IS THIS THE END O••••F •

VOLUME 42, ISSUE NO. 4 APRIL 13,1972 PRICE 10 CENTS RECORD GRADS EX.PMS HONORED three functions to The number of The Univeristy of Queensland will honour accomodate the number of 2 former Prime Ministers of Australia at the graduates from the graduates. Annual Graduation ceremony on April 26.. University of The first of the FEE They are the Rt. Hon. Sir Arthur William Queensland this year ceremonies will be held on Fadden and the Rt. Hon. Francis Michael Forde. would be the largest for Wednesday 26th April. some years, according Ceremonies for the I'aculties of Arts, Law, The final Fee Rise They have been to figures released from referendum figures have nominated for the George in 1951, and Veterinary Science and the Administration Medicine will be held at been released by the Activities budget Honoraiy Degree of awarded the Grand Cross reduced $4,000 of that Order in 1958. In yesterday. the City Hall on that night. Electoral Officer (Mr. Doctor of Laws. This Mosl other budgets 1959 he published his The Examinations On Tucsday May 2, Greg By ram). was announced ceremonies in the Faculties reduced memoirs under the title Officer in the Degree yesterday by the Tli^ (Med Me Artie. of Commerce and They show that 909 Examinations Section Vice-Chanccllor Mr. F.M. Forde entered Economics, AgricuUure people voted in favour AUS PROBLEM (Mr. C. Jones) said that Education and Music will (Professor Zelman the Stale Parliament as of the fee lise and 3431 Member for Rockhampton figures were still being be held. The final Degree against. The AUS referendum Cowen). in 1917 and served there compiled but that he ceremony will be on has caused a problem for Sir Arthur Fadden until 1922 when he was expected the number of Thursday 4lh May. This Late yesterday, reports Union Council what began his public career as elected to the House of graduates to be up on will complete the that a massive reduction in do the siudents want? ceremonies in the Faculties Union services were There were two previous years. of Science, Engineering imminent reached questions in regard to AUS iJ^^sT"' He .';aid that most and Architecture. SEMPER NEWS. affiliation. figures released yesterday Il was reported lhal the Fustly, a policy motion were final but there could The following is a list following changes were which on the first count be some alteration to the of expected number of likely following defeat of was carried by 2261 votes number of graduates in the graduates this year, the referendum: lo 2084 votes. faculty of Medicine. released by the Degree The second AUS Tliis year's Graduation Examinations Section 20% increase in all question was in regard to a WP. Ceremony will be split into yesterday afternoon. Refec foods Constitution Cliange to Abolition of student affiliate with AUS. This sfjf ADMISSION - WEDNESDAY, 26th APRIL, 1972. concessions in the was DEFEATED, 2177 Theatre votes to 2144 votes. 3 Doctors of Medicine Closing of Refeciory One Union Councillor 5 Doctors of Philosophy over weekends said: 'They want to be t^s.;tv. 1 Doctor of Philosophy (AD EUNDUM GRADUM) Hiring charges on with AUS and they don't Within the Faculty of Arts headphones in the want to be in AUS' 3 Masters of Arts Music Room Council will have to resolve 583 Bachelors of Arts - 52 with Honours Abolition of the Legal the matter." Frank Forde "Artie" Fadden 14 Bachelors of Divinity Aid Fund 2 Diplomas in Journalism Mr. T. Keogh has asked Representatives for the Semper budget slashed Assistant Town Clerk and 23 Diplomas in Psychology for a recount of all votes. division of Capricornia, completely then Town Qerk of 9 Diplomas in PubUc Adminislration The Electoral Officer (Mr. which he continued to Education budget Mackay, From 1932 to Within the Faculty of Law Byram) has instructed lhal represent until 1946. He abolislicd 1935 he was Member of 7 Bachelors of Law with Honours another count be laken. became assistant Minister the Legislative Assembly Within the Faculty of Veterinary Science for Kennedy, and then for Trade and Customs, and then Minislcr, in the entered fhe House of 2 Masters of Veterinary Science Scullin Government of Representatives in 1936, Within tbc Faculty of Medicine 1929-31, In 1932 he was representing Darling 27 Bacheiors of Physiotherapy (Candidates) elected Deputy Leader of Downs from 1936 to 1949 19 Bachelors of Occupational Therapy (Candidates) and McPherson from 1949 the Australian Labor Party to 1958. He became acting in the Commonwealth ADMISSIONS - TUESDAY 2nd MAY, 1972. leader of the Country Parliament, and held the Party in the Common­ post until 1946. When the 4 Doctors of Philosophy m ON PRICES wealth Parliament in Curtin Government was Wiihin Ihc Faculty of Commerce & Economics Following defeat of the Referendum to increase Union October 1940, and Leader formed in 1941, he became 166 Bachelor of Commerce - one with Honours fees, the PrcsWent (Mr. Paul Aberncthy) has announced a in March 1941, retiring Deputy Prime Ministcr-and 134 Bachelor of Economics - eleven wilh Honours dramatic increase in Refectory food prices. from the post when he Minister for the Army, and 8 Diplomas in Information Processing He lold SEMPER NEWS Mr. Abernethy said also retired from the following the death of that the loss on Refectory Within the Faculty of Agriculture lhat unprofitable trading Commonwealth Parliameni John Curtin he served as Trading of 4% would be 8 Mailers of Agricullural Science hours would be cut, and in 1958. He was Treasurer Prime Minister in July reversed to show a profit 54 Bachelors of Agricultural Science • fourteen with ofatlea!il5%. that the Refectory could of the Commonwealth 1945. He was a delegate in the Au.stralian delegation Honours He said: "The amount be e.\ peeled to close earlier 1940-41 and again to the United Nations 1 Diploma in Agricultural U\icnsion from the Australian than usual. 1949-58, and Prime Conference at San 5 Diplomas in Tropical Agronomy Universities Commission Minister from August to Francisco, and Within the Faculty of Education for our building Ociober 1941, serving subsequently Australian 1 Master of Education programme was contingent simultaneously as Minister High Commissioner in 174 Bachelors of Education - eight with Honours upon our getting the fee for Air. Following the Canada 1946-53. Upon his 69 Bachelors of Social Work - nine with Honours rise." defeat of the Governmeni he led, lie was leader of the return to Australia, he 195 Diplomas in Education He said that Reserves Opposition 1941-43. re-entered the Slate 18 Diplomas in Physical Education would not be available to Parliament as Member for Within the Faculty of Music cover losses and lhat all Sh Arthur Fadden has Flinders 1955-57. 8 Bachelors of Music - tlucc wilh Honours studenl activities would ~. I- had a distinguished now have to be run at a I/' political career in the Mr. Forde gave ADMISSIONS - THURSDAY 4th MAY, 1972. profit. service of Queensland and distinguished service over "In all probability, the Australia, including both forty years in two 17 Doctors of Philosophy Refectory price increase service as Prime Minister Parliaments, as a Within the Faculty of Science will be 20% acro.ss the during a critical period of diplomatic representative 5 Masters of Science board," he said. I the Second World War and of Australia overseas, and 369 Bachelors of Science - 78 with Honours "ll is quite obvious that as the Treasurer who as Minislcr for the Army 2 Bachelors of Applied Science students would prefer to surmounted a number of during the months when 16 Diplomas in Compu ter Science pay for Refectory facilities major economic crises Australia was threatened Within the Faculty of Engineering directly out of their own including that occasioned with Invasion and in the 10 Masters of Engineering Science pocket other than, in 60% J by the Korean War. He was subsequent years of the 136 Bachelors of Engineering - 62 with Honours of cases, from made a Privy Councillor in Pacific War. He was made a Commonwealth 1942, a Knight Privy Councillor in 1944 12 Bachelors of Surveying - one wilh Honours Scholarships," Mr. Glvnn Paul ABERNETHY Commander of the Order and has been honoured b) Within the Faculty of Architecture Aberncthy said. of Sl Micliael and Sl three Canadian universities. 24 Bachelors of Architecture - 5 with Honours eriodlcal -' Category Kj "Registued it the G.P.O., Brisbane, for transmission by post as a j PAGE 2 ' SEMPER FLOREAT APRIL-13,1972

why it is usually necessary to impose a charge for Union activities. As a matter of interest, when the Union started APEK THANKS running Union Rights (in Sir, Dear Mr. TuUy, 1968 or thereabouts) It is realised that the I am writing on behalf admission was free Every beginning of May will clash of both the students of hood in town started to with end-of-term International House and hear about them, and examinations or the the University Folk Club moved in. After two riots holiday period. However I to congratulate you on - one minor and one fairly would appreciate your your new issue of SEMPER major - the policy was publicising for overseas FLOREAT changed lo the present one students to address the various Apex Clubs. AT last it is a paper of charging admission. worth reading, and nol full At present, it is Union At this stage, if it is at of trash as it has been in policy that, as much as all possible, the the pasl. R.O.T.C. (equivalent to Murwillumbah Apex Club possible, the users of I hope lhat the paper out QU.R.) dead. Dean would like one or two Union facilities should be will continue supplying us Kehler of Canton, Ohio overseas students to required to make a with articles which have paralyzed from the waist address the Gub on contribuiion towards the worthwhile informalion down by a spinal wound. Friday, 5th May, 1972 NO TRASH - the largest in Australia. 1 cost of providing those and include interests For this, a grand jury commencing 7 p.m. It Sir, would certainly feel safer if facilities We believe that amongst the majority of completely exonerated the would be appreciated if I think that your the adminislration were to this is the fairest way of studenis. newspaper is trash. National Guardsmen these siudents would slay remain in its present spreading the burden. The new calendar Sir, These were the words I (including a for the weekend as a social responsible hands instead Obviously, this is a gross supplied by the Social uttered when 1 saw the Brigadier-General who was programme has been Whal a ridiculous of being flutig open to simplification of the Conveners' Club is of great first issue of your wilh them) and indicted 25 drawn. parking situation exists on every Tom, Dick and Harry Unions finances If Mr. help as also is the college newspaper on March 2. presenl and former Attention is drawn to this campus. lhat the Communisl Party Kelmar (or any other news. Even the 2nd issue students The ruling was the oul of pocket expenses The academics and other cares to nominate, reader) has further At last the paper is wasn't much better, but I allowed to stand There including travelling and privileged few (including, l-'urthcrmore to even think questions, perhaps they orientated towards as the feel that wilh your latest was no lasting public accommodation which wil! apparently, the Union of inviting labourers and would care to contact me rads call it "the mass blob" issue you have at last outcry. be paid by Murwillumbah Executive) are entitled to industrial workers to join Both SEMPER and Union of the University students, created a campus So this date is a bbck Apex Club. "A" stickers and can park the Universily Senate (or Office have my phone as well as including other newspaper which is both mark on the United States anywhere. controlling body) is sheer number. Trusting these details to factions on campus. The poor unfortunate informative and absurdity and would only and its much-vaunted be of some help. interesting. "freedom of expression," Once again congratu­ siudents have to park lead lo disaster. Nick Booth Yours faithfully, lations. I have been at this place dnd helps damn the socieiy where they can get in and The "Red Letter" also Chairman, Union House D.P. Dezentje, now for 4 years and lowards which we are Yours faithfully, in some cases this means a implies that the University Committee International Relations consider that your latest heading, one more and Robin McIIwain 'A mile walk to a leclure. is jusl another money Officer, issue is one of the best more like America, more (Soc. Convenor How about a trial for 1 hungry (capitalist) P.O. Box 64, International House) produced in lhat time. materialistic, more term, allowing all people in monopoly. As far as I MURWILLUMBAH. 2484. (Chairman of Folk Club) dog-eat-dog, less the University community If the radicals wish lo know, the University does personalised, and warns us (lecturers, studenis, boycott your newspaper, not boast a large profit but or, in fact, their to atlempt to direct fhe RADS workmen, anyone) lo park in fact had to raise this evolution of our social anywhere. newspaper, they are the year's fees to keep out of Dear Mr. Tully, ones who arc losing. system away from one that I think that the the red. You can't run a Just a note of My friends and I could condone, by silence, Dear Editor,OH ! NO SEK Administralion has lost University unless you are encouragement - keep up the Univeristy scandals congratulate you on your an act hke this. sight of the fact that this economically efficient - the good work; as you said Has SEMPER improved? read SEMPER. But you blest effort. Terry Yates Universily would not even again professional and in your editorial of March I suppose it is all a matter can't find sex anywhere! exist if there were no Good Luck, experienced admini­ 2, '72, 'SEMPER' is the of how the critic looks at (Are you against sex? After siudents. R.W. strators! voice of an organization it. If you want something all, the "Sunday Sun" and John McHoy. Law Sludent. Grachus Banksia, author called the University of diort to read while you eat the Melbourne "Truth" of the article "Students in Qld. Union. Keep it that in the Refec you're in luck, handle it quite well.) a Capitalist Universily" is HOUSE way and not the voice of but if you wanl some How about a few long either a megalomaniac or an ignorant radical good, worthwhile long articles, a bit of humour another fool! His socialist minority. articles to fill in those and some sex. AFter all, spou tinge may sound Yours sincerely, boring lecture hours you they can't hurt SEMPER's PEN ATTACK impressive on paper but to (Mrs)Phyllis Baigrie, may as well give up reputation! Sir, implement them would be HEAD Nundah looking. P.W. I recently had the sheer foUy. Sir, If you want to be up on misfortune lo acquire a Editor's Note: What In SEMPER dated 30 copy of the University Finally the "Red reputation. Sir, March you printed a letter Communists' Rag, the Letler" concludes by We operate* an from John Kelmar, "Red Letter" (March 14 - presenting the ideologies of STY criticising the practice of Sir, international pen pal club 20 edition) and out of the Australian Communist charging admission to 1 wish to raise a matter consisting of several curiosity I read the thing Party - if you wanl to Union activities. which has been causing hundred members in the but my preconceived ideas read a blueprint for So far as the charges for some irritation to me for United States. We have concerning the communisl totalitarianism then glance squash and swimming arc some time. university students, party and its supporters at the recent copy of the concerned, Mr Kelmars looks teachers and others from were quickly verified. "Red Letter". Surely The Coffee Shop in the evolution is preferable to quarrel lies wilh Sports Union has degenerated into various countries, but none I will not merely dismiss revolution! Union, not the Union. For an unbearable pig-sty. behind from Australia. From time the paper as a vehicle for Joseph McKenzie many years, the Union Now, 1 would not say to olhcr we get requests left wing clap-trap (though (Arts Honours Student) agitated for permission lo lhat card players who have the for pen pals in Australia by I am tempted) as the (and sometime Govt, of build a swimming pool on recently moved in to the American girls and boys ridiculous and unwarranted Aust. Student.) Campus Each time il area are the main offenders news assertions which are applied to the If sludenis would write as many people claim, bul riddled throughout require Administration for lo us and tell usaMltlcbit I feel that ihey immediate rebuttal. pcrmis,sion lo do this, il about themselves, age, significantly contribute to The Communists claim was told that swimming height, weight, interests, the overall untidiness of that the university should was a sport and the etc., and point out who the area. A WELL-KNOWN COMMEM WEEK this be placed in the liands of T provision of a pool was 1 think that the Union Television commenlator is they would like to the staff, workers and year - from May 1 lo May Sporls Union''s business sliould eradicate those being investigated correspond with we will studenis so that the 6. More details on activities Eventually the Union gave people causing the mess. following allegations that send them a free list (new Univer.sity will become a laler, up and built the Schonell Tlie Coffee Shop is now he would inform the Drug list in April) of pen pals. political vehicle instead of SrATE„ instead. very unattractive and I Squad of their activities if The first 50 students a profit making private MEMBER of Union In his signalure-posl- believe that a firm effort several Uni. sludenis would and teachers who write to enterprise as il is claimed Executive should know scipl, Mr. Kelmar says he is by siudents, or failing that, not give him inside us will get everything free to be now. Surely this better. It is illegal to bring disgusted wilh the way us a firm effori by staff information for his including a free assertion should be taken PTH8 Queenslanders have fouled dogs onto campus. The would alleviate the programme. advertisement with a coded with a grain of salt. Who offending party is risking a I would like to point out up our University. Maybe problem. number (no name or would be responsible for instead he should be S200 fine. address shown). to your readers the Terry Carmody the administration of such proximity of the second disgusted with the Very truly yours, Toowong RU.MOUR around the WHO works for who in a scheme? Surely anniversary of the Kent Australian Universities T.H. Bernhardsen. professional administrators Commission, which over city is that CoHn Bennett the Taxation Department S.C.E. State killings and could even be a Minister in these days? Very arc essenlial for the woundings. the years has given Ihe P.O. Box 918. Church Sl. smooth functioning of the next Parliament, Work interesting story behind On Monday May fourth Union le.ss money per Station, New York, N.Y. such a vast complexity as that out. employment of new man 1970, a group of National capita than it has given to 10008. the Queensland Univer.sity there recently. Guardsmen on Kent State almost any olher Universily. ON the Election front, campus, retreating up a hill take it from LBTN lhat the VOLUME 42, ISSUE NO. 4 and wilh no-one on one This has meant that THERE'S to be one expansion of the Union famous Charles W. Russell Commem. Publication this Editor: Paul G. Tully side of the hill and jeering, will be standing as an rock-throwing students al a Buildings has had to be year ... Wliacko. Ils ChlofofStaff: James Carter financed by the Union. To Independent in the state format is still top secret Cirtoons: Paul Whitman fair distance on the other, do this it has obtained election and he'll win. but one rumour says that if Photogfiphs: Imperial Ponraits formed a firing pattern, some kneeling, some loans, and a sizeable Brisbane can have a Sports Editor: Mtke Driscoll GUESS who the cop is standing, and, without proportion of the Union's Sunday Sun it can have a Fashion Editor: Margot McKay they call FBI Fat bald even a single warning shot, income has to be set aside Sunday Sin. Motoring Editor: Barry White and ignorant. put 35 bullets from 16/17 to mccl Ihcsc loans and the Entertainment Editor: Duncan Stuart interest on them. Review Editor: Len Sorbello guns indiscriminately into SUBURBS Add to this the facl lhat motorists should drop into Staff: Tony Frazer Scott Conway the student mass, killing LBTN hears on the the Union fees at this Fred's Caltex Garage on Hugh Carter Teny Kcogh four and wounding ten, grapevine that a big University (where there is Lambert Road In John Rigano Claire Addidson including three seriously; shipment of the hard stuff no SR.C) arc far lower is on the way and will hit dooroopilly. Fred and his Tassos Konstantinos Sam Sorbello so indiscriminately in fact, that they included two than the average combined Brisbane about August. team of workers are a mob Publications Secretary: Liberata Burman specia lo rs dead, Union and SR.C. fees al DA BOIS arc watching of friendly people ready lo Typesening: Lettercraft (Qld.l Pty. Ltd. 4t1 40C second-top cadet in olher universities, and Mr you. help you. Kelmar might begin to see P.AGfi 3" SEMPER FtOREAT APRIL 13,1972 THE UNION "house eominittee overdraft financing the The Union activity ORGANIZATION Schonell and the Refec COMPLAINTS which probably affects the extensions. largest number of Union In practice, ^his ideal Obviously, in an The Trading Sub The Refectory and Committee of the Union members is the Refectory has rarely, if ever, been operation the size of the REFEC. House Committee is and its associated services trading operations of the achieved. In the year Union, there are bound to At some time or another, be complaints We want lo expected lo mccl shortly Union arc run by the ending 31 January 1972, after the announcement of almost every student the Union's trading hear aboul them. Union House Commiitee, the decision in the makes use of the Union operations lost over REFECTORY FOOD: BY National Wage case to Buildings: to have a meal, the members of which are: $25,800. Of this, almosi See the Refectory The Chairman of the discuss price increases. 01 a cup of coffee; play a a) The President, Hon. $11,000 was lo.sl by the Manager, Mr. Bob Mitchell Union House Committee, Their discussions will be game of billiards, listen to Secretary and Hon. SchoncH Theatre, $16,000 (office opposite Union Mr. Nick Booth, told JIM BLIGH coloured by the possibility records in the Music Treasurer of the Union; was used to run the Music Shop); or the Union SEMPER NEWS that of the Union's failing to Room, attend a dance or a b) two members of the Room as a free service to .Manager, Mr. Murray Refec price rises seem Mr. Booth said that talk, buy newspapers or students, only $10,000 is Armstrong (upstairs in several services to students obtain the fee rise at Senate; inevitable in tlic near present the subject of a confectionery in the Union c) the REgistrar or his attributable to Refectory Union Admin Building). future. could not be justified on shop, go to a film at tbc operations. This represents Complaints aboul Union cconimic grounds, and referendum. nominee (al presenl He said that the Union's Schonell, or just sit in a a loss of around 2'/a% on peas will nol be listened lo were sustained only as a If this rise is not Bruce Green, Assistant food trading operations common room and go to food and funclion trading. - we tried serving decent .service lo Union members obtained, the price rises Registrar); had sustained a loss in the sleep. These losses are al peas in the pies once and Examples of such services will have to be very large, d) two represeniativcs of order of $10,000 in the present met from the switched back to the were the Music Room, perhaps in the order of All this activity is the Staff Association; last Union financial year, Union's development current green guk after which was run at a loss of 15%, for the Union will watched over by the Union e) four graduates, elected reserves, inlo which an hundreds of complaints! ending 31 January 1972 over $100 per week; and certainly nol be able to House Committee, which is two each year by Union amount of money is paid Further increases in the opening of the afford large losses in the a sub committee of Union Council; THEATRE each year from members costs were expected to Refectory in the evenings Refec trading area, and will Council and is also 0 four undergraduates OPERATIONS: See the subscriptions. follow the nalional wage after about 8 p.m. probably require the responsible to the Senate clecled annually by Theatre Manager, Mr. John case, at present awaiting a Refectory to make a During this year, I hope lo The question of finance Hartman, whose office He said he found it odd Union Council; decision. profit. be able to have a series of for the Union's trading opens off the lowest part that the Refectory trading g) the Chairman of the "Wages are a heavy cost articles in SEMPER operations is obviously of the Schonell foyer You operations should have to Price rises arc expected Union Theatre to the Refeciory trading explaining the way in quite complex, and I hope can recognise him by his sustain the toss on the to affect all areas of the Committee, elected operations and in addition which the Refeciory lo be able to devote an worried look. Music RRoom operations, Union's trading. Nol only annually by Union the cost of our supplies operations are run, and entire article lo it in the and yet were not allowed will prices rise for sludent Council; TIDINESS ETC: See will rise if there is a explaining the reasons fairly near future. lo share in the profits of meals, but also for student h) a Chairman, elected the House Manager, .Mr. significant wage increase' behind various decisions the Second Hand functions and external annually by Union Jim Burns (office opposite he said. which affect Union Bookshop. functions (such as wedding Council. POLICY Union Shop). Don't blame "We have a simple receptions). members. me if you get a thick ear - "Both of these are run choice in this siluaiion: we If you care to count up The policy of the he and his .staff have to pul as a 'service lo students "However," Mr. Booth can increase costs to the people named above, it Union House Committee is up wilh a lot of unearned and yet we are not allowed said, "we tnust be careful students or we can reduce come from somewhere, will be seen that Union to provide as many abuse from ill-mannered to balance one againsi the that we do nol price the services available," he and the only way wc can Council nominees and facilities as possible to students Recognizable by other," he said. ourselves oul of the said. gel it is by increased Executive members have a siudents, al as low a cost as neat white moustache. market. Our prices for prices." external functions are strong majority. po-ssible. GENERAL "If all users of the already quile high, and il is The Committee meets A number of the COMPLAINTS: See Mr. Union's facilities would use possible that we may have on the second Monday services which siudents Armstrong, the Union the rubbish bins provided, to make most of the extra every montli and lays take for granted cannot be Manager, in his office and refrain from stealing or money needed by charging down general policy for justified on economic up.stairs in the Union damaging the furniture and students more for their the running of the Union's grounds. For example, Admin Building. Murray i GO TO NO FES crockery, we might even trading facilities Between opening the Refcclory over can be reconizcd by his meals." manage to reduce prices," meetings, this policy is weekends or after 8 p.m. is neat beard and moustache, Mr. Booth said lhat one he said. of the reasons why carried out by the Union a dead loss economically, and his nervous tic The Mr. Booth .said lhat in —MINISTER Refeciory costs were so Manager, Mr. Murray mainly because of the high last is probably caused by the first three weeks of high was the general filth Armstrong, and his staff. wages cost. the fact that he is a operations of the Coffee lefl by studenis. As a matter of policy, "Senior Administration Shop, over 80 mugs had Official" within the The Federal Government will not act to abolish fees for "Cleaning cost us over FINANCE student meals arc run at tertiary education. been .stolen. low profit, sludent meaning of the University $27,000 last year," he said "These mugs cost over The Commonwealth Minister for Education and The University of function catering is at a disciplinary statutes So "In other words, wc spent 30c each," he said Science, Mr. Fraser, has rejected a proposal for changes in Queensland Union is one slightly higher profit, and don't be rude to him. over twice as much on "Replacements have lo be the financial arrangements for Unhersitics and of of the largest catering external function catering IF ALL ELSE FAILS: cleaning as our overall bought from Coffee Shop Advanced Education which would incorporate the loss." orga n i za t ions in is aimed al a bloody great Contact the Chairman of Profits If theft goes on at profit. This policy is abolition of tuition fees. He said that if sutdents Queensland, with an House Committee, Nick this rate, there won't be common lo mosl that because the wanted to reduce price annual turnover from all Booth. I am seldom on any profits from the Auslralian University At the end of last year Commonwealth itself rises, they should try to be sources in excess of campus and am therefore Coffee Shop anyway!' Unions. However, at many the South Australian meets large bills for tidy around the Union $584,500. Of this, around recognisable by my The Union manager, Mr. other Universities this Minister of Education, Mr. Commonwealth Scholars complex. $326,500 comes from common sense, as well as Hugh Hudson, proposed Murray Armstrong, policy has given rise to the and Commonwealth "Obviously, the greater "slinging the hash" - an untidy beard. Phone lhat the Commonwealth Governmeni employees, declined lo comment on student meals in the Refec. practice of giving 761874 evenings or, if you the mess left by Refec Mr. Booth's statement. preference lo student Government should and also incurs revenue loss In theory, the Union's really must, 217153 in users, the greater amount "Any decision on this functions in room increase its assistance for Ihrough lax concessions to trading activities are working hours. of money we have lo spend will have lo wail until the bookings, and will running costs of tertiary parents and companies for supposed to run al a small Nick Booth to clean it up," he said. Trading Sub-Committee continue to do so despite institutions to a $1 for $1 tertiary fees, up to 2/3 of profit, which goes towards Chairman, House "This money has to meets," he said. the financial disadvantage. basis, from the present $1 the extra cost to the paying off the bank Commiitee. for $1.85 contributed by Commonwealth would the Stale or raised in fees. have been offset. .Ml. Hudson had Mr. Hudson said lhat he suggested lhal a condition was disiippointed at the of the increased assistance CommonweaUh Minister's should be lhal the Slates response which showed a agreed to abolish all lack of understanding of tertiary tuition fees. the costs involved in In the submission to Mr. lertiary education even if Fraser it was poinied out no fees were payable.

