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                    <text>VOLUME 1, No. XVIII

LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY, PORT ARTHUR, ONTARIO,

Evaluation Starts
. The course evaluation proJect as promised in the campaigns of President Young and
.Treasurer Lees is now underway. When no action on the
idea was forthcoming from the
gentlemen of the AMS (wh1· ch is
so often the case) Argus Editor
Don Colbome adopted the project as his pet.
The questionnaire was ma1·1-

~biliiy of analysis by computer
1s being exploreq with IBM.
All courses ..-which will be
off_ ered next yeir excent a few
th 1
.,
Wl.
ow enrolment, some halfcourses in the Uni versl.ty Schools Program, and those for
Which there is too little response will be evaluated. A
r p t
e. or on ~ach cours.e will be
written up 1n essay and statis~ical form by a senior ·majoring
rn the subject'-and all these
reports ~ill be . edited and ineluded 1n an "anti-calendar"
wh~ch will be freely distributed rn September.
•
. Samples of the questionnaue and a memorandum of explanation were distributed to
faculty and administrative personnel two weeks ago but to
date there has been no official
comment.

ed last week to every student
who had given his summer address to the Argus during the
last weeks of the academic
term. It was drawn up with reference to similar surv·ey sheets
from other Canadian Universities and a report on course
evaluations prepared by the
Canadian Union of Students.
Original plans called for it
to be distributed with the first
Argus of May 19 but the printing company in Toronto which
did the work could not deliver
Reports trickling back to the
in time. It was then decided to Argus office are rather predictdelay mailings until all marks able. The majority of profs are
had·been mailed out and until happy to see it being done and
shortly before this edition of hoping it is done well. A few
the Argus was published so of the weaker and younger
SOUie of the difficulties which professors object.
might cause students to hesiThe Argus will run reports
tate to return thequestionnaireio of interviews with several
could be explained. (see story professors asking their reactthis program in next
page four). One vitally im nnrtant
ions topaper.
...~
week'::;
fact is that response·s returned
•
without a name will be immedEvery response form rn. at&lt;&gt;l th
t
eludes a request for help ig
1 ~ Y
rown ou • ~hey must preparation of the "anti- al aL. ue cnec11.ed against cl9tss... ~n d •• - I 15
•
c
lists to assure that no.,boC, is_.. a,t...- . t
hoped th~t a large
"voting" twice
/
nu)riber of ~tud_ents will volun•
.
t~er to assist rn this the larg~t has not yet been frnally est single project attempted at
dec~ded how the expected four Lakehead University. students
to_ five thousand res~onse forms having difficulty with or reser:,vith answers ~o thirty quest- vations on whether or not to
ions on each, . wil~ be tabulated. send in their evaluations should
If necessary it will be_ done by read thP. article in the box beman~al labour_ ( that um versally low. All responses should be
despised Mexican) but the poss- returned by July 10.

V

June 29, 1967

EIGHT PAGES

De11lict in duties says Argus

PRESIDENT ACCUSED

Of necessity this must be a
subjective report. It is regretable that one of the principals
involved is writing this story
but every effort has been made
and used to present both sides
of the dispute . . For editorial
comment please tum to page 2
andforreproductionof the letter
and memorandum mentioned see
page 4.

The President of the Al~a
Mater Society has been form•
ally accused of being derelict in his duties.
In a letter delivered to AMS
President Young last Friday
morning, Don Colborne, Argus
Editor, informed Mr. Young that
in his opinion Young was wasting the student's money and betraying their trust. Mr. Young
later said to The Argus, that
'In my opinion I'm representing
the students of Lakehead University to the extent that I
think they would feel justified'.
The letter had attached a
rough itinerary of Mr. Young' s
activities over the three day
eriod ne

look after its business, plan
for next year, and conduct a
summer programme. When, for
reasons of fairness, Mr. Young
was shown the Argus report
you are reading he prepared the
following statement.
'If Mr. Colborne doubts my
ability I would question his
support of me in the AMS
election campaign. I would
also ask for a clear definition
of the word constructive and
would invite Mr. Colborne to
make a brief comparison of
the work accomplished this
May and June with that of Mr.
Tocheri (who worked at a
higher salary) last year. I
I would think that the high
school visitations (which by
the way, impressed ORCUS
President Hugh Armstrong)
the redefining of Judiciai
Committee powers, the stu~ent handbook (which is berng capably edited by Mr.
Larry Bryan and Rod Phillips), the Contact (once again
under the capable editorship
of Mr. Joe Danis), and the
new method of bu in
ons1 ere
constructive

most students.•
dents working or visiting on
According to Mr. Colborne
campus had become increasingly disturbed at Mr. Young's his alleged 'disservice to and
apparent inability or refusal to disinterest in the students ,of
spend more than a small part of Lakehead University' became
his time doing art'ything con- increasingly evident in the
structive. He had been employ- latter part of June when Mr.
ed since May 1 by the AMS with Young appeared to be doing
tl}e understanding that he would" nothing with his time.

For the purpose of ascer~aining, as near as possible,
Just exactly whether or not the
President was doing anything,
the Argus collaborated with a
few informants, and noted roughly his whereabouts and acti vities over three days. When the
notes were tabulated it became
alarmingly evident to The Argus that Mr. Young was not
earning his $100 per week
salary.
The Argus Editor then sent
a copy of the rough itinerary to
Mr. Young with a strongly worded cover letter. The letter
accused him of 'dereliction of
duties' but expressed a willingness to close the matter if
a~surance 'that the situation
will change' was forwarded immediately ·to the Argus office.
The same afternoon Mr.
Young delivered a lengthy
memorandum to The Argus, with
no assurance 'that the situation
would change', only a detailed
but facetious explanation of
why he had spent the days in
question in the manner suggested. Hee
•
e Argus'.
Mr. Colborne then honoured
the 'ultimatum' mentioned in
the original letter and gave the
matter 'the public exposure it
mo st assuredly merits', by
printing this report, an editorial
on page two, and reprinting the
original letter and memorandum
on page three .

University Committee

AMS Subsidies Considered

MR. PETER UBRIACO
Mr. Peter Ubriaco, Superintendant of Buildings, died on June 6 at the age of 47.
Mr ... Ubriaco was well known and very well
liked by his associates and had many friends
among the student body. He showed his sincere
interest and dedication to our University by
establishing, in 1965, the "Frank P. Ubriaco
Memorial Scholarship" with an annual value of
$250 in memory of his father. He also donated
the trophy awarded annually to the Lakehead
University Squash champion, and a picture
which now hangs in the library building. It
was always well known among students that·
Peter Ubriaco was the man to see if you were
short 5 or 10 dollars until the end of the month.
Mr. Ubriaco was an employee of the University for three years. He is survived by his
mother, with whom he lived in Port Arthur and
a sister who instructs in French at Scarborough College of the University of Toronto.
The funeral was held on Friday, June 9.
The ARGUS joins the rest of Lakehead in
sympathising with the bereaved family and in
mourning the loss of a fine man.

The second summer meeting of the UniversityCommittee,
held on June 8, was considerably quieter than the first but
discussed a number of items
important to students. That
these. were not dealt with summarily is evidenced by the duration of the meeting... two and
a half hours, instead of the
customary hour.
First on the agenda was the
question of Argus representation at University Committee
meetings ( see article page four).
The Committee had decided on
February 16 that the Argus
should attend Committee meetings but that the paper had to
show its report to the secretary
of the Committee, Director of
Finance David Morgan before
publishing the report. Rod
Phillips distributed a written
brief to Committee members in
which he contested the morality and legality of the situation. Presenting the paper in the
in the Committee, Mr. Phillips
called the situation "an unsubtle attempt at censorship", but
withdrew the statement after
an objection by Dean of Students John Kerr. It was finally
resolved that the Argus could
attend Committee meetings on
the basis usual to newspaper
reporting.
The Committee,
however, affirmed its right to
enter in camera session at will.
The ·committee next considered a request that the Administration subsidize the Proctor
Force for summer. Speaking in
favour of the request, A.M.S.

,President Peter Young and
Treasurer Don Lees pointed
out that· insofar as the proctors
were protecting the good name
of the university at outside
functions and university property at on-campus functions,
that the Administration should
bear part of the cost of the
Force. Mr. Young also pointed
out that the Force was operating on a higher budget in Summer. While accepting these
points, President Tamblyn stated that to subisdize the Summer Proctor Force. the Administration would have to use
funds from tuition fees of Fall/
Winter tenn students. Dr. Tamblyn questioned the morality of
taking funds from students who
do not, in the main, attend summer dances. Discussion of the
question continued for over an
hour with no decision reached.
Mr. Lees suggested that the
situation be discussed further
at a later meeting.
The Argus asked for a cash
subsidy of $200, mailing costs
of $110, and secretarial help.
The Argus argued that its policy of mailing the summer paper
to every person who applies for
admission was a valuable public relatio.ns service to the
university. The Administration
granted all of these, but instead of giving a direct cash
grant of $200, Dr. Tamblyn decided that the Administration
would take out $200 worth of
advertising.
The A.M.S. requested a re-

duction in its share of the accident insurance on students.
Mr. Young argued that most
accidents this year were found
to be connected with athletics,
and that therefore the Athletic
Department should take a proportionate share of the insurance costs. There was some
discussion, during which it
was suggested that this insurance, which is paid automatically by all students, should be
made voluntary, as most students are already covered by
some form or other of insurance. However, because some
members of the Committee were
unfamiliar with the full facts of
the situation, further discussion a.nd a decision were tabled.
It was requested that the
Administration investigate the
possibility of keeping the residence open during the summer .t.
months. Mr. Claude Smith, Dir- • •
ector of Physical Plant, explained that there would be a
number of problems, such as
keeping the residence heated,
and that there would have to be
a guaranteed number of students in residence during--summer to justify its being kept
open. It was decided that the
question should be kept in
mind for next year.
Rod Phillips presented to
the Committee for later consideration a survey on re.sidence
problems (see article else where). The _survey was the
result of a questionnaire mailed to students in residence in
'1966-67.

�JUNE 29, 1967

THE ARGUS

PAGE TWO

One Side of the Story

disorganized to the extent that in one case
the delegation arrived a\ a local high school
on the wrong day and there was never any
sort of understanding between the AMS and
the high schools on what was going on.
Secondly these were not even 'high school
visitations' in the ordinary sense (where
people from the University attend classes
and establish personal contact with high
school students). They were simply extem•
poraneous slide shows and speaking engagements.
That pretty wel.l takes care of the 'con•
structive' items that Mr. Young claims he has
done. The only item not clarified above is that
Mr. Young claims he has devised 'a new
method of buying and selling used books'.
Fine, we hope that the new method wi II save
the students at least part of the several hun •
dred dollars paid in salary to the President
and 'for his travel ·expenses over the past two
months.

This is a difficult editorial to write • and
the decision to use. it was put off until the last
minute. It concerns personalities • normally
ta'boo - and a subz·ectiveness that should never
enter an editoria. But it is serious, dead serious, and it is the responsibility of the Argus
to make .this s'ituation an issue,

The Reason

-

Our student President, Mr. Peter Young, is
not fulfilling his duties • any of them. He
spends his days sfrolling around campus doing
nothing. He is being paid $100 per week or
more - depending on proceeds from the summer
dances. This money comes out of the students'
pockets. These dances could easily be arrang•
ed for by a student on slight honoraria. Also,
the dance schedule has been very significantly
shortened.
T-here is an almost unlimited amount • of
work which on AMS President can do in the
summer, only a small part of which concerns
the summer school students themselves •· who,
most being adults, are largely uninvolved in
student affairs.
The Argus made representation earlier this
year that two AMS executives be hi red for the
summer, because we saw all the work that
should be done. We were disappointed that
council chose to· hire only one. No longer.
They hired one, gave him free reign, no boss
(of necessity), no instructions, and an executive salary. This person, Mr. Young, has not
lived up to the expectations of council.
We saw him doing nothing and others saw
him doing nothing. There are very few students
on campus during May and June but to those
who were here, Mr. Young's activities became
a running joke, probably tinged with envy.
It was our responsibility, our duty as individual students, and as a newspoper, to try
to do something to change the situation.

.

As far as the memorandum reproduced on
page three is concerned there are a few areas
of canflict'that can be straightened out.
As Mr. Young states, our informant was
wrong. He returned from the conference in
reasonable time; it was his day of arrival
which should have been in question. Perhaps it was a problem in flight booking but
Mr. Young arrived in Toronto a day before
the conference began. It might be added that
the only news passed on to the Argus on his
return was that he had had a fine time with
a certain (female) student leader from another institution.
On the afternoon of June 21 Mr. Young
claims he was hiding in his office working.
If so he wasn't answerihg his telephone and
the CUS Chairman, who has an office next
door, says he will 'swear on 'Das Kapital'
or 'Guer_illa Warfare by Che Guevera" that
he was not there all afternoon.
The Mr. Tamblyn mentioned in the memor:1ndum is, to avoid confusion, not university
President Dr. Tami:llyn, but hla :,on Ian who
is employed for the summer on the grounds
staff.
We blew the tennis and tour evenings alright, but we're not the CIA. Mr. Young
indeed did• not start playing tennis until
4:30 on June 22, not 3:40. Referring to the
slide show and tours we wonder how it could
have taken an entire afternoon to plan a
showing given many times before (at the~
"high school visitations") and the tour
route (which involved three campus buildings and was shown to the guides hastily on
the first evening only). A number of guides
themselves were not even students. Office
girls had to fake that they were students
and earned an easy $5.00 per night for about
two hours work when Mr. Young could not
get, or bother to get, enough students to
come out.

The Action

What to do?
That is the situation as it stands . If Mr.
Young feels we have been unfair he is welcome to release a statement, which we wi 11
print,• He must be aware, however, that when
he took the position he did he become a socalled "public figure" and as such his activities are open to public scrutiny.

Clarification
It is hoped that this issue wi 11 not be regarded as overplayed petty bickering between
persons working together; personal infighting
carried too far. Relations between the President and the Argus have been very cordial
until now, and perhaps they will remain so.
It was only after serious policy discussions
among senior members of the Argus staff that
it was ·decided to use the issue as n·ews. We
concluded that it certainly was news, and
news of. vital concern to every student.
The point in question was whether print•
ing this would do any 1eal good, or whether
it would be a purposeless admission of gross
error in that the students had made a mi stake
when they hired Mr. Young. The decision was
this: that it is vital to have a member of the
AMS exec\ltive on campus during the summer,
that Mr. Young must certainly remain in his
position, that he has not thus far assumed the
responsibilities of that position, that he ignored a personal request to shape up, that by
making this
public issue the Argus might
convince him to get to work.

a

I

•

~\®
~

Letters to the Editor
AND ARE WE, NOW?

We're liars?

We did. We kept tabs on Mr. Young for three
days and were appalled at what we found. Perhaps the surreptitiousness of th-i s sort of thing
was a little ~ow on our part, but it appeared to
be the only way to confirm absolutely what we
already kn,w casually. Despite a few large
holes in our information it was obvious that he
either had nothing to do on those days, or
chose to do nothing.
We sent him the letter and the itinerary
reproduced on page J; asked him to promise to
shape up or we'd make this thing public. He
didn't. He tried to shrug it off in the memo.r•
andum, also on page 3, the feeble humour and
casual tone of which clearly showed that he
had no intention of convincing vs 'that the
situation would change immediately'. The
several hours which he spent at the typewriter
in composing that message are most certainly
the longest continuous period of work he has
put in all summer. The only significant note of
explanation offered was that the AMS was 'in
a quiet period'. As far as the Argus is concern.-d the entire summer is a quiet period for the
• - AMS and that is why Mr. Young was hired •·
to plan for the noisy periods •• something he
he has not done.
Mr. Young prepared and reieased the state•
ment quoted on page one when shown the article in which it appears. In that statement he
takes credit for certain 'constructiv_,. activities. To find out whether credit was due in
in these areas the Argus approached some of
the st.udents involv1td.
'Redefinition of the powers of the Judicial
Committee' was done at a meeting on May 5
and according to Chuck Grieve, Associate
Justice, all further work was out of Mr.
Young's hands and exclusively in those
of .the Chief Justice,· Bert Baumann.
According to Rod Phillips, the decision that
he and Larry Bryan would edit the student
handbook was made by themselves with only
a casual OK from President Young.
Mr. Joe Danis, who will again edit the Con,
tact, says that his editorship is simply 011
understanding and involved Mr. Yo.ung onl)
in the most elf-hand manner.
.Referring to Mr. Young's claim that he
works harder than last year's president the
President from two years ago, Mr. Gerry
Hess, has stated that when Mr. Tocheri was
employed last surmr.er he was •often working
until midnight'.
The Argus knows about the high school
visitations 'which by the way impressed
ORCUS President Hugh Armstong' according to Mr. Young. Firstly, they were totally
f

r---::
..\··
\~~

Dear Sir:
Yesterday I listened to an
angry tirade by ~ rampant dowager, raging against Lakehead
University in general and its
students in particular. According to her, L.U. students are a
"bunch of broads, beatniks,
hop-heads, and hippies", who
have failed at, or have been
rejected by, "better" universities, and who "are getting
chances that WE never got."
(Aha!) They have "parents who
can afford to keep them in school to print THAT sort of • • **
at OUR expense. WE'RE paying
for it, and its just a waste of
taxpayers' money." Etc., Etc ..
Ordinarily, a flailing attack
such as this one can be laughed off as just another symptom
of approaching menopause. Unfortunately this lady's spouse
has a fair amount of local
prestige, and her expressed
opinions
just might carry
weight by association.
Would it be possible to publish in the local papers the
approximate percentage of L . U.
students who have paid and
are paying their own tuition
fees? It would be quite impossible to estimate the number of conscientious, serious,
students who can just scrape
along financially by living at
home. Even though their marks
would gain entry, going elsewhere to another university
would cost too much.
The lady in question is doing a grave injustice to the
vast majority of the student
body. Her unfounded comments
could be damaging to the University Building Fund canvass..
Her remarks aren't helping her
husband any, either. And for
REALLY blunt comment, she
should read the Queen's u.
paper!
(Mrs.) Tillie Hurrell, B.A./67
Lakehead University

WE SHRIVE HARDER
Sirs etc:
Have just finished scrutiny
of your first summer issue and
take misspelling typewriter in
hand to pass -a few comments.
It would be interesting to
hear what has become ofHashiguchi and his yearbooks. I
don't think I was unique fi1 not
having a spare $2.50 (a lame
excuse but what the hell) when
it came time to peer through
the clouds of cigar smoke and
hope that a yearbook would be
forthcoming. Is there any way
to obtain one at this late date?
••AMS Attacks Admini strati on"· must strike terror into the
hearts of anyone who has any
faithin the student government
though one wonders just what
Mr. Young will have gained by
initiating this god-awful up~
roar.... a seance in a sniffer ....
Maybe the walls of the cafeteria will fall down this year
and there will be room to practise debating, or decide what
this week's bitch will be, or
dig up a fourth for bridge.
Hooray for co-op housing, I
think; down with plagarized international affairs editorials,
enough of pictures of ARGUS
staff smoking, sitting, eating,
talking, etc., etc., (there must
at least 1180 other people who
could quite conceivably have
their pictures taken) sorry to
hear the Young-Lees duo will
·be split up (Is there anyone
else on the executive judging
from the news coverage?) This
is the letter that asks the
question: will the magic hand
of CUS again collect quarters
this year?
Keep up the work,
Send money,
Peter Shtive

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June 29, 1967, Volume 1, No. XVIII, Port Arthur
The ARGUS is published regularly during the vacation
period: and weekly during Summer School by the Alma
Mater Society of Lakehead University. The opinions expressed are those of the Editorial Board and not necessarily those of the AMS or the Administration. The ARGUS
is authorized as second class mail by the Post Office.
Ottawa, and for payment of postage in cash. All correspondence to the ARGUS main office behind the downstairs
cafeteria; mail c/o Lakehead University, Port Arthur.
Subscription -- $3.00; advertising rates upon request.
Editor
Don Coloorn·e
Associate Editor
Chuck Grieve
Advertising Manager
Joe Danis
~
News Editor
Rod Philips
~ • Photography
Rene Larson
ii
Sports Editor
Larry Hebert
Business Manager
John Mccutcheon
ii
Olrculation
Iain Lawrance

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�JUNE 29, 1967

THE ARGUS

ALMA

PAGE THREE

~

MATER SOCIETY

ALMA

~

MATER SOCIETY
Lakehead Unlveralty

Lakehead Unlvera/ty

DONALD R. OOU1011Na:

PORT Mn'HUR, ONTAAIO

ROUGl I Tii lERARY OF ntE PRESIDENT OF Tl'E ALMA MATER 9JCIETY AT LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY
ON SALARY Of $100 PcR i:Ci,r. PAID BY ntE S11JDENTS. ntIS ITIHERARY CDVERS ntE ntRcE
DAYS RJLLOWIMJ ntE RE!\JR~ OF MR. IDUMJ (AT LEAST OllE MY LATER lH/,jl NECESSARY)

ARGUS

Frl):.S

Jun. 23, 1967.

ACCUSES

Ur. P. Young. Pre --i id.m t,
The Alma. Mat.. r Socfo :.y,
Lakehead University.

~; :1;ng spend
0

Dear Mr. Young:

~

9:15
'; :15 - 9:45
e-:,~5 - 9:55
-:55 - 10::'5
'; :(}"'I -

Attached h i: C('lpy of your iflincr,":ry, rt•n~ nr les;;, .nd as far as
I can ascertain, f9r th·, oastMhree days, June 20, 21, 42. It 1s my

belie f tha t derelicti111 n of duties to the ckgr~t.o r_nd l"f the type ri?corc!ad here con s titute a diss~rvice to and disint~rtai;t in th2 students
of Lakehead UniVfirsity.

PRESIDENT

A OONFERENCE IN 1000 1flC.

,llll!LaQ

10:25 - 11 :00

This 1&lt;. an ultif'l&lt;ltlJl"I. If you de '10t assure and convince l!IO that this
situation will chan92 lnrned l ~t::.!ly l -.ill be forced to give this Ntter
t he public ex'"'0s ure it nost as$urttc!ly l!l(:ri b..

11.00 - 11 :45

II :45 - 12:;()

I await your r~:&gt;lY (on ;,a w r) b:..fC'lr.! three p.m. today June =::3.

12:30 - 1:30

l:Ja - 5:00

Sincerely,

most of the day g.i th~ring suprlies then painting his office.

coffae
talking socially to Rod Philiu. and Glenn ,,flllar
gene.rel of"fic11 to got .\MS m !i
look9d at n~w tennis cnurts 1 saught out advice from a
painter on special i.:iffects he might usa in decoration of his
o"fice
:.tr. Young• s M".erdabouts during this j)Criod are not known.
He did spend c"lboUt 10 minutes spc~king to thu ugistrar.
Play&amp;d tennis against the walls, ,;ung, a,1d generally put in
time at the AMS offices
Lunch
pl 'lyod pingMr ong
Mr. Young's activities during this period were not recorded.

JUNE 22

( see page one )

9:00 - n:=o
11:20 - 9:35
9:35 - 10:15
10:15 - 10:JO
10:JO - 11 :00

Donald R. Colborne.

c.c.

-~

coffee
discuss':ld office space Nquirements with the a.is chairman

1ooked at new tennis cc-urts
spoke to the director of planning ro-location of ton,iis nets
spoke to the registrar re-relea-;e of examinatio11 statistics
11:00 - 11:20 visited the Argus office socially
1 It is assumed that a oortlon o! this period was spent
11:20 - 12:20
eating lunch
12:20 - 12:40 trackod down .and too' ~c n ..! ssion of nets for new tennis
courts
• visi t,ad tho Argu,; ('lffi co sociaJl y
12:40 --1:15
made several telephone call!; th~ nature of Ylhich are not
1:00 -- l:b5
known
Left the Uoiversity to vis· t a Mr. 'Stitt - on business it
1:15 - J:40
1s assWDJd
played teMis
J:40 - 5:00

Don Lees, Ams r~a ;urcr
Wondy Ticknor, Al..S tecretary

ON

TiiE EVENIMJS OF ALL ntllEE N'.Ci"TS IN ~Es-,·10·1 A&lt;a. IDIJMl l'/AS EW'LOYED BY
Ilic :U:W.I!l!Sll'.ATIOH 10 PRESENT A SI.:DE· S!Otl AND CD)IIJJCT A lOUR OF' LAKEHEAll U.

Mll:NORAllDUM

A. I!.

MENORAllDUN

,._ "· s. ornCE

Pvrt Artlmr. Ontario

111&lt;14:

PRESIDENT

-

Mr. D. Colborne

1'0:

P.A. Young, President A.M.S.

..
JUNE

N B N O R A""'i"D U-N-

-

NBNORAllDUN

A. I!. S. OFFICE

•

JUNE 21
9:00-9:15
9:15-9:45

coffee (correct)
talking socially to Rod Phillips and Glenn Miller land
straying only occasionally from matters &gt;'hich "°uld
affect the university.)
9:45-9:55 general office to ,:et AMS mail (and stopoin,: for a drink of water)
9:55-10:25 looked at new tennis courts, sau.-ht out advise from a
piinter on s-pecial effects he miP-ht use in decoraa.ion of
his office. (Must make sure tennis courts are finished
on time as AMS has $1,500 investment in them. )
10.25-11.00 Mr. Young•s "hereabouts ~ring tnis period are not kno,,n.
He did spend about 10 minutes s"eaking to the registrar. ( and
about 2 minutes in the washroom on the main noor in the
University Centre.
11.00-11.45 Played tennis a11tainst the 1&lt;alls, BWlg, and geneeatly 1&gt;Ut
in time at the AMS offices. (I quit nlaying tennis because
the walls kept winning and had to sing to drot'll out Rod
Phil tips tape recorder.)

A. V.. S. OFFICE

LAKBHEAD UIIIVERSITY

LAIBIIBAD UBIVERSITY
-

l!O

Mr. Young spent! moat ot the day gatherin~ suJ&gt;plies then -painting
his office. (This was on the advice of Mr. c. Smith "ho explained
that it would be some time before the university got around to
painting the rooms in the University Centre. It "88 required
to cover up the uncleanable scral)es and scars left by my
predecessor.)

I think that 1 1 would be best to an8"'er your demands in a
step by step procedure as outlined in your brief.
The first portion of vour critique contained a sli,zht mistake
which I am sure was no fault of your own but "'as rather the result
of an ignorant informant. The point to which I am referrini, is
the one which states that I returned home from a conference one
day later than necessary. The conference in question lastPd untiln
5.30 Toronto time and "'as followed by an o.u.s. debriefing that tasted
until 7.00 p.m. At this time the dele,:ates returned to their
residence to begin nackin,: and to clear un any last minute questions.
Now the part which I find hard to believe is that I was expPcteo to
travel the t"enty-five mile11 from Glendon CollegP to Toronto
International Airport in twenty-five minutes to catch a fliy.ht

-

Port Artbur I Ontario

Artlmr, Ontario

1'0:

111&lt;14:

..

nATB:

*

*

*

*

*

11:45-12:30 Lunch (yes)
12:30-1:30 played ping-pong (slightly ......,ng - time was from 12:05
until l:OOpn- I know this because l ..as 1&gt;layinl' against
Mr. Bryan who has to be back at •·ork at 1 p.m.- bJ[
the way he beat me 4 games to nil)
1:30-5:00
Mr. Youn,:s acthities during this neriod were not recorded.
(cause he was hiding in the AMS offices ....,rting)

.l!!!!Lil
9:00-9:20

I

In following your day by day example I wi 11 quot4 your
statements and then add my comments in parenthesis.

In readillg this motion I can not find a sin,zle stipuletion
as to what hours should be put in during each mentioned ••eek. I
would imagine,however, that it was council's intent'tthat I spend
my days as I saw fit as long as it was for the betterment of
the position of the Alma Mater Society ancl of Lakehead University.

de

•

which had been boolced solid (although I was on the reserve list).
did , howe...,r, leave on the next flight , (4 a.m. the next morning)
and was on campu.s by 11. 30 Lake head time. I therefore find it
hard to find the missing day.

Firstly I would like to quote from the A.M.S. minutes of
March 21, 1967. "Moved by Don Leea that the AMS i,resident and
treasurer be hired by the AMS froa May 1 1 1967 to the commencement
of the fall semester at a ,-·age of $100 each per ..eek. and should the
summer programme prove suf"ficiently successrul financially, each
of these persons be given an additional $12 1&gt;er week. Seconded
by Peter Young and carried.•

CHARGES

- - . Ontario

111&lt;14:
DATE:

Sir: It annoys me that I must take time out during a very busy
morlling to answer your letter but as you asked ( or threatened)
for a reply by a certain hour I aa sure that you "111 consider
the time as justly spsnt.

REPLIES TO

O&gt;TICB

1'0:

10 A.M. Friday June 23, 1967

DATB1

s.

LAIBIIBAD IJBIVERSITY

LAIBIIBAD IJBIVERSITY

coffee ( wrong- 4:35-9:20 coffee- niscussing sCludent
representation on the board of governors and senate.. with
Mr. Miller and Dean Kerr)
9:20-9:35 discussed AMS office sl&gt;&amp;ce ~ quirements with CUii chairman
9:35-10:15 ? (the reason that there is a ? is because Dean Kerr~
discussing a judicial matter and'l&gt;he meetin,: was a secret.)
10:15-10:30 looked at new tennis courts- (looks like thev'll be finished
in time and the AIIS will haYe to hand o-.er that $1,500)
10:30-11.00 spoke to the director of plannin,z re location of tennis nets
spoke to the registrar re release of examination statistics
( AH! picked up the mail and took somethihg over to Mr.
Morgan's office-.-ouldn't ha,re been resnectful to ask him
to come and get it and there are still narts of the
AM$ that ban some respect for administration)
11:00-11:20 visited the Argus office socially t not exactly true as
I 1111 also holding down a part till8 job as the RCMP man
on campus and these social visits and talks that you keep
mentioning are really short investigations)
11:20-12:20 ? It is assumed that a portion of this period was spent
ea tiny lunch ( correct a portion was-from 11: 50 - 12: 20
the other half hour - s spent writing a letter to OUS)

*

•

12: 20-12: 40

tracked do,'D and took possession of nets for new tennis courts
(also took Mr. Miller his lunch as he ~as nainting thw boards
for the hockey rink and was a..ay o.,er by r•sidence-I "'anted
the net because I had a 1&gt;romise of a game "1th Mr. Tamblyn
an• you don't get that offer every day- by the wa-y ,...
did play at 5:00pm and Tamblyn and Colborne beat Young
and Phillips 6-3)
12:40-1:15 visited the Argus office socially ( no/ another investigation)
1:00-1:15 made several tel1&gt;hone calls the nature of "hich are not kno""'
( made two calls- one to Mil. Murry Stitt re clothing that he
has fnnchise for and another to mp mother to tell her that
I still love her)
1:15-3:40 Left the Univel'sity to vis!.t a Mr. Stitt - on business it is
assumed ( I sho\lld hope so-the AMS doesn't advocate such
social carrying on between two mates)
3:40-5:00 played tennis -(lies-the contractors don't lean the courts
until 4:30)
ON THE EVENINGS OF ALL THREE NIGHTS IN QUESTION MR. YOUNG WAS EMPLOYED
BY ·THE ADMINISTRATION TO Plll!IIENT A SLIDE SHOW AND CONDUCT TOURS OF
LAKEHEAD U.
(more lies- I •as hired for Monday, Tuesdav ancl Wednesday,
and the dates you have listed are Tuesday, Wednesday and
Thursday--by the way you forp:ot to list Monday afternoonthat was when I spent all afternoon helpinp: Mr. Mor,zan set
up that tour and arrange tor the guests-you know, those
top-brass administration guys aren't that bad after all.)
Mr. Colborne, I appreciate Argus' concern but as Mr. Morgan said ii)
converstion with Dean Kerr recently -this is the slackest
two week oeriod in the year. I hor,e that vou will

appredate the fact that we
(AMS) too are also in a quiet
period as we await the onslaught of summer school stu•
dents. I do however feel that
the students who -Voted me
into my position have enough
faith in my integrity to trust
me to do the job as I see fit.
I would like to request (as
is usually the case with an
unbiased newspaper) that if
you do print your letter that
you will also print along side
of it my reply.
Sincerely.

Peter A. Young.
c.c. Dean Kerr Dean of Stu/Jents
Don Lees
Wendy Ticknor

�JUNE 29, 1967

THE ARGUS

PAGE FOUR

Course Evaluation

ITS EASY--.'

Hangups Solved Here
The following should clear
up any problems you have encountered with the course evaluation questionnaires. Other
comments, questions, or prob·
lems will be promptly answered
if you write or call the AMS or
Argus offices on campus.

Scared?

'all I said was that I'd
help with the Argus'

Don't worry. No faculty
member will get anywhere near
your personal response. Sure,
the students who tabulate your
report are going to know what
you think - but they aren't even
going to care after hunching
over N of those little boxes for
a period of weeks. Enter your
name or its a lost cause -- responses without names will be
rejected.

Gotta Lotta Labs?
There is only one item on the
sheet referring to labs and
seminars, which are a large
part of some courses. This was
necessary in order to produce a
questionnaire applicable to
every program. It is in areas
such as this that appropriate
comments are invited.

FUlked? Or Dropped Out?
If you dropped out of a course
forget it -- we can't accept your
evaluation. If you flunked,
don't sweat a little thing like
that, send it in anyway with
your failure•indicated. You were
just as ml\,ch a part of the class
as the keeners.

In University Schools?
So you've got ten courses
and had no choice at all in
entering every one of them.
Tear off the address label on
this paper, scrawl a request for
another form, and send it to us
-- or better still call the University - two handy locations
to serve you better -- AMS and
Argus. (Not necessarily in that
order).
One of the basic purposes of
the evaluation is to give the
profs some consensus feedback. If they can see in the
anti-calendar that their course
is weak in certain areas they
might just change it for next
ye·ar even though their students
are forced to take the subject.

Th.e Argus is a Summer

School paper as of the
time you read this.
A few old pros from
last year put this rag
together and will
stick around to help
you put out a weekly
masterpiece this
summer. But a lot of
bodies are needed -including yours.
You are therefore invited to a gathering
of the journalistic
tribes at noon Monday
ih the lower cafeteria
where you will be
strongarmed into signing ~ffidavits releasing use of your s~are
t i.t1e to THE MIGHTY - -ARGUS.
Forget the headline
above. It ain't easy.
About 400 man (and weoan) hours go into
each issue. ~ay vve
have son1e of yours?

Compliments of

LEHTO

PRINTERS
LTD.

PRINTERS-l.lTHOOIIAPHER$
275 PARK ST.
PORT ARTHUR. ONTARIO

,.....

Ot"

"(\~C.~

(-.'ft&amp;',c.G-\-e. \e.c:.t1.Ar~C'
evahAc:.te.c:\ '"'
far,\-

"'I.)

More Than One Prof
Per Course?

Already Sent In
Responses Incomplete?

Afraid To Reveal
Your Marks?

Write all their names in but
indicate clearly which one is
referred to in the question
section headed 'The Lecturer'.

We can't use incomplete
Responses. There is already a
bonfire for the hundreds we expect. Every question MUST be
answered except those that definitely don't apply and the one
asking you to give your final
mark. If you have already sent
in incomplete responses get
your behind in gear, ask us for
another plan, and do it all over
again; we will return your originals if possible.

PLEASE! This information
is not essential as other studies indicate that marks have
little relationship to ratings.
The purpose of this section is
that we want to do our own little
study to prove that very point
once and for all.

Ditn't Get An
Evaluation Fonn?
That's quite possible. Ever
try tQ sort 1200 from a list of
over 2000. addresses and not
screw up quite a few? Just
write or call and we'll have
one in the mail first class.

Ignoring All This?
Don't. It's big, it's valuable, and it's student. Everyone must cooperate.

Censorship Issue Resolved
"An unsubtle attempt at
censorship"
accused
Rod
Phillips on behalf of the Argus.
"I take grave exception to
that" returned Dean Kerr.
The question, however, WAS
on censorship, and the Argus
found itself, for the first time,
at the centre of a hassle which
could have far-reaching effects upon the future of student
publications here at Lakehead.
The issue started quietly
at a closed (as was formerly
the case) meeting of the University Committee on February
16 of this year. At that time
the committee passed a resolution inviting an Argus reporter to attend its meetings with
the proviso that any article
based on those meetings be
checked "for accuracy" by
David Morgan, Director of Finance, and Secretary of the
Committee. Unfortunately no
official notification or invi tation was sent to the Argus and
by the time news of the decision filtered out it was too late
for the Argus to report any but
the final meeting, and that only
briefly. As far as the Argus was
aware, notes from neither that
nor any subsequent meeting
were subject to review.

It all caught up on both administrative officials.
sides following the first sumAt the next regular meeting
mer meeting of the Committee. of the Committee on June 8 Mr.
Harsh words were said at that Rod Phillips spoke on behalf
meeting and sweeping accusat- of the newspaper who's editor
ions made. Comments were was out of town, and presented
candid and tempers high. Argus a paper outlining the Argus'
Editor Don Colborne attended position in a matter of this
the meeting and faithfully re- nature. The essential point
corded the action, wrote it up, was that the paper could not
and sent it to the printers.
constitutionally allow any of
On the Monday before the its copy to be reviewed, much
Thursday on which the paper less edited, by any external
was scheduled · to appear • Mr. person or group prior to publicMorgan requested a copy of the ation. Dr. Tamblyn explained
report. Mr. Colborne of the Ar- that the Committee ruling was
gus refused on the grounds that made only to assure accurate
no copy of it was immediately reporting of meetings which by
available, that the Argus had nature can often become rather
bee~ unaware that its copy was explosive, Mr. Phillips count~ubJect to censorship,, and t~at • ered that the changes granted
it was not the _paper s policy in the report of the previous
to ~ele~se stories before the meeting had nothing to do with
pubhcat_10~ date..
.
accuracy and were merely de.A difficult S!tuation arose letions of ill-considered re~hich led to an inf?rmal meet- mruks made by administrative
ing on the following day at personnel
~hich time the story was reThe final decision of the
viewed by President Tam~lyn, Committee was inevitable. The
Mr. Morgan, and representatives Argus is now officially free to
from the Argus and the AMS. In rePort University Committee
o_rder to preserve the peac~ un- meetings as they occur. The
til the matter could be straight- Committee may of course deened out Mr. Colborne of the clare any of its sessio~s or
J\rgus agreed t? remove or re- deliberations in camera
vise three statements made by
•

�THE ARGUS

Bring
Your Tent

PAGE FIVE

Freedom from Fright for Frosh

By Jake Bryan
The Off-CaRJpus Housing
Office has now obtained about
For myself and others like will be listed as well as
500 beds for out-of-town stu- me, life here can be pin-point- areas of entertainment. Little
■ G
; dents, but don't let figures fool ed on a gradient somewhere more can be said at this time
:
rade 13 to stay
■ you, reports Tom Goodman, the between absolute boredom and since we are still in the early
•
MONTREAL, CUP -Although ince with more than twelve: Housing Director, "these are mild excitement. An occasion- stages. Co-operation at the
ontario's hated Grade 13 De- grades except B.C., which still• just places -- the majority of al trauma, however, is not an university has been excellent
• partmental examinations will uses a thirteenth year for some: them are not going to be very uncommon occurrence in any- so far. The post-high school
be written for the last time this courses.
■ convenient or satisfactory."
one's life, and perhaps the shift to an entirely new fonn
• June, there's still no sign that
Infc_,rmed experts assert that _:
The Housing Bureau has freshman's first day at univ- of education is usually a diffGrade 13 itself-will be abolish- Grade 13 is made necessary by• been at work now since the ersity is the most horrific ot' icult one, and we hope that
• ed.
the mediocrity in th~ ~ir~t
first of May digging up places these experiences. Symptoms this new university guide will
Education Minister William twelve years. In Ontario it is ■ for students to stay next year. of this non-tenninal disease help to ease the burden.
The Alma Mater Societyhas
Davis of Ontario has effect- treated as the first year of coll-: It was recognized that witha,s· are easily recognizable. It be• ively skirted the issue by ann- cge, and the examinations are ■ many as 700 out-of-town stu- gins with a vague feeling o( appointed Larry Bryan and Rod
• ouncing that all of the major set with University entrance in: dents expected next year, and apprehension in the lower Phillips to edit the proposed
; recommendations of a recent mind.
. .
, : residence facilities for only abdomen which seeps up the Student Handbook. It is still,
study commission on Grade 13 . In future ye.a.rs Pnncipals ■ 112 of them, a serious housing oesophagus by some osmotic of course, in the early plan■ have been adopted.
rec~m!'1endations and . 'conf~d- : crisis could develop in the action producing dryness of ning stages, and no decision
But the main recommendat- ential marks, a1ong with uru v- ■ fall. The majority of the beds the tongue and mouth. Copious has yet been made as to the
■ ion of that committee was the ersity tests wjtl be used by: available now are room and perspiration is evident in the
final format.
ibolition of Grade 13 itself.
universities to detennine ad- ■ board offers in private homes. underarm and forehead areas.
Ontario is the only prov- missions.
: There are relatively few priv- Palpitations of the heart, nerChocolate drink
•
---------------------: ate ro_oms and furnished apart- vous twitches, shaking of the
• Profs support U Thant
as ments, the type of accommo- hand or knee, dilation of the
:
• dation preferred by students. pupils - all are symptoms.
■
A half-page ad in the Mon- ions of U Thant, Secretary- There are also a large number Even if I do exaggerate a little,
. chocolate drink
treal Star last month contained General of the United Nations, ■ of hotel and motel units avail- let's face it, the freshman i,s a
■ signatures 'of 289 professors as a policy fo1 seeking peace able but monthly rent is high pretty scared little boy and we
and staff of Montreal univer~it- in .Vietnam. .
.
and these quarters are usually seniors aren't doing much to
.
.
• ies and colleges supportu~g
l)_ Immediate &lt;:essation of• cramped.
help him.
u Thant's policy for peace m bombmg of_ North Vietnam . .
Mr. Goodman emphasises
The new Student Handbook,
Vietnam.
.
2) S~~mg_ down of a~l mili- ■ that there will be no long list which will be given to all new
■
The ad was paid_ for by the tary activity rn South Vietnam
of ideal accommodations for students during registration
• Universities
Committee for to pave the way for a cease- ■ students to peruse in the fall. will, I hope, help to alleviate
Peace in Vietnam and the Com- fire
: Those who do not contact his some of these fears. Last
mitte Universitaire ~•action . 3) WilliD;gness. to ne_gotiate : office and apply for a place in year's unsuccessful attempt
■ pour la paix at the Umversity wit~ all :=i1des,. rncludrng the ■ the very near future are def- to produce a student handbook
■ of Montreal.
National Liberation Front
• initely going to have to settle was mainly the result. of a time
:
The petition,. to be present_We ~ond~mn the Am~rie:an : for unsatisfactory lodgings. factor. Now that we ha~e the
; ed to the Canadian government, policy rn Vietnam and rnsist ■
As of June 22 the housing time and the will, it will be
■ reads:
th,at the Canadian government : bureau list consisted of 184. our general purpose to produce
we the undersigned, ~;upp- dissociate itself, in word and : beds in Port Arthur and 160 something that will answer
■ ort the following recomm·endat- in deed, from this policy.
■ in Fort William.
every question the freshman
:
---------------------: - - - - - - - - - - - - could have. At present we are
• Academic freedom threatened
•
GIIIUI• ■EAT
~ttemptin~ to gather de~c.ript:
;
ive material on all facilities
■
Vancouver,. &lt;;UP - ~ohn B. and,;reedom of_ speech.
.
a
(dtJ.nce schedule)
and services provided by the
: Macdonald, retmng president of
Com~':1nding the diffic- : Friday June 30 •• (TOMORROW) university. The student will be.
■ UBC
said last week that ulties ansrng from mi sunder- ■
Girl's Night - All Girls Free introduced by this booklet to
: strikes, rebellions and demon- standing are new forms of or- : Wednt-sday July 5
every metiiber of the facult~,
Then you know
■ strations by students and teach- ganized political activity by• Friday July 7
and administration with whom
it's
Quality Chekcr!
: ers pose a threat to academic students and. faculty in which : Friday July 14
he may have direct contact.
■ freedom and the status of univ- the campus is used as a base ■ Saturday _J~ly 15 (21 years of
Maps of the two Lakehead citersities.
for attacks on various aspects:
age minimum)
ies (with bus routes) will be
•
He told the UBC convocat- of society."
;I W~dnesday July 19
included as well as a plan of
ion that the future of academic
He pointed out that academ- ■ Friday July 21
. .
the university itself. Comfreedom and university auton- ic freedom is the right of a ■ Sa~urday July 22 (_21 mimmum-) plete descriptions of every
■ omy is perhaps the most im- teacher to express opinions : Fnday July 28 •• Drnner and
club and organization should
portant issue . affectin~ the within his speq~al field_ of com- :
Dance on campus
assist the student ip his choice
■ welfare and survival of umvers- petence, but
academic free- ■ Wednesday August 2
of extra-curricular activities.
: ities.
dam does not give him special : Friday August 4
Athletic facilities and pro■.
He said that academic free- rights in fields other than ... his ■ Saturday August 5 (21 minimum) grammes will be outlined in an
dam is too often confused with special field of competence." : W~dnesday August 16
effort to stimulate early in:: other freedoms like civil rights
: F~day AuguSt l8
terest in intra-mural and inter■
______________________
■ ,Fr~day August 25
.::ollegiate activities. Commun• Dial your results?
• Fr~day September 1
ity services such as churches
■
Friday September 8
·
f. ·1·t·
d
'
•
Montreal university grad- sults about five days earlier• Dances scheduled for July 19 recreation ao1 1 1es, an so on,
: uates have been offered a than would otherwise be poss- ■ August 2 and August 16 might
TWO DELEGATES
: unique public service by a ible." He explained that it have to be cancelled
TO SEMINAR
■ local radio station ... dial your takes about a week to deliver-a
•
: results.
results by mail after they have :
Two second-year Arts stu■
Radio station CJAD pro- been computed by the uni vers- ■
dents, Rene Larson and Rod
cures the results from the univ- ity.
:
Phillips, have been selected to
• ersities as they are ready, and
This is the first year that ■
represent Lakehead University
: students can get them by phon- university results have not:
at the Canadian Union of StuREST AURAIIT
■ ing in.
been printed in the local news- ■ . Mr. Peter Young, AMS Pres- dents Tenth Seminar. In all,
:
A university official com- papers, apparently the large: ident, has stated that ev~ry six applications were received
■ mented that "this public ser- number of graduating students ■ eff9rt will be mad~ to establish from Lakehead students.
vice is welcomed by the univ- makes it impractical to publish: a summer coJ.mc1l of s~mm~r
The Seminar, "Academic
DOWNTOWN
■ ersity because it means that them.
: school st~dents to ass1s~ rn Reform: Facelift or Major Sur• stJJdents can know their re• t~e dec~s10n-making and imp- gery?" will be held at the
:
______________________
• limentation of the summer proPORT ARTHUR
of British Columbia
■ D ft d d
rt d
: gram. He sees many problems, University
:
ra - o gers suppo e
■ however, in finding a way to from August 20 to 30.
:
Two Cornell University de- there was· no reason wby they ; assure fair representation and
■ bators were unable to uphold a should be treated differently ■ perhaps
even in arousing
: resolution th~t draft dodgers from any o~er ~mmigrants.
: enough interest among stu■ should be derued _entr)'. to CanCorn~ll s Mitc~el Ross and: dents who will be here for only
: ada in a debate with Sir George Joel Childress pornted out that • six or seven weeks.
• Williams University at the Youth the draft dodgers were acting • - - - - - - - - - - - - : Pavilion of Expo 61.
in defiance of American law,:
THANKS
■
The debate, which was film- and that their presence in Can- ■
Mr. Bob Gude, the cafeteria
: ed for future use by three off- ada could in no way benefit ; manager wishes to express his
: icials of the Russian Pav~lion, Canada.
.
. .
.
: heartfelt thanks to the students
■ was unique in that the audit:nce
An audience partic1~ation ■ af the graduating class who
: decided the ~utcome by votrng. discussion a~ t~e conclusion of presented him with a plaque in
•
Allen Hutlk and Jay Bach- the debate rnd1cated that the ■ recognition of the assistance
arier of SGWU argued that as audience favored draft dodgers
he had given them in planning
346 MEMORIAL AVE. PORT ARTHUR
■ . long as American draft dodgers seeking refuge in Canada.
• the graduation weekend activiwere not breaking Canadian law
.ti•e•s•·----------•

f
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is just

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...unless ifs

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RIGHT OUT!

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TUNE IN I
GET ON I

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Summer Council
a Possibility

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When the Treat's on You
Make It A Real Treat!

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5

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• French - a prerequisite?
••

:•

e

Lennoxville, CUP - Trans■ port minister J. w. Pickersgill
said last week that it was his
■ hope that students would have
to be able to read and under• stand French to be admitted ts
English-language
Canadian
■ universities.
:
Speaking to the convocat_ion
• at Bishops University Mr. Pickersgill said that while know• 1 d 0 f F e ch might be of "no
• e ge_
r n
.
i
practical advantage rn earn ng

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Ol_le's liv!ng" in many parts of=
Canada, 1t wou~d be an .~dvan- ■
tage for persons who !eally :
want to understand what 1s go- ■
ing .~n in thi_s ~ou~try." .
Surely 1t 1s Just as 1mpor- ■
tant for young Canadians who
pretend to be educat!!d to be ;
ab~e. to unqerstand both t~e ■
official langul!-ges of th eir:
country asrt i~ ist for tfhemd to ■
reach a ce ~n s age o un er- ■
standing of the new mathemat- •
ics."

TWO STORES TO SERVE YOU
Centennial Square
18 S. Court Street

Fort William
Port Arthur

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What goes down must come up remember those offices tom out
of the lower cafeteria last sum•
mer? - they're back .

WILLSON STATIONERS LIMITED
CANADA'S LAR&amp;nr" OFFICE OUTFITTERS

�JUNE 29, 1967

THE ARGUS

PAGE SIX

Student Power

Joe College Wants a Seat
By D. John Lyon
Bureau Chief of the
Canadian University Press

In-1965 it was "Abolition of
Tuition Fees"; in 1966 it was
"End the War in Vietnam"; in
1967 it will be "Student Representation in Academic Government".
In Canadian universities
every year students, and student leaders, draft programs of
'things to do'. These projects
vary considerably from year to
year, but they invariably have
at least two things in common:,
they have a moral rationale,
and they are progressive.
And amazingly, they are usually accepted by the Uni versity and by Society. "Abolition
of Tuition Fees" is now a wellrecognized and little-disputed
aim - but this is a far cry from
1964 when such a doctrine was
darkly regarded as a sinister
and socialistic plot.
"End the War in Vietnam"
has been a student cause for
several years now, but only recently with the current turn of
world events has it appeared
the better cause. In 1963 a
critic of the American presence
in Vietnam was considered

ROYAL TRUST
SETS THE PACE
IN SAVINGS
EARN

either one of the perenially ounced recommendations that
malcontent or downright sub- place two students on the
Board of Governors and three in
versive and communistic.
the Senate; the University of
Western Ontario has three students on the Senate and one on
the Board; similar representation is being considered at the
The current student camUniversity
of Saskatchewan,
paign in most Canadian universities has been in the area of Montreal's Sir George Williams
university government. Tradit- University, the University of
ionally the domain of the Ad- Waterloo, and several other
ministration and Businessmen - Canadian institutions.
The whole program is based
Boards of Governors. Uni versity government in the past ten on the premise that the university is undemocratic in structyears has beeh opening up
ure, and that its' policies
more and more· to professors should reflect the feelings of
who insist on having a say in
the policjes their university is the "total university community" - including students,
following.
professors, administrators and
Former Berkely president
governors.
Clark Kerr's term "multiversThis argument has been
ity" has encouraged a good largely
adopted by far-seeing
deal of research into university
~ducators. Students have imgoverning structures and quite pressed one and all in the past
early in the game the student with their maturity, insight
argument for representatin"l was and responsibility when proheard and heeded.
vided with opportunities which
The Duff-Berdahl Commi&amp;s- treat them as mature, perception on University Government ive and responsible individuals.
paid lip service to the suggestion that universities accord
students a role in its decisionmaking bodies. Quebec's Parent Report did a better job of it
Student governments, parbut both reports' combined to ticularly those in the uni versplant the seed of an idea in the ities with enrollments of over
minds of both administrators 4;000 students, have heeded
arid students.
the call of the "multiversity"
antagonists who regard the
bureaucracy of the uni versi.ty
much as Mario Savio of Berkeley's Free Speech Movement
The result is that in 1967 characterized it:
there are many joint student·
"There is a time when
administration committees conthe operation of the machine
sidering the question. Carlebecomes so odious, makes
ton's Davidson Dunton annyou so sick at heart. that

Student Power·

Berkeley Started It

In

Success
The East

Prof. Addresses UNESCO Conference

CALCULATED ON
MINIMUM MONTHLY
BALANCE
202 ARTHUR STREET
Port Arthur

OPEN
LONGER HOURS
Mon. to Thurs. 9-5
Friday 9~

Skyline

you can't take part; you
can't even tactitly take part,
and you've got to put your
bodies upon the levers, upon all the apparatus, and
you've got to make it stop.
And you've got to indicate
to the people who own it,
that unless you're free, the
·machine will be prevented
from working at all."
surorisingly, this kind of argument finds remarkable support among academics and administrators;
the -academics
because they respect the student's ability to intellectualize
in any given area, the administrators because they wish to
channel what would otherwise
be destructive energy directed
against the administration...
protest for protest's sake ... into
constructive criticism cha:nnelled into the governmental
structure. The administrators
are perhaps wise enough to
realize that if the critics of the
university are given at least
minimuni partial involvement in
the governing of the university,
their efforts then become directed upon the students. This
kind of action would at once
involve critical student acti vists in the practicalities of
university administration, and
at the same time turn them into
staunch defenders of university
policy in the face of the students.
It is therefore to the university's advantage to accede to
student pressures for representation in Senates, on Faculty
Councils, and even on departments. The most they can lose
is a sense of primacy ..... the
least ls a quieter campus.

A Lakehead University political science professor from
India presented a paper on
foreign policy at an International Conference in Sweden on
June 17.
Dr. Pradip Sarbadhikari was
invited by the International
Peace Research Association,
·an affiUate of UNESCO, to present a p~e_1, to their General
Conference being held from
June 17-19 at Tallsberg, ·near
Stockholm, Sweden. It was the

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first occasion when a membef
'.lf the Lakehead University
teaching staff presented a paper at an international conference.
The substance of Dr. Sarbadhikari 's thesis, which is
based on the complex situation
in India, is of interest to federal systems such as Canada.
Foreign policy, he argues,
should not be the monopoly of
the central government elite
but should also reflect the entire balance of political forces
within the country; including
attitudes of provincial governments, economic classes, professional associations, etc. A
policy reflecting a· diversity of
attitudes would tend to· be less
rigid. and committed and thus
help in promoting international
peace. Foreign policy should
reflect the attitudes not only of
governments but of the society
at large.
Dr. Sarbadhikari is a graduate of the celebrated London
School of Economics and Political Science, London University
and did post-graduate research
work
leading to a Doctorate
at the Royal University in
Utrecht in the Netherlands, one
of Europe's oldest seats of
learning. He was on the faculty
at Jadavpur University, in Cal-·
cutta, India, before joining
Lakehead University in 1965.
He has been awarded a travel
grant from the Canada council

Library book losses are expected to be high this year. In
the words of the university
Librarian, Mr. E. Belton, "an
unreasonable number of books
has disappeared."
At the time of our going to
press, the library inventory is
not complete, but preliminary
indications are that the book
losses will run to over one
per cent of the library's estimated 60,000 volumes. Losses
have been found to be particularly heavy in the Math and
Physics sections. In addition
to these losses, an improportionate number of bound periodicals, especially in the
Psychology section, have been
found to be damaged. In many
of these, .pages have been torn
out; the library will have to
either replace these volumes
in their entirety or insert
photo-copies of the missing
pages.
Mr. Belton explained that
while "one has to accept the
fact that a proportion (of books)
does disappear", an attempt
should be made to keep losses
at a minimum. This is in the
interests of all members of the
university. The loss of books
is an inconvenience to library
users, and is a drain on library
resources.
Mr. Belton further explained that the system of bookborrowing at the library depended largely upon the cooperation and honesty of readers. Students will be well
aware that there is no difficulty in taking out books without authority. Because so many
students do this, some sort of
check at the exit will have to
be instituted. Mr. Belton stated that he was not sure at this
point whether the check system would be in the form of
guards who would do nothing
except check books, or whether the system would be incorporated somehow with the existing de&lt;;lt arrangement. He
indicated
that experiments
may be made during the Summer School session.

in support of his trip.
The International Peace
Research Association is a nongovernmental research organization which seeks to find
ways of eliminating conflict.
Their work involves research
on the sources of conflict and
The results of. a CUS questhe devising of educational tionnaire
on r~sidence have
programs in all countries to been released. Beefs were solmeet the needs of peace. One icited and compiled by Rod
of its aims is to encourage the Phillips, CUS chairman, for
study of the role of _the mass presentation to the University
media and the problems of prop-. Committee.
aganda and controlled news in
The problem given highest
world conflicts such as the priority was that of food. The
present mid-East crisis. A pa- main complaints were that the
per will be given on the Arab- food lacked variety, quantity,
Israel confrontation during the and quality. Recommendations
conference.
were that a functioning food
The IPRA works in close committee be set up to superco-operation with the Pugwash vise all aspects of the resiConferences which concentrate dence cafetElria including staff,
on the scientific aspects in- facilities, · menus, and so on.
the problems of finding peaceGeneral regulations at resiful solutions to world. conflict. dence satisfied students but it
Scholars from all parts of was clear most thought the regthe world attended the Talls- ulations were never adequately
berg conference including Sir enforced. It was recommended
Solly Zuckennan of the United that a disciplinary committee
Kingdom, Henry Kissinger of be set up and that all the dethe United States and Ambass- tail'ed rules of last year be reador AovaMyrdal of Sweden who moved and replaced by one
all serve on the Board and "be considerate of .o thers" rulCouncil of the IPRA.
ing "referring to rowdiness,
Dr. Sarbadhikari has been drunkenness, and so on."
with the Department of PolitA definite lack of academic
ical Science at Lakehead Un,i- atmosphere was noted and it
versity for the past two years. was suggested that more faculty
He will be teaching a course memoors be encouraged to live
on International Relations dur- in residence and that they be
ing the summer school session expected to offer consultatio·n
in Ju .
and leadership ao required. It
was also pointed out that a
more conscious effort at .keepthe noise level down would
greatly improve the atmosphere.
It was finally recommended
that a higher body in the form
of a Residence House Committee be set up to generally
oversee and review all resiHow about living in a co-op?
dence business.
If you want to, or want more
"The whole effect," coninformation, contact Rod
cludes the report, "is to give
Phillips, CUS Chairman,at
the students a greater voice in
345-2121 Ext. 216
the decision-making processes
and a responsibility for their
immediate environment."

Cohabitation?

SORRY, NO ...

BUT

800 Books
Scoffed

Food Slinks say Residents

•

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I
•

�THE ARGUS

PAGE SEVEN

Seven 'VIPs' Wiped Out
Exams took a heavy toll as Yearbook editot Jim Zatulsky,
usual this year, but it seems CUS co-chairman Rod Phillips,
that the AMS and its affiliates and ARGUS editor Don Colborne will all be ineligible to
■T
h C II
b A
d
■ were struck particularly hard.
■ eac ers
o ege to e nnexe
•
Due to a ruling passed this
retain their positions unless
they improve their marks, th:
Lakehead Teacher's Col- teacher training. Eventually the: spring by the Se_na~e and the
rough supplemental examin:1ege will soon be amalgamated program will be a four year: AMS, stud~nts wishing t_o_ run
ations, to the required average.
■ withLakehead University. Ours course split between university: for, ~&gt;r. retam, student positi?ns
In one case, that of the
: will be the first of two Ontario courses and training subjects. ■ requmn~ a ~reat deal of time
vice-president of the AMS, it
: Universities to gradually phase Credits will be given only for: must mamtam a 60% average.
was decided that an interim
• teacher training into the Uni- the regular university courses ■ Came the results, seven of the
vice-president should be app : versity schedule.
taken
■ twelve students to whom the
ointed to carry the work load
■
Education Minister William
The reasons Lakehead was: ruling applied did not make
during the summer. (for more
: Davis made the announcement chosen as part of the pilot : the grade. .
.
: this month that over the next project is that the two insti- ■
AMS vice:-president poug details see following article)
The election procedure tobe
■ few years all training of ele- tutions stand side-by-side and: Robson,
Scie~ce pr_esid~nt
: mentaryschool teachers will be are
individually
relatively• Roland Pa~adis, Umver 51 ty followed in the fall, in the
event that one or more of the
■ upgraded by requiring Uni ver- small. Thus physical barriers: Sc~ools presi~ent Bob Yat~ow= sity education.
to the changeo.ver will be min- : s..k.i,_sA_s..p_r_e_s_id_e..n_t_G_1_e_n_n_M_i__1_1e_r_,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
President Tamblyn has stat- imized.
■
■ ed that he hopes the first stagPart of the new plan is that:
I es of the program will go into admissions requirements for:
• effect in 1968 when teacher teacher training will be raised•
:training will consist of a two il_lto line with those for univer-:
:year course combining univers- sity entrance.
■
■ity subjects and courses in
:
:
--------------------:
:Degree in Russian now offered
■
:
Lakehead University stu- year while Mr. Sudar will teachl
:dents may now take a general a course on Russian Civiliza- •
■ Bachelor of Arts program major- tion as well as direct the lib- I
ling in Russian.
rary Technology program.
:
•
Four courses in Russian
The Russian program will •
■
.
•
■language and culture have been mvolve the study o~ the lan~u-:
:approved by the University's age an? culturEl. with s~ecial ••
■Senate for the 1967-68 term to emp~asis on ~eadil_lg and mter- ■
:supplement the R 115sian Oa6 pretmg Russian _literature and ■
■ and Russian la6 courses intro- pr0se. Students_ will cover auth-;
lduced last year. The new cours- such as P~shkm, Gor~y, Past- ■
■ es will thus provide a three- ernak, Fedm ~nd Bumn.
:
:year program in Russian: It is
The Russian Program now ■
:necessary to take five courses extends the University's langu-:
: ~n a progra'!1 to re~ei ve stand- age department to Ho1.1ors Bach-:
■ mg as a ma.ior subJect.
elor of Arts degrees m French, ■
:
The introductory programs English-French and English-•
• in Russian last year were taught Latin, as well as Bachelor:
I by J?an Sudar, ~.A., B.L.S., of Arts pr~grams majoring. in:
: who is also the Director of the French, Latin, German, Spam sh ■
• School of Library Technology. and Russian. Three courses:
: A new professor, Mr. Walter are offered in Italian and two ■
:: Bassil, M.A., of Kitchener, ·0nt- introductory courses are also:
■ ario, will teach four of the lan- offered in Ukranian.
:
: guage courses in the coming
■
•
--------------------:
: Presentt Biology Paper
■
:
.
. .
.
:
•
Chairman of the Department c1at10n 10 June, 1968. The ■
:o~ Biology at_Lakehead Univer- program _will consist of the:
■ s1ty, D.R. Lmdsay, presented presentation of papers by bot- ■
:a paper at the meeting of the anical scholars from across the:
■Canadian Plant Societies held nation as well as local field ■
:learlier this month at the Uni- trips and studies. Close to 300:
•versity of Ottawa. His paper members will attend.
•
:was entitled 'Lake SuperiorMr. Lindsay pointed out that:
:James Bay Arctic-Alpine Dis- the locatioq of Lakehead Uni-:
■ juncts' outlining the problem versity is an envious one in the ■
:or Arctic plants found on the field of botanical and biologi-:
: shores of Lake Superior and cal research especially to bio- ■
■ James Bay. Mr. Lindsay's pap- logy departments in Universi-:
er was given during a sympos- ties of Eastern Ontario. The ■
■ ium on the flora and vegetation relative isolation of the area:
I of the North American Arctic. and the aspects of research:
;He gave details on th'e migra- brought many comments of in- ■
■ tion route for plants from Lake terest from fellow scholars at;
:superior to James Bay after the the Canadian Plant societies•
: retreat of the last ice sheet meeting.
;
■ and also dealt with the basi"c
Mr. Lindsay also announced;
: environment of the rocky shore that the Committee of heads of ■
:of Lake Superior.
Department of Biology of Ont-;
■
Lakehead University will be ario Universities will meet at ■
:the site of the annual meeting Lakehead University on Sept-:
■ oftheCanadianBotanicalAsso- ember 29th.
;
=
------------------■

:

I

IKu~s

•
Assistant Professor of Eng:ush and Director of the Lake•head University Summer School
lshakespeare Workshop
br
■

.

•

•

;George Mernll, presen~ed a
■paper at t~e ~nnual me~tmg_of
;the Association _of Uruversity
■:reachers of Engllsh. Th-e mee~■mg was held at Carleton Um:versity as part of the annual
•meetings of the Learned Soci:eties.
:
The title of Dr. Merrill's
■ paper is 'The Pre-Armada
:Years: Literature of Patriotic
;sentiment'. He showed that the
■ patriotism which is so appar: ent in the literature after the
■ British defeat of the Spanish
:Armada is also present, al:though to a lesser degree, in
■ the literature whlch preceeds
:that momentous victory.

I
:

*********

A Lakehead University pro■ tessor has been awarded a
1$3,000 Government of Canada
;orant for work on a Master's
•Degree research project.

INTERUM V

p

Fat

Commission

NAMED
SELLING ARGUS ADS
The AMS has appointed an
ing this situation. He .plans to
intermin Vice-President for the run for the Vice Presidency in
Contact Joe Danis
summer. Mr. Randy Wilkie of the fall but will not receive
Advertising Manager
Arts 11 has replaced Doug
official support from the curr345-2121 Ext 216
Robson who cannot retain the
ent
executive.
They may
from 3 - 5 pm
position due to his academic
choose to support him indivstanding.
idually, however.
, ..
. Peter Yo~ng, ~S Pre~- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~
ident; has said that 10 the situation where there would be no
Vice-Pr~sident
f~r
several
months it was decided that a
person be chosen to take the
responsibilities of that position, but not the powers. several names were reviewed, the
criteria being that the person
offered the position be returning in the fall, that he have a
high academic standard, and
FASHION APPAREL FOR EVERYONE
that he be willing to run for
election, to the position in
ARTHUR ST. PORT ARTHUR
September.
The decision to approach
Mr. Wilkie was initiated by
Peter Young and was made
T:E-D:!l CREST H0'1'E.L
jointly by himself and the other members of the executive.
~~
--- - Mr. Wilkie will work evenings on a voluntary basis and
it has been suggested that he
aid Don Colborne of the Argus
in administering the course
evaluation program and Larry
Bryan in preparation of the
1967-1968 social calendar. :Re
may also be put in charge of
the Bargain Book Bureau and
RED RIVER ROAD, PORT ARTHUR
certain of the entertainmept
scheduled for the summer sessions.
Speaking to the Argus last
BOOK DEPT (TOTTON'S NOTES)
week Mr. Wilkie said that alSCM PORTABLES
though he has had no correspondence with past Vice-PresATTACHE CASES
idents he feels that he can
offer both constructive critiPRECISION INSTRUMENTS
cism and conscientious work
in his new position. He feels
that there is a very definite
lack of communications between the AMS and the student
body and plans to do everyLAKEHEAD'S LEADING BOOKSELLER
thing possible to discover and
AND OFFICE PRODUCE DEALER
break down the \)arriers caus-

Play It Fashion Cool

With Swinging Styles

2i ~-~

-

••

-••i

•e

e.

e

BUSINESS SUPPLY

Buy that new Ford NOW!

;

Professor P.E. Coulter,■
B.Eng._, B.~d., ?f the _School:
of Engmeenng will receive the ■
grant from the. Dep_t. of Ma!!-;
power and Immigration for his ■
work on the subject, 'The Eval-:
uation of Equivilant Standing ■
in Canadian Adult Education•.;
His research c s ltant w11 •
. on u
i ■
be Dr. J.R. ~idd, Head of the:
Adult Education Department of ■
~he Ontari_o Institute for Studies:
10 Education.
:
■
James A. Brigham, Lecturer:
in the Department of English at ■
Lakehead University, has been:
awarded a Canada Council Grant ■
of $2,500 for graduate study.:
He will be on leave for 1967-68 ■
to study for his Ph.D at the,:
University of Alberta, Edmon- ■
ton.A native of Fort William:
Mr. Brigham received his B.A.:
and M.A. from the University ofl
British Columbia. He has been:
teaching modern poetry and ■
drama and creative writing atl
Lakehead University.
■

above mentioned positions are
vacant, will be similar to that
of the spring elections. Nominations will be opened on
September 15 at which time
candidacy for the positions
may be declared. Students now
holding elected positions will
be able to resign in order to
run for vacant posts. The
elections will be conducted by
the Chief Justice about the
second week in October.

NEW CAR PRICES GO UP IN 1968.
SAVE UP TO S2OO NOW
Enjoy summer driving to
its fullest. There's a
Ford for everyone and at
the right price too!
Remember....

*********

NOBODY WALKS AWAY
FROM A GIBSON
FORD DEAL TODAY!

GIBSON MO"I't)llS
(1962)

Intercity

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Dial 344·7235

_____________________________________...

....................................................

�JUNE 29, 1967

TtiE ARGUS

Slow Start For Ball Team
It looks as if the L. U. athletic department has a reoresentative
on the summer banquet trail in the person of Bill (Golden Boy)
Shannon •
- G" 1 ,
He has represented L. U. at the Sir Winston Churchi 11 ir s
Athletic Banquet. Recently he attended the annu9,l meeting of the
s.S.S.A.A. to give a talk on the pr~gress of our athletic building.

*********•

Anybody interested in playing summer basketball can come to
the P.A. Arena every Monday or Wednesday after June 26th.

••• ••• ••••
Congratulations to Don Domansky of Port Arthur now attending
U.C.L.A. He has become one of Canada's outstanding runners in
the 440.

••••••••••
About the N.H.L. draft. The Leafs (my favorite team) are
stupid or s·entimental. Protecting Al ("I wasn't the slowest player on the ice") Stanley and letting both Kent Douglas and Bob
Baun go. Punch and Stanley must be related.
Henry Akerval reports he has found the Sandy Koufax of Intermediate in the person of John Sihvonen. He hurled 13 innings in
his pitching debut.

Putters Put Off
The LU golf team travelled
to Ashland on May 20 to compete in the Annual Ashland
College Invitational Tournament. Lakehead finished 2nd in
the eighteen hole event at
which only three teams were
represented. Glenn Miller and
George Kelly tied for second
in the individual placings. The
tournament was won by the
host club Ashland College.
Other members of the Lakehead U team were Barry Mc
Namee, Dick Battiston, and
Bob Backen.

Glenn Miller of the Athletic
department has stated that the
tournament was very poorly organized and that in all probability Lakehead would not attend future events at Ashland.
He said that after not being informed of the starting time, the
team travelled all night to arrive first thing in the morning
only to wait around until 11
o'clock when the other two
teams showed up. One college
simply didn't arrive and normal
areas of organization did not
exist.

You win some, You lose
some!
The Nor'Westers tm: currently holding down last place
in the 5 team Intermediate Fastball League. But don't hold
that against them. The team is
playing some good ball and
lost one game 4-3 in 13 innings.
The squad is surprising the
rest of the league with its
• heads-up play. The team's big
weakness seems to be the lack
of a solid pitching staff. Hank
(Casey Stengel) Akerval can't
pitch every game.
Pete Johnson has not been
too consistent while John
Sihvonen pitched• one good
game but will have to learn a
few more pitches before becoming a Jood hurler. Another
weakness is the lack of a
consistent hitting effort.
Pete "No hands" Young was
a mid-season draft (Orttrna or
Crest) selection.
The tei:,m plays its ~ame at
S~. Martin_ s diamond in Fort
William twice a week between
Sunday and Thursday. Get out
and support your team. Don't
forget some of your tuition fee
goes to the upkeep of the team
so come out and see how it is
being spent. p .s.- L. u. •s lone
win was against Videon vees.

TINN ■ COURTS
F•■Hm
There are now two new
tennis
courts on campus.
They are located next to the
residence
and
were completed
early
this
week.
Original plans called for
a dirt surface the first year
but it was decided to go the
whole hog right off the bat
so asphalt has been laid.
The AMS ·· contributed $1500
to their construction on the
condition· that they be complete in time for summer
school.

Sticky wicket, old Chap

•
500
B road S Batt1ng
•

one of the more recent members of the Port Arthur Ladies
Senior Softball Association is a
team composed primarily of
.
Lakehead Um versity staff,
sponsored b! ~arnett McQueen.
The association_ has_ seven
teams in ~l, of which this forms
a part. With three of the games
washed out, the season got. off
to a poor start, but our gals
came through in their first real
game with a 19-6 win over the
Memory Diamonds - a long
standing well organized t~am.
The second game was a 20 7 loss to last year's runner-up
for the championship -- the
Canadian Order of Foresters.
Under the direction of coach
Bill Kosolowski, captain Leo.na
George and co-captain Mickey
(girl) Powell, the team, even
in its early stages, is showing
great promise. Whether its win
or lose, the girls say all games
end in high spirits.
Games are held at the Hammerskjold High School basehall
rli flmnnrl

I

CASEY KARLSTED

REPORT FROM RUSSIA
By Ifayne Tocheri
It was something of an unexpected graduation gift when I received news ·or my selection to participate in the first Soviet Union Canada University Student Exchange Tour.
Twenty-six students, most all of whom were
seniors or graduates from universities across
Canada, were chosen by the Canadian Union
of Students for this unique endeavour. With all
arrangements completed, we would tour the
Soviet Union for three weeks covering almost
3,000 linear miles with official Sputnikjuide·s
and translators.
I should explain, however, that while we
were an official delegation from Canada, we
were not empowered to represent officially
the C.U.S. or even .our respective campuses.
I am stating this now because our status involved us in an extremely flambuoyant situation towards the end of the tour . . I shall
save the details of this incident for a separ~
ate article in a future issue.
The tour, which began on May 12 and ended June 7 was the first stage of the Exchange.
The second portion will commence with the
Soviet delegation's arrival in Canada later
this fall or early January. The Soviet and Canadian Unions are cooperating to ensure the·
success of the Exchange. The primary purpose of the URions in sponsoring the tour for
university students is to increase their knowledge and understanding of the two nations.
Since the space allotment made by the·
Argus editor prohibits me from attempting any
specific analysis I shall contain this article
to only an introductory report for the future
columns.
After completing a one day orientation session in Montreal we flew by Air Canada to
London where we transferred to British European Airlines for the flight to Moscow. Any
city of seven million people will certainly
leave a graduate with plenty to talk and write
about. Moscow is no exception! I spent seven
days there, three at the beginning of the tour
and four at the end. In the next issue I shall
discuss the topic of international trade Moscow style of course. It is entitled "Moscovites on Black Market."
From the nation's capital, we travelled

400 miles north by train to Leningrad. Our
three day stay in this city bordering Finland
afforded an excellent opportunity for an intro duction to· "Komsomol" (roughly Communist
Youth) their attitudes and activities, (first
hand by me).
It was a terrifying 600 mile air flight from
Leningrad on the ever so modern airline (Soviet description) - Aeroflot - which brought us
to Kiev. Four days in the heart of the Ukraine
provided ample opportunity for "free" movement among the people. It was in Kiev that I
found conclusive evidence in support of the
theory that our world 1s too small for boundaries. I met a charming couple, an acquaintance of mine, from Fort William! They too,
were on a tour of their own.
I have an exceedingly non-descript titlefor
my article on the Ukraine. It is simply, "The
People of Kiev" , but I doubt that I will be
able to ·remain on topic throughout as there
were too many side events which I must relate. See you in Kiev article four!
If you're still with me, we climb aboard
another train, this time for a gruelling thirty
hour, 900 mile, route to Sochi on the Black
Sea. Six days tn a sub-tropical resort town
in a resort camp for youth ( anyone between
the ages 18·50)! is too much for one article.
Therefore, my first review shall be a look at
a few interesting individuals with whom I associated. My most intriguing character was a
young lady and our ensuing situation prompts
the title "Svetlana ·- An Agent?".
Article two from Sochi is "An International Incident." I am holding this review for
the finale primarily because I am awaiting a
copy of a resolution handed our delegation in
So chi on International Save the Children Day.
We departed the day following which came
none too soon. Canadians were not welcome
anymore because we alone refused to sign the
resolution. Privileges of democratic nations
are not recognized (i.e. in Russia you do as
the Russians).
Hope yau will follow future editions and
me, your Argus correspondant from the Soviet Union.

