Waterloo Iowa Death of Angela Buck

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    Volume 4, Number 19 ELECTION SPECIAL UNlVERSlTY OF WATEi tLOO, WATEkOO, ONTARIO b Thuriday 5 Decem ber 1963

    OPERETTASAilASH StJCCES bv A. ANDERSON

    Dave Smith asks Yvonne POLITELY for h is Student Directory. I f youre pol i te,you can get yours in Annex 1.

    STUDENTSCOUNCIL 19.63 - 1964EXECUi lVE BOARD

    IPres identJ.. D. KraemerIVice-Pres ident(P. E. Swartz - resigned)IREGULAR VOTI NG REPRESENTATI VESI

    ITreasurerL. A. Johnsan

    I

    ISecretaryD. R. Macri

    I I IArts Society Engineering A Soc iety Engineering 6 Soc ietyBarry Houser Richard Van Veldhuisen George NewtonDarragh Christie Doug Zavitz Eric TaylorI I 1Science Society Renson Col lege Society St . Jerome Col lege SocietyJ im Mitchel l Shei la Bel l Marta TominsDave Monk Frap Humphrey Brian cMGlynn

    It . Paul s C o lege SocietyBi l l Chestnut(pro pm>IREGULAR NON VOTI NG MEMBER SI II ISpeaker of the Counci l Chairman, Board of Publ icat ionsDavid E. Smith Murray FrenchI ICo-Chairman, C.U.S. Co-Chairman C.U.S.Gai l Rappol t Ann Perry1 IPresiden t, Arts SocietyB&h Cu: nmgham Pres ident , Engineerivg A Soc ietyDoug FvltrI IPres ident , Engineering B Soc iety Vice-Pres ident , Sc ience SocietyEd Cambr idge J im Mitchel lI IPres ident , R enison Col lege Sot . Pres ident , St . Jerome C ol lege Sot .Richard Westlake Gerald ParkerIIPres ident , St . Paul Col lege Sot .

    School Song SoughtA $50.00 prize is being offered by the .Mus ic Departm ent for word s suitable fora school song. I feel strongly that such a song should come from the Universi ty,from some student, perhaps, in any case from someone who takes pr ide in th isAlma Mater and is willing to share this pride with the current and future gen-eration of students, says Hans Bauer, Director of Music, to whom the idea ofthe song compe tition belongs.Entries wi l l be judged by a panel of composers, Mr. Bauer feels confiden t thatfaculty members. Should a set of words Mr. John Adaskin, Executive Secretary of thef ind approval , then not ice wi l l be sent to vari- Canadian Music Centre would be interestedous composers asking them to take part in in the project.comp eting for the best music. Mr. Ba uer feelsthere are two schools of thoug ht - Can a- The dead line for the contest is Januarydian composers or Canadian and American 3ls t , 1964; entries should be submit ted tocomposers . For help concerning Canadian the Of ice of Student Af fai rs , Annex 1.

    It is difficult to understand why Patience, the fifth of tlhe Gilbert & Sullivanoperettas, has never been more popular. Gilbert has never been in better satir icalform as he makes great fun of the exaggerated behaviour of some of the art forArts sake poets who were *his contem poraries, and Sullivan wrote some of hisbest music for th is operetta.Although the product&n of Patience presented last week by the Renison Cdl-lege Operatic Society tias the Univers itys first operatic production, it cannot besa:d that it lacked experience, for a large-pe&ntage of the soloists are veterans fectations and poetic nonsense for the greaterSavoyards. This experience mad & itself felt, part of the evening (al though Herry Jonesai an excel lent cast work ing on an unconven- was a litt le carried away at times.)tiona l stage gave a very praiseworthy accountof this relatively unknow n musical.

    The acting was for. the most part free ofthe stiffness that so often occurs whe n play-ers are chosen prim arily for their voices,Herry Jones and John Capin-dale as theaesthetic poets were outs tanding and theyboth had the audience convulsed at their af -StudentCouncilElections!,

    Although the vocal level of the ent i re per-formance was high, honours must go toPenny Glasser who played the t i t le role.Her voice was c lear an d st rong throughoutthe operet ta.

    The art is t ic high l ight of the evening wasunquest ionably Ann Reids s inging of LadyJanes rather pathet ic solo at the beginningof Act II. After one or two anxious mom-ents whi le she played hkr cel lo, Miss Reid,with a fine voice, delivered very tastefullywhat must surely be, one of Sul l ivans mosttouching melodies.

    Also giv ing noteworthy performances werethe s t rongvoiced colonel a nd major of thedragoons (Nick Kaethler and Don Carter,the not-so-strong-voiced major (Jim Stone)and Janet Fader, whose warm contral to anddel ight ful f lai r for being ethereal , made acharming Lady Angela.

    The chorus .of twelve twenty love-sickmaidens and twelve dragoons prov ided good6minations DueDecember 17 - 12 a.m.

    Nominations must be supported bythree signatures . This is a reduction innumber from past years when ten signa-tures were required. This a rrangementwill be more feasible for out-term co-operative studen ts to nominate and electtheir Student Counci l mem bers.Election notices will be mailed to allout- term students on December 5. Nom-ations must be submitted between Dec.9, 9:00 a.m. and Dec. 17, 12:00 a.m.Campaigning will be allowed from Jan.11 to Jan. 15, 12:00 p.m., and will beterminated by a special blection issue ofthe Coryphaeus on Jan. 15. Elections forthe Engineers only will be held the fol-lowing day.Voting members of the Council shallcons ist of (1) a representative from eachof the faculty student governments. Thisrepresentative is responsible to the fac-ulty student government. (2) Two rep-resentatives from each faculty who areelected by the students of the particularfaculty. At least one of the two must bea student l iving off cam pus.Non-voting members of the counci lshall consist of the Speaker, the Secre-tary-Treasurer, two representatives fromthe Inter-College Society and two repre-sentatives from the Inter-Residence So-cieti.

    sol id ensemble work, al though the tenorswere slightly flat on their first entrance (un-doubte dly inspired by the trumpets that ac-companied them).In fact the only real weakness in the en-t i re product ion was the musical accompani-ment . Despi te the f ine play ing of pianis tsDawn Cam pbel l and Bi l l Morrison (and anunname d performer whose f lute was a realinspiration), Sul l ivans music needs an or-chestra. Althoug h the orchestration is not un-usual , i ts moods are qui te varied, and a piano(particularly an uprigh t stuck partway downthe entrance ramp) just hasnt got the vol-ume or variety of colour necessary. Whatmusical thri l l that might have been lef t waspractically finished off by the off-key blar-ing of a pair of t rumpets at the entranceof the dragoons.

