, , • • , , • • , • , PRO TEM office without fees increase? The last of the great fire traps. • r -Inside Page 5-8

Volume IX, Number 6,. Toronto, Canada, October 14, 1969. Election Supplement What do you want? Where do we go from here? carllpus fn Canada. the socialists and liberals. To the And another fees referendum has By ANDY MICHALSKI In this case, it is a 'no' vote to best of my knowledge, Glendon's come to pass. The conflict of bills Tomorrow, Glendon students will council. The request for more funds, elitest structures have yet to carry versus money has reached the most be asked to approve a $ 10. fees to some people, is unjustified. Why out the same policy. There's a crucial point. increase for this year. The addi­ supply all this money for organiza­ chance for democracy at Glendon A pressing bill of $2, 400 to the tional fund's will be used for the tions that only serve a minority? yet. Students' Administrativ.e ~ Council expansion of club activities on this After all, if the majority desires to Then there?s PRO TEM. (SAC) Press awaits the fiscal year. campus. One of these 'clubs' is remain apathetic, why should they Even the most pessimistic of the With non-payment,e interest charges this newspaper. It is the gravest fork out money that they themselves disillusioned will admit that a cam­ of 1 1/2 % per month will be ap­ question to this newspaper since will literally, never see again.? pus newspaper has a definite func­ plied•. To postpone the debt for Nick Martin began coverage of the The paradox is that only when one tion to play in this community, Glnother year, and face another fees local.. sports_scene. begins to participate in any student If it cannot fullfil its role, the com- referendum, would be ludicrous.. ~''7 One 'w'onders if the Serpent of acrivity does one notice the lack nlunIty. IS...laggIng.. I the Don has had his final say in of money. TW9 years ago, when PRO TE:t\.1 All PQssible costs cut all this debacle. The polluted Don Student Council is not a fraternity, boasted four pages to its readership, meanders on, despite (according to though some may question that; and most people admitted that something After the accumulation of this Martin), the Serpen't's effqrts to L'Association Culturelle Artistique . was lacking. It just didn't look like debt, PRO TEM acquired on lease, plug, overflow thatturpid water, is, not a sororit~ and no doubt, a 'professional' newspaper in the 'adjustowriter' machines. (They and severely damage this campus some will question that. They are all remotest sense of the word. The type all the copy into even columns). beyond recognition. But then, there contributing cliques to campus life. readership and newspaper staff de­ The production, instead is always the Viet SqUirrel who The only way to change a clique, manded something better. of being done at SAC Press, is just might rescue us, steal the or its contributions, is. to join it, done in the PRO TEM offices. All doomed ballot box, and throw it weaken it, and change it.- Progress.was made. Debts -accu­ possible cost cuts have been taken. in the Don for good. The' Czech Communist Party has mulated. A fees referendum was Money that produced four pages of a purge now and then to clean out defeated. Nick Martin ,went on. newsprint two ·years ago, now pro­ Doomed ballot box duces 12 pages. In the event 'of a 'no' vote to the That doomed ballot box is the pro­ fees referendum, this newspaper duct of this college, or more ex­ will be embroiled in a financial plicitely, the non-product. If past mess bordering on chaos and pre­ events are any guage of the stu­ dent response tomorrow, it is un­ mature death. likely that there will be a 50% turn­ out at the ballot box. And, what's With the present budget it would more, how is one to expect a 2/3 be impossible to continue running majority vote in favour of the re­ at the present loss, to payoff ferendum? a huge debt, and produce a 'good One can only say that the turn­ newspaper'• out at meetings is a negative res­ Editor in Chief Graham Muir was ponse to council's request for more right, when he told the October 8 funds. And, there is an answer to general meeting called to discuss that. the budget, that "If all you want It would be simple to blame the to pay for is a crappy newspaper, problem on the catch-all phrase ­ that's what you're going to get, student apa.thy. It's no new problem but don't come to us and say it's to student leaders on any university crappy." At the bud et meetin The situation for US•• At the general meeting val of 50% of the These are the facts concerning the fees from the Student Union. of the Student Union held electorate will be necessary increase in regards to PRO TEM: . , 4. Because we have cut production costs last Wednesday it was point- . to obtain the fees increase. 1. The difference for us is $2,000. With­ in half and we ,shave expenses in many ed out that the change by It was also decided by' out the fees increase, we will receive other ways, we can put out the same size Student Council last year the people at of $4,000, with it $6,000. If we don't get that, paper of equal or better quality as much of the referendum from a the meeting, who numbered we will only be able to put out eight larger campuses whose papers have bud- two-thIrds requirement to a about twenty at the time, pages for the rest of the year. Even then, "gets up to six times as, large as ours. simple majority was uncon- to make the fees incr~ase that estimate counts on at least $4,000 5. The debts that we have to pay this year were built up last year in an attempt stitutional. for this year only. This would in advertising revenue tl mean that again next year 2. Without the increase, we might" hav~ to to produce a respectable, effective news­ In order to change the re- the student fees would only ston publishing altogether for awhile. paper. We may have to borrow money ferendum rule it is neces- be $17 and if council needed 3. Because PRO 'TEM is only a small in the immediate future to pay these debts, sary to take it to a refe- additional money a fees ref- fringe publication it does not get a great but, with the fees increase, we can pro­ rendum vote itself. There- erendum would be necess- deal of advertising revenue. The bulk and duce a good newspaper and have a balanced fore a two-thirds appro- ary again._ mainstay of ourfinancial support must come budget at the end of the year. Vote YES on fees- increase tomorrow - 2 * PRO TEM- * October 14, 1969 Council' order' to overrule group participation By DAVID STARBUCK with plagiarism. Under the and one at Atkinson next Jim Jac~ a student Facul- year' ancl 'full-time' student. new rules, an instructor re- summer. ty Councillor, retorted" Unles this is the onlychange, Orderly procedure is· ceiving a plagiarized essay, The committee recomm- '''The onus for appeal, if I suggest that this motion more important than com­ or one that he believes to ended that "in view of his an appeal does exist, should be referred to CEAS as part munity participation and o­ be plagiarized, would reject economic situation, the pe- be brought forward by the of a general re-evaluation. penness. This is one of the the essay, assign a mark titioner should carefully petitioner. The petitioner al- The petitions can only act general fundamentals laid of zero and advise the consider the advisability of ways has the right to ap - within the bounds of present -- down in the report of the student to redo the essay. transferring to part-time peal." regulations." Faculty Council's Commit­ If the assignment was re- study," because there was Echard thought that the Gregory opposed the re- tee on Rules and Procedure. done, the grade of zero would no precedent to cover his two sides were not in fun- ferral to committee. How- The report was presented be deleted and a new grade case.. damental disagreeIl?-ent. ever the referral was car- to the Council last Thurs- put in its place. Professor ried by a vote of nineteen . day at the Faculty Council WaIter Beringer who pre- "'I see no real disagreement. to seven. meeting in the Board-Senate sented the report, thought Harris objects Faculty Council has the right Room by Professor William that this was "the most sen- to interfere. Petitioners E'chard, Chairman of the sible procedure." have a right to appeal. The Reid: committee. Harris, the committee principle, in general, is Glendon is chairman, objected to the that Faculty Council allows Echard stated, "The Com­ A definition of council intervening in the the committee discretionary a success mittee was concerned with plagiarism affairs of his committee. power, but retains the right orderly operation. Too of­ to establish general gUide­ Principal Escott Reid read ten we allowed the ope­ lines for the committee," a statement in which he said "The petitions committee that he thought that the ration of Faculty Council The Committe intends to is a discretionary body with he said. to break down.," This rep­ present a definition of pla­ growth of Glendon College respect to petitions as the so far indicated that it was ort should establish "a fair giarism to Council soon. department is with respect and judicious ~ethod of Several professors ob­ Gregory then moved that a success. to departmental matters.. It "although Faculty Council reaching decisions." jected to these proposed gUi­ makes as little sense for gives the petitions commit­ "The committee was con­ delines. Faculty Council to retry pe­ He compared the 860 stu­ cerned with maximal par­ History Professor John tee general discretionary dents enroled in the Glendon titions as it would to review power with regards to the pe­ ticipation of the college com­ Bruckmann opposed the departmental problems." year of existence to 703 stu­ munity. and maximal open­ gUidelines because "if titions it conSiders, It re- dents at Brock University, . serves the right to ques- ness. However, this was sub­ there is no penaltys it is "It is not good- sense nor tion particular cases." 750 students at Trent Uni­ ordinated to the matter of an open invitation to pla­ fair justice, to the student versity and 506 students at orderly procedure." giarize." York Univeristy in their to deny already granted pe­ The motion was passed Philosophy Department titions. Neither is it fair fourth year of existence. Chairman H. S. Harris unanimously although there Reid also pointed out that Faculty Council moved to the committee to only were seven abstentions. into Committee of the Whole thought that the individual discuss ungranted peti­ David Copp"a--student Fa- Glendon had only $5,000 professor should be at li­ tions." worth of scholarships avai­ for a preliminary dis­ culty Co-uncillor then moved, whil~ cussion. The debate will con­ berty to decide the case with regard to the original lable to it this year tinue at the next meeting as he Wished. "Faculty Council should di­ problem, that "a student it would have had $132,000 with the detailed study of scuss only issues of gen­ if it had a scholarship pro­ taking from four to sixcour­ gram similar to that of York the new rules. The report was referred eral interest. If a decision ses be considered a full time Spectator attendance back to CEAS for further is made, the committee, in student." in its fourth year of exis­ reached an all-time high of examination and study. its good judgment, would re­ tence. The report of the peti­ nine as some of the st.udent view any 'caseswhich are re­ He expressed faith tl)at candidates for Faculty Coun­ tions committee was the lated to the decision."Harris subject of lively debate. Se­ College would reach its goal cil decided'that they s;hould said. Grounds for denial of 1250 students by 1972. make an appearance to find veral members objected to one decision which denied a David Cole, a student Fa­ out what it is all about.· culty Councillor withdrew The Committee on Exam- fourth year student who was English Department Chair- forced to work because of man Michael Gregory differ­ Harris then elaborated on his motion to change the inations and Academic the ground for denial of the names of the Departm~nt Standards presented some financial difficulties to take ed. The committee's discre- fou~ h - tionary powers, he believed, petition. "Present regu- of Political Science and Di­ proposed guidelines to deal only courses t IS year are limited to the extent th- lations state thateach stude­ vison of Social Science to the .".. ~\ at if a member of counCIl nt take a five course year. Department of Political Stu­ disagrees with the ruling~ The committee must- act dies and Social Studies .res­ z • - ;X~X~X~X·X·X~X·X~X~X:X1X:XIXIXIXt t­ he can refer it to council. within the concepts of cfull ~~_~ively. -~. ,~~ •,~~ (,I. ,;"I,i I,Ve, ,;(,'. ,;r ,', ,;(,', ,;r ,I, ,;,,1.i I, ,:( ,'. IV ,;( ,I, ~ ,I. 'IV IL,I, \ ,I. .I.

