TlHJRAR^j \JCS19 Interview with 4 U.S Naval Deserters What they saw on their ship seemed to affect them II. military fugitives cannot get political asylum in Ja­ by MAX SMITH all. pan. "Seeing those bombs go off, seeing the flash... Na­ LIBERATION After a period of hiding, they appeared Nov. 20 palm. I mean you hear the pilot slipped and killed wo­ News Service in Moscow en route to a neutral country, the Associa­ men and children; makes you sick..." (Richard Bailay ted Press reported. (LNS) - The four U.S. sailors who protested the 19, of Jacksonville, Fla, son of a naval commander). Vietnam war by not returning to their ship - the air­ “They - the Navy - showed us a film on the Vietnam The men were first absent midnight October 23, craft carrier Intrepid - did so because of what they war; but how could you tell who you were shooting? but they did not declare their intention until Novem­ had seen and heard in the Navy, and not because they Going over there with men and guns seems a stupid ber 1. Later, the.Japan Peace for Vietnam Commit­ had been coached by any political group, according to way to solve problems”. (Michael A. Lindner, 19, of tee, called a press conference to show films of each the American professor who interviewed them. Mount Pocono. Pa). sailor explaining his stand. Dr. Ernest P. Young, formerly executive assistant “While I was deployed abord the USS Intrepid, I In the filmed statement, John Barilla said: to the U.S. ambassador to Japan, and now profes­ saw tons and tons of bombs being loaded and jet af­ sor of oriental history at Dartmouth, said that the ter-jet, being launched...” (Graig W. Anderson, San “A governmental speech containing so many words young "men all seemed ‘'‘normal’', next-door neighbor Jose, Calif.) such as "Communism", "Freedom" and “the agres- types. The four had not been in the anti-war or other The four literally cannot go home again. They would sor" hardly gives an excuse to murder countless num­ political movements before their enlistment, he said. face long military prison terms, humiliation and harass­ bers of Americans and Vietnamese. Some people John Barilla, 20. of Catonsville, Md. explained to ment - even though to some Americans their action seem to be trained to respond to these motive words Young: showed true courage. Of his exile, Bailey said: and phrases, like Pavlov's dogs. It is time for Ameri­ “I really like life. 1 get a kick out of everything, “I am an American. It hurts to leave my friends» cans to wake up to reason and not words, peace3and of seeing a guy and a gal walking down the street and family and future there, knowing 1 cannot never not war. hand in hand. Then I see pictures of a guy all burnt return". up. What’s the difference between him and me? Just Regardless of such consequences, Young says “Because of my actions and beliefs, I will be jailed that his home is 13,000 miles from mine". the four are resolved to find asylum in a neutral coun­ if I am apprehended. By some, I will be labeled as an The Intrepid, in battle service in the sea of Vietnam try and to work in the i nternational anti-war movement. anti-American, or a Communist. These are just emo­ was on a rest and recreation visit to Japan, and was Though the movement is strong in Japan, the men tive words and none of them actually apply to me. scheduled to return to the front, when the men refu­ weren't able to stay there. Under the US-Japenese I am just an American standing up for what I think sed to continue to take part in the war. status of forces agreement, reached after World War is right. I am not alone".

Inside:

UGEQ supplement:

VOL. XXXI, NO. 22 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1967 8 CENTS P. 2 Reject UGEQ Dow protests.. Morality Question? Harvey Oberfeld by D. Jdhn Lynn, Canadian University Press Hold a match under one of those foam take-out intensely that it cannot be removed from human P. 3 Afraid of UGEQ? coffee cups. It bursts into flames. It’s made of skin without causing whole chunks of flesh polystyrene. So is napalm. to come off”. Protestors say such a weapon is immoral - Polystyrene is made in Canada. Some goes in­ Allan Marks much more immoral that atomic bombs. The to the manufacture of take-out coffee cups, U.S. Dow Company makes Napalm bombs Christmans decorations and toys. Some is sent for use in Vietnam. The protestors claim this to the United States as an ingredient of napalm is contributing to an immoral act. which is being used by the U.S. in Vietnam. P. 4— 5 UGEQ Constitution Part of Dow supply of polystyrene, the active The Canadian manufacturer of polystyrene ingredient of Napalm, is made in Canada. The­ is Dow Chemical CO. of Canada, a subsidiary refore, Canada is implicated in this immorality. of the parent Dow in the U.S . But Dow points out its napalm production P. 6 Anti-UGEQ panel Campuses cross Canada have risen up in protest - accounts for less than one per cent of its bu­ in some cases violent protest - again Dow re­ siness. Opponents then say it would be a negli­ cruiters interviewing on campus. gible loss to discontinue napalm production. The Canadian protests began on November 8 Pro-Dow forces on campus offer two argu­ George Barrington when a small group handed out literature at the m ents-. the first skirts any moral issue and claims door of the placement centre at the University Dow Canada personnel work on a vast number of Waterloo. of projects, so workers, those recruited annually A week later, students followed suit, but this from campuses, are not directly involved in pro­ P. 7 UGEQ and time, they blocked the doorway. At Windsor, last ducing napalm. week, campus Anglican Chaplain Bill Chris­ The second argument says it is the right of tensen, led a similar group in protest, but there students to apply for a job of their choice, and other universities was no violence. the majority should not deny them this right. Then, Monday and Tuesday, Toronto students “I want to be a rapist” screamed one U of T kept a Dow recruiter and U of T vice-president student. “Get me an interview". Doug Long Robin Ross captive until the Dow representa­ November, December and January are heavy tive finally agreed not to continue his three-day recruitment me hs •. npus - for summer recruiting program. and full-*' - e, ioym )ow, along with ma­ The Student Council at the University of kers of 1 „:id m; ts which eventually L’UGEQ and Sir George Victoria shared these sentiments when they find theii wav to Vie 11 continue to be ha­ went on the record opposing the use of na­ rassed on - palm. Dow recruiters were expected a week The arsv. Oe to follow the Cen­ Alan Segal after council took this action. tral Intelligence Agency’s lead in the States Why all these protests? Demonstrators see will conduct their interviews off campus from now it as a moral issue. on, a policy decision which is a direct reflection Harold Kasinsky, A University of California of recent disruptions CIA recruiting has led to on P. 8 Students as members biochimist, who has made a study of napalm, many campuses. reports: It is starting even now. “A napalm B fire reaches a temperature of At McGill University several companies have of society almost 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit in a few seconds. opted for off-campus interviewing. McGill prin­ The polystyrene component of Napalm B acts cipal H. Rocke Robertson announced that three like a glue at high temperatures, holding the companies who have not yet had on campus in­ Tim Gadban fire to a particular surface. terviews, have consented to conduct interviews “The new Napalm B is so sticky and burns so off campus in order to avoid “disturbances”. 2 / the georgian, November 24. 1967

ojar is ..so we MUST U T 'S $IV£ W l Out o f m mo SOME SO MU6H FOOD DNlV b y Question!' if WW fo ombT T h£V &ATH0«fiVK OVERFEED UJOOl’D \. courses. Call Marilyn at 937-5072 anytime. ed is one of Canada’s younger by Marty Charny Cash must accompany all ads. Ad­ vertising deadlines are 6.00 p.m. for poets, Darryl Hine, who will the Tuesday edition on the Friday pre­ ACCOMODATION vious, and Wednesday for the Friday be at the Main Art Galley TODAY edition at 11:00 a.m. Ads may be sub­ mitted only to room 231-3 (in the on the mezzanine armed with georgian offices) of the Hall Building. FURNISHED rooms - SI3.50 - S15 weekly. N.P.I). CLUB: Prof. Arnopolis - Pot Pouri. Question and answers All facilities. Linen, phone, cooking faci­ his reams of rhyme. For the in H. 413 at 1.00 P.M. lities available. Apply 1411 Towers evenings or phone 935-0906. interest of all creative souls, GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY: Will all malcontents,activists, FOR SALE ROOM for male student near Sir Geo: W. the session will commence at radicals, etc... registered in any Geographic Courses, s.v.p. attend BASE GUITAR and amplifier. SI50 or best University. 937-9012 evenings. 9.00 PM, Friday, December 1. offer. Phone after 5 pm. 626-5776. this important meeting to voice dissent, assent, etc... in N- 2F, Admission is 50c and wine and at 2.00 P.M. SPRITE - l%5. 20.000 miles, radio, snow li MISCELLANEOUS res. Gary 366-7316 evenings. cheese will be served at the WEST INDIAN SOCIETY: BOOKS - Hardcover, paperbacks, approx. conclusion of the reading. PARTY or Dance - Swing out with the best 4()°.» off. Business. Political Science. His­ There will he a talk by Dr. Cheddi Jagan, in H-420 at 1.00 P.M. bands in (own. Book now through Boom tory. Philosophy. Psychology. Sexology. Enterprises. 681-2698. 276-6952. 482-7056. All club members, and anyone interested in West Indian affairs Computers, etc. David 4X2-2416. Part time female for distributors is welcome. S P R IT E 1066. 16.0(H) m i., lik e n ew . S1200. WANTED of unique cosmetics More sales - higher Returning to school. 677-9411 loc. 254. 9 to percentage. Demonstration, sales training 5. Toni Moore. SATURDAY NOVEMBER 25 provided. Call 739-9341. 731-6286. 526-6772. FOR SALE - Two snow tires - 5.90 x 14. For Use our MG-B. TR-4. etc. Excellent condition. S20. ALUMNI ASSOCIATION: will hold a general meeting in h-110 Call Neil. 744-6667 after 6 pm. at 10.30 P.M. to elect the executive representatives for the Grad Classifieds class of '68. TYPING

