2
friday,
the chevron
SEPT.
UW ART GALLERY
9-OCT.
3
Special Event:
and Sculpture
Artists-with-their-Work Programme Extension Services, Art Gallery of Ontario Sept. 20 Noon-9:30 p.m.
The artist will be on campus. about his work.
Friday
Plan to come’ to meet him and bear or ask
Hours:
Free Admission
Mon.-Fri. Sun.
9-4 2-5
J
Tim Whiten, Drawings and Sculpture. UW Art Gallery. Hours: Mon-Fri 9-4 pm, Sun 2-5 pm, till Oct. 3 Library Tours- meet at the Information Desk in the Arts, E.S.L. or E.M.S. Library. 10:30, 11:30, 2:30
Campus Centre Pub opens 12 noon. Bob Webb from g-lam. $.50 after 7pm. Federation Flicks-One Flew Over t-he Cuckoo’s Nest with Jack Nicholson. 8 m and 10:20pm. AL II6 Feds $1, Otiers, $1.50.
summers working in foreign countries and their winters making contacts in the business community. Club membership is ope,n to any interested student. Come out and see what we are all about at the membership meetings at WLU(September 14 and 16. Times and places will be posted)
Saturday Campus Centre Pub opens 7pm. Bob Webb from g-lam. $50 admission Federation Flicks_One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest with Jack Nicholson. 8pm. and 10:20pm. AL 116 Feds $1, Others $1.50.
PRESS
an Express B.us from the PAC Compleic to The Islington Subway Station STARTSSEPT.17
'.
-
a.m. p.m. 3:00 p.m. 4:30 p.m.
/
p.m. 2:45 p.m. 4:15 p.m. 545 p.m.-
It30 I:30
12:45
DEPARTS 9:OO p.m.
ARRIVES IO:15 p.m.
From Brewer’s Retail Parking Lot at Bloor & Islington
At PAC
SUNDAY
Highway Coach
COST
RETURN
$2.70
$5.40
$1.60
$3.20
School Bus
’
(Obtained only at the booth in the North Centre on Thursday and Friday)
Entrance
of the Campus
Due to limited space Tickets should be picked up as early as possible Sponsored by Board of Co-operative Servick, Federation
of Students,
University
of Waterloo
Campus Centre Pub opens 12 noon. Chrysalis from g-lam. $1 after 7pm. Rehearsals For Concert Band. 5:30-7:30pm. AL 6. Computer Science Club, first meeting of the fall term. Microcomputer demonstration (IMSAI 8080). Free coffee and doughnuts. Come one, come all. 7pm MC 1050 Free Movie-Morocco with Marlene Dietrich. Sponsored by the Campus Centre Board. IO:1 5pm. Campus Centre Great Hall.
Monday) Feds Used Bookstore open for receiving and selling books. 9:30-l pm. and I :30-4:30pm. CC21 7A Library Tours-meet at the Information Desk in the Arts, E.S.L. or E.M.S. Library. lo:30 and 2:30pm. p Campus Centre Pub opens 12 noon. Chrysalis from 9-lgm. $1 after 7pm.
Thursday
Film Night. Films in the language. Free admission. Kitchener Public Library.
Tuesday
TICKETS
Feds Used Book Store open for receiving and selling books. 9:30-l pm. and 1:30-4:30pm. CC 217A Library Tours-meet at the Information Desk in the Arts, E,.S.L. or E.M.S. Library. IO:30 and 2:30pm. Campus Centre Pub opens 12 noon. Chrysalis from g-lam. $1 after 7pm. General Meeting-all applicants for turnkey jobs “must” attend. Any registered student of UW eligible. For further information contact Susan Phillips ext. 3867. 6pm. CC 113.
Scheduling Changes in Religious Studies Courses R.S. 103G Introduction to Biblical Studies I (Old Testament) / will be taught in Winter at’9:30 MWF’ R.S. 104G Introduction to Biblical Studies II (New Testament) will be taught in Fall at 9:30 MWF .R.S. 203G Wisdom’Literature in the Old Testament ’ will be taught in Fall at 2:30 MWF R.S. 304J Sexuality in the Biblical Tradition will be taught in Winter at 2:30 MWF Philosophy 329 War, Peace and Justice ’ will be taught in Fall at 7:00 Thurs. ‘Evening Philosophy 226 Ethics and Human Engineering will be taught in Winter at 7:00 Thurs. Evening
Please adjust your timetables to conform to these changes.
F6llow&ip
Friday 1
INCOMING AND RETURNING STUDENTS PLEASE NOTE!
Feds Used Book Store open for receiving and selling books. 930-I pm. and 1:30-4:30pm. CC 217A Library Tours-meet at the Information Desk in the Arts, E.S.L. or E.M.S. Library. IO:30 and 2:30pm. Campus centre Pub opens 12 noon. Chrysalis from g-lam. $1 after 7pm..Waterloo Christian -Come to the first meeting of the year, have a hot supper and listen to Norman Beers speak (New K-W Inter-Varsity staff member). All welcome! students are very 4:30-7pm. HH 101. Sailing Club Organlzational Meeting. 7pm. EL 112.
Science Fiction Club, WATSFlC: the UW SF Club will hold its first, meeting of the fall term. Everyone welcome. 7pm. CC 116 Greek Students Association General Meeting. 8pm. CC 1 IO Free Introductory Lecture on Transcendental Meditation. All welcome. 8pm. MC 2065.
The Amateur Microprocessor Club of Kitchener-Waterloo will be holding its first meeting of the term. 7pm EL 211 Rehearsals for Concert Choir. 7:30pm. AL I 16. Chess Club Meeting. All Welcome. 7:30pm. CC 135. AIESEG-WLU is back offering business students a chance to spend their
r
*
Feds Used Book Store open for receiving and selling books. 9:30-lpm and 1:30-4:30pm. CC 217A Library Toursmeet at the Information Desk in the Arts, E.S.L. or E.M.S. Library. IO:30 and 2:30pm.
Federation Flicks-One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest with Jack Nicholson. 8pm. and 10:20pm. AL1 16. Feds $I, Others $1.50.
German German 7:30pm.
Y
ONE WAY .
I 1
Wednesday
Sunday
WEEKLY SCHEDULE , DEPARTS. ARRIVES From PAC Complex At lslington Subway Station
FRIDAY
10, 1976
This~Week On Campus is 8 free’column for the a;tnouncer&M of n~eetin*~ speciat seminars or speakers, s&at s~ent$ and happenings on campus--student, faculty or staff, See the chevron st%~Wwy, Ueadtine is noon *fuesdays. Maximum of 30 words per submission,
,TIM WHITEN l&awing
September
Feds Used Book Store open for receiving and selling books. 9:30-l pm. and 1:30-4:30pm. CC 217A. Library Toursmeet at the Information Desk in the Arts, E.S.L. or E.M.S. Library. lo:30 and 2:30pm. Campus Centre Pub opens I2 noon. Chrysalis from g-lam. $1 after 7pm. Best of Second City. Comedy. Admission $3.50, Students and seniors $2.50. 8pm. Humanities Theatre. Federation Flicks-Three Days oft he Condor with Robert Redford. 8pm. AL 116. Feds $1, Others $1.50
CANADA’S LARGEST SERVICE $3.50 par PIgo Sand now for latest catalog. Encto#r $5.00 to oover return posteQe*
ESSAY SERVICES 57 Spadina Ave., Suite #208 Toronto, Ontario, Canada (416) 366-6649 Our remarch service is sold fiw research sssimme only. Campus Reps. required. Please write.
friday,
septem ber lb,
,
1976
th’e chevron
3.
. -Q
OFS urges
_
Send a .postcard’ t&’ Harry- Ptirrott I The Ontario Federation of Students (OFS) has launched a campaign to get students to send a postcard to Harry. Harry, of course, is not your Uncle Harry from Jarvis or Killaloe or Rainy River. He’s Harry Parrott, Ontario minister of colleges and universities, the man behind the OSAP squeeze. The postcards, which are addressed to Parrott and need only a postage stamp, have arrived on the UW campus and are being distributed by the federation of students at their information tables. They list two OFS demands that “arbitrary OSAP summer savings requirements be eliminated and replaced by an evaluation based on a student’s real financial resources”, and “that OSAP appeals based ‘on financial- need be settled under the normal loan/grant ratio, rather than the existing,
loan-ONLY appeal awards. ” The OFS compaint is based on the fact that even though students may not have been able to find a job this summer - whit h is considered to have been one of the worst summers for studgnt (employment the Ontario government expects you to have squirrelled away more money for your education than did students last year. OFS feels the government’s expectations should be more realistic Earlier, the student representtives lobbied Parrott and the-federal minister of finance, Donald MacDonald, but the ministers wouldn’t budge. So OFS is hoping that Parrott will be flooded with a deluge of‘ postcards this month. Students attending university in this province may receive assistance through OSAP - which is short for the Ontario StudentAssis-
tance Program. The assistance ,is generally given in a combination of grant and loan, the latter provided by the Canada’ Student Loan Plan but administered through OSAP. The first $1,000 of an award must be loan. That has been increased from $800 last year and is another ground for complaint by OFS. Meanwhile, a release from the ministry of colleges and universities says that more than 74,000 applications had been received by OSAP up to August 27. It said almost 5O;OOO of these had been processed and the results sent out to the various colleges and ‘univer-
sities, and that another 15,000 assistance was provided to more would have been processed and than two out of every five students sent out to the institutions by the in Ontario. The province’s budget % end of last week. for, OSAP grants this year is $61 million, up from $49 million in The release said that the ministry’s initial problems in the .1975-76. processing of applications have But what the ministry release now been overcome. Unless their didn’t say was that not all of that applications contained errors, stu- money will-necessarily be paid out dents who applied early should in grants. know the results of the assessments And, as Parrott admitted to an of their applications by the end of OFS delegation on July 14, any September. money in the grant fund which is According to the ministry, more not spent will be put back into the than 106,000 applications were re- provincial treasury. ceived by OSAP in 197576, and - adrian rodway
Feds* .I give- frosh a poor showing with a chair and upward mobility About seventy of UW’s newest students were invited by the stu- was gained in the administration dent federation to come and see building. Then to council’s chambers -their councillors at work, and they which, although full, lacked suffiwere treated to quite a perforcient council members to start the mance. The last council meeting (August sproceedings. While the visitors 21) was part of a weekend-tour pro- waited, someone went to make a vided by the federation to about 70 few phone calls in an attempt to randomly selected students about muster quorum. to embark upon their first year at One problem cited was that three council members had chosen Aug. uw. The council meeting was, how21 as their wedding day. ever, fraught with ‘problems. The Almost one hour after the meetmeeting, scheduled to start at ing was scheduled to start quorum finally arrived in the form of federalp.m., was delayed because people couldn’t get into the senate room tion fieldworker Gary Dryden ridon the third floor of Needles Hall ing his ten speed into the room. Though Dryden is not a council where it was to ta& place. . member he announced from his At one o’clock some people were saddle that he was Selma Sahin for sitting in the senate chamber ready to start. Others were lined up in the the day. Those familiar with counstairwell. While arts rep Franz cil business interpreted this as Klingender hammered at the meaning he carried a proxy vote for locked door which barred entrance the absent Math representative: to the third floor, math rep Bob Those unfamiliar with council busWhite scurried around Needles iness wereleft wondering whether Hall in search of a key, and about x- Dryden perhaps had ridden straight 20 of the federation’s guests and a from a sex change operation. The pre-orientation weekend is chevron reporter lined the staircase. ’ designed to get the new. students -Then the door w,as opened from into the swing of things. It kicked the inside, people hurried in, and it off Friday evening with a meal at the Phillip Street Co-op residences. closed behind them leaving another Then the visitors were treated to contingent on the outside. two films on energy. Finally Klingender, on federaSaturday morning they toured tion president Shane Roberts’ instructions, blocked the door open Kitchener. The schedule listed Dumont Press Graphix where the chevron is typeset, the farmers market,. library, “cop shop” and Victoria Park as sights to be seen. continued from page 1 The afternoon was taken up with times from Barrie in search of ac- a campus tour which included the council visit, and jaunts to the commodation said he was offered chevron, Radio Waterloo, the vilan apartment but on condition that lages and the Ontario Public Inhe take the lease in August. “No ter st Research Group. way, as a student,” he said, “I f he day was rounded-up with a could afford to do that.” party in the humanities building. Cyr was continuing in his quest / The highlight for Sunday was a Wednesday. That afternoon the housing of- picnic in Elora. Though the visitors paid for their fice was offered about 17 apartown accommodation and meals, ments on University Avenue. The catch, however, is that in the the weekend probably cost the federation $1,100. Roberts told the Waterloo Towers apartment buildchevron that he hadn’t seen the ing tenants have to pay 12 months final financial report, but $1,100 is rent in eight months. allocated to the Tom Klemmer, vice president of what coucnil weekend and, he said, it was probthe company which owns the buildably all used. ing, explained to the chevron that Klingender, one of the resource this policy is-designed to stop stupeople for the weekend, described dents skipping-out on their leases. the event as: “very successful. A two bedroom apartment, People enjoyed it and I hope it got a which if paid over the year would lot of people interested in federacost $289 a month, paid over eight tion activities.” months costs $433.50 monthly.
Housing
-n&l
docherty
-
neil docherty
Parking .a cw CO@!Smore Parking your car may cost you more this year .if you’re a late sleeper. .Twice as much, to be exact. If so, you can blame it on the administration’s decision to double “visitor” parking rates “in an attempt to make more parking spaces available for visitors. ” As of this week, parking rates in M, N, and 0 “visitor” lots at the Columbia St. end of campus went up, to 50 cents per entry from the former rate of 25 cents. The rate for lot D went to 25 cents per half hour from 25 cents per hour. (Lot M is north of the physical activities complex while N is across the ring road from the adA ministration building. Lot*0 is adjacent to the optometry building and lot D is under Needles Hall.) The reason given for the change is that when the rate in “student” lot C (south of University Ave.) was raised last year to 25 cents from ten ce\nts,’ more students began to avail themselves of the more convenient on-campus lots which had the same entry fee. This, in the opinion of the president’s advisory committee on traffic and parking, resulted in a “shift in usage” which they feel has cut down on the amount of space available for visitors on campus. They have responded by doubling rates, apparently in the hope that financially strapped students will move back into the lot across University Ave. and leave the oncampus lots -for visitors.
However according to security director Al Romenco: “We really don’t know what effect this will have,” since the real problem is an overall shortage in parking. Last year, Romenco said, there was a shortage of more than 300 spaces, and he admitted that: “We aren’t able to provide space for faculty, staff and students.” Both Romenco and UW financial vice-president Bruce Gillatly denied that a desire to increase revenue from parking had anything to do with the rise in rates. .When asked how much extra money he expected would be produced as a result of the hike, Romenco claimed that the figure had not even been projected in the studies done on the subject. Gellatly noted that last year there had been a $5,000 surplus on parking operations which had been carried forward into this year’s budgeti (The university views parking us an ancillary enterprise, which means it is expected to break even.) He said that expenses would be higher this year though, due primarily to salary increases. According to parking supervisor Phil McKay, there are seven salaries paid out of the parking budget: two for the persons alternately staffing the kiosk at the entrance to lot D and five “front office and supervisory personnel. ” McKay refused to reveal how much of the parking budget is devoted to salaries, claiming that it is ‘-‘privileged information”. Gel\
latly, however, gave the figure as approximately $127,000 out of a total budget of $240,000. He said that about $70,000 of this goes to. the “seven persons in security who report to Romenco but work in parking.” The remaining $57,000 is pro-rated against the salaries of grounds personnel who perform such tasks as snow removal. ’ Although no one seems to care just how much money will be produced by inflating the parking rates, or whether the money is even needed, a&least one thing is certain. Any student who can’t find a parking space in lot C or in free lot E (adjacent to Seagram Stadium) immediately becomes an honorary visitor on campus and liable to the higher rate. And although the monthly rate for the keyed lots remains the same, it won’t be much comfort since nearly all of them have wait- ~ ing lists ranging up to 60 names long. \ A final note: if you can’t find a place to live this fall, don’t try sleeping in your car in one of the parking lots since all overnight parking except in residence lots has been banned. This means you have a good chance of waking up in the impound lot at the Bauer warehouse, and the charge for this wakeup service is in the neighbourhood of $15. You might try Burt Matthews’ house on exclusive Westgate Walk, though. ,He’s in Venezuela. -
henry
hess
friday,
September-
.
Personal
\
Discount prices on these brand names
a : b :a : : : :
:
-
-
-"TRUST US IN YOUR BEDROOM” : I / :0 -. . : : 351 Weber St. N. Wat.
: : : :
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885-2450:
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:
_
10, 1976 ,^ - - - _ _
12 midnight, Friday 5pm. to Monday lam. Will do light moving with a small pickup. Call anytime. Jeff: 745-1293
Pregnant and Distressed? The Birth Control Centre is an information and referral centre for birth control, V.D., For Sale unplanned pregnancy and sexuality. For all the alternatives phone 1970 Toyota Corona, .4 speed, Cer8851211, ext. 3446 (Rm. 206, Cam-- - tified. $325 firm. Call Frank 743-3331 pus Centre) or for emergency numor 669-8710 bers 884-8770. Bed, Single continental. Good condiGay Lib Office, Campus centre, Rm._ tion. $30.139A Columbia Street West. 217C. Open Monday-Thursday 6-7pm. 884-9032. 7-IOpm., some afternoons. Counselling and information. Phone Wanted 885-1211, ext. 2372. -. People who have had connections Do you need information about prewith scientology, adverse or othergnancy? A free pregnancy test? Pracwise. I need information so I can do tical assistance if you,are pregnant? an adequate study of this sect. Write Call BIRTHRIGHT 579-3990 or phone. Mark Vander Wal, General HELP-745-l 166-We care. Crisis inDelivery, Waferloo, Ont. tervention and confidential listening Student to work part-time. Phone to any problem.-Weeknights 6pm to Roy 886-4340
885-l 863.
PAPERBACKS? There’s only specialist.. .
one
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32 QUEEN ST. S., KITCHENER (next Walper Hotel) I,
MUSIC
Oscar Peterson
hlletCologne-
(Tanz Forum Kin)
Fri. Oct. 29
Classical/Contemporary Company Sat. Oct. 16 _ ’
Liona Boyd\ ’
I
Montreal
Classical Guitarist
12 -Fri.--- -Nov. ._.- --A IL em a of35 lome! II I No451 Coward II
_ 1Froln * - .,. A Czech Folk Company iI Sun. Feb. 6 0 R-p :oyaPm=I” mmpeg BIallet’ ’ .
student’s
II
Hume Cronyn & Jessica Tandy Sun. Nov. 28
Musical Revue Fri. -_ Feb. 11 . -
Barber of
Fri. Mar. 25,
II
Baldoon 11Mystery
Seville -
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-Drama from
Ill C,anadian Opera Compar Thur. Mar. 31 .
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Business Series Name
No. of Tickets
brnce
-
Price
Amount
X
$15.00 (General)
$
X
$ 9-00 (StuSen)
$
X
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Add-Type Equipment
28 Bridgeport - Waterloo.
Ltd.
Rd. E. Ont.
(3 Events)
Address City
Phone:
Postal (Day)
Cod6 Eve)
Theatre (4 Events)
’ -
Mall cheque payable to the Universtty of Waterloo with self-addressed stamped envelope to the UW Arts Centre Box Office. ML 254. Umyerstty of Wateiloo. Waterloo. Ontario N2L 3Gl.
I Telephonet
885-42.80
.
