Line with the new reversible kitchen: -Western Trailer Sates West af Skcena Foreat Phone 635-6564 . ‘Tertace, Bo. "YOUR WHEEL ESTATE DEALER" Now Displaying Tho New - “KLASSIC” doors, Products, Hwy 16 : ~ While other Robert Kennedy is dead and the world again. reacts: in sick horror to the _Senselessness of murder. - . The hatred within the heart of one ‘obscure man has changed the course of 4 history: Bobby Kennedy would have been | elected President of the United States. f = His sudden death last week-has caused many to ask who will now win the presi- ‘ dential election, and they have been dis- heartened by the comparative mediocrity . of those who are left in the leadership contest. . It is cold comfort to disrniss the ine. _ cident as something -that happened in another country. Political assassination is as yet unthinkable in Canada; it was equally unthinkable in. the United States up to that moment in time when Lee Harvey Oswald squeezed the trigger tc Bh kill a President and intreduce ossassin- ation as part:af the American political - process. Already in the United States, the President and Congress have ‘moved pre- killers wait cipitately to impose restrictions on fire- ‘arms, the same restrictions that were _ urged when John Kennedy died and were rejected because of political pressure. man. » ,._ Is it because we live under the cloud of the hydrogen bornb, or because minds have become warpéd under the shrifl and incessant barrage of. mass media, that more ‘men. have Succumbed to: hysteria |- in the second half of the twentieth cen. tury? . _ Sirhan. Sirhan, the man who- mur- dered Robert Kennedy was one who suc- cumbed to hysteria, There are others al- SO waiting for that brief moment of gar- ish publicity when they too will kill, The prospect, not only for the United States, but for the human race, is ap- palling, » As the election campaign warms up Canadian voters’ eyes and ears are be-. seiged by a deluge of promises, appeals and exhortations, \ ’ patter whet . candidates. ; ; All are against sin and in favor of. ib motherhood, - a _ 4 Against unemployment and in favor of greater prosperity. _ : party, flag is attached to the - better deal for slons, . ; . ; Candidates boost that their party has people on welfare or pen- “2: They-have a striking similarity,‘no Against poverty and in: favor of a e . t k policies to make life better for every Canadian while the other parties offer nothing. ce. - __ An reality, election promises and gim- micks vary. little from : party-to, party. An“ exaimple’ popped | up recently in . the South’ Vancouver provincial: byelec- tion campaign. After flaying each other's marijuana policy, the NDP. and Liberal candidates discovered their. stands were exactly the same. . oh Honest, candidotes stand out fike bright lights. SO . ey are.not the ones who call for medicare and other high-cost programs, Tears in Should you taste brackish water in Tartan beer, it may have escaped from the tear ducts of Prince George tycoon, Ben Ginter. re a Mr. Ginter. doubtless -has many i; claims to fame, but to B.C, beer drinkers 4 he is honored for first selling suds in 1 cans. i - His enterprise hos been profitable to . his Tartan Brewery. When. the Liquor FLi i H' ned beer by ten cents, Mr. Ginter op- mis? : + . + By, Posed the move with exceptional vigor. . Bx: He was making sufficient profit, he said, i} = He did not object to money as such. yy But he did strongly. protest a price hike . that would have to be dictated by other H Canadian. breweries who belatedly. en. Be tered the canned ‘beer market. The price | mihike of ten cents coincided to the .day . gi with the appearance of the opposition'’s — H tinned suds in liquor stores. 2 =6os Mr. Ginter claims. that he has .no- ,-need of the extra dime, He has offered at \ the beer Hy), Board proposed to hike the cost of can- "To date, no satisfactory explanation and for lower taxes, ‘in the same speech, + to donate the dimes to charity, or to pay ten cents to recover empty cans. It must be noted that’in the process. of. protest he has won considerable free personal and corporate advertising which may fur- ther stimulate Tartan’ sales, However, the issue he hos raised can "not be merely dismissed as. public rela- * tions gimmickry, _- The contro! of weapons is a belated ‘and at best ineffective step. There will - be other assassinations because murder is not committed by a gun, but by a ~. Ht ds imperative, however, that taxpayers, rests firmly on the which “is run so dictatorially that S.F.U. can he shut down overnight by one man, regardless of the wishes of tis all, This intolerable incompetence of the administration has caused, for the last three years, a series CONGRATULATIONS, } TOMMY, LAD =! a Nae mYER SCORED ON SATURDAY 40. the editor Editor, Herald ; On May 28, 1968, the Cana~ dian Association of University Teachers (CAUT) passed & [e= solution of censure against Simon Fraser University, precipitating a crisis unequaled in the his- tory of any Canadian Univer- sity, Lo co . Since then the mass media has succeeded in distorting what be- gan as a clearly defined issue, you as taxpayers be well informed amd concerned with whatis really happening at your university, To this we proceed: an The CAUT censure charges the continued” contravention”: of ac- governance through interference of the academic affairs ofthe uni- versity”.' This cengure will be printed in academic journals around the world, and means, in Professors will no lo to teach at S.F.U,, 2) many of the excellent professors present- 3 the degrees of students grad- uating from-S.F.U. will be of questionable value. In other words, SFU, will become a er desire children will be deprived of a first-rate education, * . The responsibility for the dam- age which is -belng done to students, facuity, and you as shoulders of an administration He has suggested that this Province’s’ Liquor’ Control Board may have boosted. the price at the request of major brew- _ .eries and at the expense of their much smaller, B.C. competitor, Tartan of Prince