Volume, 15, Number 7

ord Wee~Iy Thursday, October 31, 1974 lifting idea goes down drain problem of the transportation of dents before the council but Jim to pay $8 extra a year to cover this help to ease the financial strain beer and liquor up to the Turret and Binns was against this as he particular cost. The feeling seemed imminent with the actualization of getting men to do the job. He thought that it is the job of the stu­ to be that the elevator was not a aletterofintent to theL.L.B.O. for mentioned the problem of carrying dent rep on the council to screen high enough priority at the moment more washrooms in the Turret in band equipment and brought up the the proposal first. · to warrant further action. There order to comply with the licence possibility of the band refusing to The response to this proposal were suggestions concerning look­ rules. This will run another play if their equipment is not easily was overwhelmingly negative and ing into different modes of elevat­ $10,000-$13,000. The referendum transportable. Turvey feels that there wei:e arguments to support ing beer and liquor but that the has been tabled and is expected to not having to pay man labour would this feeling. It was thought that the question of band equipment being be brought to the students in Feb­ be an advantage other than the fact elevator did not justify remortgag­ carried up is not serious enough to ruary sometime. that he feels it is an archaic way of ing the SUB to finance the opera­ be an important consideration. A progress report of the Record doing the job. tion at $120,000 and thereby in­ Members of the council recom­ Co-op was presented with not a He was in favour of putting the creasing (yearly) payments by mended that more emphasis be put very promising outlook. The Re­ question of the elevator to the stu- $17,000. The students would have on recruiting the manpower to do cord Co-op is suffering a loss of$75 the hauling during the hours they and is having to contend with the are needed, and that they be paid possibility of cutting down their according to the type of work they hours of operation. They are hav­ are doing. Higher wages might en­ ing trouble getting their orders re­ tice a better response. The issue of turned and with making sufficient the installation of an elevator in the daily sales to make the whole thing SUB building was dismissed with worthwhile. the motion defeated. It was suggested- that they look Council members voted that are­ for another representative for bet­ ferendum for a $2 increase in Stu­ ter services and perhaps do more dent Council fees for next year be advertising in hopes of geting a bet­ brought before the students. This ter consumer response. U of W has $2 will pay for the unexpected de­ a similar outfit and combining our ficit this year in maintenance costs orders with theirs was another pos­ for the SUB. WLU administration sibility mentioned to try and cut presented the deficit of $6,500 to operating costs. SAC too late for it to be budgeted Although SAC business took this year. SAC refused to take on four hours and two separate ses­ the deficit this year but managed to sions to cover, everything did get bargain the figure down to $1 ~ 800 to covered and the closure of the be paid for next year with the ext(a elevator issue made the meeting $2 from each student. It will also a memorable one.

was completed and some business taken care of. As the picture shows, all the members Smith landslides passionate interest in the goings on. by Jim Rice In the election for the single remaining Senate seat held on Wednesday, Oct. 30, Paul Smith won with a plurality of 94 rsity enrollments climb votes over his nearest opponent. This may not sound impressive, but considering that the the number of non high school 1,750 in 1971-72 and an official said, total vote was only 161, Smith's 117 votes represent 72% of graduates wishing to enter Ontario "I guess that we are headed for a the total. universities this year is up 15 per record" this year; Acadia, Wolf­ Of the other candidates, Jim Haslip was second with 23 cent over last year. ville, N.S., estimated 2,600 this votes and Larry Scott received 18. Three ballots were At McMaster University, total year, previous record 2,552 in spoiled. 1974-75 enrolment is estimated at 1973-74; Universite de Moncton, 8,850 and the number of first year N.B., 2,625, almost 300 more than Considering recent history, the very fact that an election students 2,750, both records. last year. ' took place must be considered significant. A turnout of only The University of Toronto an­ University of Montreal, 4,600 161 voters out of a registration of 2,400 is, however, ridicul­ ticipated a record total enrolment first year students accepted, 300 ous. The polling booths were prominently placed in the con­ of 43,772 about 1,225 more stu­ more than last year, and total en­ course, and casting a ballot takes only seconds. dents than last year. rolment expected to be a record; It can only be assumed that the vast majority of students on Estimated enrolment at some University of Sherbrooke, 3,200 0> 0> campus are so hopelessly indifferent and unaware that they a;0> 0> ~~i other Canadian universities this first year students compared with cannot be considered more than technically alive. a; year: University of Prince Edward 2,990 last year and record total en­ Island, 1,j00, previous record rolment expected. 1,771 in 1971-72; Dalhousie, Carleton, first year students Halifa'x, recorded 7,544 students 2,345 compared with 2,2ll- 'tast last year ~and applications "a little year; Laurentian, Sudbury, Ont., ahead of normal" this fall; St. 2,200 compared with 2,092 in ....C\J Mary's, Halifax, previous record 1970-71, the previous record year. 0> a)M_..- ..._C\JC\J - ..- 00 ..- 00..- Waterloogate ~6 C\J..­ .... WATERLOO (CUP)-Students in microphone from another lab ,...... ,...... - the school of optometry at the Uni­ room. versity of Waterloo have found that Hugh McDonald, the teaching -o .._ tJl one of their lab rooms was being assistant involved said he had built · Q'+­ a>- co bugged. and installed the microphone him­ ~CJ ~~ self. He said he was just testing tJl .._ ..OE.:.:..x.:te · They discovered a microphone Q)Q) c - () .() !.! them out and that he and another Radio Laurier is off in the dining hall and the Torque room, even ·- E Q) c ·c t: ""'" and transmitter in the guise of a assistant would occasionally turn though they have installed an expensive speaker system. -g!ii > a> iii iii iii photographic flashgun hidden in a ...JC... > 0 a... a... a.. of British Col­ on the combined tape recorder- . piece of machinery. anticipated receiver to hear how students were ndergraduate and One student talked into the mic­ doing. rophone saying, "this is a pretty Don't touch that dial this year would Dr. Edward Fisher, director of dirty thing to do, we should take by John Carpenter Torque Room but one can actually 0 per cent higher the school of optometry said "we them home." sit down and listen. But in the Din­ lJireg1stered la~t year. are trying everything we can to help Radio Laurier provides a fine ing Hall the sound is always turned lor the Univer­ A few moments later a graduate the students." service to the campus area with a completely off. o expected en- teaching assistant arrived and re­ "The demonstrator probably wide range of programming to ap­ The question this writer would Jgher than last moved the bug. When conf-ronted placed the microphone there so peal to all musical tastes. This is like to pose, then is: "Who controls oria\ enrolment by the students he told them he that if a problem came up in a lab, provided in residence, and to the the level; who turns it down; and as set in 1972-73, wanted '·unbiased comments.' ' he could get there as soon as possi­ community at large over the Grand why? We pay for this service other Can ad ian Students have also heard broad­ ble. I've received no complaints River Cable system. Unknown to through student fees and a number a drop in cast voices of their classmates com­ from students about this. They are many of us however, this service is of people work very hard to pro­ ing from the teaching assistant's of­ free to come and talk to me about also provided in the Torque Room vide it, so why are the students of fice. The same teaching assistant anything. We have a good relatiOQ­ and the Dining Hall. At some times this institution deprived of it during was later seen removing a second ship with our students," he said. the music is barely audible in the leisure moments?" October 31, 1974 GO BY BUS, SO~NY'S Gray Coach University Service • Direct from Waterloo Campus C: m To Toronto and Woodstock-London Express via Hwy. 401 little Board buses on University Ave. by Fred Youngs at Theatre Auditorium quiet and unobtrusive e Inter-Residence n going about making to the uni idences. Inter-Residence Council , and largely ignored WINTER TIME TABlE has a three-fold and recommends are, the director . ' and the Board of HAMBURGERS-HOTDOGS It abo endeavours to EFFECTIVE.OCTOBER 27 t an acceptable level, FISH & CHIPS of living in residence prove communication TORONTO SERVICE on-campus inhabitants ministration. 10:00 AM-3:00AM Express via Hwy 401 alking to the Cord, Chai Leave University . Aubrey Ferguson said __ all week improvement are avail Mon. to Fri. - 3.15 p.m. & 5.00 p.m. . His assumption 256 WEBER N. WATERLOO he calls "our w ide p Fridays - 12.35 p.m. & 3.45 p.m. · This is notable when 884-1750 Return buses from Toronto to Campus at the members of the Ferguson, w ho is Mon. to Fri. - 7.00 a.m. University Affairs, t Sundays 7.30 p.m.,* 8.30 p.m., * G9.50 p.m. & * 10.50 p.m. i~hols, the Dean 9,f all the head residents, * via Islington Subway Station o students selected at G-Locally via Guelph the house presidents. year IRC me mbers and compiled li WOODSTOCK-LONDON SERVICE in the residence complaints ranged from Express via Hwy 401 r to small , but Read Down Read up uch as the repair of o on reading lamps Fridays Sundays rtionate number of 6.15 p.m. Lv. University Ar. 6.40 p.m. to washing machi tht: complaints were 6.35 p.m. Lv. Kitchener Terminal Ar. 7.10 p.m. ned. one major point We've got a program for you that could change the course of your whole future - successfully. 7.25 p.m. Ar. Woodstock Lv. 5.55 p.m. Ar. London Lv. 5.15 p.m. mp It's called our Sales & Marketing Management 8.05 p.m. Program, and it's for graduates who want the most Individual Tickets Available from Driver the st out of thei r career and have the drive to earn it. Toronto and London Buses loop via University, Westmount, Col· by Jack Steumpel To find out more fi ll in th e coupon below or tal k to umbia and Phillip, serving designated stops. Buses will stop on week I'm going to · your Campus Recru itment Officer about an interview. signal at intermediate points en route and along University Ave. how to succeed in Un eries to let loose a at the Cord editors. The Canada Li fe Assu rance Company , ADDITIONAL DAILY EXPRESS SERVICE of all, perhaps I e the column's existen FROM KITCHENER BUS TERMINAL as much as you do r------,The Canada Life Assurance Company 330 University Avenue, Toronto, Ontario M5G 1 R8 See Time Table No.6 However,E ditor - explamed to me that Send me more information about your Sales & Marketing Manage­ purpose. Put nicely, ment Program. BUY "10 - TRIP TICKETS" AND SAVE MONEY! Editor Henry, on the ha n't talked to me si NAME ______10 Rides writing it. W L\TERLOO-TORONTO ...... $25.95 been attacked from too. For example, it ADDRESS ------~-- ed that I rename the Tickets have no expiry date; they do not have to be used by ·. Or "Trash". To be purchaser; they may be used from Kitchener Terminal or from COURSE __· ------Waterloo (In clude resume if available.) Tickets and .Information for this University Service Available at the Games Room, S.U.B.