914 VICTORIA AVL
aa, ARTHUR ff.
FORT WILLIAM, ONT.
PORT ARTHUR, ONT.
RIDGIIWAY AND VICK.118 na.
PORT WILLIAM, ONT,

OLIVER ROAD

ESSO SERVICE

ED CLIFF

For al I your car needs
Gas Otl lube tires &amp; BCGeSsorrea
Mdtor tune up &amp; repairs
Next to university

TEL. 344-2231

LAKEHEAD
ARMY &amp; NAVY STORES
1(/e

~ d e ~ 4/dJ, ol «-M

~ c'# ~ fJ"""'6
132 MAY'STREET,NORTH
FORT WILLIAM,ONT

622-229S

A COMPLETE LINE OF ...
Sporting Goods

Fishing Supplies

Luggage

Hunting Supplies

EVERYTHING FOR :rHE CAMPER I

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                    <text>.-.--.,

Here's

in your

to

Cricket

Treacle ...

Boots

VOLUME II, No. I

LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY, PORT ARTHUR, ONTARIO

L.U. ANNEXES
WATERFRONT

September 18, 1967

Graduate Program Announced
President W.G. Tamblyn announced recently
that Lakehead University will now offer a program in graduate studies leading to a Master's
degree in the following four disciplines: English, Physics, Psychology and Mathematics.
Candidates have already been approved and
the courses ratified by the Senate, so that the
program will commence this semester.
While commenting on this decision, the
President said that it was "a significant step
in the University's development." Dr. Tamblyn went on to say that the development of
post-graduate studies was not a decision to be
taken lightly. "Post-graduate studies are a
natural development in our academic evolution," he said, "but, the Senate feels very
strongly that no post-graduate programs should •
be adopted until they are collectively certain
that the graduates will have the necessary research facilities and qualified faculty to make
their graduate degree studies equal to those
given at any other university of our size and
stature. The University has been making every
effort during the past few years to add highly
trained personnel in the various fields of
study in the Arts and Sciences."
Those honours graduates pursuing their
Master's of Arts Degree will be required to
write a thesis in addition to taking graduate

The Mariaggi Hotel
Three Lakehead businessmen announced to the Student
Housing Bureau in mid-August
their plans to renO\· ate the Mariaggi Hotel to provide accommodation for 120 students.
The 92-room hotel, built in
the 1890' s, has long been a
landmark on the Port Arthur
waterfront. Similarly, the large
lounges on the main floor haYe
seen the initiation of many a
young lush.
But all this will soon change.
The upper floors will be repaired, remodelled, and converted to proYide dormitory type
accommodation for 120 students.
To make what will be called
the Marina Inn completely a
student's hotel, the lounges wil1
be closed until the projected
opening date early in November
to change the pub patrons to a
much younger crowd.
The ever-present problem of
parking would appear to be relati,·ely light in this case. Wbile
day parking will be a little
tight, 120 parking spots within

studies. Dr. G.O. Rothney, Dean of Arts, stated that the thesis will usually be based on
original research, involving contribution of
new knowledge. In the Social Sciences, the
research is expected to be based on local
problems in Northwestern Ontario. Each s tudent in both Arts and Science will be assigned an individual member of the teaching staff
to supervise personally his research work.
Dr. John Hart, Dean of Science, stated that
"the Faculty of Science has an active research
program, supported by substantial grants from
the National Research Council and similar organizations. We have a highly qualified faculty, who are studying applied problems of
importance to Northwestern Ontario as well
as undertaking pure research of fundamental
scientific interest." Commenting further on
graduate students, Dr. Hart said that "the
success of a graduate school in science depends on the professor, the facilities and the
research problems to be solved. The presence
of graduate students will provide an intellectual stimulus for the faculty and undergraduate
alike. Good graduate students are stimulating,
intelligent and challenging. They will not put
up with second rate answers. They demand the
best, both of themselves and of their professors."

from both cities

one block are empty at night.
The new owners are also negotiating with the CNR in order
provide more space..
Services to the resident
students will make the Marina
Inn as appealing to many as the
Residence on campus. Plans
include study rooms, laundry
and pressing equipment with
professional services optional.
the accumulation of a library,
bus service, and part time jobs
for students . Rates for room or
room and board are rumored to
be very reasonable.
The only serious drawback
which could affect the operation
of the Marina Inn is the late
date of availability. However,
the obvious benefits of living
there will certainly make up
for the inconveniences put up
with in waiting for a room. Besides, being close to downtown
Port Arthur, where else could
you live where there is a pub
downstairs instead of a living
room?

Bus Service Inaugurated
Thanks to the work of the
Administration; and to the cooperation of the two Lakehead
cities, students will be able
to reap full advantages of regular bus services this year.
Both Port Arthur and Fort
William have agreed to run buses of regular route schedules
to andfrom the University. This
should alleviate considerably
the parking problem which was
anticipated for the coming
semester.
Port Arthur will run a University Express bus, in addition
to the routes described in their
transit brochure. The Express
will travel from St. Paul Street,
through downtown Port Arthur,
to the University and back again. The bus will leave the St.
Paul Street terminal at 7: 45 a.m.,
8: 45 a.m., and 9:45 a.m., arriving at the University about ten
minutes later. In addition to the
University Express, the regular

Housing as acute as expected
Looking for a place to stay in the Lakehead? Should you answer in the affirmative
you are probably already aware of your plight.
The Lakehead University Student Housing
Bureau has come to the aid of many homeless
souls and will continue to do so until the
middle of Septemt&gt;er. They have listings of
aYailable accommodation in both cities.
The accommodation varies from the single
room or room and board variety to apartments,
small houses, and motel suites. Apartments
are an extremely rare item and many students
may have to accept single rooms.
Students arriving from Southern Ontario will
find that the choice of accommodation is
smaller than in other parts of the province.
Unlike Soothern Ontario, the Lakehead has
few apartment blocks and town house developments and virtually no high rise apartment
buildings. Although the Lakehead is a sufficient size to warrant such projects it would

TWELVE PAGES

appear that urban development is still in its
early stages.
Housing Bureau Director Tom Goodman has
found yet another handicap to hamper _h is work.
It seems that several other institutions in the
Lakehead also have out-of-town students to
accommodate. People attending Lakehead
Teacher's College, the Adult Education Centre, Confederation College, and the Rehabilitation Centre are looking for rooms and beds,
often procuring acc~mmodation which the
University had listed. The avoidable embarassment to both potential tenants and to landlords in these cases is unfortunate . But the
Housing Bureau on campus, being an office of
the Administration, cannot accommodate students of these other institutes at the expense
of University students.
With this fact in mind, one can more easily
sympathize with Mr. Goodman and his active
and busy staff.

Oliver Road bus will make a
trip to the campus at 7: 15 a.m.
Return trips to downtown
Port Arthur via the Express are
scheduled for 4:13 p.m., and
5: 13 p.m. The regular Oliver
Road bus will also pick up
students at the University at
6:30 p.m. and 9:00 p.m.
The cost for the bus service
will be the regular adult fare,
which works out to fourteen
cents per ticket, or seven tickets for one dollar. Students will
be able to travel anywhere in
the city of Port Arthur for this
fare. Transferring from a regular bus to the University Express will be at no extra cost.
The transit service from
Fort William, beginning for the
first time this fall, has taken
some months of negotiations
to work out. The bus will arrive at the University at 7:50
a.m., 8:50 a.m., 9:50 a.m., and
7:15 p.m. The route that the bus
will follow originates from the
Walsh and Franklin Streets terminal. The bus will travel directly to the University along
Edward Street. It will return to
Fort William via Edward Street
andwill travel through the city
in a route servicing Westfort
along Amelia Street, Brock
Street and Sprague Street as
far north as Walsh. From Walsh
it will proceed north on Franklin to Victoria, west to Edward,
and then back to the University.
Buses will depart from the campus at 4:15 p.m., 5:10 p.m.
6: 15 p.m., and 9:00 p.m.
The Fort William bus rates
are slightly different from those
on the Port Arthur buses, owing
to the greater distance to be
travelled. Students who take
buses from Fort William to the
University will be charged a

double fare, half to be paid 1
on boarding the bus, the other
half or the second ticket, upon
getting off the bus at the University. This rate is only effective during the hours from
7 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. For trips
after 6:30 p.m. the rate will be
higher than previously noted,
or 14 2/3 cents times two to go
to and to come from the University. A round trip after 6:30
p.m. will cost a total of 58.6
cents.
In Fort William, transfers
along Edward Street are being
set up by the transit commission. There will be no extra
cost for transferring. It is hoped that the University bus service will tie in with the regular
city service in cx:der to facilitate travelling to, and from the
campus.
The bus schedules in both
Port Arthur and in Fort William
commence today. September 18.
Port Arthur begins full service
today, while the Fort William
buses are on a partial schedule.
They arrive at the University at ,
8:50 a.m. and 9:50 a.m. and 1
leave the campus at 4: 10 p.m. c/
and 5: 10 p.m. today.
Tomorrow they will be on
their full schedule.

Buttons are
necessary for
admittance to
all activities
during
Orientation Week

--

�Page 2

THE ARGUS

September 18, 1967

Hippies-- the unloved lovers
_

-

Love was the word this summer. love and flower power.
Hippyism, which until this
spring was a small cult confined to the Haight-Ashbury district of San Francisco and the
Greenwich Village area of New
York , has spread with astonishing rapidity across The States
and Canada.
The long-haired, rather dirty
bangled and beaded, psychedelic hippy preaching the philosophy of love, peace and joy,
has become one of the major
news stories of the year, with
every reputable magazine, and
quite a few unreputable ones,
giving this new breed extensive
coverage. Toronto's establishment Globe and Mail has covered every love-in, paint-in, demonstration and protest held by
the Yorkville hippies over the
summer. Both Ottawa papers
covered the hippy versus The
Mall merchants fight in great
detail. Maclean' s supported the
use of hippies in the Company
of Young Canadians in Victoria
and elsewhere. And most ridiculous of all, a Look reporter
was interviewed by a confession magazine while he was living in Haight-Ashbury, researching a story.
But hippies are more than
good summer copy. They are an
important manifestation of the
growing dislike ana' distrust of
today's society by the young,
the so-called "majority generation.''
The desire to ''tune m and
drop out" and get •away from
the pres.sures of school, home
and materialism is understandable when one considers that a
nice home, two cars, three televisions and a college education
are what are considered success
in this life.
And the hip philosophy is
one which appeals to the young,
first because basically it caters to the self, and secondly
because in its purest form it
can appeal to the ideals of the
young in a way the big-business
syndrome never can.
Hippies believe in loving .. .
oneself, one's neighbour, the
fuzz, the mayor who is trying
to get rid of one, anyone and
everyone. They do not want to
own the world, they want to be
allowed to live the way they
want. They hold a belief which
is a mixture of Christianity at
its most primitive, Buddhism,
Communism. The Diggers, an
organization run by active hippies , provides food, clothing
and money for their less resourceful bretheren. Many of
these work part time, often with
the post office so they can survive and so they can buy the
drugs which are a necessary
part of the whole hippy set-up.
But work is not the be-all and
end-all of their existence.
To quote a San Francisco
cab driver "The hippies are
more honest with themselves
than anyone else is. Most people
spend all their time workin'gand
then enjoy life only as a sideline. With the hippies, life
comes first, and work is the
side line."
But to parents, municipal
government authorities, and
"straight" people the whole
business seems ridiculous, a
waste of time and a nuisance.
They feel the flower people'
are irresponsible, dirty and dangerous. They threaten all the
things held most dear by the
elders and ''betters'', and they
use drugs. And drugs have always been taboo.

by Lib Spry (Canadian University Press)
Arguments that pot is at in Queen's Park, a discussion
least no more dangerous than on means of establishing medthose two pillars of "straight" ical and dental clinics in Yorksociety .. . tobacco and alcohol... ville Village, and consideration
are disregarded. And the re- of the closing of streets other
ports of the effect of stronger than Yorkville Avenue, because
drugs like LSD on the mind and there have been so many probody adds to the distrust.
tests about their original choice.
In Canada, a country not re- What the final decision is will
nowned for its radicalism, col- have an important effect on futonies of hippies have become ure hippyism.
And what of the winter?
headaches in Ottawa, Montreal,
Campus Assuming New Shape
Wi th the coming of the cold
Vancouver, Victoria and Toronto ... Evenin staid Saskatoon, weather the easy, lounging life
As is obvious to everyone visiting the campus, great progress
the teenybopper, a junior, mix- on warm sidewalks will no long1s
being made on Lakehead University's expansion programme.
ed-up variety of the hippie, has er be possible . Yorkville gets
The photograph above, taken from the Students' Centre, shows
become a recognisable and reg- very chilly in winter. So does construction on the Centennial Science Complex and well demonular member of the downtown Ottawa, Montreal, Winnipeg;
strates the shape the building will assume upon completion.
scene. It is obvious the hippies even British Columbia becomes
When
completed (sometime in 1968), the building will house
are more than just a fad, that rather unpleasantly damp.
science , technology and administration. Its worth will be raised
California
is
one
thing,
they offer some thing which is
to over $14 million by its housing more than $2 million in science
needed by this generation. But Ontario another.
equipment and furnishings.
But
it
is
unlikely
hippyism
it is something which is neither
Also under construction and at varying stages of progress at
understood nor appreciated by will die out. The philosophy,
the
present time, are the additional floors to the library (almost
the
reaction
against
materialthose over thirty.
completed)
and the new athletic field house, and a new residence
istic world, the offer of mental
And they are reacting.
block. Concurrent with these construction projects have been
freedom
through
drugs,
psycheThe climax of a summer of
skirmishes between the hippies delic music and the like, and landscaping works; witness the hills on either side of the enand "straight" authorities which above all the emphasis on love, trance to the university.
Various types of construction are going to continue on campus
have occurred across Canada all appeal to a generation which
for
many months to come. They will cause annoyance, interferhas
grown
tired
of
their
parcame in the middle of August
ence, and inconvenience for many people. But the finished result
when
the Toronto group, ent's rat race.
And the hippies offer them will surely make everything worth-while.
strengthened with contingents
from Montreal, Ottawa, Winni- an escape.
peg, Buffalo and Detroit, tried
to get a street in the centre of
Seminar Report
their area, Yorkville Avenue,
closed to traffic, cutting off
fumes, hippie-gawpers and imminent death.
and these often continued until the early
"Academic Reform: Facelift or Major
First move was a paint-in,
hours of the morning.
Surgery?" was the theme of this year's C.U.S.
slogans of ''peac·e• ', ''love''
National Seminar held at the University of
There was some conflict in the beginning and "welcome", plus the hipBritish Columbia from August 20 to 30. The
and this continued throughout - between those
pie emblem - flowers • were
seminar brought together over 125 students,
who favoured the unstructured format and those
painted
all over Scollard
resource people and others from across and
who wanted a more rigid schedule: This deStreet's sidewalk. But the authoutside Canada.
bate on form constituted part of the content of
orities won tha~ round. Hippies
Not only the content, but also the form of
the seminar.
were seen wielding brushes as
Debate and discussion at the seminar rangthey scrub away at their efforts the seminar provided an interesting study.
ed
over wide areas. Those who thought that
The
seminar
was
as
unstructured
as
was
with lye. It was that or go to
academic reform had to be discussed within
possible under the circumstances: the host
jail.
the wider context of social reform, discussed
committee (from U.B.C. and Simon Fraser)
But the hippies did not stop
brought
together
the
delegates
in
one
place
at
social
reform; those who· thought that ends had
there, and so they went to jail.
to be determined before means were debated,
one time, provided essential services such as
Phase two was a 3 a.m.
food and transportation, but left the form of
discussed ends; those interested in specific
meeting around a burning trash
problems, such as student representation or
the seminar up to the delegates themselves to
can, with dancing and chanting
course
evaluation, discussed these problems;
decide.
There
was
on
plenary
meeting
on
the
producing a sound unappreciatand so it went on.
first night - and this broke down spontaneoused by their unhip neighbours.
It was impossible to atte~d more than perly into smaller, specialist, groups. This was
And this time police made arrhaps a quarter of the seminar's activities as
the form the seminar took for the full ten
ests. Six of the hippies, the
so many of the activities were concurrent. The
so-called ring leaders including days. At one time there were usually four or
seminar did, however, benefit the delegates
five main and many smaller peripheral disthe leading Digger and CYC
as
individuals and as a group, and the excussions
in
progress.
volunteer, David Depoe, were
change of views changed some opinions, temA structure - spontaneous, not imposed taken off to Don Jail o-n a
pered others, and strengthened yet others.
did emerge after two or three days: generally
charge of creating a disturbThe overall effect of the seminar must be
there was little activity before lunch and disance.
to
strengthen
the student movement in Canada.
cussions
began
in
earnest
in
the
afternoons;
And within eight hours of
bail being given, Depoe had discussions were also popular in the evenings
been arrested again, in a fracas
which occurred between Police
About Those
and hippies after a love-in at Waterloo Seminar
Queen's Park to celebrate his
Calendars
release. Along with 51 other"s,
Many students, including
he had been creating yet anARGUS staff members, have
other disturbance. A volley of
been wondering about this
missiles during the various
year's Lakehead University
demonstrations showed that the
The Federation of Students of the University of Waterloo has calendar - or rather, about the
Yorkville hippies· are not strict announced that it will host a seminar, from October 17 to 22, on lack of it.
adherents of the hippie philos- the future of race relations in Ontario. The seminar, entitled
However, Registrar Donald
ophy. While flowers are acc- "The Ignorant Society: White or Indian?" is to be sponsored by Ayre assures us that the caleneptable, apples and cans of the Native Canadian Affairs Committee at the University of Water- dar will be here by the second
coke thrown at police are con- loo and the Canadian Indian Youth Council. The seminar is re- week in October. It seems that
stricted to the Indians and students of Ontario.
sidered unorthodox.
.
basically the problem is that
And the police retaliated.
A leaflet announcing the seminar states that:
this year the calendar is a com•
Accusations of police bru"The white society must be willing to offer its assistance to pletely new book - not simply
tality are being investigated. these young (Indian) leaders. The young Indians must reserve the a revised edition of the previous
Hippies claim they were man- right to reject such suggestions as are made. Therefore, the re- year's publication. Because of
handled, a.nd at least one hip- lationship must be one which has for its background and foundat- this, Mr. Ayre has had to rely
pie, Duke Taylor, has his hand ion an understanding of each other's culture and heritage, a know- on many sources within the uniin a cast, from a heavy police ledge of each other's desires and proposals for organization, and versity, and it was these sourboot.
a respect for each other as humans and equals."
ces which caused Mr. Ayre's
"The present seminar is an attempt to construct an atmos- problems - and will, no doubt,
But Taylor admits he does
not know if it was done on pur- phere in which this relationship can be examined and re-examined, cause students' confusion durpose, and that he wouldn't rec- in whichlndian and non-Indian youth can get to know each other's ing registration.
ognise the policeman again.
ideas, in which we can get to know each other."
The Registrar's office does
And so the battle goes on.
The leaflet lists the main areas of discussion to be: "The have a limiied supply of the new
The hippies have appealed to Young Indian: His Desires and Goals"; "Indian Organizations"; calendar for students to familicity hall, asking for assistance and "Outside Forces" .
arize themselve·s with courses
in finding a house that could be
The Alma Mater Society at Lakehead University has been inBut whatever you d~ if you
used as a social center, the vited to send delegates to this seminar, but no decision has yet value your life, DON'T ask the
provision of a workshop so hip- been made.
secretaries in the Registrar's
pies may make things to sell,
office about the calendar.
permission for a second love-in

Student Movement Strengthened

Race Relations

-

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on

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aui

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�September 18, 196 7

THE ARGUS

Page 3

The Red Side of Red Power

Dr. Howard Adams .Professor
of Community Development,
Uni versity of Saskatchewan
The seriousness of the plif, ht
of the North American Indian
was the topic under discussion
on Auf.ust 29 in t he University
Centre, For this occas s ion,
Fred Kelly, member of the CY C,
and former student at Lakehead,
invited a panel of distinguished
f.Uests to speak to any intere sted Lakeheaders. Although the
attendance was not as f.reat
as was expected, the ideas ex•
pressed by Dr. Ho ward Adams ,
Ralph Bruyers, Duke Redbird,
and Harold Cardinal made the
audience think very hard about
the Indian's plight.

"Canadians are hypocrites•:
s tated Dr. Howard Adams. The
reservation system was inaugurated when the Indian was of no
further use to the white con•
querors. And then starvation
policies were used, along with
armed force, to make the Indians
move into these compounds. In
actuality, "reserve system" is
simply a nice term for apartheid.
The Indians were forced onto
reserves where they were ruled
absolutely by the government.
They were treated as wards,
children, or worse, "We were
supposed to die off, but we sure
fooled them", said Dr. Adams.
Once the reserve system was
established, steps were taken
to make sure that the Indians
could never resurge as in the
days of Riel. The buffalo had
been completely destroyed so
that the Indians were dependent
on the state for support. Here
was a tool in the form of a wel•
fare cheque that has been used
many times to exploit the Indian.
Many Indian customs were
stepped on to facilitate control
of the savages by the civilized
whites, while other customs,
such as the election of chief and
council. were fostered, and for
the same reason that the others
were disallowed. All the govern•
ment 'really wanted from the In·
dian was his land. It would have
been easier for all if the New·
foundland massacres have been
followed up in other parts of the
country, eliminating completely
all Indians and the wealth of
culture that they represent.
A GREAT RESPONSIBILITY
In the words of Duke Red·
bird, ''We (the Indian youth)
have a great responsibility to
white Canada .. The tree of Canadian culture must be planted in
Indian cultural soil, for we have
a great contribution to make to
Canada and to the changing te·
chnological world." Th~s sta.te·
ment, he said, would never have
come from an Indian youth even
fifteen years ago. This tremend·
ous development towards exam·

ining the society which they
live in is the chief characteristic of Indian youth today.
Us ing McLuhan's terminology
Mr. Redbird went on to show
the irony in the situation in
Canada today. The society the
Indian lived in (and s till wants
to live in) was a consumer oriented society. Then nature and
the Indian's whol e economy was
replaced by a welfare cheque,
making the Indian a liability to
the governme nt. Now we see the
government trying to develop a
society with the benefits taken
away from the Indians .
With this return to tribal cul•
ture- comes in fact a return to
the Indian way of life of years
past. The Indian youth has a
difficult role to fulfill. "With
the development of a cultural
mozaic, we must compliment
each other while remaining the
same . We must retain Indianness while living in society" .
Indians have much to offer
in the way of heritage and
social background. One of the
considerations therefore must
be the education of the children
if they are to contribute to Can•
adian culture , Dr. Adams ex•
plained that the reserve system,
from which the children come, is
not white, urban, and middle
class as are the schools into
which they :tre placed. They
cannot relate in this new environment and culture , the "buck•
skin curtain"' is so heavy.
According to school texts, the
Indian is still in the aboriginal
state, stereotyped as the sav•
age. The present educational
system is meaningkss to Indians since it is so obviously
alienated to their way of life.
"It is a hardship to succeed
in someone else's system••
said ·Dr. Adams.
LIVE

is only a subtle form of genocide, and it must stop",
stated Mr. Cardinal. The red
tape· atfac·bed to Indian affairs
makes his every move a labour.
Reservations are like concentration camps . The people who are
so-called friends of Indians ex•
ploit them at every turn. But
the Indian will not put up with
this for any longer. There is at
present a move towards action.
"Too long we have been subjected to the government's
thumb. We want to be the mas ters of our own destiny. We want
to walk with pride beside any
young Canadian. This we shall
achieve ."
No wonder the Indians are
bitter. The Indian Affairs Department works from an Act
draugbted between the govern•
ment and the Indians without
the knowledge of · the Indians.
"The views of ·the people are
essential to the people's government'",
asserted
Ralph
Bruyers, "But in the case of the
Indians, the communications
are one•way, in practise. There
must be a concerted effort on
both sides to throw aside the
'buckskin
curtain' ".

White society is disturbed,
and rightly so, by the re ali zation of the s e great problems.
But what do the officials who
could improve the situation do
but refuse to acknowledge the
existence of the problems . In
North Saskatc hewan, the or•
iginal separatist movement in
Canada originated. At present,
there are two tribes of Indians
near a white community. F ighting often occ urs between these
two tribes, s o successful have
been the pol itical moves to di•
vert racis m to inter- tribal
bickering. But the diss atisfact•
ion is such that fighting may
soon tum into a fuU-sc ale re•
ssutection of the Riel catastrophes.
"CANNOT SUFFER FOR
NOTHING"
The battle between Indian
and white, now mainly one of
legal procedures and wits, is
very bitter in more places than
Saskatchewan. The so-called
champions of Indian affairs now
refuse to give the Indians control of their own lives. Indians

have forc es working on them all
of the ir lives, brainwashing
them into the stereotype "noble
savage" that they are supposed
to be - s hy, humbl e, accepting.
"The church was the greatest
tool of the bureaucracy for this
purpose", Dr. Adams stated.
For the control of their own
lives , the Indians have made an
attempt. Red power, or the right
to live unstifled, to direct their
own affairs, co become integral
parts of Canadian culture, is
their goal. Dr. Adams stresses
the necessity •of governmental
aid, to begin with, in the form
of light industry on reservation
areas . This would make Indians
self s ufficient, so that they
could provide adequately for
their families, pay taxes like
the rest of the citizens of Canada, and become for the second
time in their history true Canadians. Then the whole educational system must be re-vamped
to suit their culture just as the
present one suits the white
culture. Then and only then can
the Indian again stand on his
own feet.
"We are a suspicious race.
We can not suffer for nothin ....

ON SOCIETY'S CRUMBS

In speaking of the difficulties
encountered in the educational
system, light is shed upon the
entire outdated bureaucratic
control of Indians. In many cases integrated schools are shunn·
ed because the Indian culture
is so foreign to the subject
matter taught. But that is not
all, Indians do not even have
the constitutional right to sit on
school boards, even if the majority of students in the school
are Indian.
"It"s too bad the press has
not turned the same amount of
attention to the Department of
Indian Affairs as it has to the
CYC", said Harold Cardinal.
"No man can accept the fate of
being imprisoned to accepting
the · crumbs of society. He must
be self sufficient." Indians can·
not be changed as can paintings,
nor can they be molded into
another image against their
wills. The past has shown this.
Why then are we deluding our•
selves by upholding the ob•
solete Indian Act? The Indian
seeks not academic analysis of
his problem but material work
to better his situation.
Statistically the government
spends more money on public
welfare than on Indian affairs,
said Mr. Cardinal. At the same
time as their expenditures in•
crease, Indians become .poorer.
The money spent has little effect, though. There is one civil
servant for every one and onehalf Indian families. And the
government's solution to this
problem is to create larger
staffs.
"Paternalism, in this form,

11

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continue ~ur
education.''
This booklet shows you how
you can get financial help.
Do you plan to attend a university
or other post-secondary institution?
Do you need financial assistance?
To learn whether you can qualify
under the Ontario Student Awards
program. obtain this brochure from
your secondary school. or from the
institution of your choice
or write to:
Student Awards

Department of
University Affairs,
ON T AR t O

481 University Avenue
Toronto 2

�Page 4

It certainly is remarkable that we, as Canadians, can sit here
m the Lakehead and be completely sympathetic towards all of
the down-trodden peoples of this world, and yet we constantly
keep sweeping our own dirt under the rug. It's about time that
this community woke up and realized that we have racial discrimination in quantity right here in Port Arthur and Fort William.
You may well ask: "If there is discrimination here, why aren't
there any race riots?" My friend, discrimination takes many shapes and forms. It need not culminate in a race riot in order to
qualify under the heading of "discrimination". It has been our
experience to discover that many of our own fellow students are
not able to find accomodation in the Lakehead, due to the colour
of their skin, or their religious affiliation. Discrimination, as
such is not based only upon a person's race, creed or colour.
Ther~ are so many instances where people have been denied their
basic human rights for reasons ranging from their family hackground to the model and year of car they drive.
As an example, let us take into view for a few moments the
position of the " hippie". Here is a person who, for the sake of
his beliefs, (be they love, or anything else) is declared a "misfit". One citizen of the Lakehead recently expressed the view
over a local radio station that these hippies should be put into
jail. What type of nonsensical logic is this? Does any ~:me person
have the right to judge a mass of people as large as is encountered when speaking in general terms such as "hippie"? In this
one case, there appears to be widespread ignorance of what the
hippie really is. We do not pretend fully to understand them yet.
Perhaps we never shall. However, we do believe that without
some measure of understanding, we are, in a sense, trying to
pilot our ship with a broken rudder, through a narrow and treacherous channel.
It is a great mistake, on the other hand, to stop discrimination
just to save ourselves from the discomforts of mass revolt. This
defeats the purpose of practising humanitarianism. We must be
sure in our own minds that what we are doing is not done to save
ourselves from the rebelling factions, but is done because we
have firm conviction and belief in brotherhood amongst all men.
In this way, and in this way only, can we achieve true and honest equality.
It is possible that what Canada, as a whole, really needs at
this stage is a full scale anti-discrimination drive to bring the
issue closer to home. This may take any form, be it riot amongst
our Indian citizens, or a race war in the Negro ghettos of Halifax.
In any case, this still appears to be the only way that will prove
to Canadians that this problem exists here, and that it's not
happening south of the border alone • it's starting to happen
everywhere.
At this point, there appears to be no real alternative that can
work and work fast enough. Unfortunately for Canadians, there
has not been enough outcry for "action committees" that, had
they been operating for ,some time now, could have possibly come
forth with some workable solutions.
However, leave us not speak in the gray area of "ifs", for
they cannot help us now.

September 18, 1967

THE ARGUS

T'IJe

letters to the editor
IAl.omb

J
.,.,,
Dear Sir,
1

old as well as new contributors.
The WOMB is Westgate
based only by coincidence. We
welcome the work of any worthy
poet, story writer, reviewer,
critic, humourist, etc. People
have been interested in our magazine for some time, and many
have promised contributions.
We certainly need more and
better work. Can you advertise
that need in the ARGUS?

Received your interesting
letter concerning the WOMB.
Thank you for the kind words
you had for the magazine. Advertising we probably need, but
we do not very much care
whe~her or not we se~l w~l_l. We
~eahze the small availa~1hty ?f
mtellectual customers ~n t~1s
or any other town of this sIZe
~nd nature_. ~hat we a_re m?st
mterested m _is the contmuat10n Sincerely,
and gr:td~al imprO\ement of our
magazme s ~ontent and that we George C. Spentzos
c_a_n_n_o_t_d_o_w_1t_h_o_u_t_t_h_e_s_u.;;.p.;;.po_rt_o_f_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Hate-a disease

(The WOMB is the Lake•
head's first and only Literary
magazine. We were fortunate
enough to see the first issue,
appreciating it to no end. Con•
tributions, or enquiries about
this magazine, may be sent to
139 Cottonwood Crescent, Port
Arthur.

Farout House
Dear Sir:
In an article in the July #7
Argus, concerning the 'Folk
Guild' it was stated that the
Lakehead offered no outlet for
folksingers to learn or perform.
I would like to correct this mis-

informed person.

Our

coffee

Gentlemen:
personwho believes in fairness house has been operating since
I was pleased to receive an or in freedom use the word hate Easter, in the third floor of the
issue of your paper "Argus" as impartially as Mr. Parkins? Port Arthur Y.M.C.A. The operof 21/7/67, and I have enjoyed Hatred is as final as death and ators, a boy's club, have made
reading it.
as effective in snuffing out considerable
alterations to
In your paper I came across reason and hope.
create that atmosphere required
a rather surprising article by
Perhaps Mr. Parkins' view is in any good coffee house. With
Mr. T. Parkins. I have always correct and perhaps it is not, the help of Mr. Gordon Cromp.
followed the assumption that but in any case let us be sure ton, proprietor of the former 4th
universities cultivated a liber- that we are not swayed by in- Dimension coffee house, a menu
al, just view on all subjects. tolerance. Mr. Parkins wide was made up consisting of nine
However, I now see that this is scattered and pernicious attacks varieties of coffee and eight of
The ARGUS first published in the autumn of 1966. That was not the case.
must have aggrieved many and tea.
one year ago. We cannot be expected to be the best university
I am amazed and dismayed I can only hope that his counsel
Since we are a non-profit
newspaper in that short period of time, but we try to impro".e
that Mr. Parkins coupled and beliefs do not prevade the organization, we are forced to
with every new issue. This year it is anticipated that there Will pseudo-mtellectua
•
.
• h mi"nds of those less restricted rely on entertainers who will
1ism
wit
be twenty-two issues. That means that we can improve a great Atheism. 1 am sure that if he than his.
perform •gratis'. Up to this time
deal. We intend to try.
observed the two objectively
In the end, it must be realiz- we have featured some of the
We are not a scandal sheet. But we do not hesitate to attack and with less emotional fever, ed that those who deal with Lakehead' s best folksingers.
on anything which we feel warrants the exposure we can give it. he would see that perhaps he hatred, in time become permeat· We welcome any singers who
Our first concern is that you, the students at Lakehead Univers- was a little hasty in his rash ed with it.
wish to perform to contact the
ity, are aware; aware of the internal politics, aware of potentially judgement. 1 deprecate Mr.
We should take care that the Y.M.C.A. We are open Saturday
harmful decisions, aware of what is being done for you and to Parkins' statements and I find disease does not become a pla- nights from eight p.m. 'til
you.
his aspersions very unkind. gue and its carriers voices twelve. Admission is 25¢ per
We do not suggest that everything printed in the ARGUS is He proclaims and I quote, should be regarded accordingly. hour. Everyone is welcome.
impervious, free from censure. In past we have felt the weight of "Avoid mycompany, and that of Hate belongs in the Dark Ages.
Yours truly,
student and Administration indignation falling full force on our any others like me! We hate you Let - 1 stay there.
Gordon Walford, president,
1
opinions andour work. It hurts.
very much!" In his last sentYours cordially
Zeta-Tau Boy's Hi-Y
But what hurts more is watching student apathy in the form of ence he voices hate. Can any
Ron S. Pappin.
operators of the Farout House
day-long bridge sessions, and poorly attended feature events on ••••-~-..;;~._;;;;;._;~;... ._ __;;;;.;~....
campus. The majority of students here do not seem to care about
matters which they should be vitally interested in. The average ·
attendance at AMS meetings in past years was in the neighborhood of .6% of the student body. And that if anything is an optimistic estimate.
September 18, 1967
VOLUME 2 - No. 1
It is said that the years during which a person attends university give one more freedom than he ever had before and more free- The ARGUS is published weekly by the Alma Mater Society of Lakehead University. The opinions
dom than he will ever again have in his life. That does not necexpressed are those of the Editorial Board and not necessarily those of the AMS or the Adminisessarily mean that a student can sit in the pub until it closes, tration. The ARGUS is authorized as second class mail by the Post Office, Ottawa, and for pay•
every night, or live for the fantastic Friday night dances on cam- mer;it in cash. All correspondence to the ARGUS main office, where ever it may happen to be at
pus. For if freedom means to live free of responsibility, a great that particular time; mail c/o Lakehead University, Port Arthur. Subscription ... $3.00; advertisi~
surprise awaits the fickle fool who shuns his duty.
rates upon request.

We are, because ...

~---111!11-llmlllllllim••-••••••-,

.,

Every student has a responsibility to himself and to his fellow
students to be aware of AMS and University affairs, and to take
active part in them. It is a ri[!.hf 'fnd a duty.

Editor
Managing Editor
Features
News
Sports
Circulation

Chuck Grieve
Chad Hannah
Bob Leggett
Rod Phillips
Larry Hebert
Gord Fu~ ushima

Being a student does nor: exempt anyone fro'!l ·commitments.
To be a student one must accept a dual commitment. One must
contribute as well as receive what is known as knowledge. As
we stated in the summer issue of this paper, the ARGUS giyes
one the golden opportunity for stating one's views, for sounding
Ah but it is sweet to wander into the Argus office on days so warm and balmy. The office behind
off, or for stating opinions which otherwise would be doome~ to
the downstairs cafeteria is so relaxing to visit. Don't be fooled by the sound of jack-hammers,
early death and little circulation. This is our purpose to provide
shovels, wheelbarrows, and general construction and destruction ... its all in illusion. There isn't
the medium for students.
really a huge pile of clay, dust, tile, and concrete in the middle of the floor. The desks and chairs
It is up to you to make sure that we do not wander from our
aren't really covered up to protect them. It's all an illusion. Or a night-mare. For us.
track.
lfflllllllllllllllllllffllll!lffllffllll'lllffllDll'lllffllllllllllllllll_ _.,.. . . . . . . . .1111111raia--11111111111M--11111111111n.•1111111111mrn1miii11iiiniiiii111iffll'llllllllllfflllillllll°d§

�September 18, 1967

On Voyeurism
by Chuck Grievt:
Pict!-lre the. typic3:I street is but heightened and sharpencorner m any city •• big -stor:s ed by prolonged exposure, lacko_n all four corn_e rs, traffic ing the subsequent and the
~1gh~s, cars and noise, and the necessary. What this society is
mev1table voyeurs. One can re- in fact fostering by accepting
flect _that these mem~ers of our this spectator sport is the
species are the act~ve exp~n- growth of deviation and lust,
ents of the most la1ssez-fa1re the worst of all evils. Statisphilosophies in our society. tics indicate that in another
How~ver, I be? to differ.
decade we may all be voyeurs,
G_1rl-watchmg, the so-named incapable of furthering our feelpastime of thousands of males ings, and even forgetting what
who _can't, don't ~ant to, or are utility the spec ta ting was origafraid to do anythmg other than inally designed for.
spect3:te, is a gl?rified_and imThe other side of the twomo~tahzed experience m maso- way mirror can be best describch1sm.
ed by another harsh label, exOn~ may perhaps dec_ry ~y hibitionism. What could prompt
harsh Judgement. Mas?ch1sm _is a person publicly to display
a sober _word, one filled with attributes naturely come by, or
connotations not pleasanc to a
t' f •all • d
d? Th
majority of peo le Wh th
ar l ic1 Y rn uce
ey must
.
P. •
Y
en be competing with one another.
does this p~achse, ~reatly
Competition may be the
frowned _upon m some cucles, spice of life to a certain exyet contm1;1ally used by others tent, but it surely cannot be
as_ the chief source ?f enter- the form of self-expression as
tamment
and recreation, per- 1·t wou Id seem t o b e any mg
· ht
s · t?
islt
b th
th t
of the week on the Main Drags.
may e
e case a a Wh
•
f
th
I
d
Certai•n image
o
e ma e an
. Y do
f all those
• affluent cars
Jump
rom
the
hghts
to a more
th e fe ma Ie was adop t e d from d
••
European society. Adaptations a vantageous position some
of this image, forced by a di£- yards further on down the
ference in ethics, stifled the b_lock? And. wh~ do the very
European practise until it was tight ~tre_tch1es_ l~n~ t~e w~Ik_s?
only vaguely recognizable as
This 1s exh1b1t1omsm m its
an offshoot of the original. By rawest_ and lewdest from_. Actthis I mean that a Frenchman ually 1t could also qualify for
for example, follows the pro: the title of . sel~-lov_e, but I
cess through to its logical cul- shudder to ep1t~m1ze 1t to such
mination, instead of whetting an exhalted pmnac_Ie. Those
his tongue anew every glance ~orced by persona~ ~nadequac(or prolonged stare, depending 1es to conform so ng1dly to the
on the stage of vulgarity of the accepted patterns are more
individual).
conscious of the envio~s looks
At a superficial
level, of ?ther~ than of anyt~mg else
voyeurism could be considered which might be happening. But
a healthy leisure-time preoccu- unfortunately the ego has no
pation. But there again we de- faculty with which to observe
ceive ourselves. The appetite the pity and ridicule in the vis-

Across Canada

Housing Shortage Worsens
OTTAWA (CUP) - From coast to coast this month, students returning to university have hit a common barrier • there is nowhere
to live.
The student housing problem is not simply a repeat of previous
year's complaints of lack of a few beds. It's panic because students are simply not able to find a bed at all.
Worst hit are those studying in Montreal. McGill, with just
over 1,300 residence beds, has more than 4,000 out-of-town students; the University of Montreal is in the same situation, and
Sir George Williams, with about 2,000 out-of-town students, has
no residences at all. And EXPO is taking up all outside housing
until thP fair ends in October.
To a lesser degree the same problem exists all over the country. With the influx of students into university in recent years
most of the money has been devoted to the development of academic facilities and hiring staff, and little has been channelled
into student housing.
The result? Simon Fraser University moved in ten trailers to
house students. "The trailers will be removed as soon as we
acquire the financial resources to build additional accomodation".
said SFU President Pat rick Mc Taggart-Cowan.
University of Waterloo is short 500 beds, and is sending its
students into Kitchener, miles from the campus, to scrounge
space.
The University of Guelph, with an enrolment of 4,300, has
1,300 residence spaces. The 3,000 students who are left out
must "go into town" and fend for themselve~.
Again, the Umversity at Saskatoon, with 7,000 out-of-town
students, hasonly600 residence spaces. To make m_at!ers w~:&gt;rs~
a recent survey showed that only .4 percent of the hvmg umts m
Saskatoon are unoccupied, and thus available to students.
The same theme repeats itself at other campuses across the
country, with very few exceptions. Also, officials at some universities are trying to set rules for off-campus living accomodations in an effort to guarantee the good conduct of students living in local citizen's homes.
. .
The situation is acute enough to prompt the Assoc1at1on of
Universities and Colleges of Canada (AUCC) to initiate a study
of student housing right across the country. Financ_ed by the
Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation, the stud)'. 1s to co!l•
sider all aspects of the housing question ... psychological, phys10logical and social effects on students. They will also report on
capital financing of living units.
.
.
. .
The study is not a day too soon. The housrng s1 tuatlon 1s becoming a crisis in several respects. Re_siden~e livi':1g at most
universities is a gruelling and unappealmg thmg. ~1th so few
residences available restrictive residences are forcmg students
into off-calJ)pus housing, cooperatives, and frat houses.

THE ARGUS

Page 5

ages of the spectators. How clo·
the~ compete but in their own
minds? The spectators are in-·
capable of retaining an image
in their retinas for much longer
than a blink if that long.
Next time you happen to
The Sun Is Set
stroll- sober into a dance, take
a good look around yourselt.
Then take a good look at yourright but he had never been the
self. Is not the same competmastermind. He had relied
itive, exhibitionist claw tightheavily on Liu Hsiao-Chih and
ening its grip on your miniChou En-Lai (both university
skirt hem,or your custom-tailorgraduates) ever since the comed shirt tail?
munist takeover of Mainland
If the above observations
China in 1949. He was totally
are correct, or tend to reflect
incapable of running such a big
upon the truth of the situation.,
country as China.
then a further deduction can
However, the fundamental
logically be made. Voyeurism
causes of Mao's downfall were
would be impractical and in
economic rather than political.
fact very hard to practise if
there was no Pxhibitionism
As a result of the Korean War
Yet I would contend that
of the early fifties, Red China
exhibitionism would decline
had suffered a series of econrapidly and even perhaps disomical setbacks. It took her a
full decade to pay up her debt
appear completely if there were
by Sze-Chung Yuan
by sending food-grains to Russno spectators to amuse. What
"The East is red,
ia.
these two customs tend to proThe sun rises;
It was Mao's firm belief that
duce in this culture of ours is
A
saviour is born in China, a drastic economical change
what is popularly called • the
He is Mao Tze-Tung... " could save the country. Thus
risque, the daring. If we did
This
little song had been the Cummunal System was innot deceive ourselves so much
we would see that this socially sung by millions of Chinese troduced in China. As the sysaccepted and expected custom and its tune had been publidy tem was to collapse, the great
of, fpr example, the new and played more frequently than the Leap-Forward Campaign was
daring look in fashions every National Anthem of Communist launched as a booster. Calyear, is simply the use of the China in the past seventeen culated to save, it destroyed
vulgar or in some cases the years until last August when the Chinese econoll'y. Mao, afobscene for the purposes of Mao emerged in Peking after a ter all, was no ecouomist. As a
pregnant silence and a long dis- result, he was criticized and
realizing a profit.
Bathing suits are the ideal appearance from the political became ill . He was persuaded
illustration of this last point. scene. His star was setting. by Liu to hand over his power,
Every year we wait with bated He was no longer the master as never to be able to regain it.
Last year Marshall Linbreath until we catch a glimpse he used to be. The cult of the
Sun-king
of
China
(in
one
of
Piao
failed to install Mao to
of the latest in swim wear.
poems written in the late his lost position. In fact, Mao
From a slight perusal of a cato- Mao's
fifties, comparisons were relogue, we can see that a new peatedly made between himself did nothave enough confidence
in the nationalistically-trained
bathing suit this year, being of and the Chinese emperors and army major. (Lin was a gradcourse a necessity, will force kings of the past) waned rapid- uate from Huang Pu Military
a total expenditure of anywhere ly though, with one last desAcademy, the Chinese version
between five and forty dollars. pairing effort, he managed to
of West Point, and served as a
Now a swimming suit is an un- have some people recite the
company commander in the
necessary item, pragmatically Mao-think on the street for a Nationalist Army prior to his
of absolutely no use but to while.
rebellion.)
comply with certain ethical
It seems a little early to
Though the picture of China
standards still clinging to our write Mao's obituary at present.. is still hazy at the moment and
culture. It even feels better to but it is by no means early to the chaotic situation will preswim sans bathing suit. So why tabulate the causes of his vail for some time before the
do they remain?
downfall.
Chinese people can find their
How does all this tie in with
Contrary to what had been direction without risking thema condemnation of voyeurism, advertised, Mao was born of a selves too much, yet this much
you may query. What I am stat- land-owning family in Hunan is clear so far: The Cultural
ing is that the practise of this Province and had a few years Revolution and the Red Guards
sport is played up by both cap- of high school education in havt- considerably weakened
italists and moralists for the Northern China. He had worked the Central Government in Peseeming utility of it. And the for a while in a library in Pe- king. Regional Army commandirony of the situation is that king before he joined the Chin- ers no longer obey Mao's diralthough both interests are ful- ese Communist Party, organized ectives. Cadres of all the
filled, a culture full of hung-up forty years ago by Chen Tu- twenty-six ranks (Mao was a
individuals is being developed. Shou, a professor at Peking first-class cadre) are at the
So the next time you lean on a University. By a single coup mercy of the rebels. The power
trashcan and oggle, remember de grace in Yenan Mao wiped of government is virtually trans• .,.
that you may . become one of out all his superiors and climb- ferred to the hand of the army.
ed to the top. He got the job all
The sun is set.
the statistical voyeurs.

comment of the vveek

One Forester's Opinion
I am sure that the majority of students,
perhaps everyone excluding foresters, often
wonder why these "uncouth fellows" chose
such a bizarre profession.
Perhaps because the tree is one of the
greatest gifts of a Creator ever-mindful of the
welfare of mankind. It conserves the soil, protects it, and adds to its fertility. It tempers
the cold of winter, the heat of summer. It lessens the violence of the gale. It helps man to
build shelters, to furnish them, and to give
them warmth. It provides clothing for his body,
medicines to cure his ills and ease his pains.
From the tree comes pigments that please
the eye and win the artist a livelihood. There
could be no symphony orchestra without the
tree . Through paper, to which men commit
thought, knowledge is shared and the mind
enriched.
Except for lichens, mosses and ferns, the
tree is the o~dest plant on earth. One of the
first to appear was the conifer. It may have
evolved in Canada because it was here, to the
north of Lake Superior and in the Laurentian
Mountains of Qu~bec,. that some of the earliest rocks and sohd soil were thrust above the
shallow seas and soggy bogs that formed most
of the earth's shape.
The tree was the first plant to develop a

stem that would not wither and die each year
as did those of its predecessors and companions, the club mosses. It struggled into being
duringthe carboniferous period some 200 million years ago.
It is fitting that the leaf of a tree should
be the national symbol of Canada. Whether or
not the most appropriate species was selected
may be open to argument, but that we should
have chosen a tree ·is not. For the stout stem
of the tree supports not only its burden of billowing boughs, but also much of the weight of
the Canadian economy. Upon our forests, more
than any other single factor, depend our financial health at home and the extent of our foreign trade. One out of every three dollars we
earn abroad flows from the harvest of the forest. All Canadians: whatever their job or location, share this wealth.
The tree is one of the Magi of man's universe. Its gifts are many, its favours manifold.
It has always been so, and if man, its trustee,
is faithful to his obligations, it will continue
to be so.
Where the tree dwells, man has a chance
to live a bountiful, happy life. Where there are
no trees, life is as barren as the landscape.
Give thanksfor the tree and in giving thanks
grant it the mercy of protection.

�Page 6

THE ARGUS

anti anti-calendar

Evaluation Fails to Evaluate

September 18, 1967

Full Time
Finance

From a humble beginning,
the University branch of the
Bank of Montreal has grown
to be of any use. It does not even evaluate courses in the Eng- considerably. For the past few
lish Department ... one in which most first year students are re- years, the bank was open only
two days a week. Tuesday and
quired to enrol.
Examples of carelessness run rampant through the "Guide's" Friday, forcing at times tht
stringent budgeting and denial
pages:
-The "Guide" dealt with courses that do not exist, such as process many of us are all too
Philosophy fa6, 2c6 and 3a6. Their non-existence· m·ay ex- familiar with. But no more.
plain thepoorresponse to questionnaires in those courses.
Manager of the Universit}
-Courses were listed with subject, number, and a brief des- bank, Larry Moore, assures us
cription, but no explanation as their significance in the that banking facilities will be
''Course Guide"; witness page 32.
available to students, faculty,
-Some courses listed lecturer but, not course description, and anyone else on the campus,
others listed course description but not lecturer.
daily. The hours of the bank
Suppose we accept that the "Guide" is unsuccessful in so will not conform to the new
far as it does not achieve its stated aim. What are the reasons?
hours just going into effect
downtown, but instead will be
on the old banking hours of
Should follow own advice
nine to three.
The reasons for the failure of the "Guide" are pJobably numOne of the factors making
ous, but a principal one is that it did not follow its own advice.
this full-time banking service
Examples:
possible was the new office
Page I: "By now you haverealizedonesimple but basic need:
space made available to the
to get an anti-calendar you need the authentic co-operation of Bank of Montreal. Th~ old
people'". But let's face it: the "Guide" did not get anything like cloak room opposite the Men's
the "authentic support". The results show that few people 1:oth- Room to the west of the Theered to return questionnaires and atteµdance at course evaluation
atre has been partitioned off to
meetings consisted mainly of the editor and her "patient assistform
increased office space
ant and torch-bearer".
Page I: "Another important factor to note is that all question- for Mr. Moore, as well as to
house the new student infonnanaires should be passed out well in advance of final exams .... "
tion centre.
This was not done.
For anyone unfamiliar with
There are a number of references in the "Guide" to the time the location of the bank, the
factor ... inadequacies are explained by the fact that "time ... forc- best way to find it is to walk
ed us into this situation". To my mind, this is no excuse. It into the University Centre and
seems to rile that if an accurate result cannot be accomplished to tum right immediately upon
within the allotted time, then the project should be shelved. A entering. But don't go too far-course guide is just that important.
the bank is right beside the
These have been random criticisms of the "Course Guide" main doors.
(time does not permit. a fuller analysis?). The whole effect of the
"Guide" is one of confusion and haste. The project should have
been abandoned when the AMS saw the poor response to the questionnaire. Unfortunately, nothing can be done about the "Guide"
now. I just hope that the editor is correct when she finds it
"hard to believe that the anti-calendar can do more harm than
CUS is the Canadian Union
good".
of Students. To it belong forty
institutes of higher learning in
Canada ( except Quebec, whose
universities belong to UGEO--l'Union Generale des Etudiants
du Quebec) and thus unites
over 150,000 Canadian students.
So much for facts and figurDon't forget the Gettysberg Address-es. But what does membership
of CUS mean to the individual
student?
Briefly, CUS involves stuFriday and Saturday-dents in their immediate society--the university; it involves
students as citizens of a nation; and it involves students
Dancing in the Great Hall
as members of a global society.
This sounds fine too. And
very idealistic. But translation
into some concrete terms defrom 9:00 until very late
monstrates the value of membership of CUS.
Operation of a Student Government Research Service
which provides information
on crucial aspects of the
university.
An annual National Seminar
on topics of vital interest to
students (see article on pg
8) and a number of specialized conferences during the
year.
A Travel Department which
arranges internal and international travel and accommodation savings.
An Interregional Scholarship
Exchange Plan (ISEP) which
allows students to spend a
year of their education in
another part of Canada.
A cheap life insurance plan.
Many more services and programmes.
CUS benefits its members
as a group and as individuals.
Every student enrolled at Lakehead University is a member of
CUS. Find out how you can
help CUS and how CUS can
help you. The CUS office on
campus is located in the Alma
Mater Society office block in
Ever get that feeling during registration?
the Students' Centre.

by Rod Phillips

1

The "Lakehead University Course Guide 1967-68" is out.
The plan to produce such a guide on the Lakehead campus
was initiated at the end of the last academic year by then Argus
editor Don Colbome. He designed a questionnaire v.:hich was
mailed to all students. The responses were collated by J eannetty
Gall .whom the AMS appointed as Course Guide editor.
Well and good. I accept that much time and effort has been
expended in preparing this publication and that it was prepared
with the best of intentions. Here I intend not to deal with the intentions or to discuss the merits or otherwise of course eva:luation; but I do intend to examine the ''Course Guide'' as it is
published.

Quite ineffective
A publication as controversial and important as a course
guide deserves extraordinary care in preparation. It is obvious
that in the case of Lakehead's guide this care has not been taken. The finished result is sloppy, carelessly researched, and, in
, its present fonn, quite ineffective.
A few statistics may illustrate these points:
Last year's Calendar listed over 300 courses; the "Course
Guide" deals with only 158 courses. What happened to the
rest? Of the 158 courses dealt with, the breakdown is:
Insufficient response
71
No Response
52
No comment at all
7
Evaluated
28
..,
Total
158
One can see, therefore, that the "Guide" evaluates less
than 10% of courses offered . .
Some departments, notably English, Anthropology, History,
Economics, and Geography are not included at all in the
"Course Guide". An editor's note mentions that "~e hope"
to publish another edition of the "Guide" to include these.
Under present circumstances, I hope not.
i·
-The "Course Guide" contains a total of 45 pages, including the difficult-to-describe cover. Of these 45 pages, only
15 are devoted .to course evaluation.
•The first run of 500 copies is expected to be followed by
a second run of 1,000 copies. This will involve a total
cost of about $675. And a supplemental edition, too?

I·

I

Few courses evaluated
These points go some way to demonstrate the ineffectiveness
of the publication .. .it simply does not evaluate enough courses

Course in Local
Government Planned
Aspirants for municipal off.
ice at any level, incumbent
members of elected bodies,
those interested in learning the
structure of civic government,
university and high school stu( dents .. are invited to take a
six-week course, one evening
a week beginning early in Octber at Lakehead University.
r Sponsors of the course are
the Ontario Conference on
Local Government, Lakehead
University and the Lakehead
Chamber of Commerce.

Consult the

main notice boards,

opposite the

Information Booth

for times of

all happenings.

The chairman of the Conference on Local Government,
J.T.A. Wilson of Toronto, commented the course had been
held successfully in Peterborough and Brantford and more
Ontario communities were adopting the project.
The main objectives behind
the program were:
: To interest the citizenship
generally in municipal affairs
by increasing their general
knowledge in this area;
: To provide knowledge to
those who would serve on public bodies, either elected or
appointed;
: To encourage prospective
high calibre candidates to serve
in their municipal governments
in one form or another.
Mr. Wilson was pleased to
announce that the Peterborough
Trades and Latour made it a
general principle that it would
not support a candidate for
civic office unless he or she
had taken the course.
President of Lakehead University, Dr. W.G. Tamblyn
voiced his complete support of
the six-week conference study
to give people the opportunity
to learn more about the concepts of government at the local level.
Dr. C.M. Johnston, Lakehead Chamber of Commerce
president, said the Chamber
was pleased to be associated
with sponsor~ip of the course.
He stressed the course was be-

ing offered to anyone in all
walks of life . . not just for
business
and professional
people.

Introducing

�September 18, 1967

Page 7

THE ARGUS

FROSH WEEK
SCHEDULE

A Few Notes to Freshmen
(and Seniors too)

admittance to

You will note that the headline of this blurb
does not discriminate in any way, shape, or
form against one or another of the two groups
which this week, more than any other week of
the next eight months, will be separated not
only in all of their activities, but also in the
thoughts of the students at the university.
And there is a purpose behind this little
piece of desegregation.
Tomorrow, at high noon, (or twelve semicolon zero zero if you prefer) the most important meeting of this entire first week will
take place. You may think that the different
faculty assemblies were important. That is
where you are mistaken. The faculties could
manage, and probably quite well, without
those meetings. But the organization this
meeting at noon tomorrow concerns (the organization most often called Lakehead University's most important society) cannot, and
I stress, cannot function in the corning year
without the support and help of the entire
student body, and that means YOU.·
Of course the organization which I am referring to is the ARGUS, student newspaper of
your university, full member in Canadian University Press, and the ship that only your
support will keep from sinking (great mixed
metaphor or something). This meeting is thus
of great importance to every student on campus, as it will detennine the course _the~GUS
will follow in the corning year. Thmk 1t over.
Here you have an opportunity to provide an
active service to your fellow students, one
which you will positively enjoy. So make sure
that you are at the meeting in the Board of
Governors room at noon tomorrow. You will
never regret being there, while you would regret missing it.

all activities

The Arts Social at the Fort William Ski

Monday, September 18 - Orientation Day
9:30 a.m.
Arts Assembly
11 :00 a.m.
Science Assembly
2:30 p.m.
University Schools Assembly
- Arts Social at the Fort William Ski Club Chalet,
open to all Arts students
- Science and University Schools Weiner Roast at
Chippewa Park
Tuesday, September 19 - First Day of Classes
• ARGUS ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING FOR ALL
AND ANY INTERESTED STUDENTS (this means
you) IN THE BOARD OF GOVERNORS ROOM
- Dance (The Rain) at 9:00 p.m. in the Great Hall.
lnterfaculty competitions to precede the dance.
Wednesday, September 20 • Movie (Walk on the Wild Side) to
be shown at 8:00 p.m. in room 1039
Thursday, September 21 - Volkswagon Push (oh yeh?) to the
Fort William Gardens for Roller Skating at8:00
p.m. and the crowning of the Frosh Prince·s s
Friday, September 22 - Gettysberg Address at 9:00 p.m.
Saturday, September 23 - Gettysberg Address at 9:00 p.m.

Buttons are
necessary for

during
Orientation Week

Pre-Wed 1 Enrolment Up This Year

A random sampling from McKellar
This year, over one hundred sharp. This is not entirely
true, for according to last
and thirty student nurses will
year's junior class, it soon bemake their way through the hallowed halls of Lakehead Uni- comes clear that ·they had one
versity. As we go to press, the of the heaviest schedules of
latest statistics reveal that any of us. Included in this
McKellar Hospital leads the timetable were university credway with fifty-one lovelies, it courses in Chemistry, Anatthe Port Arthur General Hos- omy, Microbiology, English
pital is running a close second and Psychology, as well as
with forty-eight exotics, and regularly held classes in Basic
St. Joseph's ~eneral _HosJ!ital Nursing Science, Pharmacolis trailing with thirty-eight ogy later on in the year. As if
femmes. This important and all this lecture time was not
annually much awaited event enough, the girls also had to
endure part days on wards.
strikes me as being more of an
To the knowledge of this
endowment than just an addi tinterested spectator nothing
ion to the student body.
We heartily welcome these has changed for this semester,
girls into the fold of uni".ersity so that the fresh young lilies
life and hope that they Wl 11 be- that you see around here afe
come eagerly involved in ~e under the same heavy work
all-embracing aspects of said load. All things considered,
this is enough to bring a tear
atmosphere.
.
To the average observer, it to the eye of any self-respectappeared that last year's das~ ing Artsman, whether he's busy
spent seventy-five per· c_ent of chasing a nurse already, or
their time in the cafetena, or just thinking about it.
just ...standing about looking

•• ••••

Club tonight is ooen to all Arts students and
their dates. Unfortunately there will be no admittance allowed to people other than these,
since there is a limit on the number of people
the Ski Club management will allow in.
However, the Science and University Schools Weiner Roast at Chippewa has no restrictions on attendance other than the usual confining of the activity to university students.
The necessity of buttons must be stressed.
since they are the tickets for admission.
On Wednesday the societies have banded
together to sponsor a full-length feature film,
Walk on the Wild Side, on campus. The film
will be shown in room 1039 (or the snake pit
as we .are used to calling it) starting at 8:00
p.rn.
The University Schools and Science types
have really outdone themselves on the Thursday night action. Have you evef heard of a
Volkswagon push? Well you have now. All the
way from the University to the Fort William
Gardens, with the society Presidents and the
Princess candidates inside. (Also an ARGUS
repcrter as "chaperone" in each car). Then
there will be Roller Skating starting at 8:00
p.rn. Cheap. The Frosh Princess will be
crowned atthe Roller Skating.
The big nights are Friday and Saturday, if
you are judging by the calibre of the entertainers. The Gettysberg Address will perform
both nights beginning at 9:00 p.rn. AMS president Peter Young told us that there will be
only six hundred tickets available for these
dances (six hundred per night) owing to fire
marshal's orders. Take the appropriate steps
to make sure that you are not one of those
left sitting forlornly on the steps of the University Centre only listening to the Gettysberg Address .

the address
Good morning.
It is my privilege to be able to address you
for a few minutes this morning.
You know, I make this address to firstyear students every year, but my heart never
fails to swell with pride as I look over the
mass of eager, ignorant and anonymous faces,
and I never fail to feel proud that so many
students care to fill our coffers with their
hardly-earned dollars. And your presence will
enhance rny .. .. your ... . university, and we shall
get more research grants which will give us a
good name, and more and more dollar~ from
the surrounding community and local mdustries which are so close to our pockets .. .
hearts.
You know, this is our university; it is as
much yours as mine - well, nearly as much,
anyway. Because here we are one big happy
family, no matter whether we are administration, faculty, or . .. or ... ah ... students. But as
you know, every family .. well, nearly every
family, anyway .. has a father, and you should
look upon me as a father; and every family
has a mother . . and that is the registrar and
the director of finance and the director of admissions and the comptroller and . .. well,
you know, all those people; and ... where was
I? Ah, yes... every family has big brothers
and sisters to look after the little ones, and
these .. the big brothers and sisters, that is
.. are the faculty; and you ... well, you are
the babies of the family. But you shouldn't
think that we think that you are inferior. Oh
no. Because we are all babies at one time or
another, aren't we? .. well, most ofus, anyway.
Now, I want to say a word or two .. well,
quite a few words actually • about why you
have come to university. This may seem
strange, because no doubt you think you know
why you are here. But father does know best,
doesn't he?
Where was I? Ah yes ... why you're here.
Well, of course , it's obvious that you're here
to get a degree. Some of you may get educated in the process, but that can't be helped; a
few of you always slip through. But as I ~a;; :
going to say about degrees .. what a difference those letters B.A. or B.S. mean after
your name! Do you realize .. I'm sure you all
do .. that those two little letters can mean a
difference of thousands of dollars after you
graduate? My word, yes!
Of course, while you're here, you may hear
a lot of talk about a "community of scholars"
and a "search for knowledge and truth" .. but

a word of warning. Look at the people who
talk about these things. Nearly always they
have long hair and beards and buttons about
Vietnam and they're the sort of people .who
are always demonstrating and if they don't
have long hair and placards, why, then it's
obvious that they are pretending to be what
they are not and we aren't stupid enough to be
fooled by them, are we? Of course we are.
Besides, these people probably couldn't define "knowledge" and "truth" if you asked
them. And besides, things such as knowledge
and truth are alien to our society and are for
misfits to talk about aren't they? Of course
they are.
Which brings me to the next point I want
to make .. and it's a rather important point,
too. We must at all costs keep good relations
with the surrounding community. Some stu-•
dents .. and I must stress that they are a ra•
ther silly minority .. don't seem to realize
how much we rely on the community for our
very existence. Where would our building programme be without outside support? And our
student housing? And the transportation situation? Yes, we have much for which to be
thankful. So we must be very careful and be
on our best behaviour when we are on display,
and that is all the time. Well, I'll say no more
about that now. Probably later in the year.
Oops! I'll have to cut my address shortly
because I have a meeting with the Board of
Govemcrs in a few minutes, and I can't waste
my time talking to you stupid frosh,
can I?
But what a pity we can't continue this discussion, because it's so interesting, and besides this exchange of ideas is so valuable,
isn't it? It's what our wonderful democracy is
based on, really, isn't it? Of course it is.
Well, now I've really got to run. It wouldn't
do to get fired, would it? Of course it wouldn't
Especially not at this crucial and si~nific_ant
stage in the development of our university.
Goodness me, no.
As I depart, I should like to leave Y&lt;?U with
this thought, which I hope may provide you
with inspiration and encouragemen~ during the
trials and tribulations of the ensurng year of
academic, intellectual, and e~tra-curricular
pursuits ... ah ... what was I say mg? ... ah .•.
Well anyway there's a lot more I should like
to ;ay, but don't have time. Perhaps next
year; those of you who don't ha~e to. come
back for a second go can drop m . . 1£ you
don't drop out first.
Well, must fly. Er ... next on the speakers'
list is the president of my .; . 'the.... students'
union, Mister ... Ah ... um ...

�Page 8

September 18, '1967

THE ARGUS

Why They Won't Legalize Pot
OTTAWA (CUP)-The cry
has gone out in North America
for the- legalization of pot- or to
the uninitiated, marijuana. College editors, the new leftists,
the hippies, and if NEWSWEEK
magazine is to be believed,
even the ranks of the middle
class 'are _sounding the call to
legalize a movement which
shows -all signs of becoming at
least as widespread as did
drinking during the prohibition years.
There is sound .argument for
legalization. One of the best
cases for pot is a comparison
with alcohol in terms of their
effect on health,· the degree of
addiction, the effect on the individual's ability· to control his
body and mind while under
their influence, and finally
their
social
repercussions.

Same high as alcohol
Pot produces about the same
kind of 'high' as alcohol. Both
would equally affect a person's
ability to drive a car, for instance. Pot also increases the
the appetite . But smoking pot
does not produce the discomfort one feels after drinking
large quantities of beer. And
there is· no pot equivalent to alcohol's cirrhosis of the liver.
which
causes
over
2,000
deaths yearly in Canada, and
ten times that number in the
United States. Death attributed
directly to pot are almost unknown.And another big plus in marijuana's favor is that there is
no retching from overindulgence
in pot as in the case with alcohol, and pot users experience
no hangover the day after.
Marijuana is non-addicting,
the experts point out. Contrast
this to the condition of alcoholics who are tied to their booze
for life, and who the Alcoholics
Anonymous
organization reports
are
75%
incurable.

By D. John Lynn
Canadian University
Pot advocates point out the marijuana is that such a move
difference in effect on the mind would be impolitic for the polibetween pot and alcohol. While tician, and uneconomic for the
alcohol and pot can both heigh- country.
ten paranoic feelings in the individual, this cannot be attriWhy impolitic? Society at
btited to the grass alone; it will large now considers marijuana
not make a well-balanced per- to be a narcotic drug. This has
son paranoid in itself, but it been thumped into their minds
might increase any psychol-0gi- not only by the laws which
cal condition which may exist erroniously categorize it so,
in the user. Pot sends the user but also by the social instiinto a very • euphoric state of tutions
which dictate that
mind. in which one's concen- this be so.
tration is very sharp. Some adThis for the simple reason
vocates maintain that the drug
encourages creative thought, that while he may gain some
enabling the user to soar to votes among the intelligencia
new levels of insight. This for his enlightened outlook,
could not by any means des- he would lose the support of
cribe the effect alcohol has on the masses of parents and older people who are convinced
the mind or psyche.
that pot is an evil thing.

Misconceptions

Socially, our society has
less to fear, from pot than from
alcohol. Pot, which fi!ncourages
great introspection on the part
of the user, does not encourage him to act out his emotions
in public - the spectacle of
the party drunk dancing around
with a lamp shade on his head
would not be a feature of the
pot party. Nor do pot users tend
to acts of bravadocio as do alcohol. drunks. Crimes of violence, rapes, fistfights in bars,
argumentativeness, and such
like drunken behaviour are also
not the pattern with marijuana
users.

In order for a politician to
advocate its legalization, he
must first assure- and convince
each of his voters that marijuana is indeed not a narcotic
as is heroin and the others.
This in itself would be a large
chore, because it is not simply
a case of stating the facts of
the case rationally; it is a
matter of breaking down the
deep-rooted prejudices of a
people who hav.e been led to believe that a pothead is just
one step from being a dope
addict with the archetypal
monkey on his back. There is
no sane politician on the face
of this earth who would advoadvocate giving the nation's
youth such a dangerous toy.

The picture painted by the
advocates of the legalization of
pot is on the whole, a good one.
Taxation impossible
some people in government both
Why uneconomic? The goverin Canada and in the U S proclaim that the laws should be nment
would
not legalize
liberalized in favour of pot marijuana unless it could be
users, and some even advocate used as a source of taxation
its legalization.
revenue. Cigarettes and liquor
But it won't happen. Ever. are subject to a considerab,le
special tax levy which repreWhy? For a variety of rea- sents a considerable revenue
sons, which have little to do to the government.
with the law's regard for socieIt would be next to impossty. The real reason why the
politicians will not legalize ible to handle marijuana in

no

I
■

Campus-banking
Monday-Friday
at
Lakehead University
Now you can enjoy the qmvenience of
banking facilities
available Monday
through Friday to the students and faculty
of Lakehead University . . . at Canada's
First Bank right in the University Centre
Building.
Bank of Montreal campus-banking offers
full-time, comprehensive service, with
special attention to student loans and
chequing accounts.
Banking really is better at Canada's First
Bank ... see for yourself at the Lakehead
University Campus branch.

Press
the same manner. If they chose
to sell· it through an agency
similar to the liquor outlets so
as to restrict sale to minors,
or if they chose to handle it as
cigarettes and enforced the use
of tax seals by the distributors, pot smokers would very
simply evade the tax by making
their own pot.

hardy plant which is capable of
survival just about anywhere.
Prisoners have been known to
grow their own supply in window
boxes or iri the prison flower
gardens, hidden underneath the
large!." leafed plants and flowers.

The North American supply
of marijuana comes from Mexico
in almost raw form. It requires
This is difficult to do with little preparation, and because
bdth liquor and tobacco. Liquor part of the ceremony in pot
require,s elaborate distilling p'a rties involve the ritualistic
equipment, and is also a very rolling of the weed and then the
touchy and dangerous thing to the passing around of the mariproduce. And, it is very diffi- juana cigarette from person to
cult to hide a smelly ill- person, it is unlikely that the
icit still. And with cigarettes, smokers would change
their
the tobacco plant needs a good ways and adopt professionally
deal of care in the growing, made brands for the sake of
with lots of sunlight, In order legality.
to operate with efficiency
tobacco must be grown in large
Because of these conditions
quantities. It also must be cur- therefore, it would be very
ed, once again .involving the difficult for the gove-rnment to
producer in a good deal.of work. control the cultivation of mariAnd finally, there is the pack- juana at home. Governments
aging and distribution. ·It is would end in spending a lot of
next to impossible to produce a their time in a futile effort to
cigarette without devoting time, curb the black market and home·
money and equipment to the job. grown use of pot.

Easy to grow
By contrast, marijuana prodiction does not present these
production problems. It is a

And they are not likely to
want to get themselves involved in a whole new dimension of
government control of a 1.:ommodity which is not likely to be
effective anyway.

T.V. Lectures for Psych
First year Psychology students this year will be part of an
experiment at Lakehead University. Educational television will
be used, along with tutorials,- to teach the introductory Psych
course to an estimated six hundred students.
PatWesley, lecturer in Psychology, will be the main "actor"
in the new series, being recorded on campus in the newest and
mostmodern television recording studio in Northwestern Ontario.
Included in what Mr. Wesley describes as "the whole Psychology
department;s effort" will be other faculty members lecturing on
areas of specific study of each member, as well as outside
people from whom the students can greatly benefit.
"The aim kept in mind during the setting-up period of this
televised method of lecturing is good teaching," said Mr. Wes•
ley. "I think that we can achieve good teaching with this unwieldy number of students by intelligent and careful use of television."
Coupled with the televised lectures will be regular tutorials,
in which the students are divided into a number of primary groups
for discussion of a problem, stated at the end of the lecture, pertaining to the lecture. In this way there will be no loss of the
personal contact so necessary to successful educational experiences.
The advantage of television teaching has been proven in the
past by the marks of the students subjected to this method.
While marks in many cases have remained static, there have been
many cases of widespread improvement of marks, while in no
caseshave the ll@ri&lt;.s on the whole gone down. Television teaching is a more efficient method o( diseminating information, since
the lecturer can cover more in the given time period. This is due
to the necessity of better organization of material to be presented. The lecturer must thmk and plan more carefully. His presentation is also better without the stress of the classroom." In our
case, we have adopted television teaching for its efficiency,"
said Mr. Wesley.
The added possibilities with this method of instruction are
great. It will now be possible, with the aid of the television camera to take a class of first year students into a clinical interview room, without disturbing the interview, or to present complex and delicate experiments which would otherwise• be impossible to set up in the ,classroom.
At JXesent, the five Psych Ia6 classes will view their lectures
in the Library building. The permanent installation of viewing
sets will be in Wing D South, in rooms on the north corridor of
the main building, and in one room opposite the Registrar's office. "We're only waiting for the equipment now,"Mr. Wesley said.