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~Inistered by JOHN INGLE 700 Ba, Street, Toronto, Canada UndeI written by - THE. MARITIME LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY 11 •Ft4 ----I October 14, 1969* PRO TEM * 3 Course unions wheeze Last year there was es­ By AN'DRE FOUCAULT tablished within the History and JIM ALBRIGHT department a Curriculum Committee which worked on 'Course unions gasp' is not a principle of parity between quite true these days. They students and faculty. are wheezing a bit but most According to McKay there unions have developed con­ now exists "an ideological siderably in the last two conflict" of which kind of weeks. student representation will The English department be exerted in the department. students held a meeting on The choice is then between September 24. The turnout a course union on the same proved to be disappointing lines as these that are now since only, 10 of the 500 el­ being operated in other de- · igible members were pre­ partmehts or the continuation sent. However, among the of the Curriculum Commit­ fe\v there, the reaction tee with an adVisory stu­ was one of endorsement for dent plenum. McKay endor­ the formation of the union. ses the latter. He explains that the pre­ Michael Gregory from the sent body is a responsive English faculty was there and body, and that it is able to also supported its formation deal with all the problems and said that personally he and issues that arise, cur­ was in favour of faculty­ riculum content, appoint­ student parity on all commit­ ments and course structure. tees. The formation of the Questions which will un­ English course union is still doubtably present them­ pending since the poor turn­ selves during the year may out could hardly be called be the lack of participation representative • Another of women in the department' meeting has been scheduled and its courses, an increa­ for noon, Thursday, the 16th se in the number of bilin­ Nigel Ottley was sent down to investigate the fire trucks at Proctor Field of October~ gual courses and the devel­ House. This is what he came up with. He1s done it again! opment of greater empha­ History Failure sis in Canadian History. A meeting will be called Third year student Sandy for Thursday" Oct. 20, at McKay reported this week 1 p.m. in Room 129. The about the failure in the His­ purpose of the meeting is Ontario Student Awards Program tory department to establish to discuss the problem and as of yet a course union possibly gather more sup- along the lines advocated . port for this point of view. by the Students' Council. 1'he extra four members This failure is a result of needed to have parity on a poor initial response to the committee may be e­ DEADLINE the proposition. lected. is October 31st, 1969

Important PRO TEM staff meeting, Friday atl.30 p.m. Come one, come all; all/or oneand If applications, are submitted after October 31st~ ·awards are ,one for all. The hour of decision is at hand. based on one-half of the assessed needs.

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1541 AVENUE HOAD 100 YDS. NORTH OF LAWRENCE BU.RTON AUDITORIUM 4_* PROTEM * October 14,1969 Mone'tary crisIs This paper is directly affected by the outcome of the referendum and in its own self-interest must support the request. However we cannot contain our rationale to the betternlent of only the campus news- paper. L'Araignee . which come people hope will extend the limited amount of bilingualism and biculturalism at this college. needs money to remove the debts it has incurred with installation of a sound system that was badly needed. Bruce 'Kidd's External Affairs section of the Stud­ ent Union will be greatly curtailed in its social action programme if the referendum fails to re- ceive the necessary two-thirds approval. ' $2. 500 has been earmarked by council for the bursary fund if the fees increase has student app­ roval•. The bursary aids students who find that they are having a hard time financially. This will be dropped if student fees remain the same. Cultural Affairs and the Glendon Forum, two groups that bring to this campus various people and groups will face budget cuts if t,he referendum fails. . How much more can be said about the fees, ref­ erendum? We can sho\v how the fees increase is necessary for the activities of this campus but it is up to the individual student to decide to what de­ Who is the Masked Beaver? gree they value these activities. l'he follOWing letter, written with the blood where, in general disarray; the walls are of a freshly killed evildoer and enemy of covered with irrelevent flotsdam, with some f:r.eedom, was received in .tile .PRO TEM exception, of course, of the aesthetically office yesterday. It has been translated into pleasing Sportsie's Corner; your decrepit oIson dodges a facsimile of English by our sports staff, furniture reminds me of that I've encoun­ who all speak fluent beaver. tered in some of the most immoral and The impression one walked .away with from the Po­ filthy rabbit holes of the underworld. litical Science course meeting las t week was that pear Sirs," either T.K. Olson, chairman of the department was Sirs, be warned. I give you but 24 hours very smart, or very stupid. Last night, as I relaxed in my secret head­ to place your residence in order. All pa­ The meeting was called by the student union to quarters, the Beaver Dam, I received a pers are to be disposed of, the walls are discuss the proposal they made to Olson concerning terrifying call on the Beaver Phone. The to be washed, and Moulton's sandals are to parity, faculty and student plenums and equal say news which I got was so disconcerting that be given a Christian burial. . In all matters concerning the department. for a moment I thought it was some dastard­ When asked to comment on these proposals Olson ly trickery espused by my arch-enemy, the Failure to comply with my orders will attempted with no success to have the meeting dis­ Viet SqUirrel, the p;iant villain gifted with bring a swift and terrible vengeance upon cuss problems of the department (for example course supernatural powers beyond those of any you and all your families. There is but one changes for next year, new faculty for 1970-71). When mortal sqUirrel. way to deal with evil in this world, -kili asked by several students why he didn't talk about it before it spreads its evil influence to what was on the agenda, Olson stated that he didn't the, minds of the young and impressionable. understand the rationals of the proposals, even though But, lack-a-day, it was a poor but honest My vast array of weapons is ready to at least two representatives from" the union had seen citizen, the fire marshall to be specific, who deal you justice. I shall paralyze you with him preViously about the three ideas. sought my aid. His plaintive cries were so my mung rays, then feed your screaming If anything Olson's performance points to the re­ pathetic, were so quick to bring a tear to my bodies to the Serpent of the Don, after first luctance of faculty membrs to discuss the concepts eye, that I immediatelyclimbed to my mung­ taking you and arriba undula mung frrebup of course unionism. Perhaps one of Olson's comments mobile and hurried to investigate the situa­ nuga you (Editor's note: thank God there is is of value. When the students at the meeting showed tion first hand, as it were. no English equivalent for this). Ayayayiii•.'. a lack of interest in discussing his priorities he said -, ... that it was a regression from last year when students Woe of woes, everything he had said was ma"de suggestions concerning departmental' decisions. Until then, be aS$ured that I remain, true. Your office is a greater disaster area cordially yours, It seems amazing that he feels that students requests than any I have ever created in my war for more say in departmental affairs is a regression. against eVil, communism, perversion, and Your obedient servant, - David Moulton athlete's foot. Papers are strewn every- The Masked Beaver

