November 24, 1967 - Concordia University

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Interview with 4
by M A X SMITH
LI B E R A T I O N
News Service
(LNS) - T h e f o u r U.S. sailors w h o p r o te s t e d the
V ie tn a m w a r by n o t r e tu r n in g to th e ir ship - th e a ir­
c ra ft c a r r ie r In tre p id - did so b e c a u s e of w h a t they
h a d s e e n a n d h e a r d in th e Navy, a n d n o t b e c a u s e they
h a d b e e n c o a c h e d by an y political g r o u p , a c c o r d in g to
th e A m e r ic a n p r o f e s s o r w h o in te rv ie w e d th e m .
Dr. E rne st P. Y o u n g , fo rm e r ly e x e c u tiv e assistant
to t h e U.S. a m b a s s a d o r to J a p a n , an d now p ro fe s­
so r of o r ie n ta l h isto ry at D a r tm o u t h , said th a t the
y o u n g "men all s e e m e d ‘'‘n o r m a l ’', n ex t-d o o r n e ig h b o r
types. T h e f o u r h a d n o t b e e n in th e an ti-w a r o r o th e r
political m o v e m e n t s b e f o r e th e ir e n listm e n t, he said.
Jo hn Barilla, 20. o f Catonsville, M d. e x p la in e d to
Young:
“ I really like life. 1 get a kick o u t of every th in g ,
of seein g a gu y a n d a gal w alkin g d o w n th e stree t
h a n d in h a n d . T h e n I see p ic tu r e s of a gu y all b u r n t
up. W h a t ’s th e d if f e r e n c e b e t w e e n h im a n d m e ? Just
th a t his h o m e is 13,000 m iles fro m m in e " .
T h e In tre p id , in b a t tle se rv ic e in th e se a of V ie tn a m
w as o n a r e st a n d r e c r e a t i o n visit to J a p a n , a n d was
s c h e d u le d to r e tu r n t o th e fro n t, w h e n th e m e n re f u ­
sed to c o n t in u e to t a k e p a r t in the w ar.
U.SNaval
W h a t th e y saw on th e ir ship s e e m e d to affect th e m
all.
"S eeing th o se b o m b s g o off, seein g th e flash... N a­
palm . I m e a n you h e a r th e pilot slipp ed a n d killed w o ­
m e n a n d c h ild r e n ; m a k e s you sick..." ( R ic h a rd Bailay
19, o f Jacksonville, Fla, so n o f a naval c o m m a n d e r ) .
“T h e y - th e Navy - s h o w e d us a film o n th e V ie tn a m
w ar; b u t h o w c o u ld y o u tell w h o you w e r e sh o o tin g ?
G o in g o v e r th e r e w ith m e n a n d g u n s s e e m s a stupid
w ay to solve p r o b l e m s ” . (M ich a el A. L ind ne r, 19, of
M o u n t P o c o n o . Pa).
“W hile I was d e p l o y e d a b o r d th e USS In tre p id , I
saw to n s a n d to n s of b o m b s b eing lo a d e d a n d je t af­
te r- je t, b eing l a u n c h e d .. . ” (G raig W . A n d e r s o n , San
Jose, Calif.)
T h e f o u r literally c a n n o t g o h o m e again. T h e y w o u ld
fac e long m ilitary p riso n te rm s, h u m iliatio n and h a r a s s ­
m e n t - ev e n th o u g h t o s o m e A m e r ic a n s th e ir ac tio n
sh o w e d tr u e c o u r a g e . Of his exile, Bailey said:
“ I am an A m e r ic a n . It h u rts to leave m y f r i e n d s »
a n d family a n d f u tu r e th e re , k n o w in g 1 c a n n o t n e v e r
r e tu r n " .
R e g ard le ss of s u c h c o n s e q u e n c e s , Y o u n g says
th e f o u r a r e reso lv e d to find asylu m in a n e u t r a l c o u n ­
try a n d to w o rk in th e i n te r n a tio n a l anti-w a r m o v e m e n t .
T h o u g h th e m o v e m e n t is s tro n g in Ja p an , th e m e n
w e r e n 't a b le to stay th e re . U n d e r th e U S -Japenese
sta tu s of fo rc e s a g r e e m e n t , r e a c h e d a f te r W o r ld W a r
II. m ilitary fugitives c a n n o t g et political asylum in Ja­
pan.
A fte r a p e r io d of hiding, th e y a p p e a r e d Nov. 20
in M o sc o w en r o u te to a n e u tra l c o u n try , th e A ssocia­
ted Press r e p o r te d .
T h e m e n w e r e first a b s e n t m id n ig h t O c to b e r 23,
b u t they did n o t d e c l a r e th e ir in te n tio n until N o v em ­
b e r 1. L ater, t h e . J a p a n P e a c e fo r V ie tn a m C o m m it­
tee, ca lle d a press c o n f e r e n c e to sh o w films of each
s ailor explain ing his sta n d .
In th e film ed s t a t e m e n t , John Barilla said:
“A g o v e r n m e n ta l s p e e c h c o n ta in in g so m a n y w ords
su c h as " C o m m u n is m " , " F r e e d o m " a n d “th e agressor" hard ly gives a n e x c u s e to m u r d e r c o u n tle s s n u m ­
bers of A m e r ic a n s a n d V ie tn a m e s e . S o m e p eo p le
s e e m to be tr a in e d to r e s p o n d to th e se m o tiv e w ords
a n d p h rase s, like Pavlov's dogs. It is tim e for A m e r i­
c a n s to w a k e up to r e a s o n a n d n o t w ords, p e a c e 3an d
not war.
“ B ecau se of m y a c tio n s a n d beliefs, I will b e jailed
if I a m a p p r e h e n d e d . By so m e , I will be la b e le d as an
a n ti- A m e r ic a n , o r a C o m m u n is t. T h e s e a re ju st e m o ­
tive w o rd s a n d n o n e of th e m actu a lly a p p ly to m e.
I a m just an A m e r ic a n s ta n d in g up for w h a t I th in k
is right. I am n o t a lo n e " .
Inside:
UGEQ supplement:
VOL. XXXI, NO. 22
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2 4, 1967
8 C EN T S
P. 2 Reject UGEQ
Dow protests.. Morality Question?
Harvey Oberfeld
by D. J d h n L y n n , C a n a d ia n U n iv e r s it y P r e s s
H o ld a m a tc h u n d e r o n e of th o se fo am ta k e -o u t
c o f f e e cu p s. It b u rsts into flam es. It’s m a d e of
p o ly sty re n e . So is n a p a lm .
P o ly sty re n e is m a d e in C a n a d a . S o m e g o e s in­
to th e m a n u f a c t u r e of ta k e -o u t c o f f e e cu p s,
C h r is tm a n s d e c o r a t i o n s a n d toys. S om e is sent
to th e U n ite d S ta te s as a n in g re d ie n t of n a p a lm
w h ich is b ein g use d by th e U.S. in V ie tn a m .
T h e C a n a d i a n m a n u f a c t u r e r of p o ly sty re n e
is D ow C h e m ic a l CO. of C a n a d a , a subsidiary
o f th e p a r e n t D o w in th e U.S .
C a m p u s e s cro ss C a n a d a h a v e risen u p in p r o te s t in s o m e ca se s v io le n t p r o te s t - aga in D ow r e ­
c r u it e r s in te rv ie w in g on c a m p u s .
T h e C a n a d i a n p r o te s ts b e g a n o n N o v e m b e r 8
w h e n a sm all g r o u p h a n d e d o u t lit e r a tu r e at the
d o o r of th e p l a c e m e n t c e n t r e at th e U niversity
of W a te rlo o .
A w e e k la te r, s tu d e n ts follo w ed suit, b u t this
tim e, th e y b l o c k e d th e d o o r w a y . At W in d so r, last
w e e k , c a m p u s A n g lic an C h a p la in Bill C h ris­
te n se n , led a sim ila r g r o u p in p r o te st, but th e re
w as n o v io le n c e .
T h e n , M o n d a y a n d T u e s d a y , T o r o n t o s tu d e n ts
k e p t a D ow r e c r u i t e r a n d U of T vic e-p re sid e n t
R o b in Ross c a p tiv e until th e D ow r e p r e s e n t a ­
tive finally a g r e e d n o t to c o n t in u e his th re e -d a y
r e c ru itin g p r o g ra m .
T h e S tu d e n t C o u n c il a t th e U niversity of
V ic to ria s h a r e d th e se s e n tim e n ts w h e n they
w e n t o n th e r e c o rd o p p o sin g th e use of n a ­
p alm . D ow r e c r u i t e r s w e r e e x p e c t e d a w e e k
a f te r c o u n c il t o o k this ac tio n .
W h y all th e s e p r o te s t s ? D e m o n s tr a to r s see
it as a m o r a l issue.
H a r o ld K asinsky, A U niversity o f C alifo rn ia
b io c h im is t, w h o has m a d e a stu d y of n a p a lm ,
r e p o r ts :
“A n a p a lm B fire r e a c h e s a t e m p e r a t u r e of
a lm o s t 2,000 d e g r e e s F a h r e n h e it in a few s e c o n d s .
T h e p o ly sty re n e c o m p o n e n t of N a p a lm B ac ts
like a glue a t hig h te m p e r a t u r e s , ho ld in g th e
fire to a p a r ti c u la r su rfa ce .
“T h e n e w N a p a lm B is s o sticky a n d b u r n s so
in te nse ly th a t it c a n n o t b e r e m o v e d fro m h u m a n
skin w ith o u t c a u s in g w h o le c h u n k s of flesh
to c o m e off” .
P ro te sto rs sa y su c h a w e a p o n is im m o ra l m u c h m o r e im m o r a l th a t a t o m ic b o m b s . T h e
U.S. D ow C o m p a n y m a k e s N a p a lm b o m b s
for use in V ie tn a m . T h e p r o te s to rs claim this
is c o n t r i b u tin g t o a n im m o ra l act.
P art o f D ow s u p p ly of p o ly sty re n e , th e ac tiv e
in g re d ie n t of N a p a lm , is m a d e in C a n a d a . T h e ­
re fo re , C a n a d a is im p lic a te d in this im m o ra lity .
But Dow p o in ts o u t its n a p a lm p r o d u c ti o n
a c c o u n t s fo r less th a n o n e p e r c e n t of its b u ­
siness. O p p o n e n t s th e n say it w o u ld b e a negli­
gible loss to d i s c o n tin u e n a p a lm p r o d u c ti o n .
P ro -D o w f o rc e s o n c a m p u s o ffe r tw o a r g u ­
m e n t s -. th e first skirts an y m o r a l issue a n d claim s
D ow C a n a d a p e r s o n n e l w o rk o n a vast n u m b e r
of p ro jec ts, so w o r k e r s , th o se r e c r u it e d an n u a lly
f ro m c a m p u s e s , a r e n o t direc tly in volved in p r o ­
d u c in g n a p a lm .
T h e s e c o n d a r g u m e n t says it is th e right of
s tu d e n ts to a p p l y fo r a j o b of th e ir c h o ic e , a n d
th e m a jo rity s h o u ld n o t d e n y th e m this right.
“ I w a n t to b e a r a p is t” s c r e a m e d o n e U of T
stu d e n t. “G e t m e a n interview ".
N o v e m b e r, D e c e m b e r a n d J a n u a r y a r e h eav y
r e c r u it m e n t m e hs •.
n p u s - for s u m m e r
a n d full-*' - e,
ioym
)ow, a long w ith m a ­
k ers of 1
„ :id m;
ts w h ich e v e n tu a lly
find the ii wav to Vie
11 c o n t in u e to b e h a ­
ra sse d on
T h e arsv.
Oe to follow th e C e n ­
tral Intellig en c e A g e n c y ’s le ad in th e States
will c o n d u c t th e ir inte rv iew s off c a m p u s fro m n o w
o n , a p olicy d e c is i o n w h ic h is a d ir e c t r e f le c tio n
o f r e c e n t d is r u p tio n s C I A r e c ru itin g h as led t o on
m any cam puses.
It is sta rtin g e v e n now.
A t M c G ill U niv ersity se v eral c o m p a n ie s have
o p t e d for o f f- c a m p u s in terv iew in g. M c G ill p r in ­
cipal H. R o c k e R o b e r t s o n a n n o u n c e d th a t th r e e
c o m p a n ie s w h o hav e n o t y et h a d o n c a m p u s in­
terview s, h av e c o n s e n t e d to c o n d u c t interview s
off c a m p u s in o r d e r to a void “d is t u r b a n c e s ” .
P. 3 Afraid of UGEQ?
Allan M arks
P. 4— 5 UGEQ Constitution
P. 6 Anti-UGEQ panel
George Barrington
P. 7
UGEQ and
other universities
Doug Long
L’UGEQ and Sir George
Alan Segal
P. 8 Students as members
of society
Tim Gadban
2 /
th e g e o rg ia n , N o ve m b e r 24. 1967
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Chronicle Features Svnd
Georgiantics
b y M arty C h a rn y
TODAY
N .P .I). CLU B: Prof. A rn o p o lis - Pot Pouri. Q u e stio n a n d an sw e rs
in H. 413 at 1.00 P.M.
G E O G R A P H IC A L S O C IE T Y : Will all m a l c o n t e n t s , a c t i v i s t s ,
radicals, etc... re g iste re d in any G e o g r a p h i c C o u rse s, s.v.p. a tte n d
this im p o r ta n t m e e tin g to voice dissent, assen t, etc... in N- 2F,
at 2.00 P.M.
W E ST IN D IA N SO C IE T Y :
T h e r e will h e a talk by Dr. C h e d d i Jagan, in H-420 at 1.00 P.M .
All c lu b m e m b e r s , a n d a n y o n e in te r e s te d in W est Ind ian affairs
is w e lc o m e .
SATURDAY NOVEMBER 25
A LU M N I A S S O C IA T IO N : will h o ld a g e n e ra l m e e tin g in h-110
at 10.30 P.M . to e lec t the e x e c u tiv e r e p r e s e n ta tiv e s for th e G r a d
class of '68.
TUESDAY NOVEMBER 28
JA Z Z SO C IE T Y : T h e r e will be a field trip w hich will to u r o n in­
v itatio n of the C.B.C.. to see th e ta p in g of "Jazz en L iberte". T o u r
leaves th e lo bby at 8.00 P.M . T h e to u r is to l'H erm ita g e.
M A R K E T IN G D E P A R T M E N T : O rga n iz ing c o lleg iate c h a p t e r
of th e A m e r ic a n M a rk e tin g A sso c ia tio n . In te r e s te d s tu d e n ts c o m e
to the first o rg a n iz a tio n a l m e e tin g in N-408 at 4.15 P.M . All c o n ­
tact Mr. R o t e n b e rg in N-578.
JA Z Z S O C IE T Y : T h e r e will be a Jazz a p p r e c ia tio n session in PI635 at 4.30 P.M.
G E O R G IA N C H R IST IA N FELLO W SH IP: T h e r o o m for h e a rin g
D avid A d e n e y is n o w R o o m H-429.
W EDNESDAY NOVEMBER 29
EC O N O M IC S S O C IE T Y : will be s p o n so rin g a le c tu r e a n d d isc u s­
sion by P ro fesso r Benjam in Higgins " E c o n o m ic D e v e lo p m e n t
a n d Political S ystem s" in H-420 a t 3.45.
-<USTRIAN SKI SHOP
Montreal’s o n l y distributor of HUMANIC
Epoxyline ski boots
T HE
-A U S T R IA N
SKI S H O P
< C a rrie s a ll fa m o u s
b ra n d s o f s k is and
b o o ts
Classified
P R O F E S S I O N A L ty p in g d o n e f o r y o u r te r m
p a p e r a s s i g n m e n t s , e tc .. in S n o w d o n a r e a .
S a m e d a y s e r v i c e . T e l e p h o n e : R e -9 -9 2 2 7 ,
6 7 3 0 W e s tb u r y A v e .
TUTORING
RATES: Classified A dversiting rates are
75£ for one insertion and $1.25 for the
sam e insertion in two consecutive is­
sues. The word lim it is tw enty (20>.