TWO STORES TO SERVE YOU
Centennial Square
18 S. Court Streat

Bank of Montreal
Canada's First Bank
Larry Moore, Manag~r
Lakehead University Branch

Fort WIii Iam
Port Arthur

~
WILLSON STATIONERS LIMITED
CANADA'S LARlln1' ORKZ OIJ1HlliRS

�September 18 1967

Page 9

THE ARGUS

~PAGE NINE

Ideal for
Barbecuing

Culture Coming

L.U. TO HOST ARTISTS
the sphere and its are cold
cannot endure alone, and seek a way
inventing Thing, and"they pray.
the burden of self is sold

Lakehead University has been fortunate in obtainin[&lt; some
outstanding cultural events for this Fall at a relatively low
cost to the University due to special grants throuf!.h the Centennial Commission and Festival Canada or[&lt;anizations, Because
of the limited seating capacity of the university Centre Theatre
we are [&lt;Oing to offer tickets to these productions first to the students and academic staff of the University and if there are any
tickets left over, to the public.

all now is less hard
He makes it that way
from evil and sin forgiven are they
and easy life is with conscience not marred
things now are so nice
weak are so warm.
but, strong endures the storm
and surely turns to ice
dm

haysong
le sacrifice du printemps
in the last lost greenland time of screaming
the wet shore dying into green
the taste of sunlight in the fresh smoke deadness
great grey canisters are coughing
the sun-grain blisters to the long deep ships
smoke-blue
lake-green
the white-hot funnels overflowing
the screaming rails
the dying lake
the box-car shore
and a city of harvest dungeons humming
by a great dark lake heaving
summer strangeness
gja

A Metaphysical
relinquished doubts fade from my view and in that lasting grasp on reason,
my dwindling sif!.hs bear out their conflicts upon the motion and sense
of the material screen,
sackcloth disciples of a forebearinf!. mask on time follow one another
into a misconceived illusion of spirtual excitement,
from the sighs of Prometheus bearing his torch to me and other men,
i can see at once that all quantities of excape are now preserved.
the incarnal e fear of revulsion pampers the masses to a semi-controlled
state of panic ..... wherein we race our minds psyched on any passing
type-cast man of the cloth.
a verbal insomnia clasps our spirits to a point of all-expectant glory.
seekers of predestiny converge upon the crepe-covered coffin of a late visionary
all in pursuit of vital life-scenes of another year.
the lights of man briefly flicker and die out, as we all knew they would.
in depth of what i feel, there is no path that can be described
as being a free one .....
a native of another century passed could walk proudly down the avenues of time
and surpass our virtues without fear of any measure of failure.
lapses in our sphere of relative facts are be·ing used every second
by the anamoured f?llowers of Lucifer.
on every street corner of this earth, the self-made man clutches the cross
to his breast on the sabbath ..... for that brief and fleeting moment,
he'll feel secure in the knowledge that he's paid his life-dues .....
for another six days.
of course, the night before he joyfully dipped into his six-pack of sanity
without a motion of grace to guide him.
.
.
sacrements, steeped in tradition, are spread on the vagrant inhabitants
of the jungle of man
. .
withering realities are cas~ aside in favour of a less restrtct~ve set of values
that w-i ll leave us uninhibited and prepared for an adventure tn moraltl)',
i've read the bible too, but, like my neighbour, i 111as happier to munch popcorn
while watching the movie by the same title, with additional dialogue by
and produced and directed by
. . .
, at the lo~al odeon.
besides, m)' limits on faith remain inside the boundaries of every contemporary
material is tic man.
in truth, the spacial reverance held by all men varies accordf11g t°. his own
response ..... to a baritone sermon ..... d~livered by a part-time st~ner, who
climbs to the altar with a knowledf!.e of sin unparelleled by an~ of us.
. .
the lilt of his chanting tongue pervades the air with a type of ins!ant ~ehf!.ton
"as the si[&lt;n of the immortal spirit of our d~ad brother departs. this ab1~.ct
world we are glad for him, for he bas received the [&lt;reatest vft of all.
perceptual gifts like this i don't posess, and in all honesty, i mu~t confess
that i feel that my dead brother will be waiting for the veatest vft for
some time,
l
h • h l' h
upon his ivory throne, · the immortal spirit of real ma~ mu~t aug wit re ts
at every glance at his earthly counterpart ..... deceived into an unusually
warm bed at the end of the longest journey.
chad the sinner

On Monday, September 25th the "Centennial Players" will present two one act plays "Les Fourberie de Scapin", a light Frerich
comedy by Moliere and "Arnold Had Two Wives" a tragi-comedy ,
on modem academic life by Aviva Ravel , a contemporary Montreal
writer. Both one act plays run one hour each and contrast in
theme as well as in language. The Centennial Players are made
up of 24 actors and six stage attendants, all Canadian University
students. Our students will be looking after billets for them.
They will have preyiously put on these plays at the Youth Pavilion at Expo September 11th to 14th inclusively. The Centennial Players company is sponsored by the Centennial Commission,
Over 300 students were auditioned in 30 universities from coast
to coast. The final auditions were made by Mr. Pierre Lefevre
Director of l'Ecole due Centre Dramatique de l'Est in Strasbourg.
France, who has come to Canada to direct the company here.
The student players will tour more than 20 Canadian universities
beginning at the University of British Columbia, September 16th
and ending at Memorial University on October 15.
On Monday, October 9th the famous French company "Theatre
du Nouveau Monde" will present Moliere's "Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme". This is one of the top drama companies in Canada.
The tour is sponsored by the "Festival Canada" organization,
the same group who sponsored Les Feux Follets, the Armed
Forces Tattoo. The colorful and hilarious tale of "Le Bourgeois
Gentilhomme" centres around Monsieur Jourdain, the wealthy but
common lout who attempts to buy the manners, the graces and the
aura which he thinks will admit him to the charmed circle of the
nobility. This play has lost none of its satirical bite in the period between the 17th Century when it was first produced and this
outstanding production of today. Though produced entirely in
French it is such a broad farce that the French language used in
the play shouldn't be any barrier to enjoyment.
The TNM has been invited three times to participate in International Festivals: the F es ti val of Dramatic Art in Paris, France
1955, the Brussels World's Fair in 1958 and at the Commonwealth
Arts F es ti val in London in 1965. Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme
played a two week run at Expo 67.
On Monday, October 30th the famous French Canadian Chant•
euse Monique Leyrac will appear at the University under the
sponsorship of "Festival Canada" . She is at a sensational point
in her singing career and has recently been highly acclaimed in
France, United States, Russia, as well as in her own country,
Canada. She won first prize awards in Poland, Belgium and French
Canada and has made a number of recordings. Miss Leyrac is
singing at just about every major university in Canada.
On Friday, November 10th the Chantal Masson vocal group
consisting of 25 singers most of whom are music students ~t
Laval, will be at the University. The group is sponsored through
the Centennial Commission. They gave four concerts at the Canadian Pavilion in late July. They are touring Laurentian University, the University of Manitoba and Toronto University in
November. Our students are expected to look after billets for them.
On Friday, November 24th, Donald Lautrec and Ginette Reno
will appear at the University. They are sponsored by "Festival
Canada" . Donald Lautrec has recorded over 70 songs in his
young career including the officialExpo theme song "Hey Friend,
Say Friend" which sold over 70,000 copies. He is extremely
popular in his native Quebec, particularly amongst the high
school and university crowd. He has appeared several times in
Paris and has recently signed a four year contract with Barclay
Records there. He recently appeared for a week at the "Semaine
de la Chanson'' at the Expo Theatre.
Ginette Reno is a glamorous young French songstress who
looks a little like Sophia Loren. She sings with equal ability in
English and French, specializing in singing jazz, blues and pop•
ular songs. She began her career in 1960. Following several
tours and successful appearances in cabarets, night clubs and
concert halls, she was offered a recording contract with Apex•
Records, from which her albums to date have, overnight, established her as a star among Canadian "chanteuses". One of her
records has sold over 90,000 copies. The critics in I 964 named
her "discovery of the year".
Due to the generous subsidies received, the costs for attending all five of these productions will be $5.00 for students . It
would be advised that tickets be procured at as early a date as
possible since the seating capacity in the theatre is not great.
Watch for dates and places of ticket sales in future editions.

CRAIG's SERVICE
Comer of Lelnl &amp; Artlwr Sts.
FORTWlLIAM

11/e~uet««e-'44,

&amp;t'M#fdete~U!Wke

�Page 10

THE ARGUS

September 18,

Athletic Fieldhouse Construction Commences

The Lakehea&lt;J will have a major new gymnasium-auditorium
facility ... 'hopefully before the end of Centennial Year!
Plans for an $840,000 athletic building were unveiled August
4 by Lakehead University PresidentDr. W.G. Tamblyn.
The huge gymnasium complex will accommodate 2,200 persons for basketball games and 3,200 for non-athletic events,
Thus it will be the largest gymnasium-auditorium building in
Northwestern Ontario, far eclipsing the seating capacity of Lakeview High School and the Lakehead Exhibition Coliseum. Lakeview seats 1,500 the Coliseum, 1,800.
The firstof a long range, three phaseprogram of athletic buildings, the field house will take the form of a steel girder-concrete
block gymnasium complex. The complex will house equipment
rooms, locker rooms, showers, offices, and an athletic library as
well as. the gymnasium.
.
Although the gymnasium's purpose is to accommodate the majority of the University's athletic program, this will not be its sole
use. It 'is the University's hope that this building will become
the neutral floorfor athletic competitions in NorthwesternOntario.
Furthermore, many regional non-athletic activities, such as
the Science Fair, conventions, art shows, convocation and concerts could be held in the building.
It will differ from the standard athletic gymnasium in that,
spectators entering at ground level will be 12 feet above the gymnasium floor and hence walk down to their seats. Seating capacity will be 1,400 in the fold-away bleachers with additional
standing room for 800. When a non-athletic event is scheduled
the gym floor space can 'be utilized to seat a further 1,000 people.

Arts I
Arts 11, lll, IV
Science I, Applied Science
Science 11, Ill, IV
Forestry (Diploma &amp; Degree)
Business Administration Diploma &amp; Degree
Technology - Engineering, Ryerson, Mining, Library
Nursing Diploma &amp; Degree
This year the Teacher's
College will participate in
team and individual competition but will not be eligible for
the overall intramural champ•
ionship. Last year's intramural
champion, tl1e Foresters bolstered by the addition of 80
first year Fore st Tech. students, will be out to defend
the title and attempt to increase the 30 point spread they
had over runner-up Arts 11, lll
and IV.

Intramural points are accumulated on a participation
basis, plus the standing of
teams in the individual events.
Each group can have as many
teams and as many participants in individual sports as
they desire. A complete breakdown of the point system will
follow in another edition of the
ARGUS.
The following are the sports
events scheduled for the fall
term:

Golf
The last signing date for
the Intramural Tournament is
September 29, 1967. Five man
teams will participate with the
best four to count. A 27 hole
tournament is scheduled for
October 1, 1967 at the Strathcona Golf Cours.e, top candidates to be eligible for the
Ontario Intercollegiate Athletic Association tournament in
Hamilton October 5, 6.

Cross Country
The new sport attempted
this year, will begin workouts
daily on September 25, 1967.
Races will be held September
30, October 7 and October 14,
1967. It is expected that all
persons anticipating playing
intercollegiate sports will be
present, as well as others interested.

Fastballers
Fare Well
In the maiden season of the
Nor'Westers Fastball team in
the Intermediate League, they
have fared well. After a slow
start the L.U. squad battled
their way to convincing wins
over Videon and Great Lakes.
By the end of the regular schedule Lakehead had tied with
Videon for the fourth and final
playoff spot. The Nor'Westers
then went on to defeat Videon
three to two to attain the playoff berth.
Videon, an established club,
did not make the playoffs because they could not beat the
young Nor'Westers. L.U. won
five . of the six games played
between the two clubs in regular season play.
In the semi-finals, Lakehead
met the Great Lakes Papermen
and forced the best-of-five series to the limit before losing
the series three to two with
one game tied. The Papermen,
who eventually won the Intermediate crown, admitted that
~he Nor'Westers gave them the
most trouble.

RIGHT OUT?

"It is the hope of the ·Athletic Department that this Field
House will become the sports centre of all athletics and athletic
events in Northwestern Ontario," said acting Athletic Director
Henry Akerval.
"This building is the first in a series that eventually will encompass facilities for every major competitive sport played at
the University level, and all sports played primarily for recreation. These facilities will be used on a year round basis, and unless they are being used directly by the University, they will be
available to others for tournaments and championship games."
The long-range plan of new facilities brings up the distinct
possibility, Mr. Akerval predicted, that national and even international sporting events could come to the Lakehead.
"Our central location has always been a major asset in hosting sports events," he added. "This may all be speculation at
the moment but it is a distinct possibility in the future as facilities expand to meet the needs of our campus and our area."
Gymnasium floor markings will, at any one time, accommo■UTA-Alff
date eight doubles badminton, or three volleyball courts, or two
tennis courts, or two full •,size basketball courts, or one centred
intercollegiate basketball court with glass backboards and two
score time clocks at opposite ends of the building.
DOWNTOWN
As well as providing facilities for these major sports, the 115
foot by 120 foot gymnasium will provide area for activities such
PORT ARTHUR
as archery, fencing, golf, gymnastics, weightlifting, wrestling.
and track and field training. A curtain which divides the gymnas- .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _•
in two will enable many of these programs to be carried on simul- ,..111111111_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
11
taneously.

TUNE II

GET ON I

lntramurals Commence First Week of Term
The 1967-68 Intramural
Program is set to commence
with the opening of classes.
The fall program has been organized to encompass twelve ..
intramural sports. The remaining intramural sports will be
announced when the Athletic
Building is completed.
This year the breakdown for
participation in intramural competition will be eight groups as
follows:

1967

Swimming
Swimming will be conducted
in the Port Arthur YM-YWCA,
evenings. A learn-to-swim program. Royal Lifesaving Society program, open swimming,
and, should interest develop, a
water polo tournament, will be
conducted. Classes to begin
Monday, October 9 - 8:45 to
9:45 p.m.

Table Tennis
The last signing date for
the tournament will be October
10, 1967. Competition begins
October 13 through 17, 1967.
Equipment and table reservations to be made at the Athletic office.

Chocolate drink
is just
chocolate drink
.. ..unless it's

Modern Dancing

Modern Dance classes will
be conducted Wednesday evenings beginning October 11 in
Handball
the Great Hall. Classes will be
The last signing date for as follows: from 7:00 to 8:00
Handball is October 24, 1967.
p.m. Jazz and Tap Dancing;
Competition to begin October 8:00 to 9:00 p.m. Classic and
27', 1967 through to December Modern Dane ing.
1, 1967. •Rules for Squash and
The Intramural Sports ProHandball are available at the gram is designed for student
Athletic Office for beginning participation. If little or no
Squash and Handball players. interest is shown in a particThen you know
ular sport it will be taken off
it's
Quality Chekcn
Tennis
the program.
An intramural knockout tournament will begin October 9,
BOOK DEPT (TOTTON'S NOTES)
1967. The last signing date for
competitors is October 6.
SCM PORTABLES
Games to be played on the Unie ATTACHE CASES
versity tennis courts.

•e

Squash
Squash tournaments to begin October 20 through to the
24th. The last signing date is
October 17. Reservations for
court time available at the
Athletic Office. Matches to be
played at the University squash
courts.

e

PRECISION INSTRUMENTS

BUSINESS SUPPLY
LAKEHEAD'S LEADING BOOKSELLER
AND OFFICE PRODUCE DEALER

�September 18, 1967

THE ARGUS

Page 11

Basketball -Coach Named
Hi gang. Great to be back at the old homestead. To start the
year off in fine fashion I'd like to give a wrap-up of the events
of the sumirer, as well as make a few predictions.

••••••••••

The Lakehead U. Athletic Department was right on the beam
again in mid-August when they released this year's intercollegiate hockey schedule. I'm sure everyone is so interested in hockey in August that they cut it out of the local papers. Let's have
some coordination between press releasing and the season when
the schedule actually takes place.

••••••••••

Congratulations to Bill Shannon, last year's athletic coordinator at Lakehead. Bill has been named coach of the Lakehead
Mustangs football team this year. Good luck, Bill.

••••••••••

Mr. George Birger is Lakehead University's new athletic director
and basketball coach. Congratulations to Mr. Birger, for
being named coach, and congratulations to the Athletic Department for finding him.
My football precictions, unlike my baseball predictions, seem
to be infallible. (San Francisco and Baltimore to win the pennents?) I predict that Green Bay will win in the N.F.L. while
Buffalo seems to have the edge in the A. F .L. Green Bay will
win its second Super-Bowl in January.
Notre Dame will top the American college polls while I see
Queens in the east and Manitoba in the west as Canadian University powers.
Oh yes, the C.F .L. (just about forgot the bush league). Saskatchewan will waltz, will £rug (my own cliche) to its second
straightGrey Cup victory.

••••••••••

As indicated by the previous football coinmen ts, I hate "Canadian Pro" Football. It's dullsville. I'm not the only one who
sees it that way though. The C.B.C. will televise over one hundred N.F .L. games this year, with the number of C.F.L. games
drastically cut. The C.B.C. could be putting itself in such a
position as to be deported to France "a la De Gaulle" for such
an unpatriotic (but correct) move.

••••••••••

I would like to apologize to one Bob Bond Sr. for my comments on Cassius Clay during a summer issue. I realize Clay is
wrong for not wanting to defend his country but his Government
is going after him in an unfair manner.
The boxing world') I-hope, will collapse. Clay had previously
saved it from ruin. What kind of justice strips a man of his titles
as soon as his back is turned, after that man has done as much
as Clay has done for boxing?

••••••••••

This past summer was a fine one for junior golfers from this
area. Jay Paukkunen won the Canadian Junior Golf Title and
Manfred Brovac was a member of the Manitoba Junior Golf team.
Eat your heart out Moe Norman.
•

••••••••••

I think the Lakehead, and Fort -William in particular, has the
right to be called the baseball capital of Canada. For the second
straight year, the Fort William American Little League All-Star
team capt tred the Canadian title. They represented Canada at
the World Series in Des Moines, Iowa, and won Canada's first
tournament victory there.
The Fort William National Little League team lost a close
game en route to the Ontario Championship but never gave up.

••••••••••

Once again the Senior Fastball League of Fort William led by
Bill Bond held its annual tournament. This has to rate as one of
the nation's top fastball tournaments with more and better teams
entering each year. Superior Cartage, the Canadian Huskies, and
the Suprej ;e Cleaners, three Lakehead representatives, all gave
good accounts of themselves in the tournament.

••••••••••

Speaking of baseball, this year the Lakehead Senior Baseball
League Pennant was won by Italia. One of their key players in
the play-offs was Al McLean of Queens University.
In that series, ·probably more of the games could have gone
~he full nine innings if the Fort William Stadium had had lights.
'I hope that next year, for the sake of Senior Baseball which is
again becoming popular, lights will be installed.

••••••••••

An indication that baseball is on the upswing is the fact that
~finnesota Twins' area scout, Ed Cox, was able to send six boys
~o this year's Twins summer try-out, and three were called back
or the second day.

OLIVER ROAD
ED CLIFF

ESSO SERVICE

For all your car needs
Gas otl lube tlreR &amp; acoeseorrea
Motor tune up &amp; repal"rs
Next to university
TEL. 344-2231
,

George Birger
A highly-qualified basketball coach from the United
States has been named the Athletic Di rector at Lakehead University.
George Birger, B.S., M.S.
has assumed duties as basketball coach and athletic director
after an impressive career in
college and high school south
of the border.
The acting athletic director
and hockey coach Henry Akerval has stepped into the newlycreated position of Director of
Intra-Mural athletics at the University. He will continue as
hockey coach. Bill Shannon
will remain as Athletic Co-ordinator.
The appointment meant a big
step forward for the athletic
program according to Henry
Akerval.
"Mr. Bir"ger is the type of
person and has the type of
qualifications that will give our
program depth and direction,"
said Henry. "Our rapid growth
is a tremendous challenge but it
is also a great potential. We
were lucky to find a person
with George's background and
with his direction. I am sure
that we will be able to tap that
potential and produce an even
more effective varsity and intra-mural program that will
bring great credit to the Uni versity and the Lakehead in
general."
Mr. Birger, 38, obtained his
B.S. in Education and Physical
Education at Northern State

College and his M.S. in Education and Administration at the
State University of South Dakota.
During his undergraduate
years, in addition to his regular academic endeavours, he
was active in basketball, football, track, baseball and wrestling.
He was assistant coach of
the State University of South
Dakota Varsity Team and coach
of the Junior Varsity team while
working towards his M.S. degree. Then from 1963 until thi"s
year, he was Athletic Director
and Head Basketball Coach at
Soda Springs Idaho High School,
where in 1967 he won the Idaho
Basketball Championship.
His lifetime coaching record consists of 249 wins and
77 losses. His outstanding
coaching ability during his stay
at Soda Springs speaks for itself, however.

In 1963-64, Soda Springs
won one and lost 16 games.
The next_year, with George as
coach they won 10 games and
lost 12. In 1965-66, they hit
the top with a 22-3 record.
Last year the Soda Springs
Team became the Soda Springs
Champs, Conference Champions, State Tournament Champions and Associated Press
Champions, losing only two
games en route.
Mr. Birger was optimistic
about his new position and the
whole program of athletics at
Lakehead University.
"Lakehead University has
been extremely fortunate in
having people like Henry Akerval and Bill Shannon in the
important formative years. I am
sure that with their support
and background knowledge our
program will flourish. I am especially impressed with our
record of championships from
last year. Our hockey team, ski
team and basketball team all
won championships in their
competition and that is an enviable record."
The recently-announced new
gymnasium
brought further
wordsofpraise fromMr. Birger.
''Of course I am very optimistic about bringing a good
overall program of basketball
to the Lakehead University.
But the new facilities will be a
great boon not only to the basketball programs but to all varsity and intramural programs
and I am sure that the interest
the new building generates will
s~ead throughout the area to
all comers of the sports world."
Mr. Birger is married and has
four children ... "one short of a
basketball team'' as he puts it.

FINEST QUALITY CUTTING &amp; TAILORING

Mike &amp; Joseph's
DISTINCTIVE CUSTOM TAILORING
10141/4 Victoria Ave.
Fort William, Ont.

Phone 622-8022

EVEN .ON A STUDENTS
SALARY YOU CAN

AF'FORD
a
FORD
NOW!!
VEAR-END PRICES ARE THE LOWEST IN '671

GIBSON ltlOTORS
(1962) LlltllTED
Intercity

Dial 344·7235

�Page 12 .

AMS

DATELINE CANADA

Nemissa

TORONTO (CUP) .. Although Ontario's hated grade 13 departme_ntal _examin3:tions were written forthe last time in June,
there 1s still no sign that grade 13 itself will be abolished.
E~ucation Mini~te~ William Davis has effectively skirted
the issue of abohshmg grade 13 by announcing all the major
recommendations of a recent commission on grade 13 had been
adopted.
But the main recommendation of that committee was the
abolition of grade 13 itself.
.Orig~nally intended t? give all Ontario students first year
umvers1ty at low cost, 1t soon became a barrier to university
when over-crowding in the senior institutions became acute.
Grade 13 became a screening year which weeded out all but
tOJ.? stu~ents. Many. students who were capable of attending a
umvers1ty, and domg well, were eliminated because of extremely high examination standards.
After a few years of this trend, grade 13 examinations, set
by a central body and written simultaneously throughout the
province, became a psychological barrier themselves. Creativity and expression in the classroom gave way to rigid adherence to the timetable so students could be best prepared
for the all-important finals.
Now that the examinations are abolished, and each school
will set its own; teachers are being encouraged to make more
use of discussions, seminars, projects and other less restrictive forms of learning.

NEMISSA, the Women's society of Lakehead University,
derived its name from an Ojibway term meaning sister-hood.
The organization is a bond of
union among the full-time female students of all faculties,
and it performs services in the
interest of the university. The
executive • President Sandra
Knight; Vice-Pres. Irene Kidd;
Sec.-Treasurer Joan Stuart; and
Public Relations Head Barbara
Coghlan, wish to welcome all
new female students to the
happy hunting ground, and to
extend a cordial invitation to
the Nemissa Initiation Night
which will be held during the
last week of September.

Yearbook

Infiltration Charges Denied by CYC
OTTAWA (CUP) .. The executive director of the Company
of Young Canadians has denied that his organization is the
victim of a Marxist take-over.
Alan Clarke said there were some CYC members with leftist opinions, but there had not been a take-over or attempted
take-over by any group.
The charges that a Marxist group was infiltrating the company were laid in the Montreal Gazette. The Gazette used for
the ~asi~ of its story an arti_cle, published in Scan, written by
a V1ctona CYC member, Lyn Curtis. Scan is a communistoriented magazine published in Toronto. The article referred
to "the rotting middle class" .. a phrase which the Gazette
reportedly took exception to.
Curtis's article suggested any radical who wanted to for.
ward his ideas and gain substantial backing should join the
CY_C. He said there was a leniency within the organization
which allowed the members to do almost what they wanted.
He also said that he was pleased with the executive director's handling of the Gazette's charges.
"1:he official CYC position has improved greatly since the
last time we played one of these little games. This time the
national office has stood behind the members and defe~ded
their actions. This shows a definite growth within the organization," Curtis said.

Lakehead University is again publishing a year-book and
like last year it will be increasing in size and in quality. The
1968 edition will consist of
216 pages in black and white
and in colour. Approximately
40 of these pages will be allotted to individual photos of
the undergraduates. Pictures of
professors, plus all events of
the school year will appear.
For those who failed to
place their orders for year
books at registration, orders
can be placed with Miss Sharon
Matchett, AMS Secretary, or at
the switchboard.
The cost per copy is $5.00
for all students and faculty.
For those who purchased
last year's yearbook the publisher has infonned us that the
books will arrive September 21.

Davis Appoints Another Commission
TORONTO (CUP) .. Education Minister William Davis of
Ontario has appointed a government commission to chart the
course of university education in the province into the 1980s.
The commission's role will be to define the future role of
all post-secondary institutions ... universities, community colleges, vocational institutes, teacher's colleges ... and to report
back to the government within eighteen months.
Although it is not a royal commission this special commission's report is to be published.
The commission will be composed of three full-time and
ab_out 12 part-time members, including one student representative.
It was the minister's wish that the commission "clarify ...
once and for all that no able student in this province will
ever be denied the opportunity to proceed to higher education
if he has the desire and ability to do so."
He noted he had not yet completely satisfied student demands for more government assistance with the costs of education, but said that student protests over the issue have been
carried out responsibly.
Referring to protests voiced by the Ontario Union of Students last year he noted: "While, like most members of the
adul~ community,_ I do not necessarily enjoy it or even encourage 1t, I accept 1t and feel an obligation to work with the students in resolving the issues which have led to it."
" .. .I would acknowledge that the philosophy voiced by the
students may differ somewhat from that held by the general
adult community and would take us down the road to free
higher education faster than our economy would seem to allow."
Ju~ging from past performances Davis has a penchant for
committees. In a recent speech in the legislature on the subject of Ontario grade 13, he referred to no less than 43 comm-.
ittees, past, present, or to be appointed.

oR1vE-1N

Commencing with the appearance of Volume 2, Number I of
the ARGUS, this space is reserved for classified advertisments
of all shapes, sizes and varieties. As the ARGUS swings into
its second big year of publication, with 3,000 copies being
printed weekly, we are offering you the best bulletin board on
campus. For a token fee we will print your every desire, (almost), in this mighty paper. As examples we offer to sell your
Honda 50, now that winter is drawing nigh, or for you slackards, we will find someone to type your English la6 essay with
precision to be matched only by those on the ARGUS staff.
Rates for ads as follows: 10¢ per word for a minimum of 5
words, and 5¢ per word for each word thereafter. Formonthly
rates, drop into the ARGUS office and consult the Advertising
Manager.
TYPING DONE
WANTED
With skill and accuracy, 20¢ Associate Editor for the ARGU
per page. Call Mary Mercy
• inquire at the ARGUS office.
344-3616.
TYPING DONE
FOR SALE
restology la6 Lab notes and Reasonable rates, CoHee
quipment. Inquire at Lab. Everett. Call 623-2692.
12:00 • 12:00.
WANTED
WANTED
Advertising salesmen, gener- Fem ale companion for Ion el
ous
commission.
Inquire Managing Editor of the ARGU
• Call 345-6237 after 7:00 p.m.
ARGUS.office.

Budgets
All Clubs, Societies and Organizations who will require
an A.M.S. Budget for the coming term must have them submitted to the A.M.S. Secretary •
ready for typing • no later than
5 p.m. on Oct. 6/67. If any club
has not submitted their proposed budget by that time, it will
be assumed that they wi 11 not
require any money from the
A.M.S. during 1967-68 year. No
late budgets wi 11 be accepted.

ROYAL TRUST
SETS THE PACE
IN SAVINGS
111

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EARN

4½%

by
The man who breaks with tradition is a young manno matter how old he is.
T. F. IS A COLLECTION OF ...
• Exclusive selected fabrics and patterns styled for the
young and the young at heart.
• Comes in the new GRANT button down collar.
• Authentic French placket at front.
•Contos tailored body for a slimmer appearance.
• White delta super fine buttons-the finest available.

I

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'\

CALCULATED ON
MINIMUM MONTHLY
BALANCE
202 ARTHUR STREET

623-0932

Most Styles $6.00

OPEN
LONGER HOURS
Mon. to Thurs. 9-5
Friday 9-6

• Authentic banded
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• Hanger loop.
eBozpleat.

Port Arthur

We specialize in chili hamburgers
804 W. ARTHUR ST·

Classified

Notes

Departmentals Go, 13 Stays

Skyline

Se%tember 18, 1967

THE ARGUS

,.■.
122 W. FREDRICA ST.

EVANS
(WEST) FORT WILLIAM

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                    <text>... there

Yes

is a

Virginia .....

VOLUME 2, No. Ill

Peter
Young
LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY, PORT ARTHUR, ONTARIO.

October 5, '1967

TWELVE PAGES

SECESSION!

Is President Tamblyn in a nit?

Fort William Reneges

•
to he reduced
Bus service
Students from Fort William attending the University
for evening classes will be
forced to resort to the thumb
if they do not have their
own vehicles.
In a memorandum from
Mr. D. Morgan to University
Committee Members September 28, it was disclosed
that the Fort William Trans-

it Coml_)aJly is losing money
on the university bus service. The memorandum
states:

estimate incorrect
"The Fort William Tr.ansit Company have maae an

exhaustive study of the buses
both to and from La.kehelid
University. It was originally
hoped that there would be
approximately fifty students
per bus load." The average
use of the bus service ranges
from twenty students per
load to one student ·with the
whole bus to himself.
"On this basis the total
loss per day to the Fort
William Transit is $53, on
an all inclusive basis including overhead. However their
direct loss amounts to $19
per day."
The memorandum also
stated that the Manager of

Weiler new V. P.
■

In the by-elections ~ld
last Friday, Bill Weiler,
Arts III, was elected to the
post of Vice-President of the
AMS Society. The selection
was made on a yes-no ballot.
In the Socl~tyby-elections
held at the same time, six
positions left vacant through
the failure of elected students· to retain sufficient
academic standings were
also filled.
Tom Goodman, Arts III,
was elected Vice-President
of the Arts Society, winning
Bill Weiler
out over Gary Kunnas, also a
yes-no vote, Fred Wiln?,ot
third year Arts student,
The Science Vice-Presi- was elected U. Schools
dency race saw Glenn Mac- Treasurer.
Leod chosen over Bill MerCouncil Elections
cer, while Gary Kinoshita
Elections
for AMS. Coungained the office of Secretary
cillors are being held this
in a yes-no vote.
Dave Roden. Forestry II, Friday,,_ October 6. Make
was elected to the position sure you take part in this
of University Schciols Vice- democratic process by votPresident. Other candidates ing for your representatives.
Chief Justice Bert Baufor that post were Wayne
Aitken and John Hickey. New mann noted that there wer~
Secretary of the University many spoiled ballots in the
Schools ls Debbie Bryant, executive by-elections. It
Library Tech. II. Also run- seems people forget that the
ning for that · position was proper mark on a ballot is
Chris Kierzowski, In a third an x.

the Fort William Transit
planned to recommend to
the October 2 meeting of the
Fort William Council that
the 7:15 arrival and 9:00departure times be dropped.
This would save the Transit
Company approxima,ely $5
per day in direct costs.

subsidies requested
It was proposed tha(La.kehead University be P.repared
to subsidize the Fort William
Transit authority for their
direct losses. On the basis
of the.Ir calculations this
'Nould amount to $14perday.
$70 per week, or about $2000
for the academic year.
The Manager of the Transit Company also stated that
unless La.kehead University
was prepared to subsidize
the company for their losses,
they would be forced to
cancel the service.
He also pointed out that
the coming cold weather
would likely induce more
transit traffic. This would
reduce the actual loss per
day.

first year of service
The original agreement
between the University and
the Transit abthority in Fort
William was months incoming. Red tape and cold feet
hampered negotiations between the two. There were
no buses running directly to
the University from Fort
William last year.
The bus service was initiated on September 18 this
term. From the beginning it
received light usage. HC?wever. as stated, the cold
weather should see business
picking up.
This matter of transportation will be discussed at the
October 3 meeting of the University Committee.

October 6, 1967
Lakehead University has seceded from Port Arthur. The
announcement was made in a broadcast monitored by the
P.U.C,, and is believed to have originated from a clandestine radio station in Wing D. At one point, the broadcast
proclaimed the establishment of the Grand Duchy of Sugra.
The announcement stated in part: "This is a victory fo.r the
people led by our glorious Grand Duke William. It ls a
defeat for the capitalist warmongers and their lackies. J.,&lt;mg
live the Grand Duke I"
The Grand Duchy will be ruled by a revolutionary council
consisting of one Grand Duke, two students, three faculty
and a partridge in a pear tree.
World reaction has been mixed, as reports are still
streaming in from all parts of the globe. In exclusive
ARGUS interviews with major world leaders, the following
statements were recorded: President Jockstrap: "This is
obviously the work of a small communist minority. The Free
World must use every facility - including peaceful means.
if necessary - to bring the aggressors to the conference
table.•• The President added that "526,000 Military and
Economic Advisors, with artillery support, were being
airlifted into the area."
General Dieu Gall: "Vive le Grand Duchy librel"
Meow Tse Tongue: "This is a decisive triumph in the
heroic struggle of the valiant and oppressed people of
La.kehead University.••
The Prime Minister. who was feting a visiting dignitary•
was not available for comment.
It is rumoured that Mayor Paul Hatpin will seek support for economic sanctions against the Grand Duchy.
Included in the list of prohibited commodities would be:
Christmas cards, blue vein cheese,. salt petre, buttons,
and• suspenders. It is hoped that the inaccessability of
essential items such as these will crush the rebellion
within a few hours. However, the Grand Duchy has negotiated with the u.s.s.R. for supplies, and reports of steppedup air activity in the Soviet Union indicate that these negotiations have been more than successful.
Preparations for the long struggle ahead are already being
made within t.he Grand Duchy. and the frontiers have been
closed to all traffic, Trenches, which would stop all but
the most rugged of vehicles, have appeared in the principle roadways. Military excavations are obvious in many
places. and strategically placed observation posts erected.
Military action in Vietnam and the Middle East has decreased noticeably as the world tensions focus on Port
Arthur. In the U,N. the lights burn late into the night as
the representatives of world powers meet in closed session. Only the Croation delegate, who caught cold while
digging ve_getables in his garden last Saturday, was absent
from the debate. The delegate, Mr. Gudenov, 43, married
wit~ four children. has been in the diplomatic service for
sixteen years. and grows many of his own vegetables.
Other developments in tile crisis include the sighting of
unidentified submarines in Thunder Bay and reports of
sporatic guerrila action in and around the Sleeping Giant.
As we go to press, no resolution to the crisis is in sight.
Perhaps the most astute analysis of the situation came
from the C,B,C. 's Stanley Birch: "It is neither difficult
or easy to see the final result. On the contrary. And above
all good night.••

Expect Confrontation
A recent memorandum from Dean Rothney concerning
degree :r-equirements and eligibility for graduation has
caused a •great deal of indignation and complaint among
third and fourth year Arts students.
The main complaint seems to be the apparent contradictions between guidance received from faculty members
and from Administrative officers.
At a meeting of third and fourth year Arts students in the
Auditorium last Friday, a commission was set up to study
the problems arising out of this dictum from the Dean of
Arts.
Informed sources say that the commission cannot accept.,.,- ·
Dean Rothney' s memorandum.
At press-time, all indications would seem to point to a
meeting with Dean Rothney. President Tamblyn, and Mr.
Ayre Registrar, tomorrow at 1:00 in the Auditorium. All
Arts 'students, particularly potential graduates, are strongly
urged to attend this meeting and lend active support to the
commission.

�Page 2

October 5, 1967

THE A~GUS

Forestry student fined,
barred from AMS functions

L

"Yes you can
contin~~r

A second year Forestry student has been fined fifty dollars
by the Judicial Committee of the AMS.
The Judicial Committee heard this case in its first session of this academic year, held Thursday, September 28
in the Great Hall. Chief Justice Bert Baumann presided
over the Cou:tt.
The charge was kicking a proctor on the night of Septem ...
ber 16 without cause or provocation.
Technicalities hampering this first sitting arose out of a
misunderstanding on the part of the defense counsel Mr.
Ian Thompson. The name on the summons apparently was
incorrect. After a court recess for ten minutes, during which
time the defendent could not be contacted, Chief Justice
Baumann called an adjournment until Friday, September
29 at 12:30.
The original misunderstanding arose when prosecutor
Art Looye called the court's attention to the fact that the
mistake in the summons could be corrected in court. Defense
counsel was unaware of this fact, and consequently the defendent had not appeared.
When court reconvened, the defendent was present. The
defendent entered a plea of guilty to the charge as read by
the clerk.
In the course of the trial to determine the extent of the
charges, the court called three witnesses, all proctors.
Details of the offense were outlined by these witnesses.
When the defendent was called· to the stand, he stated that
he was in a semi-intoxicated state at the time when the violation was committed. Upon seeing a friend of his in a scuffle
with a proctor, he impulsively intervened by kicking the proctor in the chest.
After recession, the court called the accused to the floor
and proceeded to pass judgment. The seriousness of the
charge could not be over emphasized stated Chief Justice
Baumann. This point was stressed above all. The court also
pointed out that intoXication of any kind is not tolerated by
the students at La.kehead University.
The court, considering the emotional factor in the case,
levied a fine of fifty dollars on the student charged. In addition, the accused was barred from all AMS functions, whether
on or off campus, until after the Chrtstmas holidays.

.edllcat1on.!' •

This booklet shows you how
you can get financial help.
Do you plan to attend a university
or other post-secondary institution?
Do you need financial assistance?
To learn whether you can qualify
under the Ontario Student Awards
program, obtain this brochure from
your secondary school, or from the
institution of your choice
or write to:
Student Awards

Department of
University Affairs,
481 University Avenue
Ta
2

ONLY MUSTANG
MAKES IT HAPPEN!

ah.! ihe trials awl

ii-ibulai.Io.ns ofspqt-~!
eve~ 1?101'"n~ our

flut_:ty friend would
ln.eet up wfth a chap
on 1:'he same ma:!el
of .Honda. as 1ter.s,

Md they wou.L:1 stapp
an impn,rnP}E,,, drag
in ca:mpus. ="'-"