KITCHENER TERMINAl GAUKEL & JOSEPH STS. Gray Coach Birthright offers an alternative to abortion for women with a problem- pregnancy-by offering free pregnancy test, FOR COMPLETE INFORMATION housing, legal aid, medical aid, maternity and baby clothing. Completely confidential · BIRTHRIGHT 50 Church St. Kit. 579-3990 TELEPHONE 7 42-4469 The Cord Weekly Page 3

making things n le better through. There is a general and necessary materials. He also, it is considerable lack of respect for the said, refuses to meet with groups or maintenance department by resi­ committees. dents. There are examples of Ferguson feels that IRC can do a shoddy workmanship and general lot this year. He hinted at accomp­ indifference towards the needs of lishments by saying "We aremov­ the students, too numerous too ing in the direction of getting things mention. I done. IRC can make a lot of im­ /'*. ~~- l The list was compiled through provements in residence life, we input from the residences in differ­ ,•\ ABL are explaining to people how to get ent manners. House meetings, things done, and why they house council meetings and infor­ mation from dons was used to for­ shouldn't just complain." Aubrey Ferguson~ chairman Of IRe-:- mulate the problem areas in resi­ R27 dence. With the completed list, Beare met with superintendant of buildings and grounds Mel Holmes and they went over the list to­ gether. Holmes felt that some of the problems were beyond his jurisdic­ tion and suggested that they be taken to the property committee which meets on November 25. The other requests were reviewed and some were remedied, but the major complaints were set aside for further study. Holmes dismissed many of the If you want your 10.50 p.m. complaints as being out of stock motivation to infect items or already on back order. He others. then there's residents, two no reason why not. elected at large then came up with, Ferguson said, presidents. "some unique solutions which IRC Think about us and members have had not anticipated. For the re­ yourself; then think ompiled I ists of quest for scales he suggested that about what we can ,e res1dence halls. the women of MacDonald Hall use accomplish together. ranged from lack the scales in the Student Services For more information on I, hut annoying building." the diocesan or religious up e repa1r of on-off The prevalent feeling about priesthood. contact lamps to the Holmes in IRC is not one of am­ Priests of the Sacred Heart undays number of stu­ bivalence and patience to say the Delaware, Ontario NOL1EO 6.40 p.m hmg machines. least. It is felt that he is procras­ !Jmts were wide tinating on repairs by saying that 7.10 p.m •ior point came companies are not stocking the 5.55 p.m 5.15 p.m r estmount, Col swill stop Steumpel o, oing to interrupt niversity Ave eed in Univer­ ~------, et loose a trivial I \ ed1tors. I should ex­ Abril _liant young chemist existence. r as you do at its named Lou ,Editor Fred has to me that it does Put nicely. it fills Studied the whole euening , on the other to me since I through Boohs of facts and equations I That gaue explanations I be used b I For the great tasting flauour I inal or from I of'Biue' I I ___ ., I rvice '------

TION Labatt's Blue smiles along with you Page 4 The Cord Weekly

The Cord Weekly is n1Jrlll~n1M• Editor, Fred Youngs Student Board of Publi THE Editor, Henry Hess Wilfrirl Laurier Universitv Photo Co-ordinator, Herb Klassen Opinions are independent Entertainment Editor, John Carpenter University, Students Admt CORD Sports Editor, Rick Campbell Au Manager, Ken MacDonmu Council and the Phone 884-2990 Publications. The Cord is a Advertising 884-2991 of the Canadian University WEEKLY operative.

• Working up to Municipal Electi Where lS the sanity, As you are well aware, if you read last week's Cord, students in the Twin Cities attending the missed out on the enumeration for this year's municipal elections on Dec 2nd. So as a student at W.L.U., you can ask yourself ''what the hell do I need to get involved with part two elections for?" You are perfectly correct in asking yourself that question. But you do not impact the election may have on you and I'm skeptical as to whether you will vote in the fir t Typically students will bitch when something takes place that they do not like. This is your For those of you who faithfully read the editorial each week, (I , yourself if you had an active part in making that decision. If your apathy reigned supreme then know there are some, excluding my fan club), you will re­ did not want to get involved. You would/will be content to let others make the decision member the editorial of two weeks ago, Where is the sanity? If this year's municipal election passes students by without a vote then we cannot bitch. We Well, faithful and true blue friends, as the headline implies, this apparatus to vote because most of us are over 18 and because you hopefully fliled out the is Where is the sanity, part two. your Head Resident issued to you. Off campus people can still pick up the paper that will allow Oftentimes people blame the executive for bad decisions or be added to the voter's list. non-action, as was the case for part one, and surely the execu­ During the summer months, students lost their franchise to vote simply because officials tive is not above reproach on this subject. I will not claim to have include us in the enumeration list. Most, if not nearly all of us are not on the voter's list. This instituted any great changes with the previous editorial, but in all mode beat us. fairness, I must say that the executive viewed it fairly and took it Yet forms are available in the Waterloo Town Clerk's office and people in residence should as an outside source of criticism. Hopefully that is what will the enumeration paper that will allow their names to be present on the voter's list. happen with the council. Federation of Students President Andrew Telegdi and I have conferred several times on thi I am now a council representative, by dint of a landslide have agreed to try and get the students at both universities to vote. Why? acclamation and I cannot help but think that the only reason I This year the housing situation in Waterloo was one in which students not registered in was acclaimed was because other people would win and then trouble getting an apartment. J:Iousing in Waterloo from the student point of view is inadequate they would have to sit in on these meetings. Never in my life probably only get worse. I'm sure that off-campus students will concur with me. have I seen, heard or been present at such a disgustingly The full-time residents ofWaterloo in the past have been somewhat apathetic in the municipal puerile and senseless battering around of heads and personal they don't care that's their fault. Students should care. We're the ones that are getting the interests. The entire meeting was a sham, from point one to Students bring in a lot of money to this community. Although we are orlly here a short time, point thirteen on the agenda. are pretty consistent. Financially, we are beneficial to the community and we should be concerned SAC are elected responsible positions and it should be happens politically and should be given the chance. treated as such. If a person has a conflicting meetin~ or wants to The~e has ~een talk of student counsellors of U ofW students running for municipal offices. go to the pub or some such nonsense they should not turn to the There ts nothmg more that the students of these universities need than someone promoting face next to them and hand away their vote. Proxies should be within the municipal chambers. given responsibility and they are not. As a member decided to If you have not given this much thought, do so. The municipal elections on Dec 2nd are leave the meeting there ensued a great hue-and cry from many although the payoffs are not initially in front of your eyes enough to motivate you to vote. quarters to leave the proxy with so and so or what's his name so franchise; use it (even at your own school). that the meeting could continue. It came down at the end, that there were only enough to continue with the meeting because if one more member left the quorum was shot and we would have had to continue with the meeting at another time, making it into other washer/dryer. So we can ing the Torque Room three parts. Complaints conclude that either 40 girls are telling the students of It is the duty and the charge given to these members to stay wearing dirty clothes, or all the hours is inexcusable. at these meetings, no matter how long, no matter how tedious. Been over to Conrad Hall lately? girls in "Conrad are somewhat of an Room should have The flagrant misuse of the proxy is a disgusting way of handling If so, I hope you didn't enter D inconvenience when washday stored and a meal plan this duty. wing by way of the Athletic Com­ comes along. in advance by student Beyond this there is the continual bickering and infighting plex. But if you chose that fateful In case you haven't realized it be time to take among members. I admit that at one point I was not above this, road, especially during inclement yet Mal Holmes, I'm talking at you. seven-day meal card. but the perpetual and habitual argument for argument sake was weather, I'll bet you joined the So why don't you talk back .... by students may be · beyond me. A case in point. There was a request from Lynn scores of others who have been doing something for our mainte­ ceiving a change of Brewer of Community Affairs to have a coffee percolator for the subject to slips, slides, and in nance neglected campus. So let's mail, but those of us Birth Control Center, a valid request no doubt, seeing as people general .... tremendously spec­ get to work Mal. Give us something around here a while relax and can talk more easily over a cup of coffee. However, tacular wipeouts. Let's face it, that to prove Mal's administration isn't learned to read this expenditure of forty dollars was haggled over for fifteen entrance is dangerous. Yet it is the maladministration everyone minutes. Who would control it? Could other functions of SAC used extensively. The obvious way thinks it is. use it? Where would it be kept? Could they get at it? Surely the to tackle this hazard would be to Jim Fischer members of SAC know Brewer well enough to realize the install steps, a reasonable solution uselessness of this argument, but they persisted to no end to seeing as how most other entrances Dieting Congratulations to the beat a simple issue into the ground. The pointless argument have such provisions. If, during It gets expensive to eat in re­ the superb interview ensued and finally the motion was passed without a vote of your visit to Conrad you happened staurants every weekend, but for Capson. Despite the discontent. to ride your bicycle, chances are the student who has too far to go and hints of possibly I am not opposed to argument, as it is the basis on which this you had a rough time finding a place home or is a poor cook, this is the enough of Capson 's council functions, but to argue over points which could be and to leave it. The lack of racks not only alternative left. The seven­ seeped through to at should be ratified quickly only lengthens the meetings. Argu­ only leads to an unsightly disorder day meal card apparently died an appetities and maybe, ment for argument's sake is a poor way of exercising the right of of cycles left around the residence, apathetic death this past year. A provoke some freedom of speech. but can be somewhat harsh on the survey was sent around to the stu­ Those who Council should take a good long look at itself. There is really trees to which the bikes are dents who were on that plan and was all about the no point in continuing the patterns established this year. It chained. The lack of an alternative, from the results of that survey were wrong. Sure it seems that there is opposition to motions and ideas put forward i.e. bike racks, makes such random (never published) and a discussion them, but that was more out of animosity and dislike for persons involved in the cycle parking necessary. with the Food Service Committee Capson asks what government of the students. Now let's work from the outside at its meeting on April 25th, 1974, it crucial question. The council must, not should, but must view itself as an in. Anyone who resides in Conrad was decided to let the residence real diversity in important, strong body that concerns itself with ALL the busi­ is no doubt aware of the lack of students fend for themselves on the Surely diversity is ness of the school, not just their own division of interest. It must facilities when it comes to washing weekends. A notice was sent to the order for this in overcome personal dislikes and differences to establish itself in clothes. Your frustrations will be students this summer informing as it purports to do. an orderly manner. Where is the sanity? If it isn't to be found in further enhanced when I tell you them of this change and assuring really think about the executive, or the council, both of which have, I hope, the that you and your building are enti­ them that there would be meals consider the suppres,SIOII power and the desire to improve, then where can we look? SAC tled to another washer and dryer. / served in the Torque Room from 10 ipulation d is lost, so far, and Robert's Rules of Order is not going to help as The notorious head of maintenance a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and Sun­ life, it seems the long as half the people don't understand them and the other half tells us that there should be a day. As it has turned out the Tor­ being slowly interpret them in different ways and only use them when they washer and dryer for every 50 resi­ que Room closes at 2 p.m. every us with what? are politically useful. dents. Some simple arithmetic will Sunday leaving the resident stu­ I like university life Hope springs eternal, maybe. There's a slim chance things reveal that with 240 girls in resi­ dent again, fending for himself. Pol­ the next person, but I will get better around here. dence, Conrad is entitled to five icy changes like this one leave the at its base. We"re Fred Youngs sets of laundry facilities. Yet student confused and I can't help through various club maintenance has not installed the but think they are meant to. Chang- Page 5 Thursday, October The Cord Weekly

~Veekly is published ~oard of Publicatio ~rier University are independent o the Big Blue staggering? [ Students Admin This time, though, there may be issue, then, could conceivably cars, noise, and careless commu­ In the last provincial election, and the 8'oard much more to this defeat than shake even this strong area of sup­ ter, may look elsewhere for a Davis marketed himself like some s. The Cord is a merely local issues. Inflation has port. friendly ear. The pockets of Liberal hot new product, complete with begun to bite rather deeply. Milk grace, charm and family to boot. Bdian University Problems, other than inflation support in the commercial farms of i) prices rose 6 cents a quart last week Even such an exciting symbol as are rapidly arising for the Davis south-western Ontario may spread alone. A pound of cheese now costs the Trudeau of '68, soon found that government. The admission that across rural Ontario at epidemic 20 cents more than it did last the people can turn sour on you if health costs may soon sky-rocket proportions. month. Stephen Lewis is increas­ the game is not played properly. A past the provinces ability to pay The Davis government must also ingly making the inflation issue a casual glance around at the political them points to a massive failure on central theme and Premier Davis face the civil servants demands. the part of the government. Instead The settling of these demands will ~nvironment clearly indicates that has been forced to admit that solu­ somehow and somewhere Davis of providing universal health care, be at best a delicatejgb, at worst a tions to the problem may perhaps the government has taught univer­ has not played the game properly. exist at the provincial level, rather disaster. To give too much will sal over-consumption of, more open the government to the charge All things considered, the Big than just at the federal level as he than likely, useless or unnecessary of aiding inflation. To give too little Blue Machine does seem to be had previously maintained. In­ health care. A solution to this prob­ will further antagonize the unions staggering at least a bit. The NDP deed, it is becoming imperative that lem will have to be found and the and the workingman, a group and the Liberals seeing this stagger­ he find some solutions for inflation repercus~ions o( telling people to which already has little affection hurts not only the average workipg ing, are groping madly for the jugu­ consume less and not to liye so for Davis and the Conservative lar to deliver the death blow. All man, but also the Mississaugian­ highly are frequently rather un­ party. To come down somewhere and all, there is always the good type middle class, a group which pleasant for the government forced in the middle, taking no stand, may possibility they will miss; they cer­ has strongly su.pported the Conser­ to do the telling. seem like and certainly will be tainly have before. And if they do, vatives provincially. Inflation may characterised as, a willingness to the Big Blue Machine will merely perhaps be even more painful for The rural areas of Ontario have ignore problems, a charge which shrug and go back to one-party­ this class than others, as not only traditionally been areas of assured both the teachers and the TTC felt dominance as usual. must the Mississaugian resident at­ success for the Conservative party. was justified at certain points in The question today, however, tempt to decently feed himself but However, if prime agricultural land their encounter with Big Blue. he must also flaunt the two brand continues to be gobbled up for should not be whether the Big Blue new sparkling cars out in the housing and other developments at Concrete political issues aside, wiD recover, but rather having al­ driveway, the new see-through golf the present rate, those rural in­ much of the blame for the growing lowed the situation to reach the club bags on the course and tennis habitants who want to preserve discontent may also be placed on stage it has, whether it desenes to for two on Sundays. The inflation their rural style of life free from the shoulders of Bill Davis himself. recover.