Cash m ust accom pany all ads. Ad­
vertising deadlines are 6.00 p.m. for
the Tuesday edition on th e Friday pre­
vious, and Wednesday for th e Friday
edition at 11:00 a .m . Ads m ay be sub­
m itted only to room 231-3 (in th e
georgian offices) of the Hall Building.
FOR SALE
B A S E G U I T A R a n d a m p lif ie r . SI50 o r b e s t
o f f e r . P h o n e a f t e r 5 p m . 6 2 6 -5 7 7 6 .
S IR G E O R G E G R A D U A T E a v a il a b le f o r
t u to r in g in m o s t u n d e r g r a d u a t e
E n g lish
c o u r s e s . C a ll M a rily n a t 9 3 7 -5 0 7 2 a n y ti m e .
ACCOM ODATION
F U R N I S H E D r o o m s - SI3.50 - S15 w e e k ly .
All f a c ilitie s . L in e n , p h o n e , c o o k in g f a c i ­
litie s a v a ila b le . A p p ly 1411 T o w e r s e v e n in g s
o r p h o n e 9 3 5 -0 9 0 6 .
R O O M f o r m a le s tu d e n t n e a r S ir G e o : W .
U n iv e rs ity . 937-9012 e v e n in g s .
MISCELLANEOUS
S P R I T E - l % 5 . 2 0 .0 0 0 m ile s , r a d i o , s n o w li
r e s . G a r y 366-7316 e v e n in g s .
B O O K S - H a rd c o v e r, p a p e rb a c k s , a p p ro x .
4()°.» o f f. B u s in e ss . P o litic a l S c i e n c e . H is­
to ry .
P h ilo s o p h y .
P s y c h o lo g y .
S e x o lo g y .
C o m p u te r s , e t c . D a v id 4X2-2416.
S P R I T E 1066. 16.0(H) m i., lik e n e w . S1200.
R e tu r n in g to s c h o o l. 677-9411 lo c . 2 5 4 . 9 to
5. T o n i M o o re .
P A R T Y o r D a n c e - S w in g o u t w ith t h e b e st
b a n d s in (o w n . B o o k n o w t h r o u g h B o o m
E n te r p r is e s . 681-2698. 2 7 6 -6 9 5 2 . 4 8 2 -7 0 5 6 .
First te rm classes e n d S a tu r­
day, D e c e m b e r 16. D ay a n d
ev e n in g p ro g re ss e x a m in a tio n s
begin D e c e m b e r 18 a n d ru n to
D e c e m b e r 22. D ay a n d ev e n in g
final e x a m s in first te r m half­
c o u r s e s w ill a l l b e h e ld from
J a n u a r y 3 to J a n u a r y 6. B arring
s a b o ta g e of th e H a ll B uild in g ,
c l a s s e s w ill r e s u m e o n Monday,
J a n u a r y 8, 1968 (H A P P Y NEW
Y E A R )'
A n o t h e r p o e try r e a d in g will
ta k e p la ce at Sir G e o r g e . F e a t u r ­
e d is o n e of C a n a d a ’s y o u n g e r
p oets, Darryl H ine, w h o will
be at th e M ain A rt G alley
o n the m e z z a n in e a r m e d with
his r e a m s of rh y m e. F o r th e
in te rest of all c r e a tiv e souls,
th e session will c o m m e n c e at
9.00 PM , Friday, D e c e m b e r 1.
A d m issio n is 50c a n d w ine a n d
c h e e s e will be se rv e d at the
c o n c lu s io n of th e rea d in g .
WANTED
P a rt tim e f e m a le f o r d i s t r ib u t o r s
o f u n i q u e c o s m e t ic s M o re s a le s - h i g h e r
p e r c e n t a g e . D e m o n s tr a ti o n , s a le s t r a in in g
p r o v id e d . C a ll 739-9341. 731-6286. 52 6 -6 7 7 2 .
Use o u r
F O R S A L E - T w o s n o w t ir e s - 5 .9 0 x 14. F o r
M G -B . T R -4 . e tc . E x c e lle n t c o n d it i o n . S20.
C a ll N eil. 7 4 4 -6 6 6 7 a f t e r 6 p m .
Classifieds
TYPING
W A N T to
a n y tim e .
g e t s o m e t h in g
ty p e d ?
3 6 5 -3 0 8 2
‘ffis like owning
my own business’
R oger K e d w e ii. a London L ife sales rep re sen ta tive in Toronto
" I t 's true . A t London Life you get
a co n ce n tra te d , personalized
tra in in g pro g ra m th a t's recognized
as the best in th e in d u s try . You can
choose w h e re you w a n t to w o rk.
Then you go o u t and se ll. From the
ve ry firs t day, you have the
re s p o n s ib ility o f sha p ing yo u r
ow n career. You d e te rm in e h o w fa s t
you g ro w , ho w m uch you earn.
A n d you have th e London L ife name
to help y o u .”
A n e co n o m ics g ra d u a te o f the
U n iv e rs ity o f W estern O n ta rio .
R oger began a th re e -m o n th Lon do n L ife
tra in in g course in the su m m e r o f 1966.
W ith in a year he h ad e sta b lish e d
h im s e lf as an e x c e p tio n a l life
in su ra n ce u n d e rw rite r. To learn m ore
a b o ut a career in life in su ra n ce
sales, see y o u r p la ce m e n t officer.
O r w rite to the P e rsonnel D e p a rtm e n t,
Lon do n L ife Insurance Co..
London, O n ta rio .
< H a s c o m p le te lin e
of ski wear
< H as f a c i l i t i e s fo r
re fin is h in g s k is
< O ffe rs a d v ic e by an
e x p e rt A u s tria n Ski
in s tr u c to r
2 YEAR G UARANTEE
STUDENT DISCOUNT UPON PRESENTATION
OF SIR GEOkGE I.D. CARD
4618 DECARIE BLVD.
a t Q ueen M ary Road
F o r in fo rm a tio n c a ll
487-2477
London Life In s u ra n c e C o m p a n y
Head O ffice: London, Canada
th e g e o rg ia n , N o ve m b e r 24, 1967 /
3
McGill opinion poll results:
don’t drop charges, no strike
In an o p in io n poll c a r r ie d o u t W e d n e s d a y In
the S tu d e n ts ' S o c ie ty E xec u tiv e , s tu d e n ts at
M cGill re je c te d th e p r o p o sa l that the U n iv er­
sity A d m in is tra tio n s h o u ld "drop c h a r g e s against
M cGill Daily E d ito r P e te r A llnutt, S u p p le m e n t
E d itor P ierre F o u r n ie r anti c o lu m n ist John Fekete.
T h e v o te was 2964 against d r o p p in g c h a r g e s
anti 2453 for.
On th e s e c o n d s e c tio n of the poll, the stu
d e n ts also v o te d , by a vote of 4117 to 1296, a stri­
ke on th e M cG ill Daily issue.
Of the a p p r o x im a te ly 14,(XX) s tu d e n ts on c a m ­
pus. 5417 east b allots, th e la r g e s Q h i m o u t since
a UGEQ referendum a y e a r a g o . .
In g rap p lin g w ith th e results of the poll W e d ­
n esday night. S tu d e n ts ' C ouncil w a d e d th ro u g h
2 1 / 2 h o u rs of te d io u s d e b a te b e f o r e d ec la rin g
the p leb iscite "a tru e s ta te m e n t of c a m p u s o p i­
nion ."
S everal C o u n c il m e m b e r s a t t a c k e d the e x e ­
cu tiv e for callin g the vote w ith o u t c o n s u ltin g
C ouncil first.
C ouncil m e m b e r s e n d o r s e d the results u n c o n ­
ditionally. but sa id in fu tu re till su c h plebiscites
m ust be ca lle d by the w hole C ouncil.
C o u n c il P re sid e n t P e te r Smith said, "this is
th e only w ay w e kno w w hat the c a m p u s thinks."
M o n d a y night, nine C ou n c il m e m b e r s issued
a s ta te m e n t o b je c ti n g in p art to the w ay th e
q u e s tio n s in th e poll w e r e w o rd e d . It said, "q u e s­
tions c a n often be unw ittingly w o r d e d so as to
beg an s w e rs , o r so as to c o n f u s e th e issue in
q u e s tio n with o t h e r r e la te d b u t e x t r a n e o u s to ­
pics."
SDU le a d e r S ta n G re y also said th a t th e q u e s ­
tions on the poll had b e e n so w o rd e d as to p r o ­
d u c e ;t c e r ta in type of re a c tio n a n d an sw er.
A llnutt a n d F o u r n ie r a p p e a r e d b e f o r e the
S e n a te D isiplinary C o m m itt e e T h u rs d a y . T h e
C o m m itt e e is n o t e x p e c t e d to ta k e a c tio n until
af te r several m o r e w e e k ^ o f hearings.
U.S. Army infiltrates
Washington anti-Vietnam march
W A S H I N G I O N ( C U P - L N S i - T e a m s of U.S.
A rm y "in filtra to rs," d re sse d like hippies, w ere
s p r e a d th ro u g h th e c r o w d of d e m o n s tr a to r s
d u rin g the an ti- w a r d e m o n s tr a ti o n at th e P e n ­
ta gon O c t o b e r 21.
“T h e r e w e r e m o r e m e n in filtra ted by us into .
the c r o w d at this d e m o n s tr a ti o n th a n at any
ev e n t 1 c a n r e m e m b e r . O u r infiltrators w e r e the
w orst lo oking o n e s out th e r e ," Col. G e o r g e
C reel, A ssistant C hief of th e A rm y 's pu b lic in­
f o rm a tio n o ffice, told a G e o r g e W a sh in g to n
U niversity p u b lic r e la tio n s class last w ee k .
E xactly w hat ro le the "infiltrators" p la y ed d u ­
ring th e d e m o n s t r a t i o n was left u n -cle ar by the
C olonel, w h o b e g a n c la m m in g up w h e n a s k e d
for m o r e in f o r m a ti o n by stu d e n ts.
“T h e y w e re in r a d io c o n t a c t w ith e a c h o th e r
a n d with the A r m y o p e r a tio n s c e n t e r in the P e n ­
t a g o n ," he said, a n d they a c te d in disciplined
units, "with c e r t a i n p e o p le d e s ig n a te d to m a k e
d ec isions."
"H ow m a n y infiltrators w ere t h e r e ? " a s tu ­
d e n t a s k e d . " E n o u g h " saicl th e C o lonel.
W o u ld th e C o lo n e l give this in f o rm a tio n to
th e p re ss? “W ell, it's not th e kind of sto ry we
push. 1 say this in a c e r ta in a c a d e m i c license."
(No o n e a s k e d him w hat he m e a n t by “a c a d e m ic
lic en se"; a p p a r e n t l y it m e a n s you c a n say things
to s tu d e n ts you w o u ld n 't say to real p eo p le.)
O n e w o n d e r s h o w m a n y TV c a m e r a m e n , e a ­
g e r to find th e ir p e r f e c t s te r e o ty p e of hippie
d e m o n s t r a t o r , s p e n t th e ir tim e filming n o o n e
but the "w orst lo o k in g o n e s t h e r e , ” w hich Col.
C reel a n d the A rm y pub lic rela tio n s m a c h in e
had c o n v e n ie n tly su pplied.
W h a t role did th e A rm v infiltrators a m o n g the
d e m o n s tr a to r s pla y in the "violen c e of th e d e ­
m o n s t r a to r s " a g a in st the tr o o p s ? O n e d o e s not
have to b e p a r a n o id to im a g in e th a t th e role
was a large o n e .
A b o u t a m o n th ag o th e A rm y s ta g ed a m o c k
"riot" at Ft. Bel voir, Va. to p ro v id e train in g for
its tro o p s, since m o r e anti m o r e of th e m a re e x ­
p e c te d to see d u ty in A m eric an cities as the
G r e a t S ocie ty c o m e s a p a r t at th e seam s.
As r e p o r te d o n television (NBC), this "m o c k
rio t" in c lu d e d s q u a d s of tr o o p s d re s s e d like th e
A rm y th in k s r io te rs d re ss ( c o m p le te with b e a rd s
a n d signs p ro c la im in g the virtues of acid), a n d
b e h a v in g like t h e A rm y th in k s rioters b e h a v e
(charging the tr o o p s , g ra b b in g th e ir rifles, etc.).
T h u s th e U.S. A rm y put te a m s of “the w orst
looking o n e s o u t t h e r e ” into the c r o w d of d e ­
m o n s t r a to r s a f te r telling th e m to b e h a v e like d e ­
m o n s t r a to r s at w h a t the A rm y a n d th e m ass
m e d ia all e x p e c t e d to be a riot.
Is it o d d to a s s u m e th a t s o m e of th e m follow ­
ed orders?
T his is p e r h a p s to o sinister a th o u g h t for
p e o p le w h o still w a n t to believe th a t o u r mili­
tary c o m m a n d e r s a re really g o o d follows w h o
m a k e little m is ta k e s occasio n ally .
But if the P e n ta g o n c a n se n d 500,000 tr o o p s
a n d m illions of to n s of b o m b s d o w n o n a small
A sian c o u n t r y in th e n a m e of p e a c e , w hy sh o u ld
it h e s ita te to s e n d a few rio t-sta rte rs into its
ow n p a rk in g lots in the n a m e of c r o w d c o n ­
tro l?
W e r e the “d e m o n s t r a t o r s " th e P e n ta g o n said
w e r e te ar-gassing th e m se lv e s really “d e m o n ­
s tr a t o r s " o r “in f ilt ra to rs ? ”
W e r e the so ld ie rs w h o su p p o se d ly d e f e c te d
from th e line of tr o o p s just guys w h o s u d d e n ly
r e m e m b e r e d th a t they h ad r e c e iv e d a diffe­
r e n t d u ty a s sig n m e n t that day ?
W as th e w h ite guy w aving the “N o V ie tn a ­
m e se E ver C a lle d M e Nigger" sign really an in­
f iltrator c o u n t in g d e m o n s tr a to r s a n d paying
n o a t te n t io n to w h a t sign he h a d p ic k e d u p ?
W as the w h o le O c to b e r 21 d e m o n s tr a ti o n r e ­
ally a s p e c t a c u l a r side-show sta g e d by th e U.S.
A rm y with te c h n ic a l assista n ce fro m D a r y l F .
Z a n u c k for the b e n e fit of the W a sh in g to n Post
a n d N B C -T V ?
Only Col. C re e l kn o w s for sure, a n d he isn't
talkin g b e c a u s e it has b e e n r u m o u r e d th a t he is
really a crazy p o t- h e a d d e m o n s t r a t o r w h o m the
p e a c e c r e e p s h a v e infiltrated into th e P en ta g o n .
T h re e U niversity o f T o ro n to en g in eerin g stu d e n ts w h o w an t jo b s w ith Dow C he­
m ical C o m p an y this su m m er try to clim b o v er som e of th e 80 facu lty an d stu ­
d e n ts sitting-in o u tsid e th e U of T p la c e m e n t serv ice b uilding.
U of T protestors call truce
T o r o n t o (C U P) -- T h e p r o te s t
ag a in st D ow C h e m ic a l Co. r e ­
c ru itin g a t th e university of
T o r o n t o e n d e d T u e s d a y in su b ­
fre ez ing w e a th e r .
M o n d a y , eighty s tu d e n ts a n d
s o m e p ro fe sso rs sat o n th e steps
of th e U niversity P la c e m e n t
Building a n d th e D ow R e p r e ­
s e n ta tiv e p r o m is e d n o t to r e ­
tu r n to th e c a m p u s .
T u e s d a y th e d e m o n s tr a to r s
tu r n e d th e ir a n g e r to w a r d th e
a d m in is tra tio n as th e y g a t h e r e d
o n th e s te p s of th e U niversity
A d m in is tra tio n Building. T h e y
said th e ir p u r p o s e was to d e ­
m a n d th a t th e ad m in is tra tio n
p la c e th e m a t t e r of j o b r e c r u i t ­
ing in th e h a n d s of th e S tu d e n ts ’
U G EQ M EETING TO D A Y
Room 110 — 12.00 NOON — A ll stu d en ts m ust p resen t I.D.
at door. — No o v erco a ts or b r ie fc a s e s to be brought into au­
ditorium. — D oors c lo s e when se a tin g ca p a city i s reached.
