SIR GEORGE WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY I Volume XXVIII OCTOBER 27th, 1964 No. « Topic: Race Relations Debating Tourney This Week Resolved, “That Race Relations Can Be Improved By Legislation” will be the subject for contention at the Second Annual International Parliamentary Debating The Dying Breed Tournament to be held and hosted by the Sir George Debating Tournament to be held and hosted by the By MARTHA BERNSTEIN Sir George JDebating Union this year. “The breed of trial law­ Universities such as Harvard, yers is on the verge of be­ Cornell, McGill, Loyola, Queens College of New York, Union Col­ coming extinct” . Mr. Fred lege of Schenectady, Worcester Kaufman, noted Institute of Technology, the Uni­ criminal lawyer, offered versity of Rochester, Osgoode this view to thirty-five Sir Hall Law School of Toronto, Hof- George students at the first stra University of Long Island, meeting of the Pre-Law the Royal Military College of Society. Kingston, St. Patrick’s College of A man in desperate need of Ottawa, and Trinity College and experienced counsel may not be Wesleyan (both from Connecti­ able to pay the high prices com­ manded by an experienced law­ cut! are each sending two teams yer. Criminal law involves much to the semi-final contests to be time and effort on the part of held Friday night, Oct. 30, from the advocate. Many lawyers pre­ 7 to 10 p.m. and Saturday, Oct. fer to confine their practice to Dther field s in w h ich they p e r­ Stanley Reinblatt 31, from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. These sonally are less emotionally in­ teams will consist of two debators volved. “Leave your emotions at each and each team will take both iiome” he advised. A criminal sides of the resolution in alter­ awyer must be prepared to ac­ Affirmative cept a human rather than mater- nating rounds. The debates will be alistic reward. styled according to the rules and Students planiOTV’f a ’ aw ca re e r In The Defense procedures'' or the House ot Com­ «tifl have a good fortune in Mont­ mons and are to be judged by real. Unlike other big cities, it faculty members of Sir George as s not yet overcrowded with prac- Of Extremism well as by several top Montreal ;icing lawyers. Mr. Kaufman sug­ ad voca tes. gested that young graduates join The final debate, which will de­ i large law firm specializing in Resolve that “ Barry Gold- cide the winning team, will be ;heir chosen field of law. He water is the logical choice presented at 3:30 p.m. Saturday yarned that an expert in his field for the U.S. Presidency for afternoon in Room 308 of t h e s one who has had much gxper- 1964” . This is the topic in Norris Building after which all ence and practices earnestly — the upcoming “Great De­ guest debators will attend a spe­ le is conscience bound to his cial banquet at the Airport Hil­ ilient. The advocates today must bate” between Sir George ton Hotel. At this latter event, je prepared to give time and ef- and McGill, following Sir there will be a guest speaker fol­ ort. George’s International lowed by the presentation of the The meeting concluded with a Tourney. John F. Kennedy Memorial Fred Kaufmann question period. Since the Sir George team of Trophy. Stanley S. Reinblatt, expert debators has been so Tournament Chairman, will pre­ grandly hailed in past years, and sent this trophy to the winning has been able to maintain its team as well as another fine high standards, it. has decided prize to the top tournament de- to pour all its talents into its bator. Council To Quii Morin upcoming challenge for the af­ The Debabting Union cordially firmative in the debate. invites all members of Sir George The Debating Union, one of to the semi-finals as well as to the most influential societies the final debate. Information as on the Concrete Campus, will to which teams will be debating On SGWU's Gov't Grant sponsor this debate on Monday, and in which rooms can be ob­ November 2nd in Birks Hall, tained from the information Internal Vice-President and Nor­ Last Wednesday, at the meeting of the S.U.S. from 1 to 2 p.m. All hecklers and booth in the lobby on both days man Beauregard, newly acclaim­ Council, a unanimous decision was made to invite Mr. rabble rousers are cordially in­ of the tournament; and Sir ed Treasurer, attended their first vited but are asked to be seated George hostesses will also be on Robert Morin, Assistant to Paul Gerin-Lajoie, Minister of SUS Council meeting at this time. Education, to SGWU to seek his explanation regarding (Continued on page 61 hand for added assistance. the Government’s position on the operation grant de­ crease and to inspect the operation of the University’s facilities. Canadian Youth The Council also decided by a tative to the U.M.U.N. Central vote of 5-2 that the Internal Vice- Committee. Mr. Jim Temerity, President call an election for the one of the two students previously DDWA President on November ratified for this position, no And Expo '67 19-20, 1964, an d. further, that in longer attends SGWU and there­ three weeks after this election fore the position was vacant. (CUP) — Three buildings, two of them permanent, proved Saturday, included plans an Executive must be formed. In for a youth pavillion, a youth Mr. Ron Moores, External Vice- are being planned as Canadian youth’s contribution to the event that one or both condi­ conference centre, and a youth President, was unanimously given the 1967 Montreal World Fair. tions are not fulfilled, a referen­ hostel. In addition, it described the privilege of officially repre­ dum be called to determine the If the plan materializes, a permanent and elaborate individual fair projects in the senting the students of Sir George status of the DDWA. This motion conference centre and youth hostel will remain after the fields of cinema, music, science, at the Consulting Committee on was made necessary by the re­ fair as a meeting place for Canadian and international journalism and fine arts. sults of the first referendum held Bursaries. This committee was youth. The plan will be submitted for to determine DDWA status, which established with the purpose of al­ the approval of the World Fair allowed the DDWA to retain its lowing student representatives to The Youth Consultive Committee to the Canadian Corporation within the next vote in Council. participate in the elaboration of Corporation for the 1967 World Exhibition met in Mont­ the policy of Student Aid Ser­ month. Then, the coordinating The Council unanimously voted vice and to study concrete prob­ real last Saturday and Sunday to approve plans for sub­ committee with the aid of the to donate the two thousand dol­ lems. It was felt that if Ron mission to the World Fair Corporation. corporation, will seek out spon­ lars from surplus funds to the Moores officially represented It was the third time in the sors. In all, the youth project is Student Emergency Loan Fund. SGWU at this meeting his vote past six months that represen­ dents (CUS) met in Montreal to expected to cost in excess of Mr. Nestor Prisco was unanim­ would carry more weight in tatives of more than 30 Cana­ discuss a youth world’s fair 4 millions. ously ratified by the Council as Q uebec. dian youth movements, includ­ p ro je c t. According to the committee’s the second Sir George represen­ Jawaid Khan, newly acclaimed ing the Canadian Union of Stu­ The final draft, as it was ap­ (Continued on page 2) The Georgian, October 27, 1964 a , he yout li d ld u o w n illio v a p th u o y e th s, lan p st s o he ai n ­ r e y. d a n u tod le p an o e p g ir n fa u o y f its e o th g ll a in d n to in sta rs th u o isito y v g in y a rtr o p its ts b in o s. p le p the o e p n h ’s ic h ld issio w r m o b w su ld r o w ld r ’s o a e w e itte th m — m e o c tiv th c e u e o th p y s r f e o f p o e in s t lo n c e s e re p th at n w o d rn to e b v id e s fa c ilitie s fo r c o n v e n tio n s, s, n tio n e v n o c r fo s ilitie c fa s e id v e b th u o y to l a n is tio a rn te area in r o it f ib h e x e sid a t e d se iv n g o c se to A t p m tte a an in s re stu e o th p f o t cen r e p 62 s e lv o v in t u o et ant of ce s e ad sit­ and and ce a ia sp r te fe e a ic c ff o e g r t, la n ra a u , resta th ou y halls. n g o tin e e m e g r la o tw to t r e v an a i er i yout th u o ir. y fa l a n a­ tio an a C rn te f in o l sa o d ­ an isp h d g u o r e th th n ia d at le p d o e e c p la p g n u o y ­ g o in r p lv o v — g in ild u b t n e n at a rm e s p a itie ctiv — a i­ th h u x o e y l ry cia ra e o ill p w sp m te d ird an th to a d te o d v e an d e s, b n tio iza n a rg o to e b ill w e s o p r u p Its ir. fa i a moki ooms. m o ro g in k o sm d s an g ork w tin f o y r a r lib a s, m o ­ n ro o c e itte ld m u s o u o w e n lta u hall sim e h T s. e g a u ith g w n la a s in te ta n le p co m o c tre n e c e c n e r fe n o c Youth Canadian la te d fr o m th e a ctiv ity o f the the f o ity ctiv a ­ o is e th d ­ n lo isla m e e o b d a fr -m e n ld b a u d o m w te a la n d o an ld u d o te w s, a n c tio iza n It a rg o . rld o w e th t u o days l a ir. tion fa a n e th to d te la e r s n itio b her a i ude sub- ­ m o -c b u s e d lu c in s lan p r e 700 th O to 500 g tin m sea o fr a f o ith w ity hall c a p a c n tio n e v n o c emi s n dicusi i ­ in s n ssio isctu d and rs a in m se r l i aciii our r u fo r o f s ilitie c fa n tio sla n tra h conf r tre n e c e c n e r fe n o c th u o y e h T i­ h x e e m e th se ou h ld u o w It h hotl ul ­ o l e b ld ou w ostel h th u o y e h T In th e c o m m itte e 's p lan s, the the s, lan p 's e itte m m o c e th In (C o n tin u e d fr o m p a g e 1) 1) e g a p m o fr d e u tin n o (C E Z I S G N I K R A L U G E R d n a product of Peter Jackson Tobacco Limited — maker) of fine cigarettes e t t e r a g i c e n i f f o ) r e k a m — d e t i m i L o c c a b o T n o s k c a J r e t e P f o t c u d o r p □ . . . . u AURIER M du y o u th . It w o u ld be c a lle d “ T h e e h T “ d lle a c be ld u o w It . th u o y ­ a d o has m m o c c n a g tio a in r o liv p r o o c n that e h d T le u r l. trea n o M C o m m iss io n e r G e n e ra l o f th e e th f e o th l f a l o n ra e tio n a r e o rn G n te o h In r e in n io iss l” m te y s m o u o p H C u D th u o Y e r r ie P per-1 a ir fa e b e th ld u o w on is h d T te a c lf. lo e its e b site ill w n tio us Mr Dup ’ suggestion. y’s pu u D r. M ss cu ­ m o C e th that 20 Jan. n o e c n e r fe ­ n o c f o d e n e r ig s e d ictu p air a F it t n n u e s rld re a o p W th as o e b th n to tio to a r o d p r te o n C e s re p e b meetng of r ent ­ ta n se e r p re f o g tin e e m a d e n e v g llin e v tra r o f e m o h an as d e y n a ig lid s o e n d g in ild u b t en n a m f o city e th in re e h w e m o s d te ca sever mont l er t dis­ d to r a­ te la an C s th n o g n m u o l y ra e v e f s o rld l o a e W r p l u a o r g tre n o M A e th y u air. p at F u D n e rr illio v ie a P p l ra e n e G r e n io iss m utual m ­ x e seek can . d g an in th d u n o y s rsta a e d e d n id n u u rld ro o g w rs e g g n tin a isito e v e ch m ich h ir a w fa e id to v at o r p th u to o y and ry ra o p m te y o u th m o v e m e n ts at M o n tre a l l a tre n o M at ts n e m e v o m ­ th n u o o c y p u o r g e th , n tio a r o p r o C ir a F . n itio ib h x E rld o W 1967 d a y -to -d a y p la n n in g , an d p re - - re p d an , g in n n la p it­ A m y a m o -d c rt. o -to g p y p a u tin d s a in l rd o ia o c c n a n a fin -m n e v its se e in itte m n tio a rticip a p th u o y on ­ a r o p n r o tio c e th at th d e d n e m m o c e r t­ n o M in t e m s r th e u d o a y le th a u o y n f ia o d a e id e th d e ch n u la ie f 2 Ca di n ia ad an C 25 t u o b a m o fr tives s ect o r n t e th on rry a c to d te c ­ le m e o c as w e th e e t d e r ffe o and l ­ a s a o r p o p ro r p o c e ­ th m ir. o c fa e ise e v d th tiv a lta u s n to g co tin a e e e m up itte e m h t T se 5. n tio d an 4 il r p A n o ght i n | and n tio a d o m m o c c a t h ig n r e w t s uig prs cn­ con ress p a during as w It T h e th re e b u ild in g p la n s w ill ill w s n la p g in ild u b e re th e h T t he ai he Word rld o W e th f o id a e th ith W T h e c o r p o r a tio n a c c e p te d th e e th d te p e c c a n tio a r o p r o c e h T Cniud on (Continued page page 6) p o litic a l an d e c o n o m ic ch a o s s o a ch ic m o n o c e d an l a litic o p ieraly hundr of contadi ­ ic d tra n o c f o s d re d n u h lly a r lite e th m o fr r e w o ­ p e r c o ld h r w o w t , o lin p s ta e S a d h d p e d se d o n te J a a f -h n o iro eath e d th e th ce sin leader of the Soviet Union became official, the western press had begun speculation speculation begun had press western the official, became Union Soviet the of leader th e te n s e m o n th s fo llo w in g his his g in w llo fo In s th n o 1930’s. m e e th s n in te e ssia u th R as w that n h frin oiis fhs successors. his of policies foreign the on focu ssed on the the on ­ r u l. g C in tro n rk u co n m ssed o Ir focu lin ta e e t-S th s th o p r d f o in f o h e b tain ts le r g o g p e d r stru rte u o c s s ry re to p rn ste e w e th eath, d o f Students (IU S ) to be held in in held be to ) S (IU Students f o ons r tonaly mir­ m lly a n t re en o itio d d M stu tra r. e e ist w v n o a u p h m m o C lin s m n to e io first r ­ n K u m o t, n C e w m e rta o the n o­ ca p N f im o e th e be g im ce g e tin r e sin late e m ill w ists n u l a in m n tio a It rn te in lgaria, r. u e B b m e v International ofia, S the f o me Si Sovi dif s e c n e r iffe d ­ e r t ie t v o ie v S o -S o in ew n S to e n th tio a e. g f le o im e g d th g a n the stre d f sen o ill n w tio a y e rticip th a p e th t u o b a is lik e ly to r e fle c t c u r r e n t t n e r r u c t c fle e r ss re g n co to r at­ e b s. m a ly d e e in v h o tren C lik N d e R e th is f i d s, d an ten ts, n e m rn e S o fia , i f o n ly to g a u g e the the e g u a g to ly n o f i , fia o S ed t i es of t r gov­ v o g ir e th f o s ie lic o p e th d re o r C h in e se , m ost o b s e r v e r s fe e l l e fe s r e v r e s b o ost m , se e in h C C onsiderable attention will be be will attention onsiderable C s hn 1 s a passed had rs a e y 11 than ss e L T h o u g h th e re is so m e d o u b t t b u o d e m so is re e th h g u o h T Students? Affect (CUP) Hours after rumors that Nikita Khrushchev had been removed as political political as removed been had Khrushchev Nikita that rumors after Hours (CUP) al f To K Of Fall Congress Congress Union th r e a te n e d to s p lit th e re ce n t t n ce re e th lit p s to d e n te a e r th ut um i t o. tw in m ru o F th ou Y w o c s o M in te r e st in th e p r o c e e d in g s at at s g r la in d e e rticu c a o p r p a e th e tak in st to e r te in d te c e p x e E u ro p e a n sa te llite c o u n tr ie s to to s ie in tr n u o c s r e d a llite le te sa w n rs, a llo e ea a p y ro u f­ E su e to fiv ated b a ast has ly p t n n ie sio n e fic te th est st-w In ea . fia o S ke l er c act. ta n East co l e th ra te ila b and e ak m e p o r u E rn ste e W d e n t C o n fe r e n c e (I S C ), o f f o f o ion ), n C U S (I n ia ad an C e c n e e r th fe n o C ich h w t n e d r is d surncs te b t Sovi Unin to any ion n U d t ie stan v o ith S w e ow n th o t is by tity h n t g e p u o id n e attem llite te a s firm ew n is th e th ces ran y e h assu T ed in y issu d ith a w arty. e lre P ist v a a n h u m m o t C ie s v o n S tio c l a fa r e d lib an ed t be member of the f o rs e b ­ m e e r m re a e b in g and y s o to K v e n i zh e d x re te B le r o A p id r n ie o S. e m IU L re P e y r th ta re c e and S C IS e th licy n o e p e tw n ig e r fo in ifts sh r e th e h w e tiv a r e p o o c ly g sin a e r c in e th f ist n o n u e e m tw m e o b -C n o n n and tio a r e p ist o n o u c is m th m o C w d ie v se a , e r r e c b in m e m a is ts n e d tu S K h ru sh ch e v ca m p in th e cu rr e n t t n e rr cu e th in p m ca v e ch sh ru h K U. N t-ftl RES. ti-tf-tll UN. BUS. ­ e b s n tio how la e r d an t c ffe g a g in r in e d m n o o c ill w h t w r fo y e e th b are ill w s r e d a le t n e d est. w e th n s tio rd c a w fle e r a as s g in n in g e b ard se e th tow p ste t s fir a as ct ta n o c s tru g g le b e tw e e n co n se r v a tiv e S tu d e n t le a d e r s h e re fe e l that that l e fe re e h s r e d a le t n e d tu S e tiv a v r se n co n e e tw e b le g g tru s n he Kr i nd weser t ­ stu rn ste e w d an lin m re K ­ e to th in ion n U t ie v o S e rd a th g re f o e d y e h attitu T s. ion n u t en d stu htt y wilcontnue t co- e a i iwesern ste e ti-w n a lid o s a te o m o r p - o c to e u tin n o ill c w ey th that ommunit nt natonal u­ tu S l a n tio a rn te In ist n u m m co tr bidn u a u Lf insur­ Life Sun a up building start protection and security immediate hw o hw hs a b done. be me can t this le how needs. you your to show your to and both not means tailored hy program W ance her insurance? give life to you through than can bride your compliment pay finer hat W W e ste rn stu d en t le a d e r s are are s r e d a le t en d stu rn ste e W men f he ­ n o n e th r fo n e sm e k o p S w a w regi s n r e w o p in is e im g e r ew n a ow N N ew C o m m u n ist P a rty F irst irst F rty a P ist n u m m o C ew N PNN S N O SO OPENING 45 LUY ST. 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i polcy wihi he I . d­ ad y e h T I ■ S. IU e th in ith w y lic | o p h o w e v e r , b e f o r e o b s e r v e r s can can s r e v r e s b o e r o f e b , r e v e w o h cis m s o f the C o m m u n ist C h in ese ese in h C ist n u m m o C the f o s m cis ct t ny t nt w ow h ty in rta e c y an ith w t ic d e r p nment o g. n u T e s T ao M f o t n e m rn e v o g o p e ra te w ith th e w est and and est w e th ith w te ra e p o l omotng a n w o d w o h s in a g d tin lea o m ro p 's v e ill h w c ile s h sh r w e ru d h a K le ew n o w tw llo e fo th ly e s lo c r , s i ng is iti­ r c its g in u tin n o c is l, tro n o c f h Krmln moves r m fro y a w en a ev s e v at o th m g e r lin on e m h a rem K t s r n e e the d m a e le e if r g a ts n e is d e stu r e th , ry sto est w a. e th hin C d e R ith w ith w s n sio n te g sin ea P ra v d a , u n d e r n ew e d ito ria l l ria ito d e ew n r e d n u , a d v ra P d-i s sudent t* n e d stu ist n u m m o C ­ d n e sta -lin its rd s a h on d n a b a d an est w e th ront agai t he Commu­ u m m o -C n o n a e th a, in h st C in a g a ist n u t n m o m o fr C ith w f f o the IU S is e x p e c te d to te ll the the ll te to d te c e p x e is S IU the fc ta cont bewen een ist n etw u b m m o -C n t o c n ta n ­ o c and sig is ist n It a u . that m e d m c e o n p e C d lo n e t e v n p e e d d ifica in n s s u llite te ro o sa ig v ­ n n a u e p ro is u E C IS e th f o . s ly r e e b lik m e m ist n avi nd Pol Wetr estern W . d n rs la a o e y P d an e fiv ia v la s ast o p g u Y e th in ts en d stu n ev an d K o s y g in r e v e rs e the the e rs e v e r in g y ­ s o K rezh B ld d ou an sh that r, ev e n v e w o h it, m re- , n to tio a g n in on m tio o m a d a ese in t th rm ie d v te e o e v r d S e s g s*s* b a o , isitin v ts ia e n n v e a a d h om R stu s s r e ie d tr a n le in u co t en ce d la p stu en tak has i l n he i ­ in e th on an e v e a c h n e flu ill w in e s im u g o e r m r o t n ­ e ie in v o S s e w c e n n e r iffe d t ie v o -S o in S and ­ e b te u isp d t ie v o -S o in S e th ce sin ert S rev IU to e th re u s s ar, re w p er d ld n o u c e b e th ill w in thaw er inal t nt l e n o r. e rld th o o w e th t en d or stu e th ay w l a f o tion a rn s te n ctio a e h T . le b est, w ita v e e in th rd a ­ w sh to ru h K s ie in lic ta o in p a m ’s ­ v s ro r e p e h d c e. a le lin to t s­ ie u v rn o R S ste se e e in e h ti-w th n C a an e by th to te o t S p m IU and e attem th s in sian in ith es, w rta ce bsid n su itio a s o p and rift p o e t est, th ie w v o -S o the in S m e o th fr if ay aw g in ts en sw d stu lic. b u p f o e th e m in a n c io ith n w u rity a ist n lid u so m m o C little to n e e hich b w S IU in s e te a th b e d f o m o fr w rs e ra b d m e ith ly g w m sin a cre in sian A e en­ th n e e b y b has e aintain c m n e d o d t ce n n e S a p h e IU d e in th line. f o an rn rs e b ste e m e ti-w m n a firm a to crea se, a sp lit in th e IU S seem s s seem S IU e th in lit sp a se, crea lead ill w s ie tr n u o c llite te sa the has re een e b th lt, e v su a h re a a s in A h C s. d d o d - o an fr at A e th ssia u R dispute. f o y an m d e t c ie r v fo o -S o e v in a S h r itte b san- nes ferences s e c n e r iffe d se e in h -C n ssia u R t. fr ilg students. biology zoological for etc.) preserved find iving L fishes. necturus, white rats, cats, cats, rats, white necturus, fishes. pcmn (rg, ulfos dog­ frogs, bull (frogs, specimens S e v e ra l m o n th s w ill pass, pass, ill w s th n o m l ra e v e S W h ile th e S o fia c o n g r e s s o f f o s s e r g n o c fia o S e th ile h W U n d e r K h ru s h ch e v , th e east- east- e th , v e ch h s ru h K r e d n U T h e a b ility o f th e satellite satellite e th f o ility b a e h T If, on the o th e r han d , the tw o o tw the , d han r e th o the on If, in g sy o K and ev n rezh B f I HOUSE e ilgcl Materials Biological re d n A ME T EN EM G A N A M INQ U IRIES INVITED INVITED IRIES U INQ hn 526-2277 Phone NEW

