24
This is arts rep Bruce Rorrison’s bag and he was caught in it during some of the fun at the Co-ed ‘Sports Day on Columbia Field last Saturday. For visa students - . , University of Water-106 Waterloo, Ontario volume 17, number 16 friday, September 24, 1976 Inside Inside . . Worms unearthed in Ohio . . . . . .p.T Worms unearthed in Ohio . . . . . .p.T The society, page The society, page . . . . . I . . . . . . . .p. ,9 . . . . . I . . . . . . . .p. ,9 Cosmetic approach in S.A. . . D . .p. 12 Cosmetic approach in S.A. . . D . .p. 12 Point-counterpoint :. . .I.\. . . . . . .p. 23 Point-counterpoint :. . .I.\. . . . . . .p. 23 --. --. . . m Fee bike: -B-OG paqses the I S’ - The Ontario Government’s fee ncrease for \ foreign students has )een accepted by UW’s Board of governors. --_ The increase vi/as ratified at a neeting of the board’s executive aommittee at which vice-president academic) Tom Brzustowski _ #toad in for president Burt Mat- hews, who is away on sabbatical tave. \ It was the I-esul_t of a recommen- lation on May froti minister of Gol- eges and universities Harry Par- ott, who said the government had lecided that “a greater share of the urden of educating foreign stu- dents must be shifted from the shoulders of Ontar-o citizens.” (Parrott’s rri’ove has since come under attack from student and other organizations. and at UW a Committee to Oppose the Tuition Increases has been gathering sup- _ port.) In the discbssion preceding the vote. faculty Tepresentative Dr. ‘Muriel Vogel-Sprott asked what was the status of the recommenda- tion - in other words, what would happen if the university decided to absorb the increase itself and not to pass it along to the visa students. Vice-president (Finance and Op- liiise tighten/‘ng in engineeriig The government’s cutbacks in- ducation spending came in for ome fancy phrasing at Monday’s leeting of the Engineering Faculty louncil. Each department is preparing a eport for/ the Academic Policy Committee on what the future ol& for Engineering at UW. The aim is to forecast what is on le horizon for. the faculty, and /hat the dean, Wally McLaughlin, ees are dire days of ristraint. Al- lding to the cutbacks he said: There is a great deal of societal ressure around which will force us ack to what I would call the nor- la1 Canadian Engineering scene. That he described as a “frightful zene,” referring to his days as an ndergraduate- in Civil Engineerjng Then he was being given lecture otes in 1948 which had remained nchanged since 1930. The dean said: “Society is forc- ing us to drop our research ac- tivities in Canadian universities, which only began in the 1960’s.” REGINA (CUP) - The Saskatch- ewan Public Prices and Compensa- tion Board has approved a 14.8 per cent tuition fee hike for first year students at the University of- Re- gina and an 11.4 per cent jump for other students. Working under the restraint, McLaughlin said, presents a very significant challenge. He told the faculty that a system must be de-- vised which will make maximum use of resources. Effective July 1, 1976, first year fees for two semesters rose from $460 to $528 while other fees climbed from5475 to $228. The last- increase was in 1973. \ Exceptions to this rule are pro- vided for in the section 28 which allows an increase “if the excess can be justified on the grounds of program management objectives associated with the fee or charge in question, or of fiscal require- ments.” \ Last year revenue from tuition fees made up 11 per cent of univer- sity costs. Now they will cover 12.4 per cent of costs: At a<July 30 meeting of represen- tatives from British Columbia’s three universities, education minis- ter Pat McGeer informed Petch that UVic’s supplementary provincial grant of over $1 ,OOO,OOO would not be repeated next year. * “It will be necessary for us to Each department is looking into this, he said, but he wants the Academic Policy Committee to prepare a final report to the council which will explain how the eti- gineering faculty is going to react to the new environment. The price and compensation board was formed in March. Al- though the U of R board of gover- nors passed the increase prior to its - formation the hike became subject to its approval. For students on a full Canada Student Loan and Saskatchewan bursary of $2,800, tuition for two semesters represents 18.6 per cent of their budget. He wants the report finished by November. In the past, the faculty has had two ten-year projection re- ports. The 1970 plan was success- ful, but the 1980 one was ‘relatively aborted,’ he said. Despite an active student union campaign against the increases, they were sanctioned by the board on the basis of two sections in the bbard’s terms of references. the first, section’ 27, says, “a public sector body shall not increase a fee or charge by an amount greater than the iiicrease in costs incurred by it since October 14, 1975 in, the provision of the good or service in . __ The Prices and Compensation Board has also ratified a 10 per cent tuition fee increase for the Univers- tiy of Saskatchewan. Meanwhile, British Columbia students-are facing the prospect of tuition fee hikes combined with service cutbacks for next year. University of Victoria president, Dr. Howard Petch said, in a letter , to the student council, that “budget cuts will have to be made--for examine the feasibility of increas- ing tuition fees effective 1 July 1977 to offset, at least in part, the loss of the grant,“rPetch said in his letter. . Simon Fraser University and the University of British Columbia are in similar financial situations and Petch has spoken to those presi- dents about maintaining identical fee structures. Petch said the loss of the grant could either be compensated en- tirely by a fee increase or by a com- bination of increase and cutbacks. Although a’ figure has not yet been set for the increase, discus- / - -- -neil docherty ..question.” 1977-78 which are likely to be so sions are expected to begin soon. SP erations) Bruce Gellatly replied reed to the sam.e formula that UW pay a three-term fee of $1,950, - “The minister has said that he an- will be using. which is $300 less than the three- ticipates the increase will be passed So after January 1, 1977, visa term formula fee of $2250. UW’s on, and we can disobey the minister students registering in a’n under- explanation is thai- this reduction is , so far but .no further”. graduate program at UW will pay equal to that now given in the exist- Chairman of the Board W.M. $1515 for each regular two-term ing fee structure where the three- Rankin asked if, from the point of session. while co-op students will term fee assessed is 3x200 or $600, view of theBoard of Governors-, pay $8 !8 per term. :ind the formula fee is $900. there was any choice in the hatter. The administration’s hanclout to Brzustowski replied, “Not These figures in8clude only tui- the BOG’s executive committee much, Mr. Chairman.” - tion and not incidental fees. FOI says that this three-term grad fee of , summer school, they will pay $156 $1950 was supported by all Ontario And in response to another ques- for a half course and $306 for a full universities at a meeting of the \ ton, Gellatly pointed out that most course. Council of Ontario Universities on bf the Ontario universities had ag- Graduate students on visas wil! September 17. ( / dents rinc drastic as to impair our academic programs unless otir income can be increased. That income would have to come from the students. -

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erations) Bruce Gellatly replied reed to the sam.e formula that UW pay a three-term fee of $1,950, - “The minister has said that he an- will be using. which is $300 less than the three- ’ ticipates the increase will be passed So after January 1, 1977, visa term formula fee of $2250. UW’s on, and we can disobey the minister students registering in a’n under- University of Water-106 Waterloo, Ontario volume 17, number 16 friday, September 24, 1976 Graduate students of Governors-, -

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Page 1: Chevron_1976-77_v17,n16

This is arts rep Bruce Rorrison’s bag and he was caught in it during some of the fun at the Co-ed ‘Sports Day on Columbia Field last Saturday.

For visa students - . ,

University of Water-106 Waterloo, Ontario

volume 17, number 16 friday, September 24, 1976

Inside Inside . . Worms unearthed in Ohio . . . . . .p.T Worms unearthed in Ohio . . . . . .p.T

The society, page The society, page . . . . . I . . . . . . . .p. ,9 . . . . . I . . . . . . . .p. ,9 Cosmetic approach in S.A. . . D . .p. 12 Cosmetic approach in S.A. . . D . .p. 12 Point-counterpoint :. . .I.\. . . . . . .p. 23 Point-counterpoint :. . .I.\. . . . . . .p. 23

- - . --. . .

m

Fee bike: -B-OG paqses the I S’ - The Ontario Government’s fee

ncrease for \ foreign students has )een accepted by UW’s Board of governors. --_

The increase vi/as ratified at a neeting of the board’s executive aommittee at which vice-president academic) Tom Brzustowski _ #toad in for president Burt Mat- hews, who is away on sabbatical tave. \

It was the I-esul_t of a recommen- lation on May froti minister of Gol- eges and universities Harry Par- ott, who said the government had lecided that “a greater share of the urden of educating foreign stu-

dents must be shifted from the shoulders of Ontar-o citizens.”

(Parrott’s rri’ove has since come under attack from student and other organizations. and at UW a Committee to Oppose the Tuition Increases has been gathering sup-

_ port.) In the discbssion preceding the

vote. faculty Tepresentative Dr. ‘Muriel Vogel-Sprott asked what was the status of the recommenda- tion - in other words, what would happen if the university decided to absorb the increase itself and not to pass it along to the visa students.

Vice-president (Finance and Op-

liiise tighten/‘ng in engineeriig

The government’s cutbacks in- ducation spending came in for ome fancy phrasing at Monday’s leeting of the Engineering Faculty louncil.

Each department is preparing a eport for/ the Academic Policy Committee on what the future ol& for Engineering at UW.

The aim is to forecast what is on le horizon for. the faculty, and /hat the dean, Wally McLaughlin, ees are dire days of ristraint. Al- lding to the cutbacks he said: There is a great deal of societal

ressure around which will force us ack to what I would call the nor- la1 Canadian Engineering scene. ”

That he described as a “frightful zene,” referring to his days as an ndergraduate- in Civil Engineerjng Then he was being given lecture otes in 1948 which had remained nchanged since 1930.

The dean said: “Society is forc- ing us to drop our research ac- tivities in Canadian universities, which only began in the 1960’s.”

REGINA (CUP) - The Saskatch- ewan Public Prices and Compensa- tion Board has approved a 14.8 per cent tuition fee hike for first year students at the University of- Re- gina and an 11.4 per cent jump for other students.

Working under the restraint, McLaughlin said, presents a very significant challenge. He told the faculty that a system must be de-- vised which will make maximum use of resources.

Effective July 1, 1976, first year fees for two semesters rose from $460 to $528 while other fees climbed from5475 to $228. The last- increase was in 1973.

\ Exceptions to this rule are pro- vided for in the section 28 which allows an increase “if the excess can be justified on the grounds of program management objectives associated with the fee or charge in question, or of fiscal require- ments.” \

Last year revenue from tuition fees made up 11 per cent of univer- sity costs. Now they will cover 12.4 per cent of costs:

At a<July 30 meeting of represen- tatives from British Columbia’s three universities, education minis- ter Pat McGeer informed Petch that UVic’s supplementary provincial grant of over $1 ,OOO,OOO would not be repeated next year. *

“It will be necessary for us to

Each department is looking into this, he said, but he wants the Academic Policy Committee to prepare a final report to the council which will explain how the eti- gineering faculty is going to react to the new environment.

The price and compensation board was formed in March. Al- though the U of R board of gover- nors passed the increase prior to its - formation the hike became subject to its approval.

For students on a full Canada Student Loan and Saskatchewan bursary of $2,800, tuition for two semesters represents 18.6 per cent of their budget.

He wants the report finished by November. In the past, the faculty has had two ten-year projection re- ports. The 1970 plan was success- ful, but the 1980 one was ‘relatively aborted,’ he said.

Despite an active student union campaign against the increases, they were sanctioned by the board on the basis of two sections in the bbard’s terms of references. the first, section’ 27, says, “a public sector body shall not increase a fee or charge by an amount greater than the iiicrease in costs incurred by it since October 14, 1975 in, the provision of the good or service in . __

The Prices and Compensation Board has also ratified a 10 per cent tuition fee increase for the Univers- tiy of Saskatchewan.

Meanwhile, British Columbia students-are facing the prospect of tuition fee hikes combined with service cutbacks for next year.

University of Victoria president, Dr. Howard Petch said, in a letter , to the student council, that “budget cuts will have to be made--for

examine the feasibility of increas- ing tuition fees effective 1 July 1977 to offset, at least in part, the loss of the grant,“rPetch said in his letter.

. Simon Fraser University and the University of British Columbia are in similar financial situations and Petch has spoken to those presi- dents about maintaining identical fee structures.

Petch said the loss of the grant could either be compensated en- tirely by a fee increase or by a com- bination of increase and cutbacks.

Although a’ figure has not yet been set for the increase, discus-

/ - -- -neil docherty ..question.” 1977-78 which are likely to be so sions are expected to begin soon. SP

erations) Bruce Gellatly replied reed to the sam.e formula that UW pay a three-term fee of $1,950, - “The minister has said that he an- will be using. which is $300 less than the three- ’ ticipates the increase will be passed So after January 1, 1977, visa

term formula fee of $2250. UW’s on, and we can disobey the minister students registering in a’n under- explanation is thai- this reduction is , so far but .no further”. graduate program at UW will pay equal to that now given in the exist-

Chairman of the Board W.M. $1515 for each regular two-term ing fee structure where the three-

Rankin asked if, from the point of session. while co-op students will term fee assessed is 3x200 or $600,

view of theBoard of Governors-, pay $8 !8 per term. :ind the formula fee is $900.

there was any choice in the hatter. The administration’s hanclout to

Brzustowski replied, “Not These figures in8clude only tui- the BOG’s executive committee

much, Mr. Chairman.” - tion and not incidental fees. FOI says that this three-term grad fee of , summer school, they will pay $156 $1950 was supported by all Ontario

And in response to another ques- for a half course and $306 for a full universities at a meeting of the \ ton, Gellatly pointed out that most course. Council of Ontario Universities on bf the Ontario universities had ag- Graduate students on visas wil! September 17. ( /

dents rinc drastic as to impair our academic programs unless otir income can be increased. ” That income would have to come from the students.

-

Page 2: Chevron_1976-77_v17,n16

2 the chevron

\ - A

friday, September 24, 1971

CANADA’S LARGEST SERVICE $3.50 per page

Send now‘ for latest catajog. En- close $5.00 to cover return post- age-

ESSAY SERWCES Sf Spadina Ave., Suite .#208

Toronto, Ontario, Canada

-(416) 366-6546 Our remarch service is sold

for research assistance only. Csmpur Reps. requlrsd. Please write.

/ The Reformed Presbyterian Church is one that believes Gad has spoken and through the Bible only.

Fellowship with us

This Week On Campus is a free cQlumn,forthe announce- tings, special seminars or’ speakers, social

Friday Go Where The Action Is at Bingeman Advanced lecture for meditatiors Tim Whiten. Drawing and Sculpture. Park, Victoria Street, Kitchener. This only please. 8pm. ‘HH 280. UW Art Gallery. Hours: Mon - Fri Friday and every Friday. All single 9am-4pm. Sun 2-5pm, till October students welcome. Carlton Single

Federation Flicks - Steppenwolfe

3rd. Club. Info.7451665 with Max Von Sydow. 8pm. AL 116 Feds. $1, Others $1.50.

Feds Used Book Store open to re- Saturday IMonday ceive and sell books. 9:30 - Ipm and I:30 - 4:3Opm. CC 217A.

F$iagara Falls Trip, cosponsored by Chinese Students Association and In- ternational Students office. $2.50 in- cluding meals and transportation. Limited enrolment. Apply Chinese Library (Campus Centre basement) or I.S.O. (Needles Hall). 7:30am.

Campus Centre Pub opens 12 noan. Disco from 9 - lam. 25 cents after 7pm. Campus Centre Poster Sale. All day. Campus Centre. s Sailing Club Instruction.New mem- bers welcome. 6pm. Columbia Lake.

Library Tours - meet at the lnforma- tion desk in the Arts, E.S.L. or E.M.S. library. Times: IO:30 and 2:30. Campus Centre Pub opens 12 noon. Little Boy Blues band from g-lam. $1 after 7pm.

i at the old Library Building.

Memorial meeting for Chairman Mao Tse-tunq. Speakers include

I Duke & Argyle Sts. \ Preston

1 10:30am Sundays

Prof. Rick Guisso, History, and Prof. Doug Wahlsten, Psychology. Spon- sors inciude K-W Canada-China Friendship Society, Chinese Stu-

f f dents Association: Anti-Imperialist Alliance, International Students As- sociation. For further info contact K-W CCFS 576-7544.7:30pm. Theatre of the Arts.

LIES MY FATHER TOLD ME

Sept 23-25 Thurs-Sat ’ 7&9PM

ooooi*oooeooooio....

DAY FOR NIGHT Sept 27-29 Mon-Wed

\ 8:00 PM

. . ..oeao)ooooooo@ooo

\ THE ‘MISSOURI BREAKS

Sept 30-0ct 3 Thtirs-Sun 7 & 9:30 PM

l ooooooooooooooeaooo admission $2.00

Federation Flicks - Steppenwolfe Federation Flicks - Steppenwolfe with Max Von Sydow. 8pm. AL 116. with Max Von Sydow. 8pm. AL 116. Feds $1, Others $1.50. Feds $1, Others $1.50.

Westmount Road Westmount Place Women’s Shoes

STUDENTS

offer lo%1 off on

[!ijE+a&esyyJ J

Warrior Band Practice - new mem- bers welcome. So bring an instrui ment. (percussion and music sup- plied). 2pm. Football game, Seagram Stadium.

Tuesday Campus Centre Poster Sale. All day Campus Centre.

Sailing Club Regatta - all members potential members and spectators welcome. Sunday if bad weather. For info 6. Dufault 885-6073. 2pm. Col- umbia Lake.

Campus Centre Pub opens 12 noon. Disco from g-lam. $.25 after 7pm.

Campus Centre Pub opens 7pm. Lit- tle Boy Blues band from g-lam. $1 admission.

