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Salient. Victoria University Student Newspaper. Vol. 38, No. 9. April 29, 1975

The Programme

The Programme

The essence of the 5 day programme is 'enjoyment' To put the Congress on in the university seems to us just a matter of giving you an extra week of terms lectures. So we moved to a camp site, 30 acres with bush and creek and even rabbits that come out at dusk.

In amongst the enjoyment we have placed a programme of speakers and discussions, panels and films, tapes and slides and music.

It seemed to us important that in 1975 an opportunity be provided to come together from all over New Zealand to talk about issues and events in home countries. Previous conferences have had student welfare as the prime theme so now we are relegating welfare as such to second place and instead making the main theme social, economic and political issues in the coutries where students come from and other countries as well.

The 13 to the 17 May is Tuesday to Saturday. If you arrive in Auckland before that Tuesday you can actually stay at the camp anytime from Sunday evening onwards.

The first half of Tuesday is devoted to registration and familiarization and welcome and then we launch into looking at a distant example of social change — South America. In the evening a panel will present some excellently researched material on Indochina. On Wednesday you can fly a kite early in the morning and after breakfast you can participate in a session on Malaysia and Singapore.

In the afternoon Fiji and other Pacific Islands will be looked at and some themes of common problems discussed. There is Fiji-style hangi food waiting for you and a big fire to relax around and hear more about Indochina, see slides of recent Malaysian elections and other tapes and film. You are welcome to crash any night by the fire.

Thursday is Your Day. 'Slack out day' we have called it. A chance to do nothing or your own thing or go tramping, or beaching or train riding or whatever. In the evening we will have continual barbeque food going and a session about Maori Politics in New Zealand.

If you are up by 9 am. on Friday morning you can take part in a session examining deffering philosophic and religious traditions such as Hindu, Muslim, Buddhism and Christianity. In the afternoon we will examine NZ aid agencies and official external aid including the scholarship system. Then in the same afternoon a panel looks at student welfare concerns. This includes two postgraduate students presenting current research into problems that students from Malaysia, Singapore and Fiji face in New Zealand.

Then for Friday evening we have a session on Africa with an excellent documentary film and speakers. Over food and beside the fire you can discuss these issues and if you are still awake in the late evening then we will treat you to a full length 'big picture'.

Sleep in if you can on Saturday morn morning. After you have a bite to eat and a cup of coffee we want to hear your gripes and moans about Congress and anything else. Any business resolutions and thoughts about future Congresses can be done then. In the late afternoon we have the Congress capping ceremony at which everyone will graduate and receive degrees from the University of Knock-na-Gree! For the evening a variety of foods will be ready for you and then a glorious concert and dancing and anything — all night, all night, all night.

Tapes, slides, films will have lots of showings during the Congress. Also the broadcasting system at Congress means that if you use a transistor radio you can in fact listen to talks and tapes etc. where-ever you are at the camp.

What to Bring:
  • Warm sleeping bag and blanket.
  • Good walking shoes.
  • Kites, balls, records, tapes, musical instruments.