Commerce Week The Automation Take-Over Doctor G. M. Mahoney, Profesor of Psychology at Under Way Sir George, spoke to the Students Christian Movement The 1964 edition of Commerce Week is underway. on the “Human Consequences of Automation” . He begun Photomagnus The Honorable Eric Kierans, ’s Revenue Minister, his lecture in a light way with the use of an anecdote. VANCOUVER (CUP) — A “A psychiatrist used to tape his officially opened the Week’s activities yesterady. The photographer with the Ubyssey, sessions with the patients. One settled, however, automation Hon Mr. Kierans returning from his recent European day he decided to take a break proved to be a huge success. The student newspaper at the Univer­ trip unveiled the new Commerce symbol. and after telling his client to employees, for the better part, sity of British Columbia, has The week-long activities will continue talking into the record­ were glad of this change and plans for a group picture to end include such varied events as MacDonald. Other feature at­ ing machine he went for a cup the older workers, surprisingly all group pictures. to d a y ’s Football Forecast w ith tractions in the next few days of coffee. He was startled min­ enough, adjusted more easily local sports personalities. Jim w ill b e Professor D. E. Arm­ utes later to see his patient join than the neophytes. The skilled Don Hume, recently announced Trible, Sam Etcheverry, Red strong of McGill University him. ‘It’s alright, doctor,’ he workers, although drastically re­ he wants to take a group picture Storey, J. I. Albrecht, and Ian dicussing the M.B.A. (Master of said, ‘I have my tape recorder duced in numbers, advanced to of U B C ’s 16,000 students on the Business Administration) pro­ plugged in to yours.’ ” more interesting and higher sal­ university’s football field. gram and the exhibit — “ Com ­ Dr. Mahoney also told of studies aried positions. Jobs have not munications In Industry,” b e in g conducted within companies that been lost as a result of the auto­ Says Hume, “The last group Israel In held Thursday and Friday. This have introduced automation. Most mation take-over and no great picture of the university was disatisfaction among the workers last event is the central point problems occur, it was found, taken in 1923 and its time we had of the entire week. It will con­ when there was insufficient com­ can be noted. Automation, how­ a n oth er.” Space & Time sist of interesting and diversi­ munication between executives ever, can be improved and should fied products being displayed by and personnel. Usually, automa­ be improved further. Asked how he would get com­ On Wednesday, October the exhibitors who are are ma­ tion failed because the employees The listener was left with the plete attendance for the picture assumption at the close of the Hume quipped, “Oh, that's no 28th, the Hillel Society of jor companies in this field. The were not informed before its in­ students who attend the various troduction, or if informed, not lecture that in automation, as in problem. People like to see them­ Sir George Williams Univer­ films being shown on Tuesday, fully. Often, success depends on any other change, success will selves in pictures. But, I don’t sity will present a program Wednesday and Friday certainly the amount of activity the super­ be determined by what one learns mind if there are a few people in Budge Hall at 1 o’clock benefit from these and find visor can contribute. from it and by the experience ac­ missing. Six or seven thousand wouldn’t make any difference.” entitled “ Israel in Space and them informative and stimulat­ When these difficulties were quired. Time” . It will be an illus­ in g. trated lecture by the noted The entire student body, not only Commerce students, are Montreal artist and sculptor welcome to attend the coming Stanley Lewis, with slides activities. based on his own exper­ Ivars Sayfy ience in Israel. Chairman, Commerce Week Mr. Lewis was born in Montreal in 1930. He studied at the M ont­ real Museum of Fine Arts from 1948 to 1951 under su ch renow n ed You Too artists as Arthur Lismer, Louis Arcliambault, Jacques de Ton- nan cou r and others. In 1952 and 1953 he w as aw ard ed tw o sch o la r­ (an Confer ships for study in Sculpture and Graphics at the Institute Allende, This year, as in the past, San Miguel, Mexico. Between 1956 and 1959, he studied scu lp ­ the Students Undergradu­ ture technique for three years in ate Society will sponsor Italy as a recipient of an Eliza­ beth T. Greenshields Memorial various student delegations Foundation Grant. He was an in­ to attend conferences structor in sculpture at the througout and the School of Art and Design at the Y M H A in 1962 and 1963. United States. Mr. Lewis was honoured by the Delegates must be members of city o f M ontreal in 1963 b y a one- the society in good standing and man exhibition of sculpture and will be required to fill out an stone prints at Le Centre des Arts application form. de Mont-Royal. It was in Ein There are several obligations. Hod, Israel’s artist village, where Delegates are required to submit he completed the carvings for the a paper on a particular aspect of illustrations of the “Ten Com­ the conference. A brief report mandments’’. It is presently be­ must be submitted to the Exter­ ing exhibited in the “Galerie nal Vice-President upon the con­ Members of the Debating Union are from left to right, Dave Kellet, Mike Donnelin, Arlene Libre’. He has also served as ference’s completion. Cloutier, John Mitchell and Dave Zitner. technical advisor to Irving Stone To keep informed, read the for the biographical novel on Georgian. Announcements for Michelangelo. “The Agony and each conference will be run in the Ecstasy” . We do promise that two consecutive issues of the Time Again our forthcoming program will be SCM Elects Rae G eorgian. of great interest to all and we Once again winter is just encourage your presence at The delegates are chosen by around the corner, along with Budge Hall, on Wednesday at the Personnel Selection Board, a it the Sir George Williams 1 p.m . joint body consisting of 3 S.U.S. Honorary President council members and a faculty Winter Carnival ’65. Due to member. Application forms will lack of snow in previous years, A notable honour has recently been bestowed upon ARTS FACULTY be available at the Student Re- the Snow Sculpture Contest Sir George Williams University by the election of the is to be replaced this year by SCORES AGAIN ceptionary in the basement area Principal as Honorary President of the Student Christian and must be returned to the Re­ a Float Contest in which Stu­ Barry Beloff, the Presi­ ceptionist in a sealed envelope dent Bodies, Club, groups, Movement of Canada. may participate in making a dent of the A.F.A., proud­ addressed to the External Vice- Principal R. C. Rae was a P residen t. float. These floats will be member of the SCM Cabinet ly announces the coming God and the means to the full The coming conferences are: judged and awards will be when a student at the Univer­ realization of life. It is a group of Claude Wagner, Soli­ given at the Night Out. All sity of Toronto, and writes of 6th Annual Seminar on Interna­ based on Christian conviction clubs interested please re­ the value of this experience in citor-General of Quebec tional Affairs — Nov. 10-14. and concern, a movement that gister at the General Meet­ and Provincial M.P. for the following terms: “I am very is open to the questionner and McGill Conference on World Af­ ing held on Thursday, Octo­ grateful to the Student Christian the doUbter as it attempts to re­ Verdun, on March 5th, fairs — Nov. 18-21. ber 29, 1964 at 1:10 p.m. in Movement for privileges and op­ late the concerns of the Univer­ 1965. 4th Conference on Canadian Af­ Room 308, where you will re­ portunities presented to me as sity to the truths of the Christ­ fairs — Nov. 17-21. ceive further information. a student at the University of ian Gospel. Toronto. My contact with the S.C.M. has had a great spiritual and personal impact on my life, SEMINAR DELEGATES Barbarian Barbecue and has inculcated beliefs and Those students inter­ values in me that have been by TAMMY BONESS ‘Liberty, Equality, and Frater­ most meaningful to me . . .” ested in representing Sir “Although ignorant and barbaric, we ought not to nity,’ for all, the Jew was not In accepting the appointment. George at the 6th Inter­ burn them” . This paraphrase from Voltaire’s Dictionaire to be ommitted. Principal Rae stated: “I have the national Seminar (“ Latin Philosophic was the keynote of Rabbi Samuel Cass’ From this beginning, he went greatest respect and admiration America — Evolution or on to compare modern day pro­ for the Student Christian Move­ address last Tuesday which centered upon the struggle Revolution”) to be held blems with those facing the ment. and a strong belief in its here November 10-14 are of Jewish individualism and equal status from the time Jews of France during the reign importance and value to Canad­ of the French Revolution. of Napoleon, and those of Eng­ ian University communities.” asked to obtain applica­ The three E’s: Extermination, on the many obstacles and con­ land’s Christian Feudal sys­ Honorary Presidents of the tion forms from the Stu­ Emancipation, and Equality, flicts which have conforted the tem . S.C.M. serve a three year term dent Receptionist and were the main points embellish­ Jew is his ceaseless struggle Dwelling upon the last two and are invariably University return the completed ed upon in this second discus­ to attain full recognition since centuries in France and Eng­ Presidents. froms in an envelope ad­ sion of the Hillel series, “His­ the Fall of the French Ghetto. land, Rabbi Cass expressed the The Student Christian Move­ dressed to Mr. Ronald K. tory of the Modern Jew." Speak­ “France turned into a glow­ hope that Judaism will be re­ ment of Canada is a fellowship Moores, External Vice- ing specifically on “The French ing furnace,” said Rabbi Cass, garded without prejudice, and of students based on the convic­ Revolution and The Fall of the and since the slogan of the misconception in these times of tion that in Jesus Christ are President by Wednesday, Ghetto,” Rabbi Cass elaborated French Revolution demanded crisis, and uncertainty. found the supreme revelation of November 28. he Georgian, October 27, 1964 f i Gere li Unvriy 13 Drmmod tet Monteal 5 Qubc Telephone uebec. Q 25, l a Board tre n o M Publications Street, the ond y m b rum D ar ye 1435 university the niversity, U ut o gh u s ro m th illia W Tuesday eorge every G Sir published is of eorgian G The cor -55 Aut ied a scn cas l te ot fc prmet Otawa, d n a , a w tta O ent, epartm D ffice O Post the y b il a m class second as d rize o th u A 9-7515. r icto V or amet psae n cash. in postage f o ent paym r fo tor r o it d r e o it d s e w e n g in g a n a m rculati r e g a n a m n io t a l u c ir c si ...... r e g a n a m g in is t r e v d a r o t i d e s t r o p s Sir: r a e D asp irin g “ h a s-been ,” and E gan gan E and ,” s-been a h “ g irin asp aul; e s g fcnt Any­ y n A t. ificen agn m as w he lt; u fa d id a cy , he ch a rg es m a d ly and and ly d a m es rg a ch r fo he ry o T ssa , ce e cy n a id d atch m blicity possibilities. u p im ot the r cann fo gain he calls en m and criticizes h i eus or poiia c ­ n ca olitical p es. nam r fo calls s petu im e H the . exception no is bers am h C ab le im posin g P re m ie r is foolish foolish is r ie m re P er g low posin to im pt le ab attem ld ou w ho w one h prsi of uc a hnour­ hon sible. an irrespon ch su r o f o e restig p the ore te r h te vrment. overnm G the ch a re they e r fo cene h Uniest be­ e b should iversity n U the y b plications ed p A their screen e b te le p ized. m co organ can they education. e r fo ir: S r ea D BUT ma dd not. did y an m T ho w U B — those r fo it close ’t. on d it, eed n M cG u ire? H as the G eorgian eorgian G the as H ire? u eor­ cG G M the f o reputation the ust M Cur, r ea D et hnsl nee te ne ey on m the needed honestly dents their lete p com ork w can be to e v a they h denied ill w ill w re fo e students, b rsaries bu students hese eir T th y eed n orking. w on , er spent oth — e d b e d w ill cro w e ey b s. on tow m ill w ry rsa hills u b Ski ed. criticism ? Is y ou r hu m ou r ed itor itor ed r roatia? C ou m in hu ile his r ex f ou o in y r lly a Is fe rea a ? to tered e du ban criticism size in e b shrunk it w finest ’s n gia urais l have o r be­ ork w to e v a h ill w rsaries bu . . s plt No! I I ! o N lot? p ist . . f. e v a D ry a n ctio a re the y b about M cG ill D a ily ! T he Y .M .C .A . needs needs . .A .C .M Y he T ! ily a D ill cG M lurdain! ation rid flou ome s . ils n te . . . . then will and ext N ialism ! . . ! y . c a r s c o m e e m d co f o shell A v oid w ater fountains. A v oid the the oid v A ! u o y fountains. ater w to oid v A arise can you only and u o Y ar Sir: r ea D those w ith bea rd s o v e r three three r e v o void A s rd bea university. ith w ir fa r those ou e v sa entitled, ‘S p are students green green students in are p ‘S ted prin as w entitled, ich h w rticle a an janitors. void A long. inches u ate student w ho c a n ’t teach out out ent w teach ’t n a c rticle a ho w he T student ate u . fs’ ro p d ra g “ T he U b y sse y ” (O cto b e r 22, 1964) 1964) 22, r e b cto (O ” y sse y b U he T “ h e gets b a ck in ” . I w ou ld like to to like ld ou w I . ” nd A in . ck m a o b ssro gets cla e h r a e ­ y d ra g first the et the G “ f o s: llow fo as fly rie b on e should b e lectu rin g w ho is is ho w no g equipped. rin that ill lectu or e ent, b g re statem orin fo b e b should this e on teach to to d ad how him teach N ob od y talks lou d er than the the than er d lou talks y od ob N “ Q u eb ec” w as not M r. L e sa g e ’s ’s e g sa e L r. M not as w ec” eb u Q “ editors Abe Schwartz; ; z t r a w h c S e b A , y m m a S ; e n r u b r e h S B r ia n M a lc o lm , M a r t h a B e rn ste in , A n d r e w E llio t, M a r c e l l a R e g e n s t r ie f , T a m m y B o n e s s ; ; s s e n o B y m m a T , f ie r t s n e g e R a l l e c r a M t, llio E w e r d n A , in ste rn e B a h t r a M , Editor lm o lc a Photo M ss't. n A ia r B : E U S IS IS H T IN Martin Baiey, ; h a f m o o F e c n e r u a L , y ile a B n i t r a M , n a m A re se a rch b oa rd should be be should rd oa b rch a se re A post­ been has list ry rsa bu he T do elz ta ma stu­ y an m that realize ho w o d e W those to oors d the Open Is the w h ole m ess a c . . . ist or or ist . . . c a ess m ole h w the Is ! m a scre y a m I . . . Zounds W hile these students p arallel, arallel, p students these hile W It is an outright to soften our our soften to outright an is It u ak “Bt a cn do. .” o d I can hat w But “ ask, ou Y I should lik e to co m m e n t on on t n e m m co to e lik should I . Ross Robbi John Harri li lp Fei, l os, Margaret Hock- - k c o H t e r a g r a M , s lo u o p o r lla e k a S n h o J il, e F ilip h P , s a k ic il S e o Z , n o is r r a H n h o J , s in b b o R s s o R ...... ass't. A rt director director rt A ass't. Letters Letters ln Nutik. N . E llen yours, A cerely in S ...... y pathizers. Sym ...... A rts rts A John K err, err, K John typists typists dtri-he — DAc O'Connor D'Arcy Editor-in-Chief — I I

