CRAZY HOUR————W_” _ RETURNS! ANDITIS EVEN BETTER You can get the ‘spirit’ or ‘hopp’ around EVERY FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHT 10 to 11 pm IN THE PANTHER LOUNGE ee Con't from page 8 camp was a mile from where he spent the night. "Campine ‘can be fun- but not if /' you are a refugee," he said. Aulach mentioned chat it was the tents which made him aware that he was in a world different from one he had ever known. He pointed out that the tents in the refugee camp were simply a motely collection of rags supported by unsteady poles; spherical hovels of dispair and desolation where families have lived for years- sleeping, breeding, eating and waiting, always waiting - for a better social change. Aulach’s taik indicated that life ina refugee camp is of a society where people are substantially excluded campus newspaper. democratic ordinary print More from the process and the commerce of a society. concretely, a society where people cannot express themselves freely and effectively in ways that. might bring about a change. again, doubt Time and Aulach left no about what he thought could. be done. He had a keen sense of the isolation or alienation, at the centre of experience, the anguish cf thinking man, who is separated by his rationality from events he perceives in the world external to his ego. Aulach expressed fear about the future of the children in a refugee camp. he noted that there was only one school project in the camp which was part of that future. He said he school which house grades. happens afterwards? higher educational lev be started? Will UNHCR have the funding? Will there be qualified teachers? If ever there was a need for volunteers, the need is now. seven Thanks to WUHCR, a non-profit organization that manages a variety of international development programs, both in Canada and overseas, participation in WUSC is an opportunity open not only to students but also to islanders who are interested in international development. For more information concerning wusC, contact Tan 569-3987. Hogg, OXFAM Canada will spon- sor a film on wednesday, January 28 at 7:00 pm. The titleis “Crossroads: No Mid- dle Road to Freedom”, a 1983 production which por- trays racial oppression in Pen The following people have written to the Gem seeking pen pals: Mr. Albert Opoku P.O. Box South Africa and black re- sistance to aparthied. The film will be shown at The Robertson Library, Rm 111. For more information call 892-3395. Pals 74 Agona Swedru Ghana Naoko Suyama (age 17) 870 Enokuma 2-4 Oita City Oita Japan Our Phone number is 566-0467 and you will find us on the 3rd floor of the Student Union Build- ing. OFFER EXPIRES JANUARY 31, 1987 : January 15th 1987 oO VM at