rm e n t in d iv id u a lly a n d co llec ­tiv e ly a r e b e a r in g a p p ro p ria te sh a re o f th e f in a n c ia l b u rd e n fo r h ig h e r e d u c a tio n is o n e of th e q u e s tio n s to b e a n sw e re d by th e C o m m iss io n o n th e F in ­a n c in g of H i g t e r E d u ca tio n in C an ad a (B lad en C om m ission).

T h e B lad en C o m m iss io n is ex p ec te d to p u b lish a r e p o r t in la te 1965.

StillWaiting

LENNOXVILLE (CUP) — Presidents of Sir George and five other English- speaking universities in Quebec are still awaiting word from Premier Jean Lesage on the Quebec gov­ernment’s plans for revenue allotments to the province under the Canada Student Loan Act.

E a r l ie r th is y e a r, the six uni­v e rsitie s ag reed to support th e Quebec p re m ie r’s decision to con­t r a c t out of the fe d era l govern­m e n t’s stu d en t loan plan.

U nder an ag reem en t w ith th e fed era l g overnm en t, Quebec will rece iv e 2 p e r cen t co rpora tion tax re b a te , equal to the am o u n t of m oney th e p rov ince would rece iv e un d er th e C anada S tudent Loan Act. F ren ch -sp eak in g u n iv e rs i­ties in Quebec opposed th e loan p lan from th e ou tset c la im ing it infringed on th e au th o rity of the p rovinces in th e field of ed u ca­tion.

The six E nglish-speak ing un i­v e rsitie s, in a s ta te m en t re leased to the p re ss during the su m m er, said th ey ex pected the tax r e b a te would be used in th e field of education in Quebec.

P re m ie r L esag e h as sa id he is sa tis fied w ith th e Quebec stu d en t loan p lan and does not in tend to spend the federa l re b a te on edu­cation.

P re s id e n ts of th e six un iversi­ties have req u ested a m eeting w ith th e p re m ie r , bu t so fa r no w ord has been rece iv ed fro m the Quebec governm en t.

E lections for In te rn a l V ice-P residen t, T re a su re r and- A thletic R ep resen ta tiv es will be held on T hursday , O ctober 22 and F rid a y O ctober 23.

N om inations close F r id a y , O ctober 16, a t 12 noon. A pplica­tion fo rm s m ay be obtained from the studen t recep tio n ary .

F A L L I N T O W I N T E R

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Page 7: SIR GEORGE WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY Volume XXVIII ......The Georgian, October 14, 1964 Lesage on Confederation Ed. Note: The following is a statement on Confederation by TheHonorable JeanLesage

Geo rytu n ticsR IC K I HO FFM AN

TOMORROWH IL L E L : A P an e l D iscussion w ill be held b y H illel in R oom 422.

The topic will be “ The U n iversity an d M oral V alues” and it w ill be m o d era ted by D r. H all. The guest sp eak ers include D ean G reer (C om m erce), D ean O’B rian (A rts), and P rof. P ee ts , o u r well-known R e g is tra r . The tim e w ill be posted . I u rg e you to a tten d th is m ee t­ing as it should prove beneficial.

TU D EN T CHRISTIAN M OVEM ENT: The S.C.M. w ill p re sen t a d iscussion in R oom 225 a t 1.10 p .m . given by R ev. Jo h n Guy, th e G en era l S e c re ta ry of S.C.M. The topic w ill be “ D on’t Swallow th a t B unk A bout B ible M irac les” , (shot down again .)

BIOLOGY CLUB: A m eeting of th e Biology Club will be held a t 1.00 p .m . in R oom 426. All m em b ers a re cord ia lly invited.

D EBATING UNION TOURNAM ENT: T h ere w ill be a m eeting fo r all h o stesses in R oom 223. M iss C. L. neg lected to give m e the tim e so I ’ll throw in a 1.00 h o u r b ecause sh e m ad e som e m ention of lunches. Only G eorgian S taff chew chopped liv e r a t 3.30.

G IR LS: If you’re free th is a fternoon from 2.00 - 4.00 w hy not use th e S tanley lo ck er’s e n tran ce and com e to a W om en’s B aske tba ll p ra c tic e in the C en tra l Y G ym ?

L E C ER C LE CANADIEN-FRANCAIS: A ujourd’hui — 1.05 — au local 308 a u ra lieu la p re m ie re reunion g en era le du “ C ercle” . Une inv ita tion spec ia le e s t fa ite a tous les C an ad ien -F ran ca is qui n ’ont p as encore eu l ’occasion de se fa m ilia rise r avec n o tre p ro g ram m e. (P lease excuse the non-appearance of accen ts bu t w e use Anglo- Saxon ty p ew rite rs a round h e re).

PRE-LAW SOCIETY: The f irs t g en era l m eeting of th e P re-L aw Society will be held in R oom 336 a t 1.00 on W ednesday.

GEORG IAN CHRISTIAN FELLO W SH IP: The G. C. F . will hold a tap e reco rd in g on “ The C hristian and th e H um an ities” in Room A-402 a t 1.10.

BOW LING L EA G U E : All W ednesday bow lers w ill m ee t again a t 3.30 sh a rp in the L e a d e r’s Bowling Alley. New m em b ers a re w el­com e. (One can te s t th e m an ag em en t by a sim ple m ethod: bounce th e b a ll a few tim es on th e fresh ly sanded floors and w atch the reac tio n . I 'm told it w orks fa ir ly w ell).

PSYCHOLOGY CLUB: Not only will m em b ers of th e Psych . Club be a t L e a d e r’s A lleys to observe the physical beh av io r of m an un d er sev e re p re ssu re , bu t they w ill also hold a m ee tin g a t 1:00 p .m . in R oom 335. (L ast w eek’s m ovie on the “ F a c e s of D epression” would hav e been excellen t fo r today , M iss L essa rd .)

AM ATEU R RADIO SOCIETY: The A. R. S. will hold a m eeting a t 1.00 in R oom 339.

D EBA TIN G UNION: A m eeting fo r the D ebating Union will be held a t 1.00 in R oom 224. (The topic w ill be: R esolved th a t th e M an ag er of L e a d e r’s Bowling Alley Should Be P u t A w ay’’.)

THURSDAYAM ATEUR RADIO SOCIETY: The A. R. S. will hold a M eeting

in R oom 339 a t 1.15 p .m . M orse Code T rain ing will be held in Room 323.

GEORG IAN CHRISTIAN FELLO W SH IP: The G. C. F . will hold a m eeting a t 1.15 p .m . in R oom 313.

BOW LING L EA G U E : Sadly enough (m y pred ic tions a re usually c o rre c t) , th e T h u rsd ay L eague will be d iscontinued due to lack of response . (Som ebody DID try to bounce it.) All T h u rsd ay bow lers w ill now bowl in th e W ednesday L eague a t 3.30 p .m .

PR O G R ESSIV E CONSERVATIVE CLUB: The G eorgian P . C. Club inv ites its m em b ers , po ten tial m em b ers , and in te res ted observ ­e rs , to h e a r E g an C ham bers, F o rm e r P re s id e n t of th e P ro g ress iv e C onservative P a r ty of C anada and M em ber of P a r lia m e n t fo r St. L aw ren ce - St. G eorge Riding. He will t ry and find out if Quebec can hav e its cake and ea t it too. The ta lk will tak e p lace in R oom 308 a t 1.10 today.

LUTHERAN STUDENTS: In fo rm al discussions w ill begin a t 1.00 p.m . on th e “ C ontem porary D octrinal S tance of th e L u th eran C hurch” . I t w ill b e held in R oom 245 of th e Y.M.C.A.

SAILING CLUB: The M ontreal In te rco lleg ia te Sailing Assoc, w ill m ee t a t the H.M.C.S. D onnacona a t 8.00 p .m . T h ere w ill be a g uest speaker.

FR ID A YGEORGIAN JAZZ SOCIETY: T he Jazz Society will hold its in ­

a u g u ra l M eeting in R oom 313 a t 1.00 p .m . (In a ll se riousness, I w onder if th e re a re an y o th er poor slobs like m e who m iss th e “ ja m ” sessions they h ad in th e B asem en t la s t y ea r. Any hopes fo r th em th is y e a r? )

AM ATEUR RADIO SOCIETY: The A. R . S. will hold a m eeting a t 1.00 in R oom 339.

DEBATING UNION: A M eeting fo r th e D ebating Union will be h eld in Room 224 a t 1.00.

NEW MAN CLUB: The N ew m an Club will hold ia s second G en­e ra l M eeting a t 1.00 a t 1452 D rum m ond, acro ss fro m th e E . H. All Catholic S tudents should a ttend . B esides th a t, th e N ew m an Club will hold a sw inging “ B eatle-n ik P a r ty ” a t 8.00 p .m . The p rice will be $.50 S tag, and $.75 D rag . W atch the p osters fo r w hat to w ear.

COMING EV EN TSGEORGIAN FIL M SOCIETY: The G. F . S. will hold its M ain

F e a tu re , “ The K ey” with W illiam Holden and Sophia L oren. T here w ill a lso be two shorts, one fro m th e N ational F ilm B oard , “ The P ro m ised L an d ” (all four p a r ts ) , and “ The L anguage of F a c e s ” , a V enice F ilm F estiv a l A w ard. I t will be held on Sunday, O ctober 18, a t 7.00 p .m . in B irks Hall. The adm ission is free .

NEW MAN CLUB: The N ew m an Club will hold a d iscussion on “ U n d erstand ing the M ass” a t 1.05 ev ery M onday.

STUD EN T CHRISTIAN M O VEM ENT: P rof. M ahoney will speak to S. C. M. m em b ers and a ll those who a re in te res ted on the “ H um an C onsequences of A utom ation” . I t w ill be held on M onday, Oct. 19th a t 1.10 p .m . in R oom 225.

NEWST here has been a com plete lack of insp iration today, fellow

G eorgians. F o r one thing, th e lan g u ag e h as been te rr ib ly m ediocre dow n h ere so I will have to close w ith a sin cere p ro m ise th a t I will a tte m p t to cu ltiv a te y o u r m inds w ith m y w eekly m an u re b e tte r n ex t week. In the m ean tim e I wish to p lead w ith th e va rio u s Clubs th a t m u st accep t these w eekly re m a rk s to p lease tak e no insult from them . Thank-you fo r your co-operation.

"Liberalism Is Greed" - McCullough

Prof. E. E. McCullough was the guest speaker at the NDP Club meeting, which was held last Friday. Prof. McCullough, Chairman of the SGWU History Depart­ment, chose as his topic “The Myth of CanadianLiberalism.’'

T h e m e e tin g o p en ed w ith D ave B e rcu sso n , P re s id e n t of th e N D P C lub , w e lco m in g th e au d ie n ce a n d in tro d u c in g th e e x ecu tiv e of th e c lub .