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Steve Johnstone Johnstone Steve A le x Shenfield Shenfield x le A edge, esnaiy ad h a il­ ab the and ality, person , e g d le received ­ know f o ation f in o b com rs the a e y is it w — fe the and get their g in to each m T o fr students ost level m s. g ate when latin u ridiculou gradu but stim the is to bad, d it is rrie ca l e is v le it ate gradu training at Sir G eo rg e W illiam s s illiam W e rg eo G Sir at training te. ica n u m com od eth to m ity f o than lication p ap re o m re is e m cation u the ed iversity un tes n h SWU f ­ fa U and SGW the on Jonassohn i­ D culty. , others y otter, sk P in P y n a m opportunity uindon, G , ck the o : m g rin had ea h ave f h o to and xli a ommon miu derstand­ isun m of n o m m ation co in a exam explain ir fa a r fo ited lim ­ p lo e v e d l istorica h its , tion crea its D isa rm a m en t M ovem en ts in the the in ts en ovem M t en m a rm isa D too is ce a sp this hile W . ation form of ck la total a iza­ an indicated org an rly a this le c f o exhibiting hile W understanding, . egitavism .D n .N .C r .U the ou C y at f o rprised su duly ir: S r ea D front. Y o u sir, as w ell as pundits pundits as clear ell u w N as in sir, u o Y ho w volved front. in person, f o been e typ the has to as ing its ith w first o h es w selv em le th p o e p r fo ed the s cern con reason and ent the it m f , o position d reciation e p lv ap o ev ly new tion, un­ not as w ­ b I o , than g criticism beatin e m ru tiv d c je al otion em abei hs pepl “bar d ed rd es­ bea qu “ ithout w le s” ik eop p tn bea ed ash these w un g elin b la ns socet to to h ch u m too stood ty cie o all. s at f o ents selves m em th rn ce n co ould w ­ em th o d ress p lar u op p the f o to e lik ld ou w I s, estion qu these with re o m itself g in cern con m ent arose, then explaining w hy hy w explaining ge, then an ch l arose, ica d ra ent m a given loose, to genre in this f o ice rv persons ise y d h w tioning t rea g a selves upon the realisation o f a la ck of of ck la a f o osi­ p realisation e tak the s to cern upon con hurch C r fo ­ the e g v o lon as m so ch the su taken ich h has w it at ­ e seg tim the other at that be not it Could as a su fficien t explanation on such such on explanation t fficien su a as tive stands on w a r-p e a ce question alternatives. question ce other a e r-p a w on stands tive li i pr te e oncr ­ x e cern n co new the part in plain C .U .C .N .D .’s recen t em ph asis on on asis ph em Let t e op h recen s .’s insoluble. .D re sciou .N ere fo w .C con re e .U C th ich h ered w sid con ty us cie o s estions qu ce r on fo y b eople p ressed p c heeooe alel eivd believed ly lse fa eretofore h ich h w re se a rch , ed u cation , and d irect irect d and , cation u ed , rch a se re ­ x e does it but ic, p to x le p m co a esar o wae a ocet ty cie so ce. poten a im n ow petus im its aken aw in the to e id rov ry p ssa ce e ill n w action ar Sir: r ea D me lbo i udr h illu­ the under g rin ou ­ r lab o an en is om . w .D .N .C .U C that es believ ganization o f you n g m en and and en m g n you f o ganization . Marty Goldberg; ; g r e b d l o G y t r a M . . . hs obl a te nder­ un the at , m le b ro p This I feel m ost fortu n a te to h ave ave h to te a n fortu ost m feel I t peet y Jur ls alism rn Jou ay d present ith W This n atu rally is not intended intended not is rally atu n This o h Gerin eioil o d rd boa editorial eorgian G the So Tim Pervin Pervin Tim ho of ca Wok U. C. .C .B U ork, W ocial S f o chool S Spo rts rts Spo I GOG WLIM UNIVERSITY WILLIAMS GEORGE SIR urs, ou Y c e H Rec nn. n an m eich R H. ael ich M ur sncrl , cerely sin rs ou Y editorial to . D John Lynn, ton, lan n a ll A , n o lt a D e v a D , n o t k c o t S n o R , n n y L n h o J D. . . . Roi son, obin R . B m y un degraduate degraduate un y m N e w s; ass't. editor editor ass't. s; w e N ditor E editor o t i d e P U C ...... r o t i d e e iv t u c e x e tor r o it d e s e r u t a e f editor o t i d e r u o m u h editor o t i d e o t o h p that on the the on photographers photographers the the ...... J a y B o c h a rie r , M a r t i n B lu c h itz , , itz h c lu B n i t r a M , r rie a h c o B y a J . . . \

illusions upon ord in a ry p eople eople p ry a in ord upon illusions the e, tim e m sa the at ossible, p through su ch d ra m a tic m ethods ethods m tic a m ra d ch ave su h our e c r fo and to through this trying stop ave h to lize a e re ed w ecid d to that y pp a h begun is 1 t is en ian m a eorg G isarm d r clea u n that sion si i a uitr ay. w real­ n u ieter and qu a ill in w on ealistic id and istic be n rotest p dow f o orthodox un instead, such strations sitting on other dem , and g in rch a streets m as the d o ctrin e o f “ m igh t m ak es es ak m rge u t igh m ilitarists m “ the f ich o h w e t,” h rig ctrin o d the like. I h a v e been tryin g to figu re re figu to ­ m g a re d tryin been ore m r­ e v a clea h u en n I ev is f like. o . .D .N .C poined ily .U m C fa has g in China grow that the now r fo that r? a w aration ted en prep rev p illusion. r e has v e the ar is w hen w ince S oliticians, p the on “ R ed B eatnik Im a g e .” T hat really really hat T .” e g a Im eatnik B ed R “ , eek w a for ic g lo f o of ce ie p m that a re d out the tries, n cou ed arm iy ad tatg. f h Geor­ o e G the If tegy. stra and licy o p unfortunately re a o h w s” ik ” n beatn e m o w red irty d “ ’t started isn ss re us P one ­ he T im g this “ d callin an valid. old e ore ls m fa y the an as w ell, w ” e g — a to. . .D .N able .C .U C een b not e v a h I but byo upriil ubj tve e ctiv je b su ould w perficial it su d on adherents, bey its o g and . . .D .D .N N .C .U C to sis ba taken tellectual e b s­ e not r it. ill that w y b I sed in eople bia least, p , at ly sly k — n sible iou ra on e F p g obv a im so e. is first tim it the r fe their re p us lls ca asting w eorgian G the , now and its m e m b e rs a ch a n ce to present present to ce n a allow s. ch view and a e their rs e group rob b p m e the m to f o its pt licy attem o p d an the speculation and en m g youn ded in s-m seriou “ d oesn ’t disturb us — it ju st show s s show st this ju it — us ith w disturb ’t group oesn d the dered slan .­ .C .U in C on ” a terested m in stig lly the a re g erasin ere “ w gian cn s w o c er or r ­ fo ro p rn our ce n co strate on r em ou The d and ow sh . ce tion a e p ica n can u m com e w ass m f o s. lem rob p has ress P the — although on ly su p erficia lly . W e e W . lly erficia p su ly on although — ­ c a r p the e in eterm ­ d m o to c r acaza la M a rticu L a p ts en am studied arm s, ce n re ar, fe w flict, con tried and tional doing .­ .C .U studied C been ays alw r history. e v has e . .D 5-year N this ave h our that e w during think he to T all s is seem eapons. w r clea eorgian u n G st again ere test h w ces la p ly on ethods the m re a al orm n streets the use to able tical p rob lem s that d isarm a m en t t en m a isarm d volve. in that ld s and ou w lem y a rob p B orth ­ tical N n co as eld h ch su , ied unities a­ lobb m tern e in v a h e to W etc. alternatives find to tinue to try an d fin d solutions solutions d fin ­ n co d an ill w and try to tried n ork ays begu w tinue alw our e v f a o h have ect sp you a this that realize st ju to is It p e a ce . W e w ill alw a ys m a rch in in rch a m ys a alw ill w e W . ce a e p the streets in o rd e r to put a cro ss ss cro a put to r e rd o in streets the to the p ro b le m s o f w a r and and r a w f o s m le b ro p the to The G eorgian also seem s to feel feel to s seem also eorgian G The W e in C .U .C .N .D . b e lie v e that that e v lie e b . .D .N .C .U C in e W A s fo r the “ new im a g e ” o f f o ” e g a im new “ the r fo s A r hs l y be in­ n a been ays alw has ere h T T he C anadian p ress has alw ays ays alw has ress p anadian C he T C .U .C .N .D . has n e v e r been been r e v e n has . .D .N .C .U C Our “ n ew im a g e ” isn ’t new . . new ’t isn ” e g a im ew n “ Our . John M. Vi l, m im J lli, e c in V . M n h o J . . . Contnued on n o d e u tin n o (C features ass't. ass't. features ra Knight . M Bryan tv Gol rg e b ld o G Steve i i ff lio A rie u a M rn Smms m Sim Frank Barnes arry B page page 6)

chapter of CUCND. Last week we said : said we week Last CUCND. of chapter example, one accuses the Press of vilifying CUCND; CUCND; vilifying of For Press confused. the unnecessary are accuses their letter-writers one in CUCND even example, the And made. defences never Georgian praise peaceful endeavours and condemn hostile actions? actions? hostile world condemn and seeking endeavours be peaceful praise to claim who people by comments consider as personal affronts that the true calibre of of calibre true the evident. that made is affronts CUCND’ers these personal as consider coverage. Press favourable the to points another peace. et ae o icret seset o a editorial. an of assessments incorrect on based tests No. of people (such as some CUCND members) willing to to willing members) CUCND some efforts as self-sacrifice. dedicated practice (such the World through people others. with possible of than be only himself can with peace up wrapped more form of editorial expression on matters not involving involving not matters on right expression the is editorial editor of newspaper form a of position the panies Williams to be able to leave it with a wave of the hand hand the of wave a with it leave to able be to Williams world. the pacify the writer himself, I am taking this opportunity (my (my opportunity this norm. taking the am from I deviate to last) himself, the writer takes the normally this While self-indulgence. printed to and a curteous ‘good-by’ . And as I leave, I take a good good a tucked take diploma a I with leave, leave I not as do I And True, . me. with deal ‘good-by’ curteous a and rm h casom, irr, omn om, n cor­ and rooms, common library, classrooms, are but the ‘B.A.’, from letters the with inscribed paper of piece a under my arm, but then that wasn’t my real reason for for reason real my wasn’t that then but arm, my under ios f i Gog. hy r te cuuain f a of They accumulation faculty. the and are students with They conversations George. Sir thousand of ridors tedn university. attending myriad of Experience. It is an education in the fullest fullest the in education an is It Experience. of millions myriad of accumulation bewilderment, the are joy, of They moments frustration. of and accumulation the are garnered experiences the are They value. more much of sense of the word— one on which I shall constantly rely rely constantly shall I which on subjects. one word— of the kaleidoscopic a of variety been asense has on George Sir books at life from my type short, In of words of e qadrd bt ny opudd I ev i wt a with it leave I compounded. only but squandered, be ahead. years the in upon nurtured but still hungry mind, grateful for the appetite appetite the acquire. for me grateful helped mind, has it hungry still but nurtured UN Revisited CUCND i) esaes ae rne CCD ebr as members CUCND branded have Newspapers iii) Confusion, not peace, appears to reign in the local local the in reign to appears peace, not Confusion, u w frhr ad : said further we But iii) This fresh approach to the problems of nuclear nuclear of problems the to approach fresh This iii) e r aae a te iiat epne o these to response militant the at amazed serious-minded. are are CUCND We in people Many iv) World Peace will never be won by anyone.who is is anyone.who by won be pro­ never heated will raise Peace to World futile and shortsighted How They rush to defend thmeselves against charges the the charges against thmeselves defend to rush They But it is on taking offence at what they mistakenly mistakenly they what at offence taking on is it But Do they use the Letters column of the Georgian to to Georgian the of column Letters the use they Do One has to be at peace with oneself before one can can one before oneself with peace at be to has One n o te oe laual bnft wih accom­ which benefits pleasurable more the of One ii) Peace marching and placard waving promotes promotes waving placard and marching Peace ii) I have reaped too much from my years at Sir George George Sir at years my from much too reaped have I h tig I ae ih e r nt s agbe as tangible as not are me with take I things The This University has left me a legacy which cannot cannot which legacy a me left has University This i Te raiain s o prun a more prac­ pursuing now is organization The ii) A Personal Note Personal A ) UN’ dem ncer iammn)i im­ is disarmament) (nuclear dream CUCND’s i) ) h CCD ra i laudable. is dream CUCND The i) ulct bt o peace. not but publicity practical. ere rblrues’ n “uwse beat­ unwashed “ and . niks” rabblerousers’’ bearded “ ia ad es estoa program. sensational less and tical disarmament and world peace could produce produce could peace results. world beneficial and disarmament MIT IK