ing teaching personnel, to accept hours per week during the summer to come to­ employment with this university. If at which time the pool is closed to together, live to- this was the case ten years ago, the students? together, indulge in situation is hardly the same today. Why if faculty staff pays less do in the final analysis Consider, if you will, 100 they receive a private locker room, togetherness. When applications received last year, to plus the option to rent a locker? A it out this December fill one opening in the Philosophy privelege denied the student! in a big unfriendly department, for this academic I have no gripe with faculty-staff on our own, all year. usage of any facility on campus turned inward, no-one However, my concern is not with which they have earned. However, WANTED about the person sit­ these previously secured -l don't feel that the faculty-staff and whether or not privileges, but rather with new have not earned any right to extra to the mark depends ones. I would like to know: privileges in regards to utilization Student to share 2 bedroom apartment, us. Yet we all knew Why does the faculty-staff pay of the phys-ed complex. Westmount & Erb. Call Henry at didn't we? At times only $20.00 per year for ·the right to Therefore I presently ask that all can be extremely use the phys. ed. complex when the privileges currently extended to the 579-4271. 'tbelieve me sit in student must pay $25.00 faculty-staff in regards to the phys. Room during the Why if the studeht pays $5.00 ed. complex, which are not also of­ / h hours and look more then faculty-staff, are the fered to the student be suspended was it who wrote facilities closed to the student for immediately.Note H. Maclain and lonely in a place built two hours a week while at the same McKay. It ~eems at times that time these facilities are opened to Dan Russell in an undeclared faculty-staff? chance to escape and Why do faculty-staff receive a odo so. special four hour a week swim lj!ain to the Cord for period during the winter and six UNIVERSITY SPECIALS . a few of Caps on's r, the thought of of this man fright­ WATTS SHURE he opens my mind NOW SHOWING RECORD CARE KITS MAGNETIC CARTRIDGES , and I hate reality as next person - espe­ AND ACCESORIES AND DIAMOND STYLII we're forced to delve In new SlTrfn sa)ll·ndor... onfront it. 1l1e most nmgnificent Christopher Tindale BASF RSC 1,ictnrc cn·r! CASSETTE -8 TRACK SPEAKERS-ENCLOSURES REEL LH TAPES BAFFLES GRILL CLOTH ; as was recorded, pauses and interru p­ the editors. GARRARD PANASONIC CHANGERS-BASES RADIOS-TAPE RECORDERS DUST COVERS-SPI NOLES CLOCK RADIOS-COMPONENTS ears ago. upon my why faculty-staff re- SPECIAL FEATURE ITEM C-60 TAPES 93' privdeges as free park­ Cassette Microphone $2.95 lounges, and wash­ told that these were - STEREO Stereo Headphones . $4.95 utilized in persuad- 4 Speed Automatic Diamond Stylii $3.88 Portable Record Player 8 Track Tapes $3.99 Ideal For Home - V.O.M. Multi Meter $9.88 il!! Cottag.e, 1~~~ Recreation Room AM-FM Radio $9.95 / 8" Speaker $5.95 NIGHTLY AT 7:15PM $~5 Value Grill Cloth 36"x36" $5.95 SUN. MAT. AT 1:30 Our Price S4444 - M 91 ED Shure Cart. l $29.95 COMING SOON

"2001 A SPACE ODYSSEY" AUSTIN ELECTRONICS 22 King St. South WATERLOO 743~4562

fAIIMO\' PARle ~lNG CfiiTR£ o IUICHVO L-1·11 ;i'J Ii\'131:1 #tf·l Hours: Mon. to Fri. 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. TU£rHOH£ Sll~ • IICC CIIIOIAS Ullfl£1 ...... • • • UNI-SEX • • • The N HAIRSTYLING • by Cynthia L. Zin Opposite Canada Trust • Although the federal gm • in the habit of deleg< • function of policy makin! at • ou branches of the Publi< • such as the crown corporal • TAKE OUT & DELIVERY regulatory agencies and t WESTMOUNT PLACE • 6 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU - CATERING SERVICES AVAilABlE ommissions, never did • 676 KING ST. W. 2157 KINGSWAY DRIVE 233 REGINA NORTH muc" power to so h Westmount Place Shopping Centre, • KITCHENER •t FOURTH AVENUE. WATERLOO pnization, as it did in 1 • Tel: 579·1500 Tel: 745-2781 Tel: 745-3661 the National Energy B • reate d. Waterloo - 744-0821 : 50 WESTMOUNT RD. N. 652 KING ST. E., 17 QUEEN ST. WEST It eems incredible e WATERLOO AT PANDORA HESPELER last fifteen years, major Open Tues., Wed. Thurs., Fri. : Tel: 742-2741 Tel: 745·2221 Tel: 658·5474 regarding the future • Deliveries begin at 6:00 p.m. of Canada could be left in 8:30 to 6 8:30 to 8 ...... - of even men who do not the sanction of the Sat. 9 to 5 You are invited to The Second Annual Call us at Calgary LAURIER LECTURE food unfi 744-0821 Reprinted from the Bri .. THE TWENTIETH CENTURY BELONGS TO CANADA" CALGARY students e po ed to undesirable n food and it is only a • d b t1me before there are t 0 be d e I IVere y food poisoning, said Dr. tiles, referring to Uni George lgnatieff cal~i~~~- F~~~o~e~!ces. the University of A -~------... University of Calgary

L 1 01 .. Provost of Trinity College University of Toronto ~a~~hsi~ n p~~~rtl~dj?!f~ c D.. UofW >2 3: University afe?" Former Canadian Ambassador He said in an interview o\~ that the food he ate was ...;,,~c tO the r cious, pointing out th 7 r e and vegetables as GLENRIDGE PLAZA old. During the panel h "ted Nat"lons that the food could Clip this heart out for a Open 11 am Unl FREE COKE and 10 \\armer than 80 degrees. percent off on pickup Close 3 am Weekends food safe from dangerou Tues - Thurs orders over $3.00. 2 am l~\els it must be kept e· & .ln 1 per customer 12 mid. Sun Mon. The Hon. Paul Mart 45 degrees or above I "Seating Provided" lained. ------Chancellor of the University presiding alads had been left Try Our Sub Delight long. he said, adding t Friday, Nov. 1 at 8:30 pm been out long enough to 884-2050 on the side of its -.v•••a"'" caHahead and it's ready in have formed a skin. 10 minutes; or we deliver. University Campus 1E 1 He also said that the 3 Kitchener Locations: ._------4 atoo food cold susceptible and explained to -Highland Rd. 745-1184 formations. Courtland Place 576-8120 tiles said the facili good and that he would 1+1 · ForestHill Plaza 579-5080 mrsterea get a good meal there" . "The All-Canadian Pizza" HOME It AUTO COMPONENTS-SPEAKERS ' CHANGERS " ACCESSORIES • TAPES'

"At present Hi-Fiis a boom industry which has encouraged the blossoming of many shoddy products - not always identifiable by being at the Cheaper e~d Of the market." .J.fl. f l /or Pleasure. Novv,wer 797J

He said that food i erved at the right that Dr. Stile's cold been due;; to the fact that otT while people wait in then carry it to a table. "I wish he had tried Griffiths said, "It's first aid that soups are one production supervisor !rates on. tiles had passed up when he noticed that it with a layer of skin.

n1rstereo 321 WEIER ST. NORTH IN WATERLOO (tatw.. nuni .. enltv•Mcotumbl•l TE (>ftiN MONDAY TO fRIDAY from 9 AM to 9 PM Open S.turdar 9 am to 6 pm FREE PARKING The Cord Weekly Page 7

e N.E.B.: Where does it all go? '> Cynthia L. Zinck Canada. Had these government ments for use in Canada having re- Cahada would have to literally start oil companies themselves. federal government appointees done even a mediocre • gard in the case of an application to digging to get at her "reserve" The National Energy Board of delegating the job, one might accept them with a export gas to the trends of discov­ supply. must believe, with considerable policy making to vari­ Machiavellian "ends justify th~ ery of gas in Canada." The N. E. B. Even this might be tolerable if more trust than I am able to muster, ofthe Public Service means" shrug but a more useless decisions demonstrate its belief the National Energy Board would that the oil companies would not lie ncorporations, the collection of blunderers would that exports should amount to the show the intelligence of a bright to them; that they would not agencies and the Royal surely be hard to find. full amount of any surplus gas in nine year old. Where does the slightly overestimate reserves, AVAilABLE never did it give so The National Energy Board has Canada. Its idea of "meeting the N.E.B. get its statistical informa­ would not be the least optimistic in REGINA NORTH to >O haphazard an or­ had sole responsibility for the de­ foreseeable requirements" is evi­ tion concerning the "trend of dis­ their estimates over new sources TERLOO it did in 1959 when velopment of an energy policy dently to be found in the abstract covery" in oil? Consult the magni­ despite the fact that the larger the 745-3661 Energy Board was since 1959. The N.E.B.- has the possibilities indicated by ''trends ficent two volume collection of no­ amount available the greater the power to "regulate Canadian ex­ of discovery''. thing which they published in 1973, volume which will be available for mcredible that for the ports and imports of natural gas and This leaves Canada in the in­ entitled "a National Energy Policy export. But then that's what the years, major decisions oil through the granting oflicences, teresting position of having a vast for Canada". You might be sur­ National Energy Board consists future energy supply and the power to control both in­ amount of discovered oil that is not prised to learn that that massive of-some of the most innocent, be left in the hands ternational and interprovincial practical for use at the present collection of statistical data was most trusting and, unfortunately, who do not even have trade in oil and natural gas through time. In case of an energy shortage, comprised by none other than the most powerful men in Canada. of the voters of the granting of certificates for the construction of pipelines." Al­ though the federal government has AFTtR HI'H SCHOOL I aur I DIDN'T ESCAPE SO IN TMl ENO, I the power to reverse any decision WOJ\ttED IN l\4E BUSINESS IT. I JUST ENTUED 4- f1AY FNL fW QX.a~ made by the board, it has never ~LD ANO SAW ENOUGH OF tWOI'LD WMEAE ALL TIE IT'"" 8E(OMINGM done so. ~KSTABfiiN& 10 DO ME UCKSlNMIEAS ARE EIPEin" ON POUTICS/ What are the standards by which . r·,~uf'E. \:"~),\ YOUN~ the Board decides on the merits of l ,~, each case? The board will issue a from the Bricklayer licence for export provided that the {~( CANADA" tudents are being amount exported "does not exceed undesirable conditions the surplus remaining after due al­ it IS only a matter of lowance has been made for the '. ~~ there are outbreaks of reasonably foreseeable require- said Dr. Michael ~ errmg to University of ·*'- ood Services. food microbiologist at of Alberta, ate in of Calgary cafeteria If you've spent Toronto pnor to joining a panel nutled "Is our Food the last few years learning the an mterview March 14 dor lood he ate was pretty at­ nting out the goulash, business of money management, getables as being too the panel he had said 'ood could have been no vve'd like to talk to you about 0 degrees. To keep mdangerous bacterial t be kept either below managing some of ours. or above 140 he exp- iding ad been left out far too addmg that soup had We're Northern touched the surf'\ce. creative with money as •long enough to have dried Electric, and if you've There's a whole world our engineers are with been assessing the Cana­ waiting for better means telecommunications dian business scene with of communication. South technology. an eye to pinpointing your lies the giant American Of course, our stan­ first career move, you may market; East, the chal- · dards are high. But then, already know quite a bit lenging.E uropean so are the financial re­ about us. Growth that's Common Market and wards and career securi­ been called almost explo­ West, a Pacific Rim poten­ ties for Commerce sive. Telecommunications tial so big we can't even graduates who can help us management. product development measure it. We've alregdy achieve our goals. If what manager of U of that's been termed established effective bases we offer appears to match MacEwan Hall Food what you want, talk to that he was person­ fantastic. in these markets, but to be dent that Monday's We are on the move as big a part of them as we your Campus Placement food was fresh and pre­ and to maintain this want to be, requires sound Officer. And the way per production stan- momentum, we need financial planning. we're moving, today more talented people. So we need people­ would be a good day that food is always You see, as big and ambitious ari.d enthusias­ to do it. 1e nght temperature and booming as we are, we tic finance and accounting cold food may have the fact that food cools know we've hardly graduates who can be as people wait in line and t to a table. / he had tried the soup," !ald. ··It's first rate". He are one area that the

passed up the soup that it was covered of skin.