could a1.w~ys r ~ nize him DY. his
flash_x l:&gt;1ue hel:meiwit'h, the :big Mon
the fit&gt;nt.

~~~~k,
to -1.'alk ever ~ __ ..

'5t1~ha:t'Qer.w~.w
-io Clteh. :heK) £ak.e OILt'

her adversary: once
and ibr aiwass.

wemtts~~~t
"Kl
fJ'.na iruat famous
51\eWfl.S SW

blue he,hri.e~ perched,
jau.nU~ on. i1ie top
ruil-ler tf -t'he mana~r's eoai t-reet
"I wam a loan- lo
l,u,y a su.i;er-e,11,a.~

to I'ake ~ OU,t ....

She mumbled. llle

ll'\a?1.~ 1audhed

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�October 5, 1967

I

Page 3

THE ARGUS

they sing thos·e Canadian songs

I

three men and a girl
Canada's minstrels
of the miles

THE TRAVELLERS
Thre'e boys and a girl step
on stage: the audience shushes
and shifts around uncomfortably. Pop bottles are knocked
over, everyone is nervous, the
P.A. system crackles, The
first chord ... the voices from the
first are sure, confident, enthusiastic, proud ... the audience is electrified ... the first
song JZnds ... wild applause.
The same thing happens twice
more. Five minutes of ecstatic
applause. The group has exhausted its repertoire of three
songs. The applause thunders
on. The group sings the same
three songs agai~ acknowledges the applause,. exits
beaming and exultant. The
Travellers folk song group is
born,

This was Toronto, 1953.
After fourteen years and half
a million miles, the Travellers have become recognized
as Canada's foremost
apostles of Canadian folk
music. Indeed, apostles of
music in general, including
one thousand songs in sixteen
different languages.
The Travellers have wowed full houses half way
around the world, including
six cities in Russia in 1962,
various partA of G re at

Britain in 1964 and 1965, as
well as alloverNorthAmerica. They have appeared on
numerous national television
shows in Canada, the United
States, and the United Kingdom. The number of concert
performances that they have
presented is too great to
account.
Universities all across
Canada have echoed the
sounds of the Travellers'
music, and Lakehead University is the next in line,
October 30 to November 4
when the Travellers will
·appear live at the University
Theatre.

they play Canadian
The most striking feature
about the Travellers' performance is the fact that they
play Canadian. Of the seventeen thousand Canadian folk
songs collected and recorded
in the Dominion Archives in
Ottawa, the Travellers have
polished, revised, and refined some two hundred of them.
As far as they are concerned, there are no sacred
cows that cannot be satirized
through song. For example,

they sang one song called
"National News":
Paul Hellyer' s determined to cut down defense,
But Bob McNamara says
"Hang the expense I
As partners in NA TO,
we'll split fair and
square,
You give us the skies,
we'll give you the air!"
This song, though now dated,
is reportedly being revised
constantly to keep it up with
the times. But it indicates the
style of song which this very
versatile group presents.

However, they do· not restrict themselves to one
style of music. Running the
gamut from a capella traditional folk songs to Indian and
French-Canadian folk songs
to the latest folk-rock type
sound, the group shows the
colour, range, depth and
beauty of Canadian music.

banjo-playing dentist
Of the original group from
the early fifties, only one
member remains. Jerry
Gray, dentist in the straight
world, is the banjo player,
main emcee, and baritonetenor vocalist. Jerry fell in
love with the banjo after
hearing Pete Seeger in the
early fifties, and has played
it ever since. "Audiences
have become more discriminating," says Jerry. "They
want something which is entertainment, which will provoke them and excite them.
Folk music has this power.
Often, words which could not
be spoken, or meanings
which could not be conveyed
by the spoken word, can have
a new emotional imp act
through a song." A native of
Toronto, Jerry has managed
so far to "enjoy the financial
security of a dental practice
and the excitement of show
business" simultaneously.
The girl of the group,
Simone Johnston, adds a full
dimension of "woman" on
the stage, by her attitude of
dignity during any performance. A double cultural
heritage of Russian and
French - Canadian make s
Simone's presence felt' on
stage. She plays no instrument but makes up for it by
adding greatly to the show
through her versatility of
voice. "Too much of the stuff
we do is candy floss,•• she
complains. "Be ca u s e we
want a Canadian image as
all-around nice guys, we
straddle the line between
social protest and mass
popularity. In trying to make
our material palatable to the
public, we run the danger of
refining the guts out of it. I
believe a folk singer ought
to be preaching in music, hot
and strong, about what is

happening i n the w o r 1cf"
today." And adding Quebec
separatist songs to their
repetoire an d protesting
against the u. s~ intervention
in Vietnam would make
Simone happy.
Joe Lawrence is tne baritone, comedian, · and bass
player with the Travellers.
Add to that list composer as
well and it makes one fine
entertainer. An American by
birth, Joe feels that a II).odern
approach to folk music will
produce a more consistent
and viable musical package,
despite the fact that it may
irk the traditionalists. "Folk
music is to me the means of
reaching the public with an
individual's particular phi· losophy. And various ideas
can be presented to any group
of people at any particular
concert.'' Joe's talents help
to brighten up any stage.
Tall, lanky, baritone,
sometimes - buffoon, Ray
Woodley rounds out this list
of great musicians and entertainers. Playing a driving
rhythm guitar and adding
spots of humour between
songs, Ray's infectious good
humour carries past the
mike to whatever type o
audience is watching or listening.
"The effect of the Canadian
songs we present is astounding",
Ray
recalls,
"I'll
never forget a comment made
by a university student after
one of our concerts in Halifax:
• I didn't realize we had so
many Canadian songs'. We've
got our work cut out for us Sing those Canadian Songs . .,

.

And sing those songs the
T r ave 11 e r s will, com~ .
October 30. They will be
performing ;u the Arts Folk
Festival, along with some of
the top local talent in the
folk -world. Rumours are that
Tom Kelly, Andy Washwell,
and the Ramblers will be on
the same bill as the Travellers.
Here is your chance to see
and hear Canada's top folk
quartet. Watch for notices in
future ARGUS's regarding
ticket sales, and further
developments on the Folk
Festival coming to the Lakehead.

�Page 4

October 5, 1967

THE ARGUS
Volume 2. No. 3
Oct.

s.

1967

The ARGUS is published weekly by the Alma Mater
Society of Lakehead University. The opinions expressed
are those of the editorial board and not necessarily those
of the AMS or the Administration. The ARGUS is authorized
second class mail by the Post Office. Ottawa. for payment
in cash. All correspondence to the ARGUS main office.
wherever it may happen to be at that particular time; mail
c/o Lakehead University. Port Arthur. Subscription ...
$3.00; advertising rates upon request.

~

up your axle

Everyone at Lakehead University is in a rut. Especially
if they drive. In case you weren't there for the ground
breaking ceremonies. the ARGUS. upon hearing of the impending event. sent a news and photo crew to the scene.
and now brings you this report.
In the midst of pomp and ceremony; steeped with tradition and aged with excellence, Her Highness Queen
McBamett opened the latest edition to the Lakehead University Campus. Looking immaculate in her official attire,
which, for the fashion conscious of L.U., included a yellow
tiara, flowing robes of satin and burlap and dainty shoes
befitting such an honoured occasion, she flourished her
Award du Merit and then. brandishing her Order of the
Golden Jackhammer, she commensed work and dug one
helluva gaping crevasse in our driveway I
Amongst cheers from the crowd, and catcalls and heckling
,from the ARGUS staff, the work progressed, until approximately 1:00 p.m., when it appeared that the project
had been completed. As the thousands of students on hand
slowly retreated to the congenial atmosphere of the cafeteria, and as local motorists appeared to try out the new
facilities of their friendly neighbourhood university, by
leaping across the abyss, Her Highness reappeared, to the
joy of the remaining crowd. and after re-examining her
handiwork, declared the new structure condemned.
On the serious side, this action by the Physical Plant
merits all the bitching that we, as students here, can
devote to it. The "dummy police" as they are known in
beaurocratic circles, constitute a general pain-in-the-ass
to every dl'iver on campus, whether he is from the administration, faculty or the student body. Complaints have
been pouring in from all sides in regards to these "slowdown'' devices, and hopefully, shall continue until they are
removed.
As a solution, may we put forth the following proposition
to the brass in the Physical Plant: why not merely assign
one of the roving members of the Physical Plant to keep
an eye on the Indiannapolis aspirants instead of leavin~
these menaces about. Undoubtedly, as the ''trenches'
continue to deepen, from traffic over them, there will be
a trail of springs, axles, exhaust components, bumpers
and the odd transmission left in the wake.
When this happens, (and it will) I suppose that we'll
have to pay the local junk man a small fortune to clean
up the mess.
ch.

lettersCafeteria
to Suggestions
the editor

What does it mean?

Dear Sir:
Dear Sir,

does the juice flovv?
If students pay ten dollars to get plugged in, will they get
turned on?
'!-, It would appear that the campaign to allocate parking outlets is being run the same way as last year. And many will
recall how that turned out to be mass disorganization and
semi-scandal.
As some students may remember, the outlets were rented
last year. apparently on the understanding that the juice
would flow as long as the umbilical cord connected car and
socket. Later it was discovered by some rather observant
student that the meters were only warming the cars fifty
per cent of the time.
The controllers of the electrical feed were unable to
provide satisfactory answers to the angry questions posed
by students on days when the temperature tail-spun into the
minus minus range.

The actual arrangement last year, as theARGUSmanaged
find out after considerable digging. was that the power
was turned on for half an hour and then turned off for half
an hour. The only problem we could see was that no one
seemed to know when the spark of life was on and when it
was not.
This year, informed sources seem to believe that the
plug-ins will be on for fifteen minutes at a time. and then
off for the same period.
Things are definitely looking up.
But what about the brass's parking lot? Our usually reliable sources are of the belief that juice flows there not
just part-time, but all hours of the day and half of the night.
And when you consider that there are roughly twelve times
more students than faculty and administration. you begin to
question motives and ethical considerations.
We are supposed to b€: equal participants in this "community of scholars". Obviously we are not equal actors in
the Administration's "comedy of errors" .

• 1J.l:O

..

I am presently reading
Vol. II No. 2 of the ARGUS
with acute interest. But I
must mount my mighty typewriter to inquire about Mr.
Co !borne' s "My Bag••
column.
It is an exceptional person
indeed. who. after taking one
or two psychology courses at
mo s t. (from the "highschool-like education offered here"), can sit down and
diagnose an individual with
such rare skill and. knowledge as Mr. Colborne thinks
himself to have done.
Express ions such as
"student bureaucrat syndrome", "insecure power
trippies", "feelie-wheelie
bag", "intense ego fabrication". and "classical situationist role indentification"
are certainly impressive
enough. However, can Mr.
Colborne, (or is it Dr. Colborne now), really think himself qualified to practise that
which is reserved for an
M.A., Ph.D. or M.D. in psychology? ? ? I am amazed
that he should even make the
attempt.
I remain. with only one
psychology course credit,
a "Schitzoid Student"

May I draw your attention
to the fact that the prices of
food and drinks at our University cafeteria are comparable with those at some
downtown restaurants and
coffee bars. The fact would
become more obvious should
we c o m pa r e quantitatively
and qualitatively the price of
each item available at our
Cafeteria with the prices of
corresponding items at restaurants.
As far as I know. the Univeristy Cafeteria is under
the joint management of the
Administration and an outside contractor. In other
words, half of the profit goes
into an outside drain. Why it
has been, passes my understanding.
Pepsi slot-machines _(the
bottle type) were removed
from the Hall soon after
classes commenced 1as t
winter; hot meals were only
- available during the day to
those who · had the ability to
pay; soup was dropped from
the menu almost throughout
the summer; and. last but
the least, business was
closed altogether when there
were still people working on
campus. All such measures
were taken apparently for the
interest of the business. not
of its patrons.
The situation at the Uni-

versity Residence (under the
same management) was no
better. Students complained
continually. I recall that one
evening last year the tension
was so high that some students were carrying placards protesting against the
quality and quantity of the
meals. In fact. it was a demonstration on a mini-skirt
scale.
I believe that it is not the
intention of the Administration for affairs to be conthe margin of profit had been
well trimmed. It would be
much better if the University
took over the business entirely and ran it on a limitedprofit basis. or. better still.
if the A. M. S. shoulder the
responsibility and run it on
a non-profit basis in the
same manner as that of McGill University, where coffee is obtainable at five cents
a cup.
As our University is exp anding rapidly, it is of
fundamental importance to
improve present conditions
in the cafeteria to meet the
need of all students. If some
positive steps could be taken
toward this direction, the
benefit would, indeed. be not
only to the students and those
who patronize, but to the entire University.
Sincerely.
Sze-chung Yuan

�October 5, 1967

THE ARGUS

Page 5"'

"academic atmosphere"

the lack and how to get rid of it

by D. John Lynn(Canadian University Press)
OTTAWA (CUP) -- Universities across Canada, beset
with a heavy influx of students, are only with great difficulty able to find adequate funds to provide adequate teaching staff, increase classroom space, augment library collections, install labs, and to provide other purely academic
needs to adjust to the increased demands of a population
bent on educating its young.
The universities' meager resources can barely stretch
to provide them with the means to get an education. It cannot stretch to the point where the students will have the
service13 which comple~ent a good education -- sports
and recreation facilities, student union buildings, dining
facilities, and, most critical this year, housing.
The above items draw a low priority in university construction. But add to this the general housing shortage in
Canada at the present time, particularly as the population
shifts from the rural to the urban base, and the situation
becomes critical.
Over the past summer all available housing in many
centres was filled by people shifting from rural areas.
This September undergraduate students returned to university to find apartments and rooms were simply not
available for them. University residences had been booked
solid since early August.
University officials recognize the problem, but there is
little they can do. Most universities prepare off-campus
housing registries, but these are stop-gap measures at
best, and in some cases have led to all kinds of abuse by
both students and administration.
A long-term solution advocated by some is student co.operative living.

by Rod Phillips (Argus News Editor)
This paper, as its title
That there is little desire sure that there are many
pretentiously indicates, con- for learning at Lakehead other causes more compfex
sists of my comments -- University is, I think, mani- than those which I have men1 hope informed -- on aspects fest, The fact that at least tioned. I have, at least, beof the academic atmosphere one Dean was compelled to gun.
-- or lack of it -- at Lake- give his students a "pepHaving satisfied myself
head University.
talk" during the last year, that there is a lack of acaLest there be any initial e vi d e n c e s a lack some- demic a tmo sphere, and
confusion, I shall begin by where.
having noted some valid
defining ''academic atmosThere is a general apathy causes, I shall now continue
phere" -- a phrase which among students here. The to the question of rectificaI realize to be open to indi- argument that this is so at tion of the situation, I boldly
vidual definition. By "aca- all universities irrelevant. assume that it is generally
demic atmosphere" I refer There is need for us to be agreed that the situation I
to an atmosphere which is eclectic, but this need surely have outlined should be recconducive to learning. Even should not extend to the un- tified.
this definition is nebulous, favorable aspects of other
Basically, and speaking in
so I shall elaborate by a pro- universities. This apathy, I very general terms, I think
cess of circumlocution.
should note, extends into all the answer to the problem
Learning is a matter of the fields which concern -- but lies in increasing democracy
individual; there must be don't -- the student a propos within Lakehead University.
some enthusiasm for learn- the academic community.
It has been often stated that
ing on the part of the student
I realize I have been pretty there should be no distinction
for the process of learning unsuccessful in pin-pointing (except, obviously, occupato take place. It is this en- evidence of the lack of aca- tional) bet we en students,
thusiasm which has a direct demic at m o s p he re. How- faculty, and administration;
relationship to that which I ever, I think that my belief the argument continues that
term "academic atmos- that the lack exists is shared we -- no matter to which
phere". One cannot legislate by many people on campus. group we belong -- are all
learning; it must come Whether or not I have con- members of the academic
originated in England
through enthusiasm, through vinced the reader, I shall now community. This is a noble
desire. There are various go on to examine possible and an admirable policy -The first co-op is recorded to have been started in
views on this enthusiasm. causes of the lack.
but it is not being executed Rochdale, England, by several weavers who felt they were
One view is that it must be
It would be easy to blame fully. There exists too much being fleeced by local retail stores handling their dry goods.
spontaneous; another is that this lack of academic atmos- s e gr e g at i o n -- not only To defend their common economic interest they pooled their
it must be generated. I be- phere here on an equivalent among the groups mentioned, savings to set up their own store, selling their goods in
lieve in a combination of lack of ivy-covered -walls, but within the groups. All of direct competition with the established retail stores.
these two theories: that the Gothic architecture, and this segregation contributes
Co-ops have changed a good deal since this initial start.
enthusiasm for learning is draughty cloisters. How- to the co mm u n i c at i o n s They have certain institutionalized rules. They have a phipartly spontaneous; part 1y ever, the causes of the lack break-down which is already losophy. But they still retain their basic characteristic -dependent upon other exter- are, I am afraid, much less a serious problem.
a system by which they can successfully defy the connal factors.
simple.
It is impossible to list in temporary economic system which, when analysed, is found
Where does the university
I think much enthusiasm detail specific proposals in to be an economic and social system as well.
Some say co-operativism is the middle way between
come into these calcula- for learning is generated by the space presented here. I
tions? It can do little or inspiration; the student is do think that reforms are Capitalism and Communism, two economic systems based
nothing about the spontanei- inspired by the example of needed in basic areas -- the on ownership. The Capitalist system is based on indity aspect. One assumes that others. And I feel this to be lecture system, examina- vidual ownership and Communism, the alternative, based
if a student registers at a pa rt i c u 1a r 1y so with the tions, orientation, resi- on collective ownership. Neither of these systems exists
university, then he has some student-teacher r e 1 a t ion- dence, and so on. I recognize in a co-operative house.
desire to learn. But the uni- ship. To be fully effective in the superficialty of this orief
The student co-op is the middle way between these two
versity can provide the con- the field of learning, this article, but hope it may pro- extremes because it is owned and operated by the conditions most conducive to relationship should be on an vide a starting-point f o r sumer. A co-op member owns (or shares ownership with
the generation of the desire academic, yet as informal as debate -- within and without others) his co-op only during the time he is using it. When
to learn. It is these condi- possible, basis. There are, the columns of the Argus -- he ceases to use his services as a consumer his condition
tions to which I refer by the unfortunately, few oppor- on the future of Lakehead as owner ceases.
To put the above in concrete terms, a student shares the
phrase "academic atmos- tunities on a mass basis, for University as t y pica 1 of
ownership of his co-op residence then he lives in it, paying
phere".
such a relationship at Lake- many other universities.
his way and doing his fags. But when he ceases to avail
The foregoing has been head University.
This article was written himself of its services and no longer does his fags, he no
necessarily vague, as I have
The principle of the above
b e e n talking in abstract argument can also be applied some time ago. Of some state- longer acts as an owner of the co-op.
Included in the phenomenon of ownership is the responterminology. However, I to student-teacher co-oper- ments in it, I am not so sure
now as when I wrote them - sibility to govern. Student housing co-ops adhere to the
think my meaning is clear.
ation. In the academic field,
The title of this paper there is no such co-oper- but I have decided to let principles of "one man, one vote", "direct democracy",
them stand. Also, it was not and "open membership". This last principle is important;
mentions the "lack of aca- ation.
originally
intended for publica- to note in order to combat the argument that fraternity
Another cause of the lack
demic atmosphere at Laketion in the ARGUS, I bad to residences are essentially co-ops.
of
academic
atmosphere
is
head University'\ I do not
make deletions and additions.
This is not the case.
wish to assume agreement what appears to be an apathy I hope this will explain in part
The above principles are the essence of a co-op. But
on the part of everyone that towards learning on the part the lack of cohesion within the
the degree to which it fulfills other requirements dictates
there is a lack of academic of some, perhaps many,
article.
the quality of a co-op. Direct or participatory democracy
atmosphere, and shall t e a ch e r s. There is an
by Rod Phillips
pertains not only to the structures of house government.
accordingly note here my increasing tendency on the
(ARGUS News Editor)
reasons for considering that part of teachers not to ented that the students' comacademic atmosphere is courage (nor, in all fairplaints were legitimate.
lacking. This is a rather dif- ness, to activelydiscourage)
T he students called a
ficult task to set oneself, as learning. B.ut too man~
Students Air Grievances
meeting of Honour students
the lack of academic atmos- teachers content themselves
The students also had on Friday, Sept. 29, a nd will
phere cannot be "pinned- with giving lectures and
Third year Honours studefinitely call a meeting of
down' • precisely. Rather, it, receiving their lectures back dents
met
with
Dean
of
Arts,
complaints
about
scholarstudents who had first class
like the atmosphere itself, in the form of examination Dr. Gordon Rothney, last ships. Lakehead University standing last year.
although ha v in g concrete answers.
to air griev- Scholarships, which pay
There are rumours that a
Yet another cause may be Wednesday,
manifestations, is more a
ances.
tuition
fees
for
students
with
boycott
of classes may take= .
feeling, an air -- as the the lack of any substantial
The
students
main
comfirst
class
standing,
have
place
if students' grievances
word "atmosphere " sug- intellectual programme for plaint was that during regis- been cancelled with O ut are not answered satisfacgests -- than a series of students. This programme tration they had been told notice. Dean Rothney admit- torily.
s ho u 1d be the combined that they could this y e a r , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~ - - - - - - - - - - ,
tangibles.
The most obvious evidence effort of the whole univer- take four courses in their
with regard to the lack of sity. In consequence, the major subjects and one other Editor -- Chuck Grieve
academic atmosphere, is blame -- if blame is to be in another subject, and Associate -- Bob Leggett
that the desire for learning apportioned -- lies just as graduate with a general B.A. Managing -- Chad Hannah
-- generated by an academic much with the students as at the end of this year, while News -- Rod Phillips
atmosphere -- is lacking; with any other section of the still r e ma in in g in the Features -- John Sculthorpe
Sports -- Larry Hebert
either this, or the causal university.
Honours programme.
Advertising -- Mike Barkwell
The above are circumtheory is invalid. In the first
This information was, in Circulation -- Gord Fukushima
section I expressed the belief stances which I suggest are fact, misinformation. Dean plus
all the rest of the gang of slaves, including chris
that every student, by dint causes of the lack of aca- Rothney informed the stu- and gale
and sue and nancy and glenn and wendy and jed
of his registration at uni- demic atmosphere. Some of dents that in order to gradu- and owen and
don and mary and bobble and tracy and bonnie
my
suggestions
may
be
conversity, has some desire to
ate, they would have to drop and phyllis and ralph and ho hum the names escape me
learn -- what eve r his sidered invalid. But I per- one course in the major and
motives. I here reaffirm that sonally feel that I have only take one in another subject, because it is so late and there is so much left to be done
and, well, just and.
scratched the surface. I am or take a make-up course.
belief.

•

�Page 6

THE ARGUS

...

Marshall McLuhan

ARGUS
In your book Understanding
Media, you point out the
superior qualities of . television de man d s "involvement '' in what is being shown.
Do you believe that the knowledge g a in e d via television
ls of an enduring quality, and
that the "involvement''
created will be of a lasting
nature? That is in comparison
with other media.

McLUHAN

.._

When you asked the question concerning the effectiveness of different media in
imposing or imparting of
knowledge, there is no comparison between the older,
say, written forms, and the
new electric forms, so far as
their power to impress and
impart are concerned. The
visual sense (which was used
mainly in the civilized ages
of literacy) is the only sense
we possess that gives detachment, and not involvement: it
is the one un-involving sense
that man possesses. All his
touch, and taste and smell
and movement and sound,
these are all profoundly involving experiences.
•But sight is easily the least
involving, the most detached
of our senses. Therefore, as
in a mere matter of the
imparting of knowledge, there
is no question that the written
word is the least effective in
making an impress. But the
child sitting in front of T. V.
is undergoing X-ray: T. V. is
not a pictorial or visual form .

October 5, 1967

Last July the ARGUS had the extreme
good fortune of being able to obtain an exclusive interview with Professor Marshali
McLuhan, Director of the Centre of Culture
and Technology at the University of Toronto,
through Day Laban. Mrs. Laban is a graduate
of Lakehead, and manager of the Bookst.ore
of campus, The fr!llowing is her introduction
to the interview,
"Professor McLuhan's views are among
the most controversial and most discussed
t.opics of our day. In his books, The Medium
is the Message, The Gutenberg Galaxy, and
Understanding Media, he makes us take a
close look at the "electric age" in which
we live. His philosophy had revolutionized
many people's attitudes towards mass media's
effeet upon culture, particularly the implications of electronic instant communication,
Some go so far as to say that McLuhan is the
'original' philosopher of our age, while others
are convinced that he is putting us all on.
"This interview was transcribed from a
tape - a tape being what McLuhan would
call an extension of the fingers and the pen.
That the following resembles a monologue
more than an interview is due to the fact
that the interviewer became more and more at
a loss for intelligent questions to ask, and
consequently decided to listen rather than to
interupt Professor McLuhan's train of thought.
"The intertiiew ended rather abruply when
Professor McLuhan was called away unexpectedly. An extremely busy man, he was
trying to finish two new books, Culture is
Our Business, and From Cliche to Archtype
(co-authored by Prof. Wilfred Watson of the
Univ~rsity of Alberta, Edmonton), before
leaving for Fordham University, New York,
where he will occupy the Albert Schweitzer
Chair in the Humanities,

My concern has been to study
the kind of sensory involvement that each medium of our
world possesses, and many
people have paid no attention
to these things, so they are
always puzzled when you point
out that television is not a
visual form at all: they just
cannot imagine what you could
be talking about. Television is
an X-ray form! When you are
sitting in front of T. V. you are
being X-rayed. And the little
iconoscope-tube is a very
tactile form, it is like sculpture. It is a series of little
dots on the screen;like a Serault painting, or like Expo: a
series of little pavillions, for
which the viewer has to provide the story-line. The viewer on T. v. is enormously involved.
And so, when a T. V. generation of children arrive at the
school or college, they are
absolutely alienated by the
non-involvement of the teaching. They regard it as purely
"square" and they just reject
it; the drop-out is a normal
feature.
The generation-gap developing between teacher and student, between parent and child
in our time is enormous, and
it is all within the past ten or
fifteen years. Nothing like this
ever happened in human history. And the involvement of
electric forms is so complete
as to decivilize Man, it turns
him back into a tribal and
group-oriented person, with
altogheter new needs and
problems.

For example, the Negroes,
who have lived in our midst
for a long time without being
admitted to the official culture
or literacy in any notable
degree, are suddenly liberated
by T. V. and radio and such
forms, and demand a freedom
and a use of their freedom in
this new culture, ·and they
demand to be provided with
identities. A tribal man, in
the pursuit of identity, knows
only one method: violence.
Violence is a means of achieving identity, that has been
familiar to people in many
ages; all nations boast of the
great testing of their sinews
by war and conquest, as a
growing_-up process. Children
grow up by a kind of violence
in that way....
But, in order to become
civilized, literate, we did an
enormous violence to our integral human nature, from
which we are now rebounding
or re-acting in the electric age
of the integral, the all-atonce. People never know what
is happening, they only know
what happened in the previous age: the rear-view mirror
is the only resource of any
culture.
The artist, however, is the
one figure who demands •that
people look at the present;
that's why he is called a
"kook'' or a "nut". "Sensible" people don't ever look at
the present, they look at the
past. At the immediate past,
not away, way back, but just
fifty years ago. Nostalgically.
It's reassuring and comforting. And so the whole difficulty
in our time is in getting people
to look at the present sufficiently to survive.

�October 5, "1967

Page 7

THE ARGUS

on
ARGUS
You point out the inability of
the television-educated child
to "see ahead". Will this
affect the analytical ability of
generations to come?

have mythol&lt;lgy and they have
their dances, and songs, and
magical formulas, which include the whole of the human
past. We, now, today, live
magically and mythically, we
no longer think that way, we
just live that way. So, if you
are asking whether the present
curriculum is going to have
any future: the answer is NO I

McLUHAN
ARGUS
You ask about seeing ahead.
What we call "seeing ahead"
means looking into the rearview mirror. And it's just a
joke: the ability to see ·ahead
is zero in the human being.
Because he is terrified of the
present, let alone the future.
And what is called "the
future .. is always a rear-view
image, a nostalgic image,
whether you start with Plato
or move on to George Orwell.
What they call the future is
always the old culture just
behind them. So the ability to
look ahead in the modern child
is no better than that of the
great men of the past: it is an
ability that does not exist I

ARGUS
Will the television-educated
child still be fascinated with
such things as History, or
Philosophy, or Literature?

McLUHAN
Nol Simply because they are
all present simultaneously.
There is no "past". Under
electric conditions there is
no past, there is only an
all-at-onceness, like Expo:
everything at once, all the
cultures of the world at the
same moment. So history
ceases to exist; that is, history as a kind of perspective,
over-the-shoulder, retro spec t. This is meaningless.
Today, any child can go to
any part of the world, by one
means or another, and inspect
the archaeological remains or
the cultures of any part of the
world. There is no question of
history retaining any of its
former authority: history belongs only to literacy. Tribal
people, instead of history,

No, I'm not really ask:l.n~
that, but I was leading up to
the question: "Do you believe
that if this type of interest
will cease that this will
improve or hamper Man's
creativity?" It seems to me
that it is almost a return to
the medieval way of life. . . .

McLUHAN
Much earlier: tribal, primitive. We are there now, it is
not something that is going to
happen to us "some day". We
have already achieved this
return to tribal primitivism.
You don't have to be reminded
of Watts or Detroit. It's here.
And Yorkville Street, or the
Hippies or Haighters and so
on are only a very slight indication of what is actually
around us, and of the depth
of these changes. After all,
even the age of Sigmund Freud
was _an age of return to the
most tribal memories.

ARGUS
In that case, where are we
going?

McLUHAN
We are not going anywhere I
We are already in this very
deep. Oh, allright, if you want
an answer to where you are
going: we are going to orbit.
There are no more roads,
there are no more paths and
there are no more goals. In
an electric age, there are no
goals. Everything happens at
once. You are involved in the
total human situation simultaneously, from all angles
simultaneously; you cannot
have a goal. Goals belong to a
quite different culture of the
static, literate type. So: we are
going into orbit.
Now, when you go into orbit
in a capsule,_ you have to take
the planet with you. That
means you live in a totally programmed environment. And a
feature of the future, which is
already here, is already indicated in the capsule: we use
the environment as a teaching
machine. Instead of putting
teachers and students and
classrooms inside environments, we program the environment itself as a teaching
machine....
That's where we are going,
but that is also where we are.
We're there now. This·hasalready happened. It is not
something that is going to happen: it happened. Some time
ago. But we don't lilce to pay
attention to the present: it's
terrifying I The only thing that
reassures is the nostalgic, the
"old stuff". That is why people
always hark back to the old
situations. Like Westerns.
The ordinary person today
nostalgically lives in Bonanza-land. It's safer there.

LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY UBRARY ---OBSOLETE BEFORE COMPLETED?

�r"age

8

October 5, 1967

THE ARGUS
civil liberties denied

Censorship Charges Fund for fine initiated
Four Lakehead University students initiated a project
late last week to raise money to help pay the fine of a man
Unfounded
convicted in Toronto on a charge of obstructing the police.
Charges of censorship in
the library circulated among
students last week.
The issue arose when an
undergraduate student asked
at the circulation desk for a
photo-copy of pictures in a
recent issue of "Realist"
magazine. The pictures are
said to depict Walt Disney
characters engaged in activities of a sexual nature.
The student, who requested
that his name not be printed,
was asked to return to the
desk later. When he did so,
he was informed that the
librarian, Mr. Belton,
wanted to speak to him before photo - cop i e s were
made. The student replied
that he wouldn't bother.
Later it was reported that
the Realist was not on the
shelves.
In an ARGUS interview,
Mr. Belton was asked about
the censorship issue. He replied, "I would emphasize

that I did not say that we
would not do the photo-copy.
I merely wanted to speak to
the young man."
When it was pointed out
that usually photo-copies
were made without this formality, Mr. Belton explained
that he was legally able to
make only one photo-copy of
articles under copy-right
without the author's permission. The "Realist" pictures
apparently came within this
classification.
Mr. Belton explained that
the photo-copying facilities
are provided for people who
want research material
copied, and "I needed convincing that it (the Realist
feature) was for research.''
He said . that he suspectetl
the student wanted a photocopy just to show friends,
and he doubted that the copying facilities should be used
for this purpose.

The man, John Napiorkowski, was fined $25 after he
intervened when he saw a policeman beating up a young
man. The policeman called Napiorkowski a "f . . . ing
foreigner." When Napiorkowski grabbed the policeman by
the arm, he was arrested.
The complete transcript of the trial was printed in
the "Globe antl Mail" of September 28, and can be viewed
in the ARGUS office.
The students, Karl Goodwin, Chad Hannah, Owen Marks,
and Rod Phillips, believed that the transcript showed a
miscarriage of justice. For instance, Napiorkowski was
denied his basic civil rights.
A notice, soliciting contributions to help pay the fine, was
posted in the cafeteria. At press-time it is not known how
much has been collected.
The project has had radio and press coverage in the
Lakehead.

static regression
And men were. phony. And
they hated themselves and
spent their time telling how
contented they were. And
they swore undying love to
their s po u s e s and then
switched partners. And their
women painted themselves
for sex appeal and played a

KNOWLEDGE
EXPERIENCE
PERFORMANCE

OCTOBER
17th

OCTOBER
17th

John Napiorkowski

cheating game. And man
enslaved himself and tied his
body to the hands of the clock
and rushed and was dissatisfied when he got there. And
they sat and gorged themselves on fattening foods and
dollar - ten wines and then
drank Metrical. And they
counted up their gold and
silver and pretended no one
was poor. Or else they said
they didn't give a damn and
blamed it on the New Morality. And they spent many
millions of their dollars in
other lands and praised
themselves for giving the
founders of their nation a
hundred dollars for thirty
days. And they sent their
children to ticky-tacky universities and • said "All
right, Susie - 1earn 15
courses and you are educated.,. And they still maintained the gallows so that
they might play God if the
occasion arose. And what
they could not understand,
they blamed on God. And
they produced "Seven Days"
and "Sunday" and squashed
them for their products saw
the truth. And they were
afraid to talk for fear of
losing social rating. And
they hired comedians to

make them laugh. And they
buried Uncle Charlie in a
satin lined box (guaranteed
waterproof). And they covered him up with dirt and.
divided his estate so everyone could get the biggest
share. And everything was
ninety-nine cents and multiples thereof so they could
fool themselves into thinking what a good bargain they
had made. And they built
glorious shrines and called
it "Expo" and said everyone was supposed to celebrate and be happy. And
they tried to keep control
with the bombs and guns
and napalm fire. And dyed
their hair and pretended they
weren't getting old and fat
and ugly when really they
were. And they squeezed
their size eight feet in size
six shoes and said, "damnit". And they worshipped
their towers of concrete and
of steel. And their drugstore
clerks looked smug when
they brought contraceptives
for "regulation of the menstrual cycle" and for "prevention of disease only."
And they never saw what was
REAL.
Karl A. J, Goodwin

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�October 5, 1967

THE ARGUS

Page 9

Caught in B.C.

DATELINE CANADA
Policy voice for U of W students
WINNIPEG (CUP) -- The Students' Association of the
University of Winnipeg has been granted two seats on the
policy steering committee of the University's Board of
Regents.
Tom Mercer, student council vice-stick, said September
25 that the move resulted from executive negotiations with
the administration during the summer months. "We wondered if maybe two were enough,'' he added,
The committee, which recommends policy to the board
of regents, already has representatives from the board
itself, and from the faculty of the University,
David Campbell, senior stick, and Alan Goddard treasurer
of the Students' Association, will hold the seats. '
Mr. Goddard welcomed the move towards open decisionmaking, in that it would clarify the admf,nistration's plans
for expansion of the University. Mr. Goddard's department
is studying the possibility of incorporation, and considering
a study of union building plans for the Students' Association.

Mount Royal plans four-day week
CALJ?ARY (CUP) -- Students at Mount :e,.oyal Junior College this year have achieved the working man's dream -a four-day work week.
The new system, which includes ninety-minute classes and
fourteen hour days, is planned so students a11d faculty can
mix in unscheduled Monday sessions.
Last year there were complaints that students finishing
one-hour tutorials and regular classes were forced to wait
for their classmates to finish three hour labs, before they
were able to go on to the next class. Now students may go
directly to private conference with instructors instead of
wasting time and classroom space.
Original plans to schedule tutorials and seminars on
l\fa11days have been scrapped so the day may be completely
unstructured,
One drawback to the new system is the need for some
high school teachers to cover a definite amount of material
for departmental examinations. They are worried the loss of
a day will effect their work for them.

MacDonald tries same hoax, loses
Ronald Ivan MacDonald,
affectionately remembered
at Lakehead University as
"Plump David", has been
charged with uttering forged
documents at Kimberley,
B.C.
Senior students will recall
the sensation' caused at the
Lakehead just two years ago
when this same man had his
fingers slapped for using
forged credentials from the
University of Missouri to
gain employment at L. U.
Dr, David MacDonald, as
he was known then, was head
of the Psychology Depart-

ment here for two years be-.
fore a Toronto newspaper·
reporter caught· wind of a
story concerning him, It was
originally thought that MacDon al d was the Gr~t
Impo~tor -- a man whose
illicit ·escapades have gained
world renown, as well as
providing the subject material for a Hollywood f ilin.
MacDonald had not even
approached the magnitude of
this notorious character's
romantic grandeur in 1965.
But from all appearances he
is still trying.

India has language problems
NEW DELHI (CUP) -- Canada is not the only country
with its language problems -- India has a language issue
more threatening to that country's unity than the current
French-English battle in Canada,
The issue erupted this month with the resignation of Indian
External Affairs Minister M. C. Chagla over a cabinet
decision to phase out English as the language of instruction
in universities over the next five years.
India at present uses the English language in administration, education, government, and civil service.
The government plans to phase English out of the universities in favour of regional languages in five years for undergraduate level of instruction, and ten years at all other
levels.
Chagla said such a move would lower academic as well
as administration standards.
He said he is one of those who believed "Hindi must
ultimately replace English and play the unifying role that
English plays today"
But he said this change-over must be gradual so as not to
undermine the unity of the country.

School Board officials in
KJ.mberley were informed
September 26 by a former
Lakehead resident that the
man they had hired to teach
psychology had been dismissed from Lakehead University for "irregularities
in application forms". The
Port Arthur News-Chronicle
that his name this time was
James Colin MacDougall
from McGill.
The News-Chronicle also
reported that the Kimberley
school boa'.rd are pressing
charges against Macl)pnald,
He may not get off as lightly
this time as he did here in
Port Arthur. A short trial,
a $500 fine, and a day in the
local clink was all he
received,
•
While at the Lakehead,
MacDonald was very active
in many Port Arthur institutions. He did psychology
work for St. Joseph's Hospital and ,for the Ontario
Hospital.
After his trial in June
I 966, he said he would return to the United States to
finish his education in psychology. He also said he
would work in this area' "in
a field in which I am intereSted ".
Then he receded into the
memories of students,
friends, and curious spectators.

Seats on Senate, but no nominees

Editorial sparks fund withdrawal
PHILADELPHIA (CUP-CPS) --A retired businessman has
withdrawn a $250,000 bequest to the University of Pennsylvania because of an editorial in the student newspaper
calling for the resignation of the university's president.
James Miller Glicker, who attended the Penn Law School
objected because the newspaper has Hplayed it Hard on th~
ears" in its treatment of the president.
The paper printed the editorial last spring and reprinted
it thJ.s fall. It suggested that President Gaylord P. Harnwell
had accomplished a good deal in his 14 years as president
but it was time for him to step down in favor of a younger
man.
Glicker said he heard excerpts of the editorial on a local
radio station and that it offended him and his wife deeply.
He told members of the Daily Pennsylvanian staff that
having excerpts from the editorial "broadcast to 30 million
people" was the wrong way to handle the situation.
Glicker suggested that the newspaper staff ought to consult alumni, particula:r;J.y wealthy alumni, before taking such
editorial stands. "Penn will pay for this," he added, saying
he would give his money to another Ph,iladelphia school,
instead of the university,
"When you speak over the radio, every 'nigger', everybody else, .hears the whole damn thing," he said. "All kinds
of garbage mop this up and all the Communist types love it."
Glicker said he didn't particularly like Harnwell but that
he wouldn't have done what the paper did. He said he had
met the president six or seven times.

CRESTED UNIVERSITY JACKETS
Wool - Nylon - Poplin

CRESTED SWEAT SHIRTS
Long and Short Sleeve

VANCOUVER (CUP) -- No nominations for student senators have appeared yet at UBC.
The senate, the university's highest academic body, decided to allow students into their sanctum in a meeting
last May.
The move came after Y.ears of lobbying by students and
proponents of academic reform. UBC is one of the last
universities in Canada to admit student representation to
its governing bodies.
. Nominations for the positions have been open since the
first day of registration, Elections are planned for or before
October 31.
Un~er ground rules established by the senate, any student
candidate would have to have attained at least second-class
standing in a full program of studies in the winter session
preceding his election.
In the AMS-supervised elections a separate ballot will be
given to students registered in the faculty of graduate studies.
The ballot will contain only grad. student candidates.
Undergraduates will elect three other senators on another
ballot. The candidate getting the most.votes will hold office
.for two years. Candidates placing second and third will be
a senator for a year.

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Night Classes
TUESDAY
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�Page 10

October 5, 1967

THE ARGUS

Mustangs defeated 27-11

Coach Shannon looks on as Mustangs
put up valiant fight against St. James Rams

Cross-Country - a fast growing sport

Vote Free Tuition
VOTE

ISEAMANIXI

@New Democrat

by Jed Drew (ARGUS Staff)
•Cross-country running,
that wonderful, invigorating
sport, has taken Lakehead
u. by storm, and has so far
attracted ten of Lalcehead's
more energetic types.
In an interview with Mr.
Henry Akerval, the ARGUS
was assured that Lalcehead
expects to become a strong
contender in cross-country
meets next year. He sums up
the situation for this year in
these words: "~oss-country •racing . at L.l.l. is still
in the embryonic stage. We
did receive invitatidns to
attend •meets this fall at
Bemidji on September 30,
and at Brock Univers,ity. It
was also suggested that we

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for your-

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sell those books!
October 12 &amp;. 13
Lakehead University Book Store
A buyer from the largest book clearing house wlll
be on hand to purchase all kinds of college textbooks.

FOLLETT COLLEGE BOOK COMPANY • Chicago

might participate in the
Ont a r i o Inter-Collegiate
meet. But at the time, we
lacked one basic requirement necessary to attend
these meets -- we didn't have
a team."
Since then Mr. Akerval has
either pleaded with, cajoled,
or '.shanghaied ten of our
athletes about campus to
form our soon-to-be-famous
cross-country team.
These stout-hearted lads
train daily by running over
Lake head's 2.05 mile
course.
Mr. Akerval rates this
course as easy. "A good
course has variety -- up hills
and down hills over a varied
terrain," he said. "I have to
say ours is an easy course,
for three quarters of it is
clear straight-way. How....
ever, it is being lengthened
to tp.ree mileE! to -fccommodate the N.W.o.s.S.A. meet
on October 28. I believe the
lengthened course should
present more of a challenge.''
COURSE NEEDS MARKING
The course was studied in

your

the minutest detail possible,
while running it. The main
complaint against the course
is its complete lacl~ of markings. For example it is quite
easy to make a wrong turn
and be forced to ask an A &amp;W
car-hop for directions.
Another suggestion which
may make the course safer
for the runners is that they
be supplied with safety hats
and water wings; the former
being for protection against
errant golf balls on the section of the course adjacent
to the Port Arthur Golf and
Country Club, while the latter being a precautionary
measure in case some unfortunate runner strays from
the unmarked path and unexpectedly finds himself in
the McIntyre River.
But take heart crosscountry men. Inasmuch as
misery enjoys company, you
shall find that you will be
crowded off the course each
Tuesday and Thursday. On
these ·days, all members of
the hockey, basketJ;&gt;a.11, and
ski_ teams must run the
course as part of their preseason conditioning.

'FALL WARM-UP

• Winter Footwear
• Jackets

• Parkas

• Gloves &amp; Mitts

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132 May Street, North

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..

�O.ctober 5, 1967

THE ARGUS

Page 11

Athletic Board Review
$40,000 for Big M,
how much for Stanley?
This year Frank Mahovlich is reportedly signing for
$40,000. Fine. But where does this leave Al Stanley in the
wage bracket? Everyone knows that the "pensionless wonder" is the real inspirational ·leader of the blue and white.
Each time the other Leaf players see Stanley on the ice
they are inspired (or must be inspired if they want to win).
Stanley, always a very talkative, yet exceedingly modest
person, is famous for his humour. Perhaps his best occurred after last year's Stanley Cup game when he was questioned about his retirement. Stanley's answer was something
like:
.
"I think 111 keep playing. I wasn't the slowest player out
on the ice tonight."
My only question for Stanley is "Who was the slowest?"
But let's get back to contract talks.
In my humble opinion, I think AI should receive at least
20 grand a year just for putting on his skates and another
$10,000 for not being the slowest man on the ice. Since
Stanley also made famous the poke check, he should collect
a $5000 bonus plus royalties on that check.
Also, with Al playing, each other Leaf rear guard should
receive a $5000 bonus for playing with the veteran. Sometimes Al seems to give them more trouble than opposing
forwards. One sometimes wonders if Mr. Stanley really
is Jack Benny in disguise, although Benny is only 39.

Dr. George Men-ill

by Larry Hebert
The accompanying pictures show members of the
Athletic Board at Lakehead
University. This Board is
instrumental in determining
the athletic policy ofour university. Perhaps their
gr~atest project to date is the
building of the gymnasium
complex which will shortly
be completed. For this, I
congratulate them.
Next, I hope they will vote
in favour of athletic scholarships or some type of grantin-aid for athletes at Lakehead. Such a vote is definitely
against the thought of most
Canadian universities but I
think our Athletic Board is
modern and open-minded
enough to take and stand by
such a decision.

Mr. Harry Elmslie

***

This year I think the Athletic Department and the SAS
should try to bring some of the athletes who speak at the
Legion's Sports Dinner to the university. They could possibly invite these athletes over for an afternoon assembly
preceding the dinner.

***

Another example of one of the rising stars in local hardball is Don Latimer. Don is in his first year at Lakehead.
He played with the Italian Club that won the local hardball
championship. Don earned the award of Super-Sub with his
many clutch performances.

***

In a recent letter to the Times-Journal, George Seagris

'

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came up with a novel idea for local high school football.
He proposed that the high school teams schedule some of
their games for Sunday afternoons in lieu of the absence of
rhe Redskins from t:he football scene this year. I personally
think it is a great idea. Some coaches think there would be
too much competition on Sunday afternoons with the NFL
telecasts. I don't agree. Most girls are not interested in the
NFL, so they would gladly come out to see friends and boyfriends play. And since girls are the objects that attract
girl-watchers, there would be no trouble attracting males.
Others feel that -the students would not go for the idea
since they would not miss any school to get out to see the
football teams in action. As it is now, the students only get
out to see home double-headers during the week. By having
each senior team play only one game or two at the most)
each year on a Sunday, I think the students would still be
happ'9'. In the future, I think the S.S,S.A.A. should seriously
consider the possibilities of scheduling Sunday games at
both stadiums, alternately.
This year the s.s.s.A.A. also had a new format for the
annual bowl game proceeds of which go to the United Appeal.
The top three senior teams in each city played each other
while two junior teams from each city tangled. Port Arthur
came out victorious 4 -- 0. This new format seemed to
make the game go faster and created more fan interest. The
idea of five stop-time quarters (figure that one out, Math
majors) was good.
The F. W. C.-1. girls were in good form as they retained
their cheerleading title for the second straight year.

Mr. Henry Akerval, Mr. George Birger, Mr. Bill Shannon

RON KNIGHT
Bachelor of Science
Springhill College
Mobile, Alabama

***

Bob Elvin, former Nor'Wester basketball star, is teaching
at Hammarskjold this year. Bob holds the Varsity record for
ltotal career p.oints here at Lakehead. This year he will
!coach the Senior Viking team.

1

Mr. Peter Young

Mr. David Morgan

PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
Canada is undergoing Social,
Economic and Technological transformations
You can be a part of this as a
Public Administrator
in the Public Service of Canada
Positions in
- Management Analysis
- Personnel, financial or
general administration
- Administration overseas
A 2 year Development Program

Examination to be held at
7 P.M~, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17,
1967, in Room 106, Main Bldg
Port Arthur, Ont.
No application needed.

For exam exemptions or more details, get our booklet from
your university placement office or contact the appropriate
office of the Public Service Commission of Canada.

Youth
Shall Be
Served
By Youth

. October 17th

VOTE KNIGHT
LIBERAL
For Any Information Phone 344-1321

�Page 12

October 5, 1967

THE ARGUS

West Indian Club

Club
Notes
Fencing Club
Registration for all people
interested in fencing will be
held in Room 1039 on Thursday, October 5th, at 12:30. It
is necessary that students
register in order to receive
lessons.

· -Squash Club
The Squash Clubformedat
Lakehead University in 1965
is again holding its annual
membership meeting. The
meet in g will. take place
Friday, October 6th, at 12:15
in room 1006 (across from
the Registrar's office).
Memb(:rship cards may be
obtained at the meeting or
from Mr. Gerry Kishi, Arts
• IV, and Mr. Roman Petzyshyn, Arts IV. Membership
in the Squash club is·required to participate in all club
activities.
All those interested are
urged to attend.
P,S. Girls are also invited
to attend.

•
Progress through collective action

Presidents of the 14 provincially assisted universiThere is on campus an or- ties of Ontario attended the
ganization called the West 30th meeting of the CommitIndian Association. The tee of Pre side n t s held
name may be a bit mislead- September 21 - 23.
Financial assistance to
ing, for membership is open
both
new universities and
to. everyone on campus.
The aims and objectives of graduate students were two
the organization are to pro- of the matters discussed.
ject the image of the West This year for the first time
Indian culture. By so doing, the province is making
it is hoped that other stu- grants to universities by
dents will be able to learn means of. a formula based
and appreciate something on weighted enrolment. Encategories have
about the West Indies and rolment
weights
ranging
from one (1)
other countries. We also
for
beginning
undergraduhope to learn more about
Canadian culture, which in ates in Arts or Pure Science
turn will lead to better ties of to six (6) for a student in the
friendship between Canada upper years of a Ph.D. proand the re st of the world.
If you are interested in
Treasure Van
learning about the calypso,
the limbo, the government of
Get your Christmas shopthe West Indies, the carnival, ping done early. Unique gifts.
the beautiful beaches, and of Handle.rafts from a thousand
course the lovely West Indian countries. Precious art,.
girls, then we urge you to at- jewelry. Buy now while you
tend our meetings.
have the money. October 8 We meet Friday evening-s 11 in the Great Hall.
at 7:00 in room 1022.
Support w.u.s.c.

Ukrainian Club
The Lakehead University
can be submitted to
Ukrainian Club (L.u.u.c.)
President Ihor Kozywill hold its first meeting of
ra, M.A. Psychology,
the year, today, Thursday,
or Mary Rekszynski,
October 5th, at 12:30 in room
Arts Ill.)
1025.
2. Programme for the
The agenda is a$ fol.lows:
year.
1. Election of new•offiEveryone is welcome to
cers
(nominations attend.

gramme. However, as the
formula is not adequate for
new universitfes, they presently receive special supplementary grants.
Greater financial- support
for graduate st'Udents was
recommended, specifically
in the form of an extension
of the Ontario Graduate Fellowship Programme to· include the professional fields
of law and engineering.
One result of co-operation among Ontario universities is the evolution of common admission procedures,
which have been approved
now and will be instituted in
1968. Details of these procedures will be announced
shortly.
•
The question of student
participation in university
gov~rpment was considered
wit;h the conclusion that each
untrersity should decide its
o w n manner of internal
gov.ernment.
Finally, the Committee of
Presidents decided to publish an annual Review of its
y.rork to provide information
on collective university
activity. First publication is
timed for early November.

I

letters ·
Lack of Lockers
Dear sir,
There seems to be a certain amount of discrimination against first year students not only in the student
body (Kangaroo Court) but
surprisingly enough in the
Administration as well.
The matter to which I
refer is of course the abhorable state of the availability
of lockers· for freshmen. I
would hazard to guess that
there are about six hundred
first year students here; I
know for a fact that there are
only twenty-five lockers for
them.
Now I can see. why a friend
of mine said that it takes a
good sense of humour to
make it through your first
year of university.
laughingly,
one of the lockerless

Classified

23 1/2 million dollars worth of steel and dirt getting
thrown around outside. Inside, a severe lack of $2.00
pencil sharpeners and classified ads.

I

This Week

WOULD
YOU ...
LIKE TO WORK
IN AN ELECTION?

Thursday, October 5
Fencing Club -- Room 1039. -- _12:30
Ukrainian Club -- Room 1025 -- 1:00 - 2:00
Grad. Class Meeting -- Aud. -- 7:00
Comput~r Science film -- Room 1029 -- 12:00 - 12:30
Friday, October 6
Squash Club -- Room 1006 -- 12:15
A.M. s. Dance -- Great Hall -- 9:00
Lakehead ·Symphony rehearsal -- Aud. -- 7:00
West Indies Association -- Room 1022 -- 7:00
Saturday, October 7
A.M.S. Senior Social -- Lounge and·Great Hall -- 8:00
Sunday, October 8
w.u.s.c. Treasure Van -- Great Hall -- day and evening

There.is a place for you in our election campaign and

JIM JESSIMAN
vvants your help!
l'VE TICKED OFF WHAT INTERESTS ME MOST
( ) Committee Room Work
( ) Addressing Envelopes
( ) Checking Voters' Usts
( ) Getting Voters Together

{ ) Driving My Car
( ) Putting Up A Sign
( ) Helping At The Polls
( ) Call Me to Discuss Further
What I Might Do

NAME .. . ,.. .. ... ............. ...... ....... ... ................. .......... ........................ .
ADDJIESS .. ... : .... ........... ......... .. ............ ................................ ........... .
nLEPHONE . ... ................. ..
Phone S77-1161 or Mail to 407 Victoria Ave., Fort William
Attention Jim Jesshnan

Monday, October 9
Festival Canada (Le Bourgesis
Gentilhomme) --Aud. -- 8:00
W,U.S.C. Treasure Van -- Great Hall -- day and evening
Tuesday, October 10
1-Jniversity Liberals -- 123 N.L. -- 12:00
W.U.s.c. Treasure Van -- Great Hall -- day and evening
Wednesday, October 11
A.M.S. m~ing -- Board Room -- 7:~0
Feature length comedy -- Aud. -- 8:00
W. U.S. C. Treasure Van -- Great Hall -- day and evening

A Wonderful World
of Fashion Awaits You at

GfneG/JJap~
THE STORE WITH
"THE MARK OF DISTINCTION"
Arthur St. Port Arthur Dial 345-7324

�</text>
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                    <text>Jewish

Auld

New

La.ng

Year....

Zion

VOLUME 2, No. l'f

LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY, PORT ARTHUR, ONTARIO.

October 12, 1967

EIGHT PAGES

"We all make mistakes, don't we?"

Senate Skirts Issue, Principles Now At Stake
.

Contradictions prove inefficiency
by Chuck Grieve (Editor)

AMS Treasurer Don Lees smiles grimly at the second meeting of the
senior Arts students. Lees acte~ as chairman of all the meetings.

No Calendar. Requirements changed. The memorandum.
It all adds up to one thing. Confusion and inefficiency where
there is no room for either.
What powers do faculty have at registration? They seem
to be there for some purpose. The instructions said to consult faculty members to ensure that courses to meet the requirements were taken. Presumably these scholars should
know what they are supposed to be doing. But according to
the memorandum they are nothing but clerks. Clerks, to approve courses whic:h then must be approved by the Deans.
But who is the Dean? With an impressive title like that
surely he must be someone of great imponance and of inestimable value to the university. Why, just look at the implications in the memorandum. This one person is Dean,
chief registrar, and probably bottle washer to boot. No wonder that they give him such a title.
Who is his boss? God knows_. but rumours have it that
something called the Senate tells him what to do.
Who is the senate?
The Senate is a body of people who call meetings every now
and then to discuss the students and what is good for them.
They are the ones who are z:esponsibleforthe academic requirements as laid down in the Calendar, the one that missed
registration by two weeks. The ones who replied so sweetly
to the Committee•s letter in a resolution of their own which
said absolutely nothing but which did give some indication
that they were actually there.
This then is the elusive answer to the big question. The
final power is supposed to rest in the Senate. The authority of the memorandum seems questionnble in this case,
except that no one really ~ows what power the Deans do
actually have. In fact, there: seems to be no one who can
ny for wre just exactly what the powers of any of the top

----------------------------------the predicament in wh- ual cases of course confliRevolution has fl.nally coich some students find cts, and on the other side of
me to Lakehead University.
confusion during regi- the fence there were those
As most students are awcontinued page 2
stration, and endorses who wished to deal only with
are, over the past two weeks
the review, already in the principles that were ina confrontation has developprinciples at stake (as out- cided th.l.t action must be
progress, of students volved. Amongst general
ed between the third and
programs. Students in confusion_. the meeting was lined in the same present- taken and that a five point
fonh years of Ans and the
atlon):
plan be initiat~d. The. plan
their graduating year disbanded as a result of a
Administration_. namely Dean
motion of closure from the
1) The 1967-68 Calendar was this:
will be notified of the noor.
G. o. Rothney and the Senwas not. available at
•I) A letter be sent thankacceptability of their
ate. Briefiy, here are the
Com
m
ittee
's
d
em
ands
.
registration.
This
was
ing the Senate for reprograms'.
issues at stake.
•
The
following
morning
an
not
the
students•
probplying
to the students.
As we all know, the 67-68
Rothney questioned· o~n committee meeting was
lem; in fact, it was no
2) An emergency meeting
calendar did not come out
over the past week, there held at ll.00 in the Board of
one· individuahs 'prob
of the Senate •and the .
until September 29th, two have been meetings of all Governors Room. By then
lem. But the students
Student ·committee
weeks after registration, and varieties including one on the committee had decided
are being used as pawns
called to discuss the
there were severalchanges Wednesday evening October that principles, not specifjockeyed arou.'11.d until no
grievances.
in the requirements for stu- 5, at which Dean Rothney an- ics, were the real issue. In
one knows whether there
3) That lobbyhlg with indents of all years, and pan- swered questions from the quoting from th~ presentais a problem ornot. We,
dlvidual members of
icularly for those students in students assembled there
tion made at that meeting
the students_. did not prthe Senate occur over
their graduating year. (At
in the University Theatre. under the heading of 'Spececipitate this situation_.
the long weekend with
this time it ts not kno"".11 exa- When asked about the re- ifics• these points were
and now, we are only
various members of the
ctly how many students are quirement chanf.es, Dean
brought fonh·
asking for a clarificaCommittee.
affected by the changes). A Rothney said; This is too l) Course ~hanges now do
tion.
4) That the Committee prememo was issued from Dean bad. But w~ all ll!ake misnot have to be paid for;
2) The 1966-67 calendar
pare a brief, over the
Rothney stating that students takes, don t we? ~nother
but our tex,s must be.
was not available at
Thanksgiving weekend,
were required to follow the question fr{)m the floor
And we have to payfor
registration; nor was
for student review. The
new calendar and that some ask~d 'Who•s goinf to pay
these texts.
there an outHne of chCommittee will have had
course changes would likely for the new books? To t~i~
2) our - school term is a
anges from 1967 to 68
time to consider all althave to be made. A group of Dean Rothney repl,ied; I
shon seven months.We
made available to stuernatives and to suggest
senior students met and de- can't help it if you ve bouare jeapordizing I/7th
dents at that time. Chaproposals for student
cided that the administra- ght the wrong books'. Laof valuable lecture time
nges must be publicized
action if action is nection could not expect them t-0 ter on, the Dean commenin a very important year.
before registration and
essary.
change courses (if they were ted on the situation and
3) we cannot put our faith
regulations must ba put
5) Pending receipt of inaffected) in the so-called mid said that the, lack of a calin anyone, or anything.
fonh before students
dividual letters mailed
stream of the academic year. endar was Very unfonunAt registration, we were
ch,oose their programs.
to seniors regarding any
ate• and that the memo he
led to believe that a
3) Who bas what authority?
changes to be made, thoSenate's resolution
issued
was
'For
your
own
faculty
member
could,
Many
positions
are
being·
se students affected are
The group formed a commprotection'.
in
fact
be
trusted.
But
undermined
by
an
arbitrequested
to go to the
itee, on September 30, and
After
a
question
period
now
wC:
are
told
that
the
rary
authority
which
AMS
offices
and explain
then went about the task of
of about an hour_. Deans
registrar cannot be truseems to have the powtheir situations, and frseeing Dr. Tamblyn and Dested and that the chairer to change or to inom there individual
ans Kerr and Rothney, and Kerr and Rothney turned
the meeting over to the
men' of depanments canterpret re·g ulations at
cases will be presented
through Dean Kerr• of appnot be tru::ited.
will.
before the Senate for
roaching the Senate with th- studeR.t committee, which
by this time included some
4) we want the admin4) Our University is not,
further consideration.
eir grievances.
istradon to respect the
and must be, a coCUS to assist
After a lengthy meeting of new faces -- the A.M.S.
students as peopl.e not
operative community of
Two members from cus
the Senate on October 5, the Executive in panicular.
At this point chaos reias weak-minded puppets
scholars. We mu 3t
are on campus to aid in polfollowing memo was issued
gned
supreme.
There
was
Regarding
item
one;
negtherefore
strengthen
icy forming decisions. Carol
from Donald Ayre, Registrar
our University before Wilson Associate Secretary
and Secretary of the Senate: dissent between members of otiations are in progress to
we find ourselves in
of CUS and Bob Baldwin
'That the Senate recog- the committee as well as refund monies spent on tethe position of another from th~ University of Wes!
nizes hardship result- argument amongst students xts if they are not to be usBerkeley•
tarn Ontario, are both exping from the lack of a in the audience as to the aims ed1 owing to a course change.
calendar prior to re- ~J:eth~~::1~~~=e~o~ !~~
Principies at. stake
Plan of action
erienced in matters such as
gistration, that it ex- wished to deal with individThe following are the.
At this meeting it was de- th a one we now find ourselves
entangled in.
presses concern over
.r

�Page

2

October 12, ·1967

THE ARGUS

•

Contradictions - cont'.d from page 1·
, _.....

-

-

Administrators are. Duties seem to overlap -in one hugh
circular heap. Circular because thev all seem to be chasing after something or someone half oi the time., yet never getting what they are after.
•
Th:i faculty must also fit into the grand scheme of things
somf'lwhere. Just where is anyone's guess. Mostofthem are
disint•3rested in the Administration end of this big business
cam~d education.
Wherever the power does lie., at present it most cenainly
does not lie with the students. But the students are being used as a scape-goat.
Responsibility for an error made somewhere in the upper
beaurocratic reaches of the Administration has been thrust
upon the shoulders of the students. We will not be held responsible for someone else's errors. And in our present
state we cannot effectively enaure future students that they
too will not have this responsibility shoved upon them unless we are pres~nt where and when the errors are committed.
Therefore we must have representation on the Senate.
The Sen:ite cannot skin the issue by throwing morsels
to the pack in the form of resolution sympathizing with the
students but saying nothing. Nor can they put off the question by adjourning for two weeks as soon as the issue has
been raised. If they had any respect for the positions of
respona!bility which they occupy, they would have the decency to meet with the students and to discuss the problem.
The Senate's resolution •endorses the review., already in
progress; of the students' programmes'. They •succec,1 in
snowing no one but themselves into thinking that this will
appease the people for whom they deliberate. For this is
not the issue. It is only the threshold of the barred door to
representation.
Too long has the myth of the Senate over-awed the
humble student. We will not be- beaten back from our
objective this time.

supe~ hippy
Upon numerous queries and requests into the •superhippy' faction on campus we have attempted to look into the
'flower children' who are apparently blossoming all around
us. It looks as if these people have conformed to the university community rather well in that they 'tune-in' on T. v.
lectures., are seemingly 'turned-on' by the social functions
and occasionally 'drop-out' at the Crest.
To paraphrase an old addage: 'It's not the beard and hair
that makes the hippy'. Our down· to eanh friends like to
raise hell., and that's about all. I have yet to see any real
constructive criticism levelled towards anything. They make
their views plain and then sit about snickering to themselves
when they've managed to suck-in an unknowing frosh regarding the economic feasability of doing away with hoe-handle
carvers. This is done through impressive terminology mixed
with a less than general knowledge of a pseudo-vocabulary.
Reminders of the week-end hipsters, and the summer vacation swingers are brought clearly into view and help to
give this institution the atmosphere of Flin Flon High and
Vocational Training Centre. This, which I might add., is one
of their chief complaints.
If what I have outlined to you now appears to be your cupof-tea., then the ingredients for the mix are as follows:
add - 1 cup of the milk of human blindness,
- 1 troubled childhood., (wherein Mom an' Dad just
don't dig their groovy son)
- a measure., (large) of suseptibility to established
cop-out anists and crap pushers,
- 1 heaping 'tea' spoon of genuine Yorkville imitation peads and plastic flowers.,
- 1 delapidated ego, (in need of strong reassurance)
and a dash of Jean Paul Sartre just for speech
flavour.
Also available is the 'HIPPY KIT' for all discouraged
young students who don't like messes and mixing. This allows for the instant type-cast effect., and will not, under any
circumst~ces., be sold to mature individuals. I would like
to add that these kits are available from anyone mentioning 'freak-outs' or 'love-ins'.
ch.

election meeting farce
The ARGUS had to stoop to blackmail theA.M.S. the other
day to ensure the rule of law during the A.M.S. elections.
The A.M.S. Constitution states that candidates for the
A.M.S. Council havetomeettheelectorateina town hall meing of this type was scheduled for the day before the election.
Originally scheduled for 12~15 p.m•., the meeting was not
announced over the public address system until almost 12.30
p.m. By 12.45 p.m. ., there were eight students and six candidates in the University Theatre. Chief Justice Ben Baumann,
who appeared to be in charge., decided that the meeting should
be cancelled because of the poor attendance.
At this point., the ARGUS News Editor threatened that if'the
meeting were not held., the ARGUS would declare the next
day's election unconstitutional and invalid. The meeting took
place.
Eight students attended as an audience. Six out of eleven
candidates spoke (one candidate., who had to fly to Montreal.,
had had toleavewhenthemeetingdidnot take place on time).
Perhaps the A.M. s. should reconsider the clause in the
Constitution which makes this kind of meeting mandatory.
Either this., or it should organize the meetings properly.

rgp.

Why should I waay - it doesn't concern me.
(cleverly adapted from the Carleton)

£ONG

letters to the editor
Cuties Caper Crappy members?

You will note such ideas related to the 'to
Dear Sir
that 1 say 'CUS members' stay in CUS or not to stay que
I wish to comment on a and not necessarily exec- stion.
very poor show by the 'Wo-:- utive personnel within the
With direct reference to
men's' (I use this sophisorganization.
the Union., I believe (as Mr.
ticated term loosely in this
There would appear to Phillips does) that CUS ex-context) Club on campus
be a definite mix-up about ecutives., whether· they ~
Nemissa on October 4 196'7 what 'left' means - and left or otherwise., are in
called 'Campus cutie~ ca-' rightly so (pun not inten- their positions through stuper'.
ded). Generally anyone with dent suppon. They may.,
If the hierarchy of Nern- a guitar., long ha_ir (e,ither therefore., be deposed throissa wishes to entice new sex)., who drops acid and ugh democratic process.
'girls' into its midst it was opposes paternalistic explI further maintain that the _
using a very low levei techn- oitive contr,ol, ~d the bombs student electorate should not
ique. The evening's progr- is labelled. left • Anyone wllo allow its government to lead
amme to say the least
believes in maintaining his them as a body from CUS.
lacked grace and taste it hair short and his tea cup For if student government is
appeared to be set up in ~uch balanced , on his knee \s tag- doing this, they are therea way as to prove that girls ged as a right winger •
fore dictating limits on stu(women) •can be just as if (One is also categorized as dent political affiliation.
not more crude gross ~d
'right' if he suppons the
Perhaps CUS would be well
base as s~me notorious boys status quo, the paterpalism advised to investigate whet•
(men). Several of the bright- ~d th; bombs opposed in her or not it could function
eyed newcomers were obv- , leftist, circles). What is
adequately through the dues
iously disappointed (in some
ce1!tt·~· these days is any- paid by students exercising
cases nauseated) at the cal- one s gues~. I im~gine any- their rights as individuals
ibre of the entenainment
one who is centre is sterile rather than electorate bodprovided. The programme
-- intellectually of course. ies.
included two skits aimed at
Some fen,ainly will say,
Before we cuss CUS., let
a ten-year-old level and
that the left is without an us see the benefits we can
definitely lacking in origorganized programme and gain from it. We will find
inaliry a speech which was
that all the members have our seventy-five cents going
in poo: taste and at-the best c;&gt;pted out of its philosophy a long way - especially if
of times boorish, and a.
with band wagon protest,
CUS can back us up on our
fashion show which failed at love-ins and flo"'ers bequest for student power and
both attempts of style and hind the left and right ear the total eradication of the
humour.
misconception. It is not.,
Teenie Bopper Suppression
If that fiasco was any ind- however., my intenti~n to ex- Complex which seems to
!cation of what Nemissa is
pound on leftist pnilosophy prevail in sone of the more
or stands for., I can -see ab- but rather to investigate how familiar university adminisolutely no reason for its
strations.
continuation on our campus.
Karl A. J. Good~
The Foresters already
have a reputation to tryto
VOLUME 2 N
live up toJ but must Nemissa "....
• , o. IV
attempt to equal or to outdc
October 12, 1967
them?
editor • • .....•••.•..• Chuck Grieve
associate ..•..•..•.•.• Bob Leggett
Sincerely,
managing •..••.•.•..• Chad Hannah
Jane College
news . • ••••.....••••• Rod Phillips
features •.••.•.• ~ •.•. John Sculthorpe
the CUS question spons • • •.•..••••••.• Larry Heben
advertising. . •.••.••••• Mike Barkwell
Dear Sir.,
circulation. • •••.••.••• Gord Fukushima
Mr. Sumer's comment
that the Canadian Union
of Students was 'too left,
too utopian' (ARGUS, September 28, 1967) is quite
thought stimulating.
He would seem to equate
the goal of the 'left' with
utopian. If so, how can one
be critical of this group even if it does include C'1S

once again from the land of the ARGUS we bring you live
and direct via Telex the latest in the world of conflict., particularly student-admin. type (classified under the official
secrets act as BS - 02) and the best from jed and deitmar
and joe and Jim as usual., plus bobble and bonnie and tracy
and wendy (she's the blond) and all those helpful movers
for when we moved from Moe Ktytor's office to our own
which is in the basement somewhere (just follow the signs)
plus dave and frank and suzzane at the Georgian for their
interesting and helpful comments., and Mate at the Ubyssey
even though he can't type very fast.
"

�October 12, 1967

THE ARGUS

Page 3

Cuba - a country under pressure
Approximately 80 people in .the
University Theatre on SUnday, October 3, heard a lecture on modernday Cuba. The Rev.JohnMorgan,of
the First Unitarian Congregation,
Toronto, spoke on 'Journey into Revolution: Impressions of an April visit to Cuba.• Mr. Morgan, in the Lakehead to investigate lndianproblems,
touched on many aspects of modern
Cuban life in his lecture,but concentrated on the educational aspect.
Mr. Morgan stressed that education in Cuba is much different from
education in North America.
'I have mentioned the Cuba-U.S.A.
involvement because unless you under stand what nine years of such tension can mean, you will not under stand some of the things you see and
hear in Cuba; you would not, for instance, understand the meaning of
much that goes on in Cuban schools,
many of which I visited, both in the
city and in the countryside. Canada
faces no such problem; what we do
for the most part in our schools is
attempt to teach children and young
people the fundamentals of learning
-- reading, mathematics, history,
science, geography and so on. We
do not only try to prepare young
people to live in a world of business and industry and science, but
also to appreciate literature and the

Don
Colbome

JS

During registration week some students discovered rather
blatant evidence of nonintentional racial discrimination in
the machinations of the Student Housing Bureau. Being gutsier than most, they got involved. They expressed
moral
indignation in action. They might as easily have tried smuggling the Encyclopedia Ulcrainlana past the rent~-:-cop in the
library. They forgot revolutionary aviom No. 1: Those who
are not hypocrites are shit disturbers.•
They were discredited and abused for taking independent
action on a moral issue. The issue itself was pasteurized and
homogenized by the university -machine in a manner that would dp L. B. J. •s P.R. men justice. Ask any administration
or student functionary about it today and he will tell you
that: (1) Those uppity students (read: niggers) have been put
in their place; (2) The poor button-down minds who made
that one little mistake have been forgiven (by the great computor in the sky?); (3) Everything will be alright next year;
and (4) the university's good name has been preserved.
Mellow Yellow _
This is roughly what happened: Student A (none want to be
named ..... who wants to be weiner in a sausage factory) discovered 'white only' on the card he was handed by the Housing Bureau. He got student B to help him randomly check
'about 50' other cards in the file and, when no one was
around photostatted 14 numbers which clearly stated social,
ethnic,' or religious preference and one which said (of all
the unlfkely things) 'No Preference'.
A then spoke to Mr. Kerr, Dean of Students, about what
they had discovered. 'Maybe I made a mistake,• he said later
but he wasn't satisfied that the issue would be dealt with. He
knew that the H.B. was uptight about his presuming to Judge
upon their little empire; and he was convinced that the buck
does not necessarily stop in the Office of the Dean of Students.
So, A and B went to the Human Rights Commission where
they discovered that, in this case, the Human Rights Code
did not apply to educational institutions. (Aha) Their only
out was a test case so they got friend C (coloured and from
Trinidad) and friend D (WASP) to ask for accommodation
at two of the homes listed as discriminatory. At one of them
C was turned down and D accepted. At the other both were
accepted. Thus armed they returned to the Human RiteA
Commission.Meetings were held and planned between the University and the H.B. Commission and the waves will be
smothered. Groovy. That's all they wanted.
The issue was simple. The Housing Bureau was not aware
of the implications of its 'expedious' policy of 'trying to
match students to homes' by asking landlords what sort of
students they preferred. The bureau was too thick to realize that this rather unsophisticated approach could at best
reveal, and at worst create, the most vulgar sort of stereotype prejudice. Did they expect a subtle personality description (imagine: •yes, a gentle boy with a disposition towards
stoicism and perhaps an interest in the sorreal school would
feel very athomehere)orwhattheybegged for; Meaningless
top of the head generalizations (Oh, a nice polish girl would
be fine.)
Enough said, this column has already explored the conceptual gaps of student bureaucrats. The issue is now effectively closed. The problem will be solved in time for next year.
The pimple that remains to be pinched is the cruddy attitude taken by our local rednecks towards A,B,C, &amp; D,
students who dared to practice what they' believed in. They
catalyzed an important policy change and went to a great
deal of sincere trouble. Their thanks was to be branded as
troublemakers and subversive. Their political affiliations
(backwoods paranoia) were discredited and they will certainly never be consulted, despite obvious interest, in the formation of new policies.
Maybe this place is already a Yellow SUbmarine. Maybe
this machine is already bigger than the people in it. Maybe
the university is not as far behind Newark and Detroit as
some would like to believe. This assembly line might soon
buckle on the people it alienated.

McMaster grads threaten to quit Senate
HAMILTON (CUP)--Whi- en or are without represent- of holding closed sessionsof
le most student councils are ative participation.'
committees and other boards
agitating for seats on senaHe opposed the practice bec~use it is 'undemocrtes and boards of governors,
atic •
the grad students at McMas~
ter are threatening to withdraw from senate and administrative committees on
which they now have representatives.
Graduate Student society
president Don Posluns proposed withdrawal from participating in 'any decisionmaking or committee proos,o&amp;~a-ii~-~
ceedings which are not OP~ a , $ ~ w""'-'~ l : o J I . ' ~
hippies -to ~ t e in a . ~
~nswam cr:ti1ecf' a p.v:k,.

Lakehead
Unitarian
Fellowship

"well"w ~ l:lS s h e ~
oui Ket: -£i~~. ~PE~~ahle
sem.i-h.ipp'ies w1U b:
•

~-"

MEETS
SUNDAY MORNING
at 10:30 at
Gron Morgan
High School
October 15:
Mrs.Vera Roberts
Mrs. Iris Torf:ason
1

gads.~ A Mil play fMI was.

The Friendly

Arctic Revisited

FOREIGN SERVICE
An opportunity for graduates in all
discjnJines to re~resent Canada in
inter~etjonal djnlomacy and trade
promotion.
Positions with the
Departw~r.t of Trade
arcl Gornmerc.e or the
IJep;;:i rtme:n t of External
Affajrs.

arts. We have a general approach,to
the meaning of education, a broa(I
approach to the meaning of life. But
if Canada had been for nine yearsin
a state of economic blockade policed
by the United States, if Canada had
attempt after attempt made to destroy public buildings, to introduce
counterfeit money, to destroy planes, and trains and buses, to sink
Canadian ships; if Canada had been
constantly patrolled from the air -in short, if Canada had been on the
receiving end of the hostility ~he
Cubans have had to put up with, this
would affect every area of Canadian
life, and it would affect education,
for when the country is under such a
threat, it organizes to do the best it
can to handle the threat.'
••.• the young people, the children
of Cuba are living a quite different
kind of life than we are. It is not glamorous, it is not romantic, it is
hard. I have never seen anything like
it in my life, except perhaps the conditions under which people lived in the
second World War when in many
countries it was like living in one
great organized camp. Well, Cuba is
not that, but it is a country living
under enormous pressure, and that
pressure is felt in all institutions, on
all levels, and it is felt directly in
the schools.'

.Al.l applicants must 1,1rri te

exar:ination to be 'held at
7?M, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17,
1967 j_ Y' Room 106, Main
!3Jdg., .Port Arthur, Cmt.
No application needed.

.ror niore de tails ?et 01Jr booklet froin yo'.1 r 1Jniversi ty
Place nert Offjce or contact the appropriate office of
the p,,bllc .Service Commission of Ca:nada.

il\e

1

~~ h=t=::i~

w

u ~ J"lip£il.h-Ate." l\e
~lfW.,U,:;.&lt;-~· ~fled,. "bit~ l only
s two do11a:rs .in my ACCOWl.i •
WI'!/ opW,cs All. She lupp~•
¥s

'iti-! a g\ua.e?W ! " he h.ipplied.
~i•s a .flower oE a a.i££!e.ren,t
:t-«&gt;b ehii:rely. "

--

�October 12, ·1967

Page 4

Detroit

Burn Baby Burn

11

Yes you can
continue ~ur
education.''
This booklet shows you how
you can get financial help;
Do you .plan to attend a university
or other post-secondary institution?
Do you need fina ncial assistance?
To learn whether you can qualify
under the Ontario Student Awards
program, obtain this brochure from
you r secondary school, or from the
institution of your choice
or write to:
Student Awards

Department of
University Affairs,
ON T ARfO

481 University Avenue
Toronto 2

by tarry Anderson (lecturer in Psychology)

It was Sunday afternoon. A
quiet lazy day during which
iny family and I had been out
of the city for a picnic.
About five o•clock we turned off the expressway onto
Warren A venue and towards
home. The avenue. which was
built in the early days of Detroit. twists and turns as it
makes its way to the bean of
the city.
Less than a mile from our
house we came around one of
the bends In the street and
were greeted with a sight so
unreal that for a moment I
felt that I had driven right
Into the middle of a motion
picture screen. On both sides
of the street for as far as we
could see, hundreds of people
were breaking windows and
running from stores with
everything from cases of
beer to television sets on
their backs. They were busy
at their work and seemed not
to notice the cars travelllng
along the street.
That was our Introduction
co the Detroit Riot 1967.__
We drove along. obeying
traffic signals, as we did not
want to call special attention
to our car. As you can imagine. our children were both
excited and frightened. I fnstrUcted them to sit tn their
seats and look ahead as if
nothing was happening. Of
course because they were
frightened they did so, but
I could see them talcing glances when they could.

other more than three thousand major fires burning tn
the city. Wtthin half anfiour
the building was brightly burning agatn, accompanied by
the two business stores across the street from lt.
The fire In that clothing st.ore was to be rekindled seven times before the end

all.

ominous reports of the happen•
ings since the big outbreak
of hostiliti es were quench edi
These reports he wants to pass
on to the students and the
Lakehead in general, so that
we too may know and under•
stand th e situation better.)

came.
no racial fighting
Our neighbourhood contained about fifty percent
Southern Negroes and fifty
percent Southern whites. At
no time did white and black
civ111ans attack one another.
They attacked, together, the
stores of the hated businessmen and the police who have
always represented an occupational force tn the poor
communiey of Detroit.
Compared to tne Detroit
Riot of 1943 it can not be
called a race riot. then,
armed groups of Negroes
and whites searched for,
tortured, and k1lled each
other.

much to tell

There are many more
things to tell. Por example.
there were two little old
white ladies walking past
our house. their arms loaded with 1ooted hats. And
one turned to the other and
said in a voice that was not
meant for my ears. 'Now I
can look nice when I go to
church on SUnday!
This article has been short and there are many things
homes untouched
to show and to tell about. I
After what seemed to be have a tape which has the
at least a thousancd years same title as this article.
we reached home. One half made during the Wans Riot
block from our house peo- and I have a 16 m.m. film
ple from blocks around. in- which was ta.ken of the wrecluding our neighbours, were ckage near my home In
busy redistributing the wea- Detroit.
1th of the community. As we
And most of all. I have a
turned onto our street all of story to tell of my family
the scenes that we had been and my three years of living
passing through seemed to In the inner city of Detroit.
fade from view, for if you
Larry Anderson is attempt,.
were away from the little ing to get a lecture room some
business districts (and this ev ening soon, at which time he
was true throughoutthecon- hopes to tell the full story of
fllct) there was little evide- his impressions of Detroit. He
nee that anything out of the bas many friends still in the
ordinary was happening at city and from them recei v es
By evening the clothing store on the corner was bU.JllIng brightly and soon,thef'lre
engine, guarded by hehneted
policemen. came to exttnguishlt.Assoonasthe f irewas
out they spedofftooneofthe

Underground paper shut down

Nobody Walks Away From ••••

GIBSON MO,.rt)RS
(1962) Ll1'11TED
Intercity

Dial 344·7235

VANCOUVER (CUP) -- Vancouver•s most recent newspaper. Georgia Straight, lost its business license Thursday.
September 28.
Vancouver Mayor Tom Campbell gave no specific reasons
for the suspension, except that city Hall has been flooded by
'hundreds of calls' a.bout the newspaper In the past three
days.
Georgia Straight, a bi-monthly. sold for 15 cents and claims a circulation of 70,000. It is the •underground newspaper' of the Vancouver area.
The mayor said many of the callers complained a.bout the
paper being sold outside Vancouver high schools.
The editors have ten days in which to appeal the action to
city council. 'We've been expecting some kind of action since
we started the paper,' said assistant editor Peter Hlookoff.
'We're just surprised it hasn't come sooner. Campbell's
move seems to be based on hysteria rather than any legal
action.•
½awyer John Laxton representing Georgie Straight, said
there were no grounds for suspension included in the notice.
'It makes you wonder what's happened to freedom of the
press.•
Laxton said the editors haven't yet decided whether to appeal the suspension.

�October 12, ·1967

THE ARGUS

"Control is· the fin al issue"
''We seek the establishment
of a democracy of Individual
participation governed by two
central alms: That the individual share In those social decfsi011S determining the quality and
direction of bis life: that soc iety be organized to encourage
independence In men and povide the media for their. common participation. "

United States.

Student Govemment
Individuals who are now

involved in student government leave the university

prepared to maximize their
positions and will inherit the

reins of power. The National
Students Association (NSA)

are constantly involved in
the subtle control of indiv!duals. Whenever this power strUcture reveals itself
you radicalize. Organizers
must involve the individual
in resistance of this cont1
roSociety, today, is incredibly authoritarian It can
probably be best described as 4benevolent fascism. 1
Hippies can be very effectIve in forcing the power
structure to reveal this authoritarianism because it
cannot cope with hippies.
such programs held at
some American universities as 4Gentle Thursday'
force the controlling powness in this respect. They
become intolerant and use
force to repress such acts
by the students they are trying to mould.

Page S

by Frank Brayton
The GEORGIAN
Special to Canadian Uoiversity Press
being written now that may tion of model programs that
take twenty years to comP- will enable them to cope with
lete.
student radicalism. Despite
This ls evident from the the 75 milllon that is being
number of forces working used . for this purpose the
against the American soc- whole thing will prove useial structure as it pre sent• less. because the models are
ly exists. Among them are being built on inaccurate insuch forces as the urban
formation. The minds of the
guerilla warfare, Vietnam. men feeding information in
the recent Organization of to the computers are strucLatin American States Con- ture~ in such a way that will
ference in Havana and the not enable them to grasp the
latent fascism that exists in concepts behind the new radthe u.s.
icalism. They may bebrilUThe US government has ant men. but they are Just not
large corporations to empl- capable of understanding the
oy computers in the produc- motives of the New Left.

represents this more than
from The Port Huron Statement
any other group.
sos
The recent revalation that
the CIA was providing funds
Students for a Democratic to the NSA proves that the
Society is an organization in power elite is using student
the United States which rep- rhetoric to sell the product.
resents more than any other Where will NSA executives
group the thinking and phil- be in ten years? Probably in
PHONE 345-7931
osophies of the New Left. some management or govThe Port Huron Statement is ernment bureaucratic position.
their founding manifesto.
The NSA is run from the
The SDS has stated its position on most of the questions top and its very structure
of the day, including student precludes its effecting any
significant change•• Its memrepresentation, the draft,
PORT ARTHUR, ONT.
student government, campus ber groups Just do not have
American
Empire
BOB AND HELM! WIGMORE
newspapers, American emp- any voice in the formulation
We are witnessing the end
ire, etc. But their's is not a of NSA policy. What the US of a chapter in American
34 N. ALGOMA STREET
PHONE 344-1131
remote statement of radical- needs now is a national stu- history, that of the AmeriACROSS P'ROM ST, .JOSEPH'S HOSPITAL
ism. It is in fact a univers- dent union to represent real
ally applicable doctrine,and people on real campuses in- can Empire. A new one is - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~ - - - ~ _ .
worthy of consideration by volved in real struggles.
Pressure has to be organall students.
ized on university campuses,
Student Re1&gt;19sentatian
but in new ways so that chaA trUe student voice in the nge can be brought about in
running of universities will the academic community.
not be achieved through rep- Apathy, as such, does not
resentation on various com- exist among university stumittees as many universities dents. Rather, non particiare now establishing. com- ,!'ation results from the un•
mittees are devices of the ad- conscious recognition that
ministration and are used to institutions do not really reprevent students from gain- present them. Consequently
ing ultimate control. ,
what you demand is control.
But student representa. Control is the final issue and
tives sitting on committees all other issues are used to
do serve a useful function bring this about.
because they become disen- Campus Newspapers
chanted and later demand
Students have little or no
true representation. They
control over their own eduare led to a realization of cation and as a result exptheir impotence, and apathy erience a sense of alienafollows.
tion, either consciously or
Those sitting on the Board unconsciously. Newspaper
of Governors of universities editors must become sensiare business me~ who are
tive to the undercurrents of
only interested in seeing that alienation on campus and esthere is an adequate number tablish aneditorialpolicythof graduates to fill positions at reflects it. campus issues
in the management of large must be related to this cencorporations in order that tral problem.
the present corporate strBut newspapers are one
uctures will prevail in the aspect of the control of peofuture. They are moulding pie's lives. Whatpeopleread
students to fit their image of affects their daily activities
what a person should be and and habits. It is one aspect
what functions he should per- of the volume of material
17th
17th
form. But this will not con- that people internalizedaily.
tinue as more students opt Newspapers are usually useout of their society and can less when it comes to effectenvision a better one in wh- ing significant social change
ich values are altered from
because people participate
those of the present prod- in press campaigns passiveuction oriented society.
ly. Issues raised by campus
That is why these manage- newspapers ai;-e experienced
ment executives and govern- second-hand by the students.
ment bureaucrats cannot tol- It is more important that therate dissent, because they ese people become inv.olved
can sense a danger to their in resisting authority themown way of life. As a con- selves which is the purpose
sequence they try to impose of campus organizing. In the
their authority on students. long run, this is a more effBut this will not be tolerated ective way of achieving social
much longer. Already there reform.
is a massive movement of
The power structures of
resistance developing in the universities and of society

KNOWLEDGE
EXPERIENCE
PERFORMANCE

OCTOBER

OCTOBER

ZELLER'S

RETAILERS TO THRIFTY CANADIANS

Thinking of

@aving~
Think of u 8
Intercity Plaza

VOTE

�THE ARGUS

Page 6

October 12, ·1967

Complaints featured at University Committee Meeting
The first University committee meeting of the new
year was held Monday October 3rd. The meeting lasted three hours and covered
many topics of great importance to students.
The chronic problem of
insufficient seating in the
cafeteria was again raised.
The main cause of the problem seemed to be that students were using valuable
cafeteria space for cardplaying. It was suggested
that, to alleviate the problem
card-playing be confined to
the Great Hall, where tables
and chairs would be provided
for that purpose.
Calendar complaints
S d
in d th
b tu ent1 0 1 ~
at
ecaused O e c O c a 1endar an some timetab1es at
re istration the later had
g
,
Y

J 1IT :

to make course changes, and
were being charged $3.00
for these changes. Dr. Tamblyn stated that the charge
would be a reasonable one if
conditions were normal but
they weren't. We will see if
we can eliminate the $3.00
charge.'
Dr. Tamblyn reported that
the building fund stood at
approximately $2. 8 million
($3.1 is being sought). He was
questioned on some of the
physical developments on
campus. He stated that the
contours near Oliver Road
were on the University plan
and were a way of using up
excess earth from excavations. O~ the circular drive-;
way (or execution driveway
as AMS President
Peter
Young called it) Dr. Tamblyn
d h
hi
state t at t s wasatemporary measure and was built

Complete Line of Binoculars
SPECIAL THIS MONTH

18

X

30

$18.50

LAKEHEAD

""""" &amp;

132 May Street, North

~ s~
Fort William

·AN
EFFECTIVE
VOICE
FOR

for the convenience of people open to any suggestion youve lyn pointed out that two of
using the University Centre got that's workable, to con- the faculty present were on
'in inclement weather•. Dr. trol speed.'
the Senate too, but that 'the
Tamblyn suggeste~ that the
Plug-ins
idea of inviting members of
students start a car park
It was reported that 480 the Board to these meetings
service' as a means of saving students had requested plui- is, I think, very good'.
money.
.
ins and the question of a f~e Peter Young suggested that
Locker suggestions
was raised. It was decided
Committee minutes be sent
Science Society President most students should pay
to the Senate and Board of
Don Bergman reported that $8.00 per year for a parking Governors. Dr. Tamblyn
although there were approx- space and $20.00 per year also agreed that Senate and
imately 1500 fulltime stu- for a plug-in (electricity
Board of Governors agenda
dents this year, there were costs $12.00 per year). Peter be given to the AMS so that
only 653 lockers available
Young reports that he had 18 students may make represand fewer than 40 first-year parking tickets, every one entations on issues which aff.
students had lockers. Peter warning that his car would be ect students. Peter Young
Young suggested that
stu- towed away at thenextviola- stated 'We don't wish to foldents 'double up• but Mr. D. tion. Mr. Smith states that he low the lead of otheruniverMacKenzie, a faculty repres- was afraid .to order any car
sities and push for student
entative on the committee, be towed away as he didn't representation of the Senate
pointed out that most univ- know the 'legality of the sit- and Board of Governors and
ersities do not provide lock- uation.' Director of Finance, all that. we think wecanacers and that
doubling-up David Morgan, suggested an complish more in this comwould 'merely perpetuate the internal system of fines.
mittee •
bl •
•
•
pro em•
Student reps.
Dr. Tamblyn
revealed
University Schools Society
Peter Young
suggested plans for the extensions to
President George Padding- that Senate and Board of the University centre and
ton complained about
the Governors members be in- also tentative plans for new
90 corners from the main vited to the University Com- residences to house 240 studriveway and pointed out that
d
one accident had occurred mittee meetings. Dr. Tambents.
already. He also suggested
grading the roadway at least
once a week. The question of
those 'ditches in the road'
came up once again. Claude
By Ruth Derrick,
Speclal to Canadian University Press
Smith, Director of Planning
and Physical plan1- stated
KINGSTON (CUP) -- Emotions flared temporarily here
that 'we went about it the last weekend, at the rather sedate bi-annual meeting of the
wrong way, but I still think Ontario Union of Students.
it's a good idea. I would be
The issue was the forthcoming provincial election and the
university students' awareness of the candidates and issues.
During the heated one hour debate, members of the province's 20 universities, community colleges and technical institutions argued the merits of a 'negative• approach, presented in a three-point resolutionbyYorkandCarleton Universities.
This 'stay away' or 'spoil ballot' campaign was proposed
to 'indicate dissatisfaction with recent Ontario party politics.'
This drew varied criticisms from the floor, as did another
resolution which had the OUS printing up leaflets stating 'the
demeaning attitude of candidates' to the electorate.
Terry Sulyma, a member of the OUS secretariat of last
year• said it was time for 'action now', by using the leaflets,
in order to make the public 'aware of the kind of garbage the
politicians are talking.'
According to Glendon campus. this was not the way to
handle the situation. In a directive to help make students
more aware, pointers on 'how to blow your candidate's
mind', how to set up meetings with candidates and how to
prepare and respond to a hostile audience were outlined.
The discussion also swung to the Union• s support of a candidate who most closely represented a student-oriented stand.
Don Posluas, McMaster University, found that 'it is pretty obvious that there is only one party near (the stand).• This
party, (NDP), was the one to support.
But Colin McKinnon, Universite d'Ottawa, disagreed telling
the delegates, 'let's not ha.ve an OUSendorsementof a party
that is doomed to failure, therefore lessening the chance to
communicate with the new government.•
The only part of the resolution receiving majority approval
was embodied in a document entitled 'Mr. Politician -- tell me
please.•
The OUSexecutive effort contained the responses of leading
candidates to pertinent questions.
These questions would form the basis for the compiling of
similar documents, to be drawn up by the separate universities and their candidates. All were to be submitted to the
OUS office by Oct. 12 for press distribution
Tom Faulkner, President of the University of Toronto, assured the delegates that his committee 'will urge the positive
way', but that 'if we feel that the politicians have failed the
province, then we will urge them to stay away from the ballot.•
In the final count, the two radical stands were defeated: one
by a nine to four count. and the other by an eight to eight vote.

OUS discuss election

FORT WILLIAM

''JIM''
JESSIMAN
CONSERVATIVE

OFFERS US:

CONTINUED PROGRESS
NOT

OPPOSITION PROMISES
OCTOBER 17th

WIN with JIM

l:-J_Es_s_1MA_N___l_x__.l

AMS Council elected
AMS councilors for the academic year 1967 - 68 were elected last Friday. Results are as follows, listed according
to number of votes:
Arts: Julie Wierzbicki
Peter McCormack
Dave Parsons
John Sihvonen
Don Cordingly
Forestry: Don Patton
Science: Rick Middaugh
Fred Polter
University Schools: Greg Cox
Doug Curtola
Gerald Mosa

�October 12, ·1967

THE ARGUS

Page 7

Mustangs lose on own mistakes

.-

The WORLD Series has been and gone for another year.
Although it was an exciting experience for both teams, especially Boston, I still think there was something lacking in
the whole affair. This can also be said for the past three
Series•, for 1964 was the last time that the once powerful
Yankees participated in the fall classic. I am not a Yankee
fan., but when they are not in a Series., the fan excitement
generated seems to be lessened. When the Yankees played
in a series, everyone was interested. Either you were a
Yankee fan or you were one of the majority who hoped for
the National League representative., mainly because you
wanted to see the great Yankee dynasty crushed. A team
which happened to beat the Bronx Bombers was certain to
be given the highest praise because it had defeated the best
team in baseball and perhaps one of sport's all time great
dynasties. Yes., the Yankees used to be an institution in the
World Series, but the great New York baseball myth is no
more.

*

*

*

*

*

Speaking of baseball., Dr. George Merrill of the English
D~partment is certainly thrilled over the fact that Boston
won the pennant. George 'Yastrzemskl' Merrill, a former
Bostonian, Just has to be their number one fan. He feels
Yastrzemskl will win the M. V.P. and the Cy Young Awards.
The latter will be won for the two strikes to the bases he
threw nabbing Javier in the Series, and Allison in the final
set with the Twins.

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

Seems Pentti Lund of the T.J. in Fort William Is finally
getting revenge on peop1e who bug him about the Boston
Bruins hockey team. Pentti, a former beantown hockey
player is glad that the Red Sox are beginning another of
baseball's little empires in Boston., Just as the Celtics·colapse. Now If the Bruins can build one to take over from the
Red Sox when they leave the winners circle,Pentti will finally
have a Bruin t ~ to cheer abou~

s.•

t

.:.S
1g

ty
to

al

me
ng
of
rs1e
B-

e
e
ot.'
ne

:e.

ng

At the moment, the future of the Thunder Bay Ba.sketball
League seems in doubt. Seems some of the former players
have indicated that they do not want to play anymore. This
.League could be a very good one, and in the past some excellent games have been played and some fine basketball
teams have been brought in for basketball booster night. It's
too bad the fan and player support is so poor. Lakehead
University had hoped to put a junior varsity team in the
league this year but If It folds fewer University boys will be
able to play basketball.
Ron Sewchuk: of Arts lll was one of the golfers who could
. have had his own caddy in the recent interfaculty golf tournament. Brian "Bozo• Traynor, Ron's friend, would probably
have done the Job. Bozo is probably one of the best sports
fans at L. U.
*
It will be a policy of this co}umn during the year occassionally to cover high school athletics in the Lakehead.
Whether Dick Beddoes thinks this will hurt the Sports Section's chances of winning a trophy from CUP is not important. The main objective Is to give some publicity to some
of the athletes who will in the future be a part of L. U. athletics.
In Senior football, the Fort William senior race will be
very close. Ted Murphy's Bears from FWCI have a strong
running attack led by Bill McEwen., Rick Sandberg., and Bill
Mork. The small but agile line is led by Dave Gibbons•
Collegiate has a well-balanced team, but their big problem
is too many players going both ways.
Selkirk Rams, coached by Dave Sutton and Bill Crocker as
usual have a strong defence led by Louie Riley, Doug Henderson, and Larry Kelly. The Rams offense has looked weak
this year but has also had several injuries. Top players here
are tackle Nelson Scobak and backfielders John Paddington.,
Bob Greer and Bob Reid.
Coach Ab Slivinski"s Westgate Tigers have looked imp,
ressive to date. The Tigers are led offensively by Bill
Sutherland, Tom Coombs, Brian Depiero, and Myron Hladyniulc. The Big Orange defence is led by Bob Shedler, John
Garland, and punt return specialist Wes Eyres.
In the Junior ranks, the battle foI'. number one spot will
also be very tight. FWCI, coached by Mike 'Tinker• Mithrush have a potentoffenseledbyKevinMurphy, Jack Fenton,
and Terry Freeman. Their defense is also very solid.
At St. Pats coach Peppy Dfka has a young but talented
team this year. Their spirited offense is led by Rick Bragnalo, George Letowski and Larry Zullianello. A powerful
defense is headed by a hard-charging line.
Selkirk has a potential winner this year under veteran
coach Lee Batstone. Mike Busniuk, Bill Poshtar, Bruce Malo.,
and Ron Zigman lead a powerful offense while Dave Jewitt
leads the defense.
At Westgate after three consecutive junior championships,
coach Bill France had to rebuild almost his entire team.
Although definitely weakened by the loss of so many good
players, Westgate still is giving a good account of themselves.
John Lotysz, DannisChuchmuch, and Greg Reid stand out
for the Junior Tigers.
At Winston Churchill under coach Roger Bradford the
Trojans are having a fine maiden season. The key here, I
think, is the great spirit of the new school The team itself
is on the small side but they make up for this by passing
rather than running most of the time.

•

by Jed Drew (ARGUS staff)
Port Arthur Mustangs were defeated 26-11 by St. Vital
Bulldogs Sat. Sept. 30th at
the Port Arthur Stadium.
Bill Shannon, coach of the
Mustangs and L.U. Athletic
OiJ:ector, makes no excuses
for the loss. 'We had a real
bad game. We lost because
we made more mistakes
than them,' he said.
Coach Shannon was pleased
with the play of severalL.U.
students on the team. Six of
these earned starting positions for the game; Dave
Bahrynowski started at fullback and also got into the
game as a comer linebacker.,
Peter A ndr0 s played theentire game at defensive halfback, John MacLeOd started
at offensive end., Graham
Hall at halfback., Don Smith
as an interior linebacker, and
Bero Vuerinen started as a
guard.

Wayne Slcene's passes on
the Bulldog 40 yard line.
The turning point of the
game soon followed when
the Mustangs failed to score from the 9 yard line.
L.U. players praised
The Mustangs mentor al•
so had praise for the other
players from L.U. He noteed that MacLeod, Smith arid
Vuerinen played steady football all night. He was quite
pleased with thP
play of
Bahrynowski ana Hall. Be..:,_--"--"
~~~~ sides playing halfback, Gr-~11:K.:11-..
..,,,....,. _
,.,.,
aham Hall handled the pun~lliili;.nii~'""~'"'
ting duties for the Mustangs.
••~
•.....;..i~;;.._,:..;....n He averaged a fine 35.5
Pete Andros
yards per punt despite hav"Pete Andros played an ing one punt blocked.
exceptionally fine game m
As for the future, Musthe defensive secondary
tangs must concentrate on
stated coach Shannon. Pl- eliminating mistakes. 'We've
ayina: steadily all night An lost three games on glaring
dr :s hinin
- mistakes. Each time we make
os s
g moment was orie it seems that It cost us a
when he intercepted one of touchdown.,' the coach said
after the game.
L
T o p s ·•n G o l f
By the end of the season
• _ •
we should have a strong teFive Lakehead Universi- foot nutts were not
am. I've been going with the
ry golfers· have come out mon.•
uncom• rookies all year., because
wiJUlers hf the Ontario •in'The last few foursomes they are the ones who are
tercollegiate golf toumam- came in as It began to get going to do the work for us
ent. held in Hamilton last dark. I don't think Bill Hodg- in the playoffs. The only
ThUrsday.
son could see the hole when way they are going to gain
Bill Hodgson, Rod Ferg- he sank his birdie putt that experience is by playing
uson, Dick Battiston, Tony won the tournament for us.• and this experience can onMarsonet, ·and Dave Kerr.
Some of the other team:s ly help in the playoffs.,'
the top five ·finishers in apparently only arrived at Shannon said.
the • Lakehead
University Hamilton with four golfers
Mustangs could use some
lntermural golf· tourny held while the Lakehead cont1n.! fan support or they may go
at t.1ieStrathconaG:olfCourse gent took five. Dave Kerr., the way of the now defunct
on October 3, ·toak the cha.. being the last qualifier was Ukes and Redskins. You
mplonship with scores of allowed to play, but~ sc- can't run a football club
156 for Marsonet, 160 for ore of 165 was notcountedin without money
Ferguson, 164 for Battlston, the final tall .
and 166 for. Hodgson.
,...,,__,....,;;.ii.11..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
'The reason that the scores were so high is because
of the forty degree temperature and the forty mile per
hour winds.,• said Dick Battiston, one of the L.U. team.
The host college., Mohawk
College, were quite hospitable, reported Battiston.
"The course was in good
shape,' he said. 'The greens
were very large, so that 125

u

You Are Needed
by Larry Hebert (Spons
editor)
It has been said that the
most prominent characteristic of a university student is
his apathy towards students'
activities. I agree with this
observation and I feel it is
no place more evident than
in student's lack of support
for the interfaculty sports.
Each year the athletic department proposes a large
and varied programme and it
usually falls through because
of the lack of student participation.
If the people would fil)end as
much time playing interform
sports as they do playing bridge, we would be better off.
If the boys would get up off
their asses and the girls would hustle their bustles out of
the overcrowded cafeteria
and get out and play just one
sport we would be better off.
The only faculty which has
good spirit and participate to
the fullest extent in the interfaculty programme Is FORESTRY. As an example, they
have entered three teams in
the interfaculty football schedule. Can other faculties
match FORESTRY'S participation and spirit in interfaculty sports? I say they
can not. but I sure would
like to see them try.

And wherever you flnd a congenial crowd, you'll
find Coca-Cola. For Coca-Cola has the refreshing taste you never get tired of. That's why things
go better with C o k . o k e , after Coke.

�Page 8·

October 12, ·1967

THE ARGUS

Club
Notes
P. C. Association
The organizational meeting of the new Lakehead
University Progressive conservative Association was
held on the evening of Wednesday, October 4th.
The different events and
activities that will be carried out during the coming
year were discussed by the
people present. The biggest
item on the agenda was the
model parliament to be held later this academic year.
It was noted that the club
hopes to run a full complement of candidates
during the election for
model
parliament.
W. A. (Bill)
Bartley,
tentative president, expressed his appreciation for
the turn-out and
invites
anyone interested in Joining the club to com:act either a member of the club
or himself. He also noted
and gave fair warning to the
Liberal and NOP clubs on
campus.
'Here we come so look
out!' he said.
There will be another meeting of the P.c. club on
campus on Thursday, October 12th, at 12.15. All int.erested students are invited to attend.

Mixed vve·l come
for Vietnamese
MONTREAL (CUP) Thr~e students representing
the National Liberation Front of Vietnam were roundly
booed and hissed down as
they addressed .a crowd of
900 rowdy students in Montreal Thursday, Sept. 28.
&amp;l)onsored by the Union
Quebec,• the students, on a
two-w:eek speaking tour of
Quebec, made their
first
public appearance before ah
overflow crowd at Sir George
Williams University.
The crowd was antagonistic from the moment the stu..dent speakers entered the
hall.

I

This Week

Thurs., Oct. 12

WUSC Treasure Van
Political Science Club

Sun., Oct. 15

~ e are a small country,
smaller than the state of Tues., Oct. 17
Florida and no bigger than
Vancouver island.
For
four thousand years we have
been in constant struggle.
We have waged wars again- Wed. Oct. 18
st invaders to defend our
rights to peace and freedom
and happiness.'

I

allday
12.30 p.m.

WUSC Treasure Van
G.H.
all day
West Indies Ass•n Meeting G.H. all day
Arts Society Dinner Dance

Asked if~the -condoned the ~rt., Oct. 13
killing done by the Viet Cong
the1 answered that theirs
was a war of liberation. ~ e
are not killing ~ple who
are foreign to us like the Sat.,. Oct.14
Americans are.'

constant struggle

G.H.
1006

Folk Festival Rehearsal

Aud.

l.OOp.m.

Folk Festival Rehearsal

Aud.

1.00 p.m.

University Liberals
123 N.L. 12 noon
Inter Varsity Christian 1025 12.30 p.m.
Fellowship
World Unive:rsity Service Aud. 8.30 p.m.
A.M.s. Meeting
B.R. 7.00 p.m.
Fencing
G.H. 8.00-10.00

After unsuccessfully trying to explain their view of
They explained that in
High school seats reps
the war the trio were forced
recent years the wars have
to cancel a question-andinvolved first the French,
answei: period.
then the Americans, and
SCARBOROUGH (CUP) -- Nell McNeil high schoolhas stuthey offered a catalogue of dent representatives sitting in on teaching staff meetings.
applauded at McGill
The new policy was approved by the teaching staff.
the atrocities of the War.
So far the students have chalked up credits for liberalizing smoking regulations and for eliminating teacher-chapeIn contrast to the rowdy
'We are just a small peo- rons at their school dances.
reception received at. the
P~
who are being killed by
School officials feel the main advantage in involving stuhands of Sir George stubombs, whose women are dents in the running of the high school is an increase in students, the visiting Vietnam
being violated, and ·whose dent responsibility, and a broadening of their education into
students were applauded
loudly as they entered to homes are being destroyed. other than purely academic areas.
address 900 McGill students We admire the American
students who now bravely
Friday.
•
pronounce themselves aga- week, they received more
than the had expected. Eggs
Under the chairmanship of inst this injustice.'
were thrown at them from
MARINA INN
Laurier Lapierre the mestudents
assembled there.
'
'Long live the friendships
(Ye Oide M~triaggi)
The visitors, all members
eting allo~ed the Vietnam- of our people', he said.
of
the
Central
Union
of
Stuese to explain theVietnam
Sometimes called 1'The
dents of South Vietnam, are
war from the inside.
.
Wlltin1 Tlltin1 Hilton"• It's·
visiting Quebec centres un- • older
eggs thrown
than your P,ofessor,
der the sponsorship of UGEQ. but the beer is always cold,
They are now working in the
glasses full and colour teleHowever, when •the Vietn- student section of the NLF,
vision on. We do not want.
amese visitors _spoke at the which is the political arm of
Universit,y Film Society
all your money, Just most
University of Montreal last the Viet Cong.
of it, and we will welcome
There are now fewer than programme, a series of unyour ideas before we rel!ml
160 memberships left for the derground films is . being.
vate. Come on down and
1967-68 season of eight sch- negotitated for. Admission
help pay for new furniture
and Go-Go Gfl'ls who we
eduled international films. will be by membership on~
will keep on the second
·availal]le
These pictures are being ly. Tickets are
floor. We will even uy to
stereo Centre Ltd.
shown on the thfrd Thursday at $5.00 for the season from
take
the squeaks 011t of the
of every month; the next, , A W1lliam Sheridan, Chuck
stairs for you. The 3rd and
McOuat, and Dr. Magwood.
Girl Named
·Rosemary
4th floors and beverage
Players
Records
The programme will ina recent German clas_
s ic •
rooms are going to be 10096
youn. Second floor will be
mlxfng . sex and high finance clude 'Harakiri', from Japan;
Tape Recorders Guitars
regular botel. If beer sales
- is slated for October 19, 'Jules et Jim',from France;
are high enough, maybe the
at 8.00 p.m. in the Univer- and 'Ballad of a Soldier',
. _ _ DROP IN amt BROWSE--~
rooms will be free.
from Russia. Enquire now.
sity Theatre.
In addition to the regular

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ls pleased to invite students
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University to visit our Salon

ORCHID
BEAUTICIANS
276 Park St. (Twin City Gas Bldg.) D155021

BE RIGHT, VOTE

KNIGHT
LIBERAL

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                    <text>Machiavelli

Students

Speaks ...

Tremble

VOLUME II, No. V

LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY, PORT ARTHUR, ONTARIO

COUNCIL THREATENS

The confrontation between
students and administration
at Lakehead University appears to have been resolved.
At an 'informal" emergen.. cy meeting at the home of
the University President, Dr.
W. G. Tamblyn, it was
agreed that demands made
by the A.M.S. Council on
October 13th. would be met.
Events leading up to this
emergency meeting are as
follows:
On Tuesday, October 10th.,
the University Senate met in
session to deal with points
raised by students. The
Senate issued five resolutions
which appeared to satisfy all
student complaints. The resolutions were read by Dean
of Students, John Kerr, to
an emergency meeting of the
A.M.S. Council that night,
and clarified by Registrar
(and Secretary of the Senate)
Donald E. Ayre.
A general meeting of all
students was called for Friday, October 13th. Two
hundred and fifty students
attended to hear Chairman
of the ad hoc committee, set
up to deal with the situation,
outline the committee's
tivities to that date.

ac-

Julie Wierzbicki
Chairman Julie Wierzbicki,
Arts III, pointed out that a
report in one of the Lakehead dailies that "students
were satisfied" was a misrepresentation. "The students
are not satisfied" she said.
The newspaper report was
based on the Senate resolutions. Miss Wierzbicki pointed out, however, that these
resolutions were in fact only
•rough drafts of the Senate
• resolutions, and were not official. She also stated that
students had great difficulty
in interpreting the resolutions which were very ambiguous.
Miss Wierzbicki continued
that letters sent to students,
which approved or rejected
their courses, were also unofficial, and that courses
would be reviewed again in
April. This meant, in theory,
that a student could get his
programme approved now
but rejected in April, and
therefore be unable to graduate.

October

19, 1967

EIGHT PAGES

SIT-IN

editorial

Miss Wierzbicki then spoke
at length on the long-term
consequences of the present
situation.
BOYCOTT URGED
At this point, the meeting
was thrown open to coonments and suggestions from
the floor. Debate was heated
at times as students argued
the pros and cons of accepting the Senate's resolutions
and of taking stronger action. Finally Pat O'Neill,·
Arts I, moved that students
stage a token boycott of
classes. Debate raged further
until it was moved and
passed that the A.M.S. Council, representing all the students, retire and vote on the
boycott. The Council retired
to an in camera meeting in
the Board Room and returned
after 50 minutes with a motion calling upon the Ad.ministration to comply with four
points. The Council
( 1) requested the resolutions passed by Senate to be
made official,
(2) requested the letters
sent to students to be made
official,
(3) requested that the duties, responsibilities, a n d
functions of all university
personel be defined, and
( 4) requested the establishment of a student-faculty-administration committee
(two from each) to study the
power structure at Lakehead
University, and pass down its
findings and any recommendations by January 30, 1968.
T h e Council resolution
stated that if these were not
met by Monday, it would
stage a sit-in in the office
of the Dean of Arts, Dr.
Gordon Rothney.

by Rod Phillips (news editor)

President W. c. Tamblyn

day, President Tamblyn called the emergency meeting
at his home in Fort William.
Invited were members of the
University Committee, although A.M.S. President
Peter Young stated in a telephone interview late Sunday
night that "it almost seems
a University Committee because of the people invited,
but it wasn' t an c,ff1c.1.al University Committee ~eeting."
Invited were students Peter
Young, Don Lees (A.M.S.
Treasure), Don Cordingly
(A.M.S. Councillor), George
P a d d i n g t o n (University
Schools society President),
Pentti Paularraine (Arts Society President) and Don
Bergman (Science Society
President); faculty member
D. MacKenzie; and administrators W. G. Tamblyn, J.
Kerr (Dean of Students), D.
Morgan (Director of Finance), and C. Smith (Director of Physical Plant). 'l'he
ARGUS was not informed of
the meeting.
It was agreed that the
students' points would be
met and announced to a general student meeting on Monday at 12:30 p.m. - half an
hour before the one o'clock
deadline set by A.M.S. Council.

Positive action, or the threat of it, seems to have provided
just what was needed to force the Administration to meet
student requests.
But success, if there is success, is not due to the activities
of the A.M.S. Executive and Council or to the ad hoc committee.
These bodies have a record of procrastination and of taking
ill-considered actions.
In the beginning, the ad hoc committee, set up to examine
the issues, was far too exclusive to have any popular appeal.
This may have been due to the fact that the memorandum
was thought initially to affect only third and fourth-year
students. But when it was realized that the memorandum
could also affect first and second-year students, the committee
should have been modified accordingly.
The members of the committee were unable to agree
among themselves. This was painfully obvious at the October
5 meeting after the departure of Deans Rothney and Kerr.
The mam cause of the meeting's chaotic conclusion was that
the committee, already too large, was unable to present a
united front to students.
Then there has been the lack of communciations (which
one expects at Lakehead University) between the committee
and thP

1r!M1

__ _,,.

•

the crisis has been done "behind the scenes", and knowledge
of events was thus confined to a small in-group. The student
body was given only rough outlines when it met at poorlyorganized general meetings. The committee could hardly expect
students to become enthuisastic about issues on which they
are not informed. Students should have been kept constantly
in touch with developments; they might then have shared the
sense of urgency which was felt by the committ~
For most students, the last weeks have been routine,
punctuated now and agam by notices and announcements of
general meetings. The effectiveness of these was demonstrated
by the poor attendance at the meetings.
The petition to the A.M.S. Council was good strategy, but
the committee seemed to lose interest in it after one day's
signature-collecting. In that one d~y, almost 500 students
signed the petition; in another day, the committee could easily
have had the signatures of the majority of the students. But
for some reason, it just didn't bother.
Only at the October 13 general meeting did students
seem to realize the full significance of the situation. It was at
this meeting that the motion to boycott classes was made
and the A.M.S. Council retired to consider the motion. But
what the A.MS. gained in student enthusiasm was almost lost
when Council decided to meet in camera. There was no reason
why it should have done so unless it feared that its petty
bickering would leave it open to ridicule. And these are the
people who will probably later call for student representation
on the Senate and the Board of Governors, and will pay
lip service to the principle of open decision-making.
Yet despite these examples - and there are many moreof student ,mismanagement of the situation, success appears to
have been achieved. Let us hope that members of the A.M.S.
Executive, Council, and ad hoc committee, do not feel that
this success proves the validity of their strategy. It does not
necessarily do so.
Easy to criticize? In a case like this, it certainly is.