The Extremists The Object Of Objectivism 1964 27, October Georgian, The By JILL ANDERSON Nathaniel Brandon, eminent Canadian psychologist, On Both Sides Contemporary Man founder of the Nathaniel Brandon Institute, and author By SCOTT YOUNG (for CUP) ) And His World of the book “Who is Ayn Rand ?” gave his first lecture One of the solaces of the majority of who in a twenty week series on the Basic Principles of live outside of Quebec is that they know themselves to be The Newman Club of Objectivism. His topic for this lecture, given last Friday moderate people, with malice toward no one, especially S:G.W.U. has planned an att he Laurentian Hotel, was “Objectivism : The Phi­ French Canadians. interesting program of con­ losophy of Ayn Rand. From this base they feel justified in being hurt and ferences on “Contemporary “Man must live exclusively Living” throughout his lecture, upset that some French Canadians are less than happy man, and his world’’, for the by reason,” he remarked. Mak­ with their estate in this country. ing reference to Ayn Rand’s he insisted that man’s percep­ month of October and No­ tion of the facts of reality must “We feel nothing but good- world famous, best selling no­ vember. constitute the basis of his value will,” complain these English- vels “The Fountainhead”, “At­ The whole trouble is that judgements, just as reason is speaking Canadians, of many For the past three weeks, las Shrugged”, and “We the f there is a little bit of truth on his only guide to action. “Man racial backgrounds. “We do the subjects discussed dealt both sides. is an end in himself,” he added, not feel superior to anyone and I collected quite a few views on psychiatry, with speaker “not a means to the ends of we do not understand it when from English-speaking exterm- Dr. Karl Stern, physical others. “He stated that m an some French Canadians refer ists as a result of my reports must live for his own sake with to themselves as second-class science; with Father Eric from Quebec during th e the achievements of his rational citizens and act as if we dislike O’Connor; and sociology, Queen’s tour particularly for a self-interest so the moral pur­ them or distrust them.” column titled Black Saturday. with Murray Ballantyne. pose of his life, neither sacrific­ These moderates on our side I happen to be against vio- The next conference, that ing others for himself. “Exist- of the Quebec border therefore , " , (I j - u i. le n c e as a m ea n s o f settlin g will be held at the Newman ance, identity and conscience gape with disbelief when hear­ political arguments — whether Center on Tuesday, October are the bases of the objectivist ing such statements as Pierre the violence is the criminal in- philosophy,” he added. Bourgault’s a week ago last 27tt, at 1:10, will have as 1 humanity of separatist bombs He went on to say that all Friday in Quebec: “We have all guest speaker, Mr. James or shootings, or the unnecessary men hold a philosophy of life, the problems of any slaves.” M. clubbing of unarmed shouters Courtright, vice-president whether they know it or not. Bourgault is leader of the of separatist slogans. of Shell Oil of Canada It is derived from the individ­ avowedly non-violent separatist ual’s cultured atmosphere and organization, Rassemblement I wrote here 17 months ago Limited. Mr. Courtright ac­ that I would rather see Que­ constitutes his relationship to pour l’lndependance Nationale. quired a Bachelor of Arts bec separate from Canada, than his existence. A vast majority of French degree at the University of to have one more innocent per­ Mi-. Brandon traced the his­ Canadians, for their part, do son killed by a terrorist bomb. Ottawa, and a Bachelor of torical role of reason from the not really feel like slaves. But I still feel that way. In the Science degree in Civil En­ Dr. H. F. Hall times of Ancient Greece to mo­ they are scarcely aware at all Black Saturday column I said gineering at Queen’s Uni­ dern day, basing this on esthet­ of the resevoir of goodwill that I was moved emotionally by the ics, ethics, epistomology and exists for them in other parts of versity; he is also a grad­ clubbings in Quebec City; this metaphysics. Plato and Aristotle Canada — not weakwilled. per­ uate from Columbia Univer­ Hall To Speak was because most trouble­ were the two main philosophers missive goodwill; but an honest makers could have been arrest­ sity in Business Administra­ on who people based their desire to see if something can ed and locked up without the tion. The theme for this existence. The Platonist philos­ be worked out to resolve dif­ use of more force than is nec­ forcoming talk will be: On Standards ophy took hold at the begin­ ferences and keep the country essary to grab a few men by the ning of Ancient Greece. Plato to g e th e r. “ Contemporary Man in the arms, put them into patrol postulated that reality differed Just as some people in Can­ Business World” , and shoud wagons, and take them away. Of Education from the senses and mysticism ada tend to lump all United be of a special interest, no It was the clubs that bothered took a stranglehold on society States Southerners together as Dr. Henry F. Hall, Principal me, not the arrests, or the es­ doubt, to the commerce until it was broken in the Re­ racists, and to lump all French Emeritus of Sir George will give sential and first-rate organiza­ student. naissance. Aristotle advocated Canadians together under such a talk on Standards and Life to tion to ensure the Queen’s In the weeks to come, the that reality is real, man’s cons­ labels as separatists provide, the Standards Engineers Society sa fety . ciousness is conscience, and the French Canadians tend to focus will be on Art, No­ at their first meeting of this sea­ reason is man’s tool of know­ I did receive a number of identify the rest of the country vember 3rd, with Mr. Mar- son which is to be held at the ledge. From his philosophy, ob­ moderate letters, but also many with our own English-speaking ton O’Hara, B.A., M.A., di­ Northern Electric Company Of­ jectivism was derived. During extremists. Even some quite in­ violent ones, including these: rector of The Thomas More fice s, 1134 St. C atherine St., in the Industrial Revolution the telligent Quebeckers see the “Black Saturday — yes, it the seventh floor conference room Institute; Economics, No­ knowledge gained was destroyed rest of the country as being was the damn French that made commencing at 8:00 P.M. on Oc­ by the structure of the mind. dominated by a British figure it black.” Anonymous. vember 10th, with Mr. Ro­ tober 28, 1964. Although people were given the who resembles the late Colonel And: “Too bad the police bert Keyserlingk, B.A., Dr. Hall will discuss standards right to study art, science, Blimp: red-faced, white mus- h a d n ’ t g iv e n y o u a fe w cra ck s LL.D., K.M., President of and standardization in the field philosophy, etc., the mystics tached, writing stiff letters on the backside with their Palm Publishers and Inter of education and the increasing claimed to speak in the name from military institutes and clubs.” Anonymous. importance of standards in all of science. He went on to add other enclaves of the past. (Continued on page 6) And: “The only sad part of aspects of life. Anyone interested that Aristotle was denounced This view of English-speaking _ . , is very welcome to the meeting. even though he had made this Canadians of course is false. So Ulef Que^e= C, y f °3lc+e tf lspla/ of frtrniiforce is ic thothe fact fao: rnarthat thothe rot)red thing possible. Society became is any view that all French red gang running The Globe Platonist in thinking and Aris­ Canadians are hot-eyed Quebec- and Mail and the Canadian Tri­ totelian in practice. The Pla­ firste rs. ► bune weren’t within reach of Student Jailed tonist philosophy is still being their bats.” E. P. Gray, Ottawa. maintained in our present so­ QUEBEC (CUPi — A Univer­ ciety. It is being taught in most And: “Damn tripe for which sity of Ottawa student this week educational systems and the you are noted. A good example (October 20) denied charges in world has almost lost the Aris­ of a limited education, from a court that he shouted “gestapo" totelian concepts. Br. Brandon discusted reader.” Anonymous, at police during the royal visit also said that its results arc ten­ but “discusted". October 10. sion, secret terrors and fears, And: "Every new Canadian Denis Boyer, a 20 year-old pho­ and the institutionalization of has to swear allegiance to the tographer with The Fulcrum, stu­ one out of twelve people for Queen. Would you? Which side dent newspaper at the University mental health problems. are you on?” David Wilson. of Ottaw a testified in Q uebec The rest of the series will be O sh aw a. municipal court that he had re­ presented on tape during the This might be a good time mained silent until police knocked next nineteen weeks, every Fri­ to say whose side I'm on. his camera from his hands and day night in the Laurentian Ho­ I’m on the side of one Can­ he was arrested. tel. The cost for students for ada, including Quebec and with D’Arcy O’Connor He told Judge Marcel Letour- the entire series is 35 dollars. a Q u een . neau he hasn’t since seen the f I'm on the side of a Canada camera which he valued at about where regional designations are $200. given only for purposes of geo­ Editor Resigns Boyer was on assignment with "End graphical identification, and not two Fulcrum reporters in Quebec to denote a real or fancied D’Arcy O’Connor, Editor- city on the Saturday the Queen i i state of mind. in-chief of the Georgian has made five public appearances be­ Separatism I am also convinced that resigned his post and is fore separatist demonstrators. either of our major political He told reporters he was try­ Bryan Knight, Executive Editor parties can achieve this state taking a year from his stu­ ing to get a picture of Montreal of the Georgian, recently made within two or three decades. dies to travel through the boxer and separatist, Reggie a firm commitment to encourage But this will be accomplished r United States and South Chartrand, fighting with three bilingualism: he married a ma­ only if the moderate citizens America. He is to depart at helmeted police when a police­ demoiselle de Paris. of all Canada will show enough the end of this week on a man threw his camera to the Knight, a true-blue English­ V strength of purpose to choke ground. man, had been wandering around off the wild and weedy extrem­ motoring trip which will “I shouted ‘My camera’ and Sir George with a stiff upper lip ists on both sides of the Quebec eventually take him to Bue­ the next thing I knew 1 was in until two weeks ago. Since then, b o r d e r. nos Aires, Argentina. a policeman’s lap in the back his eyes have a new glitter, his The University Administration seat of a police car. I looked stomach a new shape and his Results of the By-Elcction has expressed its gratitude for down and saw Reggie Chartrand walk a new briskness. For Athletic Representatives Mr. O'Connor’s contributions to lying face-down on the floor with At the root of the remarkable the University as Editor of the three pairs of legs holding him.” change in Knight is a diminutive .(Held Oct. 22 and 231 Georgian, and has voiced regret Boyer was released from jail brown-eyed brunette. Married 1. Tony Bush; 2. Helen Bahr; at his departure. 24 hours later on $25 bail. October in the Friends’ Meeting 3. John Watson. Total vote: Alex Shenfield, Managing The court this week reserved House in Toronto, Knight and his 146: U n favou rable ba llots: 4. Editor, has been unanimously judgement on charges of disorder­ bride (the former Ariane Triana) Dr. Marsden of McGill Univer­ Chief Returning Officer. ratified by the Georgian Editorial ly conduct and insulting the police have (we understand) been living sity speaking to the Biology Ralph Schneider, Board and the Publications Com- to which Boyer pleaded not guilty. happily ever after in a green Club. mission as O’Connor's successor N n H o le 'I OC cat f o r niHnnTnnnl The Georgian, October 27, 1964 ------tion w e have. W e kn ow that the the that ­ ica ow n u kn m m e W co f o have. e od w eth m tion ly on the less p eople know about th em and and em th un­ about less know orth w present re a eople p to s lem less rob p solutions ct orld w rfe e is p ost this m se u ca e b alternatives our w ell, you put them on us, you you us, on them put you ell, w . ied b lob e w enever h w upr te Ou Ota politi­ p a ttaw O ur O . them support w e re a lly a re, w hat w e w ant, ant, w e w who hat w out re, a finding lly a re about e w how but us to this told ys a alw ave h cians a j t s l tk te f — ff o them take ell w as st ju can Letters w ant. W e certain ly d on ’ t have have t ’ on d e ly w hat certain w e iev e W ach to e ant. op w h e w how l h as r, u we e cn­ con re a e w but ers, answ the ll a cern ed enough to try and find you find ’t n ? ca e and m hy sa W . try the them o f to d o e som enough out ed cern e o a i t e n in­ and re atu m im an of le p m a x e Sir: r ea D N ot long ag o, a test ban treaty treaty ban test a o, ag called long and ot t N en m a isarm d r clea u n ilar sim as w It editorial. te ra ccu a in g and studying, not d rea m in g to to g in m rea d not studying, yet signed. and as g w ” in le ib ss treaty o p a im such “ l.” a o tly g ered recen le sid con ossib p im as w ost alm an it,” uebec Q .’s .D .N .C .U C the eor­ G g in the cern con in Situation. itorial ed , s gian previou a ous s r n se be ni , s,” ik tn ea b ashed unw “ or rs” se u ro L a M a ca za . T h e a rticle did not not did rticle at a e h T events . the za ca on a M ted a en L m com and strations or­ on dem the l era f o sev etri­ se d been e “ cau v a h the as w to . .D .N .C l” .U ta C n e m to eace. p given to ­ steps ork w rther fu are about help rs e b m e m . .D .N .C .U C to ation inform l a ctu fa and tone in b e lie v e in, and are w illing to g o o g to illing w are ho that w le and eop p in, re pression a e im v lie e b the strators on em e d v a g the it but ca ll the d em on strators “ rabb le le rabb “ strators on em d the ll ca t­ rin p rticle a an to attention r u o y acaza M La in and there treal on r M a e y in st la the In ganization. b rin g gas m ask s, unless o f cou rse, rse, cou f o unless s, ask m gas g rin b publicity. l” ta n e m ie hs umme, ht eotd reported that ­ a g a er, M m s m ’ su n a cle a this M f o zine issue an in d e d re e v co ress p he T part. took er, me f isa e snc I’ ’m I ce sin ce, instan r fo e (m rs, be ater w and soap you all to vitation , arch M e c a e P ster a E s ’ r a e y st la detri­ “ that One call se. cau cannot their ly r in fo certa ork w and out o h c e or rmai d non­ ed in a rem r o ublicity p se u le b ca ra u vo fa the m azette fro G to the either and orters e v Star rep a g ers b em and ontreal m M the events . .D .N .C .U these C ich h w in n of u cen member. 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Joseph S. C lark (D — P e n n a ), ch airm an o f the Senate su bcom m ittee ittee m bcom su Senate Senator the ed f o join an irtz W airm ch r. M ), a n s. n e outh, lem P Y rob f — p o t (D t en en lark loym C p ploym em em S. n n u U the Joseph on youth S. ittee m U. om C to er sw an an as ool sch or s i ied tai ng beyond d n o y e b n­ g dow in in and tra ard education. d upw lize an cia e public r sp fo g r free llin fo ca f in o er, ow p an M expansion and ard t w en m high loy p m d E on on bey education public f o sion exten the rged u tly n ce re irtz W v o c a tio n a l sch o o ls, te ch n ic a l l a ic n ch te ls, o o sch ­ a c u d e l a n lic b tio a u c p o v e e fr l, o o h sc igh h c s j or or’ ommuniy ity n u m m co ’ r o r io n ju least ls, at o o e sch d lu c in soon ld u o sh tion o f e d u ca tio n and tra in in g is is r. M g in ,” e in s n tra e p x e said. lic b u and rk rs p la C at yea 14 le b n ila to tio a v ca a u rs up d a e e y that o tw so f o t s e g fir lle o e c th f o and , s e g lle co ak si t abiiy of i d e riv p e d f o ility b a e th said lark C asked. e h ,” n also tio a t c u u b d e e start, e fr fits e n e b l cia o rity s cu e s age ld o f o rt a p r te en n u tak t. n co e m e y b lo lic p b m u e ld p u o c ll fu e at e th rd fr a tow step f o le g sin n sio n a p x e the a b o u t e x te n d in g the p e rio d o f f o d rio e p the g in d ­ n e te r x e t u o t b u a o b a t s ju e w t t ’ o n n ld u o h g S in k “ in th said. e h e b ,” ity r u c e s rest su e th e b ld u o w n tio ca u d e d alo es t n n ­ n a p x n e tio ca u an d e in r o b lt e la e su fr re e th lso a re n o o M ld u o n w titio e et. p a m ark m co r fo m o fr s ce n a ch ’s th u o y n te h ig e h l cia so ich h w at e g a e th g cin u d hr o sx Suggesi g stin e g g u S rs six. te s g n u o y to d e e iv re r p th e d d r e g o f a s ram g ts n r a fo erch in­ e. m s alik b jo , ’s n ­ e n f .D u o h sm h e P d s tra d g d n education an sa tin “ a ou g th cre in ild u f b o said, the s d e h re d , ” f o stry u d sion ­ e r le p o e p d g an n u o y f o ce s n d n te is sa x ou e th e v o m ile h w rth o w er i sude pr s er­ r fe n o c ss re p t en aily d d stu l a and n tio a s n ­ rn a te itio rn ib te h in x e an art , n ir, fa titio e c n ie c s th u o y l hidr o si ilate assim to n re r ild to ch a n e S ree, m th s, slu m e ra g g a ro p at l o o g h c in s n in ry g e b rse u n l cia e sp p e rm a n e n t a d m in istra tiv e s ta ff ff ta s a e d an tiv istra s in r m d cto a tra n o c t n e n rt a o d p p an rm e su p ’s n cts ite tio a on ch r o p r o s c n e p o the e h ir s T a e F iv e c s. e rld lin o d a W e d l a st tre ain n o ag M g in k r o w e th r o f n issio m b u s e th re a p ill w n tio sla n ce. tra en s u o e n lta u im S nce. ­ en e p m o c tre ea th ­ a r n r teu a te m in a l an a n tio are t r o p e r e th in ak ur d educatonal ­ o r p l a n tio a c u d e ed rg u lark C a wa onl he i step. t s fir e th ly n o as w day . ired h e r­ b a , g ill w in ck a b ­ e r l ia c n n a la p fin e s th in w f I and is 1967. e 28, itte m il m r p co A th u o y e th , tion . n tio ra o rp o C ir a F ld r o W Youth Canadian ial taci , n a i ­ in an and s, n ctio ttra a ld r o w l sica u m a l, a tiv s fe film l a n tio e e hroughout he er­ r fe n o c e th t u o h g u o r th sed u be n recognii he need n e th f o n itio n g o c e r In “ atn of h pa Satur­ plan the f o rafting D S e c re ta r y o f L a b o r W irtz said said irtz W r o b a L f o y r ta re c e S " F r e e e d u ca tio n is y o u th ’s ’s th u o y is n tio ca u d e e e r F " si f aton woul ld u o w n tio ca u d e e e fr said e H he ect lned d e tlin u o ts c je o r p e th g n o m A B oth M r. 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O H Street, G IN T E Luke E M St. ' S D N 2196 IE R F at Wed. 10:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. p.m. a.m.-3:30 10:30 Wed. to: p.m. a.m.-9:00 10:00 ly p Mon. ap should courses. r­ e p ex ic teers m e d olun ­ s V ca a im previou or re o m ce ien than are lan­ portant interest one cere than to sin ore m given in e b fluent s. m will ra rog p ce n n ow re fe re their P out rry ca night e on eet m ill w groups The M en a re n eed ed to lead lead to ed eed n re a en M T H U R SD A Y , O ctober 29th. 1964, 1964, 29th. ctober O , Y A SD R U H T help the boy s to plan and and plan to s boy the help those applican ts w ho are are ho w ts applican those e i rasn t us t” ct,” e sp su to son rea is re e h T “ HE Y L H T N O M L A E R T N O M E TH ENDS (9UAKERS) S ing R E follow K A U 9 ( the to S D you N IE R F invites F O S E G N E L L A H C W E N E M O S “ NG OF T SOCI Y T IE C O S E TH F O G IN T E E M Cotne fom page 5) e g a p m fro ontinued (C (Mrs.) Bella Boewick Boewick Bella (Mrs.) ed Dp, Eoo ics, Econom f o Dept, Head, 53 t Ubi St. Urbain St. 3553 Ann A rbor, Michigan. Michigan. rbor, A Ann MEN WANTED MEN SETTLEMENT SETTLEMENT UNIVERSITY UNIVERSITY valu a ble ex p erien ce. ce. erien p ex ble a valu e. 842-8836 Tel. t .5 p.m. 8.15 at “-Wirtz etr: — Lecture: N 1964" 4 6 9 1 IN

B.A., B.A., . . . . M.A., M.A.,

her father could play as a uni­ versity regent.”