Sunday Chinese Folk Song Group. Practices every Sunday. All welcome. 1 - 3pm. AL 113. Varsity Soccer. UW vs Trent. Admis- sion free. 2pm. Seagram Stadium. Jazzart Concert. Barry Wills (piano)*; Doug Wicken (Bass), Mike Pihura and Brian Tansley (Sax and Flate) 2:30pm. Kitchener Public Library.

Ukrainian Student’s Club picnic. Everyone welcome. 6pm. Columbia- Lakq. International Folk Dancing. Learn and dance world iamous folk dances. $1 per person per evening. For info call Mary Bish 744-4983. Rehearsals. Little Symphony Or- chestra. 7:30-9:30pm. AL 6. .Transcendental Medltation.

Resume Writing and Covering Let- ters. Session presented by Career Planning and Placement to graduat- ing students. Sign-up for session in NH 1029. 12:30 and 3:30. NH 1020. The first general meeting of K-W Probe. K-W probe is a student- based organization on the campus of U of W, concerning itself with environ- mental issues on both specific and general fronts. The purpose of the meeting will be todiscuss and initiate work on possible projects for 1976. Everyone welcome. 4pm. ES Lounge Rm. 221.

(opposite Canada’s only Glockenspiel) Bcnton and Kinc Street Kitchener, Ontal Canada NX 13‘c ‘I‘elephonc:

Oktoberfest Happenings (.X1) 744-41-4 1

George de Sousa - Outstanding ‘one man band’ returns by popular demand after 5 month record breaking run in the Dick Turpin Room, Royal York Hotel. Zum Baden Lounge Nightly from 9 p.m. but you had better come early to get a seat! ,No cover charge. (Ott 5-Nov 6)

* Friday, October 8 through Saturday, Octo.ber 16 (excluding Sunday, October 10) Greg Gartner and his Quartet with Great “OOMPAH” Music from 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. in the Ballroom., ’ Mon. - Thur. $2.00 Fri. Sat. $3.00 - Kitchener Musicians - LARRY DAHMER - PAT LUDWIG - DON ZEEH and LARRY BRICKER’S TAPESTRY TRIO appearing early after- noon and evening in the Zum Baden Lounge - Black Walnut Bar at Poolside. No cover charge. Sunday October 10 Only Bobby Gimby, Canada’s famous Pied Piper with his Quartet (and 50 children from Suddaby School - ages 6 to 10). Sing, dance, march and enjoy a show especially designe>d for families. Two shows - 12 noon and 3 p.m. in the Ballroom. Admission $2.00 (children under 14 must be accompanied by adults). b Monday, October 11 Right after the parade, join the party with Greg Gartner

* Quartet 12 noon to 5 p.m. in the Ballroom. Admission only $1.00 Traditional Thanksgiving Day Dinner - Three sittings: 4 p.m. - 6 p.m. - 8 p.m. For reservations please call Dining Room Captain, Dirck

‘Tickets now available at Front Desk, Valhalla’ Inn For parties of 50 or more, a reduced price of $1.50 per person is offered in our Ballroom on Wednesday and Thursday nights, October -13 and 14.

Men’s volleyball tryouts. 4:30pm. PAC gym. ’ Sailing Club instruction. New mem- bers welcome. 6pm. Columbia Lake. Rehearsals. Concert Choir. 7-9pm. AL 116. Chess Club Meeting. All welcome. 7:30pm. CC 135.

Interdisciplinary Music Interest Group is h,olding its first meeting All welcome. 7:45pm. MC 5758.

Wednesday Campus Centre Poster Sale, All day, Campus Centre. Campus Centre Pub opens 12 noon. Disco from g-lam. $.25 after 7pm. Waterloo Jewish Students Associa-

tion. Discussion group and lunchec with Rabbi Philip Rosensweig. $.‘i covers bagels, lox etc. 12:30-2pm. C 113. Rehearsals. Concert Ban 5:30-7:30pm. AL 6. Sailing Club instruction New mer bers welcome. 6pm. Columbia Lakt Organizational meeting for anyor interested in joining the Ski Clu 7pm. EL 112.

Science Society Wine and Chee: Party. $40 for Frosh Sci-Sot mer bers, $.90 for regular. $2 for : others. (Bring $60 deposit for glass) 8pm. MC 5136.

Free Movie - Sometimes A Gre Notion. with Paul Newman. 10:15pr Campus Centre Great Hall. Spo sored by the Campus Centre Boar1

Thursday Campus Centre Poster Sale. All da Campus Centre. Campus Centre Pub opens 12 noo Disco from g-lam. $.25 after 7pm. Resume Writing and Covering Lo ters sessions presented by Care’ Planning and Placement to gradu; ing students. Sign-up for session NH 1029.12:30 and 3:30pm. NH 102(

Waterloo Christian Fellowship. /: are invited for coffee, conversatic and supper. This week we will have worship service together. Come ar fellowship with us. 4i30pm. HH 16’ Men’s Volleyball tryouts. 6pm. PP gym. Sailing Club Instruction. New mer bers welcome. 6pm. Columbia Lak

The Baha’i Club on campus extent a warm invitation to anyone on 1 about U of W who would-like to lea1 more about the Baha’i world faith drop by. HH 334 7:30pm.

Friday _ Campus Centre Poster Sale. All d: campus centre. Campus Centre Pub opens 12 noo Disco from g-lam. $.25 after 7pm. Federation Flicks - Shampoo wi Warren Beaty. 8pm. AL 116. Feds $ Others $1.50.

. I

University of Waterloo - a limited edition poster for University of Waterloo

\ students & faculty 1

Coming Soon ,

-Friday & Saturday

1. Rough Trade ’ One of Toronto’s most sensational

bands ‘featuri tig Carol .Pope.

All Next Week \

LISA HARTT BAND

Coming Soon: ’ The lari Thomas Band

417 King St. W. (near Victoria) Fully Licensed

Page 3: Chevron_1976-77_v17,n16

friday, September 24, 1976 , ’ the chevron 3

- Catch it if YOU can

Students ‘m‘oonlight at WV Do this year’s students want or

need money more than in the past? case, and many students are turned away on arrival.

Were their summer jobs non- * existent; or perhaps they didn’t pay

At the university audio-visual

as well as was necessary to off set department film librarian Mark

the ever climbing inflationary pro- Ritchie feeis that the students he

cess-? employs as projectionists are un-

It Seems that WaY 9 because right usually keen and they all had sum-

now the campus crowd appears mer jobs as far as he is aware . --

eager to get whatever it can. Interviews-around the UW area

tended to find that people offering, part time positions-have not been lacking in- applicants, no matter what the job entails. Long waiting lists are the rule in almost every

It seems that it is the keen and interested ones who get the jobs in any case as it is “experience that counts.” Although the A-V centre does train its personnel, they prefer to hire people who have prior ex- perience and that seems to be limit-

Rent hike quashed CHARLOTTETGWN (CUP) - The student union at the University o’f Prince Edward Island has foiled the university administration’s plans to raise residence rents as high as 26 per cent:

In appealing the rent hike to the provincial Supreme Court the union succeeded in bringing stu- dent residences under the PEI Landlord and Tenant Act and the _ Rent Review Act.

search and eviction, while the Rent Review Act limits rent increases to 8 per cent yearly, unless the land- lord can justify a greater increase.

Provincial rentalsman John Comeau has allowed the administ- ration a 12 per cent rent hike.

The UPEI administration now says they may cut some student services.

Without resorting to ads or _.. notices many students have been

able to get spending money without dipping into their bank accounts. Administrative assistant for the student federation, Helga Petz, stated that: “This past weekend over $300 was spent on booze in the campus centre pub, so somebody must have money.” Since the pub has a long waiting list of prospec- tive waiters Petz was of the opinion that word of-mouth advertising be-

- tween friends was more prevalent than in the past and that this could be common all over the campus.

University president Ronald Baker says he has “every sym- pathy” for the students, but “four

When the snow begins to fly, the university till hire some students to help with its removal. And with the second tuition fee installments due about a month after that, perhaps it will be more than the skiers who will be wishing for fre- quent flurries.

Under the Landlord and Tenant fifths of their education is funded Act students in residence are no . through subsidies, and that’s not longer subject to immediate room including grants and loans.”

ing the possibilities everywhere. Skill development counts in

other areasas well. Many jobs are filled on a casual basis from offer- ings by profs and others who re- quire some short - duration help. Again these jobs are available only to those who have had one or another kind of familiarity.

-brian pepperdine

These campus residents have just heard that their applications for student loans were rejected qnd informed (he chevron thew plan to take action in the form of a sit-in in Needles Hall. Watch where you step!

What do you do Ghen the hand- Or when “a girl student changes writing on an exam submitted by a to a boy” to write the final exam for correspondence student suddenly a course here on campus? changes from what you’ve been ac- You look into the possibility of customed to see on his/her work, attaching photos to student ID and then changes back to normal cards, says physics professor and for the next one? newly appointed associate director

Teachers ‘stand strong at $MU HALIFAX (CUP) - Saint Mary’s University Faculty Union will hold a strike vote and study sessionSep- tember 20. Meanwhile, they have started a work to rule campaign after overwhelmingly rejecting the administration’s proposed contract

.- changes which the union has termed as “nothing less than au- thoritarian.”

The union -contends the prop- osed contract would destroy

union considers money a secon- dary issue and is willing to negotiate.

The work to rule campaign started on September 15 with a fa- culty boycott’ of . registration. Senior students and administration personnel -.refused to support fa- culty and did the job themselves while professors remained availa- ble in their offices to counsel stu- dents.

academic freedom, render tenure - meaningless and limit freedom of SMU faculty militancy is evident

speech. in the 112 to 8 vote to reject ratifica-

Under the proposal the union tion of the administration proposal.

would be obliged to “avoid, dis- Voter turnout was 92 per cent with

courage, repress and oppose picket 120 of 130 votes cast. This is the

lines, information lines and media - second year in a row that the uni- communications.” The union says verSit~ has been P1aWed b’ it would be relinquishing basic faculty-administration contract

trade union rights it has already disputes.

won under-the Trade Union Act if it The work to rule campaign will signed the contract. continue through the remaining

The administration refuses to days of registration and “until the comment except to say the money administration begins to bargain in is the only stumbling block. The good faith.”

of the correspondence program Ted Dixon.

Speaking to Monday night’s meeting of the Waterloo, senate, Dixon offered these two examples as evidence that a better way of identifying students for examina-- tions is-needed. He is particularly concerned about‘ correspondence students who, he said, may never have been seen before by the per- son proctoring their exams and so may be tempted to send their smar- ter brothers-in-law to write for them.

Student federation president Shane Roberts suggested that the LLBO’s age of majority cards which “may soon be mandatory” for anyone between the ages of 18 and 25 wanting to buy liquor or beer could be used as identification for exams since they contain a photo- graph of the bearer.

Another senator objected that this would be “unfair to teetotal- ers’ ’ and Dixon pointed out that many of the correspondence stu- dents are high school teachers and older persons whom “I can’t very well ask to- get age of majority cards. ”

The photos were dropped from ID cards about five years ago to streamline registration proceedings and allow registratoin by mail. (This year about 6,400 students re-

egistered by -mail.) However the registrar’s office agreed to “look into” the possibility of - re- introducing some type of photo identification. . . .

- henry h&s

Students Centre .Closed MONTREAL (CUP) - The first move by a senate-appointed trus- tee to handle student affairs at McGill University has been to shut down the student centre for a month.

G. Sam Kingdon was appointed last week after one of two student committees carrying out McGill’s suspended students’ society duties decided to disband-and stop distribution of essential club and building operation funds.

The defunct interim management committee and the interim pol- icy committee were set up in December, 1975 after the students’ society constitution was suspended by the senate at the request of concerned students because of serious financial and managerial problems. A third committee to restructure the students was also formed to draft a new constitution.

Kingdon has indicated that most of the collected student fees will . remain in his hands until student activities are functioning again.

Some sources claim part of the money will be used to pay off last year’s $75,000 debt. /

Representatives of student clubs, angered by the arbitrary action, said the shutdown would nullify membership drive efforts this year. They plan to submit a list of demands to the trustee to rectify the situation.

Kingdon’s decree states the union “will be largely closed for general and recreational use” to allow “a short breathing space” to make adequate space and financial arrangements for the clubs. He also intends to conduct inventories and renovations.

However,.he has allowed the student paper and student radio to remain open as well as typesetting services and student society offices.

Cosensus among club reps is that the trustee appointment is poorly timed. They pointed out that the first draft of a new constitu- tion had been drawn up two weeks ago and that the students’ society could be functioning by January.

The senate agreed at its meeting that the trustee’s mandate would

English ,dept. opts - / Tar -new co-op -. -

Beginning this winter, not all co-op students will be technically oriented.

At the UW senate meeting last Monday, the, senate gave approvaI for the introduction of a co- operative honours English program that would aid students intent on jobs in communications upon graduation. .

The.Iirst fifteen’students are pre- sently in their 2A term at school, ready to begin their first work term this January, after spending their first year in ‘general arts and the present -term in . special sections that will enable them to embark on the work term.

framework these students will sharpen their communicative skills in preparation for their future emp- loyment.

The students will spend a total of 13 terms in alternating job and campus experiences. The fourth year will find them involved on the job for eight months, intended to

The new program, introduced ’ after eight years of consideration and development, will provide a second group of between 20 and 30 students entering their second year next fall with job experience in pub- lishing houses, newspapers, gov- ernment, industry, and commerce. Employed as reporters, editorial assistants, writers,- and various other positions within the

Frosh 8 good crop

allow the employers to offer more in-depth work&an would be possi- ble in four months.

Students for the co-op program will be selected, as the present ones have been, by a process of inter- views by the departments of co- ordination and English. Concerned with the output and academic re- cords of the students in courses in English and other than English, the departments will choose students _ _ of “proper attitudes and abilities” whom they feel would “best be served” by the new. program.

Graduates will have the ability to communicate on a given subject with regard to proper style and form, as well as content; to analyse and evaluate the work of others with critical sense; and to conduct library research with ease and dis- patch.

Guided by the controls presently applied to other co-operative prog- rams, the students will be required

- brian pepperdine -

to complete satisfactorily 4 work terms and conjunctive reports. Be- fore receiving a B. A. in honours English the students -will have . taken 9 full English courses, a full course in a foreign language or cul- ture, two full courses in social studies such as economics or sociology, and seven other course equivalents as electives.

If you just enrolled in, engineer- ing this year, you should be less pessimistic of your making it to - graduation. George Soulis, dean of undergrad studies in Engineering, in a report to the Engineering Fa- culty Council on September 20 felt that entrance had been made tougher and this meant a student’s chance of making it through en- gineering was greatly improved.

Soulis said a trend of inflated marks among incoming freshmen had been noted in recent years but that this had leveled off in the last year. /

He also reported a significantly lower failure rate in the 1975 class in comparison to the 1974 and 1973 classes.

-Freshman enrolment reached a peak of 803 students in Sept. .1974. In 1975 enrolment dropped to 746 and to 726 students this September.

Female enrolment increased to 45 this term. Last year there were

26 females in the freshman class for engineering. -

Twenty-one scholarships to freshmen with marks over 90 per cent were awarded this September. These students came from a total of 47 freshmen who had attained over ~ 90 per centlast year.

The enrolling students were sur- . veyed on whether they would like

four months of classes or eight months of classes before their work term. The response was a close split. This surprised Soulis, who said it couldcause problems in the teaching load.

He admitted the problem was that class loads are concentrated in the winter terms and the faculty is not geared to heavy teaching in the e spring term. There was some con- fusion as to whether the change would actually come into effect. Soulis felt students should be en- ’ couraged to go eight months.

- barry hoch ~

Page 4: Chevron_1976-77_v17,n16

Personal Adopted? Do you wonder about your Pregnant & Distressed?. The Birth past but are afraid and don’t know Control Centre is an information and where to start looking? There is a referral centre for birth control, V.D., ’ unplanned pregnancy and sexuality.

K-W Adoptees Search Group that wants to help. Please come to our

For all the alternatives phone next informal meeting on Oct. 17/76. 885-1211, ext. 3446 (Rm. 206, Cam- For more information write to K-W pus Centre) or for emergency num-

*yyYYY w+ye d bers 884-8770. _

I c anned Heat i in concert l

Adoptees, P.O. Box 8037, Kitchener, Ontario. N2K 2B6

with special guests

‘Whistle King

Do you need information about pre- .gnancy? A free pregnancy test? Prac-

Will do light moving with a small pic-

tical assistance if you are pregnant? kup. Call anytime. Jeff: 745-1293

Call BIRTHRIGHT 579-3990 Breadmaking classes. Phone 578-8613.

Gay Lib Office, Campus Centre, Rm. 217C. Open Monday - Thursday,

Gourmet Cooking Classes . Begin-

some afternoons. Counselling and ning, intermedjate, advanced levels.

information. Phone 885-l 211, ext. Phone 578-8613.

2372. Qualified Dressmaker. Will do sewing

3 WED. SEPT. 29,1976

HELP- 745-l 166 T We care. Crisis and alterations. Reasonable rates.

intervention and confidential Iisten- Phone Joanne -@86-0374.

ing to any problem. Weeknights 6 pm For Sale . to 12 midnight, Friday 5pm to Mon-

Hewlett Packard 80 calculator. $225. day 1 am

’ Pregnant? 1 New price $379. Phone 885-1661 or

745-6468.

