entrances assembly - University of Victoria

Transcription

entrances assembly - University of Victoria
ng
,Youcan’t
makea
silk president
the Martlet
L
Vol. 8
Pigasus’ ear
I
YNR
mor0
”Rise up and abandon the creeping meatball”
Rubin wrecks schedu[e
entrances assembly
I
I
UNIVERSITY OF VICTORIA, VICTORIA, B.C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1968
-SUE
w ,
from
No. 11
three.”
To cries of “What
about
Quehec?”
said
he
that Quebec has
a different union and has no part of CUS.
Paul Watson felt that
if CUS representsonly English-speakingCanadians
i t can’t be consideredaunion
of Canadian
students.
Said Watson, “We don’t need CUS. We’re getting reforms
on our own campus on our own.”
Students in the audience seemed mainly concerned with the
$5000 membershipfeefor, as manyclaimed,nothing.
Frketichdisagreed: “All ourhang-upsaboutwhether
cus
is good Or not are the reason why we haven’t got anything.”
In reference to the article in the Martlet that claimed the
O I I ~ Y support Simon Fraser University got from
cus during
their revolt last summer was a telegram of congratulations, he
said, “It’s not true. There were three cus field workers there
f c r a week.”
Gunnar Cordsen asked,
“What
about
the
overall left political views of CUS?,,
“These are policies of thecongress not of theCanadian
students,” said Frketich.
Bob Higinbothammaintained thatthe money should be
on
and academic affairs instead.
Jerry Rubinwas supposed to give a one- becoming America’s new class of niggers.
shot lunch-hour
lecture
in
theSUBupper“In
America thereis a war of genocide
lounge, just like any visiting bureaucrat from against young whites-the
oldergeneration
isconducting a waragainstthe
young.”
Ottawa-in an&, ~yt,.before it getshot.
“It’s a war of genocide against black people
Insteadhegently
played havoc withthe
Political Science Forum’scarefullyplanned’
people and white youth-the whole purpose of
the Viet Nam war is to get rid of the white
schedule, searched
out
the
hot
spots
and
in jumped
and feet.
with both
black youth.”
The leader of the Youth International ParHe
that warfare and a big draft
ty attracted almost 2,000 students Tuesday - are one method of keeping people off the job
and when theupper
lounge(capacity
300) market when you can’t supply them with jobs.
Jail is theother.”
would take no more bodies, he
cheerfully
moved outside to them.
“Go
jail
to
sometime
see
and
who’s in Students packed the
lawns
from
the
SUB
young kids. Black kids,
white
kids,
but
nearly
to
steps
Road.
all kids.”
Dave Gillet, from the-finances committee agreed.
Some jeered, some cheered, some blew grass “I
wasarrestedin Chicago for solicitation
Said Gillet, “We can’t afford to stay in CUS. Clubs, publicain thesemi-ritualsafety
of t,he crowd. Some toincite
mob action-that’s
asexcrime,”
tions and athletics have all had their budgets hacked.”
sat at his feet
like worshippingdisciples on Rubinsaid as an example of whathetermed
He urged students in the
audience to support the petition
thefrontsteps,
mostremainedstandingfor
ridiculous legal hassle.
beingcirculateddemanding
that Uvic withdrawfromCUs
more than two hours.
“Whys I bet most Of the
and
invited
everyone
to the budget
meeting
being
held Sunday
All were caught up in the charisma of the are in jail for sex crimes.”
slight,flag-drapedman
who partiallyengin-Hesaidtheresult
will be a fusion of young
Paul Watson brought up the question of the lone CUS field
eeredthe blood-drenched Chicago upheavals blacks andwhitesinto a new culture.
6
e
~
n
l
when
y
the
young
whites
become
nigworker
who’s salaryisbeing
paid from Uvic’s $5000. Said
that marked the end of happy hippiedom and
rang in youthfulconfrontationwithbrutalgerscantheyalignthemselveswith
blacks,” “atsonl “I saw the
worker sitting in the beer parlor* He
came back a week and a half ago and
sat and talked all day
authority.
Rubin.
H~
said
he,
and
the
Yippies,
have
been
with
a
small
group
who
just
happened
to
agree with his views.”
First thingthat wentwas thecarefully
accused of subversiveactivities,and
pleaded
When questioned astothe role he will play at the national
arranged format for the lecture.
641
don’t like speeches,” Rubintoidtheguilty
to thecharges.But
he listedother
assemblyJeffGreen
said: “1’11 Point outthat we’re dissatisfied
crowd, “the only good thingaboat speeches is members of society that must be included.
without field worker. It’s as simple as that.”
“People accuse us of conspiracy-and they’re He continued
to defend the advantages of belonging to CUS,
that they get people together.”
“ ~ Berkeley
f
one of the reasons fortheright.
Ther’s no doubtaboutit,” he said.
“CUS has aresearchcentreinareassuchasalternativeforms
“But there are othermembers.There’s
of education, rights Of Women, automobileinsurance for stumassive rtudent power movement was people
moving together-America controls people by Jackie Robinson, he
was the first black power dents, and the
between the universities and the
separating them.”
majors.
the inthere
up batthat
with
And government-”
Shouts Of derision throughout his defense indicated strong
‘61
came here and I thought it was an air- L.B.J. andJackie Kennedy-she decided it was
to
marry
Greek
a and
go live on an anti-CUS
Of the crowd.
port. And that’s really bad-I mean four years better
in an airport!” Rubin
told the crowd, which island-and Dick Daley, he’s been a big help,
and the entire mass media.”
was sprinkled liberally with faculty members
Questions and challenges began to emerge
and older off-campus citizens.
He told the
quiet
students
the
Yippie from
the
audience this
at
point,
and
the speech
movement is notprimarily apoliticalaction,
became a dialogue.
A new publication, the Collegian, is destined next month to
Rubin, speaking quietly, handled scattered
but a religious action.
hecklerseasilybeforemessingup
the second appear on campus.
“I consider myself a priest,” he said.
Published by members of Craigdarroch College, the journal
part of his schedule.
“The Yippie philosophy is ‘Rise upand
is
intended
for the information and entertainment of college
Substituting
a
35-cent
sandwich
for
the
abandon the creeping meatball’-it’s amyth.
A myth enables you to be what you want to.” planned $40-luncheon, he elected tostay on members, and anyone else interested enough to read it.
The Collegian will be monthly, and will contain events on
‘‘When we first said ‘Rise up and abandon campus and talk to students. Quiet discussion
the creeping meatball’, the bourgeois press groups formed on the SUB lawns where Rubin Campus, in the world, and in the minds of students, says editor
K.im SPEW.
ate his cheese and salami and philosophized.
said we meant L.B.J.-why,
the Yippies supHe said i t will not attempt to be objective, but will take a
Later
in
the
afternoon
Rubin
and
about
,
port L.B.J.”
“Johnson wasgreat,”hesaid,
“weowe
40 followers moved back into he SUB for an-criticalapproachtowhat
ma!ws news.
The first issue is scheduled t o be published November 5,
everything we have to L.B.J. He’s definitely other free discussion.
His charges for the day-$150, when most and anyone wishing to contribute articles can hand in their
our leader.”
Rubin
told
the crowd that
white
youth is
Ottawa
bureaucrats
cost $300.
material
to
the
college office before November 1.
-
New mag born
MARKRUDD
=
Mon.Noon
.
=
SUB
=
Upper
-T
U
themselves
back
into even
standinginthe.Vancouver
IslandLeague Fridaynight.
Playingbefore 1,500 fans,
the Uvic squad edged Stockers
2-1 at Esquimalt Sports Centre.
Vikingswerehampered by
sporadic
attacking
patterns,
but a hard-nosed defence kept
theEsquimalt
outfit backed
UP.
Phoenix Theatre
477-482 1
Ocf. 24
- Nov. 2
Presented by Playen Club
Bill Westover grabbedthe
first tally at 1758 of the first
period, butStockers bounced
back with 50 seconds to go in
the second period on a goal
from Terry Minnis with goalie Wayne Hodgson completely
screened.