There are students in the Glendon needed for brochures, pamphlets, community who believe in the con­ traveIling expenses and numerous cept of free speech, but are afraid ostracize' ot~er costs involved in recruiting. to expound their ideas, likes, and we are in the process of electing want us to have a student govern­ dislikes in the conventional ways new members to our student council ment. Are these our future anar- Until sufficient money is made a­ such as a convocation of students. the government of our student body: vailable to Glendon and the High .Yet we have among us those who c.hists? .Is this their way of protes­ School Liasons Committee by York They instead resort to guerilla are attempting to disrupt the election tI.ng agaInst our government, by ma­ to operate a proper national re­ tactics such as creeping about in by resorting to such tactics as de­ kIng a mockery of our election here cruiting program, few results can the dark and, when the opposition stroying election materials and at Glendon. be expected. is unaware, stabbing it in the back. campaign posters, as was done to If they had some opinions to ex­ Until such a program can be fi­ .? '. one of the candidates on Thursday S.urprI.sed. Yes, wf! at GI.endon Who, evening, only one day after the cam­ press, why did they not do so at nanced through th~ proper channels, belIeve In and practIce thIS concept paign has. begun Thursday's meeting where they had the NCC will endeavour to. carry of free speech. have in our midst • the best opportunity to reach a large on a minimal recruiting project with these so-called believers of demo- What will they do next, bomb fu- audience? Is this the extent of our the funds endowed to it by Council. cracy. But is this democracy? ture election meetings or burn down apathy, that we allow such occur­ York Hall in an attempt to destroy ences. Roy Hanna. How dare we criticize the go­ more campaign posters? Are they Chairman, NCC vernment and society outside our trying to discourage first-year' stu­ Glendonites, we who believe in de­ community, when our own commun­ dents from running for our stu­ mocracy, let us keep our eyes open ity is no better. We complain of dent council? for these anarchists and ostracize the sad state of the affairs of our them. No garbage pails society and yet we stand by and al- This is the way in which they ex­ low this sort of. vandalism to occur press their freedom of speech. Michael M. Lunyc z If someone put a garbage pail in our free and beautiful community. These are the ones who were a- under each of the notice boards ,fraid to attend and reveal their I'd be tempted to ,tear down old no­ This 'national community' of ours' ideasat the meeting which was held tices, but I refuse to carry. around is supposed to produce the leaders in the Old Dining Hall on Oct.9,r at PRO TEM ·error garbage until I stumble into a gar­ of tomorrow. Are these the type of h' h h d bage pail. (There must be a garbage lead.ers we wish to produce? Here, w IC t e can idates spoke. ' I would like to take this oppor­ Perhaps these students do not tunity to correcta mistaken impres-· pail in this college someplace.) sion created by a recent article John Maly in PRO TEM. In this article, it • Editor.-in-chief Graham Muir was stated that the National College ., Managing Editor Andy Michalski Committee (NCC) received $30. Art Editor Brian Pearl from the Principal's Fund. This Spons Editor Nick Manin report was erroneous. The money, Bus!oess Manager 'Harve Hirsb all $30., came from Student Council, Ad\·ertising Manager M.x Marechaux not Mr. Reid. ,All letters to the editor Circulation Manager Doreen Rotenberg must be signed (name can Layout and proollction: Claire Marilyn A comment was made regarding be witheld from jYublica­ Bev the niggardly size of such a sum. It is indeed a small amount when tion), preferably typed,and Telephone 487'-6136 Andre Susanne one considers the task facing the submitted before ,5 p. m. , PRO TEM is the student weekly. of_ Glendon College, NCC. We have asked for $200. York University, 2215 Bayview Avenue, Toronto 12, from council this year, 'subject to Sat:urday for jYublication in Ontario. Opinions expressed are those of the writer. the outcome of the fees referendum. following issue. Unsigned comments are the opinion of the newspaper Even this seemingly large amount and not necessarily tbose of the student union or the will only finance a small recruiting university administr~tion. PRO TEM is a member program. To get students from other of Canadian University Press, the fourth estate, and provinces to attend Glendon, unfor­ an agent.. of social ,change. tunately re uires money. Money is October 14, 1969 * PRO TEM * 5 Majority Rule His party was the Brotherhood of Brothers, and there were morer of them than of the others. supplement. ~onsitut~d e That is, they that minority which formed the greater part of the maiority. Within the party, he was of the faction that was supported by the greater fraction. And in each group, within each group, he sought I

the group that could command the most support. '- . The final group had finally elected e a triumvirate whom they all respected. Now of t.hese three, two had the final word, because the two could overrule the third. c One of these two was rela~ively weak, so one alone stood at the final peak. He was THE GREATER NUMBER of the pair which formed the most p':lrt of the three that were t elected by the most of those whose boast it was to represent the most of most e of most of most of the entire state - or of the most of it at any rate. t He neyer gave himself a moment1s slumber but sought the welfare of the greatest number. And all the people, everywhere they went, o knew to their cost exactly what it meant to be dictated to by the maiority. But that meant n.:>thing- they ·were the ~in·ority. - Piet Hein n -Your Student Council candidates Reid Laird Tony Sigooroni Mike Lunycz Reid Laird's main concerns about Tony Signoroni has declined the Student Council should be a li­ Student Council are the democrati­ opportunity of' an interview. He ason between the student body and zation of the body and the commu­ doesn't feel that -it is necessary the Administration. .They should nication problem that the council to express his own opinions. pass on demands and opinions to seems to have with the student the administrators on the functions body. His campaign consists of talking that they are now performing.' This "The purpose of Student Council to people and finding out what their is the view of Mike Lunycz a can­ should be to represent the feelings views are as to the role, purpose didate for councillor at iarge. of the 'student body. Council has and programs of council. "This would mean a predominantly found itself alienated from the com­ academic role but it may include ,- munity as a whole and I hope to "My personal .opinions are not other th.ings that concern the stu­ close the gap.'" -- as important, .a~the 'opinions and dent," Lunycz said. Laird believes that this lack of beliefs of the people that I will Lunycz was at first opposed to attempt to represent." the idea of course unions for he representation. is due to the , .... lack of communication between the ,gidn't know their purpose. "How- Union and the students. "Council ever, I have noticed course pro­ says here is an issue and the stu­ blems and I think that the unions dent body expresses a feeling of Co U nciIIors­ will be very helpful in changing not really caring." Instead, "I want .Interviews by DA VID these situations. Their success however, depends on greater invol­ to talk with the students -- I want at-large MaULTON with to be a representative of the stu­ vement on the part of the students." dents." 'photos by OTTLEY The budget that has been proposed "The fees referendum has my by council could be cut in certain support for ..one main reason: places according to Lunycz. He does L 'Araignee is in great need of mo­ think that a fee increase is neces- ney and I think that 'this activity sary but he believes that ten dol­ could bring a considerable amount lars is perhaps too much to ask. of bicultural atmosphere to Glendon The democratization proposal is that has been lacking in previous favoured by Lunycz. "Although \ve years. I will definitely vote 'Yes' may encounter problems in the be­ on the fees increase request." ginning I think that democratization To Laird the other big issue be­ can work." fore council,is the democratization Lunycz feels that the council at report submitted by Toby Fyfe and present doesn't repre.sent the majo­ David Phillips which proposes that rity of students. He hopes that everyone who attends a council his election will bring council more meeting should have a vote•. (;"It dis­ in line with student opinion. gusts me' that the apathy· they talk Lunycz concluded that he was about-is true." running because he believed: "I feel that I have the gift or ability to bring a~out· a com~romise bet­ ween opposIng groups. David Klein David Klein declined to hold an interview but submitted a statement in place of it. Paul Johnston "Being elected by aclamation makes an acceptance statement a Paul Johnston,. who has been ac­ difficult task indeed. I cannot thank claimed to the post of first-year those who supported me; I cannot representative on Student Coun­ promise to carry out any mandate I cil, puts.his hopes in the idea of have been given. Yet I am certain democratization. that had I stood for any other "The democratization .proposal position the electionwould have been will allow the present totalitarian hotly contested. In other words the air to dissipate. .Involvment on lack of interest in the first year the part of the ,students is essen­ election represents nothing but an tial. Although the fear of pressure understandable andforgivablecarry- politics is valid, I don't think it over of Ontario high school apathy. outweighs the advantages of +direct I can only promise to help other student vote." recent secondary school graduates The 'fees increase, to Johnston, awaken from their five year coma Acclaimed is of vital importance to the stu­ and participate actively and' intelli­ dent un'ion and its council. "If the gently in the affairs of the Glendon First Year referendum is not passed, then the community." Council will run on a starvation So much for 'participatory demo­ representatives budget. I will definitely vote "Yes" cracy. on the referendum.~r l r t ,.; •