    The Theatre of the Arts le nt itself sur-prisingly we ll to this type of production .Musicals are usual ly performed on the pro-scenium type stage from w hich the singercan project his voice directly to the entireaudience without fear that i t may be lostto hal f of the onlookers behind him. A greatdea l of the credit for this must g o to pro-ducer-director-actor Herry Jones. Much wasmade of the apron s tage with a minimum ofsets (namely one bridge). A nn Reid as musicdirector never let the music drag (at a morerelaxed tempo the audience could have be-come awfully tired of Twenty love-sickmaidens we. Yet dic t ion even in the rapid-patter songs, was always clear.

    BASKETBALL TONIGHT=

    LavVrence Tech. VS. arriorsSeagram Gym

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    editor-in-chief: Dave Clark Erwin Mako, George Newton,managing editor: John Conlin Alan Price, Nick Van Kats. lay-news: Mark M&in *, Vic Botari, out: Jim Nagel*, David Dolman,Dave Campbel l, Brian Monk- Michael Edwards, Terry Fleming,house, Margaret Shaw, Hennie John Hammond. copy editors:Smid, Jo Stoody. sports: Doug Gus Cammaert, Rick Weatherbe.Grenkie*, Dave Campbel l, Janet illustrations: Marian Ha rwood,Ross. photography: Gerry Muel- George Somerville. contributingler*, K en Brown, Pier re Gagne, writers: Jeff Evans, Dave Graf-

    stein, Fran Humphrey, BruceKoepke, Jim Newman, GeorgeWelsh. advertising: Jim Carrothers*, fine arts: Art Anderson*Zat Culp. CUP: Tom Rankin*circulation: ,Richard Rowe*.board of publications chairmanMurray French *department editorPublish, ed by the Undergraduate student body of the University of Waterloo and its affilia ted Collegesunder the authorization of the Board of Publications. Letters should be addressed to the Editor, Univer-sity of Waterloo. Phone 7453911. The opinions expressed represent the freedom of expression of a re-sponsible, autonomous society. isubsqiption rate: $1.00 per year f member: Canadian University PressI

    lettersto the.* Editor . . . -Bastard Off-ShootDear Si r :

    George Welshs ed i tor ia l , ( A Bas-tard Off-Shoot - Nov . 28) de-inands a response.Mr. W elsh objects to the termFrench-Canadian. Let h im be re-minded that. th is term has its or ig inin the Engl ish-speaking parts of Can-ada; the Canadians of French or ig inrefer to themselves as Canad iens.Does he not accept the fact that thevarious ethnic groups to which herefers do not cympare at a l l wi ththe French, as these cults did notpartic ipate in ear ly Canadian history,but are merely recent arrivals?

    He asks, When will we realize,especia l ly the French-Canadians , thatCanad as culture is a carbon copyof the U.S.? I would reply that th isis defin i te ly not the case in Quebecor in Canada as a whole. When wi l lMr. Welsh real ize that he, l ike Al -berta s Premier Manning and his fo l -lowers, closes his ears and refusesto recognize that the Canadians ofFrench or ig in are not attempting topress or impress their culture on therest of Canada? Instead, they aremerely asking that the rest of Can-ada accept them as Canadiens andnot foreigners. Specifica lly because itis French, and has its roots in thehistory of Canada, the cul ture o f IeS Canadiens cannot be characteriz-ed as a carbon copy of the US ,since .the language in which the USculture is expressed is entirely Eng-l ish.In further rebuttal toCMr. Welshssuggestioh that the French-speakingpeople of Canada should g ive upthei r her i tage, i t would appear tothe reader that Mr. Welsh dbes notappreciate that he is asking the des-cendants of Canad as first settlers,who number several mi l l ions of peo-ple, and whose fore-runners werelargely re sponsible for the explora-t ion and opening-up of Canada, toforget thei r tradi t ions in one unin ia-g inative swoop. Mr. Welsh couldeasi ly wri te off the foregoing aspurely emotiona l grounds for theacceptance of two cultures. But lesCanadiens have a much strongerreason, which is wri tten into thevery constitu tional fabric of Cana da.

    fhe Quebec Act of 1776, whichcarried into effect the treaty of 1763,recognized the existence of two cul-tures in- the Province of Quebec andgave defin i te guarantees for the con- t inuance of a stated *posi t ion for theFrench .language and .Roman Catho.-.l ic ism. This is a l l the. more remark-able because, whi le th is was an. adtof the parl iament of Great B r i ta in,in the Bri ta in of that day, RomanCgtholics were considerably restrict-ed in their pr iv i leges of ci t izenship.In other words, th is Act amountsto recogni t ion by the Bri t ish govern-ment that the French-speaking ma-jority of the province of Quebeccould not be subj t igated and had tbbk bargained wi th as a nation. More-over, these guarantees concerningFrench languages a nd Roman Cath-olic religion were explicitly writteninto the\ Br i t ish North America A@of 1867, which establ ished the Can-adian confederation.

    This pol i t ica l wedge in to Can-? adian uni ty, referred to by Mr.Welsh, is simply a last-ditch attem ptby the French peoples of Quebec2 The CORYPHAEUS

    for recogni t ion.In a Eather feeble last argument,Mr. W elsh states that the French-Canadians have not been fu l lyaware of the winds of changewhich have been blowing in Can-ada since 1763. The educated classof French people, which was com-plete ly obl i terated during the con-quest, has been slowly rebui ld ing i t-self, and the process had acceleratedgreatly dur ing the period of rapidindustr ia l ization fo l lowing WorldWar II. Discr iminating against th isupper class by the industria liziqgpowers has been a main cause ofthe sudden French outcry in recentyears in the Province of Quebec.

    tempted to recognize the problem heproblem i tsel f, but i f Mr. Welsh at-would l ike ly be further ahead.D . E . Smi th .

    Snow Fences Are RedDear: Si r : .I am despondent, b i tter, angryWhy could the department of bui ld-ings and grFunds not use color-faslsnow fence? Runn ing across thefie ld Saturday night, I ran into astretch of it that I didnt see inthe dark. This I do not mind. BUT,the next day, when I went to puton my jacket, I discovered that i iwas covered with streaks of red fromthe fence. This is in to lerable andshould be remedied immediate ly;N TEL.

    . either remove the fence, or as Ihave said above, n et color-fast snowo-Op (??) EducationDear Si r : fence.I would l ike to use the mediumof your newspaper to express my

    opin ions of the Co-ordination De-partme nt of this university.This department, which a l leged-ly is here to help Engineering stu-

    Limping Student,\ Forestry yI. /

    dents find jobs for their work per-iods, in my opin ion, is not fu l f i l l ingth is purpose; at least not to thebenefi t of the students.

    Fable XVI

    Having been denied the r ight tochange jobs after two previous terms,I decided, th is term, to keep mysel fin formed as to my standing wi th re-ference to interviewing . companies.This nathrally involved talking tovarious co-ordinators and, for the

    A group of people (of both sexes:were having a b i t of a get togetherin one of the residence rooms. PeFhaps get togethers is a sl ightly mi lduiorq to descr ibe th is repl& of aRoman orgy. A lady of the churchp&sing by immediate ly guessed whalwas going on behind the closed door.