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For information call London Life Insurance Company 487-2477 Head Office: London, Canada the georgian, November 24, 1967 / 3 McGill opinion poll results: don’t drop charges, no strike In an opinion poll carried out Wednesday In cutive for calling the vote without consulting the Students' Society Executive, students at Council first. McGill rejected the proposal that the Univer­ Council members endorsed the results uncon­ sity Administration should "drop charges against ditionally. but said in future till such plebiscites McGill Daily Editor Peter Allnutt, Supplement must be called by the whole Council. Editor Pierre Fournier anti columnist John Fe- Council President Peter Smith said, "this is kete. the only way we know what the campus thinks." The vote was 2964 against dropping charges Monday night, nine Council members issued anti 2453 for. a statement objecting in part to the way the On the second section of the poll, the stu questions in the poll were worded. It said, "ques­ dents also voted, by a vote of 4117 to 1296, a stri­ tions can often be unwittingly worded so as to ke on the McGill Daily issue. beg answers, or so as to confuse the issue in Of the approximately 14,(XX) students on cam­ question with other related but extraneous to­ pus. 5417 east ballots, the largesQhimout since pics." a UGEQ referendum a year ago.. SDU leader Stan Grey also said that the ques­ In grappling with the results of the poll Wed­ tions on the poll had been so worded as to pro­ nesday night. Students' Council waded through duce ;t certain type of reaction and answer. 2 1/2hours of tedious debate before declaring Allnutt and Fournier appeared before the the plebiscite "a true statement of campus opi­ Senate Disiplinary Committee Thursday. The nion." Committee is not expected to take action until Several Council members attacked the exe­ after several more week^of hearings. U.S. Army infiltrates Washington anti-Vietnam march Three engineering students who want jobs with Dow Che­ WASHING I ON (CUP-LNSi- Teams of U.S. Great Society comes apart at the seams. mical Company this summer try to climb over some of the 80 faculty and stu­ dents sitting-in outside the U of T placement service building. Army "infiltrators," dressed like hippies, were As reported on television (NBC), this "mock spread through the crowd of demonstrators riot" included squads of troops dressed like the during the anti-war demonstration at the Pen­ Army thinks rioters dress (complete with beards U of T protestors call truce tagon October 21. and signs proclaiming the virtues of acid), and “There were more men infiltrated by us into . behaving like the Army thinks rioters behave Toronto (CUP) -- The protest Council. the crowd at this demonstration than at any (charging the troops, grabbing their rifles, etc.). against Dow Chemical Co. re­ The demonstrators sent math event 1 can remember. Our infiltrators were the Thus the U.S. Army put teams of “the worst cruiting at the university of Prof. Chandler Davis to ask worst looking ones out there," Col. George looking ones out there” into the crowd of de­ Toronto ended Tuesday in sub­ for a statement from the admi­ Creel, Assistant Chief of the Army's public in­ monstrators after telling them to behave like de­ freezing weather. nistration. On behalf of the de­ formation office, told a George Washington monstrators at what the Army and the mass Monday, eighty students and monstrators he asked that all University public relations class last week. media all expected to be a riot. some professors sat on the steps recruiting by Dow be banned Exactly what role the "infiltrators" played du­ Is it odd to assume that some of them follow­ of the University Placement until the entire matter is set­ ring the demonstration was left un-clear by the ed orders? Building and the Dow Repre­ tled to the satisfaction of the Colonel, who began clamming up when asked This is perhaps too sinister a thought for sentative promised not to re­ student body. He got no answer for more information by students. people who still want to believe that our mili­ turn to the campus. so the sit-in adjourned until “They were in radio contact with each other tary commanders are really good follows who Tuesday the demonstrators after the council meeting sche­ and with the Army operations center in the Pen­ make little mistakes occasionally. turned their anger toward the duled for Wednesday night. tagon," he said, and they acted in disciplined But if the Pentagon can send 500,000 troops administration as they gathered Acting University of Toron­ units, "with certain people designated to make and millions of tons of bombs down on a small on the steps of the University to President John Sword said decisions." Asian country in the name of peace, why should Administration Building. They Wednesday the university "How many infiltrators were there?" a stu­ it hesitate to send a few riot-starters into its said their purpose was to de­ would not tolerate any violen­ dent asked. "Enough " saicl the Colonel. own parking lots in the name of crowd con­ mand that the administration ce in connection with demons­ Would the Colonel give this information to trol? place the matter of job recruit­ trations of any sort on the U of the press? “Well, it's not the kind of story we Were the “demonstrators" the Pentagon said ing in the hands of the Students’ T campus. push. 1 say this in a certain academic license." were tear-gassing themselves really “demon­ (No one asked him what he meant by “academic strators" or “infiltrators?” UGEQ MEETING TODAY license"; apparently it means you can say things Were the soldiers who supposedly defected Room 110 — 12.00 NOON — All students must present I.D. to students you wouldn't say to real people.) from the line of troops just guys who suddenly at door. — No overcoats or briefcases to be brought into au­ One wonders how many TV cameramen, ea­ remembered that they had received a diffe­ ditorium. — Doors close when seating capacity is reached. ger to find their perfect stereotype of hippie rent duty assignment that day? —Enter by front door only. Julius Fleischer demonstrator, spent their time filming no one Was the white guy waving the “No Vietna­ Office of Internal Vice-President but the "worst looking ones there,” which Col. mese Ever Called Me Nigger" sign really an in­ Creel and the Army public relations machine filtrator counting demonstrators and paying had conveniently supplied. no attention to what sign he had picked up? What role did the Armv infiltrators among the Was the whole October 21 demonstration re­ demonstrators play in the "violence of the de­ ally a spectacular side-show staged by the U.S. B’NAI BRITH HILLEL PRESENTS monstrators" against the troops? One does not Army with technical assistance from DarylF. have to be paranoid to imagine that the role Zanuck for the benefit of the Washington Post FINJAN COFFEE HOUSE was a large one. and NBC-TV? F e a tu rin g About a month ago the Army staged a mock Only Col. Creel knows for sure, and he isn't "riot" at Ft. Bel voir, Va. to provide training for talking because it has been rumoured that he is PHIL KANNER its troops, since more anti more of them are ex­ really a crazy pot-head demonstrator whom the pected to see duty in American cities as the peace creeps have infiltrated into the Pentagon. and the new contemporary folk sensation Ryerson students stage take-out XANADU with David Kaufman, John Schneer, Ronni Abramson, Toronto (CUP) - Five hundred Ryerson that library services will be improved when the Pete Shizgal and Beverly Scullion. Polytechnical Institute students tuesday tried to library moves to new quarters. Peggy Kinsella, empty their library’s shelves. head reference librarian, said she didn’t know SATURDAY, DECEMBER 2, - 8.30 P.M. The move was in protest to what leaders say when the move would take place. at HILLEL HOUSE, 3460 Stanley Street is the lowest books-per-student ratio in Canada “First it was to be moved last fall. Then it was -4.8 books. December. Now, it’s January,” she said. ADMISSION* The protest fall short of its objective -- about The protest has support from the student Members 250 2,500 books were taken out before the protest council. The Daily Ryersonian, a campus news­ Non-members 750 fizzled. The library holds about 26,000 titles. paper, carried a front-page editorial Monday The Administration pointed out repeatedly and Tuesday urging all students to take part. 4 / the georgian, November 24, 1967 editorial