-0 ;:0 COUNCIL CANDIDATES 0 IFACUL TV --f Im ~ * 0 0 0' 0- (1) -,

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EI/iot AlIen '·Rob Beadle Vince DelB'ueno Pat Flynn Bob Gibson Andre Golding By SALLY McBETH' By JIM ALBRIG HT By ANDRE FOUCAULT By JANE RUBINSKI By ANDRE FOUCAULT By ANDRE FOUCAULT, Bob Gibson says:"~ indiVidually, Andre Golding wishes to run for A working knowledge of the edu­ Rob Beadle is running for Fa­ "Since I have been three years Pat Flynn is running 'because am concerned with governing bo­ Faculty Council because he seeks cational situation at Glendon and an culty Council because of his ge­ here 'at Glendon, I am familiar with he was drafted by a group of peo­ dies of the community in which I to participate as an individual. He jnsight into the phitosophy of learn­ neral concern for the quality of the the set up and I think myself re­ ple who were not· irnpressed with live. I am working under the de:mo­ would like so:r;ne say in the making ing have led Elliott AlIen to point student participation in the real latively competent to serve on the the other nominees. cratic participation hang-up. It is my of the academic rules to which he to the Tucker Report as exemplary decision-making process at Glen­ Faculty Council at this point in its interest to see how the communi­ is subject. . of his own policy. But he has taken don. development where there 'has to be He feels it is important that an ty is run and since Faculty Coun­ On the topic of representation, he it a step further. He feels that he must be res­ some kind of effective student re­ open mind be brought into Faculty cil is now, if it wasn't before, says: "The only sense in which I am "The report held back in stat­ ponsive to student opinion if he' presentation.9 "says Vince Del B11on0,,' Council. "I'm not a radical or a the most important body on cam­ a representative, is in that I have a ing its philosophical goals. It hasn't is elected to Faculty Council Accor­ He notes that his development strict conservative either," he' pus, it is the most valid body for good number if ideas which other srated directly that it wants to get dingly, he wants to avoid any break­ as a student here at Glendon and says, but he feels that experience this purpose." people will share. For example, I away from structures that are left down between the representatives the development of Faculty Council and judgement are important for' Gibson was asked what he ~hought am an English student, unlike several over from the family and secon­ of the students and the student bo­ have merged, at this point in that a. post such as this. . of the method by which French of the other candidates who are So­ dary school situations -- authori­ dy as may have happened in pre­ he is very interested in what direc­ On parity on' Faculty Council he was promoted at the academic le­ cial Science students. tarianism and spoon feeding -­ vious years. Regular meetings and tion Glendon is going to takeo has this to say: "Parity is a good vel here at Glendon (namely through Golding believes that if by poular then these are the barriers to real notices he feels may be the solution. "The' present situation," says Del democratic principle but I ~an't compulsory courses)", He answered demand a certain course of action education." Beadle doesn't agree with the 8uono "is that habit of a liberal see it working -I would tend to that he ib 'anti-authoritarian and is sought, other than one which he' artsc~llege,a AlIen is particularly enthusiastic compulsory nature of the general direction which brings defer to the judgement of those that he does not like any kind of approves, he would not feel 'true about the recommendations for the education requirement as it is con­ about very good proposals such as in the field." compulsion. to himself' if he bowed to these con- seminar system. He emulates the stituted at present. These reqUire­ the instruction through the tutorial ·He argues that faculty members For Gibson, compulsory require­ . flicting views.He explains this stand Sociology 253 seminars in which ments he feels sometimes detract method,~" usually know a great deal more ments create an attitude which sup­ by saying that 18 students are no team teaching and dialogue between from the individual's about a course than the students plies a -very poor motive and a more representative than five.Gold­ objective. fIe contends howev~rthat When asked abouL his opInIon of and that therefore their voice should ,very illogical reason for dedication instructors has proven very suc­ the compulsory general education ing feels that his only resonsibi­ cessful. He is also strongly in fa­ there are unquestionably some carry more weight. to a certain field of study; this lity is to act responsibly. very excellent general education requirements, he said that whether Flynn believes that complete pa­ would be understandable in an in­ He feels that nothing should be Im­ vour of the ungraded degree pro­ or not we are satisfied, it is ex­ posal. courses. . rity on any committe would be un­ stitution where the diploma was the posed on the student community. "But these courses must stand tremely difficult to dislodge the es­ reasonable and unwise. He suggests' ultimate aim of the student.". "Decisions should be made by the "It would create a group of people tablished methods. who were really excited about ge­ on tJ"'eir own merit." that there be equal of He notes that in the past, the po­ community as a whole, that is, not on­ nuine education, who were not sim­ He- would like to see the number "It's important," says Del B~ono) faculty and st\ldents in Faculty Coun­ litics and the development of the ly Student Faculty CounCillors but ply politically enthusiastic, but en­ of courses now being offered in "'that we not, forget that it is part of cil, but'that the votes be weighed political consiousness of the Glen­ all students should decide.Since Fa­ thusiastic about the whole living si­ French increased as an attempt to York's. original program to empha­ so that those with more experience don student were handled by the culty council is only 15% students tuation of the Glendon Community intensify the bilingual and bicultu­ size the whole, complete man. This in academic affairs have the great­ Student Council but that now the po­ it is not truly representative of the and the interplay between various ral nature of Glendon College. is very valid and worthwhile goal, a er voting power. litics are being passed on to the student body." groups." . Parity is an important issue for goal with which Glendon was orig­ He is "impressed" with. the Faculty Council. He says that so "There must be a better way of AlIen is optimistic about course Beadle. He is a great believer inally set up. A respect of these idea of a homogeneous college go­ far, no response has been received representing the student community. unions. He pointed out that while in mass participation at the cour- goals implies the necessity for ri­ vernment, but can offer no concrete from the Faculty Council under the I don't believe students will be satis- most people consider course unions se level. The recommendations gidity in courses of general educa­ suggestions towards attaining one. new load, but he hopes it will see 'fied with their small representation to be the result of the efforts of made by the Community Group Stu­ tio~.' , It should come as a natural pro­ fit to pick it up. in policy-making which is directly students, they are under considera­ dy last year on the governing struc­ gression, but "student apathy Bob wouldn't commit himself to concerned with their academic fu-' ture of the university which was Del, Buono would like to see a tion by the Committee on College sinc~ doesn't help." --The problem, Flynn any 'concrete proposals' but, he does ture." initiated by students and on which few things implemented: first, states, is that there is only a small Government; the council consists of factions say: "Faculty CounCil is a commu­ Faculty Council represents for Beadle served are still quite valid j number of people interested enough nity goverment which will have to Golding the most powerful organiza- AlIen would like to direct him­ for Beadle. choose the representatives from "to do the tremendous amount of course unions where they would be change." He maintains that the i-' . tion on Glendon campus. "However self toward the questions studied If elected, Beadle hopes to work work involved, say, in Student Coun­ deas of the various candidates cannot by the Committee on College Go­ expected to represent their group I think that the scope for change is on the Secondary School Liaison cil, and they end up being accused vary that much since, generally limited as 'a result of Faculty Coun­ vernment and he would like to work Committe to aid students, from low­ of interest. Second, promote the of "elitism". personal stUdent-teacher contact; speaking, they all emerge from the cil's subordination to Senate." he toward the implementation of the income families to come to Glen­ As for departmental unions, he same interest group. Tucker report. "A lot of emphasis under the correct conditions, this stated. don or on the Curriculum Com­ holds that they are less necessary When asked if he was a radi­ Because he is obViously an advo­ is placed on the content of cour­ mittee to attack the nature of com- . could prove to be quite beneficial. in some departments than in others, calor a moderate, he said that he cate of c~a~~<;