    Moral : Takes nun to know fun.. . Ma t

    most pa rt, I received more or less

    men t is busy, but this is no reason

    satisfactory answers to my questions.

    to ignore the, students in order to

    During the period of industr ia l

    g ive more attention to the interview-

    interviews I realize that this depart-

    ers. On asking ,a question perta in ingto f inal matching of avai lable jobsand students, I was to ld t iy a seniormember of the department that,We don t have t ime to answer your

    In any col lection of date, the f ig-

    CO URT ESY O F T HE McM AST ER

    ure that is most obviously correct

    ENGINEERING SOCIETY

    - beyond a l l need of checking -

    The Law of the Too Sol id Goof:

    is the mistake.Corol lary I - No ,one whom you

    ask for help wi l l see i t, e i ther.Corollary II - E veryone w hostops . by with unsough t advicequestions; why don t you just tearthis up (referring to my job pre-

    ference l ist) and go to another uni -versity?

    N. G. Near.Canada Is Mul t icul tural

    I f th is is the att i tude of th is de-

    Dear Si r :

    partment I th ink i t s t ime for somereorganization of pol icy. Al l thestudents ask is that they be pro-

    There are two ways of looking

    vided information on thei r standingwith respect to their industrial as-signments, as wel l as more contro lover the f inal choice of jobs.

    at the recent edi tor ia l regarqing b;cul tura l ism. One would be to con-sider it a very sophisticated opinio n

    wi l l see i t immediate ly.Experiments must be reproducib le-they should a l l fa i l in the same way.First draw your curves - then plot

    the readings.Experienc e is directly proportio nal toequipment ru ined.

    In case of doubt, make i t sound con-vincing.Do not bel ieve in miracles - re ly

    A record bf data is useful - it in-

    on them.

    dicates y&ve been working.

    Always leave room to add an

    To study a subject best, understandit thorough ly before you start.

    ex-planation when i t doesn t work.(This open door policy is alsoknown as the Rule of the Way- one which the normal student Out).

    would -not compr.ehend. .On the -other .._ :. - ..-; _.__. _ _..hand, one could consider i t .garbage. In any problem, i f you f ind your-The choice is obvious..try, it - s multicu ltural, as all large

    Canada is not a b icul tura l coun-sel f doing an unending amount ofby. inspection.*work, the answer may be obtained

    nations are. This is one of the rea-sons our culture is a carbon copyof the U.S. There is no particular Ahem!problem in th is i f we respect thb Exams are a matter of luck w i thother persons beliefs a nd customs. me . . . .Mr. Welsh is apparently not wi l l ing Wel l , i t s a signi f icant , i tem;to do th is. But its strange h ow lucky I sureBut Canada is a b i l ingual country, can beand th is is where the problem ar ises. If I study b efore I write em.We are, at present, discrim inating Col l ins.against one of the - two off ic ia l lang-uages of our. country* French.. speak- Explaqationing indiviquals are forced to learnEngl ish i f they wish to get ahead I l ike education in most of i ts phases;in certa in f ie lds, but Engl ish speak- I f ind not one fati l t , particu lar ly:I make it to classes i n dozes anding persons are not trkated similarly. / da=,A solution to th is problem is muchmore di ff icu l t than recognizing the knd Im buried extracurricularly.Col l ins.

    .- .

    \. ..

    , . .

    -.jim, newmahreports

    / One of the first few words spok-en by the chai rman at the lastStudents Counci l m eeting, was thatth is would be a long, long me eting- And i t was. - Six hours, fro m7:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. No record,mi nd you, but p lenty long enough.Actual ly, the only ones that objected

    to the length were those who stayed.A few of the members. who hadbetter th ings to do left, aroundhal f- t ime.

    Proceedings got under way wheneveryone present observed o ne min-ute s silence in honor of the latePresident K ennedy. One late-comer(He walked in when the room wasin silence), seem ed qui te shockedthat S.C. members could ever @n-duct any portion of a meeting wi th-out the usual chatter am ong them-selves. Seriously though , it was adecent gesture a nd their respect w aswel l taken.

    After the minutes of previousmeetings had been passed, JimKraemer iead a letter from PaulSwartz. The letter was his resigna-tion from the posi t ion of StudentsCounci l Vice President. The Coun-ci l unanimously accepted i t andthanked him for the work he haddone,

    Well, folks, heres a big chancefor sokeone who didn t l ike the waySwartz ran things to offer the ir ser-vices. A lot of people could probablydd a much, much better job thanPaul but I wonder how m any wi l l .How about you Roy Masters?.

    Among the th ings on the Execu-tive Board repo rt wh ich w ere dis-:ussed was this item: The dxecutivehave ordered 150 booklets on Howto Run a Meeting. According to;he Pres., theyre to be for the gen-?ral use of various clubs an d organi-zations on campus. I hope they keepa couple around for S.C. meetings.Theyll l ikely come in handy.

    Typical t ime wasting discussionoccurred when the meeting m oved ontb the S.C. master budget. Y ou l lrecal l that i t was OKed by the F in-ance Comm ittee about two weeksago. The people w ho should havebeen at that m eeting, and weren t,asked the same questions, and de-bated the sanie issues that had beencovered previously. The budge t washowever, finally officia lly passed byStudents Counci l .

    Another of the i tems on the agen-la was the Student Christian Move-nent budget. John Braun, fu l lyIware of, just what S.C. would pay?or, submitted only a request foroff ice suppl ies. A simple th ing l ikethat soon evolved into a lengthy

    phi losophical d iscussion as . to whe-ther or not re l ig ious and/or pol i t ica lclubs should be supported. This hadal ready been hashed over and. de-cided upon some time ago and soafter hearing the same old argu-ments, they eventual ly got back tothe question of the S.C.M. budget.Keeping up the apparent tradi t ionDf the more paper .we have, themore off ic ia l the meeting must bethey to ld Mr. Braun that h is requestwould not be considered unti l hep&sented the clubs entire budget.Apparently upset by h is attempts at:ff iciency ,being squashed, he dashedBut of the room and wi th in an hourwas back wi th an armful of mimeo-

    graphed copies of the completeS.C.M. budget. Wi th an ai r ofbenevolence, Students Counci l d idgrant h is or ig inal rquest and hardlylooked at the rest of the budget.

    As 7 mentioned before, th is wasa long meeting and probably themost ac tive yet. Here are some ofthe other th ings that were d iscussed:

    You remember that resolution thatwas to be presented to the Athletic

    .Dept. expressing student dissatisfac-t ion? Wel l , apparently i t was. In re-porting on the outcome Ji& Krae-mer was of the opin ion that th ingsweren t real ly as bad as wed ima-gined. However, i t was the, generalfe l l ing on Counci l that hed been led down the garden path by Mr.Totzke anti his cohorts.