: Humanities Theatre U of W . . . \ . . TICK-i% - L Advance . - u of w, WLU

. / . Students $3.00 . 4 . . Others . $3.50 all persons at door $4:00

.ONE SHOW ONLY LIMITED TICKETS .

t Board of Entertainment a

Your repr&fuct ive I ife is your decision. Free counselling.

No effect on low medical fee.

Free tests.

pregnancy

3 hour clinic stay. Call (313)884-4000 _ Detroit Abortions members of Abortion Coali- tion of Michigan-A self- regulating group of abortionseptre people de- - djcated to the practice of sound care in the field of

EXHIBITION AND SALE

’ OF FINE ART PRINTS

featuring ‘the works of Chagpll, Dali, Matisse, Bretighel, Cezanne, Van wh ’ Homer, Klee, Monet, Magritte, Picassd, Miro, Bose h, Renoir, Toulouse-Lautrec, Wyeth, Gauguin, Rembrandt, Group of Seven, Blish and others.

Sept. 27-Oct. 1 _ Monday-\Friday

‘- 9 I‘ 5 ’ Campus Centre

Over 1200 different prints I / ’ Prices: Large Prints

$3-ea. 3 for $7.50. Small Prints ’ - I

I $1.50ea. 3 for $4.00

Sponsored-by Campus Centre Board

72 Honda 500, four into one hooker header, $800 or best offer. 884-5307. Bed $25, single mattress and boxspr- ing with legs. Excellent condition. Call or apply 139A Columbia Street West between 5:30-7 pm. 884-9032.

Wanted Sexy, personable, intelligent, worldly female personalist to share with two of same, our house, $100 month in Kitchener. Phone (Galt) 623-2959 .after 9.

’ Good homes, for four kittens. 6 weeks old. Two males, two females. Three black and one tabby. Phone Sylvia at ext 2331 or drop by the chev- ron.

Male subjects for , interesting psychology study. We require fre; quent’mariju& users (3 times per week or more), occasional users (up to twice Rer week), and non-users. No actual drug use is involved. All infor- mation anonymous and confidential. $3 for one hour session. Participate at your convenience’ up to 11 pm. Phone 885-1211, ext. 3835, Tues. - Thurs., Noon GoldenthaI.

- 4 pm. Ask for Lyn

The Psychology department has an opening for a part-time bus driver. Hours are Mon. - Thurs., II:30 - 1 pm and 3:30 - 5 pm. $3.76 per hour. Applicants must have chauffeur’s li- cence and be able td deal with young children. Please apply to Catharine Scott, Personnel department. Ext. 3186.

Typing Typing: neat and efficient. Experi- enced. Reasonable rates. 884-l 025. Ask for Judy.

Experienced typist. Will do typing at home. Reasonable rates. Phone 576-l 387.

Typing - done in my home; essays, etc.’ Phone 653-9742.

Will do stud&t typing, reasonable rates, Lakeshore village, call 885-l 863.

Fast accurate typing. 50 bents a’page. IBM Selectric. Located in Lakeshore Ivillage. Call 884-6913 anytime.

4 4 * ARTS sdCIETY 4 4 4 4 BY-ELECTION 4 *? ’ 4 4 Oct. 1, 1976

4 - 4 4

4 4 4 4 4 Polls - Psych-main hall - 9:30-12:OO noon * 4 - 4. --% Lobby p.m.

ML 9:30-2:00 4 4

4 \ 4 4 Positions Opey : 1 General Arts :Rep 4 4 : 1 4 English Rep.

4

1 Sociology Rep. . 1 4

4 4 1 Anthropology Rep.

4 4 J

4 7 First Year Reps. 4

! i Recruits Needed

. - .

The Federation of Students stages countless edu- cational activities during the year, but we need 66PERSONPOWER”‘and good ideas.

Interested individuals should attend a recruitment meeting of the Board of Education qt 7:30pm in Hagey Hall Room 334 on Tuesday Sep- tember 28.

If you cannot attend please contact Fritz- Klingender at the Federation of Students office ’ Campus Centre Room 235, dr call Ext. 3880. ’

Page 5: Chevron_1976-77_v17,n16

CLC leader says ,

Protest suL)L)oTf mountin~u / I I \

OTTAWA (CUP) - Support for the October 14 national day of pro- test is gaining momentum, and all indications are that it will success- fully demonstrate public opposi- tion to , federal wage controls, Canadian Labour Congress (CLC) ’ president Joe Morris told a Sep- tember 15 press conference here.

Morris said it is “too early in our campaign to make any definite pre- dictions,” but that “after a cross country tour during which officers of the congress met with many groups in all provinces, it-is evident that the campaign is gathering momentum and that on October 14 Canada will witness a manifesta- tion of popular dissent seldom seen in this country.” Birds in dean’s hair

chinists, au to workers, marine He lashed out at the federal and dock workers, bus workers, government’s $1.1 million cam- postal workers, letter carriers, teachers,

paign launched in early September students, telephone to convince the public to support

wowrkers, policemen, taxi drivers, woodworkers and people in many

the wage controls program, which recent polls show does not have the

other walks of life.” The only CLC affiliated union so

support of a majority of Canadians.

far to publicly oppose the protest He said the CLC’s organizing action is the Public Service Al- campaign for the day of protest will liance of Canada, representing cost less than $100,000 , and that federal government employees. the “million dollars of taxpayer’s Morris said support has also been money the federal government is forthcoming from non-CLC un- - currently spending on its advertis- ions, such as the Ontario Public ing campaign in a futile attempt to Service Employees Union and the convince these same taxpayers that CNTU and CEQ labour centrals in wage controls are good for them, Quebec. will only add to their indignation.”

The president of the 2.3 million-member labour central ’ spoke to reporters following a two-day meeting of the CLC execu- tive council, the first such meeting since the executive named October 14 as the day of protest.

He said that reports received by the council “show every indication that the protest will be an effective one all across Canada.”

The cross-country tour of con- gress officials over the last three weeks saw group after group, in province after province, pledge their determination to join the pro-

Dean of engineering Wally McLaughlin, told the Engineering Faculty Council last Monday that many engineering students were taking “bird” courses .as their non-technical electives.

McLaughlin stated many stu- dents are taking electives which aren’t pertinent to their studies. As an example he said a course in chemistry for the environment might be a good elective for a his- tory student but-not for a fourth year chemical engineering student.

McLaughlin stressed that non- technical electives needed sharpen-

the Batke committee is recom- mending that faculty set up two slates of pertinent electives. The first slate being introductory courses and the second. composed of additional courses in more depth.

The final report will go t-o a pol- icy committee before coming back to the council. McLaughlin said changes could be initiated by mid-April.

An unidentified faculty member said he felt broad elective experi- ence-was good for students. He felt the university as a whole must pat-

test,” he said, including “pub- ing up. , rol itself to get rid of ‘easy’ courses. lit employees, steelworkers, ma- An ad hoc committee known as - barry hoch

Future IoOms uncertarln for - Notre Dame utiive&ty - ,: VICTORIA (CUP) - The fight for the establishment of a multi- campus, degree-granting institu- tion in the interior of British Col- umbia may be rewarded if the gov- ernment follows the recommeda- tions in a report of a one-person commission set up to study the question.

But this should not be done until 1990, recommends the commission consisting a former University of Guelph president William Winegard.

Until that time, the’coastal-based Simon Fraser University should administer the program at the cam- puses to be established at four in- terior urban centres, says the re- port to the government body re- sponsible for BC’s publically- funded universities.

The universities council of BC (UCBC) will decide on the reports’ a, recommendations when it meets soon to draw up next year’s budget recommendations to the provincial government.

Currently the only degree- granting university in the BC In- terior is Notre Dame in -Nelson, a private institution which has been fighting a long battle against clos- ure since the former NDP govern- ment attempted to cut off funding in 1974.

Winegard’s rep&t follows the line of the current sacred govern- ment in recommending the univer- sity cease as an autonomous in- stitution after this academic year.

The report has received the con- ditional support of the BC students federation (BCSF) since it follows the recommendations of the federa- tion and other groups such as the

national union of students concern- ing the establishment of regional campuses in the interior,

But the federation argues that the report is vague on the BCSF de-- mand that local residents have input into the administration of the various campuses.

“We would like to see local ad- visory committees set up for each,” said federation spokesper- son Debra Lewis at a Sept 11 press conference, going on to suggest that the committees become the governing bodies of the new institu- tion when it receives degree- granting powers.

Lewis also agrued against the 1990 deadline for this transfer, say- ing it is based on projected enrol- ment figures for BC’s cbastal uni- versities, instead of accounting for the increasing demand for post- secondary education that the new institution will create.

UCBC chair William Armstrong said the council will submit a condi- tional budget for the institution’s program on. the assumption that Simon Fraser University will ac- cept administrative control.

However, an SFU department head who’sat on the commission’s advisory panel disagreed with this recommendation, saying the new university should have its own - governing board composed of local residents.

The Winegard report calls in- stead for the appointment of four interior people to SFU’s governing board, and the establishment of,an 3 to 10 member advisory council from the interior by the province’s education minister.

Under the proposal, Notre Dame

Students wishing to apply for bursary assis- tance for the 1976-77 academic year must submit their application form to the Awards Office, 2nd Floor, Needles Hall byno later than September 30, 1976.

Application forms are also available from - _ the Awards Office.

University would become one of the university’s regional campuses.

NDU student union president Terry Peterson, who has been ac- tive in the fight to retain a degree- granting institution in the interior, said he could not comment on the Winegard report until after the stu- dent union had a chance to study it.

Y - hmemoiv of Mao- 1 The death of Chairman Mao T/setung has sparked a flurry of I

activity on campus and in the community which is scheduled to culminate’in a memorial meeting tonight. I

The meeting, slated for the Theatre of the Arts at 7:30 pm, is being sponsored by over 14 campus and community organizations, many of whom are expected to present resolutions.

Organizers say it will be a solemn occasion to honour [he life and work of the Chinese leader. Speeches will be given on Chairman Mao’s life and his thought which led the Chinese people to victory in their revolution.

UW professors, Paul Levine (Renison College), and Doug Wahl- sten (psychology), are listed as speakers. Several of Chairman Mao’s poems will be read and a resolution for approval of the entire m5eting will be presented.

In response to wide interest in a memorial meeting the organizers say they formed a committee to prepare the event. The committee is comprised of representatives of the Chinese Students Association (CSA), the International Students Association (ISA), the Kitchener-Waterloo Canada-China Friendship Society (K-W , CCFS), and the Anti-lmperialist Alliance (AIA).

Sorrow at the death of Chairman Mao was quickly expressed on campus. Four organizations, CSA, ISA, K-WCCFS, and the Inter- national Students Office, passed resolutions (chevron Sept. 17). - Also last week the K-WCCFS and the ISA held a large display of

posters and literature from, the People’s Republic of China. A spokesperson for the Anti-Imperialist Alliance told the chevron

the organiza’tion has taken up the call of the Communist Party of Canada (Marxist-Leninist) to widely disseminate the works of Mao Tsetung.

The spokesperson said members and supporters have sold Mao’s writings from literature tables at. UW and WLU, through local bookstores, door to door in the community and at factory gates. The - The Quotations From Chairman Mao and Selected Readings have been selling heavily.

The AIA has also begun a series of Mao Tsetung study groups . which meet every Sunday evening at 8:00 pm in Arts Lecture Room 202.

Five a&vents nab, Ohio -worm pusher I

The state of Ohio employed five their time and state money on a _ wardens ‘and undercover agents to case of an 1 l-year-old selling live bust an 1 l-year-old boy on charges worms. of selling worms, which he dug up Jeff’s mother reported he had in his yard without a permit.

Eleven-year-old Jeff Gyde was hauled into court last week on charges of illegally selling \‘ ‘craw- dads”. Young Jeff was arrested after at least two different state un- ’ dercover agents reported pure has- ing the live fishing bait from Jeff and his sister.

Once in court, however, the judge threw the charges out,stating he was outraged that at least five , state agents and wardens had spent

sold a total of-four dollars worth of worms, two dollars of these to the undercover agents. Jeff and his family explained that if someone had informed them a permit was required, they would have paid for one.

.

The Gydes stated that they didn’t know that permits were re- quired in order to sell crawdads in Ohio until Jeff had been summoned to court.

- (zns)

A1‘1 clubs and organizationsmust submit a list of their executives (names, addresses, phone -..

r numbers) in order-to retain recognition status for ‘the academic year 1976-77. (This. list is needed before~bu-dget requests can be consi- dered.) _

- .Those recognized club-s wishing financial as-=/ sistance for. the -1976-77 academic year must

_ submit detailed budget requests, no later than FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1976. Budgets should

. be submitted to Helga Petz in the Federation office, Campus Centre, Room 235. L

’ Board of Entertainment

. I _ Federation of- Students +

Page 6: Chevron_1976-77_v17,n16

6 the chevron friday, September 24, 1976

6:30 Perspectives - Perspectives is a broafamme which provides a bal- 3:00 What’s Entertainment -A look a&edQview of facts and points of view ‘at entertainment events, as well as to provide an understanding of major reviews of events in the Kitchener issues before the United Nations, in- Waterloo area: cfuding ‘recordings from meetings.

Y ~

On September 24th Perspectives covers events in Namibia during the 6:00 Live From The Slaughterhouse

past seven months, including the - From a coffee house in Aberfoyle,

Windhoek “Constitutional Confer- Ontario today’s featured artist is Rick

ence” and, details of SWAPO’s own Taylor.

discussion paper on the constitution of an independent Namibia. Sunday (September 26th)

8:00 The Down to Earth Festival - ‘6:00 Live From The Slaughterhouse - George Taros is the featured artist

Alternatives to the Supermarket on today’s programme from the Culture - In this part of the prog-, Slaughterhouse, a coffee house in ramme Dr. Stanley from the Depart- Aberfoyle, Ontario.

Bb ment of Food Sciences, University of

‘\ Guelph ‘talks about the dangers as- 9:88 News feature. sociated with home processing of ‘food. Molds are discussed initially Monday (September 27th) and it is pointed out that the molds 6:00 A Ciitical Examination of the usually cause only degradedation of Roles of the Planner in Canada - flavour and odour, but that some Perceptions of a Planner’s Role. - molds are very toxic. Yeast, although Part Two - Mike Harcourt, a member it is needed for fermentation in some of the opposition on the Municipal

Friday (September 24thj absolute terms among the wor!d’s foods, can have harmful effects by Council of the City of Vancouver dis- arms merchants - exceeded only casuing fermentation in other foods. cusses his experiences with planning

6:00 Canadian Issues -‘Making a by the United States, the Soviet The harmful effects of a number of and his perception of the role the Killing - The Canadian Arms , Union, France, the United Kingdom different types of bacteria also comes planner plays.

Industry - Ernie ,Regehr talks about and Italy; also that during the sixties under discussion in this programme. the Canadian Arms Industry and re- Canada’s arms exports were at one 6:30 Scope - Scope is a feature veals some shocking statistics- that point $18 per capita whereas at the Saturday (September 26th) produced by the Radio and Visual’ Canada ranks sixth in the world in sametime those of the U.S. were only 9:00 Spending Time - This week Services of the United Nations. On

$12 per capita. , In this .context, Bob “Statham plays songs, reads Canada’s image as a peacemaker is poems and discusses social and sci- found to be lacking in credibility. entific phenomena that relate to

Weather and Man. I

Engineering is one thing: Engineering for us is quite another.

There’s nothing&dull about engineering your own You’ll work with varied and sophisticated cha!‘mge. And that’s where your Engineering career equipment on challenging projects in many parts of in the Canadian Armed Forces begins. From there, the world, face the responsibilities of leadership your career possibilities are unlimited. In the Canadian ent,rusted to you as an officer in the Canadian Armed

, Forces, the different engineering disciplines are Forces, and you’ll enjoy the opportunity of working divided into 5 major classifications: , in all fields of engineering without being overly

Maritime Engineering- limited to any one. Military Engineering . Accepted qualified applicants will be given officer Land Ordnance Engineering rank on entry,, and an excellent salary along with Aerospace Engineering .many benefits. Security, promotions and opportunities Electronic and Communications Engineering. for post-graduate training all add up to a worthwhile

and personally rewarding career. If that’s what you’re looking for, it’s time we got together.

Write, including your engineering qualifica- tions to date, to the Director of Recruiting and Selection, National Defence Headquarters, Ottawa, Ontario, or visit”your nearest Canadian Armed Forces Recruiting Centre, listed under “Recruiting” in the Yellow Pages.

THE CANADIAN ARMEDFORCES.

September’ 27th Scope will look at the encroaching deserts and what can be done about them, as well as looking at plans for the United Na- tions Desertification Conference in Nairobi, Kenya, scheduled for 1977. Also in this programme Dr. James Hester, Rector of the United Nations University taiks about the priorities, functions and finances of the Univer- sity. .

8:00 Down to Earth Festival A Single Cell Protein - The Future’s Alternative to Meat - In this prog- ramme, Dr. Kenneth Gregory from #the Department of Microbiology, University of Guelph talks about the advantages of single cell protein, and the potential future for this valuable food source. Dr. Gregory outlines our present use of single cell protein and the need for this alternate food source.

9:00 Musikanada - Interviews with, and music from some of Canada’s finest recording artists form the basis for this programme. On the 27th the programme features MOXY.

\

Tiesday (September 28th) 6:00 Native Issues - Indian Land Claims - Dr. Lloyd Barber, Land Claims Commissioner for the Indians of Canada, and President of the Uni- versity of Regina, talks about the his- tory of interactions between native and white groups over land rights. In this programme Dr. Barber gives a general history of the land treaties that have been signed and some specific examples of injustices.