I

Speech Another Apology entire effect is lost, and worse lingual province. , besmirched to the extent that As stated in The Montreal Needed we have lost sympathy which Star of Friday, Nov. 10th, 1967, Editor, the georgian: might previously have loomed U.G.E.Q. paid the sum of $200.00 last April, to the Val- Friday, Nov. 17 was designat­ within the non-committed. Preach lieres-Gagnon Defence Fund, ed as an international day of Mr. Bassior gave an excellent , to pay legal costs of two accus­ example of how public image protest against the war in Vi­ ed separatist terrorists. This etnam. To express solidarity for and support could be strengthe­ contribution by U.G.E.Q. and Screech this cause a staunch gathering ned. “Wash the American flag towards separatism in , of Georgians, banners and rather than burn it.” In this irrevocably expresses U.G. pickets in hand, sojourned to manner the tendency for dis­ E.Q.’s political aspirations in Dominion Square where other gust created by the latter would this province. Last Monday during the fourth in a series of Viet participating schools were con­ not emerge and the former me­ U.G.E.Q. was created solely Nam lectures Professor Eugene Genovese unleashed gregating for the subsequent thod is not only peaceful but in the interest of student acti­ vities, and the actions of these march to the American Consu­ more symbolic of what the ac­ a vitriolic and uncalled for attack on David Orton, separatist terrorists cannot be late on McGregor Street. tual purpose is. We should not a lecturer of the Sociology Department. The jist of categorized under the heading have to be reminded that it is Genovese's thrust centred around an article on Che The demonstration, organiz­ of extra-curricular activities. American foreign policy which Guevera in a previous addition of THE GEORGIAN. ed in Quebec by UGEQ and Fortunately, U.G.E.Q.’s true ratified by our students’ coun­ we condemn, not Americans. Professor Genevese seems to believe that those de­ colors have come to light, along cil as a condemnation of “all (They protest too it seems). with its separatist policies and siring immediate action of a revolutionary nature are sides involved in the war,” It appeared to me that seve­ intentions for the future of inimical to its cause. He asks "what heroism, besides became a complete fiasco. ral students who shouted “Go Quebec. the purely verbal, has he displayed that he is so quick The protest evolved into a Home Yankee” meant no lon­ The question that should be to malign the rest of us?" totally one-sided attack at the ger just from Vietnam. These answered in the coming refe­ rendum is whether or not Sir An analogous question might be directed at Profes­ US consulate with the spirit personal feelings should have George Williams University and behaviour of the partici­ been left at home. (Let me note sor Genovese, who implies that he is speaking as a should be represented by a pants nowhere approaching here that I feel Georgians in member of the "'enlightened" left. What, one might separatist inclined organiza­ general were well-behaved in ask, has the professor risked or sacrificed on behalf the bounds of decorum and tion. If the students of S.G.W.U. spirit, i.e. were there for peace) of his convictions? How will debate and invective help intellectualism generally expec­ wish to stand behind separa­ Everyone wants peace but lo cure the obvious social and political maladies that ted from university students. tism in the province of Quebec, The unprovoked breaking of the only way to ever realize' then by all means they should beset our society? Orton proposes a positive solution. windows and splattering of that ideal is to first achieve vote for the continuation of His solution is immediate revolution. Whether it is paint all over the consulate the requirement of inner peace, our membership in U.G.E.Q. to be violent or peaceful is not relevent. Whether Pro­ with the direct intention of and stop showing the world Yet, those students (and hope­ fessor Genovese concurs with this proposition or not, defacing and destroying is a what hypocrites we are, such fully the majority) who oppose separatism as a way of solving he is forced to admit that it is a positive one. Unless despicable way of voicing as was displayed on Friday night. Quebec’s problems, have a he is able to offer cogent alternatives it would be­ disapproval and cannot be con­ simple decision to make in the Support peace or I’ll kill hoove him to withhold his criticisms. doned. The right to dissent is coming referendum, undoubta- Professor Genovese implied that Orton is incapable one of the bulwarks of our you! bly one of nullification of mem­ and unqualified to speak out, on the subject in ques­ free democratic society, but Hilda Reisman bership from U.G.E.Q. If we tion. The Professor has clearly forgotten that past when this privilege is abused wish to have the voice of oppo­ sition to separatism heard in revolutions have been effected by academically in­ it turns into license. It is at this point that a line must be this province, then by remain­ capable and unqualified people. The time for debate "UGEQ’s drawn between rationally ac­ ing in U.G.E.Q., this voice has passed. The time for action is here. We are con­ cepted means of protest and will be stifled and our inte­ True Colors” rests suffocated. fronted with a situation that deems action not only disgraceful methods which do desirable but necessary. Whether or not these mea­ S.G.W.U. pays membership nothing but blot the image of Editor, the georgian; fees of $7,400.00 annually to sures are taken by people of Professor Genovese's the schools involved. In recent weeks much con­ U.G.E.Q., a rather high price eminence is not important. It is not likely that such I recall that when the three troversy has arisen over the to pay towards an organiza­ a man would be willing to risk this eminence in any student representatives from possible withdrawal of mem­ tion that does not represent venture which might imperil it. the National Liberation Front bership by S.G.W.U. from the views of the students of of Vietnam spoke'at Sir Geor­ l’Union Generale des Etudi- this University. ge under the sponsorship of ants du Quebec. For these reasons we must UGEQ and a debacle ensued, I personally feel that imme­ withdraw our membership from diate withdrawal from this uni- U.G.E.Q. without further he­ council lodged a formal apo­ lingual organization is our only sitation. logy. Similarly I call upon coun­ Twinkle possible choice, in this multi­ Lionel Merson , cil to formally apologize to American Consulate officials for the actions of the Sir Geor­ ge students who were part and Twinkle parcel of the mob on Friday. tfCue gj