    Some of Mr. Kraemers fr iends,after hearing that the executiveboard expense account was gett inglow, moved that he be. granted anaddi t ional $100 to cover the costof his attendan ce at various Uni-versity fun ctions. Do I detect theword honoria sneaking, back intothe l imel ight? \

    Seeing as how I usual ly run Stud-ents Counci l down, I suppose I

    should real ly nai l someone to thewal l fbr th is. But Jim Kraemer is thebest President weve had yet and hasdone an awful lo t of work th isterm. Besides, why complain, noone else wi l l?

    Most people have heard of Cross-roads Afr ica but few know aboutit. It turns out that it isnt just aplace where ttio anim al trails crossin the middle of the jungle. GaryPalen is to be commended for shed-ding some l ight on the subject forStudents Counci l .\

    University Jackets was the nextsubject for discussion. Dave Rumpel,of the Jacket Committee, presentedCounci l wi th a b lazer that he movedbe adopted as the off ic ia l universi tyblazer. Its a real sharp, three but-ton b lack f lan nel jacket. It s of thesl im design and includes the newslash pockets. The committee hasworked a deal , whereby one maypurchase the jacket complete wi thcrest (the expensive one) for around$40. The council, very enthusiasticabout i t , readi ly adopted i t as theofficial blazer. It is on sale locallyand orders are now being taken.Who knows, this may start peoplearound this place dressing in amanner befi tt ing the Universi ty ofWater loo.

    A couple of other th ings I shouldmention before wrapping i t up are:Students Counci l passed a motionto the effect that a t a l l Universi tyfunctions the p laying of 0 Canadashould be given preference to GodSave the Queen. - A copy of themotion is being sent to Prime Min-ister Pearson. - How about that?

    Also. tp those howl ing, screaming,lunatics that have turned the Engin-eering common room into one biggarbage .can - watch out. Legisla-t ion is being carr ied out to putcorrtitive measures into effect. Ajudical committee has been set upand are fu l ly prepared to deal , inwhatever manner they see f i t , wi thfuture slovens.

    * ,

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    . _.L by G. WHIZThe first litt le snowstorm of the year last Sunda y put drivers. on their

    met t le espec ial ly on the 401 where s ixty seems to be the minimum speedin any weather. I t s almost beneath ones digni ty as a driver to al low asmal l mat ter l ike the elements to dic tate the safe driv ing speed. I imaginethat would sound insane to the pol iceman or the tow t ruck operator; I t-was bene ath my dignity to go less than sixty.

    * * * *Cars in the median were thicker than snowf lakes so they meri ted

    l i t t le at tent ion f rom the pass ing motoris t. The one incongruous mishap wasan Oldsmobi le that had been gut ted by f ire a nd was s t i l l smoking as Idrove past . The smoking Olds completed the pic ture - 401 looked l ikean updated Na poleonic ret reat f rom Moscow.

    * * * *Thomas Carly le, w ri t ing on the American Civ i l War, had this to say:

    Their emancipat ion of s laves (al though a judgment upon unjust s laveowners) amounts to l i t t le more than a replacement of a crude relat ion ofresponsibi li ty between men by one of no responsibi li ty@ at al l . The Southsays to the nigger, God bless you a nd be a slave. The N orth says, Goddamn you, and be f ree .

    * * ~>)c *You engineers are walk ing garbage dispensers i f we are to judge you

    by the state of your common room. Why lecture you on respons ibility; youobvious ly don t know the meaning of the word. I wouldn t be surprised todiscover that you use the trash container by the vendin g machine s as aurinal ; and those sand f i l led ashtrays, what you use them for, Heaven onlyknows.

    * * * *G. , take a look at this . So at two in the morning I wandered into

    the next room an d discussed the probable locat ion of Carthage. Then w etried to f igure out where Hannibal s elephants came f rom. Even at thatt ime in the morning the problem was an interest ing one. And how did hemanage to get elephants across the Strai ts of Gibral tar? The other memberof our group who ha d been t ry ing to s leep through the discussion screamedfrom a tortured pi le of bedc lothes, They shipped the %&@c/&$ things inBathurst Co ntainers. End of discussion.\ * * * *

    This is KXEL, Waterloo, Iowa says the nasal twang in the weesmal l hours . No mat ter how fast you turn the dial KXEL is alwaysthere. I t must have an airwave monoply af ter 2 a.m. The commerc ials aredirected at an incredibly low intel l igence level : Stay tuned f r iends becauseafter this next numb er Ill be right back to tell you h ow you can get thisrecord for your very own. Then a s ix year old begins a monologu e: DearJesus . . . . . . and for the next two minute s she attempts to grab he rpart of the Christmas gravy. It was an open letter to Jesus. Jesus just mayreply to this one - wi th a thunderbol t .

    >I< * * *Jabberwocky is a literary endeavo ur of St. Jeromes wh ich hope s,among other things, to be infused w ith the Cathol ic spir i t of l iberal

    educat ion. Two l ines below ihat someone begins screaming that IngemarBergman is a pornography merchant . I f this is the Cathol ic spir i t of l iberaleducat ion then i t s high t ime that Reformat ion Mark I I came whis t l ingover the horizon. i* * * *

    I t seems the Royal fas ion in England this t ime of year to announcethat one is pregnant in a sui tably eupemist ic fashion. The Chris tmas addressto the Empire is one funct ion that wi l l be cancelled because of the Queenscondi t ion. Is the Queen that del icate a creature or are we not permit tedto see a pregnant Queen? Personal ly I (and mi l l ions more) w i l l no t missthe Royal address, but the royal sense of propriety is just a bit much.

    * * * *So the grad bal l is to be held in February . I know the issue has beenof f ic ially buried so in that l ight I appoint mysel f chief mourner to rant at

    the graves ide. February , Strat ford and Lionel Thornton. I f I were to putit on canvas Id call it, Disaster in Trinity. Thornton , who is his ownvocal is t and who loves to s ing sounds l ike Rudy Val lee wi th layrngi t is .

    * * * *And so another term draws to a c lose for the Engineers. Bubonic out-going, smal lpox incoming.

    TO BE I_ORNOT TOby BRUCE KOEPKE

    BECan Canada preserve a separate ident i ty bes ides

    the Unite d States? That to-day, this issue is not infre-quently raised by many respo nsible groups, is indica-tive that the question is not as facetious as it wou ldf i rst appear. Indeed, the interpretat ion given to recentevents, especially the brutal a ssassination of John F.Kennedy, has revealed that the quest ion meri ts ourcons iderat ion.