“A student’s file is indeed con­ 1964 27, October Georgian, The Georgiantics Chevrier Clash fidential information and that confidence has been respected,” Mr. Boss said Monday. “A file, however, may be described gen­ By RICKI HOFFMAN erally as being that of a good, poor or indifferent student and TODAY At Ottawa U that was done in reply to ques­ COMMERCE WEEK: Commerce Week will tiold a football OTTAWA (CUP) — The sinuated that Miss Chevrier tions on that point.” Forecast today at 1.15 p.m. in Birks Hall. No guff, the guests will be Grand Council of the stu­ “owed her admission to the Uni­ The Grand Council has so far Jim Trimble, Red Storey, Sam “The Rifle” Etcheverry and J. I. versity of Ottawa to the part taken no further action. Albrecht. All students are welcome to attend. dents’ union of the Univer­ NEWMAN CLUB: Newman Club will continue its series on “ Con­ sity of Ottawa clashed this temporary Man in His World” . This weeks speaker will be James week with the university’s Courtright, Manager of Shell Canada Ltd. (Eastern Division). He public relations officer over Quebec Separate will speak on “ Contemporary Man and the Business World". Every­ one is welcome. (G. R. complained that Hillel gives terrible annual remarks he made about the potato pancakes. Don’t gripe pal, Newman Club doesn’t even give academic standing of a - Says that!) The time will be 1.10 p.m. at 1452 Drummond. student. Sociologist C.U.C.N.D. The C.U.C.N.D. will hold a meeting at the home of The council voted Sunday TORONTO (CUP) — A sociolo­ tipping into separatism.” Mr. Michael Reichman at 5.00 p.m. All those interested in attending meet (Oct. 18) to demand that PRO gist at the University of Toronto Johnson said. in the Main Lobby at 4.30 p.m. (This is a good-humored Club; they're Bill Boss retract a statement he says the economic disadvantages Separatism is the aim of most not sensitive like the Biology Club or Folk-Singing Society. They made Oct. 9 about Miss Marie will likely not prevent the separa­ of Quebec’s young intellectuals take a lot of razz and don’t write nasty letters saying that power has Chevrier, daughter of Lionel tion of Quebec from Canada. and is catching on among the corrupted me.) Chevrier, Canadian High Com­ W. D. Johnson, a lecturer in more mature intelligentsia too. CANTERBURY CLUB: (Has nothing whatever to do with the missioner in London. Mr. Boss sociology who has just returned The big fear of many French- T ales.) Informal discussion for all Anglican Students on anything at Monday rejected the demand. all and everything in general. The Rev. H. St. Clair Hilcliey will at­ from studies in Quebec, said last Canadian intellectuals is that The controversy started Oct. week, the last stumbling block separatism may well lead to the tend. (Maybe they’ll learn to give credit cards too?) 8 in London when Mr. Chevrier confronting the separatist move­ evolution of a fascist state. AMATEUR RADIO SOCIETY: There will be a meeting and Morse said on a BBC radio interview ment are the French-Canadian The separatist movement has Code T raining Session in R o o m s 323 and 317 at 1.00 p.m . that he “was having some dif­ communities outside the province provided French-Canadians with GEORGIAN TRAINING COURSE: Those still learning to be ficulty in getting Marie into a o f Q u ebec. a new elan said Mr. Johnson. The snarky are asked to be in Room A-211 at 3.30 p.m. proper university” in Britain He added, however, that opin­ paradox is that now French-Cana­ because of the ‘.‘higher standard ARTS FACULTY ASSOCIATION: A meeting will be held in ion is gathering on the side of dians have an attainable goal, of education in the United King­ R oom 223 at 1.15 p .m . those who want to leave them as their former indolent resentment d o m .” CHEMICAL INSTITUTE OF CANADA: A Meeting will be held they are on the grounds that they of English Canadians has largely in Room 425 at 1.00 p.m. (Make up your minds readers, which will Mr. Boss said the following are already on the road to assimi­ vanished. day that the 19-year-old Miss it be. Commerce Week. Newman Club, or this? > lation. But separation is not some­ Chevrier was “having a hard The backbone of the separatist thing that will happen tomorrow. TOMORROW time holding her own” at the movement is Quebec’s new tech­ Recent polls show that only 13 S.U.S.: There will be an S.U.S. Council Meeting at 1.00 p.m. in University of Ottawa. nocratic, middle class. They are per cent of the Quebec population the Conference Room. He said Mr. Chevrier “would willing to sacrifice “free-enter­ is actually in favour of separat­ seem at last to be learning that prise capitalism” and to cast in PSYCHOLOGY CLUB: The Psych. Club will present a film on ing now . parents no longer ‘get’ their "Activity Group Therapy". It will be held in Room 308 at 1.00 p.m. their lot with the state to change A specific movement is far children into university: stud­ political structures for economic from mature. No one has really BIOLOGY CLUB: The Sensitive Biology Club will show two ents must earn their right to ad­ and political equality. formulated a definite plan for films at 1.00 p.m. in Room 426. Although “ the ignoring suffered by mission and to remain.” One striking feature of the sep­ separation, and it will take a the Members of the Biology Club is irrepairable" I will inform the The Grand Council said in its aratist movement is that French- much more radical political com­ public that two films will be presented. “ Heigh Arctic” , and “ Life resolution that a students’ file Canadians are taking over the bination than Lesage and his on the Western Marshes". Please be on time (the Biology Club is is confidential information and labor and farming movements, he L iberals to im plem ent it. sensitive. Mr. Boss had “greatly attacked said some unions are pressing for For the moment, at any rate, DEBATING UNION: The Debating Union will hold a meeting at a student’s reputation.” nationalist goals rather than more separation is no more than “the 1.00 p .m . in R oom 224. The council' also charged that money and shorter working hours. general climate” of political opin­ GEORGIAN CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: Dr. Lionel Gurney will Mr. Boss, by mentioning that If this separatist sentiment ion. But Quebec will separate speak on his work with the Red Sea Mission in the Near East. It will Mr. Chevrier was on the univer­ spreads to the whole labor move- eventually. Mr. Johnson said. be held in Room A-402 at 1.10 p.m. All are welcome to attend. sity's board of regents, had in­ i ment there will be “a complete NEWMAN CLUB: A Bible Discussion will be held at 4.00 p.m. (In case you’ve all forgotten where Newman Centre is, 1452 Drum­ THURSDAY mond Street is da place. AMATEUR RADIO SOCIETY: The A.R.S. will hold a meeting Kiss Canned AMATEUR RADIO SOCIETY: A meeting will be held in Room in R oom 323 and 317 at 1.00 p .m . 317 at 1.00 p.m . CANTERBURY CLUB: The Celebration of the Holy Eucharist for PRE-LAW SOCIETY: Pre-Law Society will sponsor a trip to St. Anglican Students and faculty will be held at 1.15 p.m. in the Vincent de Paul Minimum Security (Leclerc Institute). All are Y.M C A- Chapel. at Manitoba welcome, no charge, bus leaves in front of Drummond Street Exit at NEWMAN CLUB: Weekly Mass will be held in Newman Centre, 1.10 p.m. and will return (minus a few perhaps) at 6.30 p.m. There 11452 D rum m on d Street, at 1.10 p .m . L et’s try fo r a big turn-out. W IN N IP E G (C U P ) — A 36 will also be a meeting of the Society at 1.00 p.m. in Room 336 ito dis­ I (As you’ve probably gathered by now, I'm a Newmanite. It doesn’t minute film called “Kiss” was cuss who should be put away.) | in any way affect the amount of razzing they will get). banned by Manitoba provincial STUDENT CHRISTIAN MOVEMENT: A meeting will be held in WINTER CARNIVAL: There will be a meeting in Room 308 at censors before it could be shown R oom 225 at 1.00 p .m . 1.10 p.m. It will be open to all groups interested in entering a float to a University of Manitoba aud­ HILLEL: Stanley Lewis, famous sculptor and artist, will de­ in the Winter Carnival Parade. ience last week. 1 GEORGIAN CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP: A meeting will be held liver an illustrated lecture entitled "Israel in Space and Time?” The film consists of 12 three- It will be held in B udge Hall from 1.00 p. m . — 2.00. Slides w ill be in R oom 313 at 1.15 p .m . minute sequences, each showing shown while lecturing. (Hillel may serve crummy pancakes but last FRIDAY a continuous shot of a couple week's lecture on the French Revolution and the Jew. was well done. AMATEUR RADIO SOCIETY: Another A.R.S. will be held at kissing. One of them shows two I also mention this small bouquet because they aren’t sensitive 1.00 p .m . in R oom 317. H have to hand it to you. you surely try hard boys in this behavior. either. Not like the Biology Club.) 1 e n o u g h .) The film was to have been part COMMERCE WEEK: Commerce Week has planned another in­ DEBATING UNION TOURNAMENT: The Debating Union Tour­ of a program entitled “ The North teresting day. Prof. D. E. Armstrong will be a guest speaker for nament will hold a Meeting in Room St. Lawrence of the Y.M.C.A. at American Expedition of New the M.B.A. Program. Prof. Armstrong is the Director of Commerce 1.00 p .m . American Cinema" being pre­ at McGill and Director of McGill Graduate School of Business. WEST INDIAN SOCIETY: The Clan will meet in Room 308 at sented by an American. Robert i 1.00 p.m. (Another Bouquet: this Club always has their announce­ Brown, in a university residence ments in early and done correctly. Also, they aren't easily hurt like auditorium. FREE HELP ON the Folk-Singing Society. The chairman of the students' D E B A T IN G U N ION : A m eetin g w ill be held in R oom 224 at 1.00 committee who organized the pro­ p.m. (In passing, may I sincerely wish you all the best in the Debate gram said he believed censors SELECTING YOUR CAREER this weekend. I know it will be a big success, after all, you will have objected to the film as a whole. It could be the most important decision of your life — the career big Me as a hostess.) “They felt even the heterosxual you choose for yourself when you graduate. Before you decide, NEWMAN CLUB: The Newman Club will hold the “ Great Pump­ scenes were pornographic,” he get the answers to these 5 questions : kin Party” at 8.00 p.m. Admition for members will be $.50 and non­ said. A censor board spokesman 1. Which career field produces more top corporation presidents members will be charged $.75. Everyone is asked to wear costumes refused comment. than any other ? if possible. Refreshments will be served, and it promises to be a Mr. Brown, himself a film­ 2. Which career field offers 100,000 new openings next year and Big success (plug plug). maker. described “ kiss" as a fun every year for the next ten years ? film.” Boston audiences liked it 3. Which career field lets you make the best use of all your MORE THIS WEEK and it was shown at the recent college training, including liberal-arts courses ? The Commerce Week will hold Films on Tuesday at 2.00 p.m. in New York International Film 4. What starting salary can you expect in this career ? Room A-201, Wednesday, at 2.00 p.m. in Room A-201, and Friday at Festival. He added. "The censors' 5. Does this career offer you security ? 1.15 p.m. in Room A-201. All are welcome to attend. decision surprised the hell out of You can get the answers to This Sunday, Anglican Students of S.G.W.U. are invited to m e ." these questions and many worship at the Christ Church Cathedral. A light breakfast will be others in a fact-filled, 24- 1 I The film's creator is Andy War­ served at the Canterbury House, 3555 University Street. Watch your page booklet, yours for the J Please send my copy of the J hol, who specializes in filming letters for further announcements, or call Rev. Paul Gibson. 844-1675. asking w i t h o u t cost or ,Opportunity booklet: everyday occurences w i t h o u t obligation — This booklet I 1 The Debating Union will sponsor its 2nd Annual International moving the camera. His other Debating Tournament this weekend. The topic for Debate will be "Opportunities in Selling" J J films include "Sleep” a six hour “ Resolved that Race Relations Can be Improved By Legislation ". was compiled by public- , Name ...... I continuous sequence of a man spirited leaders of North- I I The Liberal Club will hold a general meeting to discuss the up­ sleeping. American industries as a J ’ coming Convention and Model Parliament. Watch posters for more The aim of the North American service to you. It costs you , Address ...... , news on that! nothing but a minute of your I * Expedition of New American time to fill out the coupon ! J GENERAL j Cinema is to show "avant garde” at right — yet it may change | City ...... Z o n e .... , Tf you haven't already noticed. I have made a real effort to try American films. Among the other your entire life. Mail to ■ and hand each “deserving" Club its little Bouquet this week. The films in the program are two "Industrial Sales Division, the j Prov I only reason I did this is because I have received a few rather nasty political satires and an updated Procter A Gamble Co., 1255 , r ...... * ...... i letters to the effect that “ we are wondering whether you are com­ Greek legend. Laird, Town of Mount-Royal, _ _ _ _ ■ petent enough to hold this post". Until I receive letters from sensi­ “ K iss" was last w eek in the Q u e ." tive Clubs. I shall not attempt to be humorous. However, in passing, custody of the censors until It P. & G. WILL 8E RECRUITING AT SIR GEORGE WILLIAMS I would think that Georgiantics is a waste of space in an already- could be shipped back to its New ON FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27th. WHY NOT REGISTER NOW. good paper, if it is left this way. What do you think. Georgians? The Georgian, October 27, 1964 ~ 8 h Goga, coe 2, I964 27, October Georgian, The

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Marketing in IBM offers you one of the with the study of the requirements of a most exciting and rewarding careers in business and carries through the plan­ the business world today. It is a true ning of a data processing system; presen­ teamwork function —as you participate tations of the advantages of The system; with m^ny other IBM men*and women itSj maintenance; and continuing assist­ in the varied activities of business and ance to the customer—all to achieve the industry. A career in marketing opens best possible solution to his problems. doors to a vast variety of undertakings Briefly, the IBM Representative leads in which our equipment plays a key note. the marketing team. He makes the cus­ Aside from the excitement, stimulation tomer calls, the presentations, and the and challenge, a marketing career with demonstrations of the new solutions for IBM offers you many tangible rewards, the problems. including broad opportunities for We have a brochure describing career advancement. openings. Consult your university place­ The marketing team consists of IBM ment officer. He can also put you in touch Representatives. Systems Engineers, In­ with our career representatives when dustry Specialists, Customer Engineers, they visit your campus. But. if you prefer, and others. These diverse talents com­ contact: bine to work with business management Mr. B. D. Campbell in developing more efficient Data Pro­ 1123 Beaver Hall Hill IBM cessing methods. The teamwork begins INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES COMPANY LIMITED Montreal 1, P.Q. 866-2971 o The Georgian, October 27, 1964 I of s , esn ti hsiiy a o e ieses the side-steps ce on at utter, m hostility, this students hich sensing other w r, the sso fe opinions, ro p n ow dissenting, his es ress p ex etim to som ed are allow is student a “ C o m m u n ist", or “ fin k ", or other such niceties. The The niceties. such other or ", k fin “ on or When intent ist", n u sin. m is m o al C “ cardin a rofessor p is allow not the oes questioning d often thus and and d e ery d V w ercro s. lecturing, ov is estion qu ss cla r fo the and that ulated stim finds lly a n sio cca o is he evertheless, N t. a b com will he a s k ,a qu estion : w ill he a rg u e ? R a rely . He He . rely a R ? e u rg a he ever, ill ow w H : said. estion qu has rer ,a k lectu s a his he ing eth som will by inspired sch ola r. He finds that he is only required to learn learn to a required isn’t he only is erally he gen and that books finds like He 't r. oesn ola d sch he r, e ev ubet i srcl ebl n e iy combatve." e tiv a b m o c ic m e d tily ca p a em y and an m f o verbal “ teaching strictly and is g learnin bjects su the result him tell 't on d He they that grasp. to stract, able ab not are is he they hich w that ls e rses, fe cou anities hum ers. answ his parents, the co n fo rm ism o f his p e e r g r o u p ." A s a a s A ." p u o r g r e e p conventions, his f by o ited ism His lim rm “ fo n Paul : co lly tly fu n re Said the ce ca re . d rd, e His been bsu rm A parents, fo . n Up ily his co ave m h has ing fa a row s G been He f ith o otion w em e have p author co been , situations. an or m thought r, e ood real f v G o e living, 's a s if life sse ake ce , m ro om of p to seld e and ad h som has ce never n with he scie ted confron nfortunately social U and anything. g: interestin finds he hich w anu­ m textbook or lties, facu f o dean ors, ­ m ern o c gov f ly o ed ogg board d and talking, nups grow co listening spent ctive. estru d is it that fa ctu rer l. The m odern student is rarely asked to use use to asked rarely is student initiative. n odern ow m ents his The assignm l. rer these ctu fa ses ca ost m (in ts en m assign pleting but ucation, ed an getting f o ethod m oor p a ly on not is have not been prep ared by the teach er, but b y a distant distant a y b but er, ere teach w the by ears y ared prep hese T been . not ssroom have cla a in rs a e y re o m or school 14 to even g goin students, that any M find teach. intelligence, can high one with ly ick those qu how on T h erefore the em ph asis is not on how to teach, but but teach, to how on not is asis ph em the erefore h T m ust obtain an ed u cation in o rd e r to m ake m oney. oney. m ake m to r e e rd o eryon in ev that is cation u ed sus consen an the y, a obtain od T ust m education. ass m Commentary He p rob a b ly has no interest in debate or verbal verbal or debate in interest no has ly b a rob p He He is con fron ted with arts and scie n ce cou rses, rses, cou ce n scie and arts with ted fron con is He or 13 ately im rox p p a spent has student e g ra e v a e h T n n c es h fehma i bih. uly o ­ how sually U bright. is an m fresh the s se ca any m In S o ciety is in the m idst o f an h ysterical d rive fo r r fo rive d ysterical h an f o idst m the in is ciety o S dcto’ Betrayal B Education’s