Music (4 Events)
-
-X X
---:165 & over (st u Isen) students /seniors
Portable
Typewriters
electric
purchase Electronic
& manual
or rentals Calculators 8852570
Repairs Special
to all makes. Student
Rates
’
fridayi
September
10, 1976
the chevron
Foreign students
atta
OTTAWA (CUP) -While schools were empty this summer, actions taken in three provinces have made it harder for international students to return. The Ontario government tripled tuition fees for international students starting in January. The Alberta government set aside the fall of 1977 to introduce a differential fee and two of Manitoba’s, three universities imposed quotas. Alberta moved first. On April 28, the minister of advanced education Bert Hohol said differential fees would be levied because of space shortages and high costs, and claimed university officials had ag-
reed ‘ ‘in principal’ ’ . But University of Calgary president Bill Cochrane said there had been no formal consultation while Henry Gunning, president of the University of Alberta, said: “If manything I think we have an inadequate number of foreign students.” Hohol’s blunders didn’t stop there. The day after the announcement he said higher fees would not apply to college students. But he reversed that stand May 11. Two days after the announcement he added landed immigrants to the higher fee list but also reversed that decision May 11. The Ontario government moved
OTTAWA (CUP) - Almost a third of Canada’s 25,000 university faculty have organized themselves into 16 certified bargaining units, more than triple the number of units in existence two years ago. At the closing session of the Canadian Association of University Teachers (CAUT) annual meeting here May 11-13, collective bargaining committee chairperson Roland Penner predicted 50 precent of Canada’s faculty would be certified - or in the process of certification - within a year. Five faculty associations are presently in the process pending decisions by various provincial labor boards. The CAUT delegares pointed to three main reasons for the faculty organization push: - government ~cutbacks in university funding which threaten to
render certain jobs and departnecessary standards. ments redundant in the eyes of uniAlso at issue is the possibility of versity administration. \ administrations replacing full-time - uncertainty surrounding upstaff with cheaper, less-qualified coming revisions in the Fiscal-Arsessional and part-time instructors. rangements Act which is indirectly In the last year the CAUT execuresponsible for federal funding of tive has bee.n stepping up efforts to provide its 18,000 members with universities. - student demographic money and resources in bids for trends which predict decreaceA certification. Besides input from ments in the 1980’s. CAUT workers a collective barDelegates were told that gaining handbook and clause finder administration’s “knives will be guide have been published as well WATERLOO (CUP) - Most Onout” and that they should organize as $15,645 given to five locals. .$re reluctantly to brace for ‘inevitable confrontaHowever CAUT has yet to re- tario universities tions over the need not only to ex- solve the creation of a strike fund or resigned to boosting tuition fees when the provincial freeze runs out pand programs but to simply mainaffiliation with .the trade union in September, 1977. tain existing ones. movemetit. That was the consensus when Charging that “higher education There is question whether the province’s 15 tax-supported in Canada is the least planned of CAUT should endorse a strike universities, Ryerson Polytechniactivities” newly-elected CAUT weapon and, if a fund was created, cal Institute, Ontario College of president Jill Vickers. argued colit is uncertain who should pay since some of the bargaining units do not Art, and the Ontario Institute for lective bargaining units will protect Studies in Education -met with the academic standards while providhave strike rights. Ontario Council on University Afing needed job security. And in a brief submitted to the fairs (OCUA) at the University of collective bargaining caucus, RoShe said student-teacher ratios Waterloo June 18. land Penner dismissed trade union have increased “out of bounds” OCUA is an advisory body to the with,* the only 11limits being “the size affiliation at 1.present 1 because “--union - constitutions .‘A Al 1orF provincial government and serves ora-rne room’ I. sucn as mar between the Dismissing the contention that as the CLC are, in part, antithetical to as an intermediary universities and Ontario’s ministry student enrolment declines so our notions of academic freedom of c.lleges and universities. should thenumberof teachers, Vicand the rather more decentralized kers said once the ratio gets smaller structure of a professional organithe aualitv of education will meet zation such asCAUT.“‘ -
Radio Waterloo will finally go stereo on Monday - if all goes well. The campus station had originally hoped to start operating in the new mode on September 4, but “technical difficulties” (somebody blew a tube) got in the way.‘ RadWat will continue to be found at FM 94.1 until October, when it will move to 99.1 on the cable. An application for a low-power FM channel for the station’s own transmitter is being worked on and should be submitted by the end of October. The federal -department of communications has already in_ dicated that RadWat has a choice of Channel 233 - 94.5 or Channel 249 -
97.7.
The communications department. has also recommended to RadWat that since the proposed transmitter will be located on campus, a study of possible interference to engineering and scientific laboratory equipment and experiments should be undertaken. The department requires a commitment by both the university authorities and the station on remedial measures which might have to be carried out in the event of such interference. Last month RadWat applied for the call letters CKLA but were turned down since another station in the area had already been assigned those letters. . RadWat co-ordinator Dave Assman told the chevron the station will soon be making another application for call letters, probably after their- organizational meeting on September 15. This time they’re getting an up-to-date list of available call letters before they make their choice. -adrian
rodway
next and with more ruthlessness. Whereas the Alberta differential fees will be decided in coordination with the various postsecondary administrations, Ontario opted on May 4 for a straight tripling with the only exemptions going to students sponsored by the Canadian International Development Agency. . According to the Ontario Federation of Students (OFS/FEQ) which had registered opposition to the hikes, those students make up a mere 12 percent of visa students in the province. The reason given for the Ontario hikes by minister of colleges and
Increasing tuition fees is one way to raise the 11.4 percent additional monies the universities will need in 1977.
The increase will mean an additional $87 million over the $762.1 million the ministry has alloted for university spending in 1976-77. The University of Windsor was the most outspoken against the fee increase. Officials there argued that people in the Windsor area are “living through depressed times,” and a fee increase would make things worse. McMaster University argued that while a fee increase was-inevitable, the long-range goal should be to abolish all tuition fees.
Lines, Iines, lines. Scenes like this will be a familiar sight Gourd campus for at /east a few weeks’ as everyone -scrambles to make some sense- of the confusing paperwork at hand
TEXTB The old.book barn in downtown Wateriod still has a couple of hundred university texts (mostly arts.) ---_._ Also a g-ood selection of art books, children’s books, alternative books and more.
.
Non-Resident plans a
hours Tues-Wed10-5 Thurs - Fri 10 - 9 Saturday 11 - 5 12 King St, I’d.Waterloo
5
groups in all three provinces. The University of Calgary student union issued a two page policy statement which denounced the differential fees and tuition fees in general. It said the international fee issue is being used to detract attention from educational cutbacks which are the- real cause for universities Harry Parrott was university’s financial plight. “mounting public concern over the The Edmonton and District extent of taxpayers support for Labor Council voted to oppose the foreign students.” The hike won’t fee hike at their mid-June meeting apply to students in the middle of after hearing the head of the Uniprograms, he said, but once it apversity of Alberta’s International plies to all international students he 1 Student Committee describe the estimated’ a $6 million yearly savgovernment’s policy and the minising. OFS challenged those figures ter responsible for it as racist. charging the ministry had given-no Hohol hadtold a May meeting of explanation for its calculations. student leaders that international In Manitoba, two university adstudents create a “different visual ministrations didn’t bother waiting impact on campus” and blamed for any -government directives and these students for their tuition decided to impose quotas fearing hikes because they “didn’t tell Alan overflow of internationals bebertans who they were and what they were doing here.” cause of the Alberta and ‘Ontario. decisions. The International Students OrThe University of Brandon has ganization at the University of limited international students to 20 Manitoba opposed differential fees percent of the full-time enrolment and quotas while the student union while the University of Winnipeg decried higher fees but broke the set a 200 student limit. ranks to suggest a quota system The University of Manitoba, “the better of two undesirable alafter investigation by a Senate ternatives . ’ ’ sub-committee, decided to withold While student opposition is exaction this year. pected to mount in the fall the imIn addition to the OFS criticisms, _. mediate outlook looks gloomy and the hikes have met response from the future not much better with student unions, international studangerous precedents having been dent organizations and labor set. _-
eing successfully
m
6
the chevron
friday,
Azanians fight fascism The success of the uprising of the Azanian people since June 16 has been “the most humiliating defeat ever suffered by the racisy settler regime of South Africa,” says a representative of the PanAfricanist Congress of Azania (PAC).
Speaking Monday at a Toronto sports tournament sponsored by the East Indian Defense Committee, David Sibeko said that the tiny spark lit by the Soweto students’ opposition to one aspect of apartheid has become a fire raging throughout the length of Azania. Sibeko is the director of foreign
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affairs for the PAC, which is the national liberation organization leading the Azanian people’s struggle against the South African fascist regime. Even the New York ‘Times has discovered, Sibeko reported, that the struggle of the Azanian people is now directed against the entire system of South African settler fascism and racism. Since its ignition in the black township of’soweto 12 weeks ago, the opposition has spread to the gold fields, the universitim and to ethnic minorities (especially the Indo-Pakistani minority). At least 300 places have been the sites of struggle against the white settler domination of Azania, he said. “The New York Times has revealed that the uprising is led by people who want to create a new state, the state of Azania, which means ‘black man’s land’,” said Sibeko. South Africa is the “citadel of racism” on the African continent, he explained, and it is not surprising that the U.S. and South African authorities are conspiring to attempt to extinguish the flames of revolution. “But the initiative is fully in the hands of the Azanian people, and they are not party to any international manipulations.” Sibeko praised the youth of Azania, whose leadership of the rebellion has been “one of the most outstanding developments of this struggle. ” “Already some legends have been established” by these young militants. He cited the case of Tsietsi Mashinini, who has eluded the net of the fascist police for 12 weeks, despite a massive manhunt. Nicknamed “Punyaka” (the great eluder); his very name will bring out thousands to demonstrate, said Sibeko. “The heroes’of these young militants are Malcom X (a U.S.
Radio Waterloo stands at the threshold of a new-era. We are . now a licensed carrier current station, also broadcasting in stereo on cable FM. In order to-‘ 1 reach the next plateau of broadcasting (becoming a licensed on-air FM station) we need your help. Come to Radio ~ Waterloo’s Fall organizational meeting Wednesday Sept 15th at 7:3Opm in RM 235 of the Campus Centre.
black militant assassinated in the 1960’s). and the greatest revolutionary of our time, Chairman Mao.” The struggle was sparked by the murder of a 13-year-old student during a demonstration June 16 against the imposition of the Af’ rikaans language on black students. After the South African police killed the boy “the Azanian people refused to turn the other cheek and resolved to respond to the reactionary violence of the authorities with the revolutionary violence of the people.” This quickly escalated into “a fight againstthe white settler domination in its entirety.” Faced with this massive offensive by the people, the South African /authorities “incited a handful of migrant laborers, some of whom were Zulus, against the young militants.” This reactionary force included “police in mufti,” reported Sibeko.’ The reactionary thugs were organized by the police, transported in police trucks and some wore new police boots. One journalist .overheard the police instructing the migrant laborers to kill young demonstrators, <but not to damage property . When journalists reported these events accurately, they were imprisoned by the authorities, who are attempting to impose a complete news blackout on the struggle.
September
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Three of the black journalists now in prison are Joe Tlholoe, president of the, Black Journalists Union, Harry Mashabela and Peter Meigubane. Another severe defeat for the Pretoria regime, and a “signal victory for the people”, has been the unity of the people of mixed descent - the “coloreds” - with the great majority of the Azanian people. Their actions against the racist regime have “frustrated the attempts of the South African government to use divide-and-rule tactics.” Sibeko promised that the PAC would bring to Canada at least two people intimately involved in the fight kindled by Soweto - one member of the central committee of the PAC and a member of the Soweto students’ organization that began the uprising. In conclusion, the chairman of the meeting, Hardial Bains, chairman of the Communist Party of Canada (Marxist-Leninist), explained that the struggle of the Azanian people sets them on the same road as the people of Indochina and Cambodia. He said that the uprising has smashed the pessimistic attitude of those who scoff at the law that “Where there is oppression, there is resistance,” and has become a harbinger of the People’s Republic of Azania. D
-larry
hannant
Students bettile loo/r’ce ati;acks While Canadian university students were struggling to find largely non-existent jobs this summer, their Azanian (South. African) counterparts were battling back police attacks aimed at silencing their protests against the killing of black people. According to reports in the Wits Student, the student paper from the University of Witwatersrand (a university for white students near Johannesburg), students from the university were “brutally assaulted” by out-of-uniform police and assorted thugs wielding chains, bars, knives and batons as they returned to campus following a protest march through Johannesburg. (The chevron receives the Wits Student, in addition to student publications from many Canadian universities.) The paper reports that the students, accompanied by many black men and women who had joined in the march, fought back as’a traffic policeman stood by remarking: “I can’t do anything about it as they are policemen. ’ ’ Eventually uniformed police arrived and pretended to take charge of the situation while continuing to ignore attacks against the marchers. A reporter noted that: “Several of the thugs who attacked the protesters were later seen climbing into police cars.” And then on the afternoon of the same day, another peaceful demonstration was broken up as police, this time in uniform, charged into a group of about 500 students as they were crossing the Queen Elizabeth Bridge into downtown Johannesburg. According to the report, students were marching peacefully along the side of the road, singing songs, until: \ “As the students moved along the bridge, a single police van followed by a few police cars parked across the road, hemming the marchers in. “Leaping from their vehicles, police batons charged the group, instantly breaking up the march.” About 20 students were arrested and hustled into the police van, but were released about IO minutes
later. No reasons were givenfor the arrests, however at least one student, the deputy vice president of the student council, was taken to the police station, “ostensibly for ‘resisting arrest’ ,” and was held for several hours before being released on bail. These attacks took place on June 17, just one day after people joining in the massive demonstrations in the black township of Soweto, outside Johannesburg, were violently attacked, by police. The black workers living in Soweto were protesting against the law requiring that they receive half their education in Afrikaans, the language of the ruling Nationalist Party in Azania. As a representative from the Pan African Congress (PAC) pointed out in a speech in Ottawa, reprinted in .People’s Canada Daily News (PCDN), however: “The Afrikaans language which started off the so-called riots - but it could have been anything else - was merely a catalyst, which brought out hatred for the oppressor, hatred for the exploiter, hatred for the colonialist . ’ ’ Following the police attack in Soweto, PCDN reports, the protests spread to other townships in the Johannesburg and Pretoria districts, despite attempts by the government to contain them by sealing off Soweto. Black workers (who in Johannesburg as in all of Azania make up most of the work force) also began to organize a general strike which was admitted to be up to 80 per cent effective. In an effort to break the strike, violence was incited between some Zulu “contract workers’ ’ who had been brought into Soweto and the native workers. This tactic, which the government tried to pass off as “tribal violence’ ’ , was condemned by Zulu Chief Gatsha Buthelezi who pointed out: “We as Africans are all suffering under the present oppressive rule in our country. We therefore need to be united in our efforts toward the attainment of our liberation. ’ ’ The fighting in Soweto, said Buthelezi, was “encouraged by those who are not black.” --henry
hess ,’
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September 10, l-976 -- _
\ OTTAWA (CUP) - The unemployment rate for students this summer may reach 25 percent, but the department of Manpower, and Immigration has scuttled the only method for determining that figure, the National Union of Students (NUS) has charged. Senior department officials cancelled a five-year old supplementary survey on- student employment, -meaning the government has
’ no way of determining if its summer job programs are adequate, according to NUS president Pierre Ouellette. This year the department slashed the budget of its Student Summer Employment and Activities Program (SSEAP) from $60 to $24 million, eliminating some 40,000 jobs normally provided by the cancelled Opportunities for Youth (OFY) and related programs.
TORONTO (CUP) - Ontario’s minister of colleges and univer: sities has admitted his government will do nothing to ease the financial burden for the province’s unemployed students returning to studies this year. Harry Parrott told representatives of the Ontario Federation of Students (OFS/-FEO) in a July 14 meeting it is “administratively impossible” for his department to change the awards appeal process for the Ontario Student Awards Program (OSAP). The OFS executive has asked Parrott to eliminate the arbitrary summer savings requirement, whereby students are-expected to have saved a set amount from summer earnings whether they were employed or not. Additionally, they requested that, any additional awards granted to students in excess of Ontario’s $1000 loan ceiling be in the form of grants. OSAP awards this year consist of $1000 loan along with monies awarded from Ontario’s grant fund. But despite the ceiling,-raised by
$200 this year, any additional awards to appealing students are given in the form of loans. OFS expects that many students are unemployed this summer and will require more financial assistance from OSAP. , The minister said this request was “reasonable” but that there is not enough money in the $11.45 million grant fund to cover the appeals. As for other immediate changes, the minister said too many loans have already been processed. According to OFS spokespersons the minister was reluctant to commit his department to anything until he received the recommendations of his Interim Committee on Financial Assistance for Students, expected soon. But he finally admitted that any monies in the grant fund not spent would be put back into the province’ s treasury. “It is highly unlikely that there will be any relief’ for Ontario’s unemployed students this year, the minister conceded.
Cutback kicked off board NEW YORK (Claridad/LNS) east coast. The only member of the board of Tuition was finally imposed on higher education who voted against the city university system, begin* the-imposition of tuition in the City ning with the- 1976-77 term, for the University of New York (CUNY) first time in its more than one . last, spring was not reappointed to hundred year history. the board by mayor Abraham Vinia Quinones, a black woman Beame. who opposed the tuition plan, and During the past year thousands who was the only opponent who of students and teachers demondid not resign from the board, said strated numerous times against Mayor -Beame’s decision not to threats by New York city officials reappoint her “p&ably .had to do with my stand.” of cutbacks in the open admissions Quinones denounced the tuition policy, financial aid programs, special studies, a reduction in the stu- ..plan as a “political ploy” in which no provision was made to insure dent body,, a 20% cutback in faculty, and the closing of 6 of the jobs of minorities. “For those” in government,” she said, “the CUNY’s 20 campuses, including is not a priority.” the only bilingual college on the University
Hig.h unemployment for Women NEW YORK (LNS) - Women are being hard hit by the economic crisis that besets Western industrialized countries. A survey- by the International Labor Organization found that a total of 7 million women in 23 industrialized countries in the West are unemployed. This figure accounts for over 40% of the jobless total, although women make up only 35% of the labor force in these countries. France had 110,000 women unemployed last year, with enemployed men numbering 74,000. In Belgium, the women’s unemployment rate stood at 14%, while the rate for men was 5%. In West Germany, even with production on the
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in, West rise, women found it increasingly difficult to get jobs. Their share of the jobless market rose from 40% to 46% last year. Although women are 40% of the labor force in the United States, almost half of all the unemployed are women. (And unemployment among black and minority women and men in the U.S. stood at 13%, almost twice the overall unemployment rate in the U.S,,=cording to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.) Altogether, a staggering 17 million women and men found themselves unable to find any jobs last year in the 23 Western industrialized countries- surveyed by the ILO.
and only have worked fifteen days. would cost between $40 to $50,~ Andras said there were still 6,000 out of the $24 million budgeted for “jobs available, although he didn’t SSEAP ‘76. indicate the wage level or duration Stats Can had been funding all of employment. , He did say, special government surveys, but “These vacancies may not be ex- last year passed on the costs to actly what students are looking for, those departments requesting the information, according to a NUS but -in a period of austerity things Without an accurate assessment are not always easy.” background paper. Senior manof this year’s program there willbe NUS executive secretary Dan power officers decided to cancel no firm basis to plan job programs O’Connor called Andras’ attitude the survey along with OFY, but did for next year, -0uellette said in a “callous, not tell SSEAP evaluation officials. because he is using lowletter to Manpower minister Robert level vacant jobs to imply students -* The only information this year Andras in July, asking that a sur- don’t want to work.” comes from the 1976 Labor Force vey be done in September. Survey, which does not accurately He said the minister’s claim that NUS and other student organidetermine which of the 14-25 age students are not taking advantage zations have repeatedly said that of his department’s “mobility as- group it questions are students. without adequate summer savings, sistance grants” for travel to jobs Last year’s special survey was dimany students will not be able to not in their immediate area reveals rected specifically at students. return to their studies. This year, “a complete lack of awareness” of The NUS paper says the new the organization estimates that the many students’ financial situation, system is particularly faulty in-that rate of student summer unemployciting the higher cost of living away it does not determine if people ment could run from 12 to 25 perfrom home: looked for work, which “artificent. Finally, An&as can only specucially lowers” the numbers in the Andras has not yet replied to late what the student unemploylabor force, ie. people who didn’t Ouellette’s letter, but in a press re- ment rate will be because his delease August 16 disputed the 25 partment has scrapped the special bother registering with Manpower percent figure. and didn’t find work. The ‘paper survey normally done for May; claims youth participation in the The minister said his department June, July and August. labor force has declined by two placed 158,000 students out of Andras denied his department percent. 502,000 who registered, calling this dropped “certain Statistics Canada a 4,46 percent increase over the surveys” to cover up high unempA research paper of the Official same period last year. loyment figures, but maintained Opposition based largely on earlier that the absence was due to funding Manpower counts as a placework by NDP MP John Rodriguez, ment any job with a minimum of cutbacks. says the unemployment rate for the A Statistics Canada official estithree days. One student could con14-25 age group is the highest since nrates the four-month survey ’ 1953. ceivably count as five placements
The group “Strider”provided of the orientation activities
lots ofpower and music in the Campus Centre Tuesday afternoon.The organized by your Federation of Students.