P ro f . M cC u llo u g h b eg an by tra c in g th e h is to ry of L ib e ra l­ism . H e s ta te d th a t “L ib e ra lism is e s se n tia lly th e sam e th in g in 1964 as i t w as in 1832.” H e sa id th a t “L ib e ra lism is th e id eo logy of th e b u sin e ssm a n an d i t sh if ts w ith th e s h if t in g n e ­c e ss ity o f th e b u s in e ssm a n .” H e sa id th a t th e p u rp o se of L i­b e ra lism is th e “D o m in a tio n of th e p h ilo so p h y of C a p ita lism ” a n d th a t , in e ffe c t, “L ib e ra lism is g re e d .” T h is s ta te m e n t w as g re e te d w ith m u ch a p p la u se

fro m th e O p p o s itio n su p p o rte rs in th e au d ien ce .

P ro f . M cC u llo u g h co n tin u e d b y d e f in in g S o c ia l D em o cracy an d W elfa rism . H e s ta te d th a t S o c ia l D em o cracy is “ Social c o n tro l of th e m ea n s of p ro ­d u c tio n of p u b lic goods.” T h is in v o lv es so c ia l o w n e rsh ip in w h ich th e d ire c tio n of th e co n ­tro l of th e u se o f th e se goods is in th e c o n tro l of so c ie ty a t la rg e a n d n o t in th e h a n d s of a ch o sen few . P ro f. M cC ullough sa id th a t he d o u b ted w h e th e r th e N D P is a S o c ie ty D em o cracy P a rty . H e sa id th a t i t w as a p a r ty o f “L ib e ra ls in a H u rry .”

P rof. M cCullough sa id th a t W el­fa rism is C ap ita lism ’s la s t s tan d ag a in st Social D em ocracy . He

P ro f. M cCullough

sa id th a t tax a tio n is a p a r t of W elfarism , and th a t tax a tio n is a m ethod w hereby m oney from th e r ic h is d is trib u ted am ong the people w hom the r ic h have robbed.

P ro f. M cCullough sa id th a t “ su b s ta n tia lly , L ib e ra ls and Con­se rv a tiv es a re the sam e th in g .” H e said th a t th e only difference b e tw een th em is, essen tia lly , in th e ir tac tic s as to how control of big business can be m ain- tam er.

The m eeting ended w ith a question period.

Year Round Education — Arguments Against

HAMILTON (CUP) — Year-round operation of Canadian universities would yield negligible financial savings and could seriously damage academic life, according jto a report issued last week (Oct. 2) by the Canadian Association of University Teachers (CAUT).

Based on estimated student enrolments and costs for 1970, the report said savings gained through a year-round trim ester system would not exceed 4.5 per cent of the $700 million needed to accommodate the estimated 300,000 students in Cana­dian universities in 1970. The experience of U.S. year-round universities indicates that savings would probably be closer to 3 per cent.

At the same time, the report said a three or four semester system might magnify the ills of the calendar system under which Canadian universities now oper­ates. A year-round system would require m ore registrations and examinations increas­ing the tensions and fatigue of both teachers and students, the report suggested.

A special CAUT committee under Professor B. W. Jackson of McMaster Uni­versity spent the past 18 months preparing the report. The study included visits to nine U.S. year-round universities and consultations with teachers and administrators at 51 U.S. and 16 Canadian universities.

Self-defeatingTne committee concluded that the year-round system would deprive faculty

members time for research and study, in the long run defeating the purpose of uni­versities. It noted that the large amount o f time available for research in Canadian universities has been one of their chief attractions to U.S. scholars and warned that a year-round system would make competition more difficult.

Many U.S. faculty members, the report said, reported difficulty in getting to know their students in the short sem esters which the report said tend to contribute to the students’ feelings of loneliness, anonymity, and insecurity.

While the year-round system woul d cut by as much as a year the time neces­sary to obtain a degree, the report suggested that students need free time to relax and earn money. Seasonal employment fa ctors peculiar to Canada make it necessary for many Canadian students to work in th e summer months.

In addition, the year-round system tend, of necessity, to emphasize facts and memory work at the expense of free thought and investigation, the report said.

The study of nine U.S. year-round universities indicated an increasing emphasis on administrative expediency. There is a danger that a larger, more complex operation might overwhelm academic consideration.

Few A ttendThe report noted that relatively few U.S. students attend the extra summer

semester and that the traditional Fall and Winter semesters have heavier enrolments.The year-round operation of Canadian universities has become a subject of

increasing debate in the past year. The CAUT report followed on the heels of an article in Weekend Magazine by Stephen Franklin advocating the year-round system.

Mr. Franklin was critical of the wasted library and lecture facilities at Cana­dian universities during the summer months. He pointed approvingly at a system operating at Waterloo University in which engineering students attend lectures and work in industry during alternation six month periods.

He also noted that students at the new Simon Frazer University in British Columbia will be able to enroll for one, tw o or three semesters a year.

At a recent article in Maclean’s Magazine described a report issued in the Spring by the Canadian Foundation For Educational Development (CFED) concerning the advantages and problems of instituting a year-round system in Canada. Gener­ally, the report favored a year-round system.

The CAUT report is likely to cause some debate when the national conference of Canadian Universities and Colleges m eets in Ottawa at the end of the month. The year-round operation of Canadian universities is to be one of the main concerns of the conference.

The report concluded that a year-round system should be adopted in Canada only if it can be revised to give first consideration to academic quality. It closed, “It is better to educate the top 10 per cent o f the population to the best of our ability than to provide an inferior education to the top 20 per cent.”

Page 8: SIR GEORGE WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY Volume XXVIII ......The Georgian, October 14, 1964 Lesage on Confederation Ed. Note: The following is a statement on Confederation by TheHonorable JeanLesage

The G eorgian, O ctobe r 14, 1964 —

Page 9: SIR GEORGE WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY Volume XXVIII ......The Georgian, October 14, 1964 Lesage on Confederation Ed. Note: The following is a statement on Confederation by TheHonorable JeanLesage

... career men of ’66i

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while to consider a career with IB M . W e have a

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Page 10: SIR GEORGE WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY Volume XXVIII ......The Georgian, October 14, 1964 Lesage on Confederation Ed. Note: The following is a statement on Confederation by TheHonorable JeanLesage

Mehta s Bruckner“ B ru ck n er?” sa id B ra h m s ,”

“ th a t’s a sw indle w hich w ill be fo rgo tten a y e a r o r two a f te r I a m d e a d .” Now, six ty seven y e a rs a f te r B ra h m s’ d e a t h B ru ck n er is still ha lf-a live and som ehow m an ag es occasionally to m ak e a com plete com eback to life under the re su rrec tin g b a ­tons of conductors like H erb ert von K a ra ja n , Otto K lem p erer, the la te B runo W alter, and late ly , Zubin M ehta.

No change in p ro g ram m e could hav e been m ore a d v a n ta ­geous. I n s t e a d of R ich ard S tra u ss ’ Also S prach Zarathus- tra, th e Montreal Sym phony Or­chestra u n d er the im pulsive gu i­dan ce of Zubin M ehta, p resen ted Anton B ru ck n er’s Seventh Sym ­phony in E Major, as d ifferent a sco re ideologically a s n igh t and day . M ehta is a B ru ck n erian to th e core. H e proved it witli his in te rp re ta tio n of the b ra ssy , so m etim es ly ric a l and rev eren t, an d often W agnerian in its ex ­p losiveness, score.

B ru ck n er, a deeply religious m an , possessed of a childlike

fa ith an d freq u en tly m e host to ecs ta tic visions, saw the sole p u r­pose an d sign ificance in his c re a ­tive w ork in th e g lorification of his C rea to r. T h ere a r e tra c e s of th is obsession th a t can b e d e tec t­ed in the qu iet p a ssag es of the m usic. He com es a s close to his goal h e re a s in his M asses and p a r ticu la r ly th e T h ird M ass.

As w as expec ted M ehta ignored th e theological a sp ec ts of the m usic and em phasized the o ver­b earin g in tensity and d ra m a of th e sco re , c rash in g the unauthen- tic cy m b als in th e fu n erea l se ­cond m ovem en t to accen tu a te th e c lim ax and m oulding with c irc u la r w aves of his ba ton c re s ­cendoes th a t c am e close to being ear-sp litting . And ye t, he never m elo d ram atized the .proceedings. He h ad th e MSO so un d er his d e ­m o n iacal spell th a t they execu ted h is s lig h test w ish w ith un p rece ­den ted en thusiasm .

This sco re, how ever, is not a l­w ays serious. The bucolic th ird m ovem en t can be taken as an exam ple. The pou ltry fa rm in the country-side cam e vividly to life w ith tlie sh a rp , orn ith ic c ra c k ­lings of the b ird s and the m ascu ­line hunting calls of the horns. By the fourth m ovem en t the p lay e rs w ere re a lly on th e ir toes. The w hole sym phony c am e to a triu m p h an t close with the b laz­ing repetition of th e th em e with w hich the whole sym phony had began.

In the f irs t p a r t of the concert

B eethoven’s Violin Concerto in D M a j o r su b stitu ted P a g a n in i 's F irst Violin Concerto. This w as p layed by th e ju s tly fam ous R u s­sian v irtuoso of th e Violin, L eo­nid Kogan.

A dm ittedly , this is not one of B eethoven’s m ore p e rfec t scores hav ing gone on to g re a te r th ings a f te r its com pletion, bu t tak en fo r w ha t it is, it ra n k s w ith the concertos of such com posers as B rah m s, M endelssohn, T chaikov­sky, Sibelius and B erg .

This w asn ’t a com plete ly over­w helm ing p e rfo rm an ce . T h e y both took lib e rtie s th a t often d idn’t qu ite com e off, but when they did, they w ere overly r e ­vealing . They certa in ly w eren ’t apologizing fo r B eethoven. M r. K ogan has enough v irtu o s ity to spill over to som e less fo rtu n ate , u n talen ted violinists bu t when it com es to p ro jec tin g em otions, leaves you quite cold. G ran ted , this is not a v e ry em otional score bu t som e p assag es in the slow m ovem ent, w hich w as ta k ­en a t a sn a il’s speed, w ere pass- e d o v e r m onochrom atica lly enough to a ro u se indignation. He com pensa ted us for these unfor­tu n a te lap ses , how ever, w ith < the b re ad th and nobility th a t he in ­jec ted into th e la s t m ovem ent. It can only be sa id th a t the Rondo is a rtis tic a lly p leasing bu t he m an ag ed , With th e invaluab le help of M r. M ehta, to m ak e som e­th ing in te lec tu a l and lofty of it and his success w as com plete.

John Sakellaropoulos

Queen Victoria’s friend is Carole Simpson, who is one of the stars of THE ESTABLISHMENT. The British satirical group will be in Montreal from (let. 20-24 at the W estmount high school auditorium. Call Spectrum Productions (484-7200) or see the SGWU Student receptionist for tickets.

Aloud For Corks

" . . And m aids, tu rned bottles, ea ll aloud for co rk s .”