Veteran Paul Bion put the
game on ice for the Vikings at
8:lO of the third frame when
he
connected
during a Viking's Dower-Dlav.
ACADEMIC REFORM
NEED FOR CHANGE
- PART II
Available at the SUB general office
Please read one!
i
a.
Hallowe'en
SOCHop
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31
8:30 - soc hop
10:30
band
IIc,
- fireworks display
50s each
live
II
P L A Y B O Y BUNNY BASH
Saturday,
October
26th in SUB from 9-1
Dress:
Semi-formal
II
THE MARTLET
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1968
3
” R O D I N SIYCSON ?HOT06
“You might call itan act of love to kill
a cop.’‘
”‘We’re goingto urinate in thevoting
booths.”
“Marxism doesn’t help meunderstand
the situation I’m in.”
Pay toilets
baby!” I don’t think I havetheright
1.0 try to
and the millions that you’re making shouldn’t go
impose that ethic to someonewhosebestfriend
to Madison Avenue - they should go to free food
I’m getting used to charred bodies. I’m getting has been killed.
in the park for people.”
used to brutality. But the one thing that gets me
I say the cops are beginning to treat thelongthe angriest is the Paytoilet. YOU see what the pay haired whites, the hippies,
just the same as the
American concentration
toiletsays - if you don’t havethe money, you blacks.
ca,, t shit. I mean, whatkindofcountrydefends
AndI canrun off 20 ugly,brutal,experiences
camps
that principle? Wow! The war in Vietnam can be t h a t have happened to me recently with cops.
Well we’re notgoingtobeliketheJews
explained by the pay toilet.
Asking me why I hate cops is like asking me because we’re not going to walk there.
averymetaphysicalquestion.
It’s metaphysical.
Theymaytry
to do itbuttheirability
to do
You might call it an act of love to kill a COP.
The new culture
so is questionable.
(
I
We’re buildinganalternativeculture.
We
In Chicago the copskilledaYippie
andthe
It’s possible thatChinaisgoingtolayitslife
press
suppressed
it.
behind
the
American
black.
There
are
a
lot
of
have our own press. We have our own definition
A youngkidwasshottwodaysbeforethe
blacks that say our ultimate security lies in China
of beauty. We have our own sex habits which are
saying: “You put blacks in concentration camps
differentfrommiddleclass
America’s. We have convention opened - from Sioux City, Iowa, Dean
Johnson, shot and killed by Chicago police. But it and we are going to blow up the world.”
our own language. We have our own stimulants.
That would be a deterrent, and as f a r as the
We have our own definition of what’s important got no publicity.
The police right now a r e in a certain position
blacks are concerned, they get it where they can.
- our own attitude toward the nation.
in America. I think there’s danger they
are going I get it where I can get it. In other words I think
It’s a newculture,and
it’s a culturewith
to go further.
we’ve won.
growingpains. And the first experimentsinthe
Right now, if you’re not black, don’t have long
culturearegoingto
bestumblingandpainful
hair, and don’t break the laws you won’t have any Decline
becauseit can’t separateitselffromthemass
empire
trouble
with the police.
commercialism that surrounds it. So we haveto
To control, a culture has to have a myth create alternative economic institutions.
myth is the only thing that is powerful enough.
Love
Once the myth breaksdown, and the American
I wish I hated more. I don’t think I’nl capable myth is dead, all they’ve got is physical force.And
and Pop
The people who were born from
1934 on a r e of shooting a cop and I think that I’m chicken and physical force is self-destructive, it eats itself up.
- they had
Chicago was total defeat for them
incredibly different. Let’s take the difference be- I think that I’ve beenbrainwashed - I mean,
mmemilitaryforcethan
we did,butwe
won
tween us and our parents. Theylived through the I wish I had that ability.
What‘s the address of the police department.
Chicago because it wasobvious what the two sides
depression.TheylivedthroughtheNewDeal.
Their image of waris World War 11. America Go there and preach love. Don’t preach love to me, were saying.
Amercia,militarily,istrying
to controlin
wentinandthemilitaryhad
a lot of prestige I know. Don’t go telling people on the bottom they
have to love. Tell the people that are putting them Vietnam,andshehasthepower
to staythere.
during World War 11.
on the bottom.
TheMilitarysolvedthe
economicproblems,
But she has lost.
The moment America takes an extensive agand it wzs an
economy of scarcity. The waypeople
music
gressive a c t s h e h a s widened the gap between the
react to you now is all based on the depression,
,Theperformerswanttogetvisibility,
so opposition. So the country is caught in a position.
the World War 11 imageandan
economy of
Columbia Records and Electra sign then. up. The If it gets more aggressiveit gets more opposition.
scarcity.
commercialism eatsintothe
new cultureand it’s
That’s the sign of a dying empire and we a r e
a constant battle.
living, in the Roman empire, and it is just, like,
The New Left
But the rock groups are still part of the com- crumblingaway. Its mythnolongerholdsthe
I’m notinterest.edintheleftwing.
I’m not
munity,
and they play for free all the
time.
youth, and people on all kinds of levels are chipinterestFdinleftistorganization.
And I’m not
Their stimulation comes from the mergy in
ping away at it.
interestedinleft-rightlanguage.Because
itall
1968
has that Marxist background, which I don’t think thestreet. And themusictheyexpressis
is really appropriate to 1968’s over-industrialized, America,andallthetensionsandsyruggling
within America.
count
Minorities
mass-communications,consumer-orientedsociety.
So
what
we’ve
got
to
do
now
is
grow
as
a
Veryfewpeoplemakebigchanges.Let’snot
Marxism
doesn’t
help me understand
the
culture
and
then
start
making
demands
on
rock
wait
until
wehavethemajorityreadytoact,
situation I’m in.
groups.,We’ve
got
to
set
up
our
own
record
combecause
the
majoritp will never be ready to act.
It’s a religiousmovement
I’m involvedin
pany,withalltherewardsgoingbackintotheAfewpeoplecanchangeeverything.
rather than a political one.
the Chicago,
to rational
came Yippies
community.
It’s emotional
rather than
-thousand
doing Five
“We’ve got to tellDylan - “You know,we
Free SpeechMovement
at Berkeley, 800 people
i t i s moreimportantthantheanalysis.
I’m not
created
you
and
you
created
us
and
we’re
in
bed
out
of
25,000
seized
buildings.
interested in diagraming, or analyzing
I’m not
of the samt! processOnepersoncanmakeincrediblechange.
interested in any academic jazz. We’ve got to get together. We’re bothpart
out of our minds. We’ve gottogetout
of our
Oh;yes, America has a strange law that
Question:Inexactterms,what
does the
brains.
says
you can’t sell liquor on election day.
We
Yippie movement hope to accomplish?
are going to sell beer and wine in the streets.
Rubin : Haurghhhhh ! HAURGGHHHHH !
Cops
oppression
Question:Are
you actuallyaleader?
DO
AURRRRGGGGGHHHHHHHHH!
!
Telegraph Avenue,Berkeley. Cops six deep,
you lead others in ideas, or
is it spontaneous
Question: Okay, whatabout electionday
patrolling all the time.
Move on, move on, that’s
from city to city?
alltheyhavetosay.Andarresting
people for
in the States, what willyou do?’
drugs,arresting
people forloitering,arresting
Rubin: Its myth is spontaneity. It is also
Rubin: We aregoingto vote on election
people for sitting on tables, arresting people on
creating theatrical events.
daywithourentire
bodies - withourfeet.
4
felony raps for nothing stuff.
We aregoingtobecreatingallthetheatre
In
Chicago
the
myth
came
true
for
the
Breaking into yourhome - your home is your
alternatives that the systemdoes not allow.
people there, and they acted on it.
palace, it’s your sacred shrine.
First of all we haveour own candidate.