\ I

I1A Norlhf'rn Elf'clric ~ g COMPANY, LIMITED Page 8 The Cord Weekly A history

Just in time for Hallowe'en: an article on what real issue was control: male upper class healing medications or charms. In short, her magic was the grounded more witches really were. under the gaze of the church was acceptable, female science of her time. ntations and - This article is excerpted from Witches, Mid­ healing as part of a peasant subculture was not. to be effective. A wives and Nurses by Barbara Ehrenreich and The wise woman, or witch, had a host of remedies a broth made of Deirdre English (Glass Mountain Pamphlets), which had been tested in years of use. Many of the The Rise of European n a dry land among and is available from New Hogtown Press, To­ herbal remedies developed by witches still have their ronto. Thanks to the Voice for this feature. place in modern pharmacology. They had pain­ Medicine ·science" at the killers, digestive aids and anti-inflammatory agents. Meanwhile the ruling classes were cultivating their persecuted for being The witch-healer's methods were as great a threat own breed of secular healers-European medicine witches who de­ Women have alWays been healers. They were the (to the Catholic Church, if not the Protestant) as her became"firmly established as a secular science and of bones and unlicensed doctors and anatomists of western his­ results, for the witch was an empiricist: She relied on a profession that excluded women. were still tory. They were abortionists, nurses and counsel­ her senses rather than on faith or doctrine, she be­ Confronted with a sick person, the university­ rology and al- lors. They were pharmacists, cultivating healing lieved in trial and error, cause and effect. Her attitude trained physician had little to go on but superstition. to gold. herbs and exchanging the secrets of their uses. They was not religiously passive, but actively inquiring. Bleeding was a common practice, especially in the were midwives travelling from home to home and She trusted her ability to find ways to deal with dis­ case of wounds. Leeches were applied according to village to village. For centuries women were doctors ease, pregnancy and childbirth-whether through the time, the hour, the air, and other similar consider- of without degrees, barred from books and lectures, learning from each other, and passing on experience from neighbour to neighbour and mother to daugh­ ter. They were called 'wise women' by the people, witches or charlatans by the authorities. Medicine is part of our heritage as women, our history, our birth­ right. Today, however, medicine is the property of male professionals. Ninety-three per cent of the doctors in had won a clear the US are men ; and almost all of the top directory ne among the and administrators of health institutions. Women are ). They then still in the overall majority-70 per cent of health of female heal- workers are women-but we have been incorpo­ rated into an industry where the bosses are men. We State and medi­ are no longer independent practitioners, known by m the witch trials. our own names, for our own work. We are for the medical "expert" most part, institutional fixtures, filling faceless job whole proceeding. slots: clerk, dietary aide, technician, maid. the doctors' profes­ The suppression of women health workers and the ..... "'"""''"'1 healing as rise to dominance of male professionals was not a dare to cure with­ 'natural' process, resulting automatically from and must die." (Of changes in medical science, nor was it the result of a woman to study.) women's failure to take on healing work. It was an a handy excuse for active takeover by male professionals. And it was not practice: Anything science that enabled men to win out: the critical result of sorcery. battles took place long before -the development of of the witch-hunts modern scientific technology. the last preserve of In the hands of the who wielded for­ Witchcraft and Medicine Into a lucrative bus­ in the Middle Aaes lllf'llrerE!a in force in the Witches lived and were burned' long before the development of modern medical technology. The great majority of them were lay healers serving the Rise of peasant population, and their suppression marks one of the opening struggles in the history of man's Medical suppression of women as healers. The other side of the suppression of witches as healers was the creation of a new male medical profession, under the protection and patronage of the ruling classes. The age of witch-hunting spanned more thanJour centuries (from the 14th·to the 17th century) in its sweep from Germany to England. It was born in feudalism and lasted-gaining in virulence-well into the 'age of reason '. The witch-craze took differ­ ent forms at different times and places, but never lost its essential character: that of a ruling class cam­ paign of terror directed against the female peasant population. Witches represented a religious, political and sexual threat to Protestant and Catholic Churches alike, as well as to the state. Two of the most common theories of the witch­ hunts are basically medical interpretations, attribut­ ing the witch craze to unexplainable outbreaks of mass hysteria. One version has it that the peasantry went mad. According to this, the witch craze was an epidemic of mass hatred and panic cast in images of a blood-lusty peasant mob bearing flaming torches. Another psychiatric interpretation holds that the witches themselves were insane. But, in fact, the craze was neither a lynching party nor a mass suicide by hysterical women. Rather, it followed well-ordered procedures. The witch-hunts were well organized campaigns, initiated, financed and executed by Church and State. Commonly, the accused was stripped naked and shaved of all her body hair, then subjected to thumb-screws and the rack, spikes and bone­ crushing "boots", starvation and beatings. The point is obvious: The witch-craze did not arise spontane­ ously in the peasantry. It was a calculated ruling class campaign of terrorization. The most fantastic accusation of all was that were less witches helped and healed those who had no doctors they mighl and hospitals, and who were bitterly afflicted with with even poverty and disease. The church told these sufferers didn't know that their torment was a mark of sin. their close But the gout and apoplexy of the rich got plenty of clout. By1 attention. Kings and nobles had their court physi­ ing laws cians who were men, sometimes even priests. The ing the Fi The Cord Weekly Page 9 story men healers

~gic was the ations. ricians were going down the drain. m "log1c Publicly, however, the obstetricians launched quas1-rel -=~ their attacks on midwives in the name of science and frequent reform. Midwives were ridiculed as "hopelessly dirty, pean the flesh of -..··'-; ·- .. ... ! '. /:..-') - ignorant and incompetent". ... - / stones A truly public-spirited obstetrical profession would Such w \~ ~; ~~ :-~ ; have been to make the appropriate preventive tech­ ~ ivating their time when "'-. ,:-' niques known and available to the mass of midwives. ~ n medicine practillone ~ - - ·· r1/---:-- . : ~,. This is in fact what happened in England, Germany veloped an and most other European nations: Midwifery was muscles \-.-tv · I upgraded through training to become an estab­ ...' ,' denvmg 1 lished, independent occupation. chem1s1s But the American obstetricians had no rea\ com­ mitment to improved obstetrical care. In fact, a study by a Johns Hopkins professor in 1912 indicated that most American doctors were less competent than the midwives. Under intense pressure from the medical profes­ sion, state after state passed laws outlawing midwif­ ery and restricting the practice of obstetrics to doc­ tors. For poor and working class women, this actually meant worse-or no-obstetrical care. For the new, male medical profession, the ban on midwives meant one less source of competition. Women had been routed from their last foothold as independent practitioners. The Lady with the Lamp The only remaining occupation for women in health was nursing. Nursing had not always existed as a paid occupation-it had to be invented. Credit for the invention of nursing goes to a small handful of upper class women reformers whose prime interest was not in improving opportunities for women but in improving hospital conditions. In the view of nursing leaders like Florence Nightingale, the filthy and ar­ chaic hospitals of the time needed a "woman's early grab for medical monopoly inspired mass in­ lewd-of the male students. There were professors touch". "The Nightingale nurse", who set the pattern dignation in the form of a radical, popular health who wouldn't discuss anatomy with a lady present. for nursing education in this country as well as Eng­ movement which came close to smashing medical There were textbooks like a well-known 1848 obstet­ land, was conceived as the embodiment of "feminin­ elitism in America once and for all. rical text which stated, "She (Woman) has a head ity" as defined by Victorian society. almost too small for intellect but just big enough for For all the glamorous "lady with the lamp" imag­ love." ery, nursing at the time involved little more than The Popular Health In the late 19th century, the "women's health household drudgery, with the patriarchal husband movement" began to dissociate itself from its Popu­ replaced by the lordly doctor. But just as the late 19th Movement lar Health Movement past and to strive for respecta­ century women's movement had not opposed the The Popular Health Movement of the 1830's and bility. Members of irregular sects were purged from rise of medical professionalism, it did not challenge 40's is usually dismissed in conventional medical the faculties of the women's medical colleges. nursing as an oppressive female role. histories as the high-tide of quackery and medical Female medical leaders such as Elizabeth Blackwell Women have not been passive bystanders in the cultism. In reality it was the medical front of a general joined male "regulars" in demanding an end to lay history of medicine. The present system was born in social upheaval stirred up by feminist and working midwifery and a "complete medical education" for all and shaped by the competition between male and class movements.' all who practised obstetrics. All this at a time when female healers. The medical profession in particular The Movement was a radical assault on medical the "regulars" still had little or no "scientific" advan­ is not just another institution which happens to dis­ elitism, and an affirmation of the traditional people's tage over the sect doctors or lay healers. criminate against women: It is a fortress designed medicine. "Every man his own doctor," was the and erected to exclude us. T.his means to us that the slogan of one wing of the Movement, and they made . sexism of the health system is not incidental, not just it very clear that they meant every woman too. The Money and Germs Save the reflection of the sexism of society in general or "regular" licensed doctors were attacked as mem­ the sexism of individual doctors. It is historically older bers of the "parasitic, non-producing classes, " who the Regulars than the medical science itself; it is deep-rooted, survived only because of the upper class "lurid taste" Though no longer faced with organized opposition institutional sexism. for calomel and bleeding. (they could not claim to control any special body of Professionalism in medicine is nothing more than The peak of the Popular Health Movement coin­ knowledge), the professional victory of the "regu­ the institutionalization of a male upper class cided with the beginnings of an organized feminist lars" was only made tangible through a lucky coinci­ monopoly. We must never confuse professionalism movement, and the two were so closely linked thc:11 dence. Science and ruling-class support became with expertise. Expertise is something to work for it's hard to tell where one began and the other left off. available about the same time, the. turn of the cen­ and to share; professionalism is-by definition The health movement was concerned with women's tury. -elitist and exclusive, sexist, racist and classist. rights in general, and the women's movement was French and especially German scientists brought Our oppression as women health workers today is particularly concerned with health and with women's forth the germ theory of disease which provided, for inextricably linked to our oppression as women. access to medical training. the first time in human history, a rational basis for Nursing our predominate role in the health system, is disease prevention and therapy. simply a workplace extension of our roles as wife and Meanwhile the US was emerging as the industrial mother. The nurse is socialized to believe that rebel­ leader of the world. Fortunes were ruthlessly built. lion violates not only her "professionalism", but her The Rockefeller and Carnegie foundations appeared very femininity. This means that the male medical in the first decade of the 20th century. One of the elite has a very special stake in the maintenance of earliest and highest items on their agenda was medi­ sexism in the society at large. Doctors are the bosses cal "reform", the creation of a respectable, scientific in an industry where the workers are primarily American medical profession. women. Sexism in the society at large insures that Naturally the money to set up such institutions as the female majority of the health workforce are Johns Hopkins was firmly behind the scientific elite, "good" workers-docile and passive. Take away of the "regular" doctors, leaving the smaller poorer sexism and you take away one of the mainstays of schools (often special schools for blacks and the health hierarchy. women) to close. Medicine was established once What this means to us is that in the health system and for all as a branch of "higher" learning accessi­ there is no way to separate worker organizing from more lnJUnou ble only through lengthy and expensive university feminist organizing. To reach out to women health The lay praditinll training. workers as workers is to reach out to them as more ettectiv, At its height in the 1830's and 1840's, the Popular Medicine had become a white, male, middle class women. mild herbal Health Movement had the "regular" doctors-the occupation. The doctor had become "the man of hand-holdmg f, professionals ancestors of today's physicians science"-beyond criticism, beyond regulation, very didn't know -running scared. Later in the 19th century, as the nearly beyond competition. were less Irk grassroots energy ebbed and the Movement degen­ theymightw erated into a set of competing sects, the "regulars" with even m1d went back on the offensive. In 1848 they pulled to­ didn't know I ·outlawing the Midwives gether their first national organization, pretentiously All that was left to drive out the last holdout of the their close II named the American Medical Association (AMA). old people's medicine-the midwives. In 191 0, about clout. By 1830 The rare woman who did make it into a "regular" 50 per cent of babies were delivered by ing laws outlaw medical school faced one sexist hurdle after another. midwives-most were blacks or working class im­ ing the ''regu First there was tlie continuous harassment-often migrants. Potential profits for "professional" obstet- CHAPEL SERVICES NOVEMBER 1st- Musical Praise for All Saints Day Mr. David Hall