— A lexander Pope, The R ape of The Lock.Sex and the College G irl, unlike Sex and the Single

Girl, does not a ttem p t to p a ss ju d g em en t o r provide step by step in struction in obtain ing a m ate .

W hat it does do, how ever, is p ie rce th e d a rk n ess and m isconception su rround ing th e m atin g h ab its of the A m erican College Coed. G ael G reene ach ieves th is by a sy s tem atic and ob jective investigation w hich encom ­passed m ore th an one hundred u n iversities from U. C. L. A. to S a ra h L aw rence.

M iss G reen e’s m ethod is to p re sen t th e “ low-down” or inside sto ry-on th e p rom iscu ity of th e Coeds in th e ir own lan g u ag e and in th e ir own w ords. U tilizing an acad em ic and jo u rn a lis tic appro ach , the au th o r re lies upon ac tu a l case h isto ries and heav y docum entation to give th e w ork its expose ty p e of a tm osphere .

T he study w as based upon six hundred and fourteen stu d en ts who w ere in te rv iew ed in sm all groups and in ­dividually . T heir rev ela tio n s and opinions do not rev ea l an y new tren d or technique w hich has not been d is­cussed before.

W hat can be d istilled out of the study is a com m on deno m in a to r of fe a rs , guilts, and d esires th a t a re r e ­p e a ted again a n d again in a ll th e inciden ts described .

The cause of these an x ie ties, acco rd ing to Sex and the College G irl, is the sudden uprooting and distortion of trad itio n a l m o ra l idea ls and m odes of behav io r. The Coed finds h e rse lf th ru s t upon a bed of conflicting and confusing v a lues, coupled with an in sp iring freedom from p a ren ta l control.

A dded to th is is the g re a te s t challenge to th e C oeds’

by GAEL GREENEDetail from jacket of “Sex And The College G irl,” by Gael Greene. Paperback edition published by DELL Books.

ch astity , the U niversity M ale. As one U.C.L.A. Sopho­m ore pan ted , “ T h ere a re 9,000 v aria tions on m ay b e 12 basic lines, and ev en tually you h e a r th em a ll .”

The question of M orality is how ever still an in ­div idual concern , and th e opinions o r excuses rep o rted ra n g e from th e glib to th e psychotic . “V irgin ity is a ba rg a in in g position” suggests a S a ra h L aw rence Sopho­m ore. “A fter all, th e re a re hundreds of b rig h t, a t t r a c ­tive g irls around. W hat do you have bu t your v irg in ity . But w hat about a f te r g rad u atio n when th e re a re hun­d reds of b rig h t, a ttra c tiv e g irls and th ey 're going to bed. Then w ha t h av e you g o t?”

This co m m erc ia l ap p ro ach to ch astity is not th e ru le but th e exception. W hat does ra n k high on th e “ r e a ­sons” lis t acco rd ing to a young lad y fro m Queens Col­lege is “ You do it b ecause you like it, th a t’s th e only good re a so n .”

We can deduce from these view s th a t the tren d today is tow ard a definition of a new m o rality , a m o r­a lity th a t would m ean som ething, th a t would be logical and th a t m igh t p rov ide th e indiv idual w ith a deep er insigh t in to th e ir em otional responses.

F u rth e rm o re serious consideration should be given to a new m o ral o rien ta tion on the p a r t of “ ru les com ­m ittee s” to w ard cam p u s re la tio n sh ip s and restric tio n s .

H a rv a rd c ircu it m en evade a ru le s ta tin g th a t s tu ­den ts who have fem ale g uests in th e ir room s m u st have the door open a t le a s t six inches, and a light on, by opening th e closet door and th e ba th ro o m light. The Ivy L eague “ do not d is tu rb ” notice is a neck tie hung fro m the door knob. W hich only goes to underline th e cliche, “ w here th e re is a will th e re is a w ay .”

W hat G ael G reene has a ttem p ted to do in Sex and the College Girl, is to p re sen t a s tra ig h t fo rw ard “no holds b a r re d ” re p o rt of the sexual scen t in th e A m eri­can U niversity . H e r deg ree of success can p e rh ap s best be su m m arized by a P u rd u e U niversity Sen ior’s com ­m en t “I w onder w hat it will be like to be a m em b e r of the c lass of ’69.”

Bob Brandeis

film society:

VertigoIn a m o n o g rap h on A lfred

H itch co ck th a t a p p e a re d in F i l m Q u a r t e r l y , C h a rle s H ig h am w ro te of V e r t i g o : “ W hat H itch o co k m an ag es . . . is a to ta l su sp en s io n of d is ­b e lie f in th e im p o ssib le go ings- o n b e fo re o n e ’s eyes. S u r re n d ­e red to, th e film invades one’s co n sc io u sn ess w ith ru le s o f its own: th is is one of those film s . . . w hich co m p le te ly c re a te s a d e ca d en t, a r ti f ic ia l w o rld u n ­re la te d in an y w ay to th e re a l o n e .”

I th in k M r. H ig h am w as r ig h t, b u t I o b jec t to th e w ords “ to ta l” an d “co m p le te ly .” W hat

p lish ed , is ob v io u sly w h a t th e d ire c to r w as try in g fo r , b u t d id h e m ak e it ?

Vertigo begins w ith Saul B a ss’ b e a u tifu lly d e s ig n ed sp ira ls , w h ir lin g u n d e r th e c red its . T h ey hav e a tw o-fo ld pu rp o se : to s e t up a m o tif o f dizzy im ­b a lan ce a n d to su c k u s in tJ th e “ decaden t, a r t i f i c i a l w orld ,” H itch co ck t r ie d to c re a te . A t tim es, we re a l ly a re in th is w orld . E v e ry th in g in th e f ilm is h e ig h te n e d : th e r e s ta u ra n t,w h ich is too e le g an t, too p o ised — lik e R e sn a is ’ M arien b ad ; th e co ld e th e re a ’ sh o ts o f K im N ovak in th e c e m e te ry w h ich have th e sam e k in d of lo v e ­lin e ss H a w th o rn e w as so good

•• • 1 - * i -- _ r ------1 „

fu n erea l colors — the blues, b ro w n s a n d fa d ed o ra n g e s th a t a re p a r t of lan d scap es , clothes, o b jec ts a n d e v en m ak e th e lo ca tio n sh o ts o f a re a l c ity — S an F ra n c isco — seem lik e an im a g in a ry p lace

T h e re is a v e ry im p o r ta n t b o u q u e t o f f lo w ers in V e rtig o — i t is one of th e th in g s th a t c o n n ec ts th e f i lm ’s fe m a le p ro ­tagon ist (K im N ovak) to the d ead w om an who supposedly possesses h e r . In a d re a m s e ­qu en ce , th e b o u q u e t com es a p a r t a n d sp in s a ro u n d th e s c re e n — ex ac tly lik e th e s p ir ­a ls th a t o pen th e film . H itc h ­cock is a sk in g us to e n te r th e d e a th ly u n iv e rse in s id e th e bo u q u e t. W h at m ars h is a tte m p t a t in d u c in g a s ta te of su sp en d e d an im a tio n , a re th e fa u lts of th e film .

A ctors w ere n ev er very im ­p o rtan t to H itchcock (except for his m inor ro les) bu t a com ­b ination of J a m e s S tew art and K im N ovak, pulls you out of an im a g in ary un iverse rig h t into the

n n n *» 11 n i u o r c o U /h P f P

th e re a re re a litie s like lousy ac to rs . The sc rip t m ak es im pos­sible dem ands on both these ex m ovie-sta rs — th e re a re m o­m en ts when they a re actu a lly supposed to re ac h d r a m a t i c

heights. One scene h as S tew art following N ovak into a g ian t Se­quoia fo rest and i t ’s beautifu lly done, un til K im h as a fit of violent, em otional tu rm oil. She is supposed to be re g is te rin g all so rts of sub tle em otional sh ad ­ings and, of course, fails m ise ra ­bly. B ad A cting ru in s th e spell of the Redwood sequence and you a re in the m idst of nothing else but a bad m ovie.

A nother fau lt w as the n a tu ra l­istic exp lanation of the film ’s m v s t e r v (the e ir l w asin ’t rea lly

possessed, she w as ju st p a r t of an unm otiva ted m u rd e r plot) b e ­cause it adds an u n n ecessa ry e lem en t of rea lism . This ex ­p lanation is k ep t vague, bu t I suspec t c rea tiv e laziness r a th e r th an an a tte m p t to m ain ta in the su rea lity of the film . If G race Kelly (a b e tte r ac tre s s and pos­sesso r of a genuine, icy beau ty ) had been in Vertigo or H itchcock had stuck to posing Novak (as he did fo r th e f irs t q u a rte r of the m ovie) and if the m echan ics of the story-line w ere k ep t a m ­biguous, H itchcock’s s t r a n g e , little cosm os would have been to ta l and com plete.

Still, Vertigo is an intriguing, haun ting film (due la rg e ly to R obert B u rk s’ exquisite c in em a­tography) and its ending, a l­though som ew hat g im m icky, is — all a t once — frigh ten ing , w eird ly beau tifu l and th e k ind of sudden, opressively irra tio n a l th ing th a t could happen in the dan gerously a ttra c tiv e n ig h tm are Vertigo was m ean t to be.

Maurie Alioff,Features Editor.

Page 11: SIR GEORGE WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY Volume XXVIII ......The Georgian, October 14, 1964 Lesage on Confederation Ed. Note: The following is a statement on Confederation by TheHonorable JeanLesage

The Moveable A Moveable Feast

P a ris m ust leave a sca r, b u t sa lved and bandaged , it heals. Veined with a peace, the book flows th rough flights, friends, fa sts and feast and is a p a in less r e ­m em brance.

The working day fo r the tw enty-five y e a r old M r. H em ingw ay began in a six th floor room over-looking roofs and chim neys. T here , he w rote a ll d ay until he had som ething done, th en stopped when he knew w hat w as going to happen next. In th is w ay, he w as su re of going on the n ex t day.

Stopping when lie knew w hat w as going to happen next w as, p e rh ap s , his philosophy. H is fligh ts with Scott F itzgerald , friendsh ip w ith G e rtru d e Stein, a f te r­noons a t the race -tra ck , w ere c lipped , and h e p lum ­m eted back to the p lan e t w hen h e knew w h a t aw aited him.

This book, b ecau se of its repose m ay su rp rise th e read e r. The im ag e of w rite rs ’ w ebbed lives and sy m ­pathetic suffering , is absen t. F rie n d s , o th er w rite rs , w ere excused, an d allow ed to live independently .

B ut the h u n g ry young m an is h e re . The fa s ts of P a r is w ere im p o rtan t; th e “ e m p ty be lly ” c le a re d the cornea. He b egan to u n d e rs tan d C ezanne, an d soon th a t h unger w as a good d isc ip line to le a rn from , a s long a s o thers did not u n d erstan d . At le a s t th is is w hat he to ld h im self a s he took the long w ay hom e a t night to avoid the re s ta u ra n ts an d bake-shops.