—Enter by front door only. J u liu s F le is c h e r
O ffice of Internal
V ice -P r esid e n t
B’NAI BRITH HILLEL PRESENTS
FINJAN COFFEE HOUSE
F e a tu rin g
PHIL KANNER
and th e new co n te m p o ra ry f o lk s e n s a tio n
Ryerson students stage take-out
T o r o n t o ( C U P ) - Five h u n d r e d R y e rs o n
P o ly te c h n ic a l In s titu te s tu d e n ts tu e s d a y tr ie d to
e m p ty th e ir lib r a ry ’s shelves.
T h e m o v e w a s in p r o te s t to w h a t le a d e rs say
is th e lo w es t b o o k s - p e r -s tu d e n t r a tio in C a n a d a
-4.8 b o o k s.
T h e p r o te s t fall s h o r t of its o b je c tiv e -- a b o u t
2,500 b o o k s w e r e ta k e n o u t b e f o r e th e p r o te s t
fizzled. T h e lib ra ry h o ld s a b o u t 26,000 titles.
T h e A d m in is tr a tio n p o in te d o u t r e p e a te d ly
th a t library s e rv ic e s will be im p r o v e d w h e n th e
library m o v e s to n e w q u a r te rs . Peggy Kinsella,
h e a d r e f e r e n c e lib ra ria n , said she d id n ’t k n o w
w h e n th e m o v e w o u ld ta k e pla ce .
“First it w as t o b e m o v e d last fall. T h e n it was
D e c e m b e r . N ow , it’s J a n u a r y ,” sh e said.
T h e p r o te s t has s u p p o r t fro m th e s tu d e n t
c o u n c il. T h e D aily R y e rs o n ia n , a c a m p u s n e w s­
p a p e r , c a r r ie d a f ro n t-p a g e ed ito ria l M o n d a y
a n d T u e s d a y u rg in g all s tu d e n ts t o ta k e p a rt.
C ouncil.
T h e d e m o n s tr a to r s se n t m a th
Prof. C h a n d le r Davis to ask
for a s ta te m e n t fro m th e a d m i­
nistra tio n . O n b e h a lf of th e d e ­
m o n s t r a to r s h e a s k e d th a t all
r e c ru itin g by D o w b e b a n n e d
until th e e n tir e m a t t e r is s e t­
tled to th e satisfaction o f th e
s tu d e n t b ody. He g o t n o an s w e r
so th e sit-in a d j o u r n e d until
afte r th e c o u n c il m e e tin g s c h e ­
d u le d fo r W e d n e s d a y night.
A ctin g U niversity of T o r o n ­
to P re sid e n t Jo h n Sw ord said
W ednesday
th e
university
w o u ld n o t to le r a te any violen ­
c e in c o n n e c t io n w ith d e m o n s ­
tr a tio n s of an y so rt o n th e U of
T cam pus.
XANADU
w ith D a v id K a u fm a n , Joh n S chn ee r, R onni A b ra m so n ,
P e te S h iz g a l and B e v e rly S c u llio n .
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 2, - 8.30 P.M.
at H ILLE L HOUSE, 3460 Stanley Street
A D M IS S IO N *
Members 250
750
N o n-m em b ers
4 /
th e g e o rg ia n , N o ve m b e r 24, 1967
editorial
,
Preach,
Speech
I
and Screech
Last Monday during the fourth in a series of Viet
Nam lectures Professor Eugene G eno vese unleashed
a vitriolic and uncalled for attack on David Orton,
a lecturer of the Sociology Department. The jist of
Genovese's thrust centred around an article on Che
G uevera in a previous addition of THE G EO R G IA N .
Professor G en e vese seem s to believe that those de­
siring immediate action of a revolutionary nature are
inimical to its cause. He asks "what heroism , besides
the purely verbal, has he displayed that he is so quick
to malign the rest of us?"
An analogous question might be directed at Profes­
sor G eno vese, who implies that he is speaking as a
member of the "'enlightened" left. What, one might
ask, has the professor risked or sacrificed on behalf
of his convictions? How will debate and invective help
lo cure the obvious social and political m aladies that
beset our society? Orton proposes a positive solution.
His solution is immediate revolution. W hether it is
to be violent or peaceful is not relevent. Whether Pro­
fessor G eno vese concurs with this proposition or not,
he is forced to admit that it is a positive one. Unless
he is able to offer cogent alternatives it would be­
hoove him to withhold his criticisms.
Professor G enovese implied that Orton is incapable
and unqualified to speak out, on the subject in ques­
tion. The Professor has clearly forgotten that past
revolutions have been effected by academ ically in­
capable and unqualified people. The time for debate
has passed. The time for action is here. We are con­
fronted with a situation that deem s action not only
d esirable but necessary. Whether or not these m ea­
sures are taken by people of Professor G enovese's
em inence is not important. It is not likely that such
a man would be willing to risk this em inence in any
venture which might imperil it.
T w in k le
,
Twinkle
Wasn't that one-day strike g reat? All the liberals
w ere out in force opposing the power structure and
challenging the forces that govern and manipulate
our lives.
It could have been successful. It just could have
accomplished something immediate. We could have
realized our objectives as SA President Jeff Chipman
w as so quick to proclaim. But what exactly has been
accomplished. People w ere out there on the floor of
the lobby not because it w as a picnic, but because
they w ere tired of being screw ed by the Bookstore
and wanted lower prices on books. They knew damn
w ell that the cost of education is already exhorbitant.
But instead the administration successfully stalled
our dem ands. We enlarged the bureaucracy and con­
ceded implicitly that the SA did not know what they
w ere talking about by agreeing to establish a body
that would investigate the situation further.
A Bookstore m anagerial committee has been e sta ­
blished at last. Now, let's see them do something. We
don't want any more w affle. We want lower prices on
our books! The SA told us it w as possible. Prove it.
Another Apology
Needed
E d ito r , the georgian:
Friday, Nov. 17 was d e s ig n a t­
e d as a n in te r n a tio n a l day of
p r o te s t again st th e w a r in Vi­
e tn a m . T o ex p re ss solidarity fo r
this c a u s e a s ta u n c h g a th e r in g
of G e o r g ia n s , b a n n e r s a n d
p ic k e ts in h a n d , s o j o u r n e d to
D o m in io n S q u a r e w h e r e o th e r
p a rtic ip a tin g sc hools w e re c o n ­
g re g a tin g fo r th e s u b s e q u e n t
m a r c h t o th e A m e r ic a n C o n s u ­
la te o n M c G r e g o r S treet.
T h e d e m o n s tr a ti o n , o r g a n iz ­
e d in Q u e b e c by U G E Q a n d
ratifie d by o u r s t u d e n ts ’ c o u n ­
cil as a c o n d e m n a t i o n of “all
sides involved in th e w a r ,”
b e c a m e a c o m p l e t e fiasco.
T h e p r o te s t evolved into a
totally o n e-sid e d a t t a c k at the
US c o n s u la t e w ith th e spirit
a n d b e h a v io u r of th e p a r tic i­
p a n ts n o w h e r e
a p p r o a c h in g
th e b o u n d s of d e c o r u m a n d
inte lle ctu alism g e n e ra lly e x p e c ­
te d fro m university stu d e n ts.
T h e u n p r o v o k e d b r e a k in g of
w in d o w s a n d s p la tte rin g of
p a in t all o v e r th e c o n s u la te
w ith th e d ir e c t in te n tio n of
d e f a c in g a n d d e s tro y in g is a
d e s p ic a b le w ay
of voicing
d isa p p ro v a l a n d c a n n o t b e c o n ­
d o n e d . T h e right to dissen t is
o n e of th e b u lw a rk s of o u r
fre e d e m o c r a ti c society, b u t
w h e n this privilege is a b u s e d
it tu r n s in to licen se. It is at
this p o in t th a t a line m u st be
d r a w n b e t w e e n ratio n ally a c ­
c e p t e d m e a n s of p ro te s t a n d
d isg rac eful m e th o d s w hich d o
n o th in g b u t blot th e im age o f
th e sc h o o ls involved.
I recall th a t w h e n the th r e e
s tu d e n t r e p r e s e n ta tiv e s from
th e N ational L ib e ra tio n F ro n t
of V ie t n a m s p o k e 'a t Sir G e o r ­
ge u n d e r th e s p o n s o r s h ip of
U G E Q and a debacle ensued,
c o u n c il lo d g e d a f o rm a l a p o ­
logy. Sim ilarly I call u p o n c o u n ­
cil to fo rm a lly apo lo g ize to
A m e r ic a n C o n s u la te officials
for th e a c tio n s of th e Sir G e o r ­
ge s tu d e n ts w h o w e re p a r t a n d
p a r c e l of the m o b o n Friday.
G ilbert H olzer
Washing The Flag
E d ito r, the g eo r g ia n :
Well, w e did it all right. M a d e
d a m n fools of o urselve s, t h a t ’s
w hat! I d o n ’t k n o w a b o u t the
rest of th e G e o r g ia n m a rc h e r s ,
b u t I paid a t te n t io n to w h a t was
being said at th e teach-in, a n d
f o u n d th a t a lo n g w ith Kevin
R o d g e rs (the w a r resister);
a n d th e films; H a n k Bassior
w as well w o rth hee d in g .
He s p o k e of th e n e e d for p u ­
blic s u p p o r t in r e la tio n to a n ti­
w a r d e m o n s tr a ti o n s . It was
s tre s se d th a t th e n ec e s sity of
p e a c e m a r c h e r s to p r e s e n t a
g o o d im age w as im p e r a tiv e to
win o v e r th e d o u b tf u ls a n d u n ­
d e c id e d . By b ein g v io le n t th e
e n tir e effect is lost, a n d w orse
b e s m ir c h e d to th e e x te n t th a t
we have lost s y m p a th y w hich
m ight previou sly h a v e lo o m e d
w ithin th e n o n - c o m m itte d .
M r. Bassior gav e a n excellen t
e x a m p le of h o w p u b lic im age
a n d s u p p o r t c o u ld be s tr e n g t h e ­
ned. “W a sh th e A m e r ic a n flag
r a th e r th a n b u r n it.” In this
m a n n e r th e te n d e n c y fo r dis­
gust c r e a t e d by th e la tte r w o uld
not e m e r g e a n d th e f o r m e r m e ­
t h o d is n o t o nly p e a c e fu l but
m o r e sym b o lic of w h a t th e a c ­
tual p u r p o s e is. W e s h o u ld not
h av e to b e r e m i n d e d th a t it is
A m e r ic a n fo re ig n p o lic y w hich
we c o n d e m n , n o t A m e r ic a n s.
(T h e y p r o te s t to o it seem s).
It a p p e a r e d to m e th a t s e v e ­
ral s tu d e n ts w h o s h o u te d “G o
H o m e Y a n k e e ” m e a n t n o lo n ­
g e r ju s t fro m V ie tn a m . T h e s e
p e r so n a l feelings sh o u ld hav e
b e e n left at h o m e . (Let m e n o te
h e r e th a t I feel G e o r g ia n s in
g e n e r a l w e r e w ell-b e h av e d in
spirit, i.e. w e r e th e r e fo r p e a c e )
E v e ry o n e w a n ts p e a c e but
th e only w ay to e v e r realize'
th a t ideal is to first a c h ie v e
th e r e q u i r e m e n t o f in n e r p e a c e ,
a n d s to p sh ow in g th e w orld
w hat h y p o c r ite s we are , suc h
as was disp lay e d on F riday
night.
S u p p o rt p e a c e o r I’ll kill
you!
Hilda R eism an
"UGEQ’s
True Colors”
E ditor, th e georgian;
In r e c e n t w e e k s m u c h c o n ­
troversy has arise n o v e r the
possible w ith d raw a l of m e m ­
b ersh ip by S .G .W .U . from
l’U nio n G e n e r a l e des Etudia n ts d u Q u e b e c .
I p erso n a lly feel th a t im m e ­
d ia te w ith d ra w a l fro m this unilingual o r g a n iz a tio n is o u r only
p ossib le c h o ic e , in this m u lti­
tfC u e
lingual p ro v in c e .
As s t a t e d in T h e M ontreal
Star of F riday, Nov. 10th, 1967,
U .G .E .Q . paid th e su m of
$200.00 last A pril, to th e Vallie re s-G a g n o n D e f e n c e F u n d ,
to p ay legal co sts of tw o a c c u s ­
ed se p a r a tis t te rro rists. This
c o n t r i b u tio n
by
U .G .E .Q .
to w a r d s s e p a r a tis m in Q u e b e c ,
irre v o c a b ly
ex p re sses
U .G .
E .Q .’s political a s p ira tio n s in
this p ro vince.
U .G .E .Q . w as c r e a t e d solely
in the in te r e s t of s tu d e n t a c ti­
vities, a n d th e a c tio n s of th e se
s e p a ra tist te rro rists c a n n o t b e
c a te g o riz e d u n d e r th e h e a d in g
of e x tra -c u rr ic u la r activities.
F o rtu n a te ly , U .G . E . Q . ’s tr u e
c o lo rs h av e c o m e to light, along
with its se p a r a tis t policies a n d
in te n tio n s fo r the f u tu r e of
Quebec.
T h e q u e s tio n th a t s h o u ld b e
a n s w e re d in the c o m in g r e f e ­
r e n d u m is w heth e r o r n o t Sir
G eorge
W illiams U niversity
sh o u ld be r e p r e s e n te d by a
se p a r a tis t in c line d o r g a n iz a ­
tion. If th e stu d e n ts of S .G .W .U .
wish to s ta n d b e h in d s e p a r a ­
tism in th e p r o v in c e of Q u e b e c ,
th e n by all m e a n s th e y sh o u ld
v o te fo r th e c o n t in u a t io n of
o u r m e m b e r s h ip in U .G .E .Q .
Y et, th o se s tu d e n ts (and h o p e ­
fully th e m a jo rity ) w h o o p p o s e
se p a r a tis m as a w ay of solving
Q u e b e c ’s p ro b le m s, h a v e a
sim ple d ec ision to m a k e in the
c o m in g r e f e r e n d u m , u n d o u b ta bly o n e of nullification of m e m ­
b ersh ip fro m U .G .E .Q . If we
wish to h a v e th e vo ice of o p p o ­
sition to s e p a ra tism h e a r d in
this p ro v in c e , th e n by r e m a in ­
ing in U .G .E .Q ., this voice
will be stifled a n d o u r in te­
rests su ffo c a te d .
S .G .W .U . pays m e m b e r s h ip
fees of $7,400.00 an n u a lly to
U .G .E .Q ., a r a th e r high p rice
to p ay to w a r d s a n o r g a n iz a ­
tion th a t d o e s n o t r e p r e s e n t
th e views of th e s tu d e n ts of
this U niversity.
F or th e se re a so n s w e m u st
w ith d ra w o u r m e m b e r s h ip from
U .G .E .Q . w ith o u t f u r th e r h e ­
sitation.
Lionel M e rso n
g j< e © ir g jo a i[n )
Members of CUP and PEN
The georgian i s an ed ito rially autonom ous new sp ap er p u b lish ed by
the P u b lic a tio n s B oard of th e S tu d en ts’ A sso c ia tio n of Sir George
W illiams U n iv ersity . A uthorized as seco n d c la s s m ail by the P o st
O ffice D epartm ent, O ttaw a, and for paym ent of p o stag e in cash .
P rin te d and m ailed at St. J e a n , P .Q . T he o ffic e s of the georgian
are lo c a te d in room s 231 and 232 o f the H all B uilding, M ontreal 25,
O uebec. T e l.: 842-6461, ext. 38. T elex : 01-26193. The ad v ertisin g
office is lo c a te d in Room 233. T e l.: ext. 37 and 27. M essrs. How­
ard Krupp, Ja c k B erke and Morris R osenfeld, A dvertising R epre­
s e n ta tiv e s.
M an agin g B oard
E d ito r - in -C h ie f
...............................
Managing E d i t o r ..........................................
B u s i n e s s M a n a g e r ............................................
S u p p le m e n t
.........................