4th- Mr. Save Sterritt and Mr. Neil Campbell

5th- Mr. David Meddle

6th- Eucharist: Pastor Richard Urdahl Birth control info 7th- Mr. Klaus Raab 8th- A Service of Hymns-Or. Walter H. Kemp

by Judy Merrill haviour. This tendency is common mastered some of the more subtle 11th- Mr. Sam Makhurane Alth·ough the service provided to even the most innocent and sim­ aspects of counselling and to have by the Birth Control Information ple interchanges between people, an ability to put themselves in the 121h- Miss Debbie Gillespie and Mr. Wayne Shal!ll Centre is basically information but is heightened in situations client's position and to establish based, counselling situations do where strong emotions ancffeelings communication. The reason that 13th- Eucharist: Dr. Ragnar Teigen, Officiant occasionally have to be dealt with. are involved. In order to avoid they can do this is that they are real Because this is true, I feel that the making judgements it is necessary people with real feelings and prob­ 14th- Mr. Robert Gotwalt students should know what is in­ to try to see the 'other person's lems of their own. Theydon'tcome volved in counselling as it applies point of view, to sense how he across like automatons because 15th- Strains of Praise no. 1 to the Centre. feels, to achieve his frame of refer­ they aren't. There is only one more 18th- A Cell Group With both professional and ence in regard to the thing which he point that I would like to stress para-professional counsellors there is talking about. It means really lis­ which is that any one may come to 19th- Eucharist: Celebrant, Pastor Bart Beglo are a number of problems which the tening to what the client is saying us, student or not, and no one will 20th- counsellor must be able to over­ and focusing totally on him without ever know that you came except Mrs. Jean Lanier-Visiting Lecturer come in order to be effective. One letting one's mind wander. In the counsellors on duty and you. in Systematics of the easiest things for the counsel­ short, understanding with a person, We do stress confidentiality very 21st- Mr. David Lee-Thompson lor to do is to visualize himself as not about him is the most effective strongly because it is a safeguard being THE person who can HELP way of communicating. and a very necessary one. 22nd- Strains of Praise no. 2 people by solving all of their prob­ No counsellor should ever take This article is one way of letting 25th- Mr. Charles Dietz lems. Unfortunately, this attitude, anything for granted. He has to be you know what we can provide and 26th- Mr. Walter Johanson if it shows, is usually more detri­ able to offer all alternatives and of keeping you informed about the mental than helpful in such a situa­ without the whole situation it is im­ things that we consider to be impor­ 27th- Eucharist: Professor Richard Crossman, tion. One of the main faults with it possible to do so with any effec­ tant to students as far as what is Celebrant is that the counsellor appears im­ tiveness. really happening with on-campus 28th- Mr. Jack Dressler posing, condescending and there­ All counsellors need to realize organizations. More in a couple of fore he immediately sets up a bar­ that they are not infallible that they weeks about new developments. 29th- Strains of Praise no. 3 rier between himself and the client can and will sometimes make mis­ which hinders all attempts at com­ takes, and that they are as most munication. other people are, emotional, some­ ------HOWDY PARTNERS SPECIAL Nigh In order to have an effective times tired, sometimes bewildered 1/4 WESTERN FRIED CHICKEN counselling relationship the client or uncertain human beings. Clients ROY'S GOLDEN FRENCH FRIES ath razor blades i must see the counsellor as a real as well as counsellors need to HOT OR COLD DRINK mb , making it i person, a spontaneous individual realize that these people are there ONLY $1.19 f Dad"s Buic whom he can react to, an individual for whatever help they can give, be GOOD UNTIL NOV. 30, 1974 fights an who is going to be honest even if it medical and factual information AT- 210 KING ST. W. 111nmc a break hone being honest sometimes means referral services, or simply to be a WATERLOO I admitting that the counsellor sounding board. doesn't know how to help the All of these aforementioned client. An effort should then be problems are even more difficult to made (on the counsellor's part) to handle when the person one is deal­ either find out the necessary infor­ ing with is on the other end of a mation, or to refer the client to phone, because little things such as someone who is capable of giving movements of body and expres­ the client aid. Another problem sions, cannot be picked up making which has to be overcome is the it more difficult to decipher the real natural tendency to make judge­ extent of the problem. ments or evaluations, moral or Above all, the people who work ------·------otherwise, of the client's be- with us as counsellors seem to have SYNTHESIS OF QUALITY--- EQUIPMENT I ote Regular Super Price List Special PIONEER OXBOOO 4-channel receiver $729.00 $499.00 CT3131 Cassette Deck 257.50 195.00 NIKKO QSR4040 4-channel 449.95 299.95 receiver SHERWOOD • S2400 Tuner 299.95 199.95 S9400 Amplifier 399.95 299.95 KLH 6 Speaker 350.00 pr. 250.00 pr 23 Speaker 420.00 pr. 299.00 pr INFINJTY Posi Speaker 299.95 pr. 199.95 pr AFTER YOU PROMISE HER THE WORLD .•• ONKYO Radian Ill GIVE HER A DAZZLING DIAMOND 440.00 pr. 299.95 pr Even if you can't keep all the other • MARTIN Speaker 360.00 pr. 199.95 pr promises you made ... there's one you can. TEAC An-60 Dolby Unit 175.00 139.00 Give her a diamond! One fiery jewel to express the love that is yours. CONCORD CR250 Receiver-used 199.95 Symbol of love like new and devotion ... and all that is yet to be ... a brilliance to be cherished forever. BRAUN TG 1000 Tape Deck-used 1'199.95 829.00 like new (full warranty)

- - - --·-- - MOST UNITS 1 ONLY FLOOR MODELS-CLEARANCES DUNNETTE lO KING W. KITCHENER 50 Westmount Rd.N J E\\'ELLERS SYNTHESIS Waterloo STEREO SHOP 579-5650 Page 11 Evolution of the Rock Audience

Carpenter them out and throwing them at the Along with the rebirth of the solo Mr. Neil Campbell Fred Youngs screen, stately London was aghast, performer, this era also spawned the Nazareth but it was fun and it grew from total audience involvement. Hys­ mght, it brought to there. terical women were commonplace phenomenon we and so were short concerts. No one Urdahl .. the rock-N- cared how they played or what or On the beach how long they played, their mere :ltre or classical audi­ On the other side of the Atlantic presence was enough. it was sand and sun. The surfing r performance with They were interested in girls, view several years later, said that Teigen, Officiant he audiences expecta- cars, boys, surfing, girls, illegal he even played the lead line to drinking, boys and partying. But Wolly Bully, then the number one and arranger who once again dancing was the thing; song and no one, not even the other recreate the works of the only concert they would attend may do so without the three noticed that it was different was on the beach, that idyllic home audience not involving from the song they were playing. away from home where you could ,ysical manner. Classi- The Beatles were the biggest forget school and the evils of r Bart Beglo . ~edate and respec­ thing to hit rock'n'roll ever. The parenthood. Only thing was you Peter Townsend of the Who. to listen and involve audience at these events could be had to be home by 11:00. man emotional sense. termed over involved, and then you no 1moke bombs, col­ The music reflected this. It was would be making an understate­ ously any discussion of audiences never present before. not loved for itself but because it and other paraphanalia ment. must lead to the festival, that idea talked about these kids. The Beach ubliminal and primal In Australia, a young mother where you take x-number of peo­ Boys were the first major concert Package Deal way a group such as thrust her baby at Lennon and ple, put them in a field, dope them 1972 and the Rolling Stones, bil­ band and the kids loved it. This does. It even shows asked him to touch it so it would be up and feed them entertainment for led as the greatest rock'n 'roll band then is the real birth of the concert ~.·,iifference in the music. cured of some malady it had. The a few days. If you're good, I ike Bill in the world invades North idiom, where you sat down and the possibly with the ex- audience went out into the street. Grahm, forceful, like Bill Grahm, America. Everywhere they went band was on stage and one man Crossman, the Allmans and the None of the four could walk down or lucky, like hundreds of other they sold out, and everywhere they made a whole lot of money off your an interest level in the street without fear of being promoters, you make money. played they played the same set. meager earnings from the grocery ten minutes. Classical stampeded and stripped of any­ Woodstock was the big daddy of With a flick of his wrists or a store where you worked. Enter the rttcularly the sym­ thing and everything they had. festivals. Five hundred thousand demure kick of his leg Jagger could promoter. over ten minutes. The English invasion livened up people all crammed on Max end a song anywhere he liked. The the rather dreary affairs of Yasgur's alfalfa patch. We just love package never changed. They had Ni ht Shakin' all over rock'n'roll and brought out the full you out there, you're so strong, the lights, the stage and all the ------g Normally when they show a per- potential of the audience. don't eat the brown acid. Beautiful props and they bring us to the pres­ former on variety shows they start man, peace, gee, I might be in the ent. with razor blades in with a full length shot and work in M-m-m-my movie. Every band can be seen in two tat! combs, making it in to show his face, often returning to They (the performers) could categories. The Woodstock leftov­ eat of Dad's Buick, full length shots throughout. But G-g-g-g-generation make you stand up, sit down or ers, (CSNY, the Dead, the All­ ga ng fights and one night, a Sunday to be exact, The Who, the mods and sods. play in the mud. They didn't mind mans, Lynyrd Skynyrd) who come Gi mme a break honey, they had this hick from Tennessee They were the first and are still one because no one was straight on in jeans, or some such "ordi­ fifties. on, and they would only show him of the few bands who do what they enough to realize how bad the nary" clothes and play. we presently refer from the waist up. Not surprising do best. They play harder longer music really was. It was the start of Then there is the realm which when dancing was when you considered that it was the and louder fo r the people, they are the new tradition where a per­ could be called theatre. It's big were abso­ Ed Sullivan show and he wouldn't just straight ahead, and the audi­ former could play endlessly, jump now. Pink Floyd. Bowie, Mott and of. It was only even allow brassiere commercials, ence loves them. about and everyone loves him. of course Alice Cooper. It's the bu t they liked it. let alone the bump and grind ofElis. It started the idea of audience smoke bomb and the faked guil­ wl as not ost on the Presley. By the time we get to unity. Everyone reacts as one. lotine that bring the people to their It came out in the Presley was the real thing. Girls They all clap along at the same feet and we have the Stones to in London Eng­ fainted, screamed and boys copied Woodstock time, scream back at the same time thank for that. up to see Bill Haley his hair style. They really went to Monterey, California, mid­ and get drunk at the same time. They were the first ones to do up play that music in his concerts, really sat down and sixties, the first festival. San Fran­ However, the audience was the theatre thing and the '72 tour ------~ , and they tore the really tore it up at the climax. The cisco, a perpetual festival. New­ maturing. There was an under­ was more an event for that then the OF Knifing the seats, tearing birth of the audience. port, a traditional festival. Obvi- standing of the music which was music. PMENT Note on Jazz : ·A horn honks Super by Garth Webb young musicians have played with Miles Davis' most recent release dued and contemplated with Chick "Go Ahead John" is the LP's Special nks, breaking the still him and then gone on their own comprises a sort of retrospect of his Corea's haunting piano summoning weakest track. Twenty-nine sec­ on the stage. Miles productive ways. I do not think that post-Bitches Brew album phase. distant echoes of "Sketches of onds of slush is too much to pay for mg, mfull control and they could tell you. How did this Big Fun incorporates four side-long Spain". "Great Expectations" is a a bit of inspired Miles-McLaughlin $499.00 the living legend owns· one man communicate the legacy tracks recorded at different time in­ transitional track, complex riffing. All in all the album is a very house Yes. Miles has of Charlie Parker, assimulating it tervals from the past four to five throughout. The piece opens with a respectable effort by Miles and 195.00 a long time, a Juillard into the mainstream of popular years. roar of high gear funk, then, half­ gives every indication that Miles 299.95 lmhip student, the music? How often was it you got to The earliest piece of the set, way through, the music does a re­ Davis will be around as a driving the legendary Charlie hear a Chick Corea set, or Keith "Lonely Fire", shows shadows of versal towards a gentle finale with a musical force for a long time to d and a constant influ­ Jarrett, even when they were all "Bitches Brew". The mood is sub- peaceful almost folk like theme. come. evolution of the jazz- playing with Miles on albums, how eler smce. often could you hear them indi­ 199.95 1is ts the forefather of vidually? Virtually never, and yet This space is reserved for infor­ invited and can be left in the "To 299.95 lectric trendsetting today the music audience is recog­ mation on future events relevant to Be" mail box in the Board of Publi­ pectrum of today's nizing the promise of these young m:o 18t • • • the WLU campus. Submissions are cations office before 10 a.m. Tues­ fusion is almost often white often classically trained day. 250.00 pr. made up of players musicians', by-products, of Miles' pr. is as their graduate bombastic conversion to electric Thurs. Oct. 31st Sat. Nov. 2nd Tues. Nov. 5th 299.00 Davis' band, has music. - Senate Open Meeting, 8 p.m., - WLU Football, playoff game -Open meeting ofWLU Board of 199.95 pr. the three controver­ I feel that it is Miles' innovative Rm 2E5 against McMaster, 1 p.m., Centen­ Governors, 9.30 a.m., Rm. 5-203 a.hes·Brew Lp's-those daring and strong personal mag­ -Halloween Pub with "Canada" nial Stadium -SAC film, Patton with George C. 299.95 pr. rtoo n covers: On the netism that gets people in his bands in the Turret; those in costume ad­ Scott, Two showings; 7.30 p.m. 199.95 pr. and recently Big to respecfand follow him. Who else mitted free, others $1, 8 p.m. and 10 p.m. in lEI are recordings which would have the nerve to put Keith 139.00 om in g in evolutionary Jarrett and Chick Corea, the first Sun. Nov. 3rd 199.95 they gave birth to such time that they ever played together - WLU Convocation, 2 p.m., Wed. Nov. 6th Wea ther Report, on organ and electric piano in front Fri. Nov. 1st Kitchener Auditorium. -History Club Meeting, Willison andjust about every­ of a packed house at the Fillmore - Semi-formal with "Canada" in Lounge, 10 a.m. 829.00 happening in the new just to see what would happen. And the Turret; celebration of 1st birth­ c these days. there's Miles playing in the middle day of Wilfrid Laurier U ni versi ty, 11 about this trumpet of them. That's what makes him a admission $1, 8 p.m. Mon. Nov. 4th Thurs. Nov. 7th - Family Property Law Meeting, - Laurier Christian Fellowship CES t. Louis that makes leader; knowing how to make the - Kitchener Jr. A Rangers vs. tire of speculating on actions around an event become program to outline major recom­ Meeting, Willison Lounge; to be Peterborough Petes; 8 p.m., Kitch­ mendations of commission study­ followed by worship service with ount Rd.N. going to do next? Ask the event itself and he is just being ener Auditorium mu sicians what speci­ Miles Davis. ing these laws with Hon. Robert Pastor Urdhal, 6.45 p.m. - "Civil Rights and the Law" , Waterloo that ~\ ile<> did or to\d \\ )\\'i>\ QCC\\n:ed \Q me \\\c.\\ c.m Welch. Attorney General of On­ - WLU Exhibition Hockey Game Corea. Herbie Han­ supposed to review an album or so Study Room, Kitchener Public tario. 8 p.m., The Humanities against York, 8.00 p.m., Kitchener 579-5650 MI;Laug hl in, Keith Jar- in this write up. Library, 12 noon Theatre, Hagey Hall, U of W. Auditorium. Shorter. All these Big Fun; Miles Davis (Columbia) Nazareth: surpri.singty good, sorry kids