The independent young m an is h e re . N ev er a deep friendship w ith anyone b ecau se he w as un iquely con­ten t in m arr iag e . The o th e r w rite rs su ffered m ore, d ran k a lot m ore, an d understood th em selves a b it less.

A m an concerned w ith m an is h e re . M occasins and a pine needle ca rp e t, o r an A lpine ru n w ere a liv e to him , and like an y o th er a r tis t , he w as f ru s tra te d by an in truder into one of th ese dom ains. B u t N a tu re , w hether in p a rk s , on the R iv ie ra , o r on a slope, w as m ore of a re le ase th an an in sp ira tion , b ecau se he w rote about people. I t w as not th e r iv e r he fe lt on his w alks, bu t the fish e rm en w hom h e ad m ired .

E rn es t H em ingw ay h as laced th is book togeth e r with a ca lm th rea d and , betw een ex p erien ces, added his own view s. One v e ry top ical com m ent is, “ I thought a ll genera tions w ere lo st by som ething, and alw ays had been, an d a lw ays would b e ” . H e u n d e r­stands, and speaks w ith re -a ssu ran ce , p e rh ap s de ­tach m en t about som ething h e n ev er com plete ly knew and had a lread y out-grown. This d e tach m en t and objective rem e m b ra n c e a re th e m ost d istu rb ing ingredients of the book.

To m atch this m ood he has used sim ple w ords and kep t a w andering pace th rough even ts th a t to o th er w rite rs would have d em an d ed leap s and craw ls.

B ut th is book is w orth tas tin g . H is descrip tions of books, spring , w rite rs , “ Bel E s p r i t” , tr ip s , and yes, wom en, a re a ll v e ry slightly tossed in the p a n n ie r of P a r is and seasoned. Seasoned w ith w ines by the L itre , cham pagne, cold d a rk b e e r and han d ground pepper, then left to m arin a te for a few y e a rs . It is th ere , but you m u st lift your fork and sam ple .

K ath leen T hom as

The KillersA U niversal re le ase of a D onald Siegal production,

d irec ted by S iegal, from a sc reen p lay by G ene L. Coon, based on a sto ry by E rn e s t H em ingw ay and w ith the following cas t : C harlie , L ee M arv in ; Sheila F a r r , Angie D ickenson; Johnny N orth , Jo h n C assevetes: Browning, R onald R eag an ; L ee, Clu G ulager.

The K illers is dead. I f H em ingw ay had seen it, he would have shot h im self.

Of course, i t ’s his own fault. His sto ry co n trad ic ts Gene Coon's screenplay .

H em ingw ay 's ten-page m as te rp iece spends eight of them in a re s ta u ra n t o rdering h a m and eggs, and telling the re a d e r th a t the two k ille rs a re going to kill a Swede. A nother pag e tells the Swede. T he las t page leaves the Swede calm ly aw aiting his fa te . And the guys in the re s ta u ra n t saying, isn ’t it awful.

The point of the sto ry is th a t i t is im possib le to fight one’s fa te — w h e th er it be “ the evils of civiliza­tion” , tonsilitis, o r a ce rta in film .

The p ic tu re h a s tu rn ed th is com pelling sto ry into a com epuking b a rra g e of sex (im m acu la te from its conception, I a ssu re you), sad ism , and sophistication. A product of th e “ get your k icks a t the flicks” school.

Although the story a ttem p ted no exp lanations, be­cause death and life a re stupid and inexplicable , M r. Coon has been so good as to enligh ten M r. H em ingw ay, and the killing revolves a round the k ille rs sea rch for a m illion bucks.

B ut enough of com paring the s to ry and th e film. The nam e The K ille rs w as a box-office pitch .

Now, w hat qualities did the m ovie itself have ?Well, fo r one, the plot d idn ’t hold to gether. Why,

fo r instance, did one of the hold-up m en ge t h im self gun-butted and throw n out of a speeding 70 m .p.h. e a r? So th a t he could tra p the gun-butting hero and steal the m oney? H ard ly p lausib le . I t would have been e as ie r (sa fer, too, I should th ink) to knock M r. H ero off in the car.

I hope it w as h te plot th a t confused Angie Dickenson. She played h e r p a r t very im pressive ly , bu t she seem ed to be undecided about h e r c h a ra c te r ’s m otivations. So w ere we. Did she love Johnny N orth? Only M r. Coon knows for su re . And he isn ’t talk ing . If she loved riches m ore th an Johnny , w hy did she double-cross him when he h ad a m illion bucks?

^ ^ e M arv in pu t in a m as te rfu l p e rfo rm an ce as the

Casa Loma Foot Stompin'

L ast w eek a t the C asa L om a w as, to say the least, d isappoin ting fo r the level of excellence m ain ta in ed so fa r, d ropped w ith th e a p p ea ran c e of M artia l Solal and The V illage S tom pers.

Solal a p p ea red w ith Teddy Kotick, fav o rite b assis t of the la te C harlie P a rk e r , and on d ru m s P au l M otian, ex -m em ber of th e Bill E v an s group. Som e concessions m u st be m ad e , how ever, b ecau se the group w as not and could not be in top fo rm b ecau se of fa tigue ( th ey ’d ju s t got in fro m P a r is ) and u n c erta in ty (they h a d n ’t p lay ed to g e th e r fo r som e t im e '. E v en in top form , I don’t th ink I would like Solal fo r although he m ay be tech n ica lly com peten t as a m usician , h is sty le of p lay ing sim ply does not ap p ea l to m e. It is c lu tte re d a n d cock tailish , rem in iscen t not a s m uch of O scar P e te rso n an d D ave B rubeck to whom he h as been co m pared , bu t m o re of R oger W illiam s o r a t b e s t E rro ll G arn er. H e is of the ‘R ipply-C hord School’ of m usic th a t p roduces a p e asan t yet som ehow m ean ing less an d unm oving sound, to m y e a rs a t least. One good th ing about h im how ever : One need not be overly a tten tiv e to his p lay ing because if you’ve h e a rd all his selections y ou 've h ea rd one.

This leav es room fo r a little quiet conversation .If I d idn ’t like M artia l Solal, I w as ap p alled by

the V illage S tom pers. A t lea s t I resp ec t Solal. The

Le Jazz Hot will open its 40th w eek of consecutive jazz, M onday O ctober 12, w ith the fam ous Gene K rupa who drew m ore fan s la s t Spring w ith his q u a rte t fea tu rin g C harlie V en tu ra, than any other m usic ian who has p layed a t M o n treal’s jazz M ecca during the y ear. K rupa and his group will s ta y a t Le Ja z z Hot for two w eeks, from O ctober 12 to 25.

V illage S tom pers all w ear little c re s ts upon th e ir b lazers w hich b e a r a likeness to the W ashington Square A rch in New Y ork’s G reenw ich V illage. The only connection they have w ith jazz Is a ra th e r tenuous one th rough the D ixie p a r t of w h a t they ca ll th e ir Folk-D ixie sty le. W hat I call i t is u n p rin tab le . On the p rin tab le side I w ill say th a t it is a conglom eration of corn and cliche m ad e com m erc ia lly pa la tab le . You can re a lly stom p your feet to th e ir m usic.

They c la im a t one tim e or an o th er to have w orked w ith Louis A rm strong w hich w as sufficient ra tional foF th em to p lay th is seaso n 's m ost obnoxious hit tune “ Hello D olly” . T hey also p layed " I f I H ad A H a m m e r” 1000 000 000 000) and in te rla rd ed their m usica l offerings w ith genially idiotic re m a rk s . I am aw are th a t th e re a r e those who will ac tually like the V illage S tom pers and th a t is a s it should be fo r I can ad m it th a t w ithin th e ir own lim ited little sp h ere they m ay be quite accep tab le , even good. They a re not, how ever, by any s tre tc h of the im agination jazz m usi­c ian s fo r th e ir “ m u sic” is com pletely lack ing in o ri­g inality and spontaneity . And all I say is, ‘‘W hat a re th ey doing in a jazz c lu b ?” I will not give the p e r­sonnel as I p re fe r to have th em rem a in a nam eless, hovering m em o ry th a t I will soon be ab le to forget.

N EX T W EEK AT TH E CASA LOMA: I t ’s Gene K rupa again b ecau se of his po p u lar success in M ay of th is y e a r. L ast tim e, people cam e from a hundred m iles aw ay to see h im as he is undoubtedly one of the key figu res in the evolution of jazz. A fter that little k iddies, sav e your pennies b ecause C harlie B yrd is com ing to town, som eone whom I consider rea lly w orth­while seeing. And then it ’s (hold your b rea th ) M iles!

Zoe Siliekas.

The young H em ingw ay, b y H enry S tra te r . F ro m ja c k e t of H em ingw ay’s “ A M oveable F e a s t ,” pub lished by SC R IB N ER ’S SONS, New Y ork.

soph istica ted k iller. H is looks, his a ir , h is sense of tim ing , and u n d erp lay m ak e h is c h a rac te riza tio n the m ost com plete and believab le in the e n tire film .

T he o th er k ille r did a g re a t M arlon B rando. P ity .The m usic, pho tography , an d dialogue w ere a d e ­

quate and ap p ro p ria te . N othing m ore. E x cep t the d ialogue, w hich w as a little con trived a t tim es. L ike: (D ickenson to oJhnny N orth) “ You’re m y E a s t, you’re m y South, you’re m y W est, you’re m y ” . . . y ah , you g uessed it . . . “ m y N o rth ” .

I don’t w ant to give th e w rong im pression though. The K iller is a g re a t trag ed y , in th e trad itio n of the O restean Trilogy and H am let. A fter all, everybody g e ts rubbed out in the end, don’t they? I t rem inds m e of B elsen and Auschw itz — it h a s th a t sm ell of finality . M ax L ayton,

BalladsThe nine volum e anthology of

The Childe B a llad s has been r e ­cently re issu ed on the W ashing­ton label. The contents of th e r e ­cords re m a in the sam e. The only change is a superfic ia l one. The reco rd jack e ts spo rt a new de­sign.

The series is m ade up of 87 b a llads of which only a few a re not taken from F ra n c is Ja m e s C hilde’s m onum ental w ork The E nglish and Scottish P o p u la r B allads w hich took Childe a p ­p ro x im a te ly th ir ty y e a rs to com ­pile (the five volum es of th ree h undred an d six b a llads and th e ir num erous va ria tio n s a re av aila- able in th e S.G.W.U. l ib ra ry ) . The sin g ers of the ba llad s a re E w an MacColl and A. L. L loyd; th e edi­to r — K enneth Goldstein. Gold­s te in ’s job should not be u n d e r­ra te d fo r he h as to m a tc h th e cuts, giving each b a llad a sense of a tta ch m en t to th e p rev ious one. G oldstein ach ieves this goal. E ach reco rd has a sense of unity . H ow ever it is u n fo rtunate th a t he w as unable to follow C hilde’s p ro ­cedure of catagoriz ing the b a l­lads.