6:30 Perspectives - Prespectives is a programme which provides a bal- anced view of facts and points of view to provide an understanding of major issues before the United Nations, in- cluding recordings from meetings. On September 28th, the Cyprus prob- lem is discussed.

8:06 The Down to Earth Festival - Ethical Attitudes Towards Non- Human Life - In this portion of the programme Gerald McKeating from the Wildlife Branch, Ministry of Natural Resources talks about the impact of urbanization on Nature and Environmental Ethics. Mr. Keating also talks about the urbanite’s value system and the attitude of urban dwellers towards wildlife.

9:00 Spotlight - This programme features well known bands and ar- tists by utilizing researched material. On the 28th we look at Mahogany Rush.

(September

5:30 Sports Report - A roundup of local sport events, scores and ac- tivities. Co-ordinated by Gary Fick.

6:00 Community Services - A series of programmes featuring vari- ous community services in the Kitchener-Waterloo area. On the 29th, we look at the Addiction Re- search ‘Foundation.

8:00 The Down to Earth Festival - Ethical Attitudes Towards Wildlife Part Two - In this portion of the programme Gerald McKeating from the Wildlife Branch, Ministry of Natural Resources talks about the importance of a natural environment for mental well being, the types of environments lost to urbanization, the aquatic environment and the fail- ings of churches and schools to edu- cate people in the area of land ethics.

9:00 Crawdaddy - From Craw- daddy Magazine ‘features on well known artists and bands. On the 29th Jimi Hendrix is the featureed artist.

Thursday (September 30th) 6:00 What’s Entertainment - A re- view of some of the entertainment features in the Kitchener-Waterloo area plus a listing of upcoming events. Produced by Peter Goodwin and Greg Merrick.

8:00 The Down to Earth Festival - Heaven on Earth - From the 1976 Down to Earth Festival Gregory from the Heaven ‘on Earth Learning Centre, which opened in Kitchener last week talks about the various ac- tivities that the centre will offer, the origins of the centre and the reason the centre was set up.

L 4 . b

Page 7: Chevron_1976-77_v17,n16

1

friday, September 24, 1976 e ‘\ <the chevron

SwmMk workers to -get’ batikpa;. -‘\

People who were temporary summer employees on campus this year are probably the only ones who have even a lit.tle to smile about following the Anti-Inflation Board’s rollback of 1976-77 pay in- creases for food services and phys- ical resources personnel.

That doesn’t mean that the AIB cuts don’t apply to the earnings of summer employees.

It’s just that the summer people - of whom a large proportion are students - had been concerned that they would receive no part of the increases at all. ’

But associate director of person- nel Bob Elliott told the chevron Wednesday that they are to receive increases retroactive to July 1. .,

Under the terms of the contract between UW and Canadian Union of Public EmployFes (CUPE) local 793, signed in June and effective July 1, a 10 per cent across-the- board raise was agreed on. This has now been rolled back to 8 per cent by the AIB. * Summer ehployees, usually hired up to August 31, felt that they should receive whatever raise the AIB allowed, for the months of July and August.

But the contract between the university and the union specified that ‘the retroactiye increases would be paid only to those who were dn the payroll when the AIB ruling was handed *down.

The decision had been expicted

CAUT supports

faculty strike- ’ OTTAWA (CUP) - The executive of the Canadian ‘Association of J University Teachers’(CAUT) has voted unanimously to support in principle the striking faculty at Montreal’s Lava1 vhiversity and to endorse individual loans for the strikers.

The committee said in a release September 9 it supports “the prin- ciples bf academic freedom being defended by the striking profes- sors’ ’ .

These freedoms are “essentiaily the right to fair and equitable ’ treatment of faculty including the right to a grievance committee and appeals system,” said executive secretary Victor Sim.

The strike has curtailed registra- tion and delayed classes for 23,000 students. Most of the university’s

other employees have refused t6 cross picket lines.

Sim emphasized that CAtiT’s fi- nancial guarantees to the strikers do not constitute a strike fund.

The strike began September 7 after Lava1 professors vo’ted 83 per cent against accepting the university’s latest offer. They have been negotiating their first contract for a year. #

Issues still in contention are: Salaries, job security, implementa- tion of a’factilty salary structure, participation in establishing teach- ing criteria plus creation of a grie- vance procedure.

University officials say their 33 per cent salary raise dffer will give Lava1 professors better wages than those at otlYer French-speaking universities in Montreal or Sher- brooke.

However the professors are -standing fast with their 35 per cent request because they say salaries at universities are soon to, be in-

strike . creased.

TORONTO (CUP) - Library w.orker demands for a 20-per cent wage hike and increased benefits have been rejected by the Univer- sity of Toronto administration in the latest round of conciliation talks since their contract expired June 30.

The 390 workers, who staged the - first major strike in the university’s history last year, now enter a 15 day waiting period before they can legally strike.

Members of the Canadian union of Public Employees (CUPE) Local 1230, the workers set up in- formation pickets outside two uni- versity libraries on September 13 and September 14, the days of the talks.

The university is rejecting the 20 per cent wage request, offering in- stead 9 per cent and 7.5 per cent increases for first and second year employees. The current starting salary is just over $7,000.

CUqE 1230 president Judy Darcy said, “The management has the AIB as an ixcuse this Lear and they’re using that excuse to the hilt.”

A key issue in negotiations. is protectidn against technological change said Darcy , adding that CUPE 1230 fears the library system is quickly moving towards automa- tion.

Other demands include: a dental plan, better maternity leave and in- creased vacations on -the same basis as professibnat librarians.

PAPERBACKS? There’s only one specialist.. .

PAPERBACK PARADE

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some time in August but came only’ the terms of the contract, super- disctissed”. last week. This- clearly -excluded visors of the departments that hired - The result is that sbmmer work- the summer employees, none of summer employees had, decided ers “who completed their assign- whom were still on the payroll. that since the AIB ruling had been ments” will now receive the re-

However Elliott said that despite late, the matter should be “re- troactive increase. ,

Driver who- hit student; fin&d \ The case ofthe driver who struck driver’s license susbknded for six ’ clemency for his client since

a UW student on University Ave. last April was heard Wednesday at the Waterloo police court on Albert Street, David Bruce Cook pleaded not guilty to a charge of impaired driving.

Cook, who had also been con- victed of impaired driving _ in March, 1974, and fined $225, was found guilty. This time he was fined $400 and court co’sts or 30 days in jail. The court granted him 45 days to pay the fine. He was placed‘on probation for one year with his

months. I Cook’s actions left him liable for a The charge was laid on April 2, civil suit.

1976, when Cook hit Laurel Some- rville. She is in a hospital in Sud- bury and as of this summer was in a coma and not expected to recover. The chevron has been unable to get an update on her condition.

The Crown agreed that this court was dealing solely with a traffic charge but refused to consider Cook’s civil liability in charging him.

Cook’s lawyer pointed out that Cook could just as easily have hit a telephone pole as‘a pedestrian. He. asked the court to concern itself with the impaired driving charge only. He then w&t on to ask for

The court advised Cook that he must attend a drinking driver’s program. After the six month sys- pension he might-get use of his driver’s license back upqn the re- commendation of the director of this program. ’ - ,karen redman

,

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A MARTIN POLL- LEWIS JOHN CARLINO PRODUCTION sta‘;;ing SARAH MILES, KRIS KRISTOFFERSON in “THE SAILOR :WHO FELL FROM GRACE WITH THE SEA”

Based on the novel by YUKIO MISHIMA. Music by JOHN MANDEL. Produced by MARTIN POLL. Written for the screen and Directed by LEWIS JOHN CARLINO. COLOR. PRINTS BY CFI.

‘8

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Page 8: Chevron_1976-77_v17,n16

-. 8 the chevron

- .1

friday, September 24, 1976 _- - .

\ P

The best car&The best driw&s. _ . Labatt?s tias brhght it\all borne. ._ -_ ,

. - Each year men such as Niki Lauda, Mario Spain. . I you haven’t missed it all. Labatt’s has Andretti; James Hunt and Emerson Fittipaldi gather together in places around the world

to test their cars and their skill. It’s called . Grand Prix Formula 1 racing, and the

competition gets tougher everytime- out. If you missed them in Italy, Germany or

brought it all home. ‘The Labatt’s 50 \Grand Prix-. of Canada is back. The best cars, the best drivers. The Labatt’s 50 Grand Prix of Canada, Formula 1 racing at Mosport, October 3. Practice and qualifying days Oct. 1,2. It’s hap- pening right here. . . and it’s happening for you.

\ -.

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Page 9: Chevron_1976-77_v17,n16

friday, September- 24, 1976 the chevron 9

Sacs wa m n I .

, The chevron contabted campus societies in order to find out what activitjes have been planned for the upcoming year. The followinggives you an idea of what to look forward to. The chevron is interested in hear- ing from the Recreation Students As- sociation, Kinesiology Students AS- sociation, Integrated Studies and the Church Colleges Association. Thus far we haven’t been able to make contact with these sotjeties.

-Art sot ’ . - / If you are going down to the Arts

Society office hoping to find infor- mation or help, don’t hold your breath. You’ll be lucky if the door is unlocked, let alone a body inside to answer your questions.

The office, located in room 178A in the Humanities Hall, is supposed to be manned by council members who are meant to sign up for a cer- tain number of hours each heck to keep the office functioning.

However it appears somebody isn’t doing his/her job. Over a period of two days, eight attempts were made to gain information from the office but it was open only twice.

One person contacted, who did not want to be identified, indicated that the situation may not improve.

“The reason that nobody is here now is because they are still getting their timetables changed,” she has- tily added, “but there probably won’t be anyone in here later either.”

She also said that the main reason behind the society’s exis- tence is to “get the Arts students together.” I Everyone else contacted agreed that the society desperately needs student support.

The office is open, ideally, from ?:OO to 3:30. If you should happen to wander by when the office is open chances are the person you ,talk to could be one of the society’s executive. It is comprised of Cindy Siebel, Heather Scrutton, Kahen Gamanel, and Doreen Danis who are the president, vice-prksident, treasurer and secretary respec- tively,

Doug Kerohan and Joanne Drys- tek, two1 society council members expressed cancer-n over the lack of student participation ,in the ac- tivities held so far and hope that attendance iti future events will in- crease.

Some of the events plann?d, in- clude two Arts Weeks, one ‘in the fall and one in the winter, with ac- tivities such as tug-o’-war and broomball competitions, a pub, wine and cheese party, a spelling bee and a semi-formal.

If you are interested in in- tramural sports, check the’Arts ath- letic announcements located downstairs in Modern Languages. Or if lifting a cup or munching on a doughnut is more your idea of phys- ical exertion try the coffee shop in room 280 in the Humanities Hall.

If Shakespeare turns you on there are trips to StraVford which the society co-sponsors.

They also have information re: garding the 13 clubs that they spon- sor.

This is just a spattering of the events scheduled for this year. If you have any ideas, questions, complaints or if you are merely a curious first year student drop by their office or call them at extention 2322.

Should you bring along your lucky rabbit’s foot and the stars happen to be in the right position you may be fortunate enough to find someone to help you.

- graham thorn&n .

Math sot MathSoc is kicking around the

idea of setting up a “clearing agency \ for programming ser- vices”.

Purpose of such an agency would be to facilitate the getting-together of non-math faculty and students with math people on projects re- quiring computer use.

MathSoc president Gary Pru- dence said the idea is now being discussed “to ‘see if there is ari in- terest in doing it’: (on the part of math people) “and if there is an interest in having it done.”

Prudence says the Math&c “pub in Ottawa is going over well, and the society is thinking of setting up a complete service there in two to three weeks.

The- service, which is similar to one previously set up in Toronto,‘is for stud’ents on work-term who can call a phone-number for informa- tion abqut a weekly pub. The number is available from the Math sot office.

Tomorrow, Saturday 25, the soc- iety will hold a pub car rally. Depar- ture time will be 11.30 am from parking lot “b”. Teams can regis- ter at the Math Sot office, M&C 3038.

Checkpoints in the rally tiill be various out-of-town pubs. At these stops, the navigatdr drinks, but of course the driver doesn’t.

On the more sober side, Math- Sot will be involved in “Oktober- kon”, a science-fiction convention organized by WATSFIC, the UW Science Fiction Club. WATSFIC, MathSoc’s stablemate at M&C 3038, is holding the convention at Forest Heights Collegiate on Oc- tober 9 from 9:3O,am to 6:30pm.

Oktoberkon will include movies, panel discussions, an art show, an auction of “Space art”, and a number of booths selling science

<fiction merchandise including books, art and magazices.

-adrian rodway

Eng%soc Eng. Sot has just completed one

of its most successful orientations -four days of fun, frolic and push- ing a bus. _

According to Len Trembley (1st Vice-president and Chris Komoroswki (Special Events) more of the same is planned.

But the society does more than just organise schemes to entertain its memberg’and in educational ac- tivity it is ahead of most other cam- pus societies.

The engineers were the first on campus to print a course critique.at the end of each term. L

Since the winter of 1975 any en- gineering student who didn’t re- ceive a pass has had a letter from the society’s Appeal Squad ac- companying the bad news.

The appeal committee evaluates the student? case and will repres- ent students who are on work-term

‘when their case is heard. The society also runs a peer

counselling service. This allows lower-year students with problems to consult yith third and fourth year students who have been through the grinder.

They are also active on the faculty’s Examination and Promo- tions Committee, the body which decides what to do with students who are under the 59.9 pass mark. The committee also decides ex- amination policy, such as whether to allow calculators into exams.

The engineers have two sepatate societies which alternate with the work terms (the society on campus this term is Eng Sot A), yet despite the interruptions they don’t lack active members.

It’s the old die-hards who run the place, Trembley and Komorowski

up fo rl ter ,fun ’ said in an interview, but there are always new faces appearing.

The society’s entertainment schedule for _this term includes a trip to Stratford Oct. 9, and a semi- formal on Oct. 30. They also plan to sip a quiet couple on Oct. 12 during the Oktoberfest celebrations.

Any steam remaining is scheduled to be released during Engineering Week when there will be trike races, camel races and paper aeroplane competition (at which the engineering reps said the chevron i$ folded neatJy and tossed into the air, though apparently with little success).

pub crawl will be held on Tuesday, September 28. Tickets are availa-

Among future events, an ESS

ble from the ESS office. A wine and cheese party will be held 0~ Thurs- day, September 30, and all mem- ber’s of the Environmental Studies faculty are welcome. The society has also purchased a number of tic- kets for Oktoberfest.

Although the activities are mainly for the benefit of ES stu- dents, “everyone is cordially in- vited,” said Ferguson.

This year, the executive of the ESS is made up of Andrew Tucker - prgsident, Dave McLel- lan - federation rep., Heather Robertson - federation rep., Susan Ferguson - publications of- ficer, Rob Ferneauz - social direc- tor, and Rick Forster - “critic at large”.

The society has already entered intramural teams for flag fobtball,

-volleyball, broomball, inner-tube

director for SciSoc.

water polo and basketball with more teams planned if interest con- ” tinues. “It’s the best response we’ve had from Science students in years,” Beaudette said.

Despite the participation in the intramural program, there is still great -apathy among science stu- dents, said Harry Strothard, soci- ety treasurer.

Komorowski said this year’,s orientation attendance was the best in recent years. The activities were kicked-off with 535 new students competing in tugs-of-war, sack races, and dodge ball. It featured campus tours (the new students were even ‘shown the Arts Coffee Shop) a garbage grab, visits to :some country pubs and culminated in about 200 engineers parading into the Warriors football game last week. \

Oh! and just for fun the new stu-

“We can’t get things moving when voile can’t get a quorum at soc- iety meetings,” he said. Only six of the 1,722 society members showed up /for last week’s meeting. -The society still needs undergraduate officers but there has been no re- ’ sponse as yet, Strothard said.

Besides Strothard, the society executive consists of president Wayne Halpert atid vice president Anne Bowes. .

The. society has planned social ’ activities, beginning with last night’s pub crawl and a wine and cheese party on September 29. A semi-formal and a pub are also being planned for later this term.

The society newsletter, contain- ing intramural scores, science news and society activities is available in the society office, BI room 253.

-terri berlinghoff

dents pushed a school bus around the campus - 250 of them split into teams and completed the circuit in 15 minutes 41.8 seconds.

-neil docherty

Env. sot Coffeeshops, rollerskating, a

Christmas party, and a formal are among the activities planned by the Environmental. Studies Society. (ESS) for the upcoming year, said Sue Ferguson, publications officer for the society.

Student participation at past events staged by the society this year has been good, Ferguson added. However, someone sittiqg across-the rqom disagreed, saying that “student apathy is the name of the game.” I ,

Anyone wanting more informa- tion on the ESS should visit room 138A in the Environmental Sttidies building: In the hdjoining room, a coffee shop is open from 8:30 -3:3$ where coffee, donuts, and kaisers are sold.

-lynne hunter

Sci. sot’ \ Things are looking up for the

Science Society this year, accord- ing to Dale Beaudette, intramural .

UNIVERSITY CATHOLIC PARISH University of, Waterloo

Mass schedule: Notre Dame Chapel Mon-Fri 7:30am

12:35pm Sat: 7:OOpm .

5:OOpm Sun: IO:OOim 11:30am

Sat: 9:OOam - 12: 30pm (Village II) 7:OOpm

Father Norm Choate, C.R. 884-8 11 O/ext . 4256

., Father Bob Liddy, C.R. 884-8 11 O/ext . ,0863

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Page 10: Chevron_1976-77_v17,n16

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CT-2121 STEREO CASSETTE DECK WITH DOLBY Motor: Electro’nically-controlled DC motor Vi&w & Flutter: 0.12% (WRMS) S/N Ratio: 58dB (Dolby on) Frequency ‘Re- sponse: 30-l 6,OOOHz (chrome tape)

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Page 11: Chevron_1976-77_v17,n16

Friday, September 24, 1976 \' the chevron 11

Want to learn all about Cbiina?