    I t is unfortunate for our nat ional image. that wehave, or, rather, bel ieve we have, a common unde-fended border wi th the Uni ted States. Nothing wouldbet ter serve our nat ional pretent ions than a bel l igerentneighbour. But the pi t i ful fac t is that we haven tsuch a power. T he jingoistic manifest destiny crythat in former years provided such wond erful electoralammu nit ion for ul t ra-nat ional is ts l ike Sir John A.Macd onald (A *British subject I was born; a Britishsubject I wi l l die) has for g enerat ions been conspicuousfor its absence. Cana da, as a distinct natio nal entity,is being raped by co-operation, peace, and good-wi l l .

    The threat to Canadas ident i ty comes f rom f r iendly ,peaceful penetrat ion by American money, ideas, andculture. Oh, it s not part of a vicious plot to digestthe north; i t would no longer be a threat i f such werethe case.. The American s are as interested in our sur-vival as a separate. and distinct entity as we are our-selves. Still the threat exists. Moreover, it is actuallysol ic i ted by Canadians in their des ire for things Am -erican, espec ial ly their material weal th.

    At present, w e differ very litt le i n basic attitudesfrom our southern neighbour. Hence the commentonce voiced by a British journa list to the effect thatThe Austrai l ians are unmistakable, the Canadians in-dis t inguishable. Friday, November 22, drove homethis fact wi th pecul iar poignance. Canadians and Am-ericans mourned him as one people. Pol i t ical sc ienceteaches us that it is the public awareness of mutualinterests an d similarities t-hat constitutes a nation , In-

    deed, during the fateful weekend we had become Am -ericans in al l but name.

    Economical ly too, we are being Americanized. Thecorroborative statistics a re too well known to meritrepet i t ion he*. What must be s t ressed, though, is thefact that most of the- major decisions affecting Cana-dian industry are made by, or subject to the approvalof, econom ic concerns ou tside the country.

    What can we do about i t? Of course we could,as one Canadian bus inessman has said, Bui ld a wal lacres s the border, jam American communicat ions, andforce the populat ion to sacrif ice a few generat ions todevelop an independent economy as they did inRussia. A less spectacular, but more practical solu-t ion would be to learn to l ive wi thin our means, andthereby hal t the process of aloenat ion of ownershipand control of Canadian industry , and to publ ish ourown magazines, wri te our own books, and make ourown monies, thereby propagat ing our own cul ture toco.mbat the American. This in effect, is what theCdnadian government has been attempt ing to do wi thsingular lack of success for many years now. My ow nsolution wou ld be to sit down , this very year, withAmerican of f ic ials and at tempt to negot iate a unionwith the Uni ted States whi le w e s t i l l have some ele-men t of distinctiveness to serve as amm unitio n fornegot iat ion. I t , is only in this way that we can hopeto salvage any vestige of Canadianism in the worldof tomorrow.

    Alas! Both solut ions are utopian and ut terly incap-able of real izat ion! I f we had a cause to which toral ly , then perhaps we would be prepared to t ightenour belts , for the glory of Canada. But we haven tsuch a cause. We have not been openly threatened,though a vei led threat ex ists ; we have not even be encourted, though our rape is imminent . Why thenshould we be perturbed, espec ial ly when such an un-solicited act may tend to disrrupt our prosperity. Noris the second solution possible. Again st a history of anti-americanism and Canadian not ions of . superiori ty sucha course of act ion w ould be pol i t ical suic ide for i tsadvocates. To lay hands on the life work of Sir WilfredLaurier and Sir John A. Macdonald would be nothingshort of nat ional vandal ism! And so we shal l com-placent ly dri f t toward our predest ined goal - Ameri-cans in name as wel l as in fact . But remember this ,i f we lose our separate ident i ty i t wi l l not be becausewe lack the means to sustain a dis t inc t ive Canadianway of l i fe. I t wi l l be because w e lack the wi l l .

    by TOM RANKINAn intereset ing art ic le f rom theRyersonian further serves to poin t

    out the hypocracy of our censors.Al though i ts theme is not prec iselythe same as that of Peekaboo las tweek, by John MacDonald, i t mightprove interesting.

    These artbooko, these novels, areselling like hotcakesbecause they are notlegal ly .

    near Ryersonobscene . . .

    Incest, lesbianism, travestism,homose xuality - a galaxy of skinon paper is being sold in The Ryer-son campus area.

    The man appointed to keep aneye on sex on the newsstands isDavid A . Coon, Chairman of OntarioAdvisory Commit tee on IndecentLi terature.

    Mr. Coon explained that obsceni tyis dec ided in court.

    Bus iness is booming at The TimesSquare Book Store on Yonge Street- skinbook purveyers par excellence.We g et Ryerson people in here

    every day, says Gill Ball, storemanager.

    He said his commit tee is not em-powe red to search out indece nt lit-erature.

    Citizens must submit mate rial tothe Commit tee for cons iderat ion -i fthey consider it offensive, he said.

    Anyone over 21 can buy TimesSquares artistic nudes a nd nov-els. You thful looking customers areasked for proof of age.

    A book, whether p ubl ished hereor imported, is judged absence underthe Criminal Code.

    Obscene? No, nothing we sel l isobscene, says Gill. A ll these maga-zines are passed by Can ada Cust-oms.

    Sect ion 150 (2) of the Code makes,it an offence to sell any obscenewri t ten mat ter, pic ture mod el, phono-graph record or other thing w hatso-ever .

    Sample: They Traded Their WivesInstead Of Green Stamp s in SinValey! $1 .OO.

    Pol ice - Yes, plainc lothesmencome in once in a whi le - neversay anything though. Fines? No, notus .

    A recent ame ndment to the codedefines obscenity thus: Any pub-lication, the dom inen t characteristicof which is the undue exploi tat ionof sex or sex in one of more ofthe fol lowing: horror, v iolence,crime, shall be considered obscene.

    Sample: Part -Time Virgin . . .She Used Her Body Like A WhipTo Lash Mens Hunger! 7%.

    Mr. C oon s tated that in his opin-ion, nude pic tures per se are notobscene.

    Tropic Of Cancer? No, we don tcarry it. Law says it pornogra phyyknow.

    The Stouf fv i l le lawyer made thepoint that paperbacks that exploitlesbianism, for example, are of tenjudged obscene.

    Sample: Kozy Up With - Kozy The Commit tee has ordered theBooks - Behind The Scenes In A removal of at least 50 paperbacksMassage Pallor. $1.25 . from the newsstands. This is like

    . Thursday I December I963 3 a

    sweeping the ocean, he said.Mr. Coo n said that presently, hisCommit tee is not get t ing act ion.He said crackdowns on indecen t lit-erature come in cycles.

    Mr. Coon confi rmed that someEnglis h classics such as Tom Jonesand Wuthering Heights , ha d beensubmit ted for examinat ion to hisCommit tee because they of fendedsome people.

    The Commit tee Chairman saidmost novelized smut is churned outby a few hack writers.