The purpose of the a lbum s is to p re sen t C hilde’s B a llad s in the trad itiona l m an n er. To achieve th is feat, th e aid of E w an 1 M ac­Coll and A llen1 L loyd w ere en­listed. Both s ingers a re uncom ­prom ising folk p u ris ts . T heir in te res t in folk m usic lies in the inheren t quality of th e m ate ria l, its in n er m eaning , not in m aking harm on ic cong lom erations out of ballads. Fo lk m usic to th em , and to m e, is sim ple and even a p rim i­tive fo rm of h ighly ind iv idualis­tic expression. Folk m usic m ay not b e soph istica ted , fo r u t te r sim plic ity is its g ran d eu r. And in its own w ay it s tan d s beside th e fo rm al m as te rp ieces of m usic.

I t is w ithout a doubt th a t M ac­Coll and L loyd w ere feeling the above sen tim en ts w hen they set out to sing the Childe collection. T heir p e rfo rm an ce is to ta lly un>- affected . At f irs t it is h a rd to get u sed to th e ir “ non-sty le” w ay of singing. Y et if you a re pa tien t and p e rs is ten t and a re willing to listen , you will begin to love the b a llads for th e ir own sake.

M artin B ailey

HemingwayThe

Georgian,

October

14,/1964

Page 12: SIR GEORGE WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY Volume XXVIII ......The Georgian, October 14, 1964 Lesage on Confederation Ed. Note: The following is a statement on Confederation by TheHonorable JeanLesage

The

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Ocr

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~t two exhibitionsT here w ere two in trigu ing exhibitions in M ontreal

recen tly . F i r s t . . .“ G en ius!” “ V irtuoso!” “ An In sp ira tio n !” so ra n

the head lines on H aro ld Town. T his a r tis t h a s h ad a dozen group show s, and nine one m an show s, and fro m th ese h as reap ed n ineteen aw ard s . H e h as m a s ­te re d e ac h m ed ium he exploits. He h as unquestionab le pow er, v e rsa tility , sensitiv ity , and im p ac t. None of th is do I deny.

BUT, w hy a re we, the M ontreal public shown only b lack and w hite tira d es? T his isn ’t a tru e re p re se n t­a tion of h is w ork to da te . W hy is som ebody ex pected to fa ll m ad ly enough in love w ith N ude U ndressing and spend 390 odd d o lla rs to h an g h e r on a w all fo rever. I t is a w ork m inim ized to a few v ery b eau ­tifu l o rgan ic lines and one quite u n n ecessa ry tra c e of sp ilt ink r ig h t a cro ss h e r flank. This w as a dow nright sloppy study .

C onversely , in lin ea r w orks, his R esting Nude or M an F ir in g a Bow, for exam ple , we find th e s im ­p lic ity of m ovem ent, th e sensitive , tw itch ing contour, th e dan ce of s ta rk w hite background an d suggested undu lating m uscle , w hich I h ad thought only a P i ­casso could cap tu re .

T here is one ou tstand ing fea t Town ach ieves. He d iv ides his sheet v e rtic a lly into two seg m en ts, one becom es w orked to a point of exquisite b lack s, the o th er he abandons. T he shee t sings. Self P o r tra it ty p ifie s th is fo rm and a t th e sam e tim e d em o n s tra tes the inven tive n a tu re of Town : he kuifes his ch arco al in p laces to allow sp ark lin g w hite b ead s and th rea d th in lines to tw eak in and out over th e surface .

T h ere is a d y nam ic q u a lity in hos w ork, in tensified by v e ry little use of h a lf tone. The stren g th , th e p a s ­sionate involvem ent w ith his su b jec t, is obvious in a w ork such a s M m e Nhu. The hollow ness of h e r eyes is e e rily echoed by pit-like w hite b re as ts . H a ir drops down h e r shoulders and off the p ag e — a sav ag e c lim ax . Cold, v e rtica l fe a tu res of The C ollector would B a tte r, a s the a r tis t Intended, any corpse. T he F o o t­b a ll P la y e r rem inds one of an in sec t bash ing its p a th e tic , h e lm et encased head in to a screen .

T ow n’s w ork b e a rs the unm is tak ab le im p rin t of h is concern fo r hum anity .

Yesterday,Today And Tomorrow

D etail from pain ting by H arold Town.

The H irschorn F oundation Collectiin is a cross section of a r t w ork so exquisite ly se lec ted th a t one can sense the p ieces h av e been hung and left to com m ent on each o ther. Som e ta lk too loudly — for exam ple Childe H a ssam 's d e lib e ra te ly delightful p iece

of Im p ressio n ism (A m erican sty le) N ym ph a n d Sen. But, to be ob jective , th e a im of th e collection is to t ra c e th e m ain d irec tions and lines of ex p erim en t in 20th c en tu ry A m erican a r t , so th is p a in ting , an d fo r th e sam e p u rpose , a few E u ro p ean w orks, w ere in ­cluded to effectively define an d underline, th e n a tu re of A m erican trends.

I w on’t dw ell on the schools of w ork shown. W hat I can d iscuss is th e fa n ta s tic ra n g e of ap p ro ach to s im ila r com positional p ro b lem s, the d ifferences a p ­p a re n t in in te rp re ta tio n of su b jec t and colour, and above a ll the in te rp lay betw een th e can v asses on display .

L e t’s s ta r t w ith H opper’s E lev en A.M. Its d e lib e ra te vertica l-ho rizon tal p lann ing h as a pow erful, com plete ly cub istic su b -s tru c tu re . F e in in g e r tu rn s th is cub ism to a fo rm of ro m an tic expression ism in his M an h a ttan Subject. He u n d e rs ta te s the sam e so rt of com position. All is tra n s la te d in to a d e lica te v e rtica l-ho rizon tal line dance. V iera D a Silva solidifies F e in in g e r’s su b tle te n ­sions into a m as te rfu l in d u stria l land scap e .

Lee G a tch p u rsu es v e ry p e rsis ten tly h is own p a th of tran s la tin g land scap e (o r o th er sub jects) into la rg e cu rved free-m oving sh ap es w hich p u lsa te over his canv asses. The C orridor in co rp o ra tes a lovely touch of his c h a ra c te r — a sense of hum our.

T he p e rso n alitie s of B en Shann and Ja c k Levine p e r ­m ea te th e ir w ork quite d ifferen tly , how ever. H ere reac tio n s to th e w rongs of a g enera tion a re b itte rly ex pressed , som etim es sa tirica lly . In L ev ine’s T he Syndicate th e re is a nervous s ta cc a to of b ru sh strokes. T h ere is, in th is w ork, a n an tith es is of fan ta stic deta il com bined w ith a com plete freedom of overall t r e a t ­m ent. B en Shann m ak e s m onum en tal s ta tem en ts through th e v e ry poignancy and sim plic ity of his exp ressed em otion , . . B ro th ers .

We m ove from th is E x p ressio n is t re a lm to the w orks of Appel and those of R iopelle. H e re the can v as is no longer ju s t the ex p ress iv e m ean s, bu t is a s well th e expressed th ing in its en tire ty . M ad explosions of colour seduce one’s eyes . . . bu t th en M ac iv e r’s Coal and Wood, w ith its m ag ical, rich ly a tm o sp h eric lack of colour h as th is sam e tan ta liz in g effect.

I sn ’t th is th e root of a c r itic ’s p rob lem s ? T h ere a re no ru les in a r t. All these a r tis ts sp lash th e fac t into one’s face , ra th e r than onto th e can v as, a s one m ight like to think.

M arg are t H ockm an.

v..' ►- .. .. .

n a tu re and the hum our is contained in the action r a th e r th an the dialogue.

The th ird bit is en titled M ara of R om e and is the m ost sensitive of the th ree . Sophia L oren p lays the p a r t of a p ro stitu te who lives in the a p a r tm e n t a d jacen t to a young theological student and his g ran d m o th er. The studen t fa lls in love w ith M ara and th rea te n s to give up a ll thought of the priesthood. The prostitu te trie s to help his g ran d m o th er convince him he is m aking a m istake.

M arcello M astro iann i provides m ost of the com edy, in the segm ent, p lay ing the p a r t of one of the p ro s titu te ’s lovers. He is continually fru s tra te d in h is e ffo rts to get h e r into bed, b ecause she is occupied with th e p rob lem posed by the theological studen t.

O verall, the film is funny and en te rta in in g . It is sim ply a m a tte r of w aiting th rough th e dull p a r ts fo r the fun to s ta r t. The dialogue a t tim es is b rillian t and it is too bad th a t one has to get it th rough sub-titles.

John Harrison.

Film Society

Sophia Loren

Y esterday , Today and Tom orrow is a collection of th ree short com edies v a ry in g in leng th , content and quality . E a c h film s ta rs Sophia L oren and M arcello M astro iann i and all a re d irec ted by Vittorio de Sica.

The f irs t sto ry is the m ost delightful of the th ree . It d eals with the lives of a self-em ployed w ife and h e r unem ployed husband in N aples. A dalina is an ag g ress iv e m erch an t of illeg a l b lack m ark e t c ig a re tte s . She is fined fo r h e r activ ities , bu t since she canno t pay , is th rea te n e d w ith a r re s t . H ow ever, the law s ta te s th a t no w om an can be a r re s te d w hile she is p reg n an t and fo r six m onths a f te r the b ir th of the child. Since A dalina is p reg n an t a t the tim e, she is safe . B ut she m u st keep ge tting p re g n an t to save h e rse lf fro m a ja il te rm . A dalina ca lcu la te s the n u m b er of m onths she h as before th e inev itab le a r re s t an d tells h e r husband , “ C arm ine, around C h ristm as you’de b e tte r ge t b u sy ” .

C arm ine fulfills his obligation a s best he can , but by the tim e the couple h as th e ir six th child , he is on the verge of nervous collapse. And so h is w ife pack s h e r th ings and goes to jail.

The p e rfo rm an ces by th e two p rincip les a re exce llen t, e sp e­cially Sophia L oren as A dalina. H e ro le w as rem in iscen t of the one she p layed in The M istress. The m ost d istu rb in g asp ec t of th e film w as the c am e ra w ork. I counted two p laces w here people w ere w alking along a s tre e t with the f ram e cu t off ju s t above th e ankles. The d irec tion w as sloppy an d th e sc rip t could have been b e tte r ed ited in a n u m b er of p laces.

T he second seg m en t of the m ovie, en titled Anna of M ilan, seem ed com plete ly out of p lace in the film . I t is not re a lly a sto ry ; it is a v ignette. A rich , m a rr ie d w om an, m ee ts h e r lover on a s tre e t. T hey go fo r a d riv e tog e th e r, hav e an acc id en t and Anna proves how fickle slie re a lly is. H ie hum our in th is segm en t is due to the d irec to r r a th e r than the sto ry . The sto ry is of a serious

This Sunday night, the Film Society will present Sir Carol Reed’s The Key. The film stars Sophia Loren, William Holden and Trevor Howard. A psycho-sexual study of a strange kind of common-law marriage, The Key is one of Reed’s more interesting films. He is the maker of The Third Man, The Heart of The Matter and most recently The Running Man. As usual, short films will accompany the feature. (See page 10 for review of last Sunday night’s film).

