("TE'dito’r-iiavl can‘t marks: they are usually em- PtY: except insofar as they serve the interests of the bourgeois, Leon Loucks 18 an example of this type. THELCADRE, TUES., FEB. 26, 1974 Page 7 There is also the "expert". This fellow is, or would have us believe he is, very knowledgeable. He constantly appeals (very subtly) to au- en FHCULT‘I 0N SENRTE _.D£MoNsmmm& THEIR ‘SUPEmoKIT‘I OVER STUDENT SENfiTDRS. if we could get 5 - 10'— 100 or even a thousand female prisoners. That would cut the cost per prisoner way down. So get out there girls and rape, kill, steal and molest babies. You, too can help your—governmentl! (Even if you are only a girl) Speaking of taxpayers' mo— ney, J.F.F. raised the price of meals laSt week from $1.35 to $1.75. The cost has gone up I guess! You know how it is in the restaurant bussiness. "You just can't make those meals that you get in jail for under $1.50~ a piece and sureley you want us to make 25¢ profit on ,such a fine meal. So surely you can understand a mere 40¢ raise in cost." At 40¢ a meal and an average of 25 meals at once or 75_meals a day, the total increase comes to $10,950. a year, more if it's a leap year. So, if you see a (baby Pink) 1974 Cadillac down on Wey- mouth Street at-4 a.m., do Your bit for the revolution and don't forget to salute. Love & KiS W , , “.1... .A,\~,,,,..,_ _. ~ _- In! _‘-_-,.._._-__..-r~-. n *- Sidney T. Kidd & friends NOTE: "Tasty tid—bits" meal of the week is fillet of mackeral (only slightly bu— rnt) two scoops of potatoe, three slices of bread and 43 diced carrots. There was a glass of milk with my meal so maybe that accounts for the extra cost!!! .99.... are) luster of can. University Press (c.u.r.). The opinions espressed sre those of the suthors. Allconcributions must be signed to be'considered for publication. ~ Phone: 2-7142 Editor - Stan Dalton Managing Editor - Louise Mould Ass't managing Editor - Joanne Hansen Staff Reporters - Joel Hansen Richard Willis Advertising Manager - Ken MacNeill . _ Photographv - Jim Crombie For Ms. Editor —- Gil Brammer Sports Editor - Mickey Place TYP18t_7 Leslie Lambie eé . 5 a: t e é o i 0‘ d 3‘ 5853312 13'. ‘; “A” 'I ~ A a . - ‘ ’ " ‘ p. I‘m“. Q~Q6g-, "‘<,, .-:~.os-~..s¢a¢¢.,qu Al’ 3 thority -- to tests he has conducted, to research he has done, books he has wri- tten, etc. Throughout the courSe of his remarks there are many appeals to author— ity designed to impress the other senators. He seeks to mystify so as to create a climate in which he can have considerable measure of con— trol. Unsuspecting students are apt to fall peey to this dishonest practice. Who does it? Verner Smitheram is one. Ron Baker is another. The "suckhole" -— the one who laughs for the chairman, is, indeed, a very subtle fellow. His laughter is a form of communication to the other senators which seeks as its aim the co—operation of these other senators to aquiece to the wishes of he for whom the laugher laughs. In our case, the laugher subtly asks the other sena- tors to accept Ron Baker's suggestions (which are often made in his funny comments- which are very seldom funnyl). However, the laugher does not really care whether we follow Ron Baker's suggest— ions: what he is really in— terested in is obtaining fa— vour with the chairman so as to facilitate obtaining his own way. His act is an act of deceit -— very sneaky, and very childishll No one has a mind of his OWn —- each looks to the left & right reading the expressi- ons of fellow senators in an attempt to find what is appropriate to say or how to respond to what has been said. More people should attend senate meetings to observe this spectacle of disgust. You think your professors are awe-inspiring because they are professors? Look again from another angle and watch the bourgeois in act- ion. These remarks will no doubt seem unfair to some —— es— pecially those named. But there is a general problem revealed here: a most com— mon trick among the bourge- ois (which is an unwritten law) which is the right to say whatever they like with- out having their name atta- ched to it. "One must never mention names." They can propagate any oppression; ,any and many forms of evil, without the necessity of having personally to face up to it. But the sneaky tricksthey use (as indicated above) are real, committed by real peOple: and the only means whereby one may take issue with them is to quite simply call a spade a spade! There are no social acts a— part from people -— the bo— urgeois pretend otherwise, which is again but another means of perpetuating them- selves and their wretched modes of thought. 3,,3-3 ' . y . , . . . . . . A . . . . . . i . . , . . . p a ~ A . _ . .‘