I could get your approval and sayI don’t hate
Question: What about the
black ghettos?
He’s a 200 pound hog, and he has an ability no They seem ready to blow, what happens next?
the cops. But I’d be copping-out.
othercandidatehas
- he’ll be ineverycity
The cop does not oppress me t h a t much.
in the country on election day.
Rubin: I can’tpredictanythingreally.
The first 20 years of my lifeIwasnot
oppressed by cops at all. I had no great experiences
They’ll be big marches behind the pig
- But whites are becoming niggers. Consequently
they find themselves in the same relationships
with cops. Why should I ? I’m white, middle classhis name is Pigasus.
to the powers t h a t blacks do. There’s a brotherso cops don’t oppress me.
Question: What else do you intend to do?
hood between white dropouts and young blacks.
ButtheAmerican
police do oppresslarge
Rubin: We are going to put LSD into the
numbers of people - and those people have every
I think whites and blacks are going to join
drinking water. We are going to urinate in the
fucking right to hate cops.
together, and on many different levels they are
voting
booths.
We
are
going
to
hang
.American
Thoseblacks injailshaveeveryreasonto
flags on every house so no one will kn,ow where going to break down America and try to create
hate cops.
something new.
the
polling places are.
So I can comeon
andsaytothe
Black
Panthers--“Hate cops? Don’t hate COPS. Lo-o-0-v-e,
of
Mom
Rock
’
-
~~
and
, ,
l-jal,
‘PIIHIII.
f
I
I
l-l&li.1
I - $ & !
.,
\I‘
’
L
f
OCTOBER
4
FRIDAY,
THE MARTLET
The Political Science Forum is to be commended for the
opportunismandforesightdisplayed
in persuadingJerry
Rubin and Mark Rudd to lecture at eUvic.
More important,KeithThompsonand
Tom Cronedisplayed the kind of ruthless behind the scenes efficiency we
wish prevailed in all bureaucrats in their handling of the
unorthodox Mr. Rubin.
They handled him withfinesse.
Mr. Rudd should prove more receptive to schedules, and
with the Poli Sci Forum’s revealed efficiency, he should be
a smash hit.
But getting back to Mr. Rubin.
We cannotbelievehe
is everythingheclaimsto
be, but
if he should prove to be a few of the things he said we will
be happy enough.
The whole thing has reinforced our desire to liquidate
Uvic’s obligation to CUS and use the money for more relevant
and’exciting projects.
Three hours with Mr. Rubin, we suspect, has been more
enlightening than three years with CUS.
. T ,
Anti = ACRe
-
I
is
delightful
It
to
watch
the
stimulus-response
patterns
of bureaucrats when they are feeling the pinch of financial
crisis.
Inevitably it seems, they turn on the arts with the fury
of red-eyed rats frustrated beyond breaking point.
We hear there is a move afoot to kill the university’s
embryonic literary publication ACRe 68.
In the obviously undeveloped minds of some,
ACRe 68
is synonomous with Tower; in the distorted mythologies of
others, Tower is the true literary publication- realistically
rdecting the image of the university in its gleaming rows
of graduating simpers.
We are notamusedthat
the bureaucrats’searchfor
money previously wasted an frivolities like Tower and CUS
should assume the nature of a snuffling, piggy rooting for
acorns in the form of ACRe.
With a miniscule budget of $1200 and a prediction of
two issues, Mike Hayes and Gus Havelaar were embarking
on a task that is taken too seldom at this university.
We hope ACRe survives the onslaughtof Tower-oriented
practical men. If it does it will be all the more significant in
terms of the university experience.
If the practical geniuses should prevail, and the suggestion that ACRe’s budget be used to cover the expenses of
Tower should be implemented, we will watch with interest
to see how $1,200 does the work of $5,000.
Perhaps the answer mightbe to kill CUSO and cover the
deficit of the AMS with the $300 budget.
-
’IL
It
Donate budget to Biafrans
The Editor, Sir:
YourOctober4theditorialisdefinitely
a milestone in yourassessment of therelationship of students to their academic environment.
When you statethat
theroot
of the
problem is Apathy, however.. I think you a r e
dead wrong. The fact of the matter is that
the students have not been led into areas of
collectiveenterpriseworthy
of thetime,
attentionandservice
of seriousanddedicated students.
The nature of the practical psychology
displayed so f a r by the AM3 leadership has
been, as you so aptly put it, “to goose” students into action biased toward the student
activist role.
It is becoming clear to most thinking students that the AMS leadership is no longer
in touch with the real needs, and aspirations
of Uvic students. This means that they have
We would liketoregister
a note of profounddismay
upon l a r n i n g last Sunday theathletics budget had been
drastically cut.
Thataction
by DanGerwingwasunavoidable,the
currentfinancialscenebeingwhatit
is. What we want to
do here is to suggest an alternative means by which funds
for the depleted athletic budget can be recovered.
This wouldinvolvesellingthestudentunionbuilding
to the Department of Transport, for use by the DOT a s a
combination control tower, waiting room and ticket office.
This proposal is, of course, in line with Jemy Rubin’s
suggestion Tuesday that Uvic is better suited as an airport
than as a university campus.
Revenuefromtheuse
of ourcampusasanairport,
would, understandably, be considerable. In no time at all the
athleticsdepartment wouldbe ableto affotrd tosponsora
ranking football team and scholarships in track and field,
to say nothing of an unlimited number
of away-from-home
ba,sketball games a t Sitka, Alaska.
The Editor, Sir:
It has come toournotice
of late that
largerandlargerareas
c’f thebreedinggrounds of thecampus.population of skylarks and meadow larks are being permanentlyruinedforfurtheruseinthat
connection through the construction of parking
lots, buildings and lawns. Although
we recogof course the need for the material improvement of facilities use to support the physical
requirements of campus society, we feel that
thereexistssocialrequirements
of a nonphysical nature. In this regard let us suggest
that the incorporeal, ethereal strains of the
song of a meadow lark on an Autumn morning, or the indescribable beauty
of a skylark’s
descent in the heat of a Spring or Summer
afternoon are too valuable to be cast outby a
material “progress” made poor by its loss of
spirit.
Let us not forget the platonic ideal concerning the education of the good man. Let
us neverforgetthatthe
good manistem-
of The Martletand not necessarily
opinionsexpressed are those of theEditor.
those of the Alma Mater Society or the Unireraity of Victoria.
Authorized asSecondClass Mailby thePoat OfficeDepartment, Ottawa, and for
Payment of Postage in Cash.
per academicyear.
For nonSubscription rates: $4.00 for students andalumni
students, $5.00 per academicyear.
Printed
Canada
in
Days: 477-1834, 477-3611
With best wishes for a newsless year,
Ray Kraft, FA 3.
pered to the end of justice, wisdom and right
conviction, to harmony of body and soul, to
the love of truth, not merely through blind
empiricismbut
by therightmixtureand
balance of sound knowledge with a sympathy
for beauty and harmony.
How is thisnoblegoal
to beachieved
if futuregenerationsareto
be deniedthe
inspiration of the beautiful? Whoisthere
amongourdescendantswhowillventure
beyond his ink-blotted books and papers in a
searchfortheultimateform
of the good
if thesesmallmanifestations
of that end
arepreventedfromfindingsafehavenon
our grounds.
Thus,let us urg?campusplannersto
study the needs of these vital creatures and,
from this consideration, to set aside an area
sufficienttotheguarantee
of their future
prosperity.
Sincerely yours,
D. A. Knox, 4thyear.
J. R Knox, 4th year.
“To hell with you Jack”
In publishing the facts from memorandum 37, approvingoutfallsforsewagedisposal, you mayhavegained
a tittalating
thrlll at challenging the two Victoria daily
papers, but in doing so you have missed the
boat
completely.
You have
inadvertently
allied .yourself and our paper with the
“To
Hell with you Jack, I’m doing OK” forces of
reactioninVictoria,
whodon’tcarewhat
our beaches will be like thirty years hence.