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Oliver Kent Andy McAlister Jim MacKinnon Deni's Masicotte Til7J Minton David Moulton By JIM ALBRIGHT ~y STARBUC~K By DAVID STARBUC~ By JAI'~E'R·UBINSKI7 By DAVID STARBUCK By SALLY McBETH DAVID "Faculty Council is the most Jim MacKinnon is concerned with French Canadian students at Glen­ Tim Minton resigned as men's Moulton is running for Faculty Humanization of the evaluation don are exerting a conscious effort process and parity on Faculty effective means of voicing student individual rights. He believes that social director to run for Faculty Council because he is concerned ooinion at this time," Andy Mc­ it is impossible for one person to to represent themselves effectively over the lack of democracy there. Council and in the departments are in college government. Denis Ma­ Council. However, he doesn't want the goals of Oliver Kent. Alister believes. He envisions a represent the views of a thousand to make easy promises which may Moulton believes that there are day when "Faculty Cou~cil \lvill be students, however, "There is a sicotte sights this as his primary be impossible for him to, help im­ two types of democracy working just an arm of ove~-all' college possibility ·that 18 students can make reason for runningfor Faculty Coun­ on Faculty Council at the present Kent bases his push for parity. cil. His specific interests .centre. plement. He thinks students and fa­ on two preconditions. The first is government, " but h~ is not so sure a stab at representing student opi­ culty can work together. time. "One is that of the faculty how long this will take., nion as a whole." around the teachIng of French to who represent nobody except them­ that faculty and the administration "English speaking students. If elected, Minton would be in­ must show a willingness to accept Meanwhile McAlister says that MacKinnon opposes student Fa­ ,terested in serving on the Curri­ selves. The faculty members, Moul­ he "intends to be quite responsive culty Councillors grouping toge- "The way they learn the language, ton believes, have therefore a role parity. He does think the students it would be difficult for us from culum Committee or the Secondary are in the position to force parity towards what people want," and will ~ ther in a caucus to plan policies School, Liason Committee. of direct participatory democracy. forward any sqldent opinion to the or tactics. He' believes that any Quebec to d.o it, and the things they He believes in confrontation po- The student members, however, re­ on the faculty. learn, we don't even use. It's a The second is that there -should to the Council. discussion or coordination can be litics .as a public action, that is, present not only themselves but done informally. He also believes good way.,to learn to hate French." confrontation politics is a method also a thousand other students. They be a mass base of students wil­ He is generally in favour of the ling and capable of participating that only item'8 of a general nature English, on \the. other hand, is of obtaining public support.' are forced to either attempt to pointsoutlined in the Tucker Report should be discussed at Faculty Coun­ Minton sees himself as repre­ obtain the views of other students, in the decision:...making process be­ but feels that he would go further taught to French Canadian students fore parity is enactedt/ sil and items referring to a spe­ on a discussion and seminar" basis. sentative of student opinion although which at any time is difficult, or on some issues. He believes that cific department. he tries to maintain some sense to assume the faculty role and re­ Kent is concerned about avoiding setting up ungraded courses towards Masicotte believes that English is confrontations between faculty and Parity ,on Faculty Council is 'one generally considered among French of ob jectivity in decision-making. present only themselves. Moulton ungraded degrees is good .bu~ is of MacKinnon's eventual goals. How­ He would have liked to see more believes thar this inherent contra­ students. He doesn't want a separa­ too vaguely worded in the report. students to be a most enjoyable tion of students andfaculty' into in­ ever, he believes that student or­ class, a welcome departure from first year students running in the diction on Faculty Council is un- He is concerned that there has been ganization on the departmental level election. "They could have more democratic. \ dividual plenums. no action taken yet because ~f this methods of teaching English in Que­ "It is not worth accepting any­ is more important at the present bec_ time for Faculty 'Counciland in a few Moulton sees two possible alter­ lack of concrete proposals. time. '~The departmental level is thing less than parity in a re­ "You can teach French the wa-y years the experience needed in run­ natives. One is that Faculty Cou'n­ structured legislative c.ouncil, " McAlister holds that the French the most important for students as ning Students' Council." cil would contain representatives most of the decisions that directly you are teaching English to us. Just Kent stated. However, he does not . program at Glendon can stand con­ talking in· seminars. I agree with Minton approaches the question of of faculty as well as students. The believe that parity is essential on siderable improvemeijt. He points concern students are made there. parity on Faculty Council skeptical­ other is that all the members of I am in favour of parity on the Bob McGaw's statement that he is - all committees, particularly pro­ out that FT~nch Canadians seem to against a 'way~of teaching French." lYe He has more confidence that the community would participate motions and tenure. be getting th~ most benefit from departmental level." ,. the faculty rather than students are in a Council based upon direct de­ the upper level French courses MacKinnon is willing to allow Masicotte stands against parity able to recognize what "is best for mocracy. Moultonfavoursthe latter. The evaluation process is ·Kent's although their .original purpose was faculty to retain control over some on Faculty Council. He considers the students. ~'If you are given Moulton ' s other goal is the eli­ other main area of concern. He to encourage Anglophones to make areas of departmental organization a large representation of students a political situation (committed ra­ mination of the present system of believes that the means of evalua­ use of their French. According to for the time being, particularly in - "to adVise, recommend, and work dical candidates), then I tend to place external evaluation. I-Ie feels that tion in any course should be deter­ the realm of tenure and promotions. with the faculty" - an essential, my faith in the faculty. But assu­ the present ABC grading system mined by the stUdents and faculty McAlister compulsory French is still one of ,the basic qualities He stated, "It is likely that fa­ but believes that the final decision ming you get responsible candidates, does little to assess a student's work 0 in that course. of Glendon. culty will want to reserve certain must come from the experienced that is those who are not as nar­ in terms that are relevant to him. ~ "A reasoned critique is the guts rights but it is unlikely that these instructors. "Parity would mean row minded as some of the faculty, He would prefer a system where- 8­ _ McAlister favours parity on Fa- of any evaluation, much better than reservations will last for long." we were running 'the university, i.e. able to' adjust, then I'am all for by the prof.essor would give either CD . culty Council because "the college an ABC rating." MacKinnon supports a review of and we can't." parity on ·Faculty C'ouncil; parity a written or oral crItique of the~' Kent favours a credit/ no credit is here for the students." He does the hiring processes of the univer­ being defined as the majority of student's work. Such a system, ~ " system, in which failure would in­ not believe that, with parity, the sity. "It is an intolerable situa­ He was of the opinion that cour­ students and the majority of facul­ Moulton believes, would stimulate'" dicate non-participation rather than students would vote as a bloc against tion if more than 40 % of the fa­ se unions should submit recommen­ ty being required for the acceptance the student, into a reassessment ~f::O incompetence, to a pass/fail system. facultYtl "Parity would lead to a culty of a department are Americans dations to the Faculty Council. "Fa­ of any proposal." his work. ~ ~ sense of cooperation instead of con­ as they tend to take ovet." culty Council is the proper channel. Minton is also interested in the ~ The college staff should not be frontation.' , They should use it first. If it doesn't implementation of the Tu~ker Re­ Moulton 'doesn't want to discuss * represented on Faculty Council, Departmental unions, McAlister MacKinnon believes that a profes­ work, they can try somethingelse." specific items of policy. "I think;g sor who is unacquainted with the port and course unions. Kent believes. states, should be a "fundamerital Masicotte believes that Glendon He states himself that he may that it is the right of every stu- 0 "In university govE!rnment as a aim" of both Student Council and Canadian situation should not be, could, with development, fullfil its dent to express his own views and--l allowed to teach courses that have not know all the workings of Fa­ whole, the staff should have a voice; of student Faculty Council rnemberstl interpretation of the ideal college­ culty Council, but he gives the im­ not to have my opinion express m but not on Faculty Council as the Course unions should have priority Canadian content. He doesn't, how­ bilingualism, mobility in courses, his. This entails direct participa- ~ ever, favour quotas on foreign pro­ pression that he has an objective decisions made there are academic and "Faculty Council is one of . ,and freedom to take what you want liberal approach on the problems tion in the 'affairs of the cornmu- * be~t IQ and don't really concern the staff." t:he placfs.... t,o push for them." fessors. on your own responsibility." on Faculty Council. nity." 'J '/'" :/ i, /., \ _",~_"".".~.~",~_""""",L.'-'...... __~ lee__--._---- ~ ~~ ~ .a.l~ ~ ~~L&JI ~.- ~ ,.,~.~,e,.-.-..-.-_ ...... ---- ...-. IIIIIII .. ftp- ..Sees••,.·••eo·so•••••••••••••••· _ . 8 * PRO TEM * October 14, 1969