Worldwide interest in China ;rows daily and the Kitchener Waterloo commynity is no eltcep- ion.

In response to this interest, the Kitchener-Waterloo Canada-China ?riendsh$ Society was founded in 19713.

The purpose of the KW CCFS is 0 promote people to people friend- ;hip between the people of Canada md the people of China, says Geoff Arthur, society member at large. dnyone who supports this aim is welcome as a member of the soci- :ty.

The society has many members i-om all walks of life and is always lappy to find new people interested n coming to programs, taking up asks on various committees, or in assisting the executive with its work.

The society currently involves ‘our active ,commitfees.

The programme committe’e re- ,earches and organizes the public neetihgs held by the society. It in- lestigates possibilities of speakers ind topic,s ,uf particular interest to nembers.

The Bethune Study Group is :ompiling the journals, speeches md diaries of Doctor Norman 3ethune in order to put together a Jublication of this well known Zanadian’s work in China.

The Outreach Committee isbusy aking films and literature to vari- )us community organiztitions and chools. It is always on the watch or people expressing a keen in- erest in China.

The job of the Newsletter Com- nittee is the regular publication of kiendship. This committee seeks but reports and news articles for ?clusion in the newsletter. It also ncourages members and friends to vrite stories, poems, book reviews

C-Mart Workers But 16 weeks

‘Members of the Canadian Food nd Allied Workers (CFAW) in Vindsor and Sault Ste. Marie en- :ring their sixteenth we’ek of strike ction against K-Mart are calling 3r a boycott of K-Mart and Kresge tores.

The union members, mainly /omen, are fighting for their first ontract. In dispute. is their right to union shop, increased wages and

ealth benefits. K-Mart, a subsidiary of Kiesge

lompany is a multi-national nier- hancising giant. In the 26 weeks &ing July 28. 1976, the S.S. iresge Company had a net.income f $100.9 million.

The company is actively engaged 1 a programme to break the union. cab labour and so-called “K-Mart 3ecials’ ’ are being used to keep ie stores in operation.

Scab labour hired to fill the posi- ons ofunion members is receiving 3 cents more per hour than work- I-S were before they went on trike. K-Mart is also providing full IHIP coverage for the scabs: lmething they were not willing to o for the union workers.

The stores are offering “spe- ials” to customers. Sundry goods ich as tobacco, potato chips, & 3ft drinks are being offered at 210~ cost price. Dick Tighe, president of local

ne of the Canadian Union of Dis-. llery and Allied- Workers, de- :ribes K-Mart’s actions as: “no- ting more than a deceitful fraud to reak the heart of the pickets.”

The CFAW is calling for ation-wide support from union iembers and the general public for heir cause.

-dave col burn

and research articles for the news- letter. Friendship is a reflection of the aim of the society in building people to people friendship. _

Programs of the KW CCFS are held regularly and deal with specific aspects of Chinese life. Past programs have featured the screening of films from China such ,as, The Red Detachment of Women, and Red Flag Canal. Films by Wes- terners who have visited China are also shown, such as Away With-All Pests, a film documentary by Doc- tor Joshua Horn covering his ex- perience in China as a surgeon, and The People’s Army, a film by Au- stralian journalist Felix Green about the People’s Liberation Army of China. ’

The society has also had the c

pleasure of bringing many speakers who have been to China to show their slides and to lead discussions, Arthur said. -

Last year the KW CCFS purch- ased four fims produced by Au- stralian journalist Felix Green: Eight or Nine inthe Morning, about education, Friendship First) Com- petition Second, concerning sports, Self-Reliance, dealing with indtis- try, and People’s Communes, on ag- riculture.

These films give excellent ac- counts of four areas of Chinese life. They have been shown by many other Canada-China Friendship Societies, ’ organizations and schools1 in southwestern Ontario. The society is happy tb rent these films at a small charge to interested groups and is. pleased to assist in organizing programmes on China.

The society also has a large selection of literature, posters and buttons from China. These items are inexpensive and available at all programmes of the society.

For any inform&ion regarding the society, the mailing address is:1 KW CCFS, P.O. Box 2412, Station B Duke Street, Kitchener, Ontario. Announcements of programs will be posted.

-petra taylor

works& s in%ibrar T&search . Learn to use the resource’s of the Library in preparing essays and reports.

Sign up in advance at the Information Desk of the Arts or E.M.S. Library.

ARTS Dana Porter Arts Library

E.M.S Engineering, Mathematics,\ and Science Library (4th floor, Mathematics

*and- Computer Building)

E.S. Environmental ’ Studies Library (Room 246, ’ Environmental Studies Building)

Chairman Mao Tse tung Dec. 26,1893 - Sept 9,1976

S

S

_ Universi of Waterloo Theatre .of the Art& -

Fridag, Sepf; -24,1976

peakers include: / Dr. Rick Guisso, History

Dr. Doug Wahlsten, Psychology

ponsors include: Anti-Imperialist Alliance Arab Students Association I The Chevron Chinese Students Association International Students Associatio

uw & WLU ’ K-W Canada-China

Friendship Society K-W Chinese Cultural Centre

Page 12: Chevron_1976-77_v17,n16

12 the chevron irida

$365000 RR job-

* SJA gov’t tries NEW YORK (LNS) - The

South African government is trying . its best to turn U.S. public favor in

its direction - and is using black Americans to do it.

Badly in need of a face-lift, the white minority regime signed a con- tract this spring with the U.S. pub- lic relations firm of Sydney S. Baron Co. to ihe tune of $365,000. Andrew Hatcher, a black man, was hired as a vice-president of the P.R. firm just about the time the South African contract was signed. He then appeared on the NBC “Today” show June 23 to debate the current situation in South Af- rica with American Committee on Africa director George Houser, .

- who is white.’ Hatcher defended the white

minority government, said that South Africa was the U.S.‘s best ally in Africa, and maintained that increased American investment could help to bring about change.

The South -African government has also niade hay out of a recent trade agreement between a black- owned Mississippi company, and a white-owned South African firm.

Under this agreement the E.F. blacks, including 1960’s civil rights Young Co., which is headquartered activist Charles Evers. Evers, who in Meridian, Mississippi, will sup- is now the mayor of Meridian-, re- ply a wide, range of its special sponded to Kirksey’s attack on the “black” cosmetic skin lighteners cosmetics deal by saying, “‘Just-let and hair straighteners to .the An- us get into South Africa and that drew Harding Pty. Ltd. which will monster of serv’ication will come market them in South Africa. tumbling down.”

The contract, seen as a triumph by the South Africans, was signed in front of the Mississippi governor in a partying atmosphere which in- cluded the presentation of -South Aft-ican gifts to the governor.

“U.S. investment in South Af- rica has grown from almost nothing to over $1.5 billion in the last 25 years. While apartheid has inten-

Not everybody was so happy about the deal in Mississippi, how- ever, arid Henry Kirksey, an inde- pendent black politician running for the Senate against conservative segregationist John Stennis, at- tacked the contract. “The native people of South Africa and Rhodesia don’t need any cosme- tics,” said Kirksey. “They need help to get the European apartheid thieves 0% their backs.” *

But South Africa’s constant re-

Chilean boycott called for OTTAWA (CUP) - Canada and other countries must stop all trade wfi the ruling military jun/a in Chile to pressure the regime into respecting the human rights of the Chilean people, the former minister of agriculture under Saivadore Al- lende said in Ottawa last week. ~

iteration of the argument that it is changing and that economic de- velopment w*ill help that change has been bought by some AmericanL

Jacques Chonchol was addres- sing an audience at the University of Ottawa on the third anniversary of the coup which removed the popular unity government of Al- lende. He has been living in exile in France since 1974 and teaches ad- vanced Latin American studies at

sified, the Bantustans have been established-and thousands of polit- ical prisoners have been jailed 01 shot ,” points out the American Committee on Africa (ACOA). “It seems unlikly then that a contract to supply cosmetics will bring that system crumbling down.”

“The South African government has learned to hide its iron fist in a velvet glove,” concludes ACOA, “thus it now allows blacks to travel

out of South Africa, and even to be quite strongly critical’ of apartheid. So long as they accept ‘the possibil- ity of change within the system’ and do ngt identify themselves with liberation movement politics. For the men and women who do adopt such an uncompromising stance there are no overseas tours or \aeI- vet gloves, only the guns of Sowsto or the prison t&s of Robben I+ land.”

h ke Ontario fish --the Universitk de Paris.

j Air. pollution j

As Chile’s minister of agriculture from November 1970 until the end of 1972, Chonchol directed a mas- sive land redistribution program that gave many peasant farmers their first chance to own property. After the coup this progress ended when 25 percent of the most arable land was expropriated for the small elite of landowners who had prei/i- ously owned it.

He described the massive re- gression of socio-economic stan- dards in Chile in the three yeai-s following the coup.

“Inflation has reached 400 per- cent. Unemployment figures soal’ at 20 percent arid no provisior?s are made for those without work. Lots of people are living on the charity of the Church.”

Food consumption has de- creased dramatically in the past three years as well. “When Allende was in power a typical peasant in a village consumed about 2,700 calories per day. This intake has dropped to 2@0 calories under the

junta,” he said. To illustrate the concentrated

wealth in Chile today, Chonchol sai\d, “One percent of the popula-

‘tion owns 50 percent of the national revenue. ”

He also confirmed the ndtorious reputation of the military regime. “All political parties have been repressed, all trade unions have been banned, all institutions are in- terfered with and -the univerisities are controlled.” / There are thousands of political prisoners being tortured and persecuted in

-the jails. People are kidnapped dur-

ing the night and never heard from again. ’ ’

Though many Western countrie\ have spoken out against the at- rocities committed by the militarbl regime, their sentiments are purelbr hypocritical, he said,.

“It’s pretty well recognized that the CIA financed the coup that re- moved Allende. Chile has r<ceived $ I biNion through international credit organizations since the coup,

and this is mostly American money .’ ’

He mentioned there might be a decrease in American aid if Jimmy Carter wins the upcoming presi- dential race. Carter is using the blatant CIA manoeuvres in Chile to discredit the Republicans.

Asked if the Chilean people would not benefit from this aid in a time of severe inflation and unemp- loyment, Chonchol said: “Most people never see that money. The bu-lk of it is spent on buying arms.”

Chonchol is confident that the military regime will someday be overthrown, and that he will be able to return to Chile. ’

‘.‘Despite all the repressive measures !aken by the junta, the people are still organizing them- selves to defeat the dictatorship.”

While the efforts of the people are ess_ential for a victory, he also stressed the importance of Western countries pressuring the junta by withholding trade from Chile.

“Th&-e will be changes for the people once the regime is bank- rupt ,” he said. d+

to swim- in, Mirex NEW YORK (LNS/CUP) - Likelihood of exposure to danger- ous air pollutants is related to in- come, occupation, rent and race. according to a recent study by economist William Kruvant.

Using data on carbon monoxide (CO), hydrocarbon, suifur dioxide and particulate pollution in a number of cities, Kruvant’s study (summarized in the March issue of Environment Magazine in an arti- cle entitled “Discriminatory Ail Pollutidn: If Poor, Don’t Breathe,“), shows that air pollu- tion is most acute for people who are poor, black, engaged in non- professional occupations or li_ve in low rent areas.

Those who fit into more than one of those categories, particularly those who fit all four, are the most likely to be endangered by the air they breathe.

Hydrocarbon and CO pollution are caused mainly by automobiles. Sulfur dioxide and particulate pol- lution are caused mainly be indus- try and power plants, and cause acute cases of lower respiratory disease and ihronic bronchitis.

In statistical terms, Kruvant’s study shows that OT 13, percent of the Washington D.C. areas where median income is less ,than $7000 per year, CO concentrations ex- ceed the federally e-stablished safe maximum of 10 milligrams pei cubic meter.

Only- one percent of the Washington D.C. census tracts with median incomes between $7000 and $16,000 per year had this level. No areas with median in- comes over $16,000 per year had unsafe CO levels.

But, “the close parallel between poverty, low economic status, low rents, segregation and air pollution is not one of cause and effect,” notes Kruvant. “(Economically) disadvantaged people are not primarily responsible fol-s air pollu-

tion.” Poor and third world persons, he

points out, “live closest to the sources of pollution - power plants, industrial installations and central cities where vehicle travel is heaviest.”

NEW -YORK (LNS) -!- A New York State chemical manuf&ureI is dumping largeamounts of Mirex, a known carcinogen, into Lake On-

- tario, effectively contaminating the lake’s large fish population.

The Hooker Chemical Company -- a subsidiary of Occidental Pet- roleum -claims it stopped produc-

’ tion of the substance in 1967. But a recent New York Times investiga- tion disclosed that over one pound a day ofthe highly dangerous sub- stance - a huge amount for this chemical - flows into the lake through Hooker pipes. ’

Furthermore, a permit issued by thti United States Environmental Protection Agency itself actually allowed Hooker to Q dump thousands of pounds of other highly . toxic chemicals (among them PCB’s) into -the lake daily.

‘To permit anything like this in a single day is incredible,’ one

EPA scientist was quoted as say- ing. “1 don’t think I have ever seen a permit for this much junk. It has all the makings of a scandal.”

The Times investigation also re- vealed that the State Department of Environmental Conservation was proceeding with plans to stock Lake Ontario with millions of sal- mon in spite of wa_l.&ngs about Mirex from scientists and others on their own staff.

Fish in Lake Ontario contain large amounts of Mirex, which then accumulates in humans who eat the contaminated fish. Yet the State’s Environmental Protection Agency is also moving dhead with a $10 million hatchery to produce salmon and trout for sports fishing, slated to bring money to the region’s sag- ging economy.- The fish will be stored in the contaminated waters of Lake Ontario.

Visa students limited i

“opposed to’ quotas, differential fees and any other barriers, aside from academic, obstructing ent- rance to post-secondary educatibn for foreign _ students. Canadians should realize that education is one of-the best forms of foreign aid av- ailable.”

REGINA (CUP) - The U-niveksity of Regina has set a quota of 500 international students because of limited government grants and teaching resotirces, according to the university S&retary, T.L. Lowery.

At the same time, a May meeting of the board of governors restricted total full-time enrolment to 4,000.

According to Lowery , the inter- national student quota was set ar- bitrarily. “We just felt that 500 foreign students to 3,500 Canadian students would be a reasonable proportion but we will be flexible,” he said.

Lowery defended the policy against student union opposition, saying, \ “Our rules are .not as stringent as those at other univer- sities.”

Two Manitoba universities Also set quotas on international students this summer. The University of Brandon has limited international students to 20 percent of its full- time enrolment of about 4,000

j while the University of Winnipeg set a 200 student limit. _

. Regina student union president Doug Tabah stated he is

- Tabah also rejected Lowery’s argument that international ’ stu- dents hold back Canadian students because they cluster in engineering and science faculties and may have trouble with both the subject mat- ter and the English language.

“All students must demonstrate a proficiency in English before being admitted to university level classes, he said.

The board of governors also re- commended residence bed space for internationals be limited to 15 percent.

A residence committee report in April noted that tensions exist bet- ween internationals and Canadians because of “cooking habits, differ- ing lifestyle backgrounds:: plus communication barriers. Howevel the report said segregation and quotas were not the solution, re- commending instead a _ more thorough comtiittee study.

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24, 1976 ~--. -__ _ the chevron 13

had one enty j1/70 n obstacle course,

societies.

-Spaceman takes ,a nasty fall “The man Who Fell to Earth” is

the story of Thomas J. Newton, a ‘stranger in a strange land. The no- tion of Earth having visitors from

’ outer space is not new in science fiction. The farthest one usually gets to know in a film with this no- tion, however, is the human pers- pective. It was mandatory that the alien be on Earth for the purpose of either conquering or destroying the human race. One. is relieved to learn that “the Man Who Fell to Earth” is no such film.

Newton, portrayed by David Bowie has come to Earth for some vaguely defined purpose. A pur-

pose which iequires a grea‘t amount of financial and scientific i-e- sources. ‘A good guess, might be that his home planet is stricken with severe drought and Earth hav- ing quite an abundance of water is target for some mass means of in- terstellar transport. This is not the important problem.

The particulq dilemma which this film addresses is Newton’s adaptation to the human lifestyle. From his arrival he. tends to sur- iound himself only with characters who are somewhat depraved (in terms of modern society’s values).

His lawyer/business manager . .(Buck Henry) is a homo_sexual. His girlfriend, Mary LOLI (Candy Clark), is the classic “dumb broad” ‘and his chief scientist/confident (Rip Torn) is somewhat of a sex maniac, who ch- ases young girls. Newton seems very naive and innocent in the midst of all this depravation. Often as not, he tends to ignore those around him, insisting on wallowing in a pool of melancholy. As with any home loving alien, Newton misses his wife and children, who are still back on planet-X. turn to alcohol as a way of dealfng with his strange _emotional condi- . tion. Drink must make him tend to forget the many problems about him. His secret origin is somehow uncovered and someone begins tests on him, his financial empire crumbles around him, and his girlfriend leaves him after he shows himself for what he really is (quite ghastly Tor poor Mary Lou).