Memorandum 37 may have proven that sewage in the sea is not a heaith hazard, but it
admits the possibility of aesthetically revo!ting beaches - a condition that doesn’t con:
cern the city fathers because most
of them
are long past the day when they enjoy beach
parties, “saw-ins”, or j u s t plain hand-in-hand
strolling barefoot on the sand. Nor do they
careaboutpolluted
beachfms because to ensurethatVictoria’sbeach2sarekeptpure
will cost bucks and to them bucks are more
important than beauty or
people’s pleasure
- especially younger people!
theopponents of outfalls”(and you cry
about so-called suppression by the press!)
(b) You can’tchangethethinking
of a group of adults who hav’e been brought
up i na n
“I’m doing OK” atmosphere;
whose daily exercise is towalk their dog
ar,d let it defecateon someone else’s boulevard, and who extend this thinking to include the dumping of human excrement, via
sewers,
on
someone
else’s waterfront
property.
If, as you suggest, there has been a press
cop-out, you would do well to look in a mirror.If you can’tdoabetterjob
of determining what the real issue is in this
pollution-sewage dispute maybe you’d better stop
pretending to representthe
youngadults
on this campus, and retire with your geritol
to your rocking chair.
Name Withheld,
Education 11.
(Ed.TheMartlet’sprimaryconcern
in
publicizingMemorandum 37 was not to take
sides in the currentsewage d.isposa1 controversy, but rather to make public importantand
has beenconsistently
relevantevidencethat
ignoredbythetwo
local dailies. I f , as the
authorsuggests,theMartlethasfailedto
present the other side of the disposal debate,
it i s becausethedailypresshasconsistently
given more than adequate coverage in that one
area. Suggestions have been made to the
editorialcommitteethatthereis
valid white
paper evidence which directly contradicts the
findinqs o f Memorandum 37, and whichis
leading the British Government to abandon the
outfall system of sewage disposal.
W e would
(a) You can’t fight City Hall -when
theystageapublichearing(Oct.
19, in enjoyseeingsuchevidence,andwewould
certainly publish it. But we are tired of vague
McPhersonPlayhouse)andimport,presumably a t public expense, a panel of ex- references to other evidence. Let ZLS have some
perts whose express pumose was to “crush -put up or shut up, as it were.)
Where
were
you 1a:jt summer, Mr.
~~~~ii~~~~~lilllli~~lli~lliillllllililllilllllllillillillllillilllillllllllllllllllllllllllllillllillllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllliillllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllillllllil
Editor, when the Jacks and Jills in the above
equation banded together, here
on the Uvic
campus,toprovidetheonlyorganized
opCo-editors ............................................................................and Bob Mitchell
Hume
Steve
position
to
Victoria’s
sewage
outfall
pro.................Susan Mayse
News editor
posal?Theirorganization.“ThePollution
.
Mark Hume
Sports Editor
.
Alan Jones, BrianAlgulre.
Paul Simpson
New. Desk
Solution
Society”
used
their
meagre
reManning
Advertising
sources of bothmoney andtimetotryto
RobinBurgess,
BobDolhsnty,
Murray Pletzer, Lynne
Reportera
Hannay.Barb
Noakra. DaphneMouat,Joan
Smith, lMary Morgan,
impress upon the T.H.W.Y.I.D.O.K. groups
Mary Bigelow, Liz Richards,StephanieMontague.MarleneAlmond.
that treatment of sewage is the only guaranEd Norman, Ross Carbrey.
Photographers
Robin
Simpson,
Scott Tanner,
Klaveren
Adrie
van
teedeffectivemethodtoensure
t h a tV i e
Secretary
ey Walker
toria’sbeaches
arekeptunpolluted,
as a
Member of the Canadian University Press
heritage. For their efforts the group learned
Published twice weekly throughout the University year in Victoria by the Publicatwo things :
Society,University
of Victoria.Editorial
tions Department of theAlmaMater
the Martlet
failedtogiveeffectiveleadershipandthe
soonertheyaccepttheirfailureandstep
down, the sooner the real spirit
of change
will return to the campus.
You asked for a “heart message.” I have
one. But it is one that will take a great deal
of couragefromeachandeverystudent,
for it is a directappeal to theindividual
consciences of every student.
I propose t h a t we shut down the AMS
for a period of one year, for the purpose of
taking stock of ourselves. The’entire b’udget
forthisyear
I suggestshould be donated
to the Biafran Relief Fund.
Does this sound too radical - even for
the Activists? Well, heart messages are not
easy to give in cold print much less in cold
blood. But god dammit I’m notastudent
nigger for nothing.
Breedinggrounds endangered
The Editor, Sir:
Fasten seat belts
.y
25, 1968
@e
”
”
-
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1968
THE, MARTLET
5
The-case of the vanishing lectures
The mind that banned Cleaver
BERKELEY(CUP-CPS)Eldridge Cleaver is minister
of information for ,the Oakland-based
Black
Panther
PartyFor
Self - Denfense,
presidential
candidate
for
Peace
theand
Freedom
Party, and author of a book
on theNegroexperiencein
America,Soul On Ice.
Cleaver was scheduled this
fall to deliver a series of 10
lectures at theBerkeley campus of the Univ’ersity of California, as part of a n experimentalcourseonracerelations, Social Analysis 139X.
Thecourse
also includes
lecturesfrompsychiatrists,
Eldridge Cleaver
Oakland police chief Charles
Gain a c d black and Mexican-American writers.
But when word got out in mid-September about
Cleaver’s
engagement,outragedprotestswereregisteredfrom
conservative elements of the California government.
Superintendent of publicinstructionandsenatorial
candidate Max Rafferty called Cleaver a “racist bigot” and
said if hewereallowedtolecturethestate’seducational
system was in need of a complete overhaul.
Governor Ronald Reganlikened
Cleaver’s engagement
to “asking Bluebeard the Pirate, the wife-murderer, to be a
marriage counselor.”
Reagan as0 threatened a “legistativeinvestigation of
theuniversityfrom
toL to bottom”if the Black Panther
minister was allowed on campus.
The California state senate got into the act, passing
a
resolutioncensuringtheuniversityforinvitingCleaver
to lecture.
Under the pressure from the state senate and Reagan,
theuniversityboard
of regentsSeptember
21 passed a
resolution from president Charles Hitch (head administrator
of the University of California’sninecampuses),limiting
Cleaver and the other speakers to one lecture instead of 10.
Students who regard Cleaver as an articulate spokesman
for militant blacks, reacted angrily, saying the token lecture
was not enough.
OnOctober 3 thefacultylambastedtheregents
in a
resolutionthatattackedtheir“hastyand
ill-considered
action,” and said the faculty would take all necessary steps
to give full credit for Social Analysis 139X.
Meanwhile,Cleaver,speakingto
a n overflow crowd at
StanfordUniversity,October
3, lashedback
a t Reagan,
calling him “a punk, a sissy and a coward.’’
He challenged Reagan to a dual to the death or “until
he says Uncle Eldridge,” and gave the governor a choice of
weapons: guns, knives, baseball bats or marshmallows.
Cleaver described the United States as “the successor
to Nazi Germany, the Number 1 obstacle to human progress.”
U of C chancellorRoger W. Heynsthenpresenteda
compromiseallowing forthe use of aclassroomon
the
racismcourse,withtheunderstandingCleaver
would be
allowed to lecture as often as necessary.
About 300 studentsattendedCleaver’s
first Berkeley
lecture October 8 in a session that was closed to the press
and general public.
Onelistenersaidthelecturewas“aclinicalanalysis
of thecauses of racism,couchedinfairlyacademiclanguage.”
By Richard Sharp and Leslie Lincoln
Staff writers for New University
University of California at Riverside
(Special to Canadian University Press)
-
William J . Forbes, president of ;Southern
California Music Company, director of BeU
Brand Foods, and Regent, gave a penetrating analysis of the working of the Boardin
connection withtheRegents’decisionto
limit Eldridge Cleaver to on0 lecture on the
Berkeleycampus.Forbes
was interviewed
before Cleaver spoke October 8.