    They can produce one of thesethings in a couple of days by dictat-ing into a recording machine andhaving a s tenographer insert thepunctuation later.

    The lawyer, who went on recordas bein g opposed to censorship,commented on the use of four-let terwords in fiction.

    You cant write a story abo ut anarmy barracks and say gee whizthroughout , he said.

    Quest ioned about the poss ible so-ciologic al effects o f the sale of skin-books in the Ryerson area, Mr.Coon said there is no proof of anydetrim ental effort on society result-ing f rom the sale of these books.

    Meanw hi le, at The Times Sq uareBook S tore,- business continues .

    Skin books not availa ble, overthe counter in the Province ofQuebec are sold in lots ranging invalue up to $100 to Times Squaresout-of-town customers.

    The Times Square Book Store isthe only bookstore in Canada that isopen 2 4 hours a day, says Gill.

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    /\

    I. I

    Last Tuesday, November 26, theUniversity of Waterloo hockey war-riors came out on top in the gameagainst W.U.C. Hawks at WaterlooArena.

    The Warriors open ed the scoringin the fi rs t two minutes of the gamewith a goal by Terry Cooke, assist-ed by Don Mervyn.

    A few minutes later the Hawkst ied i t up when Warriors were aman short and Reynolds scored un-assisted.

    The Warriors went ahead with agoal by Tom Searth f rom Love andLawless, only to have it t ied upagain by the Hawks on a goal byFavot , f rom Gi lbertson and Temp-lar, which fin ished the scoring of thefirst period.

    The first period was rather roughand, as a resul t, 8 penal t ies werehanded out . The Hawks got 5, 3 ofwhich went to De Fehr and the othertwo were picked up by Randle andReiner. Warrior penal t ies went toCooke, McLean and Lawless.

    The Hawks opened the scoring inthe second period at the 16 secondmark w i th a goal by Gi lbertson f romTempla r. The Warriors tied it up atthe 7: 15 mark on Thompsons goalf rom Lawless and Passmore. A t the8:40, the Warriors again took thelead with P indlers goal assis ted byThompson, at 11:55 the Hawks t iedi t up wi th a goal by Belajac f romBacon. They then took the lead forthe last t ime on Randles unass istedgoal at 15:37. The Warriors t ied thescore on Cookes second g oal fromCressman. Mervyn put Warriors infront to stay at 16:02 on his goalf rom Sharma n a nd Cooke. Searthcompleted the scoring at 19:02 withan unass isted goal . The penal t ies inthis period were even, with Cress-man, Lehman and Peacock of theWarriors and Favot and Russell ofthe Hawks doing them, R ussel ltwice. The last period , althou gh lack-ing in scoring, suppl ied severalthri l ls along the box ing l ine. Templarof the Hawks and Deighton of theWarriors received majors for fight-ing. Lehman of the Warriors andBrady of the Hawks received m inorsfor roughing. The gam e c losed in afree-for-all type affair with theWarriors Sharm an taking th e spot-l ight whi le pluck ing a few feathersfrom th e Hawks Russell.

    Al l in al l , the Warriors played agood game, but wi th more pract icewi l l be able to do much bet ter andshow prospects for a strong team.

    L 22KINGA Sports. .-OUG. GRENKIE--Sports Editor /

    Tonigh t the University of Water- CURLING CAPERSoo basketba ll Warriors take on theLawrence Tech Blue Devils a t Sea-gram Gym. This wi l l be the War-riors first test of the season. Sofar they have looked qui te good inpract ice wi th Coach Dan Pugl ieseput t ing them through the dri l ls andpat terns. The Blue Devi ls should putup some st rong com pet i t ion s incethey have an average height of . 64on their first team. Last year Law-rence T,ech were defeated by thechampion Assumpt ion team by only1 point . So, i f you w ant to see somegood basketbal l and also help cheerthe Warriors on to victory, be sureto show up for to-night% game atSeagram Gym.

    LEAGUE SCORESTuesday, November 19:But t defeated Hi l l : 7-5Amon defeated Busch: 5-2Smith defeated Kerr: 8-6Darragh defeated St . John: j -1Dolman defeated Schnarr: 5-4Ackroyde defeate d Purnis: 5-4Thursday, N&ember 21: *No Curl ingTuesday, November 26:Amon defeated But t : 6-2Kerr defeated Busch: 8-2St . John defeated Smith: 5-3Darragh defeated Schnarr: 4-3Ackroyde defeated Dolma n: 1 -2Hi l l defeated Purnis : 6-3Thursday, November 28Al lan defeated Kerr: 5-4Scot t defeated Hagey: 5-4 1Schnarr defeated Hi l l : 6-5

    Don Mervyn who scored a hat- tr ick against the HawksCORNELL SQUEEZE WIN

    Last Thursday th e Univers ity of Waterloo Warriors iournevedto play the Corn611 Univers ity hbcke y squ ad. -Although bur &amlost the game 4-3, they put up a very stron g showing against themore experienced Corneli team.

    That sure was a close hockeygame between Arts and St . Jeromeslast Thursday. Pretty lucky, arent)iou Arts?

    In the f i rs t period Cornel l gotahead with a goal by Charles With-erell. Fifty-one seconds later, TomSearth teid up the game with anunass isted goal . Cornel l got aheadagain in the fi rs t period wi th a goalby Murray Stephen, w ho. happens tohai l from St. Marys, Ont.

    The Warriors came roaring backwith a goal by Don Mervyn at 2:22of the second p eriod. Assists weregiven to Ken Thompson and DavePassmore.In the f inal period, Co rnel l surgedahead by two goals when Ed Sauerand Jim Stevens coun ted. TerryCooke p ut the Warriors back in thegame when he scored a goal at the12:08 mark; he was assisted by Don

    Mervyn and John McLean. TheWarriors tried hard to , get thatequal izer before the end of the gamebut they were unable to get thatelus ive puck behind Corne l l goaltender John Sharpe. Thus the gameended 4-3 in favoun of Cornel l .Waterloo received six pena ltiesand Cornel l received three minorsand a misconduct . The Cornel l play-ers outskated the Warriors since theyplay Interna tional Rules which stressfast skating and no body-checkingin the offensive zone. Our fellowstook a whi le get t ing used to thedifferent rules, but once they did,they played a terrif ic game and,with a few breaks, victory couldhave been ours .

    By the way, St . Paul s enjoyedtheir steak dinner; I know, I wa sthere. TOP LEAGUE STANDINGSTuesPay 1Darragh is in top place with 5 wins

    and one loss. Dolman, Purnis andAckroyde are tied for second with4 wins and two losses.ThursdayAl lan and Scot t are t ied for f i rstplace with 4 wins and o ne loss.These two teams wi l l play of f onThursday, December 5. The winnerwi l l thei play the winner of Tues-day s league on Thursday, December12, i f poss ible.Curl ing wi l l cont inue for those whowish to curl , unt i l December 19th.Teams wi l l be drawn up at thecurl ing c lub for those who are notin the playoffs.