The Union Transport Trainee teachers and Committee has students at the QIT still recommended to Union retain the concessions. Council that a boycott of At the 2nd Meeting of all Brisbane City Council Union Council on March 9, transport be organized. Mr. Tully reported lhat the Speaking al Council lasl student Senator (Mr. Alf Thursday, the Chairman of Nucifora) would .seek the Transport Committee through the Senate a (Mr, P. Tully) said that the declaration from the City Council Labor Brisbane City Council that Administralion had the Universily of withdrawn University Queensland was an student concessions in approved college within 1961, the meaning of the He said that a token Council's By-Laws. boycott of one day could If this were done, and should be organized to students at Queensland show the City Council thai University under Ihc age of the Union sirongly 19 years would be entitled protested at the lack of to fare concessions. concessions. PAGE 4 SEMPER FICJOKEAT APklllS, l^Vl '

VOICE FROM THE GRAVE A HISTORY OF THE UNION SftoM. iTimv Bv.EXFimoNs stii'Lotr.vr —PAGET Semper Floreat semper (loreat...

Vohm* 21, NimlMr 3 Tht D,Q.U. Ntmpoptr Thurtdi),, March ZT, 1»M the newspaper o( the university of This week we look at our secret Senate o ctueens\an6 students' union The Government Senators Friday, Mirtli 31, 19H SHOULD THEY GO?[!»*!^i^ Vol. XIX. - No. 5 , ^ A YEAR AGO III-I1I|F, UM Mlnlitir lor Public iaiiriKlian HI Ih* Qslr Labour aov10«Mt. •( r-ffi IIIH II Of I«tc th« ttu^lt-nU (or Ihcir p&rrnU, ^inJUiu, Rf^o «AS of tlw Uploa Bfutatlooa) get out of It anyway." There have b«n oOwr itatemfntB, bul •Dd Ihcrefon fttratil IU ttcy would noMMiute a woiplcte raw oJ Wankj. Anyway, to MHMMrf tl iktn ft tout iiI>*lT «4 KM *\t^aman From 7.15 ptn. unUl »X. tneihberi »!»"• rt» nwlUn nl) (« „. .,. __ , tjbvijile all quiiUoning, abuM? and Ignorance gf the facts, here ot Council and observer* wert inter- ta Tati*t« Qia fhalr. IW*!** brr« ct iliTI i^>k»»w, (m« Kwti t we (nuat d»lve int* SporU t'nurft r»Prr»entlM the »»»•* My of rtu- (Ml. Ut.afi(faUB'i» rWtnf M t» fMn-nit •»? r*>tTHMrU;.i^ UM U-4.MJI. Rleellaafc •IV ««l feUlwy. AMI lui, th*dwrt, n^n fn«mrr>. '*kl, Ji |«iJi ui U*tttU»ilLtf Wijt^' Th* motion w« p*n«l. frpmrwoTk Q} prvailc n;lei nt de< Mr Wright btfin to apeak to bli rriof to IK« only Uwte uudenl* Ute, *il kt but i.Nr'tf pu-m-ht f**itjtttiri Mi war*rnMr Thn» tilrarti >r» ndfirlfnt ta motlofi, rirtt poinlinit out that a iM^M rKktm Pt • pnaMWfti mho look (laM In iSe Bi1lv.tJ« ol my TooVan oJ,dlM*i:l il no way Inlmed cl the Sport* L'nUift'i Clubt were te- thaw lh»l illhoufh Spocu fw** •r* HEDII. WIN muT ROCKD. ' . . . ••'*^ **"ini*iii ilk jfl riwkm collfclpd br Uw ArroUnli S«llW. lo Lick la ronf.denfe to the rhalr- r ^ IM Mutil lut (•«'• tfliiH) ~ 'H"^'fS"'lH "'"• Morris said I'KS qulrtd 10 paj • Spcrti Fee whirh Mlrr a iSoTt Uude Irvolvlhi a man* tm; merely dlMpeeweilt from wki coUected br U» UDKMJ iUelf, tVi wtm Wlfliuny VitMcd fcj **• ts, i(adfal> fAith p«n lft (he iJlp)*rt of SpoiU fr« rulini. he cfrliTUed, It meant that be- t^ftiitn rifdlMri 4*# t'«,.tfrtij .4r„ .it„ri^mf*i gJl lectwa If"-* t*^ *lwa *'th lectuie nvctioni nnd poiftla ct onler Mithout rt«fmh« ta SCA*I* f%ottmi wu rT<«rvlr Ihr pnirlilM of A ren- rauie Mr. bteyer'a anvewiih^ motion fff J*> ikrrr •'t Wwrt *^ it^vi M »« (f«¥nf. j«rn.aJL»rt, A dilJttffll nxUioa ot f.farwt wu muted to Ihe mwtlni •» rrr«»iit»- lbVm. the period. 1134 ta \%\9. tht pctlt^n approval, ll. *a4 IM electknu held $rt§t4, tm l>i «• aJilMr^ • 4n« thfj «r H. wM^if, fc«^^ ^, j^y,f ,A„ ^( PHI. idoptH. IT-.e Ifillowit-i U ft quoU. Uvt ot Ihc Mm'i Cradjale AOOTM- >•<« Ihit. .1 tM rttiMtm H hat rrmnined tl-.t »«m« iFtouih tlK under It. were Invalid. Mr. VUiiif ••MthN |Mr \ J il^t't.t-N •I^UJ MtrnMili *» < i»r*aat i;on tnm Ihe Sfwtti UWoo'i »Bnti»l lion; uphaldrn ot the U.QM^. Piiuo cf ttrne rr,kr have obtcurtd here objerted thai at there wu e-o w *• Uwoo. JHI («ol Ht«n). MF U(xr^ kiU MtMf w tf^mimt tiK StB^I *>^ i»;( report of 16M-:7:- breathed alinoat atidible i^lh* of re­ tvif. H 1 (KFMfMnMi l|» amendmenl, It •> n-w-mJ rf^. rie&Kial: the tact Ci» U-« SporU P^ il lUlt I lief. r«Mki«J MM 1« IW btMit ffftfm' rVt Art Jt/ tm,ti brouihl up to Cour.tlt lor apjiroval. tr.d ite^ lo tlM SouU • ••linf /(" rt(»fm' * Ht «Mno tf ftMti avtl' "Once mwe Mr. J. P. Cramb It WM then moved by ». *. u lie roatrTMled thii tho tnoUon ot Mr. lk«M ifcrr* iMtvFT* bf UM Hnr li itMU be ^^J that fif itT^st* ffl/dstt Mf ***^ (fdrntifted wjUi lh« Mr. Crtmb lo JiailtMa (pcoay for Mr G, ShtUl, Mc^eri w»j one cl policy, moved w OMU M, AM/d rhfft UMT* V ft rupanilbUV M tb« •pptar CiWrJ fi« efW « (reajurrr tfuJ Uje ftormti cf^r ct bujlnea be trwn Ihe (toot ii f the merttnc vitl\Mit *Nttt ft ttfntt (kmjfal t^tr pftri a Iw* VrfW. ?tL. Ibe Sei- Mr. Axon na^'H XO far Uie 5;>oMJ UB.OQ. end Uunfca 1« juip'^'d. to dtbete Lhe miii«f pf any noUft betorehatid—he had lh« tit m^mto ft^iien •le. tlnct H (Wlt«»«M# pit HMrt ftnnt " Me ur4 f>r l>e fmrlbenuKe cf rd in Nalional Unwn (amonpi ftthei mombor of SonoUltqulto Impractlcjil. Ur. ref th.» wai ao or •U-Af ik.1 Art. MT 4«» ™'**"^ •" **• '^«" MfTUI 0 IHM (ftmi Mr lh« •IU»UBM« rate af UM L'oder- •toe* Uw aitfrMWb U ttw SrMle rlnl. tradutei 10 appfiuKh l&t Srfitic ncti, thdnh be tttlrmrd to Council, d«m wNfattkatad ty r ~" SEMPER FLOREAT thii wook. Wll uttVvlHd hr • KlUuVlMl Mr. Wrjjht and Mt. J. L. Jamkton rti1>MMM •lOun M Ik* MuM maliRti ud IKI fAt itmina i^j Va jfn.-v with a view to intiwlufinf • cocnpMl- ton nolke bM been iivtn, «|vln* hii "TU MM* wl Aa imimt tu Saniw viwU VUtt hi tay Virfti MT IV^ I'ddermOMt*. %M a then tried rvery trkk to the bxA \o 1 Uadtnt tTTttMM^iit in aoi7 Sporia Tre *iiK lUtemenl the min­ Mb wt tkfa LWiMwiri fM fci tk*M iba UMM Vd 10 U|, mpentlbtlHr I* tke atBimta lo Induce Ihi- 1;D»OO l^reildcnl, Mt. a. T. 7Jlf ^Wj frfN md rlit H*f denU. Thli «e irr x>«I to uj hai utes of toe V.Q M.S. meeUni al whlfh rrti •VOTYM nm i>iiiMd to Uf »ee Ihtl UM i*** u» Mt perrerf • Bewana. !» vacate the chitr; he t • WtUti.1t kuor. ud )tt K »**rr u ifaitei tfimhaiiM mtf •IM rf^;i •rtar "Vl.-V aOA now been iclrodJi-nl and )».jjj en- the motloa waa inovedi Iheae rr.lnulcf. *4 trwm euk *rt|JMt} tuffmt. rftralned therein, Oiw*if ttt* «riru- il>r JkH^ rrmM Ml. Aim lui ba «u I •blt a more deCinite propunrrc lo It appeared, were rjii natlibie tor Q. »•( MttI), Ml. Al««. a tomt on IhJi. Wr u. J- Kwlat. ttm ] ruUipBX. tb IMMK |«|«h- bt! mapped oul for fwh tomtiiuent Cottimi* JrwpetUor, ai toe new tW^ )T"— wa^ k* • CONTROL TN rElUOD tf TO '«. referrlM lo UftJoR HefulatJWU (whkft I b*4 t«a^ pwfn w MCTft «li Club." U.Q M.S. eneojllve had Ulitn Lhem j M •«)(« nt ntliwul (Mttftnn t«r krtta* Sertl'>n 5 (l) at t^e CcwuUtulloR auie "Tit* rr**l*ent ifaal] t>m«T ibt hotr.f. Debate on t^.e rc1 el the I ^h« hoJi ttHititv*ik«| M Alao of Inlerett in Ih^i nkalter !• italrt thai Vie Spcrti l'nion Caiineil. eulr al atl tlatofl CMttttl aweutm vkhdltr of Ihc aiTxndlnf motMm to Remember^ Gentlemenl ikalWaaT t rel(¥anl cKiracI frwn ih» mlnulM at wtUrh ha b peeaenl"} laid tha «u. t*t Vnur il t4t tMtmiri irf A -Tlian »» v»»i •ttw, thill, iutjfd to Uw lylhorlty ct lh» termi oE Ihe U,QM£. ConsUluttOB JMiAvwriH hrUi mrnl •< hi «t Ihf Studcnla' Lnitm Cotjritii meet- Setute. h*ve the H1« mtiufcuMnt cf dtence in the aliln by npealtdly «(. ccnllnutd for aonie Ume. to be tor- (•WttHtfl UI ftM-t tt-Kuitcd »lMCh in irf IM InjI ot llUi July. l»2fl:— ltir.plla| to »ik Mr Wriilit wh«lher •»h*f v> tittdtnii. wd auj U\e etfalrt ind t/ini»rI*on at thr minaled by Ih* chakmar'i*\ilin| that *• TV Uti tf I (MtM 1941 1957 Mr. Denneta wai pre*mL Oo h«»liu >kKti It aogWl ba ktntr fot « -Mr. ruher mc\ed thai « b(i«- be Sporti Union and ih^U ht«* (^e Ihe diacunion tlvouM be ironttRed tn A RrHIKOM UAJLOi V OUwH^ thla queitkin repeatedly diu1!o«,d, tioJtfH ^aMfor itdl l« kt«r' •ent to Iht Senit* lUtln* \hn the iw«rr to prrform lU itxh Kti ini the valld.iy of ih* tlecuona Irom the * U Aac*^ «r Lu y«M, (kt ^x ,<^*^^* -I *"*'^i Ikt iM^. el UK l^it r*n, i«, Unkm Coui«IL iMrnj »ni, b|«,iu;f dfedi u •hall Appear IA Ihcffl Mcei* ha subintlttd to Uie chatmiih Uiai the po'al ot yfvr Dt tite Vmon Ccaitnv- '{'•'Ai MlmMkf (d • MiiM Q. )M tt* Mian, iit, OM r«« Lutttr m- iU npKMjoi fH/ O Kt* t MniM) : V frWmr Mt j„. that the Sports C'nloni )Ur« tocn- ury For the maMltmfnt »( Ihe Pmkltnt vaa prtvtnt Mr. toam. iloa al Iriit Cor toepuipot t ot Mr. ICMMmn** t r*p«l »«iTlftJ - " " "ilMntoVw. r K r«(Ui*» Tk* fi,S mi m nluftt wM a//w«J af ikt ftlkj af |4# C#itnAt>W'i blMd In atkinx Uw Senate u, cot[«t Sporti Unbn. wbo waa both. expre»ed imt retlet * TW NMJ U tfaMdnK bo - Wrifhl'i dUMfll motion. "•"mni Uitlfv t^. ^mi amt fmt ^ il thm JUP>/ • <»a*trtff «/ *M'ohttrt « *V Sporti Fin tnn all dtj t\udet\U at IhU atflTmailon. He ei^br^ that. !kUt" fcti r*fat#^ r*" -'»*>'• M ««; PIM^J b JM^ THe Cliuw ji}veTnlni P>ntnre U: UiMCli be I1M4 by wbal ^ had HM i Ifc* I'axn ffOfiMd •rdtft obtain a Swru Oval anJhetr. niX WIKMNO BLOW • *«*« rt* If«<(rw th>wMi; Tbe Coujvell ahall, •• TWvday %tAU b* «^ wIlMnw * I ^Thll ttttt bl M 4 Btttf^ by dejjJTi to lend IU tupporl lo thew Mr. mtf bt rantUaed V* apaceli >• a^M fwfr*M*«J fxwrW atrr ikf I'M- ^ifwlij M .taitrWfa b thnr m mtfaritf Bf lubjfvl \o Pfovttlon 37 or Ihe Vhivtf- Inc bla af«Mrfla« af llw "NUaa t« de- I Nt «f tM UnM, * MaitNH iMopnaaU for dffsnii.jy prevl^rii (or Uia dlaaent MtlM. and p*lBt«d MI "fw> « • "AWt, aai iA< u»4,t M ^ar O^rMMttf •//vMm. *UT at QueemUnd Act, har* KAI etara Ibe fleet Una laraM, aad WMM ' ^kri 11 k oMMhfr c( At UMiai - "V*. kulcVn il I pat. the »ppfllnjf il^e o( o«r litiiveraltT lhal tba w«r|i«*4 te I «Mnt W I Ajfrw* rUt OatmiViJ tAvwt Ide." SceoDded by Mr. Sparkn, Mat apMJt mnlier •• ttaaaUrv^ b« {CoftUnuad 6a pac* i) fcmiiwt M *ai» fwtttikMi (Cmtliwedtft Hie 9) I *rfj 11 DM UTW ht kill M rifHi 'r/raffit>w/ "OiKiwort tt tmi «tM —' J tf tpitdi MJ tM i^iii t» F*o- 'f/ Jhr C#"tanf«J Urt • wftt tl^rrfn' «1wi Vnii rao^MMn t«(4i N f«>«« •nnr Mi Itt i*ar Al rii^tjrMMfrfi Atf tiM lta(»"*t]f tflv JO nwi Dt •tnM M •If 4t)tUH«i wtit piWn Ce^: Early tXafnoMa ttt th« Anita Abd«c«n th* Ka4tBm dtiriopTTCMI ef )>«WP> faerit tfl MHti «( aAjmrthtt tlt- .« ....,...! "'*« •«»"*»*• iW KMfaM tniviti-pntiitt^ iMat. Iar tt' A. McLEOD c^oi. &T, U/dfifJ Wuiot w (Vkti Mr >*''> kMr* 14/ f Jf fi itttf%»4 u fit ttfrtttfU- Md «t cMKrAoIMM M M«llf> «nd nUnn Walker: Tba Oreal Tnk _, (tnw M tu taMctf. rvmriMf It ^ «f»r; Hiu U (tat n cf UM jMwku tk*l AIN ln»«i iitpuU if«] tte (MVI. I laiuv AHMMM at WtrM M| of Wkiit dtciM^a ' «• ett Aawtr H rt* '^mK ••rf •/ arU-a H fron m pttMM ki|;li ttvtl M ntAot/Jv. in OltActh Strctt, BBISBANE Available UtouTita: fthort UMory et Ut* n^ t«tt ^5fopo, r.4 ! -TWl Vl' 6 (Mrt • tkf ftmt^ 10 44 WM tt tJwtt' NMvmt !