THE BQARD
concert
was part
OF ENTERTAINMENT
invites applications for the following positions 1. Publicity Co-ordinator ” to organize the preparation of publicity, and supervise the distribution of publicity on campus f6r Board of Entertainment events. Remuneration is negotiable.
-2. Se&ettiry
-
to attend regular Board meetings, to prepare agendas, take minutes and --performother secretarial tasks for the Board
,
Inquiries and applications may be forwarded to Doug Antoine, . Chairperson, ‘Board of Entertain;ment, Federation Office, Campus-Centre. Deadline. for. applications is September ’ 23, 1976
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Board of Entertainment Federation of Students
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tion at 30 million by the year 2020. There. is also some discussion about the the development of government’s Green Paper on Immigration. Saturday September 11 6:00 LIVE FROM THE SLAUGHTERHOUSE - Music and interview originating from the Slaughterhouse, a coffee house in Aberfoyle, Ontario. The featured artist on September 11 is Raffi.
Friday September 10 6:00 CANADIAN ISSUES - Development Education Centre - An interview with a representative from the development education centre in Toronto, discusing the centre and the work that they do on issues related to World Development and Canada’s involvement in the 3rd Wqrld, 6:30 PER~CTVES - a programme which provides a balanced view of facts and points of view to provide an understanding of major issues before the United Nations, including recordings from meetings. On Sep-
tember IOth, the focus is on the Middle East and Thea Palestine Liberation Movement. From United Nations Radio. 8:00 THE DOWN TO EARTH FESTIVAL Zero Population Growth - Janice Palmer of Zero Population Growth of Canada outlines in this programme the aims, history and operations of Zero Population Growth in Canada. Discussion revolves around the suggestion by Zero Population Growth to hold immigration to 100,000 people per year in order to stabilize Canada’s popula-
Sunday September 12 6:00 LIVE FROM THE SLAUGHTERHOUSE David James Bowen is feature@. 9:00 CAMPUS ORIENTATION A weekly feature during ’ September outlining different organizations on campus and the activities they concentrate on. Monday September 13 6:OO A CRITICAL EXAMINATION OF THE ROLES OF THE PLANNER IN CANADA Regional Planning in Northern Saskatchewan \ Doug Elias, former director of public participation for the ChurchiII,Rtver Study in Saskatchewan and -now with the Museum of,Man and Nature in ‘Winnipeg
I
these guidelines are developing self rather than the accumulation of matter, growing towards technologies that don’t require continual input of non, renewable resources, and the management of materials in continual cycles. Bakavi grew out of the Institute for the Study of Cultural Evolution of Ottawa. 9:00 MUSIKANADA - Interviews with, and music from some of Canada’s finest recording artists form the basis for this programme. .September 13th, we feature Shooter. Tuesday September 14’ 6:00 NATIVE ISSUES - Interactions between Native and White Society - A discussion with Duke Redbird, Vice-President of the Native Council of Canada on the interactions between native people and the rest of Canadian society. Mr Redbird speaks from the perspective of a native person w,ho grew up in a white environment and he discusses a number of topics, includ!ng Children’s Aid and the problems of retaining native identity in an environment that is predominantly white. 6:30 PERSPECTIVES - a programme which provides a balanced view of facts and points of view to provide an understanding of major issues b,efore the United Nations, including recordings from meetings. On the 14th Mrs. Thorsson, Sweden’s Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, who represents her country at the Geneva disarmament conference, tells of some of the main problems
\
Astudentresearcher namedSue, Whilestudyingonmcampus brew, Saysthe..rtrendis now clear Toa beerwithout peer, LabattYBlue’isnow ‘in’ ’ &th‘Who’s who’! /
September
10, 1976
under discussion there. 8:00 THE DOWN TO EARTH FESTIVAL Twin Valley School Concepts -. In the first of a two part programme ‘which deals with education at the Twin Valleys School, concepts behind the unique educational system at Twin Valleys are dealt with. Twin Valley School was set up for students who do not fit into other schools, in response to the belief that the present educational system is ’ inadequate and that schools do not teach people how to live, but at best are teaching people how to make a living. Twin Valleys School aims to assist students by helping them’ achieve harmony with their environment and by encouraging good .-” qualities rather than makI ing students into role playing programmed individuals. 9:00 SPOTLIGHT - An indepth look-at the music and background of a number of international recording arj tists. September 14th Fludd is featured. Wednesday September 15 6:00 COMMUNITY SERVICES Rape Distress Centre - An examination of the aims and activities of the Waterloo Regional Rape Distress Centre. 8:00 THE DOWN TO EARTH FESTIVALTwin Valley School Workings - In the second of a two part programme the methods of teaching at Twin Valleys School are discussed. Twin Valleys School is a total environment and students are there 24 hours a day, seven days a week, in order that the learning process can go on at any time. The aim of the school is to try and channel students into their own areas of interest and the,D teach them skills to enable the students to earn a living in those areas. Follow up studies of graduatesfromTwinValley School have shown that the school has a 75% success rate. Twin Valleys - School is located in South-Western Ontario. 9:00 CRAWDADDY From Crawdaddy Magazine, features on well known artists and bands. On the 15th the programme looks at the comedy of Bill Crystal and also features an interview with Tom Waites. Thursday September 16 6:00 WHAT’S ENTERTAINMENT - A review of some of the entertainment features in Kitchener-Waterloo plus a listing of upcoming events. Produced by Peter Goodwin and Greg Merrick. 8100 THE DOWN ~0 EARTH FESTIVAL Bio-Dynamic Farming - In this programme Rip King from , Paulo Alto, California discusses the principles behind Bio-Dynamic Farming, including some discussion on the French Intensive Method. BioDynamic Farming involves the use of natural methods, including such things as companion planting, the cycling of crops, composting and natural methods to -improve the soil. 9:00 MUSICAL KALAIDESCOPE - Conrad Grebel Choir features the Conrad Grebel Choir, taped at the Theatre of the Arts, University of . Waterjoo.
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National student protest is; ‘ket’for.y this fall . /
OTTAWA (CUP) -I Student - councils across Canada plan to demonstrate their opposition to increasing financial barriers in postI secondary education on National to be held on Student Day, November 9. National and regional committees will co-ordinate local campus actions dealing with government cutbacks in higher education funding, tuition fee hikes, regressive student aid programs and high student unemployment. National Student Day (NSD) was proposed at the National Union of Students (NUS/UNE) annual meeting in Winnipeg last and was subsequently May, adopted by most regional and provincial student organizations.
The November 9 activities will largely be co-ordinated by the individual student unions, and could range from information campaigns to educational seminars to class boycotts. The political content will be determined by the provincial situation, or “social surrounding”, as suggested in the NUS resolution. The responsibility of keeping NSD content along national themes while stressing regional problems falls to both national and provincial co-ordinating committees. To this end,(BCSF), the Federation of Alberta Students (FAS), the Ontario Federation of Students (OFS) and NUS have all met at least once over the summer to plan their respective strategies._
Niagara forum to eniJ arms race Brock University in St. Catharines will be the venue for the Niagara Forum to End the Arms Race on September 17 to ,19.
.
The Forum, which was initiated by the People’s Assembly on Canadian Foreign Policy, will focus on the arms race and will discuss methods of promoting disarmament. Among the speakers will be the provost of Trinity College, George Ignatieff; Ernest Regehr, author of “Making a Killing”, a book on the armaments trade; vice-president of the Canadian Labour Congress, Julien’Major; Dr. Ted Johnson of
the Presbyterian Church and Dr. Bruce McLeod of the United Church. Workshop themes will include: the politics and business of arms; environmental and resource themes connected with arms; lifestyles and education for peace; labour mobilization for disarmament; the media and arts responsibility in promoting disarmament; alternative defense policies, and Canada’s involvement with NATO/Norad. For more information you can contact the Global Community Centre, 94 Queen Street South, Kitchener; phone 743-7 111.
ally give money to universities but The University of Waterloo is to that in this case it was logical for it be the location for a provincial to do so. “sport and l.eisure resource centre He said UW is an ideal site for for special populations”. the centre, both because of its Professor JosepkLevy of the decomputer facilities and because partment of recreation has been given a $32,000 Wintario grant to there is an academic department of recreation on campus, a departset up such a centre here. “Special populations’ ’ is a term used to de- ment which already houses a good deal of information and expertise in scribe people who are handicapped this area. in one way or another,‘and for Eventually, he feels, the centre whom special facilities or programs would disseminate information have to be provided. through the publication of a newsThe centre will be a place where letter and other materials, or by orrecreation directors, or other inor providing terested people, could go to get in- ganizing workshops consultants. He even foresees the formation about sports and recreapossibility of computer terminals in tional activities for such groups. various locations in Ontario Levy’s first task will be to collect (perhaps, for instance, at the men, , information - on how to design tal health centre in Penetanand build facilities, how to use guishene) where information could them, and how to promote their use be accessible as it is required. among the “special populations”. Levy says there are “two ways He said the centre would draw on to‘ go” in planning recreation for the experience of many other counthese special groups. _ tries, including the United States, “You can plan facilities and Britain, and the Scandinavian programs for them which tends to countries - “We already have one segregate them from the rest of the thousand pieces of information but community, and I would say Israel we’ll be adding thousands more”. is a country that tends to do this, The material will be indexed and though they have fantastic serstored on a computer, so that it can vices. Or you can integrate them, I rapidly be made available. It will and I think there are some excellent include such information as the examples of this in some of the ‘latest methods for teaching parapScandinavian countries.” legics to swim; for designing a , He said the thrust of the UW wheelchair so that children with centre would be towards integracerebral palsy can go fishing; for tion -providing guidelines for new setting up a transportation network ways of making it possible for to get senior citizens to a commun“special populations” to use bowlity centre. ing alleys, art galleries, national __ Also available will be informaparks, and. so forth. tion on laying out a nature trail for “Normally’ in this country we’ve people in wheelchairs, or on debuilt rinks and pools and ski tows veloping a botanical garden for the for the able, and we tend not to blind (where plants have beautiful think much about the needs of our scents rather than colorful flowdisabled citizens. Yet they have perhaps even more need for recreaers). Levy said Wintario doesn’t usutional activities,” Levy added.
Little activity, at least on the regFAS’ member campuses appear ional level, has begun in the Atlanto favor a day of meetings, while tic region, organized under the Atpromoting the Provincial concern lantic Federation of Students of student aid through a proposed (AFS), but the national conewspaper. OFS held a provinceordinating committee meeting of wide strategy workshop in early August 1 mentioned. reports of August, but otherwise has concen“campus planning” at several New trated on local work in the campus Brunswick institutions. and community. Saskatchewan will attempt to rePublicity for the day is to be create a provincial student federahandled by all three levels of organization. Plans’ call for “introtion while organizing NSD, the national co-ordinators reported, but ductory” posters and leaflets and a little organizational activity has “declaration of 1976 NSD con-_ been done to date. Campuses in terns” from NUS, who with the provinces will also produce pamManitoba run hot to cold in their enthusiasm, but two institutions phlets dealing with national issues. have formed committees. Both will release periodic leaflets Efforts by NUS officials to work and posters on the issues, while with L’Association des Etudients du Quebec (ANEQ) continue to meet little response, the August meeting revealed. The strategy set by the regions If you are interested in earning seems to reflect the original NUS some pocket money and are familconcern that NSD be a “grassiar with the care and feeding of a roots” effort. For example, BCSF ! 16mm motion picture projector, the rejected the idea of a demonstraUW audio visual centre is looking tion at the provincial legislature, for you. and will initiate actions at the campus level stressing the themes of They need about 10 students severe unemployment, threatened who can work five to seven hours tuition hikes and current cutbacks.
local campuses will publish leaflets with “national anh provincial input’ ’ and be solely responsible. for publicizing events and recruiting help. These plans in some ways answer the concern expressed by NUS executive secretary Dan O’Connor when he noted at the committee meeting that there had been “an absence of extensive co-ordination at either the provincial or national levels.” Although the coordinators agreed NSD must be “a day unlike others on campus”, what constiutes the minimum activity to meet this requirement has been left to the individual campuses to decide.
Do YQU need a job? per week as equipment operators. Pay is above, average, with higher rates for night or overtime work, but hired only experienced persons will be . If this sounds like your cup’of tea, you should apply in person to Sheila Kieswetter at room 1309 in Engineering II.
Course offeiing ,
A new course, “Anthropology and Education”, is being offered jointly by the departments of anthropology and environmental studies this fall. The course, which is crosslisted as Anthro 335 and Man Env 335, will be given in room 2 12 of the arts lecture building from lo:30 am to 12:30 pm on Wednesdays. Due to an administrative oversight the course was not advertised, but a limited number of course outlines are available from Colin De’Ath at Env. 214.
FEDERATION OF STUDENTS FALL 11 BY-ELECTIONS Mathematics Co-op 1 seat (on term) Environmental Studies 1 seat -. Co-Op (Both Streams) - 1 seat Science Regular 1 seat St. Jerome’s College 1 seat Graduate Studies 1 seat Nominations open Lved Sept 15 close Wed Sept 22 . , Election Date Wed Ott 6
1,
Any Student registered in the above constituencies may run for their constituencies seat if he/she has the signatures of five persons-registered in. his/her constituency FEDERATION
ELECTION
COMMITTEE
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friday,
September
10, 1976
RECO-RDS RARE LIVE AND sTUDI RECORDINGS BY DYLAN STONES, BEATLES, ELTON JOHN, LED ZEP & MANY OTHERS.
THOSE PERSO.NSWANTING TO OBTAIN THE1.R
RN/ATE
k********************* * TRANSCENDENTAL
ILOTS-LICENC
* * *
- should attend the Flying Club’s introductory night. Room 103, Eng..-Let., 7:30 pm., Sept. 22. Films, material hand-outs, WI .question . I? & answer period.
UNIVERSITY
FLYING
* * *
r
‘< .b: c
is a simple, natural and scientifically searched technique that purifies the nervous system, refines perception and allows the natural expansion of the conscious mind.
Applications for all Ontario medical ailable at Ontario Medical School (OMSAS) for the 1977 session.e / Completed or before (This is one of three aircraft Wellington Flying Club.)
owned
by the Federation
of Students
applications must December 1, 1976.
(NOTE: For 1979 Write immediately --7,
and leased to the Waterloo
the deadline to:
ATTENTION
- I x I
YOUR FEDERATION REfiESENTATIVES
ARTS tST”DENTi!
Franz Klingender Don Orth Donna Rogers Bruce Rorrison
i I
’
OF STUDENTS COUNCIL FOR 1976-l 977 ARE:
Phone
I I I
Plumbers
.885-6559 . 8856559 744-3014 885-4348
\
.
I I I I I
I I I I I I I 1
is November
on
15, 1976)
-
I I I
1 I I
4
at OMSAS
‘*OMSAS P.O. Box 1328 Guelph, Ontario NlH 3N8
The ‘Ministry of Transport approved Ground School course will be held each Wed. evening (11 nights) Room 3027, M & C, 7:30 - 10 pm., starting Sept. 29.
! I I
schools are now avApplication Service
be received
I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I
I
If you require any information regarding Federation’events or have any complaints about any aspect of the Federation or if you would just like to become involved with the Federation, feel free to call us. The Federation can also be helpful in dealing with such problems as OSAP, legal problems and problems with your profs or courses. We can be reached through the Federation of Students, ph. 885-0370 or drop in and see us in the Federation of Students office in the Campus Centre, Rm. 235.
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NEW YORK (LNS) - A new study has confirmed what many people have long known for a fact - doctors in the United States are concentrated in areas where they can make more money, leaving poor rural and urban areas without proper medical services. According to the Berkeley, California-based Carnegie Council on Policy Studies in Higher Education, the ratio of doctors to population in 1974 ranged from 84 for every lOO$OO in South Dakota to 249 for 100,000 in New York.
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_must be complemented by grocery store or market shopping. And yet it carries more than enough for the members to find it worth-while. So- what does it carry? Flours, notably stone-ground whole wheat, both pastry and all-purpose;grains such as rice and rolled oats; raw nuts and seeds such as cashews, peanuts, almonds, sunflower, and sesame; dried fruits such as raisins and currants; dried legumes such as kidney‘ beans, lentils, and chick ‘peas; a wide variety of herbs, teas, and spices; various cheeses and a number of miscell-aneous items such as non-instant milk powder, demerara brown’ sugar, unpasteurized honey, and some GREAT old fashioned type peanut butter. The Food Co-op is located at 94 Queen St. S. in Kitchener, in the basement of the Global Community Centre. Unfortunately it is not onen to the public. However, it is easy to join.<The Co-op has a policy of turning away only those who do not choose to join.) There is a $3 .OO membership fee.’ If you are interested in joining and would like more information, check out these people: if in Waterloo - Gary Sosnoski at 884-0548; if in Kitchener Ralph Wilson at 579-4305; if in one - but near the other (got that?) try Rick Green at 576-1769.