by Bill Elliott throughout. The audience seemed ity but mellowed through the use of their third album. These were both and tt ended m a greo' On the evening of Oct. 25 Rush to appreciate the hard work of the a southern blues-folk influence. performed extremel,Y well and the smoke, red light opened a show for Nazareth in the band and there was a smattering of Nazareth originates in Scotland remainder of the concert was con­ flashes. The audtence Theatre-Auditorium at WLU. The applause for an encore which was but they dispel all notions which sistent along these lines with only a their feet and called them crowd was a rather unpleasant mix­ unfortunately overshadowed by one may have regarding their abil­ couple of exceptions. They attemp­ tribute of burning mat h ture of "teeny-boppers" and anticipation for Nazareth. ity of British bands to "boogie" ted two songs which were really the encore should not ha1c drunks. anxious to listen to After a short 10 minute intermis­ They consist of: Don McCaf­ wrong style of music for this band: tempted because it onl) "heavy-metal". Rush played a sion, Nazareth came on and played ferty-vocalist, Manuel Charl­ "Bad, Bad Boy", a satire on sexual be anti-climactic follo11 n short set consisting of only 5 songs, a brilliant and surpri'sing set. As a ton-guitar, Peter Agnew-bass relationships and "Glad When incredible finale. the best of which were "Anthem" result of the influence of their pro­ and Darrel Sweet-drums. They You're Gone" which was too soft a The concert pr01 ed to and "Hard-working man". On the ducer, Roger Glover, the general opened with a rearrangement tune for their style of work. The pleasant surpri e latter in particular the bassist and expectation was for pure "hard­ of a Joni Mitchell tune, "This flight final song took everyone by sur­ Nazareth did not hve lead guitarist were outstanding in rock" of the Deep Purple genre. tonight", this was followed by prise. It was a Yardbirds tune "Deep Purple" reputa their trading of lead breaks The band turned out with this qual- "Razamanaz", the title cut from known as "The Shape of Things" though the audience did Beaver Boogie The Last Five Years

by Mark Everard likely name of , Woman" an appeal that made it a is the biggest this debutante breathed new life chart-topper in both Canada and band ever to come out of Canada into the group. In late 1968, they the U.S. and is now an important force in the made a trip to the U.S., their first, Show bi::. train, baby won't you international music scene. They to cut an album. Out of this climb on hoard. have 14 gold records and are one of emerged "", from Later in 1970, they were given an the top five acts in North America. which a tune was invitation to appear before Presi­ However, their most important released as a singl