The last scene sums up well Newton’s dilemma. The waiter ad- vises Mr. Newton that he’s proba- - bly had enough (meaning drink) after knocki<g over,‘his glass. Rip Torn responds, “Mr. Newton has

There’s nothing you can say - about this- movie ,- ’ f

f Mel Brooks -did it again. “Silent

Movie” showing at the Fairview Cinema, is at least as funny as “Young Frankenstein” (Frunk- en-Steen) if not quite as brilliant in conception. Or maybe s-0 - I

A silent movie in this day and

tempts to recruit the stars. Thev - can’t afford to pay them so Brooks and his cohorts have to win them over in other ways - sometimes disastrously..

age‘? This is what the owner of a failing Hollywood movie company says to Brooks (who plays a direc- tor) whem he suggests that it will save them-that is, they mouth the words. Except for a single- monosyllable from the least likely candidate, “Silent Movie” is com- pletely silent.

Engulf and Devour in the mean- time invent ways to frustrate Brooks’ efforts, (they discover he once was a hopeless alcoholic. . . ), culminating in an inevitable car chase.

The old movie company is being engulfed and devoured by a nefari- ous east-coast corporation called - Engulf and Devour. Brooks prop- oses to prevent Engulf and Devour from foreclosing by producing one smash hit - a silent with all the great stars that they can get: Burt Lancastqr, Ann Bancroft, Liza Minelli, Paul_ Newman and more (each of which appear in cameos).

Throughout, Brooks makes use of cinemas oldest jokes and sight gags, but uses them in such a way - ’ ’ as to inject new humour into them--- , and make them seem fresh again. When Brooks originally gets the idea for a silerit movie, we see a bare light bulb on a stand a few feet behind him light up, positioned im- mediately over his head. The effect is, well, to say the least, unex- pected (not any more, you may say, but don’t worry; there’s lots more).

Marty Feldman and Dom De- luise accompany Brooks in his at-

Don’t expect to be laughing from the first second to the last, but don’t expect either that you won’t enjoy every moment.

“Silent Movie” fits in well with the list of other Brooks movies: “The Producers”, “The Twelve Chairs”, “Blazing Saddles” and “YoutQ Frankenstein”. In gen- eral, he’s been improving; “Young Frankenstein” is still my favourite, but “Silent Movie” shows us that

-he’s not going to let us down (please ignore “When Times Were Rotten” which wasn’t really his show anyway). Brooks keeps get- ting better at slapstick and tends now even more-to other visual gags. Although his humour gets pretty risky it is never really crude.

“Silent .Movie” also has the most consistent barrage of gags. If you blink twice you’ll miss some- thing.

One word of warning:-* If you haven’t enjoyed any of the earlier Brooks movies., you won’t like this one. it’s as personal as tastes in

x books or music. -0mn

had quite, enough!” Probably “quite enough” of the whole human race.

In Spite of the feeling that there is something incomplete about the script, the film is good, with Bowie giving an excellent debut. I’ll prob- ably see it again, next time around.

-d.j. mclellan

.

--

Second City good with their characters -’ I Q No. 1: Lights!

(Humanities Theatre) (Enter the Second City Revue’

Touring Company, a troupe highly acclaimed as the funniest cabaret group in Toronto, perhaps the best in the country. Their setting: a black backdrdp, a dozen black chairs.) ,

LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, PRESENTING THE BEST OF SECOND CITY!

Q No. 2: Blackout! (In the dark, the audience hears

low sounds; shuffling and the noise of chairs being jostled about. Of course, the company is not used to work$g on such a large stage and a big auditorium. Their style of swift satire is more suited to a smaller, mildly tipsy crowd .)

Q. No. 3: Lights!- The troupe performs a number of

short, very ’ slick comic skits. Themes vary from THE NAG- GING WIFE, to BOY MEETS GIRL IN LAUNDRAMAT to, a

beautiful rendition of MARY TELLS JOSEPH HOW THE ANGEL OF GOD DESCENDED UPON HEI?.

Granted, a good ‘portion of the program revolved upon questions of sex, gender, and personal pre- ference of the above. This is the

-kind of material which goes over. well with the pub crowd, especially the student pub crowd which turned out in full force at the per- formance.

’ One of the more involved skits, a take-off on T.V. game shows, was entitled THE PASSPORT GAME. Fashioned upon Monty Hall’s Lets Make a Deal (a technique pioneered by the infamous George Carlin) the contestants are visitors to Canada seeking landed immig- rant status. The host of the show, an immigration officer, offers them a choice of DOOR No. I, DOOR No. 2; or DOOR No. 3. The grand prize, legal entrance to Canada-in- cludes such benefits as free hos- pitalization, unemployment insur- ance and government subsidized, low-cost housing. In short, the.

winner receives an all-expenses- paid free life in Canada.

k Most notable about this /corn- pany is strength in characteriza- tion. They instantly conjure up nuns, preachers, construction. woi-kers, teachers, students, angels, cops, teamsters, doctors, hoods, civil servants, etc., etc, . The company was very relaxed with the near capacity audience and, as a result, the audience was + responsive to the players. Q. NO. 12: Blackout! .Houselights.

(Intermission) Q No. 13: Lights.

This brings up an interesting point about Fabaret theatre. It does

-not rely upon garish costumes, massive sets and a cast of thousands. It relies upon that part of the theatre tradition which dates back through vaudeville, English music hall and pantomine right 1 back to ancient times. This is the tradition of wit and timing.

Second City puts across their show with a great deal mere finesse than their manner would have you notice. They can coax a laugh, hold

a laugh, delay a laugh and move the audience into various situations, places and times in a matter of sec- onds. Experience and exposure have taught these performers how to draw their audience into imagi- nary circumstances, when to lay it on and when to cool it off. -

Even in his seventies, the bril- liant George Burns commands an audience better than most comics. What he lacks in energy, he gains in timing. Zero Mostel and Mel Brooks, men with outrageous humours have the chuzpah (or gall) to put it across because they know their audience well.

Q No. 20: Blackout. HouSelights. (Two members of the company

out on stage to take suggestions from the audience on situations for improvisations. Afterwards, a lengthy INTERMISSION ensues.)

During the intermission the company has- been throwing to- gether some ideas for the improvs.

- In all of theatre this is one of the most fundamentalxqnd yet difficult operations to pull off, especially

after an exhausting performance. Q No. 21: Houselights out. Lights! - Perhaps the cast is tired, or just

run-out of spontaneity because the entire improv period is a wipe-out. The players panic and lose their ability to feed off of each other.

It is a real let-down to an audi- . ence iyhich had waited patiently.

As the crowd files out this Satur‘- day evening, most of them chose to remember the sparkling skits over the bloopers and take home a light&- frame of mind than they ’ took in. Q No. 26: Blackout.

-myles keston

Cdming October 8th and 9th to the Humanities Theatre, the Montreal Centaur Theatre presents On The Job. The production is realistic, boisterous, and at times bawdy drama about life in l the Montreal garment industry, with dialogue that is to the point and fre- quently coarse. Student tickets are $2.50 and are available at the box office.

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! 14 the chevron friday, September 24, 1976 3

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jay, septembef24, 1 976 the chevron 15

iwee t Blindness vwpe in the dark. D ‘Don’t w&y,” they informed

audience, “We’ll just use the clause track from “Wood- ck”. But Woodstock died six Irs ago and Sweet Blindness died stage Tuesday. in unfortunate mistake by the ientation Committee resulted in lismal attendance at the Sweet ndncss-Mike Mandel concert d in the Humanities Theatre. All t posters that were placed on :ice boards around the school 1 the advance tickets said Wed- ;day 22nd. since few people knew the right ‘e there were only approximately ty people in a theatre that can ,d ten. times that number. The k of warm bodies put the screws the opening act, mentalist Mike mdel. Because the numbers were too all, Mandel said he couldn’t do : main portion of his act: a dis- .y of mindreading. Instead Man-

spent 30 minutes on a variety of -d tricks supported by a reper- t-e-of stale jokes and tales of the IIGTIME” (Motor Inn Hotel, glt-Ste-Marie). Mandel beat a hasty retreat and er ;a five minute wait Sweet ndness took the stage. Back- upped by a black curtain with the #up’s logo written in silver se- ns, they made the .final sound e&-and after a dras_tically short reduction began to play. .t would have been nic‘e to have d that they weren’t bothered by b diminutive audience, but ned in a sterling performance. Ily, that was not the case. 1pening with the group’s theme weet Blindness” (what else?) ich was played with the confi- It ease that a good bar acquires y after countl_ess playings, -the nd slowly deteriorated. The main problem with Sweet ndness- during the performance

was not their playing, but the in- consistency of the material they played. Other than the previously mentioned theme song, their first single release ‘ tcowboys to Girls” and “National Poddy” an ambigu- otissalute to Canada the rest of the material was weak.

Yet although the musical content wasn’t on the level of an “Abbey Road” or “‘Tommy” that doesn’t mean it wasn’t interesting. Exam- ples are tunes li_ke “Full-Time Sub- ject” a searing epic about .a ‘boy who gives up his books so he can make love to his girl all day and night. Or the immortal “Someone’s Watching You” a tale based on the posJ-Watergate paranoia so com- mon today. Finally there is “Quebec” a little ditty done in disco style, dedicated to the Laurentians and those “foxy french ladies” but not really in that order.

The evening was not a loss due mainly to Curtis Lee the group’s lead guitarist who would often take a song and improvise new parts to. it. He was obviously the dominant stage figure despite a conga player who hopped about the stage doing a . cross between a highland fling and the rectal itch pdlka.

The mixing of the instruments

/ CAMPUS , ’ WORSHIP vSER.VICE .2&Z+\ by Chaplain Kooisha

EVERY SUNDAY- MORNING

11 a.m. Room 373.. Humanities Hall

Theme: 1 Believe in Cod’s Cdodness

7t&io . tudent Assistance Prograi

-- DeadIi.ne: September 30 If you’ need financial assis’tal n- tinue your studies’ this term, apply for OSAP before September 30. _ _

Information and application forms are available in the Student Awards Office, Room 2001, Needles Hall.

Ministry of . Colleges and Universities

Intario .

Hon. Harry C. Parrott, DDS, Minister Dr. J. Gordon Parr, Deputy Minister

also suffered from inconsistency. Sounds produced ranged from clear, sharp melodies td a -Phil Spectorish “Wall of Noise”, dis- torted and ear ringing.

At the show’s finale, the group left the stage followed by as much noise as forty people can niake, sustained applause and shouts of “encore” from the roadies. Hope- fully mistakes of Tuesday can be eliminated from future events like this one, it could only .be beneficial to all involved.

-doug hamiiton

photo by Rob Dickin

ETERTALAME.. ieedk 0 .

IDEAS -‘-

to - the ..,chevrow campus centre- 140

lhlhat’s going on ins South Africa? I \ Engineering lecture 101

University of WaGho 8PM -

Sept. 30

. E. Tekere - from the central /

committee ZANU-ANC A.M.- Chidoda - ZANU Represe-ntative

IN Canada

Sponsored by: Board of External Relations

African Students Association Global Community Centre

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16 the chevron friday, September 24, 1976

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friday, September 24, 1976

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the chevron 17

-PedTa/tts put philosoph’y to -work J i Philosophy Is No Mystery and

Serving the People with Dialectics , are two remarkable little pamphlets which portray how workers and peasants in China study Mao Tsetung Thought and apply it in the practice of class struggle, the struggle for production, and scien- tific experiment.

The first pamphlet begins with

between the two lines, socialism and capitalism, bet-ween the pro- letariat and the bourgeoisie. The comrades saw. that those who av-

oided the hardest work, claimed that production could not be in- creased, and advocated private fish breeding were on the capitalist road and must be criticized.

Their success in applying ’ presents the application of Mao philosophy started a mass move- Tsetung Thought by a peasant ment in the villa-ge for reading farmer, a crew of truck drivers, a Chairman Mao’s work, and subse- team of weather forecasters, some quently these ideas enabled them to vegetable keepers, a paraplegia overcome a severe drought. Sum- treatment group, and a letter car- ming up their experience, the peo- rier. In all these cases, the workers ‘pie said: “If we peasants study and peasants began with a thorough philosophy in the light of the prob- investigation of ,the facts of lems everyone is concerned about phenomena. Using dialectical

verified their ideas, or, faced-with failure, revised them and again re- turned to practice until good results were achieved.

Both pamphlets are valuable for people who want to find out about dialectical materialism, and they are also useful adjuncts for the study of Chairman Mao’s four es- says on philosophy.

Chairman Mao’s call: “Liberate philosophy from the confines of the

. With renewed enthusiasm, they . in the struggle between the two materialism as a,, guide, they then They are published by Foreign ,

philosophers’ returned to the study of “On Con-

lecture rooms and tradiction”. This time, however, lines, we can understand it quickly developed mere perceptual know- Languages Press, Peking, and are

textbooks, and turn it into a sharp and apply itwell -just like dry soil ledge into rational knowledge of the available in Canada from National absorbing raindrops. ” essences of-phenomena and the Publications Centre, Box 727,

- weapon in the hands of the mas- theTaadopted a new style of study. “We study philosophy because we

laws of their development. Apply- Adelaide Station, Toronto. ses.” It then describes how the ~ Serving the People with Dialectics ing this knowledge in practice, they - doug wahlsten

Chairman Mao chatting with commune members ofpoor peasant origin in his native village Shaoshan, Hunan Province, 7959.

Picture by Hsinhua/LNS

peasants of Chinchein Production Brigade of Kiangshan County, Chekiang Province, did precisely

this.

‘Life in general, and grain produc- tion in particular, ‘had improved greatly since liberation, but the people found that their problems had not disappeared. Old ones were solved, but new ones had ari- sen. Some of the brigade leaders were no longer enthusiastic to do the hardest. work, and others said that production had reached its limit. When drought ensued, a con- tradicti-on arose between the pri- vate interest of a fish breeder and the collective interest of the brigade which needed the pond water for the rice crop. A work team following Liu Shao-chi’s re- visionist line came to the village and accused the Party branch cadres of making wrong decisions and needing rectification.

Faced with all these contradic- tions, the cadresdecided to study “On Contradiction” by Chairman Mao. They began to read it line by line like students in school, but this only made them dizzy. What were contradictions ? What were the principal contradiction and the principal aspect of a contradiction, anyway? Some local reactionaries began to ridicule the comrades; saying, “Humph! Clodhoppers wanting to study philosophy! It’s as ridiculous as a cat teaching tigers to climb a tree. And these are blind tigers at that.” Meanwhile, the contradictions in,, the village kept mounting

Then Chairman Mao’s “23-Point Document” reached the village. It explained how the principal con- tradiction in the countryside was

ha6e problems, -but when we turned to books we put the prob- lems aside. .Therefore we should study what relates to our specific problems and apply what we study to solve them.” By integrating study with their experience and going back and forth. several times between study and application, they began-to grasp dialectics and solve their problems at the same time.

- I

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friday, September 24, 1976

i

Gray Coach University Service - ’ Direct from Campus Entrances ’

To Toronto and Wood‘stock-London Express via Hwy. 401 ’ B

I FALL TIME TABLE I LONDON-KITCHENERrTf3RONTO t /

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LEAVE UNIVERSITY Mon. to Fri. - 3:05 p.m. & 4:50 p.m. Fridays - 12:25 pm. & 3:35p.m.

- ----RETURN BUSES FROM TORONTO TO’CAMPUS EARLY MORNING SERVICE - ’

6:45 a.m. - Mon. to Fri. via Guelph 7:00 a.m. - Monday NON-STOP Express

Sundays or Monday Holiday 7:30 p.m.; l-8:30 p.m.; l-10:40 p.m. /

I- Via lslington Station G- Via Guelph

WOODSTOGK-LONDON SERVICE

Read Down Express via Hwy. 401 ’ ‘

Fridays Read Up

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Lv. 5.55 p.m. London Lv. 5.15 p.m.

Toronto and’ London buses lo@ via University, West- mount, Columbia ‘and Phillip, serving designated stops. Buses will stop on signal at intermediate points en route and along University.Ave. ,

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* Conductor: Raffi Armenian *

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Guest Soloist: William Aide * s Brahms - Symphony No. 4 in E minor, Op. 98 s &Fo’r subscription tickets Concert sponsored& ” call, 886-3850 * .B Single tickets at door

by K-W Octoberfest Inc.“ * a&’

Don I’t Worry!! Westmount Place .

Pharmacy Will Save-You!

Mon - Sat 9am - IOpm Sun and Holidays llam - 9pm

w westmount place pharmacy 378-8800 -

Page 19: Chevron_1976-77_v17,n16

friday, September 24, 1976

J ‘.

the chevron 19

hes The following game was played at the 1976 Ontario Open

Chess TouCnament:

Sicilian Defence - WHITE: R. lnkol

’ 1 P-K4 2 N-KB3 3 P:Q4 4 NxP 5 N-QB3

‘BLACK: H. Jung P-QB4 ’

P-Q3 PXP

N-KB3 P-QR3 . \

The 1976 K-W Open Chess Tournament is taking place this weekend in the General Examination Room in Villagel.

It is being sponsored jointly by the University of Waterloo Chess Club and the Concordia Club and will be a 5 round Swiss System iournament. This means that each player will get to play five games.

The entry fee is $5 for adu’lts and $3 for juniors (under age 16). -In addition the entrant wjll have to join the Chess federation of Canada ($9 adult and $6 junior) if she or he is not already a member. ’

The tournament will be?ated by the Chess Federation of Cana& so it will be a good opportunity for unrated players to obtain a rating.

The prize fund will be’100 per cent of the entry fees received and there will be prizes for the top three finishers overall and the winners in the B, C, Dand unrated classes. There may bespecial prizes for the top Lady and the top Junior players.