Doug Newson Dave Phillips, Bill Rows Charlie Stedman By JIM ALBRIGHT By DAVID STARBUCK By SALLY McBETH By JANE RUBI.NSKI Freedom for the student to di­ 'Community action' might be the "In the beginning," said Bill Rowe, Charlie Stedman's basic aim is rect his own education is Doug catch -phrase for Dave Phillips "hardly anybody around was to 'prepare the faculty for course Newson's reason for running. camflaign; He is interested in the interested in Faculty Council and unions, and to convince the faculty "Education is an extremely in­ democratization of the decision­ I wanted to get involved. I'm not of the merits of such a system. dividual matter. I believe that any making processes at Glendon, both terribly informed now, but I would He sees a way of bringing unions student must have 'the final res­ .on Student and Faculty Councils. be willing to educate myself in the in by making them committees of ponsibility for what he believes is issues if I were elected." Faculty Council and by haVing the p~oposal the best educational policy for him- 6 Phillips' is supported Although ,he expressed sympathy members of each union (that is both self." , by his belief that 'IPeople should with the ideas brought forth in the faculty and students) present opi­ Newson believes that to achieve be creative in order to change the Tucker Report, he saw major dif­ nions jointly. student control of education neces- institutions of society which. cause ficulties in their implementation and "The idea of separate plenums sitates a decentralized Faculty oppression; they should be respon- feared that such concepts as "the should not be carried over into Council and departmental unions sible for the results of their actions pass/fail system of grading and the final decison-making." he says. with increased powers. in changing institutions." ungraded degree would prOVide in­ Eventually he hopes that Faculty sufficient evaluation of a student Council will achieve parity, and Newson hopes that the election Phillips believes th~t the best entering into the working society•. combine with or replace the Stu­ will provide a rational examination method would be to democratize "We have ,graded degrees to sup~ dent Council to create one college of various policies concerning edu­ the governing structures so that ply business with a criteria for government that would cover the cation and college government. all members of the community con­ judging prospective employees. I functions of both councils and also "Faculty does not have the right cerned have the opportunity and the don't think the gr.ades are as im­ incorporate the departmental unions to make decisions for the student; power to control the decisions that portant to the person a.s to the as sub-committees reporting to the faculty is not in the position to affect. them. business or industry." new body. In addition, the present 'tell you what is best for you." Rowe supported both parIty ana Faculty Council committees would Newson believes the student qThe course unions, to me, are course unions. "I suppose that in have to be restructured. should listen to the advice of the an integral part of the community," all courses there can be biases, But, as he put s it, "The imme­ professor but that the student should stated Phillips. "Ifelected,to Facul­ particularly in history, economic~, idate problem is parity." He sees not be forced to accept, advice ty Council, I would try and get and political stuqies.• In high school, this as an equal representation of that he feels is wrong. as much responsibility as possi­ history courses tend to play down faculty. as well as students. "For example, if a first year ble handed "over to the depart­ revolutions. Universities can pro­ This means that instead of all fa­ student has good grounding in po­ mental unions." long the status ·quo byteaching ba­ culty being members of the council, litical science and economics and sically capitalist ideas and playing only a certain number, equal to if 'he wants to major in them, I Phillips' major concern with cur­ down Marxist theory." . the student representation, would, see no reason why he should be riculum is his desire that commu­ ~'People should be able to be vote. required to take the SocSci." nity work should be given credit taught things they want to know, And in the matter of course u­ Newson would like to see Glendon as a course. rather 'than having to go outside nions, he suggests that the present {-·'become autonomous. "Initially to learrir them~" form .of haVing the chairman of ea~b..., there may be benefits from affilia­ Phillips explained: ~'On a basic Rowe-, advocated conventional department be finally answerable t

carry a subject of interest. However, across as a methodical, careful Dave Varty the problems facing the establish­ Don Walker and well-reasoned indiVidual. He ment of such a system do not believes that Faculty Council and By ANDRE FOUCAULT only lie in our adaptability to it By JIM ALBRIGHT Student Council as separate bodies but also on that of other universities are irrelevant. fitAn integratedcoun­ Dave Varty says that there should and graduate schools which might Recruitment is the impetus for cil of students and faculty with pa­ be increased participation in the be called upon to recognize the the candidature of Don Walker for rity would better serve the interest course unions since he hopes, even­ GleRdon degree under that system. Faculty Council. He thinks that Glen­ of the college as a community of tually, that these unions will be don has been in a process of stag­ scholars.', the channels of student representa­ He also :,expressed a desire to nation and that a re-examination tion on the Faculty Council. improve the library facilities avai­ should be made in order to give Walker thinks that the Tucker He believes that the duties of a lable on campus: "If books are the college some direction. He hope's Report was an efficient study. of representative are to represent; in overflOWing at Steacie on the main to participate in the Secondary the problems of instruction. order to facilitate thiS, the repre­ campus, why not bring them here, School Liaison Committee and the He thought that it made some very sentatives should be drawn from where we 'have empty shelves?". National College Committee. relevant suggestions and any fai­ groups of interest, or, moretechni­ Varty also wishes to improve the lure to implement its recommen­ cally" from within the departmental freedom in choice of courses a­ Walker describes himself as dations would be tragic. boundaries. vailable by making timetables less "floating somewhere between a Some specific points of the He also expresses interest in re­ rigid, and by eliminating the annoy~ radical and a moderate, despite' report which he supports are the cruitment for the campus. To em­ ing course limitations. ' what some may say." He comes real need to improve the phasize the need for recruitment, the atmosphere of the seminar he stated: "Glendon will stand or rooms and the pass/fail evaluation fall on how well it can recruit­ system. However, he feels! - that students from all ove r the coun­ unless the academic world .is ready try." to accept a pass/fail sy.stem then ,T 0 people who object to the it would unadvantageous for Glen­ compulsory general education re­ don. quirements, he says, "Glendon should be sold exactly as it is, a place He stated that students should have where there isn't too much over­ strong representation on the Com­ 'specialization.', mittee for Examination and Aca­ demic Standing. He has faith that He voiced support for the pass/ students are capable of the required' fail evaluation, although he did not objectivity. 'think it right to demand a complete chnageover. He would like to see Walker believes that it will be people carry one such subject on a a very quiet campaign. Should he trial basis for the new evaluation be, elected, he would 'try to re­ -method. present those students that had e­ This would permit a person to Dove Varty Don Walker lected him. October 14, 1969 * PRO TEM * 9

Knight wins golf Ray Knight of 0 House has won the Glendon Golf Tournament with a score of R3, usually reliable sources inform us. Frosh Bruce Berdock was second with 84, and Terry Irie of 2nd year was two strokes behind the leader (i.e. Knight). Racketeer Jim Martin tells us that the singles tennis tourney ·was won by frosh Al Kramer. "Kramer won it" Martin said in an exclusive interview. He refused to elaborate, but PRO TEM's network of in­ formers have since discovered that Mark Best and the aforementioned Martin won the doubles. Giz Baranyi' of 1st year won the cross-country in a time of 18:05, with Larry Scanlan of 3rd year second. Three competitors were ruled ineligible for receiving outside help during the race after the Masked Gle~'don loses ~nother scrum. Scarborough (in striped shirts) won the game, 14 - 5. Beaver was forced to rescue them from his arch­ enemy the Viet SqUirrel. "Nuga freebup undula ayayayi, " the Champion of Freedom told PRO TEM in describing his triumph. Our rugger team to the varsity scrubs 9-zip, ·Romping animals rampage and fell to Scarborough 14-5. Chopper Kidd gave it the old college try, and Murray Shields converted. Boxing and wrestling have been dropped from the By NICK MARTIN timers, while Dave Roote pair, and Ralph Trodd, lohn athletic program due to lack of ·interest. Glendon As the GFL schedule pass­ got one majortl Pete Pearce, and Ken Donnelly students prefer to make love, not war (phone 487­ ed the halfway point, the 0 Schwalm, Marty Bazinet, ana tallied singletons. Terry Irie 6136 and ask for Fifi)., House Animals held first Pete Gusen tallied for the (a canal in upstate New York) The men's volleyball tournament will be held on place with a 4-2 record, Geritol Brigade. had two touchdowns for 2nd, October 16th, contrary to rumours some people are closely followed by A, B E House frosted the frosh while Bill Wade and George spreading that there will be a volleyball league this and the sophs at 3-2. The 27-20. Mike Eisen had 14 Hewson had· one each. year. "They lie.. " commented Mike Salter. Animals have reclaimed' points, with Doug Street and Contest winner Rives Dalley placed 2nd in the women's golf tourney themselves number one. Jim Mountain adding six at Scarborough College with a score of 117. e~ch. Lawrence had two for "We're number one," an The Sons of B topped the -NICK MARTIN obscene caller traced to 0 1st, and Pritchard chipped in a major. frosh 48-43 as Garry Free­ House told PRO TEM. burn had four scores, Geoff Ye Greene Machine danc­ The sophomores gave third a hard time, triumph­ Scott 2, and Bruce McDo­ ed the Wade on the Pen­ nald one. Craig Cameron sioners 45-20. Al Hamilton ing 20-19. George Hewson, Bram.berger amazed Mike Santelli, and Murray and Bruce Stacey did it twi­ scored twice, with Dave ce for 1st, and Andre Do­ .John Bramberger is the new man in charge of the Stone, Peter Allan, Jim Mar­ Shields were the heroes for 2nd, .while Don Wallace, Dave yan, Glen Jones, and Andy equipment room at Proctor Field House. John came tin, Paul Hallett, and Henry Stevenson also scored. to Glendon by way of Germany of the equally distant Wood doing the six routine. Starbuck and Nick Martin led the Beavers. In intercollege action, York campus located in the rich 'farm lands to the Aged Mike Faye scored twice Glendop whomped Founders north of Toronto. and the alliterative Larry Serpent uptight 42-15. Renault Marier scor­ John spent (misspent) two years at ·the-other cam­ Leonard once for the Ponce­ ed deux fois as well as pus before he realized the error of his ways. Mean­ deleoners. The Serpent of the Don getting two touchdowns. Roy while, his errors did not stop: he became a married The Axemen shaved 3rd has informed PRO TEM that Hanna and Garry Collins man this summer. In a brief flash of brillance, John year ,33-32. Armstrong any balls landing in the ri­ also got six-pointers, while made an important decision, however. He decided to deuxed, and Kevin Kilbey, ver from now on will become Murray Shields booted six mend and wend his ways to that monument to athletes Vie Borycheski, ,and Know­ his property. He will return converts. Our secret code and die-hard sportsies - Proctor Field House. les did it to the Beavers them only if a young virgin expert has examined the once apiece. Don Wallace got is sacrificed to him" Accor­ scorecard and thinks the John commented: "The organization of the athletic two TD's, with Larry Scan­ dingly, convenor Roy Hanna other scorers are possibly department as vastly superior to that of our big lan~ Lorne Rogers, and Sandy has rounded up a big supply Ray Munrit and Jeff Lee. brother in the north." Moreover, he expressed amctze­ McKay hitting home for 3rd. ••••• of extra footballs. 'Perhaps we" were never ment at the participation in the men's athletic program. The Beavers were without meant to know. The Sons of B gUillotined However, John is disappointed that Glendon students star flanker 'Sudden Death' How many times have we don't make greater use of the pool. Del Buono, who was laid up the Axemen 47-39. Mar­ used that expression this with a bad cold. shall's perlorn'.ance was year? Send your answers to John told me that eqUipment managers are sometimes troisating, with Bruce Mc­ Arabian beauty Contest C/0 PRO TEM. The placed in a embarrassing position by uncooperative Donald adding two majors expression itself will not be students. "Some students don't seem to realize that Glendon now has a cheer­ and Fleming and Stanger accepted as an answer. Last we are held responsible for all equipment, and to leading squad to keep all the each one. Bullet Rob Gib­ week's winner is David ensure its return, we are requesting that students leave fans occupied. Leading the son scored twice for A, with Mouton for his answer of their 1.041 cards with us. Equipment has been lost." girls will be the \vell-known Borycheski, Smith, Kevin Krunchin' Casey.Mr.Moulton Students are ok in general,' according to John. Arabian beauty, Abad Kold. Kilbey, and Debellefeuille will receive a year's supply The Animals chewed up contributing six. of strawberry mung. -BILL KORT the Octogenarian's 46 - 21. Gobby Cohen, Jamie Meuser, The Animals digested the and Ramblin' Ralph Trodd sophs 44-26. Gobby Cohen Complete Flower Service were all a bunch of two- and Dave Roote scored a 9lora"Vown 9loriJtl LTO.