Registrar D. Ayre

The motion was relayed
to the Registrar as soon as
it had been announced to
students. The threat of a sitin was given full publicity in
the Fort William "TimesJ oumal" the next day, tiut
not mentioned in the Port
Arthur "News-Chronicle".
EMERGENCY MEETING
The following day, $\lll-

-&gt;
AMS President Young

Asked what A.M.S. Council
would do if compliance with
points was not announced by
one o'clock. Peter Young
stated that the sit-in would
still not be held "because we
have been assured that our
demands will be met."

PLAY TO BE PRESENTED
The Cambrian Players will present George Bernard Shaw's
"Arms and the Man" in the University Theatre on October
25, 26, and 27, with a student matinee on Saturday the 28th.
Tickets are $1.50 regular, an'd $1.00 for students, and can be
bought from members of the cast and at regular outlets.
'\\!atch for notices.

_,__-

�Page 2

October 19, 1967

Y.HE ARGUS

VOLUME II, No. V
October 19, 1967
The ARGUS is published weekly by the Alma Mater
Society of Lakehead University. The opinions expressed
are those of the editorial board and not necessarily those
of the AMS or the Administration. The ARGUS is authorized
second class mail by the Post Office, Ottawa, for payment
in cash. All correspondence to the ARGUS main office,
wherever it may happen to be at that particular time; mail
c/o Lakehead University, Port Arthur. Subscription ...
$3.00; advertising rates upon request.

..C

NO PROBLEM IS
50 BIG OR 50
COMPLICATED THAT

•

IT CAN'T BE RUN
AWA'! FROM!

editor • • ........~ .•••...•••.•..• Chuck -Grieve
associate .•••••.••••••••••••.•.• Bob Leggett
managing • • • • . • . • . • • . • • . • . • • • • Chad Hannah
news • • ••••.••••••••..•••••••• Rod Phillips
features • • •••.•••••.•.•.•.•••• John Sculthorpe
sports ••.••.•••••••••••.••••. •urI"Y Hebert
advertising ••••••••••.•.••.•••••Mike Barkwell
circulation.••••••••••••••.••.•••Gord Fukushima
Also around · the • office this week in various moods,
positions, shapes, and sizes: jed and wendy and bonnie
and bobble and tracy and ma;rnie and owen and don and
mary and lots of people without names, and then everyone found his watedoo and left me here to do the paper
myself, and i'm si~kl sick! sick!

-

I

Don
Colbome

I
I

"This is a really funny campus" according to Carol Wilson,
Communications Secretary for The Canadian Union of Students.
Miss Wilson was here last week to advise the AMS on budget
and constitution business. She took some time out for a beer
and to talk candidly about where Lakehead University was
at. Rather than shoot off my mouth this week I'll noncommitally quote what she had to say.
"Before I came," she said, "I had heard Lakehead referred
to as "Lunkhead U." so didn't know what to expect.
She didn't find much.
On the students: "very conservative . . . they really
believe the message in the student handbook that tells them
that they are privileged to be here . . . they have been sucked
into the middle class notion that education is to train you for
a job and success . : . they are convinced that somebody up
above knows best."
On student responsibility: "People here don't seem to
realize that they have a responsibility for their own education.
They cannot participate in University government both because
they are not aware of it's benefits to them, and because of
the authoritarian type of education offered. People here don't
have ·a chance to develop this responsibility."
On education: "Very few people seem to have done any
real thinking about what education is . . . why they are
here . . . how education relates to society . . . why students
should be concerned with University government and its
correlation with the educational process."
On the AMS: "They don't realize what University government is all about. It is a 'high school' student government
which conducts little if any educative function.
On 'student power' (LU style): The administration is so
nice.' For example the representation on the Board of Governors is a farce- . . . it is worse than -tokenism; it's a sham.
They only call in students for certain issues. The University
Committee is just another channel. Representation on the
Senate is a bribe being offered to cover the reality that very
basic change is needed."
On the calendar issue: "Rules will be bent so most people
aren't hurt. The University Committee will study University
government and the issue will die. I hope it doesn't. But
unless students stand up for their rights through action, it will.
I was appalled at the first meeting at the lack of reasoning behind what was happening. There was no analysis of
principles . . . people were reacting emotionally. The idea
seemed to be to patch up what they thought was wrong
with no concern for the University power structure. They
were willing to be satisfied with tokenism.
On freedom:
"I used the phrases 'radical action' and 'student power'
at a committee meeting. It was as if I had sworn at a private
gi!rl's school . . . it was a complete and utter shock to the
students there."
Miss Wilson is of course an "outside agitator" according
to the less syrupy members of the administration and not
to be listened to by us quiet children huddled in the shelter
of the great gooey, ~rthodoxy called Lakehead University.

letters to the editor
Helping others
In this age, man has made
great advances technologically, scientifically, economically and educationally; it is
lamentable to state that these
changes have not been followed morally, socially, and
spiritually. Man, to my
mind, has grown too egotistical and self-centered.
This era has ushered in
the "dog-eat-dog" attitude,
in which each individual
thinks only ·of himself and
, cares nothing about the
people around him. Today,
all of us are concerned about
living a good life. We crave
for all the luxuries of this
world. We spare no effort
to satisfy our wants, not caring that in so doing we may
be injuring other human
beings.
How -many of us have
ever taken a minute to think
not only of the sufferings
of the people of OU'l' land,
but even of those of other
countries? Have we ever
thought about the sufferings
of the people of India, or
quite recently about the
hardships endured by the
countries that fell in the
wrath of the recent hurricane? Maybe we have seen
these things in the newspapers or maybe we have
heard them mentioned over
the radio or television stations. When we heard them,
we became very sorry, but
that is as far as we went.
Embedded in our 9 w n.
thoughts, we soon forgot
about the sufferings of other
people.
We, a:s human beings,
should try for one second

to think of those less fortunate than us. Do you realize
that there are thousands of
people the world over, whO"
have to go without food for
the day, not because they
wish it so, but because of
poverty? What about the
Cancer and Pollo victims?
How can we assist them?
It is impossible for us as
individuals to go to every
unfortunate person and express our sympathy. Maybe
we can show our concern in
a more tangible form. I am
hoping' that the A.M.S. will
be instrumental in forming
a ''Help Others Club" or
some o t h e r association
whereby we as students
could contribute a little of
our spending money when
the need arises. I am sure
that in so doing, we will be
happy to know that we are
helping to relieve the sufferings of others.
-Khalid Ali,
Arts I

Cafeteria Prices
Sir:
In the ARGUS of October
5, there appeared a letter
from Sze-Chung Yuan concerning t h e cafeteria. I
would like to set the record
straight about a number of
statements he made.
1) "Cafeteria prices are
considerably lower than the
m a j o r i t y of restaurants
downtown." In fact, our cafeteria prices are considerably
lower than the majority of
restaurants downtown as our
prices ' do not include a
charge for overhead.
2) "The university cafeteria is under the joint management of the administration

ahd an outside contractot, so
half of the profit goes outside." T h e cafeteria is
owned by the university and
all the equipment for it is
supplied by the university.
Meal prices are based on the
cost of food and salaries plus
a small charge. Versa Foods
fee is 10 percent of the total
wage and food cost to the
cafeteria. If there is anything
left ov.er (difference betw~n
total. revenue and old_ charges
including Versa Foods 10
percent) Lakehead University gets the balance. Last
year Lakehead University's
total gross return was $3800
on $57,670 total sales (6.6%).
But this money was more
than used up to buy new
equipment. Lakehead University actually lost $7,450
on the overall operation.
3) Residents last year complained about food." We did
receive a number of complaints last year but we endeavoured to meet each of
these complaints by improving the service. This year
we have completely revamped our menu. The Residence
Council told me that they
are pleased with this year's
operation.
As for improvements, if
anyone has suggestions for
better cafeteria service, or
complaints about present
services, he can always come
to see me. My office is µi
the lower cafeteria. I am
open to all suggestions.
I hope that this letter may
help to dispel some misconceptions which students may
have about the cafeteria.
Sincerely,
Bob Gude,
Catering Manager.

�October 19, 1967

Page 3

,THE ARGUS

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ARGUS MAGAZINE

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4

October 19, 1967

THE ARGUS

Cold, sun morning, dew-mounted grass-weeds
Roll downhill. Woodbridge, right _turn, left Barrie IUghway
Becoming grey, sun-fire gone, winter think
Long phallic ribbon, grey with a thousand •uses
spotted snake
Wrapping coils against flank hills, sending tongue
through valley-critch ahead.
Making one handed love
Soft, old flaccid breasts, easy conquest, two minute land.
Brown weathered barns, mushroom thick.
Sickly brothers attend dying elm.
Warm, speckled leaf blankets smother tired hills.
Throat wounding breath; Sudbury
Dust cloud visible, rotting, de.ad, still belching death
sterile, putrence blanckened.
Sandwich gulped, away.
Same bland hills to Soo.
Morn
Frosted weeds, pocket bound by black spruce
Frosted weeds, pocket bound by black spruce
Headlights proclaim through white skin;
Car eaten by mist.
Lake sparkle, cloud lying together,
sunrise voyageur looking.
Road hugging hills.
Blasted root and rock make way, slice into
height, over run valley.
- Harder, savage.

Creep up long energy sapping grades, protesting
machinary, climax top.
Gullwing flight curves down.
Imprisoned monster backs, lump through green skin
mantle.
Road and I, struggle, exhausted.
Middle aged last miles
Nanabijou
Squalor called Cumberland.
Ugly library, park, unembrace car, register.

Feelings
It must be six summers ago. Maybe seven. I was wandering. ~essly through the American south. I happened (I
guess it was a happening-unplanned anyway) to drop into one
of the more famous department stores. The store shall remain
nameless as shall the city, for names are irrelevant and law
suits hurt. I guess one could call it a city but somehow it
took on the air of a somewhat corpulant southern small townyou know - a town where all the girls are named MaryBelle, where they're all sweet and refined and lose their
virginity about age 10; a town where the starch melts out of
men's shirts by 10 o'clock in the morning, and men's bellies,
round from that one more for the road, strain at shirt buttons.
I recall feeling how Alice felt when she fell down the
rabbit hole or wherever she fell. But for me the rabbit hole
was not a hole at all but a hall of unconnected "I do deeclayah
's" and "You all 's". At the end of the aisle, or hole if you
prefer, was the sporting goods department. It was classified
as the sporting goods department but it had rakes and shovels
besides. However that has no particular relevance anyhow.
In the department I happened to strike up a conversation
on the merits of one reel over another reel and lure versus
lure. The conversation was with a negro boy of my own age
and it never occured to me that he was anything but someone
of my own age and sharing my own interest. He was from
Detroit, and, like me, a sterotype Yankee. You know, fishing
is the only respectable way to be lazy - also an irrelevant
comment.
We weren't particularly aware of time's passing. At
least I wasn't, because I didn't have any precise destination
in mind or anyone bugging me then. In any event the air
conditioning selereted my morning in the store to slow up
or break down; I'm not sure which. The break-down and
the corresponding rise in temperature led one of us to suggest
going for what I believe is referred to as - I guess I shouldn't
mention that name either (trade mark registered, probably).
In any event we went to the cafeteria in the store and I
remember that "See Dick's New Friend" feeling. I had almost
finished that somewhat uninvolved process of picking up a
drink in a paper cup when "I'm sahrry suh, we cayunt serve you all."
The southern Mary-Belle was addressing my friend. I don't
know what happened after that. Only that psychological lump
and embarrassing chill in the spine.
And, thinking back, I think it was the time I filrst became
aware of hate.
Karl A. J. Goodwin

Centennial Dialogue on 100 Years
"I'm a Hungarian," he said.
I sat in my chair and listened.
"I don't need those bloody Yo-Yos--that's
What I call those Englishmen, Yo-Yos."
I tipped my beer to make the salt rise,
Then sipped lt.
"I escaped in •57 without the help of
Any bloody Yo-Yos".
"Is that so," I ,replied and sipped
Once more.
"You•~ bloody right pal - you believe it!"
I believed him.
"You know one thing a fellow
Doesn't forget how to pray.
My mother taught me how to pray
When I was just a kid."
"I pray sometimes," I said.
"You're bloody right buddy - you
Better believe it!"
"I'm a D.P.," he said
"What are YO\l?"
"A Yo-Yo", I replied.

�October 19, 1967

TH_E ARGUS

BOZNIA
FOREVER
By B. HUSSEY

an excellent gift because not
Long, long, long ago in
many people had ever heard
the far, far, far land of
of it let alone had it. It was
Boznia dwelt King Oldar
novel. He called in the Wizand his two daughters the
ards of Life, Art and LiteraPrincesses Yutha and Gonna.
ture, the Wizards of Wisdom
Qldar had ruled his kingdom
and Knowledge and, of
fairly and raised his daughtcourse, the Witch of Happiers well. The men who
ness. He knew they would
worked in the green-hilled
do a good job because he
fields by the River or
had appointed them himself.
in the mines. near the giant
And when he had gathered
Rock Rock would tell you
them all he sought a place
the King was good as would
for his daughters to seek
the people in the shops and
Truth. In a far comer of
businesses in Box Square. In
·a oznia he found a hill that
fact if you pressed them
overlooked the whole counyou'd find that they really
tryside and he decided to
loved him. They loved him
build a castle there for them
because he had promised to
to s e e k in. Although the
keep them as happy as they
king was rich he was not
had ever been under all the
that rich and he needed fikings and queens of Boznia
nancial support if his figt
and he had kept his promise.
was to become a reality.
He hadn't meddled with
Therefore, he called in all
their lives in all the thirtythe merchants and mine
five years of his reign. Don't
owners and all the wealthy
MOVIE REVIEW
think for one moment that
men of the kingdom a n d
By WILLIAM SHERIDAN
Boznia wasn't progressive.
made them the Wizards of
"In the Heat of the Night"
Hadn't they begun using the
Success, Security and Conis
on~ of the best pictures
new water wheel from Aca,
tentment.
of
the year. The story is at
the country across the Great
Soon the castle was finonce,
simple and complex. A
Lake Lake? Didn't they have
ished and everyone "oohed"
white
business man, visiting
when the king unveiled the
many inventions from lnglan
from the North, is killed in
and weren't they enjoying
name at the opening. When
a small southern town. Durthey saw the big gold
the new music from Phants?
ing the subsequent ·alert, a
Oh yes, Boznia was progresletters TRUTH they said the
Negro,
also visiting from the
king was wise even though
sive but they weren't foolish
North,
is apprehended and
they didn't know what
like some. They waited until
charged; but the Negro is
lnglon or Amca tried it out
TRUTH meant. All the Wiza policeman, from Philadelards moved in, and castle
and if it worked Boznia got
phia, beter paid than the
it. Sometimes it took long • was filled with the best
small town chief, a homicide
books and Yutha and Gonyears to know if something
expert,
and a nervy chap in
na began to seek Truth.
was a good idea or not but
the
bargain.
Well, obviously
At the end of a year the
they hadn't made a mistake
he
did
not
commit the
king called for the princesses
yet. Now and then someone
murder - but who did? The
and asked what they had
wondered why a Boznagonyoung Negro police officer
ian never came up with anylearned. Gonna said that she
is
coerced into staying, into
thing new but it didn't
had discovered, "What the
suffering
the slings and arreally matter so they didn't
people wanted was always
rows
of
outrageous
Southern
really really worry. But
best." The king was very
dignity, in an attempt to
there was something worrypleased with this. His smile
turn up the guilty party. The
ing the king.
grew bigger when he saw
acting, by Sydney Poitier of
Yutha,
but
when
she
said,
He had wondered for
the Negro from the North,
"The past means nothing in
many years what he should
and by Rod Steiger as the
itself,"
he
grew
angry
and
give his daughters and now
~mall
town police chief in
ordered them to search for
that they were that old the
another year. T hen he
Yutha said that Truth was
time had come for a decision.
brought in more books and
Beauty and the Polisher
One of the princesses would
more wizards.
frowned. She said that she
rule as queen sonieday and
The next year he called
was Truth, and the king
she must be able to govern
again and this time Gonna
frowned. Then she said that
as the people wished. There
had found that change was
the truth was that Boznia
wasn't much doubt in anynecessary only if it was
was a rather backward place
one as to who should be
necessary to change which
and that they never would
queen. Gonna was pretty
it seldom was, and uneoesget anywhere unless they
and she could do anything
sary at any other time."
stopped ·being happy, being
exactly the way it should
"Much better," thought the
stupid and stopped worrying
be done but when people
king. "Surely Yutha will be
about whether changes would
talked with her they found
closer to the truth." But, this
work or not and the king
it difficult to talk for long.
time Yutha said that the
collapsed. The Wizards gathShe was quite knowledgeable
future was meaningless until
ered around him and he debut nobody wanted to talk
it had become the present.
clared that he wished that
about fiscal policy or the
The king was furious. He
Gonna succeed the throne
growth of the gross national
cut the time to be spent
and with his last dying
product and how it would
words, he banished Yutha
affect the internal external with the Wizards of Art and
for being disloyal and wastexport import bracket, al- Literature, W i s d o m and
ing taxpayers money. All the
though they would never Knowledge and the Witch of
Happiness
and
increased
the
taxpayers
were sad but
admit it. Yutha was beautiful
agreed that she was a very
though nobody could say ex- time spent with the Wizungrateful child.
actly why they thought she ards of Success, Security
and Contentment. He ordered
The people grew to :miss
was beautiful. There was a
Yutha but it only mattered
lightness in her eyes that more books and more Tooms
a little so then only missed
spoke of the future though and to , be sure that the
she seldom did and when her merchants would continue to · a little. Gonna married the
Chief Polisher and lived
songs floated down from the help he made one of them
contentedly. They decided
palace and through the town, Chief TRUTH Polisher.
The Wizards all worked
that money should not be
the people loved her. Yutha
wasted on people like Yutha
carried all the hopes of very hard for they wanted
the king to be happy and
so they made rules about
Boznia.
who
could get into the castle.
the
king
listened
to
the
Oldar called in the Wizard
They decided too, that none
of All Things and asked Chief TRUTH Polisher bewould be allowed out unless
him what he should give his cause he couldn't afford the
they were just like Gonna.
daughters. The W i z a r d castle anymore.
Finally, they changed the
For the last time he called
thought for many days and
name from TRUTH to GOAL
for
his
daughters.
Gonna
then returned to tell the king
and made the letters out of
that he should give them said that the truth was
lead because it was more
that nothing succeeds like
Truth.
practical. Sometimes, t he
The king was very pleased success. "Marvelous," said
and felt that this would be the Chief Polisher. "Marvel- people wonder about the
marks of an old word beous " said the king. Everyhind the new name, but it
on: was sure that Yutha
doesn't matter much so they
would have found the truth
don't wonder much. •
• too.

r

1D31

the South, is superb.
The human reactions to
the evolving situation form
a story themselves. Poitier
returns slap for slap with a
southern gentleman, w h o
breaks down in tears, proclaiming, "There was a time
when I could have had you
shot for that." Three mugs
catch Poitier in a warehouse
and try to beat the hell out
of him because he is interferring in the town's affairs.
The mayor reminds the

police chief that Poitier
could have been oonvenient-ly shot for striking a whit.e"
man on a plea of self-defense. Poitier slowly becomes
the most hated man in town,
and all because he is doing
a job his pride will not let
him give up. Twice, men
are framed in an attempt
to cJose the case and get
him out of town, for status
is becoming more important
than murder. I wouldn't
miss this one!

�Page 6

October 19, .1967

THE ARGUS

The Challenge
of Social Change
Technocracy Inc. is the only organization on 'this Continent
that is preparing the citizens of North America for social
chan~e. _Social change is analogous to chemical change, in
that it involves energy transformation. Technocracy points
out. that our present social structures comprise a Price System,
which evolved during the past 7000 years ·of human toil, hand
~ls, and the resultant scarcity induced by a low energy
~xistence. Only with the introducion of exraneous energy,
~ the forms of steam, hydro-electric, and finally atomic power,
did the factors of production, and hence of social organization
change.
The magnitude of history's first real social change can
be graphically illustrated. The human animal must consume,
on the average, no less than 1700 Kilo-Gram Calories of
food energy for even the most sedintary existence. Less will
not maintain metabolism. To perfonn work calorie intake
must rise propo~ .onally. Since the human an~al can convert
food energy into work at an optimum efficiency of 25 per
cent, a man on a daily diet of some 5,000 K.G.C.s can perform
work at the rate of only 1/ 10 ·horsepower for a 10 hour
stretch. The average calorie intake for North America is
2300 K.~.C.s per capita per day. But through the use of
extraneous energy, automation and cybernation over 187 000
K.G.C.s are being converted per person per' day (in 'the
U.S.A. as of Sept./67).
This physical work means goods and services for our
econ~my ~d ~his rate of conversion belies the myth of
sc~rcity maintained by those pathologists of debt, the economists. Nevertheless, the Price System distributes this abundance
t~ the population through wages and salaries. Automation is
displacing more and more jobs, and so reducing purchasing
po~er. Wars ~f waste on foreign soil notwithstanding, the
Pnce System is proving less and less capable of handling an
abundance.
• Te~hnocra~ Inc. has calculated that if sufficient energy
consuming devices are installed, and the total amount of
extran~us energy consumed reaches or exceeds 200,000 K.G.C.s
per capita ~r . day, the ensuing abundance will knock the
bottom ?ut of scarcity values and show the Price System up
for th~ impotent imposter it is. If present trends coninue, and
there 1s ample indication that they will, the Price System's
modus operandi will be responsible for a social crisis of
~paralled magnitude on this Continent, Probably within
eighteen months.
Technocracy Inc. is a membership organization with headquarters at Rushland, Pa., U.S.A. Technocrats are citizens
of North America who accepted the discipline of facts and
who are pointing the way toward the next most pr;bable
sta~ of society on this Continent. Technocrats present an
engm~r'.s bluep1:IDt which is the only prescription for survival
t?R.t. is _in keeping with the science and technology of this
civiliza~on. Techn°&lt;:racy's postulate, that the phenQlllena involved in the functional operation of a socal mechanism are
measurable~ has been confirmed by over 50 years of research.
The Executive of Technocracy's Continental Board of Directors
has the ~trategy for action for the citizens of this Continent~ th_at 1s need~~ is 'the go ahead.' The membership at large
1s neither qualified nor authorized to expound on these
me~ures; rather, the organization -is an educational branch,
designed to present and clarify the issues at stake, as the Price
System becomes increasingly intolerable. Investigat.e Technocracy Now!
William Sheridan - 8948

For the finest

SCANDINAVIANGIFTS
and
.
FURNITURE

Examinations don't
by Rod Phillips
Presumably most of the
readers of this article are
at university. In which case,
most of the readers will have
written many examinations
already in their lives. But
how many have ever thought
seriously about ,these examinations their purpose,
their relation to education,
their achievements, and so
on? Probably very few. But
the examination system is
becoming extremely o u tmoded and in need of critical scrutiny.
The following is an attempt at briefly analyzing
certain aspects of the examination system, with particular reference to conditions at Lakehead University.
First of all, how important
are examinations to students
at L a k e h e a d University?
Briefly, the answer is that
the results of examinations
determine whether or not a
student is credited with his
"year." The degree of influence of examinations varies
from one department - and
even within departments and from one year, to
another. For example, in
first-year History the breakdown of the final mark is
20% to 40% term work
(which includes the midyear examination), and 60%
to 80% final examination.
The variation is according to
individual tutors. But in
senior ye(lrs' History, the
final examination accounts
for less of the final mark,
and there is generally no
mid-year examination.
As you can see, there is
some variation in the degrees
of influence oJ. examinations,
but the fact remains that
examinations do account for
a great deal of the final
mark - in many cases, in
first-year especially, most of
the final mark.
You can see from this
brief survey - as if you
didn't know it anyway that examinations play an
extremely important role in
determining whether or not
you graduate. And, general-·
ly speaking, we accept this.
Only at examination times
do we complain that too
much emphasis is placed on
examinations and not enough
on term work (especially if
I

Lakehead
Unitarian
Fellowship
MEETS

visit

SUNDAY MORNING

the
treasure
house

Gron Morgan
High School

r

at 10:30 at

October 22
Mrs. Anna Charles

Cosmic
Consciousness,,
11

7 S. CUMBERLAND ST.
Phone 344-9441

we have done well during
the term). By then, of
course, it is far too late, and
we forget about it until the
next :rear.

B.A. in Two Months?
But should examinations
be considered so important?
What do they really prove?
Firstly, look at the purpose
of an examination. Ideally,
an examination shows how
much a student has learned
during the year how
much he has assimilated
from the lectures given in
his course. Ideally.
But what - in reality this
time - does an examination
do? Students :reading this
know damn well that an examination does not test what
they have learned during the
year. On the contrary, it
tests the know ledge they
have managed to cram into
their heads in the couple
of weeks before the examination takes place.
Now, if examiners are
satisfied witfi this arran~
ment, fine - let's keep the
examination system. And
let's cut down the academic
year from seven months to
three weeks. This way, we
should be able to get a B.A.
or B.Sc. in just over two
months of concentrated effort. Ridiculous? Maybe.
But the present examination system does more than
just test a couple of week's
work. It tests, among other
things, a student's writing
speed and his ability t.o work
under stress. Of course, this
doesn't help students who
are verbally slower and less
fluent, and µ can be disastrous to students who are
unable to remain ca]m and
collected under stress, but
it's always been this way,
so why change it?
Yes, it's difficult to see
any resemblance between the
examination system's ideals
on the one hand, and
achievements on the other.
It is quite obvious that this
situation is intolerable and
must be changed. Easy to
say. Difficult to find a practical alternative. More difficult
to implement the alternative.

Alternatives
There are a number of
alternatives open for the
present examination system.
Which of these a1ternatives
or what combination of them
should be instituted is open
to debate. The most popular
of the alternatives are
- "Open book" examinations. Where students are
allowed to refer to prescribed texts or to. any boo~
they wish.
- Distribution of examination questions some days
,before the examination itself takes place.
- Exclusive reliance on
other criteria for the final
mark e.g. research papers,
term work, seminars, etc. •
It is necessary to note
that every one of these proposals demands somewhat
different abilities. "O p e n
book" examinations, for instance, call for more comprehension and less memorization, and create less tension.
Of course, the alternatives
1also depart from t~e ideal
c,f the examination system.
Their !'esults do not evidence
!knowledge gained by memorization, but by understanding and research. This aspect is of minor importance
however; the ideal of the
examination is by no means
set down by law, and may
be discarded when considered obsolete. At thiJ: .J)oint.
it may not be irrelevant t.o
·ask where, in post-graduate
life, one is required to work
under examination conditions. One is always able t.o
refer to available infonnation.

.

'fhe ramifications of changing the examination system
will (a note of optimism) be
far-reaching. The structure of
the whole teaching system
is based on examinations,
and abolition of the latter
will necessitate modification
of the former. Nevertheless,
the . examination system is
badly in need of re-appraisal
and . replacement, and these
should be effected as soon
as possible. The present intolerable situation must not
be perpetuated.

Number 32 is Coming
Number 32 is coming, and number thirty-two stands for
thirty two miles, the duration of a walkathon soon to be
held in the Lakehead. The whole effort falls under the name
"Miles for Millions" and the way it works is this:
On the morning of October 28 at 8 o'clock a few thousand
students from all the various high schools plus Lakehead U.
and Teachers College will set out walking. Each participant
will find a sponsor to donate a certain amount of money for
every mile walked. What is done with all this money? It's
divided up amongst various charities. $5000 will go to Care
of Canada to supply pipe and mat.erials for building a water
supply system in Guatemala. $5000 will go to Town Talk which
is a municipal government educational forum. $2500 is to be
donated to Care of Canada for building five schools in
Guatemala. $12500 will be given to Oxfam for forming a
co-op farming system in Columbia. Any surplus. funds will go
to Crossroads, Africa.
The walks have been very successful in most Canadian
cities. In Ottawa, 4000 students walked to raise $85000. So
let's support it here in the Lakehead and make this endeavour
a real success. Gordon Wolford, Arts I is the representative on
Campus.

I

j

�October 19, ·1967

THE ARGUS

Page 7

Basketball Schedule
1967-1968
Saturday November 18
Cambrian College
There

By LARRY HEBERT
Well, the two major intercollegiate sports are finally
"beginning. The varsity basketball team is currently practicing
at the Teacher's College gym in the afternoons, ·and at the
high schools two nights a week. Hockey practices for the
defending I.C.H.A. champs, the Nor'Westers began October
17 at the Port Arthur arena.

*

*

*

*

Rwnours has it that P.A.C.I. has lost their football games
this year because of the absence of Roy Holman of Arts I
Roy keeps telling us he was the star when he was there.

*

.

*

*

With coach George Birger ordering short haircuts for
his basketball players this year, forward Lou Pero wants to
take advantage of the situation. Lou is trying to obtain the
hair-cutting contract for his father who is a barber.

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

Seems that a certain brother of mine is taking over as
sports reporter for the Times plus a newspaper at Selkirk
High School. Good luck, but . don't get too good 'cause I may
lose my job.

*

*

*

*

Although Port Arthur high school football teams .. have
not provided Fort William teams with a great deal of competition, they are running close races in both divisions in
· their own city.
The senior race is a three-way affair including Lakeview,
Hillcrest, and Hammarsjold. For the first time in many years,
P.A.C.I. has a weak senior team and will probably finish at
the tail-end.
Lakeview is Tated as the best in Port Arthur but could
easily be upset by either HjlIIlDlarl;jold or Hillcrest. They tout
a strong backfield led by backs Ron Kehl and Gord Dixop.
Quarterback Ian MacRae gets fine blocks from lineman Don
Smeetan and Jim Perrier, who team with linebacker Larry
Perepeluk to lead a strong defense.
Hillcrest has a well-balanced team that almost beat Lakeview in theiir last meeting, but fell short two points, losing
9 - 7. The offense is led by back Lauri Keller and quarterback
Lei Hartviksen. Holding up the defense are Ken Launderville
and Brian Marcino.
Hammarsjold Vikings can be rated on par with Hillcrest
as they tied in their first meeting. They tout a fine all-round
quarterback in Marcuu Peuhkurinen and a strong fullback in
Jack luvehar. The defense is tough and right up with those of
the other two contenders.
The junior division is a four-way toss-up and has been
unpredictable in the early stages. Hammarsjold and Hillcrest
show how close they were when they tied 0 - 0, Lakeview
Lions, after taking three straight beatings, came back to beat
Hillcrest 6 - 0, scoring their touchdown in the last three
minutes. Earlier, P.A.C.I. had squeaked by Lakeview 7 - 6.

I

\

MUSTANGS
\
I
r
s

e
ii'

b
le

ln
a
go

an
So
on

1

With only 23 players
making the trip Lakehead
Mustangs were beaten 19-'Z
by the St. Vital Bulldogs who
had bombed them earlier in
the season. Because of the
shortage of players many of
the team had to play both
ways. Guards Harold Michelson, Eero Vuorinen, and .
D a v e Montgomery also
played in the tackle position
because only one regular
tackle made the trip. Their
weight is about 65 lbs. less
than the front defensive
four of the Bulldogs. Two
Winnipeg Blue B om be r
scouts saw two-way halfback
Pete Ondros intercept three
passes which earned him the
Player of the Game Award
from his team-mates. Harold
Michelson contributed a 40
yard single which completed
Mustang /Scoring.

November
November
November
December
December
December
December
December
December
January
January
January
January
January
January
February
February
February
February
Februairy
February
February
February

19

24

25
2
3·
8
9

15.
16
5
6
13

14
19
20

3
4
10
11
17
23
24

25

Cambrian College
University of Winnipeg
University of Winnipeg
Bemidji State College - J.V.
Bemidji State College - J.V.
Hibbing College
Ely College
Mesabi State College
Itasca College
Wisconsin State U. - J.V.
Wisconsin State U. - J.V.
Brandon College
Brandon College
St. Cloud State C. - J.V.
St. Cloud State C. - J.V.
Wisconsin State U. -J.V.
Wisconsin State U. -J.V. Cambrian College
Cambrian College
Northland College
Regina Tournament
Regina Tournament
Regina Tournament

There
Here
Here
Here
Here
There
There
Here
Here
There
There
There
There
There
There
Here
Here
Here
Here
There
There
There
There

To A New Student

Bill Horychuck of Bus. Admin. I is another one of the
local baseball players who the Minnesota Twins have taken
serious look at. Bill toils on the monument for the Port Arthur
Red Sox in the summer.
*

Sunday
'.P'riday
Saturday
Saturday
Sunday
Friday
Saturday
Friday
Saturday
Friday
Saturday
Saturday
Sunday
Friday
Saturday
Saturday
Sunday
Saturday
Sunday
Saturday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday

I wondered why you were
sitting alone, so, being a
pseudo-social type, I. grabbed a coke (15 cents this
year) and sat down at your
table. It didn't take long to
see why you were alone.
Your first comment was
"Boy, this sure is a crumby
cafeteria compared to the
one we have back home.''
From there you went on,
criticizing and condemning
almost everything about our
city and our university . . .
not enough stores, prices
tc;,o high, nothing to do, university too "small", etc.
When you ran out on this
topic, you proceeded to give
me a resume of your
parents' accomplishments,
stressing their economic
achievements and social
position. As I made a frantic
excuse and fled, you made the
only comment that I agreed
with. You said "I think ·I

should have stayed home and
gone to the Un iv e r s it y
of ... ".
Friend, we're not naive.
We know that our city and
University aren't all they
could be. But, believe it or
not, many of us have come
to love both and are willing
to accept the muddy parking
lots, the crowded cafeteria,
and all the inconveniences
because they are by far outweighed by the many advantages of • living and being
educated here. I suggest you
develop a sense of humour
quickly. You'll need it when
you're pushing your car out
of a six-inch pot hole as the
passing vehicles throw mud
on your suit.
As for your parents'
achievements, leave them at
home; they weren't yours to
bring anyway. You may have
benefited from Daddy's posi-

Join the ·College Crowd!
Everyone gathers at the

DOMINION ROOM LOUNGE

ROYAL EDWARD HOTEL
623-8467
Fort Wlliam

EVERYBODY'S

TRYING
The Lakehead's
First Full Sized

19c
BURGER
Wb7 pay 30, 35 and
ea 40 centa for &amp;he
ume hamburger that

you can now pt at

tbis new LOW PRICE.

TINY'S

Memodal at Ontario 8&amp;.

tion in your loca high school,
but you won't ride through
Lakehead University on your
old man's money. Your only
success here will be in
boring all you meet.
Since you've gotten to the
university level, you're supposedly an intelligent person, and, as such, you have·
the right, even the obligation
to observe, evaluate, and
criticize. But please don't
shoot us down all in thefirst
few days. Look around; get
to Jcnow the people, th~ university, the city itself and
then offer your opinions, You
may be surprised to find
that, in some respects, we
may be even superior to
your home city, although I
hear that Winnipeg is a fine
place to live.
At any rate, you're our
guest, and given a- chance,
we'll make you welcome (we
are· known for our hospitality
here). But, friend, keep going as you are and it'll be a
long! lonely year.
Ron Perry, Arts III

ONLY MUSTANG
MAKES IT HAPPEN!

MARINA INN
(Ye. o·lde Mariaggi)
Sometimes called 1"The
Wlltln1 Tlltln1 Hilton"• It's
older than yom Ptof..,..,
but the beer ii always cold,
glasses full and colom televJdon on. We do not want.

all yom money, jmt malt
ol lt, and we will welcome
your ideas before we reno ...
vate. Come on down and
help pay for new fmnlture
aud Co-CO CJrJs who we
will keep OD the second
floor. We will even try to
take the iquealm oat ol the
ltafn for you. The 3rd aud
4th !loon and beverage
l'OOml are going to be 1009'
y0Q1'1. Second lJoor will be
regu)m hoteL If beer sales
are high enough, maybe the
IOOIDS will be free.

Want more fun? More excitement in
your life? Turn to Mustang. Mustang
makes it happen. Mustang grabs you,
turns you on-creates a new you; puts
you in a whole new exciting worldl
And Mustang makes rt happen three
ways: Hardtop. Convertible. Fastback.
FORD MUSTANG

1967 Close-Out Sale Continuing
at greatly reduced prices

GIBSON MOTt)DS
(1962) Ll1'l1TED
Intercity

Dial 344·7235

�Page 8

October 19, ·1967

THE ARGUS

another letter

Why Not An

International Youth Centre
Taken from Projet De Cenue
International De la Jeunesse

via CUP

After his Excellency
Mister Pierre Dupuy, Commissioner general of the
International Exhibition had
declared "Will Youth and his
world be absent from Man
and his World?" Canadian
youth formed an advisory
Committee for representation with the Canadian Corporation for the Universal
and International Exhibition
of 1967. It ls the same committee which, in collaboration with the c.c.w.E., promoted the Youth Pavillion,
first step towards research
on youth, it's movement and
it's communication media.
Through the Youth Pavillion,
students from all parts of the
world, all those concerned
with youth or the ''Youth''
fact; were gathered for conferences, panels, slide projections and work shops,
adapted to their interests and
experience. It is in the sense
of interdisciplinary meeting
that ,we can say that the
Youth :eavillion is the first
step towards a crossroads or
International Youth Centre.

'Youth Advisory
Committee
On the other hand, the
Youth Advisory Committee
had already submitted this
project of an International
Exhibition: the project then
consisted in the creation of
a non-profit company, "The
International Youth Centre",
which, publically and privately financed, could build
and manage a Youth Centre
to provide meeting facilities,
offices for youth organizations, and, most important,
to provide a Youth Research
Ce~e, as well as a communications centre, vital to
any evolution. and interdisciplinary aim. Unfortunately, this project was at the
time unacceptable due to lack
of funds. However, the Canadian Corporation for the
World's Exhibition hasgiven
it's formal approval, and
moreover had accepted to
reserve location for the
establishment of the Centre
on the Exhibitton site.

the working Youth. The International Documentati9n
Centre, as well as fulfilling
it's static funcrton of 'information bank, would also act
as a priorities indicator in
the domain of Youth Research. The Cultural centre's aim would be to relay
all information, study results, briefly, .all "cultural"
product received, taught or
created on the spot, i.e. at
'Under Thirty'
the International Youth
Centre. In a different outWithout disc re di ting look, this centre would proU.N.E.S.E:.O. and other vide a multi-dimensional
organizations f o r t Ii e i r
means of expression for the
Youth research, we must young, i.e. by taking advanIface the fact that the inten- •tage of all available methods
sity of the Youth Phenome- of expression, such as films,
non around the world. Re- radio, television, pre s s,
membering that one half of theater, arts and sports,
the world's population is in workshops and panels. The
the "under-thiro" bracket, International Youth Centre
and that youthplaysapromi- would be financed and mannent socio-economic role in aged, in it's first stage, by
many countries, we believe an inter-governmental soit has become urgent to ciety (;Montreal, Quebec, Otpromote youth research by _ta wa), to be transformed,
the establishment of an afterwards, into an internaInternational Youth Gentre. tionally mixed so c i et y,
As well as wor.king in all whose participants would be
fields of youth activities, the national governments.
Centre would serve as a Moreover, certain interestbasis for practical forma- ed pr iv ate organizations
tion and as a starting point could contribute to the fifor in te rd i sc ipli nary nancing and equipping of the
research in which autocriti- Centre. We also know that
cism would be favou:red by U.N.E.s.c.o. is ready to dethe organization of seminars fray part of the costs of the
on all levels;
e stab li sh me n t of International Youth Centre.
the International Secretariat
would provide offices and a
considerable nu m h.e r of
material and technical services to •the different Youth
movements around the
world. By such groµpmg,
many of these movements
will save precious time and
money needed for the accomplishment of their functions.

Youth Centre

Role of Youth

One of the first items to
consider in the greater
rationalization of the Youth
Phenomenon i-s, without a
doubt, the establishment of
an International Youth Documentation Centre. It is
important to assemble all
documentation pertinent to
Provincial, National and International Youth. In general, Youth organizations are
financially very limited, and
as a result, they are incapable of maintaining documentation centers or even constant communication with
other organizations: the
creation of such a Centre
would lift many ideological
barriers by providing serious and continuous interdisciplinary research and. extending the scope of this
research to, for example,

r

name in the late 'fifties were
the work of Liu Ya-tzy.
As to the question of
"great", I believe, Mr. O'Neill
will agree w:ith me that
when we consider whether
a man is great or not we
consider his contributions to
mankind (at least to his
country and his people).However, if Mr. O'Neill calls
Mao "A great man" simply
because he is responsible for
the butchery of 25 million
Chinese, more than the total
population of Canada, in the
last 17 years, and responsible
for making the rich poor,
the poor, poorer, I cannot
_but comply.
Sincerely,
S. C. Yuan.

This Week

THURSDAY,OCTOBER19
Film Society "A Girl Named Rosemarry" (German)
UC Theatre - 8:00
Circle K Meeting - 10:58 - 12:00 - 2:00
Thursday Discussion Group (J. Howard) room 1100 - 12:30 - 2:00

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21
A.M.S. Senior Social Club - Luong and G.H. - 8:00
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 22
Development Fund Meeting -

BR and FL -

7:30

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24
University Liberals - 123 N.L. - 12:00
Municipal Govt. Course: Speaker D. B. Morris, City Clerk,
Fort William
"Diverence Between Business and Gobt. Decision Meeting''
Speaker: E. H. Reed, Mayor, Ft. Wm.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship - r. 1025 - 12~0 • 2:00
Business Administration Film - Aud. - 2:00 - 3:15
L.U. Women's Association - FL - 8:00

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Thermal Boots Thermal Underwear

Rexa/1 Pharmacy

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Hydro Parkas

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LAKEHEAD

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132 May Street, ,North

Fort William

I

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20
University Schools Society Dance - G.H. - 8:00
Lakehead Symphony Rehearsal - Aud. - 7:00 - 10:00
West Indies Ass'n. Meeting - r. 1022 - 7:00

It would be useful, at this
point, to stress the considerable role of youth
movements in a society: they
group certain of the most
eminent dynamic elements
of a population and provide WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25
them with efficient means
A.M.S. Meeting - BR - 7:00
of expression and action in
Fencing - G.H. - 8:00 • 10:00
our cultural transformation.
Friends of L.U. Library - FL 8:00
Ever increasing examples
point out youth's important
role in a global society and
the authorities awareness of
this role. At first glance,
it may seem dangerous to
tread on such highly political
terrain, but we believe that
youth must face the problems which divide it and not
avoid them. Furthermore,
we believe that youth has
proved its sense of responsibilities capable of such a
task.

Expo Closes
Now that the Exhibition is
coming to a close and that it
is time to decide what will
be done with the pavillions
and the lands, we, as well as
two hundred and eightyseven other Youth organizations find that the moment
has come to once again bring
this project to the attention
of the public and the inte!ested authorities. As previously mentioned, to fulfill
efficiently it's function, the
International Youth Centre
should provide international
offices, a research documentation and communication centre. In .order to
improve technical exchanges bet we en various
Youth movements, and thus
' to increase their efficiency
as much on the individual
as the international '!level,

Dear Srr:
Concerning the letter "Sun
not set" (Argus 28/9/67): If
Mr. O'Neill were familiar
with the Chinese education
system, he would know that
no teacher training course
in China lasted as long as
six years; but all the high
schools were (and still are).
Fifty years ago, anyone in
China could, with permission
of the university and usually
by paying a small fee, walk
into a lecture room as a
drop-in student and had to
stand at the back in case
all the seats were occupied.
This indicates that Mao was
unable to enrol as a regular
student at the .university.
Mao is not a poet. A few
poems published in his

in Port Arthur
2 S. Court St. 345-6564
~y City Mall 345-7334
Medical Arts
Dispensary
344-3811

in Fort William
Victoria at
Syndicate
Centennial
'Square

623-0477
623-2777

�</text>
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                    <text>Hey

How's

Exec -

Ticks?

VOLUME II,

No.

V11

LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY, PORT ARTHUR, ONTARIO.

November 2, 1967

TWELVE PAGES

Sir George Williams student
strike a complete success
Striking Sir George Williams students won their
fight Thursday to have a say
in the running of the university bookstore, and have
gained ground in their struggle for great.er control ir..
the "affairs of the university."

Wendy Ticknor

AMS secretary resigns

Crowds of up to twentyfive hundred students sat in
the Hall Building Thursday
while representatives of the
students, faculty and Administration met behind closed
doors to discuss student demands.

by doing some of their work,
they would never show you
how it was to be done, or
they would say they would
do it later, later, lat.er."
"I found I was putting in
too much time for the
amount of work I was accomplishing," she said. "I did
all my own work, plus lots
of financial stufr- and lots

to a deeper disorder within

of other things besides."

the AMS Executive.
"It st.ems back to the fact
that everything is disorganized," she said. "The more
you tried to organize it the
deeper you p into the hole."
"The co-operation among
the executive at times was
almost non-exist.ent. When
you would try to help them

"The position is there, and
it is just what you make it,"
she said. "It is very rewarding, if you can afford the
time necessary. I think my
resignation will allow me to
be more beneficial to both
the Council and to myself;
I can go to Council meetings
and speak up."

After more than three
hours Student Association
President Jeff Chipman returned to the strike scene
and announced ''Ladies and
gentlemen, our goals have
been realized."
The crowd went wild.
Their demands included
setting up a Managing Board
of the bookstore, to be com-

posed of equal representatives from each of the int.erested groups involved.
In a front page statement
in last Wednesday's special
edition of The Georgian,
Chipman explained "Our decision to ask for a general

Cafeteria prices to go up
Twenty cents for a cup iof dents themselves regarding
coffee; 25 cents for a large the unsightliness of these
soft drink. Will you pay tables which, rather than
serving their intended purthese prices?
Based on conditions as pose, have been transformed
they now stand, there is a into receptacles of dirty
strong possibility that these trays, dirtier dishes, crumpother proposed price in- led lunch bags, and discarded
creases will have to be im- food.
In attempting to solve
plemented soon. However, as
of yet whether increases are this problem, the Food Combrought into effect or are mittee approached Mr. Bob
avert.ed still depends on the Gude, Cafeteria Manager,
students, and their co-opera- asking him to sit on the
Committee in an advisory cation - or lack of it.
pacity. Mr. Gude pointed out
The recently - appointed
Food Committ.ee was formed that one woman was hired
to discuss suggestions or to wipe tables and clean out
legitimate complaints which the ash-trays - but those
students wish to air concern- were her only duties.
But the responsibility of
ing the operation of the
the cafeteria and the service depositing dishes in the
racks - five of which are
of food at the university.
One problem that was provided - and of disposing
brought up a problem of refuse in the receptacles
which should never have provided is supposedly the
students'. However it seems
arisen in the first place is a direct result of student's that many students are so
restaurant - conditioned that
ne~Iigence and laziness.
This problem is the de- they are content to leave
plorable state of the cafe- their mess behind, creating
t.eria tables during peak busi- inconviences for those who
follow.
ness hours -in the cafeteria.
Nothing• is more unappetNumerous complaints have
izing
than a mosaic of dishes,
been received from the stu-

The final resolution arising from the negotiations established a joint studentfaculty-administration Committ.ee, compo~d of 12 members from each group, to
"undertake an examination
of the concret.e means of
more fully involving student
and faculty members in the
affairs of the university."
BOOKSTORE FIRST

"GOALS REALIZED..

Wendy Ticknor, AMS secretacy, resigned last Monday,
due ost.ensibly to academic
presrures.
Miss Ticknor, a Math major, feU that the hours she
put in working for the AMS,
at least 40 per week, did
not allow her to keep up
her academic work.
But her resignation points

strike is an indication that
the Students Association is
not prepared to back down
from the demand for democratization of the university."

The statement specified
that the Committee's first
task will be 1:Jo set up a body
with power and authority to
set policy for the university
bookstore.
Chipman said the Committee would meet for the first
time Monday, October 30.
FACULTY SUPPORT 'I'

Earlier in the day, Sir
George University Association of University Teachers
passed a resolution supporting the student action.
The strike was called at
a Council meeting early
Thursday morning and the

crowds sat in at the Hall
Building all day. Among
them was a contingent of
about 70 students from McGill and about 30 from
L'Universit.e de Montreal.
DEMOCRATIZATION ROT
SO CLEAR

After the meeting, Chipman said "We asked for a
bookstore manag,erial committee and we got it. As
for democratization we must
look at it in the broad cont.ext. It is not so clearly defined."
"The demonstration had a
definit.e affect on the Administration. The student show
of support was necessary to
endorse our position."
Chuck Axelrod, lnt.ernal
Vice-President and co-negotiator with Chipman, said
"The Administration is worried because of the demonstration of student-faculty
co-operation. They are very
concerned that no..mapifesta-

tion of power such as today
should happen again."
The President of SGWAUT
said "I think our agreement
today will be a constructive
beginning to the task of involving students and faculty
members in important university matters."

- students to blame

empty and half-empty cups,
used cutlery, and over-flowing trays, all with spilled
salt and sugair, inconsiderately placed cigarette butts,
ashes, matches and crap all
over them.
Since students refuse to
place their offerings of
gravy, ketchup, and cigarettes in the racks provided, the
necessity has arisen to hire
another woman to do what
students should be doing
themselves.
This, then, is the reason
for the proposed increase in
cafeteria prices. If this intolerable situation does not
cease, there will be no alternative but to raise food
prices.
Kindly assist the Food
Committ.ee in continuing to
keep the prices competitive
by removing your dishes and
garbage.
Members of the Food Committee are John Sihvonen
(Chairman), Dave Parsons,
Rick Middaugh, Chris Horodecky, and Greg Cox. If
problems il'elated to this
matter arise, these people .
are the ones to see.

lonely garbage, an inanimate space filler

�Page

November 2 , 1967

2

I

Club
Notes

The Anthropology-Sociology Club will meet on November 7, 1967, at 12:45 p.m.
in room 1149.
The guest speaker at this
meeting will be Dr. Daniel
Hill of the Ontario Human
Rights Commission.

--- Nemlssa
Nemissa is pleased to announce that Gloria Moodile,
a professional model, will be
on campus Wednesday, November 8th, to attend a discussion on good grooming. A
hair stylist will also be
present to demonstrate the
versitility of hair pieces.
All girls are invited t;o attend. Watch the bulletin
board for further information.

Polly Sigh Club

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3
West Indies Ass'n Meeting-r. 1022-7 p.m.
Lakehead Symphony Rehearsal-r. 1006-7-10 p.m.
Folk Festival-Aud.-8 p.m.

Simon says

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4
Lakehead Symphony Rehearsal-r. 1006-7-10 p.m.
Folk Festival-Aud.-8 p.m.

••••

For a new fun experience try driving along the "Express-way," that $3,000,000 strip of glorified cow path. A road, only
four and a half miles long with 3 stop lights, and as an added
feature a special corner at Oliver Road designed to kill cars.
That miserable excuse for a throughway has twelve, count them-, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6
twelve intersections between Oliver Road and Fort William.
SAS Meeting-BR-7 p.m.
When the precipitation becomes heavier than a light mist the
Chemical Institute of Canada-Fl 1029-8 p.m.
average speed drops to 24½ mph.
Human Rights Commission Reception-SL-8 p.m.
Happiness is a verbose professor with laryngitis.
Happiness is wat.ching the cacti in wing D grow.
Happiness is pretending you are at Zenda as a prisoner, as
you walk through our tasteless tunnels.
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7
Happiness is watching the Cambian Players production of
University Liberals-123 NL-12 noon
"Arms and the Man," with that excellent cameo performance of
Technicians Meeting-r. ll020-12 noon
the Russian Officer bv someone we all know and love.
Fencing Club-GH-12-2 p.m.
Happiness is a good healthy belch.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship-r. 1025-12:30 p.m.
Happiness is T.H.I.F. day, after surviving the first four days
Demonstration Lectures on Yoga-Aud.-8:45 p.m.
of the week.
Municipal.Government Coui:se-1029-7 p.m.
Happiness is a library designed for the use of the librarians.
Speaker: H. Badanai, M.P., Fort William
Happiness is Simon going to classes, to find something else
Topic: Responsibility of Elected and Appointed Members
to write about.
Municifal Government
Speaker: . M. Main, Executive Ass't to Minister ·of
Municipal Affairs
Top_ic: Why Individuals Should Take an Active Interest
or Participate in Municipal Government

Grad. Class Members at Large

The following students
have been chosen for the
positions of members - at large on the Graduating
Class Ex~tive. From their
respective faculties, they are:
Arts, Jean Jordan; Science,
Tim Comishin; Mining Tech.,

Bill Fotheringham; E n g.
Tech., Dave Dobbin; Forestry, Tech., Terry Noble;
Library Tech., Debby Bryant;
Business Adm., Jeff Shivrat•
tan; Nursing Degree, Margaret Boone; For. Research
Tech., Auguste Schmid.

Top priorities of Polly
Sigh's Club this year, will be·
a seminar on student political awareness and. a continuation of last year's Model
Parliament.

Battiston New SAS Vice-President

In order to eliminate the
general ignorance on part of
the students concerning Canadian political machinations
the Political Science Club is
ready to increase the education of the individual student as to his legitimate role
as a citizen. It is thought
that by means of a public
seminar and a Model Parliament this goal will be
partially accomplished.

In t h e recently held
elections for the executive,
Dick Battiston Arts III took
the vice-presidency by a
slim nine votes out of 245
over Bruce Brymer Arts II.
The position of secretary
was filled by Wayne Marostica Arts II in a YES, NO
vote.
The two winning candidates, together with the
treasurer Lorne Gander and

In the same meeting, the
new executive was chosen;
President, L a r r y Joseph;
Vice-President, Arden Gillis;
and Secretary - Treasurer,
Tracey Hanna.

Attention
Foresters

president Glenn Miller who
were elected last year, complete the executive of SAS
Councfil.. •

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 8
Faculty Ass'n Old C.Omedies-Aud.-8: 15 p.m.
''Wife and Auto Trouble'' 1916
(Mack Sennett, Mae Busch, Keytone Cops)
AMS Meeting-BR-7 p.m.
Fencing-GH-8-10 p.m.

* * * *

MUSTANG for '68
...the car that's ·prominent
in all circles!!
1

Only MUSTANG
makes it happen

We, the members of the
Engineering Society, challenge you to a blood donating contest. Who has the
best and most blood! You!
or us.

No question about it. A
Mustang will open doors to
a whole new exciting world
for you, put you in the right
circles. It moves, and it
moves people. Watch
Mustang for 168, make it
happen!

HARD COVER BOOKS

On Sale
~
- - -,-uu- ~,.o;_
, .3.00
$3.oo

I

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2
Circle K Meeting-r. 1058-12-2 p.m.
Fencing Club-GH-12-2 p.m.
Nursing Society Meeting-r. 1035-12: 15 p.m.
General Science Meeting-Aud.-12:30 p.m.
Thursday Discussion Group-r. II00-12:30 p.m.
Folk Festival-Aud.-8 p.m.

Any club wishing to put announcements in the Argus
must hand them in lo the Argus
office by Wednesday at 6:00
p.m. They · will appear in the
following week's edition. Take
advantage of this service!

Anth - Soc Club

This Week....

~
·60

$1.oo

Lakehead University Book Store

GIBSON
MOTt)DS
fntercity

&lt;19&amp;2&gt; Ll1'1lTED
Dial 344 ·7235

1

�November 2. 1967

THE ARGUS

Page 3

"Canada Day"

Dean speaks at University of Idaho
Lakehead University's Dean
of Arts, Dr. Gordon 0.
Rothney, was one of three
noted Canadians who participated in "Canada Day" at
the University of Idaho on
October 19.
The theme of Dr. Rothney's address was "America,
Canada's Problem"
a
paper on the problems of
regionalism in Canada.
Dr. Rothney is reported in
the Idaho Argonaut (the U.
of· Idaho's student paper) as
saying that Canada cannot
preserve its economic independence.
"In the past, Canada's economy has depended on the
East-West trade. With the
decline. of Britain this trade
is now with the Soviet
Union and China," he said.
However, since Canada can
never depend upon this
trade, Dr. Rothney continued,
it must turn to north-south
trade.
"The pull of American
metropolitan centre on the
regions of Canada is the
greatest threat to her existence.
"If Canada were alone on

this continent, it would be
very easy for Canadian metropolitan centres to hold
their regions together economically, culturally, and
politically.
"But Canadian metropolitan centres must always
compete with larger U.S-.
centres and this . econlOmic
control leads to political control.
''In this sense, although
Canada poses no threat to
America, the U.S. threatens
the very existence of Canada
as a dominion and a sovereign nation" Dr. Rothney
said.
"It's inconceivable that
Canada could ever achieve
economic independence from
the U.S. We read the -same
magazines, listen to the same
radio programmes, live in
such close proximity, and
have a common language.
"All of these things make
it impossible to substitute
any otlier country. There is
no escape to Americaniza•tion.
"There is no answer to
this problem except superceding continentalism by universality - eventually lead-

ing to the political concept
of 'one world'."
Back in the Lakehead, Dr.
Rothney reported that the
students at Idaho "showed
very, very keen interest in
Canada. Many were especially interested in how we treat
draft-dodgers. I was impressed by the calibre of the
students who turned out."
(Seven hundred students attended each of the two daytime sessions).
Dr. Rothney said that his
chief impression was the
"overwhelming conoorn" by
students about the war in
Vietnam. This concern is
manifested, he said, in activities such as debates, demonstrations, and discussionsa 11 concerning Vietnam.
Asked about student opinion
on the war, Dr. Rothney
said that "every member of
faculty I talked to said it
(student opinion). was about
fifty-fifty. But I didn't get
any student opinions."
The other two speakers
at "Canada Day" were Dr.
Peter Waite, chairman of
Dalhousie University, and
Donald S. MacDonald, M.P.

Library hiding information

.1

Dr. Gordon 0. Rotbney, Dean of Arts

"To hide facts from those
who should have them is a
sin."

an.! lbe trials alld,
t~ibulailo.tis of sport!
e-re~y 11101-nbyfour
flu~£~~

The students ot oar Uni-

versity Schools branch and
others are in a semi-technical field. In the faculty of
Forestry, the advances in
the study of tree harvesting
are of signicant importance.
New techniques ai-e usually
written up in trade papers
or in periodicals, most of
which our Library subscribes to.
But what if you want to
research a specific topic that
can not be found in the current editions? If you check
our card file and locate a
stack of books just smaller
than the Library Building
itself, you will also spend
the entire weekend searching these x + 1 indexes for
the required topic material.