n mrvmn i te university the in improvement an ef n n ttl es. h bih student bright The sense. total any in self illusioned. nvriis Tee s ite potnt o h tdn t eeo him­ develop to student the for opportunity little is There universities. - as h irtr tks lc hoh n h hg shos n the and schools high the in h oth place takes ivriter, the says o s, o a ana a ad ot. e s tk fve fiv take ust m He jotto. and s ram ag n a lay p to rse, cou ytm, u h fes e a o rlhs tdnsb its by students his trol the him con e in ect can believ resp he y a not m students his rofessor that p realize ." y a not w y n a does feels He he “ but use. he T , . system system g radin g lectu rer who is v ery d ecisiv e about the date on hich on w date the the about e end. a the ecisiv d to rs e v upholds isco d never ho “ w He and ." g ords, due. in w e is b t ’s en ery n an v m a m hum d is o assign o G a an who as in rer self ho, im w lectu h its, cred and for exposes te hours, e p m co fter a ust m still he ere h w ool, sch high irrelevan t cou rses w hich teach him little-, e x ce p t of of t p ce x e little-, him teach hich w rses cou t irrelevan students with erses v con rarely ho w lorified g a rer, lectu finds al he form Instead discussion. in partake to and gra d es. He d isco v e rs an unfriendly, a lo o f and and f o lo a unfriendly, an rs e v isco d He es. d opportunity gra the and have ould w he here w sses cla agined im , eilly 'R O r sso fe ro P ask better ’d u o y an, m g youn logy, drive, o f independence, and o f p ro v o ca tiv e thought. He He thought. e his tiv ca o v ed ro p f o envision and he is ool ect sch independence, resp f o high this drive, s se finished ca e he som hen W In ed. ers. teach his ects why resp here, e p sco our beyond at's h T “ or ." e s r u o c our future yea rs at university as y ears o f am bition, of of bition, am f o ears y as t­ university isappoin d at is rs student yea the s se future ca ost m in and unearned, o­ rop th an really of s hat’ eat T m “ the or eh." -h to heh 402?” back Sosh get take you let's ’t on ell, d W “ — g sayin issue T he co lle g e student finds that he m ust study several several study ust m he that finds student e g lle co he T It is am azing that the young student gen erally erally gen student young the that azing am is It saife Students issatisfied D , id hmef iapitd n dis­ and disappointed himself finds , aig okdfrad to forward looked having iiitv, uroiy r rativity. crea or riosity cu -initiative, ve i itlet Hs colng a dsotd earnest­ distorted has g ." n itio b schoolin m a His and ness intellect. his en ev d i sx lt, uld i c ist n prbabl ly b a rob p and riosity cu ­ g his ra iscou d dulled initiative, his ality, sexu sapped has his that ed ss ce ro p long a such a m ach in e, for m ost p rofessors forbid it to display display to it forbid rofessors p ost m for e, in ach m a such exam ination. But this com p u ter is d e fe ctiv e — it is is it — e ctiv fe e d is ter u p com this But ination. exam not m eant to be a m ach in e at all. Y et it will rem ain ain rem will it et Y all. at e in ach m a be to eant m not must turn in student The ation. inform s feed rer lectu the show, hostility eekend. w this e g lle lets co he ild w and the , m o ld attending fficia o in all ard tow moie hs nomain n rprduc i o an on it ce u rod rep and ation inform which into this ter, u p com orize a em m like treated is He rs. ea y 20 to 12 ­ con student. the only trust can not One does study. inistration of adm the instead that e d clu pin-ups, es g ra cou their gloriou s university. The student is now hostile hostile now is of student reputation the The is ls university. officia the s to gloriou en­ their portant hich w im is ere osph What atm an is It therein. ed serv slop the in som e ca ses, live in the co lle g e d orm itory , and eat eat and , itory orm d e g hand lle co to ust, the m in student The live reluctant tives. ses, are cep ca tra e con ls som about fficia in o ation form these in out nfortunately, U hysteria am on g officia ls con cern in g unw ed m others. others. m ed unw g in cern con ls officia g on am hysteria and how he m a y entertain a girl. T here is alw ays som e e som ays alw is here where T and girl. a when es ecid entertain d y a m he inistration how adm and The . controlled situation This ? ity tiv a cre he , if ry e engulfs. v isco aste d w to interest, o g ote ill prom w the that about orry w ollars d ust m He hundred l schedules. era and sev es, d gra ents, m s ie die e i grws i sras ad ial, it finally, and this spreads, can it ow s, H row g it ork. w se: isea ate d gradu a which like r fo is about ter future, en his to about orry w ust college m e H out. flunks a person , is when he break s dow n and is referred to to referred is and Paul n as dow s A s treated is break he student a .” inistration. ce e when n a adm tim id is u ly g on the , The to “ person a s stated, lem an rob m p ood G his brings som ething b eca u se other cou rses interfere. H e is is e H he when in interfere. lies p ap rule interested rses this cou and e b erson er p ev a other n as can se treated u eca He rely b ra rocess. p ething som g learnin the or six cred its each y ear, th erefore, he includes som e e som includes he erefore, th ear, y each its cred six or “ snap c o u r s e s " in o rd er to e a se the load. He m ust rush rush ust m He load. the se a e to er rd o in " s e s r u o c snap “ T he student, sa y s Paul G ood m an , “ has been through through been has “ , an m ood G Paul s y sa student, he T A student is, th erefore, e x p e cte d to g o to sch ool for for ool sch to o g to d cte e p x e erefore, th is, student A n o isiuin, h sx ie te tdn is student the f o life sex the institutions, e som In n hr, h suet s wor aot assign­ about orry w ust m student the short, In

How Not To

< n a Make A Movie o It is seldom that one gets the the boy’s father. We find out, opportunity to see as bad a film later, that this was due to fear, but the scene in which he rejects as Behold, A Pale Horse. The o the boy does not even hint at fear. n movie convinces me that director, Hh Instead, there is the paradox of o Fred Zinnemann, and script­ a war-hero to whom honor is O" I* writer, J. P. Miller, know nothing sacred, blithely sloughing off his about drama or the nature of duty. human motivation. Honor again rears its ugly head 1 and demands that Artiguez visit o The story is set in France and his dying mother in Spain. At this o Spain twenty years after the point, we are given a picture of Spanish Civil War. The central the wicked Spanish Captain who character is Manuel Artiguez, a killed the boy’s father. He ap­ militant, clergy-hating ex-hero, pears to have an obsession about who was forced to exile himself destroying Manuel Artiguez; but in F ra n ce. this is never adequately explained A boy appears and demands by the film makers. Why should that Artiguez revenge his father this man have such a strong feel­ who has been tortured to death ing twenty years after the war? by the Guardia Civilia. Artiguez Now comes the long, hideous, promptly throws the boy out. At extraneous, segment in which this point, Messrs. Zinnemann Manuel finds out that his mother Possibly, Anthony Quinn is thinking of his director, in this scene from Fred Zinnemann’s “ Behold and Miller leave France and their is really dead, that a trap has A Pale Horse.” audience is left in a state of been set for him in Spain, and puzzlement. Little effort is made that the man who is supposedly Manuel decides to walk into the faster and faster and then cuts music. The only scenes which to establish in the minds of the his friend is really an informer. trap and the audience is left with to the boy kicking a soccer ball achieve any real effect, I am in slow motion and our hero is audience any logical motovation This is done through the boy. The the job of supplying the reason sure, were purely accidental. behind the action of the char­ boy, by the way, disturbed me as dead. The scene is totally out of See this film only if you are in­ for this move. Frankly, I found acters. Artiguez is supposedly a a logical character. I often won­ place in the movie. terested in how not to make a great hero who still longs to win der where he lives, during the it im possible. The dialogue only at times rises movie. And even then, wait till it the battle he lost twenty years be­ course of time that the movie Mr. Zinnemann takes over at above the mediocre. The photo­ comes to the System Theatre and fore. But the film conveys no takes place. He just conveniently the death scene. After Manuel is graphy is nothing to speak of and see it for fifty cents along with feeling about the man. There is appears and disappears. No gen­ shot he lies on the floor and looks at times I thought that Maurice two Elvis movies and six Donald no inner conflict brought out uine relationship between he and up the four flights of stairs to the Jarre was trying to create an­ Duck cartoons. about his decision not to revenge Manuel is developed. ceiling. Everything begins to spin other Third Man theme with his John Harrison

•; tfnp* ‘ at meg ill: folk concert: Weisbuch Gauthier Exhibition Scope

The exhibition of Weisbuch’s work ran from the For its first program of the current season, Scope Great 7th-21st of October at the Galerie Dresdnere. This young Society of M cG ill University is presenting an out­ artist seems to have a unique outlook on portraiture. standing evening of contemporary Canadian poetry. As one wanders through his works the same ex­ Four of the best known major Canadian poets will pressive face occurs over and over again. I thought present selections from their latest books, all to be that at first he’d just hired the one model, or perhaps published this fall. Irving Layton will read from The used his own face as a point of departure, but gradual­ Laughing Rooster, his 17th volume of poems since his ly I came to realize that the puzzle went much deeper. first was published in 1946. Leonard Cohen will read He doesn’t seek the likeness of his subject, nor does selections from his soon-to-be-released Flowers For he want to dpict a social class. He sees all about him, Hitler. Phyllis Gotlieb, well known for both her poetry men stripped of their souls, and it is this universal and science-fiction, will take selections from her new characteristic of the twentieth century that he ex­ book, Within The Zodiac, and Earle Birney, head of the pounds. He can’t concentrate on men's faces nor can he school of writing of the University of British Columbia, ignore their anxiety. As a result, there is deep sadness will read from Near False Creek Mouth. in the glance of all the “people” he creates. This he The program will be presented in the auditorium of wraps in a network of subtle traits, and the symbology the new Humanities (Leacock) Building on Friday, 01 the face is left to throb against its purposely unde­ October 30 at 8.30 p.m. Special student tickets at $1.00 fined background — usually a wash of muted yellow are available either at the McGill Union or SGWU ochre. Student receptionist. Judging from the reception ac­ corded each of these poets in their previous separate This pulsation between the subject and its environ­ trips to Canadian and foreign universities, their first ment is one clue to Weisbuch’s style. Forms are con- joint reading should prove to be an evening of excep­ tional literary merit. Claude Gauthier

Last week Les Quatre-Vignt and Claude Gauthier appeared on a double bill at the Comedie Canadienne. ties his very distinctive use of serpantining, self-cor­ Les Quatre-Vignt were horribly dull and hackneyed. recting black lines. Their banjo player was conspicuously rotten. His He sometimes picks dangerously hackneyed sub­ frailing lacked tempo, while his picking was nothing jects: Court Jester or The Orator and yet he knits more than a meaningless jumble of notes. In short, he these with so much of his insight, that one can only played beyond his limited technique. This, in point stare, dumbfounded. of fact, was the basic fault of Les Qualre-vignt. They Seated Polinchelle was a little too blotchy and hazy. sang and played far too quickly. Lines, here, undulated without defining form or adding any effect. Perhaps they were to emphasize Polin- Unfortunately, there is little hope for this group. Detail from W eisbuch’s “L’ORATEUR.” chelle’s apathy but the whole thing had a depressing, This was evident after they played Rhythm and Blues with a Madrigal flavour and called it a fusion of Jazz dream quality, which didn't link with the other works, so vital and realistic in their comments. with a Baroque background! stantly pulling and pushing against the background Standing Man was another unfortunate work. The Claude Gauthier is very definitely an artist of ex­ which peeps through and gains territory wherever it lines were simplified, but still excessive. The abandon­ panding genius. His delivery is excellent, his style can. ment of treatment (eg. shapeless arms, half formed sincere. He also displays remarkable versatility. Not I couldn’t help thinking of a game of GO. The trans- body) didn’t work. It just looked unfinished. Weisbuch only does he sing whimsical love songs such as Notre luscent, impressionistic quality it leads to, intensi- was mucking about. chanson d’amour; he also is quite capable of drastical­ By comparison. The Bath with its fantastic sim­ ly changing his tempo and mood to belt out Notre plicity, exclusion of black, inclusion of concrete back­ jeunesse en auto sport — a song that has all of the drops and mastery of drawing technique, shifted the elements of the sounds of a sportscar downshifting exhibit back into key once more. around a tight turn and then dropping back into high oscillating back and forth, up and down, in the wind. Weisbuch hasn’t time for flattery. Angular fore­ gear to race down the next straight away. He creates This, of course, may be an unfounded conjecture on shortening, floppy hair, knobby fingers — he portrays even greater tension in Tete de mort, the notes of this my part. However, I doubt if Gauthier would mind such all these with the sincerity of a child. His nudes ex­ song tumbling one upon the other until they all but analogies. He is not a scientist but a creator of mood. emplify this. They are so human, so tossled, so unat­ collide. Another facet of Gauthier's repertoire is the topical tractively beautiful. One is reminded of Degas. I am song. He sang two such songs last Saturday night. There is no affectation in Gauthier's style. He is speaking now of his two pencil sketches Nu a la Toilette L’ere atomique which I didn't particularly like, seemed quite content to let the cadence of the verse form the and Nu Vu de Dos in particular. to be a sort of seperatist national anthem. It attracted rhythm and the mood of his delivery. An excellent ex­ In an ink study Horse and Rider, two lumpy, bony, a lot of sympathy from the audience, who sang with ample of this self-confidernce was related in La fumee beings float off the page with the clap of old worn out Gauthier at the top of their lungs. des matins. hooves. You watch, mesmerized. Le soleil brillera demain was remarkably similar to Claude Gauthier was wonderfully original and inspir­ As Raymond Charmet put it; Weisbuch in all cases La fumec but instead of being dependant upon the poet­ ing. Judging from audience reaction his appeal is by-passes the incidental to arrive at “emphemeral ry of versification, Le soleil seemed to rely upon the almost universal. I recommend him to all. emotion and eternal meaningfulness.” poetry of motion one feels when gazing at a mobile, Martin Bailey. Margaret Hockman *

The Georgian, October 27, 1964PDA at Carmen n mit lndsa s An wh i i ta amot y ry e v e ost alm that it is hy w nd A es. scap d lan isty the m . and now y b , ch in F r te e P lifeless. to ­ ap h next er ev n are It rs e that v le. lo b a told believ is rried and a m a priest ushingham T with ita R arish p g and sortin the up con y b r fo er visited fath is er h an, m by e om h E nglish p ictu re has at least one scen e situated on an an on situated e scen ? one detail inter w d least n in rou at g ck ch a a b to e has b . s re om cuts, ictu ocean seem p ored b ock sh he nglish his E has upon but o g tw ily lin and v a ea ce eal, h n p co the ap virile ic lty g een depending tra ifficu betw riately d rop f p o e ap es m so is scen ount am ave an, h the m right er that old the set is is ­ evitable n in o c film tension to dull o g a ctric le e ust m is an and e ed tim gg sin ra d again. first ortal pens m been the f o hole r w g o F er vin g a the h an . d in in fession athy, C is scene ly she e hen w liv truly rs ccu ). o ld one ra e g the It itz F is . cott too S film so F. and s read (She sitivity rom a n tic aura she e m e rg e s fo r w hat she is: a shop sen­ er shop h of a f g o atterin of is: sm a she Stripped and helping . hat w ” g es n r d ro valu fo w s secon s e irl’ g as rg e op w a m sh e I a er h she with know aura irl g passed I tic , n a ch e in ow F rom N eon r som te e . P e k ca if y unspoiled. pp a h and genuine ing eth som as irl g aste T in debut her e d a m who ctress a ritish B g n you beautiful things about this film and I ’m not sure own sure its not in ’m that, I is and not or film this intentional together as w about e it liv er and things eth h w another, beautiful one to attracted are eet, m a , ushingham T ita 'R in interest g risin the in itself I thought y ou w ere the kind o f girl w ho w ould be be ould w you ho w et m girl first f o I kind hen W “ the s: ere y w sa ou y ally fin thought an, m I er old the ggly stra a a er h girl, g in giv plain reen G y b ely ith W relativ irl asized G a ph em ith w is is up ingham ich this h ush w T ed ct iss fa M follow s. and e y E ey on H f o y ou righ t in the m ood o f the u p com in g events. A ct ct A events. g in put com p o, u p al­ tem the ry act, f a o you ­ ch stom e a b e cu ood m to It details than le u the red ear ster ore. h P fa in m he ld a T t cou any righ at r This efore. you ou b y ilia l. taken at m of that fa t ccessfu t su though so cen oran abilities ign as w lt ’t translu their sn he ere a ifficu w w f d so o not the e its sic than u m lim m ca often the through r re to ilia o m m gers fa ated in sin them but dom and es, , tim s stom straining n cu , sicia u the re m e sco b his to s guided seem ce la as P the and, t at en ifferen d arm C be izet’s B eek. w f o last ce n a rts A rm rfo e des p a launched quiet w ay , it shatters the m yth o f the w ork in g class class g in ork w the f o the yth m f o the One shatters bound illusion. it as an , w ay w it upon hey T quiet as built an. m as w er old disintegrates it an se ship u ca and e b relation to girl their g na­ youn until a with een g in betw nn u com ir ffa a thoughtfully or picture. s be the indow erficial to w p su letes p t ean com m through and only eal, id slick opgirl new sh a the clothes. Dublin such, e a d of a m as into dly and ba antithesis , girl eap ch r in u the o m la her g is ressing d She and airdo h . shallow or s frivolou either as f o thought is ry u x lu f o ot n t Se sd oh e aci n snig abili­ singing ­ set and trag g had ou ctin a she lusty, all, ce her on f is o both stage the en ost m used the arm C f o She and ated f in o it. om d on She flippant, presentation ception foot con sexy. ’s r a e er y ggestive, H eously su . last ar, iem lg in u v equ R soloist erdi V outstanding of you earth as p s, dam orou the od f o g ce bein n ra g to fra side. the se clo ell ountain sm m e m the a ost c alm de ld relu cou p s ree’ th he hand re su a ith W a. eth M Zubin f o cy n ra ib v the by continuou sly posed b y the d ire cto r look in g w istfully istfully w g in look r cto ire d the y b posed sly continuou hint a ere or h w sunshine point of the m to icu d o ess m a drabn g with containin obsessed ything an g in m co e b ue Se s i fc, o dmn ogat or ords. w r fo poignant n dam too fact, in is, She ture. eudl wa ht nuh o un h sae Her H stage. the burn to enough chesty. utter­ and hot tic a m ra d as harsh w or e v a ly ce g e on sitiv and o p Seguidile although sic u re e m g, w in the even that the ­ g ored f n o ces rin ig an ost and m she r e fo id ice w tw so trol con is e g under ran high her A virtue, ss. ble ercile testa m it con e er b h ld saw ou w you she nce O that you to advantage. tic a m apparent ra d as w est b to ties an ch su as w ho w errett, V re o Shirley m , o, n ed ra lin t iscip d ezzo-sop m excellen re o m re can o m e cert, n m o co c e b e tiv to secu seem con cohesive. ch they a e with enough, gely Stran ‘ m ore r e a l’ and to h ave g rea ter depth. M aking her her aking M depth. ter rea g ave h to and l’ a e r ore m ‘ of er g an d art. in in are ist rotagon they p him genuine d re e a v isco d as g an m havin g ow in N ork w the ing, alm ost m eta lic, that it ap p roa ch es that o f a a ell f w o ges that assa p es ch roa p tessitura ap g it tryin un- er h that that al­ to had e, lic, g add eta ran She to m er and low fluid, ost lto, soprano. alm the tra her con in r a beautiful, fo ing, s g s ost ice A o m bein v to the o feet. n f ra o se g cin clo an one d ezzo-sop ost m m er h , to ossesses ety p elv sy v p she y g g, ate gin sin assion p , ry fie tim e than the rest o f the W estern W orld to recog n ize ize n recog to er orld g W lon a estern took W ers the ak f -m o film rest ritish B the . film than dull e tim ry e v a also re Eyes Green e amer r, e ivntv, s o lc e clich now is tive, inven ce n o ork, w ra e m ca he T P erh ap s one o f the reason s G irl W ith G reen E y es es y E reen G ith W irl G s reason the f o one s ap erh P good is that, called be can it if ent, denouem he T W ith the sp eediest P relu d e e v e r heard , Zubin M ehta ehta M Zubin , heard r e v e e d relu P eediest sp the ith W H er H aban era w as done in a sa u cy m an n er but h er er h but er n an m cy u sa a in done as w era aban H er H ould w en arm C this that new k ou y , ly te ia d e m Im This obsession w ith the w ork in g cla ss m anifests anifests m ss cla g in ork w the ith w obsession This n h rol Came we a te gnei Ameri­ e m A etic n ag m the had e w en arm C f o le o r the In The M on treal S ym phon y O rchestra outdid itself. itself. outdid rchestra O y phon ym S treal on M The G irl W ith G reen E y e s is the often told story o f an an f o story told often the is s e is y E she reen G gful ith W eanin m irl G be to pposed su is she se u eca B The G irl W ith G reen E y es is a good film . It is is It . film good a is es y E reen G ith W irl G The il With Girl e Silickas. oe Z r pns famenc o az, o c h hs xd ixed m has he ich h w to zz, ja to co n e m fla Spanish m fro iu. r a wtot iir n hs touching, ­ ch his te l and ssica cla lifier p m sic, the a u m else lar u without op p s anyone lay to p ch than a yrd B B lly S. ­ e r nique. J. ccessfu a su genius. m o y f fr b o ore m ted full itar, u g arran w on is inspiration done an ich h w be and f e o various f ­ niqu o r ce n fo tech lle ce ilation x able e ers ark assim m the ­ follow o the is — f o an efy zz d ja zz result ja ill w f isite and o exqu that the tastes history , yrd his the B in expression ), ia v o in g a e S rem artistic f o ys a alw lated pupil ill w a ork w as w e (h sic u m in guitarist. jazz a as ce en in em influences — cla ssic, A m e rica n folk -son g, fla m en co, co, en m fla g, Charlie -son folk f o n sic rica u e m m A the ssic, cla solely — e b his and ays alw influences apart ill w It sician u m er. a ev yrd B e f o ak m it m ality sum erson p the his on alone ctober O m fro stands rather heard as 2) w be ill r w e sician b great u o m m h e v (w as a o N rd y such B to guitarist oose harlie 26 a C ch r o fo T present easy, onths. to m last blic u the p eir th to it ed ow linked to no sp e cific ja zz sch ool. His cla ssica l education education l ssica cla His ool. sch zz ja cific e sp no to linked Jazz as all the other artists w ho h ave p layed there during during there layed p cca e M ave h zz ho ja w s l’ artists trea on M other f o the t all en gem a as an m the ce, existen M r. V errea u as one o f the g reatest tenors of the the of ity cid lu tenors and e m reatest olu g v the erable sid f con o has one ice o v as is H u orld. w errea V r. M reau. In the last few y e a rs w e h a v e c o m e to recog n ize ize n recog to e m o c e v a h e w rs a e horrified. y singing few and forgettable. n u er last h the to as w spellbound ted In en ess sn dem reau. letely Scene p a m ysteriou co m to ard C a you up at hypnotic left The a building starting that t sound. and brough highlight, f She o a o also r ianissim e p v as fe w ric e Song sm e m ypsy G frenzied ale d i c e ofpl ng ayhn ta c n ca that anything g in y la p f o le b a p ca is rd y B harlie C be can it that ersonal p and unusual so is sic u m is H So that all instrum entalists cou ld be featu red by Le Le by red featu be ld cou entalists instrum all that So N ot as su ccessfu l w as the D on Jose o f R ich ard V cr- cr- V ard ich R f o Jose on D the as w l ccessfu su as ot N H ot b e fo re the end o f this clu b ‘s first y e a r of of r a e y first ‘s b clu this f o end the re fo e b ot H poppin finger t Tsiga n Pet Fic i “Te r Wih en .’ s e y E reen G ith W irl G The “ in inch F r te e P and Tushingham ita R hre Verrett V Shirley