Health food stores sprouted up like ‘completed a few years ago, gave us enjoyable because they are meeting people, making friends, they are toadstools after a shower, vitamin some real data on our national health. The importance of such it+ learning, and in a co-op you are one C and megavitamin doses sparked of the direct beneficiaries of your - formation cannot be underestilively discussion. own efforts. The members have a Today more emphasis is placed -mated. It ‘facilitates research, certain control over their destiny. on nutrition in newspaper cookingdraws publicity, and like a roadmap columns, and we have two leading in strange territory allows us to see Everyone can have an equal say in where we are going, where we are, the operation of the co-op. members of the Nutrition Canada Actually, this is perhaps the harsurvey (Ruth Fremes and Zak and how far we have come. dest thing for members to accept, Sabry) doing a syndicated column Concern over pollution of, our on nutrition which appears, inciwater and air has spread to food, as but the most rewarding. If’you see something, you disapprove of in a dentally, in “a leading K-W newspeople are becoming wary of chemstore, say, or have a suggestion, paper’ ’ . ical preservatives and other artifiyou generally keep it to yourself The Nutrition Canada survey, cial additives. Some exotic ones and despair. In have been implicated in cancer or -out of resignation in mental disorders in children. In- -fact, you stop looking for things to disapprove of or suggest for these gredients must now be listed on’ reasons. such as packages and cans in order, start- - -*-But in a situation . . the Food Co-op, it is everyone’s ing with the principal one. Reading yours, you take labels is an intriguing way to exer- ’ store including pride in it, and you can do somecise the eyeballs while shopping. thing about it if you want to. It limited to the makers of coke ovens Rising food prices have encourtakes members awhile to realize aged-people to look to alternatives > - Koppers, Co., the Allied Chemthis. ical and Dye Corp. and the Salem- in the diet. Many are experimenting Some Food Co-op members are Corp. with vegetarianism (a very loose vegetarians as you might expect, Albert Jackson, Jr., who worked term which might be read “less but certainly not all. The Co-op meat z more plant food’ ‘) . with coke ovens for 22 years, was carries no meat, mainly because of among those awarded compensaKitciiener Co-operative Foods the difficulty and the expense. Nor tion in the 1972 case. He received - or the Food Co-op as it is generdoes it carry fresh vegetables. It --charles cass the sum of $60 a week plus certain, ally known - has been around in unspecified medical expenses. one form or another since 1971. It One year later, at the age of 49, has a fairly solid base of permanent Jackson died of cancer. His wife Restaurant residents now; although the seanow receives $23.40 from U.S. sonal student high tide may cause a arid Tavern Steel as her portion of the $60 per 30 per cent fluctuation in the mem64 King St. S. week settlement. bership. No matter. The aims ofthe Since 1972, U.S. Steel has Co-op have never really been set yielded awards in only 6 other down as a manifesto, or even eleg$2.45 Every Mon: Med. 8 Sl. Pizza, any 3 items cases. There are 15,000 coke oven antly articulated to everyone’s Every Tues: Spaghetti, Rigatoni, Rotini with meat sauce, workers in the U.S., a disproporsatisfaction, however they seem to eat in only $ .99z tionate number of whom are minorgo roughly as follows: to provide a ity and women workers. , $4.00 Every Wed: Lge. 12 Sl. Pizza, any 3 items good cross-section of basic (gener‘. _ $3.30 Every Thurs. : Lasagne, Salad Bar, Roll ally unrefined) foodstuffs ,of the , Sm. $2.25 Every Fri: Veal Parmagiana, Salad Bar, Roll members’ choosing, more cheaply Lg. $3.05 than available commercially (if at I Sm. $2.60 Every Sat: Chicken Cacciatore,, Salad Bar, Roll all available commercially), in an “Less easy to document statistiLg. $3.65 and cocally, but generally accepted as a atmosphere of community Sunday: All you can eat (4-8pm only) . operation. It is a trade-off: you pay serious problem, is the deficiency Country Style, Adults $4.95 Children-$2.95 of supply of physicians in the\ less for, the food, but you do a little under 12 ’ work now and then for it. ghetto areas of large cities, where -~ I Fully Licensed Phone 884-4160 residents tend to depend on --Members usually find the work crowded hospital outpatient clinics, rather than on private physicians, for medical care,” the study observed.The council attributed the problem to the “naturaldesire of health professionals for the higher incomes that are associated with urban practice and for the social amenities of urban life.”
Steelworkers sue coke -oven makers NEW YORK (LNS) - A multimillion dollar damage suit against the makers of coke ovens has been brought by six former U.S. Steel Co. workers suffering from cancer and by the families of six other workers who have died of cancer. The suit charges that the coke ovens leaked cancer-causing gases because they were ,“improperly designed”, and that the coke oven makers “failed to warn or inform” workers about the ‘tcausal relationship between the emissions from their coke ovens and lung cancer in coke oven workers.” U.S. Steel, in a 1972 workers’ compensation -case, admitted that coke oven emissions can cause cancer. U.S. Steel is not named in the present suit, however, which is
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iti eating
AlternativesThere is no doubt that in recent years awareness of what we eat has burgeoned. Much groundwork was laid in the 60's and earlier. Familiar names such as Adelle Davis, Linus Pauling, Carlton Fredericks, and Emmanuel Cheraskin waged war against the powerful vested interests of the mammoth refined food industry and pricked the smug indifference of widespread ignorz ance. The public slowly began to pay attention and become interested.
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doctors
-1B,ENT
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blSC0:+ LIVEBANBS= THIS IS A WINNING COMBINATION Fri - Sat
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Get in touch with Bruce, Rita, or Doug at the Federation Qffice, Campus Centre, ext. 2326, or leave your name at the office when you get on campus.
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A Canadian doctor, born in Cravenhurst Ontario, is revered by over a quarter of the world’s population. Dr. Norman Henry Bethune died a hero in China in 19.39. Two weeks ago the Canadian Government paid him the honour of opening his birthplace as an historic site. The three pages contain articles which we hope explain ” following these events. In the centrespread Rob Taylor, a student in Man Environment and an executive member of the Kitchener-Waterloo Canada-China Friendship Society, gives some background on Bethune. His article is complemented by three news stories ofthe opening written by chevron staffer staffer Neil Docherty. Also included is Chairman Mao Ts&Tung’s famous essay written in honour of Bethune, which is standard reading all over China. The character’ of the man is probably best explained in his own writing. Shortly before his death Bethune wrote “Wounds”. It is his powerful indictment against imperialism and its wars, its wounds. ’ The passage beneath is taken from a biography of the dotter written by Ted Al/en and Sydney Gordeb. It describes Bethune on his death bed, and of how “wounds” was left to the world.
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This remarkable document was written by fit-. Norman BethlIne shortly before his death from blood contracted while operating on a wounded Chinese soldier. The kerosene lamp overhead makes a steady buzzing sound like an incandescent hive of bees. M,ud walls. Mud floor. Mud bed. White paper windows. Smell of blood and chloroform. Cold. Three o’clock in the morning, 1 December, North China, near Lin Chu, with the Eighth Route Army. Men with wounds. Wounds like little dried pools, caked with black-brown earth; wounds with torn edges frilled with black gangrene; neat wounds, concealing beneath the abscess in their depths, burrowing into and-around the great firm muscles like a dammedyback river, running around and between the muscles like a hot stream; wounds, expanding outward, decaying orchids or crushed carnations, terrible flowers of flesh; wounds from which the dark blood is spewed out in clots, mixed with the ominous gas bubbles, floating on the fresh flood of the stillcontinuing secondary haemorrhage. Old filthy bandages stuck to the skin with blood-glue. Careful. Better moisten first. Through the thigh. Pick the leg up. Why it’s like a big, loose, red stocking. What kind of stocking? A Christmas stocking. Where’s that fine, strong rod of bone now? In a dozen pieces.Pick them out with your fingers; white as dog’s teeth, sharp, and jagged. Now feel. Any more left? Yes, here. All? Yes. No. Here’s another piece. Is this muscle dead? Pinch it. Yes, it’s dead. Cut it out. How can it heal? How can those muscles, once so strong, now so torn, so devastated, so ruined, resume their proud tension? Pull, relax. Pull, relax. What fun it was! Now that is finished. Now that’s done. Now we are destroyed. Now what will we do with ourselves? Next. What an infant! Seventeen. Shot through the belly. Chloroform. Ready? Gas rushes out of the opened peritoneal cavity. Odour of faeces. Pink coils of distended intestine. Four perforations. Close them. Purse string suture. Sponge out the pelvis. Tube. Three tubes. Hard to close. Keep him warm. How? Dip those bricks into hot water. Gangrene is a cunning, creeping fellow. Is this one alive? Yes, he lives. Technically speaking, he is alive. Give him saline intravenously. Perhaps the innumerable tiny cells of his body will remember. They may remember the hot, salty sea, their ancestral home, their first food. With the memory of a million years, they may remember other tides, other oceans and life being born of the sea and sun. It may make them raise their tired little heads, drink deep and struggle back into life’ again. It may do that. And this one. Will he run along the road beside his mule at another harvest, with cries of pleasure and happiness? No, that one will never run again. How can you run with one leg? What will he do? Why, he’ll sit and watch other boys run. What will he think? He’ll think what you and I would think. What’s the good of pity? Don’t pity him! Pity would diminish his sacrifice. He did this for the defence of China. Help him in your arms. Why, he’s as light as a 4 child! Yes, your child, my child. How beautiful the body is; how perfect its parts; with what precision it moves; how obedient; proud and strong. How terrible when torn. The little flame of life sinks lower andlower, and, with a flicker, goes out. It goes out like a candle goes out. Quietly and gently. It makes its protest at extinction, then submits. It has its say, then is silent. Any more? Four Japanese prisoners. Bring them in. In this community of pain, there are no enemies. Cut away that blood-stained uniform. Stop that haemorrhage. Lay them beside the others. Why, they’re alike as brothers! Are these soldiers professional man-killers? No, these are amateurs-in-arms. Workerman’s hands. These are workers-in-uniform. No more. Six o’clock in the morning. God, it’s cold in this room. Open the door. Over the distant, dark-blue mountains, a pale, faintline of light appears in the East. In an hour the sun will be up. To bed and sleep. But sleep will not come. What is the cause of this cruelty, this stupidity? A million workmen come from Japan to kill or mutilate a million Chinese workmen. Why should~ the Japanese worker attack his brother worker, who is forced merely to defend himself. Will the Japanese worker benefit by the death of the Chinese? No, how can he gain? Then, in God’s name, who will gain? Who is responsible for sending these Japanese workmen on this murderous mission? Who will profit from it? How was it possible to persuade the Japanese workman to attack the Chinese workman -his brother in poverty; his companion in misery? Is it possible that a few rich men, a small class of men, have persuaded a million poor men to attack, and attempt to destroy, another million men as poor as they? So that the rich may .be richer still? Terrible thought! How did they persuade these poor men to come to China? By telling them the truth? No, they would never have come if they had known the truth. Did they dare to tell these workmen that the rich only wanted cheaper raw materials, more markets and more profit? No, they told them that this brutal war was ‘the Destiny of the Race’, it was for the ‘Glory of the Emperor’, it was for the ‘Honour of the State’, it was for their ‘King and Country’. False. False as Hell! The agents of a criminal war of aggression, such as this, must be looked for like the agents of other crimes, such as murder, among those who are likely to benefit from those crimes. Will the eighty mi,llion workers of Japan, the poor farmers, the unemployed industrial workers - will they gain? In the entire history of Wars of Aggression, from the Conquest of Mexico by Spain, the capture of India by England, the rape of Ethiopia by Italy, have the workers of those ‘victorious’ countries ever been know to benefit? No, these never benefit by such wars. Does the Japanese workman benefit by the natural resources of even his own country, by the gold, the silver, the iron, the coal, the oil? Long ago he ceased to possess that natural wealth. It belongs to the rich, the ruling class. The millions who work those mines live in poverty. So how is he likely to benefit by the armed robbery of the gold, silver, iron, coal and , oil of China? Will not the rich owners of the one retain for their own profit the wealth of the other? Have they not always done so? It would seem inescapable that the militarists and the capitalists of Japan are the only class likely to gain by this mass murder, this authorized madness. That sanctified butcher; that ruling class, the true State stands accused. Are wars of aggression, wars for the conquest of colonies, then just Big Business? Yes, it ‘would seem so, however much the perpetrators of such national crimes seek to hide their true purpose under the banners of high-sounding abstractions and ideals. They make war to capture markets by murder; raw materials by rape. They find it cheaper to steal than to Urgent inqurries came from Genera/ Nieh, from Yenan, from the Chin-Cha-Chi government, from the troops in the field. Tung and Fong continued their vigil, hoping against hope. Now exchange; easier to butcher than to buy. This is the secret of all wars. Profit. Business. Profit. Blood money. ’ Bethune could keep nothing on his stomach, but in his eyes there burned a light that was more s Behind all stands that terrible, implacable God of Business and Blood, whose name is than fever. “How is the fighting going, tungtzemen?” he asked. Profit. Money, like an insatiable Moloch, demands its interest, its return, and will stop at “Many troops are engaged at MO Tien Ling,” Tung said soft/y. “The enemy is throwing large nothing, not even the murder of millions, to satisfy its greed. Behind the army stand the forces into the mountains, but we are leading them into a trap. Genera/ Lu has troops waiting to - militarists. Behind the militarists stand finance capital and the capitalist. Brothers in blood; fall on them from the rear.” “Then it will be as Genera/ Nieh predicted,” Bethune whispered. After a long silence his face companions in crime. turned upwards towards the ceiling, he added: “There will be many wounded. . . . We should What do these enemies of the human race look like? Do they wear on their foreheads a sign send a courier to have tungtzemen Yo and Lin lead the other unit to the front. .* .‘I so that they may be told, shunned and condemned as criminals? No. On the contrary, they Night closed ih on Yellow Stone Vi//age. Bethtine shivered on the k’ang, his teeth clenched. In 1 are the respectable ones. They are honoured. They call themselves, and are called, gentlethe light of the candle his eyes became dark ho//ows. men. What a travesty of the name. Gentlemen! They are the pillars of the State, of the far/y in the morning he seemed to rouse himself. In an unusually vibrant voice he said: “Tung, s church, of society. They support private and public charity out of the excess of their wealth. my papers on the chest - would you give them to me?” When Tung hesitated he said again: They endow institutions. In their private lives they are kind and> considerate. They obey the “My papers . . .I need them, Tung.” There we a note in hjs voice that moved Tung to com’ply.’ law, their law, the law of property. But there is one sign by which these gentle gunmen can be Bethune pawed awkward/y through scores of manuscripts, letters, reports, diaries, raising his told. Threaten a reduction in the profit of their money and the beast in them awakes with a snarl. They become as ruthless as savages, brutal as madmen, remorseless as executioners. head painfully, till he found what he wanted. He /et the other papers fall to the floor and tried to Such men as these must perish if the human race is to continue. There can be no permanent read it, but the effort was too exhausting. He held it out to Tung with his good arm and said: “My letter to Genera/ Nieh, and this . . .Everything’ I have tq say is in them.” peace in the world while they live. Such an organization of human society as permits them to exist must be abolished. Tung took the manuscript,from his trembling fingers. I[ was something Bethune had written in These men make the wounds. Shansi. It was titled, “Wounds”: ‘,;‘*‘; c’*“$ c-4 a’;‘E’e‘;‘4-~‘:‘e’~‘; q’+Y;(‘C” ?..-‘y ;I* ? $;+‘f y’j .$..-\* .f $ .$$7+ +?>~~+‘p\“,+ $ * *‘g, +;-*-_ alA =xXa: A-A * .. - L^*‘L-r*l*P-hr.r~L-*=_l..“m.c’,‘,’ i’rr’n’~‘Lla’d*‘~‘x’B’elT’~‘iC’iW’u‘I *‘i :* * (hTh., * * $ * * * * 6 j * iJ * 5 a* .* , 3 * ) * s Q4%.‘rts . .._i
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Beth
A crowd
of about 400 people came to see the opening of the house Bethune was born in. The Cravenhurst Ontario was built in 1880. It served as the Presbyterian Manse until the Methodists sbyterians joined for&s, and then it housed United Church ministers, until the government bought it Photo by
house in and Prein 7973. rod taylor
China’s hero -honoured in his Ontario home
1 Otto Lang, the federal Minister XTransport, praising a Canadian communist with a quotation from Chairman Mao !? Hard to imagine, perhaps, but such was the scene August 30 when the gqvemment officially opened doctor Henry Norman Bethune’s birthplace as an historic site. A high-level Chinese delegation attended the opening, along with about 400 people. Representatives from Canada-China Friendship Societies from cities across the country, including a delegation from the Kite hener- W aterloo society, went to see Bethune, a hero in China, honoured in his hometown. The man who was a famous a;d outspoken surgeon in Canada, who while fighting against the fascists in Spain devised the first mobile blood clinic, is revered in China for the way he served the. people. Sent to China by the Canadian and US Commtinist Parties in 1938 to aid the Red Army in its fight against the Japanese, Bethune gained a reputation for selfsacrifice in his care of the wounded. He died there in 1939 but left behind a reputation so great that Mao Tse-Tung wrote an essay in his memory. Lang quoted from this essay saying: “No one who returned from the front failed to express admiration for Bethune whenever his name was mentioned, and none remained unmoved by his spirit. ‘% The transport minister felt Bethune’s spirit of self-sacrifice should be nurtured internationally with countries helping each &her. The leader of the Chinese delegation, ViceMinister of Public Health Chang Chih-Chiang, also
Clerg*i suspects
quoted from Mao’s work in praise of the Canadian doctor. He said the man who had adopted the Chinese struggle as his own had shown: ’ ‘ . . .the spirit of internationalism, the spirit of communism, from which every Chinese Communist must learn.” Chang said in helping to create a qew China Bethune wrote a great page into Chinese history and is symbol of friendship between the two peoples. He thanked the government for inviting the Chinese delegation to the opening and donated a large woodcarving depicting BethunG at the head of a group of Eighth Route Army soldiers (the army ’ Bethune fought with). Chang said it was in honour of Bethune “who feared no hardship.” Provincial Minister of Health Frank Miller also spoke at the opening. He addressed himself to the ladies and gentlkmen, the dignitaries present, and to: “the friends and comrades of Bethune.” He paid tribute to the man whorn he said advanced the cause of universal health care for all Canadians. The minister, who earlier this year met with stern opposition from communities across the province, when he tried to close hospitals in an attempt to cut government spending, felt Bethune would be pleased with the progress Canada has made in’providing universal health care. The occasion was also-used by-Lang, sitting-in for Minister for External Relations Allan MacEachen who is on tour abroad, to announce a cultural exchange which has been agreed to in principal by the two countries. It involves the Toronto symphony visiting the People’s Republic, in exchange for a tour of the Shanghai Dance Troupe in Canada in the 1977-78 ’ season.