,
F ra n k Brayton
D av e Bowman
L eonP ressm an
. . I s r a e l Cinman
D ep a rtm en t H e a d s
E x ecu tiv e E ditor, A llan H ilton; N ew s E d ito r, A lan S. Zw eig; N ew sfe atu res E ditor, Norman L azare; High School Supplem ent Editor*
Mark M edicoff; D esk E ditor, Mona F o rre st; Photo E d ito rs, Steve
Frem eth and Ja c k M iller; Sports E d ito r, Stan Urman; R esearch
C hief, Stephen P a sk u s ; Senior Staff Writer, P e te r Shaw; Copy
E d ito r, E s te lle G eller.
S ta ff
H ead S ecretary, Carol L e e ; T y p is ts , Mary K urylo, K aren B ailey ,
D onna H ippenheim , R e se a rc h , J a n e t H ulbig, Mona Bum garten,
V icky T abchnick.
th e g e o rg ia n , N o ve m b e r 24. 1967 /
to h a v e a t t e n d e d th e V ie tn a m
T e a c h - In o n F riday r e c e iv e d
th e r a r e tr e a t o f h e a rin g Mr.
Guillan, A rts...
Editor, th e georgian: i
I did a nasty thing th e other
day and c h e c k e d th e student
directory. M uch to m y disap­
p oin tm en t and d isillusionm ent
and dism ay I d iscovered that
this cat, R obert G uillan of
w hom 1 w as so vicariously
proud (im agine, a student in
Sir G eorge, w riting for Le
M on d e) w as n ot a m em ber of
our august stud en t b od y. T he
co n clu sio n I reach ed after read­
ing th ose im aginatively titled
articles (V ietnam Part I etc .)
w as that the georgian w as print­
ing articles from external sourc­
e s . T h en I rem em b ered that
o n e of th e reason s that the
G eorgian is n ot m erely a paper
describ in g social even ts is
b eca u se it is h ere to ed u cate
our ap ath etic stud en t body.
Way I figure it i s that education
im p lies
p resen tin g
both
sid es of th e story. Like, if all
th e articles con d em n in g the
A m erican stan ce in the war,
w ere w ritten by stud en ts w ell,
O .K . its a student paper. But
w hen th e g eorgian , using ex ­
ternal reporting and p resen t­
in g, e x c lu siv e ly , one version;
then it i s not ed u cating, but ra­
ther it i s propagandizing. The
g eorgian purpotedly p r e s s e s
for dem ocracy and freedom of
press. By n ot reporting both
sid es it is not ed u catin g but
ram m ing their op in ion s dow n
our throats. T his is a represion of F reed om o f sp eech
and thou ght. H ow m uch longer
are w e to be su b jected to totaiiatarianism of the Press?
P eter Klein
Made in Quebec
E ditor, th e georgian:
W ith r e g a rd s t o th e article
in last T u e s d a y ’s georgian
c o n c e r n in g th e
a n ti- U G E Q .
G e o r g ia n s w h o, as sta te d , hav e
“M a d e in U .S .A .” w ritte n all
o v e r th e m . A fte r r e a d in g this
p r o p a g a n d a I rea lize d th a t the
w rite r w a s n ’t to tally
i aw a re
of all t h e facts a n d w as th e r e ­
fo re filling in th e b la n k s p a ­
c e s w ith u n b e lie v a b le trash
like his A m e r ic a n c o u n t p a r t
Paul K ra ssn e r.
I a m o n e of th o se f e r v e n t
flag-w avers w h o c o n s id e rs h im ­
self as a C a n a d i a n first a n d a
Q u e b e c e r s e c o n d a n d th u s
I w o u ld like t o m a k e it e m p h a ­
tically c l e a r t h a t I w o u ld n e v e r
w e lc o m e living u n d e r “M o th e r
A m e r ic a ’s” flag. O bviously the
w rite r has p r o v id e d this A m e r i­
c a n is m angle as a c o n d u c iv e
c a m o u f la g e ta c tic fo r c o v e r ­
ing o v e r th e g la ring faults of
UGEQ.
P e rh a p s, h o w e v e r, h e th in k s
U G E Q is d o ing a f a n ta stic jo b
in w riting F r e n c h a n d English
C a n a d ia n s.
Well, if so, d o e s h e c o n s i­
d e r fin an c in g tw o se p a ra tists
in c o u r t, a n d n o t c o n trib u tin g
to a n y c e n te n n ia l p r o je c t w o rth
a n h o n o r a b le m e n tio n .
I -believe th a t Fr. C a n a d ia n s
a r e a g r e a t asset to C a n a d a a n d
th a t th e ir survival is a n e c e s ­
sity. As a m a tte r of fact, m y best
frie n d is F re n c h C a n a d i a n a n d
I w o u ld n e v e r sell his frie n d ­
ship fo r th a t of th e U.S. Does
this still m e a n th a t I a m a n antiF r e n c h big o t?
T h e r e f o r e , 1 a m p r o u d to
w av e a C a n a d i a n flag fo r it
show s m y feeling fo r C a n a d a
a n d fo r Q u e b e c , a n d n o t for
U G E Q w hich isn’t fully r e ­
p r e s e n tin g th e V o ice of En­
glish sp e a k in g s tu d e n ts . T h u s
th e w rite r of th e a rticle should
apo lo g ize to us c o n c e r n e d
C a n a d ia n s, for his n a iv e pseud o -C a n a d ia n is m r e f le c t only
s e p a r a tis t a s pira tions.
A r t h u r C u rrie
Non-teach-in
E d ito r , th e georgian
1 s ta n d c o r r e c t e d . I th o u g h t
th e p u r p o s e o f a te ac h -in w a s to
e d u c a t e p e o p le o n c e r ta in is­
sues. T o let th e m h e a r both
sides a n d th e n let th e m m a k e
u p th e ir o w n m in d . A fte r w hich
d e le g a te s from b o th sides ask
fo r s u p p o r t, (eg. in th e fo rm
of a m a rc h ).
Last friday G e o r g ia n s w e re
n o t e d u c a t e d a b o u t th e V iet­
n a m issue. W e w e re s u b je c t e d
to p r o p a g a n d a . W e w e r e a s k e d
to s y m p a th iz e w ith a draftd o d g e r a n d a V ie tn a m w a r ve­
te ra n . W e h e a r d h o w w ro n g
th e A m e r ic a n po licy is from
k n o w le d g a b le p e o p le . But w e
did n o t h e a r b o th sides of th e
story. P e o p le w h o a r e p ro -w a r
w e r e n o t a s k e d to talk, th e y
w e r e e v e n s u p p r e s s e d fro m ta l­
king.
T h e S tu d e n ts ’ A sso c iatio n ,
the georgian , a n d
Comfru,
th e ra d ic a l o r g a n iz a tio n in
Sir G e o r g e th a t o r g a n iz e d o u r
teac h -in , a r e all ad m itte d ly
a n t i- A m e r ic a n o v e r th e V iet­
n a m issue. W ell d o e s th a t c o n s ­
titu te all of the s tu d e n ts in
Sir G eorg e. D o n ’t w e g e t to
make up our own mind.
T h e b la m e lies w ith th e Stu­
d e n t s ’ A sso c iatio n . W h e n a n o r­
g a n iz a tio n p r e s e n ts o n e side of
a story, it s h o u ld n o t b e called
a teach-in. O n e is n o t e d u c a t e d
unless h e h e a rs b o th sides of
th e story. A n d th e S tu d e n t As­
so c ia tio n allo w ed a biast (sic)
o r g a n iz a tio n to p r e s e n t a te ac h in.
I c a n n o t m a k e u p m y own
m in d o n th e V ie tn a m issue b e ­
c a u s e I h a v e n ’t h e a r d th e w h o ­
le story. I suggest th a t th e SA
rectify its m is ta k e by p r e s e n ­
ting us w ith a tr u e “te a c h -in ”
o n V ie tn a m .
Sam C h a im
Weinstein grooves
E d ito r, the georgian:
T h o s e of us f o r tu n a te e n o u g h
\
J. W e in stein d e f e n d his co c ksu c k in g th e o ry . A ctually, it
w a sn ’t so m u c h a r a r e tr e a t as
a n old a n d fam iliar p le asu re.
M r W e in stein 's r a t h e r je rk y
style s t i m u l t a t e s us; but, in a
w ay w e w e re also puzzled.
W h a t m o tiv a te d his c h o i c e of
style?
The birds is come
by
ELLIOT BLINDER
W e m u st im m e d ia te ly dis­
miss th e a s s u m p tio n th a t h e was
a t te m p tin g to p e r s u a d e th e
straig h t a n d th e u n c o m m itt e d
m e m b e r s of his a u d i e n c e of the
a b s u rd ity of Jo h n s o n a n d his
ad m in is tra tio n .
E ven
som e ■
of th o se little re v o lu tio n a r y
c h ic k e e s. th e y trie d n o t to
sq u irm . But gosh, h o w w e re
th e y to k n o w th a t social c h a n ­
ge c o u ld get this stick y?
'
M r. W e in ste in m u s t hav e
c o n s id e r e d th e possibility of
effects suc h as th e se. A fte r
all, he m a d e very s u r e to in­
fo rm us th a t h e c o u ld also
play th e role of social s c ie n ­
tist. A n d social scientists, in
th e ir te rrib ly e a r n e s t fashion,
h a v e w o rk e d long h o u r s to find
out about co m m u n icato r c re­
dibility.
P e rh a p s, th e n , Mr. Weins­
te in ’s style sim ply re f le c te d
his basic h u m a n ity , his n e e d to
b e loved. M y h o w g r o o v y he
was.
W h a te v e r his th in g m ig ht be,
h e did titillate us, a n d , in fact,
c o n v i n c e d us th a t his social
sc ie n c e th e o r y has w ide ap p li­
cability.
Mr. W e in ste in was sucking!
W e, if n o t he, a lm o s t c a m e off.
D av id H. A nd res
E d g ar B . Z u rif
D ept, o f P s y c h o lo g y
Scum
Editor, the georgian
Y ou hav e in m y o p in io n an d
in th e o p in io n of all c le a n th in k ­
ing individuals hit th e lowest
e b b of d e g r a d a tio n by invit­
ing th e w rite r of th e unfavor­
a b le article to a d d r e s s the
stu d e n ts.
But th e
stu d e n ts
th e m se lv e s hav e hit ev en low er
by giving th e m a n (that is to o
g o o d a w o rd for this thing)
an ovation! W h a t of th e p a ­
re n ts of th e se s tu d e n ts a n d I
use th e te r m loosley. Do they
also th in k th a t this d e g r a d e d
s u b h u m a n is w o rth listening to ?
W h a t a b o u t y o u r o w n m o th e r ,
ho w d o e s she s ta n d ? 1 guess he
c o u ld n o t hav e h a d o n e ! T h e
w h o le b u n c h of y o u sh o u ld
b e a s h a m e d t o be eve n in the
s a m e r o o m with su c h a thing.
D o n ’t try to give m e th e sto ry
of f r e e d o m of th e press as p o r ­
n o g r a p h y c a n always b e o b ­
ta in e d u n d e r th e c o u n t e r w h e r e
it b elongs, fo r individuals low
e n o u g h to s to o p th e re b u t not
for th e u p per-level w h o d o es
n o t e n jo y d irt a n d lo w e r th a n
d irt as this m a n . M u st all p e o p le
see filth, k e e p it h id d e n w h e re
dirty m in d s c a n revel in it, as
it s e e m s th e y do, b u t s p a re the
o t h e r please.
Claire H orelt
5
LI BERATION News Service
As m ost birds begin flo ck ­
ing S ou th fo r the w inter,
so m e of w h at's fowl a b o u t
the W h ite H o u se w as m a k -'
ing h e a d lin e s this w ee k in
W a sh in g to n 's
soc iety
co­
lum ns.
Lady Bird Jo h n so n , in an
interview with T h e Evening
Star, d e s c r ib e d life in the
e x e c u tiv e m a n s io n as in te n ­
se: “A w a re n e ss of this h ouse
is like a sh o t of a d r e n a lin .”
T h e family, she said, “has
d r a w n c lo se r to g e th e r th a n
we hav e e v e r b e e n in o u r
lives -- t h e r e ’s just f o u r of
us in th e s a m e b o a t."
T h o u g h th e re has b e e n n o
w o rd as to w h a t b o a t young
P atric k N u gent is in, it c e r ­
tainly is not o n e b o u n d for
V ie tn a m . H ow ever, w h e n as­
ked how she felt a b o u t her
f u tu re son-in-law. C a p ta in
C h a rle s R o b b , going to w ar,
Mrs. Jo h n so n re p lie d , “Like
any m o th e r , o r m other-inlaw, 1 feel c o n c e r n e d a n d I’ll
be praying. But I'll always
b e very p r o u d . I like that
y o u n g m a n a n d I'm glad
th e r e a r e folks like him
fighting for us.”
W h e n a s k e d for c o m m e n t
a b o u t th e r e c e n t anti-w ar
d e m o n s tr a ti o n ,
th e
First
Lady said that w hen sh e anti
th e P re sid en t d r o v e a r o u n d
W a s h in g to n th a t w e e k e n d .
“ I was thinking, by gosh,
w h a t a big c l e a n -u p bill this
city w as going to face. If
m u st be an k le d e e p in the
trash th e y left...to s o m e e x ­
te n t that d e m o n s tr a ti o n was
th e fruits of afflu en c e an d
p erm issiv e n ess...It was ab o u t
as u n c o n s tru c tiv e a w ork as
1 c a n r e m e m b e r seeing. I
feel boiling up in m e a feel­
ing w h ich is s h a r e d by mil­
lions of A m e r ic a n s -- that
w e'v e got to sta rt having
m o r e r e s p e c t for the law -that w e m ust start m o r e
firmly e n fo rc in g the law".
A W a s h in g to n Post so c i­
ety c o lu m n is t d e s c r ib e d a n o ­
th e r kind of d e m o n s tr a tio n
this w ee k , o n e that took
p la c e at th e e n g a g e m e n t
p a rty th ro w n for
Lynda
Bird Jo h n so n
on
Friday
night in a G e o r g e t o w n night
c lu b : “L y n d a ’s e n g a g e m e n t
p a rty m a d e a big night of it
for G e o r g e to w n . T h e c r o w d lined up ac ro ss M S treet
a n d c a r s slow ed d o w n to
w a tc h
th e
p h o to g r a p h e r s
give th e T a v e r n a H ollyw ood
au ra.”
“O n e e n te r p ris in g yo u n g
lady with a g u ita r in h a n d
tried to sit-in right on the
p a v e m e n t in fro n t o f the
club. But it d id n ’t w o rk .
Police hustled Joey Holm
right along, g u ita r a n d all.
She d id n 't get to str u m a n o te
as s h e s c ra m b le d up fro m h er
chilly
pavem ent
p e r c h ."
“ In d o o rs all was gay a n d
g la m o r o u s as th e guests,
s p a n n in g all ages, d in e d on
p o a c h e d filet of sole with
c a r d in a l s a u c e , c a p o n with
ham , wild rice a n d a s p a r a ­
gus, g r e e n salad a n d p in e ­
a p p le souffle w ith straw ­
b e rrie s a n d w h ip p e d c r e a m ."
E ven th e P re sid en t an d
First L ady a t t e n d e d th eir
d a u g h t e r ’s e n g a g e m e n t c e ­
le b r a tio n fo r 40 m inutes.
Brother-in-law
Patrick,
with th e e x p e rtise of o n e w ho
has b e e n th r o u g h it all b e ­
fore, t o a s t e d th e c o u p le,
th a n k in g th e Jo h n so n s “for
th e tw o m ost w o n d e rfu l an d
u n d e r s ta n d in g girls in the
c o u n t r y -- Lynda a n d Luci.”
At h e r s h o w e r next afte r­
n o o n , Lynda Bird “was sm a rt
in a w hite c u lo tte dress,
b ro w n p a t e n t le a th e r shoes
a n d bag a n d b r o w n textured s to c k in g s . ? ’a n d . a c c o r d ­
ing to Evening Star c o l u m ­
nist Y m e ld a D ixon, “Luci
N u gent was gay in bright
c a n a r y y ello w ,” th e p erfec t
co lor.