h welko Fr h j z pait Matal Solal. less. l reath B artia M y n a p m pianist, cco a zz ill ja w ch n aren re L F n ell-know w the y b in boat, how S ing the ccess. sw su f o ing subtle d and crow s vigorou faithful his the sic, u m attracted iselled has ch l, fu joy br. fl s c e wa wrte ad f med d e rm rfo e p and Jean ritten w y b as ed w y la p re d, sco irlfrien ’s g n film e erica h T m A his eberg. S and him g; oral with am cuttin d tially e g g essen ja nouvelle- and Its ch ork a. ren F -w em era cin m the ca the oddard ic G with od in sm uc a L sp t ted en lted ift, u associa ovem sw m catap e e it m u a c ag e v b ago, es rs a am e n y six e m so ade M c edu L rre ie P pianist f ontreal o M strik­ the In r a o d eek, w as ssa a w b e rs. m a a e sam y yrd B the as y n ent, hear a m epartm D toured r fo State he the night ere r h fo w ill w fter , a rica e good m A night , South ton g in sh a W h rn r h polc. et es pns n day y a d one spends less reath B y lice. an o m p on the m fro influence run profound the heir a T irectors. d had ch e. ren m F fa has g, iew to v youn f o o d on point elm B l au -P Jean star, out B his A and ’s rd a d od G uc Jean-L top in returns onths, m o tw f o ce sen ab an shape. after ho, w it w ith his sym pa th etic m u sica l interpretation interpretation l sica u m ce n a etic rm th pa rfo e p sym to s e acting m his co an it as w ith when w This but it loss. a at intelligently, is ost he m it acting uses he and torea dor. H is is a la rg e baritone that he uses sen sibly, sibly, sen s ou fam uses he the that and rm a baritone ch e ’s rg la en rm a a C is r is H fo ry a dor. rs e big v torea d a er h ’s se fter o a J brought up She applause . hips w cy f o lica e m d often y eliriu d she m a a re c but in f o thin house ­ n and notes co the n all and dow sm sustained er e ellow m rath som is ry e v ice o v as w Song r e w lo F His vincing. role. the 1875 and certain ly hastened B izet’s death, it has has it g bein l a riv death, ly on its rs, izet’s e B o g era op all y hastened b pany. om ed C lov ly sets be pera O to The certain e m o c tial. anadian C and the inconsequen 1875 of as w e ig a rtesy P cou on ryd ere B w of y raph g that cou ld on ly b e ca lle d lu d icrou s, but he m ad e up fo r r fo up e ad m he but s, icrou d lu d lle ca e b ly on ld cou that in at I icue Marel sir n h r e le ro the in essier T ehta M seasons. l rce r. g a M in M com that in included ce a him It p of once st fa cast. re o breath m the of dian ear h out f o as ’ll e w W se u he on D . eca b aria , illo s selected m ice ou m tw sca fa E f his o or in role the although sung raun, B r icto V f o ct. A that hird T the in aria fo r ch oosin g it. It served to p rove that M ontreal has has ontreal M that rove p to congratulat- be ontreal served to M It is the t and en it. ice agem g o an ch M oosin y ch pp a h r a rchestra fo O y indeed phon as w Sym This ida. A horeo­ C The to ess. M and g Susan self, Irvin im f h f o o es m overdid irection d he costu es l stage tim rfu the at colou to the although celle, , . lly ren an, ced au tica a L uttm a p G m l ra d rce sly a u M or ro t­ o y b ig lly v cellen ex oetica p and as w sung . sung that ired ere w requ lly act bles tica as a d ard l m sem E ra ern en d B secon the f o the , y All b in ced n la ba roles sung quintet ly a he us ere T w e v a g ' iro ca le ortie. i­ n L ebrun. n ab a L g D a re d an m n A l ise a E ou and geau, L and ouran rgeon T y Zuniga, u b T o f d o a d uguette H en sung that y em b R in sung ita s e erard rasqu d u F G rce e M d n t la o Y ficen les, ora M lt o an n ntig o oe omi per­ e p a g in form y b lose to y. an p nothing com and era op gain anent m to lot a A sh ort b y the N F B residen t genius, N orm an M a c- c- a M an orm N genius, t residen B F N the y b ort sh A The Jazz Hot regu lar cu stom ers w ill be h a p p y to to y p p a h be ill w ers stom cu lar regu Hot Jazz The B elm on do p lays a young hood with no valu es, on on es, valu no with hood young a lays p do on elm B present ill w ociety S ilm F the night, Sunday This A big su rprise w as P ierrette A la rie ’ s M ica ela . H er er H . ela ica M s ’ rie la A ierrette P as w rprise su big A A lthough this op era w as a fia sco at its p re m ie re in in re ie m re p its at sco fia a as w era op this lthough A rs of h rls r tkn p n l Cana­ C all an y b up taken ere w roles the f o rest e h T ontreal, M in e tim first the r fo ced introdu ice o v A A sp ecia l m ention g o e s to the larg e chorus drilled drilled chorus e larg the to s e o g ention m l ecia sp A T he last fou r m entioned, join ed by M iss V errett, errett, V iss M by ed join entioned, m r fou last he T im Society Film M H W on Sakellaropoulos John Dc Dc S ouffle (B rea th less). less). th rea (B ouffle S of of

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If you've learned to write 0 Page O

iuba tongue for “adultery,” but The two warriors then embrace, they don’t let that stop the .'. . and call it a day. There are also no words for Thus we see the calmness of “drunkenness,” “incest,” “poly­ this simple society, whose tran­ gamy,” and “catharsis.” Every­ quility is so alien to the confusion one has a high old time, let me and chaos of our modern culture. tell you. Our only hope is this: we must In the good old days the main break the chains that bind us, means of sustenance was the and join the fast-disappearing licorice root. Then one fine day Quariuba in a new struggle for Quariuba relics dug up on Location at Pig Feet around 1500 AD, all of the licorice happiness (hunting the Great plantations were wiped out due Brown Elephant). It’s a great Creek. Note the symmetry of design? Eh? to Chinese rot. This presented a life, if you don’t mind them god­ considerable problem to the folk dam drums. S. G. Then they propitiated the Rain so that the trains can run on time. of the Quariuba, but they solved God, who wasn’t listening, be­ It is of the greatest importance it with characteristic ingenuity. that the great ceremonial drum cause he has other things to do Most of their food supply is now FIRST STEP TO SUCCESS! far more important than paying always be pounded. For his pur­ gained almost exclusively from attention to a lot of crazy In­ pose, each tribe is divided into the hunting of the great brown dians. Believe me, I know. But four-hour shifts. Day in, day out, elephant. The Quariubas are MEMINDEX that goddamn great ceremonial the Indians kept screaming and slowly but surely dying out. THE AUTOMATIC MEMORY! hollering until the Rain God got drum thuds on and on. Most of the Quariuba do what good and teed off, and sent a They have divided the year into they damn well please, but there flood down. This killed off all the 362 days, and 111 be damned if are very few quarrels or wars noisy Indians except two: a boy I know why. The last three days among them. Most of the mis­ Indian and a Girl Indian. These of the year have no names (not understandings which do take two, John and Rebecca, formed even four-letter ones) and are place are over the women of the what was to be the basic family sacred. At the end of the year all tribe, who like to live it up, and unit of the Quariuba culture. the tribes come from miles don’t much care where they park The Quariubs are a fruitful race around to the great Indian Pan- their moccasins for the night. A GOATSKIN BLACK MOROCCO who have been roaming the Athenaic festival. They spend the typical argument (or Unglick) first two days hunting the great runs something like this: MEMINDEX - an unusual handsome and Northwest plains, and generally welcome GIFT for any busy person. raising hell, for upwards of fifty brown elephant. As everybody The offended individual ap­ Handy dated or otherwise indexed CARDS knows, there are no great brown proaches the house of the of­ fit both POCKET CASE (for temporary million years now. Their language data) and DESK FILE (for permanent is extremely simple. It consists elephants on the North-West fender, accompanied by his records). No transcribing. Style PK, Lexide plains, which complicates things. armed brothers. He knocks three (not illustr.). Pocket Case and stylized of ten letters; five vowels and gray and black Desk File, with Dated and five consonants, four of which On the third day, a great sacrifice times on the door and shouts: otherwise indexed Cards, $12.95. Genuine is held in honour of the Elephant “Io I am great Drum-Beater, Goatskin Black Morocco Pocket Case and are never sounded. Most of the Desk File $15.25. W ith Pigskin Pocket words of the Quariubs language God, which nobody attends. The and who spits in your mothers Case $15.95. Postpaid in Quebec Province. Elephant God goes unpropitiated, milk and beats the Great Cere­ Add .50 for postage and handling else­ are four letters which is very where. All orders significant, if you know what I but nobody seems to give a monial Drum at you. Honourless shipped promptly. — damn. On the night of the last ol’ sonavabee, if you don’t come Satisfaction guaran­ mean. The word Quariuba means teed. Quantity disc­ “ noisy,” which figures. day, another great festival is held out I’m gonn’ breaka you face!” ounts. Free folder. in the great hall, during which a Whereupon the offender em­ Write Dept. SG 3; They are just about the loudest Ambassador Products fantastic orgy takes place. Just people on God’s green earth. They erges, and intones three times: Co. Ltd. 50 Place J about everybody attends this fes­ “Klatu barada niktoo,” which Cremazie West, _ believe that in order to avert Montreal 11, Quebec.^ tival, and who can blame them. natural disasters, the Gods, at means, “In yer hat, ya dumb Earn a 20% students discount—- all costs, must be kept awake There is no word in the Quar­ b u n n y !” Specify your faculty with your order. The Georgian, October 27, 1964 wen h pss or te inning w the r fo posts the een tw o fa Mc l, t te ­ x e the ith w . able en m ed ill, R cG been M has e efeat rg d o e G to Sir eriod p played Georgians the days four of period a During play. n un uhe te et r ­ e b er leath the ho, w ed push Todd rnie A turn to it in ped flip o h w Unbeaten Remains Team Soccer ception o f two defaults b y the the y b defaults two that f o in it e ception tim as first drought, the win r a e y The ed six with ark m a plays. e m a able g ended fast, estion qu nasty tain tough, in es a tim here as at w ark P It and an m ew N ontreal. M at lights ald. acdon M to ed rd ted a aw one dispu ly on hotly ed allow olton D oals. g Macdonald, Saturday 1. and 3 4-0, C.M.R., Friday, 1-0; McGill, w as gathered in b y B aron D yer yer D aron B y b in gathered as w en­ ged elon b t The eorgian eligh G lim initiative. lf a the h e som firt show did ers y la p i sk row tach S ihr em ee fom cer­ r e c m fro t p exem team either n of a m ber m fro u n resulted e m it sa total and the es, atch seventeen in m eight 's the oal m has g a te in now olton. D the goals and uy es G f o m five a g and Sporting tallied three “ ch yn ere ch L w yn L " series m a S this f o defeated ers they Wednesday On games. intercollegiate in three league won the and of top the at is Williams finest g a m e to date. The ball ball The his date. to layed p lf­ a h e ho m w a y g b an shot hapm finest C g rin clea ck a b upfield an oves m adept renen. B of ry e v and e team som e r siv fo pbell, efen am d C But the olton, D to ch a tirely co y b talk g pep rousin a l a rb e v and heated abuse e som r fte a cou n ter w as p lay ed under the the under ed lay p as w ter n cou M cG ill w ould have been leading leading s, ­ been p e llback c x fu e have the e ould som w by g ill and cG rin M clea goalie tional the y b only and lock ead d ss le re sco a t es tre goals. three least at y b e i Ger - Gil n­ en ill cG e-M eorg G Sir he T At half-tim e the team s w ere in in ere w s team the e half-tim At ons n h OLA rc me ls Stra a Kingston. at Saturday last aggregate .C. .M R high meet at for track Athletics award of the OSLAA with the presented in is points Arnold Mark e wo s osadn pl ­ y la p oustanding ost m o tw he T rsnig ak ih h toh i Mao MLo, Director McLeod, ajor M is trophy the with Mark Presenting from resulted goal inning w The pe Mc l Wednesday W ill cG M opped T 1424 Stanley Stanley 1424 The soccer season is five-eights over and Sir George George Sir and over five-eights is season soccer The penalty RN BRE S P O SH BARBER N ER D O M A ET OUR RED AT FRIENDS R U YO MEET y B SCHWARTZ ABE By t mi mum prices m u im in m ith w JEAN I.AVOIE I.AVOIE JEAN shot shot . The G eorgians p layed a better better a layed p eorgians G The . B artes m a d e the sco re tw o-to-one. o-to-one. tw re sco the e d a m artes B rn r ondd u te scor- the out P. ded . roun rasp g er y D r’s the le a aron o B e g ag g the isen d m to fro ald g ptin ball acdon M attem the a and g in in elbow r e fo gon lled ca inutes m o fifty-tw se ecau b ed disallow as w e m a g owar so d hi tu po­ o p true their ed show s rd a forw ­ in m sixty-fourth and thirteenth, e. tim the ­ p am C en efensem d ore m led g an hapm C displayin e, tim this e m a g aye who s ryng hm him g orryin w as w ably o h estion w qu er y as la w p With olton D , e inutes. m m a g rty- fou sixtieth the in and ed and in b com sixth ch o yn tw L e m sa to net when the e m f ca o inute m d front secon fourteenth The eorge the G side. Sir d in e ff o im cla as w yons L e re fe re sd o wet-o by C. R. .R .M ­ C op y b as r oal g enty-fou firing tw on to Jean, St. shots osed p at r ets cad sixty-fou the ed donald. T he first, e a rly in the the in rly a e first, balls he T six blasted donald. they as tential ark. m in­ inute nsend m ow T m rty fro fo ” tsy a P “ pass . ely a ectiv sp on y la p f o utes Dolton great left e ich h som w to ork. w ork w g renen B clearin team and bell and coordination the net fo r a p ictu re goal. The The goal. re ictu p a r fo in net ball the the assed p icorish L on R at er . o o Mac­ c a M of ood W P. r le a o g past the at oal g ­ e his r d with reboun the ted f o tercep renen B front a in le b d n m 'a cra s net a yer, D of ost m post the against leaning “ S portong S a m ” headed it into into it headed ” m a S portong S “ ol n h svnysvnt min­ m e. th gam the seventy-seven f o the ute in goal L ynch scored in the tenth, tenth, the in scored ynch L It w as in this g a m e that the the that e m a g this in as w It ­ lay tp ou letely p com e rg o e G Sir akd M. Frday y a rid F . .R .M C lanked B hr Vcoy Saturday Victory Third er Ste-Catherine near