Today, Dr. Henry Norman Bethune is a hero and a model to the people of China; to one quarter of the population of the earth. What eventshave led to this tremendous admiration and respect? Bethune was born in 1890 in Gravenhurst, Ontario, the son of a Presbyterian minister. His early career was varied and by the age of 27 he had been a student at the University of Toronto, a teacher of immigrant workers in northern Ontario lumber camps, an ambulance attendant in France during World War I and a doctor. As a doctor, his only private practice was established in Detroit in 1924. During the two years he worked in his practice he discovered the two kinds of tuberculosis: “There is a rich man’s tuberculosis and a poor man’s - the rich man recovers and the poor man dies.” --His practice was ended when he contracted the disease himself. Determined not to let his life be stolen by this disease, he studied and investigated all sources he could find to learp of a cure. He demanded that an operation which had not yet been proven reliable be tried on him. The operation was perYormed*and he left Trudeau Sanitorium well, but with only one functioning lung. The other would remain useless and collapsed. At Sacre Coeur Hospital, outsidi: Montreal, Bethune became “le Chef ‘, a respected, skilled and innovative thoracic surgeon. His temper was short in dealing with inefficiency, but his compassion was great for the patients with whom he worked. His work touched mariy other areas of life in Montreal. He established a school in his own apartment for the children of the city to learn and practise art. After witnessing a brutal assault by the police of Montreal on a large group of demonstrators, he joined a meeting and volunteered his services as a doctor, free of charge to any workers who were in need. He travelled to a medical conference in Russia at which he attended only one presentation: the first. He spent the rest of his time touring hospitals and observing the people. On his return to Montreal, he spoke to large gatherings of his trip. He condemned private practice: “The best form of providing health protection would be to change the economic system which produces ill health and to liquidate ignorance, poverty and unemployment. The‘ practice of each individual purchasing his own medical care does not work. It is unjust, inefficient, wasteful and completely outmoded. Doctors,
private charity and phi1 kept it alive as long as po natural death a hundred of the industrial revoluti the nineteenth century. In our highly geared there is no wch thing as, public. The illness and w the mass effects all othl of the people’s health s government as its prim6 citizens. ”
At the age of 46 Beth highly paid, and widely He was also leaving hi against the fascists whc countryside and the pe It was in this theatr mobile blood transfusio 75 per cent of ‘the live been lost at the front dL first time in hi’sitiry tha the front. At every turn he wit by the fascists and the fleeing in disorganized His description of the on the road to Malaga : to the’hatred he felt fo1 for the people he was Although the fightin commended that Bethu recruit financial suppo against, the Loyalist greeted with a hero’s \ Shortly after his ret1 tour, he began to gathc China in the Systematic had become his traden On January 2, 1938 1 press of Japan, on a mi munist parties of Canac farewell letter he expl; “The fact that I we) nor could it give any1 dulgence to sit quietly ( a scar on my heart. DC that can never heal. Th reminding me of the tl I refuse to live in a w corruption without rai: refuse to condone by
motives’ -
Reverend John Housten tried several times to get the government to buy his house. They finally did, and have made it an historic site, but the former occupier of Norman Bethune’s birthplace is suspicious of their motives. Housten, his wife and six children, loved the old five-bedroo-m manse in which Bethune was born. But following Canada’s establishment of diplomatic relations with the People’s Republic of China in 1970, a common feature of living in the house was hosting Chinese delegations eager to see the birthplace of their hero. In an interview with the chevron the minister said the Chinese visitors were always polite. “It was exciting,” he said, “and a great education for the kids.” But caring for a parish, raising a family of six, and playing guide in his own home became too much for the reverend. So in 1970 realizing its importance, he approached the government about buying the house and turning it into a museum. At first Ottawa refused, but fin*ally in 1973 when he threatened not to alldw any m&-e delegations through the house the government purchased it for $60,000. / Since then the old home has been transformed into what curators, archeologists and historians believe it looked like around 1890, when it was ten years old and Bethune was born. It also contains a small photo exhibit portraying Bethune’s turbulent life. Housten is pleased with what has been done, but thinks the government has done it to impress the Chinese and 80 develop favourable trade relations. - The Chinese people hold him (Bethune) up as a model,” he said, “we are using him to get intoChina. ”
Housten said it is a market for our wheat and pointed out that Otto Lang, federal minister for transport who opened the historic site, is chairman of the Wheat Board. Lang, who filled in for Allan MacEachen, minister for External Relations who is abroad on tour, mentioned the improving trade relations”between the two countries in his opening speech. He specifically noted Canada’s wheat exports to China. According to the government’s figures included in the press kit for the opening,‘ grain is the-major commodity which Canada exports to the People’s Republic. The figures show a marked increase in the amount taken by China in the last two years. Up to a value of $334 million in 1974 and $307 million in 1975 from $227 and $186 million in 1971 and 1972 respectively. The figures outline the trade between the two countries in the period 1961-75. A spokesman for the government said the house was being opened as a museum becau.se: “Since 1970 Chinese delegations began to beat a path to the door.“’ Asked why the government had decided to honour Bethune 37 iears after the communi$t doctor died, the spokesman said he felt Bethune had always been recognised in the country but pointed out that prior to 1970 Ottawa didn’t recognise the People’s Republit, and instead had diplomatic relations with Taiwan. Since then the interest shown in Bethune’s birthplace prompted the government to restore the house and establish it as an historic site. The house was purchased in 1973, the spokesman explained, and has been under renovation since then.
Bethune ministering to a Chinese boy, probab/y during the spring or summer oi has written: “it is true I am tired, but I don’t think I have been so happy for a loj important work which. keeps me busy from 5:30 in the morning to 9:00 at ni
6
the chevron
wars which greedy men . . .Spain and China arepart going to China because that is greatest; that is where I
make against others of the same battle. Iam is where Ifeel the need can be most useful.”
From his first arrival in China Bethune’s story reads like a whirlivind. It depicts the urgency of the situation in \;lhich he was now immersed. Istitutions have ’ The military district known as Chin-Cha-Chi, had xdd have died a been established in the Japanese rear. This was thk with the’coming area for which Bethune was bound. lpening years of Ten days out of Hankow, reports appeared stating Bethune had been killed en route by the Japanese. dustrial society The truth of the situation was that Bethune, travelh -all health is ling toward Chin-Cha-Chi, had witnessed the evacuits of one unit of ation of peasants aboard-trains which could barely The protection be recognized as trains for the‘ numbers of people :ognized by the scrambling for a place that would take them to r and duty to its safety. He passed through villages and towns which the Japanese,had already reduced to ruins. ghly respected, He was separated from the main body of the train oracic surgeon. at one point and was temporarily stranded with the 1 work in Spain Japanese forces advancing in his direction. A Major i destroying the Lee arranged for the continuation of his journey to Yenan by mule. lne devised the Just over a month had passed since his departure is system saved from Vancouver when he had his first confrontation normally have with the war. His unprotected train of m<les, supllood. It was the plies and men was attacked by bombers and reduced ice was used at to half its original size. In Yen&n, where the Communists were in charge, the Kuomintang also participated in decision making :struction dealt and action. What he observed here was the policy of I of the people providing a model for the rest of the country: joining lnlj/- their lives. all the people in a common front against the enemy, he encountered luent testimony under the leadership of the communists. He met with Mao Tse-Tung, one of the leaders of the love he felt the Eighth Route Army. Their discussion included :lp. the establishment of a mobile medical unit which ling, it was reBethune promised would save the lives of 75 per Ianada to’ try to cent of the Chinese fighters. d the blockade Conditions in the sub-districts of Chin-Cha-Chi Canada he was were deplorable. He found that hosiptals were not really hospitals and the bedS were not really beds but lg his speaking There were no hospital straw covered k’angs. P on the war in clothes for patients, no anesthetics, no operating 1manner which rooms, no regular surgical instruments, no reliable medicines, and no training facilities for doctors and ver on the Emnurses. ed by the ComIn response to these conditions B&ihune eistabted States. In a lished a hospital with “learn while you work” classion: ses, and schools for the training of nurses and docbesn’t give me, tors. me special inH.e introduced blood transfusions to these new s now. Spain is nd? It is a scar medical officers but not without great fear and mislith me always, understanding bn their part. This fear initially angered Bethune, but upon reflection he wrote: een. fns murder and against them. I >y default, the
‘.,
:riod Bethune tent. . .I have II I. .. .
“And what we don’t understand, we fear. They and K and all men. More than anything else, it is understanding and knowledge that defeats fear. When they saw how I drew my own blood, with no ill effects to myself, there was no longer anything mysterious, anything unknown, anything to fear. Then they saw how the patient was saved, saw the connection and they were ashamed. And my rage at them had as little basis as theirfear of giving blood. What was it Mao Tse-Tung said to the writers and intellectuals of China ? ‘You can teach the people only when you become their pupil.’ How profoundly it fits . . .To be a better teacher one must be a better pupil . . L.”
He worked tirelessly for periods of many hours and even under fire. In Chi Huei, in a Converted temple, under constant artillery barrage from the Japanese, Bethune and his dedicated staff, once magistrate and water buffalo tender, now anesthesiologist and surgeon, worked for 69 hours and performed 115 operations. The last 15 were performed without anesthetic. Bethune was always intolerant of carelessness and set a selfless example of treating all tasks as important and putting no task beneath his dignity. His name spread throughout the region along with tales of his selflessness and courage. So great was the confidence and love the fighters felt for Be,thune that, “Pai Chu En - tchu tsai - wo men ho mien!“, “ATTACK! BETHUNE IS HERE TO TAKE CARE OF THE WOUNDED! ATTACK! BETHUNE IS WITH US!“, became a battle cry. With at least 500 Japanese troops advancing less than two miles away, Bethune was preparing to op-’ erate on a young soldier with a badly mangled leg. The conditions, even without the presence of the Japanese forces, were not ideal for an operating situation. Supplies were dwindling. Bethune cut himself while performing the operation without the benefit of rubber gloves. He continued to work following this incident, but his work was becoming slower and it became obvious that his finger had become badly infected. The poison that had taken his finger soon spread, and the people who had worked with him and loved him for his devotion to them and their people now desperately watched Pai Chu En slowly dying. He is honoured by the people and by Chairman Mao Tse-Tung in his writing, “In Memory of Norman Bethune”. Today this is required reading in China, and Norman Bethune is celebrated as a true internationalist and communist and a model of seiflessness that all people ofChina must try to emulate.
In memory By Mao
of -Bethun
dse-Tung
Comrade Norman Bethune, a member of the Communist Party of Canada, was around fifty when he was sent by the Communist Parties of Canada and the United States to China; he made light of travelling thousands of miles to help us in our War of Resistance Against Japan. He arrived in Yenan in the spring of last year, went to work in the Wutai Mountains, and to our great sorrow\died a Fartyr at his post. What kind of spirit is ihis that makes a foreigner selflessly adopt the cause ofthe Chinese people’s liberation as his own? It is the spirit of internationalism, the spirit of communism, from which every Chinese Communist must learn. Leninism teaches that the world revolution can only succeed if the proletariat of the capitalist countries supports the struggle for liberation of the colonial and semi-colonial peoples and if the proletariat of the colonies and semi-colonials supports that of the proletariat of the capitalist countries. Comrade Bethune put this Leninist line into practice. We Chinese Communists must also follow this line in our practice. We must unite with the proletariat of all the capitalist countries, with the proletariat of JapLn, Britain, the United States, Germany, Italy and all other capitalist countries, for this is the only way to overthrow imperialism, to liberate our nation and people and tojliberate the other nations and peoples of the world. This is our internationalism, the internationalism with which we oppose both narrow nationalism and narrow patriotism. Comrade Bethune’s spirit, his, utter devotion to others without any thought of self, was shown in his great sense of responsibility in his work and his great warm-heartedness towards all comrades and the pedple. Every. Communist must learn from him. There are not a few people who are irresponsible in
15
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their work, preferring the light and shirking the heavy, passing the burdensome tasks on to others and choosing the easy ones for themselves. At every turn they think of themselves before others. When they make some small contribution, they swell with pride and brag about it for fear that others will not know. They feel no warmth towards comrades and the people but are cold, indifferent and apathetic. In truth such people are not Communists, or at least cannot be counted as devoted Communists. No one who returned from ‘the front failed to express admiration for Bethune whenever his name was mentioned, and none remained unmoved by hisgpirit. In the Shansi-Chahar-Hopei border area, no soldier or civilian was unmoved who had been treated by Dr. Bethune or had seen how he worked. Every Communist must learn this true cQmmunist spirit from Comrade Bethune. . Comrade Bethune was a doctor, the art of healing was his profession an4 he was constantly perfecting hi%skill, which stood very high in the Eighth Route Army’s medical service. His example is an excellent lesson for those people who wish to change their work the moment they see something different and for those who despise technical work as of no consequence or as promising no future. Comrade Bethune and I met only once. Afterwards he wrote me many letters. But I was busy, and I wrote him only one letter and do not even know if he ever received it. I am deeply grieved over his death. Now we are all commemorating him, which shows how profoundly his spirit inspires everyone. We must all learn the spirit of absolute selflessness from him. With this spirit everyone can be very useful to the people. A man’s ability may be gre~at or small, but if he has this spirit, he is already nobleminded and pure, a man of moral integrity and above vulgar interests, a man who is of value to the people. Mao Tse-Tung
lean Ewen served with Bethune in China. She was the interpreter at the famous meeting between the doctor and Mao Tse-#Tung. Thatbackgroundmade heracelebrityattheopeningofBethune’sbirthp/aceasan historicsite. This picture shows her in a telephone interview with CBC. In the background is the wooden sculpture of Bethune and a group of Chinese soldiers which the Chinese delegation donated to the house. Photo by neii docherty
Be&u*ne’s / nurse reca She was just about to be wheeled onto the bus, tired from too many interviews, but still willing to talk about her days in China as a nurse alongside Norman Bethune. An old woman, now confined to a wheelchair, was the star of the show. Brought from Vancouver by tlie government for the opehing of Bethune’s birthplace as an historic site, she was the person all the Chinese wanted to be photographed beside. Mrs Jean Kovich, formerly Nurse Jean Ewan,‘ was with a Franciscan mission in China in 1938 when Bethune arrived, and she remained at his side as nurse and interpreter almost until his death in November 1939. When the now famous meeting between the Canadian doctor and chairman Mao Tse-Tung took place she served as interpreter..-- ,’ Not wishing to burden her with another long interview the chevron asked her two questions. “What do you remember most about Bethune?” With very little hesitation she replied: “The way he was with the patients and his colleagues.” The patients were more imporant to him than anything else, she said. And was sheaware of making history when she sat in on the meeting with Mao and Bethune? “Not really but it was very exciting, because not everyone got to meet the chairman.” Of the meeting she said Mao treated Bethune as a brother, as they sipped tea and nibbled peanuts during their five hour discussion. She remembers the Chinese leader as a simple
man with a tremendous sense of humour. “He kidded me about being able to speak Chinese and said there must be some Chinese in my family.” Earlier in the day the chevron sat in on a telephone interview she had with CBC. The former nurse spoke of some of the conditions she and Bethune worked under. She talked of the lack of food, w*ater and medical supplies in many places, -of-shells passing ?ver, 0f operating in caves which were &ed as hospitals, and of using rice paper in plack of gauze. Yet despite these conditions the’survival rate was not low, she said. She told the CBC interviewer that Mao had heard of Bethune’s work in Spain, when the doctor had fought on the republican side against France. She said in their meeting they talked abotit the need for a hospital to accommodate tiie 40,000 wounded enclosed in 24 square miles, and mapped out routes to bring them in. In late 1939 Nurse Ewan became ill and ?*las sent to Sian to collect supplies, while Bethune is.-JGtinued to the front where he died of blood poisiti;iing contracted from one of his patients. The old woman who now lives quietl:5/ :.1pVancouver has only scribbled down a few of her experiences in China, and hqs never returned since she left in 1939. But she recounts some of the tales to her grand children and admits to being a lit& proud of her “small contribution” to the Chinese people.
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the chevron
friday,
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LOCATION
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MEN’S VARSITY
Meetings
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Report to Women’s Locker Room Mon. Sept. 13 4:30 p.m.
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Org. meeting Tues. Sept. 14 500 p.m. PAC Room 1083
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Basketball Wed.
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Org. meeting Sept. 15 5:30 p.m. PAC Room 1090
Ext.
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Track
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Org. meeting Sept. 14 6:00 p.m. PAC Room 1090
Thurs.
Org. meeting Sept. 16 5:30 p.m. PAC Room 1083
Speed Swim
Badminton
-~ Oct.
Curling
Mon.
4 7:00
Oct.
’ Synchro
Ext.
Wally Delahey Ext. 3151 PAC
p.m.
4 8:00
Pat Davis 3146PAC
p.m.
Judy
McCrae Ext. 3663
Judy
McCrae Ext. 3663
TBA
Pat Davis Ext. 3146
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meetings
CONTACT
’ Daily 5:00 p.m. Columbia Field
Ron Cooper H. 576-4879 W I-621 -3250
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Derek
First practice Sept. 13 6:00 p.m. Waterloo Tennis Club
Track II Basketball
Hockey
Org.
Golf t_
Humphries 884-7343
Stan Fogel 884-8110 E-xt. 42
Organizational meeting Sept.’ 15 4:00 p.m. Seagram Stadium Org. meeting Thurs. Sept. 16 6:00 p.m. PAC Room 1090 _
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LOCATION
Tennis
Gord
Robertson 884-2927
Don McCrae Ext. 3088PAC
meeting TBA
Bob. McKillop Ext. 3149PAC
Conestoga G.C. Sept. 10, 9:15 a.m. (meet in front of faculty club 9:15)
John
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Water Polo
TBA
Peter Straka H. 884-7403
Swimming
TBA
Wally Delahey Ext. 3151 PAC
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TBA
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‘hgby club offers ear-round activity \
turday Sept. 11 has officially declared Rugby day by the rersity of Waterloo warriors y football club (WWRFC). student body is invited by the to come and partake in the fun estivities starting at one thirty ith the christening of the clubs :st acquisition, a “scrummage line”. The christening will be wed by an inter squad game at )m. At seven pm there will be a uet at the. Hiedleberg House re George Jones, one of rio’s foremost and funniest )y authorities will be speaking. :a1 will be supplied at a cost of
at 5:00 pm on Columbia Field. Waterloo’s first hom,e game will be held here Saturday Sept. 18 at 2:00 against Western. The Rugby Club is active all year round both on the field and off the field. ’ It holds numerous dances, dinners and parties. Normally, winter trips are planned to the US, and in thz. off season, the team actively engages itself in basketball, floor hockey, and other intramural activities. ~ At present there are 9 teams in the OUAA Rugby League. Each team plays every other team at least once during the season, and lis will be the tenth year that the finals are held between the first <ugby Club has been in exisand sec,ond place team in :. The club has three playing November, at the home field of the s of varying ability. first place team. On the same day as le first fifteen, called the Warthe Ontario University Athletic compete in OUAA varsity Association finals for the Gilbert Turner Trophy, the finals for the ietition and players for this top two Ontario University club must meet all OUAA eligibilules. The second fifteen man side teams are held, in conjunction I, named the Trojans, plays with the Ontario University 1st other club sides from vari7-a-side Tournament. The club the Nank1ntario Universities. Staff, fa- side teams compete’for v, part time students, and ivill Cup. :nt’s whose eligibility has run Last year, the University won its may play for the Trojans as first two club championships, beatmight for a third team which is- ing RMC in the 7-a-side tournament n conjunction with the Kitchfinals, and beating Western in the Pirates, a local ORU team. Canadian Universities Pushball doesn’t matter whether you Championship. 1 beginner or an experienced In 1976, Waterloo intends to win er there is a position on one 6f the bigger trophies. Anyone in;lub’s teams for you and the terested is invited to help out. RFC would like to see you at tices that are held on weekdays
‘Tryouts for the Varsity soccer team are hard at it every day on Columbia field. The. final team this year will be picked by September 75 to enable the team to come together as a unit before starting r&gular se&on play. An exhibition game against the Kitchener Rangers is slated for Tties. Sept. 74 at 8:00 pm.
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employs over 500 students each year as assistants, instructors, conveners, officials and lifeguards. Presently over $30,000 is paid out to students. Pay scales range from $30-$250 honorariums. The hourly rate is minimum wage of $3 .OO per hour. If anyone is interested in becoming involved in an intramural staff capacity, you are urged to fill out the.appropriate forms in the IM office and attend the necessary meeting or clinic. More information on these jobs can be found on the blue IM sheets posted around the PAC or in the PAC offices.
macksters are reminded-that the ‘s and women’s track and field cross country teams will be :ing practices at Seagram’s ium from 4;O0 to 6:Ob pm on iday, Sept. 13. There will be an nizational meeting at Wednesi practice. re first track meet of the season be on Sept. 25 at Windsor. you can’t attend the organiza31meeting but are interested in wing more about things contact 1 Robertson at 884-2927.
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friday,
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September.
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7.
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Fall 1976 CO-ED 1
CLUB
r
5,Pin Bowling . (40. members] .
ORGANIZATION REGISTRATION
EXPLANAT~*ON
AND MEETING
Sun.Sept. 19 8:30-l&30 Waterloo Lanes (Princess Street West)
Curiing (80 members)
Tbes.qct. 4 Room 1083 PAC
7:30
_-
Mon. Room
Sept.
p.m.
27 8:00 PAC
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Sept. 20 Activities
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Orienteering (15 members) 1
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Outers .. (30 members)
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I
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Rugby (70 members)
Sailing (95 members)
.
p.m. brf
16 7:00
Thurs. Sept. EL '12. -
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Wed. Sept. EL 1'2
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Sun. Pool
Sept. PAC
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7:00
p.m.
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2:uO Area
p.m. PAC
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MEN’S ) ACTIVITY LEAGUES Flag Football (Delahey. Trophy)
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TOURNAMENTS -St.Jeromes Invitational Softball Tourn. Paul Knight Golf Tourney
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12 4:3Oprr
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COMPETITIVE T
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7:3Oprr
4:30pm PAC
Thurs.Sept.16 Room 1083
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4:30p-m PAC.