Lady Bird, a c c o r d in g to
Y m eld a, “h a d to dash off to
join h e r h u s b a n d fo r th e m a ­
tinee p e r f o r m a n c e of ‘Hello
Dolly." D espite th e jo y of
“ Dolly,” said Y m e ld a , “it
m ust hav e b e e n a w re n c h for
the loving m o t h e r to leave
the pile of p r e s e n ts sta c k e d
in th e d raw in g r o o m u n o p e n ­
ed .”
N ev e rth ele ss , L y n d a did
o p e n h e r p re se n ts, ranging
all the way fro m peignoirs
to mini-slips. Mrs. R o b e rt
M c N a m a r a d r e w rave n o ti­
ce s from Y m elda, as she
“ingeniou sly w r a p p e d her
gift, a nightgow n, in a k itc h en
tow el w hich h ad a p ic tu r e of
the W h ite H o u se o n it.”
J
6 /
th e g e o rg ia n , N o v e m b e r 24, 1967
The intellectual
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T h e R e a d in g and R e fe re n c e Room s o f th e M ain L ib r a r y ,
N o rris B u ild in g , w i l l be open as s tu d y a re a s p r io r t o t h e
e x a m in a tio n s.
November 26
December 10
December 3
December 17
1:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.
by P e ter Shaw
Senior Staff Writer
T h r o u g h o u t tim e , m a n has b e e n h a m p e r e d by
gospel - th a t w h ic h is holy, u n to u c h a b le s irre­
p r o a c h a b le . T h e o v e r-p o w e rin g a u t h o r i ty given
to ideals by th e ir w o rs h ip e r s p la gue m e n 's lives
to a n even g r e a t e r d e g r e e in to d a y 's w o rld of
a c c e l e r a t e d life-processes.
T h e stu d e n t, s e a r c h in g for tr u th a n d a c q u ir ­
ing th e skills to ru n his life - a n d th a t of the
w orld - m ust strive to u n d e r s ta n d th e n a t u r e of
divine a u th o rity .
T o gain a c l e a r e r p ic tu r e of th e d o g m a tic ele­
m e n t. o n e m u st lo o k to th e n a t u r e of in te llectual
d e v e lo p m e n t. K n o w le d g e consists of tw o basic
building b lo c k s - facts a n d the r e la tio n sh ip b e t ­
w e e n th e se facts. Since th e b e ginning of m an’s
history, he has b e e n o b se rv in g facts a n d f o r m u ­
lating r e la tio n sh ip s. H o w ev er, th o u g h t places
s e c o n d to survival o n th e list of n a tu ra l priori­
ties. T h e r e f o r e , A d a m was very busy staying a li­
ve a n d h a d little tim e to th in k . Also, his th o u g h t
s ta r t e d from s c r a tc h , a n d he had n o prev io u s
k n o w le d g e to b u ild his o w n u p o n . R esult - th e re
was a gigantic d is c r e p a n c y b e t w e e n w h a t he
ratio n ally th o u g h t o u t a n d w h a t h e o b se rv e d .
He th e n c r e a t e d g ods.
ACCOUNTANCY NEEDS
UNIVERSITY GRADUATES
G ra d u a te s o f A r t s , S c ie n c e , C om m erce and E n g in e e ­
rin g
h a v e been ta u g h t to th in k
c le a r ly
th e m s e lv e s c o n c is e ly and e f f e c t iv e ly
w r it in g .
and e x p re s s
in sp e e ch and
P ro fe s s io n a l a c c o u n ta n c y n e e d s th e s e a t t r i -
b u te s and r ic h ly re w a rd s th o s e w ho p o s s e s s and a p p ly
them and d e m o n s tra te
an in te r e s t
in b u s in e s s a f f a ir s .
A v it a l need in p ro fe s s io n a l a c c o u n ta n c y is fo r p e o p le
w ho k n o w how to ta c k le a p ro b le m , ho w to go a b o u t
Front the im m e d ia te past, a reso u n d in g ly si­
g n ific an t c o l le c tio n of p r o o f show s th at r a ti o ­
nally - th o u g h this s ta te m e n t is a c o n t r a d ic t io n n o u ltim a te s exist. M a tte r ca n be c h a n g e d into
e n e rg y , lig htning is c a u s e d by electricity . Se­
v e r e d spinal c h o r d s c a n be successfully re jo in ­
ed - th e se a r e all c o n tr a d ic t io n s of p reviously
k n o w n facts. Laws, m orals, religion, c o n s titu ­
tions - all th e se go spe ls vary a n d a re c h a n g e d .
A n d so they h a v e to. T h e very n a t u r e of life is
the o rg a n iz e d d e v e l o p m e n t of m a t t e r a n d energy.
O PPO SIN G FORCES
D o g m a is the p iv o t p o in t a r o u n d w hich r o ta t e the
o p p o s in g fo rc e s of C o n s e r v a tis m a n d R a d ic a ­
lism. C o n s e r v a tis m a n d R ad icalism r e la te to th e
s tu d e n ts ' strugg le s with the e d u c a t io n a l system ,
th e g e n e r a tio n - g a p , politics in its p u r e s t fo rm in s h o rt m a n y p re ssin g issues of today.
GRADUATING
STUDENTS
NO ULTIMATES EXIST
In tim e m a n ’s g o d s d e v e lo p e d in to sop h isti­
c a t e d c r u tc h e s c a lle d d o g m a o r a b s o lu te s. T h e
a b s o lu te , like all tools - w h ich in the b r o a d sense
of th e w o rd c a n b e c a lle d c r u tc h e s - has b e e n used
tw o distinct w ay s by tw o d iffe ren t type s of p e o ­
ple. O ne type used th e m as ra tio n a l device s;
the o t h e r used t h e m to ratio n aliz e.
ABSOLUTES A HINDERANCE
Life th e n , d e v e lo p s c o n s ta n tly . T h e r e f o r e , to
k e e p th e d i s c r e p a n c y b e t w e e n w h a t h a p p e n s
a n d w h a t is u n d e r s to o d to a m in im u m , o r per­
hap s even to e lim in a te the d is c re p a n c y , the
h u m a n m in d m u s t h a v e th e f r e e d o m to d e v e lo p
at full c a p ac ity . A ny fo rm of a b s o lu te is a hinde r a n c e to this c a u s e sin c e th e y form b o a r d e rs
to th e field of k n o w le d g e . If th e h u m a n m in d has
the will a n d the c o u r a g e to s e v e r all its a n c h o r
c ha ins, th e result s e e m s limitless.
P eople w h o b e lie v e gospe ls of an y kind, feel
th a t a h ighe r a u t h o rity , say logic, a go d , duty,
reigns a b o v e th e ir c a p ab ilities of u n d e r s ta n d in g .
M o r e specifically, they s h ru g th e ir s h o u ld e rs
a n d say th e y a r e doing w h a t th e y a r e su p p o s e d
to. T h e d r a m a t i c irony of this s itu a tio n is th at
e a c h individual helps c o n tro l th e w o rld to a
g r e a t e r o r lesser ex te n t. W e a re in c o n t r o l w h e ­
t h e r we k n o w it o r not.
In the past, th e d e stiny of th e w orld h as b e e n
left in th e h a n d s of a ruling elite by virtu e o f th e ir
divine a u t h o rity . N otoriously, th e ir u n d e rly in g
driving fo rc e h a s b e e n p r e d o m in a te ly e ith e r
pow er-lust o r g r e e d . T o d a y , in th e w a k e of im ­
m e d ia te d a n g e r , th e in dividual m u st w re st his
s ov erign right of self-rule intellectually a n d
socially a n d he m u st ex e rcise his rights r e s p o n ­
s i b l y to insure t h e life of his w orld.
g e ttin g in fo rm a tio n and fin d in g a n s w e rs , ho w to th in k
th in g s o u t fo r th e m s e lv e s .
A th re e -y e a r a c c e le ra te d c o u rs e is o ffe re d a t M c G ill
U n iv e r s ity
T hose
ab ou t
fo r
who
th e
re q u e s te d
n o n -C o m m e rce
w o u ld
lik e
p ro fe s s io n
to f i l l
of
to
u n iv e r s ity
o b ta in
C h a rte re d
m ore
g ra d u a te s .
in fo rm a tio n
A c c o u n ta n t
in th e cou po n h e re u n d e r and
are
send
i t d i r e c t ly to th e a d d re ss sh o w n .
Careers in
accounting
C h a lle n g in g o p p o rtu n itie s w ith g ro w th p o te n tia l fo r
B. C o m m .'s m a jo rin g in A c c o u n tin g .
T h e E x e c u tiv e D ire c to r ,
N o rth e rn E le c tric C o m p a n y L im ite d —
T h e In s t it u t e o f C h a rte re d A c c o u n ta n ts o f Q u e b e c,
lo c a te d in M o n tre a l, L achine, O tta w a , B e lle v ille , B ra m a le a,
630 L a g a u c h e tie re S tre e t W est,
O n ta rio , and London.
M o n tre a l, Q ue.
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NAME..............................................................................
ADDRESS
P la n ts and O ffices
......................................................
CITY OR T07JN ........................ P R O Y .............................
ON CAMPUS November 28, 29, 30th.
T o a rra n g e an in te rv ie w a p p o in tm e n t,
p lease c o n ta c t y o u r P la ce m e n t O ffice.
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COMPANY LIMITED
th e g e o rg ia n , N o vem b er 24, 1967 /
7
the parts left out
of the Krassner caper
by: Juan Rodriguez
T his w h o le c o n tro v e rs y o v e r th e r e ­
prin tin g of th e Paul K ra ssn e r article,
“T h e P arts th a t w e re Left O ut of the
K e n n e d y B o o k ” , by th e M cG ill Daily
has b e e n e x tre m e ly p e r ti n e n t in th at
few h a v e really d is c o v e r e d th e real
p o in t o f th e article . T h e u p r o a r has
p o in te d o u t so glaringly th o se h u m a n
w e a k n e s s e s so in h e re n t in us th a t we
refuse t o see, o r ad m it, th e m .
F ro m th e o u ts e t of th e K ra ssne r
crisis it has b e e n p r e s u m e d th a t 1) the
article in q u e s tio n w as a satire against
L y n d o n Jo h n s o n , 2) a n d if you g o “d e e ­
p e r ” , it was a sa tire p o in tin g out the in­
sensitivity of a s o c iety of p e o p le w h o
refu se t o get w o r k e d up o v e r th e s la u g h ­
t e r of t h e V ie tn a m e s e p e o p le a n d th e ir
lan d, a n d 3) Paul K ra ssn e r is a dirty
y o u n g m a n . N ow , su p p o s e th a t n o n e of
th e se t h r e e p o in ts s h o u ld be w e lc o m e d
w ith d e f a c to a c c e p t a n c e . S u p p o se that
th e re a r e o t h e r fac to rs, ideas, a n d c o n ­
c e p ts o f sa tire involved in th e K ra ssn e r
a rticle , a n d its s u b s e q u e n t u p r o a r , o th e r
th a n t h e o n e s m e n t i o n e d a b o v e . If we
c o m e to a p p r o a c h s o m e “n e w ” s u p p o ­
sitions, th e n w e a re e n t e r in g a new
ball g a m e .
H ere a r e som e i d e a s .
T h e a c c e p t e d d e f in itio n o f a s a t i r e
is th a t it is a n e x a g e r a tio n a n d sa rc a sm
o f facts p r e s e n te d so as to p r o d the
r e a d e r to c o m e to e x a m in e this infor­
m a tio n . A n " o u t r a g e o u s ” article is thus
in te n d e d to s h o c k its r e a d e r in to sensi­
tivity a n d sensibility. K ra ssne r's a r ti­
cle, it s e e m s to m e, is a m u c h m o r e
c o m p lic a te d , “ta c tile " type of satire.
His p ie c e w as m e a n t to sh o c k , all right,
but th e s h o c k was n o t m e a n t to p r o d u c e
an e x a m in a tio n of th e credib ility of
the sto ry . It w as in te n d e d to s h o c k it's
r e a d e r into e x a m in in g the re a s o n s an d
m o tiv a tio n s b e h in d his o u tr a g e . Ir. this
r e sp e c t, it was a tactile, involving a r ­
ticle. T h a t is the u ltim a te r ea so n th e re
was s u c h a violent r e a c tio n o v e r it it was a n ar tic le you c o u l d n 't e s c a p e
from .
Let us ta k e a loo k at th e p e o p le w h o
m ight c o m e to r e a d this article . “T h e
P arts t h a t w e r e Left O u t of th e K e n n e d y
B ook" first a p p e a r e d in “T h e R ealist” ,
a p u b lic a tio n w ith a c i rc u la tio n of a b o u t
60,000. “T h e R e alist” is prirrjarily r e a d
by s tu d e n ts , N ew Lefters, p s e u d o -r e v o ­
lu tio n a rie s , ic o n o cla sts, intelle ctu als
a n d r a b b le r o u s e r s - a n a u d i e n c e , you
m igh t say, th a t is slightly m o r e a w a re
a n d sen sitiv e th a n y o u r a v e r a g e run-ofthe-m ill slobby Life-N.Y. Daily News
r e a d e r s . T h u s, if th e a rticle w as a sa tire
ag ainst its re a d e r s , it w as a sa tire against
th e so c a lle d “sen sitiv e” in te lle ctu al
c o m m u n ity . I th in k th a t th e article
was w ri tte n w ith th e e x p re ss p u r p o s e
of p o in tin g o u t th a t in telle ctu als a n d All
Of T h o s e Beautiful P e o p le O u t T h e r e
a r e ju st as s u sc e p tib le to th e m o tiv es
th a t w o u ld s p u r o n a p e r s o n to r e a d
th e “N a tio n a l I n q u ire r ” o r "M id n ig h t” .
T h e a r tic le is n o t unlike “ P a re n ts Eat
Child F o r B rea k fast!” o r “19-Y R O L D
BOY G IV E S BIR TH !”
S u p p o s e th e K ra s s n e r article a p p e a r ­
e d in M id n ight. T h e type of p e r s o n w h o
faithfully goes o u t ev ery w ee k an d
buys th a t p a p e r w o u ld p r o b a b ly vo ic e
mild su r p ris e o v e r th e article. L e t’s
f ac e it, it’s juicy. A nd th e n h e w o u ld
lick his c h o p s a n d g o o n to th e n ext
p ag e . T h e r e w o u ld b e little o r n o o u ­
trag e b e c a u s e th a t is w h a t he e x p e c t e d
a n d w a n t e d to r e a d . A n d h e k n o w s it.
He r e a d s M id nigh t for n o o t h e r p u r p o s e
th a t to get a little thrill h e re , a slight
h ard -o n th e re . A n d h e a c c e p ts his m o ti­
ve, a n d m o st im p o r ta n t of all, h e ’s n o t
really a s h a m e d of it e ith e r. In o th e r
w ords, h e 's a p r e tty h o n e s t fellow.
N ow with y o u r “R e alist” r e a d e r , well,
it’s a d if fe r e n t story. He re a d s th e a r ti­
cle for th e sa m e r e a s o n a M id nig ht r e a ­
d e r w o u ld r e a d it. He w a n ts to g e t his
jollies, w an ts his thrills. H e ’s g o t this
crazy h a t e of Jo h n so n , a n d he sees th e
h ea d lin e s, “T h e P arts T h a t W e r e Left
O ut Of T h e K e n n e d y B o o k ” (“P a r e n ts
E at K ids F or B re a k fa st” ) a n d h e licks
his lips. Boy oh boy, h e r e it is, th e real
thing. H e w a n ts this dirt a n d p e r v e r ­
sion b e c a u s e it will satisfy a n d p r o v e all
th e th e o rie s he has a b o u t th a t aw ful t e r ­
rible B o g e y M a n Johnson.
So K r a s s n e r k n o w s this, a n d he really
goes all th e way, gives th e m lotsa dirt
a n d s m u t a n d c ra p . He th ro w s it in th eir
faces. A n d it’s just w h a t th e y w a n te d ,
isn’t it? But t h e r e ’s th e h itc h ; it w as to o
dirty, t o o crass for th e m K ec»use it re­
vealed so blatantly what th e readers
m otives w ere in approaching th e arti­
cle.