to have attended the Vietnam Teach-In on Friday received \ the rare treat of hearing Mr. J. Weinstein defend his cock- sucking theory. Actually, it Guillan, Arts... are a great asset to Canada and wasn’t so much a rare treat as that their survival is a neces­ an old and familiar pleasure. Editor, the georgian: i The birds is come sity. As a matter of fact, my best Mr Weinstein's rather jerky I did a nasty thing the other friend is French Canadian and style stimultates us; but, in a day and checked the student I would never sell his friend­ way we were also puzzled. directory. Much to my disap­ ship for that of the U.S. Does What motivated his choice of by pointment and disillusionment this still mean that I am an anti- style? and dismay I discovered that French bigot? ELLIOT BLINDER this cat, Robert Guillan of We must immediately dis­ whom 1 was so vicariously Therefore, 1 am proud to miss the assumption that he was LIBERATION News Service proud (imagine, a student in wave a Canadian flag for it attempting to persuade the Sir George, writing for Le shows my feeling for Canada straight and the uncommitted As most birds begin flock­ give the Tavern a Hollywood Monde) was not a member of and for Quebec, and not for members of his audience of the ing South for the winter, aura.” our august student body. The UG EQ which isn’t fully re­ absurdity of Johnson and his some of what's fowl about conclusion I reached after read­ presenting the Voice of En­ administration. Even some ■ the White House was mak-' ing those imaginatively titled “One enterprising young glish speaking students. Thus of those little revolutionary ing headlines this week in articles (Vietnam Part I etc.) ' lady with a guitar in hand the writer of the article should chickees. they tried not to Washington's society co­ was that the georgian was print­ tried to sit-in right on the apologize to us concerned squirm. But gosh, how were lumns. ing articles from external sourc­ pavement in front of the Canadians, for his naive pseu- they to know that social chan­ Lady Bird Johnson, in an es. Then I remembered that club. But it didn’t work. do-Canadianism reflect only ge could get this sticky? interview with The Evening one of the reasons that the Police hustled Joey Holm separatist aspirations. Star, described life in the Georgian is not merely a paper right along, guitar and all. Mr. Weinstein must have executive mansion as inten­ describing social events is She didn't get to strum a note considered the possibility of se: “Awareness of this house because it is here to educate as she scrambled up from her effects such as these. After is like a shot of adrenalin.” our apathetic student body. chilly pavement perch." The family, she said, “has Way I figure it is that education Non-teach-in all, he made very sure to in­ form us that he could also drawn closer together than implies presenting both Editor, the georgian “Indoors all was gay and play the role of social scien­ we have ever been in our sides of the story. Like, if all glamorous as the guests, 1 stand corrected. I thought tist. And social scientists, in lives -- there’s just four of the articles condemning the spanning all ages, dined on the purpose of a teach-in was to their terribly earnest fashion, us in the same boat." American stance in the war, poached filet of sole with educate people on certain is­ have worked long hours to find were written by students well, sues. To let them hear both cardinal sauce, capon with out about communicator cre­ Though there has been no O.K. its a student paper. But sides and then let them make ham, wild rice and aspara­ dibility. word as to what boat young when the g eorgian, using ex­ up their own mind. After which gus, green salad and pine­ Patrick Nugent is in, it cer­ ternal reporting and present­ delegates from both sides ask apple souffle with straw­ Perhaps, then, Mr. Weins­ tainly is not one bound for ing, exclusively, one version; for support, (eg. in the form berries and whipped cream." tein’s style simply reflected Vietnam. However, when as­ then it is not educating, but ra­ of a march). ther it is propagandizing. The his basic humanity, his need to ked how she felt about her g eorgian purpotedly presses be loved. My how groovy he future son-in-law. Captain Even the President and Last friday Georgians were for democracy and freedom of was. Charles Robb, going to war, First Lady attended their not educated about the Viet­ daughter’s engagement ce­ press. By not reporting both Mrs. Johnson replied, “Like nam issue. We were subjected lebration for 40 minutes. sides it is not educating but Whatever his thing might be, any mother, or mother-in- to propaganda. We were asked ramming their opinions down he did titillate us, and, in fact, law, 1 feel concerned and I’ll to sympathize with a draft- convinced us that his social be praying. But I'll always Brother-in-law Patrick, our throats. This is a repre- dodger and a Vietnam war ve­ science theory has wide appli­ be very proud. I like that with the expertise of one who sion of Freedom of speech teran. We heard how wrong cability. young man and I'm glad has been through it all be­ and thought. How much longer the American policy is from there are folks like him fore, toasted the couple, are we to be subjected to to- knowledgable people. But we Mr. Weinstein was sucking! fighting for us.” thanking the Johnsons “for taiiatarianism of the Press? did not hear both sides of the We, if not he, almost came off. the two most wonderful and story. People who are pro-war Peter Klein David H. Andres understanding girls in the were not asked to talk, they When asked for comment Edgar B. Zurif country -- Lynda and Luci.” were even suppressed from tal­ Dept, of Psychology about the recent anti-war king. demonstration, the First Made in Quebec Lady said that when she anti At her shower next after­ Editor, the georgian: The Students’ Association, the President drove around noon, Lynda Bird “was smart With regards to the article Scum the georgian , and Comfru, Washington that weekend. in a white culotte dress, in last Tuesday’s georgian the radical organization in “I was thinking, by gosh, brown patent leather shoes concerning the anti-UGEQ. Sir George that organized o u r Editor, the georgian what a big clean-up bill this and bag and brown textur- Georgians who, as stated, have ed stockings.?’and. accord­ teach-in, are all admittedly You have in my opinion and city was going to face. If “Made in U.S.A.” written all ing to Evening Star colum­ anti-American over the Viet­ in the opinion of all clean think­ must be ankle deep in the over them. After reading this ing individuals hit the lowest nam issue. Well does that cons­ trash they left...to some ex­ nist Ymelda Dixon, “Luci propaganda I realized that the ebb of degradation by invit­ titute all of the students in tent that demonstration was Nugent was gay in bright writer wasn’t totally i aware ing the writer of the unfavor­ canary yellow,” the perfect Sir George. Don’t we get to the fruits of affluence and of all the facts and was there­ able article to address the permissiveness...It was about color. make up our own mind. students. But the students fore filling in the blank spa­ as unconstructive a work as themselves have hit even lower ces with unbelievable trash 1 can remember seeing. I The blame lies with the Stu­ by giving the man (that is too Lady Bird, according to like his American countpart feel boiling up in me a feel­ dents’ Association. When an or­ good a word for this thing) Ymelda, “had to dash off to Paul Krassner. ing which is shared by mil­ ganization presents one side of an ovation! What of the pa­ join her husband for the ma­ I am one of those fervent rents of these students and I lions of Americans -- that a story, it should not be called tinee performance of ‘Hello flag-wavers who considers him­ use the term loosley. Do they we've got to start having a teach-in. One is not educated Dolly." Despite the joy of self as a Canadian first and a also think that this degraded more respect for the law -- unless he hears both sides of “Dolly,” said Ymelda, “it Quebecer second and thus subhuman is worth listening to? that we must start more the story. And the Student As­ must have been a wrench for I would like to make it empha­ What about your own mother, firmly enforcing the law". tically clear that I would never sociation allowed a biast (sic) how does she stand? 1 guess he the loving mother to leave welcome living under “M other organization to present a teach- could not have had one! The the pile of presents stacked America’s” flag. Obviously the in. whole bunch of you should A Washington Post soci­ in the drawing room unopen­ be ashamed to be even in the writer has provided this Ameri­ ety columnist described ano­ ed.” same room with such a thing. canism angle as a conducive I cannot make up my own ther kind of demonstration camouflage tactic for cover­ mind on the Vietnam issue be­ Don’t try to give me the story this week, one that took Nevertheless , Lynda did ing over the glaring faults of cause I haven’t heard the who­ of freedom of the press as por­ place at the engagement open her presents, ranging UGEQ. le story. I suggest that the SA nography can always be ob­ party thrown for Lynda all the way from peignoirs Perhaps, however, he thinks rectify its mistake by presen­ tained under the counter where Bird Johnson on Friday to mini-slips. Mrs. Robert UGEQ is doing a fantastic job ting us with a true “teach-in” it belongs, for individuals low night in a Georgetown night McNamara drew rave noti­ in writing French and English on Vietnam. enough to stoop there but not club: “Lynda’s engagement for the upper-level who does ces from Ymelda, as she Canadians. Sam Chaim party made a big night of it not enjoy dirt and lower than “ingeniously wrapped her Well, if so, does he consi­ for Georgetown. The crowd - dirt as this man. Must all people gift, a nightgown, in a kitchen der financing two separatists lined up across M Street see filth, keep it hidden where towel which had a picture of in court, and not contributing Weinstein grooves and cars slowed down to dirty minds can revel in it, as the White House on it.” to any centennial project worth it seems they do, but spare the watch the photographers an honorable mention. Editor, the georgian: other please. I -believe that Fr. Canadians Those of us fortunate enough Claire Horelt J 6 / the georgian, November 24, 1967

LEARN TO TYPE The intellectual Save Money and Time Courses offered Saturday morning and / or late afternoon stumbling block INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCTION Special Rates For Students! 2052 St. Catherine St.W. Rm. 103 by Peter Shaw For information tel.: 933-6896 Senior Staff Writer

Throughout time, man has been hampered by NO ULTIMATES EXIST gospel - that which is holy, untouchables irre­ proachable. The over-powering authority given Front the immediate past, a resoundingly si­ LIBRARY OPENS SUNDAY to ideals by their worshipers plague men's lives gnificant collection of proof shows that ratio­ to an even greater degree in today's world of nally - though this statement is a contradiction - accelerated life-processes. no ultimates exist. Matter can be changed into The Reading and Reference Rooms of the Main Library, energy, lightning is caused by electricity. Se­ Norris Building, w ill be open as study areas priortothe The student, searching for truth and acquir­ vered spinal chords can be successfully rejoin­ e xa m in a tio n s. ing the skills to run his life - and that of the ed - these are all contradictions of previously world - must strive to understand the nature of known facts. Laws, morals, religion, constitu­ divine authority. tions - all these gospels vary and are changed. November 26 December 10 And so they have to. The very nature of life is the organized development of matter and energy. December 3 December 17 OPPOSING FORCES 1:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. Dogma is the pivot point around which rotate the ABSOLUTES A HINDERANCE opposing forces of Conservatism and Radica­ lism. Conservatism and Radicalism relate to the students' struggles with the educational system, Life then, develops constantly. Therefore, to the generation-gap, politics in its purest form - keep the discrepancy between what happens in short many pressing issues of today. and what is understood to a minimum, or per­ haps even to eliminate the discrepancy, the human mind must have the freedom to develop To gain a clearer picture of the dogmatic ele­ at full capacity. Any form of absolute is a hind- ment. one must look to the nature of intellectual erance to this cause since they form boarders GRADUATING development. Knowledge consists of two basic to the field of knowledge. If the human mind has building blocks - facts and the relationship bet­ the will and the courage to sever all its anchor ween these facts. Since the beginning of man’s chains, the result seems limitless. history, he has been observing facts and formu­ People who believe gospels of any kind, feel STUDENTS lating relationships. However, thought places that a higher authority, say logic, a god, duty, second to survival on the list of natural priori­ reigns above their capabilities of understanding. ties. Therefore, Adam was very busy staying ali­ More specifically, they shrug their shoulders ACCOUNTANCY NEEDS ve and had little time to think. Also, his thought and say they are doing what they are supposed started from scratch, and he had no previous to. The dramatic irony of this situation is that knowledge to build his own upon. Result - there each individual helps control the world to a UNIVERSITY GRADUATES was a gigantic discrepancy between what he greater or lesser extent. We are in control whe­ rationally thought out and what he observed. ther we know it or not. He then created gods. In the past, the destiny of the world has been Graduates of Arts, Science, Commerce and Enginee­ left in the hands of a ruling elite by virtue of their ring have been taught to think clearly and express In time man’s gods developed into sophisti­ divine authority. Notoriously, their underlying driving force has been predominately either themselves concisely and effectively in speech and cated crutches called dogma or absolutes. The power-lust or greed. Today, in the wake of im­ writing. Professional accountancy needs these attri- absolute, like all tools - which in the broad sense mediate danger, the individual must wrest his butes and richly rewards those who possess and apply of the word can be called crutches - has been used two distinct ways by two different types of peo­ soverign right of self-rule intellectually and them and demonstrate an interest in business affairs. ple. One type used them as rational devices; socially and he must exercise his rights respon­ A vital need in professional accountancy is for people the other used them to rationalize. sibly to insure the life of his world. who know how to tackle a problem, how to go about getting information and finding answers, how to think things out for themselves.