ll\eet up wiih a chap
oncnesarneJnGdel
of .I:iottda as hers,
and iltey WOuJd St..¥:f!
an improm~u cb-ag
to c.a:mpus. slie
cou:ld alw~ys ~ nize h:im DY. his
flash,x blue .he1rneiwii11.._!1te l&gt;:ig Mon
the 1..1ont'.

~~~~
to-Wk,ovei-a

su~~~lo!ut,
-lo (heh. 1\dtJ £al&lt;e CIU,t
her .adversary: once,
and -fbr rowa_ys.

wemw;i~~

Forester swamped by volume of reference
material ... and no indexing.

Shew~ su;
"K1
finc:l ~hat farn.ous
blue llelmet- per-~
jaUJ1.U1y_o:rdli.e top

M1iler 'tf -the matta-

~r'S eoat tree t
"I want a loa.n, lo

Why cannot the Library
catalogue this vast storehouse of knowledge and
make it productive instead of
useless as it now is? Is the
Library not in fact hiding
facts from students?

.bu,y a Stlfer'C.~

-to ¼ake -yov., OU,t ... ,

She mu.~bled. llle,

Jna.n~ 1ait®ed,

polile~. "I "have,
~ COMiae?-~ -l:l1e
~ame tlii~
1.
Mmi~

i/!f'U can'/ lid: ~.... ......
JJlll!J ca1111sill &gt;v1rn Hie111.

Classified
ROOM &amp; BOARD-With TV
and Private Washroom,
phone 623-8607.

we:11-ott.r ~ - - .2
~n.'1· a/.wal/S ~
money. ibr 'fnst~
we know iwo t:ie9ple
who've sublirna.rea.
-¼heir campeiinve
ids to hvice-we&amp;,~

Can.a.isia

FOR SALE-1958 Oldsmobile
in good condition. In
quire at Argus Office.

Picture, Gel'fY Calms, Winnipeg frH Pren

Give The Gift of Life
Nov.28 &amp; 29

r.,_. ~~

~.. .,.,.,,¥1~ty-

lout S •

-;.we
,;,,

~,
.t,

.:

~

�~---

Page 4

November 2, 1967

1]:tE ARGUS
'--'-

\

~

"oho ho-"o.h~ ) ) ,
hee hee..

"AAAIIA

//},

~

Mo Ho .
HAl

w'HAT

A

OIFfERENCE

\J

A '\I/EEK ~'&lt;ES.I

letters to the editor
Unity Threatened
Dear Sir:
Mr. Roderick G. Phillips
has resigned his seat on the
Alma Mater Society Council
because he feels this Council
is not fulfilling its duty, i.e.,
it is secretive, apathetic, not
representative of the students, and it is not clear on
what it's long-range purpose
is, etc. Neither, he feels, can
·he identify with such a

Descrimination
Sil-:

We would like to voice a
dissatisfaction, and bring to
light to the student body,
and administration, an injustice on the part of administration towards us, the
class of Business Administration Diploma II
We are singled out in the
matter of attendance! We
are being treated as high
school students! We have
attendance taken at each and
every class. No other Business Administration class,
nor any other class in the
university has its attendance
taken at every lecture. We
feel, that as adults, we
should have the right to
make our own decisions as
·to whether or not we can
afford to miss a particular
lecture in order to work on
a class assignment.
We need only draw to
their attention the heavy
course in which we are enrolled. We take nine subjects
with a total of 28 class hours
per week. Plus, homework
hours which are more than
equivalent to those spent in
class. Therefore, many of us
miss classes in order to work
on our assignment and reports so as to have them
completed for the due dates.
Since we feel our time is
well spent, we don't think
we should be forced to attend classes. We believe it
should be the perrogative of
the student.
We, the students of Business Administration II, would
like an answer from Dr.
Braun, either directly, or
through the Argus.
Sincerely,
Business Admin. II
Lakehead (High School) .?

body, nor can he be an integral part of it.
Mr. Phillips, if you really
feel that the AMS Council
is lacking in any way, and
if you feel sincerely that you
would like to · do something
to alleviate this situation,
then I feel that you have
missed the point in resigning from the Council. By
your resignation, you have
destroyed a certain pairt of
the unity among the AMS
councillors, among whom
unity should exist;. and you
have made doubtful the position of the AMS Council,
a position which should be
strongly evident on this
campus.
This year's Council is not
all you would like to be,

nor is this university as a
whole all you would want it
to be. But it will never
change - for you - if you
throw away in disgust your
part in it. Your ideas can
never be accepted, nor can
they be appreciated, if you
choose to remain apart f.rom
the body which you are
criticizing.
I direct these remarks to
Mr. Phillips, for he has taken
a much publicized stand
against the AMS; one which
I feel to be unfortunate, for
all concerned. But I would
suggest that they apply also
to any person who is a meinber of the Alma Mater
Society.
Peter McCormick,
Arts AMS- representative

comment
They Would Never Be Missed
by pat o'neill
I've got a little list
Of Society offenders
Who might well be underground.
-The Lord High Executioner's Song, from "Mikado."
On September 22, 1950, the United States Senate passed
a bill called the Internal Security Act, or the McCarran Act.
It was sponsored by such notables as J. F. Kennedy.
Section 100 of this Act states that under conditions of a
declaration of war by Congress, an "insurrection" within the
U.S., or an "imminent" invasion, the President may proclaim
a "National Internal Security Emergency."
Then the Attorney General MUST
"apprehend and detain any person as to whom
there is i"easonable grounds to believe that
such person probably will engage in, or probably will conspire with others to engage in act
of espionage or of sabotage."
(The word probably was in italics in the Act.)
McCarran himself called the act "a concentration camp
measure."
Since 1950, Congress has tried twenty-four times to get
the Presidents to implement on Section 100. Until now, each
attempt has been unsuccessful.
President Truman set up six "detention" camps with a
minimum capacity of 15,000 persons each. Since then eleven
other camps have been built and staffed. These seventeen
camps would hold a minimum of 255,000 persons. But to
date these "detention" camps are empty, and operated only on
a standby basis.
The FBI in response to this act has issued and holds over
one million warrants. They claim they could pick up 12 to
15 thousand persons within twenty-four hours in a programme
called Operation Dragnet.
The government department concerned, installed a Univac
1108 computor in Washington, D.C. on April 23, this year.
It records the names, addresses, current political activity,
associations, HABITS, movements, communications, and correspondence of over one million persons who; in their opinion,
are probably covered by the Act.
This list contains hippies, Negro activists, "communists,"
University professors, and New Left "subversives."
President Johnson will never set the plan in operation,
you say. (?) The experts claim that a sudden uprising in
three Negro ghettos would be enough for him to do just that.
Or a declaration of war w.ith China.·
And if he does, what will you do? We all know the German people merely said that their concentration camps were
not there.

Our Watchdog
Sir:
It seems that the student
body's watch-dog has fallen
asleep; the sacred rights of
the student . body a'l'e being
violated and our conscientious canine is not to be
seen.
Our AMS President (and
his Council I believe) is taking us (the student body)
for a ride. We paid him in
the neighbourhood of $2000
to idle away the summer
while Joe Blow slaved in
the ash pits for three-quarters that sum.
Two thousand dollars well
invested could .have brought
returns, especially at registration time. What did our
$2000 return? One helluva
mess!
No one, not even the profs,
knew north from south at
registration time. They (the
profs.) received the calendars
as they entered the registration rooms to advise students on proposed courses,
which in many cases were
the wrong choices. The administration pulled the bag
over Peter's head and he
didn't even let out a peep.
How much did Mr. Ayre
pay you, Peter, for not minding the student's business?
Organizing summer school
dances etc. seems to be all
you did all summer.
And in the fall when

people realized that they
were being given a raw deal,
they started a committee to
look into the matter. What
did Pete go out and fight
for: irecognition of course
changes and details about
administrative structure. You
sure poured the soothing oil
upon troubled student waters
and I'm sure Mr. Tamblyn
appreciates it. A precedent
has been set and next year
the administration will feel
much more confident about
throwing it into us once
more. Another thing: the
AMS Council meeting held
during the general meeting
on October 13 was constitutionally closed. Why?
Don't we have the right
to see how our representatives vote? If they too are
going to chicken out in the
crisis we should know, for
it is our rights which they
should be fighting for.
A final matter Mr. President: it seems that 50 of the
choice spots in the pairking
lot immediately in front of
the new tunnel entrance did
not go on the auction block.
Are these for yourself and
for 49 of your friends?
Wake up, watch-dog and
crawl out of your kennel, or
go bury your bones in someone else's yard.
George Roy
Arts II.

Pat O'Neill

THE

ARGUS

VOLUME 2, No. VII
November 2, 1967

The ARGUS is published weekly by the Alma Mater
Society of Lakehead University. The opinions expressed
are those of the editorial board and not necessarily those
of the AMS or the Administration. The ARGUS is authorized
second class mail by the Post Office, Ottawa, for payment
in cash. All correspondence to the ARGUS main office,
wherever it may happen to be at that particular time; mail
c/o Lakehead University, Port Arthur. Subscription . . .
$3.00; advertising rates upon request.
editor ································-·····--···-················ chuck grieve
associate ( war correspondent) ·······---·---········--·· bob leggett
managing (war correspondent) ·············-·····- chad hannah
news ......................... :.......... ·-·-·-···········----·-··· rod phillips
features ·-···-··················------···········--·-·-·-······· boyd hussey
advertising manager ········-··--··-····-··············· mike barkwell
circulation ···-----····-·······---·····---·····--·-----···· gord fukushima
Tho perhaps it would be wise
Not (o carp or criticize
•
For it's very evident
Their intentions are well meant.
(Gilbert and Sullivan.)
Our intentions are well meant too. If you disagree with
the way your paper is being put out, say something. Or better still, come in and do something.

. .. ....

.. .

�November

2., 1967

THE ARGUS

Don
Colbome

The College Entrance Board, an organization which most
students have dealt with ( they administer tests of aptitude and
achievement to students applying for entrance to North Ameri('.an Universities) has discovered a frightening trend.
In tracing the success of students evaluated, they have discovered that it is the bright student, even the brilliant, who
more often than not "drop out" of university. Those with "middle range" abilities graduate and often enter post-graduate pro~ammes. Not surprisingly, those who do poorly on the tests
Bunk out" early.
These findings are forcing educators to reconsider their
stereotypes and prejudices concerning "drop out." They are not,
as was previously supposed, cowardly, impatient, or maladjusted.
In fact it takes a lot of plain guts to reject all the conventional
pressures and willfully to abdicate formal education.
Increasingly, drop outs are found to be very bright J&gt;eQple,
disillusioned with regimentation, static disciplines, and an institution which reflects what is often called a very sick society.
They do not, as is often suspected, get a good job, buy a Mustang,
and forget about learning. That has become the distinction of
the graduate, the person who has been successfully dulled to the
lost promise of the time, and of himself. For example the CYC,
the hospitals, and the hippy communities are picking up a lot
of. these "drop outs."
LAKEHEAD LOSES MANY
Everyone here knows a few-they certainly aren't all the
same. But many represent distinct losses to Lakehead University.
Some drop outs.
A., a talented poet, left for the east.
B., an encyclopedia of pornography, is leaving for the west.
G., a poet and musician, has taken a job helping children.
And there are many, many others.
Universities must stop accommodating, even glorifying,
mediocrity. This university is young, controlled by-self-proclaimed "liberals," and claims to be open to suggestion from any
quarter. Considering the massive fire under which it is now
labouring, and the obvious fact that "drop outs" are merely the
tip of a very large iceberg, it must begin to listen to a few of
the more radical voices.
If not, this university will continue as an undistinguished
local public utility.

A Prayer
Mighty Argus:
I pray that thou hath, ih
thine voice of 6ctober 12,
1967, misquoted our most
noble Alma Mater Society
Pre~ident.
At a mortal University
Committee Meeting, didst
thou truly hear Mr. Young
quoth, ''We don't wish to
follow the lead of other universities and push for student representation on the
Senate and Board of Governors and all that. We can
accomplish more in this committee."?
Ideally t h e University
Committee (that host of
well known, ranging to
anonymous, souls) could still
remain enthroned to deal
with earthy, non-academic
problems i.e.. bridge playing
in Gude's cafeteria and plugging into half-time electrical
outlets. (Hallowed be these
causes). Give Mr. Young the
strength not to belittle the
student representation on
governing bodies of the university "and all that."
Agreed, Mighty Argus, presentations could be made to
Senate via University Committee, but give us the courage to realize the possibility
of unholy implementation of
academic justice. How long
would it take problems to
reach the Senate through

another committee? My impatience betrays me, Mighty
Argus.
Leave us not wade through
Satan's bureaucratic mud.
Carry us through the pearly
gates of Senate, the great
God Senate, manipulating
the students. For if students
are in there, they too may
be angels and whisper in
God's ear should he fail
(tremble, tremble, tremble)
to realize the dimensions of
reb'Ulations he passes.
And there may even be,
Mighty Argus, a responibility of a ·brave ange~ a very
brave angel, asking fellow
members. of that
most
heavenly host, exactly what
the four Saint Peter's duties
are. God may even consider
whispering the functions of
his other sub-angels.
Karl A. J. Goodwin.
Amen,

Detroit... Summer 1967

The community that loots together
The White and Negro communities in the inner city of
Detroit have several perceived
common enemies: the loan
sharks who make no di//erentiation the the basis of colour,
race, or creed; _the "buy-now•
pay-later" furniture • stores,
who sell worthless goods at
exorbant Prices: and last but
not least,· the police depart·
ment, seen by most inner city
residents as an occupation force,
living in comfortable .
homes safe in the suburbs.

The west end of the city
of Detroit serves as a point
of entry for groups immigrating. into the city, both
from foreign countries and
from the southern United
States. As a result, the West
side contains groups of
Southern Negroes, Whites,
Spanish Americans and other
less numerous ethnic groups.
We lived in a house on
the near west side, in the
area which was 50 per cent
southern Negro, and about
50 per cent poor southern
White. Members of these
groups had migrated from
the South because of the impossible living conditions in
their home towns. Both
groups (and this will at first
blush seem. a surprising fact)
looked back with nostalgia
upon the old homestead and
longed to return.
Whites and Negroes live
together in our area out of
economic necessity. Whites
grudgingly give up some of
the public habits which are
proper in the South; they
do not often say "come here
boy," or use the word ''Nig~r." Because the Whites are
forced to. take a public position which may be different from their private beliefs, tJ~ey gradually come to
change some of their beliefs
to make them more in h81'- •
mony with their actions.
WHITE AND BLACK
TOGETHER

When the Detroit riot
burst its seams from the
predominately Negro 12th
Street, where it began, it
flowed into our neighbourhood. Near my house it became apparent to me that
this was no standard race
riot. The furniture store on

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the corner was looted and
burned three times, by both
Whites and Negros. During
the loooting, people-Whites
and Blacks - mingled freely, eX!changing items and
passing goods out the windows· to one another.
Two doors away from the
burning furniture store, both
Whites and Blacks went in
and out of an ice cream
parlour, p~ing for the ice
cream. The store owner is
a southern White who lives
in the neighbourhood.
The first three or four
days of the riot, I witnessed
a community spirit that was
glorious to behold, Whites
and Blacks mingled together
in a joyeous, and at times,
carnival atmosphere: -

not know was who might
tell on them and which of
~heir neighbours might tell.
Within minutes the colour
line of suspicion was redrawn.
Neighbour peeped out to
neighbour the question on
their minds, "Will that Black
bastard tell?'' or ''What's
Whitey up to now?" In a
half hour the block was still
•~mpty, no looted goods appeared, but the seeds for
the next riot had been sown.
When I left Detroit, three
weeks later, the truck had
still not returned.

POLICE DISRUPT
COMMUNITY

The Detroit police department soon moved in to disrupt the community. On
Thursday, five days after the
riot had begun, a black squad
car, filled with policemen
carrying high po~red rifles
motored down our street
with a loud speaker blaring.
Behind them followed two
large trucks. The speaker
said, "We have a federal
' search warrant (it was untrue-there is no such thing
for the crimes involved). We
are going to be back in one
half hour. Place all looted
goods on the front walk and
and no questions will be
asked. If you do not comply,
we will search your hiouse,
and you will be prosecuted
to the fullest extent of the
law!"
.
The people in my Cornt"1Unity knew some things, and
they did not know others.
They knevs.• it would be almost impossible for the
police to return the stolen
goods to the original owners,
since it required a signed
confession by the looter and
a positive identification of
the item by the store owner.
The community also knew
that some homes had been
searched and all a person's
possessions had been confiscated. The thing that the
people of the community did

U"OI)·"":

M~rf

fiiji

MEMORIAL at ONTARIO

GOOD 'WINllB

FAMOVSFOR
ITALIAN FOODS

':/cafM,.#•f
ANTIPASTO

CHICON CACCIATORE
SPAGID'ITJ

VEAL SCALOPPINI

~ndoubtedly, .!.!!! book shop
49 S. Cumberland St. , Port Arthur

~ - - 7 °"MII.E

B Y oJMoNDs
'llTiTVPf
STUDENTS TOLD
By cagey handling of
their lunch money, high
schoolstudents can become
independently wealthy by
the time they graduate,
TIJ\TY, famed finance expert, said today.
''We suggest a student
buy diamonds with the money he saves by eating at
TINY'S, " said TINY.
''The average high schoolfootball player, for in stance, can eat 43 Beefy
Boys a day, a saving of
$2. 15, "saidTINY. Atthis
rate, he can buy a one -karat diamond in two semes•ters. II
Fellows who can-yaround a one-karat diamond
ring find girls are some what friendlier than before,
TINY pointed out.
"We have never been
able to figure why this is, "

230 Bay St. Port Arthur

Phone 344-4256

�. . . Page 6

THE ARGUS

November 2 , 1967

The American fantasy reflections of a
_.,..

Decision making is an intricately difficult and solitary
process.
There is a war on somewhere. Two ideologies are supposedly
fighting, and your government is sending out these papers to
males over eighteen years of age, demanding that they participate in murder.
I am a draft dodger. For two years I thought about war,
and thinking about war and induction papers concerns more
than visions of a battlefield. I thought about history and politics
and freedom and boundilries and presidents, and people and
society, churches and jails, the rich and the poor, Democracy
and Communism, economics and the military, and birth and
death, and love and hate and freedom. And I came to a basic
conclusion after juggling all those-and more-around in a
hundred combinations perhaps love is freedom, and hate is not.
And of course I saw very often the horrors of war. I saw
masses of American soldiers and masses of Vietnamese, all dead
or dying. I saw bombed villages and bombing "mistakes." And
those glorious jets I saw spewing napalm, and screaming women
and children-some of them on fire-and others who could no
longer walk because they had no legs. And still others I saw who
just lay there dead.
I saw one continuous line of naked Jews trudging along single
file to showers. I saw their gold fillings extracted, and Ilse
Koch's lampshade of human flesh. I saw again all those pictures
we have seen many times. And ignored.
Then I saw President Johnson speaking on television; he was
saying something about freedom and human dignity. And there
was Lady Bird planting a tree, and consternated Congressmen,
and I kept on seeing Negroes for some reason, and I even
glimpsed the Pope, and there were neighbors enjoying the freedom of reading Ann Landers and tuning in for Gomer Pyle.
I heard several neighbors in their living room tableau exclaim
during a Viet Nam broadcast: "Oh, that's horrible. Why do they
have to show that kind of stuff!"

11

paradoxes"

Oftentimes this contemporary kaleidascope would tum just
so and I would laugh with cynicism and disgust. I saw the
National Paradoxes growing more apparent-especially Capital
Punishment. I tried to conceive of two ideologies holding guns
against each other . . . that vision l could not see.
I saw myself slowly dying in pain after having killed a few
enemies, wondering why, and then humming the National Anthem before expiring on the field of glory. This was the Preposterous Paradox concerning American intentions. I began to understand the true nature of the conflicts (plural) in Viet Nam,
and my stand against the war became more vehement.
I argued and discussed endlessly, and had to deal with many
cleverly calculated arguments such as "What would you do if a
Viet Cong married your sister?"

SUPP -RT DRAFT ftEFUSilS -~
DE -ND....W
AR-TAX
REFilNDS
. ......

T! RESIST! RESIST!

.
Draft resistance scenes such as this one are becoming more
frequent in the U. s. Do these demonstrations indicate a
breakdown of the Great American Society?

That one was asked my two friends and myself by a Green
Beret who stormed into a novelty shop, furious, and screaming
about Mao Tse Tung posters hanging alongside Dylan, Garbo,
Keaton, et al. The Green Beret was just back from Viet Nam
duty. We argued with him and asked man7 questions. He said,
"Sure it's a political war, but goddamit its my country, and I
don't care if it's wrong/"
He described in vivid detail the atrocities he had committed
and seen. He was shouting at us, "Communist/ Nigger lovers/"
and went on about how the brains of the Oriental scum and
those of Niggers were smaller and that they were all illiterate.
We asked him why, and he said because they no white blood.
He said if he were in charge he'd have the three of us shot just
like that. I looked at the fire in his eyes, and I believed him.
I heard that song, The Ballad of the Green Berets, the part that
says: "Put silver wings on my son's chest. Make him one of
America's best." I felt nausea.
There were elaborate political, social, economic perspectives
which we discussed also. Many of them were labyrinthian, abstract, and often pointless. I kept on seeing visions of history's
horrors, and I would mention the attitude of the Germans as six
million went up in smoke, and someone would shout "False
analogy! False analogy!"
There exist murder en masse perpetrated by a national
consciousness, nationally organized: this is the parallel.

decision to make
So I decided that I would not hasten the madness of a world
threatened with imminent, total destruction. Under any circumstances, no. The decision about the war was resolute. I was a
"stubborn idealist," "a dreamer."
The dilemma of another decision was there before me: Five
years of prison? Immigration to ·Canada? A career ":ith. the
medics who repair killers? The underground? Conscientious
Objection? It was difficult. For one year there was the expectation of those papers in the mailbox. I had limited my choice to
prison or Canada, and often I felt the anxiety of uncertainty.
One day as I got off work my friend appeared with a grave
look and told me the news: My induction notice had come. I
was relieved and felt a certain peace, because I knew at last that
the decision would have to be made, and also the plans if I
decided on Canada.
After a long deliberation I at last decided upon Canada.
Prison seemed more like needless masochism than an effective
stand. So we then made dozens of phone calls, and obtained a
.rough idea of immigration procedures. We spent hours ruminating over possible complications at the border.
When the day came to leave I packed one large suitcase,

�November 2, 1967

THE ARGUS

Page 7

dratt dodger
.

by d.d.

c~efully sel~ting books, clothing, and other necessities. It was
painful. I said goodbye, and one day prior to my induction date
crossed the border. At that moment I realized the U.S.A. wa;
now forever closed to me.

immigration officials hostile
I soon learned in Port Arthur that my immigration application had been refused on the grounds that I had little work experience, no trade, and meager funds. For two hellish months I
attempted to obtain a student visa from the. hostile immigration
officials. I visited SUPA in Toronto and also spoke to the wonderful immigration people there. I told them I had evaded the
draft, that I had a sponsor statement notarized, and that the
immigration offici~ls in the Lakehead would not co-operate.
They were qmte shocked and amazed about the immigration
officials here, and said that their questions about the draft were
irrelevant and none of their business. Thev said I had the sufficient papers, so I returned to the Lakehead and three days before the expiration of my visitor's visa, I was granted at last a
student visa.
. My dealings with immigration were very complicated and
tiresome, and I am weary of trying to explain them. If it weren't
for the friends I had at the Lakehead-concerned University
people-I would most certainly be in prison today.

fanaticism personified
So suddenly here I am in another country. I have no regrets
whatsoever, and I do not really miss the States. I miss only a
handful of people. I had spent nineteen years in St. Cloud
Minnesota., a citf ~ see personified to. a large degree by a fe~
super-patrm~ ladies groups armed with snippet scissors who
gu_ard the city from tr~th and or obscenity. Most people who
thmk at all and have hved there for even a short time feel surrounded, as if the walls of the state prison there had enclosed
the city t~. Paranoia is rampant, due to the war, mostly.
The city has produced many prominent business men and
flag fanatics, as evidenced by Osco Drug's window display of
American flaJ!,s about five months af!,o-a mass of red, white, and
blue-for sale behind plate glass. This sounds very cynical, yes,
but the truth of the town is indeed, as in much of the States, a
grotesque caricature. Sinclair Lewis was born forty-four miles
away; "Main Street" and "Babbit'' are not foreign to Saint Cloud.
And what do I think of Canada and Canadians? I don't
know Canada and I am admittedly ignorant of its history.
In American texts the closest we came to Canadian history
was studying Cartier who discovered the Saint Lawrence, I think.
I am surprised at Canadians' knowledge of the states-even
geographical knowledge. Few Americans can name even three
of the provinces. Canadians-or those I have met-are generally more thoughtful, somewhat friendlier, and more spontaneous. However, many of them are uncommitted as to the
Viet Nam war. If I have caused some to think about it, I am
pleased.
I am often asked why I am against this war and, wearx of
politics and lengthy explanations, I would often like to say, 'For
sentimental reasons," which in essence is quite true.
However, it is impossible for me to stop there. There is the
awful absurdity of a self righteous nation monstrously asserting
itself against Communism in the wrong place. There are many
Canadians who understand quite well what is going on and why,
and there are many who understand my viewpoint.
And of course there are those who immediately register
"Draft dodger, hippy coward, traitor." Draft dodger I can hardly
refute. Hippy? If that means an individual who has little faith
in structures and organizations, yes. If a coward is one who
shuns violence or needless destruction, ves. Traitor? If a traitor
is a person who tells the majority of his country to go to hell;
then, of course, I am a traitor.
Another common question from Canadians: \Vhat do vour
parents think? They did not like the idea of self-exile, but they
understood in an intuitive wav, which-as far as I know-is the
best way to understand. They have come to accept it.
Often I am asked what do I think of American imperialism.
I think the evil of American imperialism is typified by the classic
"democratic" cliche "You're entitled to your opinion, I'm entitled
to mine." It sounds very golden at first, but it is too often a
justification for greed and selfishness. Often, too, an excuse not
to communicate or to share.
American politics? I don't know. For some reason I always
think of the Academy Awards Ceremony and Hollywood Galas.
The U.S. Educational System? I think the Canadian is
better, I'm not sure. The high school in St. Cloud ·was very
concerned with length of hair, type of clothing,, attendance, etc.
"The Catcher in The Rye" is banned from its library. "Vllysses"
was taken off the shelves, and one must explain to the librarians

why one wishes to read it before they'll hand it over.
Viscious complaints about alleged Communist teachings
were, and most likely still are, very common. If the United
States were as concerned about the evils of communism as thev
let on, there would be intensive required studies of Communism
on the high school level. I hope there are few high schools like
that in the States.
Negro riots-what do I think of those? Oppressed people
sametimes mean business. The violence is regrettable but I am
disgusted when I hear the oft repeated comment, "\Vh-y don't
they take it to their representatives and solve their problems diplomatically." Now that is faith in American Democracy!

fugitive
And "How do you feel about being a draft dodger" is frequently asked me. I feel wanted by the FBI, and I sense these
magnets at 0e bord~r waiting for me to re-cross. I am very bitter about this sometimes because I do not believe in Democracy.
Sometimes it seems my nation doesn't.
I don't like the word "dodger" though, since it connotes a
sudden, imp'-!lsive leap across the border, a dramatic escape from
hordes of police about 24 hours after the induction notice arrives.
Most draft evaders have done very much thinking and searching
within themselves before that sudden "leap."
And there's the big one; "What do you think of the United
States?" This one. is difficult and pain_fu~. There is much good in
the ,country and m the people, but 1t 1s being obscured, and I
don t know all the whys, but I have seen it and sensed a souring
of something there.
~he ~nited ~tat~s, to me, is a tragedy and a paradox. In
my s1tuat10n, I thmk 1t somewhat more appropriate to enumerate
evils rather than good points.

American dream
If a Canadian ask!': what I see in my mind when the word
"America" is menti?ned, I'd like to give the .following structural
montage: I spent four days in the St. Cloud jail for purchasing
liquour, underage.
From my cell through three sections of bars this is what I
could see: In the right foreground was the large court house,
and beyond tliat was Zapp's National Bank; across the parking
lot was Schwartz Bar, its Grain Belt Beer sign illuminated; further back on the highest point of this city scape was the American flag on the Exchange building, waving arrogantly on high.
Far away I could see the steeple of St. Mary's Cathedral, a small
gold cross perche~ precariously up there. This visual epiphany
was uncanny, and so perfectly indicative of those paradoxes
I speak of.
Ten years from now I wouldn't be surprised if the American
Press, guilty of misinforming the people and breeding fallacies
about this war, starts publishing magazine articles by the hundreds saying, "Viet Nam: The Tragic Mistake," and "Why
Wasn't The Holocaust Stopped?" or less likely, "Who Is Responsible?" And if such articles appear and peoplt: wake up and
wonder who was responsible, I won't be around.

�Page

8

THE ARGUS

November

2., '1967

Machines for living
by William sheridan
The buildings of North America comprise the biggest
collection of junk in history,
Our cities display a lack of planning and a waste of
resources plus space, which considering our present knowledge,
can only be ter.med criminal negligence. Our horizontal
expansion covers precious acres of arable land, produce miles
of roads with their concomitant traffic problems, and necessitates at least a dozen different types of delivery service.
The individualistic building concepts. encouraged by
those purveyors of sucker bait, the teal estate interests, result
in homes which waste heat profusely and leave residents blocks
or 'miles away from schools, stores, theatres and libraries, etc.
The materials and construction techniques which go into most
homes today contribute to a plannde obsolesence guaged to
reduce the house to rubble in 1ess than 30 ye~rs.
On top of all this, the use of fossil fuels for heat and
propulsion has resulted in an air pollution problem of plague
proportions. We are in a hell of a mess.

Vertical expansion in North
America is found to be isolated, costly and inefficient

SOLUTIONS TO THE MESS
Durability, economy of space, convenience of services,
concentration of facilities, continuous service - a society of
our present proportions (technologically and demographically),
a city must of necessity provide these features.
We now have sufficient synthetic materials to construct
buildings that would last for hundreds of years. Vertical
extension is the only feasible way of housing our present
population. This would leave -more park facilities for all, and
leave valuable arable· land available. Commodity outlets, .
educational, recreation and entertainment centres should all
be eccessible to all, in a few seconds, for a few steps. There
is no reason to operate two outlets where one is sufficient. A
line of similar stores and of delivery trucks can be eliminated.
A balanced load method of production and distribution would
guarantee a 24-hour a day availability of all goods and services.

TECNOCRACY"S DESIGN
In accordance with the technological and social specification~ of this age of abundance, Technocracy Inc. has designed
an Urbanate which is worthy of man's intelligence. A typical
block would be rectangular in shape, about 400 meters wide
and 1000 meters long, with the buildings around the periphecy
and an open space in the interior. A typical U:rbante would
provide residence for 16,000 to 20,000 people.
The outer walls would be continuous, of some heavy
form of construction, for example, meter-thick concrete. The
inner part would be terraced, with open insets to provide
adequate lighting, The central area would be park-line space,
possibly with an open water way going through, at least with
warm swimming pools. Temperature would be controlled by
a thermodynamic heat pwnp, a reversible refrigerator-type
unit. Precripitron dust collectors will automatically remove
98 percent of the dust from the air. •
All transportation would be underground. A "pipe", 35
feet in diameter would carry water, gas, electric telephone
and mail services plus subway or motor vehicle transportation.
The outer walls would carry the risers - elevators, ventilating
shafts and pipelines, etc.
Deliveries would be implemented by a, revolutionary,
new service. A tube-conveying system, similar to the pneumatic
tube, but powered by "sucking solenoid" magnets that couJd
move anything from a razor blade to a refrigerator, would
deliver any obje&lt;:t from any one point to aey other point
at the turn of a dial. Clothes, fooci. books, even the garbage
could be whisked away at any time; no delivery boys needed.
Most, of the cities would be situated beside the Continental Hydrology canals. Bulk transportation of supplies
would be accomplished by water. A Marine Train would
simply pull up beside the Urbanate, lock into place~ and be
unloaded by hydraulic lifts. The cargo would be removed
and lifted up the inside of the outer wall, being automatically
sorted and displaced as it went up, all without a hum.an hand.
Marine trains would also serve as floating classrooms, a part
of every child's education being a trip around the entire
Continent by water.
' However, education in this New America would involve
learning to produce and living with an abundance. Cities
would truly be, MACH!NES FOR LIVING,
CAMPUS OBSOLETE?

A dream of the far distnat future? No indeed; technoligically feasible today, socially necessary tomorrow.
If present trends in our society continue, these new
cities will be built for North America within a decade. A
start will probably be made within 18 months. Most of our
present cities will have to be torn down and mined for their
metal content. All of them are obsolete in terms of our present
needs. (The proposed campus of La-kehead University may
never be completed or used.}
This is Techn~cracy lnc.'s plan for the future. Only a
design for living, such as this one, which provides for the
fOO million people of this continent is adequate.

personally
made
CORSAGES
For That
Horizontal expansion is personified in this typical European scene

TALK TO

ROYAL TRUST

About a Career

•
Ill

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FOR AN APPOINTMENT
ON 9TH OR 10TH NOVEMBER
CONTACT M. KTYTOR
STUDENT PLACEMENT OFFICER

SPECIAL
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344-1131
345-7931
Across from St. Joseph's Hospital

Ruttan - Bolduc Adderley Ltd.
GENERAL INSURANCE
16 Court St. South, Port Arthm Dial 345-6585

"See Us For Dependable Insurance"

�November 2, 1967

THE ARGUS

Page 9

Protest meets mixed receptions
The Lakehead's Vietnam
Protest left as an aftermath
a bitter taste in the mouth
of at least one of the participants.
Larry Anderson told of his
feelings after the protesters
were not allowed to leaflet
in Fort William due to an
old bylaw. The bylaw states
that no leafletting will be
allowed without permission
of the authorities.
"We all milled iM"ound for
a few minutes," he said. "I
was very ashamed that I
didn't have the guts to

stand up and say 'Is this
cause more important than
some obscure ordinance?' But
I didn't. I put my tail between my legs, climbed into
my car, turned on my lights,
and quietly followed the
policeman out of town."
About 25 cars participated
in the rally, all carrying
posters protesting the war.
No static was received by
the leafletters in P o r t
Arthur.
"The people took the leaflets from us with no objections or denunciations.

My son and I had no difficulties when we were in
front of the PUC building,"
he said. .
The picture was quite different when they arrived in
Fort William. The march organizer told the group that
the police had forbidden
them to leaflet, since there
was that bylaw about littering in the streets. However
they were told that littering
in the park was allowed.
"And the park was cold,
windy, and empty," Larry
Anderson said.

University Health Programme

Flaw found in student loan plan
SASKVILLE (CUP) - A
contradiction has been discovered in information describing the Canada Student
Loan Plan.
'fhe Athenaeum, student
newspaper at Acadia University, printed the contradiction Friday, October 20.
A pamphlet released by
the Federal Government entitled Canada Student Loan
Plan - Instruction to Students says the plan's regulations permit a wide degree

of flexibility in setting loan
repayment terms.
But the application for the
loan, entitled Schedule B,
says in part that loans must
be repaid, in equal monthly
sums, "except otherwise provided in the Act and the
Regulations, ending not earlier than 5 years and not later
than 10 years after the
month in which the student
ceases to be a full-time student."
In non-bureaucratic language this means a student

Windsor students seat
four on senate
WINDSOR (CUP) - Four
Windsor .students will sit on
the university senate, president J. F. Leddy announced
Friday.
"I am very pleased with
this result," said Leddy, "It
is a very constructive move
and I am sure the students
have a very useful contribution to make."
The senate will have four
student members: the president of the students' council, ex-officio, and three to
be chosen by a method proposed by the students' council.
One of the three chosen
will be a graduate student.
The senate also approved
student membership .ion a
number of senate committees. The procedure to be

MARINA INN
(Mariaggi)
The Tiltin' Hiltin'

followed and the number to
be chosen will be determined
by the senate itself.
The committees involved
include the senate academic
committees on arts a n d
sciences, applied science and
business administration, the
library committee, and the
committee on student conduct, activities and discipline,
and additional and special
standing committees f o r
which students may have unusually appropriate qualifications, according to the
university information officer.
The 55-member senate accepted unanimously the recommendations of the special
senate committee on university goveniment.
Richard Wyszynski, student council president, said
he was very pleased. He
said it was an historical
event that will go untouted
because there was no dramatic struggle involved as
was the case at the University of Western Ontario.
"The senate merely made
official what has been known
for some time," he said.

by ralph barone

cannot repay a loan in less
then five years.

Free health services are
available on campus to students this year. This service
has been active since September 19, 1967.

But, as stated in the above
quote, this regulation is subservient to "the Act and the
Regulations," which clearly
state ·that loans can indeed
be repaid quicker than five
years.

With the rapid growth of
Lakehead . University, the
need for a Student Health
Programme was recognized,
and in September of this
year a Health Unit was established on campus.

F. P. Passy, chief of the
Canada Student Loan Plan
told Canadian University
Press in Ottawa Tuesday,
"there is obviously something
wrong here." •

The purpose of the Health
Programme is to promote
better health, in its broadest
sense, for the students and
all members of the universi.ty comm.unity.

He pointed out that students could certainly repay
Canada Student Loans at a
faster rate.

The Health Unit is located
in the University Centre
Building next door to the
games room.

is the Registered Nurse on

duty Monday through Friday
from 9 a.m. to 12 noon and
1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Doctor Diggens is on the staff on a
Student examines facilities

Their on 1 y immediate
source of information is the
pamphlet which is misleading on the question of minimum term of payment.

Most Young Adults
Have Complexion Problems
If this is a problem with you,
·we strongly recommend
that you consult one
of our

The ,Athenaeum cites examples of students who applied to the bank to repay
the loan over shorter periods,
but were told they had to
pay interest based on five
years, not on any, shorter
repayment period.

''ELIZABETH
ARDEN'' consultants

MT. Passy said he would
look into the matter after
he had studied the Anthenaeum story.

ALL OF OUR 4 LOCATIONS SELL
"ELIZABETH ARDEN" COSMETICS

CROOKS
PHARMACY

ATKINSON'~ JEWELLERS
Headquarters for

WORLD FAMOUS

-

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Try -Our

Diamond Rings

Coffee

budget terms available

Bar

8 S. Cumberland Street

Phone
344-3548

''It is hoped that the students will take advantage of
the existing programme it has been instituted to meet
the students' need," •said
Mrs. St. Amond.

At present Mrs. St. Amond
Students do not receive
copies of the Act and Regulations unless they write Ottawa for them.

Your Home
Away From Home

part· time basis from 11 to
12 noon Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. Appointments can be made to see
Doctor Diggins at these
hours througq. the nurse.

75 YEARS IN THE LAKEHEAD

FORT WILLIAM
Centennial
Square - 623-2777
Victoria Ave. at
Syndicate ~ 623-0477

fll,-L

C

.-

.

.

•

.-

PORT ARTHUR
Bay City Mall

345-7344
2 - S. Court St.

345-6564

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                    <text>Students gain voice to Senate in matters of concern
The first step towards full
student representation on
the Senate and the Board of
Governors at Lakehead University has been taken.
The Senate passed a resolution at their November 3
meeting, calling for:
-detailed agendas of each
Senate meeting to be sent
to the AMS Council.
-minutes of each meeting
to be sent to the AMS
Council.
-student delegates to be

mos(scoop

able to appear before the
Senate to support written
briefs on matter-s in the
agenda relating directly to
. the student body.
"This is a very significant
break through in the light
of the near-tragedy at the
beginning of this term," said
AMS President Peter
Young." We are hoping it
won't be the end. We hope
the University Committee
will be able to work with

the AMS on getting represenatives on the Senate."
"This throws terrific responsibility on the AMS
executive as the student's
representatives," said University President W. G.
Tamblyn. Any mistake that
you fellows make will create
diffieulties for those who
follow you."
"Let's not conform to the
pattern set by other universities," he said. "Just because they push strongly for

Senate representation let's
not follow in their tracks.
Let's weigh this thing and
see if we can get something
better."
"The key is . to evolve a
tool that works," stated
faculty representative Mr.
D. Alexander." When the
day comes that it no longer
works, then we will have to
evolve another vehicle."
Mr. D. Morgan termed the
resolution a real break-

THE

through."
But Dean J. Kerr warned
against running blindly into
th~ Senate.
"Student feeling and thinking is moving very rapidl.yi-so raipdly that students
can't keep up with it," he
said. "Waterloo s t u den t s
said over television that
what they wanted was a
voice on faculty committees,
not the Senate."
"So you see, the Senate
is not the end," he added.

an ARGUS

Garrett

under cover

is ...

reporter

VOLUME 2, No. VIII

LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY, PORT ARTHUR, ONTARIO.

TWELVE .PAGES

November 9, '1967

Saturday~ October 28, 4.45 p.m.
by bob leggett

Six thousand students
joined the march this moming and for what? For
Charity, for Care, for Oxfam and for Town Talk, of
course. They are helping
poor farmers, uneducated
South American children and
selfish _"good citizens" right
here in the Lakehead. In
fact as I write this they are
st i 11 marching stoically,
..,. f
steadilY, and steadfas~y
or
the cause.
My buddy and I were
.
d own town on C umu=.__
Just
land Street watching them-

limp by on the last leg of
the circular crusade. They
were all young, smiling and
laughing in their own little
groups. As I was about to
turn and head home to consume more of the weekend
rations l noticed yet another
marcher.
He was going North as
the marchers were heading
South. He was also proceeding at a .much slower rate
of speed. He was on e of
those older men - the kind
we refer· to as bums, hoboes,
rubby dubs, etc., at least if

-

one were to judge by appearances. His shoes were
very old brown ones, one
had no leather in the back
and his bare heal was •exposed. I suppose that might
slow him down a bit. Most
of the walking "do-gooders"
took no notice of him as
he shuffled North with his
head hung low and his back
h
h d H d'd r te an ocunc e • e i
a
casional "what are you doing
t t'" t
f
k
on my s ree . ype o 1oo
f
th odd
lk
H'
rom
e
wa
er.
IS
.
old ith dozens Of
swt
was
w

plied. "Do you have ,any
money?", I ask~. "I ha~e
none . •.. nothing at _ail
• ·· . nothmg; I get a pension
but it doesn't come till next
moifth" M~ buddy and I
each gave hnn one doll~r ~
told him to get something to
eat His eyes lit up like a
small child's and h~ thanked
us very much in. hlS clearly
pronounced foreign accent.
"Wh r are you going'" I
e e.
"
, •.
asked him. I guess I ll Just
h
" h
'd
d
go
orne.
e sa1 , an

odd worn, threadbare hole.
He had no shirt on at ~u.
just a pair of "long johns.''
When we finally approached him, after watching him for a few minutes,
we noticed he was quite an
old man. But then he was
that type that could be 59
or 89. Obviously, by his
hands, you could tell he had
done his life's share of hard
work.
My buddy asked him,
"How are you, sir?" "Not too
god-damned good," he re-

headed home.
But now as I sit here writing, wearing away at my
usual case of beex:, I'm
bothered. Oh well, I guess
I really shoudn't worry
about things like charity.
The farmers will likely get
their co-operative, and the
lady will get her $5,000 for
Town Talk and maybe the
old man will be home in his
little room.
I guess the marchers are
still marching but they'll be
home soon too.

three corner tears and the

pointed no_..,_

..-wa.

At thia we

turned, mounted my !-housand dollar motor cycle and

Circle K's annual hallowe'en type bash was enjoyed by many
including these two gypsies or whatever they are.

The other side of the

•

COIO

by bill weiler (AMS vice president)

is grossly unfair to
leave students with a onesided coin Thus I feel that
some defense of the AMS
executive and Council is
long overdue.
I am not asking for complete forgiveness by the students for some of the confusion that has developed
within the AMS executive,
but let us at least consider
the facts before condemning
the people and actions taken.
The executive had two
strikes against it with first,
the failure of Mr. Doug Robson last year, and second,
the resignation of Wendy
Ticknor a few weeks ago. I
myself have only~ been in
office a month and you must
realize that orientation to
such a position takes time.
With Wendy's resign~tion we
are swamped with extra
duties. I feel now that we
It

are gradually improving our
system. Slowly ~e are getting caught up to be able
to keep up with the work
load.
You must remember that
a very green executive was
burdened with a very serious problem concerning registration etc. this year. We
were forced to take one of
two alternate methods fn
,solving this problem: radical action or conventional
bargaining methods. Because
we chose the latter, we were
accused of "abandoping the
students' pleas," and of
"joining the Administrative
army."
I contend that the actions
•
I
we took did get us the results we wanted. Ask around:
how many students are still
affected? I'm sure
the
answer is "none.''
We were accused of being

a high school organization
because we did not take the
advice of some .members of
the CUS Secretariat we consu1ted on the issue. I stated
then as I do now that I
have no intention of being
dictated to by someone who
openly states his belief in
svndicalism (consult a political science .major for a translation) and whose decisions
·1·efl.ect this belief.
The ARGUS is the students' key method of criticism; with that fact I have
no beef. But if you are going
to complain, at least use the
brain that was supposedly
j!iven to you when you
checked into this world.
One of our irate students
used the ARGUS to let off
steam (or was it hot air?).
Prepare yourselves, fellow
councillors, for apparently
on October 18, at the AMS
Council meeting, we dis-

cussed " at great length such
important matters as where
thev (we) will obtain a
dm;ble-reverse-bottle holder,
-iripper-and - jigger - fixer."
Perhaps I was alseep when
that came up, but I still
cannot -f ind it in the agenda.
This critic goes on to
state that the suggestion to
limit discussion on the regstration issue to one-half
hour was ridiculous. As a
point of interest, this particular discussion lasted one
hour and fifteen minutes.
Recembering that this was
one item of 12 on the agenda; at that rate the meeting
would have lasted 15 hours.
I. would like to close off
these comments with the
suggestion that while criticism is good, a little co-operation and assistance would
go a lot further. Back-stabbing is an awfully low tactic!

�Page 2

Simon says

_,

Club
Notes
Any club wishing to put announcements in the ARGUS must hand
them in to the ARGUS office by
Thursday at 6:00 p. m. They will
appear in the following week's edition.

Anth - Soc Club
The Anthropolgy-Sociology Club has arranged for
Rev. Lederman of the Town
Talk series to speak on November 9 at 12:45 in room
1149. Be there.

"the group,,

-

November 9, ·1967

THE ARGUS

The hard-core iconoclasts
of the Thursday discussion
group (being non-alligned
and non-structured we have
no real name) invite everybody to a revolutionary
meeting on the university
and its government: today
(Thursday), 12:30, Wing D
North. Guest whipping boys
will be Dean Kerr and the
Director of Planning Mr.
Smith.

••••

Happiness is waking up, with hang-over, at 11: 10, just in
time to be conscious of missing your 11 :00 o'clock class.
Happiness is putting a new blade in your razor, to shave
the 5 sq. cm. of your adam's apple and then slashing your throat.
Happiness is walking two miles because your car ( with a
sticky gas gauge) ran out of gas.
Happiness is a girl's navel.
Happiness is drinking that second glass of draft for taste,
the first consumed just for thirst.
Happiness is a dill pickle; long, juicy, phallic and crisp.
Happiness is changing buses in the dismal swamp area between cities.
Happiness is looking at Saskatchewan Wheat Pool 8 from
your balcony.

R. I. P.
In an unfortunate encounter with Business Administration last Tuesday,
the Science Rag Tag Football
team lost its entire team.
Forestry wishes to express
its sincerest regrets for this
crucial loss.
Also personal regrets are
extended to the family and
friends Mr. Glenn Rnjala.

Poli. Sci. Club
The Political Science Club
will hold a meeting on
Thursday, November 9, at
8:00 p.m.
Mr. McEwan will
speak on polling, and William Sheridan will speak on
"The Scientific Approach to
Government."

Bookstore
Students are warned that
they will have to buy their
texts before December 1.
After that date, the Bookstore staff will be sending
all unbought texts back to
the publishers.
Besides the obvious fact
that in these books a great
amount of money would be
tied up, they are also holding valuable shelf space
which could otherwise be
used to shelve the Bookstore's browsing sections.
The bookstore has also informed us that they c a n
order any• books that stu'dents want.

I

This Week ....

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9
Fencing Club-GH-12-2 p.m.
Circle K Meeting-r. 1050-12-2 p.m.
Library Committee Meeting-B.-12:15 p.m.
Thursday Discussion Group-r. 1100-12:30 p.m.
Topic: What is a University?
(Dean Kerr will be present)
W.U.S.C. Film-Aud.-8 p.m.
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10
Festival Canada Presents "Chantelle Maison"Aud.-8: 15 p.m.
AMS Dinner Dance-Ortona Legion-6 p.m.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 11
AMS Young Liberals Dance-GH-9 p.m.
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 13
National Unity Seminar-Aud.-8 p.m.
4 Liberal speakers
R. Andras, M.P.
G. Beachman, M,P.
0. 1.aflammP-, M.P.
B. Mackasey M.P.
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
'
University Liberals Meeting-G-023-12: 30 p.m.
Municipal Government Course-r, 1029-7 p.m.
;;:tc: Functions of the Municipality
Province-Municipalit}e Direct Relationships
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship-r. 1025-12:30 p.m.
Fencing-GH-12-2 p.m.
West Indies Ass'n-r. 1058-12:30 p.m.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship Filni-Aud.12:30-2 p.m.
"The Stones Cry Out"
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15
AMS Meeting-BR-7 p.m.
Fencing-Gli-10 p.m.
W.U.S.O. Meeting-Aud.-8:30 p.m.

Liberal movement on campus
At a recent meeting of the
Lakehead University Liberals, several topics were discussed, all of considerable
importance.
It was decided that six
representatives be sent to the
forthcoming University Liberal Convention in London
on November 24. The convention is being held in order
that this year's national
executive be elected.
Following this, final plans
were confirmed for our
dance, to be held Saturday,
November 11, at the university. A good turnout is expected.
Co - campaign chairman

with

&amp;~eedUJna'!U

Bob Gibson and Fred Porter
WE-re then elected to supervise our campaign for the
University's Model Parliament early in January.
Policy was discused and tentative areas of concern
agreed upon. They include
Northern Affairs, Health and
Welfare, Foreign Affairs,
and Parliamentary Reform.
Finally, this year's membership cards were signed
and distributed. Arrangements werte also made to
contact Liberals on campus
at . Confederation College in
hopes of establishing an ac.
tive organization there.

Final ·rear Students

ABC SHORTHAND

Because of readability and
short learning time, Speedwriting is an ideal, easily
acquired medium for university students use. Check
today for details, or drop in
on a Tuesday night at either
college. Also available in a
half-day basis.

Night Classe$
TUESDAY

Studen~ interested in investigating prospects of
professional training in public accounting, leading to
qualification as a CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT,
are invited to discu,ss career opportunities.
Clarkson, Gordon representatives will be on camnus

November 13
Interview appointments may be
made through the office of the
Student Placement Office.

Port Arthur 40 S. Court St.

345-9551
Fort William 1119 Victoria Ave
(Dodick Block)

622-7061

c&amp;«1,/,,pn/ d,·ou11la11/.J.

KINGS

Halifax Saint John Quebec Montreal Ottawa Toronto Hamilton
Kitc}iener London Windsor Port Arthur Fort William Winnipeg
Regma Calgary Edmonton Vancouver Victoria

Business College

I

ii:f"' can'l licl.:. t.111 -

PIIIJ ca1111,ltt w,·,A ineJlt.

�November 9, ·1967

Page 3

THE ARGUS

Et tu, Brute?

the

Sir:

wise and honourable man.
for twenty-five dollars for
The Lakehead U. EngiWhat say you, Brutus?
an
Engineering
Symbol
conneering Society asked for
Doug Curtola,
test. Mr. Lees said "no;"
.twenty dollars token . for
President, L.U.,
that the honour of having
speakers. Mr. Lees said "no;"
Engineering Society
one's design accepted was reand Mr. Lees is a wise and
ward enough and all the
honourable man.
time and energy put for this
The Lakehead U. EngiParking prQb/ems
effort should be sufficiently
neering Society asked for a
Chinese students in Canada
rewarded b.y the designs. Sir:
second-hand typewriter. Mr.
to relate that there- are 91
in a pig's eye
~d Mr. Lees is a wise and
Being the vice-president Chinese students at LakeLees said "no;" and Mr.
Sir:
honourable man.
of the Chinese Students AsLess is a wise and honourhead University, of which 80
We have a treasurer on sociation, I keep the list of came originally from Hong
Good grief! Wasn't that
able man.
our AMS who similarly all Chinese students' names Kong, five from Canada, five
a brilliant and easy way to
The Lakehead U. Engishould find ample reward for and record of their living from Malaysia and Singamake an expensive and tem- , neering Society asked for
porary University Parking Jifty dollars for an Enginerall his efforts, time, and conditions here. May I draw
pore, and one from Indonesia.
Lot a paying proposition?
energy in the fact that he your attention to the followAmong the 80 originally
ing Symbol contest. Mr. Lees
Simply abolish all free parkwas chosen for this position. ing comments on the article from Hong Kong, 64 of
said "no;" and Mr. Lees is
ing on campus and FORCE
Yet the treasurer ·will re- on Hong Kong students apa wise and honourable •man.
th~ are in Catiada for the
students to pay 20 bucks a
ceive a substantial honor- pearing in the ARGUS (Octfirst time. Within the total
The Lakehead U. Engipiece for parking ~
- It's
arium; and Mr. Lees is a ober 26).
nillnber, there are some who
neering Society then asked
First of all, I would like
very demooratic in the dogcont'd page 9
·eat-dog business world, but
I thought a university was
Is the Argus a bunch of misfits?
of a different class. The
ham and egg crew since the
spews every week when he
decorum please.
Tho perhaps it would be
Administration has taught
Daily Planet. Lets get some
is
unable
to
keep
his
sex
How
much
confidence
can
wise
us a good lesson in the cold,
new blood in this rag, prelife (male or female) straight
we have in a man called
Not to carp or criticize
hard facts of life . . . and
ferably with some of the old
"Barkwell"
as
advertising
from
one
day
to
another?
I
For' its very evident
it hurts! Right in the
spilled.
manager?
Since
when
does
say
burn
not
his
draft-card
Their
inwntions
are
well
pocket book!
Why not some conscienta grease monkey from Cobobut rather his passport.
meant.
And why are those in
ious
able-bodied, keen-mindconk
know
about
advertisAnd
what
of
this
"Chuck
My intentions are also
charge so hell - bent on
ed
students
like our illustriing?
Grieve"
(obviously
•
an
alias
well
meant.
I
disagree
with
squeezing every last dollar
ous
(soon
to
be canonized
The
less
I
say
about
the
adopted
after
he
read
the
the way the paper is being
out of the student body? I
or
is
/it
prcumcized)
AMS
circulation
department
t
h
e
copy
his
staff
had
submitput·
out,
and
I
will
say
somecan tolerate the petty fees
President Pe te ·r Young.
better. The man's an alcoted). I think "Chuck Ptike"
thing.
for course changes, late regholic, beter fitted for the
Seems to me this is the only
would have been more in
Students o f Blackhead
istration, etc., but when they
Vendome than a newspaper.
thing he hasn't got his
order.
Here
is
a
man
who
take
note
we
are
reading
moye into the $20 bracket
Simon Hoad - just a rose
greasy finger in yet. He
deserves a better fate than
dung. Written by a bunch
... ouch! This is- a TAX to
in the manure pile, a treat_ probably could have fired
leader
of
this
pack
why
of
misfits.
How
much
confihigher education we can do
to read, he must feel odd,
off quite a few editions this
dence can you have in a -not parking lot attendent in
withoutr
being the only one contribsummer. He had quite a bit
the
D'
parking
lot.
Seems
to
political
(news)
item
written
What is really important,
uting something worthwhile.
of time.
be
more
intellectually
fulby
a
love-sick
tom-cat
like
of course, is the principle
I hope this evaluation will
Chad Hannah? So~ds like .
filling.
R.G.P. (or is it D.P~?&gt; whose
of the thing The students
stimulate controversy and a
an unemployed bubble gum
And
what
of
this
Colonly
claim
to
fame
is
that
a r e being "sucked in" by
general purge of the ARGUS
singer, doesn't it? What kind
bome? Just because he got
he insists on wearing a
such a vacuum that they're
of paper can be managed by
staff that is indeed a necesa hair-cut is no reason why
Viva
Che
badge
three
weeks
not fully conscious. The ADa crack-pot who rides a
sity if we are to rid this
the readers should be subafter the funeral and who
MINISTRATION par.ks tor
Honda when its -10 degrees.
university of a
definite
ject to such a ·nauseating
peddles "speed" fruit-cake
~ . and so do the profes- - u{'- his room... Are we to bepollutant.
sight as his "bag" in every Is this normal?
sor.s, the office help, all
rve never seen such a
A Concerned Artsman
lieve the crap this man
issue. Let's observe a little
visitors, and even part--time
students. (Oh, and don't forResignation more effective than ,complicity
,
get the construction workthink
that
I
can
be
more
efstudents
at
Lakehead
Uniencouraged
by
the
number
ers)! These lucky people Dear Sir:
fective as part of the AMS
versity which is rejecting the of students and faculty who
I should like to answer
are obviously priviliged and
Council.
Even
casting
aside-:AMS Council in its role of have supported my stand. I
a lot ·smarter to have such some of the points made in
albeit reluctant]:y - moral
leading the students in their see in this ·support evidence
the ARGUS, (Nov. 2) by
a good thing going.
consideration·
and
considerafight for students' rights.
that the AMS Council has
Mr Peter McCormick conIt's beyond me why the cerning my resignation from
tions of conscience, I do not
Mr. McCormick accuses alienated itself from the unistudent body has to subsidize the AMS Council
agree. I believe th1:1,t I can
me of making "doubtful the versity as a whole.
a parking 1 o t that should
do more for the 'student
position of the AMS CounIn closing,• I wish to reI note that Mr McCormick
have been financed out of the has not attempted to answer
movement' outside the AMS
ell, a position which should affirm the statements I
university's over-all building my charges against the
Council - the Council havbe strongly evident on this made and opinions I exfund. Free parking is a Council, but rather has coning become a meaningless ircampus;" I believe that pre~sed in my letter of resig"fringe benefit," the prece- tended himself with comrelevance within the context through my resignation many nation.
dence for which was estab- menting on the tactical asof the movement.
students have become aware
Yours truly,
lished by this university's pects of my resignation.
I am a member of an inof the true position of the
Roderick G. Phillips
ADMINIS';t'RATION ye a rs
I feel that Mr. McCormick
creasingly large number of AMS Council. I have been
ago. I'm not decrying the has made an unfortunate
need for electrical outlets to mistake in confusing the
heat cars in winter time, but, Alma Mater Society on the
why should everyone be one hand with the Alma
torced to "plug:.in"?
Mater Society Council on the
The ADMINISTRATION other; the two bodies are
expects an outcry over their by no means synonymous.
"pay to park" gimmick. T h us Mr. McCormick's
They also expect the cry to charge that I have taken a
whimper away and suicide. "much publicized s t a n d
In a pig's eye! (I've been against the AMS" should
■
wondering why the Admin- read"' . . . against the AMS
istration has seen fit not to Council."
I do not work to better
suf&gt;sidize the bus service to
campus and where in ~ h e the AMS Council per se; this
world was the AMS when would be rather like governthe parking lot plum was ment for the sake of government. But I do work for the
being concocted)?
betterment of the AMS i.e.
Signed,
"Pipe up or you won't the student body.
Mr. McCormick seems to
be heard."

edito1·

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0

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(1962) LlllllTED

Intercity

Dial 344·7235

�Page 4

THE ARGUS

November

9, 1967

REMEMBER
Don
Colbome

1/'

I

th•

,
~

,,,~

Dyin~
~

I

on

.., ..STUDENT POWER
Five years ag~. so-called student activists were crusading
·south in aid of the civil rights cause.
Two years ago they marched against the war in Vietnam.
Today the fight is closer to home-in fact it is home in the
offices and lecture rooms of every university. The cry among
the "20 per cent ... who do most of the writing, talking, agitating, and creative work" (if MacLeans is to be believed) is now
for "student power"; a catch-phrase not as frightening as it
might sound, but with important implications for the future of
Canadian education.
It is not difficult to hypothesiz-e why this change has taken
place. The civil rights movement is dead and the message from
black leaders is "Clean up your own house baby-or we'll burn
it." The Vietnam cause continues, but despite its new respectability it has had no clear result-and students are impatient
people. Perhaps the implication of relative failures is that sincere effort against a rotten situation is not enough, and that
there is too much underlying rot which must first be got at that
has moved the student to "clean up his own house." That is
- merely a guess-but a popular one.
The fact is that from Memorial to University of Victoria the
revolution has come home.
QUIET GENERATION SETTLED
The movement's key, as stated, is "student power." Or
more delicately, student representation on the governing boards
of universities. This demand is clearly a manifestation of the
more aware and more involved spirit which the frightening social
and political situations of the sixties has forced upon students.
The "quiet generation" of the fifties are now in comfortable
junior management, while the very noisy (but still a minority)
bunch of 196 7 is demanding more control in society and certainly more control over their own lives.
Involvement in the control ( or destruction) of the immediate environment, the university, is the obvious first step.
Student complaints are well known: hundreds of students
per lecture, professors heard but never spoken to, and course
cards not to be folded, spindled or mutilated. They claim, and
in several cases have demonstrated, that a dog can be enrolled,
successfully complete courses and graduate, without any trouble
whatsoever-just good friends. They denounce the "knowledge
factory" dedicated to the processing of technicians and the proliferation of flaccid middle-class propaganda.
Their more profound arguments are that an automated,
cybernetic society no longer needs to turn out finely-honed technicians but should create a truly "liberal man" of the sort Newman called for a century ago-a man who can remain a human
despite potentia)ly stultifying leisure, the machinations of a
computerized corporate society, and cries for help from the "third
world."
FREEDOM TO LEARN
They demand lernfreiheit (freedom to .determine, at least
in part, what they wish to learn) to compliment the "lehrfreiheit''
(freedom of professors to teach what and how they please) which
has largely been won by faculty. They condemn grading and
lock-step advancement as services provided as conveniences to
- the corporations. They recognize the damage done in the name
of "public image" and "fund raising." They tell administrations
that their functions are strictly j;mitorial and secretarial and to
kindly keep the hell out of academic matters. They look to
Europe, and the healthy communities of scholars which are its
universities, for example and inspiration.
The more sophisticated criticisms that curricula are abstract
and static, that the disciplines are inward and academic, and
that imagination, creativity and spontaneity are either discouraged or actively destroyed, often come from the junior. faculty.
STATUS QUO SAVED
Reaction from supporters of the University status quo ( usually composed of some faculty, the administration, the government, the press, and the public) adhere to the view of Clark
Kerr (President of Berkeley during its famous rebellion in 1964)
that the modem university "is an imperative rather than a
reasoned choice among elegant alternatives."
They point to the proliferation of education and claim that
- it is functionally impossible to achieve much more, and that
certain sacrifices must be made to demands put on the university
by its. "many publics." When pressed they fall back to the pragmatic arguments of Sydney Hook who states, rather paternally,
that "academic freedom exists primarily for teachers ... students
have a right to free.dom to learn"; or they assert Flexner's argument which boils down to a glorification of post-graduate and
research work at the expense of undergraduates.
At root the status quo claims that whatever the shortcomings
the university must and does reflect the society which supports
it. The students concede that but return with the valid claim
that society is rotten and that if anything is to initiate change,
it must be the university.
These then are the keys to the problem: students fighting
alienation, impersonality, and paternalism, the status quo defending what they claim is merely expedient.
Next week: Some of the historical trends in education which
are most often debated in the current squabble.

'

I

November Elevenih
•

lakehead university entombed
Yes, friends, entombed.
We do not pat ourselves on the back when
we state that without the ARGUS, this place
would be a regular cemetery. This is unfortunate, but nonetheless, true. Not everyone
enjoys the bi-weekly dances or the intellectual
discussion groups sponsored by everyone except the AMS. However, everyone who at• "umvers1
• ·ty" h as the ch ance to enJoy
•
tend s th1s
the paper.
Now the point of this epic; the AMS executive has threatened the ARGUS with a
reduction in the number• of pages that we
will be able to publish. This all stems from
the fact that the executive is dissatisfied with
the content ratio of advertising. The threat
of a cut to the paper has been made on numerous occasions lately, even in an attempted
humourous vein.
This all comes about for a variety of reasons, the most notable being the state of the
budget. The ARGUS has budgeted for approximately one quarter of this to ·publish 22
editions, each containing 12 pages. This budget was approved by the AMS Budget C,ommittee, but now some re-evaluations are being
made so that every little corner of the activity
world can get a chunk of the load.stoneoften duplicating one other.
Exactly what is our beloved Treasurer

thinkin

f h h d 1
th f d
g O w cm;, e O es _out e un s ~
the s~d~nt OO?Y: ~ere IS a state of ~1sorgamzation existing _ID the ~MS now which
~anno! ~ p~ra~eled ID the ~istory of foul-ups
1s 1DSlitution. At ~ rate, the AMS
ID
wont evel?- be ~ble to orgamze ~nces . (presently thell' pnmary preoccupation) ID the
future.
Th •tu ti"
"th th
· • t
e s1 a on w1 .. e pal?,fr is JUS one
example of ~hat the ~apable hands of rll:e
~S exec~tive can do if they really put thru
m1Dds t? It. There are others too num~
to mention: CW~ would, but ~en '_'.Ve rm~t
end up with thirteen pages m this weeks
paper, and Don would get upset.)
.
The g~~ral ~onsensus 0 ~ camvus IS ~at
the Administration _a~ the ~S executive
are the same tw? evils. eac~ trymg to ~ut-do
th~ other when It c~mes to 1Dcoml&gt;t;~ence and
m1smanag~m_ent. Righ~ now, the gleesomethreesome IS attempting to get round .the
thous~ds that they have over-budgeted so
far this Ye:ir•
.
.
.
W~ ~on t want to ~ve the unp!es~1on that
we dislike th e way, thin_gs ar~ gomg, 0 ~ the
contrary, we couldn:t he happ,er. K~p 1~ up,
boys, and we can have a new executive within
the next month.
-Ch.

lf

parking and the AMS
"The University has a
limited number of parking
spaces with electric power
supplied "plug-ins." These
will be alloted to students
soon after registration. Upper classmen will receive
priority. Application forms
will be available at registration. The cost is $10.00 per
space."
This is the Word as .laid
down in the University
Bible for 1967-68. It would
appear that, as with any
Bible, the interpretation of
the Word is open to a wide
range of opinion.
To the as yet incompetely
educated undergraduate it
might seem that he would
be able to rent a parking
space with a plug-in for $10.
Oh ye of little faith. Trust
ye not the inexplicit word
of the High Priests?
Harken ye to the True
Word. Parking will cost you
$20.

"There is no charge for
parking in the general parking lots."
Judge ye not the tongue
of the serpent for it is forked
up.
"The Senate reserves the
right to. make changes in
this Calendar without prior
notice."
Here endeth the lesson.
T:he Senate, which is an
omnipotent body in this
community of scholars, cannot be questioned and has
the right to act arbitrarily
on all issues. It is therefore
above our questions.

The AMS, which is an impotent body in this community of scholars, is supposedly of the students and is
therefore not above our
questions. Indeed it has been
shown that many of our questions are above it.
The Administration has
"asked" that we abide by
the Calendar for the purpose
of degree credits. Why is it
that we may not follow the
Calendar in this instance?
There a r e other questions
too.
Why is it that th4: faculty,
who must be cons1dE:red a
part of this community of

THE

ARGUS

sch?la_rs, do not have. to PSI.!
sumJ~r fee for their plugms? Why n_,.u_st students pay
!or the pnvilege of entermg a course and then pay
for the privilege of get~g
close enough to the buildings to take the course?
Why did the AMS take so
long to act on this issue?
Why didn't the AMS recognize this as an issue? Does
the AMS know when this
regulation was changed?
Does the AMS believe that
there could be any valid reason for ,raising or even applying such a fee?
Whv is the AMS?
bh.

?-

VOLUME 2,

No.

VIII

November 9, 1967

The ARGUS is published weekly by the Alma Mater
Society of Lakehead Unive_rsity. The opinions ~xpressed
are those of the editorial board and not necessarily those
of the AMS or the ~dministration. The ARGUS is authorized
second class mail oy the Post Office, Ottawa, for payment
in cash. All correspondence to the ARGUS main office,
behind the lower cafeteria; mail c/o Lakehead University,
Port Arthµr. Subscription ... $3.00; advertising rates upon
request.
editor ···········································-················ chuck grieve
associate ( war correspondent) ...................-....... bob leggett
managing (war correspondent) ···················- -chad hhill"ah
news ···-·················· ... :.................................... rod ~ Ips
sports ............-.............................. - ............... Jarry hebert
features ..... ...... .............. .. ..... .... .... ..... ....... .... boyd hussey
advertising manager .. ........ ............. ............. mike barkwell
circulation ...................... ....... ................ ... gord fukushima
contributors -- ken conrad, simon hoad, william sheridan, bobbi
lambert, bonnie satten, marnie stewart, tracy hanna, don colborn~,
ron baker, gale rolley, cbris horodecky, wendy wilson, ian thomp•
son, Jim pudron, Joe fraser, glenn rajala, peter andros, amos "gui
tar picker supreme" garrett (alias "scoop")

�November 9, 1967

Page S

THE ARGUS

drew photo

clUmptruck
f

reVIEW

�November 9, 1967

THE ARGUS

MONIQUE PARLE un pen
Melle Monique Leyrac nous donna un interview avant sa
representation. Monique est une jeune femme tres jolie, tres
vivante.
Tout d'abord, elle refusa de parler politique, reiterant son
refus
plusieurs reprises. Lorsque nous lui avons demande
pourquoi elle avait exprime !'opinion qu'elle trouvait l'auditoire
de !'Ontario. plus difficile a plaire que d'autres, comme celui de
la Bussie ou de la France ou des Etats-Unis, elle manifesta son
etonnement: ''J'ai peur," dit-elle, "que ~on opinion ait ete completement mal interpretee. Je ne voulais pas venir chanter au
Canada anglais parce que je croyais qu'il n y aurait pas assez de
personnes qui s y interessent a venir m'entendre. Comme ii y
en a, alors c'est different. C,ela me fait plaisir, et je ne trouve
pas le public ici plus difficile qu'ailleurs."
Elle a chante un peu partout, mais surtout depuis un mois
et demi. Elle a chante pour la premiere fois Toronto l'annee
demiere. Elle finit maintenant une tournee de tout le Canada,
c'est-a-dire qu'elle a chante dans le Manitoba, !'Alberta, la Colombie Britannique, Jes territoires du Nord-ouest, l'Ile du Prince
Edward, le Nouveau Brunswick et l'Ontario. Demain, elle sera
Strathford avec sa troupe de musiciens, et ce sera la fin de la
toumee..
Elle discuta ensuite un de ses disques qui a ete joue tout
demierement au Club Fran~ais, ici
notre universite, et qui
s'appelle "Le mariage anglais," une ballade fran~caise du l Seme
siecle. Elle dit ne mettre aucune significaf:ion speciale dans ses
chansons. Ensuite, elle discuta la carriere de Melle Joan Biaz
qui est une chanteuse americaine de protestation. Ciette chan
teuse a un grand repertoire, mais Monique, qui pourtant adore

a

a

a

a

Joan Biaz, dit qu'elle ne veut pas se meler de politique. Le but
d'un artiste est d'amuser son auditoire.
Elle pense aller au Japon avant la prochaine exposition, e
meme pendant que celle-le durera. Pour ce qui est des autr
pays d'Orient, comm~ l'Australie, elle n'a pas de projet. Elle va
ou son metier la porte et ne desire pas etre la representante de
)!!;ipolitiques! ni d'etablir de relations ~tre le Cana~ fran~ais. et
' les pays etrangers. Elle veut tout srmplement faire son. metier
de chanteuse, ce qu'elle fait admirablement bien d'ailleurs.
Quand l'un de nous lui a demande si elle esperait uh jour
prendre part dans une comedie musicale fran~aise, elle repondit
que les comedies musicales fran~aises, n'existent pas. Qu'il y
avait eu beaucoup de tentatives, mais jusqu'ici aucune reussite.
Que si le jour venait ou ii y en aurait qu'elle serait ravie d'en
prendre part, d'y jouer un role.
Elle comments alors sur son refus de permettre un de nos
reporters de prendre des photos, disant qu'elle n'etait pas tout
instant prete prendre des photos, qu'elle n'avait pas vingt ans,
et que quand elle se sentait fatiguee, comme elle l'etait apres
une toumee d'un mois et demi, elle ne voulait pas voir dans Jes
joumaux sa tete qui ne serait peu son goftt.
.
Pour Monique, la partie la plus attrayant.e de son metier est
le moment de la preparation avant la representation, ou les pre•eres fois qu'elle presente des chansons au public. Pour elle,
.,_..)es chansons et le theatre sont la meme chose, un moyen d'expri:.
·•Jmer son exuberance, sa gaiete, son besoin de vivre.
Elle deteste les fetes, la vie mondaine-c'est pour cela qu'elle
ne rest.e pas plus longtemps qu'elle ne le peut dans les villes de
sa toumee.

a

a

a

a

nterviewed
by janine

feelay

photos by
westman
(Peak) and

skula

reviewed b
boyd
1ussey

She came to sing of love;
sang; and conquered her
audience in the University
Theatre. And many of those
present had never heard of
Monique ·Leyrac before.
This same audience, which
sat on its hands for most
of the night, were on their
feet for three curtain calls
at the end of a varied and
times exciting programme.

Mlle. Leyrac opened with
"Ce Soleil" and her apparent nervousness disappeared
as she swung coyly into her
first English song "One More
Dance."
It was in the English
portions of the performance
that she slipped from the
heights she attained in the
FTench selections. This is
not to say that Mlle. Leyrac

did not deliver her English
selections with authority but
they could not compare with
the picture she ·creat.ed in
t h e Vigneault, Levefilee
song, l'Hiver.
In the first set she demonstrated h e r versatility
with a wide range of moods
and tempos. Of particular
note were "e Le Vent de i'
Hiver", "Tout Mais Pas Ca"
and the lively, foot-stomping,
"Pot-Pourri." The latter did
not receive the response it
deserved from a slightly reserved audience.
The second set was stronger. The reaction of an audience will greatly affect the
output of a performer and
in this portion of the programme we were closer to
each other.
We were moved by "Pendant Que" and the almost
pleading "Parlez - Moi de
Vous"; greatly amused by
"John Sebastian Bach" and
"I Wouldn't Walle Across the
Street." We were again reminded. of Mlle. Leyrac's
versatility in the lively "La
Valse minute" and the stirring, powerful "La Manikoutai." If there was a particular weak spot it was in "If
You Go Away," which the
singer interpreted too emo-

tionally.
Through the whole performance M 11 e. Leyrac's
prowess as an internationally acclaimed artist was never
really in doubt. Conte's
most difficult "Ainsi Soit-D"
left the audience gasping at
the polish with which she
handled its intricacies.
It is questionable whether
Mlle. Leyrac deserved the
standing ovation she received, for this was not an
inspired performance, and
she was visibly surprised at

the ovation herself. Perhaps
it was that she -con~eyed
more of Monique Leyrac
than she wished. Perhaps too,
it was because of the words
of the emotional and beautiful "Mon Pays," which may
someday rank as Canada's
national song.
Mlle. Leyrac never stooped
to conquer but rather lifted
us to her and to her level
of perfection. That is always
more satisfying for the audience.

�November 9, 1967

Page 7

TijE ARGUS

The real unreal \NOrld

of Arms and the Man

by simon hoad
Waiting,
perhaps
the
whole picture of theatre
group acting is rounded by
waiting.
A large portion of nights,
four a week, in a select little
band with chailrs, empty
table and a script. Cups of
instant coffee, battered lump
sugar, and coonmunional cigarettes consumed for break.
First rehearsals, w i t h
scripts, and rough blocking.
Walk around fictitious tables,
into invisible doorways.
Cold, alternate night journies; Slovac Legion, University theatre. Cigarette extinguished, c o f f e e placed
down, shoulders straighten,
and a tired man metamorphaizes into a Bulgarian officer.
Group spirit exists, fostered by workng association,
common interest. The structure grows larger. Actors
must be closed by a dozen
barriers; sets, props, and
costumes.

Grey afternoon trip to
Founders Museum, with assorted amusements loading
and unloading an old railwav caboose stove. Week
later red truck drive to return, swap, too much Northern Ontario for a more Bulgarian stove.
Fittings of braid and boots.
The abstract reality of rehearsal, lines now memorized after a fashion, becomes
fleshed in with a prop or
three.
Now success becomes more
than actors. Backstage crew,
create, change, scrap, or
make do, by their work a
set emerges. Ttckets, publicity and you
wander
around, dunning friends to
buy your wares.
Dress rehearsal, as technical difficulties, forseen and
unforseen, create six hours
o f .waiting.
Performance
night, and first glance at
the program, did they spell
.mv name correctly and what

did they say about me.
Makeup, smear on, wipe
and with unaccustomed finesse stick an eye brow
pencil into your eye. Wait,
in the costume room, wait
offstage, wait onstage. Lights
down, curtain up. More
waiting, now a trained wait,
with one last frantic thought,
what's my cue.
That one step, from dark,
warm obscurity lo bright,
hard exposure. Many faced
anonimity pooled in the
darkness, a row of blank
shadow faces, multiplied by
many, all watching.
Walk off, hot, sweaty and
thinking of that slip y o u
always make, apparent, with
luck, only to you and the director. Play end, curtain,
and &lt;?urtain call, a line of
peoples advances and bows.
Clean up, dress and as a
cliche, out for a drink. Home,
and when this play ends it
really doesn't, for the routine is always the same.

Raina comforts the
soldier mentality

DRIVERS WAR1''ED
..Hungry
university
drivers were warned today
to handle their cars with
extreme caution while on
the way to TINY1S.
"Youcouldhavea bad
accident - like turning in
at one of our compet ....
I mean one of our imitators' places, " cautioned TI1'TY. "And nobody
wants THAT to happen.
Least of all ME."
The average teen-age
driver is competent, and
has quick reflexes TINY
said, but sometimes is
easily distracted, espec ially by gorgeous blondes.
''Pay no attention to
gorgeous blondes, f e 11 pws, "warned TINY.
"Remember, you are
hungry!"

Rehearsal: Dennison, Raffo, Wesley

Tillis

MEMORIAL •t ONTARIO

Male protagonists face to face

Sergius snows Raina

INSULATED BOOTS
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at Ecomony Prices
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Hydro Parkas 12.88
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�Page

8

November

THE ARGUS

9, 1967

folk spectacular

•
a ballet of microphones and good music
If you didn't attend the
Arts Folk Spectacular you
missed a very good show,
featurihg all-Canadian talent.
Congratulations Lakeheadl
As a recent import to
Port Arthur, I was extremely impressed by the
talent of our local folk singers, and of course I was
swept up by the humourous,
and at times riotous, Travellers.
The audience was almost
lulled to l;}eep during the
first is minutes of the show
by Tom Kelly's "Squire
James"' jokes (maybe they'll
catch on), Mary McKimm's
two self-composed ballads
and the Freemen's first two
numbers. I'm not knocking
the obviously good talent but
just the terribly quiet and
peaceful atmosphere provid-

ed at the beginning.
WOISHWILL SAVES
After a ballet of microphones and several renditions of a favorite Chinese
!olksot\g "tu ning'', the· dozing audience spines were
stTaightened by a relatively
new Lakehead talent, Andy
Woishwlll. I had never seen
him perform, but had been
told that he followed early
Bob Dylan, Tom Rush, and
Eric Anderson. His performance was exciting and had a
definite professional air. He
doesn't just sing a song he- believes it. This is •more
than can be said for most
"new-type" folk singers. I
could have listened to much

0

u
R

B
0
0
K

s

T
0

R
E

by wendy wilson
photos bill esarik
more of him on Thursday
night.
TRAViELLERS TERRIFIC
Things had definitely begun to look up on stage.
When the Travellers appeared my little heart was
oh so happy. I immediately
fell in love with the lead
.male singer, Ray Woodleyhe reminded me of my hero,
Michael Caine.
Unfortunately the Travellers had to perform amid
persistant microphone troub
les. At one point the guitarist Amos Garrett was moved
to balancing on his toes in
order to use a live mike.
Their songs were lively
and just what was needed
totally to awaken the previously sleepy audience. Their
"1-akehead Junction" bJ;"Ought
tears to my -cold Winnipeg
eyes, while the other songs·
induced a laugh from my
usually quiet humour corrtrol mechanism.
LOCALS SHIHE
After a fun-filled intermission and a nose-wrinkling introduction to part n
of the Arts Folk Spectacular '67, Frank Shoemaker entertained. Once again I was
astonished at the fantastic
local talent. His songs, both
written by himself, were
favourably received l:&gt;y both
my ears and those of the
audience.
At this point the stage.was
invaded by a multitude of
guitars, bass, and violin
called the Ramblers. They
produced a very definite
Western sound which prodded the audience to foottapping and, once in a while,
"Ya hooing'' in the background. I didn't think the
Go Go dancers were necessary in an extremely well
played version of
the
"Orange Blossom Special",
but . . .
When Tom Kelly stopped
talking and started singing
the audience really began to
listen. Tom "Good Guy"
Kelly has a marvellous voice
and did a beautiful rendition
of "Danny Boy." It even
made me, a staunch Cana-

dian, wish I was more than
one-sixteenth Irish.
TRAVELLERS "BOSS"
Once again the Travellers
took over the whole audience. Their humour fai· outshone their musical prowe~
-and they are very good
musicians. Thanks to the
Travellers everyone in the
place left with a huge grin
on his face. They were _great!
So I'm impressed, the
audience was impressed everybody was impressed.
The Arts. Society and the
Folk Guild did a commendable job and should be congratulated.

MeDONALII~ CIJBBIE &amp; CO.
CHARTERED ACCOIJNTANTS
Representatives from our Firm will be
on campus November 16, 1967 to
interview students for positions available in offices of our Firm throughout
Canada.
These positions are available for the
graduates in the Faculties of Commerce,
Arts and Science, Engineering and Law.
Further information and arrangements
for interviews are available through
the placement office.

ST.JAMES
Stereo Centre Ltd.
Records
Tape Recorders

Players
Guitars

DROP IN and BROWSE
202 1/2 ARTHUR ST.

-

PORT ARTHUR

�r
fltovember 9, ·1967

THE ARGUS

Page 9

Cafeteria prices and food quality

letters cont'd
(Chinese cont'd)
have spent a year or more
in other provinces before
they came here. Some have
spent time in other countries,
e.g. the United Kingdom, the
States, Australia, etc.
There is another point
which M. Sze-Chung Yuan
reminded me about: the
number of Chinese students
that are stu&lt;flying at J&amp;lladian universities is not about