A n d t h a t ’s w h a t p e o p l e a r e really
m a d at. K ra ssn e r has said so m e th in g n o
on e c a u g h t up in a n ideology is p r e p a r e d
to a d m it; N o o n e has a m o n o p o ly o n
rig h te o u sn e ss o r filth. He s h o v e d it right
in th e lily w hite fac es of all th e B eau­
tiful P e o p le - y o u ’re really n o d iffe ren t
fro m t h e rest, a n d all th e le a rn in g a n d
f a c a d e s in th e w o rld will n o t h id e it.
K ra s s n e r said th e u n sa y ab le . T h e ugli­
ness in p e o p le is a reality, a n d efforts
to hid e this rea lity only se rv e to c o m ­
p o u n d this ugliness. T h e facf th a t p e o ­
ple a re o b s c e n e , in th e ir daily snigger­
ing a n d silent q u est for soul-satisfying
dirt, d o e s n o t re m o v e th e right for th o se
w h o c a n see this o b sc e n ity to satirize
it. K r a s s n e r is c a tc h in g p e o p le in th e
a c t of b e i n g ugly a n d o b sc e n e . I th in k
th a t is w h a t is really im p o r ta n t h e re ,
a n d I c a n n o t see how K ra ssn e r c o u ld
hav e d o n e it an y differently.
Paul K ra s s n e r w ro te a n article th a t a
lot of p e o p l e , in telligent lovely B eauti­
ful P e o p le , w e r e dying to r e a d w h en
they sa w it’s title. It w as dirty, cru d e ,
o b s c e n e , h o rrib le, crass a n d p o r n o g r a ­
phic. It w as sa crile g eo u s. A n d it was
a m a s te rp ie c e .
Jagan denounces the CIA
by Douglas Hutchings
B efore a n e n t h u s ia s tic c r o w d o f 300, o v e r half of
w h ich w e r e W e st In d ians, Dr. C h e d d i Jag an f o r m e r
P rim e M in ister of G u y a n a p a i n te d a b la c k p ic tu r e
of w h a t has h a p p e n e d in G u y a n a sin c e his o v e r th r o w
in 1964.
H e told h o w the C e n tr a l In tellig en c e A g e n c y ex­
p lo ite d his split with F o rb e s B u r n h a m (a n e g r o , n o w
P rim e M inister) to f o m e n t th e r a c e riots w h ich led to
a s u sp e n sio n o f the c o n s titu tio n by Britain a n d Jag a n 's s u b s e q u e n t dow nfall.
Ja g a n r e p e a t e d th e c h a r g e s he m a d e at Sir G e o r g e
W illiam s o n Nov. 11, 1965, th a t th e C .I.A . is to b la m e
for G u y a n a 's p r o b le m s a n d for his o w n p e r s o n a l w oes.
T h e s e c h a r g e s w e re s u b s t a n c i a te d by th e L o n d o n
S u n d ay T im e s o f A p ril 19, 1967;
“As c o u p s go. it w as n o t e x p e n siv e ; o v e r five y ea rs
the C.I.A . p a id o u t s o m e th in g o v e r §700,000. F o r th e
co lo n y , British G u y a n a , th e result was 170 d e a d , u n ­
told h u n d r e d s w o u n d e d , ro u g h ly $28,000,000 w o rth
of d a m a g e to th e e c o n o m y a n d a le gacy of racial b it­
te rn e s s .”
B u r n h a m , a p u p p e t of W a sh in g to n , has sin c e led the
c o u n t r y in to th e c a p ita list c a m p by p ro v id in g “tax
ho lid a y s” for U.S. a n d C a n a d i a n c o r p o r a ti o n s a n d by
provid ing c h e a p la b o u r f e tt e r e d by anti-strik e legis­
lation.
“T h e p r o b le m fo r G u y a n a a n d th e w h o le th ir d
w o rld ,” Jagan said, “is n o t a s h o r ta g e o f c a p ita l - it’s
ju st th a t all th e c a p ita l is fo re ig n -o w n e d a n d th e p r o ­
fits a r e all leaving t h e c o u n t r y . ” H e e x p la in e d th a t,
th a n k s to low w ag es ($10-$15 a w e e k ) fo re ig n c o r p o r a ­
tions a r e o fte n ab le to d o u b le th e ir m o n e y in just
t h r e e years. A nd, at t h e e n d of th e five-year “tax ho li­
d a y " g r a n te d by B u r n h a m 's g o v e r n m e n t, m o s t of th e se
c o m p a n ie s p a c k up f o r h o m e o r else re-establish t h e m ­
selves u n d e r a n o t h e r n a m e a n d a p p ly for a n o t h e r
five-year p e r io d tax-free.
Jagan b la m e d the C .I.A . for th e o u stin g of N k ru h m a ,
Ben Bella, Ju a n B osch, G u z m a n ( G u a te m a la p re s i­
d e n t, o u s te d 1954) a n d , of c o u r s e , Jagan him self.
Jagan c l a im e d G u y a n a h a d b e e n d o in g a g o o d trad e
with C u b a b e f o r e th e B u rn h a m -C .I.A . ta k e o v e r, but
n o w th e y n o lo n g e r sell to C u b a . In stea d , th e y sell
th e ir rice at a lo w e r p r ic e to A m e r ic a a n d h e r allies.
H e c o m p a r e d G u y a n a to J a m a ic a - w h ic h h as h a n d ­
ed its b a u x ite to f o re ig n e r s a n d w hich also h as a f a l s e
p r o s p e r ity built o n a s ta g n a n t e c o n o m y . Ja m a ic a ’s
u r b a n u n e m p lo y m e n t r a te is 18% a n d rising, w hile p r o ­
fits f ro m th e raw m a te r ia ls flow o u t of th e co un try .
“G u y a n a ’s tro u b le s a re n o t b e c a u s e of r a c e diffe­
r e n c e s, b u t b e c a u s e o f class d if f e r e n c e s ”, Jagan said.
" T h e r e is n o n e u tra lis t c a m p . All th e rea l neutralists
w e r e to p p le d a long tim e a g o by th e C.I.A . Now th e re
a r e only tw o c a m p s - th e Im perialists a n d th e A nti­
im perialists.” He th e n c o m p a r e d C h i n a ’s progress to
I n d ia ’s b a n k r u p c y , a n d c a lle d for a u n ite d fro n t of all
fac tio n s o p p o s e d to neo-c o lo n ialism , a n d a n e n d to
leftist “h a ir sp litting” .
Ja gan was th e n g iv e n a ro u sin g a p p la u s e - p a r tic u ­
larly by th o se s tu d e n ts fro m u n d e v e lo p e d c o untries.
8 /
th e g e o rg ia n , N o ve m b e r 24, 1967
C o n fessio n s o f a h a r d e n e d p e a c e n ik :
Announcement
to
UNIVERSITY STUDENTS
H ow 1 L e a rn e d to S p e a r C o p s
W ith
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P lac ard , or
F o r m a n y s tu d e n ts, politi­
c al a w a k e n in g c a m e o n Friday
a t th e e n d o f a p o lic e m a n ’s
stick. Until th e riot o n Mc­
G r e g o r S treet, th e y ’d believed
p olitics is a g a m e h av in g n o ­
thing to d o w ith b lo o d s h e d , a n d
th e y w e r e the first to raise
th e cry “P olice B r u t a l i t y ” w h en
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y o u n g skulls. But w h a t did
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C a n a d a ’s
My
P .M .
LEE ROY PRESTON
& THE INNCROWD
RENT - A - STROBES
Talk over your future
with the Bell employment
reps when they visit your
campus on
Rioting is se rio u s business.
A n d so is p e a c e m a rc h in g o r
any o t h e r so rt of a gitatio n against the s ta tu s q uo . T h e m o ­
re th o se in p o w e r feel th r e a t e ­
n ed , th e m o r e b ru tally will
th e y r e t a l i a t e w ith a g a i n s t t h o s e
who th r e a te n them V ie tn ik s
c o u ld draw a l e s s o n from th e
negro r ig h ts movement in t h i s
resp ect.
In this early sixties the egali­
ta ria n d e m a n d s of n e g r o e s m a ­
d e w h ite s o u t h e r n e r s feel t h r e a ­
te n e d , so th e y r e s p o n d e d w ith
s h o tg u n s a n d lynch m o b s . But
liberal a n d pacifist n e g r o le a ­
d e r s lik e Martin L u th e r King
Jr., e v e n tu a lly s u c c e e d e d in
c o n v in c in g th e p o w e r elite that
n e g r o v o te rs c o u l d n o t bring
a b o u t significant c h a n g e a n d
th a t th e y p o s e d n o th r e a t to
a n y o n e , a n d s o o n th e y ev e n h ad
L y n d o n Jo h n s o n singing W e
Shall O v e r c o m e . N egros w e re
a llo w e d to k e n gains o nly b e ­
c a u s e th e ir r e a l p o s it io n w ill
not change.
M a lc o m e X w as a m o n g th e
first to see th r o u g h th e sh a m
of to k e n is m a n d he t h r e a t e n e d
to blow th e w histle, so some
o n e had him sh ot.
In 1964 Stokley C a r m ic h a e l
a n d Rap Brow n f o u n d o u t th e
h a rd way (at th e Mississippi
Freedom
D e m o c r a tic
P arty
C o n g re s sio n a l C h a lle n g e ) th a t
n e g r o e s a n d m e m b e r s of th e
u n d e r c la ss w o u ld n e v e r b e al­
lo w ed to v o te th e m se lv e s into
p o w e r . T h a t ’s o n e of th e r e a ­
so n s w hy, th r e e y e a rs la ter.
D e tro it h a d to b u rn . N ext s u m ­
m e r will b e th e p o in t of n o
r e tu r n , th e y say, b e c a u s e t h a t ’s
w h e n w h a t use d to b e ca lle d
th e civil rights m o v e m e n t will
tu r n to g u erilla w a rfa re . A n d
th a t m e a n s th a t th e U.S. A d m i­
nistra tio n , to p r e s e rv e d e m o ­
cra c y , will be free to e lim in a ­
te the n atio n 's se co n d -larg est
racial g ro u p .
W h a t c a n th e V ietn am m o v e ­
m e n t le a rn fro m th e n eg ro e s.
First, b o th g r o u p s hav e fo u n d
o u t th a t th e y c a n win to k e n
v icto ries th ro u g h n on-disruptive, n o n -v iole nt ac tio n . S o u th ­
e r n n e g r o e s a r e n o w free to vo­
te fo r th e w h ite y of th e ir c h o ic e
a n d L y n d o n Jo h n s o n says he
pray s for p e a c e e v e ry nigh t
b e f o r e h e go es to bed.
T h e s e c o n d lesson is th a t vio­
le n c e is A m e r ic a ’s s e c o n d la n ­
g u ag e an d , to be h e a r d , a flow
o f w o rd s has to be follo w ed
by a flow of blood.
T h e n th e m ass m e d ia g et in
th e a c t a n d c a r ry th e m e ssag e
all th e w ay o u t to s u b u rb ia .
But o n c e th e ‘r e s p e c ta b le citi­
z e n s ’ a r e a r o u se d , c o u n t e r - a c ­
tion is swift a n d decisive. T a n k s
c l a n k e d th r o u g h the s tre e ts of
D e tro it; po lic e h o r s e s gallo p ed
(co n tin u ed on p a g e 10)
NOVEMBER 29,30
DECEMBER 1
G R A D S - T O - B E - IN :
C O M M E R C E -A R T S -
A sk at y o u r Placem ent O ffice
fo r in fo rm a tive b o o klets and
arrange fo r an in te rvie w n o w !
Bell Canada
T o rc h lig h t p e a c e p r o te s t
th e g e o rg ia n , N o ve m b e r 24, 1967 /
[comment
Little has b e e n said, e ith e r
fro m ta c t o r for o t h e r rea son s,
a b o u t the b e h a v io r o f ed ito rs
A lln u tt a n d F o u r n ie r sin c e the
beg in n in g of th e D aily affair.
1 c a n n o t find w ithin myself
th e ta ct, n o r d o I see a n y r e a ­
sons w hy it s h o u ld n o t be p o in t­
ed o u t h o w th e re tw o ed ito rs
have b e tra y e d th e ir ca u se .
W h e r e a s th e M cG ill S en ate
C o m m itt e e c h a r g e s th e m with
a c tio n n o t b efittin g a M cG ill
stu d e n t m u c h m o r e to th e po in t
n o w w o u ld b e th e c h a r g e of
a c tio n n o t befittin g h u m a n di­
gnity th a t w e as o b se rv o r s
a r e in a p o sition to m a k e .
T H E M A N N E R OF M E R C Y
T h a t A lln u tt c o n s id e r s h im ­
self to hav e m a d e a m is ta k e in
itself c a n n o t be o b je c te d to,
b u t th e m a n n e r in w h ic h he is
p le a d in g fo r m e rc y , p a r ti c u ­
larly a t F e k e t e ’s e x p e n se , is
d istu rb in g . D uring th e h e a r ­
ings he has b e e n try in g to e s ta ­
blish th a t F e k e t e s o m e h o w
s n e a k e d th e a r tic le in q u e s tio n
p as t him , th a t he did n o t really
th in k a b o u t it, (the full c o n n o t a ­
tion o f his te s tim o n y b ein g th a t
he is t o o y o u n g o r t o o naiv e a n d
in n o c e n t to really th in k a b o u t
a n y th in g ); w h e r e a s th e tr u th of
THE COALBIN
THE DILEMMA OF JOHN FEKETE
th e m a t t e r is th a t F e k e t e dis­
c u s s e d th e issue w ith b o th All­
n u tt a n d F o u r n ie r fo r a w hole
half day, that he m a d e eve ry
a t t e m p t to w a r n th e m of th e u p ­
r o a r th a t was p r e d ic ta b l e , while
th e y a s s u rr e d him th a t h e w o u ld
b e d is a p p o in te d .
A person w ho makes an ap o ­
logy a n d a r e tr a c tio n , as All­
n u tt has, sh o u ld at le ast be
ab le to sta te w h a t h e m e a n s by
having m a d e a m is ta k e ; bu t
A lln u tt’s s tu b b o r n r e p e titio n of
this s ta te m e n t w ith o u t any
re a so n s a t t a c h e d s m a c k s of a
f rig h te n e d e m b r e c e m e n t of a
fan a tica l a lte r n a tiv e . D urin g
th e hea rin g s D e a n H .D . W o o d s
r a t h e r s y m p a th e tic a lly p o in t­
e d o u t to A lln u tt th e g r o u n d s on
w h ich th e artic le c o u ld c o n c e i ­
vably b e d e f e n d e d ; w h e r e u p o n
th e la tte r r e p lie d th a t he was
n o t p r e p a r e d to d e f e n d th e a r ­
ticle o n an y g ro u n d s. (W hy
th e n h a d he a llo w e d it to be
p r i n t e d ? ) W h e n th e f u ro r first
b r o k e o u t A lln u tt r e c e iv e d a
te le g r a m of s u p p o r t fro m th e
U.S. S tu d e n t Press A sso c ia ­
tion, w h ich he p r in te d at th a t
tim e. L a te r he r e c e iv e d a n o t h e r
te le g r a m w hich c o n d e m n e d his
c o n c ilia to r y
b e h a v io r.
T h is
second
te le g r a m
h as
been
Jeannette M . Cayford
436 M a yo r
TYPING SERVICE
7 B lo c k E a s t o f M o rg a n ’s
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carefu lly s u p p re ss e d . Equally
striking is th e M cG ill D aily’s
lack of c o v e r a g e of an y of the
d e v e lo p m e n ts of the affair, the
m ost n e w s w o r th y
item
on
c a m p u s . (As for F o u rn ie r, he
sh a v e d off his b e a r d w h e n he
first h a d to a p p e a r b e f o r e the
S e n a te C o m m itt e e , a n d la te r
his sid e b u rn s as well. H e also
has a d o p t e d a totally a p o l o g e ­
tic s ta n c e .)
T h e b e h a v io r of th e se tw o
has left F e k e t e badly in th e
lurch . Equally s tr a n g e is the
b e h a v io r of th e S tu d e n ts ’ C o u n ­
cil w h ich d e p l o r e d th e a c tio n of
th e S en ate, a n d th e Judicial
C o m m itt e e of w hich u n a n i­
m ously c o n d o n e d th e article,
b u t w hich a s k e d A lln utt to r e ­
m o v e F e k e t e fro m th e Daily.