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by: Juan Rodriguez

This whole controversy over the re­ mation. An "outrageous” article is thus the “National Inquirer” or "Midnight”. and smut and crap. He throws it in their printing of the Paul Krassner article, intended to shock its reader into sensi­ The article is not unlike “Parents Eat faces. And it’s just what they wanted, “The Parts that were Left Out of the tivity and sensibility. Krassner's arti­ Child For Breakfast!” or “19-YR OLD isn’t it? But there’s the hitch; it was too Kennedy Book”, by the McGill Daily cle, it seems to me, is a much more BOY GIVES BIRTH!” dirty, too crass for them Kec»use it re­ has been extremely pertinent in that complicated, “tactile" type of satire. vealed so blatantly what the readers few have really discovered the real His piece was meant to shock, all right, motives were in approaching the arti­ Suppose the Krassner article appear­ point of the article. The uproar has cle. but the shock was not meant to produce ed in Midnight. The type of person who pointed out so glaringly those human an examination of the credibility of faithfully goes out every week and weaknesses so inherent in us that we the story. It was intended to shock it's buys that paper would probably voice And that’s what people are really refuse to see, or admit, them. reader into examining the reasons and mild surprise over the article. Let’s mad at. Krassner has said something no motivations behind his outrage. Ir. this face it, it’s juicy. And then he would one caught up in an ideology is prepared respect, it was a tactile, involving ar­ lick his chops and go on to the next to admit; No one has a monopoly on From the outset of the Krassner ticle. That is the ultimate reason there page. There would be little or no ou­ righteousness or filth. He shoved it right crisis it has been presumed that 1) the was such a violent reaction over it - trage because that is what he expected in the lily white faces of all the Beau­ article in question was a satire against it was an article you couldn't escape and wanted to read. And he knows it. tiful People - you’re really no different Lyndon Johnson, 2) and if you go “dee­ from. He reads Midnight for no other purpose from the rest, and all the learning and per”, it was a satire pointing out the in­ that to get a little thrill here, a slight facades in the world will not hide it. sensitivity of a society of people who hard-on there. And he accepts his moti­ Krassner said the unsayable. The ugli­ refuse to get worked up over the slaugh­ Let us take a look at the people who ve, and most important of all, he’s not ness in people is a reality, and efforts ter of the Vietnamese people and their might come to read this article. “The really ashamed of it either. In other to hide this reality only serve to com­ land, and 3) Paul Krassner is a dirty Parts that were Left Out of the Kennedy words, he's a pretty honest fellow. pound this ugliness. The facf that peo­ young man. Now, suppose that none of Book" first appeared in “The Realist”, Now with your “Realist” reader, well, ple are obscene, in their daily snigger­ these three points should be welcomed a publication with a circulation of about it’s a different story. He reads the arti­ ing and silent quest for soul-satisfying with de facto acceptance. Suppose that 60,000. “The Realist” is prirrjarily read cle for the same reason a Midnight rea­ dirt, does not remove the right for those there are other factors, ideas, and con­ by students, New Lefters, pseudo-revo­ der would read it. He wants to get his who can see this obscenity to satirize cepts of satire involved in the Krassner lutionaries, iconoclasts, intellectuals jollies, wants his thrills. He’s got this it. Krassner is catching people in the article, and its subsequent uproar, other and rabblerousers - an audience, you crazy hate of Johnson, and he sees the act of being ugly and obscene. I think than the ones mentioned above. If we might say, that is slightly more aware headlines, “The Parts That Were Left that is what is really important here, come to approach some “new” suppo­ and sensitive than your average run-of- Out Of The Kennedy Book” (“Parents and I cannot see how Krassner could sitions, then we are entering a new the-mill slobby Life-N.Y. Daily News Eat Kids For Breakfast”) and he licks have done it any differently. ball game. readers. Thus, if the article was a satire against its readers, it was a satire against his lips. Boy oh boy, here it is, the real the so called “sensitive” intellectual thing. He wants this dirt and perver­ Paul Krassner wrote an article that a Here are some ideas. community. I think that the article sion because it will satisfy and prove all lot of people, intelligent lovely Beauti­ was written with the express purpose the theories he has about that awful ter­ ful People, were dying to read when The accepted definition of a satire of pointing out that intellectuals and All rible BogeyMan Johnson. they saw it’s title. It was dirty, crude, is that it is an exageration and sarcasm Of Those Beautiful People Out There obscene, horrible, crass and pornogra­ of facts presented so as to prod the are just as susceptible to the motives So Krassner knows this, and he really phic. It was sacrilegeous. And it was reader to come to examine this infor­ that would spur on a person to read goes all the way, gives them lotsa dirt a masterpiece.

Jagan denounces the CIA

by Douglas Hutchings

Before an enthusiastic crowd of 300, over half of Burnham, a puppet of Washington, has since led the Jagan claimed Guyana had been doing a good trade which were West Indians, Dr. Cheddi Jagan former country into the capitalist camp by providing “tax with Cuba before the Burnham-C.I.A. takeover, but Prime Minister of Guyana painted a black picture holidays” for U.S. and Canadian corporations and by now they no longer sell to Cuba. Instead, they sell of what has happened in Guyana since his overthrow providing cheap labour fettered by anti-strike legis­ their rice at a lower price to America and her allies. in 1964. lation. He compared Guyana to Jamaica - which has hand­ He told how the Central Intelligence Agency ex­ ed its bauxite to foreigners and which also has a false ploited his split with Forbes Burnham (a negro, now “The problem for Guyana and the whole third prosperity built on a stagnant economy. Jamaica’s Prime Minister) to foment the race riots which led to world,” Jagan said, “is not a shortage of capital - it’s urban unemployment rate is 18% and rising, while pro­ a suspension of the constitution by Britain and Ja- just that all the capital is foreign-owned and the pro­ fits from the raw materials flow out of the country. gan's subsequent downfall. fits are all leaving the country.” He explained that, thanks to low wages ($10-$15 a week) foreign corpora­ “Guyana’s troubles are not because of race diffe­ Jagan repeated the charges he made at Sir George tions are often able to double their money in just rences, but because of class differences”, Jagan said. Williams on Nov. 11, 1965, that the C.I.A. is to blame three years. And, at the end of the five-year “tax holi­ "There is no neutralist camp. All the real neutralists for Guyana's problems and for his own personal woes. day" granted by Burnham's government, most of these were toppled a long time ago by the C.I.A. Now there These charges were substanciated by the London companies pack up for home or else re-establish them­ are only two camps - the Imperialists and the Anti­ Sunday Times of April 19, 1967; selves under another name and apply for another imperialists.” He then compared China’s progress to “As coups go. it was not expensive; over five years five-year period tax-free. India’s bankrupcy, and called for a united front of all the C.I.A. paid out something over §700,000. For the factions opposed to neo-colonialism, and an end to colony, British Guyana, the result was 170 dead, un­ leftist “hair splitting” . told hundreds wounded, roughly $28,000,000 worth Jagan blamed the C.I.A. for the ousting of Nkruhma, of damage to the economy and a legacy of racial bit­ Ben Bella, Juan Bosch, Guzman (Guatemala presi­ Jagan was then given a rousing applause - particu­ terness.” dent, ousted 1954) and, of course, Jagan himself. larly by those students from undeveloped countries. 8 / the georgian, November 24, 1967