Q. Whydid you vote for the resolution to limit Cleaver to one lecture?
A. This would beextremelydifficult
to sumupin
a few words. We spent
severalhoursintheEducationalPolicy
Committee on Thursday and had a reasonably full discussion. Not allof the Regents
were present and it came before the full
Board on Friday. AsI recall, there were
lhree or four rollcallvotesondifferent
phases of this thing. You’re referring to
the last, one, of course. The reasons for
votingacertainwaymust
comein the
context of a long discussion and it was my
feeling that it was the proper way vote.
to
Q. For what reasons didyou feel this
was the proper way to vote?
A. I feltthatthecourse
e,hould be
given and that Mr. Cleaver should be part
of itand my vote meant that it would
happen. Cleaver would speak once instead
of twotimes
as thePresident(Hitch)
originally recommended. But i t hadbeen
previously reported that President Hitch
pulled his vote from two lectures to
one.
Q. Are you personallyagainsthaving Cleaver as a lecturer for tea appearances as hewasscheduled?
A. A lecturerwasthecapacity
in
whichtheBoard
approv’ed Mr. Cleaver’s
appearance . . . I voted for it.
Q . Yes, you voted to let Cleaver lecture once. But would you be in favour of
Cleaver lecturing at ten class sessions if
the board had not limited him?.
A. I thinkthisisan
if-y question,
now. I would refer you to the full body of
our discussion last week.
Q. Then, you’re not p e r s o n a 1 1 y
against having Cleaver as a lecturer. How
would you feelaboutemployingCleaver
as an instructor?
A. We’re talking
about
the
plan
under which the President
recommended
that Mr. Cleaver participated. My vote indicated . . .
Q . Yes, yourvoteindicated
you fa-
voured him as a lecturer. But how would
you feelaboutemployingCleaver
as an
instructor?
A. This is a matter that comes to the
bobrd through proper channels. Through
proper academic and administrative channels. I think we would judge at that time
the recommendation of the President.
Q . Dc you feelthat GovernorReagan, when he brought
up this issue, was
acting under mandate of the people? We
a point of allthe
noted thathemade
letters he had receivedopposingtheappearance of Cleaver as a lecturer for the
course. Do you think this had any bearing
on the Regents’ judgment?
A. I think that I’d prefer not to discuss their motives or the vote of any one
member of theboard beyond my own. I
thinkit wouldbe
presumptuouson my
part to attempt to judge theGovernor.
8. Did thenumber of lettersthat
GovernorReagandidreceivehaveany
effect on your judgment?
A. No. (Pause) Do you know
.the
elapsed amount of time between the momentthecoursewasannouncedandthe
Goevrnor’s reaction to it?
Q. No, I don’t.
A. I thinkthisisratherpertinent.
(Pause).
Q. Well, how longwas i t ?
A. I don’t know. But I thinkthis
would be good to know.
Q. Inlight
of the
Cleaver
issue,
underwhatconditions
do you think the
Regentsshouldreviewdecisionsinacademic matters?’
A. Essentially we should review matters that are brought to us by the president. The Board is essentially oneto determine policies and not get into operations.
Although any Regent has the right to put
a subject on the agenda, we basically discuss the issues raised by President Hitch.
Q. But the Cleaver issue was put
to
the Board by Governor Reagan.
A. Yes.
Q. Don’t you feel that the Regents’
decision in this matter will have
a detrimentalaffectonacademicfreedomand
specifically the AcademicSenates’right
to create courses and hire lecturers?
DO
you think this will be a trend.
. A.
I think it’s tooearly to makea
properjudgmentonthis.Thishas
been
a subject that’s burst upon the scene very
suddenly. We made a decision and I think
now this is being evaluated by all theUniversity administrators and members
of the
Academic Senates and Academic Council.
I think it’s too early to judge.
Francisco
Chapter
of the
MedicalCommittee
forHumanRightsthat
Mace can
cause premanenteye damage.
second-degree burns and pronounced injury
to the central
..
nervous system. Dr. Rose reportedseeingeightcases
01
eye burn,
three
of them
serious.
FiveCalifornia policemerl
were SO seriously injured by
Mace last year as to be hospitalizedor off d u t y for a t
least three days.
Chemical Mace is no longer
anoccupationalhazardfor
reporters and photographers
in at least eight U.S. cities.
Police
officials
in
San
Francisco, Los Angeles, Madison,
Cleveland,
Denver,
Paterson,KansasCity,
Mo.,
and AnnArbor, Mich., have
banned
its
use
indefinitely
following U.S. Surgeon Genere1
William
H. Stewart’s
warning that the incapacitat-
Newspapermenhave been
frequent
targets
of police
Mace attacks during antiwar
demonstrations a n d racial
disorders
during
the
past
year.Many
of theattacks
haveapparently
been
deliberate.
attackedaftershowinghis
presscardto
a policeman
who had ordered him off the
street.
Newsmen
were
similarly
sprayedwith
Mace during
disorders in Oakland, Columbus and Pittsburgh last fall.
The l a t e s t involved a TheSanFrancisco-Oakland
atNegro reporter for the
New Guild chargedthatthe
dozen
York Times who was sprayed tacksonmorethana
in
Oakland
were
withthe chemical during a newsmen
racial breakout in Newburgh deliberate.
Alan Litman, a Pittsburgh
physicist whodeveloped the
damage
to
eyes
-and
skin,
spray,saidtherehasnever
have demanded that the use
of Mace be stopped. The sur- beenadocumentedcase
of
geon General has warned permanentinjuryresulting
that it may have “more than
transient effects unless treat- from it. But he supported the
Surgeon
General’s
advice
ment
is
prompt”
and
enbe washed from
couraged
further
study
of that it should
“possiblechroniceffects.”
the face and eyes a s soon a s
possible.
:3r. Lawrence Rose, a San
Mace’s principal
ingrediF I ancisco ophthalmologist.
ent is tear gas, suspended in
saidlast month at anews
conference calied by the San chemical solvents.
6
FRIDAY,
T H E MARTLET
OCTOBER 26, 1968
-
”
Right wing agitators suspect
in bloody- Paris uprising
Right wing agitators seeking t o discreditThe
movement startedatthe
town of
Troopsfromoutsidefinallyput
down theturmoilwith
striking French students mayhave beeninNanterre, Prior said, in the faculty of soci- great violence, he said.
strumentalsome
in
of the bloody riots
that
ology and psychology.
“The
riot police were hated by everyone,”
said,
“I
he
rocked Paris inAugust,a
member of Uvic’s
“When unrestwasfeltatthe
Sorbonnecan’ttell
you how muchtheywere
hated.’’
French departmentclaims.
the director panicked and called in thepolice
Roy Prior, in Paris during the rioting,
becausehethought
it was gettingout of
and Dr. Janet Walters were speaking to
mem- hand.
bers of Craigdarroch College Wednesday on
“They came in the middle
of a student
demonstration,” he said.
the French situation last summer.
Dr. Walters was a member of the Sor“Waded right in, roughed them up and
bonne faculty during the troubles.
threw them out - the first time the police
Students are needed to sit on each of the
had set foot on Sorbonne soil in 800 years.
Priorsaidhewasreturning
homeone
following
committees.
Resentment was intense among students
dayalongtheSeineduring
a lullinthe
and
faculty
and
the
Sorbonne
was
shut
down,
street fighting, when 60 riot police suddenly
Dr. Walters said.
blocked off a bridge for no apparent reason.
1) planning committee for the new Physical
The next day 40,000 students and work“It was just a quiet
evening,”hesaid.