The games will be played at’7:30 p.m. on September 24 and IO:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. on September25 and 26. Registration will take place from 5:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. at the tournament site on Friday Septem.ber 24. Entrants should bring chess sets and chess clocks if possible.

Black is playing a variation of the popular Sicilian defence. In this defence Black-aims for a counter-attack on the Queen-side by advancing his’ Queen-side pawns and posting his heavy pieces on the Queen,Bishop file. White will normally counter with an attack of his own ‘on the other wing.

6 B-QB4 , . . . White develops his King Bishop to its most aggressive

diagonal. Common alternatives are 6 B-KN5 and the conserva- tive 6 B-K2.

6 P-K3 Black‘p&dently builds a barrier of Pa’wns to limit the range of

the enemy Bishop. 7 B-K3!?

d Q

White is aiming for an attacking format@ similar to that of the Velimirovic Attack which is characterized by-Queen-side castling and the rapid advance of the King-side Pawns. Hoyever this particular position allows Black to undermine the support of the White King Pawn by an eventual P-QN5. Therefore 7 O-O or 7 B-N3 may be safer.

7 8, t%N3

P-QN4! _ P-N5!

9 N-R4 Black has successfully underr&ed the suppbrt of the White

King Pawn. Now, rather than making the obvious capture, Black should intensify the pressure with 9 . . ., B-N2 which would probably force White over to the defensive with IO P-KB3. This is onelof the positions where Nimzoyitch’sdictum “The threat is stronger than it’s execution” can be applied.

9 1 O-‘&K2!?.

NxP?

Even stronger is the tactical 16 NxKP!, PxN; 1 I N-N6, B-N2; 12 NxR, BxN; 13 BxKP and Whjte has a strong attack against Black’s exposed King.

10 . . . P-Q4?! Black places his faith in a wall of Pawns, but 10 . . ., B-N2 was

safer. 11 o-o B-K2

’ 12 P-KB4! White will open the King Bishop file.

12 . . . o-o 13 P-B5! _ B-Q2

/

14PxP PXP 15 Q-N4!? N-B4??

Black falls for the false economy of this move. Apparently he has a double attack on the Knight on QR4 and he defends his backward King Pawn at the same time, but the absence of the Knight from the King-side allows White to strike adecisive blow. Much better would have been 15 . . ., N-KB3! \

16 B-R6!! . . : Threatening 17 QxNPmate. Black has no good defence.

16 . . . RxRch? This merely cedes White the vital King Bishop file. Now White

wins quickly. Objectively the best is 16 . . ., P-KN3 which gives up the exchange but avoids the worst. Another insufficient try is 1‘6 . . ., B-KB3; 17 NxN, BxNch; 18 QxB, PxB; 19 BxQP!

17 RxR P-KN3 18 QxKB4!!

There is no defence against both.1 9 Q-KB7mate and 19 Q-K5! 18 . . . Q-K1 19 Q-K5! I Resigns

Q-N7mate is not to be denied. -robert inkol

turns to rock . / *

Last Saturday the Garfield Band blasted their way through a one night stand at the WLU auditorium to\ a crowd of 700. Organizers were very disappointed as it was hoped

b thai two shows could take place-but low ticket sales prevented that.

To the surprise of many, Garfield has gone “heavy” complete with strobe lights, magnesium bombs, black lights, and pulsating red, greens and blues. The band is noted as having one of the best sound sys- tems on the circuit today, however the lyrics were totally inaudible, masked in the thundhr of the low notes re\ierbating against the solid concrete walls that form the WLU auditorium. The gym is defi- nitely not suited for any events that involve the use of sound. The or- ganizers deEided that it was un- necessary to provide seating much ,to the discomfort of everybody forced to sit on a hard gym floor for two hours at a time..

The Garfield band has certainly changed but nobody is saying for j the better; sensitive lyrics are now lost “In the deluge of heavily qmp- lified instruments and streaming sentlesizers. Followers who re- member past performances in more quiet settings were no doubt disap- pointed with the new “blast em out” arrangements.

The “new” Garfield Band no longer has any Stage presence; this is especially noticeable in Ron French, the band’s lead singer, I who tried to entertain the crowd between numbers with stoned out statements like, “I was looking for a shirt”, “it’s hot”, and “alright - yeah’ ’ .

- kevin o’leary

Brow&ale~ Child Care Certificate \ Program i

l A one year intensive instructional and field work educational experience leading to a Browndale Child Care Certificate.

l The Certificate will lead to employment opportun- ities in a number of Browndale Centres for emotion- ally disturbed children in Canada, U.S.A., and Enrope.

l B.A. is required for entrance, sir&e affiliation with M.Ed. extension is planned for 1977.

l Classes begin in October in Toronto. Fjeld place- ments outside -Toronto.

l For further information phone: 416-961-5612 or write:

Browndale ’ P.O. Box 19 A

Postal Station P B

Toronto, Ontario MSS 2T3 , -.

PROFESSIONALS I- . . SOMETIMESNEEDTOSEEK

,‘ MORETHANJUSTADVICE. All the good advice In the world won’t

pay the rent on office space, or keep the cash flow of an expanding practice running smoothly.

If you’re a graduate, or have already stat-ted your career, the Royal Bank can help you to either get established, or progress further in the professional world. Your Royal Bank manager is qualified to give you good financial advice, and assistance in a more tangible form-up to $50,000 where the cir- cumstances warrant.

Speak to your Royal Bank manager about , our Business Program for Professionals. whether you’re just starting out, or on your

way up, he can help you plan your future with practical solutions to your financial problems.

ROYAL l3AN I( , the helpful bank _

Eligible profes@ons include’: Accounting- Chartered Accountant-C.A.,*Architecture- B. ARCH., Chiropractic-Doctor in Chiropractic-D.C., Dentistry-D.D.S., Engineering-B. ENG., Law-B.C.L.;LL.B,, . Medicine-M.D.,“Optometry-O.D., Pharmacy -B. SC., PHARM., Veterinary Medicine-D.V.M. \

Page 20: Chevron_1976-77_v17,n16

- 20 the chevron frid&,‘septernber 24, 1976

chevron sportsters

join the team x come down and

have> -mo’re fun

m 6ARTON’S INN l NEW DUNDEE ONT.

, Fri. & Sat. Humber River

Valley Boy All Next Week Kent County

- Pickers

Thursday Night Special 59pm. Rib-Plate $2.49 ’

Raft race attracts

one entry

They were the only bout to e)Iter this years m c‘e altlloligh -sA)ercil were on hand just year.

The winners slcrmmed student crputhy but didn’t mind CI bit taking- home the )rize - tli e equivnl- ent of ten c’uses qf beer.

In@iasporting reporting ._

, DISCO + WE BANDS = GREAT ENTERTAlNMENT

Table Tennis in order to take instructors Tuesday, October 5 - children 1 Starting October 3, 1976 at 9:00 . Fitness Classes-will be held in and 2 years 9:00-9:45 -group I and

a.m. sharp in the P.A.C., gym 3. gym 3; Monday, Wednesday, and children 3,4, and 5 years 9:30-10: i5 Entry date deadline is Thursday, Friday 12-1 pm. Classes are still - group II. October 1 in P.A.C., room 2040. open \ Class Times: Must be wearing dark &our un- Badminton Registration - Group I - 10:00 a.m. Tuesday iforms and gym shoes. This is maQ- Tuesday, September 28 at noon in Group 11 - *lo:30 a.m. Tuesday

the P.A.C. building at the-Red panied by a parent. datory . There are three divisions.; (1) North Entrance. This is your golden opportunity

Men A singles at $3.50 per person, Ball Room Dancing Registration to find out what is going on in the

THIS IS A WINNING COMBINATION F&Sat

The Cherd & Robbie

(2) Men Bsingles at $2,00 per per- - Monday, September 27*at no’on Intramural program for September son and (3) Ladies singles at $1.50 in the Red North Entrance P.A.C. and early October. Come on out,

- _ meet new friends and have fun, fper person. it’s a -fist come first served This -is double elimination, basis.

guarding two matches, best two out Kinder Swim Anybody can join. Time is mov-

Registration - ing fast, get going NOW!

Rae Show Wed-.Sat

W.O.W. \ (Women of the World)

Amateur Night every Tues. sound system so unique it ha8 to be hear

of three games. Balls are supplied; sign up now.

Swimming Instruktional Swimming - there

are still some openings (a) No N.L.S. will’be offered this term. (b) A second Bronze class will be offered Thursday, 7:30 - 9:30 p.m.

For further @formation, contact Sally Kemp or Ken Shunk, 885-1211 ext. 3533.

More IM Fitnes\

Leader Patrol - cost $14.00, an instructors course will be offered in January and you must have leaders

Gymnastic4

Judo

OPIRG has opportunities for students interested in public interest research and’social action. Hard work, good experience, possibility of course credit in: appropiiate discipline, knowing your - academic York will be used to benefit ’ the community, are your rewards. We‘ ’ specifically need people< to: -write .and produce a slid&/tape I . ‘-

-montage on mercury pollution in N.W. 0 Ontario. I - .-develop a water-pollution map and inventory of local pollution and water-management problems. -analyze voting r’ecords of Kitchener city council. See Gene Beuthien, room 351, Chemistry 1, ext. 2578 i -7

CLUB Outer-s’

Orienteering

5 Pin Bowling

Table Tenni\ _

Whitewater

Tenni\ Singles

5 Aside

/Ball Hockey

Swimming

r Karate

.

Squash

Soccer Day 1 -

NAUl Scuba Course 1

Little Olympics Track and Field

Fencing

Basketball

Ballroom Dancing

Co-ed Slow Pitch

Co-ed Innertube Waterpolo

Co-ret Volleyball

Badminton

\

Tennis Singles

(Women’s)

Skiing

Curling

,

Kinder Swim

Children I - 5

, -

TIME, PiACE AND DATE INFORMATION CALL Registration 4ate: Wednesday ’ Brent Hegadoren September I S , 7:OOpm 1083 P A C Neil Hestor, Carol Seljak

Greg Derbyshire 884-33 19

Registration date: Wednesday,

September 15, 8:30pm 1083 P A C

Dayle Vraets,

Doug Taylor (Hammer house) Gerry Baycroft Ex t . 3534

, Registration date: Sunday,

September 19, 8:30-IO:30 pm Waterloo Bowling Lanes (Princes\ Streer We5t)

Registration date: Sunday,

September 19. 3:OOpm Blue Activity Area P A C

Dave Potje 743-2555

GaetAn Massie. Dave Berman

Registration date: Sunday, Gab Farka4 886-0635

September-19. 4:00 pm Pool P A C

Registration date: Monday,

September 30 l2:OO noon Gym 3 P A C “- - Registration date: Monday Jim Doherty 8X4-3320 September 20, 7:00 pm Blue Activities Area P A C

,Registration Date: Monday, John Hatashita September 20, 7:00 pm Blue

Activity Area P A C

Entry date: Monday, Sebtember 70 4:30 pm Room 2040 P A C

Stan Fogel Tony Bozza 8X4-9627 Mike Bak 884-5038

Entry date: Monday, September 20 4:30 pm room 2040 P A C

Registration date: Monday,. Sept. 20. 7:00 pm Red Activity Area

Registration Date: Tuesday, September 21, 7:00 pm Red North

Activity Area P A C

John H-atashita -

. Registration date: Tuesday, Sept.

21. l2:OO noon Red North Ac t .

Registration date: Tuesday, Sept. 21. 4:30 pm room 2050 P A C - .

Registl <ition date: Wednesday. Sept. 22. 6:30 pm 1083 P A C

Entry date: Friday, Sept. 24 4:30 pm room 2040 P A C

Registration date: Monday, Sept. 27, 8:OOpm 1083 P A C

-Entry date: Monday, Sept. 27 4:3O pm room 2040 P A C

Entry date: Monday, Sept. 27 l2:OO noon Red North Activity Area P A C

Entry date: Monday, Sept. 27 4:3O pm room 2040 P A C ’

Entry date: Monday, September 27 4:3O pm room 2040 P A C

Entry date: Monday, S.ept. 27

4:3O pm room 2040 P A C .

Registration date: Tues&y, Sept. 28, l3:OO noon

Hoom~2050 P A C m

Entry date: Tuesday, Sept. 28 ’ -

room 2050 P A C at 4:30 pm __-- Registration date: Wednesday -Vickie Behume 884-3485 Sept. 29, 7:00 pm E E I I2

Registration Date: Tuesday. Boi McNeil 884-1497 October 4. 7:30 pm lO83-PAC Ken Lynch, Ross Hamilton

Dave Smith

Registration date: Wednesday, October 5. 9:30 - IO:30 am Red North Entrance P A C

.

Page 21: Chevron_1976-77_v17,n16

riday, se&?tnber 24, 1976 the chevron 21

W’s Regan Trethewey is shotin here being tackled by an energetic Western player. Dave Haynes is coming in for Ipport. . by Tom Sumerville

The Waterloo Warriors R. F. C. uised to an easy win on Saturday : Columbia Field over the Western Iustangs.

The final score was 19 - 0, ex- ibiting the depth of play of which re Warriors are capable.

The forwards were. simply too uch in the strums for the Mus- rigs who were consistently out- assed. The backs proved formidable

3ponents by moving the ball into festern’s five yard area on at least tree occasions with Steve Dibert most going over for a try only to 2 stopped at the one yard line.

The game was exceedingly hard tting, a style‘of play which has :come the Warriors’ trademark. Davy Dyer made some great

ckles as did Mike Hazel, Dave aynes and Whip Watson. A great

erformance was put in by Dave ing, who put the Warriors on the :oreboard with a penalty kick, and Ien proceeded to rack the score up )15- 0 with a series of penalty cks. Western’s fate was sealed when

alph Jarachow went over the line 1 make the score 19 - 0 on the :cond half.

The Trojan team* however did not fare as well as they were beaten 12 - 3 by Western’s second team. Good performances were turned in by Steve Webb, Mark Cranfield and Kirk Oeilinik.

The crowd was treated to some very good rugby as both teams

SOCCER The UW-Trent soccer game to be held Saturday,

Sept. 25 has been rescheduled for Sunday, Sept. 26 at 2:00 PM at Seagram Stadium. ,

JW footballers lose ’ Lame ‘to. Win&or The football Warriors travelled Waterloo’s only touchdown

) Windsor this weekend only to be came on a Joe Adamo pass in the ambled by the powerful Lancers , first half which was caught by i i- 11. Steve Connell. The half-time score The loss was the second in as was 39 - 7. any starts for the Warriors this This coming weekend threatens ason, while for Windsor, their to add to the woes of the Warriors n kept them in contention when they must face the Golden longst the top three teams in the Hawks of Wilfrid Laurier. estern division of the 0-QIFC. The Hawks share first place

honours along with the Lancers Windsor’s offense was sparked and the Mustangs from Western. the strong passing arm of quar- The Hawks had little trouble with

,back Ed Skowneski. Skowneski the U of T Blues as their ball con- nnected for four touchdown pas- trol techniques effectively ground

to a halt the potent Toeonto of- ; in the first half in addition to [ping himself to one on a six.yard fense. The.Hawks won the game 16 1. - 9.

by Tom Sumerville

played a bruising tackling game. The Warriors journey to Queens

next week where they will meet ,an old enemy.. The next home game will not be until Saturday October 2. Come out and support your team!

-john isaacs

Sailors hold* ’ fall regattas ‘

Organizers of the UW Sailing Club were amazed when about one hundred people attended the fall organizational meeting last week. In past years thirty or forty people have shown up.

Members of the UWSC can sail the club’s six boats on Columbia: Lake, participate in an, intercol- legiate program, and take over the Grad Club on occasion. I

The first fall regatta was held last Saturday. Fine weather resulted in a turnout of close to thirty people. Eleven pairs raced all afternoon, until first, second, and third place were decided.

Geoffrey Mess and Rob Nimmo hadlthree firsts for an overall first place. Christopher Dufault and var- ious crew members finished second with two firsts and a third,, while Dave Fallowfield and Laurie Young were third with two firsts and a fourth.

Regattas will be held every Saturday at 2:00 pm (Sunday if it rains) until inclement weather sets In,.

An unidentified Western Mustanger is being unceremoniously taken out of bounds by UW’s TrethPwey. by Tom Martin

I /

HADASSAH PRE-BAZAAR

Super she of brand name denim jeans, cut-offs , ‘and jackets., From $2. c

Wed. Sept. 29 ’ Stirling Street IPlaza Thurs. Sept. 30 corner of From 2-9:30 r>m Stirling & Courtland

Kitchener

\ I \

WinterTerm . Residence double $530 - iiingle $610

Non-Resident meal

Waterloo Co-operative Residence Inc. I 280 Phillip St. Waterloo 884-3670 \

Applications received before 1 Oc- tober 3976 have the best chance of being successfujly processed. -

Page 22: Chevron_1976-77_v17,n16

22 the chevron friday, September 24, 197(

STUDENT CHRISTMAS SPECIAL Toronto/Vancouver/Toronto

Depart Return Price Tax Dee 21 _ Jan 03 $189.00 $8.00 Dee 21 Jan 05 $189.00 $8.00

Toronto/London/Toronto Depart Return Price Tax Dee 19 Jan 04 $289.00 $8.00

Contact: Canadian Universities *Travel Service Limited (owned and operated by the Association of StuL dent Councils (Canada)) 44 St. George Street, Toronto. M5S 2E4 , Telephone: (416) 979-2406

I

c 9 C . . . THERE’S MORE TO A DIAMOND THAN DAZZLE

True diamond quality is determlned by four factors. CARAT w’eight . . . which denotes size _

and not the quality of the diamond. CUT. . . brings out the fire and sparkle.