McGill LettersThe a im of the M cGill L e tte rs Club is to encourage the ex ­

change of id eas am ong studen ts in te res ted in lite ra tu re . E v ery a lte rn a te w eek m eetings will b e held a t w hich a sp e a k er e ith e r from on o r off cam p u s will ad d ress the studen ts. This will consum e p a r t of the evening w hile th e re s t of the evening will be spen t in d iscussion by the students.

This y e a r , the Club has a secondary a im — to b ring the world of lite ra tu re as it is p resen ted in the th ea tre and c inem a closer to the studen t in the acad em ic world. The Club will p re sen t a se ries of m ovies th a t a r e of specia l in te res t to studen ts of l ite ra tu re . F o r th is te rm em p h asis will be p laced on m ovie p resen ta tio n s of the S h ak esp earean plays.

The Club is s ta rtin g a se rie s of in fo rm al studen t discussions w here stu d en ts m ay m ee t to ex p ress th e ir id eas and th eo ries on lite ra tu re . P o e try read in g s will p ro b ab ly be organized a s well as sev e ra l th ea tre outings to E nglish productions in th e M ontreal a rea .

As h as been done in the past, the Club will hold a se rie s of m eetings w ith guest sp eak ers . T hese will n u m b er abou t fo u r p e r te rm . The f irs t sp eak er, on O ctober 20, 1964, will be poet and teach e r, Irv in g L ayton.

Any fu rth e r in form ation m ay be ob tained from C harles K ahn. RS. 8-9923, P re s id e n t; D e ird re O’Donnell, 844-0721, V ice-P residen t: Vivian A stroff, R I. 8-8316, S e c re ta ry -T reasu re r.

Note: S ir G eorge S tudents a re w elcom e to join.

Nothing But The BestN othing But The Best is a

sy m p ath e tic p o rtra it of a b a s ­

ta rd . I t is a subtle tongue in

cheek version of the “ How-To-

Succeed - By - R eally - T ry ing”

them e. Som e have seen it as a

pa rody on Room At The Top. Be

th a t a s it m ay. the ‘p a ro d y ’, if it

is one, has been given a sugar-

coating of the A m erican e x tra v a ­

gan za v a rie ty : i.e. the R oss H un­

te r syndrom e of beautiful people,

expensive clothes, gorgeous se ts

plus so-so sto ry . H ow ever in this

case th ere is none of the sn ig ­

gering in v ariab ly found in the

A m erican type production. T here

is instead , the u n d e rsta ted hum or

typ ical of the B ritish.

Alan B a tes p lays the cad and does reaso n ab ly well. A part from his acting , he possesses the w orld 's sex iest eyebrow s which would com pensa te ju st in case he cou ldn 't act, which he can.

This would be ju st a n o th e r p leasan tly fo rg e ttab le p ic tu re if it w asn ’t fo r one thing. U sually , when som eone kills som eone else in a p ic tu re the re s t of the film is ju s t one long wait until lie is pun ished and brough t to tria l, so when O ur H ero k ills an obnoxious friend who is fouling up his p lans it is only n a tu ra l to a ssu m e th a t th is is The E n d for him . As we all know c rim e doesn’t pay and he will be punished. I sn ’t th a t a d ra g ? Well som eth ing hapens and for once th e question of d is ­covered gu ilt is left up in the a ir . Does he o r doesn’t he? Only his D irec to r knows for su re and if he h a d n 't seen h im do it even he w ouldn 't have believed it.

Zoe S iiiil

Page 13: SIR GEORGE WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY Volume XXVIII ......The Georgian, October 14, 1964 Lesage on Confederation Ed. Note: The following is a statement on Confederation by TheHonorable JeanLesage

Humor

Amazing new theory

Shlump Is AnswerDr. C. M. Coricidin, in an attempt to isolate the

neuro-vegetative process, has devised the Shlump Test to measure student’s receptivity during lectures. In this test, the doctor lifts the student bodily, and places him upright in his seat; then, examining his stop-watch, he counts just how long it takes for the student to slump six inches in his seat.

A d ro n in g fa n w ill cause a sh lu m p of f o u r in ch e s in tw o m in u te s , o r in sym bolic n o ta ­t io n 4 /2 = 2 S H L U M P. J u s t th e o th e r day, o n e s tu d e n t in an o v e rh ea te d c lassro o m w as o b se r­ved w ith a ra sh w h ich e x te n d e d dow n h is face , n eck a n d ch es t, o n to h is no teb o o k . H e h ad a SH L U M P of 3.

A n o th e r u n fo r tu n a te fre sh - e t t e w as c a r r ie d o u t o f a c lass f la p p in g h e r lo w e r lip , and sc ream in g : “P ile d riv e r, p iled riv er, pile d r iv e r !” in in te rm it­ten t p ierc ing shrieks. She had a S H L U M P of 16, an d w as com ­m itted to a t ru c k -fa rm w h ere s h e m u st g a th e r ice b u rg le ttu c e

betw een seven and e igh t o’clock e ach m o rn in g — i t ’s th e on ly k n o w n cu re .

D r. C o ric id in h as b e en m o st p e rce p tiv e in cases of “C om ­m on R oom In te ro v e rs io n , w h e re S H L U M PS o f 250 o r m o re hav e b een re co rd e d . S tu d e n ts sh lu m p s in th e i r se a ts u n til th e y fa ce th e ceilin g , w h e re th e acco u stica l t i le a p p e a rs to h a v e som e h y p ­n o tic e ffe c t. T h ey w ill sp e n d h o u rs co u n tin g th e t in y h o les , u n t il th ey a re d e ep in a m e ta ­p h y s ic s t ra n c e — fro m w hich e n d le ss so lu tio n s to w o rld p ro ­b lem s a re sn a tch e d . F o r tu n a te ­ly th e se id ea s a re im m e d ia te ly a n d e n th u s ia s tic a lly exch an g ed , a n d e v en w r i t te n dow n. F is t f ig h ts , d e fe n d in g c h e rish e d id ea s , often occur.

WANTED: dead or alive.O n e sh lu m p of 16 accu sed

a n o th e r ’s m o th e r o f in fid e lity , h is f a th e r o f s te r il i ty , an d h is re lig io n of s tu p id ity — e v en go ing so f a r as to accuse th e p o o r fe llo w h im se lf of b e in g a ra t- f in k — in frcm t o f th e e n tire one o’c lo ck p o p u la tio n o f th e C om m on R oom ! T h e v ic tim ra is ­ed h im se lf on one elbow (S H L U M P — 13.5), b u t b e in g in a p h y sica lly w e ak e n e d s ta te a f te r a h eav y n ig h t o f te lev is io n , sa n k in to h is se a t a n d e x p ired .

D r. C o rid ic in a ss ig n e d h im th e f i r s t n e g a tiv e S H L U M P in th e h is to ry o f sc ien ce . S in ce th a t in c id e n t, t h e s tu d e n t, E n o ch B o u rb o n , h a s b eco m e a sym bol o f u n iv e rs ity sp ir i t.

S u re ly w e w ill see th e re so ­lu tio n o f ra c ia l in to le ra n c e , r e ­lig io u s b ig o try , a n d th e com m on cold th ro u g h a p a th y . Yes, th ro u g h a p a th y (S H L U M P O ), sc ien ce h a s f in a l ly d isco v ered th e w ay to in n e r peace.

— E l L ib e r ta d o r

Feature extraordinaire

Halls of Sir GeorgeF o r the in fo rm ation of new G eorgians, the following descrip tion

of the m ost im p o rtan t lec tu re ha lls on the cam p u s is offered.

B irk s H a ll is o u r la rg e s t m e e t­in g p lace . F o rm e r ly k n ow n as B u rp ’s H a ll, in h o n o r o f th e food a t th e YM CA c a fe te r ia , i ts n am e h a s b e en ch an g ed in th e in te r ­e s ts o f eu p h em y .

R e ad in g th e G a z e tte is b e s t d o n e a t th e b a ck of th e H all, w h ere you a re lo s t to th e in-

Real Good Words You Can Use

U sing long o r obscure w ords is th e e as ie s t way to im p ress people. This te s t w ill show you how little you rea lly know abou t w ords in th e f irs t p lace.

In the second p lace, if you w ant to be known a s an in te llectual, b u t c an ’t afford a b e re t, i t will p ay you to know these peachy words.1. BUTT ib u tt) — A: d e rrie re . B: except. C: nevertheless. D: the

cap ita l of M ontana.2. ACRIMONY ta k ’ r i m o knee) — A: spaghetti w ith a hole in it.

B : the high cost of living alone. C: the re la tionsh ip ex isting betw een m a rr ie d persons. D: re n t pa id fo r use of land.

3. ASCEND (ass end’) — A: m ount. B: soa r. C: sore. D: but.4. THE (the) — A: defin ite a rtic le . B : indefin ite a rtic le . C: a r tic ­

u la te defam y. D : w a rm tea in g lasses.5. BACCHUS (b ah k ’ us) — A: a wooden con ta iner. B : G reek god

of wine. C: independent god of wine. D: in severse order.

6.

2.

R E D treh d ) — A: p rofessor. B: S tudents. C: G overnm ent em ­ployee. D: a colour.

ANSWERSI. BUT — A: the cap ita l of M ontana is H elena.

ACRIMONY — B : from the Anglo-Saxon a ec e r, “ a c re ” , and th e old F ren ch , m oneie , “ m oney” . Thus, a c re s of m oney, o r the sum pay ed to one’s d e p artin g spouse.

ASCEND — A: to m ount, from the L atin a scen d a re . The p ra c ­tice of a scending w as so called b ecause th e R om ans m ounted th e ir a sse s from th a t end, a trick they lea rn ed in A ttica.

THE — D : derived fro m an an c ien t W elsh onom atopoeia. The sound p roduced in rem oving a loose speck of tea lea f- fro m the tongue.

BACCHUS: D : R ev ersed , o r h indside fo rw ard . Often seen in the fo rm “ b acch u sw ard s” .

R E D — D : I t w ill su rp rise m an y people to lea rn th a t red is, in an a rch a ic sense , a n innocent so rt of color, som ew here betw een o range and purp le.

S. G.

s t ru c to r ’s v iew ; ta lk e rs fav o r th e m id d le w h e re th e y a r e lo s t in an o n y m ity ; n o te - ta k e rs p r e ­f e r th e f ro n t w h e re th ey are lo s t in b o redom .

The b est p lace to sleep is in th e m id d le , a s th e w a rm a ir f ro m th e v e n ts o f th e back , a n d th e h o t a ir fro m th e le c tu re r , co llid e so a s to p ro v id e a n o m ­in a l p re c ip ita tio n . A s a n a id to th o se w ho can f in d no o th e r e n te r ta in m e n t, a c lock is lo ca ted in fu l l v iew of a ll s tu d e n ts w ho a re aw ake. O n th e o th e r han d , i t i s w ell h id d e n fro m th e lec ­t u r e r w ho can th e re fo re b e d i­v e rted by skilful questions until the cacophony of the bell sounds the changing of th e b a rd s.