Education Centre
“Therewere no demonstrationsschedersmarchedtotheArcdeTriompheand
sang the Internationale.
uled. But within two hours there was a full
2) academicplanningcommittee
scale riot in progress. X strongly suspect it
Laterahuge,demonstrationbrokeup,
was initiated and kept going
by right wing
and students poured into the Latin Quarter,
agitators who wanted to discreditthestuwhere they dug in and threw up barricades.
3) senatecommitteeonentrancerequiredents,” Prior said.
“Police went in to get them out,” Prior
ments
“DeGaulle welcomed the riots - they said.
frightenedtherightwingelement
of the
“Theycharged in andtherewere
4-5
4) universitygovernmentcommittee
country, and the backbone of France is very
hours of streetfightingthatlasteduntil
conservative.Thatexplainshisoverwhelmdawn.”
ing sweepbackintopowerinthegeneral
“Theinterestingthingisthatthe
inIf you are interested, you may leave your
election t h a t followed the troubles.”
habitants sided with the students, throwing
name a t the SUB general office or contact
He said the Paris riot police were using
water on them from upper windows to damp
weapons againststudentsthathave
been down tear gas.”
student vice-president Rhys Phillips.
outlawed by the Geneva conv’ention.
When the students were finally broken,
“They weren’t just using tear gas, they
theysoughtrefugeinprivatehouses,but
had automatic grenade throwers, cannisters
policebroke in, and simply brutalized anyone who was there.
of phosphorousgas,andconcussiongrenThen the students retaliated
by taking
ades that knock you flat - there were some
over the Sorbonne and proclaiming ita Free
very nasty things being used.”
Universityopen 24 hours a daytoanyone
“The brutality of the police was indiscriminate, and anyone who was on the scene but police.
The red flag flew over Notre Dame, he
got it.”
flew overthe
Dr.Waltersgave
some of the back- said,whiletheblackflag
Your Downtown Sound Centre
Sorbonne.
ground a tt h e Sorbonnewhichledtothe
EVERYTHING IN RECORDED MUSIC
At the university, lecture theatres stayed
summer rioting.
“Conditions at
the
universikhadn’t openallnightfordiscussiongroupsand
Complete Hit Parade and New Releaser
changed very much in f a r too long,” she said. debates.
“It wasreallyincredible,”Dr.Walters
“The
Sorbonne
was
incredibly
oversaid.
crowded - Iwasteachingatutorialina
AnotherFirst:
“A whole section of a cityinabsolute
room that seated 35 with a class list of 50.”
Lowest price ever offered on
“Major courses were duplicated - they ferment - talking,thinking,arguing,and
were on sale in the
book store because the behind it all kinds of underground CommitClassical LP‘s, RCA Victor reg. $2.98
tees working and organizing.”
profs gave the same lectures over and over
Now only
69#
Next move of the students was to seize
each year.’’
the national theatre and throw it open a s a
“As for faculty, if you’re really imporClassical and Popular LP’s
tant, you might get half an office two days a free university too.
“The
Communists,
always
Strong
in
week. Communications with senior staff was
Angel, Columbia and Capitol
France,had, inpoliticalterms,been
Outby inter-office memo.”
Now each ________.____._____._..
“It was a very unwieldy and rigid struc- flanked on their left.”
“But a Trotskyite group of shock troops
ture.”
did try to burn down the stock exchange in
Extra Special: Jeff Beck “TRUTH“ ....$ 3.69
“As a result, when the trouble started
System,’’
the junior faculty were immediately
on the a direct blow at thecapitalist
Prior said.
side of the students.”
We carry a large selection of Cassettes and
8-Track Tapes
PEOPLE WANTED!
MODERN SOUND RECORDS
I
Long drought ends
SUB cabaret wet
no circumstances would any
Thefirstlegalizeduniverunder-age student be served
sity cabaret in western Canada opens tonight at 8 pm in alcohol,Watsonsaid.
He said that rule would be
Uvic’s SUBcafeteria.
Activities co-ordinator Paul strictlyenforcedbecausea
incident
of minor
Watson last Monday obtain- single
AMS operdrinkinginthe
ed a license from the Liquor
atedclub
would causethe
ControlBoard
thatpermits
license to berevoked.
the AMS operate
to the
“Ifwecanprove
we can
cabaret once
every
two
handle
liquor
responsibly
weeks.
now, we’ll possibly be able to
Thelicensemustberesome
newed each time the student- getafulllicenseat
run club goes into operation. later date,” he said.
He
explained
the
philoThecabaretwill
be open
new into
members
of the Alma sophybehindthe
novation in AMS activities:
Mater
Society
and
their
“So manyactivitiesproguests.Studentswishingto
vided by the AMS are aimed
entermust
bepreparedto
a t under-age groups on camproduce at least three kinds
someof identification, W a t s o n pusthatitwasfelt
thing should be provided for
said.
older members of the society.
Student cards, birth certi“But
the
only
way
this
ficates,driverlicencesand
social insurance cards would scheme will work is with the
be readily accepted, he added. fullco-operation of the stuThecabaretwillnot
be dent:: ”
ThF-rc- will be ’:ve enterclosed to minors,butunder
Budqet meeting ..
L
m
mc
%&$*.
us
-E:
pW
.
766 Fort St.
=
Phone 388-6841
OpenFriday ‘til 9:OO
10% discountonpresentation
of studentcards
tainment a t every
cabaret
session.Tonight it’s alocal
folk-rock band.
AS SHERIFF:
Staff of the new establishmentwillincludetwo
doormen, abartenderandgirls
to serve drinks.
Watson
said
he
is
still
looking for girls who would
like to workin the cabaret,
whichwillhaveaseating
capacity of 200.
HELD OVER
Nine in the Fifth Place
university students $1.25
Anno:mcing the Opening
NEXT WEEK:
of
Oct. 31: HALLOWE’EN MASQUERADE
The
BARON
Barber
-
PARTY
Stylists to Men
Phone Rick.Matthews at
385-5213
-
II
with Vancouver‘s Holy Smoke
Fri. and Saturday(Nov. 1 and 2 too)
Nov. 3: PIGLING BLAND
-
bread be there Sunday, 2 pm, SUB
(sc>
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1968
THE MARTLET
7
-
Uvic’s traditionallyparochialsoccer.team
The Vikings only loss in the tourney was 1-0
a
Steve Baines into the net.
steppedoutintothe
big,coldworld
of inter- squaker to second place Bisons in the second game
A disallowed goal early in the second half on
varsity athletics this season.
of the tournament. The Uvic squad won its opener another header from a corner kick, this time by
It’s a step that will be remembered, because
against Regina 7-0.
Pete Demchuk, seemed to throw theUvic squad off
theysteppedrightonthecream
of the college
Manitoba’s loss came at the hands of upstart balance, and Saanich came back to tie the score.
kickersintheWesternCanadianIntercollegiate
Winnipeg,whochopped
the Bisonsdown to the
Demchukmadeupforthegoaldisallowed
Athletic Association.
tune of 3-2.
earlier
by heading another one home, and Steve
WCIAA
Playing at Reginaintheannual
Mike Sails and Greg Pearspn were outstandBaines
added
insurancebyscoringneatlyona
soccer
championship
tournament,
the
Vikings
ingplayersfor
Vikings duringthetournament,
pass
by
Daryl
Stokes.
literally kicked hell out of most of the opposition while Pete Songhurst and Glen Myles were strong
Saanich came back, pressing hard in the dying
inwrappinguptheuniversity’sfirsteverintercontributors.
UvicgoalerAlex
collegiate league play crown.
At home, the Norsemen added another victory moments of thegametobeat
TheVikingsclinchedtheirtitleSunday
by to their winning streak by edging Saanich 3-2 in Muir.
blastinghaplessUniversity
of BrandonBobcats
a Sunday game at Sidney.
Norsemen, with a four won, two lost record,
11-0 in the final game of the round-robin tournaNorsemen held a 1-0 half-time lead on a goal currently stand in a three-way tie for third place
by Tony Cocking, who headed a corner kick from in the Victoria and District second division.
ment.