COLOR . . . captures the spectrum of the rainbow. And CLARITY. We’ll be happy to explain

all-these factors.. . come “C” for yourself.

,

GEMOLOGIST ON STAFF

30 KING ST. W. ’ i<lTCHENER

c

I

On the Job The Many Faces of Tonite! Noel Coward Centaur Theatre Co. Love * Musical Revue Oct. x. 9 Hume Cronyn/ Feb. I I 5.00 tStudent4/Seni6r5 2.50) Jessica Tandy 5.50 (Stu./Sen. 3.00)

Nov. 28 Ballet Cologne 6.00 (Stu./Sen. 3.50) Menaka Thakkar . . From W.-Germany East Indian Dance Concert Oct. 16 National Festival , Feb. 14 5.3) (Stu./Sen. 3.00) Ballet of Spain 3.00 (Stu./Sen. 2.00)

Osc;tt- &D,f&t-~on s . _ ~o~u$ul~Spegtacular

b.(H) (Stu./Sm. 3.50)

, _ Mime for All Seasons

1 Paul Gaulin Company Mar. 5

Toronto Dance Theatre 5.00 (Stu./Sen. 2.50)

Clawical Guitarist _ Contefriporary Dance No\. 12. I? Jitn. 14 Royal Wisnipeg Ballet 5.00 (Stu./Sen. 2.50) 5.00 tStu./Sen. 7.00) Mar. 25. 26

6.50 (Stu./Sen. 4.00) Entre-Six Baldoon,’ Dance Concert for C’hildren N.D.W.T. Theatre Com- Barber of S&He Nov. 20,..2p.m. - pilIly Canadian Opera Company Children ( I2 and under) Jiln. 27. 2X Mar. 31, April I I .SO ,\dults 2.50 ’

5.50 (Stu./Sen. 3.00) 6.50 (Stu,/Sen. 4.00)’

Special Christmas Show Dee; . 2x. -2% 30 7:30p.m. , - Jan. I. 2 2:OOp.m.

“Jack & Jill” ‘A Traditional Pantomime 3.00 (Children I2 and under 1.50)

Box Office: 254 Mod.ern Languages Bldg., University of Waterloo 885-4280 Open 9-5 Mon.-Fri. 7p.m. Shbwnights

Mail .Orders: Send cheque payable to the University of Waterloo and * stainped self-addressed envelope for return of tick&s.

Cookr’ng forlife, ’ -

The chevron received the following letter from Karen Barnaby sent originally to Burt Matthews acd Bob Mudie, Director of Food Services, with the request that it be published as an open lett&.

I would like to propose the opening of a small bake shop within the university com- munity to cater to students who would like to eat whole, natural foods. Through talking to students, I have found that an enterprise of this sort would be gr_eatly appreciated by students who find it difficult-to eat on cam- pus (and even by those who don’t) because the food do&s not correspond with their philosophy of eating and life. If I may quote Michael Abehsera in COOKING FOR LIFE, “Feed a man what he wants to be fed, not what your dwn ignorance prefers to feed him”.

For. many, eating in 5 way that they be- lieve is most natural for their body will make them happier, health& atid more able to work through the cultivation of a sound mirid, body and spirjt .

, With today’s growing awareness of health, many people have realised the desire tb change their mode of eating (eg.; veg- etarianism, meatless diet, etc.). However,

. many of them, and especially students with their limited time and resourc&, do not know how to combine alternative meat pro- teins to make a complete and well-balanced diet. If protein is lacking many severe dis- eases will beset the body due to malnutri- tion. Also; because of the lack of buIk (which

1 comes in the form of raw vegetables and

7 I

1

whole grains) cancer of the celon is becorr -ing a major killer. Sugar, too, is being single out as the culprit in many forms of body an mind malfunctipn. - I - What I would like to establish is bakery-kitchen within fhe facilities of th university. It-would have a limited selectio

-of food items ranging from ho’me-mad yogourt (which can be made very inexper sivelyin quantity by using powdered milk) t banana bread to individual quiches and VV~ etable turnovers, all of which can easily b prepared, handled and served. I would lik to give out small samples to introduce peopl to things they may not haGe eaten befort The emphasis would be on using who1 grains and natural, unprocessed ingredient c

I feel that the university has a responsibi ity to the health of its students by providir them with an alternative food service th; will offer a life-source more suitable to the needs and allow the possibility of choice.

Thank you and good healt Karen Barnat

Sinatra immodalized

I write with reference to your article ‘Tl Olympic Stadium’ (17 September). As yc point out, Frank Sinatra could be pa $25,000 per night for six nights per week fl 100 years, or Barbara Walters could be pa for 800 years, with the estimated cost of tl stadium. The idiotic cost appears even mo disgusting when it is realized that, in fat four Frank Sinatras or forty Barbara Walte could be paid for ever: the interest on such : investment b&ng at least,. $100,000 per da! \

Frank 0. Goodm; (Professor of Applied Mathematic

Council meetings.

Apply t6P.W. Yates ,

Federation of Students z -

P HIGH HOLIDAY SERVICES Temple Shalom , 421 King St. N.

Waterloo L _ I 576-3745 8852047

Rosh Hash,ana Sept. 24 8:30 p.m. Sept. 25 IO:30 a.m.

Yom Kippur . , Kol Nidre

\ - Oct. 3 8:15 p.m. Oct. 4 IO:00 a.m.

Student memberships Everyone welcome for children K-6 c

SERVICES TWICE MONTHLY

. / --

Page 23: Chevron_1976-77_v17,n16

friday, September 24, 1976 the chevron 23

Rosanne Pellizzari, a first-year arts s&dent, submitted fhis article to the chevron. In it she suggests one way in which she thinks we could help alleviate the world’s food problem.

She is keen to have the subject discussed, so in an effort to promote discussion we decided to print her comment. .

The staff a/so decided to dust off an old trddditjon And reinstitute “Bullseye”, where staff will make comments on articles which appear in the paper.

How responsible are we for others? How responsible tire we for the life or death of this

So below chevron staffer Neil Dochgrty gives some of his thoughts on the problem, which he hopes will further stimulate discus-

/ sun.

child - just one of the millions suffering from chronic hunger and malnutrition? Were the German people responsible for the con- centration camps? They know of them, saw them, smelt them, but were they responsible for the mass murders’ and tortures which went on inside of them? Silence, or a refusal to stand,up, ipeak out, and commit oneself can be a cop-out. Clo’se your eyes, close your ears - as long as it doesn’t hurt us, we can pretend it was all a bad dream and go back to sleep. If it happens to hurt another, well, we can rationalize anything. Life is not a bowl of cherries $0 if someone chokes, let’s shake our heads ‘and say it’s too bad.

I’m not writing a put-down - especially because I still believe that people aren’t a- fraid to care. I still believe&t there is lot of kindness, a lot of generosity, a lot of con- cern, a lot of heart-warming ‘good’ around.

People still walk their feet into blisterous states to raise money for charities, social workers still struggle against walls of red tape, kids still offer each other a bite of ice- cream or chocolate, and babies on buses still manage to attract smiles from even the crus- tiest of passengers.

sential vitamins and proteins. While we buy our dogs dogfood especially designed to combat over-weight canines, hundreds of

But at the same time, we can easily be- come so wrapped up in lectures and social pleasures that the fact that we, a mere 20% of the total earth’s population;, are consuming and indulging in 80% of the world’s wealth. Last year alone, we spent over $360 million on snack foods. While we were dipping into the Frito-Lays bag of empty calories, 450 million people, 40% of whom ire children, were denied even a minimum amount of es-

Rosanne’s concern for others, and lier en- thlisiasm to have the matter discussed, are to be applauded. The part solution she prop- oses, however, would not ease the problem.

She suggests that we can make an impact on the world’s food problem by curbing our eating habits. According to Rosanne if all UW students stopped eating meat for a da9 15,000 lbs. of grain would be “liberated”.

Any sentiment against indulgence is cer- tainly laudable, but if we are to deal with the realities of the situatian, any liberated grain under our present system would have to flow through the hands of the grain-handling monopolies who manipulate the Chicago Fu- tures Market so that they can buy it as cheaply as possible and sell at as big a profit as possible. ” ‘,

The problem for much of the world is not lack of food’but the private ownership of the means of production.

India has suffered from this problem. Its indigenous industry ahd communal agricul- tural organization were destroyed by British imperialism.

The result of this in agriculture was that it forced most farmers to become landless labourers for feudal lords and others who owned land.

so when natural dis,asters hit an area there was no work for them, and without W.&-k they had no money to buy grain imported tp the region.

Thus, on’ August 16,. 1952, a New York Times headline read: “Indian larder full, 20 million starving.”

Today India still suffers from imp’erialism, though Britain has largely been replaced by the U.S. and the Soviet Union.

It’s the superprofits which these im- perialist powers extract ‘from the Thirld World which leaves the people im- poverished.

If we are going to discuss this problem we should focus our atte.ntion on the two factors

which determine how much. food (or, any- thing else) can be produced.

The fu-st is the stage of development of the means of production. So we must consider the level of agricultural science and technol- ogy, since scientific farming can greatly in- crease the yield per acre.

The second factor, and the most crucial, is the organization of society.

Third World agriculture organized under feudalism and iandlordism, and operating in an econopy suffering from imperialism will never provide enough food for the people.

The imperialists dump food on these coun- tries to ruin their agricultural base, often forcing the countries into monoculture and to depend largeiy on imported food.

In other areas the’imperialists often try to impose- unsuitable agriculture and technol- ogy such as trying to grow cash crops in tropical areas suited to subsistence farming, thus destroying land which supported the native inha-bitants. . China faced similar conditions, but by re- organizing its social structure, via revolution it has eradicated famine and become a net exporter of food. /

Following the revolution the Chinese were also faced with an economic blockade. Btit ’ by land reform, the elimination of feudal sys- tem?., the establishment of people’s com- munes, and self reliance, they have managed to feed 800,000,000 people and have grain in reserve. .

The Chinese general policy is that agricul- ture is the foundation of their economy, and industry is the leading factor.

There is not room to elaborate 01 all this here. ‘The aim is to channel the discussion onto the crux of the problem.

The world’s food problem can only be sol- ved if imperialism is overthrown and those interested in solviog it should support the national liberation struggles of the Third World and organize against imperialism.

/ -neil docherty

thousands of retarded dhildren - victims of permanent brain damage due to insufficient food during the crucial first stages of life - struggle to learn the meaning of the word ‘dog’. Until we are responsible enough to change our affluent life-style, until we are. willing to give a little more, the terrible injus- tice will continue. “ We have the capacity to wipe hunger and poverty from the face of the earth within our lifetime -we need only the will.” ’

I am not advocating that 15,000 students withdraw their tuition, fees and stampede to their nearest CUSO office to sign on the dotted line. Nor am I proclaiming a mam- moth “Good Will’ crusade to Latin-America or Africa. Being responsible is not difficult - it’s being aware of the world injustices and then adjusting our lives a little to help al- leviate them. It means refusing to remain silent.

At this point, people usually throw their arms in the air and exclaim, “But what can I, one single solitary person, do?” There is so much that we, as students, as consumers, as citizens of a developed nation as people, can do - locally, and internationally. Hope- fully, this article will be just the first of sev- eral, giving you ways, small and big ways, of being responsible. And a more responsible nation often leads to a more responsible gov- ernment.

For just an example, we can change our eating habits. North Americans - that in- cludes you and I and not only the politicians on Parliament Hill, eat far too much meat.

‘Th$: average Canadian now .consumes annually 10 lbs. more beef, 7 lbs. more pork, 5 lbs. more poultry than 5 years ago,” ac- cording to the Financial Post of July Zlst, 1974. It can be safely estimated that 10 lbs. of grain go into the production of each lb. of ineat that appears on your dining-room table. The Canadian Bishop< went so far as to state in their 1974 Labour Day Statement that: “A North Americansteer, for example, consumes as much as 21 lbs. of inexpensive grain to produce 1 lb. of expensive beef.”

We Canadians affluently indulge in over a

ton of grain per person pep year. Of that,- only 150 lbs., or less than 10% , is consumed directly is grain products. The rest reaches our digestive tracts as MEAT. Meat’ which is not necessarily being eaten for protein, but for the psychological, sensual, social pleas- ure. $eople moving up the ladder of success usually relate a higher standard of living with a larger meat budget. For many, a meal just isn’t a meal without the almighty meat dish. True, grazing on pasture land is an efficient use of land, but the meat produced for the highly demanding North American market is from animals fed on grain in feedlots built with the slaughterhouse, and the dollar sign in mind. While we worry about the rising cost of the meatspread in our sandwiches, millions of mothers frantically struggle for the bread. “Give us this day our daily bread.. .” There is enough grain produced annually to feed the entire world population, if we can be responsible enough to eat only our fair share of it.

Yoghurt! Cheese ! Eggs! Fish!. Lentils! Peanut Butter! There are so many other sources of protein. Keep that foot on the gas and off the brakes the next time you pass a McDonald’s or Ponderosa! Help out your local farmer and eat a vegetable! Support a green revolution in your diet and you’ll be supporting a green revolution in your pock- etbook too! If 15,000 Waterloo students could give up a lb. of meat per week, there’d be at least 15,000 lbs. of grain liberated each seven days and that’s a-lot of daili bread for

.a wartd. fill-edwith too much physical hunger. Of course, ihat is ,not the global solution - use of the grain will have to be eventually controlled by a world reserve food bank, proposed at the food conference in Rome. But it is a step in the right direction - a step in being more personally responsible - a step in increasing our own involvement’ in hopes that with public pressure, our gov- ernments will take constructive action - a step towards a more sincere concern for a sick and starving child -and as the Chinese say, “A journey of a thousand miles begins with the first step.” ’

We need live bodies to sit at typewriters, hide be- hind pens, hang-on to telephones and uncover scan- dals. Be a chevrk and ‘learn how to fire a typewriter.

Member: Canadian university press (CUP). The chevron is typeset by members of ‘the workers’ union of dumont press graphix and published by the federation , bf students incorporated, university of wateiloo. Content is the sole responsi- ’ bility of the chevron editorial staff. Offices are located in the campus centre; . (519) 8854660, or university local 2331.

I

F

first we apologise to the people in the villages who organized some of the events featured in our centrespread. it seems our head left the impression that the feds had organized it all, that certainly was not our intention. before we get off this week there-a& a couple of things which were inadvertently left out of the last masthead. the first was the name of diane ritza who helped us and wasn’t credited, ‘and the other was a conSumer tip to new ktudents: the bargains on campus are - a bowl of soup at south campus hail-and a haircut (male or female) from the barbers shop in the campus centre i they may be tried in any order. hot news this week was that a snooping chevric overheard one of IjW’s top administrators exclaim that the university was a good place, except for the students. this weeks collective effort involved: karen redman, graham thomson, terri berlinghoff, lynne hunteribrian pepperdine, dave colburn (of cup), barry hoch, petra taylor, rob taylor, Chris dufault (whom we can’t fault), doug hamilton, rob dickin, dave mclellan, Oscar nierstraz, myles keston, Sylvia hannigan, doug wahlsten, kevin o’leary, tom sumerville, lob ngiap jong,Iom martin, jacob arseneault, alex beamish, marina taitt, nikki carter, laurie, Sandra endacott, jamie thiers, n,ina tymoszewicz, ernst von bezold (our-associate soccer captain), brenda Wilson, henry hess; linda hess, and anyone whose name has slipped my ‘fingers n.d.

Page 24: Chevron_1976-77_v17,n16

24 the chevron ' Friday, September 24, 1976

Free -- >’ ape Clinic

Remember Naturkl udio’s tape seminar,

and clinic Friday,’ Oct. l/76, starting at 230

Bring in your tape and see how it rates against

. Maxe-Il. -

Free: - Posters and Iron b-ns.

ADVANCED fw

il Welcome. Fall term groups will be orgatiizing -dur-

i

ing the w,eek of September 27. Up to 10 groupsare available, each group running one hour, once per

-* week, for 10 weeks. There is likely one.that fits your i

i 4 schedule. For information, schedule and _ sign-up,

3 come to Counselhng Services Main Desk, Ira G. I * Needles Hall, second floor, opposite the Registrar’s .$ z

f

Office. No fee. All materials supplied. To.ensure a 2 place, stop by as soon as possible.

* -- f YYYYYYYYYYu**+w~YuuYY

. ,QUICK... -

When 1achg.a long distance- ’ P cal 9 is it cheap& to: ’ I

have the operator place the cells II ‘/ . air direct did? II ’

Answer correctly this a three other questions about -.

distance an U

, Fu II---detai IS are : in your free . personal tele- ‘, bhone directory

campus bodkstore.

IN THE LONG DLISTANCE --

-- SWEEPSTAKE$, --- Trans-Canada Telephone System (@

’ ‘k&Motor Hotel w 871- Victoria St. N. 744-3511

Every Wednesday is Singles Night IN THE CROWN ROOM

FTi. & Sat.

Thor & The Imps (Mr. Universe)

All Next Week

- Coming Soon: Dublin Corporation

MacLean & MacLean

AND TAVERN Entertainment

Weekends Fully Licensed

64 King St. S. (across from Z&w’s)

Waterloo Square- 886-4160

‘Greg Beer i Every Sunday All-yopcan-eat

(Country Style) $4.95 &w-y Mon.: Med. Pizza 8 slice

any three items $2.45 Every Wed.: Large Pizza 12 slice

any three items $4.00 Fully Licensed. Phone 884-41601