    CT Chapple, Sec.-Treas.

    The hockey game against W.U.C.was not too wel l played. I t almostappeared at one t ime that they mighteven t ie us. Cam Brewer wi l l beback on skates for the next hockeygame; He received a broken noseand several stitches in the gameagainst the Hawks.

    In the article Athletic Apathyin las t weeks paper, two quest ionswere raised. Should the Athlet ic de-partment go around to every s tudentto force them to get interested inintramu ral sports? If the studentscannot be bothered to show any in-terest, why should the Athletic De-partment be responsible for get tinghim to take part in athletics. Mosts tudents do show an interest andthese people are looked af ter bythe Athlet ic Department in a wel l -organz ied int ramural program forthe Fal l and Winter terms. PerhapsDave Campbe l l s art ic le s t irred afew people and made them take alitt le more interest. T,here are moreintramu ral sports compe titions nextterm, and YOU can take part int hem if YOU ARE I NTERESTED?Are you?

    dribble! dribble!!ENGINEERSTROUNCE ST. Ps

    The Engineers wiped out St . Paul s 4 galant indiv iduals and thus wentdown figh ting. For the victors RossPrent ice and Roger McLeod shone.John M cVey and J. Schultz w erestandouts for the Artsmen.

    LATE SPORTS* On Monday night the Univers i tyof Waterloo Warriors went to West-em for a hockey game . Final scorewa s WESTERN 8, WATERLOO 2.* Monday night Basketbal l scoresare: iGame 1

    St. Pauls (5), 34; St. Pauls (7), 35Game 2Science, 10; St. Jeromes 53

    Game 3Engineering 44; Renison 27.

    58 to 18 in the fi rs t game. A fastbreaking offense and sturdy defenceenabled the Engineers to demol ishSt. Pauls. St. Pauls weaknesses inboth, departments were a great help.Top scorers for the Enginee rs wereJohn Cat terick wi th 14 points andAl Etchel ls wi th 9. St . Paul s l inestar was Rod Barr w ith 9 points.

    The next ga me saw a t ight de-fensive tea m from S t. Jeromes top-ple Renison 37 to 20. J im Ridleyand Stan Connel ly s tarred for St .Jeromes . For Renison Doug Hi l l andBernie . , Sl iwinsk i were s tandouts .In the las t game St . Paul s (6) up-

    set the Artsmen 30 to 29. The g amewas won in the dy ing seconds of athree minute overt ime period. I f theArtsmen had had a couple of ext raplayers they would have been as-sured o f a victory, but they had only

    l m

    WHITETAKESBLACK up a s t rong defense and al lowedth Blacks only two more points forthe remaining minutes wh i le theythemselves pi led in a few morepoints. F inal score stood 84 -71 forthe Whites.

    The game i tsel f was not t remend-ous, but i t did show one

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    L. A \sc/, R E. N C E I--- ;: -,.by TOM RANKIN

    Lawrence of Arabia is another m ult imi l l ion dol larmovie sp ectacular but with a difference. Its grande urand c laim to the t i t le of a great movie does not dependon a cast of thousands, Charlotn Heston, Cinemascopeand color.

    On the contrary, althou gh a cast of thousands isused, it is not necssary to the crux of the story. PeterOToole is a better actor than Mr. Heston. Black andwhite would have suf f iced.

    This does not mean however that these thingsweren t important . The thri l l ing Arab cavalry charge onthe Turkish garrison at Akaba and the bloo d thirstymassacre of a who le Turkish column by the crazed Law-rence an d his Arabs wi l l never be forgot ten.The photography is magnif icent . Never has thedessert app eared so beaut i ful . The rugged red of sand-stone cliffs che wed by the winds into fantastic shapes;

    the rol l ing mountains of sand l ike buxom wom en both blue yes and six foot stature make a striking Lawrenceinv i t ing and dangerous; the fiery sun so hot tha t death (al though the real Lawrence was about 56). His per-is its constant comp anion - this is Arabia , a wildly formance is bold and exhibitiona ry, full of spirit, f ire, *beau tiful country. This the camera catches with severe and pathos. I t is a noble characterization of one of theclarity. great heroes of the First World War.Producer Sam Spiegel has assembled some of theaward winning cast of Bridge ,on the River Kwai: tT,Director David Lean is, a man . so,, respected- in his field _.that Alec Guinness ,accepted th e role of Prince Feisalk.wi thout even reading the script ; Sir Alec Guinness oneof the most versatile actors in the world today, equa llyat home on the modern s tage, Shakespearian theatre andthe films, a nd Jack Hawkins a veteran of many greatmovies and a respected actor. In additio n, there is An-thony Quinn, Jose Ferrer and of course Pe ter OToole.

    Peter OToole, al though unknown to most moviegoers is not a newcom er to acting. He is a trained classicalactor wi th a dramat ic voice and manner; his blond hair

    The fact that Lawrence of Arabia was a hero cannotbe . .disp$ed, . -but T. : ;E. . : Lawrence the man has been apuzzle for;. the; last -50 years. :-He ha d a grea t desire tohelp the Arab .people f ree themselves f rom the Turksand give Arabia .back to the Arabs. He had such fai thin himsel f that he thought himsel f inv inc ible and almosta god. Within this grand exterior lurked a man taintedwith m asochism as wel l as sadism and touches of homo-sexuality. He was a crazy mixed up kid! But these quirksin his character did not affect his contributions to history.He still remains a dynamic character with a story worthtel l ing, and i t is told wi th drama and feel ing in SamSpiegel s Lawrence of Arabia.

    o 7 SIDED SESSIONAt the Baha i me et ing on November 26, Mr.

    Mart in spoke on integrat ion. Integrat ion, an import -ant facet of the Ba hai faith , was chosen as the firsttopic because it is such an importa nt question forNorth Americans. I f we l ived in Pak is tan where wo-men are kept in sec lus ion, th topic w ould probablyhave been the rights of women.

    The Bah a i fai th was founded by a Pers ian overa hundre d years ag o, but it is in our fast-movingworld of today that it has becom e so significant. Aworld community in which there are no black, oryel low, or whi te people, but rather people of an in-f ini tely more at t ract ive l ight brown hue is what theBaha i fai th maintains would be a solut ion for the

    system was right for mediev al Europ e, this seems tobe the solut ion for today.

    Also they think that integrat ion is not a thingof the future but a process which has been goingon for a long t ime. As Mr. Mart in pointed out , theinvas ion by the North African Negro Moslem of .Spain, painted qu i te few Europeans with the tarbrush, _and if you look a t the portraits of European royaltyafter tha t time, there is some suspicion as to thepurity of the race.