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17 llpm Moses and Queensmount '
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AND TOURNAMENTS
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19
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Dra w posted ,Sept.24 lpm
Wed.Oct.13 Room 2040
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Sat.Oct. 16 &3Opm Lau-rel Creek Conservation Sun.Oct.24 1:30pm Seagram Stadium
Mon.Oct.25 Room 204n
4:30pm PAC
Thurs.Oct.28 Main Gym
7 Aside Rudby (Highfield)
Mon.Nov. 1 4:30pm Room 2040 PAC
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Wed.Nov. 10 4:3Upm Room 2040 PAC ,
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FINAL
Flag
Fri.Sept.17 Noon4~30 Rm 2050 PAC
Football
OF CLUB PROGRAM
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3
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Singles Award)
American Hardb>ll - Squash Singles (Molson Aw.ard)
CLUBS
-epjoyable co-ed league play, Sundays 8:3&10*:3Opm at Wloo Bruce Wenstrome tournaments, basic instructiorBowling Lanes.Cost $2/term Sandra Kulpergar several free nights plus $'.50/evening Pat Hill Starting Sun.Sept. 19 Dave Potje -basic instruction, men, mix&Cost $lO/term Bob McNeil women's leagues,extramural Mixed:Mon. 4-6pm/ Men's and Ken-Lynch< competition. women's: Tues. & Thurs.l0:30 Ross Hamilton . - 7.10em . Dave Smith Gr_anlte Club ~ -a new rejuvenated club.Peopl$-one or two evenings a week To-be appointed or eager to-learn-about fiil,epeeas determined by the members elected from within or sabre should attend-instructhe club. tional and competition. -low key friendly group of Mon. &'Wed. 7-10 pm Tues. & Gillian Mayes people interested in maintain-Thurs. 5-7pm. Blue Actiyity Kevin Eby ing their interest in gymnast-Ar,ea PAC. No charge Eric Flanagan' its or those wanting to learn. learn & participate in-the art-there are meets every weekDayle Vraets of discovering your way in' end for beginners to advance.Doug Taylor -for those-who enjoy orienteers.trips determined Louis Hebert nature. [the outdoors & chtilleng'e. Iby interest-instruction _ available.Cost $4/term -now having camping .equipment -regular trips to Bruce Trai on a rental basis,for those -trips occur when those Hestor trippin-g, hiking, plan one.Seljak I who enjoy I ested Iexploring the outdoors in a loccured last summer. IGreg Derbyshire membership: $2/term. e group.-snowshoeing, canoeing varsity G 2nds Varsity & seconds practise Mike Hazel 884-4005 Sbcial events, competition, y daily on Col. field #2 Ralph Jarehow (same) extramural events. 4:30-6pm, general meetings DIber 884-1373 I & special ISteve called by executive. Chuck Buckley 5,sunflowers avai 'able, Every d,ay, special events Lawrence MacAtiley as determined by the members 884-8221 Regittas, instruction or simply recreational sailing ICost $3 for fall members. Mike Ruwald 884-7662 on Columbia Lake -social sessions, clinics, Regular fa1-1 meetings as Vickie Behume884-3485 fashion shows-weekly determined by the Club Exe& Jon Kingma movies, trips in the winter to Blue -weekly trip schedule will Patti Briggs be available for__winter term.Joanne Drystek Mountain, Jay Peaks and Dossible triD to Whistler B.CJCost. $3/term. -regular table tennis,rec times Tues. & Thurs. 7-10~; Gaetan Massie -in club tournaments-special Wed. 5-7pm Fri.7-1Opm Dave Berman open townaments-instruction on Sun. 2-5pm Blue Act. PAC request. ' Cost $1.50/term. -pool instruction in the art of Pool sessions Sun.4-6pm Gab Farkas kayaking-opportunity to build PAC, tours & kayak build. own kayak & paddle-trips, tours ing determined by possible. interest. Cost $2/term.
p.m.
. Fencing (new organization)
ATkLETlC
ENTR"
DATE
7:15pm . l2:30pm #1
-Sat.Nov.l3 9:30am Red Side-open , Courts-2nd level
ir Qualifying Rounds Sat.Sept.18 ' ?-9:3f?pm Tee off/Sun.Sept. 19 lO-10:30/Final Sept. ?5 E 26. Prelim.Round Sat.Sept. 5pm. Finals Sun.SeDt. Waterloo Tennis Cl'ub. Sat.Oct.16 12:30-3pm Sun.Oct.17 12:30-3pm caurel Conservation . Sun.nct.24 Tpm Seagram
25 ?am26 l-5pm
Stadium
Prelim.Rou*nd Thurs.nct. 28 7:30-10:3Opm Finals Thurs.Nov. 4 7:3Qpm Main Gym. Sun.Nov. 7 1-5pm Columbia Fields Sat.Nov. Squash _
CoMPETlTivE CAPTAINS SCI'EDULING I RULES F POLICY MEETING Mon. SeDt.20'7:0@ pm Room 1.083 PAC
13. IO-am Courts PAC
LEAGUES TIME Mon.& Field.
5pm
A&B levels
18 hole
3 man
team-
A-Barefoot(Kin) B-Davidson(Grad) C-Humphrey(Kin)
championship
(Team champs-Grads) A-Experienced,B-beginner A-Stan Fogel usually modified Double B-Tony'Bozza Elimination Tournament Mike Bak (SJC) 4 man teams, one circuit Science /team member, min. 2 \ bikes per team. 5 man team-3 mi.course L. Lindiger thru k/loo Park+Contract (St.Pauls) Race/Run Against yourselfTeam-St.Jeromes A-Experienced B-Beginner E.-Darwin Evkryone guaranteed two Mathmatches ' lo-12 minute games, min A-V1 North ,rouKd robin and Champ. B-Pit Juicers C-V' S/D-SJC A-experience/B-Beginner W.Ceroici 7 Everyone guaranteed 2 Grads matches 1 /
AND ~~LJFWM~ENTS
G LOCATlfiN
OF ;\;ENT
\j'ed. 4:3O-6:.3O Col. Practice Mon,Sept.20
_
'EXPLANATION League Start-
play/playoff Sept. 22
PREVIOUS ' '
,
9 CHAMPS
'
V2 South r
I
September
Tennis
Singles
Soccer
Day
Tues.Sept.28 Room 2050 Tues.Sept.21 Room 2050 Wed.Oct.13 AorB leiel
Volleyball
Rm 2050
No meeting, office for Wed.Sept. Room 1083 Thurs.r)ct.
4:30 PAC 4:3(1 PAC Enter
4:30
Mon.Oct. Room 2040
Squash
Fri.Nov. 5 4:30 Room 2050
check IM, (Thurs.Sept. 30 7-llpm 1st game time Waterloo Tennis Club 22 7:30 pm Sat. Sept.25 loam-4pm J PAC 14 7:30pm Mon. Oct/Nov. League play 7:30-lo:30 start Oct. 18. PAC
Room 1083
PAC 25 4:30
Badminton Singles-
Thuw Main
10 7:O pm Locker Room
Wed.Nov. Women's
ACTIVITY
FINAL
Little Olympics Track & Field Day Co-ed Slow Pitch /Co-ecj
Swim Day
Mixed
Curling
ENTRY DATE
CAPTAINS SCHEDULING -RULES E POLICY MEETING Mon.Sept.27 6:30pm or 6:30pm on Rain Date Seagram Stadium Thurs.Sept.30 7:3t>pm Room 1083
4:30 PAC
Mon.Sept.27 Room 2040
4:30 PAC
Wed.Oct.13 Room 2040
4:30pm PAC
Sat.Oct. 16 Pool Deck
Mon.Nov.1
4:30
Room 2040
PAC
Draw times will knbwn by Fri.Nov.
No officials,
points,
Awards,
Standings.
Floor
Ball
Hockey
Hockey
Co-Ret Innertube Waterpolo
TIME
Volleyball
12:3Opm
be
5
Mon.Sept. 20 4:30pm 2040PAC
Wed.Sept.22 8:3Opm Seagram Stadium
Mon.Sept.27 4:30pm 204OPAC
Tues.Sept.28 '1001 PAC
Co-Ret
Broomball
Fri.Oct.15 2040 PAC
'1001
4:30
Sat. Field,
Oct. 2, Village
Sat.Nov. llam-maybe (possible
6 two draws pam E 3 games guaranteed based ‘on equality of play. 1st at local C.C. entry fee) 16 teams accepted.
Fool
PAC
28
8pm
Mon.Oct. 18 7:3O 1083 PAC
LiiAiiJES
p.m.
Wed.Oct. McCormick
EXPLANATION
20 1Opm Arena
few
rules,
St.
.
3 men,3
CHAMPS
women
little skill --
TYPE OF LEAGUE
# PLAYERS PER TEAM
A level-experience B level-beginner 6-7 league games Round Robin 6-7 league games
10 players per team 10 players per team
Round Robin 6-7 league games no playoffs . 25 teams only Round Robin 6-7 league,games-no playoffs 48 teams 6 league games-no
&a
,
Jeromes
”
Like Road Hockey Sun.3:45-l.O:45pm Mon.3:45-10:45pm Thurs.Sept.23 No body contact 3:45-lo:45 Seagram Tues.3:45-lo:45 Thurs.3:45-10:45, Tues.Sept.28 Waterpolo played Exhibition Night by sitting in 7:30--9:30 p.m. innertubes-mixed and fun games. Thurs.Sept.28 7:30-few rules, equal 10:4'5 Gym l&2 PAC #s-fun volleybal
PAC
declared
PREVIOUS
16 1-4pm
STARTING DATE G LOCATION Sun.Sept.26 3:4510:45pm Seagrams
0
Not
EXPLANATION
Sat.Oct.
TEAM
7pm
Tues.Sept.
2040PAC
A-V2 South B-V2 East C-Arts E. Darwin Math
Come G Try day, 19 events St. Jeromes max.3 events + relay, no pr&ious skill required Pitch to your own team. New Event All hit/inning. Teams guaranteed 2 games Fun Day in Pool, women’s,Optometry mixed, men's and novelty no experience necessary
.or playoffs,
CAPTAINS SCHEDULING RULES, POLICIES MEETING Wed.Sept.22 7:30pm Seagram Stadium
Mon.Sept.27
OF EVENT
27 7-1Opm Rain 4 7-10pm Seagrams
..
F I NAL ENTRY DATE Mon.Sept. 20 4:30pm 2040PAC
4:30pm
E CQCATION
Fri.T)ct. 1, Oct. 3 Col. Green
. Co-Ret
Brenda Lloyd Math New Event
TOURNAMENT-S
Mon.Se'pt. Date 9ct.
RECREATIONAL
- - _.-
-Y
COMPETITIVE
Fri.Sept.24 Room 2040
Elimination/Consolation Tournament 7 players, play across field,tourney round robin League play/A or B level Playoffs
A-Experienced B-Beginner Prelim.Round Thurs.nct. 28 7:30-10:3Oam Finals Everyone guaranteed two ‘Thurs.Nov. 4 7:30 Main Gym ' matches. Wed. Nov. 10 7:30-10:3Opm Softball tournament A and B levels
Gym
CO-ED
5.Aside
10 players/ 1 per team 4 ladies 10 players per team
4 ladies 16 players per
team
c
5 ladies Ret Hockey (Men’s) Hockey (Women ’ s)
Fri.Oct.
15
=4:30pm
2ObOPAC
.Fri.Oct.
2050
18 8:3Opm
Mon.Oct.
1083
15
PAC
Tues.Oct.19 1001 PAC
PAC
fun play no body checking no officials/like shinny hockey Come & have fun little equipment required
Fri.Oct. 22 12noon - 5pm Queensmount
7:30pm
Thurs.Oct.21 Waterloo,
llpm
INSTRUCTIONAL ACT’1 V I TV
REGISTRATION DATE TIME AND LOCATI’ON Sept.15 at'noon Red North Entrance PAC 1st come basis
Tennis
Fi tness
_
noon Gym 3 ready to workout. 20 7pm Combatives
Mon.Sept.
PAC, Judo
20 at
come
, Mon.Sept. Room PAC
Mon. Sept.20 7pm Red Activity Area PAC
Swimming
Beginners Sept.22,.
Start Monday, and Advanced U of
Squash
Karate
l3a 11 room .
Wed.Sept. PAC Bring
NAUI
Scuba
-
North . come basis
Tues. Sept.21 7pm Red Activity PAC Sept. 27 at noon Mon. Red North Entrance
Course
W style-by
Hatashita
Level
lA-Non swimmer-unfamilar with lB-Non swimmer-able to float 2 -Knowledge of front crawl-l
Level
3 -able
Bronze N.L.S. Award noon-Red PAC 1st
September 20. start Wed.
Four
1% hr. pm./Wed.
North
8~15
to
swim
elem.Back-
to
swim
2
to
swim
knowledge
of
22 6:30pm Room Bathing Suit
1083
water
=&8:3(~ 7:30-8:3o
length
7:30-8:30 &OO-g:30 be
2 length-back/class side
and
strong swimmer to cover book cost - Bronze’ _ ) -pre-reg
Start Wed. Sept. of John Hatashita
Beginners-Tues. Advanced-
-,Thu
Fri.
r-s_.
------7:30-8:3o 7~3008:30
----o--m --------
8:oo-g:jo
-0-----m
--------
will
senior
R.C.
breast.
---------
I---------
)
)- 2 of 3 to be offered arranged according
to
.=
be interest
7:00-9:oo --
7:00-g:oo to /.L 6weeks once a week,Beginneys-Wed.7:3Opm Thurs,8:30Dm/Advanced-Wed. 9:30 pm and I-Thurs. $30 pm. Tues. and Thurs. 7:00-9:OOpm 10 weeks ,Red Activities Area PAC Mondays: 7:30 pm Beginners _ 8:30 pm Advanced
29
Cha Cha,
Rumba and Advanced live mus-ic Student Village 1 Great Hall 25 male, Starts Monday, September 27, 25 female/class Cost. $5.OO/Derson Certified Program-Cost $75.00/person - Wednesdays Sept. 22, Lecture You need-medical, own fins, snorkle, Room 1983, Pool 7:30-9:30pmmask, above average swimming ability Swim t&t-Sept. 22 limit 24 people 1 Open to chi ldren l-5 yrs. Class ..l - - 18 weeks, Tuesdays lo:00 - )}:oo l-2 10 -lo:30 yrs. am. Class 2 Begin October 5, 1976 3-5 byrs. lo:30 - 11 am. Each child must ,I be accompanied by an adult. 4 weeks, Tues. 9:OO p.m. Gym Basic strokes, serving for beginners
1976 -I’ 6:30-7:30, 12 weeks
I
Kinder Swim Zhi ldren l-5
Tues. Oct. 5 Registration Red North Entrance lo:30 a,m. 9:30,-
-----I Tues.
w
Badminton -
Co-ed Clubs
Sept.2
All
Athletic .
eleven programs.
Intramural See Club
Athletic programs
for
Clubs offer some more information.
degree
of
basic
7pr1i &
7pm f, 8:15pm.
1 length
length-crawl/Thurs
-very -$ls
Instruction in, Waltz, Jive, Polka. Beginners Last week, Dec.6 Party, Limited Registration,
in
-0-0-0‘,,,,
,
Tues. 9:30pm/Wed. 9:30 pm. Amns Wdterloo Tennis Club Monday, Wednesday, Friday, 12noon-1:OO Gym 3 PAC Mon. Beginners 7:c)O p.m./Wed. Advanced j 8:3O p.m. - 10 weeks Comt&tives Room
Dist. -pre-reg - Award 1 Beg i nners1 imi ted or no experience Advanced-had lessons & have been
playing. By statf
12 players per team
.
lessons.
Mon. Level Level
able
Sept. 21 Entrance
1 REGULAR SESSIONS
Beginners-l imited or 40/hour-no experience, Advanced-have been playing,have had priorinstruction, 24/hour, Starts Tuesday, Septembef 21 Exercise and jogging pro&am - 3 days
q-week.
5-6 games no playoffs 12-15 teams only P ick up games
.e
EXPLANATION
able
Dancing
19
the chevron
10, 1976
instruction
as
an
integral
part
of
a,m,
3
their
at
p.m.
*
-
.
20
the chevron
friday,
September
WESTMOUN .. nI daily 9:30*to 6
0 ‘000
-Y/
/ WESTMOUNT
I
ROAD
Your Favourite things
florally
speaking
Isday an,d’Friday Till 9:30
\
-
are
here!
Westmount Jewellers
Lots of little starter plants. Lots of big decorator plants
/
We are also specialists
in
Corsages and Boutonniers Come in.. .browse and enjoyi or phone 743-4321
1
FLOWERS
E.G JACKSON
WESTMOUNT
JLUl
lul
IUV
lcl
I
UC3lfjl
ICU
VVUIR
QIIU
cuu
744-9201
y
lamps. Eliminates glare and shad L ws. ,Bends, str,etches and turns to put light where you need it - and stays there. Idealfor home or office. Available in desk, wall and clamp-on design and in vatGous’contemporary painted colours. Metallic finishes priced slightly higher.
Between the Covers of a Book , F with Us! I
Priced frbm $12.98
School,
‘. Special Orders . Office, Social Stationery
SCRIBE BOOKSTORE LIVING
Westmount Place 576-7290 Market Square, Kit. 576-8270
LIGHTING
Back to Books
Welcome Back! YOUR
COMPLETE
HQMF II.Ib
l3FPnRATlhlCIc7 YLYVl
ONE STOP I II.”
PEhlTRc “LIY
ladloom Draperies Lighting Wallcovering Artifacts Smcializina in
I IIL
.
mStudents’ sDecial 1 O”/a \discount =I Specializing in knockI __
,
Special Coffee
$1.29 ’
-Mugs’
$1.98
reg r
.i*. !-. .) * t,.
\‘ t<\A
Rosewood Teak Leather ’ Modular Units Wall Units
’ VISIT OUR SHOWROOM
’
576=8Qi’73
been
reduced
.New Danish Pine furniture nCome in and meet our helpful, friendly staff.
we have
Come in and browse ots of interesting and practical atid things nautical
IF BUSY CALL
7457367 50 WESTMOUNT
NJWLOO
G
576-0703
.,
gifts
IQ, 19
friday,
September
21
the chevron
10, 1976
4. Waiting For
SPECIAL
.
20 cts.“off on any
When shopping at
I3c33utrfd &yg
pi%onal l
.
Westmount
Plaza
enjoy our daily
Lunch
Special
roast beef on a bun with homefries homemade soup Oktoberfest sausage veal schnitzel on a bun
as your signature
.
sundae!
l
FAST LOW
SERVICE PRICES Good at any of 6 K-W locations ti
Gap~tcctoSIaoes 50 Westmount Road Westmount Place Waterloo
N.
,
NZL 2R5
576-3330
,
women’s
Shoes
For your schooj needs I a special selection of casual shoes. Regularly priced to $30.00 now only $15.00. Limited sizes. 10% discount for students with ID card. Good all year on regular merchandise. \ /’
Introducing
‘,
Synthesis Stereo Shops b 50 Westmount Place, Wat. 579-5650 Market Villagq, Kit. 579-4990
1 ‘*
We carry: Kenwood, Pioneer, Scott, Harrison, Lenco, Stax, Taya, PSB, Audio Logic, Audio Analyst, ‘Audio Technica, BBC, Rogers, Braun, Supex, Mordaunt Short, IMF, Sennheiser, AKG, Goldring, TDK, Watts, Micro, Polk, RTR.
SUBSTANTIAL
STUDENT
DISCOUNT
50 Westmount Road N., Waterloo (at Westmount Place Shopping Plaza) Sayvette sells everything: And students-are some of our best customers. If you are a student of the University of Waterloo, Wilfrid Laurier University or Conestoga College, Sayvette will give you an additional 10% discouM on any purchase you make. % Just take your purchase to the Customer Service Cashier and present your ID card.