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ADiUViDE IN >Aj&jiLpugJc [pLp^jextir JANUARY THI H.q.U. NBWSPAPCR 'J'ages: ^ 5EMPER riDI1EAT>^ riirMli)-. 27tli .Wareli. l%2 VolXX-Hoil MAncu Ith. }m Itrclatered al OP.O, ftrltfMOa^ tec 3,4&5 tiapwpiaaioti by pert M a pfita^kal. Big-wigs non-committal COMMEM TRADITION TO CO? F« flu Mcond Ilini in « ytu tR eld QnMntUml Uiil>tralr|t Irtdlllon hn ^MR tllowtJ fe Upu. tnd thit llmi ll U Ijtctly b«CJiiM H>« •«•»»«« cwnmlttM ol (IM Sill il9<2l Union Csuncil hai t*lhni a IMIICII dtftit i» Iht hindi of thi Univtt- illY Adrntaliltition. Uit ytir wlun Iht Pmctorial CommittM binnid th* choir from th* fitdutlion c«r«nwny th* Union wti over fare alleviation qalta In«»f«t»i»i In Iti p»l«it, If at ill iny pntttt wi< mid*. Now • chaa|t tt plaan«d In tht uwtl HlttMlnnounc*Mll» •ad ZaU Bobt^ lo pek* aonad AM (dAcM el carina dty ktkeei aM aq«a4 aboul Ih* way aMwilnmn hstdhB fiho«l *' ^^^m^^amm """*'. ^!*}*-" 1**-'» InFofmitlcn aMlUbl* o« Ihilr faalinn kna. and aaoMteBr th««a >o ^ Uio »• wit U. «"* WTI SWEENEV — Time rr>Ppivf»C Q^Ct ^^^HPIB'»"•"'«"''•''»"• b«ih with tradition, JwprtalDVlT. ha i«t«n«d istaet. Aldanaaa AttewMi BCBBM fanbae mm* tort fimz ton/gftt CbanAae^ MRW<-IWB boya we P«** lhal K the aiatur kt eeM- i°lV:^!l?ii;?" • tmlK% imilaaaan »« •wMtfvd ta •ay wterred M bu partj. K mnU b &• "•""?". »"'••».« la H«a>Wt, IIOI, Mn Wf M dM,. ic.l,|i. In „,,U. ">"" •*»"«>" *~ V(- frU0 9m H t^m tht arettml taitar- Sxfueah& Unaia. toovctu^Tf ud bKrtaite< rtt»4, (MM l«w OKII U I,^ U> iMutar •» K^ JLS <>•"' *«"•"»• I" ftnkv- m >IMJ."< «< th,«.,» to. ally wttaiffaiitM aayitite • n lalTillnCMkW^. M^^ »>K..vi T ''^ •xP'nMX Ol Itu- M rni.;l.l«>r. ... u te CO.. and wdauMMty btxMai. tnotm* aa< Wr. BUM, Oett* S«SS.'^':.2rtf '•i'tr-ii. 1^ MSTESS lYT? 'T" fl «uatinCcrT««^\K^'i' •-< « e^'','« *• <«t eaAHnKtmi. aada by ^u ~ •ral WUanvTtmM- I catttna imUmata anuBd Uie i »••! PtptfteKt,! rspoUa; and we prv^et than qmwA MtaMad thai wai fmat PM* wtih Ibt Ma* to MPtJ^lo the Oty I daalrtAtwtty wMh Miltti Ibe? van !P^If iSiSiS'S'*".''- ™« "" !•• illlK^tM •1^ •:-y^ •• S ThurvUy. April 2<|K „ bww *- "n^ M- Ou. „ ,_-, a„, „,_.,.,.. ._ a^m M M, QanMiai *Da fM Uta«r the tfarSMe af ttrm tae ValnaraAr bUKl.V af ttlliin by B«m of jirmir/nraijiSfc ^•V. Jf^^M '*" "^ "" "^ wM. H *~ "»«» "• '•" 'rmu%."<^ ""• • tol'Jw amdioia, ani tt «o, ttM aiap* •IB rw tak* la leiDf ahaai agch ,. fc„** - —»j ,,„,„ H. *. ™™- ^mk^si£MKi Thon-fl fhe b* bf'ore CUHt. OMlH Hw.. to i UJ*. h,^ „ lo, &«)»,«. m CUI-..Y i«»i>u •>» enar •MMMta a «tW( e-aH Hy HMW al COWKMI. the . , ^ .T .... *.\.n*wni How...... MH... tRMTw. I., rt. 8.H tf.q.Jd I*.. '"'* *** in.»iafl. o» «. -.'—•Tr. ' r*** " *"*•* ***^*et af Wwutwn. at>ala»H»'. 'at a SK DM.! CUIM. Mvorted «•• 1 S^^^Ii— k,. d.. 'J*^ "J? **""!" " "" ••»"• "rt -«ii Tl.., do rf», *»' " • ixm. •" l~*.i^ r-^iTjr^^HiL "^ *" '«*"« I" .wl. I«.y r. •» «WM *„, , W "Wtd I. h» -J» «•

•^ •"^Iff 2r^J^ t^ the^e-^SSWrtJ M Ipetlal.teaaitHaaa. ..,M cf e-er, a^jJrrt « w> » jwytft^ "bom H, htMeii. bvKWtf _ ^ , . .„„ Tb«» atatlat baea a iMtataa* tf*i*in *? N »*, (ot hM »i«*ei. Iha 'Bl»iOMv» aw «• w d«^ IW* a. « bataal rt-if >aMt H IW cnly pfwentad IT fiwml Tw iWtMVtKtMf la« *• *• fr***f*L.!3 ^***" MMIIIM af a4a«a«f«« aad - - - at* MKHHKI to 4k't( ta all "^ (beH taawbe bat been tetHad Chaadltr. Tfee rtrf*. **»*^ breete f,ri«., ^i,Wd be tetfM at l.aedM8y«l M* ef IJ9 u*a«ia(i Hffti ia>«*taM«t a«>tiaa po^T'^.l^iir^iJJM m landeti ttu lK«n! t.Krfi^ iDi* rwtr S! OfflcUl View I; effwai i^ti .t iw HI A earr bar* Mirw IWI »t >ii Unid iwt iw i\MMr« iNurr ».i ta*»e«H»a« af IW WaWt* «taa ta«>larTtfw. U,^w^mMU^ ^ »barfd ba »a4 t««e«Wi«a .M»f*aa ts «t1l< •** **^*^j' ••'**» TK aa*ia.>in>i. taatWt' **W»e el'fledf to »n*«^ Wt*k. StMl tl ta«. wHli an aaily **- a certtfa Hea^ M1M«. «»»daw«S aaJ Tfca •alalafI MtMk •r«arrf ami IW I^WM aMiilHia i» rartUMM jAtMa aa |W mt**- af «ba batd ia eairh .. . aiiilMiafi ^"JwiM. IU4 la-« bM« Ma*to| a^ HM «.«., c«-EliI7 I- S K,.^7r^ *^J^ 1 .l«.>».l.lr Bui.r««,. etitttui ttifiat ftaai Tbat> < fH aa a«ntf, aa MM, M .*««lb, 1*. J(«., »., Kris? ' '*••»" .1 J.V .«4 »»-r I., Wl w TW |t»N attaflttkti t>a» baen **'^ '*l.f^ **^* "^^^ •^ •*• •••**»»• al "cw«. .MW ft>«4«»j Ik, (WM«MMM, tUttrt b»ea a Ma ak* MiMUe* Ibai MUl Uttar*! letter. If teeiM Pfem .I|K|I..>. I^M(H..m.l. Vnttevfltr tlvdeni ran awt.Waii ftt.rfta«Ma.tbettlr . , , , -, In Mtt, 1960. rw t»^^- 2^^ tliil bTSrii? "^ «»...i..i. n,. I'M.oai, t«N ta mtmt af HH *^e»* $WEENEy REVIEWED H tw »»*«« M«»»ba*. Ky, Co-w*.m«. acviMnted bl dMiW. i...i«n et • IW*. •jaHt, ] Uh mM tItH Ibaf MM afaty it *t r**^ «ti«<»trtr. at iw 1^ <^Mfrtf'(^rtB tw )m«nc>«l *»<>ewt t^uyatwu. lit prtMitu and tfUtt- A HoM Mrratuckbi^ •vwhm. Tba aKracJaltag Msiacy .li'i. h.al.r rdutilian rvMta ttet t«otrt>il Wt Ufa ikat IbMe aalharkit* awM/e at rt,« (.««M m*|OfHr l"d IS. .w. .* It.. <4Ni««n Mte'fl.^ to "Kowt. tw tlrttwutwn el bMtndl ton. VMai in lit* iMrautt Mwttag ht MM* aftei4atlafl ai e< Iha hoM-Balodfow] acMaa. Ih* ahcOT bnrtal liLaiaiitiniiiiai* i^-^^^iJ^V"*^ ""J ""'"^ i..«in»B i""***"*-**"*^. td Ihey iMffntty, lb* MUnM bMe bantaa «« f«- n»nl w^oJfd IW- Urtat ^Lrrt^lvn. pt'eMt tn a iHut*- ..» > r.rni'tnr IM. .... II'" 'H^l'f tiCh.ll lOT I*. IfUt Md bua faraa tM«M • byetttt of racLtIng atlh t«ndtann of fiM Itn* •» nil »^S to. it>^»i «!•»,» IW raJM*] ri. et'fif a«a IIMA pr«Tioui FliKM at Till T««Odk« by Pl«a. bat alM. wd •meuDy hr •ncemewi " ^K.i4...1 4.Iilwvvl •((«(i.l wmWMI. « low. fn the atoer tha ahMof K»irier_H««»a aa UtanTjadrHar' W^ .rtd c*^"***, cm. ay,t«w ol rw p*.e«f*i «*-• I . I . t»*n«t<» di'».n] I ,„ IUMI htrti «>mW4«rf fiir iW f^, • f«Mwr ir( I'lmtmrtM. |la> |H V'^ial etcfaticn iti iratut" and aptendM r^tJBf pM"^ ,*Ura. UAetiLaurlnUioerfcadale »uti M TflMi" W«* •*.* ^1 *d,.wJ to W Ml tWTWi *US, (ht t/ifltrth Kl1ion«f |.fcy,w„t» fM K» |«Wtwt»«dt- >Wv pi^'Of* k-ne (iifdet^ ntuui hteoOM hli aaadMUni al liMra OaUey>, aa4 Herl nuntMMl UI tfui a tiWntt It t* W >"• b«JjBl Sa«*««V «ltmvO»d icn va-e IW ft>r»o-*fl ij- at tw »«.*at.«-i ,.ortv a»d ra ab^ t; .1^ J I'ri*«il(iii, 1' y IV ('Oductd ta rWt tM WOW AVAOABLC t K «W aeeuMl miMf jr WT* ft «t*i lea*e in ewv rsunlenanra—CUf f Fleak M 0«*ei)e« ^•te v>r\eH», i}a>i^ t'Ofn Owtihofi leim \luiA UM dtioea btrbtr at Ptoet riraitwd, tut Baa otari hkd eoe 9;:. W rt'Md la [411 pat «ha*:l* ?(. McLcorf TlpyHUatUMln I ftUul iM«wU of ikvwua W*. tm m Of'o'^f *^ CambridM O/i Oi^rr pa^es 0«M U*l laal It lettal^ Iba Marian tw fw a^ •tnet. Miei, t.*ttKJ Ut (f tw ma.i- m., ., ,,„, )5 „„ ^*^ ."•*»~T ^' fiajtd («• th»# KJ IJU tf etW< i^vi>«n>twi bf« B« Mta |«»IM A>«4 •< uaUaMre •n IW »He«»tri6f toCMif tnw^ »ii«fr t»itd Hi eaih' * 1^ ••« -vi..a It t*emt ina lhal IN nntt oh- ?*^.'*r.S I*,'" Ibt laa» utae indvi.,^ to, tW hAiMjyll »j»~^.i I "•**—-'—i-M^ HWM) M a -Kot». 11^ VMt •» '"•f**^ '»« ^*>^ r..rt*^ «*.th ifii, *vliC •«r4«tow^ Vtat KMfea(at«< ikitttr aaUiffioa (MfinuiicM to bnlcbl al AQ BabiU' lUS. ebowiu IWte n** revJi«i siti Ijtt'; 1- to /'it.. < W L^rtt* y ^1 f-ea-e ma-t *^*a-* f^i^" •* *** J*"*" ••"'• -^' ovef W - rw >tH .^^S our rvcent Caltatmy ^^ bait BUU HAiaa. Vt y^ ^n ta^atfl tM Ha tMblt tRPfH* lot Jt'.KX 1 ,lf'-.4M blrv«e-Tb« HlMle Air* nl eneevafling n ***t l# •»» WH. IW MtaWrDtaj * tl t*S r* */ ftie 1 |IRU»Aft| [MwUe w uwft: etiw dittl^t^tW^TIi•ri WiTr aall e#«t.. ,„ ^^ *iW*«»i".*J"S!J[7? lifintir M tf d*n't CoUAeyi txp»» In rawtttwy Ta*r. Utirtbtea. yM( u% »4t)wd no) (• Mhnt i« (45 nv lira ^»HI. t.f.r. I.Vf*.*, t.( •9t«ni tw itM'ante **•** »^ a-a"UWI aiaamaiaa^.. ott,«»,ya i,v«*< tW !>>»«» ft m tmi itH'- Real bad Uie pMm manH. btif '^?, **- on Thwatfar idrfit a>e bf »>**i IW WIM**! «t>. ffi/x«f ila"v, 1, fiww patent) aW fW^. f^»ti«* "Iiuinvi W.lrwt". many olhen of tbr lame rr«ca>ttT« Wtt tfr IT^.J:.>1 t e-towi«9« Its* Kk* at ^*xat, tfti 1. IVQJ] ire, W h»J Squdette APRIL 13,1972 SEMPER FLOREAT