600 but far more. According
to the Canadian section of
the Commonwealth UniverYearbook of 1966, there are
761 . students from Hong
Kong and 320 from Formosa
in 1963-64. It is evident that
the number of Chinese students increases greatly- every
year. I would• like to estilhate that at this moment
there are about 2000 Chinese
students studying throughout Canada. Of course, the
majority are from Hong
Kong.
As reported in the same
article that Mr. Yuan said
that the Hong Kong students
had no trouble in adjusting
to life in the Lakehead.
But, remember there are
two sides to the coin. This
applies to the Chinese students adapting to the Canadian life. Apparently there
seems to be little or no difficulties for these students
to stay here.
Actually they are facing
a great challenge. For instance, the weather; the different tastes in foods, and
the difference in _languages
are the hardships which
they have to overcome. In
addition, they are not used
to the bus service (I am not
criticizing it) because they
are unfamiliar with it.
However, I trust t.hat difficulties, once overcome, will
.make them feel better qualified to- exist in this world.
Sincerely,
Michael W. Li.

Sir:
. The article that recently
appeared in the ARGUS
(Nov. 2) edition puts forth
a very strong -point. We
agree that the mess should
be cleaned up by the students.
The reason we think that
there is garbage sitting
around is that there is garbage being served which
someone has classed as. being
food.
•
At the beginning of September we noticed quite a
change in the coffee; it was
better than it had been the

previous year (1966-67 session) but to date it has gotten back to its original old
shoe taste.
We also noticed that:
-the chili ii; reheated from
day to day, cold
-the chips seem uncooked, cold
-the hamburgers are dry
and lifeless, cold
-etc, etc.
One remedy for the food
is to cook it yourself at
home or to douse it with
ketchup, salt, or pepper.
Another remedy is bicarbonate af soda or T.P.
Although these are only

a few examples the complaint can be found with the
other pig swale.
We also think that prices
have been run down enough,
although a b o v e normal.
meals (potatoes, meat vegetables, and desert) can 'be
bought at other universities
such as Queen's or McGill
for under a dollar. Compare
prices.
P.S. Is the first idea of
a business to make one helluva profit and then to provide a service ?
Sincerely,
the boys from 459

ON SALE
Yearbooks
'67 - '68

* more colour pages
* 40 additional pages
* grad, faculty, staff

undergraduate pictures

only $5.00
the
Nor'Wester

Lakehead Teachers College students snu!Jbed
Sir:

Lying in my room, reading the ARGUS evoked me
to write a letter of complaint concerning Lakehead
University students' attitude
towards Teachers College
students.
I have been called stupid,
etc., for going there. Nobody
understands that I want to
be a teacher like another
person wants to be a lawyer.
I don't know if the students
have a dislike for the institution, the profession, or the
student body. There are all
these supposedly open-minded students who think you
are square or something
else just because you go to
L.T.C. :i'hey judge you by
the building you attend, not
by your own individual personality. In my eyes, these
people are ignorant slobs. I
do not conliemn them for
the profession they are entering; rather judge them by
the type of person they are.
Nlost people, 1 think, still
have the image of a dictatorial bitch of a teacher which
they 'bad when ijley went
to school. If this is w h y
they judge us as they do,
the:r are again unfair. They
are judging us by someone
else's acts.
Today, as teachers, we are
learning to run a democratic classroom. Everything is

planned around the students'
individual differences. We
wi:ll do more in the shaping
of our society than any
parent or any other fat ass
stting around writing of the
problems in the world will.
In July we will b.e joining with Lakehead U. Already you have asked us or
included us in your athletic
programme. But I'm sure if
the majority of students had
their way, we would be completely ignored. Just a small,
insignificant example of that
is the fact that on the radio
an announcement said that
your dance was open to university students and nurses
only.
I have been informed that
football was practised on
days which we were out
teaching, thus we couldn't
participate. Also that none
of our boys can play in the
final basketball games. I
don't know how valid this is,
but I do know we often give
up the use of our gym for
your people to practise in.
Thus it would be only fair
to let us participate.
But sports isn't the topic
I decided to write about. I
don't know if this cold
block (mental) will ever be
lifted from most of the minds
of the university students. I
tend to doubt that these

narrow-minded people that
are so much better than us
will e"!'er judge individuals
for what they a i' e worth.
Most of the kids at the college are great. I'm sure if
you dared to associate with
them you might have many
"zestful experiences." After
working at the O.H. Tuesday
nights we go to the Shoreline, if you care to join us.
I would like to be informed on how widespread
this attitude towards L.T.C.
is. I'm not saying everyone
has this attitude, but others,
as well as myself, have
noticed it through comments,

COME IN TO SEE

Our Gifts
&amp; China

lease
Don't Touch!

etc

Maiybe an opinion poll on
what the L.U. students think
of the "things" over at
Teachers College would provide me with an answer.
Sincerely,
Joan Walberg

LOWERYS
LIMITED

C.r. CUmberland &amp; Park
Dial 344-tlM

•Students interested in obtaining information
regarding post-graduate studies leading to
the degree of Chartered Accountant are requested
to contact:

F.H. Black &amp; Co.
Chartered Accountants
Representatives will be on campus
NOVEMBER 13
Port Arthur

Fort William

345-5417

623-3252

Equipment for a
lab course

In a lifetime of lectures, you'd
never learn what the world is really
like. You have to see it - the laboratory
with three billion teachers. You might learn
political economy from a Muscovite (or English from a
Cockney bartender). Discover high finance in a Caribbean.
marketplace (or sales psychology in a Paris souvenir shop~. ~et a refresher course in ancient history (or just about anything) from a cabb1e m Rome.
Or be taught something new and unforgettable somewhere on your own continent.
When you're ready to take the lab course in learnirig (and living it up), call Air Canada.
We've got a good way to get you to class.

•

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�Page

10

November 9, ·1967

THE ARGUS

Hippies - could they be right?
by r.b.

Ask any hippie, drop out
or whatever, why he bu
taken this course in life, and
you will nearly always receive a storm of criticism
of our society.
And the storm is followed
by the final l'esignation that
it (society) will not change.
He will then say that he
cannot prostitute himself by

supporting and thus helping
tp perpetuate a society such
as OU1'S.
I would not go so far 48
to say that every acid-freak
is devotel to a better society,
but when so many people
are saying something, it
stands to reason that many
of them believe it. And they
have evidence - evidence

.
Peter Ltglit explains to Simon Fraser students what bippyilm ii and
what it tm 't. - Peak photo

OLIVER ROAD
ED CLIFF

ESSO SERVICE

For all your car nNd1I
Gu Otl lube tll'N I acoNeorl"N
Motor tune up repa&amp;a
Nut to alwn"1
TEL. 344-m1

a

which cannot morally be refuted.
.
'l'he element of society
"which e&amp;WjeS the most
grief" is, of course the government. There a.re two
methods of keeping a nation
in order. One is by brute
strength, the other by deception. There is no country
in the world today which
operates without the use of
both of these methods, although the degree to which
each of these is utilized
varies. Naturally, opposing
countries play u p each
other's faults by showing
their people h o w
tht!
"enemy" pushes it populace
around and witholds the
truth. And when one man
realizes that his country is
just as guilty as all the rest,
it may be a difficult thing
for him to carry on support,.
ing something he does not
believe in.
This , I believe sums up the
esse nce of the hippie movement.
There are thousands of things
people would like to see changed,
but here 1 would rather point to
the cause of the hippies' 'flroblems: the government. I will
speak' of the United States in
particular, as that country is
supposedly the symbol of free·
dom in the world today.
The government ol the
United States ha&amp; gained too
much ·power and those who
have it want to keep it and
spread it liberally over the
globe. This is a natural reaction. They are succeeding,
and they believe they are
ri(bt.
The most clear cut example of this is of course
the Vietnacese War. It is
fairly clear that the South
Vietnamese a rm y cannot
stand up to the Viet Cong
without American troops to
help. There is no evidence

of Communist troops comJng
in from countries outside of
Vietnam - only weapons. If
America left all her weapons
in South Vietnamese hands,
the country would still fall
to the Communists. This
suggests to me that there is
at least a strong minorifiy of
Communists in Vietnam, but
America seems to have forgotten this, as in the "free"
election, when there was no
mention of a Communist
candidate. Is the United
States standing for the free.
dom to chose one's own government, or for her own
b~d!
k. if this isn't enough to
send the freedom • loving
American, into depths of
despair, take a look at what
happene4 to President Kennedy. U t h e peop1e don't
mind seeing their country
obstructing freedom, per~s
they mind seeing it obstructing justice.
The Warren Report is
proof il'.) itself that Lee
Harvey Oswald did not assassinate Kennedy. Jim Garrison, a New Orleans district attorney, recognized
this fact and set out to discover what happened. He
has received news coverage
(as little as possible), ridiculou.s charges, and in general
every kind of hindrance possible, sbQrt of being thrown
in jail himself. 'Witnesses
keep dying. The Central .Intelligence Agency k e e p s
"classifying" their files on
Jack Ruby, Oswald, and
several other people. (No one
is allowed to read classified
files for 75 years).

what the hippies strive towards.

Why do they not help
Garrison in his quest? Could
it be there is something to
bde? Perhaps if the truth
was publicly known the gav.
emment would not look so
good.
These are only two ex-amples. People like to think
they're being told the truth,
and sometimes they try to
find out ·for sure. If t he
quest for truth itself becomes strong enough, it cannot be blinded by a belief
in what a country says.
People begin to realize that
all might not be the way
it seems.
So what is leftY
You can hold strongly to
your values, and you can
get hurt. Or you can accept
the facts and try to better
them by helping others see.
But you can still get hurt,.
When the facts can be so
effectively di.,gui:sed on major .issues, as these, imagine
what might be happening in
smaller incidents.
The hippies, I believe, are
a .nurture of people who have
given up hope of an answer,
others who see their llle ai
the best method of protest
they have, and attn othn'8
who have aone along f o r
the trip.

"And so people walk up to
me and ask. 'Do you really be·
lieve in what your songs are
saying?"
.
"And 1 have to smile and
reply, 'Hell, n~, but the money'·s
good.' for what else. could I say
to such a question?"
Phil Ochs

- Chevron photo

T:ED:C CR.EST H0'1'.S::L

Who caresl Who's got the Coke? Coca-Cola has the
•
refreshing taste you never get tired of. That's why things go
better with Coke, after Coke, after Coke.

z

z

RED RIVER RO~O, PORT ARTHUR

�-November 9, ·1967

THE ARGUS

Page 11

Future bright for Mustangs
I'm glad to see that some people are giving some suggestions
for the Sport's section of the paper. It shows that people not
only read but are interested in the Sport's section. We are always open for suggestions and criticisms.

•

•

•

Next week the Isolated Camera begins. During the winter
months we also hope to do specials on such things as L. U.
students and their stock cars. Also intercollegiate football and
basketball scores of other universities will be posted as we receive
them.
Looks as though Nor'westers basketball coach and athletic
director, George Birger is in demand on the banquet circuit. He
will speak at the P.A.C.I. football banquet.

•

•

•

•

•

•

The Port Arthur News Chronicle has been doing a story
over several issues of the paper on "Bobo" Penner, a former longtime coach at P.A.C.I. "Bobo" is one of the most successful and
one of the most respected High School coaches as well as being
a top athlete himself. It was a deserving article and congratulations go to the Chronicle on a 2ood story.
We now have a representative at the Teachers' College who
will cover sports there for us. He is Davis Gerrie, secret agent
.0031/2 (which gives him a licence to write sports). Doug
Trimble was elected President of the Athletic Council at the
school. Doug also scored I 7 points for Rembers Razorbacks the
other night in a losing cause. They play in the senior men's
league of which L. U. is the defending champs, although it won't
retain its title this year since we are playing only an intercollegiate schedule.

•

•

The Great Mystic has a 4-4 record on his N.F.L. predictions,
which means his salary is cut in half. Jolm Stefiszyn, an L. U.
hockey player was very disappointed with the Mystic's prediction
that St. Louis would beat Green Bay (Green Bay_ won 30-23}
Jolm says Green Bay will even take Baltimore. This week the
Great Mystic (by the way, Cooch is not the Great Mystic) is
J;Oing out on a Jimb by predicting N.F.L. and A.F.L. games.
fhe Great Mystic predicts:

_

N.F.L.
Baltimore over Atlanta
Green Bay over Cleveland
Dallas over New Orleans
Sj:. Louis over Pittsb!fr~
New York over Chicago
Detroit over Minnesota
Los Angeles over Philad.
Washingt over S. Francisco

A.F.L.
New York over Buffalo
Houston over Denver
Kansas City over Boston
_ San J)iego over 1vfiami

and I piedict Oakland
will
have the bye.
I

•

•

•

•

•

•

Last issue had a serious printing error. F.dger Laprade is
the former N.H.L. hockey star mentioned in the November
"Sport" who owns the Sports Shop in Port Arthur
HIGH SCHOOL WRAP-UP
With high school football finished, I would like to give a
summary of the trophies I would have handed out.
My choice of Senior coach-of-the-year goes to Bill Crocker
and Dake Sutton of Selkirk. The Junior coach-of-the-year goes
to Roger Bradford at Winston Churchill.
Best Offensice Team goes to the Westgate Senior Tigers.
Best Defensive Team goes to the Selkirk Senior Rams.
Most Exciting Player to watch goes t.o Wes Eyres of Westgate who ran three punts back for T.D.'s.
Best Performance by a Player (tie) Bill McEwan 4 T.D. vs.
P.A.C.I.
Tom Coombs 4 T.D. vs. P.A.C.I.

•

•

•

A recent announcement from the C.I.A:U. states that the
Canadian College Bowl will turn into a true national championship this year Saturday, Nov. 25. The winner of the Maritime
Association and the Central Association game will play the
Western Associatio~ chamf. for the national crown.
McMaster 1st m C.C ..F.C. 5-0.
Sir Francis Xavier 1st in M.I.A.A. 4-0.
Toronto 1st in O.Q.A.A. 4-0.
Alberta 1st in W.C.I.A.A. ,,.5-1.

.

.

Remember, "If you can't play a sport be a sportscaster.''

Someone asked for
a picture of cheerleaders, so here it
is. We couldn't get
one of L. u. 's best
so we took this shot
instead. Besides,
these cheerleaders
can be found in uniifonn more easily
than can the girls
of L. U.

After a disappointing season Lakehead
Mustangs gave it all they had and put on a
.fine display in Winnipeg against the St. James
Rams. However, they fell to the powerful
Rams 26-12.
In the 4th quarter the Mustangs gave up
two touchdowns. It appeared they were tiring,
due to the fact that several key positions were
played by men going both ways. This was
mainly because of the rookie laden roster of
the club.
Commenting on the game and season,
Coach Bill Shannon said: "This past season
was a rebuilding year for Lakehead Mustangs
which brought together the established Mustangs, members of the now defunct Redskins,
Lakehead University students, plus fine rookies from the High School ranks. It was my
decision that win or lose we must play the
rookies to give them experience. My greatest
problem, having made the decision, was to
keep the team from becoming discouraged
when they lost aJ.ame badly. They did not become discourage , a fact made obvious by the
tremendous showing in the semi-final game· a
game which we lost on the scoreboard but
which was a moral victory for the young
Mustangs.''
•

"&lt;;,oach Shann~n•s points are well spoken,
for 1t was definitely obvious that the game
experience will provide a cohesive nucleus to
build on Aext season," said John McLeod a
rookie quatterback and end, in Arts I.
'
Other uhiversity men on the team were:
Don Smith-interior linebacker;
Graham Hall-halfback and punter;
John Buie-defensive halfback;
Dave Montgomery-guard;
Brian Sheehan-end;
Harold Mickelson-guard and interior;
Eero Vuorinen-guard and interior;
Joe Barube-guard;
l&gt;ave Bahrynowski-fullb. and def. haH;
Pete Andros-def. safety;
George Keffer-def. halfback.
Said Peter Andros in summing up, "With
the return of several of these players as well
as other veterans and rookies the Mustangs
should be a team to contend with in the future. There are several students in the university who should have been playing but
figured they wouldn't make it or just didn't
care since it wasn't a university sport. Support the Mustangs next year and it won't be
long before the university has a team of its
own."

S.A.S.

report

by glenn rajala
The last SAS meeting saw
the Chinese students represented by· Tory Tai.
The secretary made a report on entering the hockey
team in a local commercial
league. He said the university would pay the $30 entry
fee which would be refunded
if the team didn't forfeit ~Y

The S. A. s. executive: (left to right) Dick Battiston (vice president); Lorne Gander (treasurer); Glenn Miller (president); Wayne
Marostica (secretary).

games.

The university would supply sweaters, goalie equipment, and any hockey sticks
not used by the university
team. Insurance would also
be available to the players.
The SAS defeated a
motion to support the team
to the best of its ability but
passes one to give the team
20 percent of the money
grossed from the Christmas
tournament to the maximum
of $150.
The rest of the meeting
was used to choose committees for both the Christmas
tournament and the various
i,nt.er-mural sports.
At this, the second meeting of the year, nine mertlbers were missing!

Half of the S. A. S. council lool&lt;S on as president Miller
makes a point.

learn
to fly
nflu
1;~.-- .
!;fl

DANCE
Sat.
Nov. 11

9

- 12

sponsored by
University
Liberal Club

IN

'

~

NEW CESSNA

The BEST in professional
flying training
Take advantage of special rates
for Lakebead University students

Lakehead Flying School
Call Us Nowl
577-1441

MARINA INN
(Mariaggi)
Where we Nemisus the Nemissa
We recognize student power
Renovations a little slow, but we will be ready by
Christmas. Beverage rooms will be English Pub Type.
Bar (when we geL it) - West 1n&lt;11an with a go-go girl
from Trinidadmaybe. Have a free meeting room available for off-campus meetings. Just telephone
Mr. Hurtig - PH 345-6526. Register now by letter
for a call when we are ready. Coffee bar specials
will be Son-Of-A-Gun Stew. Coney Island Beans,
and Spaghetti, Hello Charlie Chile and a Doughnut
machine. Don 1t forget we want your ideas.

�Page 12

November 9, ·1967

THE ARGUS

Continentalism

- the

mandate for survival

by william sheridan

sult was to more than double
the total population and to
raise the standard of living.
Today we travel by road,
rail, water, and air to all
parts of the continent and
the world. Resources and
finished products move with
ease from the manufacturer
to the market.
ANTIQUATED CONCEPTS
But our methods of design for these new services
are based on antiquated
concepts. If our railroad
track gauge was widened to
half again its size, we could
run trains at 200 mil.es per
hour and control them. by
computor. Using the concept of the flying wing, our
air craft could be built to
carry tons more for less
fuel; the flying wing could
be crash-proof and all serviced from the inside (engines
too). A continental hydrology system could integrate
the rivers and lakes of this
continent to permit bulk
transportation of materials
at a cost of one-tenth per
ton-mile the present railroad
costs. Motor vehicles could
be run by a buried cable
up the centre of the lanes,
with radar to prevent colJisions. Our welfare rests
upon an efficient transportation system, and we need all
of the above.
RESOURCES SPREAD
With our people and resources spread out across the
face of the continent as they
are, we need vast supplies
of power in every corner of
the country. Our high energy
civilization will soon be converting over 20,000 kilo gram
calories per person per day.
With our present knowledge,
we can build a power grid
with lines capable of carrying 1,000,000 volts D.C. current for a distance of over
3,000 miles with only a 10
per cent transmission loss.

This continent h a s a
rendezvous with destiny and
in that destiny lies the
future of ,civilization.
That destiny will not tolerate the politician and poverty, the economic pestilence
of this price system. This
continent has no choice but
to lead the march of civilization. The opportunity is
given to no other continent.
The twentieth century belongs to North America.
This continent's rendezvous with destiny, its task, is
the elimination of human
toil and the installation· of
security and abundance. This
continent will have its rendezvous with destiny within
the next decade and upon
this generation of North
Americans will fall the competent and orderly achievement of a new civilization.
This generation has the
technology, the men, the
material and ·, the machinery
for its accomplishment.
BIGGEST CHANGE IN
HISTORY
Let us renew the march
of events that wll make this
the biggest Social Change in
history.
When the white man came
to North America there were
approximately four million
American Aboriginies on the
land mass north of the
equator. Today there are 400
mllions in this same area.
Those 400 millions are being
supported by the biggest array of technological equipment on the face of t he
earth. That technology produces its goods and services
by expending energy a n d
moulding resources. T h e
sources of requisite energy
and other materials are located across the length and
breadth of this continent. We
get oil from Venezuala,
Texas, Pennsylvania, and
Northern Alberta. We use
electric power generated in
Northern British Columbia,
Southern Ontario, and the
Tennessee Valley. Oranges
come from Florid;i and California. Iron ore is mined in
Labrador a n d Minnesota.
Coffee comes from Latin
America and wheat cmnes
from the Prairies. We need
a social order, based upon
geomechanics to survey and
supervise vast areas of the
earth both on the ground and
below, to guarantee that our
livlihood is maintained.
Before the coming of the
white man to North America,
the native population travelled by foot. This mode of
transportation and the existing
agriculturiµ
and/ or
travelling hunter types of
society soon set an . upper
limit on the population and
the standard of living. When
the Spaniards introduced the
horse to the Indians, the re-

Lakehead
Unitarian
Congregation

Power from the Yukon will
go to Los Angeles if necessary. Power from Churchill
would be available in New
Mexico.
PREVAILING ORDER
PRICE SYSTEM
The prevailing social order
in North America is a price
!O"Stem. Such a system is predicated upon turning of
natural resources into dollars. To continue such a
scheme, the economy must
grow at a compound interest rate each year. This rate
of expansion based . upon
physical growth is impossible
to maintain indefinitely. But
while it does go on, it is responsible for a profligate
waste of resources, both human and phys~cal. As a result of these trends North
America faces a crisis in
each of air and water polution, adequate housing facilities, soaring costs of living, shortages of irreplacabre
resources, and incompetent
and insufficient educational
personnel and facilities. A
crisis is just around the corner.
DOMINANT UfTERESTS
RESPONSIBLE
Technology Inc. charges
the political administrations,

children by blockading social progress in the hope of
preventing the arrival of a
New America.
Technocracy Inc. predicts
that destiny will declare the
price system "no dice," and
without anger or malice issues fair warning to these
dominant interests, that if
they persist in ,maintaining
this conspracy in the face of
the technological march of
events this gefleration of
North Americans will at
that rendezvous with destiny
judge th.em to be guilty of
continental treason.

the corporate enterprises,
and the debt merchants of
the United States and Canada with being in possession
of the data lmd the physical
facts of the technological
progression of this continent
area.
Tec'hnocracy Inc. charges
these dominant interests with
wilful suppression and distortion of the facts
Technocracy Inc charges
the dominant interests with
being guilty of a deliberate
conspiracy to deceive and defraud this generation of
North Americans and their

BOWLING ACCESSORIES!
SHOES

Ladies and Men's from $7. 95 up

SHOE BAGS
TROPHIES

$1. 95 and up

Special Team Prices!

SHIRTS In many styles and colours complete

with sponsor's crest and player's name
on the pocket. Special Team Prices!

-

Perciante

&amp; Laprade

Sporting Goods Ltd.
9B S. Cumberland St.

Graduating students are

INVl,TED
to discuss new opportunities
in banking with

MEETS
SUNDAY MORNING

at 10:30 at
Gron Morgan
High School
November 12:
DR. A.A.D. ASIMI
"India - Palestine Study in Majority Minority Relations and Its
Relevance to the
Canadian Situation"

Bank of Montreal

on
MON., NOV. 20

Join the ·College Crowd!
Everyone gathers at the

•

DOMINION ROOM LOUNGE

ROYAL EDWARD HOTEL
623-8467
Fort William

Consult your placement
office for complete details

Dial 345-8424

�</text>
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                    <text>Lakehead

urine ...

University
VOLUME 2, No. IX

LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY, PORT ARTHUR, ONTARIO

November 16, 1967

EIGHT PAGES

Miller Speaks Out
Dr. Tom Miller

Dr. Tom Miller, Chairman
of the History Department,
spoke out Friday night
against- the trend in university administration, and in
particular against the DuffBirdall report.

History Department
Duff-Birdall Report
Chairman

Poor Apology
by rod phillips (cus chairman)
The "long ovedue defense"
'of the AMS Executive and
Council by Mr. Bill Weiler,
AMS Vice-President (Argus
Nov. 9) reads as a poor
apology.
Mr. Weiler first points
out that confusion developed
in part because of Wendy
Ticknor's resignation as AMS
Secretary, and that "we (the
AMS Executive) are swamped with extra duties." Do
you remember Miss Ticknor's statement (Argus Nov.
2): "When you would try to
help them by doing some
of their work, they would
never show you how it was
done, or they would say they
would do it later, later, later.
I found I was putting in too
much time for the work I was
accomplishing. I did all my
own work, plus lots of financial stuff and lots of other
things besides."? Perhaps Mr.
Weiler's "extra duties" consist in large part of his
normal duties.
Mr. Weiler attempts to
justify AMS Council's action
owr the registration issue.
He states: "I contend that
the a c t i o n s we took did
get us the results we wanted.
Ask around: how many students are still affected? I'm
sure the answer is 'none'."
Perhaps, Mr. Weiler. However, I was under the impression that the issue was
to be approached on the basis
of principle before specifics.
I contend that the principles
have yet to be resolved.
Mr. Weiler speaks of the
CUS Secretariat members
who were consulted on the

registration issue: I have no
intention of being dictated to
by someone who openly
states his belief in sydicalism . . . and whose decisions
reflect this belief." Mr.
Weiler, no one asked that
you submit to •dictation only that you listen to suggestion. And to reject an individual's recommendations
on a specific issue, using the
criterion of the individuars
political and social. beliefs instead of the criterion of the
merits of the recommendations per se, seems to me to
be an imtnmature attitude
to adopt. I contend that the
Alma Mater Society is essentially syndicalist in nature - and compulsory, to
boot. Does Mr. Weiler wish
to withdraw his open (or is
it covert?) su~port of the
AMS?

Mr. Weiler refers to a
letter published in the Argus
some weeks ago, which
stated, inter alia, that council discussed "at great length
such important matters as
where they will obtain a
double-reverse bottle holder,
dripper - and - jigger - fbrer."
Mr. Weiler says "perhaps I
was asleep when that came
up, but I still cannot find it
in the agenda." Mr. Weiler,
a number of students present
at that Council meeting will
testify that the item was discussed, and at great length.
I personally cut off the discussion. Perhaps you were
indeed asleep.
Mr. Weiler suggests that
the motion to limit discussion on the registration issue to one half hour was

valid because "this particullar discussion lasted one hour
and fifteen minuates. Remembering that this was one
item of twelve on the
agenda; at that rate the
meeting would have lasted
fifteen hours." Mr. Weller's
point is no doubt mathematically suond, but it is simultaneously meaningless witltin its context, and I consider
its inclusion in the "defense"
an assinine decision. It may
not be irrelevant to note at
this point that if all twelve
items were limited to thirty
minutes, the meeting would
have lasred six hours i.e. until 2 a.m. But so what?
I shall not deal with Mr.
Weller's petty personal. attacks and snide remarks.
They merit no discussion.
I realize that discussion
could now rage between Mr.
Weiler and myself in the
columns of the Argus f o r
weeks to oome. It is not my
wish that this be so; I desire
a positive conclusion.
I therefore challenge Kr.
Weiler to defend publicly the
activities and attitudes of the
present Alma Mater Society
Executive and Council.
I will meet him on the
stage of •t h e University
Theatre on Friday, November 17, at 12:30 p.m. He may
choose a mediator for the
debate, which will be open
to all members of the university.
I will be there. Will you.
Mr. Weiler?

This report, published in
early 1966, is supposed to
be the model for university
administrations, and, according to Dr. Miller, is a farce.
An over-all impression of
the report revealed that the
administration was to be
rated far above the teaching
staff, and that the aim of
faculty was to join the ad:
ministration.
It is to be therefore assumed, that the faculty
should be more aware of the
greater rewards .to be found
in the administration than
the exercise of the profession. The report was
cerned with a voice for
faculty i n administrative
matters, however, Dr. Miller
feels that the Canadian
Association o f University
Teachers has overlooked the
fact that there is a threat
of faculty becoming assimilated into the administration, for the simple reason
that the report "seemed to
be an improvement." At its
conception, the report was
s t a n d a r d thinking, with
C.A.U.T. sharing these views
as a step forwai-d for faculty
members.

con-

'Good Deans'
As Dr. Miller pointed out,
"there is a tendency for the
good Deans to join the ranks
of the administrators after
their term of office, and for
the poorer Deans to return
to the faculty." Dr. Miller
went on to say that there
is a good example of faculty
subordination to administration evident on campus right
now, in the parking lot, as
"faculty must wal.k two
miles through a blizzard, and
the administration has a
short 50 feet to the doors of
the university." This, he
pointed out later, was trivia
compared to the greater·
lengths to which the faculty
has begun to take a second
place to the administration.
Nor is this just the case at
Lakehead, for Dr. Miller
said that he was aware of
other matters across the
country, which added insult
to the profession of teaching
in universities. The parking
lot, according to Dr. Miller,
''is again symbolic of the

subordination of faculty to
administration." .

"In the administration, as
well as in othelr areas of
university affairs, there is a
tendency for institutional
loyalty to rate higher than
the end of the institution,
that being the dissemination
of knowledge."

Pluralistic Approach

..c:

According to Dr. Miller,
there are three ways that
the job at the top may be
assumed nowaday.s,. a n d
these are; simply being
around long enough to take
over, evoking a leade1·ship
quality, and inspiring confidence. When asked how he
would like to see the administration,. Dr. Miller replied
that "there should be a pluralistic rather than unitarian
approach to administrative
matters, with no top position
per se, instead with a shift
of power to groups, as an
example wherein a particullar group or person will
have a large voice in matters
of ciriculum, and a small
voice concerning building
programmes. This of course
is all dependent on current
needs and interests."

Later, in interview with
the ARGUS, he commented
on the present student government at Lakehead, and
pointed out "that, as in all
forms of government, there
is a trend towards becoming
an administration, and that
in this process, they will inherit all the bad and good
features of government as
such." He cautioned student
government to be aware of
"coJDlllunity backlash" when
dealing with matters pertinent to student interes~ and
that the job of student government was to strive towards providing good teaching and a good atmosphere
for the university.

Concerning student repre- ... .,
sentation on the Senate, Dr.
Miller said that there was a
potential threat to student
government as this might be
the first step towards "students being also assimilated
into the administration, and
therefore becoming alienated
from the purpose of the university.' It is Dr. Miller's
hope that the students would
attempt to keep the university "small enough so that
participatory d e m o c r a c y
means something."

�Page 2

THE ARGUS

November 16, 1967

- ~ ;:======;.--------------~----..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~;;;;;;;;;;;;

L.U. Ukrainian Club I
Club
Notes

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER I
SAS Homecoming Dance-GH-9 p.m.
West Indies Ass'n Meeting-r. 1022-7 p.m.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18
Senior Social Club-Sr. Lounge- 7 p.m.

Circle K had its first open
meeting of the year under
the new executive. The next
meeting is scheduled for
Nov. 23rd in room 1029 at
12:45. A movie explaining
Circle K's purpose and objectives will be shown; all
interested males are invited
to attend.

Sighcology
Thanks to the efforts of
fourth year psychology stu_dents, a Psychology Club has
been recently formed. The
purpose of the club is to
promote an interest in psychology on campus.
The club has made plans
to bring in leading speakers
and pertinent films. Plans
for trips to the University
of Minnesota and the University of Manitoba to toUT
the psychology departments
are being considered.
If you're interested in this
new and highly rated club,
come out to the meeting
next Thursday at 7:00 p.m.
in Room 1029 (watch the
bulletin boards).

Chemistry
The Lakehead University
Chemistry Club has been
organized with the intention
of maintaining an active interest in chemistry at the
undergraduate level.
The program for this year
includes:
1. Tours of chemical plants
and laboratories at the
Lakehead.
2. Seminars by professional
chemists.
3. Films on various topics in
chemistry.
4. Analysis .of minerals.
5. Personal research.
General meetings are held
every Monday at 1:00 p.m.
in Room 1100 (or as posted).
Every "chemistry bug" is
welcome!

Theft!
Simone, female member
of the "Travellers" who were
here recently to feature in
the Folk Spectacular, was
relieved of $60.00 during her
stay. The money was taken
from her purse in one of
the AMS offices "backstage"
d u r i n g a performance.
Another performer, local this
time, was relieved of $20 at
the same time. Return of
the money is :requested to
the Arts Society office.
Mailed slipped under t h e
door, however you wish. No
questions asked.

I

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Circle K Meeting-r. 1058-12-2 p.m.
Fencing Club Meeting-GH-12-2 p.m.
New Democrat Youth Club Meeting-Aud.-12-2 p.m.
Library Committee Meeting-BR-12: 15 p.m.
Thursday Discussion Group-r. 1100-12: 30 p.m.
Lakehead Film Society-Aud.-8 p.m.
"Harakiri" - The prize winning Japanese film of violence
and revenge in the Samurai tradition
Director: Kobayashi

Circle K
_,..,..

This Week....

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 20
Chemistry Club Meeting-r. 1100-12:30 p.m.
SAS Meeting-BR-7 p.m.
Seminar, Sociology 3c6-r. 405-5-6:30
Friends of Lakehead University Library MeetingFL-8 p.m.

Members of L. U. u. c. are pictured left to right: Front Row: Chris
Hor ode c ky , Eugene Kolisnyk, Roman Petryshyn. Second Row:
Roman Fedorowycz, Marcus Slotiuk, Iris Maznyczka, Mariam Bugara, Stephanie Boyko, Back Row: Gerald .Mesa, luba Kostrakewich,
Thor Kozyra, Roman Kordiuk, Roman Staranczak, Mervin Tomski.

L.U.U.C. (Lakehead University Ukrainian Club) held its
meeting under the leisurely and relaxtive atmosphere at the home
of Leonard Hartley where activities for the coming year were
planned. Ways of contribution to the academic and cultural
output of this university were brought forth in the form of concerts, lecturers and the winter carnival.
One of L.U.U.C.'s primary concerns is to try to develop
individuality. This concept we advocate with great enthusiasm
as we strive towards greater school participation. It is easy to
fall prey to a static and conventional way of life and for this
reason individuality is very important in all segments of our
society.
Membership is not restricted in any sense, and anyone interested in joining is cordially invited to attend. Our aim is to
attract new members, and keep our present members active at
all times. If you have any desire to join L.U.U.C. contact any
of the members for information.

Seminar

Arts Council

The AMS council is planning a seminar on The
University Today to be held
during the Christmas Holl~
days or the first week of
January. The purpose of the
seminar is to involve the
university and the community in a dialogue which
will lead to a better understanding of Lakehead U. and
of its students and faculty.
Universities in Ontario and
Manitoba will be invited to
send delegates, and local
groups will be asked to
participate in the discussions.
The committee organizing
this event is; Julie Wierzbicki, Bill Weiler and Wendy
Ticknor.
Many other students and
faculty have offered their
suggestions, and anyone having any ideas is asked to
contribute to the cause. The
committee will be meeting
Monday, November 13 at
3:00 p.m. in the vice-presidential office.

Designs for an Arts crest
are now being accepted by
Arts President Mr. Pentti
Paularinine.
At the council meeting of
Wednesday, November 8, it
was decided that since the
Arts Society did not have
an official crest, a call would
go out to Arts students to
submit designs for such a
crest. Moreover, there is one
stipulation that the colours
used be red and white.
All designs m u s t be
handed in by Christmas, to
either the Arts office or the
AMS Information Booth.

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21
University Liberals Meeting-123 NL-12 noon
Fencing-GH-10:30-2 p.m.
Seminar on Machinery Automation-BR-10:30
Inter-varsity Christian Fellowship.- r. 1025-12:30 p.m.
West Indies Ass'n Meeting-r. 1058-12:30 p.m.
Speaker Arnold Edinbrough-Aud.-12:30 p.m.
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22
AMS Meeting-BR-7 p.m.
Festival Canada Lautrec-Reno-Aud.-8 p.m.
Fencing-GH-8-11 p.m.
Seminar, Sociology 3c6-r. 405-5-6:30 p.m.

.

J

HEID OVER
What the Hell 1s Wrong with the
University? Featuring Deans
Rothney, Kerr, and their courtage of intransigent reactionararies vs. the poor dispossessed of
the student body. UNFETTERED
DEBATE: Today (Thursday) at
12:30 Wing D. North.

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�November 16, 1967

Page 3

THE ARGUS

Councill

Teachers, arise

letters
Parking
Dear Editor:
Good grief! I'm still getting those intimidating "illegal parking" notices on my windshield. I've enough of those blue, massproduced dittos to wallpaper the entire University ADMINISTRATION office. And what makes me laugh is that the whole
parking thing is a game the ADMINISTRATION is playing.
It's a survey. They want to see how many student car drivers
will cough up 20 bucks without a word of protest. I think it's a
sheep count. Of course the money will be refunded later and
we'll get together with the ADMINISTRATION over a cup of
coffee and laugh it up as "our" little joke.
But, in the meantime, the ADMINISTRATION threatens
but hesitates to remove the so called "illegally parked" vehicles
from the lots. Obviously someone at the top is having a pang of
conscience about the "unjust'' regulations.
Thank you CONSCIENCE. My car along with a hundred
others would have been towed away a long time ago. Or should
I thank FEAR? Fear that such harsh action would precipitate
a student revolt, demonstrations, sit-'ins, protest pickets . . .
ADVERSE PUBLICITY. (Removing an auto without the owner's consent comes under the CRIMINAL CODE!)
But let's play the game by the book ... the Lakehead University Calendar, circa late 196 7 ( very late). Page 215 says
in beautiful print: "There is no charge for parking in the general
parking lots (note plural)." And WHERE, pray tell, ARE the
FREE parking lots? over at the Lakehead Teachers' College? or
perhaps hidden under those newly-made ''burial mounds'' at the
University's entrance? Why did free parking EVAPORATE
when the SUPREME COMMAND moved into the parking lot
business?
If you can't believe what you read in the University Calendar what can you believe? You certainly can't believe "a limited
number of parking spaces with electric power'' are available at
"10 dollars per space." (Also on page 215). Between the
printing of the calendar and its distribution, the price jumped
100%. (And Dr. Charles says inflation is a paper tiger?)
Tsk! Tskl One disaster after another at LU. Registration,
parking . .. . and what next? . . . Mass resignation of the AMS
Council? (How come we haven't seen last year's financial
report'?)
Good grief! The whole thing makes me BARF!
Signed, PIPE UP AGAIN.
film (there must be at least
Misfits!
one hanging aroUhd that office).
Dea'l" Sir:
• One able-bodied, competI have read with some inent
photographer.
terest and more distaste the
• The subject or subjects
letter written by 'A Con(how about the L.U. Cheercerned Artsman' which you
leaders)?
We can be found
published in the "Argus Novany
Tuesday
or Thursday beember 9, and while I have
tween
the
hours
of 6:15 and
no wish to interfere with
8:15, sometimes later, in the
the writer's freedom of
Great Hall, practising f o r
speech, I wonder if you, sir,
our and your teams.
have a duty to publish this
Oh, by the way, do you
sort of semi-libellous and
know
why you can't find us
ANONYMOUS materials.
in
uniform?
Funny thing, 6
In the course of his bitter
uniforms
can't
be worn by
criticisms of Messrs. Grieve,
10 girls all at the same time.
Phillips, Colborne, Hannah,
And the ones we do have
et. al., he omits to mention
are much too revealing withthat each of these gentlemen
has the courage to put his
name to his material - a
form of courage which is
conspicuously absent from a
letter signed 'A Concerned
Artsman' . .
I do not always agree entirely with the opinions expressed by the aforementioned writers, but I certainly
have a higher degree of respect for them than for those
of a correspondent who indulges in criticism of an entirely destructive nature but
who is too cowardly to reveal his identity.
I remain, Sir,
Yours faithfully,
Alan Alexander, M.A.,
Lecturer,
Department of
Political Science.

Pictures
Sirs:
Re: ARGUS Nov. 9, Pg 11.
There are three major
steps to taking a picture:
• Acquire a camera and

Dear Sir:
It has come to my attention that, during the special
council meeting called for
12:30 Thursday, November
9, that four councillors were
not present. Orie in particular was found playing cards
in the lower cafeteria at the
time of the meeting. Perhaps
I am too blind to see it;
could you tell me why this
elected representative was
not present in such an important meeting? I understand that t h e answer he gave when questioned regarding his absence was
that he "forgot."
I cannot impress this
upon you strongly enough,
for, I feel that granted, a
game of cards can become
captivating upon occasion,
this is no place for one of
my representatives to be
when the selection of the
AMS Secretary is at stake.
Is this to be the · trend to
be followed by councillors
again this year . . . the confusion in the Executive is
enough without the entire
council foll Owing suit,
to
P k
so
s ea •.
.
1 z_rught also pomt out th~t
th
I di~ attend
e Council
~eetmg 1 as t Wednesda!
~ught, and I m?sJ say that it
15 more en~rtammg than any
Folk Festival could ever
hope to be.
I remain,
yours in frustration,
B.W.H. Arts II.

My Dear Miss Walberg:
After reading your letter I felt a tremendous sympathy for
you. The sympathy arouse out of the fact that you have not yet
opened your eyes.
You want to be a teacher and that is admirable, but you as
yet have no idea of what that means. Do not assume that because university students criticize you, they have no valid reason
to do so.
You mention that you are "learning to run a democratic
classroom." Look again Miss Walberg, you are being TRAINED
to control. Rare will be the school where you can be democratic
in your classroom. You will find little time to cater to individual
students let alone time to recognize their differences.
You are correct when you say that you will do a great deal
to shape society, but do not let self esteem dictate too much.
You are being trained to entice students to swallow what YOU
want them to. You are being trained to form lines, mark registers, keep your room pleasant and the students dutiful.
When you teach next year you may try to ap_ply some of
your beliefs and if you are very fortunate you will be allowed
to work unhindered. Don't count on it.
If you have not yet questioned the system you have been
brought up in you will not be a worthwhile teacher. If you
have not wondered about the methods employed in your present
institution then you are not mature enough to be a teacher.
Education is not a game and pupils are not footballs. It is
not your job ~o m~uld or shape ~nybody. There are ~ough pressures on pupils without ~ou ad~g moi:e. 1:ou 51;! MISS Walberg
you are all ready becommg a dictatonal bitch. . You "'.'ould be
bette~ to enter your classroom next Se)?tember with nothing. All
your ideals a~d ~ms must be subordmate to those of the people
you are. "'.'orking with. They must be allowed to a~pear only_ as
y~ur opm1~ns and not as truths. '.fhe _pe~e you will be dealing
with are m the process of formmg id . Don't cheat them.
Let them have the fun and joy of finding them alone.
The fact that you want to be a teacher and your concern for
the individual gives you the jump on the majority. But think,
Miss Walberg, think some more before you race off to shape
society. There may be reasons why L.T.C. is frowned at. And
please excuse me for "sitting on my fat ass and writing about the
problems of the world."
Hopefully,
BOYD HUSSEY, Arts I.

Journalists?
Dear Journalists?
•
I think it's time we stopped complaining about the food in
the cafeteria. Why not be critical of the reading material you
are producing? I believe a student's newspaper should follow
the example of a professional paper. It should consist of the
factual truth. Slander and maligning are not part of such a
paper. Freedom of the press is fine but not the freedom of
ridicule. Not only does such material reflect the intelle~t o~ the
writer but also the unethical values of the staff allowmg 1t to
appear. True journalism is an art; it would be a pleasure to
see some.
Yours truly,
GEORGE F. PEARSON.
Ed.-why not came to the
office and demonstrate the
finer points of this art to
the staff, we would more
than appreciate it; for, as
you can see, around here
people talk but do nothing.
out bloomers !
We'll make you a deal:
when we ALL get uniforms,
you get a picture!
Yet, Nor'Westers!

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Give The Gift of Life
Nov.28 &amp; 29

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�.. Page 4

Council this vveek
editorial comment by chad hannah
"What'll we do if Student Government comes t.o Council."
Such was the comment made by one member of the AMS Council at the meeting held on November 8. The above statement,
I believe, adequately describes the procedures of the Council.
Petty bickering over rules of order on the part of the Chairman
and the members still takes up most of the time in Council
meetings-time that should be devoted to important points on
the agenda.
SELECTION DEFERRED
In this connection, the selection of the new AMS Executive
Secretary was deferred until the following day at a special meeting, due to the fact that only two candidates were present and
thereby able to .present their positions regarding matters of the
AMS and the Executive. The attention of the President was
drawn towards the fact that the candidates were informed by
telephone of the meeting approximately ninety minutes before
the selection was to take place, therefore giving them a mere
hour and a half to prepare themselves to face the Councillors.
In the discussion that was to follow ( discussion later ruled out
of order), one observer argued that this was hardly enough time
for the candidates to prepare a resume suitable for presentation,
and that Mr. Young was not considering the magnitude of the
position and the responsibilities therein, in the light of the
withdrawal by the past secretary, when he personally called the
persons applying for the job.
Previous to the item regarding the AMS Secretary, Council
voted 7-3 in favour of denying the United Appeal a $100.00
gift on the grounds that "if we give them some, everyone will
want some" and "why should we give to them when we already
turned down the Miles for Millions campaign?"

»

November 16, 1967

Tl;IE ARGUS

COUP DE GRACE
After much heated debate over a $180.00 subsidy to be
given to the,Lakehead University Ukrainian Club for a member
to travel to .New York to attend the World Conference of Ukrainians, the motion failed 8-7 with I abstention of Mr. McCormick. At this point Mr. Bert Baumann, Miss Julie Wierzbicki
and Mr. George Paddington all resigned from the Conference
Committee.
Now comes a remarkable move: Mr. McCormick moved
that the Council subsidize the L. U. Ukrainian Club to the sum
of $179.60. Upon conferring with the Chief Justice, Mr. Young
recommended that Mr. McCormick lower the sum to prevent
the Council from "looking silly.'' Mr. McCormick then moved
that the club be subsidized to the amount of $160.00. The
result of the vote that was to follow was an 8-8 tie, the Chairman then cast the deciding vote in favour of the motion.
This was the general trend of the meeting, and is not difficult for one to come to the conclusion that the A.M.S. Council
does nothing but sit once a week and squabble over points of
order, and the shelling out of two or three dollars here and there.
Right now there are several programmes under way that
should be brou$ht to the attention of the Council, one of these
items consists of the C.U.S. Resolutions passed at the last C.U.S.
Congress in September. The plan at that time was to bring two
resolutions to each and every council meeting to be voted on.
Thus far, not one of these resolutions has come before the body
and at the last meeting, Mr. Young said that he would have
them ready for discussion beginning at the next meeting of
council. It is a widely known fact that the President spent a
rather slow summer, but, must this continue?
Are the student of this university to be satisfied with mere
empty promises on the part of our President, are we to stand by
and watch as our affairs continue to be mismanaged?
I, for one, say emphatically "NO.'' We must then take it
upon ourselves to lobby with our respective councillors, and to
express our mass discontent to those responsible. \.Ve shall not
continue to stand idle and watch as our system of university
government crumples and runs through the hands of incompetants.
It may be a paradox, however, that system of university
government now in use is obviously inefficient and unproductive.
There is no alternative open, but to scrap entirely the system in
use in favour of a better one. One closing word 'of caution: do
not elect your next executive or council in a popularity poll, it
just doesn't work.

attend
A.M.S. Council
Meetings

·O pen Letter
Dear Sir:
The Argus reported last
week that "the first step toward full student representation" had been taken,
as the Senate agreed to hear
"written briefs on matters in
the agenda related directly
to the Student Body."
I have no doubt that
Tamblyn and Co. were buying free rounds the night they
heard THAT hailed by our
imnipotent President Peter
Young as a "significant
breakthrough." How in God's
name can he be so consistently naive? Are the rumours
true that he has been
"bought" by the administra- tion with t h e offer of a
choice P.R. next year? Have
the University Committee
tea parties at the Tamblyn
shanty got to him? Or does
he. just not know what he
is doing?
I recall the development
of this same issue at Sir
George Williams University
1 a s t summer. Incidently,
there was some advance
planning done there. They
knew very well that their
administration was going to
offer a token, such as we

have accepted, and decided
strongly that they would· refuse it and press for full
representation. They won resoundingly.
Here, where no planning
was done, the AMS snatched
the proverbial carrot and
can now, after making success noises, retire to their
offices to munch on it for
a few years. I hope they
choke.
With decisions of such incompetence being made by
our elected representatives,
it is hard to knock the administration. They k n ow
very well that full members
from this year's AMS council
would so bung up Senate
proceedings with sophomoric
nonsense that its effectiveness would be seriously compromised.
Ignoring for a moment the
type and quality of this
years student government,
the fact is that we, the students, have been snowed;
and cheated out of effective
voice on the Senate.
The resolution, as reported,
allows the AMS to present
"written briefs on matters
in the agenda relating di-

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THE

ARGUS

.

rectly to the student body."
Good sense and any knowledge of debate makes it
clear that no one, particularly our notoriously unaware AMS council, has the
knowledge or the ability to
produce a convincing document before a discussion has
even begun. To be effective,
representation on the Senate
must be continuous, involved
informed, and above all,
equal.
The S e n a t e discusses
matters of ~ fairly complex
nature. A new member
would have little to contribute until he had attended a
few meetings and "got the
feel" of the group. He would
have to know the personalities he was dealing with, and
how issues aire considered. He
must know what sort of
arguments are effective, and
what are not. He must learn
a great deal about the politics of creating academic
policy. He must know what
he is talking about, and be
accepted as a valuable part
of the group.
All these things are impossible under the "significant breakthrough" Mr.
Young wants us to believe
HE made. (It is clear that
even the pathetic gestures
that have been made a r e
only a result of fires lit by
CUS: not any sparks that
originated in his office).
So here is where we stand.
If the AMS council can:
a) figure out from a rough
agenda what will be dis-b) find a student with intimate knowledge of a complex academic issue who is
willing to research and compose a brief,
c) present a brief that relates directly to what ends
up being discussed,
d) sense from their offices
(cloisters?) the mood of the
Senate,
e) be able to present a
convincing case before a
roomful of articulate and
knowledgeable s tr an g ers;
THEN we have representation. If not we have been
bought off.
Another little item; Briefs
must be on matters "relating
directly to the student body."
And who decides what matters so relate? Why, the
Senate, of course. Ho Hum.
D. R. Colbome.

VOLUME 2, No. IX
November 16, 1967

The ARGUS is published w.eekly by the Alma Mater
Society of Lakehead University. The opinions expressed
are those of the editorial board and not necessarily those
of the AMS or the Administration. The ARGUS is authorized
second class- mail by the Post Office, Ottawa, for payment
in cash. All correspondence to the ARGUS main office,
behind the lower cafeteria; mail c/o Lakehead University,
Port Arthur. Subscription ... $3.00; advertising rates upon
request.
editor ···-··················-··············-················· chuck puke
associate ···········-··········································· bob leggett
managing ·································-······· bubble-gum hannah
news ···········-······-······-········································· r.D.P.
sports ···············-··-············-············-··········· larry hebert
features ........................................................ boyd hussey
advertising ···············-························-···-··· grease monkey
circulation ···························-····························· alcoholic
chief critic ·············································-······· artsy £artsy

also contributing this week were: ken conrad, simon hoad, bobbi
lambert, bonnie sattin, mantle stewart (in absentia), tracey .hanna,
gale rolly, chris horodecky, wendy wilson, jim purdon, joe frazer,
g ~ rajala, and a cast of thousands. while the editor is away, the
staff will play.

�November

16, ·1967

TAE ARGUS

My Bag
This is the second of a
series backgrounding the student power controversy. The
AMS obviously has no knowledge of the issue. Perhaps
through this column the
students, at least, will
"Thank God there are no
free schools for printing . . .
for learning has brought
disobedience and heresy into
the world, and printing has
divulged them ... God keep
us from both." These words
were spoken by the Governor of Virginia only three
hundred years ago. More
than two thousand years
ago Plato wrote, "Education
makes good men." Thus, the
history of education is
rather mottled, and can lend
support to any side of any
educational issue.
Even so, both sides of the
current student power debates use the lessons of history to support their arguments. It is not difficult to
discover the origins and development of the university,
and I shall roughly outline
it here. The value of history,
however, should be very
much in question, considering the most reoent, and
therefore most pertinent developments in the university.
(I make this strong qualification as a result of involvement in a recent discussion where, after comparing the medieval guilds of
master and apprentice scholars with similar guilds of
shoemakers, carpenters, etc.,
Dean Rothney was asked if
he seriously thought it was
merely a historical accident
that the university exists today, when the other guilds
have died. "I don't know,
maybe" answered The Dean
of Arts Ph.D. (Hist.). Such
ill-considered and arbitrary
historical analogies can do
nothing but harm to dialogue
related to the university today. Therefore the following
brief history should be considered warily.
Canadian higher education
has been variously effected
by English, Scottish, French
German, and Arp.erican influences which have exerted
their pressures at different
periods of time and undetr
different conditions. It is
therefore of no value to attempt a definitive explanation of precisely why Lakehead University has certain
characteristics. The current
controversy, however, con-

by don colborne

cems the structure of power
and authority within the institution, and for this reason extant descriptions are
more important than lineolo-

gy.

Despite its Greek precursors, the university is, as
Hastings Toshdall wrote, "a
distinctly medieval institution." The Greeks and the
Romans, strange as it may
seem, had no universities in
the sense in which the word
has been used for the past
seven or eight centuries. The
Acadamy of Plato, and the
schools of the Sophists in
Greece were, by any modern
interpretation, totally unorganized. Students attended,
learned, and left without
being exposed to an inch of
red tape.
Only in the middle ages
did organization become a
part of learning; and even
then there were no Boards
of Governors, no calendars,
no AMS - except so fa!l" as
the university itself was
fundamentally a society of
students. It should be added,
of course, that there were
also no libraries, laboratories, or government subsidies.
One of the two most
famous of -these earliest universities, Bologna in Italy,
must be cited as the unconscious prototype of the student power movement. Here
the students banded together to bargain collectively on rent with the townspeople, and on food prices
with the tavern - keepers.
They then turned on "their
other enemies, the professors" and by the threat of
fund boycott, effectively controlled how they taught.
Over time, through the formation of guilds which became colleges, the teachers
gained more power, standard
academic degrees were granted, and officials were hired.
Even so, t h e history of
southern European Universities has been one of active
student participation a n d
freedom. For example t h e
present University at Caracus, Venezuela, whose roots
are Spanish; is literally ruled
by the students as a revolutionary enclave from which
they emerge at times to
practice guerilla w a r f a r ~
against their government.
The other most important
early university, Paris, in
contrast with Bologna, was
a university of masters. By

the early twelfth century it
was a corporation, and inherited a hierarchial structure f r o m its cathedral
school origins. Masters and
students did however, have
joint responsibilities regarding organization and discipline. Over the years the
students lost most of these
responsibilities.
Oxford &amp; Cambridge grew
out of Paris, and Canadian
higher education traces much
of its history to those oldest
of English universities. They
adopted from Paris the subservient student idea and
added to it the emphasis
on the residential college
which some Canadian Universities, but not Lakehead,
still include.
A new type of university
appeatt"ed in Germany in the
17th century, stressing freedom of professors and students (lehrfreiheit and lernfreiheit). The professor was
established as a great figure,
and students shown high respect both within and without the institution. Our heritage from Germany, however, has not been respect
for the undergraduate, but
emphasis on science and research, and the elective system, which has "come more
to serve the professors than
the students for which it was
first intended."
The most recent, and
probably most profound ~xternal influences on Canadian Universities have come
from the United States. The
totally utilitarian training of
businessmen, and at Lakehead, even technicians; the
responsibilities to the community at large; the active
pursuit of government research grants; the production
line organization; and large
scale athletic programs; are
distinctly American.
All this may have seemed
a bit tedious, but one point
is now clear and very important to the "student
power" movement; all the
origins of the modem Canadian university, with the remote exception of Bologna
and its lineage, have stressed
an inferior role for the undergraduate. It is precisely
this tradition which is being
debated. Whether it is relevant today depends upon
what the modern philosophy
of university e d u c a t i on
should be, and that is the
topic of next week's column.

• Page

Simon
says ....

~

AfiwolJ(~:

~r

.

•·tINY'S SEEKING
ICBM_CONTRACT
' Ottawa, Ont. - Diplomatic circles are agog over
a Lakehead burger baron 1s
plan to end the Cold War
overnight.
TINY, well-known local
benefactor, (he practically
gives away his Beefy Boy
Burgers, for only 19¢) has
•asked Parliament to award
1
him a $57,000,000 ICBM
1 contract.
1
''That's for Inter Continental Burger Mission, "
'explained TI:t-'Y1 ''For only
1$7 million buckS we will
•send 300 million Beefy Boys
across the Iron Curtain -one
for every man, woman and
child in Russia. "
Science affirms a Beefy
Boy makes the eater happy
and contented immediately. With 300 million happy, contented Russians no

I

I

Happiness is an empty ashtray in the cafeteria.
Happiness is a repressed
cancer cell.
Happiness is being a rose in
the manure pile.
Happiness is missing the
Great Pumpkin and hoping he will come, next
year.
Happiness is an AMS pres.
with a greasy finger.
Happiness is Yoga bear
•• belching.
Happiness is a head full •of
knowledge with someone
to spill it to.
Happiness was Larry Ander.:
son's beard.
Happness is having a friend
come up to you with a
happiness is and then
having him forget it.
And by request;
Happiness is a silent Hoad.

fi~

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�Page 6

November 16, 1967

THE ARGUS

The First Rate Reader
by boyd hussey
This is a man. See the man. See his clothes. They are
farmer's clothes. Farmer's are good. Farmers grow food so we
can eat.
S~ the man's face. He is happy. His food is growing, so
he is happy. Men like to farm and work for other people.
How do you know he is a man?
He has two arms. He has two legs and two eyes. See his
eyes. See how dark his skin is. He works l 1: the SUJ?,· The sun
makes his skin dark. The sun makes your skin dark m the summer too.
Your daddy is a man. See how much like this man he is.
All men do not look the same. All men do not work the same
or live the same. This is good.
Men live all over the world. Men are strong. Men are kind.
Men are civilized. That means they are clever and smart.

!j

,

-=it.
4

; .•

~

i,

..r,

f~I '
·-•;

This is an Indian. See the funny Indian. See his clothes.
He is a farmer. Farmers grow food. Some do not grow it very
well. Indians do not like to farm. They do not like to work for
others.
See his face. He is not happy, he is stupid. His food is
dying and he is smiling.
.
He looks like a man. He has two of everythmg he should
have. But he is not a man, he is an Indian. See his eyes. They
are almost like a Chinaman's eyes. See how dark his skin is.
He was born that way. The sun makes your skin dark in the
summer but that will wear off.
Your daddy is a man. See how different he is. All men do
not look the same. All Indians do. Indians wear feathers and
funny clothes. Silly Indians.
Indians are primitive. That means they are dumb and do
not know very much. Dumb Indians. Indians live in shacks
and do not wash. Dirty Indians.
Indians used to kill women and children for fun. Sometimes Indians killed each other. Crazy Indians.
Indians live in many places. Indians are lazy. Indians are
poor. Have you ever seen an Indian? No, because they hide
well.

Waterloo students protest
WATERLOO (CUP) - A
group of 26 University of
Waterloo students Wednesday protested job recruiting
by companies who are selling war materials to the U.S.
for possible use in Viet Nam.
Students from the newlyformed Students for Democratic University (SDU) and
some professors started their
protest by marching from
the arts theatre to the arts
library.
The companies were scheduled to hold job interviews
for co - operative program
students on the library's sixth
floor. Under Waterloo's coop program students, mainly
in the scienoes and engineering, study one term and
work the next in a studyrelated industry.
At first the protestors
were to hold a sit-in on the
sixth floor, but campus
police locked access doors
and allowed only staff, administration officials a n d
students with appointments
to enter. So the protestors
marched around the door,
quietly carrying their placards. As people entered, the
students handed out leaflets
describing their reasons for
the protest and citing facts
to prove their beliefs.
The protests were centered on Dow Chemical Com-

Lakehead
Unitarian
Congregation

pany and its production of
napalm as well as several
other companies which interview students for jobs
during their work terms.
As the protest started
around 8:30 a.m. groups of
co-op students gathered and
started heckling. The protestors ignored the taunts
and continued handing out
their leaflets and displaying
their signs. Some snowballs
were tossed at the protestors
but this soon ceased. Instead
the co-ops concentrated on
an anti-protest. Large blackboard size posters appeared
supporting the right of any
company to come out to the
campus to interview students. Other co-op signs
said, "We like Dow" a n d
"Don't let a minority misrepresent our views."
Leaflets passed out by the

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at 10:30 at

SDU group listed some of
the companies and their contracts. Litton Systems, Canadian Marconi Ltd., Valcartier
Industries Ltd., and United
Aircraft of Canada were
some named along with
Dow.
The main concern voiced
by co - operative students
seemed to centre on the
chance that the demonstration would hurt their job
prospects and that the demonstration would give the
university a bad name.
At one point in the protest some co-op students
wanted to just charge in and
"rip the signs up," but cooler
heads prevailed.
Organizers of the protest
were mostly members of
SDU, a newly formed group
on campus.

WEAR

We'll be
looking
for you!

�November 16, 1967

THE ARGUS

L. U. Accepted
After many years of frustration and two years of negotiation,
Lakehead University has been sanctioned as the first Canadian
University accepted as a member of the National Association of
Colleges and Universities.
Because of its geographical isolation, Lakehead University
has had difficulty in obtaining acceptance into organized intercollegiate leagues in Canada. On March 28, 1966, Bill Shannon
approached the Ontario Intercollegiate Athletic Association asking for acceptance into that association. On January 4i 1967,
M. T. (Maurice) Regimbal, President of the Ontario nten:ollegiate Athletic Association, announced that Lakehead University had been officially accepted as a member and would be
allowed to compete for Ontario Intercollegiate Athletic Association championships in all sports except those referred to as team
sports. Sports such as hockey, basketball, volleyball etc.
Since receiving recognition, Lakehead University has been
fortunate enough to win the Ontario Intercollegiate Athletic Association Squash Raquets Championship, Ski Championship,
Golf Championship·, and Singles Table Tennis Championship,
and were able to have representatives skiing in the Canadian
Intercollegiate Ski Championships in Banff in March of 196J.
On August 4, 1967, Winnipeg, Manitoba, was the scene
of a meeting which was to have International Athletic repercussions. This meeting was attended by Bill Shannon, and George
Birger of Lakehead University, with Mr. A. 0. Duer, Executive
Secretary of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics.
The context of this meeting may be summed up in quoting from
.a letter addressed to W. J. Shannon, Athletic Co-ordinator at
Lakehead University, from Mr. A. 0. Duer which reads, "The
upcoming issue of ~e National Association of Intercollegiate
Athletics news will carry the announcement, of which we are
proud, that Lakehead- University is the first Canadian Institute
to be accepted into membership of N.A.I.A."
Mr. Duer went on to say that "As of March 18, 1968, Lakehead University would be eligible to compete for National U.S.
Championships in Ba~ball, Ba~ketball, eross ~untry, Gymnastics, Soccer, Swimmmg, Tenms, Track and Field, Wrestling,
Football, Golf, Bowling, and Hockey.
Mr. George Birger, Athletic Director and Basketball Coach
at Lakehead University, in summing up the ramifications of our
official sanction by the National Association of Intercollegiate
Athletics stated simply, "Lakehead University has always had to
sit on the side lines and watch other teams that they defeated
compete for National Cham[&gt;ionships, _those days are gone. 1:-a,kehead University has some fine, and m some cases, very g1fted
athletes on campus and there is no reason for them not to receive
the recognition they deserve."
"The fact that Lakehead University is a member of both the
Ontario Intercollegiate Athletic Association and the National
Association of Intercollegiate Athletics provides our athletes the
opportunity to compete for national championships in both
Canada and the United States. Dual citizenships if you wish."

-11 -

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another letter
Resignation

Page 7

B - Balling

Dear Editor:
Mr. Rod Phillips made a
comment to me, concerning
the council members of the
AMS. To him, councillors are
threads, meaning they
make snap decisions.
This message is not just
directed at Mr. Phillips, but
all members of the AMS on
t h e Lakehead University
Campus who criticized AMS
policy and yet do ABSOLUTELY nothing but talk:
No constructive criticism,
only destructive.
I would welcome any criticism for science's good but
I reject and completely oppose any action by the minority who continually oppose AMS doings but acting
as "stone blocks."
AMS is not perfect but
if it does not have backing
of students and unity, it
cannot function even
though it will never satisfy
THIS FEW.
I would urge that all criti"Coach Birger and the hairless wonders 11
cism have the good of the
council in mind; don't atThe Lakehead University NorWesters basketball team won
tempt to ruin something that their first game of the season under new coach George Birger by
you refuse to help YOUR- defeating the Dinty Kentuckians by a score of 7 7 to 61 at
SELF.
Winston Churchill High School on Wednesday, Nov. 8.
Don Bergman.
After a slow start the Nor'Westers pulled into the lead with
about five minutes gone in the ·first half and were never headed
after that time.
The Nor'Westers led at halftime 41 to 30 led by Don Holmstrom's 20 points. In the second half Holmstrom cooled off but
freshman guard Roy Holman, a PACI product, took over and
made IO field good for twenty points in the second half. Roy
Holman ended as the leading scorer for the NorWesters with
26 points, followed by Holmstrom's 24 and Rob Cameron's 10.
The leading scorers for the Kentuckians, Nino Diblasio and
Jim Brownrigg with 18 and 1 7 points respectively.
The Nor'Westers shot 101 times from the field and made
34 for 34% while the Kentuckians were making 25 of 70
for 35%.
CONGRATS!
From the free throw line the Nor'Westers made 9 of 20
while the Kentuckians made 11 of 21, both rather poor marks.
Advertising Staff
In the rebounding department the Nor'Westers led 66 to 51
over the Kentuckians. For LU it was Holmstrom with 22 and
Mike Barkwell
for Dinty's it was Love with 20.
Jim Purdon
Coach Birger praised the efforts of the entire squad and felt
even though there were a lot of mistakes made, the game was
&amp; Joe Frazer
a real· good one for us, to help us find some of our weaknesses.
will appear on individual write-ups and future conYOUR GREAT!! tests,Articles
etc. in next week's issue.

SHARE YOUR
GOOD HEALTH

IE A BLOOD DONOR

Talk over your future
with the Bell employment
reps when they visit your
campus on

NOVEMBER 20 &amp; 21
GRADS-TO-BE-IN:

·ARTS·

·SCIENCE·

Ask at your Placement Office
for informative booklets and
arrange for an interview now I

Bell Canada

�November 16, 1967

IHE ARGUS

letters cont'd

S.A.S. Report

Sir:

by glenn rajala
Lorne (Goosey) Gander is a
two year veteran of intercollegiate hockey. AFortWilliamproduct, this 5 19", 170 pound business administration student was
captain of the ICHA champion
Nor 1Wester team. He plays def enc e and is the inspirational
leader of the Nor 1Westers. Besides having two years of intercollegiate hockey experience,
Lorne picked up valuable tips in
junior ha::key in Fort William
and Port Arthur,

-

Clare Battison is another veteran of the hockey wars who patrols the blueline for the big blue.
Clare is a 6 1, 205 pound Arts student from Fort William. As an
assistant captain last year, he
picked up 8 goals and 14 assists
in ICHA competition which landed him a first all-etarteam berth.
He was the fourth leading L. u.
score ( exhibition games included) with 9 goals and 20 assists.
Rumour has it that Clare has the
hardest shot on the L. u. team.

At the last meeting of the S.A.S. more information was given
on the formation of the university hockey team to be entered in
the local Commercial hockey league.
About 3 S hockey players have showed an interest and began
practises last week. l'heir first game was this Monday against
last year's league champs, B.A. Oilers. Coach Akervall and
Lome Gander will help to coach the team when they are available.
In an effort to encourage the two University intercollegiate
teams, the S.A.S. is practically giving away season passes this
year. One dollar for each sport will permit any L. U. student to
attend any basketball or hockey home game. Regular gate admission will be 2Sc for students while others will pay S0c.
Admission prices for the Christmas high school tourney were
also set. Students will pay S0c for the 3 days or 2Sc a day.
Adults are charged $1.00 for the tournament or S0c a day.
Following is a list of the intramural sports committees, the
members of which will provide you with any information ~ the
sport that you are interested inHOCKEY-Mr. McAllister, Mr. Gill
BASKETBALL-Mr. Goodwin, Mr. Siemieniuk, Mr. Battiston
BROOMBALL-Mr. Macheluk, Laurie Albertini, Julian Jasiura,
Alan Holt
TENNIS-Alan Holt
SQUASH-Bruce Brymer, Graem Barr
BADMINTON-Laurie Albertini, Julien Jasiura, John Buie
VOLLEYBALL-Dave Siciliano, John Buie
ARCHERY-Alan Holt, Tim Comishin
TABLE TENNIS-Tony Tai, Chris Kierzkowski
HANDBALL-Dick Battiston, Mr. Montgomery
WRESTLING-John North
PADDLEBALL-Mr. Crocker, Wayne Marostica
CURLING-Mr. Montgomery
GIRLS:
BASKETBALL-Susan Savage
George Kostyshyn is a5 18" GIRLS' HOCKEY-Maureen Broadhurst
guard who is a veteran of interSusan Savage, Chris Kierzkowski, Nina Sackett, and Maureen
collegiate competition. George
Broadhurst will look after the following sports: BADMINTON,
played his freslnnan ball at ManVOLLEYBALL,
TENNIS, TABLE ThNNIS, ARCHERY.
itoba and last year as a starting
guard in the I. U. squad. He is

st ill mis fits

Why would "a Concerned
Artsman" not reveal his
true identity? Is the Argus a
Cosa ,Nostra front? Does the
"grease-monkey from Coboconk" do part-time work as
a trigger for the syndicate?
I can see why "the Boys
from 459" fear nutritional
retaliation. Also the critics
.(except for a noble few) of
the parking policy of the
administration and the AMS
Council' have a right to fea.:
divine retribution. But a
mere critic of the Argus
staff no sword shall smite.
I'm sure tlie editors would
welcome any ideas that
would improve the calibre of
the paper:
Joe Fraser,
Science I.

Globe &amp; Mail
Students may or may not
have noticed a ''Globe and
Mail" box just inside the
first doors of the University
Centre; there is another in
the Residence. The ''Globe
and Mail" costs 10 cents a
copy. Students a n d others
who buy from the University
Centre box pay 80 percent
of the time; students in residence pay 50 percent of the
time. This amounts to 20
percent and 50 percent ~~ft
respectively.

a fine dribbler and ball handler
who is a tenacious defensive
player, George is an Arts student
from Fort William who is majoring in History.

Rob Cameron is the real vet
of intercollegiate play. This is
Rob 1sthirdyearon the Lakehead
University team. Last year he was
co-captain and bis inspirational
playboth· last year and this year
have won him a starting guard
po s i ti on . Rob is a Political
Sciencemajorin the Arts faculty who resides in Fort William.

- · Zero in on the
Snoopy &amp; Novelty
SWEAT SHIRTS
Only $3.60
at the

~=

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L.U. Bookstore

...

ONLY YOU CAN
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+

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Corruptable and willing young boys and girls who are
willing to take the step to the adult way of living.
Man, if we don't have what you're looking for, tell
us and we'll get it.
The only Pub in the Lakehead tlµit REALLY wants YOU.!

Amazing - the number of nationalities
at Lakehead University - N. Y. Times

~~d UnivP.§iW. &amp;'?!P..8
Cosmopolitan - Life

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Well planned by WUSC

The only shop of· Its
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�</text>
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Lakehead Nor'Westers
Go International
Lakehead University has
scored another "first" in the
sports world.
The young university is
the first Canadian University to "go International" with
the announcement November
23 that they have been accepted as a member of the
United States National Association of Intercollegiate
Athletics.
The NAIA is an association of small and mediumsized United States Colleges
and universities including
such names as Florida A and
M, Boston State University
and, closer to home, the
University of Minnesota in
Duluth.
Lakehead University will
thus be able to compete for
national United States championships in baseball, basketball, cross country, gymnastics, soccer, swimming, tennis, track and field, wrestling, football, bowling and
hockey.
The University will still
maintain its Canadian affiliation with the Ontario Intercollegiate Athletic Association, taking on what
amounts to dual citizenship.
It wfill be the only college
or university in Canada or
the United States which
may win championships in
both countries.
In the past two years the
University has won the Ontario Intercollegiate squash
raquets, ski, golf and table
tennis championships competing against other universities in Ontario. Last year
their basketball team won
the Lakehead title and the
hockey team won its conference title in the first
year of competition against
teams from the United
States.
To become eligible to
compete in National Championships, Lakehead University will first have to be
accepted into leagues or conferences in Minnesota, Wisconsin or Michigan.
They must win their
league, then play off against
winners of other leagues in
the same state, thus representing that state or district
at the National playofffs.
The Nor'westers are already members off one
American-based conference,
the International Collegiate
Hockey Association. Last
year they competed against
teams
f T om
Wisconsin
State University, St. Cloud
.State College, Bermidji State
College and Lake Superior
State College of Sault Ste.
Marie, Michigan, winning 10
games against two losses to
capture the conference title.
The pull from the United
States was a natural attraction according to athletic coordinator Bill Shannon, the
man behind the move.
"Our geographical location really gave us no ..other
choice," he pointed oul Al-

though we are a member
of the OIAA we cannot compete in most team sports because of the travelling costs
involved in any league which
might be arranged."
ATHLETIC SCHOLARSHIP
QUESTION

The move is expected to
bring comment from other
universities over the controversial question of grant.s-inaid for worthy athletes. A
well-recognized point in the
United States, such athletic
scholarship assistance is still
frowned upon in Canadian
athletic competition.
Lakehead University will
be able to offer grants-in-aid
in the future if it so desires.
No set policy has been -established in tilis regard but
the University's new Athletic
Director G e o r g e Birger,
formerly from the United
States, has set views on the
subject.
"There is no reason why
we should allow our fine
young athletes to be pirated
away because of our outdated concepts on athletics,"
he explainid. "A young
athlete who maintains a high
academic standing should be
rewarded on a controlled
basis for his abilities and for
the honor and publicity he
brings to the university and
the city. Young Don Domansky and Arjan Gelling are
fine examples of how athletes can bring l'.I"eat honor
to our area. We can't, of
course, expect to keep people
of this calibre here at the
present time but we should
be trying to keep these boys
in Canada. Once they have
gone across the border to
study, many do not return.
It is part of the brain drain."
Hockey coach H en r y
Akerval, the captain of Canada's 1964 Olympic hockey
team. pointed out that hundreds of young hockey players
from Canada go south every
year on athletic scholarships. "None of the top
United Stat-es Colleges could
maintain their calibre without our Canadian hockey
talent," he claims. "But a
Canadian boy shouldn't have
to leave his country! If he
wants to go - that's fine.
But he should at least have
the opportunity of one or
two Canadian alternatives."
With athletic grants-in-aid
or without, Lakehead Universty faces the future of
stiff international competition with an optimistc attitude.
George Birger summed up
the feeling of the athletic
department when he said:
''The main point is that our
top athletes will now receive
the recognition they deserve.
And the door is wide open
for Lakehead University to
build up an international
reputation, particularly in
sports such as hockey and
basketball."

RUMANIAN
NATIONALS
DECEMBER 13

LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY, PORT ARTHUR, ONT

Nov 30, 1967 8 PAGES

AMS Council passes budget
A total of 32 budgets were presented
to the AMS Council for ratification Saturday, November 25. Of this number, 29 were
passed with few enquiries pertaining to
details not shown on the actual budget. The
other tm-ee were passed on condition that
these clubs be recognized by Council.
The three clubs in question are the
Lakehead University German Society, the
Art Club, and the Sociology-Anthropology
Club. The constitution of the latter has been
tabled by Council.
This year's total expected revenue is
approximately $49,775. The total expenditure budgeted for is $55,343. The deficit is
$5,568.
The reason there is a deficit budget,
explained Treasurer Don Lees, is because
the clubs and organizations who get a part
of the AMS budget very seldom spend all
of it. Clubs are expected to carry through
with their programs as laid out.
The following is a list of some of the
budgets passed with the amount they were
subsidized to last year.

Argus ............................ 7,529
2,838
Year book tabled until editor present
AMS symposiwn ........ 500
Conference Committee 2,000 not available
Contact .......................... 450
550
Course evaluation ...... 600
CUS ................................ 75c per
65c per
Cultural committee .... 1,000
Essays from
Lakehead .................. 500
Photo directorate ...... 722
OUS .............................. 25c per
25c per
Winter Carnival ........ 2,500
1,644
Arts Society ................ 2,425
655
Science Society
765 made 250
U. Sch. Society
1,856
285
Political Clubs .......... 75 each
75 each

"It has taken this long to pass the
budget since it has taken this long to compile it," said Mr. Lees. "We used a different
system this· year. The financial committee
went over all the budgets before they came
to Councl for ratification. Instead of taking
12 hours as it did last year, Council has
spent three on it so far, and I think that
another one will do the job."

Students voice lack of confidence

....

t:lltAD

f

~~

Mike Barkwell

Barkwell
elected V.P.
Mike Barkwell, sec on d
year Economics student, is
the new AMS Vice President.
Mr. Barkwell was elected
by Council at its regular
meeting Tuesday, November
21, in accordance with the
AMS constitution. He succeeds Bill Weiler in that
position, Mr. Weiler taking
over as President following
the resignation of Peter
Young.
A native of Southern Ontario, Mr. Barkwell has i,.ttended Lakehead for two
years, and plans to return
next year.

S t u d e n ts' constitutional
right of petition for a meeting of the AMS Council was
exercised for the first time
in the history of Lakehead
University, Wednesday, November 22.
Some 32 students signed
a petition circulated the
Frida,y previous calling for
this special meeting.
For Lakehead, it has been
a year of agitation, dissatisfaction, and resignation. This
meeting brought to light the
latest grievances.
The Council, with its
newest President Bill Weiler,
faced approximately 200 students to hear prepared resolutions, all reflecting a 1ack
of faith in the Council and
the executive.
The resolutions w e r e
available only to the councillors and to the members
of the committee presenting
them.
The lack of faith refiected
in the resolutions was a result of claimed infringements on student rights, constitutional ambiguities, financial mismangement, the
handling of Council resignations, the parking issue, the
committee system used by
the Council, and various
other dissatisfactions with
student government.
On Mr. Weller's request,
Bert Baumann, Chief Justice,·
agreed to chair the meeting,
It became apparent, however, that even the constitution drafted by Mr. Baumann
was "under fire", and that
the chair was therefore not

impartial. Further more, no
student could be impartial,
being an AMS member. Mr.
Larry Anderson of t h e
Psychology Department was
asked to take the chair, and
agreed to take over for the
rest of the meeting.
The Council President set
a time limit on the meeting,
pointing out that he had to
catch a plane for Toronto
later in the afternoon, and
that many councillors had ,,
two o'clock classes.
UNITED FRONT

Council appeared to take
a solidified stand in defense
of its policies, and in the
acceptance of some of the
arguments and crticisms of
the committee of students.
The general body in attendance appeared to be
swayed according to the eloquence of each speaker involved.
PREPARE BRIEF

Mr. Weiler agreed to prepare a brief in reply to the
criticism and remedies .proposed by those initiating the
meeting. This brief apparently will be given to the whole
student body. A straw vote
was called, the results indicating that the original resolutions should also be made
to the whole student body.
But in the words of Karl
Goodwin, Associate Justice,
"As the battle raged, most
students either played cards,
drank coffee and laughed, or
didn't give a damn as long
as they knew· they could get
their parchment."

�Page 2

November 30,· ·1967

THE ARGUS

Winter Carnival Committee

Club
Notes
Psychology
Club
It appears the Psychology
Club has again succeeded in
filling its repertoire with interesting and informative details.
The meetng of Nov. 23 focused on one- type of brainwashing used by Communists on certain prisoners of
war. The technique, as presented through a tape recording plus a commentary
delivered by Mr. K. A. Allan,
involved a gradual re-education of the soldiers, but
with no physical punishment. The men were submitted to a moral degradation achieved through t h e
censoring of their mail which
allowed only "bad news"
through. They were taught
to mistrust their companions
by an "informer" system.
The end result of this drill
was that they would endure
up to six hours a day of
C om m u n i st propaganda
starting at 7:00 in the morning!
The programme also called