A n o th e r in te re s t in g m ee tin g p lace is C o lley H a ll, w h ich on w eek en d s is u se d fo r re lig io u s p u rp o se s . P e rh a p s th is acco u n ts fo r th e e v an g e lis tic fu rv o r of th o se w ho le c tu re th e re d u rin g th e w eek.

T h e c h a irs a re v ery h a rd in ­d eed , th e re fo re a ll sh o u ld b r in g so m e th in g to s i t on. A cu sh io n o r a fe m a le G e o rg ian a re b o th c o n v en ien t, as th e y a r e b o th easy to lay you h a n d s on.

S ittin g on so m eo n e’s lap is e sp ec ia lly e ffe c tiv e , as i t causes th e le c tu re r to b e liev e th a t h e is so p o p u la r th a t th e r e a r e n o t en o u g h se a ts fo r h is e a g e r s tu ­d e n ts . T h e c lock in C o lley H all is u n fo r tu n a te ly a t th e b ack of th e ro o m , th e re fo re , one in g en io u s re m e d y is to fa ce th e back d u r in g th e e n tire le c tu re . In th is fa sh io n , th e in s t ru c to r h a s g re a t d i f f i c u l t y in de te rm in in g w h e th e r you a re a sleep o r ju s t ig n o rin g h im .

T h e doors, as w ell, a re n o t to o w ell a r ra n g e d fo r th o se w ho w ish to lea v e d u r in g lec tu re s . An o b se rv an t in s t ru c to r h a s an a d v a n ta g e o v e r th e sw if te s t an d m o st e x p e rie n c e d s tu d e n t. C ol­ley H a ll does hav e i t d raw b ack s.

A n o th e r c lassro o m w ith a r e ­lig io u s ' f la v o r is E cu m en ica l

The Gypsy CurseD uring the e a rly y e a rs of the 17th C entury , when in justice and

the p rincip le of the p riv ileged few w ere ra m p a n t, a gypsy cam p m oved into the e s ta te of th e B aron Von D entenw orth , in E as te rn B av aria .

In fo rm ed of the p resence of the gypsies, th e B aron and his ten sons decided to d rive th e th ieving m ig ran ts fro m th e ir land.

M ounting h is h o rse , and assem bling his p ack of hunting hounds, the B aron and his sm a ll a rm y m arch ed in to th e m id s t of th e igypsies, burn ing the ten ts and w agons a s th ey rode, and s trik in g down the fleeing people w ith th e ir sabers .

In the m id st of th is c a rn ag e , the old G ypsy le a d e r’s w ife rose ,., and p ro c la im ed in a laud , sh rill voice:

“ A cu rse on ye , B aron Von D entenw orth! A cu rse on ye, an d y e r kin an d kind! A cu rse on a ll th a t is yours, and a ll th a t w ill be your sons, an d th e ir sons to an hun d red g en era tions. The foulest cu rse of the dev il upon ye fo r your m u rd ero u s in iq u ity !”

So say ing , the old G ypsy fled in to the forest.Y ears p assed , and the old B aron died, leav ing his fo rtune (now

treb led in size) to his e ld est son.T he son sh a red h is fa th e r ’s e s ta te equally w ith his b ro th ers , all

of w hom lived to rip e old ages. T heir lands an d fo rtunes p rospered , and to each of th em w as born two sons and th re e d au g h te rs . E ac h of the sons then inherited a p a r t of th e ir g ra n d fa th e r’s p ro p erty , w hich h ad now grow n to cover an en tire county.

E ac h in tu rn p rosp ered , and passed on th e ir lands and im m ense fo rtunes to th e ir sons.

The gypsy w as sore a s hell.— S. G.

Entertainment Guide For Frosh

H aving p e rfec ted your im age as a sophisticated college m an by a tten d in g a lec tu re o r two a t S ir G eorge, you m ay w ish to tak e out one of the m an y g lam orous coeds d ecora ting th e ha lls of our a lm a m a te r. H ow ever, should you be unab le to g e t a d a te , do no t d e sp a ir — the u n iv ers ity h a s an tic ip a ted y o u r p ro b lem ; s itu a ted im m edia te ly a d ja ce n t to S ir G eorge is the Polly A dler College of th e S ec re ta ria l Sciences.

E n te rin g a t th e door m ark ed b y th e tr ia n g u la r re d neon sign, you will a t once p e rce iv e a dim ly- lit, bu t w ell-stocked b a r around which n ub ile dam sels d iaphan- ously c lad a re languorously ta k ­ing shorthand . F o r a p u re ly nom ­inal fee th e D ean of W omen will in tro d u ce you to y o u r chosen com panion of the evening.

H aving p ro cu red a da te , your n ex t p rob lem is to e n te rta in her. B eing a su av e m an-about-tow n, you will w ish to tak e h e r to som e in tim a te b a r fo r cocktails. T here a re m an y such in th e ne ighbour­hood of th e U n iv ersity ; n am es w hich sp rin g im m ed ia te ly to m ind a re S lim ey H ym ie’s, th e Spoon of G reece an d la T our d e m erd e , to n a m e bu t a few. H ow ever, for th e m an of d isc rim in atin g ta s te , th e re is only one possib le p lace, th e b is tro w hich h as th a t c e rta in co n tinen ta l je ne sa is quoi; we a re of course, re fe rrin g to th e Y Caff. H aving s ta r te d y o u r even­ing th e re successfu lly , you will w ish to ta k e in en te rta in m en t of an equally h igh calib re .

To th is end w e strong ly reco m ­m end th e “ son-et-lum iere” spec­tac le p re sen tly p lay ing to s tan d ­ing room only aud iences in the B urnside S tree t subw ay ex cav a­tion. T here , to the p u lsa tin g L atin rh y th m s of ja c k h am m er and pn eum atic drill, p u n c tu a ted by th e p ic tu resq u e n a tive c rie s of trap p ed w orkm en a s b lasting ch arg es a re p re m a tu re ly deton­ated , an d th e equally p ic tu resque cries of S ir G eorge facu lty m em ­b e rs a ttem p tin g to lec tu re in' the Annex, you m a y w hisper sw eet nothings in your fa ir com pan­ion’s e a r p re p a ra to ry to th e F in a l Conquest. This is best acco m ­plished on the floor of the M anley

C av ern e w here it will, in all p ro b ab ility , p a ss unnoticed am id th e g en era l m errim en t. The M an­ley , a n a u th en tic rep lica of an old E n g lish tav e rn , is eas ily lo­ca ted by its p ic tu resq u e hanging sign, “ At Y e Sygne of Y e B ar- feynge S tew edente,” and m ine

hoste , h im self a SGWU alum nus (B. Com. ’99, LLD. ’01), is a l­w ays re a d y to ex ten d a n open han d to a ll G eorgians.

H aving b rough t y o u r evening to a c lim ax th e re , you will w ish to fin ish off w ith a quiet b re ak ­fast. A gain w e a re fo rtu n a te in hav ing in th e v ic in ity of Sir G eorge an a ll-n ight e stab lish m en t ca te rin g e sp ecia lly to fun-loving studen ts , and th e q u a lity of th e coffee se rv ed a t P o lice Station N u m b er 10 is acc la im ed even by th e b lase am ong us.

Thus a n o th e r even ing sp en t in th e p u rsu it of those co cu rricu la r ac tiv ities w ithou t w hich no uni­v e rs ity education can be con­sid e red com plete is brought to a successful conclusion. N eed we say m ore?

A.S.

H all. In th is p a r tic u la r case th e w o rd “ H a ll” is to b e ta k e n l i t ­e ra lly , in fa c t i t is a c tu a lly a co r­r id o r b e tw een a ru g s to re an d th e N ew m an C e n tre . (H ow m an y h e re a re C h ris tia n s? H ow m an y a re n o n -C h ris tia n s? H ow m an y a re n e ith e r? ) O n e o f its p o si­t iv e fe a tu re s , as h a s a lre ad y b e en m e n tio n e d in th e G eo rg ­ian , is th e m a g n if ic e n t v iew of th e p o p u la r loca l ra d io s ta tio n .

S leep , w e h av e n o ted , is e as ily e n g in e e re d in E cu m en ic a l H all. A s th e in s tru c to r ta k e s h is p o st a t one en d o f th e H all, th e s tu ­den t tak e s his a t th e o ther. EH h a s a n odd sh ap e you see. I t is 10 y a rd s fro m th e le c tu re r to

th e b ack w all b u t 250 yds from one sid e to th e o th e r. T hus, the le c tu re r w ill n o t b e ab le to h e a r y o u r sn o rin g fro m th e o th e r sid e of th e H all. In fac t, h e w on’t b e a b le to see you a t a ll, u n less h e h a s b in o cu la rs . F o r th is re a ­son, EC is v e ry p o p u la r; an d th e re a re , b e tw e e n lec tu re s , p it­ch ed b a tt le s b e tw ee n th o se al re a d y in th e H all and th o se w ho w ish to e n te r i t fo r th e fo llow ­in g lec tu re .

S o m e s tu d e n ts , as a re su l t of th e s e sk irm ish es , have been th ro w n fro m th e w indow s in to th e M e tro excavation .

T h is is a r a th e r m a jo r incon­v en ien ce io r a ll co n ce rn ed .

Page 14: SIR GEORGE WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY Volume XXVIII ......The Georgian, October 14, 1964 Lesage on Confederation Ed. Note: The following is a statement on Confederation by TheHonorable JeanLesage

The

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64 S P O R T S * - **

Georgians Crush Bishop's 5— 1The Georgians continued their winning streak last'

Saturday by overwhelming a flatfooted Bishop’s eleven 5-1 under slippery conditions at Lennoxville.

The c h a ra c te r of th e g am e w as, faction a t h is te a m ’s pe rfo rm an ced esp ite th e s lippery p lay ing su r­face , and s ta te d th a t h e thought th e squad w as w ork ing in to sh ap e beau tifu lly . A big tu rn o u t is ex ­pected fo r th e n ex t en coun ter w hich will be ag a in s t th e R edm en 011 W ednesday, O ctober 21.

S.G.W .U. R o ste r: M. B rem n er, E . C hapm an, P . K om los, H. P il­g rim , P . L icorish , C. Lynch, A. Todd, (C ap ta in ), P . Tow nsend, B. D yer, G. Dillon, A. Brown.

how ever, ap tly re flec ted by Coach S tach row sk i’s re m a rk s . W hen questioned , he com m ented th a t th e shooting w as “h o rrib le” , bu t s ta te d th a t the defensive w ork of C am pbell, C hapm an, and B re m ­n e r w as superb . H e also had high p ra ise fo r left-half, H. P ilg rim and “ Sporting S am ” Lynch, the S ir G eorge ou tside-righ t, who sco red th ree of th e te a m ’s goals.