George. - ; has. been offered by either the Liquor Control Board:nor the new Attorney Gen- era _, ° ‘However ‘it is a disturbing ‘anomaly . that a provincial government allegedly “committed to * free enterprise. should strifle that same. free enterprise by re- . fusing a B.C, company. the right not to 1 No choice You have to leave the big cities — sbefore you ‘con really resent the CBC... - nly: in’ smaller communities ‘remote rom competitive airwaves is It heard in llits awfulness, © Te Take: Terrace, We have two radio utlets available, CFTK and: tha-CBC’s even, Sisters network. Although. TK’'s nnouncers are sometimes frenzied of — Bonsil, and the caterwauling ‘squawls of © (of the station, " ‘merge’ Into’ a depressing: unity. raise the price of its product: ; ” agement decision ‘to use~a foghorn in place of an announcer is-also interesting technically, but does: little far the image. .. Fa “listeners, of cor nh their ‘disparate our two avallable radio is: Unfortunate instead of contin paths, frequently, TK: Is a:CBC iliat :. therefore commit ae) of crises under which students effect, that; 1) highly qualified Simon Fraser in dan For this ree help us in our efforts to innitl- ate democractic reforms at S, F.U. and to uphold the above resolution in the form of letters and petitions to your MLA. Department of Educa tion, and/or appeals to the vare ious news media, This much we and the ask of you. SIMON cepted principles of university |§°°:°° at -S.F.U.. will resign, and | 5 see fourth-rate university, and your|/§ % wie good name and: standing of S.F.U. be preserved, This cannot be done without the support of the people of B.C, DENNIS C, DEMERS FRASER UNIVERSITY shopping plaza, And indeed wa should be; it is an asset to our community, and it is wonderful to know that the owner of the complex and the new businesses see enough future. in Terrace to warrant thelr undertaking, - But whilewe're enthusing, Let's not forget the businesses who've Son we urge you to who've given us charge accounts and. often not collected, who've taken our cheques (yes, andoften : had them’. “bounce'*),' who've H, ROY STEPHENS | made their telephone numbers. available for our convenlence, | who've tried hard to bring us a oa good selection of merchandise feontin . to falluro. to cary’ on apenas Bator Herald». | Blems involved, aut wie favs administration of the univer | We're all. excited. about the) served us pleasantly, aiid well, |--- to take » sity" and the President, 'wtth] opening. of-Terrace’s: fine new | ~~" ENIVE LA ‘TERRACE’? “ “xoany _ | When Chinaman sneezes: _out that his. situation was .;_ Pity the poor weather maxi, -When he makes a mistake tin: ‘his predictions He gets ‘eriticlam from- thé public, And such: is the way of human- nature, when his predictions are right“ and the ‘weather’ is bad=he sometimes gets blamed for it, _. So many variables are involved in weather forecasting that." even with hig training In higher mathematics and physics,.and - the sae ae expen ive, olved equipment, his accuracy factor . ber cent, - ea : There ts an old’ agying among meteorologists that “a © * Chinese sneezing in Shen-al can set men to shoveling stow In. New: York City. The admitted exaggeration has a grain of - truth in it, though: The prevalling movement of storm centres {is from west. to east, and under certain conditions a minor ‘ focal turbulence can start a new storm centre moving east" ’ ward across the Pacific: se ae a . The position of the sun, the force created by the rotation - - of the earth itself, the amount of water vapor ina given mass - of air, varying temperatures in colliding air masses—theseand _ a myriad of other factors coincide to determine the weather = ’ at any given moment over any given area, te ; And sometimes the factors coincide to create a situation. which couldn't exist under normal conditfons— {findeedtheword : normal can ‘be used for conditfona ‘In the temperate zones” where the only certain factor ia change,"~ = Oe For instance, a recent spell:of nasty weather in southern” | Canada end much of the United States resulted from the rare. condition ofa stationary area of high pressure centred over: ' Hudson Bay, =: aera J ' Usually these highs -Mmove'on to, the east and north, but because of coinciding factors the Hudson Bay high in late May” stayed where it was, blocking. off air masses which would 2 have brought a change for the better. The weather men pointed o i br ont abnormal”: and might not” happen ‘again at that time of spring for years, - Fos Oat thers may be ‘hope ahead for the hard-pressed fore=. ', casters, Within the next 10 years:‘observers may be drawing | ’ up their weather. maps with the aid of talking ocean buoyh, sat- - elites and computers. At present, forecasters lack detailed — “information about peanditions over almost :70 per cent of the . earth’ a . ening detailed conditions to’ satellites. or! ceans wW automat . the oceans with buoys . Faatlcaly would cover much of the surface where Information is lacking 2 ; now, a served us well for many years— |~ - powder, the atom bomb and _In ahurry to die? ___In every century -since the begtnning of time, ; managed to find new ways to shorten his natural.life span’. s+... Man has progressed in that he has found a-new way to slaugh. - ter his fellows in each, From i " ’ . society fs geared to a ti proportion - to - OIL LTD. {Now however, the situation has ‘|that the censure be lifted and from CBC. tations’| 9 and faculty alike have suffered, reached such proportions that . mot only.are students wasting . clr time, and faculty’ their ef= |B: ‘orts, but taxpayers their money= fhe extent of $65,000,000 to e ; ; The CAUT has endorsed a Stux dent Council and Joint Faculty |M: - resolution that “Pubic repres-| ff entatives on the Board-of Goy- ernors to be. appointed elther | 9. by community organizations such . as the B,C,. Federation of: La-| ff: hour, B.C. Federation of Teach | £ ers, B.C, Council of Churches, B.C. Civit Liberties Union, Cana- dian Council of Arts andSclences, and/or: by the public”’-in order