Before the final match,
=
Uvic wastiedwithsecond
place University of Manitoba
EDUVAC EDUCATIONAL SERVICES
Bisons, who heldontotheir
are commencing a
finishingposition by smashing the University of Saskatchewan Cougers 15-0.
October 30
Vikings finished with four
wins and
one
loss
in
the
0
Modern machines and methods
You can play fieldhockey as well as the best in the west,
tournament,whileManitoba
0
pricesstudentscan
afford
was pressed for second place but that’s not good enough to beat the bureaucrats.
Apply now:phone 384-7717
Uvic’s varsity women’s fieldhockey teamgot a nasty
by University of Saskatche(Two years of continuous service on the
taste of redtape at theWesternCanadianIntercollegiate
wan (Saskatoon) Huskies.
UniversityofAlberta
campus)
Athletic Association championships at Winnipeg last weekHuskies and Bisons finishend.
edin a tiewithrecords
of
Competing in a three-day tournament with eight other
3-1-1, but Manitoba’s 15 goal
university sides, Uvic wound up Saturday with a record of
splurge
in
the
final
game
DON’T TWIST HIS ARM,
seven wins and a loss - enough to tie UBC for the Donna
pulledthemthroughonthe
basis of for - and - against Hunt Trophy.
TURN HIS HEAD
But officials ruled that the Victoria girls, competing in
scoring.
WITH FABRICS
University of Winnipeg the annual tourney for the
first time, were only playingon an
W e s m e n finished
fourth, exhibition basis, and UBC lugged home the loot.
from
whileReginawasfifthand
A1 Foster,extra-muralathleticsrepresentative,said
fieldhockey is one sport in which the university aisfull time
Brandon last.
member.
“Someone pulled a funny one somewhere,” he said.
“I think we’ll get a letter off toWinnipegandthe
1439 DOUGLAS
382-1125
WCIAA as soon a s possible to clarify the situation beforewe
do anything else.
Uvic won its final games Saturday, defeating University
_I_
of Manitoba 6-0and edging last year’s champions from University of Saskatchewan 1-0.
The fieldhockey girlstied UBC 1-1 on Fridaytoearn
their half of first place in the round-robin tournament.
Next action for the women’s field hockey teams is SatIt wasalmost
toomuch
urday
when the varsity girls tangle with Oak Bay at Lansto believe.
downe
and the second team meets Sailors at Gordon Head.
Nobody turns out to watch
SPEED-READING
COURSE
-
-
Vandals
-
punish
Tigers
2 Stores to serve YOU
713 Yotes
the finicky antics of men’s
fieid-hockey. Not
even
in
Victoria.
But there theywere, 25 enthusiasticfanscheering
on
Uvic’s Vandals.Amilestone
inspectatorhistory
- and
the game was suspended on
them.
Uvic’s cross country squad travels to Calgary today for
Uvic wasleadinganyway
the WCIAA championships.
whenthe gamewascalled,
Saturday the team posted its first major win of the new
so it might be considered a season by slogging to a first place finish in the
B.C. Cross
true victory of sorts, but it
Country League.
didn’t really matter because
a 6.2 milecourse,Charlie
Runningintherainover
the ref was going to charge Thorne and Larry Corbett
led the team in with respective
the losstoVictoriaTigers
sixthandseventhplace
finishes.Bringingupthe
rear at
anyway.
loth, 13th and 15th were Ken Cameron, Ed Day and Wayne
Bothteamswerewarned
Morrison.
repeatedlyforquestionable
The Uvic team tests itself against
the best in the west
behaviour on the field follow- at Calgary .
ingtheopeningwhistlein
RunningtherewillbeUniversity
of Alberta’sRay
t h e roughgame
at Gordon Haswell,whileCalgary’sspeedmerchant
DaveAtkinson
Head Saturday afternoon.
will run also.
The game was calledby the
referee
when
Uvic’s Gary
Anakacracked a shot from
just inside the circle.
Moving in,hepicked
UP
the rebound and slammed it
Uvic Vixings slammed James Bay Athletic Association
passed the Tiger’s goalie.
14-3
in rugby action a t Gordon Head Saturday.
T ige r fullbackBrian
Scrum half Dave Slater counted for a pair of tries for
Curtis protested that a Uvic
the Vikings,whileJimWenmanandNeilBonnellbanged
player
was
offside.
When
Curtis continued to complain for singles.
James Bay,down 11-3 at half time, scoredwhenEd
he was ordered from the
field.
Hemadethemistake
of Kubeck kicked a penalty.
I n seconddivisionplay
UvicSaxons
and Norsemen
continuing
the
protest
by
counted
a
pair
of
wins.
dragging his heelsin leaving
Saxons were down 12-0 a t half time, but stormed
back
the field.
on
the
scoring
of
Ralph
Facer,
Peter
Gudewill
and
Bob
Beck
Therefwastired.Bang,
Uvic hadtwopointsin
the to finally win 13-12 over James Bay Barbarians.
Norsemenfared
a littlebetteragainstJames
Bay’s
league standings.
Crusaders,
breaking
loose
for
a
14-3
victory
on
scoring
by
Theywilltry
to improve
on that Sunday at 11 a.m. a t Bob Price with two tries, and singles from Randy Howarth
VictoriaHigh
School when and Reg Holle. Dave Pue kicked a convert.
Next games see Saxons a t BCIT Saturday, while Vikings
they
tangle
with
Victoria
Red Barons in regular league take on last place Cowichan at Gordon Head, and Norsemen
take a crack at Oak Bay Wanderers a t Layritz Park.
play.
Cross country team
to run in Calgary
COATS, SUITS, DRESSES
725 Yotes
SPORTS WEAR,LINGERIE
-
0
AYLOR’S APPAREL
LTD.
MAYCOCK OPTICAL
Vikings slam JBAA
1327 Broad St. (at Johnson)
10 % DISCOUNT
for Uvic Students andFaculty
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Repairs
CONTACT LENSES
384-7651
i
bija
C.L
Vikings crush soccer cream
first inter=varsity crown
Uvic takes first,
UBC takes prize
LH3
FRIDAY,
8
T H E MARTLET
OCTOBER 26, 1968
Toil, sweat for Crossroads volunteers
Lyn Hagglund had a winter job last summer.
It was cold where she was working, somewhere in the mountains and lowlands of Lesotho(formerlyBasutoland),
a tinycountry
now administered by South Africa.
Lyn, third-year education studentfrom
Victoria, was part of a Crossroads Africawork
team that included twoCanadianand
eight
Americans.
She will describe some of her experiences
in a special Crossroads Africa meeting, Tuesday noon in Clearihue 106.
It was hard work, Lyn says. The team had
to complete two heavy constructionprojects
withouttheaid
of heavyequipment.They
carried water, mixed concrete and made concrete blocks by hand.
Their. assignments included construction
of atwo-reservoir
irrigationsystemand
a
windmill in the Lesothomountains,and con-
struction of three classrooms for a school in
the lowlands.
But the personal reprards of the two-month
work program were well worth the sweat of
manual labour.
The American and Canadianstudents worked
in co-operation with 27 Basutu university students and local villagers and school children.
“We learned a lot from them as we talked,
sang African songs and played softball,” Lyn
said.
Shesaysestablishment
of firm personal
relationships based on mutual respect between
people of different nations is what Crossroads
in Africa is all about.
0peration.Crossroads Africa is anindependant, non-governmental organization that was
statred in 1958 by Dr. James Robinson, a black
minister from Harlem.
Canada joined the scheme in 1960,and last
summer 226 youngvolunteers,including
59
Canadians, were sent to Africa.
Dean’s post to be questioned
Posters
The committee on university government has announced i t
has establishedtwosub-committees
to deal with proposals
containedin the AMS brief,The Need For Change - Part 11.
Lightfoot sings,
gets paid, leaves
-
Review by AL JONES
Gordon tightfootatthe
McPhersonPlayhouse
attracted me moreout of habit than anything
else. His
performance was good.