W,estmount- Place Pharmacy has all _ ’ the goods!! ’
.22
friday,
the chevron
September. 10, 1976
P 4
\
Board of Co-operative Services Federation of Students
--
Part time ticket seller(s) to sell FedhatioWs Toront-o bus service tickets. 7 Requires
‘/
Time: Thursdays & Fridays ing the school term. Pay:
10:OOA.M.
to 4:OOP.M. dur-
$3.50/HR
Previous i-
ticket -
*-II* ELAINE
setling
experience
would
be an asset.
MAY
VALERIE
PETER BOYLE ALAN ARKIN *********fiti***
, All began their THE SECOND
Apply
at Federation
Office,
‘Campus
Centre,
Rm. 235.
HARPER
DAVID STEINBERG GILDA RADNER
HILARIOUS
careers with CITY REVUE
COMEDY
LIVE ON
STAGE!
Best of
Fri. Sept.
17 & Sat. Sept.
HUMANITIES
THEATRE,
Admissiow3.50 Advance
-
18, 8p.m. UW
CAMPUS‘
Students/Seniors250
tick& available from Aug. 30 at Box Office 254 Modern Languages Bldg. 8854280 Mail orders accepted
--A SPECIAL
PRESENTATION-&F
.
UUJ arts
centre
W Motor Hotel w If school time means new shoe time, co-me and see us at the Athlete’s Foot. ^ .
871 Every
Victoria St. N. 744-3511 Wednesday iq Singles -Night
IN THE CROWN
ROOM
We’re Canada’s largest dealer of -quality athletic and recreational footwear. Choose from hundreds of different styles of ADIDAS, PUMA, CONVERSE, .NIKE, TRETORN, and PATRICK shoes. You’ll also find a complete line of hiking boots from VANARI, VASQUE, and RAICHLE. .
the
f)#hjg&
k&
At the Athlete3 Foot we know how ‘important correct fit is. Thatls why we stock sizes from children’s 4 to adult’s 15. We take the time to measure your foot so you’re assured of the most comfortable, ‘yet durable shoe for you and your sport-every time. .
8KingSt.
All next week
BIG WHEELIE Coming
E~c0r.J~~~~ GUELPH 54 Carden St. 636-0620 LONDON 22b Dundas St. 438-3264
Thor
& THE HUBCAPS Soon:
MacLean & M&Lean & The Imps (Mr. Uni.verse), Major Hoople’s Dublin corporation
Jf
friday,
September
10, 1976
the chevron
l
23
think got housing.‘._troubles “The Tenant” is a movie that will shock’ you, impress you, disgust you or scare the shit out of you. Somehow this movie will affect you. Roman Polanski is the creative force behind the film; he directs, assists in the screenplay, and plays the main character, a role which under any circumstances is hard to fill. The story begins with a reserved, young clerk trying to get accepted into an apartment in Paris, where it seems that getting housing is almost as bad as in Waterloo. The clerk is accepted in after an interview with the landlord; who viewed the shy clerk as a “serious young man”. The young man, meanwhile becomes fascinated with the previous tenant, a woman named Simone, who tried to commit suicide by jumping out the apartment’s window. The apartment itself is not really strange except for two things, a tooth hidden in the wall and the view through the lone window. Each time the young man looks out, it is to the public toilet, where he sees people who appear to be like mummies. Throughout the course of the film the tenant becomes increasingly paranoid over noises, that the other tenants claim
he is making. He also begins to feel that he is being pushed into the same sort of life-style that Simone had assumed. He invents a conspiracy of his fellow tenants, whom he thinks forced Simone to commit suicide, and who will in turn force him to the same fate. Polanski’s character seems to have some sort of fragmented sexual identity which leads him to wear .women’s clothes and a wig at night.
Particularly impressive in the film is the fine acting of Polanski as well as the performance of other characters, such as Shelly Winters as the gruff conceirge. This film can sit along with “Chinatown” and “Rosemary’s Baby” as a fine example of the work of Roman Polanski. If you see this film be sure to take a shoulder to hide behind. d.j. pclellan
OATES ISELA VEGA KEN NORTON ’ l
Tell a kid a tale---for $1,000 If you can tell a tale - one which will interest a child - then it might be worth your while getting it down on paper and sending it off to Little Brown and Company. The Toronto publishers are continuing their 19 year-old tradition of sponsoring the Canadian Children’s Book Award. ‘They are offering $1,000 for the best juvenile manuscript written by a Canadian or resident. The award is in addition to customary royalties. The publishers say that only legible manuscripts of unpublished, original work, typewritten and in the English language will be considered. Manuscripts may be written for boys or girls of any age group and may be either fiction or non-fiction. The competition will close on December 3 1, 1976, and all manuscripts must be postmarked not later than 12 midnight on this date. Should the judges, comprising :he Editorial Departments of Little, All manuscripts and communicaBrown 8~ Company (Canada) Li- . tions should be addressed to: Little nited and Little, Brown and ComBrown Canadian Children’s Book Award, Little, Brown & Company >any in their sole discretion, find hat no manuscript has been sub- (Canada) Limited, 25 Hollinger nitted which measures up to the Road, Toronto, Ontario, M4B 3G2. tandards established for the comManuscripts should be accompanied by sufficient postage to letition, no Award will be made, md the associated companies re- cover the return of the manuscript ;erve the right to reject any or all if it is not acceptable. While all reasonable care will be nanuscripts.
Bluegrass for funds Bluegrass, Country and Folk music are the highlights of a benefit being held for the Waterloo Regional Rape Distress Centre on Sunday Sept. 19th. ’ The festival will feature Apaloosa, Cody, Shirley Eikhard, Humber River Valley Boys, Saddle Tramp, Saltspring Rainbow, Bob Webb and others. The Pioneer Sportsman’s Club in Kitchener will house the festivities including a crafts fair and workshops. A ticket at $4 also entitles the holder to admission to’8 dance on Saturday night. For those daring enough to endure the cold weather, camp, sites are available from Friday night to Monday morning for $3 for the weekend. Tickets are available at Sam’s, Records on Wheels, CI$GL radio station, Art’s Recreation, Gragal Electronics, Sound Unlimited, and by mail order from the Waterloo Regional Rape Distress Centre, Box 675, Waterloo, Ontario,
2 SHOWS
NIGHTLY
l
7:00
& 9:15
JAMES
P.M.
A
L CAAN ELLIOTTI DIANE
KEATON
GOULD 1 ------I I \I
/NOT SINCE “THE STING” / HAS THERE BEEN SO MUCH FUN!d
exercised, the publisher shall not be responsible for manuscripts Yost or damaged in transit or otherwise. ‘-
1 Sept
TAXI DRIVER 9-12 Thurs-Sun’ 7 & 9:15 pm.
l **~*oe**oooooo*oooa
THi LION- IN WINTER Sept
1 S-1 5 8:00
Mon-Wed pm
WC -FIELDS ’ AND ME‘ Sept
16-18 ,7 & 9:15
Thurs-Sat pm
l 0e0eoo0oee0e~eooooeo
admission
$2.00
’
2 SHOWS NIGHTLY AT 7iOO & 9:20 FEATURE TIMES AT 7:lO & 9:35 P.M.
\
24
friday,
the chevron
September
10, J 976
. Box 640, Jarvis, Ontario, NOA 1JO
Canada
Featuring Articles on Natural Foods, Organic Gardening, Alternate Energy, Alternative Schools, Homesteading Shelters, Hand Crafts, Music Festivals and Alternate Celebrations. Single Copy Price 60@, Subscription Advertising
Price $6.00 per year (12 issues)
Hates: Unclassified Ads $1 .OO per column line (28 characters per line)
-Display Ads (ph.&to - ready copy)-$4.00 per column inch (1%” x l”), Full Page 7” x 10” Mihimum charge $5.00 per ad, with 20% reduction for 4 prepaid consecutive insertions. The Alternate Press reserves the right to reject any ad not consistant with Natural Life editorial policy. To avoid delay in ad publication includedescriptive literature, documentation, or other supportive materials with ad order. i’ Contributions of articles and photographs are always welcomed and will be gratefully acknowledged, but cannot be returned unless accompanied by a self - addressed stamped envelope. .
ITTLEHANDSAT 12 WEEKS FROMCONCEPTION Already completely formed a’nd fully mobile, the child is sensitive to pain and touch and cold and sound and light. He gets hiccups and sucks his thumb; he wakes and sleeps. By this time every child shows a distinctive individuality in behaviour:* OF WHAT VALUE IS YOUR LIBERATION IF IT ASSUMES YOUR RIGHT TO KILL OTHERS? Fight for equal rights for all: women; men; children born; children unborn; the old; the infirm; the ‘handicapped.
* T.W. Hilgers & R. Shearin 1972. Induced Abortion, a Documented Report. Presented to Minnesota State Legislature.
If you haven’t
tried. .. .
Pizza and Spaghetti House 103 King N. Waterloo
Tony’s .
.
.
You haven’t
Spaghetti Ravioli
Lasagna Subs
tried. the BEST! Pizza Cannelloni
EAT QR WE DELIVER (delivery on campus only 50 cents)
friday,
September
10, 1976
Bethune defamed in special play l
The effort to pervert the reality of Norman Bethune used to take the form of denying that he was a communist. The Parks Canada plaque outside the Bethune Memorial in Gravenhurst still skirts round .that touchy issue, describing him as a “humanitarian, surgeon and revolutionary”. But. that form of deception has been stripped bald during the past several years. The Chinese, who forced the Canadian government into belated (and embarrassed) recognitionof Bethune, make it obvious that he is-held up as a model to the Chinese people because he was selfless, red and expert, that is, a doctor and a communist. So the distortion of.‘Norman Bethune by the Canadian monopoly capitalist class and its artistic agents has of ltite..taken more sophisticated turns. Norman Bethune: On Board thk S.S. Empress of Asia, a play per-
formed by the Muskoka Summer Theatre last week to coincide with the official opening of the Bethune Memdrial at his birthplace, is one of the first of this new breed of veiled slanders on Bethune. Being a pioneering effort in this new style, it is heavy-handed, un- ’ sophisticated, and raw. So much so, in fact, that Norman Bethune: On Board
the S.S; Empress
of Asia
we’re given the impression that Bethune doubts, even scorns, communism, but we have no evidence other than the drunk communist in the closet. The other characters ire less fictitious. There is a rich young cou-. ple, Humphrey and Rosemary, and a showgirl-cum-whore, Millicent . The cast is completed ‘with the ship’s steward, Allistair. On the very early moining in question, the cast is observed imbibing Humphrey’s scotch whiskey, admiring each others’ bodies, prattling about one experience or another, and cutting each other to ribbons with witty comment and repartee. Ocdasionally random pairs wander off to bed-down. The aim of all this is to berate Bethune for his proclaimed communism and his un=communist penchant for drinking, chasing elegant women, boasting about his <xiloits in Spain and priding himself on his extraordinary vision and prowess. _ . This tempest-in-a-stateroom lacks any purpose and directibn other than the calumny it casts on Bethune. The bickering is banal and several lines intended to draw laughter from the audience elicit only silence. Audience reaction could be summed up in the statepent overheard at intermission that “I* still don’t get the sense of it.” Carol Bolt, the author of Norman
is less veiled vilification than pure, unvarnished defamation. Bethune: On Board the S.S. -EmThe new tact to belittle Bethune press of Asia has launched a career - all the while appearing to honour on plays about political figures. An his contribution to the people of earlier play, Red Emma, on the life Canada, the U.S., Spain and China of anarchist Emma Goldman, -is to portray him as an egotistical, . reached CBC television last year. braggart, a womanizer, a drunkard One fervently wishes that with and, beneath -this domineering exits week-long engagement in Gravenhurst completed, Norman terior, a sensitive, lonely and confused man. Bethune: On Board the S.S. EmThe play is set in 1938, aboard _ press of Asia would die an ignominious death and not follow the the S.S. Empress of Asia, on which footsteps of Red Emma to national Norman Bethune is travelling to television. I China, where he will later serve with the Eighth Route Army, the Not that its demise would end the Chinese Communist army fighting effort to despoil the image ofNorman Bethune. Instead, the play will the Japanese invasion of China. an early prototype, a With that thin hull of historical . become fact, Norman Bethune: On Board - mock-up for even more outrageous endeavors. Already there is news the S.S. Empress of Asia sets out on a voyage that careens between’ that Hollywood film- director Otto Gilligan’s Island and Who% Afraid Premingei- plans a feature film on of Virginia Woolfe. Bethune. In fact, he was in the Travelling with Bethune i’s Dr. opening-night audience for Norman Charles Parsons, a communist who Bethune: On Board the S.S. Emremains in the bathroom throughpress of Asia. out the play, emerging periodically Sitting in the Gravenhurst Opera 1 to drunkenly bray a verse from House Saturday, alternately bored, Union Maid. aghast and angry at the travesty The brunt of jibes and jokes by being committed on stage, it was all the other charicters (Bethune not reassuring to imagine Otto included) Parsons, as a closet Preminger on opening-night, mencommunist, is intended to symtally recording scenes to be empbolize Bethune’s misgivings about loyed in his own hatchet-job on communism. Bethune. That’s called artistic licence -larry hannant
Chat - Reels on VVh.eels i .
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A fantastic film will be shown at Ernst says it’s about the life of a the Aberfoyle Down-to-Earth Fespeople, but it’s not a documentary. tival tonight, tomorrow and Sun- _ “this film could be ranked with day nights . ‘Ballad of a Soldier’ and “Met- We give you this information on ropolis’: it can be classified, but it is the authority of-our roving cultural unique. ” correspondent, Ernst von Bezold, He adds, “The story of this film who called us excitedly (but col- . is a message to us from the people lect) from Toronto where he was of a great and ancient culture (the viewing the movie, and caught us Mayan). He who has ears, let him just as we were going to press. hear. ! She who has eyes, let her Name of the film is “Chat”. It see!” was shot in 1975, and stars the peoAt- Aberfoyle, “Chat” will be ple and village of Tenejapa iri the state of Chiapas in the Yucatan - shown by the Cinemobile, which is, of course, a mobile cinema. It’s a * pepinsula in Mexico. And it’s in Canada Councilproject - a travelTzeltal - that’s an Indian lanling movie house with an inflatable guage, but there -7are English’ subtiauditorium that seats 50 people. ‘. ties.
A MARTIN POLL- LEWIS JOHN CARLINO PR “THE SAILOR WHO F Based on the novel by YUKIO MISHIMA. Written for the screen and Directed by LEWIS
- Feature at 735 & 8:?5. Last Complete Show at. MO matinee ‘Sunday at
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WITH THE SEA” NDEL. Produced by MARTIN POLL. OR. PRINTS BY CFI.;
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26
friday,
the chevron
September
10, 1976
Address all tekrs to the &or, thechevrun, catirpus centfe. Please type on’ a J &character -line; double spaced. A
-OP/RG co-ordinator chalhncred --~ ,u
,-
Terry Moore, you have got to be putting us on! Your comments on students and the housing crisis in the chevron (Aug. 13) are totally asinine. After all of the money students have sunk into OPIRG and your salary, you have come up with one incredible programme for us - “form co-ops”. So what I want to know is, when are you going to start working on some problems , facing
students?
_
Let me explain. You say that to meet the housing crisis people should “form consumer credit unions which by keeping the money within the community could finance ventures such as co-op housing.” W-hat money? Terry, we don’t have any money. I can’t even afford to buy books, let alone a block of apartments. You have to be really detached from the problems of students to talk glibly about “keeping the money within the community” while many students are worried about keeping enough food in the fridge. Your “co-op” proposal may be fine for upper-petty bourgeois professionals with some spare cash and time, but it is making a laughing-stock out of you among students. Student fees support OPIRG, and OPIRG should first and foremost serve the imsmediate interests of the students. We have problems these days, and we need to study the situation to figure out what to do, what action to take. Since you haven’t followed this path on your own initiative, let me pose a question for you: What research has OPIRG \ done on the education cutbacks? Let OPIRG answer this question for the students in next ,week’s chevron. Rick De Grass
commoditiei sdsidies and profits ‘Once again a question of the political economy of Canada has been botched by Terry Moore, the OPIRG coordinator. We were astounded to read in the Aug. 13 chevron how Terry believes that a state subsidy means that a house is no longer a commodity but is instead “produced for human need and not for profit.” First of all, we would like to explain to Terry what a commodity is. A commodity is a useful thing which satisfies human wants and which is produced for, exchange. Under feudalism, peasants and small craftsmen who owned’their own land and/or tools produced an excess of one or two produc‘ts which they then exchanged in the marketplace for other commodities. This small-scale commodity production eventually gave rise to capitalism, where the land, factories and raw materials became concentrated in the hands of a wealthy minority ofcapitalists, and where the majority of people has no property and were forced to work for a wage in order to survive. This was commodity production and exchange on a large scale, with even the labour power of the workers becoming a commodity to be bought and sold and subject to the law of supply and demand. In certain countries the workers organized themselves into a Communist Party, seized state power and the means of production away from the big bourgeoisie and landlords, and are building socialism. But there is still a commodity system under socialism. China, for example, practices an eight-grade wage system, distribution according to work and exchange through money. What has changed is that the products of labour such as houses no longer become the private property of some capitalist but are instead state property owned by the whole people. Furthermore, labour power is no longer a commodity, because the workers have become masters of
their own country and receive wages according to the socialist principle.‘ ‘from kach according to his ability, to each according to his work. ” Only in a classless communist society where wages and exchange through money are abolished will housing cease to be a commodity. A house subsidized by the state certainlydoes not cease to be a commodity. Under Canada’s monopoly capitalist system, housing is produced by labourers working for a wage, and the houses become the- private property of some capitalists who then sell them at a profit. If the state pays part of the purchase price of the house, the house remains a commodity because it is still produced for exchange through money. The price of the house and of labour-power are still governed by the laws of value and of supply and demand. Neither does a subsidy eliminate profit. In fact, state subsidies are given in Canada in order to guarantee maximum profits. Capitalists-willnecessarily invest their capital where profits are highest, even when it means building ornaments like the CN tower or the Olympic stadium-instead of housing. If rents or prices are not high enough to make maximum profits, no housing ‘will be built until rents rise or until the state hands over a certain sum to the capitalist in the form of a subsidy. The Ontario government grant of $1000 to first-time home buyers is agive-away of this type. The essence of this scheme is to lure people into buying at outrageously inflated prices and interest rates, so that they end up paying far more interest on a mortgage than they would ever ,save from the \ subsidy. Most people realize that housing subsidies come from taxes, and that the majority of taxes are paid by the workers. Subsidies are a-short-term redistribution of wealth which may appear to benefit those who could not otherwise afford a house, but which in practice are for the long-term benefit of a handful of rich finance capitalists who own the mortgages. No scheme of subsidies or state ownership (“municipalization”) of land is going to alter our situation substantially as long as the Canadian state remains the state of the rich. Any necessary enterprise which has become unprofitable or entails too much risk for the monopoly capitalists will be taken over by the state and operated at a loss which is paid for by a real “subsidy” extracted from the people in the form of taxes and differential pricing schemes for industry and private individuals and households. Railways and hydro power are examples of enterprises of this type. We need to deal with the housing problem by tactics which address the immediate situationconfrontingus. U.S. imperialistsandthe Canadian monopoly ‘capitalist class are desperately trying to shift the burden of their economic crisis onto the backs of the people in order to maintain maximum profits. In the education sector, the state is using spending cutbacks to force students, staff and faculty alike to do more work for less pay. As a result, the price of housing and other commodities is rising faster than our capacity to pay. We must oppose this campaign of the rich by demanding more financial aid and higher salaries, which means fighting education ‘cutbacks tooth-and-nail. We must organize to MAKE THE RICH PAY! The rich can pay fortheir crisis, but we must organize and work hard to make this happen. At the same time, we firmly believe.that the problems of housing and education, inflation and unemployment, cannot be truly solved until the US imperialist domination of Canada and the monopoly capitalist system are overthrown and socialism is built under the dictatorship of the proletariat. This will definitely MAKE THE RICH PAY! To direct our struggle -at the problem, of housing will liquidate the struggle against the education cutbacks. To call on the state to, pleasemasters, handusout somehousingsubsidies, is out-and-out opportunism which mystifies the class nature of the state. This kind of grovelling and prostrating humbly before the rich is a shameless betrayal of the
students, staff and faculty. The campaign to MAKE THE RICH PAY! must include a campaign against this kind of opportunism which may sound radical or “leftist” but in essence serves the interests of the rich. Anti-imperialist
Alliance
China has given consistent support to the struggles of the oppressed people of Asia, Africa and Latin America for national liberation and total independence, and has given this support without any strings, attached. We urge all progressive and democraticminded people at UW to do the same, and we ‘denounce anyone who tries to split the national liberation support movement at the behest of either of the two superpowers, the U.S. or the Soviet Union. .