    So ofetn, i f you tel l someone that you bel ieveintegra tion is the right thin g, they come back withthis s tunning quest ion, But would you want yourson or daughter to marry a Negro? Some membershave an equal ly s tunning answer. Oh, but my daugh-ter is married to a Negro and I m sure I have somepic tures in my wal let of my two grandchi ldren.

    pol i t ical and soc ial problems of today. They do notthink that this is the last answer but, as the feudal

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    FOR SALE: Several three-chair, Gorman model, hand-made W hipples.These are masterpieces of the old-tim e flackers art, and are in perfectcondi t ion. We regret not being able to of fer any of the usual acces-sories, but the recent disturbances in Sikkim render these unob tainab le.To any true connoisseur the excellent conditio n of our stake makesour prices very reaso nable. Contact A. B. Cou pal, c/o the Coryphaeus.

    TO THE GAMBLERS . . .It is a difference of opinionthat makes horse-races.

    MARK TWAI N. . . and Supps!

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    7REASURE VAN ,St. Pauls College,December 9, 10, 11

    10 a.m. - 5 p.m. and 7 -9 p.m.

    EXOTIC HAND-MADE ARTICLES FROM THE FO URCORNERS OF THE EARTH

    Thursday 5 December 1963

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    i Two saints- and a Sinner -. RENISaN: Batten down the hatches, .

    Renison laurel wreaths go to a l l the members ofthe cast of Patience for putt in on a most enjoyableperformance . A special vote o % thanks to Ferry, orMerry, or anyway, Mr. Jones (you know, the pne withthe li ly an d the angelic expression) for an aesthetictransfiguration which some may cal l indigestion, but3 which we cal l pure enterta inment.Besides supplying -a large number of the cast for the operetta, Renison also provided the locale for thecast parties on Thursday and Friday nights. Beingtypical Renisonian s, several of the boys staged aninpromptu water f ight, in the course of which Mr.IS. - J., the Don of men, and var ious members ofthe cast were barricaded in his apartme nt. His jailersmust have re lented, though, because he was out intime to shoulder h is r i f le in t ime for the Fridaynight performance. \

    A clothesl ine, that made a dandy l imbo bar, wasstretched across the downstairs h all in the girls wing.However, the Housemother was not too appreciativ&Apparently the l ine stretched from her door to theone di rectly across the hal l 2 making i t impossib lefor her to leave her apartmen t, except by way of thewindow, and thats qui te a drop. The Sigma Del tasstrike again????The barricades are up, everythnig breakable is beingremoved, fire hoses are unwou nd and ready for instantuse. Renison is being invaded by a hord of, no, notEngineers or the Sigma Del tas, but the orphans fromSt. Agatha. We real ly don t need the r iot equipmentfor the children, at least theyre w ell-behave d, its tokeep the good Sisters from the orphanage from re-cla iming them. Fran.

    ST. JEROMES: News, for a changeComplete ly abandoning my usual pol icy for wri t ingth is column. I m going to mention something news-worthy - the elections for the S.J.C. Stude nts Coun -cil executive. The offices of president, secretary andtreasurer were acclaimed , vice-president, executive pre-sident, and 2nd Rep. ( these last two represent us onthe Universi ty Students Council ) were e lected. BobWiljer was uncontested for President, as were CarolynLavigne for secretary and W. Patrick Mackesy forTreasurer; Dave Youn g was elected Vice-Preside nt,Rick Weatherbe 2nd Rep., and George Johnstone,Executvie President.Sports are, once again, in fu l l awing. Our p ing-pong /table is set up again in the laundry room. It s not safe. to do your laundry any more; i t hurts when someoneP

    smashes a p ing-pong bal l off your head. Saturday, weheld the event that everyone has been tra in ing for a l lyear: the annual get-a-good-seat-for-the-Grey-Cup-gamecompeti t ion. This year i t was a memorable event;the te levision was moved upwhere the contest was held. to the main lounge,We were lucky e nough to have the Folk Danceclub as guests last Thursday evening. The dancesthey performed for us were interesting, entert ainingand informative.Oh, by the way: who tied the knots in the sta i rwel lcurtains las t Friday n ight?As for Notre Dam e, its stil l there; but as usual,no news. -Vic.

    ST. PAULS: Nothing Spectacular .Congrat ulations to Renison on their very successful -production of Patience. It was certainly enjoyed byal l who attended (The parties were a lso good.)Elections for St. Saul s Col lege Counci l are set fornext Tuesday, December 10th. At the t ime that th isartic le was being wri tten, nominations were sti l l com-ing in for President, two vice-presidents, (1 boy and1 girl), Secretary, Treasurer, seven ~ Floor Reps, andI two Universi ty Students. Counci l Reps, Socia l Com-mittee and Athletic Committee Chai rmen wi l l be ap-pointed later.Chalk up another steak d inner for St. Paul s ath letes.Thursday night, we celebrated our tennis victory in/ fine style. (I wish tha t one fella ha dnt saved hissteak ti l l Sunday dinner. It was murder trying tokeep my eyes on my own plate of kidney and r ice.T ien Hoa Ho!)

    On Thursday night, too, we were undefeated inhockey (guess why?) I should like to make a predictionre basketbal l Monday night (now last Monday night) :St. Paul s wi l l win two an d lose one. (Edi tor s note:St. Paul s Team 1 plays S t. Paul s Team 3 .)Since this -is. my last column before Christmas (andwho knows where any of us will b e after Christmasresults), Id like to say Merry Christmas to;ALjLn you readers. Note that I restra ined the impulseto te l l the truth by putt ing BOTH? At least onegentleman around here has al ready got in the Christ-&s spi r i t. I mean, once youve -got a whi te beard,YOU can rent a sle igh and make a few bucks overthe holidays or you can get a scythe and

    have a bal l New +ears Eve . . . . Jeff.Will the real Lawrence of Arabiaplease stand UP? 0 0 0

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    week ccmpusThursday 5 DecemberFolk Dance Club I Theatre Workshop 12 NoonFriday 6 December and St. Jeromes Lounge 7 p.m.Arts and Science Ball Walpher HotelSaturday 7 December 9 p.m. to ?Studying for ExamsSunday 8 December at home and library all day

    Wri t ing overdue essays On a typewri terMonday 9 December all dayTreasure Van St. Pauls Great HallTuesday 10 December . . 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.Treasure Van St. Pauls Great HallWednesday 11 December 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.Treasure Van St. Pauls Great HallThursday 12 December 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.Only eleven shopping da ys lef t to ChristmasFriday 13 December ( lots. of luck)Engineering Exam s beginRenison Semi-Formal Seagram GymRenison College 8 a .m. & 2 p .m.9 to 1:30Saturday 14 DecemberEngineering Exam s - sti l l!Sunday 15 December 8 a.m. & 2 p.m.cramming, cramming, crammnigMonday 16 Decembercrabbing, crabbing, crabbing

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