by Andrew A Wedman Field). This produced the desired Brahms Violin Concerto. Since his Monday evening the "Music a B.B.C. producer"ut~ The International Artists series effect of wandering and world­ term as concertmaster of the To­ Group of London" played in the his time to composition got off to a good start October 21. weariness first displayed by the ronto Symphony, he has appeared Arts Building room 3Cl5. They written in 1966 for the The Gewandhaus Orchestra of I ieder of Schubert. Perhaps one only once before with the K-W played trios by Ravel, Goehr and certs with Yehudt Leipzig made their first and only could wish for a voice that would Symphony; last year in the Pagan­ Dvorak. These trios, with the ex­ violin. This work Canadian appearance on their cur­ battle above the orchestra. Masur's nini D major concerto. ception of the Dvorak (written in very interesting matenal. rent concert tour, at Massey Hall in experience as an opera conductor Kantarjian played'superbly even 1891), were all composed in the than one listening 110 Toronto. The performance under served him in good stead in that he though a little more warmth would twentieth century. The Group qui red to discover all the Kurt Masur began with the Sym­ kept good balance throughout, not probably have been achieved had which has played in numerous con­ ities of rhythm and ton phony number four by Robert allowing the orche~tra to over­ the orchestra been a I ittle freer with certs and B.B.C. broadcasts con­ porated within Schumann. It was quite excellent. power the soloist. its accompaniement. The cadenza sisted this time of Hugh Bean­ After a brief mte~ but perhaps the Scherzo was at The second part of the program in the first movement was particu­ violin, Eileen Choxford-cello and program contmued 111th times a bit heavy. consisted of the "Eroica", a Sym­ larly thrill in g. Daniel Parkhouse-piano. d ition of the "D~mk To watch Kurt Masur conduct is In the E minor Symphony of phony of Beethoven. It was ob­ Performing one of the few pieces Dvorak. This ptece an experience well worth paying Sibelius, Knussen obviously vious that here Masur is continuing of chamber music which Ravel folk style dances all the price of admission. Though he enjoyed being on the other end of ten by the rntmnt>CPI the tradition of excellence estab­ wrote, was perhaps the high point does not use a baton the absence of the stick (though he did not use a tion given by Mr. lished by Felix Mendelssohn in of the evening for this trio. The such was not felt in the least be­ baton). He estimates he has played these trios was 1en 1836. The orchestra was originally Group's propensity for excellent cause he not only uses his hands founded in 1742. The other prog­ this double-bass part in more than and helpful in understar. timing and good intonation was ob­ but his complete face and body as rams in this series promise to be one hundred concerts in his career vious early and the tremendous pieces. well. equally rewarding. and this sense of enjoyment was A not her· reminder technique of these people was The symphony was followed by Last weekend the K-W Sym­ shown early helping to make this Bach Choir concert, clearly demonstrated throughout the Mahler "Songs of a Wayfarer". phony under the direction of Stuart piece fun for the listeners. Particu­ at 8:30am. The K-W the evening. · This featured baritone solist Knussen, former solo Double-Bass lar credit should be given to Mike Choir with the Siegfried Lorenz. His voice was player with the B.B.C. and London Hayes for the difficult timpani The two movement trio of Alex­ November 10. 7:30. particularity suited to the song Symphony Orchestras, performed work. Perhaps a bit more public ander Goehr followed. Goehr is a Mary's Church. 56 "Ging heut' Morgen uber's Feld" works by Brahms and Sibelius. conducting would help Mr. Knus­ professor of music. at Leads Uni­ ener. Both are under the (This Morning I went across the Gerard Kantarjian soloed in the sen to relax. versity, England. He was formerly of Howard Dyck. The Cord Weekly Page 13 ~[3~[3~~[3[!) ****************************************************************************** Complex Corner / More Bunches --The intramural football league hockey, teams 1-6 at 1:30 p.m., 7-5 place with one win in two outings. championship was won last week at 2:30, 8-4 at 3:30, and on Thurs­ Ecies asks all other teams to be­ Insight Out by the senior Business boys 14-0. day at 9:30a.m. teams 2-3. Be sure ware as Mad Dog Walton is hot on Rick Suddaby, the fastest cat on the to get your money in for the tee­ the recruiting trail looking for a team, counted both majors for the shirts. coach , whose only purpose will be season has finally come to a close, and Hawks OUAA winners. Senior Business therefore --The tennis tournament starts to tell Bobby and Charlie when to on the top of the heap for a second consecutive cleaned up in the point parade, next Monday at the Complex and go on and off the ice. They're hav­ T triumphed in the east with the only unblemished winning 25 for the league champ­ entries will be taken right up to the ing a terrible time by themselves. •11111!aoue. 7 wins and no losses. This year however under ionship, 10 for the championship start of the tournament. --The girls varsity volleyball , the first place team in each division plays the and 2 points for competing. After --More deadlines: co-ed bowling team travelled to Guelph on Mon­ while second plays third. The two winners in each golf and football completed, they tomorrow, one on one basketball day to play their first exhibition off for the division championship. are naturally at the head of the pack Monday, and women's badminton game. Although the Guelph team been declared, the winner of the U ofT division sails in the Intramural Standings. also on Monday. swept the set, our girls showed to contest the Atlantic Bowl, while the winner of our --The deadline for co-ed curling --The Tamiae hockey schedule noticeable improvement during the the Western Canada representative. But first let's is tomorrow, with the action taking is entering its third week on Sunday evening, and are looking forward to •~~eontariowinners. This being Hallowe'en night, I thought place every Tuesday from 3-5 p.m. night. Bus II holds down top spot their next outing, the Queen's Invi­ Great Pumpkin and ask him for his predictions on the lle and Sundays from 9-11 a.m. start­ with a defaulted win and a 1-0 vic­ tational in Kingston this Saturday. ing November 5 at the Glenbriar. tory over Bus I. Ecies is next with a CORD wishes the girls the best of western division, WLU hosts McMaster on Saturday. --Next Wednesday in intramural win and a tie and Bus IV is in third luck. (Thanks Sue). leading rusher in the division in Ross Tripp who should offensive punch. Their quarterbacking is sadly lacking not give the leadership needed to prevail over the defense. The McMaster defense is fairly strong and the game a contest. However, continued battering from OUAA Statistics should finally take its toll on the Mac fortress and of a hometown crowd, should prevail with authority. WESTERN DIVISION PASSERS A C YDS TD I % SCORING TD FG C S TP '"London, Guelph throws two top runners and a fine Bill Robinson, West 152 84 1182 5 11 .553 John Wintermeyer, WLU 24 1 1a1nst the Mustangs. They also have allowed only one 1 11 64 Gord Taylor, WLU 55 30 414 5 3 .545 Chns Skopelianos, West 2 8 17 1 54 Rick Muldoon, Wind than Western, but the difference is in the offense, where 160 87 1056 5 15 .544 Dave Pegg, Wind 8 1 54 Gerry Verge, York scored 79 more points. This reads easier as quar­ 15 92 50 754 3 6 .543 Chuck McMann, WLU Brad Hall, Gue , who will lead his orchestra of ballplayers with 7 42 156 76 1005 6 14 .487 Bruce Morris, Gue 6 distinction. They've got the hometown crowd, so you 36 Steve Connell, Wat 118 53 736 1 7 .449 Rick Chalupka, WLU Western, but don't say I haven't left open the 5 30 Mike Long, McM 64 26 377 4 2 .406 Rick Scarborough, West aGuelph upset. Those Gryphons have got some kind of 5 30 RUSHERS TC YDS TD AVE LG RECEIVERS COMP YDS TD LG east. U of T hosts Carleton and the mere presence of Ross Tripp, McM 129 674 0 5.2 27 Brian Plenderleith, Wind 30 357 1 47 Mark Bragagnolo should get the Blues past the Ravens. Bruce Morris, Gue 127 673 5 5.3 3.6 Curt Rush, West 29 518 3 96 has been remarkably stubborn in some contests this Rick Chalupka, WLU 79 578 4 7.3 38 Ron Gardner, Wind 27 328 3 48 against the tougher teams. They are the biggest unit Chuck. McMann, WLU 65 545 7 8.4 35 Paul Forbes, York 24 337 1 53 could extend Toronto to the limit before bowing out. Gord Taylor, WLU 59 523 4 8.9 54 Craig Holt, Gue 22 348 3 49 possibility. Bud Wilson, West 93 424 3 4.6 13 Jay Parry, West 21 321 I 59 the Gee-Gees should have no trouble disposing of Dave Lane, Gue 76 412 2 5.4 50 Vaughn Wright, Gue 20 334 0 72 tailed off badly after a jackrabbit start. Really should Mike Weiler, WLU 50 374 4 7.5 98 Ross Tripp, McM 20 210 1 29 Bob Kendall, Wat 80 374 3 4.7 50 the divisional finals. Assuming Toronto and Ottawa Rick Scarborough, West 81 '374 5 4.6 19 PUNT RETURNS NO YDSAVE.LG will meet in Toronto for the eastern championship. TEAM INTERCEPTIONS NO YDS RET TDS Mark Brown, Gue 12 204 17.0 53 neck out some by predicting Ottawa over the Blues. Windsor 14 208 0 Larry Baines, McM 18 294 16.3 41 an earlier contest between the two but only on a lucky McMaster 14 191 2 Tom Dewey, WLU 26 379 14.6 81 (td) screen pass touchdown late in the game. Ottawa has WLU 13 153 1 Chris Skopelianos, West 30 435 14.5 95 (td) more powerful and balanced offensive machine, and I Guelph 12 206 0 Todd Allison, McM 26 341 13.1 44 and 'the boys will get it together over Varsity. Western 11 114 1 Stan Strecker, Gue 20 184 9.2 39 ah yes, the western division championship. Gimme a Waterloo 7 146 2 I wouldn't have started writing this column if I wasn't York 4 116 1 KICK-OFF RETURNS NO YDS AVE. LG the Hawks would win it. Assuming Western is the PUNTERS NO YDS AVE. LG Jay Parry, West 7 182 26.0 34 we learned much more from that game on Thank- Pete Gabriel, McMaster 38 1458 38.4 65 Dan Bovair, WLU 6 245 40.S 105 (td) Mustangs. Considering our sour effort, Cosentino's Ray Fox, York 33 1259 38.1 55 Doug Crossman, Wat 13 317 24.4 44 themselves in a manner which would indicate Gord Taylor, WLU 38 1368 . 36.0 72 Chris Skopelianos, West 9 206 22.9 35 can study their mistakes, and if a majority of Brian Craig, Western 46 1623 35.3 59 Tom Dewey, WLU 8 169 21.1 33 lit corrected, we should have the edge. It would (will) likely be John Alexander, Windsor 41 .1387 33.8 58 Paul Forbes, York 12 252 21.0 30 wide open affair, and there is really no doubt in my Kirk DeFazio, Waterloo 55 1683 30.6 51 play a good game, Hawks will win. Jim Mossop, Guelph 46 1396 30.3 44 1ST DOWNS RUSH PASS PEN TOTAL tw are gang. The Great Pumpkin's season end predic­ FUMBLES NO YDS LOST BALL LOST W.L.U. 122 24 12 158 t predicted that McGovern would beat Nixon in 1972. York 10 2 10 Western 64 61 4 129 ...,,,wn11oth<>t predictions are notto be heeded until after the McMaster 12 2 8 Guelph 58 44 12 114 Windsor 12 42 11 Windsor 41 56 16 113 national playoffs are concerned, I'll leave that until we Western 14 0 11 McMaster 62 33 13 108 io.hollo,nor~oective of the Ontario representatives. It appears W.L.U. 14 8 8 York 41 40 11 92 between St. Mary's and Acadia in the east; now Waterloo 14 40 12 Waterloo 47 29 16 92 has fallen down the manhole out west, and Guelph 21 69 13 fight things out. Too far off to pick the College Bowl PENALTIES AGAINST NO YDS LOST YARDS GAINED RUSH PASS PEN TOTAL so I'll cool my heels in the predictio~ department for Windsor 37 404 W.L.U. 2524 512 515 3551 York 40 407 Western 1150 1464 433 3047 back at the ranch, it was really interesting watching Guelph 48 542 Guelph 1242 1123 559 2924 .V. last Saturday. Both the Western coach and the Western 53 706 Windsor 832 1323 700 2832 announced their intentions to meet again in the Waterloo 56 591 McMaster 1198 610 619 2427 Considering the factors involved, I would consider it W.L.U. 58 595 Waterloo 1017 753 572 2342 for one of the two to be represented. Oh well, all idle McMaster 58 671 York 637 1109 462 2208 Only time and breaks will tell. RUSIDNG CARR YDS LOSS NET LONG think the Hawks hav~ yet to reach their peak which is 1ST DOWNS TDS dyou look over our shoulders at the past few years. In W.L.U. 23 St. Mary's and then came up short in the College 360 2565 41 2524 98 122 annihilated Ottawa to win the Yates Cup and then Guelph 252 1281 39 1242 50 9 '" the Atlantic Bowl. Let's hope this year the team is 58 • McMaster 3 too much else for the Great Pumpkin to do around this 274 1319 121 1198 27 62 Best of luck with your tricks and treats, and see you at the Western 12 er,thegame Saturday. I gotta blow before Charlie Brown 264 1265 ll5 1150 75 64

Rick Campbell Waterloo 282 1186 169 1017 50 47 8 Windsor 211 974 142 832 44 41 2 , - - York 191 811 174 637 48 41 7 Page 14 The Cord Weekly

WLU pigskinners finish first

by "Second Hand Rose" margin. We were really our own Fahrner alertly fell on the ball. This had one run for minus five yards. emphasize on hull It's kind of hard trying to write a worst enemy in many ways during was the straw that broke the That's not a true indication of Hawk machine. Wll story on a football game that one the half because although the Hawk camel's back as far as Loyola was John's talents as he was not tackled hand, will be looki does not see, but I'm going to do offense initiated numerous drives, concerned as they had shown some on the play but was blown out of slightly defensi\el) my best, so please bear with me if I penalties halted any serious ad­ indication of coming back, but this bounds by the wind just as he was the Hamilton uefen commit a few fumbles and intercep­ vances the team made. play really shut the lights off on ready to motor to paydirt. Oh well, establishment of out tions. This paper had nothing to do Loyola's points were scored on a their play-off chances. Only three breaks can go either way. Hawks Finally,l'dJu t hk with my not going to Montreal, but field goal and a conceded single off plays later, Taylor threw a 46 yard gathered 298 yards on the ground late the Hawks on th apparently the Board of Publica­ a Warrior punt. It was felt by many TD strike (into the wind) and con­ and another 59 through the air as finish, and wish them tions policy is that any game the that the half~time score could be nected with split end Warren Howe Taylor was 3 for 7. in the play-offs. Hawks play which is more than a attributed to Loyola's psyched up for the six points. This play gave Along a more serious vein, Points after drive and a 'nine iron away, is defi­ defense trying desperately to gain the Hawks a 15-4 lead, but more Coach Knight was not ecstatic --Dan Bovair and nitely out of bounds and must be the fourth play-off position. In ad­ important than the score it gave about the way the Hawks were car­ were effective gomg reported from the starting tee. dition, last Saturday afternoon was them some breathing room to con­ rying out their assignments. He defense for the H Last Saturday the Hawks travel­ a very cold and windy day. centrate on their game plan. wants to stress a much more physi­ Loyola. led to Montreal to play the Loyola Besides, numbers of Hawks had Hawks, m their typical fashion, cal brand of football in the upcom­ --Loyola's "ta Warriors in a game of key impor­ trouble adjusting to the drumlins started doing things right in the ing play-offs. I watched the U ofT­ again proved bothe tance to both teams. If Loyola won, which dotted the field. Our players second half, with McMann being Western game last Saturday and U outside running. they would slip into the fourth and had a great time on the scavenger the prime ball carrier. He scored ofT had no problem blowing holes --The defen. e final play-off berth in the eastern hunt, which was held on the field all his second touchdown of the game in the Mustang defense. The To­ in preserving the division of .the OUAA. If the afternoon. Ed Dietrich won top and seventh of the season one mi­ ronto team was employing a run­ riors. Hawks won, they would finish atop prize in the event, picking up the nute into the fourth quarter, which ning game not unlike the formation --Hawks ha\e the western division, providing that most debris from the playing sur­ for all intents and purposes, sewed the Hawks use, and with efficient juries although It 11 the University of Toronto was able face on what was termed the worst up the win for the Hawks. Two blocking and the running of Mark that safety Tom De11 to handle the Western Mustangs. field the Hawks have played on weeks ago Chuck did not even fig­ Braganolo, they had little difficulty fered a mild concu Well, Hawks won 21-10 and U ofT since College Bowl '72. Coach ure in the scoring stats, and in two piling up the yards. So obviously day. did handle the Western squad 28-6. Knight was not notified of the hunt games he drives right up and parks Western's defense can be beaten --Hawks topped So we finish first, ahead of West­ until halftime, as the event was held in fourth place in the OUAA west with proper offensive execution. total offense, natu em, which is a very significant fact, on the far side of the field, out of his with 42 points. The western divi­ First though, Hawks must get by emphasis on the because if probabilities follow their line of sight because of a giant sion scoring champion, I might the McMaster Marauders on --After the game t natural course and the Hawks and moraine in front of our bench. add, was WLU's John Winter­ Saturday at Centennial Stadium. jacked the team "u Mustangs both win on . the However, when informed, he po­ meyer with 64 points, ten more Game time is 1 p.m. and as stated Baffin Island, and pc weekend, then Western must c'ome litely asked the boys to postpone than his nearest rival. What ever last week, everyone must pay ad­ weekend resting ur here in a week's time to play-offfor the hunt and go out and win the happened to Etherington? mission in order to defray team ex­ game and ice-fi hm the western division championship football game in the second half. Anyhoo, Hawks led at that point penses. The Marauders will be kimos. of the OUAA. They did. 21-4 and Loyola did not add to their bringing to town the western I would like to rnn•••· •.-. Hawks started off last Saturday Chuck McMann gave Hawks the total until the final minutes of the division's leading rusher, Ross to Barry Lyon, the very strongly against the Warriors. lead for good right off the bat in the game when quarterback Greeley Tripp, who is very versatile and ment, and the pla~en They took the opening kick-off and third quarter. Rich Ott made a great connected on a long bomb to Wade also a proven pass receiver. Mac tern pts to accomrnodlllt marched down to the Loyola seven interception to reverse the momen­ Clare for the major score. Clare knows that they are a very low weekend in "lontreal yard line, using an assortment of tum and at 2:13 of the third quarter played a fine game at half-back for scoring unit, so naturally they will running plays. The Quebec team McMann capped the drive with a the Warriors, and is probably one came up tough near their goalline five yard run. John Wintermeyer's of the most exciting runners this though, and WLU was forced to convert made the score 8-4 in league has ever seen. settle for a single point on a wide Hawks favour, and they never re­ McMann--led the Hawk rushers field goal attempt. That was the en­ ally looked back after that. Midway with 93 yards in 16 carries, while tire summary of Hawk scoring in through the quarter Gord Taylor Rick Haswell followed with 87 GP W L T F the first half as Loyola went to the punted, the Warrior return man yards on 18 hauls. I noticed on the Western Division dressing room with a 4-1 mid-game fumbled on the play, and Dave stats sheet that Wintermeyer also Laurier 7 6 1 0 260 ~4 Western 7 5 1 I 192 121 Guelph 7 3 3 I 113 ~~~ Basketball: McMaster 7 3 4 0 99 147 Windsor 7 2 5 0 110 15' Waterloo 7 1 5 I 93 I "We'll be exciting" York 7 0 7 0 104 293

