VOYAGE, ' ‘ This is the las e ion, fof the Cadre for the 1972- 1973 academic year. we shall resume publication in Sept. of this year at which time we shall reproduce the. "Cadre Manifesto" which app— eared in the April 3rd. edition. There shall be” other reproductions e.g. Pat Duffy's proposal for a restructuring of the UPEI Student Union: and the in- .formation regarding Day Care facilities for child- ren of students and fac- ulty which appeared in the April 11 edition. Time nor circumstances have not permitted the prom— ised expose on unethical practice at G.J.'s. This 'awaits another publicatidn. Ybur exams are before you: so is your summer. Make of it what you will. Until September then. - Editor The ‘Vanishing Law On I would like to bring it to the attention of admin- istration and students about -the lack of proper policing of a high school hockey game which took place on this cam- pus April 5th. The north parking lot was completely Letters Con’td Campus Vblocked and parking.was allowed on the aCCess road reducing it to single lane traffic. Many cars were blocked in and there were students who had spent a great deal of effort to get out of the parking lot. future by man or God, both of which is ridiculous), for they built'in the presents their present.) 7 ' I owe nothing to the past or to my forefathers. I owe only to myself to live an ‘existence in the present. One deficiency of the past was their conception of time, They lived very much deter- mined by their past (const— ituted by their forefathers, etc.) and projected heavily upon the future: the present was practically ignored! In .any society(or any individual) which finds the reality of fie present too difficult to cope with, may look to the past, or look to the future (e.g. many UTOPIAS were written for this reason) rather than face up to their responsibilities man is always looking for a way out of his PRESENT s1t- uation. ¥ou say I have nothing to replace this present sys- tem. So far as our material society goes I have no des— ire to eliminate it for it is not wrong in itself. What I do wish to change is the way we deal with life’s problems. If man would acc— ept their freedom and res- ponsibilities which living in the present implies, ' then we would have a very different, healthier soc- iety. In that society I would have little to Say.' I Again I say, I owe nothing to the past (so far as ' gratitude is concerned): I owe nothing to my fore- fathers: I know nothing of the future nor does it concern me, what does con- cern me however, is the present and how I compart myself in it. Sincerely yours, Stan Dalton Dear Editor: It seems that every time I pick up a Cadre there is someone somplaining about being "ripped off“ by the Administration. While I realize that these "rip. offs" do not affect every— one on campus, I would like to express some of my opinions concerning the forthcoming Summer sessions. Being abundantly aware of the fact that we are not a tri—semester institution and ~consequently cannot offer a wide variety of courses during the summer sessions, I feel that the timetables set forth, represent the endeavours of some highly pressured joker whose main concerns were to match courses with professors who cannot Swim, or with those who are zealous enough to teach a few hours on either I . . . . . . . . . ‘THE CADRE, APRIL 18, page 3 With such a flair for screw— ups, might I ask the campus "pigs" and administration how this type of thing was all- owed to get out of hand? Ken Davis side of "prime tanning time" on P.E.I° As a result of these con- straints the student who planned on getting some of his courses off finds the usual bag of tricks thrown at him. He finds one or two courses during the time that suits him which he either already has or are such ab- surd selections he decides to waste his time and not his money by not taking any - courses o Here's the final catch— since only a few students )find a course they want to take, the administration in— flates the residence fees to compensate for the income fdregone because many students are not satisfied with the timetable. In conclusion, as I look with despair at the deciev- ingly packaged summer cal- endar, I realize the con- straints that the adminis- tration has to deal with and can't help thinking that if a bit more pro- gressive thinking seeped through the system that just maybe things would be better next year. Sincerely, Irene McCardle