-CHERRY 7-7604 BROADWAY 2308 KEELE ST. TORONTO 15, ONT. BILLIARDS 2428 Yonge Steet· (one light north of Eglinton) Ontario Student Awards Bring this coupon for one free game (30 min.) of billiards in Canada's only mod billiard lounge on ~ny of the follOWing times: Monday 3 -'12 p m Wednesday Tuesday '. •• Thursday Saturda.y _. 12 noon to midnight Sunday -I p.m. to midnight Introductory offer good until Nov. 11 Students receiving grant assistance under the Ontario Student York Guys and Gals Please be our guests Name Facultl _ Awards Program should submit the Request for Grant Portion in

Address Telephone _ duplicate to the Student Awards Office immediately.

* Good for only one ga.me pe~ person per day. 10 * PRO TEM * October 14~ '~

"This then is the death of the American Forum imports PhilOchs imprisoned by his paranoia and all diseases ofhis innocent inventions By ANDY RAVEN only eighteen -- I've got a rup­ tured spleen' ) through his now fa­ he'plunges to the drugs of'the devil to find his gods Phil Ochs, easily the most pro­ mous 'Changes' to the extremely he employs the farce offorce to crush his fantasies minent folk-protest singer in the complex yet penetrable 'When in and continent has agreed to do a con­ Rome' • he calls conventions of salesmen savage's cert in Toronto later this month, " And all the high-born ladies to reinforce his hopelessness in conjunction with Glendon's In­ So lovely and so true So the poet swordsmen and their lost generation,s ternational Forum, 'The Year of Have been handed to thesoldiers the Barricade'. The Barricade staff When in Rome, must divorce themselves from their motherland have been working on such a con­ do as the Romans do." only for the least ~ensation of life or love or pain cert for several months but plans were not finalized until recently. aur deepest and most religious moments The announcement has already a­ Preparing for death were on elevators posing as planes" roused interest since Ochs has not been in Eastern Canada for two Politically, Ochs has moved con­ "Part two of this earnest epic years. siderably since he began to sing finds seaweed lapping against your eyes The concert is to be held at the and one can trace this develop­ Ryerson Auditorium, Friday Oct. ment through his writing. Early in the sailors have chosen the mystery surprise 24 at 8:00 p.m. Tickets at $2.50 his career he was producing anti­ to join the flying dutchman in his search for a green and $3.00·are on sa'le from 'The war s'ongs, and singing them in - disguise Year of the Barricade' at Glendon. rallies from Berkeley Calif. to Den­ Still others invade the final colony the Y.S.M. office at York Main mark. Since then his poetry has Campus~ the Ryerson Aud. box of­ become heavier armed, aimed at to present their tinted tributes to the millionaire assassin fice, or Sam the Record Man on the destruction of a system which While I stumble through this paradise Yonge Street. perpetuates, fosters and nourishes the de-humanizing and alienating considering several suicides A singer,songwriter and poet forces of today's world. .for distant lavender lovers 'Amidst this is his style and per­ or bless the violence of the ridic:ulaus revolution Long connected with the student haps his hope -- an almost fright­ movement and the 'Yippies' in the ening beauty which at first cloaks for self bronzing brothers .US, Ochs has agreed to fly in from but then spotlights the emotion- and and finally turn away from the turquoise towers Los Angeles for expenses only. Part the reality of an ugly picture. Some­ of the' proceeds from the concert times as in 'The Scorpion Departs' of this comic civilization will go to help finance 'The Year the thin red lines which separat­ my responsibilities are done let them come let them come of the Barricade'. es hope from despair, victory from . Although' he has been labelled defeat, sane from insane, and, most a·nd I realize these last .days these trials and tragedies Communist, anarchist, nihilist, re­ important, real from unreal, disap­ were after all only cidivist libertine, poseur, martyr, pears and falls into a void never saint, and "priceless paragon of to return. ' our rehearsals for retirement." - Phil Ochs wit and urban gUile , he is neve'r­ "The radio is begging them to come IRehearsal for Retirement' theless basically a singer, song­ back to the shore · writer and poet who has· been ex­ All will be forgiven - it will be just The silence of their sinking is all filled .several concert halls and he panding the song form and dealing just like before that they reply will undoubtedly fill Ryerson Au- with the social issues of the day. All you've ever wanted will be wait­ ditorium Oct. 24 but his public ap­ He uses all these abilities to com­ ing by the door. :Some have chosen to decay and pearances are becoming few andfar bine and juxtapose a deep unq.er­ We will forgive you - we will for­ others chose to die between. Perhaps evenOchs is feel­ standing of the disillusioned, alie­ give you" But I'm not dying No I'm not ing the grasp of futility grOWing nated man with truly unique and dying" tighter. Perhapshe, not unlike often beautiful lyrics•. 'Tell me I'm not dying' others is simply preparing for an His songs range from the light 'Tell me we'll forgive you# inevitable death or as Ochs des­ and relatively straight-forward ""But no one gives an answer, not cribes it "rehearsing for retire­ , Draft Dodger Rag"", ("Sarge, I'm even one good-bye Needless to say Phil Ochs has ment."

of the same man fiercely attacking a punching bag and coaching a small boy with "The ob­ ject of this game is speed and power. Ac­ tually, the object of this game is to beat the brains out of somebody. Then you win."