n e M s ik sct. 6 m a e T ssycats. u P eoli T Pink ry e J ’s b o c y a b J guided pties. and um H f 432) ackston H for ave rs D ou -F y en b T the led er v o lead the . es . 371 .. n so ie m a J D. Singles High n e m o W p a ce next w eek en d against pionship. against Cham SLAA O the d to en eek ay w w next ce a p d ecim ated b y m issing p lay ers, High ers, lay p 4. team issing m er ov y b ated ecim d ete P scuttled (379) son ards, C ck Ja he T ike M . victory took point (436), seven CJreig a eam T ony T by ednesday. W led on 2, start e fin a . ai . 129 ... n a im la K P. n e m o W n e M cad ets they w ill be w ell on their their erful on ow p ell w the be ill w beat they this ets at and cad season . .C continue .M R this can es tim they if three and g only bringin on ictories, v t recen three . n ur 0 2 2 5 rs ou F en T 4 8. m a e T oes ed 7. orp T ssycats u 6. P Pink 5. pties um H 4. victorious e rg e m e to ged a an m . v. nFo rs ou en-F ssycats T u P vs. 6 Pink m a e vs. T 4. oes eam ed T orp T vs. 2 3. ards C m ea T vs. 2. pties um H 1. l: bow will . rs 5 ards C 3. too r fa left and e tim g lon a r reporter, fo this including ers serv oss The hae en sor d re sco been no and ave h wins ey h e T their fiv f to o e losses. rd co e virtu r y b their ce la ossession p p first undisputed of into d e v o m (364) B a rre ’ s T orp ed oes. The The oes. ed orp T s ’ rre a B (364) . a 5 oints P 6 eam T 2. m ea T (375), held on to d efeat R olf olf R efeat d to on held (375), desired. e b to ch u m ­ b o f o rity jo a m whose the cer­ n y u b no in ared it sh about know press inutes m enty-seven play. tw to left with l a o g . 7 2 m a e T 1. ficiatin g w as the p oorest seen seen oorest p the as w as w g ficiatin opinion His the s. term let and tain g refereein the about unassisted beautiful, his with ing H igh sco re s w ere as follow s: s: follow as ere w s re sco igh H to ff o got es leagu g lin bow he T N ext w'eek the follow in g team s s team g in follow the w'eek ext N N everth eless, the G eorgian s s eorgian G the eless, everth N S tach row ski w as quite indignant indignant quite as w ski row tach S Bowling ...... riples T pno i ta te of­ the that is opinion . g 463 ig e r G T. . kson. 191 .. n sto ck a H D. 4 ocr cin n ensa’ vcoy vr McGill. over victory Wednesday’s in action Soccer upport rom t e t ­ e r p e r y e th se o th m o fr t r o p p su he nw' ht re behi d in h e b e 'r u o y that ' know em th o n g n stro r, t e u b o m e ith m w e R te le p m o c . is team is h T team y e r. ck o fte h a ly te ia d e m im e d a m - e c fa g in n e p o e h this T . g g in tin e a in m in a tra G rm te son ld o d G e y la d p an e b t e rn a ill G w the 30. g isin m ro p ith w g n lo a and e r o m tain. o h p o s r e th o n A tain. y o u and y o u r s ch o o l. S o le t ’s le t t le ’s t t n le se o re p S re l. o o s ch y s o b r u o y se e and th u o y d r an you t sen f o e se to edition e c n a h c 65 - 1964 st fir r u ir, o the y ffa a e b t u w'ill ll-o a an e b ill w ­ a e e -s m re a p g g lin e u r g f o th on m ct. O past , y a rid F n o d an m iu r ito d u A atthew's. M ­ p ca x r o le v A re T assistant ie k o , o d g r in te c w le e ­ as ft w p le a c r stal­ r e d K g te o in v d e n iv s as n tsta ,w u fe o e d ies D d an ric E art, an w m r a e y t t s s i c s o be e b to ts cu l a fin e ’s h r T a e . y ck is ’clo th o o ith w tw r fo slated is f f o n u rd e V e th at t n e sp e n o last nd hs wo assat. d n o in c e ta S cap ’s n o assistants. s a se o tw this his d t c an le e to ? Canada of Championship Hockey Collegiate the e, pl s i s l e eld h ssiv as re w p g im tin e e m ost m ’s r e y la p the a n yet, e e b has the laurels it won last year and then some. Which means means Which some. then and year last won it laurels early the too still really is it although And belong. didn’t felt boys through their paces and dropping those whom he he whom those his dropping putting and been paces has their Arsenault through Paul boys coach sophomore to judge, the team definitely shows signs of retaining all all retaining of signs shows definitely team the judge, to weeks few past the For team. a like look to beginning Pucksters Shaping Up PuckstersShaping T h is c o m in g w e e k w ill b e th e e th e b ill w k e e w g in m o c is h T ter Frday’ practce, ich h w , e tic c a r p ’s y a rid F r e ft A dwek activities: eek id-w M HE REVEREND NORMAN RAWS D. . NITER E IST IN M .. .D D , N SO W A R N A M R O N D N E R E V E R E TH h Mody e ng :5 m. nomain V 8-9245 AV. ation Inform . .m p 8:15 g in ven E onday M ch a E Our Hockey Georgians for this coming season are are season coming this for Georgians Hockey Our T JMS NTD CHURCH UNITED JAMES ST. 10 a. Th Monig orship. W ing orn M he T . .m a 11:00 :0 m. lo hp our. H ship ellow F . .m p 9:00 7:30 p .m . The E ven in g S e rvice rvice e S g in ven E editation M The for . usic .m p M 7:30 . p.m 7:15 6 S. ahrn Sre. s, and est, W Street. Catherine St. 463 45 iy onilr Street, Councillors City 1435 ls-y i George Sir Close-by mnsnig Rers nts. en m efresh R n-singing, ym H this p a g e fo r fu r th e r p a rticu la rs rs la tch a rticu w a p r e se a th r le P fu r fo ill. e g cG a p M this and l a re egar ng t s o name t. en m a rn tou is th g in rd a g la o re y o L ith w t n e m a rn u to eir th l t veriy of t­ n o M f o rsity e iv n U e th , e g lle o C G ill R e d m e n on T h u rsd a y , N ov. ov. N c­ M , y a r e o rsd f u th h T e ith r on w a p re n p e tilt m d e R to g in ill m o G c 'eek w ir e e th n o st ju sq u a d g am e, th e te a m w ill have have ill w m a te e th e, am g d a u sq he i f he start. e th m o fr t h rig em th 11. T h is is the fir s t g a m e in in e m a g t s fir the is is h T 11. A ft e r th is F rid a y ’s b ig in tra - - tra in ig b ’s y a rid F is th r e ft A o sin ! i t . ., . ! it lim o N ! issions m com o ifr to — wie : write Laurent St. — 911, Box P.O. ation enerous SSE, G inform For time. in spare subscriptions your agazine m $$$ Sell Extra Make 282 St. Catherine St. W . . W St. Catherine St. 282 T CHEZ MEL" M Z E H "C AT az Coffee & Jazz r. St nite Sat. & Fri.

Hockey Harriers ProfilesD . - i ; / - , MacdonaldOutfoot Letters From Tokyo 1964 27, October Georgian, The by BRUCE KIDD two of the Senator’s commer­ thrower Elvira Ozolina. The cur­ The Georgian crosscountry For CUP, by Special Arrangement cials for every one of John­ rent world record-holder for the team defeated Masdonald Col­ with the OQIA so n ’s. ) women’s javelin, Elvira could ! lege 21-34 in a dual meet Sat­ only place fifth in her event. Two years ago when I de­ Coupled with Bill Mills’ sur­ urday afternoon. The Georgians The next morning she went to \ prising 10,000-metres win last finished strong taking five out cided to title my articles the Village barbershop and tear­ week, Bob Schul’s easy triumph of the first seven places. Peter from the Perth British E- fully ordered the hairdresser to in the 5,000 will explode a num­ Croxall led the Sir George shave her head bare, a primi­ pire Games “Letters From ber of myths about American r quintet, covering the four-mile tive sign of shame in many The Underworld,” I was distance running. Traditionally, course in record time of 22:58. Eastern countries. Before, her the US could field the best Warren Sutton finished second using a geographical meta­ silken black locks almost danced sprinters in the world, but her chased by two Macdonald run­ phor, and not until I had around her shoulders; now she performances weakened as the ners, Wayne Boyle and Chuck looks like a lightweight wrestler returned from Australia did distance increased. Critics Warner. Sir George then cap­ with a kerchief over his head. I realize how the subjective have always attributed this tured the next three positions weakness to the “softness” of The unsung heroes of these with Phil Turner, Russell Cor­ atmosphere of a Games American life. Not enough ex­ Games are the Tokyo police. At * bett and Gene Beswick crossing Village was akin to a Dos- any time of the day, the crowds the finish line before any of toyevskian dream. That ercise and too many junky foods have sapped American endu­ here are as thick as those at a the Mac-men were in sight. sense of removal from the rance, runs the argument most football game, so when there WARREN HALE This Saturday the Harriers everyday world has been recently expounded by Austra­ actually is a sporting event in travel to Bishops to compete in the city, congestion is magni­ Warren Hale is beginning his magnified here. lian super-miler Herb Elliot. the OSLAA championship meet. fied beyond belief. But after a third year in the Maroon and The high barbed-wire fence en­ But the real reason was in the 1—P. Croxall, SGWU 22:58 full week of competition, no Gold uniform. He is a 20-year- closing the Village only serves to structure of amateur sport in 2—W. Sutton. SGWU ...... 23:14 one has been trampled in the old defenseman who stands 5 feet 3—W. Boyle, Macdonald ...... 23:16 keep spectators and autograph the States. As long as the col­ 4— C. Warner, Macdonald 23:24 crowd, and the police deserve 11 inches and weighs in at 180 hounds out; for the excitement of leges provided the sole source 5—P. Turner, SGWU ...... 23:52 the credit. During this period pounds. Warren is a third year 6—R. Corbett, SGWU ...... 24:58 competition keeps athletes and of Olympic talent, US distance 73,000 officers have been em­ commerce student and was a 7—G. Besw ick, SGWU ...... 26:18 their thoughts ever close to the 8—W. Slidler, Macdonald 26:36 runners were bound to be out­ ployed in handling the crowds regular with the old Maroons Village and the various Games 9—D. Fransham, Macdonald . 26:43 classed, because four years of — that’s no' exaggeration. in 1962-63 and ag?in last year 10—N. Gillespie, Macdonald . 28:15 venues. college isn’t sufficient to pro­ Since my competition is over. until Christmas when he gave 11—J, Boomgardt, Macdonald 31:36 Although Tokyo must be one duce a world class runner. But I’m going to break out of the r up the game because he felt it in the past five years many of the world’s most fascinating was affecting his studies. Village and see the land. I’ll go ► year in the best shape ever. His cities, there’s a general reluc­ college distance stars have kept1 to Kyoto, the ancient capital, running beyond graduation, and Over the summer, Warren play in practice to date shows a tance to explore it — athletes and hope to find out something as a result, Uncle Sam’s stable shed some of the weight that great improvement and if this hardly go outside the Village about Buddhism first band. he used to such good advantage continues to be the case into (except to train or compete) is as good as any in the world. From there I’ll go to Hiroshima. in the league during the pre­ regular schedule play he should twice a week. Why? They fear Who said hamburgers aren't as Then on the return to Tokyo for vious two seasons, but he re­ be one of the top rearguards in tiring through too much sight­ nutritious as the bark off trees? the closing ceremonies I'll try to ported to training camp this the league this year. seeing, and they’re so nervous There is at least one heart­ climb Mount Fuji. The record they haven’t the heart to dis­ break for every pleasing per­ for the ascent is a mere 2V4 r cover anything new or foreign. formance here, and probably the hours, 'so 1 should be able to In my own case, I didn’t give most distressed athlete in the | run up and slide down in one B'NAI B'RITH HILLEL COUNSELLORSHIP AT S.G.W.U. any thought to touring in Japan Village is Russian javelin day. ANNOUNCES AN until after my competition was completed — it wasn’t procasti- nation; it was simply that the Touch Football ILLUSTRATED LECTURE Games spirit sweeps you along \ FORUM so completely you can’t give Because of a consistently low turnout, the Science your attention to anything else. Pistons have decided to drop out of the intramural touch football league. Players who have been turning Wednesday, Oct. 28-1 p.m. News falls in the same cate­ gory. In the past week, there’s up for the Piston games will be allowed to merge with IN BUDGE HALL — YMCA BUILDING been a change of government in the Science Rockets for the remainder of the season. THE NOTED CANADIAN SCULPTOR AND ARTIST Westminster, a paiace revolu­ Schedule changes have been necessitated; all players tion in the Kremlin, and more ! please note new playing times; STANLEY LEWIS punches in the bitter fight for Monday, October 26th the White House. Yet no one WILL SPEAK ON here seems to care. While the 4:00 - 5:00 p.m. Commerce Jets ISRAEL IN SPACE AND TIME" Soviet reaction of indifference vs. Arts Dragons to Khrushchev’s deposition may 5:00 6:00 p.m. Arts Rifles A showing of slides with commentary taken by Mr, Lewis personally he unchanged by the Games, the during a recent sojourn in Israel where he produced his latest works vs. Science Rockets unconcern of my usually opin­ "THE TEN COMMANDMENTS" now on display in the Sallerle Libre Official: Bernie Bressler ionated British and American COME AND SEE ISRAEL THROUGH friends can only be accounted Wednesday, October 28th THE EYES OF A SENSITIVE ARTIST for by Olympic fever. 4:00 5:00 p.m. Science Rockets British sprinter Adrian Met­ vs. Arts Dragons ALL ARE CORDIALLY INVITED calfe, who is employed by a 5:00 - 6:00 p.m. Commerce Jets London newspaper as a political vs. Arts Rifles writer, learned of Harold Wil­ Official: Herb Vogel son's victory only Saturday, and says he won't look at a news­ Note: This ends league play. All teams will enter into a paper until he gets home. The Series “A” — Series “B” best of three game semi-final. US Armed Forces Network in The winners will go on to a final series. Quebec the Far East (USAFNFE), the only English radio station here, Standings as of October 21 won’t let us forget the cam­ w L T P ts. RIFLES paign, but even the most ardent Arts Rifles 3 0 0 6 Democrat d&esn’t blink an eye­ Science Rockets 1 1 0 2 VERSUS lash when a Goldwater commer­ 1 3 0 2 cial is aired. (The USAFNFE has Commerce Jets 0 1 0 0 Toledo TORNADOES the alarming tendency to play Arts Dragons

r Saturday, Oct. 31 - 1 p.m. ★ ★ ★ SPECIAL OFFER TO SIR GEORGE WILLIAMS i STUDENTS ONLY

ALL SEATS ARE ENTITLES YOU TO SEE UNRESERVED ONE OF THE BEST O N TH E "RIFLE" HOME 25 YARD LINE *1 GAMES THIS WEEK Tickets On Sale At Delorimier Stadium Mark Arnold clears a hurdle on his way to a record breaking performance in (he 120 yd. high STUDENT CARDS MUST BE PRESENTED hurdles. Mark also won the 100 yd. dash to walk off with the high aggregate points hours. t < photo by Jim Sherburn) The Georgian, October 27, 1964 inhp ad anand a maintained and pionship, h hl season. whole the hustled He year. sea­ last son successful very a after ten-point average through through average ten-point cham­ conference Junior Varsity’s the to team the with o a t uabl i­ r e p x e le b a lu a v ith w d an , son up from the Junior Varsity Varsity Junior the from up ealy prmii . i expect­ e p x e s k o lo is e v e a H D g. it, d isin cre rom p is h lly a re o t e c n e to d e id c e d e h r, e v e w o h r, a e y s em. team ’s n o s a e s ’s e v a D rs. e g ca the r fo e c r fo l fu r e f o se u ca e b e e V y a J to ck ba step in d an l o o h c S igh H t n o m tre u O ed to add a lot o f depth to -th is is -th to depth f o lot a add to ed sea­ st la t n e rtm to a p e d d e v g ro p in d n u o b th g n stre d an o tw t h t ig e e h fe six at d an . old rs a e y ies. d stu f o re su s re p e th ast L . e fiv on w rsity e a g V r o e e th G ir on S at rth e b r a a e y first his C o m m e rce , D ave is ba ck w ith ith w ck ba is ave D , rce e m m o C real ntge n he ­ e r e th in e tag an v d a l a e r ­ w a o p e b y r e v a e b can e h 'enty tw es, is ch in e H ad. squ rsity a V e th D ave started p la y in g ball w ith ith w ball g in y la p started ave D N ow , in h is th ird y e a r o f f o r a e y ird th is h in , ow N Dave Dave ae Profiles Cage UMMI S G IN M M CU E V A D b Cummings A ht has come come has six-footer from Newton Newton from six-footer his third year here at Sir Sir at here year third his s real earni or r fo r a e y g in n r a le l a e r e a h as ll, w a b e g lle o c r o f le ib lig e in brand steady his when year City, taste first York his had he New where in High d riv e a re s u re to m ak e h im a a im h e ak m ­ g r o e to G re u s e th re a ith e w riv d season d o o g hi s o he rsity. a V e is th th t n u o p is h T a to son a se s e p o is . h th m l, a tea e tre h n o M and ­ e , u th b r g o o f a B e N o L e th s r r ile io ith O n w e S rd a u g rn e ed y la p much provided shot outside deadly his and basketball of freshman his in squad Vee in excel­ an had Bob Now George, basketball. of ook f o a ­ r e o p h w d er, o g o g ea n is a a th c m o to fr s n ia g e r d c o r n e a a G w m and r r fo fo irit art. k sp o stalw lo is h l a re d an , ain ag s ian ence t work for hi im h r o f k r o w to e c n ie r e p x e Ju­ the for five. nior impetus the of Jay the with season lent w ill u n d o u b te d ly m ak e h is is h e ak m ly d ce. te en b u o d n u ill w esence f t i t Conf ­ r fe n o C e th in lt fe e c n e s re p n t olowi ng g in e b r a e y g in w llo fo e th In s ooki orward t a to d r a w r fo g in k o lo is b o B Robert Nathan is a husky husky a is Nathan Robert O NATHAN BOB . 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