by Dalrymple Dribbler The team opens with an exhibi­ Waterloo and Loyola. In addition, One can hardly blame Coach tion game here against Ryerson on two American schools will be com­ Smith for reserving his optimism November 19. Most of their games peting, D-Youville College from about the coming basketball sea­ before Christmas are exhibitions, Buffalo, and Hillsdale College from son. Just look back to see who he and the coach hopes his players will Michigan. Not only will fans be lost from last year's squad, and it is benefit from these opportunities. able to see three members of the easy to see that a major rebuilding Most of the guys have very simi­ Canadian National team compete, job is in store for the season. lar size and ability, and it is obvious but they will also see CIA U champ­ Rod Dean, the backbone of the that their defensive prowess will ions Guelph and OUAA champions team for the past three seasons, is count most in the final analysis. Waterloo. The Hillsdale squad gone. So is Rick Thompson, al­ Only twelve can dress per game but should also be tremendously excit­ ways up there in the scoring, and the coach also hopes to establish a ing as they are billed as being' 'fast, Dave Lockhart, the league leader junior varsity system to allow all but not too big", and then rosters in rebounds, also will not be back the guys to get a chance to play. come in with guys 6-8, 6-7, 6-6, 6-6. for this year's team. All three of Being such a long season, basket­ Yeh, not too big. these players were in the top ten in ball has a very high risk of person­ Coach Smith is very pleased with scoring last year, and will be obvi­ nel turnover, which will make it the planning stages of this tourna­ -• ously missed, as will regulars like necessary to have extra bodies ment, and considers it to be one of Bert van Cook, Lynn Cond, and around. the premier b-ball classics in the Paul South. country. Travel expenses for the However, Coach Smith still has a Smith definitely realizes that teams are totally paid for by gate tight nucleus to build around, led there is a lot of work to be done receipts, and so admission will be by returnees Paul Lattanzio, his with the team. It is lacking some­ charged. On Friday afternoon, two Hawks hope to be a driving, hustling unit in the OUAA twin Joe Macrito, Mike Pierce, what in height and experience, and games will be played, including one Dave Levac and Dave Miller. Also will have to compensate with extra with the Hawks, and the price for The week following, Hawks are I'd also like to a back are familiar faces Tom hustle, a great deal of pressing, and the doubleheader is $1.50. Friday also entered in Waterloo's tourna­ that Dan Ru el 11 Thompson, Neal Hegeman, Bob by using a set offensive pattern night two more games will be ment, the Naismith Classic. most of the Ha11k Smith, Rich Hood, and Brian De­ which the coach is confident will played, same admission. The for­ During the season the Carling for the Cord. Dan Marchi. The coach is very pleased succeed. Regardless of the end re­ mat will be followed on Saturday, O'Keefe Sports Foundation plans brother Bill \1 a a with practice sessions so_far, and is sult, he promises to floor an excit­ except you will be able to see all to honour a WLU "Player of the with the NBA also very encouraged with his crop ing squad of 110 percenter's, and four games at 9,ll, 1, and 3 for $2. Month'' and at the end of the sea­ looking for his of rookies. Stu Bollefer, Bill Hutt, you can't really ask for much more (Not bad for 8 hours of ball). Satur­ son, the "Player of the Year" will get set to hop do11 nt Mark Faryniarz, Jim Malcolm, than that. day night the consolation final and receive a $100 watch courtesy of the complex, and John Morgenson, Doug Eldridge, On November 22 and 23, WL U is final will be played; again the cost the same company. Carling players who 11ill Ed Doda, Bill Kunz, Pete Zwart staging the first annual WLU Invi­ will be $2 for the 6:30 and 8:30p.m. O'Keefe should be congratulated thing they've and Jim Wendland are all showing a tational Basketball Tournament. doubleheader. These are all very for this gesture, just another one of Coach Smith and lot of hustle in practice and are anx­ Competing schools are us, natur­ reasonable prices considering the their attempts to boost athletics at success in the ious to make the squad. ally, Lakehead U., Guelph, Brock, quality of the talent involved. the university level. son. ckey-: Oh, how sweet it is!

Debooger ting useless and needless penalties. cage just in time to have the goal >- ~ r happy. Even Hawks took advantage of the scored on him. .0 :::J m grade three plumber disorganization and in­ From that point, Waterloo <( raJ~ed my allow- creased their lead to 4-2 on a nice gained momentum and was really >­ coming on for the majority of the .0 three way combination started off B final period. They managed to 0 by Paul Stratton and Jim Nickleson ...... c and ended off by Kim Bauer, who close the gap to 6-4 on a tip-in ,..,_~ 0.. derives great pleasure from scoring through McColeman's pads but against the Warriors, and anyone from that point on Phil pulled a else he is lucky enough to score on, "Man from Glad" and sealed off for that matter. the net fwm the plumber attack. Plumbers came back to tighten it The final shots on net were 49-33 in to 4-3 on one of their patented gar­ Waterloo's favour, which indicated bage scrambles around the Hawk the extent to which McColeman net, but before the Massey Fergu­ held the fort. son had started to re-surface the Towards the end of the game ice, Paul Stratton ended another things really became tense as the beautiful three way passing play referee, noting the fact that this was /' - with linemates Nickleson and an exhibition game, called several Bauer by tipping in a pass by Cole. dubious infractions against the .. This goal gave the Hawks a 5-3 Hawks, giving the Warriors the • edge to take into the third period. manpower advantage. However, "If you had told me you were playing for WLU, I would have checked An encouraging factor in the sec­ McColeman was equal to the task ond period was that while the and turned back 15 of the 16 shots you back at the bluellne." Warrior all-star Mike Guimond in pursuit of Hawk "rookie" Jim Nickleson. Hawk fans cheered, the Warrior fired his way in the final stanza. fans began to get down on their Aside from the tremendous team with the plumber fans. This carried her out supporting the school hoc­ team, especially on goalie Cole. effort, numerous Hawk pucksters over to the Warrior team on Friday key team at night. There were This was unjust as he had no also turned in fine individual per­ night as they all hounded him all many more fans than at any other chance on three of the five Hawk formances. The line of Bauer­ game for ·his autograph. Despite Hawk exhibition in the past. Con­ goals and was obviously exhibiting Nickleson-Stratton played very. this show of affection, Chris man­ tinued team performances like last strongly all evening, both offen­ aged to fit in an excellent effort, Friday and there will be many more hittmg well for sheer nervousness on the other sively speaking and backchecking. leading the team for the entire sixty fans in the future. mmutes and two. Of course it is a common The other Hawk forwards also minutes, and conducting a chorus The Hawks next game is one of bottling up characteristic of the Warrior fans to showed no hesitation in throwing for the plumber fans in thetfinal six week from today at the Kitchener This also pro­ get down on their players when their weight around, and for the seconds. And nothing more has to Auditorium. It is a home game .coring chances support is needed most (i.e. foot­ first time in years the Warriors be said about Mr. Reliable in the against the York Yeomen, who ut each time they ball), even though a goodly portion seemed to be the intimidated team. nets, Phil McColeman. It was basi­ have no less than five players with Ui~ was equal to of them were drunk Friday and Hawks also came up with a fine cally a fine all around effort for all OHA Major Junior A experience, Waterloo took the wouldn't have known a goalie stick defensive effort. Hawk-turned the Hawks. Must have been, 'cause as well as the starting goaltender ncar the end of the from a lacrosse stick. plumber-returned Hawk Jim Tom­ when I asked Coach Gowing for his from the U.S. Western Intercol­ Canadmn all-star WLU's Kim Bauer started off bros and newcomer Fra~k impression of the game, he looked legiate champion Michigan Tech broke down the the third frame on the right foot by Yakabuski stood up well on the like he had just been told he'd won squad. Should be quite a game, n one break and first taking it out of his mouth and then skating into the slot, taking a blueline, and then there was cap­ the million dollar lottery. especially if the Yeomen have any ~1cColeman at quick pass from Nickleson from tain Chris Baldwin. During the off There were also a few more old friends on their football team. behind the net, and firing the puck season, Quinn went on the banquet rei iables at the game last Friday. Anyway, national anthem is rtunate, as really past Dupuis, who returned to the tour, starting a Baldwin fan club The Hawk fans. I wasn't at all sur­ scheduled for 8 p.m. Give a little of erve to be down prised when Dr. Morgen son your time. You'll get a lot in return. twenty. Except showed up just before game time. Great win H·awks. What a fantas­ we were short­ Lots of other familiar faces too. tic foundation to build season F the Hawks con­ Kinda nice when you can buy a hopes on. A 6-4 win against the dlld could have sandwich from a lady in the Torque plumbers, national champions yet. ree or four goal Room in the afternoon and then see Boy, was I ever happy. 260 74 nd 192 121 .,., 113 1... .:hanged net­ 99 147 Dupuis with 110 157 11ks knotted the 93 IR4 ly eleven seconds 104 29 Baldwin blueline IT d plumber de­ d 90 degree stroll k \'ickleson as-

Waterloo long to a •·bang-bang" from the right Hawk net but 11mger centred it tman had fired it Bauer fires number six past Dupuis. Notice Kim's friends cheering before the latter ecstatically in the background. move on the play. late'r the tide in the Hawks killing a penalty, We wish to go wherever the Spirit leads in order to rush down the ice cooperate in man's complete development and sanc­ ,hot just wide Revenue Canada< ' tification. 1·er saw the first (Taxation) We try to follow Christ by living a communal life, by the rebound being present among our fellow men, sharing their him in front of To meet its requirements for profession­ joys and sorrows, their aspirations and their legit­ 1econd effort, als, our Department has developed a one imate struggles for a more human world. Hawks gathered yeartraining program for university graduates. flipped it in the Through appropriate courses given at our We are the Holy Cross Fathers. tied 2-2. training centre in Ottawa, alternating with For further information, write: reassured his on-the-job training sessions in our district well back of offices throughout Canada, we intend to Vocation Director took the lead graduate qualified taxation officers, espe­ Holy Cross House through the cially in the Audit, Verification and Collec­ Fredericton, N.B. ve lapse by tions areas. o.~.... mon gave Earl We invite you to come and meet our the net and recruiting teams for interviews Nov. 4-5-6. ------, the slick For more information, contact your university Please send me information about your community. Yvan Cour­ placement office ofthe net Name ______. At this point to get more rug­ led to their get- ...... 8 E ::s z .n.... a) E ::s 0 >

>-__. 0~ ~ L1J IO~ rU>

Hallowe'en Pub Semi-Formal

Thursday, Oct. 31 featuring Friday, Nov. 1 featuring Canada Canada

Admission free for those in costume No jeans or T·shirts until 8:30 pm All others $1.00 Admission $1.00

' Advance tickets available in SAC office Advafttt ticuta aail • ii SAC otfict Doors open at 8 pm Doors open at 8 pm