A lln u tt h o w ev e r, for s o m e
r e a so n n o t w an tin g to fire
F e k e t e publicly, sim ply m a d e
it c l e a r th a t n o m a te r ia l of his
w o u ld be a c c e p te d by th e Daily
in th e fu tu re , w h ich is a r a th e r
u n d e r h a n d e d m e th o d fo r d e a l­
ing w ith th e situation .
O N E O U T OF T H R E E
T h is is w hy F e k e t e w ishes
his c a se to be tried s e p e ra te ly ,
sin c e it is c le a r th a t A llnutt
a n d F o u rn ie r's kiss-ass s ta n d ­
po in t w o u ld be s o m e w h a t d a ­
m aging to his ow n, for he alo n e
of th e th r e e w ishes to d e f e n d
th e f r e e d o m of th e press.
But t h e r e a re o t h e r r ele v an t
o b je c tio n s to th e S e n a t e ’s m e ­
th o d of d ea lin g with th e m a t ­
ter. T h e S e n a te m a k e s ev ery
p r e te n s e of being a ju st trying
bo d y , a n d yet it c o n t r a d ic t s
th e s ta n d a r d s usually a p p lied
to su c h b odie s. It has held
clo sed m e etin g s, its c o m p o ­
sition has c h a n g e d fro m the
first m e e tin g a n d th e y a r e n o t
h e a rin g th e c a se for th e first
tim e, so m e of th e m e m b e r s hav ­
ing b e e n p r e s e n t at a d m in is­
tra tio n a n d fac u lty m eetin g s.
T h e y a r e e m p lo y in g a law ­
y er w h o w as in s tru m e n ta l in
form ulating th e c h a r g e s . In
a d d itio n to this, a lth o u g h the
c h a r g e s h a v e b e e n laid p u b li­
cly th e y wish to h e a r th e c a s e
in priv ate. T h e y h a v e m a d e
th e c o n c e s s io n of e m p lo y in g
c lo sed -circ u it
television
but
this has ob v io u s lim itations.
It is essentially a d e a d , fra g ­
m e n t e d m e d iu m , it is s ta tio n a ­
ry, it c a n only fo cu s on o n e
p e r s o n o r small a r e a at a tim e,
it r e d u c e s th e im age d ra sti­
cally a n d it c a n edit. In sh o rt,
it w ou ld isolate th e p r o c e e d ­
ings fro m h u m a n reality a n d
fro m th e usual, n a tu ra l h u m a n
re a c tio n s of a n a u d i e n c e w hich
ha v e su c h an essential effect o n
c o u r t p r o c e e d in g s th a t a r e p u ­
blic a n d just, in th e u n d e r s to o d
se n se of th e te rm . (T.V . c a n
a c c o m m o d a t e a la rg e r n u m b e r
of p e o p l e a n d fo r this r e a so n
s h o u ld be used, b u t o n ly as an
a d j u n c t to th e p u b lic hearing).
IM PL IC IT S U P P O R T
In feeling th a t th e S e n a t e ’s
ac tio n m a y p re v e n t p r o p e r d e ­
fe n c e of th e c a se , F e k e t e an d
his law yer a re n o t a l o n e . Six­
te e n c h a ir m e n of d e p a r t m e n t s
of M cG ill hav e h a n d e d in a
brief a sking the S e n a te to p o s t­
p o n e the c a se for t h r e e w eeks
to give th e m tim e to e v a lu a te
th e c a se . (This b rief of c o u r se
w as n o t m e n tio n e d by th e Dai­
ly). A lth o u g h this is n o t in
explicit s u p p o r t of F e k e te 's
ca se , it d o e s e x p re ss su p p o r t
of his criticism of th e S e n a t e ’s
p r o c e d u r e s , a n d im plicitly it
m a y be a lot m o re.
But of c o u r s e th e m a in le g a­
listic issue is w h e th e r th e Se­
n a t e has an y ju risd ic tio n o v e r
the p a p e r at all. 1 call this le­
galistic b e c a u s e m a n y p e o p le
d o n ’t realize th a t t h e r e a re
ac tu a lly tw o, m u tu a lly e x c lu ­
sive issues. T h e o t h e r issue is
th e d e b a t e o n w h e t h e r th e a r ­
ticle w as c o n d o n a b le o r not.
O bviously this s e c o n d issue ca n
only b e a rg u e d in th e S en ate if
th e S e n a te is n o t ta k e n to c o u r t
o v e r the m a tte r of jurisd ic tio n .
T h is th e n c o n s titu te s the
d ile m m a th a t F e k e te has b een
p la c e d in. If he w ishes to d e f e n d
th e ar tic le itself he m u st a c ­
c e p t th e S en ate's ju risd ic tio n
in the m a tte r. If he w ishes to
q u e s tio n this ju r isd ic tio n he
m u s t ta k e th e m to c o u r t w h e re
th e c a se m a y d r a g o n for years
a n d w h e r e th e issue of the
validity of th e a rticle will not
ev e n c o m e up. In p rin cip le b o th
issues a r e e q u a lly im p o rta n t.
But th e re a r e o t h e r c o n s id e ­
rations.
If F e k e te c h o o s e s to d e f e n d
th e artic le in th e S e n a te he will
not have m uch of a chance un­
less th e S e n a t e ’s p r o c e d u r e s a re
m od ifie d . F o r this he will n e e d
th e s u p p o r t o f his law yer, C la u ­
de- A r m a n d S h e p p a r d for w h o m
h o w e v e r th e m a in a ttr a c tio n
of th e c a se is th e possibility
of es tab lishing a very im p o r ta n t
legal p r e c e d e n t o n th e p o in t
of ju risdictio n. T h e defense
of th e artic le w ou ld no t be as
im p o r ta n t fro m his point of
view. T h e se g m en t of th e stu­
d e n t p o p u la tio n w hich is su p ­
p o rtin g F e k e te is also m ore
e n th u s ia s tic a b o u t the question
of ju r isd ic tio n , partly b ecause
it is e m o tio n a lly m o r e a p p e a l­
ing a n d also b e c a u s e from the
po in t of view of th e to ta l fight
fo r s tu d e n t f r e e d o m it is m o re
ce n tra l.
An a d d itio n a l p o in t is that
given th e S e n a t e ’s c u rio u s stand
o n the so rt of p r o c e d u r e s they
wish to a d h e r e to, it m ay sim ­
ply n o t b e possible to k e e p out
of c o u r t if F e k e t e w ishes for
a h u m a n e , just, a n d b e t t e r th a n
rid ic u lo u s h ea ring.
FISC A L BA C K L A SH
T h e im p o r ta n c e of these
e v e n ts s h o u ld n o t b e u n d e r e s­
tim a te d by th e s tu d e n t bodies
of M c G i l l a n d Sir G e o r g e or
an y o t h e r university. T h a t this
m a y b e a historic ste p in the
stru ggle for a s a n e ed u c a tio n a l
system is a t te s te d by th e warm
s u p p o r t th a t has c o m e from stu­
de n ts, faculty a n d fro m o th e r
universities. It is tim e for this
s u p p o r t to ta k e a practical
form . F e k e t e w as to have re­
ce iv e d just this last S aturday
a th o u s a n d do lla r sch olarship
from th e Beta Sigma Phi w o­
m e n 's o rg an iz atio n w hich had
b e e n a w a r d e d him last su m m e r
a n d w hich he was c o u n tin g
on to su p p o r t him d u rin g the
c o u r s e of this year.
A lth o u g h th e re c e p ie n ts of
th e se sc h o larsh ip s a re not a p ­
p o in te d by this society but the
A ssociation
of
Universities
a n d Colleges of C a n a d a , it
se em s th a t th e w ithdraw a l of
the a w a rd is still th e perogative of th e fo rm e r, for l a s t W ed­
nesd ay F e k e te was in form ed
th a t he w o u ld n o t b e receiving
the a w a r d b e c a u s e th e o rg a n i­
za tio n “c o u ld n o t affo rd bad
p u b lic ity ” . (A nd .this in view
of th e fact th a t F e k e t e has not
b e e n c o n v ic te d of an y offense).
S o m e fac u lty m e m b e r s at M c­
Gill have ex p re sse d c o n c e r n
but it is n o t c l e a r h o w m u c h
c h a n c e th e r e is of gettin g hold
of th e sc h o la rsh ip . As for the
c o u r t c a se , a lth o u g h S h ep p ard
is ta k in g it o n w ith o u t a salary
b e c a u s e of its im p o r ta n c e , the
c o u r t costs will still devolve
u p o n F e k e t e a n d will a m o u n t
to s o m e six h u n d r e d dollars.
T h ere w ill b e a box in the
georgian o ffic es for contribu­
tions. I d o n ’t think any student
or facu lty m em ber is so poor
or so blind to the m onum ental
sig n ifica n ce of the ca se that he
ca n n o t afford to contribute a
dollar to aid th e person w ho has
taken u pon him self m om enta­
rily th e full w eight o f our ap­
peal for a free and m eaningful
university com m un ity.
10 /
th e g e o rg ia n , N o ve m b e r 24. 1967
paperbacks
Why w a it in lin e when
we are ju s t a ro u n d th e
c o rn e r w ith th e la rg e s t
s e le c tio n o f p a p e rb a ck
b o o k s in N o rth A m e ric a .
A s k o u r fr ie n d ly p e rs o n ­
n e l to h e lp you fin d th e
b o o ks you re q u ire fo r
a l l y o u r h i-b ro w o r lobro w n e e d s. V is it us to ­
d a y o r d ro p in be tw ee n
c la s s e s
and
b ro w se
aro u n d .
1327 St. C a th e rin e St. W
844-1721
Engineering
careers in
telecommunications
N o rth e rn E le c tric C o m p a n y L im ite d R esearch and
D e v e lo p m e n t L a b o ra to rie s a nd M a n u fa c tu rin g P la n ts lo c a te d
in M o n tre a l, O tta w a , B e lle v ille , B ra m a le a , O n ta rio a nd L ondon.
ON CAMPUS November 28, 29, 30th.
T o a rra n g e an in te rv ie w a p p o in tm e n t,
p le ase c o n ta c t y o u r P la c e m e n t O ffice.
Northern Electric
COM PANY LIMITED
Both Coca-Cola and Coke are registered trade marks which identify only the product of Coca-Cola Ltd.
That group really gives (
you the cold shoulder. I
■dm
3~p,
pm«
C he G ueverra poster hangs o v er club-w ielding c o p . In th e riot
that fo llo w ed 46 stud en ts w ere arrested.
(n o n - v io le n c e . . . c o n ’ t from page 8 )
th r o u g h the ra n k s o f university
s tu d e n ts in fro n t of the U.S.
c o n s u la t e . O n c e it starts, vio­
le n c e te n d s to e s c a la te a n d s oon
it b e c o m e s im possible to r e ­
tr e a t to a ta c tic of no n -v io le n ­
ce.
O n c e n o n -v io le n c e has b e e n
r e je c te d (as th e real n e g r o
le a d e rs have r e je c te d it, a n d as
m a n y in th e ‘p e a c e - m o v e m e n t
rejected
it)
the
r e s u lt in g
v io le n c e m a y ta k e o n e of th r e e
c o u rse s. V io le n ce m a y be ai­
m e d at g ain ing p o w e r (the vio­
lence of th e V ietnam ese N .L .F .)
o r v io le n ce m a y be p u re ly dis­
r u p tiv e to frig h ten , paraly se,
o r p unish th e e n e m y (W atts,
D e tro it riots) or, v io le n ce m ay
be p u rely sym bolic.
T h e v io le n ce o n M c G r e g o r
S treet, 1 believe, was v iole nce
of th e sy m bolic type. T h e d e ­
m o n s t r a to r s did n o t th in k that
th e y c o u ld brin g A m e r ic a 's
w a r against th e V ie tn a m e s e
g rin d in g to a halt by stoning
a few w in d o w s in the U.S. c o n ­
su late. A n d th e v iole n ce d ir e c ­
t e d a t th e c o n s t a b l e s from s t a ­
tio n te n did n o t help to p p le the
so ld -ou t L iberal g o v e r n m e n t. It
w o u ld m a k e m o r e se n se to ta k e
a p oke a t th e p o stm e n or waterm eter reader.
F riday's v io le n c e was m e re ly
a fo rm of c o m m u n ic a ti o n - e x ­
pressing sym bolically th e s tu ­
d en ts' d e p th of feeling against
a n un ju st w ar. T I M E a n d N E W S ­
W E E K d o n o t m a k e a p r a c tic e
of allow ing critics eq u a l time,
and n e i th e r d o e s C F C F . T h e
sticks a n d sto n e s w ere a m o n g
the few m e d ia left o p e n to say,
“See, I'm ev e n p r e p a r e d to go
to jail to sh o w m y c o n t e m p t
for w h a t J o h n so n is d o ing to
the V ie t n a m e s e ! ”
W h e t h e r o r n o t the level of
v io le n ce in th e p e a c e m o v e m e n t
h e r e a n d in th e U.S. will c o n t i­
nue to e sc a lla te , I can no t pre­
dict at this tim e. It all d e p e n d s
on w h a t o t h e r fo rm s of e x p r e s ­
sion a r e given to th e m . For
e x a m p le , if U.S. v o te rs a r e gi­
ven a c h a n c e to say N O to the
w ar in th e ballot box in 1968,
v io le n ce as a ta c tic will be
a b a n d o n e d a n d th e y will th ro w
all th e ir en e rg ies in to c a m ­
paigning for th e m o st dove-like
c a n d id a te - as th e y did in 1964
w h en th e y e le c te d Jo h n so n .
But if 1968 brings only a c h o ic e
b e tw e e n J o h n so n a n d Nixon or,
w orse yet, Jo h n so n a n d R e ag a n ,
th o se against the w a r a n d th o se
s y m p a th e tic to th e aim s of th e
V ie tn a m e s e N ational L ib e ra­
tion F ro n t m a y be m a r c h in g in
th e s tre e ts again - n o t w ith p a ­
cifist p la c a rd s b u t w ith M o lo ­
tov c o c k ta ils a n d guns.
k
.....
fjfe o t f e
So fig h t ice with ice. Bribe them with a bottle o f ice-cold
Coca-Cola. For Coke has the refreshing taste you never get
tire d of. That’s why things go b ette r with Coke, a fte r Coke,
a fte r Coke.
T h e MAN i s on cam pus
by Smokey Hashman
th e g e o rg ia n , N o ve m b e r 24, 1967 /
More hockey players needed
by
Sports
Comment
11
Loyola downs J.V.’s
in opener
Stan Urman
and
Brahm Sand
by S a u l MARKOWICZ
Sir G eo rg e is known around the Mont­
real a re a as b e in g p r im a r ily a h o c k e y
s ch o o l. Four y e a rs in su ccession, th e
G e o rg ia n h o c k e y te a m has w o n th e O tta w a -S t. L a w re n c e 'cham pionship', a nd
th e tro p h y th a t g o e s a lo n g w ith th is
t it le has b e e n a ll b u t g lu e d in th e t r o ­
p h y case.
It is n o t s e c re t th a t a g o o d p e rc e n ta g e
o f th e a th le tic b u d g e t is b e in g c h a n n e ­
led in to th e in te r-c o lle g ia te h o c k e y
p ro g ra m a n d d e s e rv e d ly so! The G e o r­
g ia n h o c k e y te a m has c o n trib u te d
m uch in th e w a y o f sch oo l s p ir it as w e ll
as p ro m o tin g th e g o o d n a m e o f Sir
G e o rg e W illia m s acro ss C a n ad a .
H o cke y has re s e rv e d a p ro m in e n t
s e a t in th e a th le tic p ro g ra m y e t w h a t
has b e c o m e o f in tra m u ra l h o c k e y ?
T rue th e tim e a n d m o n e y a llo te d fo r
th is p ro g ra m doe s n o t c o m p a re w ith
th a t o f th e v a rs ity h o c k e y te a m b u t it
s h o u ld be lo o k e d a fte r w 't h so m e d e ­
gree o f c o n c e rn on th e p a rt o f its o r ­
g a n iz e r.