U IS THIS THE WORLD WE LIVE IN \ "

BATTLE OF ALGIERS (M) Directed by Gillo KING KONG (M) Pontecorvo Directed by Ernest Schoedsack Screenplay by Franco Solinas Slory by Edgar Wallace and Merian Cooper

BATTLE OF ALGIERS is an amazingly close Viewed by modern standards, KING KONG is reconstruction of the fierce and unsuccessful struggle for monstrously funny, but viewed in iiis(orical perspcc(ive independence by the T.L.N. against the French between KING KONG is undoubtedly a screen classic. 1954 and 1957. This film gives present-day audiences some insight into Tlie Algiers events produce uncanny parallels to those the film techniques of the carly 30's and also gives Ihem in Ulster right now - the big difference being that glimpses of the depression era. Tlic movie camera was still terrorism was popularly supported in Algiers whereas the manually operated and Directors were beginning to shoot majority of Ulster folk reject it. scenes out of sequence. Tlie camera reveals long queues of Tliis immense, important re-creation of urban terror people eagerly awaiting their daily rations while the during the Algerian revolution has all the grainy heroine (Fay Wray) is caught stealing an apple. The authenticity of a newsreel, (hough its introduction J930's must have been a great period for Women's Lib emphasizes that no newsreel footage was used The too - actresses did not wear bras in those days! combat photography is awesome, though the battles were The story is uncomplicated. A movie director charters staged. The antagonists - French paratroops, Moslem ship and crew and sets sail on a mysterious expedition to guerillas - seem to have been caught unawares by find and film the legendary KONG, the eighth wonder of invisible cameras, thougli they were aciors (mostly the world He takes with him an impoverished beauty non-professional) following Gillo Pontecorvo's direction who is lured by the prospect of stardom. and Franco Solina's script. He succeeds in finding KONG on an unchartered island The illusion is almost perfect; the shadow is almost and predictably our heroine ends up in the clutches of the substance, and yel this painstaking mimicry of reality huge man-like ape. KONG'S big heart is overwhelmed by would be nothing more than a trick, an academic exercise the bra-less beauty, and when she is eventually rescued by in neorealist cinema, were it not for the honesty that the film crew, KONG follows after them in hot pursuit. The Battle of Algiers*; To begin with, brilliance and honest informs it. A gas bomb succeeds in subduing KONG and the MAN IN THE WILDERNESS Instead of playing God and judging right or wrong, jubilant crew return to civilization to show the world Pontecorvo and his associates have chosen the slightly less their prize capture. Directed by Richard C. Sarafian difficult role of recording angel. Their sympathy is plainly However, in New York, KONG escapes from Screenplay by Jack de Witt with the rebels but their allegiance is plainly to the truth. confinement and after rampaging through the city, he t o^u g h Tr 0 n t ier The terror they portray is indiscriminately terrible for symbolically falls to his death from the top of the Empire MAN IN THE The film chronicles the man — though it ts French and Moslem alike. State Building. WILDERNESS is a amazing survival of surprising to see him in The paras do not hesitate to use the most hideous disappointing film with Zachary Bass (Richard KONG and the prehistoric acatures in the film were of Harris) in the wilds of the such an ordinary film. torture in interrogating prisoners and defending the surprisingly poor editing, course animated and though the standard of animation North West American interests of 'La France Civilisatrice'. A police continuity and obviously Though aspects of the varies considerably from good to poor throughout the frontier of thel 820's after commissioner blows up an entire apartment house and its fabricated sets. film were disappointing, film, the realism achieved is remarkable considering the a savage mauling by a bear Arab tenants in misplaced revenge for terrorist acts. Despite an assurance some scenes, namely the difficulties that confronted the animators (Peggy the Bear). Peggy Yet the leadership of the rebel National Liberation from the outset that the one of wolves feeding on a Mention should also be made of the dialogue and acting turned in a quite moving F'ront also uses Draconian measures in purging its own story is "based on dying buffalo, powerfully styles of the film. These provide modern audiences with performance of a be.ir showed the savagery of the people of public vice, and its homespun bombs also historical fact", one many, though misplaced, laughs. attacking a tough frontier environment Zachary Bass extinguish countless innocent lives: youngsters dancing to suspects that either In conclusion, one wonders what the Censor originally man and certainly seemed survived in. a jukebox, a child licking his icecream cone. saw fit to delete from the film. Perhaps the sight of Sarafian has taicen what at home in this role. It was VERDICT: This film is a masterpiece beyond any might be described as the Overall, this is an KONG tickling the girl's breasts was too much for him or a pity her part came to entertaining movie but shadow ofa doubt. director's brand of poetic maybe KONG'S appetite for human fiesh irked him. such an abrupt end. perhaps a too Nevertheless, when you see KING KONG you can come licence or tbe "historical was also commercially minded to your own conclusions. facts" were not all that quite convincing as the semi-sequel to "A Man plentiful. MELODY (NRC) mauled but incredibly Called Horse." FORTUNE AND MEN'S EYES Directed by Waris Hussein Directed by Hany Hart Screenplay by Alan Parker Screenplay by John Herbert MELODY focuses on the sexual attitudes of young children in the 10-11 years old category. They are more FORTUNE AND MEN'S EYES was filmed sexually aware than their parents realize, though they do Unfortunately, Wendell not fuUy understand the nature of their feelings. in the now abandoned Quebec Prison with many Burton's Smitty does not Just as ten year olds have an understandable thirst for of the cast of extras made make a convincing knowledge about the world around them; they have a up of ex-convicts and transition from the novice healthy curiosity about sex. Girls and boys alike feel wardens of the prison. to a fully integrated 'con.' attracted to each other and they know that kissing does The film is put foiwatA QucenJe (Michael not produce babies - but they want to know the true as a realistic glimpse of the Greer), one of Smitty's cell facts of life. And who is going lo tell them? Certainly not perverse social order of mates, is all that the name their patents or their teachers As one of them prison life and to put it implies in flamboyant unwittingly reveals, the older generation are a mob of mildly, this glimpse is not homosexuality, and imbeciles who, though tbey remember they were young pleasant. provides excellent comic once, have forgotten what it was like. The central figure is relief in this rather grim MELODY is thus similar to FRIENDS in that two very Smitty (Wendell Burtori) drama. young children fall in "love", and to IF in lhat both filnis whose prison experience is Director Harry Hart has end on a satirical note. In IF the school rebels actually kill traced from his bewildered dealt with his subject in a their teachers and parents, whereas in MELODY (he kids arrival to his growing sensationalist manner and and their elders merely have a hand to hand battle. awareness, and then allows a number of However, MELODY does not suffer by comparison involuntary involvement in excesses to detract from a because of the rcniarkublc talents of the young actors. the "facts" of prison life, realistic portrayal of prison Jack Wilde, as Hornshore, is perfectly cast as a young until he finally adopts (he life. For example—(he 'hood' while Tracey Hyde makes a pretty leading lady. same methods of tyranny ChrLstmas parly scene and Mark Lester, as Latimer, uses his angelic face to full cffecl which he initially Rocky's too-rapid as Melody's "lover". abhorred. This drama is demoralization. These The photography and music arc excellent Ihroughoul intensified by the excesses arc no doubt carry and director Wari.s Hu.sscin has Irealed Ihc Ihcmc of Ihc revelation near Ihc end, overs from the stage play film wilh commendable restraint. lhat Smitiy has been j;iiled of which the film is an This film is (hus compulsory viewing fur all parents, for the possession of adaptation. future parent.-i, and those opposed lo sex education of marihuana. children at an early age. RICHARD HARRIS as he appears irt Man In The Wilderness PKGE'6 SEMPER FLOREAT APRIL 13.1972 FILM ^•••••••tk ^ ^ -^ __.^____*M^ ^ ^ ^ ^ REVIEWI • • • by Len Sorbello, John DeGroot, Stephen Torre.

THE HUNTING PARTY STATUE SEMPER RATINGS. Directed by Don Medford Screenplay by William Norton, Gilbert Alexander, The ball is set in motion in STATUE when middle-aged but still quite spunky David Niven arrives home (after a Lou Morheim few years' absence) to find himself immortalized in stone XXXXX BATTLE OF ALGIERS (SchoneB) (in to to, without so much as a fig leaf to cover his PADDINGTON LACE (Crystal) THE HUNTING PARTY is an ordinary Western, nakedness) by his sculptress wife. distinguished only by its complete devotion to macabre The high ranking linguistic Niven ibaulks at the "FIDDLER ON THE ROOF" (Paris) violence, prospect of having himself triumphantly unveiled and xxxx I'rank Calder (Oliver Reed) and his gang abduct Melissa displayed in the market square, furthermore, he is filled (G) Rugcr,(Candicc Bergen) wife of the loal cattle king. She with righteous indignation when his mistress points out "DIRTY HARRY" (Forum) (R) is to teach Calder to read; however the learning process that it is a very good hkeness except for his Percy (| don't "GO-BETWEEN" (Crystal) (NRC) has little time to develop as Melissa's husband (Gene recall the euphonism used in the film.) Niven construes KING KONG (Re^) Hackman) sets out lo avcnpc the insult with grisly that it belongs to a "randy devil" who's been having his dcdicalion. The bodies of the viclims are laid out like the wife on the sly (or on whatever you like). spoils of an animal hunt us the relentless revenge is acted The film is a mad search for the owner of the xxx MELODY (Odeon) out. above-mentioned member, which is supposed to be filled "FORTUNE & MEN'S EYES Obvious care has been laken with the violence scenes with outrageously funny situations and very naughty wit. wilh definilely realistic results and some good Unfortunately, the only really funny thing about it all is "MAN IN THE WILDERNESS" photography. However, in the frief interludes when that Niven could have originally mistaken his for someone (George) (M) bullets or knives are not providing Ihe blood, else's, particularly as the someone else turns out to be photography is almosi amateurish. In fact, there is much nocn other than Michelangelo's 'David'. Well, it's not XX THESTATUE HtlNTlNG PARTY of the spirii of the Italian Western running througii this everyone who can mistake his Goliath for David's, film (shot in Spain, by Ihc way). TO BE REVIEWED; THE DEVILS TWINS OF DRACULA Poor diclion marred Ihe performances of mosl of the cast, though otherwise competent. THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN DEADLY SINS: Verdict: defmilely not entertaining! mmm(!^i^^(&%^(^mmi^mm(^mmm^ ^i^^i%| I^IV^ ll""! I Abrjvc.nCkvconcepI in ^f Uf l|\l[«| I omenainmcnl T_f *|_*P^ V-»* ^r^ I f Phone71187g'

Airconditioned THF/ijTRF LUNCH TIME movies

monday and Wednesday 12.15 pm tucsday, thursday and friday 1.05 pm QUEENSLAND BALLET COMPANY hlSO: Wed.J Thurs., Fri. at S pm. VILLANOVA More Queensland talent is to go on show shortly with the Queensland Ballet Company's preseniation of four one-act ballets with Paul Wright, Robert Okell and Jan Blanch. Heading (he programme is Grand Pas De Six next week choreographed by the Company's founder and Artistic PLAYS Director, Charles Lisner. Also included in the repertoire THE MAD MEDICS FROM are GLAZOUNORE DANCES by Leslie White (the M^A'^S^H ARE BACK! Company's Ballet Master), CIRCUS by Ray Powell and THE CHRYSALES by Cathryn Short. Upon completing ils Australian tour, the Company will iM STELLMACH return to Her Majesty's theatre where the season will extend from April 25th to May 6th.

11 is very encouraging to sec local playwrights '•JAWJI patronized in any locale, but in Brisbane it is particularly exciling when the playwright is Barbara Stellmach. Two of Mrs. Stellmach's plays have been chosen by the ONE Villanova Players lo coincide wilh Australian Theatre Week. "Time in Balance" is written, according lo the author, ..lis F[ MISS "with considerable enjoyment and no lilllc difficulty" for a friend and her husband. It deals with the confiicl and HUNDRED ....^j^liffle apprehension in the mind of a young girl on her wedding iPiin nigh I. Creative instincts from "Time in Balance" '\ 'surfaced' again says Mrs. Stellmach in "The Merry-Go-Round Went Round". In producer Berenice Murray's words the play "sets out to show the PERFORMERS dehumanizing - and also the humanizing - effecls of science on people forced lo follow the animal instinct of Dance enthusiasts will have the added pleasure of the SUNDAY movies hiding in (he earth, frightened of (he very eardi (hat gave Russian {"estival which follows close on the heels of (he them life". Tlie plot works around two people who arc Queensland Ballet Company. "hunian tests" of the mental distress involved in living The Russian Festival offers 100 performers from the Uni of Qld FUmGroup after a hydrogen cxpolsion. ranks of the Bolshoi Ballet, the Piatnitsky I'lolklorir Song These two thought-provoking plays are well worth the and Dance Ensemble and other accomplished Russian Sunday 16th 7pm $1.00 admission and arc showing al Sl. James' Hall, Ihcatres. Coorparoo al 8 p.m. on 14lh, 15lh, 21st, 22nd, 28th and The season opens on May Sth and extends to May 29lh April. 12th. Bookings arc now open from Her Majesty's Theatre.

01 UM loK) KM IM-ll Ml

V'\ The VILLANOVA PLAYERS \ ^—^*^^y present two new J ^^^gf^^ Australian plays § ^mgm tS^^J at Kirlcland Ave Coorparoo ^^1 W^^ ^^- J^®s Hall - 98.6179) g m^\ W^^ ^^^ ^^^^ ^^ Balance y^\ ^^J (ii) The Merry-Go-Round dattiBattle 0o1f AlgierAlgierss (^ •»y^^ on April 1^-15 21-22 28-29 Nightly 7.3auntim^ I ^f Unl Students; 60^, SCHONELL THEATRE Sat. SCHONELL THEATRE Iv APRIL 13,1972 SEMPER FLOREAT PAGE 7 SEMPER FILM GOD HELP BOBBY & HELEN ' the panic in needle parlc '

As New York's Wust Side enjoys a period of uplifting Jerry Schalzberg, director of THE PANIC IN NEEDLE physical change, one sight reniains-tlie depressing PARK conies from a diverse background. After 15 years .spectacle of desperjfc addicts clinging !o "Needle Park," as a Jiighly successful fashion pholofraplier, he directed This barren triangle of concrete and wooden benches his first film PUZZLE OF A DO\WFALLCHILD (as yet symbolizes the depths of a contemporary problem that unreleased in Brisbane), the story of the mental has spread lo even the most affluent suburbs of our deterioration of a fashion model starring I'aye Dunaway. society-heroin addiction. Everyone connected with the film look great care to bring Thus, the love slory of two young people tragically auiheniicily to this picture of the drug addict. caught in the world of hard drugs marks the occasion of Herman Buchman, the make-up man, had lo create the Schonell Theatre's first 'R' Certificate film, THE "track" marks on the actor's arms. A "track" is the f PANIC IN NEEDLE PARK. THE PANIC IN NEEDLE brown mark left after an addict has stuck a needle into a PARK commences on Monday, May 8l!i lor a limiied perlicular vein in the arm so many limes lhal Ihe vein season and will be an Australian premiere engagement for collapses and dries up. Huchman used a liquid called the Union's theatre. l"le\ible Collodion which darkens slightly on the skin to a Needle Park is a narrow 'island' al the intersection of Irightening reality. Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue at 71st Street, New THE PANIC IN NEEDLE PARK has been critically York, ll has long been a favourite hang-out for addicts acclaimed overseas. It was voted one ofthe year's 10 best and pushers. movies by the New York film critics while Kitty Winn, To research their project, scenarists John and Joan the leading actress of Um film, has won the best actress Dunne checked into the nearby Almac Hotel which is award in this year's Cannes l-ilm I'exlival. The Censor, frcqucnled by llic Needle Park crowd They made loo, has gotten into the acl. He cut 74 seconds out of Die personal conlacl with the denizens of the area, gained film for incitciiient lo drug abuse-very few 'R' films have thwir confidence and got a look al fhe drug addict's world suffered at the hands of the Censor. thai Hie outsider rarely sees. THE PANIC IN NEEDLE PARK pulls no punches and all students eligible lo see "R" movies should note the commencing dale in Iheir diaries for this is one film thai Coming Sth May you can't afford lo miss.

^ THE PANJC IN NEEDtE PARK is one ol a bunch ol 1972 pictures dealing with (he drug scene. This one's aboul a couple ot young addicts and their efforts fo keep (hemselves supplied. TO THE Stars Al Pacino (Irom "The Godfather") and Cannes Festival Award winner Kitty Winn. X SCHONELL

'««:»»««:•»•«• MPORTAWT! STUDENTS AT THE SCHONELL 'R' FILMS. By law, persons over 6 years and under 18 years of age cannol be admitted to 'r' films. This means that students under 18 years will NOT be admitted to 'IV ccrtifiealc screenings at the Schonell Union Theatre. Some siudenls may be under the mistaken imiuession lhal the new i-ILMS AND PICTURI'. TIII-ATUliS ACT 0!' 1971 does no! apply (o om on-campiis (hcalre. However, this is definilely not the case and the provisions of the acl will have to be enforced by all the Schonell's staff. Students will need, therefore, to have their stinlenl cards on hand at Ihe ho\ offkx nol only to obtain their siudeni concessions but also »s proof of their age. s|gggggggEiggE|gggaagg§|ggB|EiggB]ggaaa§igggggg|gggggBigaE]EigB^ APRIL 13,1972 PAGE 8 SEMPER FLOREAT

nEmuKAntocrmby Malcom Smith, Post Grud Zoology fact or fiction ? Studenl.