Confessions of a hardened peacenik: Announcement How 1 Learned to Spear Cops With My Peace Placard, or to UNIVERSITY STUDENTS The death The Northern Miner, the foremost authority on Canada's mining industry, now extends to students a special yearly subscription rate. of non-violence This weekly mining newspaper published con­ tinuously since 1915 has the largest mining Thursday December 14th circulation in the world. It is a valuable For many students, politi­ Friday December 15th 8:30 P.M. to blow the whistle, so some source of information for those engaged in, Tickets: $2.50 - $3.00 - $4.00 cal awakening came on Friday one had him shot. investing in or selling to the mining industry $5.00 - $5.50 at the end of a policeman’s In 1964 Stokley Carmichael of Canada. stick. Until the riot on Mc­ and Rap Brown found out the PLACE DES ARTS Gregor Street, they’d believed hard way (at the Mississippi Start reading The Northern Miner each week c A d SALLT WILFRID-PELLETIER politics is a game having no­ Freedom Democratic Party — become acquainted with what's happen­ MOMKLAL 18 'QUEBEC . TEL.: 842-2112 thing to do with bloodshed, and Congressional Challenge) that ing, as it happens, in Canada's fast changing, they were the first to raise negroes and members of the ever expanding mining industry. the cry “Police Brutality”when underclass would never be al­ Take advantage of this special student offer. the cops did their duty and sent lowed to vote themselves into Complete the coupon below and mail it today. their clubs cracking across power. That’s one of the rea­ young skulls. But what did sons why, three years later. they expect. Detroit had to burn. Next sum­ mer will be the point of no ♦GbelRottbem Miner* Rioting is serious business. return, they say, because that’s Canada’s N ational M ining Newspaper And so is peace marching or when what used to be called 77 RIVER STREET — TORONTO 2, ONTARIO any other sort of agitation a- the civil rights movement will gainst the status quo. The mo­ turn to guerilla warfare. And mm re those in power feel threate­ that means that the U.S. Admi­ Please send me one year's subscription to The ^ O T H E O P ned, the more brutally will nistration, to preserve demo­ Northern Miner at the student subscription rate of they retaliate with against those cracy, will be free to elimina­ $5.00. Remittance enclosed. who threaten them Vietniks te the nation's second-largest racial group. Name...... FRI. NIGHT ONLY could draw a lesson from the What can the Vietnam move­ BARTH0LEMEW negro rights movement in this Address------respect. ment learn from the negroes. PLUS THREE First, both groups have found City------Z o n e ______Province.. In this early sixties the egali­ out that they can win token Sat. Night & Sun. 2-11 P.M. victories through non-disrup- School Attending . tarian demands of negroes ma­ tive, non-violent action. South­ LEE ROY PRESTON de white southerners feel threa­ Faculty______..Year of Graduation.. ern negroes are now free to vo­ & THE INNCROWD tened, so they responded with shotguns and lynch mobs. But te for the whitey of their choice and Lyndon Johnson says he RENT - A - STROBES liberal and pacifist negro lea­ ders like Martin Luther King prays for peace every night Jr., eventually succeeded in before he goes to bed. convincing the power elite that The second lesson is that vio­ negro voters could not bring lence is America’s second lan­ about significant change and guage and, to be heard, a flow that they posed no threat to of words has to be followed anyone, and soon they even had by a flow of blood. Lyndon Johnson singing We Then the mass media get in Shall Overcome. Negros were the act and carry the message Talk over your future allowed token gains only be­ all the way out to suburbia. cause their real position will But once the ‘respectable citi­ not change. zens’ are aroused, counter-ac­ tion is swift and decisive. Tanks with the Bell employment Malcome X was among the clanked through the streets of first to see through the sham Detroit; police horses galloped reps when they visit your of tokenism and he threatened (continued on page 10) campus on

NOVEMBER 29,30 DECEMBER 1

GRADS-TO-BE-IN: COMMERCE-ARTS-

Ask at your Placement Office for informative booklets and arrange for an interview now! Bell Canada Torchlight peace protest the georgian, November 24, 1967 / 9 [ c o m m e n t THE DILEMMA OF JOHN FEKETE

