It‘s all there: the public igâ€" norance; the government apathy; the triggering incident; the proâ€" fiteer who selils sandbags at an exorbitant rate; the man with two bombâ€"shelters and a shotâ€" gun to keep others out; the little boy whose eyeballs turn to jelly when he sees the flash; the ordinary family crouched, like terrified animals, under the kitchen â€" table; the fireâ€"storm that destroys everything in its path; the grotesque â€" burned faces; the people shocked into idiocy; the breakâ€"down of law and order. Carefully juxtaposed with picâ€" tures of children whimpering with pain and shock are the calm, pompous â€" statements â€" of bishops who say we must learn to live with the bomb, and a jovial nuclear scientist who exâ€" No excruciating detail is sparâ€" ed. Blatantly antiâ€"war, it is a bitter satire on our society and man‘s stupidity. The film is crude, the message blunt, and the effect harrowing. The BBC banned it as too shocking to be shown to the public on televisâ€" The film was The War Game, & short British movie. It depicts, in a matterâ€"ofâ€"fact documentary style, what would happen if a nuclear exchange broke out. But after the reels began spinning on Monday morning, there weren‘t any laughs. When the lights went up, there was none of the usual horseplay. There were 500 shaken, subdued and in some cases stunned teenâ€" agers. There were about 500 nermal, noisy teenâ€"agers in the theatre, altogether. Normally this is askâ€" ing for bedlam. Modern kids( conditioned by television, are equally inclined to laugh jarâ€" ringly, mockingly, at scenes of horror and scenes of poignancy. Brutality and violence are their daily bread. f Took about 300 of our senior students to the movies first thing Monday morning. They looked forward to the outing, a change from the classroom. It was quite an experience. SUGAR AND SPICE by Bill Smiley 6 Waterloo Chronicle, Wednesday, Maerch 20, 1968 Heavy 11â€"gauge galvanized fence over %" thick . . . on sale now for Spring installation. Gates, corner and end posts extra. 124« 133@ 142« 1163« 36" high FENCES Simpsonsâ€"Sears Completely installed, all posts in concrete. FREE Estimate and further information, call 744â€"6141, ext. 264â€"267 Smiley at the Movies 42" high â€"__ 48" high _ 60" high We ranged from Vietnam to hippies and escapism, from morâ€" ality to the instinct for survival, from whether they would rather be Red than dead to what they would do if the Yanks decided they must take over Canada, for their own military safety. (Most of the boys would fight, take to the hills). _ I think it was good for them. The world of the future is theirs and they can‘t go on blamâ€" ing us forever. See the film yourself, if you can. Some of them were shaken out of their cosy, conformist little sox. Others were overâ€" whelmed by a feeling of futiliâ€" ty. And some were filled with a fury at the idiocy of their elders, who had allowed this to happen. And others were just plain scared and wanted to know _ what preparations we were taking for such an eventâ€" uality. And a few believed that man could prevail and overâ€" come the evil. We discussed the moral imâ€" plications of shooting people who wanted to share your shelâ€" ter. Of the police in the film shooting victims of burns who had only a few hours to live, and those hours in extreme agony. Of what they, themselves, could do about it all. They tried to explain why there is comparative silence these days about the Bomb and fallâ€"out, compared with the obâ€" session with it, and the wave of shelterâ€"building, that occurrâ€" ed a decade ago. We talked about it later. They thought it shouldn‘t be seen by children, but that everyone else in the world, on both sides of the fence, should see it. What‘s the purpose, you may ask, of â€" subjecting _ wellâ€"fed, bourgeois teenâ€"agers to such an experience. Well, it‘s rather like shock treatment. It makes them wake up, examine their values, think about the world and the part they must play in it, raâ€" ther than what they‘ll wear to the dance Friday night. plains how many millions will be kiÂ¥ed. . Mrs. Barry Nelson reported that a busload of members enâ€" joyed a tour, March 5, to the Tickets for the event will go on sale April 15. Mrs. L. P. Breithaupt is ticket chairman. Potters and portrait artists will display their talents and a canvas 20 feet long will be availâ€" able for guests who wish to wield a brush. Twenty works of art will be housed under a pink tent and auctioned at 7 o‘clock. Plans were included in a reâ€" port by committee chairman Mrs. John Ledger at a luncheon meetâ€" ing in the gallery last week. Mrs. H. F. Jewson presided. Caled Country Ayr, it is schedâ€" uled for Chauvenet Farms, the Ayr home of Mr. and Mrs. Laâ€" the women‘s committee of the Kâ€"W Art Gallery for a mamâ€" 15. Thirty quarters of beef rotatâ€" ing on outdoor spits at a barbeâ€" cue of 1,500 persons, bands, folk singers, and square dancing over spacious lawns, are planned by Gallery Opts for Country Ayr 15 KING SOUTH ONE HOUR FASHION CLEANERS ANNOUNCINGE ... _4 p.m. daily _ © Free Mothproofing on everything we clean. © Last Cleaning for â€"hr. service accepted at At No Extra Charge QUALIFIED TAILOR FOR MINOR & MAJOR REPAIRS & ALTERATIONS Free Parking at Rear of Store (BESIDE ADAMS FURNITURE) guest speaker. She gave an inâ€" formal talk describing a week she spent in England doing rubâ€" bings of medieval church brasses. lery April 5 and the Ontario cenâ€" temnial exhibition will open April Mrs. F. D. Middleton announeâ€" ed that the Albert H. 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