It was a big day fot the atrocity stories lhat used the same number of probably didn'i try hard to crazy, automatically that come wilh senility. Now since crimes occur U.S. Senate sub-committee lu circulate during the civilians, about 700 would find oul.) There i.s, of assuming that anybody His book, "War Crimes in in wartime just as (hey do on internal security. A I'irst World War - stories have c(Hnmitled murder in course, no way a reporter inside is a Vicl Cong, lhat Vietnam" is a classic. Of in peace, wc are entitled lo Czech spy, now a defector, of rape and mutilation (by the same lime if the l-'BI's can know whether* the they hubituully drop 12 chapters, only 3 ask a few things aboul was about lo give his the Germans) and figures arc correct. Since il Vietnamese who so napalm on any village actually refer lo atrocities. these testimonies; testimony of the years he well-poisoning and is the normal practice ofall willingly gives him whose street plan they Of 23 quotations from the (a) Are they Irue? The spent in the eye-gouging (by the Allies) civilized armies to try information is not a Vict don't like, that torture of American I'ress, 17 refer to witnesses have nol been Czechoslovakian stories born of those responsible, one Cong in disguise, and as prisoners is the rule, and the normal practices of cross-examined, and and it government's "Department exaggeration and distrust wonders why all that heart Peter Samuel pul it; "it is the old I'avourilc: "My Lai war, which only Russel is well known that when of Disinformation", an for Ihc enemy. Olhers arc washing that wenl on over always easier to gel a .slory wasn't an isolated incideni, regards as atrocities (i.e. he people have lo make organization for the closer lo the deliberate lies the My Lai affair didn't of an atrocity commilled but a matter of policy." refers lo strategic hamlets testimonies in front of a leaking of forged put out by the occur with the Talc by our side, since lhal is Obviously this isn't proof, as "concentration camp.s") large crowd, they tend lo documents to the leaders Communists during the murders. I know thisll be usually in 'our' territory, it is only one man's and some questionable exaggerate, to say the least. and press of the free world Korean War - tales of the hard to swallow for those and the Viet Cong do not interpretation of what he statistics (obviously the More serious is the facl He told how they had Yanks machine-gunning who believe every crime oblige hostile journalists saw, possibly on a very New. York Times, doesn't lhat many of the Citizens' forged documents civilians and hanging must be personally wilh free helicopter short investigation. To go around counting the Commission of Inquiry, as transport to film their purporting to detail plans pregnaiil women, and the authorized by the quole it merely throuws dead.), 4 are "opinions" they call themselves, refuse President, bul I doubt atrocities. In any case some of an American plot now famous, and farcical, the onus of proof back on referred to above, and only lo make .sworn statements whether Ihe 209 soldiers media men will argue lhal against the Government of "germ war" hoax. the person wlio first said it. 2 mentioned real alrocilie.s, in court. They claim Ihey indicted in 1970 for Ihe Julius Nycrcre of Tanzania The point is lhat few no proof added. When he don't want individual (who, incidentally, was not atlempled murder of a really believed these wild wants actual figures und prosecutions, but rather lo as big a fool as they superior officer were jusl tales before, bul now a concrete events he quotes focus public scrutiny on thought he was), how they obeying orders. large portion of the straight from the Viet leaders, policies, and forged 1964 election unpatriotic , indeed Something else lhal isn't Cong, without hesitation. strategies, wilhout having pamphlets making Senator immoral, habit of mentioned very oflen: very Nexl is Chapter 10: to worry aboul proof. Goldwater look like a accepting on face value few of llie Communisl "Broadcast of the National racist, how they fed false everytliing the Communists forces are entitled to the Liberation i'ront Radio lo information to Ihc tell Ihem, gleefully rights of prisoners of war, American Soldiers, May FAKES anti-establishment press of searching out "evidence" since they don'i follow the 24, 1966." I'inally, he Obviously this is a golden the West. lo incriminate their Geneva regulations of (a) announced the setting up o p p or t u n i I y for it's nut very oflen lhal country, while writing off acting in regular miliiary of an Inlernalional War grudge-bearers and fakes lo the Communist powers" anything that doesn't units, (b) wearing Crimes Tribunal, whose lake the public for a ride. policy of systematic lying conform to this view as uniforms, (c) carrying arms membership reads like the Danny Nollcy made is so dramatically revealed. "propaganda". In fact, openly, and (d abiding by Who's Who of the I'ar Lefl. headline news wilh his Hut why should anybody when a bunch of Uni. liie rules of war, and of Jusl to let us know the allegalions, then refused be surprised? Didn't Lenin siudents were shown course, the V C objectivity il will maintain, point blat\k to give himseir say ."moralily must pictures of G.I.s cleaning infra-structure, involved in he publishes its firsl evidence to (he Army CID be subordinated lo the up the Nazi concentration cell formation and investigation - a 48 page As one Pentagon interests of the proletarian camps, half of Ihem subversion, are legally appendix entitled "Report spokesman put it: "Wc are class struggle'".' Didn'i he thouglit they were spies, pure and simple, from Norlh Vieinam". I investigating, but we also instruct them to "use coiiimiHing war crimes in only worthy of the firing counted Ihe equivalent of cannot go far without any ruse, cunning, Vietnam. By harp, harp, s(|u:id. only 6 pages lhal were not names, places and dales." harping on the handful of unlawful method, evasion, verbatim quotations from dubious stories, they have (b) Are lliey policy, or concealment of truth" in official propaganda. buill up a picture of their even known lo the order to further llieir aulhorities? Since few of cause? soldiers as depraved semi-human wretches who TRIAL the "witnesses" informed Tliat the Communists would rather fire their last I-u rlhermore, war their commanding officer are habitual Mars can bullet at a sick child than governmenls normally CRIMES at the lime, we must hardly be doubled livery at a uniformed enemy assume emergency powers Another "expert" the answer no. This is hardly day Iheir propaganda soldier. At a lime when Ausiralia outlawed the left loves to quole is surprising. An analysis of machine pours oul stories S5';; of Ihe Allied forces Communist pari in 1939, Neoam Chomsky, whose the stories reveals mostly about condiiions in (he are coloured, and 800 of Ihe British Defence main qualification is his crimes of passion, with West shich they must know the enemy are defecting Regulations abolished must professorship in hnguistics, large numbers of troops or are untrue, while endlessly every week, when 647 out of their civil rights, the at which I am told he is high ranking officers singing the praises of the of 660 Norlh Vielnamcsc Irish Govcrnmcni interned very brilliant. He devoted a hardly ever involved. earthly paradise they've prisoners lold the Red 11,000 IRA suspects whole chapter to war Now we can get to the buill behind the Cross Ihey didn'i wanl to without trial during the crimes in his latest book, (realinenl of prisoners As barbed-wire and go home, the lefl lias been civil war, and even Hanoi "Al War Wilh Asia", bul slated before, mosl of machine-gun posts that telling us America's aim is made "counter- INJURED VIETNAM CHILD alas, all the war crimes them are not entitled to guard their borders lo racism and genocide. revolulionary-activiiies" quoted arc eilher prisoner slalu.s, but make sure no one gets a punishable by death in our atrocities are news "opinions" or perfectly nevertheless, every soldier chance to vole with his 1968. When this is lakcn We won't discuss them There's only one way whereas their atrocities arc legal, that is, aparl from is given a card slating; feel about living in lhat into account, most of the further. lo treat Ihesc monstrous routine, to be exjiecled the two direct quotations "You cannot and must earthly paradise. criticism of the Saigon Now the real stories, allegations, and that's the and therefore 'unnews- from the Communists. not, misircat your Tlie New Left, which, normal legal procedure: regime goes by the board. i'rom the start the Viet Don't think all the prisoner, humiliate or worthy'. Sometimes 'our' Cong put out a stream of let's face it, is just a THE ONUS IS ON THE Yet every.liltle thing is stooges are American, degrade him " Tliat hamfistcdness and propaganda of which Che denomination of the same ACCUSERS TO PROVE used to discredit the Allied mind you. Recently our the exceptions lo the law carelessness is boosted up Lan Vien's pamphlet religion, is no belter. THEIR CASE BEYOND A cause. If a G.l. says a nasty own Jim Cairns returned are just that - exceptions and exaggerated as a "Sparkling Fires in the Phillip Luce, for six years a REASONABLE DOUBT word about the from the Internationa! - is proved by the Chieu matter of news promotion Soulh" would be typical. member of America's Vietnamese, or vice versa, Commission on U.S. War Hoi programme, in which Whal is Ihcir case? Few - 'unless we beat it up a He describes how "a radical left, nnc of their it is taken asa sign that the Crimes in Indo-China and prisoners are encouraged to of Ihem seem lo have any bit, Ihey won't give it a run certain hamlet was the leaders in fact, bclore he Yanks ought to leave. I announced that he had defect, and the fact, stated idea of the realities of war. back home.' Sensation- target for bombing by SO "sang" to the I'BI. put il wonder whal they would heard evidence that would above, thai of 660 North In war accidents occur. alizalion is an inevitable U.S piloted planes for six bluntly: "I defected have thought if they could indict Gen cral Vietnamese prisoners, 647 There have been by-product of a hours; one hundred tons of because | saw young have seen ihe bad blood Weslmoreland for war lold the Red Cross they innumerable stories of competitive news system." bombs on one thousand people being deceived and lhat existed belween crimes. Who drew up the did not want to go home. Americans shelling their You don't believe il? persons," thereby proving possibly destroyed by lies Diggers and G.I.s during evidence? The "New Tltat would not happen if own troops, so are wc to Just look at the meagre that a U.S. bomber can which we, as leaders, were believe lhat every civilian World War 11? Some of our coverage given lo the Hue Times", (June 1971), they were mistreated. telling them; by actions in girls were actually raped by only carry two tons in in which describes itself as "a dealh is a victim of massacre, and the single six hours. And the really which the^ were jusl deliberate policy? In war the Yanks, and Ihey paragraph given to the Soviet weekly of Worid expendable pawns" There weren't paid 350 pounds horrible bit about "the Affairs" stated: "The civilians do get killed; killings al (he An Hoa Officers' school wilh SHOT are plenty of these pawns by the enemy to make session is attended by In South Vietnam there hundreds and thousands of orphanage compared to Ihc Anierican-lyiie training, around. It's not very hard false allegations, either. prominent jurists, public are 35,000 prisoners of German and Japanese publicity of the My Lai where young men eat to control ihem. Once you personalities, politicians, war, 25,000 to 35.000 civilians died under the Now, where do these affair. Tlie latter case was human liver in a join a cause it's only and delegations of the "Communist Criminals" Allied bombs. Devastation atrocities slorics come particularly ugly for the sophisticated manner natural lo believe the Democratic Republic of i.e. the political arm ofthe also is inevitable. The from? I'irst of all, it must fact that the media di'ring an evening dinner worse about your Vietnam, the Provisional Vict Cong (under the Allies totally destroyed the be remembered lhat the practically tried and party or a fishing trip." opponents, even if ihey Revolutionary Government normal rules of war Ihcy French railways sysiem, press carries an inherent condemned Calley in The Reds don't tell those happen to be your of the Republic of would have been shot) and and Normandy and the bias lowards the left in advance, thereby lessening stories any more; they're fellow-eounlrynien. Vietnam, and Laos." Dr. 6,000 - 7,000 common I'alaise Plain were reduced Ihese matters. The press is his chimces of a fair trial. too hard to swallow lo rubble. The Canadians lied down by deadlines, F.ven before all the Cairns no doubt believes criminals, which arc closely ra/ed Caen lu the ground and jusl does nol have the evidence was read, iwo everything the Communists watched by the Red Cro.ss. tell him. Tliis is in contradistinction Crimes also occur. If a time to sludy the situation books had been published, in detail, nor do most to North Vietnam, who Since the Vieinam War gang of hoods ra|>e and purporting lo give the SENILE He's made his pressmen know much refuses to let the Red Cross started we have been murder a girl in New York "whole story." As the war hotted up, allegjiions on T.V, bul into the country. Also il becomes a statistic. If it about military realities, There are two types of the fifth column in the when H.R. Rainwater, deluged by a Hood of unlike the death holes of happens in Vietnam lliey anyway (example: when a atrocity story. The first is West started into action head of 2 million veterans poisonous propaganda the North, even Ihc write a book aboul il. The reporter refers to the simple "opinion", in Tlie most notorious was of F'orcign Wars asked for directed againsi Ihe prisoners of Con Son are facl is lhat 2'/j million 'indiscriminale bombing' il which the uulhur tells us the once-great pliolosophcr equal lime, it was denied iinli-Communist cause. reasonably well off by Americans have served at merely means that HE that the Yanks nv,itcU into Bertrand Russell, now in So much for the Some of the sluries bear world standards, according leasl a year in Vietnam. Of doesn't know its value, and a village .diooting like the grip uf the abses.sions Iniperialislic Press. resemblances to the lu the Red Cross. APRIL 13,1972 SEMPER FLOREAT FACP 9