Little has been said, either the matter is that Fekete dis­ carefully suppressed. Equally action may prevent proper de­ of jurisdiction. The defense from tact or for other reasons, cussed the issue with both All­ striking is the McGill Daily’s fence of the case, Fekete and of the article would not be as about the behavior of editors nutt and Fournier for a whole lack of coverage of any of the his lawyer are not alone. Six­ important from his point of Allnutt and Fournier since the half day, that he made every developments of the affair, the teen chairmen of departments view. The segment of the stu­ beginning of the Daily affair. attempt to warn them of the up­ most newsworthy item on of McGill have handed in a dent population which is sup­ 1 cannot find within myself roar that was predictable, while campus. (As for Fournier, he brief asking the Senate to post­ porting Fekete is also more the tact, nor do I see any rea­ they assurred him that he would shaved off his beard when he pone the case for three weeks enthusiastic about the question sons why it should not be point­ be disappointed. first had to appear before the to give them time to evaluate of jurisdiction, partly because ed out how there two editors A person who makes an apo­ Senate Committee, and later the case. (This brief of course it is emotionally more appeal­ have betrayed their cause. logy and a retraction, as All­ his sideburns as well. He also was not mentioned by the Dai­ ing and also because from the Whereas the McGill Senate nutt has, should at least be has adopted a totally apologe­ ly). Although this is not in point of view of the total fight Committee charges them with able to state what he means by tic stance.) explicit support of Fekete's for student freedom it is more action not befitting a McGill having made a mistake; but The behavior of these two case, it does express support central. student much more to the point Allnutt’s stubborn repetition of has left Fekete badly in the of his criticism of the Senate’s An additional point is that now would be the charge of this statement without any lurch. Equally strange is the procedures, and implicitly it given the Senate’s curious stand action not befitting human di­ reasons attached smacks of a behavior of the Students’ Coun­ may be a lot more. on the sort of procedures they gnity that we as observors frightened embrecement of a cil which deplored the action of wish to adhere to, it may sim­ are in a position to make. fanatical alternative. During the Senate, and the Judicial But of course the main lega­ ply not be possible to keep out the hearings Dean H.D. Woods Committee of which unani­ listic issue is whether the Se­ of court if Fekete wishes for THE MANNER OF MERCY rather sympathetically point­ mously condoned the article, nate has any jurisdiction over a humane, just, and better than That Allnutt considers him­ ed out to Allnutt the grounds on but which asked Allnutt to re­ the paper at all. 1 call this le­ ridiculous hearing. self to have made a mistake in which the article could concei­ move Fekete from the Daily. galistic because many people itself cannot be objected to, vably be defended; whereupon Allnutt however, for some don’t realize that there are FISCAL BACKLASH but the manner in which he is the latter replied that he was reason not wanting to fire actually two, mutually exclu­ The importance of these pleading for mercy, particu­ not prepared to defend the ar­ Fekete publicly, simply made sive issues. The other issue is events should not be underes­ larly at Fekete’s expense, is ticle on any grounds. (Why it clear that no material of his the debate on whether the ar­ timated by the student bodies disturbing. During the hear­ then had he allowed it to be would be accepted by the Daily ticle was condonable or not. of M c G ill and Sir George or ings he has been trying to esta­ printed?) W hen the furor first in the future, which is a rather Obviously this second issue can any other university. That this blish that Fekete somehow broke out Allnutt received a underhanded method for deal­ only be argued in the Senate if may be a historic step in the sneaked the article in question telegram of support from the ing with the situation. the Senate is not taken to court struggle for a sane educational past him, that he did not really U.S. Student Press Associa­ over the matter of jurisdiction. system is attested by the warm think about it, (the full connota­ tion, which he printed at that ONE OUT OF THREE This then constitutes the support that has come from stu­ tion of his testimony being that time. Later he received another This is why Fekete wishes dilemma that Fekete has been dents, faculty and from other he is too young or too naive and telegram which condem ned his his case to be tried seperately, placed in. If he wishes to defend universities. It is time for this innocent to really think about conciliatory behavior. This since it is clear that Allnutt the article itself he must ac­ support to take a practical anything); whereas the truth of second telegram has been and Fournier's kiss-ass stand­ cept the Senate's jurisdiction form. Fekete was to have re­ point would be somewhat da­ in the matter. If he wishes to ceived just this last Saturday maging to his own, for he alone question this jurisdiction he a thousand dollar scholarship THE COALBIN Jeannette M. Cayford of the three wishes to defend must take them to court where from the Beta Sigma Phi wo­ 436 M ayor the case may drag on for years TYPING SERVICE the freedom of the press. men's organization which had 7 B lo c k E a s t of Morgan’s and where the issue of the been awarded him last summer Professionally Typed Essays But there are other relevant above Ste. Catherine Reports — Theses — Resumes objections to the Senate’s me­ validity of the article will not and which he was counting Manuscripts — Duplicating even come up. In principle both Notes photocopied thod of dealing with the mat­ on to support him during the FOLK SINGING issues are equally important. course of this year. Spelling Corrections Free ter. The Senate makes every But there are other conside­ Friday and Saturday Special Rates for Students pretense of being a just trying Although the recepients of body, and yet it contradicts rations. these scholarships are not ap­ THE BORDERMEN 1010 St. Catherine West the standards usually applied pointed by this society but the Open from 8 p.m. Room 642, UN. 6-9052 to such bodies. It has held Association of Universities closed meetings, its compo­ and Colleges of Canada, it sition has changed from the seems that the withdrawal of first meeting and they are not the award is still the peroga- JUST AROUND THE CORNER hearing the case for the first tive of the former, for last Wed­ -Thousands of new and used books- time, some of the members hav­ nesday Fekete was informed The works of Aubrey Beardsley Paperback $ 2.95 ing been present at adminis­ that he would not be receiving Art Nouveau $ 1.75 tration and faculty meetings. the award because the organi­ Science of Being by Maharishi Mahesh $12.50 They are employing a law­ zation “could not afford bad Karsh Portfolio $10.95' yer who was instrumental in publicity”. (And .this in view formulating the charges. In of the fact that Fekete has not 1475 St. Catherine W. addition to this, although the been convicted of any offense). & eryman's 933-5675 charges have been laid publi­ Some faculty members at Mc­ Browsers Welcome cly they wish to hear the case Gill have expressed concern BOOKSHOP in private. They have made but it is not clear how much the concession of employing chance there is of getting hold ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ closed-circuit television but of the scholarship. As for the this has obvious limitations. court case, although Sheppard * You're seen the rest * It is essentially a dead, frag­ is taking it on without a salary mented medium, it is stationa­ because of its importance, the ¥ Now see the Best * ry, it can only focus on one court costs will still devolve person or small area at a time, upon Fekete and will amount at * it reduces the image drasti­ to some six hundred dollars. ¥ cally and it can edit. In short, AT * it would isolate the proceed­ ¥ ings from human reality and There will be a box in the ROOM THE TOP from the usual, natural human ¥ * georgian offices for contribu­ reactions of an audience which If Fekete chooses to defend tions. I don’t think any student the new edition of * have such an essential effect on ¥ the article in the Senate he will or faculty member is so poor court proceedings that are pu­ not have much of a chance un­ or so blind to the monumental * blic and just, in the understood ¥ THE HOT TAMALES less the Senate’s procedures are significance of the case that he sense of the term. (T.V. can & their nine piece aggregation modified. For this he will need cannot afford to contribute a fe a tu rin g * accommodate a larger number ¥ the support of his lawyer, Clau­ dollar to aid the person who has of people and for this reason de- Armand Sheppard for whom taken upon himself momenta­ DARRYL BANKS should be used, but only as an ¥ Stax Recording Artist * however the main attraction rily the full weight of our ap­ adjunct to the public hearing). o f + of the case is the possibility peal for a free and meaningful ¥ “ Open the Door To Your Heart” of establishing a very important IMPLICIT SUPPORT university community. ¥ 772 M OUNTAIN ST. |u s t B e lo w St. Antoine 937-6605 * In feeling that the Senate’s legal precedent on the point 10 / the georgian, November 24. 1967

paperbacks

Why wait in line when we are just around the corner with the largest selection of paperback books in North America. Ask our friendly person­ nel to help you find the books you require for all your hi-brow or lo- brow needs. V isit us to­ d a y or drop in between classes and browse around. Che Gueverra poster hangs over club-wielding cop. In the riot that followed 46 students were arrested.

1327 St. Catherine St. W (non-violence . . . con’t from page 8) 844-1721 through the ranks of university dents' depth of feeling against students in front of the U.S. an unjust war. TIME and NEWS­ consulate. Once it starts, vio­ WEEK do not make a practice lence tends to escalate and soon of allowing critics equal time, it becomes impossible to re­ and neither does CFCF. The treat to a tactic of non-violen­ sticks and stones were among ce. the few media left open to say, Once non-violence has been “See, I'm even prepared to go Engineering rejected (as the real negro to jail to show my contempt leaders have rejected it, and as for what Johnson is doing to many in the ‘peace- movement the Vietnamese!” rejected it) the resulting W hether or not the level of careers in violence may take one of three violence in the peace movement courses. Violence may be ai­ here and in the U.S. will conti­ med at gaining power (the vio­ nue toescallate, I cannot pre­ telecommunications lence of the Vietnamese N.L.F.) dict at this time. It all depends or violence may be purely dis­ on what other forms of expres­ ruptive to frighten, paralyse, sion are given to them. For Northern Electric Company Limited Research and or punish the enemy (Watts, example, if U.S. voters are gi­ Development Laboratories and Manufacturing Plants located Detroit riots) or, violence may ven a chance to say NO to the be purely symbolic. war in the ballot box in 1968, in Montreal, Ottawa, Belleville, Bramalea, Ontario and London. The violence on McGregor violence as a tactic will be Street, 1 believe, was violence abandoned and they will throw ON CAMPUS November 28, 29, 30th. of the symbolic type. The de­ all their energies into cam­ monstrators did not think that paigning for the most dove-like To arrange an interview appointment, they could bring America's candidate - as they did in 1964 please contact your Placement Office. war against the Vietnamese when they elected Johnson. grinding to a halt by stoning But if 1968 brings only a choice a few windows in the U.S. con­ between Johnson and Nixon or, sulate. And the violence direc­ worse yet, Johnson and Reagan, Northern Electric ted at the constables from sta­ those against the war and those COMPANY LIMITED tion ten did not help topple the sympathetic to the aims of the sold-out Liberal government. It Vietnamese National Libera­ would make more sense to take tion Front may be marching in a poke at the postmen or water- the streets again - not with pa­ meter reader. cifist placards but with Molo­ Friday's violence was merely tov cocktails and guns. Both Coca-Cola and Coke are registered trade marks which identify only the product of Coca-Cola Ltd. a form of communication - ex­ pressing symbolically the stu­ by Smokey Hashman