However, when I think back to last year as
I squirmed
on the floor of the Uvic gym with the rest of the. people
who saw him, I remember that he left me more inspired
then than this time. Perhaps last year, it was the surroundings.
Monday’s show was well presented, as it must be in
all the towns Lightfoot plays at,gets paid at, and leaves.
His songs were the same Lightfoot, well sung, with
their usual sentimental “Cavalier”lyrics.
Thislatest
numbers haven’t changed appreciably, although they
do
appear to be gaining more sophistication and control.
Of all his songs.-the Canadian Railroad Trilogy, made
the best impression on me by its generation of a Canadianatmosphere.
As an overall view, I must say I enjoyed the performance. but then. I had exDected to.
They’ve struckagain !
to UnlVerSltY administrationatthedepartmentalandfaculty
levels.
Once againposters advertisingan upcoming event have
Theseproposalsinclude the election of departmentalchairbeen stolen by inconsiderate
men andelimination of the position of dean. Writtenbriefs
-There are editors and there are editors.
thieves.
must be submitted by November 8.
Taciturneditors,snottyeditors,nit-pickingeditorsand
Seventeen hours were spent
Sub-committee
B
will
study
proposals
relating
to
policyhaughty
editors.
in thedesigningand
handmaking
bodies
at
the
university,
particularly
the
role
and
But
there
isalsoaneditorforthe
academic guidebookcutting of the silk-screened
composition
of
the
senate
and
board
of
governors.
Chaired
by
or,
a
t
least
there
should
be.
postersadvertising “Measure
calling forbriefs to be
Theyeardrags by, butstill no one has been appointed to
for Measure”. Now they are Professor L. Bakony, thisgroupis
therather
unenviablepost
of editingUvic’s\annualantisubmitted
within
the
next
two
weeks.
gone.
calendar, student evaluation of courses and professors.
Thesneaks have even made
Sub-committee
A
will beginmeeting
November 7, each
Last year’s editor, Bob Higinbotham,saysthejobtakes
off withthe notices advertis-Thursday
a t 6:30 p.m.
up a lot of time, especially after Christmas.
ingthetickets’sale
a t the
Plans are afoot to establish an editorial board to set policy
SUB office.
Sub-committee
B
wil hold its first meeting
today
a t 4:30, for the format of the publication, Higinbotham said.
and succeeding Fridays.
board The behind
posters
Only those
will include
facultythree
members, three stuglass are still up, perhaps beBriefs should be submittedtoDr.PeterSmith,secretarydents,andtheeditor.
cause no way hasyet
been of theuniversity governmentcommittee, department of clasAnybody canapply forthe job,andapplicationscan
be
hem at get to found
easily. Sics.
submitted
the to
academic affairsthe
box in
SUB.
guidebook head
Uvic Track Team
The girls will be havinga
telegraphic
meet
with
the
University of Saskatchewan,
to be held Nov. 2 and Nov. 5.
RegularpracticeSat.
10-12.
French Club
VCF
There will be aseminardiscussion
meeting
on the
work of Inter-VarsityChristian Fellowship
in
foreign
universities. 12:30, Tues.,
Oct. 29, SUB. Clubs A, B, C.
Physics Club
Monday, 7:30 p.m., 4031
Whiterock Street. This is the
first meeting of the year, and
all studentsare
invited. I t
isn’t
necessary
to s p e a k
French. Information : Donna,
477-6875,orTrish, 382-3216.
The club isorganizing
a
student-faculty symposium to
discussthecontentand
instructional method of science
courses.
Watch
forfurther
details.
Liberal Club
EducationUndergrads
Thenextgeneralmeeting
of the CampusLiberal Club,
originally scheduled for Friday, Oct. 25,has been changed
to 12:30 p.m. Wed., Oct. 30 in
Club Rooms Aand
B. The
election of officers, postponed
from a previous meeting, will
take place, All membersand
interested students are urged
to attend.
R.I.P. Day is Friday, Nov.
1. Bring your gripes and suggestionstoany
of thethree
R.I.P. stations located inthe
SUB and MacLaurin Building
between 11 :30 and 1 :30. Your
chance tobringmeaningful
change to the Facultyof Education.
Political Forum
Mark Rudd speaks Monday
noon intheSUB
lounge on
Chemistry
the American Student in ReDr. G. H. Stout of the Uni- volt. Details of a Sunday semversity of Washington will inar withRudd
will be anspeak on Structure and stereo- nounced soon.
chemistry of some products
f r o m calophyllum species, Una Fiesta?
Club memMonday Oct. 28, 1968, 4:30 Si,si.Spanish
bers and all others interested
p.m. Room 160 Elliot Bldg.
-set aside Friday, November
8 for a party. Details a t next
clubmeeting, November 4.
Botany
Dr. Bruce Tregunna, UBC,
speaks on the Biology of Photorespiration, Monday, 8 p.m.
Elliot 167.
Measure for Measure
Bernard Beckerman ofColumbiaUniversityspeaks
on
Measure for Measure a t noon
today, SUB lounge.
Lost and Found
Jewellery,
watches,
umbrellas,
sweaters,
spectacles,
Budget Meeting
notebooks, etc.-if you’ve
lost
Are the alocations f a i r ? If them, you might find them in
you think science students are the lostandfound,
nowlogetting a raw deal, the AMS
cated in the Trafficand Sebudgetmeeting i s a t 2 p.m., curity Office, Building B.
SundayintheSUB
lounge.
Come and voice youropinion
ROUTP
”Physics Club.
Interested in an
exciting
hobby that pays?
Recital
Why not become an Officer
WinnifredRoberts,
violin,
in
the Canadian Scottish Regand
Geraint
Jones,
harpsichord,Tuesday,
noon and 8 iment, under the Reserve Officer University Training Plan?
p.m., MacLaurin 144.
ROUTP offers you a Commission as a Lieutenant after a
Pollution
The Biology Club presents training period of only one
nightper
week duringthe
“Death of a river”, a current
film appraising the water pol- academic year and a full sumlution
situation.
Wednesday mer’s employment. The CanadianScottishRegiment
has
noon, Elliot 060.
only three vacancies left for
men of intelligence and initiaCrossroads Africa
Lyn
Hagglund
speaks
on tive, who are between 17 and
her experiencein Africa last
25 years of age. Those intersummer, Tuesday noon, Clear- ested should contact D. Grubb
ihue 106. This is a general in theLinguistics
Dept., N
meeting for all students.
Hut, or come to the Canadian
Scottish Regiment Recruiting
office in the Bay Street Armory on TuesdayandThursday evenings, or on Saturday
mornings.
CLASSIFIED
RATES:
Students.
faculty.
clubs
3 lines. 1 issue 60c: 4 issues $1.76:
8 issues $3.00.
Commercial4 lines. 1 issue 75c:
4 issues $2.60: 8 imsuea $4.60.
“
For Sale
-
MOTORCYCLES - RETAIL YAHAMA.
Triumph sales.
service.
accessories
and repairs.-Mullins
Marine Sales.
925 Yates. 382-1926.
1961 RILEY, 38,000 MILES. 4-SPEED
transmission, $450.-Phone 477-2545
Wanted
STUDENTS - WOULD YOU DO?
Housework. babysit. odd jobs.-Call
me at 6 p.m., 662-2640.
Typing
TYPING - MRS. L. TEDDES, 1712
Oak Bay.-Phone 386-6991.
WILL TYPE PAPERS WITH
IBM
electric? tyuwriter. - Phone Mrs.
Giles. 383-5084 evenings.
Apartments
GIRLWANTED
TO SHAREAPARTment.477-1296(anytime).
APARTMENT TO SHARE.477-6710
or 386-4107.$46
each, Dartly furnished.
I PLAYBOY$3.00B U N N Y B A S H II
I Dance to .Marquis and Encore
percouple
Saturday, Oct. 26th