college's Children's screaming. If I were in his newspapers As a biologist Cambodia, then told their Institute for Advanced place you'd need three myself, I can't stress loo men to watch out for an Sludy and Research." strong men to hold me much lhal Ihis is the very outbreak uf malaria in the Amazing! According lo the mniAM ATROCmES down. The Yank, however, anlilhesis of science. area. Pity the author forgol Year Book of U.S. may be a hypnoli^t since Ecologists are supposed to to tell us malaria is carried Educaiionai InstiUitiotw, IK'S ccrlaiul> a find oul for Ihemsclves, by mosquitoes, not gas. Yet two years ago wt Mercy College, Dobb's logic demand such a village The four doctors of contortionist. His thumb and lei the press quote Obviously Ihcn any saw Graham Williams make I'crry, New York, is a girls' to be denied the enemy, ll South Auslralia's first isn't even louching the TIIEM. photograph, official the claim that there were is for these reasons villages surgical team for Vietnam school wilh 230 pupils. knife, and he's .squalling document, or "experi" 200,000 poiiticai prisoners are bombed sometimes. made the same point, They Tlie booklet itself was wilh a 90 dcg. angle testimony can lurn out to in South Vietnam, When Ihe Americans do had performed 150(1 published Ijy "Ramparts" between his thighs, be a fake, ll is impossible suffering the must horrible who.se managing editor, belween ihiglis und body, INFLUX this, it is their practice to operations, and had treated Next, they become lo unmask them all. If of tortures. This is ab.surd, Mr. Schcer, had a long thigh and calf, calf and warn villages, liever many burns, bul never sociological experts, und anyone wants to make of course; there aren't even conference wilh officials of ground. Try it. It's possible, two days before, those of napalm. The tell us that due lo a refugee another of (hcsc lhat many prisoners of the (Communist) impossible. But he isn't by leaflet, lhat an attack Australian surgical team influx caused by American abominable accusations, let war. At firsl it seems he'd Inlernalional Union of sitting on a seal, for you will be made - an act of did not see a single napalm bombing, the population him prove il, and let him can see (he legs of other got the two Vietnams e.\.tvp(ronaJ grace in war case in (he 1000 civilian Siudenls in Prague. He of Saigon has changed prove his own credentials men between his. mixed up, but in fact he conditions. casualties they treated. Dr. refuses lo lell anybody from 250,000 to And Ihe word of a I reckon it's a fake. was quoting the overseas Tliis advice may be Howard Rusk, chairman of where he gels the money 3,000,000 in Ihe lasl Communisl or Buddhist Association, disregarded for several the Deparlmenl of lo cover Ihe $1.5 million decade. 1 checked that up fellow-lravcller is nol which was founded by reasons. Coercion, Rehabilitation of New deficit the magazine had with the Encyclopaedia evidence worthy of Thich Tri Quang when he intimidation by the Vicl York University's College incurred lhal year, bul we GAS Britannica yearbooks The consideration, was a member of the Viet Cong, belief that il cannol of Medicine, inspected 20 can guess. Strangely enough, when true figures are 1,219,0110 Minh. It's been a pack of happen here, reluctance to hospitals, and didn't see a the Yanks do try to cut and 1,770.000. So how Communisl sympathisers leave home, cattle, and single casscn said Mrs. down the death loll the much of the rest of the ever since. Hardly a group family burial grounds, ure Gietzell, the Red Cross FAKE Leftists complain! At Qui article was wrong? 'Joke' lands whose word could be pul the commonest. Al-'lcr the reported 30,000 child Page 15 of "The Nohn the Viel Cong forced Filially, when everything above thai of the Red Children of Vieinam" 390 women and children else fails, they can always Cross, wouldn't you say? shows a litlle girl bandaged down a tunnel with them. turn back to pretending students The fact thai Graham and walking with a slick, Whal could the G.I.s do? Ihc normal melhodsof war Williams printed il blindly from an American bomb. Throw down grenades, or are atrocious. You know •- without checking his facts However, il is plainly a pour in burning oil as they harping on the amounl of says a lot for our so called clumsy forgery of a photo did at Okinawa? Instead, bombs dropped without in court "Imperialist Press'. lhat appeared in "Who are Ihcy pumped in tear gas, saying whether it is ZAGREB, Wednes­ Ihe Viet Cong," and Life and 390 innocent lives dropped on soldiers, day, w. Police were magazine, of a girl injured were saved The fifth civilians or inanimate called In to investiratc in a terrorist attack on column called at "chemical concrete, endlessly a computer which had CLEAR Dong Xoai. (Remember warfare". repeating the numbci of become a political agi­ tator. Dong .Xoai? Tliat was the AAAS wenl one casualties without Now the bombing of the Every lime (he ma­ North. In World War II where the Viet Cong used bcller They wanted lo mentioning who was prisoners as a human chine was asked to policy was pretty clear: prove lhat defoliants could responsible or whether il supply business civilians were nol lo be shield.) Pages 18 and 19 cause birlli abnormalities was deliberate. How many particulars al the eke- direclly aliacked, bul if showed two little bandaged The malhemalics arc all remember the "black Ironic data processing children. This photo was Ihcy were anywhere near a right, providing you areas" and "New Villages" centre, it returned slips laken by an official site of strategic assume (a) lhat hunian of Malaya? They are the of paper on which an­ photographer on March 14, ti-communist slogans importance, loo bad. reproduciivc sysiems are "free fire" zones and 1966, at a national were printed. Result: 595,000 Geinwn the same as mice's "strategic hamlets" of orphanage. One child's (unlikely, a mouse will lose Vieinam. No wonder the Among hostile and 360,000 Japanese propaganda the com­ parents had been killed, her litter if she gets a whiff Communist sympathizers civilians died that way. Uut and the olher child injured puter was providing in Vietnam Ihey gol a bit of a sirange male,) (b) Ihey are riled. If we keep il up was a Yugoslav version when a Viet Cong threw a South Vieinam might end squeamish. They took so u.sc as much defoliant on of the Strikers Hymn, grenade into a bus. up a free couniry, like much time trying lo avoid crops as ihcy use on which calls for a revo­ Anolher photo lhal forests, and (c) the Malaysia. killing anybody lhal they lution. always puzzles me shows Vietnamese lap spray off did nol allow the bombing Policf. unable to ar­ an American soldier the ground instead of rest the computer on to become effective. torturing a Viet Cong by letting il be diluted in a charges of sedition, RcsuU: after V/i nuuilhs' slitting his .stomach. The tank or stream. spent two months in­ intensive bombing in 1967, YANKS vestigating slaff work­ V(" is laking il rather Of course, this doesn't As I write lliis. I scc that Hanoi was able lo claim quietly, in fact, allhough ing Ihc computer. fewer than 400 deaths. It prove it lias actually an even better slory has Today Ihey arrested Ihe Yank i.n only touching happened. To do lhal Ihey been cooked up. It seems four Zagreb Universily didn'i stop Ihem pushing him lightly with the tips of Ihe propaganda button, would need a vast scientific the nasty Yanks tried oul students, who will be his fingers,an d he isn't lied some nerve gas by tried in the Political Ihough. Harrison Salisbury .survey. Insiead ihey to any solid object, he isn't dropping it on a Court, admilled lhat ihc only merely quoled a couple of struggling or even Communist camp in figures he had for the u n n a m e ll Saigon casualties he reported in North Vietnam came frorn ISTHIS PICTURE FAKED? the Communists. He told aboul the devastation of the "non-military target" bombs have fallen, human victims of napalm. Then of Nam Dinh (il only had a interest stories abound I'.J. Mount poinied out the big transshipment area for .... prior lo bombing is report enlilled "The MR. BCSWELL'S SUCCULENT SPIT ROASTS & STEAKS cuslori nol mentioned." Inlernalional oniile Cross war inalerial, a thermal THREl- COURSES AND COFFl-:!-: - FROM 5.30 P.M. power plant, fuel .stores, a But the biggest and the Vieinam Confiicl", key rail link with the propaganda line the issued 12.8.66, made no Soulh, and IOO aircraft Communist sympathisers mention of napalm. Would TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY, S2.45 had ever used consists of Mrs, Gietzell please verify balteries.) 89 civilians had FRIDAY and SATURDAY, S2.60 actually been killed there, one word: napalm. Napalm her statement? She didn'i. a raiher low score for 64 is supposed to have some Makes you thing doesn't All nights 16 serves for children $1.20 raids. rather dramatic effects, il? Whoever totd Mrs. G. If the bombing of the like inching the flesh of ils that lie must have assumed no-one would be able to Norlh was done so viclims, even ihough none SINGING WITH WF WANDERING MINSTREL ON FRIDA YS AND SA TVRDA YS carefully, whal about the of the alleged napalm check up such an bombing in the South? pholos show this Some importanl authority. Stewart Harris, an slories are a bit hard lo opponent of the war, was accept. What, for instance, quile objective. He said: arc we lo make of llie lale SPOCK "As for the much of the woman who had Unlicensed. Dinners for Two, both arms and eyelids Anyhow, the mailer was publicized accidents in finally settled by the Liquor service or Mr, BosweWs for the family, or which villages are shelled burnt off, but presumably had the rest of her body Committee of bring your own. private parties and or bombed, these are rare, Responsibility, a considering ihe chaos in unscathed, since she functions. survived? Actually, burning pro-Communist group Ihis couniry and the headed by Dr. Spock. They problems of co-ordination oil has been a legitimate weapon of war for inspected 37 of South between two huge military Vietnam's 40 ho.spilals, machines with different thousands uf years, and, like olher weapons, it is and could find only 40 nalive languages. civilian war viclims \ have slayed awake a I kcpl well away from civilians. suffering from burns. They night listening in the dark couldn't be certain these while edviscrs cursed the were caused by napalm. So long delays in geiting that's that. I hope I never (Special menus approval from a Vietnamese hear the word napalm province chief PHOTO can be arranged j Ll. Co. W. dag a mentioned again at the Chrisi church surgeon, I'orum. which never lasts very iC HO PS HO published a photo of a Hy the lime his long." third-degree burn caused coinmiuee had made its 'Of GOQCf LiVii by an exploding kerosene findings, however. Dr. BASE cooker which had been Spock had written a filled wilh petrol. He susee l.ircwordlo "The Children Dr. Wylie, who served as of Vietnam". This a doctor Ihcre, was more numer of these pholos have been published as scurrilous publication was fflf• Do/wcllV Chop Shop to the point: "Re- written by Mr. W.P. connaisance may show thai napalm burn.s. More Ihan 40 New Zealand doctors Pepper, who calls himself a particular village is being "Instructor in Political INDOOROGPILLY SHOPPINGTOWN used as a base, or some have seen hundreds of burns in Vietnam, but he Science at Mercy College in nther essenlial purpose of Dobbs I'crry, New York, the enemy. The has never mel any who has INDOOROOPILLY. ENTER VIA STAMFORD ROAD. PHONE: 78 1816 and director of that fundamentals of tactical seen napalm burns. APRIL 13J972; PAGE 10 SEMPER FLOREAT' "by MARK OLIVER of the Public SEMPER R E VI E\A/ Interest Research Group of the L University of The Universily of and al Feslival Hail. Queensland Queensland Ljiw I' o r m e r quiz AND Law School." School's PUBLIC champion, Bany Jones INTEREST RES­ is organizing Nader's EARCH GROUP has tour to Sydney, completed negotiations Melbourne, Brisbane responsible for 30% of the estimated tonnage of U.S. to bring the American and Hobart. air pollution. He goes on to This article surveys Consumer Affairs say "clearly Ihe forced Advocate Ralph Nader the philosophy behind NADERISM consumption of to Brisbane. the Nader movement action for aU citizens pollution-gases chemicals Ralph Nader's and points out that the againsi the tyranny of coal and cotton dust is a Queensland visit willbe attitudes against Big economic oligarcy. silent and somclimes a In an arlicle called on July 5. He will speak Business arc not only lavish form of violence, "Toward a jusl economy" both at the Universily contemporary. which compels people to Nader says; "Bul what pay insurance medical and mosl troubles corporations other costs, including the is the consumer Perhaps Darrow's best loss of wages. Tlie It Ls still current opinion movements relentless attitude as to who are polluting corporations among students at the documentations that really the criminals in inflict these burdens on Ihe University of Queensland consumers arc being society can best be gauged workers when only for a Uw School that the ideal manipulated defrauded and trom his "Address to the fraction of the money they job after graduation lies injured not just bymarginal Prisoners in Cook County force others to pay when Willi big business as a Jail" " ... there is no businesses or fly by niglu comparvy lawyer. This was hucksters but by the U.S. they could have prevented doubt there are quite a il in the first place." once the case at Harvard number of people in this blue-chip business firms CM,11. says Nader Law School (where Ralph jail who would pick my whose practices are "between 1967 and 1969 Nader studied), however a pockets. And I know this unchecked by the older G.M.H. spcnl S250 million recent trend there has - thai when I get outside regulatory agencies. Since to change it's slogan on .sliown that mosl gr.iduates that nearly everyone wants the consumer movement billboards, dealers signs, rvQW aspire to work for the to pick tT>v pockets. There can cilc statistics that these and other promolionable underprivileged, the poor, may be some of you here practices have reduced real income and raised the rates materia! lo read "G.M. the racial groups and to join in that would hold up a man of morlalily and disease mark of excellence". With the work of Ralph Nader in the street, if you did not in combating big business. the same funds il could have something else to do have developed easily a This aversion to big and needed the money; but non-polluting engine." business, however is not wticn I want to light my Pollution, poverty, new. As early as 1894, office or my home Ihe gas DRUGS defective products and Clarence Darrow, later to company holds me up. cheap chemical non become a famous They chsTgc me one dollar "As these charges get nulrifying foods, are only a American Attorney, left a that is worth twenty-five altention, demands for few of the many social comfortable, big paying cents. Still all these people new legislative action injsuticcs caused by big job wilh the ClllGAC.O are good people; they are increases. This at least has busines.s. Racism is AND NORTII WEST the pillars ol society they been the case with the another, the activities of RAILWAY COMPANY to support the churches and exposure of defeds wilh Camalco in Wicpa could be defend Ihc leaders of the they are respectable. When vehicles industrial and said to be evidence of lhal, American Railway Unbn I ride in street cars i am vehicle pollution, gas the use of cheap black sucessfully against held up - I pay five cents NADER & RAIDERS pipelines, over priced or labour in South Africa by conspiracy diargcs made that's worth two and a half dangerous drugs, unfair following a Slate wide credit, harmful pesticides, certain cigarette companies cents. . • danger of a rich man going strike. and export them to on such terms as these men cigareltcs, land frauds is another example. Whal to jail . .. Australia. England was see fit to make then you electric power reliability, gives big business ihe right •file Iraditional lole of .., Those men who own owned by lords and nobles are bound to get into jail household improvements lo lake so much of Ihe the lawyer then was to the earth make the laws to PAPER and rich people. They rackets, exploitation in resources in a given serve big business againsi protect what they have. owned the whole earth Surprisingly enough stums, auto warranties, community lhat pct^ple arc any and all comets, to They fix up a sort of fence .. , Some of you are over there, and other these words were spoken radialion high priced lefl wilhout sufficient accomplish its purposes by or a pen around what they here for obtaining money people had to stay in the by Darrow as early as auio-insiirance, and food? Why are they any and all means. have and they fix the laws under false pretences - yet streets. They could not get 1912. 1-or their time they boating hazards. allowed lo make l-Apcticncc in criminal a decent living. When these so that the fellow on the I pick up a great Sunday sliowed great insight. It is a exhorbitant profits al the courts taught Harrow that criminals got to Australia outside can't get in. The great pity Uiat the "ll seems possible thai newspaper and read the expanse of ihe poor? mosl illegal acts fall inlo advertisements of a and nobody else had come laws are really organised juriprudencc of Darrow people may begin to react two cal;ipories crime merchant prince -" they had the whole for the protection of the was never studied by law wilh greater anger to the against persons and crime Shirt-waist for 39c, marked continent to run over, and men that rule the world. schools wilh the same enormity of their againsi properly. [he down from S3 00 .,. so they could raise sheep They were never organised enthusiasm as llailland or deprivation - each year ERLICH niajorily of crimes were to be enforced to do consumers lose half a . .. These people have and furnish their own meat Blackslone. Ycl despite Countries where foreign againsi property: and an justice. billion dollars in sccuriiy the police they have the which is easier than Ihis, the mess:ige got ownership exisls help lo overwhelming mmibcr stealing it. These criminals through to some. Among frauds and a billion dollars jails and the judges and the ... It is perfectly plain raise the siandard of living were coinmiucd by the then became decent these was Ralph Nader. in home repairs frauds, lo lawyers and ihe soldiers why these people (the rich not of Ihcir own couniry poor: these crimes respectable people because name only two of and all the rest of them to sector in Chicago at the Ralph Nader has bul of others where the increased in direct they had a chance to live, thousands of ways which lake care of the earth and time} have not committed extended the theory of owners live. Asian pioponion to UHcmploy- they did not commit any the income is being milked, drive everybody off that crimes; they have so much Darrow and wielded it inlo couniries like the nicnl and the rise in the crimes. And the second "The current assault on comes in their way ... property they don't know a new force, Whereas Phillipines (the never lo be cost of living. On theoijicr generation - tho health and the safety of ., . When the Standard what to do with il. It is Darrow always defended develoiicd couniries as side he s-.iw Iwsiness men descendants of those tlic public from so many Oil Company raises the perfectly plain to see why the viclims of big business, Doclor Paul lirlich calls commit countless frauds, criminals were as good and dangerous industrial price of oil I know that a these people have not the impoverished, the them) help raise Ihe m a n i p u 1 a I i 0 n s, respectable a class of products, by-products, and ceriain number of girls committed crimes against negroes, the leaders of siandard of living the U.S. embe7.7.elnwms ;uid Voi people as there were on the foods have resulted in w)io arc seamstresses and property; Ihey make the striking unions Nader has who plunder their natural their efforis taking plates face of the earth ... violence that has dwarfed who work nighl after night laws and have no need to always not on the defence resources. U.S. Big of honour in the the issue of crime in the long hours for somebody break them. And in order bul on the attack, Business takes more frotn community. streets. else, witl be compelled to for you to get some prosecuting big business these poor countries than Darrow onco said .., go on the streets and ply LAWS property you have to break exposing the injustices and "What the consumer Ihc U.S. gives back in total their trade, and I know the rules of the game ... inequities caused by movement is beginning lo aid. "Whal about those siKial ... See what the law is that Mr. Rockefeller and ... to take all the coal irresponsible corporations. say - and must say more crimes lhat are not when men gel into control When the effect of his associates are in the U.S. and raise the Darrow theorised on the strongly if it is to grow - is punishable by law; of things they make the corporate powers are such responsible and nol the price two dollars or three social injustices caused by lhal business crime and exaggerated and lying laws. They do not make that Ihc enjoyment of the poor girls in jails... dollars when there is no big business as a whole and corporate intransigence arc adverli-scnients that bleed the laws to protect world's resources (that all need of it, and thus kill defended such isolated the really urgenl menace to millions of their wages for ... a man would not anybody; courts are not men are supposedly heirs thousands of babies and examples as came to his law and order in ihc products lhal arc useless; hold up another man if he instruments of justice. to) is confined to a select send thousands of people notice in the course of his America. manipulations ol stocks had plenty of money, he When your case gets into few, it becomes obvious to the poor house and tens profession. Nader has that rob the uninitiated of might do it if he had one court it will make little lhal all men are nol born of thousands of people to taken this basic theory of their savings, forestalling or Iwo dollars but he difference whether you are etjual and have no chance jails as is done every year Darrow, extended it citing markets, controlling prices would'! il he had as much guilty or innocent but COSTS of ever being equal. The of the consumption of money as H^r. Rockefeller in the U.S. - this is a concrete and compre­ real criminals in socieiy are whether you have a smart uig business ploughs goods, by monopoJv' hns. Mr. Rockefeller has a greater crime ihan all the hensive sludies of big the corporate powers lhal lawyer and you cannot onwards and upwards, control and inisrcpresent- great deal better hold up people in jail have ever business and it's evils in coiiimil mass crimes have a smart lawyer unless forever .slriving lo increase alionsof all sorts'.'" game than lhat ,.. committed but Ihe law our society of 1973. Nader against humanily in ihe you have money. First and their profits irrespective of does not punish it. has the brilliance of mind forms of poverty, pollution Darrow belicveil lhal a last it is a question of the costs caused lo olhers to not only |>erccive and the destruction ofihe man should not be money ... Then if you ... So long as big hy Iheir irresponsible specific examples of what environment, racism and convicted if h»^ Mole JAILS wore rich and you were companies can get the coal acl ions. Nader says lhal because lie or his family fields so long as the big Darrow talks about but the indirect deaths of . . . ll every man woman beaten, your case would be the money spent by car were hungry but raiher the criminals can get control of also to see and implement l«opIe dying as a and child in the world had taken lo the Appealate nianufacUirers for the legislators, the bankers ihe the city council and get the most effective tactics subse(|Uence. ;i chance to make a decent, Court. A poor man cannot model change each is industrialists all who public streets for streetcars leading to their eradication lair, honest, living, there take his case to the sufficient for research to if big business blindly allowed members of the or gas rights - this is and justice. Harrow would bo no jails no Appealate Court, he has design cars to crash, side cause these atrocities nol siime communiiy starve bound to send thousands delended in instances lawyers and no courls . . . not tho price ... but nine on head-on. from on or knowing the consequences when there was sulTicispi to jail. So long as other where he could, Nader . .. The English people tenths of you are 'in jail any other way safely at of their aciion then they lood availalile lor mon are allowed to attacks and on broad once punished criminals by because you did not have speeds up lofiDm.p.li. are criminaly negligent; if consumpii'"" should come monopolise all the earth fronts. He has converted a sending them away. They enougli to pay for a good General Motors afier .sceintific data reveals under ihc wraUi ofthe law. and compel others to live philosophy iiiio action, - would load thom In a ship lawyer. There is no great according lo Nader are Ihe true extent of their PAGE 11 SEMPER FLOREAT APRIL 13,1972 • I ll laf iiiiitiiirf»wfiMoi>i iiBia umaiMi NADERS RAIDERS