Up t ill n o w , tro u b le w a s e n c o u n te r­
ed in try in g to lo c a te a m a n a g e r to lo o k
a fte r a nd o rg a n iz e th e p ro g ra m . A t
th e tim e o f th is w r itin g , h o w e v e r, Ha­
ro ld F in k le r h ad b e e n a p p o in te d co ­
o rd in a to r o f th e p ro g ra m b u t m a n y
d iffic u ltie s n o w s ta re h im in th e fa c e .
P u b lic ity , in s te a d o f b e in g a b o a s tin g
agent, has been a thorn in the side.
A fte r so m e 150 a p p lic a n ts h ad sig n e d
up, litt le in fo rm a tio n c o n c e rn in g p ra c ti­
ses has b e e n p u t up on th e b u lle tin
b o a rd s.
V ir tu a lly n o n o tic e s a re p la ce d in th e
N o rris b u ild in g a n d m a n y c o n c e rn e d
in d iv id u a ls fo u n d th e ir w a y to th e A th ­
le tic o ffic e s as w e ll as th e
georgian,
to in q u ire a b o u t th e la s t d e v e lo p m e n ts ,
M a n y a p p lic a n ts s tu d y in g in th e N o rris
B u ild in g h o w e v e r, d id n o t n o tic e a n y
in tra m u ra l in fo rm a tio n a n d c o n s e q u e n t­
ly d id n o t go o u t to th e e v a lu a tio n
p ra c tis e s - th u s lo s in g o u t on w h a t
co u ld be a v e ry e n jo y a b le e x tra c u r r i­
c u la r a c tiv ity .
O n e S a tu rd a y e v e n in g , a p ra c tis e
had b ee n s c h e d u le d . M a n y p la ye rs,
a p p e a re d a t th e M c G ill w in te r a re n a
o n ly to fin d th a t th e d re s s in g s a nd
e q u ip e m e n t ro o m s w e re lo c k e d . The
o n ly p e rso n on th e ice w a s J.V. g o a lie
Dave E rskin e . Since n o s u p e rv is o r
w a s p re s e n t a nd E rskin e had no ke y,
th e p la y e rs had to s a tis fy th e ir h o c k e y
d e s ire s b y ta k in g sh ots on g o a lte n d e r
E rskin e fo r th e re m a in d e r o f th e e v e ­
n in g . W ith fo u r ty p la y e rs on th e ice,
n o t o n ly o n e in s tru c to r, b u t m a n y w e re
needed.
These a re o n ly so m e o f th e p ro b le m s
th a t n e w ly a p p o in te d o rg a n iz e r F in k le r
m u st ta c k le if th e in tra m u ra l p ro g ra m
is to be la b e lle d a success.
J.V. h o c k e y c o a c h . D ave
Dies, n e e d s m o r e b o d ie s for his
te a m - il only to k e e p his o th e r
boys c o m p a n y on th e b e n c h .
Playing w ith tw o fo rw ard lines
a n d tw o d e f e n s e m e n . th e j.v.s.
w ent d o w n to a 7 - 1 d e fe a t
last S a tu rd a y in th e ir o p e n e r
against Loyola.
T h e G e o r g ia n s s ta y e d in the
g a m e for th e first tw en ty m in u ­
tes as b o th te a m s left the ice
tied. Bob Shofield s c o re d first
an d gav e Sir G e o r g e th e lead.
T h e goal c a m e o n a p o w e r play
at 13.14 as Shofield flipped
a five f o o te r past Loyola g o a le r
Jim Jo h n so n . It did n 't ta k e to o
long for D iy o la to c a tc h up
h o w ev e r. F o u r m in u te s la te r
Loyola fo rw a rd D anny Lynan
also s c o r e d on a p o w e r play.
In d ica tio n s of a G e o r g ia n
c o lla p s e c a m e early in th e se­
c o n d p e r io d as L oyola hit the
goal post in th e first m in u te .
A fte r the n e a r fatal play the
G e o r g ia n s stru g g le d a lo n g but
soon g av e way to f o u r Loyola
goals. Steve Lowe s c o r e d two,
D an n y Lynan got his s e c o n d
of th e night while c a p ta in John
H u tto n n o t c h e d his first of tw o.
H u tto n s c o r e d again in the
third p e r io d as he flic k ed o n e
o v e r G e o r g ia n g oalie T o m A n ­
d e rso n . Barry Fisher finished
the b o m b in g as: I1" slid the p u c k
th r o u g h A n d e rso n 's pads.
Before the g a m e c o a c h said
“w e 're w e a k defensively". He
was right as th e G e o rg ia n s had
tr o u b le c le a rin g th e p u c k from
t h e i r z o n e . T h e y also w ere w eak
in th e c o r n e r s as Loyola for­
w ard s e s c a p e d fro m the J.V.’s
c h e c k s w ith o u t m u c h difficul­
tyT h e g o a lte n d in g was horri­
ble to p u t it midly, as at least
fo u r go als w e re of the c h e a p
variety.
G e o r g ia n ska ting a n d hesi­
ta n c y in s h o o tin g w e re th e most
d is h e a r te n in g fa c to rs of the
g a m e h ow eve r.
M any tim es it liked as if the
ice h ad m e lte d b e n e a t h the
s k a te s o f th e G e o r g ia n players
as th e y w e r e c o n tin u a lly going
n o w h e r e th r o u g h o u t th e gam e.
Sir G e o r g e did h av e a n u m b e r
o f sc o rin g o p p o r tu n itie s during
the g a m e , b u t th eir h esite ntcy
in s h o o tin g g r a n te d the Loyola
d e f e n c e m e n tim e to regain b a ­
la n ce a n d sto p th e atta c k .
Next g a m e fo r th e J.V. is
T h u r s d a y against St. Joseph's
T e a c h e r s College at the Loyola
a r e n a . By eight o 'c lo c k T h u rs ­
day ev e n in g . C o a c h Dave Dies
ex p e c ts to hav e so m e n e w faces
a r o u n d to join his sk e le to n crew
of t h r e e v e te r a n s a n d eight
rookies.
cE L D O R A D O 9
ELD O R AD O
M IN IN G
AND
R E F IN IN G
L IM IT E D
Eldorado representatives will be available for interviews on Campus, November 28th.
Opportunities exist in the following fields:
Permanent Employment: Geologists
Mining Engineers
M echanical Engineers
Electrical Engineers
Summer Employment:
Geologists (Post G rad s,
U ndergrads )
Mining Engineers
M etallurgical Engineers
Mechanical Engineers
Chem ical Engineers
Commerce (3rd year)
Contact the Student Placement Office
for interview times and further information.
12 /
Six
th e g e o rg ia n , N o ve m b e r 24, 1967
players in double figures as
B askesb all team scores
initial w in
F or H e a d C o a c h F re d Whitac r e . th e d r o u g h t a p p e a r s to be
o v e r as his V arsity B asketball
T e a m c h a lk e d up its initial
v ic tory of this y o u n g se ason
this w eek.
T h e d r o u g h t in q u e s tio n
stem s from th e G e o r g ia n s ' s e a ­
son long inability to s c o re
c o n s iste n tly
or
f re q u en tly .
Last S a tu rd ay , the te a m m a n a ­
g e d 45 poin ts in the s e c o n d
half aganist Bishops w hile T u e s ­
d ay night th e Varsity missed
th e c e n tu r y m a rk by o n e point
as th e y b o m b e d University of
M o n tr e a l 99 - 82.
H ow ever, the m ost e n c o u r a ­
ging poin t a b o u t th e University
of M o n tr e a l c o n te s t is deriv e d
from th e s c o re s h e e t w hich
show s a total of six players in
d o u b le figures. L ooking b ack
o v e r last se aso n , this o b s e rv o r
c a n n o t r e m e m b e r a single c o n ­
test in w h ich the V arsity Bas­
ketball T e a m e i th e r c a m e close
to this tota l o r s p o r te d suc h
a diversified a tta c k .
C a m p o li stars again
For th e th ird straight g a m e .
Richie C a m poli led tn e Varsity
o ffensive a t ta c k as he s c o re d
19 po in ts d e s p ite p la y ing only
25 m in u te s of b a s k e tb a ll. In
discussing C a m p o li, it is in te r e s ­
ting to n o te th a t he is not sim ply
a o ne-w ay ballplayer. He is just
as skilled d efensively as he is
u n d e r th e b a s k e t. F u r th e r m o r e ,
he is a h ea d y p la y e r w h o do es
not allow him self to b e lured
into silly fouls o r forget the
p rin cip le that te a m w o r k wins
b a s k e tb a ll g a m e s.
M ike H irsch a n d r o o k ie Carl
R o b b b o th h a d by far th e ir best
g a m e s of th e y e a r as th e y p o tte d
F raser Adams
up with the V arsity again
16 and 15 p oints respe ctively.
H irsch has finally b eg u n to
sh o w th e spring u n d e r the
b o a r d s w h ich he is c a p a b l e of
a n d w h e n he c o m b in e s this a b i­
lity with his a d d itio n a l asset
of k now in g h o w to driv e in of­
fensively, th e re is n o r ea so n
w hy M ik e s h o u ld not be o n e of
the leading r e b o u n d m e n on
th e s q u a d as well as o n e of the
m ost c o n s iste n t sc o re rs,
Carl R o b b was a su rp rise s ta r ­
te r at g u a r d in p la c e of Will'
Ja c k so n anti he certainlv justi­
fied C o a c h W h ita c re 's c o n f i­
d e n c e in him. He illustrated
that like C a m p o li. lie c a n be
a d ea d ly o u tsid e s h o o te r. W he n
you a d d this sc o rin g to u c h to
his c o n tin u a l hustle anti a le r t­
ness, R o b b sh o u ld b e c o m e tin
ab le r e p la c e m e n t for th e d e p a r ­
te d R on T ru e s d a le .
In a d d itio n , this s u d d e n em e r g e n c e of R o b b as a s ta r t e r
sh o u ld put s o m e sp a rk into Will'
J a c k s o n w h o is only a b rief a p ­
p e a r a n c e s h o w e d signs of s n a p ­
ping his p ro lo n g e d slum p.
A dam s Returns
B ig 6 ’ 7 ” c e n t e r F ra s e r A d a m s
has re jo in e d th e Varsity af te r a
short stint with the JayV ees.
A d a m s was a n o t h e r surprise
s ta r t e r w h o p la yed virtually
th e e n tir e g a m e at the post
position. ‘Fra/e* in d ic a te d that
he hail g a in e d valuable g a m e
e x p e r ie n c e as he sc o re s 10 points
a n d g r a b b e d his s h a re of re­
b o u n d s. A d a m s just m ight sol­
ve the G eo rg ia n s-, height p r o ­
blem s if he c a n c o n t in u e to
im p ro v e his play especially
w h e n it c o m e s to th e defe n siv e
a s p e c ts of th e g am e.
Rod W a rd . P e te r T ulk w ere
the o t h e r G e o r g ia n s to break
into d o u b le figures, with 13
and
11 po ints respectively.
It is n o te a b le that ev e ry p la yer
on the te a m s s c o re d at least
tw o points, w ith the e x c e p tio n
of Brian Cunliffe a n d Yaki
M a n d el. Cunliffe. did no t dress
d u e to a b a c k in jury. Whitac re h ad in d ic a te d th a t M a nd el
will be sent d o w n to J-V for m o ­
re g r o o m in g while at th e sa m e
tim e he will reta in F ra ser Ad am s.
On th e w hole, d efe n siv e la p ­
ses w e re the o nly m a jo r w e a k ­
ness displayed by th e G eo rginas in this LI of M g am e.
H o w ev er, these m a y stem from
th e in c re a se d e m p h a sis on sc o ­
ring, com b ined w ith t h e poor
d e f e n s e of o v e r a ll l o s e n e s s
s h o w n by b o th te a m s .
B ro d e u r of M o n tre a l a c c o u n ­
ted fo r alm o st half his te am 's
tota l n e ttin g 37 po in ts while
displaying th e sh a rp e s t s h o o tin g
e n c o u n t e r e d this se aso n .
T h e r e is little d o u b t that the
sc o re w o u ld have b e e n well
o v e r th e h u n d r e d m a rk had
W h i ta c r e left his sta rte r s in
for th e e n tire c o n te s t, h o w eve r,
his insertion of all availab le
players m a d e this victory a real
te a m effort.
by Stewart PHELAN
Fith consecutive win
Water polo club
wins again
by L aw rie CARPMAN
W ith o n e m o r e g a m e to g o . T h e G e o r g ia n w a te r po lo te a m
a p p e a r s h e a d e d to w a r d it's first u n d e f e a te d se aso n in r e c e n t
m em ory.
O n S a tu rd a y , Sir G e o r g e to y e d w ith it’s o p p o sitio n , w allo­
ping th K ingston b a s e d R M C g r o u p at th e Sir A rth u r C u rrie
po o l. T h e final s c o re w as 17-4 b u t it c o u ld hav e b e e n m u c h
higher.
F or all in te n ts a n d p u r p o s e s the g a m e was o v e r at the
e n d o f th e first half as Sir G e o r g e , w h o held a g re a t m a rg in
in play, r a c k e d u p a 10-3 s c o r e a g a in st th e ir struggling o p ­
p o n e n ts .
By th e e n d of the first q u a r t e r the^ G e o r g ia n s h ad p u t five
go als past R M C ’s f ru s tra te d g o a l te n d e r .
R M C p la yed lik e o ld tir e d s w im m e rs as th e y w e re c o n ti­
n ually c a u g h t up at th e w r o n g e n d of th e p ool. S even of the
17 G e o r g ia n goals w e re s c o r e d o n b re a k w a y s.
L ea d in g Sir G e o r g e ’s la te s t sw a m p w as M ike Florian w h o
b e a t th e b e le a g u re d R M C g o a lie 9 tim es. Five of his goals
w e r e s c o re d fro m less th a n five feet fro m th e n et. Florian
n e t t e d only o n e goal in the first p e r io d as Clifford Barry a n d
R olf K in sk o ffe r h a n d le d the s c o rin g w ith tw o a p ie c e . Barry'
la te r a d d e d f o u r m o re.
F lorian s ta rte d giving R M C fits in the s e c o n d q u a r t e r as
he s c o re d f o u r tim es. Barry s c o r e d th e fifth goal of th a t q u a r ­
te r for Sir G e o r g e .
G e o r g ia n go alie Brian Sco ffield p la y ed an e x c ellen t first
half b lo c k in g all b u t t h r e e o f th e R M C drives.
W ith a 10-3 half - tim e b u lg e , th e G e o r g ia n s did n o t w ant
to let u p in the se c o n d half. T h e y p r o c e e d e d to s c o re seven
m o r e to o nly o n e for th e ir o p p o n e n t s a n d c o m p le t e d th e ro ut
in e m b a r ra s in g fashion.
N ot su rprisingly, R M C g o t w o rse as the half c o n t in u e d a n d
th e y fin ished u p s h o o tin g o n ly tw ice at th e Sir G e o r g e n e t in
th e last 10 m in u te s.
PO IN T S A F T E R ; Only th r e e p la y ers s c o re d in th e g a m e
M ik e Florian (9 goals G liffo rd Barry (5) a n d Rolf Kinshoffer (3)....) Joe R o b o z has b e e n d e e m e d in e lig ib l e fo r f u tu re
play in th e O S L A A l e a g u e a s h e p a r ti c ip a te d in a w a te r p o lo
g a m e fo r a n o t h e r te a m r e c e n tly . T his c o u l d b e a h a rd blow
to th e te a m in it’s a t te m p ts for an u n d e f e a te d se a so n ...N e x t
and. last g a m e f o r th e w a te r-lo g g e d boys is a g a in st M cG ill.
T h is is a big c o n t e s t as Sir G e o r g e d e f e a te d M c G ill 15-14
in th e ir p r e v io u s e n c o u n te r . M cG ill c o u l d a c t as th e s p o i l e r ’
in n o t allow ing Sir G e o r g e to finish th e se aso n u n d e f e a te d .
X .
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
w ith three b illio n teachers. You m igh t 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). Get a re­
fresher course in ancient history (or just about anything) from a cabbie in Rome.
Or be taught something new and unforgettable somewhere on your own continent.
When you’re ready to take the lab course in learning (and living it up), call Air Canada.
We’ve got a good way to get you to class.
A IR C A N A D A ®
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