That group really gives ( k you the cold shoulder. I

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So fight ice with ice. Bribe them with a bottle of ice-cold Coca-Cola. For Coke has the refreshing taste you never get tired of. That’s why things go better with Coke, after Coke, after Coke. The MAN is on campus the georgian, November 24, 1967 / 11 by More hockey players needed Sports Stan Urman Loyola downs J.V.’s and in opener Comment Brahm Sand by Saul MARKOWICZ Sir George is known around the Mont­ agent, has been a thorn in the side. J.V. hockey coach. Dave through Anderson's pads. real area as being primarily a hockey After some 150 applicants had signed Dies, needs more bodies for his Before the game coach said school. Four years in succession, the up, little information concerning practi­ team - il only to keep his other “we're weak defensively". He Georgian hockey team has won the Ot- ses has been put up on the bulletin boys company on the bench. was right as the Georgians had Playing with two forward lines trouble clearing the puck from tawa-St. Lawrence 'championship', and boards. and two defensemen. the j.v.s. theirzone. They also were weak Virtually no notices are placed in the the trophy that goes along with this went down to a 7 - 1 defeat in the corners as Loyola for­ title has been all but glued in the tro­ Norris building and many concerned last Saturday in their opener wards escaped from the J.V.’s phy case. individuals found their way to the Ath­ against Loyola. checks without much difficul­ It is not secret that a good percentage letic offices as well as the georgian, The Georgians stayed in the ty- of the athletic budget is being channe­ to inquire about the last developments, game for the first twenty minu­ The goaltending was horri­ led into the inter-collegiate hockey Many applicants studying in the Norris tes as both teams left the ice ble to put it midly, as at least program and deservedly so! The Geor­ Building however, did not notice any tied. Bob Shofield scored first four goals were of the cheap gian hockey team has contributed intramural information and consequent­ and gave Sir George the lead. variety. much in the way of school spirit as well ly did not go out to the evaluation The goal came on a power play Georgian skating and hesi­ as promoting the good name of Sir practises - thus losing out on what at 13.14 as Shofield flipped tancy in shooting were the most a five footer past Loyola goaler disheartening factors of the George Williams across Canada. could be a very enjoyable extra curri­ Jim Johnson. It didn't take too game however. Hockey has reserved a prominent cular activity. long for Diyola to catch up Many times it liked as if the One Saturday evening, a practise seat in the athletic program yet what however. Four minutes later ice had melted beneath the has become of intramural hockey? had been scheduled. Many players, Loyola forward Danny Lynan skates of the Georgian players True the time and money alloted for appeared at the McGill winter arena also scored on a power play. as they were continually going this program does not compare with only to find that the dressings and Indications of a Georgian nowhere throughout the game. that of the varsity hockey team but it equipement rooms were locked. The collapse came early in the se­ Sir George did have a number should be looked after w'th some de­ only person on the ice was J.V. goalie cond period as Loyola hit the of scoring opportunities during gree o f concern on th e p a rt o f its o r­ Dave Erskine. Since no supervisor goal post in the first minute. the game, but their hesitentcy ganizer. was present and Erskine had no key, After the near fatal play the in shooting granted the Loyola the players had to satisfy their hockey Georgians struggled along but defencemen time to regain ba­ desires by taking shots on goaltender soon gave way to four Loyola lance and stop the attack. Next game for the J.V. is Up till now, trouble was encounter­ Erskine for the remainder of the eve­ goals. Steve Lowe scored two, ed in trying to locate a manager to look ning. With fourty players on the ice, Danny Lynan got his second Thursday against St. Joseph's after and organize the program. At not only one instructor, but many were of the night while captain John Teachers College at the Loyola Hutton notched his first of two. arena. By eight o'clock Thurs­ the time of this writing, however, Ha­ needed. rold Finkler had been appointed co­ Hutton scored again in the day evening. Coach Dave Dies These are only some of the problems third period as he flicked one expects to have some new faces ordinator of the program but many that newly appointed organizer Finkler over Georgian goalie Tom An­ around to join his skeleton crew difficulties now stare him in the face. must tackle if the intramural program derson. Barry Fisher finished of three veterans and eight Publicity, instead of being a boasting is to be labelled a success. the bombing as: I1" slid the puck rookies. cELDORADO 9 ELDORADO MINING AND REFINING LIMITED Eldorado representatives will be available for interviews on Campus, November 28th. Opportunities exist in the following fields: Permanent Employment: Geologists Mining Engineers Mechanical Engineers Electrical Engineers Summer Employment: Geologists (Post Grads, Undergrads ) Mining Engineers Metallurgical Engineers Mechanical Engineers Chemical Engineers Commerce (3rd year)

Contact the Student Placement Office for interview times and further information. 12 / the georgian, November 24, 1967 has rejoined the Varsity after a Six players in double figures as short stint with the JayVees. Adams was another surprise starter who played virtually Fith consecutive win Baskesball team scores the entire game at the post position. ‘Fra/e* indicated that Water polo club initial win he hail gained valuable game For Head Coach Fred Whita- experience as he scores 10 points wins again cre. the drought appears to be and grabbed his share of re­ by Lawrie CARPMAN over as his Varsity Basketball bounds. Adams just might sol­ Team chalked up its initial ve the Georgians-, height pro­ With one more game to go. The Georgian water polo team victory of this young season blems if he can continue to appears headed toward it's first undefeated season in recent this week. improve his play especially memory. The drought in question when it comes to the defensive On Saturday, Sir George toyed with it’s opposition, wallo­ stems from the Georgians' sea­ aspects of the game. ping th Kingston based RMC group at the Sir Arthur Currie son long inability to score Rod Ward. Peter Tulk were pool. The final score was 17-4 but it could have been much consistently or frequently. the other Georgians to break higher. Last Saturday, the team mana­ into double figures, with 13 For all intents and purposes the game was over at the ged 45 points in the second and 11 points respectively. end of the first half as Sir George, who held a great margin half aganist Bishops while Tues­ It is noteable that every player in play, racked up a 10-3 score against their struggling op­ day night the Varsity missed on the teams scored at least ponents. Fraser Adams the century mark by one point two points, with the exception By the end of the first quarter the^ Georgians had put five up with the Varsity again as they bombed University of of Brian Cunliffe and Yaki goals past RMC’s frustrated goaltender. Montreal 99 - 82. 16 and 15 points respectively. Mandel. Cunliffe. did not dress RMC played like old tired swimmers as they were conti­ However, the most encoura­ Hirsch has finally begun to due to a back in jury. Whita- nually caught up at the wrong end of the pool. Seven of the ging point about the University show the spring under the cre had indicated that Mandel 17 Georgian goals were scored on breakways. of Montreal contest is derived boards which he is capable of will be sent down to J-V for mo­ Leading Sir George’s latest swamp was Mike Florian who from the scoresheet which and when he combines this abi­ re grooming while at the same beat the beleagured RMC goalie 9 times. Five of his goals shows a total of six players in lity with his additional asset time he will retain Fraser A- were scored from less than five feet from the net. Florian double figures. Looking back of knowing how to drive in of­ dams. netted only one goal in the first period as Clifford Barry and over last season, this observor fensively, there is no reason On the whole, defensive lap­ Rolf Kinskoffer handled the scoring with two apiece. Barry' cannot remember a single con­ why Mike should not be one of ses were the only major weak­ later added four more. test in which the Varsity Bas­ the leading rebound men on ness displayed by the Geor- Florian started giving RM C fits in the second quarter as ketball Team either came close the squad as well as one of the ginas in this LI of M game. he scored four times. Barry scored the fifth goal of that quar­ to this total or sported such most consistent scorers, However, these may stem from ter for Sir George. a diversified attack. Carl Robb was a surprise star­ the increased emphasis on sco­ Georgian goalie Brian Scoffield played an excellent first Campoli stars again ter at guard in place of Will' ring, combined with the poor half blocking all but three of the RMC drives. For the third straight game. Jackson anti he certainlv justi­ defense of overall loseness With a 10-3 half - time bulge, the Georgians did not want Richie Campoli led tne Varsity fied Coach Whitacre's confi­ shown by both teams. to let up in the second half. They proceeded to score seven offensive attack as he scored dence in him. He illustrated Brodeur of Montreal accoun­ more to only one for their opponents and completed the rout 19 points despite playing only that like Campoli. lie can be ted for almost half his team's in embarrasing fashion. 25 minutes of basketball. In a deadly outside shooter. When total netting 37 points while Not surprisingly, RMC got worse as the half continued and discussing Campoli, it is interes­ you add this scoring touch to displaying the sharpest shooting they finished up shooting only twice at the Sir George net in ting to note that he is not simply his continual hustle anti alert­ encountered this season. the last 10 minutes. a one-way ballplayer. He is just ness, Robb should become tin There is little doubt that the POINTS AFTER; Only three players scored in the game as skilled defensively as he is able replacement for the depar­ score would have been well Mike Florian (9 goals Glifford Barry (5) and Rolf Kinshof- under the basket. Furthermore, ted Ron Truesdale. over the hundred mark had fer (3)....) Joe Roboz has been deemed ineligible for future he is a heady player who does In addition, this sudden e- Whitacre left his starters in play in the OSLAA league as he participated in a water polo not allow himself to be lured mergence of Robb as a starter for the entire contest, however, game for another team recently. This could be a hard blow into silly fouls or forget the should put some spark into Will' his insertion of all available to the team in it’s attempts for an undefeated season...Next principle that teamwork wins Jackson who is only a brief ap­ players made this victory a real and. last game for the water-logged boys is against McGill. basketball games. pearance showed signs of snap­ team effort. This is a big contest as Sir George defeated McGill 15-14 Mike Hirsch and rookie Carl ping his prolonged slump. in their previous encounter. McGill could act as the spoiler’ Robb both had by far their best Adams Returns by Stewart PHELAN in not allowing Sir George to finish the season undefeated. games of the year as they potted Big 6’7” center Fraser Adams X. Equipment for a lab course

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