Like any Ionesco play, "Jack or the Sub­ In the fairly recent tradition of 'Easy Rider'~ ...And other things mission" is difficult to perform. The second 'Last Summer', and 'Hail, Hero', Haskell Wex­ The creative writing' people are publishing a year English class that presented it last Thurs­ ler's 'Medium Cool', now playing at the Down­ small magaZine at the end of the month to be day made a good attempt. The play itself is town, combines excellent dialogue with excel­ called 'The Dime Bag' and containing the fluent rather obscure, filled with peculiar puns, many lent photography with a super~excellent story. efforts of our friends and neighbours. .

of which failed to come acrosso Set in Mayor Daley's Chicago immediately The Glendon Art Gallery, secondfloorB-wing JohnRussel1 as Father Jack and Sally Mc­ before and during the 1968 Democratic Par­ (Bwing f) is occupied by an interlocking photo­ Namara as Jacqueline seemed to understand ty Convention, 'Medium Cool' explores ~hrough graphic(ological) stabile created by a very com­ their parts best, and therefore gave better the eyes of a young news photographer, both petant Ad-man on a phlight of graghic phancy. performances than the others, who appeared presentation to the masses through the media. The Poetry and Mime sections of the pro­ less well-rehearsed. Though each actor may Wexler has done an excellent job of con~ gram of Fine Arts Faculty presentations at Bur­ have been fairly good indiVidually, the whole trasting the latent violence in all age groups. ton Auditorium are nearly sold out. your peformance seemed to be a case of every man The young photographer's diatribes a~ainst the own conclusions. for himself. · 'liolent Society are juxtaposed with scenes

______'""'-~- ..-~~~""'.'-~.. ~'.~. r--~~~------... ~' '.

October 14, 1969 * PRO TEM,* 11

The box has an operational fu nction. That is to say, without it there is no way of affecting a specific atmosphere so that water can evaporate and then con­ dense: there is a real technical need for it. And although I am pleased with how these things look, it is in a way only a very pleasant by-product. What is really important -is how they operate in a physical, chemical, biological, ecological or whatever sense\, Hans Haacke

new alchemy ELEMENTS· SYSTEMS •FORCES

ART GALLERY OF ONTARIO . September 27 - October 26, 1969

. .. Let a floating cloud in the sky, :_Let4i ~ave of the sea - let growing mint, , Spinach, onions, tomatoes - let these be exhibited As shows, at great price for admission! " (Whitman)

A prism is a mirror type of object, a geometric type of object because of its shape, and a transparent window which is a third kind of object. I think that to "understand them you have to take an aspect like their "objectness" and break it down. They are never one single thing, they are always several things at once, overlapped. Charles Ross

11 y a un petit·peu de Dada en toute chose. 12 * PRO TEM * October 14, 1969

Look.See the man.He is a success. He has a pipe.He must be very King Rat wise.He is bald.He must worry a lot. Lis- ten. Listen to the suc­ cessful bald man speak. and all the "In school I was appointed to represent the Student Body in.dis­ agreements with the Staff.I ALWA YS cast my vote for the staff side! rift between the student-youth COIT1­ The principal awarded me a GE- munity and the mature adult com­ NEROUS scholarship for OUT- munity. The latter in the eyes ST ANDING contributions to the of some of the younger rats are school. rife with the disease of hypocri­ "Later the Insurance Company sy (as the cartoon exaggerates so­ drowning I joined asked me to do a STUDY beautifu11 y) •. on the feasibility of Lo\vering Pre­ miums! I sat on it for three years So the young rats split the scene. and they made me a Vice President! They must maKe a- blatant an"d os­ "As my reputations grew, the tentious show of rejection. Tradi­ Police Commission put me in charge tion and old moral values are tram­ young rats of an independent committee to in­ ples in the rush, which is in some vestigate Police Brutality! I didn't cases an actual physical , find 'any! The city made me Citizen but most often just a temporary of the Year! psychological trip. "Soon a giant, automobile manu­ But no matter what degree or satisfying) escape. facturer ofered me a FAT BUCK form that revulsion assumes, it My own high school, (dear sweet· and a FREE HAND to report, un­ usually always ends up i!1 an ul­ alma mater), which I left two years safe features in their products. I timate sense of c·ommunity, ago, has become drug city in minia­ never .. even reported for WO~K! of togetherness. Like man, 'they' ture. Talking to a girl in grade They gave me a thou'sand shares can't beat 'us' all, there's too many. eleven there now, I learn that she of STOCK as a BONUS! The horrendous rock festival at has been approached countless times "Since then .I've probed BANK­ Woodstock, New York, last August by pushers and users. Apparently RUPTCY SWINDLES for GOVERN­ was a classic example. Here close they even light up in the school ~1ENTS, POLLUTION CONTROL for to a million souls gathered peace­ yard during lunch hour and enJOY INDUSTRIAL COUNCILS, CANCER fully despite rain, ·claustrophobic whole new dimensions of awareness CAUSES for CIGARETTE COMPA­ conditions and the lack of shelter. during art class. Looks like I left NIES and AIR CRASHES FOR AIR­ Total strangers shared food and too early. LINES! I write SONGS for the flip overcame tension. About ninety-five Then finally, there's the old fly­ side of HIT RECORDS! I've always per cent were high on grass and out-the-window-trick. Suicide re-­ FAILED COMPLETELY AND been were therefore eased into passi­ mains the third ~o fifth cause of a GREAT SUCCESS! < vity, but they did live in true Sa­ death in fifteen to nineteen year "And now President Nixon wants maritan style for days. olds. me to do an EXHAUSTIVE EXAMI­ But drowning young rats do need A cartoon in Mad MagaZine por NA TION of the ways to end the some escape vehicle. If they can't trays a Negro youth demanding war in VIET'NAM! do as thousand part-time hippies $$$$$$$$$$$$ rights ••. 'not now, not tomorrow, I may win the NOBEL PEACE do every year and travel across McLuhan says that the electric I want it yesterday'. PRIZE!" the country and away,· then the age has instigated a sudden dislo~ The question now is whither we need is sated psychologically. cation of the senses, causing an goest. The future holds for many a -OFF BASE equally sudden loss of iden­ hazy, . grey picture. The tendency $$$$$$$$$$$$ tity. The media blasts away at is to procrastInate. Not only- is It is ironic that in an abstract university enrollment way up, but social sense, man is organized so' conformist-consumers and the indi­ On his trip he may fly the wings so is the student demand for post ...... --;. much in the same fashion as are vidual is submerged" of the great white booze bird. The So he must regain that sudden graduate studentships. That big bad rats. These creatures of vermin use of alcohol in Canada has trebled -;1 re gregarious and peaceful ani­ loss of identity. In his quest for world is not welcoming me with over the last thirty years and latest a new face, he becomes image­ open arms so I think I'll stay here mals within the confines of their figures .estimate that your average own clans, but react .violently tOr conscious and cloths and appearance where it's cozy• You get thousands red-blooded Canadian feeds his take on startling significance. Arlo of university students wandering ellow members of theIr own spe­ liver theequivalerit of four hundred ies not belonging to their parti- Guthrie hat, blue jeans, cow­ aimlessly, unemployed in the real and eighty twelve ounce bottles of boy boots, beads over faded t-shirt. sense of the word. cular community" $ the foamy stuff every year Three Instantly you're classified - 'look To clarify the analogy, there is to five per cent of the population for a myriad of reasons, an obvious at him Selma, he's a hippie'. Uni­ $$$$$$$$$$$$ are alcoholics depending on your versities are relatively free of definition of the word. class conflicts, soespecially there's So while he's in his educationa Or he· may try 'better liVing 'clothing makes the man'. embryo, he has two choices. He through chemistry', a turn on via And man is impatient. He's used can run, and most do at least 'ye local pusher'. The use of pot to things happening quickly. The pre­ occasionally. He can get high, I get can be compared to alcohol con­ electric youtp would wallow in de­ drunk or get lost. sumption during the prohibition era, pression; in this moden counter­ An increasing number are hitting. in which it actually went up 10 part that qUickly crystalizes to anger pop festivals. Maybe they'll replace per cent and not down. Until lega­ and frustration which are imme­ the circusses of old, and kids can lized~ and other drugs and amphe­ diately vented. Politically he has lost run away from home and join pop tamines remain a convenient and faith in the old processed means of festivals. illegal (and therefore much more opinion-letters, speeches and meet­ Or he can stay and fight a~ em­ ings. Red tape is a towering struc­ bittered battle against those staunch, ture that will topple only through conservative old rats. Confronta­ direct action by numbers, mass tion is just as much a way of life numbers to march and intimidate. as the pop festivals are. There. Previous eras have been just have even been planned revolutions as rotten as ours. This generation in the psychiatric wards of Cana­ is unique in reacting Violently to dian hospitals. that decay and attempting to era­ In one case, half the patients dicate it. QUickly. had walked off in an organized confrontation with the administra- tion. The predicament was~othed by appr.oaches 'dictated by eac per­ son's situation' said the re2 rting psychiatrist. Some of the ra e rou­ sers were later released, -weren't responding to treatment you see•. Very oversimplified, ·1 see the .choice as political versus apolitical. Promotors got half a million people Q to sit in the rain together and just groove. At the same time student agitators (they're the ones with the old army shirts) spurred Houston students to protest when a new sports centre was _named after a donor (he gave 1.5 million dollars to the project) and the students weren't consulted. "All you hear about these days is violence. There is too much violence in the world. vVhen will all this violence end?" (maybe when everybody stops re­ acting Violently to it) - Animal Crackers