T he G eorgian fo rw ard s, n ev er­th eless, show ed p ro m ise a s they s lam m ed 41 shots goalw ards, a l­though B ishop’s g o a le r D avidson h a d to deal w ith only 16 of them .

T his h eav y b a rra g e of th e op­position n e ts w as la rg e ly th e r e ­su lt of th e G eorg ian fo rw ards fan cy footwork. T im e and ag a in th e B ishop’s defence w as left b e ­w ildered and m oving in th e w rong d irec tion by th e b eau tifu l body sw erves and c lev er footw ork of th e a ttack . D esp ite th is co n stan t p en etra tio n of th e opposition d e ­fence, poor fin ishing robbed th e te a m of a w ider m arg in of v ic­to ry . This seem ed to b e la rg e ly th e re su lt of e a r ly season stiff­n ess and th e shooting should im ­prove by th e tim e the G eorgians m ee t la s t y e a r ’s cham pions, the M cGill R edm en.

T he scoring w as opened in the tw en ty -first m inu te when a bu lle t fro m A rnie Tood bounced off th e g o a le r’s chest an d th e n im ble Lynch, following up closely, con­v e rte d it in to a goal.

F o u rte en m inu tes la te r , the ev er-p resen t “ Sporting S am ” booted in a b e au ty fro m a goal­m outh scrim m ag e.

L ess th an two m inutes of the second h a lf h a d p assed w hen cen tre-fo rw ard B aron D y er n e t­ted an o th er goal to pu t h is te a m ah ead 3-0 in a heavy, drizzle.

T odd’s r ig h t side co rn er in the seven ty -fou rth m inu te w as h eaded in by “ th e S am ” to ru n th e count u p to 4-0. T he single B ishop’s sco re cam e a m inute la te r w hen M. D um a tap p ed in th e ba ll as i t slipped out of G oaler D illon’s han d s. B ut th e ir joy w as sh o rt­lived a s th e o v eren thusias tic B ishop’s d e fencem an P ilg rim d ro v e the ba ll into his own net in th e seven ty-eigh th m inute.

R e feree D ew ar’s final w histle w as p robab ly w elcom ed w ith a sigh of re lie f by th e hap less B ishop’s crew as it b rough t to a n end a con test w hich had quickly developed in to a g am e of “ back s a n d fo rw a rd s” p lay ed la rg e ly in th e B ishop’s h a lf of th e field.

T he g am e w as p layed a t a fa s t p a c e th roughout bu t w as m a rre d by som e overly robust p lay r e ­su ltin g in six teen fouls being called , of w hich only six w ere ag a in s t th e G eorgians.

Sk ipper Todd expressed satis-

T ennisThe Varsity Tennis Team

playing in the OSLAA East- pulled a surprising upset in the last doubles match against Sherbrooke Univer­sity to come from behind and tie Loyola with 5 out of a possible 9 points.

B ecau se of L o y o la 's e a r l ie r v ic to ry in 2 ou t o f 3 m a tc h es a g a in s t S i r G e o rg e th ey , a long w ith S h e rb ro o k e , w ill r e p re s e n t th e E a s t in th e O SLA A fin a l. N e v e rth e le ss , S i r G e o rg e ’s d o u b les p a r tn e rs , T re v o r K e r r a n d D av e S a x te r , w e re th e ta lk of th e to u rn a m e n t w h en th e y o v e rcam e th e h e av ily fa v o re d S h e rb ro o k e te a m a n d d fe a te d th e m (2-6) (6-2) (6-4). T h is w as th e f i r s t t im e S h e rb ro o k e h as b e en d e fe a te d in O SLA A te n n is c o m p e titio n .

T re v o r K e r r , c a p ta in and te a m le a d e r , w as v ic to rio u s o v e r L oyola a n d CM R in “A ” s in g les to w in 2 p o in ts fo r S i r G eorge. Soccer s ta r , A rnie Todd, d e ­fea ted CMR in “ B ” singles. A d o u b les v ic to ry a g a in s t C M R by D ave B a x te r a n d N o rm B ro w n co m p le ted th e G e o rg ian sc o r­ing .

ResearchersWanted

1) A pplications a re av ailab le today (d a te of issu e ).

2) A pplicants should hav e high a cad em ic s tan d ard s .

3) Will be screen ed by P e rso n ­nel Selection B oard .

4) Upon adoption of an ad e t q u a te se t of by-law s m em ­b e rs will a ssu m e full s ta tu s of th e B oard .

5) All app lications to b e in by F rid a y , O ctober 16, 1964, in a sea led envelope ad dressed to:

E . R. Soroczan, E xecutive Assistant

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BasketballProfiles

D uring the following few w eeks, p rio r to the s ta r t of th e b a sk e t­ball schedule, th e sp o rts pag es of the G eorg ian will run individual p rofiles of p lay e rs expected to help th e G eorgians c ap tu re th e ir s e c o n d successive conference title.

Bob H ab ert is 6 feet 4 inches ta ll and is tw en ty one y e a rs of age. This being B ob’s fourth y e a r w ith th e G eorgians m ak es h im th e re a l v e te ran of th e squad.

B ob H abert

He h as th ree g re a t y e a rs of col­lege ball behind him . In h is f irs t y e a r he won th e M ost V aluable P la y e r a jv a rd fo r his effo rts and ag a in la s t y e a r d isp layed g re a t fo rm on th e court. W hile in th e N ational C ham pionships he m ain ­ta in ed his seaso n ’c a v e ra g e of fo u rteen points p e r g am e ag ain st th e co u n try ’s top cag ers .

In 1961 Bob h a d g re a t success a s th e s ta r c e n te r fo r th e U ni­v e rs ity S e ttlem en t O rchids, the C anad ian Ju n io r C ham pions, and w as se lec ted to th e te a m re p re ­

sen ting C anada a t the M accabee G am es in Is ra e l. This he accom ­plished as a seven teen y e a r old ju s t out of h igh school.

W e’re looking fo rw ard to w a tch ­ing Bob lead th e G eorg ians r ig h t into the N ational P laydow ns a g a in this y e a r. Since Bob g ra d ­u a te s th is sp ring he will be look­ing fo rw ard to h is b est season yet.

Gordon Collyer s tan d s 6 feet 2 inches and is tw enty tw o y e a rs old. He is a re tu rn in g v e te ran of th e V arsity F iv e and w as a re a l f ig h te r fo r th e te a m in i ts bid to cap tu re the N ational Title.

G ord cam e to S ir G eorge from R osem ount H igh, and gained his ex p erien ce in b ask e tb a ll w ith the R osem ount R ebels, a sen io r ‘B ’ team .

A fter a season w ith the J a y Vee squad h e re he c rack ed th e V arsity lineup la s t y e a r , and m ad e v a lu ­a b le con tributions to th e te a m ’s effo rts in conference action and a t th e P layoffs in W indsor.

W ith th is experience behind him , G ord is looking fo rw ard to h is best y e a r an d judg ing from p a s t p e rfo rm an ces, he can be counted on fo r a lo t of good b a s­k e tb a ll in th e com ing season.

G ord C ollyer

Water Polo, Swim Teams Hold First Meeting

B y DOUG ROBB

The two w ettest tea m s in Sir G eorge had th e ir f irs t m eetings this week. F o rtu n a te ly fo r both team s th e re w as a good tu rn o u t of fresh m en a s a n u m b er of key p lay e rs fro m la s t y e a r ’s team s h av e been lo st th rough g ra d u a ­tion o r o th e r m eans.

The sw im te a m w hich won th e O ttaw a-S t. L aw rence cham pion­ship fo r th e second y e a r in a row , la s t M arch , has back its th re e double w inners, M a r v C hase, B e rt V andenberg and F ra n k M cG illivray. W ith th ese th re e an d a little h a rd tra in in g by th e o th er m em b ers of th e te a m we a re looking fo r a f irs t p lace finish in a ll e leven even ts in nex t sp rin g ’s cham pionship . We hav e a n o th e r d iv er th is y e a r who, w e hope, will g ive us a few m o re poin ts in support of W ayne L ang. The te a m will s ta r t p ra c tic e s and

exhibition m eets in early D ecem ­ber, d irec tly a f te r the end of the W ater Polo season.

The W ater Polo te a m has a new coach th is y e a r , M ike C am p­bell, a g ra d u a te fro m fo u r y e a rs of polo a t S ir G eorge and th e J a m a ic a n P a n A m erican team . This y e a r ’s te a m will have a n u m b er of new p lay e rs ju s t up from th e high school ra n k s who' should stren g th en us in a n u m b er of positions w here we w ere w eak la s t y e a r. T he te a m will be p lay ­ing in tw o leag u es ag a in th is y e a r, th e O ttaw a-S t. L aw ren ce leag u e and th e Quebec Senior leag u e in w hich w e p lay such tea m s a s C oncordia, who w ere th e finalists in the C anadian se ­n io r cham pionships la s t y e a r. Hopefully, th e te a m will s ta r t p ra c tic e s th is week.

W ith a l ittle stipport fro m th e stu d en t body we feel both these te a m s can b rin g hom e cham pion­ships to S ir G eorge. O ur f irs t g a m e will be in e a r ly N ovem ber. See you a ll th ere .

Cage H opeful

GolfersSecond

P lay in g u n d e r th e se v e re s t of w ea th e r conditions, th e S ir G eorge golf te a m p laced second to C ar- leton in th e O ttaw a — St. L aw ­ren ce Golf T ournam en t. T he firs t round, p lay ed in a pouring ra in , le ft th e G eorg ians ten stro k es be ­hind th e C arle ton lead ers . The second round w as p layed in a b it­te r snow sto rm w hich ra ised sco res by an av erag e of six strokes.

A fte r the f irs t n ine holes on S a t­u rd ay , S ir G eorge go lfers h ad r e ­duced th e ir defic it to nine strokes. At th is poin t i t w as decided th a t only th e tw o contending team s would p lay th e final nine holes. The ou tcom e left th e G eorgians tw en ty s trokes in a r re a r s of C a r­leton.

Ind iv idual honours w ent to Doug Bowie of C arle ton w ith 74-83. Tony P e rry , also of C a rle ­ton, fired a 78-85 to fin ish tied (fo r second) w ith Bob D ubeau of S ir G eorge who fired rounds of 79-84. T hese th re e w e re th e only ones to b reak 80 on e ith e r day.

The play-off fo r S ir G eorge In ­tra m u ra l honours w as won by B e rt M oreland who shot a 169 to Don H enderson’s 172.

CARLETON Doug Bowie 157Tony P e r ry 163R ay M owling 165G ord T inder 169 (169)

SIR GEO RG E Bob D ubeau 163B ert M oreland 169Don H enderson 170Don R oss 172 (674)

O ther team s com peting , whostopped a fte r. 27 holes becau se of th e b ad w e a th e r conditions, in ­cluded, in o rd e r of finish, B ish­op’s, Loyola, R .M .C., Sherbrooke, C .M .R., M acdonald, St. P a ts , O t­taw a U.

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