irresponsible action as between Darrow and Nader same opportunities for revealed in the form of education, for hcalih and EDUCATION in the belief that the real Nader's Reports) they do criminals in society are the legal justice that are nothing to stop them then ireesponsible and self available to the wealthy. they become evil. centred corporate powers, Had our law 'school been Nader is creating what THE A.LB VIEW (2) Use this as a basis more juriprudcntly he calls the professional or upon which to criticise the orientated and studied Mr. BILL HARTLEY, member of the A.LP. Federal In the meantime I will return lo an outline of some the public citizen, Nader Universily of Queensland Darrow and Nader (at least Executive and Chairman of the Federal A.L.P. Education proposed interim mea.sures pending total change in ihe says "a lot of people don't Law School for failing lo keeping abreast with the Committee, University week address. Union Theatre, educaiion system, at the same lime stressing the theme care what is being done to produce lawyer aware of latest developments) with University of Melbourne, 2 pm, Saturday, March 25 th, that inequality in education is intrinsic to a class-based them others do cue and point no. (1). Clarence the same enthusiasm as 1972: society and that this inequality cannot be removed until ask what can I do. We Darrow once said ... "I Austin Hobbcs or tbe education system provides the communiiy wilh (Naders Raiders) are living entered my first criminal Blackslone a truer insight EDUCATION AND CLASS STRUCTURE: conviction lhat Ihey must struggle and remove the the answer. We are creating case in the attitude of the into leal justice for rich as dominance of the classes which exploit and control them. a new professional citizens "good" lawyer - the well as poor would be My approach today will be to adhere to the text of a brief As I have said, inequality in the present education system role not based on lawyer who attended all closer to the interests of paper for media reasons, then to expand on the themes has been the theme of many studies, articles und books, as institutional or corporate Queensland barristers and outlined. I do not intend to argue expressly from a party well as constant discussion. I do not want lo rc-ilcrate power." the bar association meetings and so gravitate solicitors. Is our profession political standpoint, but initially I ^all refer to Labor some of the well-known formulae for eliminating some of "Who represents the as rapidly as he can to the to serve society or big Party policy on Education as a stage in the sort of the more severe class-based impediments in the existing citizen?" he asks "Who defence of Big Business. business? Is it to serve only development I favour. system so much as to outline some additional ideas can? Only ourselves and The tragedies the sorrows, those rich enough to pay The underlying principle of the A.L.P.'s f-ederal capable of quick fuiniment. that is why I urge you as a the despairs, that were or provide for all sections education platform is lhat education should promote love A WAGE FOR ALL STUDENTS: public citiien to be present in the criminal of the community who are of freedom and justice and should develop critical concerned about your court I knew nothing of in need of legal counsel perception, abilily to choose intelligently, capaciiy for Educaiion in Australia is nol free, and at most levels it is self-government and a sense of social responsibility. It community and your and did not wanl to and representation? If our in facl subject lo very heavy charges, Universily fees, should instill belief in the equal rights of all people and country" If Nadci finally know." law school fails to give law which the Labor Parly is pledged lo abolish, are achieves this aim then the respect for their essenlial humanity, irrespective of Had our law school a social application and outrageously high. Fees and service charges for educaiion government the legal nationality, colour or creed. It .should ensure free and studied Clarence Darrow extend it's curricula arc only pari of the scene, l-'or every student in the more system can begin to work harmonious devclopmeni of inlellecl, physique, enurtions 10, or 20 years ago we beyond pure technicians advanced levels of the educaiion sysicm, there are a for the people and not and abilities. It is the obligation of the Slate to provide a might have produced at and give the lawyer an number who are not there because they just could not solely as an instrument of understanding into the univer.sal, free, compulsory, secular sysiem of educaiion least one or two lawyers of afford lo live while studying, ll is a major factor in ihc the corporations. Power nature of society, how. can open to ail citizens. The platform then extends into a the calibre of Nader. wa.siagc inherent in Ihe current sysiem that, for students must as a consequence be he provice every one with a detailed programme which could be regarded as a stage Unfortunately our law- who aitempt (o struggle through full and part-time vested in the people once fair representation if he has lowards the realisation of the Party's educational school has a tendency to cour.ses while also in employment, the lask is such an all people begin to care no understanding of philosophy. lurn out technicians only unfair and almost impossible one. Education should be what's being done to them society and the real It is important lo stress at this stage the priority given lo fully regarded as a social cosi, and the maintenance of capable of working the and other's. Laws can then criminals. Perhaps il might educaiionai questions by the Labor Parly. In our scheme sludenis while undergoing educaiion should be similarly legal sysiem for the legal in the vision of Darrow be of things, education and social justice are of critical regarded The inadequate and unintelligible .system of system instead of making be too frightening for some for people not properly. imporlance. Policy already seeks imporlanl steps towards Scholarships and living allowances should be completely the legal system work for to look closely at the the establishment of equality in education. At pre-sent the discarded. Education should be free and studenis ftom In this article I have the society at large. revelations of Ralph Nader attempted to do two and then ask themselves class position of students is the major criteria in advanced secondary levels onwards should be paid a living Lawyers should leave a law determining the lype of educaiion they will receive. Many wage calculated on Ihe same industrial criteria as apply lo things; -school endeavouring inter can a lawyer work for a (I) Explain the corporation assisting Ihem studies have shown just how the system is working against olher wage determinations Such a move would carry Ihe alia to secure for the poor the lower income groups, which largely regard the A.L.P. addilional benefit lhat the philLsophically-indcfensible connection as I see it and the underprivileged the in their aclivitics and still be an honest man, as their political reprcsentalives. I see the basic probleni as system of bonding of studenis in return for scholarships III iiMi • I » I iM I I I one not only of removing the impediments to equality in and living allowances would be discarded, ll is lo be education, but in equipping Uie dominated classes in hoped thai bodies such as the Auslralian Union of The Speech Therapy Cellar Night Wine & Cheese is on socieiy to fight for a socialist form of society where Students make a living wage for alt full-time studcnis who SPEECH Friday night, April IS at the Herston Refectory. inequality is nol presenl at any level. While for practical maintain academic progress a leading objective in their This same function last year made its mark on the reasons political parlies have to adopt an interim aims. Such a step would have a marked elTect in reducing THERAPY record books when males were outnumbered four to one! approach of endeavouring lo reform the existing .system current incquahly of educaiionai opportunity, Gorgeous speech therapists lined the walls and the guys of educaiion lo improve it quahtativcly and to remove the COMMUNITY EXPERIMENTAL SCHOOLS SOCIAL who made it along were still talking about it months later. worst features of inequality, ihey must realize lhat siudents themselves are already tending lo look far in If you missed it last advance of these aims. I'rom sparse rccources, .significant results have been year, don't make the same achieved at primary and .secondary school levels in mistake again in 1972 So while total change is admilledly in ihe future, il is experimenting with new forms of education. Much of ihis ACTIVITIES Besides it's a good chance important that parlies such as the A.L,P. should not in work will be of cumulalive value in preparation for the to brush up on your word the interim reject the altitudes which underlie the major changes in education to which I have already power and get some free thinking of those who favour it. referred. Communities which are prepared to sponsor SLAMMED advice. Tliis week siudents al La Trobe, faced with the experimenlalion with new educaiion forms, where Ihe inlerventton in their affairs of an explicitly reactionary The Queensland University Union's Activities Probably the most conimunily, students and teachers arc all able lo lake pari political party, an equally reactionary univer.sily Programme for 1972 compares very unfavourably with versatile band in Brisbane, in determining the style and objectives of their education, governing body, and the courls, told ihem all where they that of the University of New South WWales Union, "People", will be there. should be paid to do so, Il should be basic to such a could go. according to figures disclosed this week. They were officially placed proposition lhal the form of education at these schools The U,N,S.W.U. Activities budget is well over S20,000 third in the University A general mceling of siudenls resolved overwhelmingly, should be democratically determined and not made the compared with S6,000 for U.Q.U. Band contest, though and correctly, to defy injunclions granted by the Supreme subject of outside interference o: the lool of general This is in spite of the facl that U.Q.U. has more many consider ihey Court to the interveners. That the studcnis -• and there public policy. student members than U.N.S.W.U. deserved better. Slacks of arc many more like them elsewhere - were prepared lo reject so-called law-and-order. and hence lo reject the old Mr. Richard Isaacs, Programme Director for wines, cheeses and other SEXUAL SEGREGATION: U.N.S.W.U. (full lime), has prepared the following delights all inclusive at system, represents a most welcome development. An appropriale education system would leach them lo programme for this yeat". . $1.50, Tickets are Just as racial segregation in schools overseas (and to a challenge in tliis way, nol atlempt to restrain them from Available at the door. lesser exlenl in.Australia only because our racism has (1) Union News Sheets S3,20n doing so. NOTE: HliRSTON degraded and decimated our own black race and largely S5Q0 Such alliludes may be radical; but they are not subversive (2) Summer Schools REFECTORY is situated excluded non-European migrants) has been a target of of the aim of producing a better, equitable and just (3) Tutorial Classes on the ground floor of the consistent attack, so should sexual segrcgalion. Liberated $1,500 socieiy. What I have .said so far establishes a theme upon (Yoga, dance, crafts etc. Medical School in Herston individuals should nol be prepared to tolerate the sight of which I will expand later in this address and in other (4) Twelve Exhibitions Road, Herston. public and private schools whicii exclude .scholars on Ihe sessions today. (art, photography, sculpture) SI,200 basis of sex. There should he a univer.sal policy of (5) Printing, Publicity & Graphic Art $750 Any students with their Such a network could be extremely valuable nol co-cducalion. Allhough il is unforiunaie lo have to (6) Debates S6SQ own 35 mm cameras and only in adull educaiion bul in bringing into less affiuent advocate any form of coercion in determining educaiion (7) Concerts who would like to do some homes the influence of a type of socialisation which policy, the institution of .sexually segregated educaiion (28 coffee sliop concerts at SIS ea.) part time social would better equip children to combat the advantages would be wor.se than the existence of laws expressly (16 conceits at SSOea.) photography should enjoyed by non working class children in the home. An prohibiting such segregation. (SIS for major group visits $3,000 contact the Social early decision to extend radio broadcasting into higher (8) Ten Sunday Night Concerts Conveners' Office in Peter fiequency bands and lo introduce frequency modulation AIR WAVES: (at SOc pet bead) $4,500 Shearer's. sound transmission would enable the wider use of radio (9) Films, Talks, Seminars $1,000 Persons doing this may for educational purposes. Both I'M Radio and educaiionai Labor policy also provides Ibr the u.seof oneof the most (10) Contingency $1,400 expect regular work al television have a much higher priority than color valuable (and presently alienated) forms of all public TOTAL; 517,500 socials, cabarets, balls, television. It is to be hoped that the Labor Government properly - Ihe air waves - for educational purposes, ll weddings etc. which will be elccicd al the end of 1972 will reverse seems an outrage that priority is lo be given lo televising In Addition to this, the Programme Director is paid a present Governmeni broadcasting priorities. in color while wcare still lacking an educational television. full time salary thoughi to be close to 54,000 p.a. A U.N.S.W. Union Cultural Affairs Fund is separate from this al around $2,755.88. PROPOSED CONSTITUTION CHANCES Mr. Isaacs said: "Out programme is on a very broad basis aimed at contact with the widest proportion of the Union's membership, including many of the conccrl type That section 45(|) of the Constitution be amended by deleting the first activities at a time when they will be available to "S4.00" and repbcing it with "SS.50", and by dclcUi^g Ihe second "S4.00" part-time students. and replacing it with "S8.00" By comparison, the U,Q,U. Activities Director's LSC/8 Programme consists of: (1) Six Union Nights That a new 13(6) be added to the Constilulion as follows; (2) Concerts 13. 6. Notwithstanding Part X of this Consiitution, Council may, as (3) Guest Speakers provided in the regulations, suspend any ittcmbcr of Council for no more than (4) Commemoration Week the equivalent of one full nieeling of Council. Any incmbcr so suspended Total budget is $6,000. sliould not be enlilled lo appoint or accept a proxy during (he period of One of the obvious items of interest is the inslallalion suspension. of carpets ihruughuui most of their Union Buildings, This LSC/2 has paid off in terms of lower cleaning costs. U.Q.U. at prcscni expects to pay $64,000 in cleaning cost this year. Thai Scciion 42 of the Consliiuiion be amended by adding Ihe words "or Carpels have been proven as a money saver, why his nominee" after (he word "Treasurer" at the end of ihe section. doesn't U.Q.U. follow suit? LSC/5 PAGE 12 SEMPER FLOREAT APRIL 13,1972

ON THE BEACH SEMPER Skin Cancer in Queensland

Groups 0 and I will prcvcnl skin reddening all day, if a Kwiktan Sun Oil Ihickness of .01 mm is main­ Malibu Coconut Suntan Oil tained. Half thickness will pre­ Group V at .01 mm should vent sunburn for 2 to 3 hours. prevent skin reddening for 11 CROUP O fo 2 hours. At half thickness Ardcna Covering Cream they protect against skin red­ Zinc Cream A.P.F. dening for 40 minutes and give Piz Buin Exclusiv Lip Protec­ mild reddening in about one tion hour. Coppertone Noskole GROUP V Sunskrcen (lipstick) Ambfc Solaire Creme Sunskrcen Nose and Face Gel Sundowner Suntan Lotion (Children) GROUP I Sea and Ski Indoor-Outdoor Ultraviolet Cream B,A,F.S, Lotion Q.R.I. Sun Proteclion Cream Ambre Solaire Moisturizing (Salol) Bronzlan Sunslop Cream Suntan Lotion UV Filler Cream Tanfast Cream Lolion Coppertone Hawaiian Tanning Skol Suntan Lotion Creme Sea and Ski Dark Tanning Oil Piz Buin Exclusiv Extreme Group vi at .01 mm thick­ ness will prevent skin reddening Creme 5 for a little more than one hour, Piz Buin Exclusiv Creme 7i giving mild reddening in two Hamilton Sun-proof Lotion hours. At half thickness they Coppertone Get give mild reddening in less than Uvcsan one hour. Phiasol A.S. Alcoholic Solution Sea and Ski Blockout GROUP VI On mitin liaicli ui Kurjcr's Paradise, a holidiiy-maker fills in : united in regarding creative spirii". (Kropotkin). Tolstoy also rejected progress as an ideal. I'reedom, thcm.sclves as apolitical, even antipolitical. The bitterest There arc many anarchistic elements in the thoughts brotherhood and the cultivation of man's moral nature battles between anarchists and Marxists have been fought of philosophers and writers throughout history: Lao-Tae, are more imporlanl, and to these progress must be over the quesiion of .seizing the State machine. Anarchists Arislippus and Zeno, Diderol, Shaw, Wilde, Daudei and subordinated. He was not opposed lo all progress, bul lo deny all political aciion and declare lhat the State must Anatole Irance for example. Religious movements were that which is achieved lo the detriment of hunian liberty nut be lakcn over, but destroyed, llakunin wrotc:- al.so involved: Anabaptists, Hussites, and in fact Ihe and human life. To allain the new socieiy he advocaled a "...doctrinaire Socialists.,.are enemies of Ihe powers that French Tolstoyan Lecharlier .said thai "the true founder moral raiher than a political revolulion. A political be only because ihey cannot lake their places. Tliey arc of anarchy was Jesus Chrisi and the Tirsl anarchist socieiy revolution fights the State from without, but a moral une enemies of existing political in.slitutions only because was that of the Apostles". The Levellers, who were works wiihin the .society and attacks the evil in its very those insiiiuiions prevent the imposiiion of their own crushed by ihc Statist dictatorship of Oliver Cromwell, foundations. The man who wishes lo abolish the State diclalorship. The Marxists say lhal this Slale yoke is a wrote:- ",..cvcryonc shall pul lo Iheir Iiands lo lill ihe must cease to co-operate wilh il, refuse military service, necessary transitional means in order lo attain the earth and bring up cattle, and the blessings of the earth jury service, the payment of taxes. Tiic refusal to obey emancipation of the people. THUS TO I'Rlir. THE shall be common to all ... There shall be none lords over was his great weapon. Perhaps the greatest convert lo this MASSI-S IT IS l-IRST NIvCI-SSARY TO KNSLAVE olhers, but everyone shall be a lord of himself, subject to line was Gandhi, who through civil disobedience led his TllHM! They maintain that only a dictalor.sliip-llieir the laws of righteousness, reason and equity, which shall people through an almosi bloodless revolulion lo freedom diclalorshij>-can create the will of the people. Our answer dwell and rule in him, which is the Lord". from foreign rule. is this:- No dictatorship can ever have any other aim bul The Anti-State Theory lhal of self-perpeuiatioii, and il can beget only slavery in Il is difficuil to describe the basic theory of anarchism Ihe people tolerating it." One anarchist went .so far as to because of its very rejection of any rigidly systematic s:iy lhal "In Socialism Ihere is bul one master which is the The perfect society has no government, Slate. but only an administration, theory, and because of ils stress on exlvcme freedom of no laws but only obligations. choice and the superioriU' of individual judgement. A variety of views is inevitable. As a doclrine il is constantly The individual and the new society Wilhelm Weitting. The Ihing that unites anarchists is the belief in direct decision by the individual. The individual lakes part voluntarily, decides of his own free will whether to Anarchism, Nihilism and Terrorism are usually become a member of a communiiy. or lo refuse military wrongly equated, and the anarchist is usually presented as service clc. No cocrsion or delegation of responsibility a mad-boniber lype who offers nothing to replace ihe should occur; Ihe individual comes and goes, acts or order he is Irying lo destroy. Anarchists are partly declines as he sees Til. Unlike Marxisms, anarchists do not responsible for this, since many have lended to stress ihe Individualism scc the people as a mass, but as a collection of sovereign destructive aspects of their doctrines. The very idea of individuals, each of whom must make his own decision to abolishing authority implies making a clean sweep of most anarchism radicalism capitalist act. Tlie extreme concern for the sovereignty of individual of the prominent insiiiuiions of modern socicly. In I Individualism \ choice not only dominates anarchist thoughi, but also comparison plans for reconstruction have been rather I explains why anarchism rejects democracy as well as oversimplified. Anarchists have often lended to hover r autocracy. Democracy (i.e. parliamentary insiiiuiions) between an idealised future and an idealised pasl, Tlie advocate the sovereignty of the people, while anarchism pasl is a kind of combinalion ofall those .societies which / advocates the .sovereignty of the person. Parliamentary have lived by cooperation rather than by organized institutions are rejected because the individual must government. The communities of the early Chrislians, the abdicate his sovereignty by handing it over lo a free cilies of medieval Europe, the Russian mir are some O representative. Once he has done this, decisions may be examples of whal can be done without the apparatus of I the Slate. ^ made in his name over which he has no control and of ^ which he disapproves. An anarchist may accept destruction, but only as a social ———.—^^—«.-. conservatism {U Anarchism is a philosophy for the individual, and its part of the eternal process of Nature, and because he has democracy —• conlempl for authority arises from authority's contempt faith in the ability of free men lo build a beller socieiy in 3 for the individual, ll is a personal moral nnd social code the rubble of the pasl one. Above all, the anarchist lhat attracts those who want a total alternative to believes in a moral force powerful enough to survive the contemporary values, society and politics. destruction of authority, and yet still lo hold socicly / I \ logelher. The association of anarchy with political Why do anarchists struggle? terrorism in the mind of the general public is lo be - to liberate the individual, deplored. Anarchists have deep disagreemcnls on the - because of the emptiness of the present point of luetics. The followers of Tolstoy will never materialistic society, acknowledge violence; Kropotkin accepted it because he ./ - because of the constant erosion and fell it unavoidable; even Bakunin, who fought on many state dehumanisation of human personality by a barricades, had his doubts and slated:- "Bloody communism fabianism macliine-orienlcd age, revolutions are a monslrouscvil and a great disaster". - because of the overriding social problems lhat The Philosophers totalitarianism have no foreseeable future. It is an ironic fact that a number of anarchist What are the aims of anarchism? philosophers came from the country gentry and 1) Tliat every man should have the material and moral aristocracy of I9lli cenlury Europe. Mikhail Bakunin, means to develop all of his humanity. I'or this society Prince Peter Kropotkin, Prince Cherkesov, and Count Leo must be organized so that on entering life every Tolstoy for example. Others like John Godwin and individual should find approximately equal means for Sebastian Faurc were former clergymen. But ihe mosl the developmeni ofhis faculties. important in practical terms have been the artisans, the changing, and as a movement is in constant growth and 2) To create a society which would place each individual craftsmen such as printers and shoemakers. disintergration. This is due lo ils altitude to organizulion. in such a position that il would be impossillc for him For Pierre Joseph Proudhon, the individual was both The basic ideas of anarchism prevent any rigid to dominate or exploit the labour of anyone else. the starling point and the ultimate goal of all action, but organization, and particularly the idea ofa political parly 3)To protest againsi any regimenting authority. it was within society lhat each man's personality musi for seizing power. "All parties without exception, in so 4) To organize socieiy through a free federation of find its function and fulfilment. "Properly is Theft" was far as they seek for power, arc varieties of absolutism" associations-industrial agricultural, scientillc, artistic, to become one of the great catchwords of the 19th (Proudhon). However, the basis of anarchism is resistance literary-first inlo a commune then from communes into century, bul Proudhon made it clear lhal he did not mean to the apparatus of the Stale. regions, from regions into nations, and finally ftom the this literally. What he meant to be understood by What is (he State? federation of nalions inlo a fralernat inlernalional property was "the sum of ils abuses". He was denouncing Mikhail Bakunin wrote:- "The jurists tell us lhat Hie union. the properly of the man who uses it to exploit the labour State is tbe realization of justice, morality and virtue. Peter Ovetlack. of others without any effort of his own. He supported Tlierc is no greater duly on the part of the individual than "possession", the righl of a man to effective control over to dedicate, sacrifice and if necessary die for the of Ihc his dwelling and the tools he needed to work. In fact, he Slale. In the ordinary moralily of man il is a crime lo regarded possession as a keystone oflibcrly, and his main offend, oppress, rob, plunder, assassinate or enslave one's INTERESTED? crilicisin of the communists was that they wished to fellow man. i'rom Ihc point of view of patriotism, when If you agree with what has been said here and woulil destroy it. Communism fails to recogni.se that man these Ihings are done for Ihe crcaiiM riory ofthe State, like to find oul more, then you should come to a meeting loves independence as well as equality. Property springs they become a duly and a service. The .sole aim of the in Room 81 of the Main Arts'building al Ip.m. on from man's desire to free himself from the slavery of Slale is the preservation and increase of its power to the Tuesday, |8lh Aoril, communism, but in lurn it also goes to llic extreme, and detriment of liberiy and justice. The Stale ihen, is the _ You will be welcome to pui forward your own views violates equality by exclusion, and supports ihe most llagranl, cynical and complete negation of on anarchisni and suggest how a group may he formed acquisilion of power by a privileged minority. humanily. ll rends aparl the solidarity of men on earth, for discu.ssion and Ihc application of anarchist ideals. In the political sphere, Proudhon saw federation as a and unites .some of them only to destroy, connuer and stage on the way lo final anarchy, which he thoughi enslave the resl. So long as States exist there will be no niighl lie centuries ahead. He saw "public order resting on peace." the liberiy and conscience of the cilizen"; Ihe organizaihin of administralion should begin locally and as near the direct control of the jieople as possible. Thus The aims of anarchism arc:- We are the sons of the Revolution and we have inherited individuals .should .starl Ihe process by federating inlo Thc peace, emancipation and happiness from it (he Religion of Humanity. communes and associations. The nation would eventually of the oppressed, We believe in Ihe rights of man, in Ihe dignity and the be replaced by a geographical confederation of regions. liberty, justice and fralcrnily necessary emancipation of the hunian species, All afl'airs would be settled by mutual agrecmenl. in regard to all human beings upon (he earth, Wc believe in hunian liberty and human fraternity based contract aiul arbitration. This presented the first practical equality fur all upon hunian justice. alleriialive lo political nationalism. llakunin Mikhail llakunin. SEMPER FLOREAT APRIL 13, 1972 YAG^l^ '" •" RUGBY UNION by Russell Luke UNTWTN