for a 40 minute film on
Schizophrenia but, because
of the responsive discussion
about the tape, there was
not time.
The film may be shown
at the Dec. 7th meeting
plus anything else that is
scheduled. Don't miss it.

The Winter Carnival Committe had its first meeting
last Thursday. Winter Carnival Chairman is ·J ohn Lee,
Arts III. Other Executive
positions still have to be
filled, so come out and be
active in the biggest social
event of the year.
Major committees have
been selected but more bodies and new ideas are desperately wanted. Meetings

Circle K

Don't wait until the Holiday Season is upon
you, .. SHOP NOW for the finest in cameras
and accessories. Stock up on all your camera
supply needs and avoid the last minute rush.

Each of our Fort William stores has a Top
Camera man on duty at all times to serve
you better.

Victoria at
·s yndicate
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Centennial
Square

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developing good citizens and
leaders of the future.
As in Kiwanis, the Circle
K motto is "We Build," a
building for justice, liberty,
democracy, and a better
world in which to live.
The Circle K is not just
an organization, but a driving force, developing the
leadership for tomorrow,
whi:le it creates a better college or university centre today.
A Circle K club is first
and last a service club.
There are many activities
which Circle K clubs have
developed and conducted on
campuses and in communities.
These include publication
of campus aids such as rlirectories; toU'rs of campuses;
prov1s1on of scholarships;
promoting of blood donor
drives and fund-raising programmes for national charity
drives, tutoring programmes
for students and others.
Circle K is an opportunity for college men because
it provides a means of
leadership in a college community, that service clubs
are giving in the business
and professional world.
Information on local Circle
K groups will follow in
next week's edition of the
Argus.

This Week ....
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER, 30
Blood Donor Clinic (high school students9-4 p.m.-GH
University Graduating Students Recruiting12 noon-r. 1058
Circle K Meeting-12 noon-r. 1020
NDY Club Film, "Nobody Waved Good-bye"12 noon-Aud.
Thursday Discussion Group-12:30 p.m.-r. 1100
Faculty of Arts Mee.ting-12:30 p.m.-r. 1004
NDY Club Film, "Nobody Waved Good-bye" 8 p.m.-Aud.
Town Talk Speaker: Jack Davis, M.P.-'Polluti.on"
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1
West Indies Ass'n Meeting-7 p.m.-r. 1022
Lakehead SymphonJ' Rehearsal-7 p.m.-r. 1022
SAS Homecoming Dance-9 p.m.-GH
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 2
University Government Seminar (CUS)
Also Sunday)-day, evening-GB
Senior Social Club-S.L.-7: 30 p.m.
Hockey and Basketball Games-L. U. versus Bemidji
Hockey games: P.A. Arena basketball:
Sir Winston Churchill H.S.
MONDAY, DECEMBER 4
SAS Meeting-7_ p.m.-B.R.
Chemistry Club Meeting-12 noon-r. 1100
Seminar Sociology 3c6-5 p.m.-405n.l
Rhythmic Gym- 7 p.m.-Aud.
Oral German Classes, Mr. Morrison8 p.m.-r. 1100
TUESDAY, DECEMBER J
University Liberals Meeting-12 noon-023 nl
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship Meeting12: 30 p.m.-r. 1025
Fencing-12 noon-GH
West Indies _Ass'n Meeting-12:30 p.m.-r. 1058
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship MeetingAud.-12: 45-"Red River of Life"
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6
W.U.S.C. Film "Huckleberry Finn" 8:15 p.m.-Aud.
A.M.S. Meeting-7 p.m.-BR
Fencing-8 p.m.-GH
Seminar Sociology 3c6-5 p.m.-405Nl

Progressive Conservative Federation
"Duff" Roblin has been invited to Lakehead University, by the Progressive ConseFVative Student Federation
on Campus.
He will arrive in Port
Arthur a t approximately
6:30 p.m. on Thursday, De-

cember 7th.
He will speak in the University Theatre at 8 p.m.
Thursday night.
Duff Roblin who will -resign as Premier of Manitoba
within the next few weeks,
is" expected to play an im-

Bay Cities
Mall

34S7344
Downtown

3456564

portant role in the federal
Conservative party.
As one of the candidates
in th~ September Progressive
Conservative leadership convention, Duff Roblin announced his entrance into
Federal Politics.

You'll he

'KING of
in a

and Top Men
to serve you!
I--

the men's club

Circle K is a service organization for college men
operating on the campus,
and is similar to Kiwanis
and other service clubs.
Its objects are to emphasize the advantages of the
American and Canadian way
of ·life; to provide an opportunity for leadership training
in service; to serve on the
campus and in the community; and to promote good
fellowship and high scholarship.
It is a leadership and
character - building group
which gives primacy to the
human and spiritual rather
than to the material values
of life.
To co-operate in maintaining that sound public opinion
and high idealism which
makes possible the increase
of righteousness, j u s t i c e,
patriotism and good will is
only one of the group's
ideals.
A Circle K club is sponsored in co-operation with
College or University officials by a local Kiwanis
club which is composed of
leading business and professional men of the community.
Kiwanis does not sponsor
these clubs in order to build
future Kiwanians.
This activity is part of the
Kiwanis programme of service to youth and community.
Circle K clubs fulfill this
object by service to the
campus and community by

Top Values
in Cameras
and supplies!

are held weekly - time and
place will be found on the
Carnival bulletin board in
the tunnel.
Societies and clubs are
reminded that they should
get in touch with the Carnival Chairman concerning
floats and sculptures. There
are also a few open dates,
both afternoon and evening,
for society or club events.

the

ROAD

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better idea ' car
from FORD!!

SEE THE LIGHT
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(1962) LIJIITED

6 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU
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�November 30, 1967

THE .ARGUS
The Dow Protests

Page 3

A question of morality?
By D. John Lynn,
Canadian University Press
Hold a match under one
of those foam take-out coffee
cups. It bursts into flames.
It's made of polystyrene. So
is napalm.
Polystyrene is made in
Canada. Some goes into the
manufacture of take-out coffee cups, Christmas decorations, and toys. Some is sent
to the United States as an
ingredient of napalm, which
is being used by the U.S.
in Vietnam.
The Canadian manufacturer of polystyrene is Dow
Chemical Co. of Canada, a
subsidiary of the parent Dow
in the U.S.
Campuses across Canada
have risen up in protest in some cases violent protest against Dow recruiters
interviewing on
Campus.
The Canadian protests began on Nov. 8 when a small
group handed out literature
at the door of the placement
centre at the University of
Waterloo.
A week later UBC students followed suit, but this
time they blocked the doorway. At Windsor last week,
campus Chaplain Bill Christensen led a similar group in
protest, but there was no
violence.
Then Monday and Tuesday, Toronto students kept
a Dow recruiter and U. of
T. vice-president Robin Ross

L.U.U.C.
There will be a meeting
of the ·Laklehead University
Ukrainian Club on Thurs-•
day, Nov. 30 at 12:30 p.m.
The room number will be
posted on t h e bulletin
boards. All members are
asked to be in attendance.
Dow protestor· at U. B. c. destroys J&gt;Qlystyrene cup.
Polystyrene is used in napalm. photo - Ubyssey

Mali - Senegal - Ivory Coast
ditions, culture, resow:-ces and
It does not happen every
aspirations of the different
day that someone offers you
areas visited.
the chance to go to Africa
3) During the last week
and study the development
of
the summer, the various
of several countries. Here is
travel groups w-ill assemble
your chance for an outstandagain in Abi~jou, Ivory
ing experience.
Coast. They then will hold
During the summer of
a concluding session during
1968, World University Serwhich they will discuss their
vice of Canada will sponsor
impressions of different asa group of Canadian students
pects of African life.
and professors to study the
There is also the possibilidevelopment of three Afrity of taking part in a work
can countries, namely Ivory
camp in some other West
Coast, Mali and Senegal.
African country after the
The summer will be diend of the seminar.
vided into the following
The basic requirements
phases:
for
the seminar are:
1) The Canadian delegates
1) Fluency in French.
will fly from Montreal or
2) Returning to Lakehead
New York to Dakar, Sene.,
University
in the fall 1968
gal for a special one week
as a full time student.
introductory p r o g r a m me,
3) Canadian c it i z en or
starting in the last week of
permanent
resident.
June, 1968.
If you think that you
2) Dele~tes will stay in
qualify, or have any questhe capital cities, for about
tions concerning the Inter10 days each and will divide
national Seminar, contact
into small groups to travel
Mark Mueller, (622-9777).
for short periods in these
The deadline for applications
three countries. During the
is Dec. 11, 1967.
study tours, the group will
Give it a try!
observe and discuss the tra-

captive until the Dow representative finally agreed
not to continue his three-day
recruiting program.
The Student Council at the
University of Victoria shared
these sentiments when they
went on the record opposing
the use of napalm. Dow recruiters were expected a
week after council took this
action.
USE OF NAPALM
IMMORAL
Why all these protests?
Demonstrators see · it as a
moral issue.
Harold Kasinsky, a University of California biochemist, who has made a
study of napalm, reports:
"A napalm B fire reaches
a temperature of almost
2,000 degrees Fahrenheit in
a few seconds. The polystyrene component of napalm B
acts like a glue at high
temperatures, holding the
fire to a particular surface.
"The new napalm B is so
sticky and burns so intensely that it cannot be removed
from human skin without
causing whole chunks of
flesh to come off."
Protestors say such a
weapon is immoral - much
more immoral than Atomic

bombs. The U.S. Dow company makes napalm bombs
for use in Vietnam. The protestors claim this is contributing to an immoral act.
Part of Dow's supply of
pdl.ystyrene, the active ingredient of napalm, is made
in Canada. Therefore Canada is implicated in this immorality.
But Dow points out its
napalm production accounts
for less than one per cent of
its business. Opponents then
say it would be a negligible
loss to discontinue napalm
production.
Pro-Dow forces on campus
offer two arguments: the first
ski$ any moral issue and
claims Dow Canada personnel work on a vast number
of projects, so workers, those
recruited annually fr om
campuses, are not directly
m.volved in producing napalm.
The second argument says.
it is the right of students to
apply for a job of their
choice, and the majority
should not deny them this
right.
"I want to be a rapist"
screamed one U. of T. stu-

�Page 4

THE ARGUS

November

The Merchant of ,Argus
cleverly adapted from William Shakespeare

THE

BASSANIO. He hates my sacred nation, and he rails,
On me, my bargains and my well-won thrift.

THE CASTE
SCENE Ill
Portia, an heiress ........... , ..•.. ~the AMS Budget
The Prince of Aragon. , ....•..•... , !Bill Weiler (AMS Pres. )
(Enter Prince of Aragon, Tubal, Portia)
Shylock. ....•..................••'Don Lees (AMS Treas.)
Tubal, bis fop ............•....•.. Mike Barkwell (AMS Vice}
ARAGON. By this scimitar, that slew Gobbo, and a
Jessica, his daughter....•....•.•••.. Joan Stewart (AMS Sec.)
Persian prince that won three field, of Sultan Solyman,
Antonio, a merchant .....•........• The ARGUS
I would o 1erstare the sternest eyes that look,
Bassanio, suitor to Portia......•...• AMS Council
Outbrave the heart most daring on the earth,
Launcelot Gobbo, servant to Shylock. Peter Young (ex AMS Pl-es.)
Pluck the young suckling cubs from the she-bear,
Old Gobbo, bis father ......•..•••.• Wayne Tocheri (AMS Pl-es. 66-67)
Yea, mock the lion when 'a roars for prey,
To win thee lady.
SETTING
Belmont, the ancestral home of Portia (AMS offices)
PORTIA. Sure you would buddy, but Shylock bas rented me for 61/2
percent.
SCENE 1. The ~ Office
ANTONIO. I pray you, good Bassanio, let me know it.
TUBAL. (aside) I'll drink to that.
And if it stand as you yOUl'Self still do,
Within the eye of honour, be assured
SCENE IV. Behnont
My purse, my person, my extremest means
(Court Scene)
lie all unlocked t.o your occasions.
PORTIA. I am thoroughly informed of the case. Which is Antonio?
BASSANIO. Bullshit !
Which is Shylock?
ANTONIO. You know me well, and herein spend but time
To wind about my love with circumstance:
And out of doubt you do know more wrong
In making question of my uttermost
Than if you hitd made waste of all I have.

30, 1967

SHYLOCK. I am Shylock.

RGU
VOLUME 2, No. XI
November 30, 19bi'
The ARGUS is published
weekly by the Alma Mater
Society of Lakehead Univetsity. The opinions expressed
are those of the editorial
board and not necessarily
those of the AMS or the
Administration. The ARGUS
is authorized second class
mail by the Post Office,
Ottawa, for payment in cash.
All correspondence to the
ARGUS main office, behind
the lower cafet.eria; mail c/o
Lakehead University, Port
Arthur. Subscription . . .
$3.00; advertising rat.es upon
request.

ANTONIO. He sure is,
PORTIA. The quality of the University ls not strained:
It droppeth as the gentle rain•from heaven upon the place
beneath. It is twice blessed;
It blesseth him that igves and him that takes.
Js Antonio not able to discharge the money?

(Enter Portia and Launcelot Gobbo. F.xuent Bassanio.)
ANTONIO. Shall I compare thee to a summers day?
PORTIA. Get off the pot, Antonio.

BASS.ANIO. Yes. Here I tender it for him in the court of the financial committee.

ANTONIO. Is this a digger I see before me?

PORTIA. It must not be. Why this bond is forfeit:
And lawfully by this Shylock may claim
A pound of flesh, to be by him cut off
Nearest the paper's heart.

GOBBO. Flower Power!
(Exuent Antonio, Gobbo. Enter Jessica. )
PORTIA. By my troth, Jessica, my little body is aweary of this great
world.
JESSICA. My father Shylock yearns to invest thy body at 6 1/2 per
cent.
(Exuent Portia with Jessica explaining)

SHYLOCK. 0 most noble judge ! 0 wise and upright judge !
PORTIA. Are there scales here to weigh the flesh?
SHYLOCK. I have them ready.
PORTIA. Have by some surgeon, Shylock, on your charge,
To stop the wound,, lest those he serves bleed to death.

editor ................ chuck grieve
associate ............ bob leggett
managing ........ chad hannah
news .................. Tod phillips
sports ................ larry hebert
features ............ boyd hussey
circulation .. gord fukushima
this past week's staff: bobbie an 1
bonnie an' tracey an' ken an' joe
an I jim an I wendy an I steve an 1
simon an' glenn an' kbalid an•
arnie an I ward an I dasher an' danc er an' prancer an' vixen, comet
an' donner an' blitzen...... now
dash away, dash away, dash away all •• ---------------------

SCENE 11 Belmont
SHYLOCK. Is it so nominated in the bond?

(Enter Antonio, Shylock and Bassanio)
ANTONIO. Pl-ithee sir, I have a most urgent matter, at hand for
which I need nine thousand ducats.

PORTIA. Ay. For the state, not for Antonio.
TUBAL. Ab gimme that old, soft, shoe................•....•.

SHARE YOUR
GOOD HEALTH

*********

SHYLOCK. $14. 50
BASSANIO. (to Antonio, aside) I toldest thou so.
ANTONIO. Double, double, toil and trouble,
Editorials boil, Editorials bubble.
SHYLOCK. (Aside) How like a fawning publisher he looks.

Will Shylock get his?
Can Antonio live on $14. 50 until April?
Does the state really care?
Will Old Gobbo ever be beard from again?
Will we get thrown out of English 2a6?
For the answers to these and other startling questions, tune in again
next week.

IE A BLOOD DONOR

On student power
By Day Laban
In centuries past, philosophers used to
write treatises entitled "On the Nature of
Things", "On Metaphysics", "On the Principles of Morals.'' The implication was that
these essays were one man's opinion, an
exercise in thought, rather than a dogmatic:
stating of facts. I would ask that this be
judged in the same fashion: the statement
of a personal opinion, and an enquiry as to
to where we are going . . .
It is probably correct to assume that
the word "student ·power" is an adaptation
of the phrase "black power", so often used
in reference to the racial turbulences in the
United States. It denotes a minority group's
realization of its own strength, and of its
intent to impose its will upon others. It is
a flexing of the muscles, a testing of the
sinews, the first stirring of a young giant's
might.
But it is more than that; there is a
connotation of animosity, an almost revolutionary approach, an "out with the old, in
with the new" feeling that may well do
more to destroy than to improve the structure
of our universities.
The sharing of knowledge, a University's
reason for existence, has become secondary
to a political manipulation, whereby the
University is broken up into three warring
factions; Students, Faculty and Administration. Those who stir up the controversy
would have one believe that there is no
common ground on which these factions can
meet to discuss their differences, that this
is a "cold war" between three different

ideologies. It is rather like an argument
about religion between three die-hard members of different denominations: interesting
to listen to, but hardly likely to come to a
satisfactory conclusion.
I am quite aware that this three-way
battle is taking place on campuses all over
Canada and the United States, that it is
not peculiar to Lakehead University. And
possibly .this is the most worrying aspect of
the situation: just because others start a
certain trend, is it necessary that we too
jump on the band-wagon? Any band-wagon?
Even one, that, when the sound of its
rumbling passage dies down, will leave
behind the shattered remains of what so
many people spent so many years to build?
The "divide and conquer" tactics employed
by those who would sow dissent have been
used many, many times before, and rarely
have they led to lasting improvement. He
who sows dissent shall reap chaos.
Students have always been the most
important single factor in the structure of
a University, for a very simple reason; no
students, no University. But, per se, the
student body is in constant flux: only a
very few remain on campus longer than
three years, and during those years their
main preoccupation is with their studies
rather than with the manner in which the
institution of learning, to whose tutelage
they have entrusted themselves for a few
brief years, is being run. At least that is
how it used to be, in the days when administrators had time to do what they are paid
to do, i.e. administrate, rather than weather-

ing the onslaught of sit-ins, stand-ins and
lie-ins, and slinking down the hall-ways
wearing dark glasses on the day the studentnewspaper comes out.
Student government itself is in constant
flux. Witness the events at L.U. in recent
weeks. Is this not an indication that before
one can rule the world one must be able to
rule oneself?
In any form of government, the greatest
essential is unity, the striving toward a common goal. And if the students among themselves fail to realize what this common goal
is, if they relentlessly criticize their elected
officals, if they protest without purpose,
if they fail to impose discipline upon themselves, how then would they rule the University?
Every organization needs a "constant"
to function efficiently. Because of its everchanging nature, the student-body cannot
provide this constant. A long-range view of
the aims and functions of the University
can be taken only by those who will be
called upon to carry out these plans and
bring them to fruition.
Such a constant is the Senate. Not the
student-body, not the often-nomadic Faculty
nor even the Administration, but the Senate.
Student representation on the Senate is
indeed a great step forward. But in order
to represent the student-body as a whole,
these student-representatives must know
what its aims are. As things are, I wish
them the wisdom of Solomon and the
patience of Job: they'll need it.

�Novi:neber 30, 1967

THE ·ARGUS
.-.istorical discovery

Page 5

Situation difficult in years of yore

What is a University?
Good question:
Lakehead University is one, but it is not very much like the
one called Oxford, and even less like the Bay Area Free University, San Francisco.
Somebody is putting us on.
Will the REAL University please stand up.
For clues, I turned to the Lakehead University Calendarbut it wasn't one! It misses out three whole months, and doesn't
have a single guide to the phases of the moon. It doesn't even
have a pretty picture so it can be hung on the wall. Actually.
it is just a throw-away paperback.
But, I thought, someone in authority (and therefore very
sensible) insists that the university put out a guide, and that it
not be called a guide. So, continuing my research, I drafted an
alternative, a Menu. It is brief, familiar. inexpensice, and easy
to read.
Menu
1..Akehead University of- Arts, Science, and Technology featuring: no nonsense, home-cooked facts and data
Competitive Prices
Dinner for 1700-choice of:
Arts (a subtle blend from the established kitchen of North
America)
Science (bland but filli11g-for men on their way to the
top)
.
Technology (reduced price-served separately-no
guarantee)
Hors D'Eouvres: never-filling, ·deli~htful, and quaint (ancient
recipe from Mrs. Alma Mater)
Beverages: a complete selection of moderate brews and effective
sedatives (bar managed by Athletic Diversion Department)
Main Course: good old-fashioned all-Canadian meat and potatoes
-never too spicy-"just like mom always serves"
Desert: "prejudice pudding"-light and refreshing but sticks to
the ribs-you may never want to eat anything else
Floor Shuw:, our own unique group of intellectuals, radicals,
Christians, hippies, etc. perform daily-your opportunity
to see real live eccentrics
Special: Bonus Coupon-entitling all our satisfied (i.e. full and
without upset stomachs) patrons to instant respectability

(Following this short introduction. is a translation of
perhaps, on e of lhe most
important archeological discoveries since the Dead
S e a Scrolls. 1l was found
aim.Ong lhe remains of what
appears lo have been an official carrier for a minor
official in lhe ancient province of La-Ked Yu. The
message was apparently intend9C\ for the official's
counterpart in a neighboring
country. I feel that lhe contents of this message are of
such importance that I am
passing them on to you for
your evaluation.
A. F. Thoroughsearch
Professor of Archeology
World UDivenity.

My dear Foo . . . (here
the parchment is too worn
for translation) . . . things
have become steadily worse.
As I have already covered
the social structure of our
country in previous communications I will not bother
to review that informaion,
but, will get right to the
heart of the current crisis.
At present Emperor Tam
Lin is away from the country
on an ocean cruise and the
country is paralyzed. Neither
Arts Minister Ra-The Ne
nor Minister of Alchemy Har
Te seem to have the authority to act. This situation
seems to belie the rumors
that Tam Lin is a mere
figurehead.
As you know, our largest
city Nu Lie is divided into
three sections; The Place of
the Sacred Books, Living
Quarters for Grand Tutors,
and, Slaves Meeting Halls. I,

That's a lot better than a 200 page Calendar that isn't a
HAVE YOU
Calendar. But it doesn't answer the question "What is a UniverTHOUGHT
sity." I'll try again next week.
( Note to collectors: After the revolution of 19 71, the above
menu could be priceless. The one usecl at the Winter Palace in Our advertisers want your businand are dedicated to serving
Petersburg on the evening of November i, 191 7, recently sold ess
you well.
for a small fortune.)
••.•••• Patronize them .••••••
You 1ll

being one of the Tutors, have
in the past, had access to
the Place of the Sacred
Books. New restrictions instituted by the Royal Guard
make it almost impossible
for us to enter within the
walls of that section.
Ah, my friend, I can see
your face twisted in horror.
Such a plight for a proud
profession! Further, we must
move along the sealed walls
in the same pathways as the
slaves! No, don't put it
down, there is more. Yes,
More! One of the most revered Tutors Ree Sir Cha was
waylaid in a hidden staircase
in Nu Lie. Those responsible
for his death were either
Slaves, seeking to steal his
books, or Royal Guards. My
suspicions are concentrated
on the latter.
The situation is exacerbated by the attitude of the
Royal Guards. They seem to
think that the entire town

OF LIFEI
BEA
BLOOD
DONOR

+

Opposite the Prince Arthur Hotel
DOWNTOWN PORT ARTHUR

414 Victoria Ave.,
fort William
823-7586

Stereos
Television
Tape Recorders
Musical Instrument
Record Players
Radios

Largest" Selection of LPs in the Lakehead

You'll find the-newest,
loveliest,most modern
diamond ring styles
atf

be glad vou did!

11111-1111 If

PHONE M!S-7931
0,,

wire
flowers b

~

-1

ONLY YOU CAN
GIVE iiifGIFT

JEWELLERS LIMITED

°'ou'&gt;
4t

Well, perhaps, I shall
have to endure it a while
longer; at least until Tam
Lin returns. Although, I
must confess, I have heard
seditious talk among the
younger Tutors and am finding . myself listening with
greater and greater interest.
So-Sa De.

George H. Burke

Dow protests cont'd
dent. "Get me an interview:"
OFF-CAMPUS
RECRUITING
November, December, and
January are heavy recruitment months on campus for summer and full-time employment. Dow, along with
makers of arms and munitions which eventually find
their way to Vietnam will
continue to be harassed on
campus.
The answer for many may
be to follow the Central Intelligence A~cy•s lead in
the States. They will conduct their interviews off
campus from now on, a
policy decision which is a
direct reflection of reoont
disruptions CIA recruiting
has led to on many campuses.
It is starting even now.
At McGill University several companies have opted
for off-campus interviewing. McGill Principal H.
Rocke Robertson announced
that three companies who
have not yet had on-campus
interviews, have consented
to conduct interviews off
~ampus in order to avoid
:iisturbances.,.

of Nu Lie should be their
exclusive domain. Granted
that the slaves meeting halls
might be moved, but our
residences? Never!

$

'

w

0 ~

POR1 ARTHUR, ONT.

BOB AND HELMI WIGMORE
S4 N. ALGOMA STREET

PHONE 344-1131

ACR089 PROM BT. .IOSKPH'9 HOBPl'l'AL

I • L', • I ' ,I" I · I '. ,l." ,1: .11 " I ",! . I · ,

MARINA INN
(Mariaggi)

You'll also find.the most
traditional and conservative.
Why not? There are over 500
different styles from which to choose ...
priced from $100 up.

Where we Nemisus the Nemissa
We recognize student power
Renovations a little slow, but we will be ready by
Christmas. Beverage rooms will be English Pub ~e.
.sat (when we get it) - West Indian with a go-go gul
from Trinidad maybe. Have a free meeting l'OOm available for off-campus meetings. Just telephone
Mr. Hurtig - PH 345-6526. Register now by letter
for a call when we are ready. Coffee bar specials
will be Son-Of..A-Qm Stew. Coney Island Beans,
and Spaghetti, Hello Charlie Chile and a Doughnut
machine. Don't forget we want your ideas.

c-,. or,,_,.,_,,. ,,__
ap to 10 _ . , , , _

f1111111111,
FORT WILLIAM

PORT ARTHUR

�Page 6

November 30, '1967

THE ARGUS

by Cooch

Dave Siciliano of Science 11 is
a 5 1 9 11 , 175 lb. spark plug centre for the Nor 1Wester Hockey
Team. This is Dave's second
year on the team after a very
successful rookie season. Dave
was an assistant captain of the
I. c. H. A. champions, all-61:ar
centr~, scoring leader with 15
goals and 22 assists in 12 games
and the most valuable player.
Dave also lettered in hockey and
was the overall top scorer at L
U. with 19 goals and 37 assists
in 19 games. - Once again this
year, h~ will play on the All
Conference line of Smith, Siciliano and Stin:ett.

Fans at the Friday night basketball game were the lucky
observers at our cheerleaders' first start. photo - gauley

Long trip tires team
The Nor'Westers hockey team lost their third straight game
Friday night as they were defeated 6 - I by the Junior Varsity
team in Houghton.
The game was played as an exhibition game.
The lone goal for the Lakehead squad was scored by Dave
Siciliano at the 2 7 second mark of the first period. But the battle was all up hill from that point on.
C.oach Henry Akervall attributed the loss to the long and
tiring bus trip from the Lakehead to Houghton. The team left
the Lakehead early Friday morning, and played that night.
The team js expected to be in better shape for the doubleheader against Bemidji State this weekend.

Dave Siciliano photo-drew

MmTay Smith is a 6 11 "Bus. Admin. 11 student of Fort Williall\
who patrols left wing for Nor'
Westers. He is anothermember
of the All Conference team and
he placed third in the I. C.H. A.,
scoring 12 goals and 21 assists.
As a rookie, ''Big Murray" lettered in hockey and so far this
season has shown great promise
by scoring 6 of our 10 goals a gainst the Soo.

Larry Hebert

photo-appelt

larry Hebert is a 5 16" guard
from the faculty of Arts and from
Fort William. larry lettered in
basketball last year, and was
one of the backup guards. This
year he gives the cagers needed reserve at guard. His top
claim to fame is probably his
column, Cooch's Cornei,.or his
attempts at cheer-leading.
Murray Smith

WORLD UNIVERSITY
SERVICE OF CANADA
Invites applications to fill staff
vacancies for
(a) General Secretary
(b) Business Administrator

photo-drew

The BEST in professional
flying training
Take advantage of special rates
fm lakehead University students

(c) Assistant Secretary
For Particulars Write Immediately to

WUSC. 328 Adelaide Street West,
Toront,o 2B, Ont.

Lakehead Flying School
Call Us Nowl
677-1441

The Canadian
Meteorological Service
offers
professional careers to bachelor graduates iu
(GENERAL, MAJORS, AND HONORS COURSES)

PHYSICS AND MATHEMATICS
OR PHYSICS
METEOROLOGISTS

Jim Johnson

photo-appelt

(about 15 graduates required)

Successful candidates are enrolled, at full salary, in a 2 year
Master's degree course in Meteorology at McGill University,
the University of Toronto, or the University of Alberta (Edmon
ton).
and

METEOROLOGICAL OFFICERS
Jim Johnson is an Arts student
with a history major. This 6 1 1 11
180 lb. forward is from Fort
William (Westgate, as you can
see). Jim 1s lnunour is only surpassed by his basketball ability.
In his rookie season last year,
Jim averaged 14 pts/game, and
was the leading rebounder on
theteam. Healsohad the highest shooting percentage on the
team which helped gain him
his letter in basketball.

(about SO graduates required)
Successful candidates are given a 9 month in ◄ ervice training
program and then posted to the various civilian and National
Defence weather offices across Canada.
These opportunities offer competitive salari~, challenging
work and numerous employee benefits.

INTE RVI EWS ON CAMPUS:
DECEMBER 1
Full details, applications and interview appointments available
at your Placement Office.

�November 30, ·1967 •

I
I

I

I
I

THE ARGUS

After a rather unsuccessful intercollegiate trip to the Soo,
the Nor'Westers at least produced some humourous incidents
on the bus trip. One occurred in a bridge game involving John
Stefiszyn and Dave Nuttal on the one hand, and Boyd Hussey
and Coach Henry Akervall on the other.- John, in a subtle attempt to indicate what he wanted Dave to lead, came up with
one of the best pieces of table talk heard in a long while. John
leaned forward, belched, and said he had heartburn. No one
realized the significance until Dave led a heart and they took
the trick.
Another occurred when the bus driver was asked to stop
along the highway for a much-needed "pit stop." As the line
formed along the side of the bus-some two deep-a few cars
passed by. The expression on the drivers' faces was priceless.
The last was appreciated only by a few. You can ask Al
Johnson of the hockey team about former Leaf goalie Harry
Yum Yum.

•

•

•

Murray Smith was the top performer for the Nor'Wesfers
hockey team, scoring six of the ten goals in the first two league
games.
Don Holmstrom also performed well, scoring 46 points on
the weekend. Don captured CKPR's Sportsman-of-the-Week
Award.

•

One of the reasons for the hockey team's losses stems from
their lack of practice time. They better start getting in shape
soon if they expect to compete with the Rumanian National Team
on December 13.
,,.
,,.
,,.
One thing about these intercollegiate trips-the students
are expected to come to school for all their classes even after returning home at 3 a.m. It was noted, however, that the Monday
after the last trip, the two intercollegiate coaches did not show
up until after twelve noon.

•

•

•

•

This week the SAS is planning on holding its first Homecoming Weekend, with a dance Friday night and basketball and
hockey doubleheaders Saturday and Sunday against Bemidji
State.
,
Get out and support your teams. Don't forget to get seasons
passes from the SAS, valued at $2.50 for each sport.
••

Once again I attended a local wrestling card. Although it
certainly cannot be classed as a sport, it has to be one of the ~st
forms of humourous entertainment around. After seemg
"Poland's Native Son" Igor, I now know where all the Pollack
jokes started. Handsome Harley Race seems _to captivate ~e
audience by spitting huge gobs out into th_e audience w~en he ~s
hit in the face. Many think these are his teeth. All m all, 1t
turns into a great night, one which university students would
appreciate-especially if they were bombed.
Rumour has it that Chad Hannah is really Igor.

,,.

,,.

Nor 1Westers keep Wesmen on their toes. photo-gauley

Nor'Westers split with Wesmen
By Larry Hebert
The Lakehead University
Nor'Westers basketball team
brought its intercollegiate
record to 2-2 with a win
Friday night and a loss Saturday aaginst the University of Winnipeg Wesmen.
Friday night at Winston
Churchµ!, before a packed
house, Don Holmstrom led
the hoopsters to a 48 - 39 win
over the Wesmen. Holmstrom almost single-handedly took care of the L.U. scoring, picking up 22 points in
the first half and 28 in the
entire game.
Another reason for Lakehead's win was their good
defense and fast break.
Coach Birger was very
pleased with the big threeDon Holmstrom, Lou Pero,
and Jim Johnston. They did
an excellent job rebounding
against a rnuch bigger team.
Birger stated that L.U. beat
Winnipeg with superior hustle. But he was still disappointed with his team's
inability to put two good
halves together.
In almost every game this
year, the Nor'Westers have
faltered in the second half.
Other top scorers for L.U.

were Cameron with 6, and
Holman with 5. For the
Winnipeg University Wesmen, Irwin led the way with
14 while Macy had 7 and
Crockett 5.
Saturday afternoon a t
Lakeview the Wesmen came
back to win a thriller by a
score of 57 - 51. Nor'Westers
held a half-time lead, and
although they played their
best half of the season, it
wasn't good enough as the
Wesmen got hot in their
shooting.
Lakehead continued t o
fast break Saturday, but it
wasn't enough to overcome
Winnipeg's precise shooting.
Once again it was Holmstrom who led the way for

.

After seeing a National Hockey_ League g~me ?roadcast by
an American announcer the other mght, I realized Just how far
behind Canada they are in hockey knowledge. I'm sure it won't
take long though, before they surpass us in the broadcas~g of
our own game. American sports announcers seem so professional
compared to the people employed by the C.B.C.

•

•

•

Muscles tense and teeth grit as the ball goes up.
photo - gauley

I'm glad to say that the ARGYS. n?.w ~as an eastern c~rrespondent in the person of Ken Friar . Nic!iolson. Ken will
occasionally drop a line about Eastern Umversity Sports. So far
he has been impressed with the calibre and pageantry of college
football in the eastern conference. Ken also states that. coaches
in the east are impressed with the play of former Selkirk Ram
Don Manahan, who played with Waterloo this year.
Ken rates the I 8 - I 8 tie between Western and Toronto as
the top game of the ye_ar. Toro!lto won the confere~ce championship this year, while the highly-favoured Queens _Golden
Gaels finished a disappointing second. Western was thrrd and
McGill last.

PETRIES
CYCLE AND SPORTS
Headquarters for Squash
and Badminton Supplies

LATEST IN SKIING &amp; HOCKEY EQUIPMEN
Johnston blocks a shot
photo-gauley

IClassHied I
HELP WANTED
Part-time salesman wanted
to sell hippie posters and
buttons to friends. P.O.
Box 1302, Station St.
Laurent, P.O.

L.U. He picked up 15 points.
Holman had 12 and Cameron
10 in Saturday's match. For
the winning Wesmen, Macey,
their top guard, had 15 while
Crockett netted 12 and Johnson had 10.
The top players for Lakehead Saturday were Pero,
who rebounded well, and
Cameron, who played a good
defensive game as well as
leading the N or'Westers fast
break.
The weekend doubleheader also provided the fans
with their first glimpse of
the Lakehead cheerleaders.
They did a god job and have
several new cheers that
went over very well.

GRADUATION PORTRAITS

~-----~----,....·--------~I
11114 VICTORIA AVENU&amp;:

11001 RIDGEWAY STR&amp;:E.T
FORT WILLIAM

I

224 ARTHUR STRE&amp;:T

PORT ARTHUR

ALL Proofs Not Yet Returned
must be returned
FRIDAY, DECEMBl:R 1st
main entrance university centre

I
~
I
I
- ~

I

I

IT~

Bourke's Drug Store is as close
to you as your telephone.

I

I

I

POUNCY'S STUDIO
~ ~ - - -

�November 30, 1967

Page 8

ATKINS8~S~BWELLERS
Registrar Donald Ayre talks of proposals for educational reform

SHIENCH
DINNER
DANCH

~Artearved &amp;

Bl■e•I

Diamond Rings
budget terms

!Jllt--

8 Cumberland St.
Phone 344-3548

photos - drew

Everyone to bis own tastes in fun and jollies

EXAM TIME
JITTERS?
nILAt...

Are the Cossacl&lt;S infiltrating?

Nemissa
Nemissa is sponsoring a
Christmas Wardrobe Draw in
conjunction with Cooper's
Ladies Wear, Fort William.
Tickets are 50c. Three merchandise gilt certificates of
$75.00, $50.00, and $25.00
respectively will be awarded.
These certificates make ideal
gifts, and are also handy for
the woman who would like
to add a glamourous touch
to her holiday wardrobe.
The draw will be held
December 8 and proceeds
will go into the Nemissa
Bursary Fund.

VE HAVE 11IE \lll&gt;EST
SELECfl&lt;li OF

C'ONCENTRATED
.sTUDY.AID.S
I. u. bookstore

Bob Cude and wife
celebrate wedding anniversary

Appolon #1

Chem. Club
Dr. Walker, Chairman of
the Chemistry Department
here at Lakehead, will give
a lecture on as,gects of his
research to all interested
students, December 4. The
room will be announced.

\\ ,

-t

::r
CD

n
0

=
•
CD

-n

C:
CT

9.95 to 23.95 .

Appolon #2

BREAKFAST SPECIAL
Bacon and Eggs, Toast
and Jam. or 1 of 4
other selections
7 A.M. • 10 A.M.

50c

Bird•s Restaurant

-

·.::

C,

..

' .!

...u
0

·-&gt;

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                    <text>Lakehead

an

University
is...

ARGUS

VOLUME II, No. 2

Front
LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY, PORT ARTHUR, ONTARIO.

September 28, 1967

EIGHT PAGES

Windsor to withdraw from C.U.S.
Await Council Vote
The Students' Administrative CounciloftheUniversity
of Windsor has announced
that itwillprobablywithdraw
from the Canadian Union of
Students in the very near
future.
In a telephone conversation with the Lakehead UniWhat a waste of good pie, (more pictures on Frosh Week on p 4)

versity A, M. S. Executive and
C.U.S. Chairman, the U. ·of
W. S.A.C. External VicePresident, J3ob Sumers, gave
reasons for the planned withdrawal and sought to know
Lakehead's stand on the
matter.
He said that as far as his
council and its constituents
were concerned, the c.u.s.
secretariat was not representing tlie Canadian students. He charged that the

secretariat was "too l~ft,
too utopian''.
He saw that the issue -..would not go before general
referendum but before a
council vote, where, he said,
he is•already assured of six
out of nine votes..
Mr. Sumers said that he
was in favour of a national
union of students but that he
felt that c.u.s. wasnotdoing
what a national union of students should be doing ..

USC CUS Chairman Resigns Over National Policy

VANCOUVER (CUP) -- whether CUS would increas- union for- international relaThe unhappy chairman of the ingly be worth the rising tions and federal lobbying
Canadian Union of Students price tag placed upon its backed by a strong provincial
The position of Vice-President of the Alma Mater Society committee
at UBC resigned membership.
organization for most of the
is presently vacant due to the unfortunate removal last Monday, Sept. 18.
(CUS fees in 1966-67were programming now carried year of Mr. Doug Robson owing to his failure to maintain
Steve Beckow said in a
.
his academic standing in the April Examinations. In this last-minute letter to student 65 cents per student and out by CUS.
were raised to 75 cents at
"CUS is in dire need of
connection, there will be an election tomorrow, Friday council he quit because he its
annual congress this change if it is to succeed in
September 29th, to find a successor.
disagreed with the present month in London, Ontario.) any • form," wrote Beckow,
As the ARGUS goes to press, we find that Bill Weiler, concept of CUS.
Beckow, not present when "I do not support C{)Sbliridly
Arts III, and Vice-President of the Arts Society, is the only
Beckow, after appearing
resignation was debated, and I was not and will not be
one who has expressed his definite· intention to run for this at the A Ima Mater Society his
suggested
in his letter that the last dying defender &lt;;&gt;f an
office. In announcing his candidacy, Mr. Weiler made the council meeting and defend- schemes for
altering CUS
following statement: "I have decided to resign my position ing statements he made would include a weak national organization that does not
meet the needs of the student.
as Arts Society Viee-President and to enter the race as a earlier about CUS needing
candidate for the A,M.S, Vice-Presidency. I feel that in this radical change to make it
position I can do more in the field of A.M.S, reform and effective, • resigned in a
Lakehead Remains C. U.S. Member
shall be better able to serve all the students of t.his Uni- letter delivered to the counRod Phillips, CUS Chair- future of CUS, Mr. Phillips
versity. I am confident that my involvement with the A.M.S, cil meeting a half hour after man at Lakehead, was in- added "It is hard to .say at
executive, through the Arts Society, has provided me with he wrote it,
terviewed by the ARGUS over this ·peint what the ramifithe knowledge necessary to carry out the duties of this
In the letter he asked if. the week-end concerning the cations of Windsor's action
positir.r, effectively.•• -foe organtzat1orr(CUS) kiat1.,- rece11t resignatiun vf UBC 's will be. l chink it is quice
There are rumours that Torn Goodman, Arts III, .has factorily met the needs of CUS Chairman and the pend- likely that some of the other
also expressed his desire to run in the election for this the students at this campus ing withdrawal from CUS by conservative campu~s will
position. However, he has made no formal statement at and the rest of Canada.
drop out. I think certain uniWindsor.
press time.
"A lot of people are dis- versities have been dissatisHe also said he doubted
turbed by the fact that the fied with CUS and Windsor's
leadership of CUS tends to be move may provide them with
left-oriented. But p e o p 1e some impetus. . . . ''
A gifted conductor with
Lakehead •s future with the
13 television shows withITV
At 19, he was appointed should also remember CUS
an outstanding international in Great Britain. TheNorth- Assistant Conduc1-or to leaders are elected by stu- Canadian Union of Students
reputation, Boris Brott has ern Sinfonia Orchestra, ·un- Walter Susskind with the dent Presidents, who are the came up in the interview. As
been named Music Director der his direction, has just Toronto Symphony Orches- representatives of the stu- to our dropping out of the
for Lakehead University and completed the first six in a tra and took up his appoint- dents at their Universities. organization, Mr. Phillips
Music Consultant to the series of recordings with ment with the Northern This is a democratic pro- said "I certainly hope not.••
''I know there is great dispublic and separate school Mace Records of New York. Sinfonia Orchestra a year cess," he said.
boards of both Port Arthur
"I agree with what I satisfaction in some circles
Mr. Brott was born in \ater, for two years carryand Fort William.
1944 and grew up in a very ing on the aci:ivities of both believe some of the reasons . . . at Lakehead, at what
In these capacities Mr.
for Windsor's withdrawal CUS has done for and meant
music a 1 background. His posts.
Brott will be responsible father, Alexander Brott,
Mr. Brott will continue are and I agree in principle to the students here. This is
for encouraging and guiding
Professor of Music at to have a busy international with Steve Beckow' s com- mainly because of the in-:the development of music in Mc G i 11 University, is a schedule during the coming ments, insofar as they state activity of past CUS leaders
the Lakehead.
Violinist, Conductor and ye a r. He will conduct a that CUS is an imperfect here. But I should think -University President Dr. Composer and his mother is series of 10 concerts with organization. Of course it is. and remember that Lakehead
W. G. Tamblyn made the a professional Cellist. He the CBC Symphony Orches- But I do not think the best was admitted to CUSonly last
announcement. He said Mr.
started his Violin studies at tra from Toronto in honor way to go about reforming year -- that it would be
B r o t t will arrive in Novem- the age of three and at the of Centennial Celebrations. CUS is by dropping out. I rather stupid for Lakehead to
ber to take up his new duties. age of five played his first He has also appeared at think it is more effective to drop out after such a short
Mr. Brott is presently in concert as guest soloist with the Canadian Pavilion at work towards the reforma- trial period -- and you must
his fourth season as Conduc- the Montreal Symphony Or- Expo and will act as Guest tion of CUS from the inside, remember too that during
tor of Britain's on I y perma- chestra.
Conductor in Vancouver, I think everyone agrees that this short trial period there
At the age of 14, he won a Winnipeg and Montreal as a great benefit can be derived have been several changes
nent Chamber Orchestra, the
Northern Sinfonia Orches- scholarship to study with well as other cities in Canada from a national union of stu- in CUS leadership here -tra. During the last few years Igor Markevitch in Mexico and A me r i c a and on the dents. I can see only harm the whole thing hAs been
he has guest conducted with City and during that same Continent in Europe. Mr. corning from the breakdown pretty disorganized."
''If there is any move to
most of the important or- year, won the Pan-American Brott will take the Northern of CUS -- that is harm to
pull
Lakehead University out
the
student
movement
in
Conductors
Competition,
He
Sinfonia
Orchestra
on
a
tour
chestras in Great Britain as
of CUS I'll fight it all the
well as on the Continent -- completed his training at the of the United States and Canada as a whole."
the R o y a 1 Philharmonic, Conservatoire du Musique in Canada in October during
AS for the immediate way.''
Philharmonia, the BBC Sym- Mont re a 1 and at McGill which the Orchestra will play
phony, the Royal Liverpool University.
in 20 cities including New
Philharmonic, Sy mph o n y
Attheageofl7,hebecame York, Montreal's Expo '67
Orchestras of Milan and understudy to Pierre Mon- and Toronto during "British
It was noted in the first edition of the ARGUS that the
Rome, Concerts Calonne in teux, who described young Week.''
Mariaggi Hotel would. be converted to a student's hotel.
Paris and others.
Brott as "One of the finest,
During September, he will
In connection with the renovation planning being done by
Last year he guest conduc- most serious talents I have conduct the Royal Phil- the new owners, Mr. Bob Gude, Cafeteria Manager on
ted a tour with the Royal encountered in all my years harmonic for two concerts campus has been asked to suggest a theme for the public
Ballet, Convent Garden and of association with young at Royal A 1 be rt Hall in area of the hotel. The theme should be one which students
recorded another series of conductors.••
London, England.
would find congenial. Bob has suggested the English Pub
theme to the owners, but he feels that this may not meet
with the approval of students. He has indicated that he would
A.M.S. INVITES COMMENTS AND COMPLAINTS ON REGISTRATION
be very happy to q_ear from any students who have any ideas
PROCEDURE. PLEASE SUBMIT TO A.M.S. OFFICES ANYTIME.
as regards theme.
Bob Gude has his office in the downstairs cafeteria, and is
SUBMISSIONS SHOULD BE IN W-RITING, AND MAY BE SIGNED.
never too busy to speak with any student. If you have any
ideas on pub themes make a point of dropping in to see him.

Election Tomorrovv

Conductor appointed to Lakehead U. faculty

I Pub

Theme Needed

I

�Page 2

Septmeber 28, 1967

THE ARGUS

that three-dollar deal
Do you remember that sign at one of the desks at registration that said any course changes would costthree dollars
each? We do. We also wonder at the logic behind this charge.
Let us indulge in an exercise in nostalgia for a moment
or three. Freshmen students will not be aware of this fact,
(some seniors may not either) but last year there was no
charge for course changes until about two or three weeks
after the beginning of classes. Perhaps the exact number of
weeks or days during which free changes were allowed is
not exactly what is stated above. Nevertheless, the fact is
that there was no charge for these second thoughts about
certain subjects until a decent waiting period had passed.
But this year?
It is a fact that the ratio of out-of-town students to local
students is significantly lower this year than in the past
~cademic year. The absence of a calendar may be charged
for this. It is not the concern at the immediate time to sulk
about the calendar. However, the ludicrous (and lucrative)
decision to hit students for a second time when they have
a change of heart, or perhaps even a realization meaningful
to themselves as individuals insults us as individuals.
And they actually charge this three dollars when they do
not have a calendar to allow students to decide upon the
best course to follow. What trauma students must go
through when they approach that long grey desk to disclose
the fact that they have made a mistake in the choosing of
their courses. And then they have to cough up for a mistake
that may or may not have been their fault in the first place.
Sometimes we wonder.

Science Congratulates Forestry(?)
Don
Colbome

One of the curious idiosyncracies of Lakehead University
is the type and quality of people here who fall before that
great undergraduate freakout which might be called the
student beaurocrat syndrome. Basically it is a manifestation of t!1e peculiarly high-school-like education offered
here and it attacks a particular group of insecure power
trippies who are so little aware of what a real university
is that they actually believe the games they play are in
some way meaningful.
Symptoms of the onset of this affliction appear when a
red-blooded Joe College begins, usually after about siX
months here, to have bad dreams about graduating as just
another sausage without an impressive history of "stuff"
with • which to pad his resume. It doesn't take much to
realize that L. U. is not doing much for him. These early
symptoms include the affectation of suit (preferably cord),
walk (busy-busy-busy), and card file of names (for dropping). He greets friend and foe with a smile which varies
with social status of the smilee and if he is particularly
clever he will force his name into public. The tactics of
this game vary from graffitiing "I am a great lay'' on the
ladies' room wall, to writing totally plagarized letters of
comment and criticism to the school paper.
Then comes that great democratic event when the most
able and interested prevail upon themselves to guide the
destiny of their institution - election time. Here the personality switch hits an acute stage as our schitzoid student
goes hyper for a few days. He makes posters, speeches,
friends, notes, pins, platforms, and platitudes. He talks
hockey with the jocks, turns on with the heads, makes time
with the chicks, nods at profs, and generally goes through
the whole B.M.O.C. routine he has learned so well from old
Hollywood horrors on the late show. He turns on the total
feelie - wheelie bag.
Then he gets elected . . . by a minority of a mass who
don't know him, couldn't care less about the illustrious
position he has so rapidly aspired to, and are unaware of
the intense ego fabrication through which he has forced
himself.
Now the real power-trip begins. He starts mouthing bigger
than life stuff like "Let's go to my office and call Toronto
about it" or "No time for coffee ... I'm waiting for a call
from the President."
He becomes the very worst variety of beaurocrat - the
student mechanic.
Through a classical situationiste role identification he
becomes an administrative automaton, talking in abstract
about budgets and briefs, purchase orders and parking slips,
office space and off-campus housing. He stops thinking
about himself and what he should do. He loses touch.
That's the diagnosis. It is also much of the reason why
the student government at this university is so frightfully
inept. However it is a problem peculiar to young universities, and we should be passing from that stage during
the course of this year. Where all this leads, of course, is
to tomorrow's election.
Choose aware, sincere, dedicated candidates (there may
be some) not any horn-rimmed glasses type with a big
mouth and an insecure ego.

by Don Bergman, Science
President
The "fungae finders"
came through again.
In this year'sfroshweek's
activities, the ever-lively
Foresters once again proved
beyond doubt that they are
the group to watch when it
comes to participation in
planned act iv it i e s. The
woodsmen won the Volkswagen push to the Fort
William Gardens from the
University, Thursday night,
in fine style.

Time and again it seems
that the smallest faculty
proves that it has the most
enthusiasm and spirit as they
push ever onward for more.
Lakehead firsts.
Said Arts President Pentti
Paularinne, "The race l~ft
too early' but we still caught
up". What he forgot to add
was the fact that Arts drove
down Memorial Avenue, instead of pushing their
vehicle all the way to the
Gardens.
From the largest faculty

the turn - out was almost
neg 1i g i b 1e, although two
Artsmen were seen during
the race taking photographs.
Science has expressed
thanks to the Foresters for
the rivalry they provided in
the race. However future
events will find more Science
men chailenging the Foresters. Congratul~tions are in
order to the "fungae finders" from Science.
Maybe the red and white
might find time to participate
at some future date.

·letters to the editor
Mao who has controlled and

SUN NOT SET
Dear Sir:

I disagree with Mr. Szechung's opinion that Mao Tze
Tung was "incapable of running such a big country as
China''. ("The Sun is Set",
Sept. 18/67, Vol. II, No. 1),
Firstly, Mao, contrary to
Mr. Sze-chung's subtle sugg e st ion s , was a great
scholar. He was enrolled at
Changsha Junior College
(1911 ), completed six years
of teacher's training college
(Changsha, 1913 to 1918)and
a year as librarian and dropin student at Peking University. He would often spend
ten hours at a time reading,
and habitually received 100%
in his essays. He developed
into a better-than-average
poet of the classical type,
and wrote many books on

philosophy and hist_ory.
Secondly, he was a great
leader, in war as well as in
peace. His guerrilla tactics
have inspired the peoples of
Vietnam. Cuba, and Korea to
victory and partial victory
against greater forces than
themselve·s. He hims e 1f
gained and controlled mainland China. Since 1947, he
has developed China from a
starving, weakling, demoralized nation to a .w orld
power. All this, Mr. Szechung would argue, is the
work of not only Mao but of
those around him (notably
Lui-Hsiao Chih and Chou
En-Lai) and I would not dispute his supposition. But in
my eyes, this makes him an
even greater leader. For all
great men must, by necessity, lean upon the work of
those around them; and it is

co-ordinated the work of
these great men.
If Mao is presently slipping from power, as he
undoubtedly is, then we must
view this not as the end of
a weakling leader but as the
downfall of a great man over
whose bones•lesser men are
now fighting.
P. O'Neill

COOCH QUERIED

Dear Sir:
I noted with curiosity the
comment in "Coach's Corner'' (ARGUS September 18)
that "I realize (Cassius)
Clay is wrong for not wanting to defend his country
. . . ". Perhaps "Cooch"
could enlighten us; who or
what is attacking the United
States?
In Peace,
Rod Phillips

Sept. 28, 1967 Volume 2, No. 2, Port Arthur

The ARGUS is published weekly by the Alma Mater Society of Lakehead University.
The opinions expressed are those of the editorial board and not necessarily those of
the AMS or the Administration. The ARGUS is authorized second class mail by the
Post Office, Ottawa, f0r pa)!ment in cash. All correspondence to the ARGUS main
office, wherever it may happen to be at that particular time; mail c/o Lakehead
University, Port Arthur. Subscription . . . $3.00; advertising rates upon request.
Editor . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . Chuck Grieve
Associate Editor
Bob Leggett
Managing Editor
Chad Hannah
News
..... .
Rod Phillips
Sports
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Larry Hebert
Circulation
Gord Fukushima
Advertising
Mike Barkwell
Photography
.
Rene Larson

. . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
............... .............

Happenings around the orifice; seventeen broads register for lay-out positions;
ARGUS accepts franchise from the Lakehead Cork Works; Dean Kerr's Secretary
annexed by ARGUS.

�September 28, 1967

THE ARGUS

educational opportunities

Social Environment, Not Ability
"One morning I had a smoke with this
kid about seven or eight years old. He
told me that his old man had some beer
left over from the night before, so all
the neighbours were up in his apartment
looking for a drink."
Bert Baumann, AMS Chief Justice, Lakehead's only delegate to the CUS Seminar on
"Social Barrier to Higher Education•', held
at u. of T. August 1.8-19 this year, made
this comment in speaking about his "in-thefield" experiences.
The Seminar was conducted on a twopart basis: delegates travelled to parts of
Toronto to the two extremes on the afflu·ence scale, then returned to the University
to discuss their experiences and observations. The ultimate end in view was to make
delegates aware of the barriers to education
posed by differences in social environment.
And, according to Mr. Baumann, the
seminar was a great success.

Sharp Contrasts
The first area visited by Bert was the
Trefann Court section of Toronto. Under
the Toronto Urban Renewal Scheme, this
slum section will be replaced by new highrise, high...;revenue apartments. Already
there are new blocks looking down on the
area.
But it seems that the business men cannot
wait to move into this potentially lucrative
area, with as little initial cost as possible.
As a result the residents there cannot get
replacement value for their homes. They
can't even buy lots. Public Housing offers
them no solution since the rent for these
homes is prohibitive for employed persons.
And the last thing that they want is to be
unemployed.
The CYC has a headquarters in Trefann
Court. They have succeeded in banding the
neighbourhood together to fight city hall's
efforts to buy them out. For the first time
in the history of the area, they have opened
a p1ayground on a previously rocky lot. Their
prime concern being the children, weekly
auctions of clothing have been initiated to
support the children and to let them lead
a young life more closely approximating that
of their middle-class counterparts. Also a
scheme is presetltly in operation whereby
neighbours fix each other's homes in a cooperative effort.
0
J was able to walk with the families
there, talking about their jobs, transportation recreation and future", Bert stated.
"I w;nt into the •Bridle Path area right
after. It made me feel guilty even to walk
in" he said. "The contrast between the
chiidren was immediately apparent in talking to this class of youngsters."
But the most "sickening" aspect of the
total picture was the difference in educa-

Page:-,

W.U.S.- an introduction
(Mark Mueller was Lakehead
University's delegate to the
World University Service
National Seminar which was
held on Canada this past
summer. The following is an
introduction to W.U.S.)

the host country exposes
participants to the cultural,
political, and economic life
there.
tio!lal opportunities between these two
This year, Canada welclasses, for no other reason than that of
comed professors and stu]&gt;ackground and circumstance.
dents from sixteen countries
In the Toronto education system, the
and thus inaugurated the WUS
children from . the lower class area of
World University Service International Seminar.
Trefann Court, almost without exception, consists of students and
Orientation week, held in
are placed in "opportunity classes'', sup- faculty members from fifty Ottawa, acquainted participosedly because they are slow learners. In countries who feel the need pants with Canadian federal
fact, it would appear that the system has for international co-opera- government policies. Then,
no room for them in its middle-class cur- tion concerning the material Canada and her people were
riculum. The 10 tests they receive are and cultural needs of univer- exposed to the inquirihg
those geared to the middle-class children. sity communities.
minds of students from difWith this in mind it is small wonder that
In an attempt to satisfy this ferent academic fields, as
they score poorly, and ultimately end up need, World University Ser- the groups travelled througl_l
in the "opportunity class".
vice of Canada (WUSC) has the country.
"The ensuing discussions concerning sponsored seminars in sixWUSC will be sponsoring
their experiences proved very meaningful teen different countries, en- both films and seminars on
to all participating,'' Mr. Baumann stated. abling selected students and campus during the coming
Each primary group in the discussion had faculty members to meet academic year. Watch for
one case worker, as a resource of experi- their counterparts in each of notices of these at future
ence from which to draw. And it was dis- these countries. Trav,,.1· fn dates in the ARrms
cussion in which everyone participated.
The talk was aimed directly at the education system, for the most part, and its
inadequacies. Delegates decided that the
only chance for these underprivileged chilTHE DEAN OF STUDENTS OFFICE
dren is through a reformed school system
adapted to suit the environment. At present
has been moved to the old
the education that these children receive
does not reach down to their level, but
production room,
succeeds in burying them by running over
their heads. The school, which would be
geared to this particular situation, would
adjacent to the Senior Lounge.
probably take the same format as Everdale
Place, an unstructured school in Toronto.

NOTICE

Interest Becomes Action
Students attending the seminar, and in
particular those from Waterloo, decided
to concentrate on setting up their own
schools to help the children in their areas.
The second main area of concentrated effort
will be directed towards those students
who plan to go into teaching. It was decided
that the traditional OCE goal of teaching
people to teach must be reformed. Instead
of turning out robots to feed the system,
a concerted effort must be made to provide
a freer atmosphere in schools, eliminating
the need to con, and in the end seeing
happier and more complete graduates.
Mr. Baumann is probing the possibilities
of setting up this sort of an educational
environment at the Lakehead. From necessity it would probably be held, at first, in
the evenings, on weekends, and during the~
summer months. For the enlightenment of
Lakehead University students, Bert plans
to show several of the films which were
shown at the seminar on campus during the
coming year.
"I know I can make a definite contribution to the student body on campus as a
result of this seminar", Mr. Baumann
stated.

Candidates to be in Hot Seat next Tuesday
A political "open forum''
dealing with the coming Pro1ection will. be held
vincial
E
at the University Centre
Theatre next Tue·scray, October 3, at 8:00 p.m.
All six candidates in the
Port Arthur and Fort Wiliiam ridings have indicated
they will be present to
answer questions from the
general public.
•
Sponsors of the event are
t he Lakehead University
Political Science Club and
the Alma Mater Society.
Acting Chairman of the
p O 1it i ca 1. Science Club,
Charles McOuat, said today
that the meeting will take the
form of a "town talk'' meeting. Every candidate will
speak ~o the audience for six
to eight minutes. The meeting will then be thrown open
to the public. Written questions must be directed to an
individual candidate.
Prime Minister of last
year's Model Parliament and
Chief Justice of the AMS,
Bert Baumann, will be
Chairman of the Open

Forum. Bert is in thirdyea_r
said Mr. Young. "We want
Arts, majoring in Geogra- to make all our students
phy
a ware of their government
•
th
h
lf
f
the
2300
and of their responsibilities
More an a. o
ful_l _and part-time st~dents ..a.s_c1_t.ize_n_s_._ _ _ _ _ _,.
at Lakehead University are
of voting age, remarked
Come and Hear
Peter Young, AMS President. If the 250 members of
Rev.
faculty and administration
are added to this list of
potential voters, the univer- JOHN MORGAN,
sity community itself represents close to 1500 voters.
First Unitarian Congregation
"I feel that it is the duty
Toronto
of our student governmentto
Speak About
provide this opportunity to ,·
the students to ?ear the vari;;
Journey
ous candidates platforms,

Into Revolution

LECOCQ
THE FLORIST

Reflections on May April
Visit to Cuba

Fort William

SUNDAY.
OCT. 1

Port Arthur

University Centre

and

Serving the LAKEHEAD
since 1911

Member F. T .D.

7:30 p.m.

Silver
Collection

stash i~ at Ute -friendly
CAmpusbank,.
our 21.~w Tt'ue ~ n g
Acc0021.ts l:&gt;eat hollow
lo&amp;':: all hollow.

J,ank, of tnonlte!U

�Page 4

THE ARGUS

....

September 28, 1967

FROSH
FREA~
A Nostalgic After-Thought
"Who blew up the other item?"

Chippewa Park amusements amuse frosh. Frosh amuse
our photographer.

What a pity it is tnat only one week in the whole school
year i.s dedicated to the hazing of poor freshmen. On second
thought, perhaps we're lucky that only one week in the whole
school year is dedicated to the hazing of poor freshmen.
How many times could your system take a Ski Club Social,
or your pocketbook take a Chippewa Park Bash? Or just
how many times do you think it would take before you tired
of pushing stupid little Volkswagens half way to hell and
back? (We know Arts didn't even make it the first time, but
let's not take that into account right now.) Scavenger hunting
is all right in its place, but when the second term rolls
around many students will find themselves scavenging for the
essentials of living (women, booze, food) and will cease to be
amused by this pastime. Dances -- we care not to comment
on this particular aspect of the past week.
But Kangaroo Court?
Although one of the chief prosecutors comes from New
Zealand that is no reason to call this mockery of justice
"Kangaroo Court". Since the Kiwi bird is said to be the only
true native creature of New Zealand, and since the court was
obviously "for the birds'', we feel that due consideration
should be given to changing the name of this function.
With the change in name, there should also come some
reforms in procedure. We would like to point out to the
tribunal that clothes, especially gowns, do not make the man.
Instead they seem to ma~e the Foresters (at least the
swacked ones) hostile. (Great show of couth on the part of
those three goats with the ties).
As one persecuted freshman put it, "Offenders called to
the stand were not even told what heinous crime they had
committed, so the punishment was in fact a gross miscarriage of justice.•• And as we seniors retort, "Yes, wasn't
that beautifully planned?"
But we wonder what was really beneath those bailiff's
hoods. For to allow a prisoner to escape beneath their very
eyes one can only ponder over the amount of graft and corruption witnfn the tight circle of friends of the court.
_

Frosh exhibits unusual prehensile abilities with hands
and feet while searching for crab apple on oak tree.

Agony or ecstasy?

"Gee, Wendy, I've never been
so scared in my life ! "
Mary Frosh refused to wear her beanie. Kangaroo
Court proved her mouthiest broad on campus.

Frosh pretends he's eating hot dog, while actually
sucking thumb.

Ca~ We Help You Find
TheWeBook
You Need?
Stock College Outline Series
And 0th.er Supplementary Reading

sin••• supply coa11pan
(BOOK DEPARTMENT) Books Available By Special Order

cros• from Royal Edward Hotel South May Street Fort Willia

Foresters victorious, happy and bushed.

�September 28, 1967

WEEK

OUT
"All for fun; fun for all"

photos
Dietmar Appelt

sculthorpe speaks

Jed Drew

George gets his.

"No greater love hath one man than to have his posterior pricked for the pleasure of his persecuters. "

PoliticsRalphand
You
Barone

by
It has been -a long cold
summer. D ief e nb ake r
wouldn't think so with nine
dogs barking at his heels
all summer, nor would our
friend Mike Pearson after
having travelled with Vivre
Le Gaulle Libre. Of course
little Tommy Douglas had his
warm summer with the old
Left going left and right and
the new left leaving.
All that I have said so far
is petty politics. It's on
everyone's tongue, but is all
this helping Canada in any
way? If I was to ask one
student to name six of the
bills presently before the
House of Commons, I doubt
if he (or she) would be able
to name even two of them.
It is not easy to become
adequately familiar or informed, but the very survival
of free, orderly government
depends on the intelligent

interest that people show in
the conduct of public affairs.
After the traumatic experiences of last week, the
political forum will provide
an interesting and enlightening change. Here you will
have the opportunity to prove
your loyalty and interest in
Canada on Tuesday, October
3rd, by attending the Political Forum with candidates
for the Port Arthur-Fort
William election. They will
be questioned by the editors
of the ARGUS, the News
Chronicle, and the FortWilliam Times Journal; but
questions from the audience
will be received for every
question asked by the press.
T u e s day evening will
prove to be an interesting
and informative evening for
everyone in attendance at the
University Centre.

Wednesday September 20 was a day of torment. In thE
midst of the wet, wet wilderness came voices crying "Lord,
save our soles"! I
The wilderness of the student parking lot is unequalle&lt;
on such a wet 'and drizzling day. And as no modern scienct
has enabled us to walk on it, we must walk in and througl
the water. Our haste laid waste the precious motherec
creases of our fine new "back-to-school" clothes anc
splattered us with mud from head to toes.
This is a University very much concerned with studen·
comfort and esthetic qualities. The administration literall)
stumbles upon itself in an attempt to provide a pleasin~
environment. The administration's attitude was quite capabl)
presented by Mr. Smith, Planner of Building and Plant
Operations. Quote "Our responsibility is to provide more
than first rate teaching staff."
Thus the University spends up to $30,000 a year - five
full time employees plus equipment and supplies in ensuring
that the grass and trees and flowers are in tfp.;.top shape so
that they can provide "the necessary adjuncts to the bare
essentials".
If student comfort is such a concern of the administration,
why don't they pave the student parking lots, literally savin
our soles. Perhaps they could rechannel their re ources
from filling courtyards with paving stones (courtyards that
one can get into but not out of) and building neat little
horseshoe shaped driveways (in a lawn that took thousands
of dollars to cultivate) to project that are indeed, "necessary adjuncts to the bare essentials".
While the administration is in the process of shoulaering
their responsibility, perhaps they could find out why room
1041 has an atmosphere more conducive to physical growth
of potted tropical plants, than mental growth of eager students.
Perhaps as well, they could be induced to do research on
just how necessary 16th Century lab stools are to the comfortable continuance of our education.
But in the meantime, let's all be sure to take a few
leisurely strolls down the corridor of wing D and contemplate the wondrous beauty of the various cacti. Ah what a
pleasure it is to know how well we are taken care of.
HOW SWEET IT IS! ! !

For The Finest
SCAN DINAVIAN
GIFTS
and
FURNITURE
visit

the
treasure
house
7 S. CUMBERLAND ST.
Phone 344-9441

�Page 6

September 28, 1967

ARGUS

Lakehead University

feelings of an almost-student
At the outset:
Faded dreams in the realization that this, (the university)
was in truth and reality what countless high-school teachers
had goldplated and fleece-lined as my nirvanah, my goal.
Oh I had envisioned a thousand college co-eds running
helter-skelter
happy up to meet me and disappointment Yet who but who came, arms outstretched with (yes)
platonic offers of
guided tours and free coffeesM Editor Grieve ( enthusiasm)
and a flock
of other Argi (needed insanity). Cold winds kept out by
warmer than
leather fellowship.
Days slip by as hours and dreams.
Satisfaction charged with the energy of almost creativity, of
maybe construction.

PAGE NINE
it leaves you breathless

looking back
A cool autumn evening:
Longing for warmth
I struck a match to the wood.
The flame caught, grew steadily brighter.
As I felt the wonderful warmth
Filling my body,
My soul,
I drew closer,
And,
Misjudging the fire's strength,
Impatiently fanned the flames.
As the light seemed to grow stronger
I failed to see the flicker,
And eagerly fanned
Until I had smothered it.
Cold,
Distraught,
Kicking sand on the remains,
Seeking warmth in strength,
I ran:...
To a cold winter's night:
My matches damp,
The fuel lost.

evening lovesong
vagrant traces on the night air sadness
come back of long kissed lips
unseen
but drifting in misty summer essence
blended fire
flame and fragrance twisting
twined in myriad nightsong mist
we feel, thought not as yet conceiving
of the consequence,
the living message presence
in the evening air
projected to our hearts
and cling together straining
to the songs of evening sadness.
Ward Olson

R. Baker.

WOULD
YOU ...
' LIKE TO WORK
IN AN ELECTION?

There is a place for you in our election campaign and

JIM JES.SIMAN
1Nants your help!
l'VE TICKED OFF WHAT INTERESTS ME MOST
( ) Committee Room Work

( ) Driving My Car

( ) Addressing Envelopes

( ) Putting Up A Sign

( ) Checking Voters' Lists
( ) Getting Voters Together

( ) Helping At The Polls
) Call Me to Discuss Further
What I Might Do

NAME .. ... ... ... ........ .. ................ .... ...... .. .. .. ... .. ..... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ... .. .. .. ..
ADDRESS
TELEPHONE
Phone 577-1161 or Mail to 407 Victoria Ave., Fort William
Attention Jim Jessiman

I had dreamed the people I met years before on a morning
when I woke up
warm and happy.
You old stud, hid your Mateuse and never stop overflowing
your own
container.
Talk on and laugh you do yourself a favour each time you
speak, on
to a marriage of more than just people.
And promises, and shouts, and laughter oh, and second thoughts
of reconsideration
and goodbyes I rem~mber a thousand people commenting between their
beers, deriding
the Administration, the staff, the paper, the students .....
But all these words could only have been spoken in a hate
born out of
jealousy;
Too much electricity, too many smiles, too much discussion
and
I'm humbled,
At the end:
looking at the infant university, amazed at its destiny
(the feeling
is strong)
and yet I watch, outside.
My road is too long planned, too hard worked for, and
fought for, and
cried over, and dreamed of, to relinquish just yet,
And as I wave goodbye,
I mirror your jealousy,
my freedom for yours,
I will return.
G. Tuck

Prostitution at L.U.
Damnit, maybe we should
take down our Lakehead University banner. Let'sputone
up that says "Whore house".
We're prostitutingourselves
and the bureaucracy is the
pimp.
Students in this "university", if you prefer, are
shopping in the academic flee
market for satisfaction, for
c o u r s e s biologically described as "bird", and
"mickey mouse".
Is this a hard course?
What's snake anatomy 2b6
like? What did you get in it
last year? Does he mark
hard?
These intellectually stimulating questions generally
are answered (?) with some
numerical abstraction such
as "Well, (pause) I got 72,
67, 4. . . . " But can bureaucracy evaluate performance on a mark-type basis
derived from pressure circumstances? How can bure-

aucracy place a number on
personal relevance?
The system runs on gears
and numbers and we, the students, prostitute ourselves
to the system for X dollars
of tuition, living expenses,
anonymity and u 1t i m ate
alienation.
In turn the system cons
us i n to perpetuating it
through economic manipulation. It sells us its labelled
buttons, jackets, and match
book covers. In reality we
are identifying with it, supporting it and perpetuating
it. The wheel turns and we
ask ourselves if we are getting our money's worth, if
our fees are being properly
administered and if our
dances are showing a profit.
Man, are we hooked!
Or are we?
Karl A. J. Goodwin
Arts III

OLIVER ROAD
ED CLIFF
ESSO SERVICE
For all your car needs
tires &amp; acoessorres
Motor tune up &amp; repairs

Gas Ott lube

Mext to university

TEL. 344-2231

�~eptember

28, 1967

THE ARGUS

Page 7

L.U. Reps Backbone of Mustangs
by Glenn Rajala
It was pleasing to hear that Don "Andy A" Arnot and
Gary Logozzo both played semi-pro ball in Saskatchewan
this past summer. Both played in, and received jobs from
the North Saskatchewan League. "Andy A" graduated from
L. U. last spring With his B.A. He had previously played
with Lakehead's basketball team as well as helping with
the coaching at his old alma mater PACI. This year "Andy
A'' is manager of the bookstore at the new Confederation
College. He also plans to coach their basketball team
hoping ~o get them into a league if possible. Don hopes t~
teach high school in the next few years while coaching on
the side. Good luck, "Andy A".

*******

Seems the L. U, Athletic Department is a little steamed
up over my comment in the last ARGUS regarding their
posting of the hockey schedule in local papers in August.
They claim they put it in the paper the day after the Grade
13 exam results came out in order to attract hockey players
to the University. That's a good idea but why wouldn't an
article, telling of the places that the team would travel to
suffice in attracting aspiring hockey players?
The Weekend Magazine (Star) also ran a hockey story
(September 2). They showed pictures of last year's all-star
team and pictures of the individual trophy winners. I think
they were also a li,ttle hasty in putting out a hockey story,
especially last year s pictures (unless Chicago needed some
morale boosting, since it was mostly pictures of their
players). I don't recall their doing too many CFL stories
and they are playing now while on September 2 no National
Hockey League team had yet begun practising.

Bill Shannon, coach.

(l. lo r.) John Buie, Dav e
Barynowski, Pete Andros,

**** ***

The expanded NHL could see several Lakeheaders in the
League this year. No less than nine players from here are
attending pro camps while at least twenty-three others are
trying out for berths on minor pro teams.
In another corner of the hockey world, John Ferguson, a
Lakehead player of some repute, is trying to catch on with
the Canadian Olympic B team.

****** *

Fred Poulter, treasurer of the Science Society, hopes that
the Athletic Department will come up with some better
quality tennis balls in the near future. He says that the
present ones are very soft, although they do have lots of
fuzz. Fred also wants the department to stock up on plenty
of fencing equipment in keen anticipation of the second year
of fencing as an intramural sport. I hope they don't get stuck
on that last hope of Fred' s.

(l. to r. ) Don Smith, Graham
Hall, George Keffer

Students and faculty of L. U. make up a substantial part
of Lakehead Mustangs football team, member of the three
team Lakehead - Manitoba Rugby Football Union. The fifteen
full-time and two part-time students join alumni Ian Hogg
(Eng. Tech., 1965) and Ferg Penner (Science, 1967) on the
club.
Mustangs are coached by Bill Shannon, well-known athletic
co-ordinator at Lakehead. Bill is a fifteen year football
veteran. This is the first year that he has coached.
Two ex-Redskins, Mustangs' quarterback John Schelling
and fullback Jim Sanderson, attend University here on a
part-time basis,
Following is a list of the full-time students, and their
positions:
- Pete Andros, defensive half. Pete is in Science II
and comes from Fort William.
- Dave Bahrynowski, fullback. Dave is in Engineering
Technology II and is from Brantford, Ontario.
- Joe Berube, guard. Joe is a First Year Artsman
from Port Arthur.
- John Buie, offensive half. John is in his First Year
of Ryerson Engineering and is from Fort William.
- Graham Hall, defensive half. Graham is a First
Year Arts student from Brantford, Ontario.
- George Keller, defensive half. George is a First
Year Science student from Sioux Lookout.
- Dave Magee, a Third Year Arts student who this
year decided to put to use the experience gained while
trainer of our I.C.H.A. champion hockey team, handling
that position with the Mustangs.
- John MacLeod, end and quarterback. John is a First
Year Artsman from Toronto.
- Harold Michelson, linebacker. Harold is in Second
Year Arts and resides in Port Arthur.
- Dave Montgomery, linebacker and offensive guard.
Dave is a Second Year Artsman and hails from Sioux
Lookout.
- George Munroe, guard. George is in Second Year
Forestry and comes to the Mustangs from Toronto.
• - Dave Penner, guard. Dave i s in First Year ·Business
and is from Kenora.
- Brian Sheehan, defensive end. Brian is a First Year
Science man, and comes from Port Credit.
- Don Smith, defensive end. Don is a Second Year
Forester from Toronto.
- Ero Vuorinen, offensive guard. Ero is in Third Year
Arts and comes from Port Arthur.

* * *students
* * * * to buy memberships at
I encourage University
the local YMCA. This year the Fort William "Y" has been
remodeled. The new athletic is Ken Tyson from Bemidgi
State. Ken received a B.A. and Bachelor of Education degree
from Bemidgi.

Sports Shorts
RAG TAG FOOTBALL

Rag Tag Football was left off the list of Intramural
events by mistake. All persons who wish to play Rag 'Tag
Football please report to the Athletic Office immediately.
Games will be played at the Port Arthur Stadium Tuesdays
and Thursdays at noon.

(I. lo r.) Harold Michels on, Ee ro Vuorinen, John Mac leod, Brian S heehan, Dave Montgom ery

GOLF
The Intramural Golf Tournament will have its tee-off
times posted on the Athletic Bulletin Board, Friday,
September 29. Tournament .time is 7:30 a.m. Sunday,
October 1, 1967 at the Strathcona Golf Course.

CHEERLEADING
All persons interested in joining the Nor'Westers Cheerleading or Majorette Corps please leave· your name at the
Athletic Office. Practices are Tuesdays and Thursdays at
noon.

MODERN DANCING
If more response is not received from the student body
the Modern Dance classes will have to be dropped.

SWIMMING
Begins Monday, October 9, 1967, at 8:45p.m.to 9:45 p.m.
at the Port Arthur YM-YWCA. Mixed, •open, and teaching
of the Royal Lifesaving Program.

FENCING
Will begin Wednesday evenings as soon as sufficient
student response is received. Please register at Athletic
Office.

ST.JAMES
Stereo Centre Ltd.
Records
Tape Recorders

Players
Guitars

DROP IN and BROWSE
202 1/2 ARTHUR ST.

PORT ARTHUR

Just that she's mad about the refreshing taste of Coca-Cola. •
It has the taste you never get tired of. That's why things
1.
1.
go better with Coke, after Coke, after Coke.

�Page 8

September 28, 1967

THE ARGUS

Club
Notes

Watson's Advice to Frosh-Revolt

Biology Club
The Biology Club will be
holding it's first meeting on
Friday, September 29th at
1:00 p. m. The meeting will
be very brief. In regards to
the room - either an announcement will be made
during lectures, or posters
will be placed on bulletin
boards throughout the university. Everyone is welcome to come and explore
the mysterious depths of the
Biological world.

OTTAWA (CUP) -- Patrick Watson last week (Sept. 15)
urged Carleton U. freshmen to revolt against the administration and faculty.
Watson, who co-hosted the controversial "Seven Days"
TV show with Laurier Lapierre, told 500first-year students
to work through their students association to gain a bigger
say in the administration of their university.
"You can convert the next four years of drudgery into a
social and intellectual adventure if you act now", he said.
He said the university is a learning situation and not a
training school.
He attacked professors who lazily believe that to impart
knowledge all they need to do is stand up in front of a class
full of students and give the same lecture they gave last
year.
The time is gone when student government's major role
was organizing dances and football games. "Now they are
working for political reform within the university", he said.

Cuties Caper

Chinese Assoc.

L.U.FA.
Elections for LUFA, the
Forestry students' association, will be held on Friday•.
September 29, in room 1029.
At this meeting, representatives fro m first year
Forestry Tech., third year
Forestry Tech., and first
year Forestry Degree will
be •elected. All Foresters
are urged to attend.

Cheerleaders
All girls interested in bee om in g cheerleaders or
majorettes should contact
either J 0an Stuar tor Fiorine
Guzzi and watch the SAS bulletin board for details on
practises and try-outs.

P.C.,s
On the evening of September 20th, representatives of
the local Progressive Conservative Riding A ssociations met with interested
students of the Lakehead
University to lay the ground
work for the formation of a
Progressive Conservative Club on campus. All
interested students wishing
to support both the Progressive Conservative Party and
the new Conservative Club on
campus should avail themselves of this oppprtunity.
Notices will be placed at convenient locations on which
you may sign your name for
future contacting purposes.

Again this week the ARGUS is reserving this space
for classified advertisements. Apparently, the students
at L. U. are somewhat bashful when it comes to handing
in their ads. Be not afraid, for the staff is more than
_willing to help you in placing your ad. Please take advantage of this service, and come to us. ·
Rates for advertisements are as follows: I0¢per word
for a minimum of five words, and 5¢ per word for each
word thereafter. Monthly rates are available from the
advertising manager in the ARGUS office.
Students: exercise your Typing Done With skill and
franchise and vote for Bill accuracy, 20¢ per page. Call
Weiler as.yournextA.M.S. Mary Mercy 344-3616.
Vice-President.
the ARGUS News
anted: more staff for the NOTICE:
Editor has just acquired
ARGUS, apply at the office.
a red telephone in his
residence room. He requires phone calls of •an
Wanted: School Spirit, apply
intimate nature (pref.
anywhere on campus.
females) at 344-3637.
Wanted: more female companions for the Managing Found: one smelly old dog,
Editor of the ARGUS, who
can be claimed under News
is a little bit less lonely,
desk in the ARGUS office.
but lonely nevertheless.
Phone 345-6237 anytime.

All full-time female University students are invited
to attend Campus Cuties'
Caper, Wednesday, October
4, at 9:00 p.m. in the Senior
Lounge. This annual event,
sponsored by Nemissa, will
feature a fashion show, entertainment and refreshments. Admission is free, so
come on out and join in on
the fun.
A warm welcome is
extended to all Chinese Students of Lakehead University to attend a reception in
the lower cafeteria on Saturday, September 30, at 2:00
p.m.

Classified

You can bet it hurt when she missed!

University Papers on Display
Copies of all the University newspapers in Canada will
be put on the newspaper rack in the Senior Lounge beginning next week.
These papers are for your reading and enlightenment.
However, if they mysteriously disappear from.the racks as
they had a habit of doing last year, they will remain in
our possession, for us to read, and for you to do without.

Why not advertise in the ARGUS? It is not a case
where the rates are prohibitive, nor where there is no
advantage to advertising due to lack of readers. we
see your little notices on bulletin boards because we
stand there for five minutes every day just reading all
those tiny slips of paper. Why notleteveryone see your
ad? All you have to do is bring it to us, for then you are
assured of a place in the best bulletin board on campus.
And remember, 30% of the reading population always
starts a newspaper from the back page, where your ad
will be.

This Week
Thursday, September 28
- Cambrian Players (rehearsal) - 7:00 - U. Centre Auditorium
- First. Year Science Test (Morrison) - 12:00 - Great Hall
- pepartmental Evenings (History, Political Science) - 7:00 Faculty Lounge, room 1029, Senior Lounge
Friday, September 29
- Lakehead University, Forestry Association elections - room
1029
- Biology club meeting for all interested - 1:00 - room 1041
- West Indies Association Meeting - 7:00 - room 1022
- AMS Dance - 8:00 - Great Hall
Saturday, September 30
- Chinese students' reception - 2:00 p.m. - AMS Dance - 8:00 - Great Hall

lower cafeteria

;/),aw6on;
BEAtmCIANS &amp; BARB
119 MCIJ' St., South

Fort WIiiiam. Ont.
"B Tom Hair la lfot llecomlng
to Toa. You Should be Comiag
to Da."

REWARD
LOW, LOW PRICES

Tuesday, October 3
- University Liberals Meeting - 12:00 - room 123 New Library
- Political Forum - 7:00 - University Centre Auditorium
Wednesday, ·october 4
- Faculty Association presents "Old Comedies" - 8:20 Auditorium
- University Committee Meeting - 12:00 to 2:00 - Board
Room
...;.;.;;;.:;:...
- Campus Cuti~s• Caper - 9:00 - Senior Lounge

■

Warm Winter Clothing
Hunting Supplies
■ Rifles-as low as 9.95
■

LAKEHEAD

A1e•'I &amp; 1t'""! Sttvee

____ _____________________________

Do you want your club's
activities advertised in the
A R GUS? Re.member, the
deadline for this column is
the Friday before the date of
insertion. And this service is
free.

Join the ·College Crowd!
Everyone gathers at the

DOMINION ROOM LOUNGE

ROYAL EDWARD HOTEL
623-8467
Fort William

Fort William

132 May Street, North

CASH!
for your

textbooks
sell those booksl
October 12 &amp; 13
Lakehead University Book Store
A buyer from the largest book clearing house will
be on hand to purchase all kinds of college· textbooks.

FOLLET,T COLLEGE BOOK COMPANY.· Chicago

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