Two young stars, Maloncy and Gary Pearson. the day. formerly of the Uni U/19 Varsity played well In Ihe forwards QI team, and more recently wiihin their capacity in the University were clearly promoted (o A grade first half to post a 13 - 3 dominant. Their loose 131 ranks, helped Uni to a lead. They capitalized forwards were always on devastating 31 - 12 win mainly on Jeep's errors, the ball and they gave the 131 over G.P.S. last weekend at Karly in the ,second half G.P.S. inside backs a great 131 Ballymorc. Richard Miller, after deal of trouble. It should The young stars - Hal following Ihrough on a be remembered however 131 Batch in the backs, and high kick, toed the ball that two of G.P.S.' belter 131 Sieve Ccrulti in the over the line to score the backs, David Rathie and forwards are currently easiest of Irics. This was Dugald Clark were away 131 One hundred brake horsepower per litre is a power output in aboul 75 mph, the Coupe 9 being hailed by many of Miller's second Iry for the wilh the "Junior 131 (he ultra-sophisticated Formula One opcr wheeler racing car class feels much like the Coupe 7 ta Union's toughest critics, as day. Wallabies" in Japan. The ... yet inventive Japanese manufacturer Honda is hovering and most of the other brisk IS the best young prospects Tlic highlight of the presence of these two 131 around these standards with the very practical Honda Coupe 9. 1300 cc cars on Ihc market. .seen in Union circles G.P.S. effori was a players would undoubtedly IS have made the team much 131 This is a iwo-door But between 5000 rpm and around Brisbane for many s|wctacular 40 yd field goal four-sealer, cto.ser lo a sedan 1700 rpm, the Coupe 9 comes IS seasons. by full-back Alan Upron more effccilvc in altack. 131 Ihan a coupe, which develops The Coupe 9 is pretty alive with an agrcssivc howl As well as Batch and after the Uni fullback, All in all, the outlook from the twin exhausts. I'tom ISI 110 bhp from 1298 cc. This is compeliiivc, but is has some CcTUtli, other players to Gary Pearson, had kicked for Uni as 1972 premiers at 131 my performance work on Ihe almost double the average classy oppo.sition in the S3000 .star for Uni included the bail lo him. It was this slagc looks very good. circuit, the claimed top speed IS 131 output for a motor of this size - S3500 price range. The Richard Miller, Peler Pearson's only mistake of of 115 mph seems accurate. and the peak power is enthusiast shopping around in IS 131 The speedometer was just two developed al 7300 rpm, long this group witl be looking at miles an hour out at 60 and I IS 131 aflcr most cars have run out of the Alfa 1300 Tl, Capri GT breath. Hut from the 200 mile had it indicating 110 mph IS Ial V6, Torana XUI, Capclla Rli, before running out of road. road test including MG Band Renault 16TS. IS 131 performance work, the Coupe It is not a screamer off the 131 9 still managed to return 32 mark, because the 83 fi-lb IS mpg. interior torque is developed al the high IS 131 At S3275 the Coupe 9 is engine speed of 5000 rpm. It's $266 more than the Coupe 7, attraction lies in ils high speed IS 131 Here's what Honda dealers which has an identical body cruising ability and reserve of offer for the money. A IS 131 and interior layout. The low power at regular highway two-door, four-dealer with an models share basically Ihc speeds. IS 131 above average bool, a luxury same motor, but in (he Coupe specification, brisk IS 7 the single carburettor engine 131 performance, above average develops 95 bhp al 7000 rpm performance IS economy and good comfort. 131 against the 110 bhp al 7300 The only aspect of the car rpm in the four-carburctlored IS 131 which did not appeal to me - Against the stop watch, the Coupe 9. IS 131 apart from the harsh steering Coupe 9 accelerates 0-50 mph The combination of wilh the king-size tyres - was in 8.3 sec, 40-60 in 6.6 mph IS 131 front-whecl-drive, air-cooled the seat belt arrangement. In in 6.6 sec, in third and 10,0 motr, single overhead sec. in top, standing quarter IS 131 common with most Japanese camshaft design, four cars, Ihe upper anchor point is mile in 18.6 sec. for a terminal IS 131 carburettors and extremely too high and the shoulder speed of 72 mph. Maximum 131 high engine speed, all sounds harness passes across the neck speeds in the gears were 27, IS like bad news for enthusiasts instead of across the shoulder. 52, 82 and a claimed 115 IS 131 who like their motoring quiet Obviously the pillars - mph. 131 and comfortable. But especially in a coupe in this Handling is about neutral. IS somehow - generally Ihrough case - cannot lake an anchor On corners which tighten up a IS 131 fine engineering - Honda has point. bit sooner than expected, I overcome the potcntbl found it was better to reef on IS [31 difficulties and produced an I believe Ihc move lo more lock and keep the power 131 interesting, very capable compulsory u.se of seal belts on, rather than throttle-off IS personal sporting coupe, was the obvious thing to do if and induce the back to slide the road toll was to be lakcn IS Bl The Coupe 9 is for the around Mini fashion. Driven seriously. However ther has enthusiast - the driver who quickly, it has mild power-on IS 131 been a serious lack of likes to work a car hard, steer understcer and mild power-off information on ihc proper use IS 131 on Ihc throttle, flick on a bit oversteer. It handles of seal belts and there is a of opposite lock every now something like Citroen - IS 131 confusion of designs, many of and then and generally play everything done on the them obviously unsuitable. IS 131 boy-Brabham. steering. During the time I had the The driver who enjoys To sum up - interesting, IS 131 Honda I made a trip to the motoring in a more leisurely practical and comfortable. Gold Coast with three children IS 131 manner, but who nevertheless Quick too, if stirred vigorously in Ihe back. Leg roin for tfjl . Honda's Coupe 9... air cooled, front-wheel-drive, 115 mph. likes a well-balanced motor car above 5000 rpm. 131 these 12-year-olds was barely wilh advanced specifications, adequate bul many of the SI3lslsl9lslslsl9l9l9l9lsl9l9g|g|9S!9lslalglSI§]p 131 would be beller off in the light family sedans arc jusl as Coupe 7. They have the same Ial cramped. Mead room in the visual appeal and up lo about back is good. Honda obviously 131 80 mph, the difference in 131 put room before styling, performance is minimal. Bl 131 becau.se the roolline is a litlle 131 high for the coupe class. ISI It has comfortable, Bl 131 tyres lay-back seats, the driving 131 position is good, the Bl My impre.\sion of the instruments are easy to read Bl 131 COU|H; 9 was colored and Ihe dashboard controls are 131 somewhat by the oversize al fingerlip distance and Bl radial ply lyres 111 led to the simple to use. Bl 131 road test cat. They ptiUruded The gear .shift is lighl and aboul an inch beyond Ihe positive 11 has a four-speed, Bl 131 front mudguards. The lest car all-synchromesh gear box wilh Bl 131 had optional "mag"slyle a remote-control lloor lever. sporls wheels to give the wider Steering is rack and pinion, Bl 131 165x13 lyre size. The 3.7 lurns lock to lock, and Bl 13 wheel-tyre option costs an precise. Hrakes arc discs at Ihe extra $244. They improved front and drums al Ihe back Bl 131 Ihc already good roadholding wilh high pedal pressures, 131 and handhng, bul Ihey made typical of Honda and many the steering heavier and more other Japanese makes. Bl 131 direci. Tlie ride also suffered, The Coupe 9 is easy lo Bl 131 particularly over lumpy drive and is quite docile bitumen. around town and in highway Bl 131 Good stuff for Honda traffic. Drivers will rarely Bl 131 drivers who tike lo go chasing exceed 4000 rpm, which gives Alfas and Ihing.s, bul a litlle Ihe car adequate acreleralion Bl 131 liring after llie novelty has and a 60 mph cruising .speed. Bl m worwornoun off.. UVJoU tIOo abouaouuti 500ouu0u rom.. oorr ' -"-•-—• • • - .„._... - gSSIslaialalglilsIsIsllIalalslilglalsliSIiSIililaSlilalgg PAGE 15 SEMPER FLOREAT APRIL 13,-1972 PERTH VARSITY WINS HOCKEY OPENER.

Univcristy's hockey team had a comfortable 3-0 win NATIONALS Athletics over Bulimba, to open (he hockey season last weekend at by David Stokes St. Lucia. The more successful of University athletes in the (Queensland team were Marion Hoffman, Peter Phillips, from opening Bully, Universily, who were defending Ron Wilson, David Stokes and Russell Busquez. Most of the river end, overran Ihe Bulimba defence. the Queensland athletes anived in Perth with Afier 1 minuies of play. University had the chance to national-ranking performances and very strong medal go to an carly lead when Ihey received a penalty stroke. chances, but few came up to these hopes - much of the Ian Sommcr's subsequent shot was good, but anticipation blame for this lying with Queensland's lack of an by Bulimba goal-keeper Greg Smith saw him stop Ihe ball. all-weather track. MEN Uni however, didn't receive the chance again in Ihe first Ross Wilson (bronze medal, 400m.) is Australia's half. fastest ever quarter-miler, but Queensland tracks, a The half time score: 0-fl, blistered foot, and the head wind in the home straight, IOO D, Stokes, C. Coutts, E. Rutledge 10.6 Early in the second half, former Ipswich and Qld colt cost him his title and a trip to Munich. Peter Phillips (3rd, 200 D. Stokes, C. Coutts, R. SUcock2I.5 forward Arthur Davey scored with a reverse stick shot Shot Pul) threw near to his best this season and no more 400 C. Coutts, D. Stokes, R. Freeman (F)49.9 giving the keeper no chance. could have been expecied of him since he is primarily a 800 I. Wilson, P. Drewe (F), Wyatf (QIT)2:OI.8 Three minuies later, Davey again found holes in wcighllifter, Dave Stokes (rinalist, 100m.) wenl down lo a ISOO R. Luke, M, Smith, P. Byth4.00.7 Bulimba's defence, when he picked up the ball from a class exhibition of bad starting in the 100 m. and some 5000 M. Smith, R. Bourne, J. Reid 15.04.0 corner shot to send il inlo the net for the second tinlc. unfortunate seeding in the 200 m, Russ Busquez made the 10,000 T, Creevey, Wells (QIT), Dawson (QIT)34:50.0 In the final 10 minuies of the game centre forward Rob semi-llnals in both lOOm. and 200m, bul was affected by Steeple F. Stanfield, P. Maddern, A. Waterford 1:34.0 Pfitzncr pul the cap on Uni's victory with great goal after the strong head winds on both occasions, and a foot tlOH I. Wilson, A. O'Connor, J. IloffmanlS.O a malee in front of the net. injury in the 200's, Busquez and Stokes were part of the 4 200H I. Wilson, P. Drcwe (F), C. Savis26.5 X 100m relay team (with Eric Higby, and Jeff McLean, 400H I. Wilson, A. O'Connor, J. IIoffman57.2 reputedly "the fastest rugby Union winger in the world") U I. Wilson, R. Herd (QIT), P. Drewe (F)20'0ii" that ran 2nd to Victoria in a fast 40.6. TJ R. Herd (QfT), I. Wilson, A. 0'Connor40'I0'/2" John McCubbery (representing Papua - N.G.) made HJ L. Wilson (F), R. Henl (QIT), P. Drewe (F)5'8" Ihe finals of Ihc Junior 200m. and 400m. He looked a Pole B. Garfoot, S. Brown, M. McRaelO'7" good medal prospecl in at least the 400m, but lost to Shot M. McRac, A. O'Connor,?. Drewe (F)44'4'/j" more experienced competitors. Maybe the aods were Disc R. Priman, F. Stanfield, A. O'Connor 145MO" unimpressed by a white man with a "black power" T - Jav M. McRac, A. O'Connor, P. Drewe (F)127'S" shirl and a morning fire rilual. Of the olhers, lan Murray ran a creditable 9:7.6 in the WOMEN Steeple but was out of medal range. Graham Taylor had every chance of a long jump medal but for once succumbed to the compctilion. lan Wilson hit a hurdle 100 R. Stokes, B. Astbuty (F), H. Wri^t (F)12.2 and did nol achieve his 52.9 in the400m, hurdles. Robert 200 B. Astbury(F), H. Wright (F), C. Ludwig26.2 freeman ran a reasonable Junior 400m, heal but the 400 C. Ludwig, B. Astbury (F), G. Harris (F)62.0 competition was too strong. 800 C. Ludwig, G. Hanis (F), P. Madden2:24.0 The University women fared better: Marion Hoffman, 1500 C. Ludwig, G. Harris (F), L.S. PeterS: 11.4 allhough nol mnning at her best, won silver medals in Ihe lOOH R. Stokes, B. Astbury (F)I7.6 lOOm. and 200m. and has a good chance of that coveted 20011 R. Stokes, B. Astbury (F)32.1 Munich trip. Margaret Taylor .suffering noiiceably from U B. AStbury(F), IL Wright (F), C. Ludwig 15'10V4" nerves (especially in the long jump) nevertheless still made HJ B. Astbury (F), R. Stokes, H, Wright (F)4'6" the 100m. final ahead of Queensland sprinters who had Shot R. Stokes, B. Astbury (F), G. Harris (F)32'5H" beaten her all season. Disc R, Stokes, B. Astbury (F), G. Harris (F)83'I" Not an auspicious year after the lasl Nationals, but Jav R. Stokes, B, Astbury (F), G. Hanis (F) - these same athletes will be much improved next year with this experience behind Ihcm.

Picture right :- heat of thelQOm. in Perth. Boswell, Slokes, Turner, Plant RACING

•••••*••••••••• ANDY STEVENS, one of racing's most respected men (he tips more winners)\vill, from the next issue on, be on the SEMPER staff. Andy's aim ST. LUGIA is to give Uni punters a better than even chance of FRESHERS' TITLES winning.. The titles produced few new athletes (some of Ihe possibles seemed more concerned about towing and the 'old school lie' than about competitive athle(ics), but the quality was good: Robert Freeman (400ni.) and L. Wilson (lligji Jump) are both good prospects. But the "iron man" was first year Dental student Paul Drcwe, who completed in 10 events in (he 2 days including a good 2:01.9 in ihe 800m. Paul will no doubt win the Men's Freshers' Champion. The women always seem lo produce niorc good aUtPUS PHMRi first-years than do the men, and this year, wiih Barbara Astbiiry, Glcnda Harris and Heather Wright already as good as selected for Inter Varsity, was no exception. POR STAFf k SI Glenda Ihirris proved herself a good middle distance runner and should improve well, and Heather Wright has every chance of doing reasonably well, liut it was Barbara Aslbury who proved herself the best of ihc first-years UNION COMMERCIM. CENTRE m\. OF QUI. winning numerous I'Veshcr Titles and (no doubt) Ihc Women's Prcshcrs' Championship. COSMETICS PERFUMES: The best performances for the weekend came largely in REYLON • RIMMEL M^ PIERRE BALMAIN Ihe Open events: in Ihc Men's 100m. 4 sprinters ran 'even time' including (at lasDliddie Rutledge and Dave MAX FACTOR W WORTH Burrough, both with 10.9. Dave Slokes, short-tempered as CYC LAX SCHIAPAREUI ever at the slart (especially after Perth and the Nalional loom, final slati) won both short sprints with 10.6 and 21.5. Chris Coutts continues lo improve, win, 10.8 for Ihc 100m. and his first sub 50s (49,9) for the 4fl0m., beating Slokes (50.0). Dick Priman threw a consistent FREE DEUiBkY ON C4MP(/S fOU STAFF I45'I0" to win the Discus. In the Women's 100m. Robyn Stokes ran 12.2 and is now looking for 12.1 or better. Phone 701S09 Others to do well were Russell Luke (personal best 1500mm,), Moresby Smith (I5:04;0 for 5,000m. on his own), lan Wilson who won all 3 hurdles, frank Stanfield Aak About Concessions Available who proved the value of his morning milk round by winning Ihe Slecple, and QIT's jumper Bob Herd, kr.ORR R CO Mill PAGE 16 SEMPER FLOREAT APRIL 13, 1972 SEMPER FASHION i ••story gearbox

Every year seems to produce Its own unique look and this year it looks like "Multi Storey" - layer upon layer of fashion, each excitingly unique and different and above all so economical. Start off with the basic oxford bags (from S10.16) & shirt (S4.14) and then layer it with gear Imported leather zip jacket-$62,50. piece by piece as the budget allows & then presto! Tank tops are a new variation on an old theme. Priced ... a multi fashion wardrobe. between S4 and $10. 131 Illustrated are some of the many fabulous sorts QI 131 of layer accessories from FIFI'S GEARBOX, Picadilly Arcade, the Pavilion, Queen and Albert QI 131 Streets and Morningside Fair. QI 131 QI 131 QI 131 QI 131 QI 131 QI 131 Ql Q! QI 131 Ql Ql 131 Ql 13! Ql QI Ql QI Ql QI Ql Bl Ql QI Ql Ql Ql QI Ql QI Ql QI Ql QI Ql QI m Bl QI Great little wool chubby $30. Ties range from $2-$4 Tank tops with Japanese sleeves at approx. $9.50. Ql QI while the diamonle fun pins can be yours if you've got QI $1-32. Bl QI Bl QI Bl QI BPl! Bl QI Bl QI QI QI Bl QI P! QI Bi B! Ql Q Ql Bl Ql Ql Ql Ql Ql Ql Bl Ql Ql Ql Everything's coming up leather and this tremendous little There's a great idea in uncut cord. Vest is priced at vest is only $28.50. $18.50 and novel, enamel |ean medallion at only $2. Bl Prinled by Mirror Newspapers Pty. Ltd. at 367 Brunswick Street, I'ortiludc Valley, Brisbane. Published by Paul Gregory Tully, of 9 Vincent Street, Indooroopilly, Brisbane.