Soviet. \union 0mortuniSm called on the momi -I-
I-
,-
Anti-Imperialist
Alliance
for
Regarding the letter in the Gazette July 2 1976 about how the AIB had awarded a cer Some local opportunists have been trying tain group a-said per cent. True or otherwise to create confusion about China’s stand on this is not the way to go about making you the situation in Angola and the National. own situation better.. Union for the Total Independence of Angola Shouting about the other guy does no (UNITA), the political party ,,which is curhelp. The other group may have had to figh rently leading armed struggle/against Cuban hard and long for said award. and Soviet invaders. So to me the answer to bettering the situa UW’s’ own scab and traitor to the stution is to organise; one lone voice in the dents, Shane Roberts, has suggested wilderness only gets one a sore throat ant (chevron, June 18) that UNITA has lost the nothing else. The answer is to form a union. support of China. John Saul, a member of the The staff association is good for the pur “Toronto committee for the enslavement of pose it was started for, but it cannot ever be : southern Africa’s colonies by Soviet socialbargaining unit for wages, unless of course imperialism, ’ ’ has told us (chevron, July 23) the constitution is changed. that the Soviet-backed MPLA regime in In my opinion the answer is to form ant Luanda is going to establish “relations” join a union. I know the union already or with China. campus would be pleased to get thing! We would like to set the record straight by started, and I am positive the Student Feder citing China’s own views on these questions ation would be glad to help. as given in Peking Review. So come on secretarial-clerical staff get of The Government of China attributes the your butts. present war in Angola to the “ . . .undisguised expansion and crude inter- I I would also like to take this opportunity tc reply to the editor’s note after the TNT! ference of the Soviet Union” (Nov. 21, letter about it being anonymous. What else 1975), and it has stated clearly that “until the does he/she expect? As to the part about i Soviet revisionist intervention is done away being talked over with the editors in the stric with, there can be no peace or tranquility in tist confidence, who is kidding whom? Angola . .” (Feb. 6, 1976).The Chinese have know what this ‘ ‘strictly in confidence’ identified the Cubans in Angola as “mercemeans. It is certainly “strictly in confi, nary troops” and “moscow brand world gendence” if, and I mean a very big “if ‘, it is no darmes’ ’ who are carrying out !‘permagoing to rock the boat or cause any waves nent occupation of Angola” (July 2). They This is no bull because I know from per also declined to *give recognition to the sonal experience. This is what I mean by tht MPLA regime by abstaining from’voting on lone voice in the wilderness; unless one ha! MPLA’s bid for a UN seat (June 23), and some backing that is all it will ever be. SC they’ have consistently called for a governeditors, unless you can really ensure that ii ment of national union. will really be treated strictly in confidence Concerning the present struggle, Peking then that is the only kind of letters you arc Review says: “The mercenaries directed by going to receive: “anonymous”. You wil Moscow massacred the Anglolans in cold have to prove that you are on the level ant blood and turned a million of them into renot just talking with tongue in cheek. fugees. But they have not been able to frusname witheld on request trate the firm determination. of the Angloan people to safeguard their national independence. Instead of being cowed by that colossus of Soviet social-imperialism, the Angolan people have incessantly meted out the punishment it deserves. They are hitting hard at the foreign mercenaries in the vast countryside and on many communication lines.” (July 2) And who is leading the people to “hit Moves such as the Ontario goyernment’$ hard” at the Cubans in the country-side? “proposed” tuition increase for interna UNITA! tional students are detrimental to worlc China’s stand has been principled and peace, particularly in times when that peace consistent support for the struggle of the Anis strained by economic crisis. The increase golan people against foreign. interference. would make it even more difficult for anyone Only those with ulterior motives can claim who is not wealthy to come to this country tc confusion on these questions. learn and share their view of the world ant It is precisely the Soviet Union and its understanding of life with ordinary peoph stooges in Canada who we observe frehere. quently switching their-position in true opFreer movement of the world’s people ac, portunist fashion. First Soviet socialross national boundaries promotes a unifiec: imperialism urges MPLA to unite with understanding of common problems, which FNLA in Angola, and then it provokes civil benefits almost everyone. The purpose o war (see our article in the chevron, July 23). this increase is supposed to be to reduce tht It backs the Turkish invasion of Cyprus but cost to the Canadian taxpayer. If it in a smal then changes its mind. It backs the Syrian but significant way inhibits the developmen invasion of Lebanon but then has second of world understanding, where is the saving‘ thoughts. It claims support for the PLO What is the cost of war? . B while at the same time supporting Israel. It The Ontario government should take backs the NLF in Vietnam but ion No1 in down the discriminatory barrier of tuitior Cambodia. It denounces US imperialist ocincreases. We the people can direct the gov cupation of Indochina but invades Czechosernment to act in our interest or otherwise lovakia. Whatever position will best serve we can replace it, provided we are able to ac the interests of its revisionist ruling clique, in concert to do so’, uniting around our corn that is what the Soviet social-imperialists mon interest. , / ’ will adopt. Ernst von Bezolc
economy, at what price
friday,-September
10, 1976
the chevron
.
‘Welixirfze to the Chevron
Hereth,
LNS
1976 FALL T-ERM Meal ‘Plans 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Lunch & Supper (7,days a week) Lunch & Supper (Mon to Fri) Supper (7 days a week) Supper (Mon to Fri) Lunch (Mon to Fri)
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Feedback Feedback letters must be addressed to Editor, Chevron, Campus Centre, University of Waterloo. Letters must be typed on a 32 or 64 character line and double-spaced, and may not be run if they are not typed. Letters should not be longer than 1200 words.OjLonger letters may, with the author’s consent, be edited to meet space requirements. Letters must be signed by an individual, not an organization, and should have a phone number and address for authentica-
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Welcome to campus for another year of rollicking tin and frolic ! And for those people who get their kicks be_actually doing something useful, welcome to the Chevron, where you can write, draw, take pictures; and generally have fun while learning new skills and sharpening those you may already have. The Chevron particularly welcomes people who want to come down to the paper, become involved in its production, and become staff members themselves. How to become a member of staff? Well, anyone with six contributions - articles, graphics, photos, or layout (or any combination of these) - from the beginning of the preceding term to the issue currently being produced, qualifies as a voting member of the chevron staff. For new people, what this means is that as soon as you’ve had your six things accepted for publication, vou-htive a vote. But the chevron also welcomes contributions, not only from people who are, or intend to become, regular staffers, but from the entire university community. While we encourage people to write for the paper, we suggest the best way of doing this is to contact us first, so that we can discuss it and agree on what needs to be done, and give you some pointers on how it should be done. The chevron operates under a number of policies which have been drawn up and approved by staff. This week we publish some of our key policies which would ,be of interest to anyone who is interested in contributing to our pages.
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REGIONAL
TERRY CHRISTENSON CODY SHIRLEY EIKHARD EM & FRIENDS HUMBER RIVERVALLEY SADDLE TRAMP
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DISTRESS
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holidays
thechc
A WATERLOO
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What with monday being labour day -when no-one laboured - it’s been a short and hectic week at the chevron. But we made it with the help of jacob, peter barron, larry harfnant, doug wahlsten, salah bachir, dave maclellan, ernst von bezold, rob taylor, brenda Wilson, commodone Chris dufault, loris, neil d., nina tymoszewicz, marguerite, henry hess, and me a.r. And a special thank you to all those eager people who rushed down to sign-up as new chevrics z keep 03 coming. \
SALTSPRING RAINBOW WATSON &REYNaDS & DNID JAMES BOWEN BOB WEBB DEBT ANN WEBB & MORE
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 19/ 76 NOON TO 11:OO f?M. $4.00 PIONEER SPORTSMAN’S CLUB 211 PIONEER TOWER ROAD, KiTCHENER,ONTARIO
(all tickets) l
CKETS
AVAILABLE AT SAMS, RECORDS ON WHEELS, C KG L EATJON, GRAGAL ELECTRONICS,.SOUND UN TIVAL BOX 675 WATERLOO NG $3.00. INDOOR DANCE SATURDAY ED, PERSONS UNDER 12 FREE, WORK
chevronchevr
c4 i4 &
DISCO
orientation program 4*****************t***************~****-**~*********************************~ ~~~ IAs of September
must present
student
and age ID to all licensed
*WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15 Environmental Information Day Sessions at 10:00 am. and 1:OO Studies pm., ENV. Lounge (Room 221) 1:30 pm. FREE OUTDOOR CONCERT - Village Green (CC Great Hall if it rains) Bands: Edward, Harding & Maclean PLUS 100 Proof Library Tours Arts & EMS lo:30 am. and 12:30 pm. Federation Pub, Campus Centre. Band : Noon“Maclean & Maclean” Cover $1.00 at 7 pm. 1:OO am. F of S & Societies, intramurals, club information Information Campus Centre Great Hall Week
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8 Engineering Frosh - meet in Humanities Theatre 10:00 am. for fun day of events (i.e. meet profs, field day, lunch). St. Paul’s Frosh - picnic and registration on front Noon lawn; at 9:30 pm. - bonfire, sing-a-long, dance. 7:00 pm. Renison Frosh - general meeting followed by party in Moose Room Evening roller skating Villages NoonFederation Pub, Campus Centre; evening Bob Webb 50 cent covercharge at 7 pm. 1:OOam. See start of schedule Tours -CC, Great Hall, Free Band I:00 pm.
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18 Library Tours Arts & EMS, lo:30 am. and 12:30 pm. Information F of S & Societies, intramurals, club information Week Campus .Centre Great Hall Noon Bi-Annual Spelling Bee, Arts Society. Call Arts Sot. for location. Noon - 1 :OOam. Federation Pub, Campus Centre. Band: TBA 5:00 pm. ESS Barbecue - Architecture Bldg. 5 pm. 9:00 pm.Optometry - Wine & Cheese Party, check turnkey 1:00 am. desk, CC Villages Evening, Village II Pub with “Yukon”
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 9 Engineering Frosh Tours - meet in Engineering 1:00 pm. Lecture Room 101 1:30 pm. Church Colleges - inter-College games. 2:30 pm. Engineering - Great Garbage Grab 7:00 pm. Hay Ride & Square Dance - contact St. Paul’s College Renison - pub crawl 7:30 pm. 7:30 pm. Villages - pub crawl 8:00 pm. Federation Pub (Engineering Night) - Campus Centre, Bob Webb, 50 cents cover at 7 pm. See start of schedule Tours FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10 ESS Council Meeting, ENV 138A - everyone wel10:00 am. come Noon Federation Pub - Campus Centre, Bob Webb, 50 1:00 am. cent cover at 7 pm. Tours See start of schedule 8:30 pm. Federation Flicks, AL1 16. “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest”. Federation Members: $1.OO; Others; $1.50 8:30 pm. Villages - Frosh Pub, Great Hall VII 8:30 pm. Casino Night (Church College Association) -at St. Jerome’s College 9:00 pm. Movies at St. Paul’s College SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11 a: Villages Afternoon: go-carting Evening: all-night movies Federation Pub, Campus Centre, Bob Webb 50 Noon-’ 1:OO am. cent cover at 7 pm. Football Parade - meet k-r parking lot in front of 12:45 pm. Humanities Bldg. 2:00 pm Football Game, Waterloo Warriors vs. U. of T. Blues, at Seagram Stadium Engineering Victory Celebration at local estab4:00 pm. lishment Federation Dance at South Campus Hall, Festival 8:30 pm.Room; Band: the fabulous “Flyer” admission 1:OO am. Feds $1.75, Others $2.00 Nostalgia Night, Renison. Band: “Bruce Brylcreem and the Tubes”. Federation Flicks, AL 116. “One flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest”. Federation Members: $1.OO; Others: $1.50 \
Watermelon Football; Tug-of War; Waterfight 2:00 pm. : Mini Olympics 7:00 pm. : Kangaroo Court Students’ Council Meeting, everyone welcome, time and place to be announced Federation Flicks, AL 116. “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest”. Federation Members: $1 .OO; Others: $1.50 MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 13 Optometry - clinic and research tours Arts & EMS (Sept. 13-l 7) Federation Pub, Campus Centre. 8:30pm. - 1 :OOam. : ARTS NIGHT First-year Arts students: free Other Arts students: 25 cents All others: covercharge $1.00 at 7pm. Band : Chrysalis FREE OUTDOOR CONCERT, Humanities Quadrangle (T of A if it rains). Sponsored by Arts Society and F of S. Bands - “Whistle King” & “Salt Spring Rainbow” “Discovery Pub”, 3rd floor lounge, HH. F of S & Societies, intramurals, club information Great Hall, Campus Centre
f
patrons
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7 - FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10 Library Arts & EMS - lo:30 am., 11:30 am., 2:30 pm. Meet at Tours: reference desk CampusTours: 11:30 am. - meet at scheduling area in PAC Information Federation of Students - All day in scheduling at PAC Centre: Campus Centre, Monday to Saturday, 12 noon to Federation 1:OOam. Live entertainment. -Bob Webb 50 cent Pub: cover at 7 pm. Tours 1:OOpm., meet in front of Campus Centre Library I:00 pm., Great Hall, CC
E
*
I/76
8:30 pm. Noon-
Arts & EMS, IO:30 am. amd 12:30 pm. Meet at reference desk F of S & Societies, intramurals, club information Great Hall, Campus Centre Free Band at 1:OO pm., “Salt Spring” “Meet your Prof” Wine & Cheese Party HH Room 373 F of S-Societies-Colleoe-Councils Social - bv Laurel Creek in front of Psychology Building L “Challenge Tug-of-War” Village I - Frosh Pub. Band - “Hot Rocks” Federation Campus Centre. Band: W,
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 17 Library Tours Arts & EMS, lo:30 am. & 12:30 pm. Noon - 1:OOam. Federation Pub, Campus Centre. Band: TBA FREE ALL-NIGHT SCI-FI MOVIES, Campus i 1:00 pm. Centre Great Hall. Sponsored by F of S, Science, Math & Arts Societies, Campus Centre Board, Watsfic. Pancake breakfast follows movies. Feab tures: Earth vs Flying Saucers, THX 1138, Abbot & Costello Go to Mars, Colossus - Forbin Project & more. Villages Evening: Village II Coffee House 8:00 pm. Federation Flicks, AL 116. “Three Days of the Condor”. Federation Members: $1.OO, Others: $1.50. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 18 , Noon - 1:OOam. Fed. Pub, Campus Centre. Band: Chrysalis SECOND ANNUAL RAFT RACE & SPORTS DAY, Columbia Field & Lake Noon Raft Race (heats) - sign in at lo:30 am. Special note: Entrants for this race must register in advance. Entry forms available at Federation and Society offices. 12:30 pm. Co-ed Sports Day -- Baseball Tourney, Bicycle Rally, Tug-of-War, Obstacle Course, Horseshoe Pitch, Labatt’s Balloon & more. St. Jerome’s PRIZES - BARBECUE - MUSIC - FUN Enquire at Federation office for more details. Sponsored by the Fed of Students and Societies. 8:30 pm.Federation Dance, Festival Room in South Cam1:OOam. pus Hall. Band: “Brutus” admission - Feds$l.75, Others $2.00 8:00 pm. Federation Flicks, AL 116. “Three Days of the Condor”. Federation Members: $1.OO; Others: $1.50 Renison Evening Pub College -d-s SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 19 Villages Wiener & Corn Roast at Elora Gorge Conrad Evening Coffee House Grebel College 8:00 pm: Federation Flicks, AL 116. “Three Days of the Condor”. Federation Members: $1.OO; Others: $1.50 . Golf Tournament. Enquire at Campus Centre Optometry Turnkey Desk. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 \ Library Tours Arts & EMS (Sept. 20-24), lo:30 am., 2:30 pm., and 6:15 om. Library Comprehensive look at library resources with emWorkshops phasis on preparation of reports and essays. Enquire at reference desk. Noon Federation oub. Camous Centre. Band: “Little 1:OO am. Boy Blues” ‘cover $1 .dO at 7 pm. ALL DAY Arts & Crafts Fair. Campus Centre Great Hall. 7:30 pm. & Film Night (ESS). EL Room 101, Admission: $.99. lo:30 pm.
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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 . Library Tours Arts & EMS (see Monday, Sept. 20) Enquire at reference desk. Library Workshops Noon Federation Pub, Campus Centre. Band: “Little 1:00 am. Boy Blues” cover $1.00 at 7 pm. ALL DAY Arts & Crafts Fair. Campus Centre Great Hall “The Merchant of Venice”. $7.00 includes bus PLAY AT STRATFORD fare. Bus will leave at 1 pm. for 2 pm. matinee. Tickets available at ESS office, ENV 138A. Sponsored by Environmental Studies Society. Villages “Disco pub” at Village II FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24 Library Tours Arts & EMS (see Monday, Sept. 20) Library Enquire at reference desk Workshops Noon Federation Pub, Campus Centre. Band: “Little .-=I:00 am. Boy Blues” cover $1.OOat 7 pm. ALL DAY Arts & Crafts Fair. Campus Centre Great Hall Villages Casino Night at Village I Federationilicks, AL 116. “Steppenwolf” Feder8:00 pm. ation Members: $1.00; Others: $1.50 8:30 pm. Orientation Pub-Disco. M&C 5136, 5th floor lounge. First year Feds: Free Other Years: 50 cents SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25 Noon Federation Pub, Campus Centre. Band: “Little 1:OO am. Boy Blues” cover$l.OO at 7 pm. Villages 7:00 am. Market Run 8:00 pm. Federation Dance, Festival Room, South Campus 1:OO am. Hall. Band: “Fludd”, admission Feds $1.75 Others $1.50 Federation Flicks, AL 116. “Steppenwolf” 8:00 pm. Federation Members: $1.OO; Others: $1.50 Afternoon Math Car Rally. Enquire at MathSoc office (M&C 3038) for details SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 26 Noon . Optometry Car Rally. Enquire at Campus Centre Turnkey Desk. (A barbecue follows rally.) Villages Bingo Night 8:00 pm. Federation Flicks, AL 116. “Steppenwolf” Federation Members: $1.OO; Others: $1.50 MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 27 ALL DAY Artist Print Sale. Campus Centre Great Hall Noon Federation Pub, Campus Centre. Disco cover $.25 1:OO am. at 7 pm. Villages Week of Baseball Tournament. Enquire at Village office for more details. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28 ALL DAY Artist Print Sale. Campus Centre Great Hall Federation Pub, Campus Centre. Disco, cover Noon 1:OOam. $.25 at 7 pm. ESS Pub Crawl. Leaves by bus on two routes. 6:30 pm. Returns 1:30 am. Tickets available at ESS off ice. Evening Villages Roller Skating WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29 ALL DAY Artist Print Sale, Campus Centre Great Hall Noon Federation Pub, Campus Centre. Disco, cover 1:OO am. $.25 at 7 pm. PLAY AT “The Merchant of Venice”. $6.00 includes bus -STRATFORD fare. Bus will leave about 1 pm. for 2 pm. matinee. Tickets available at Federation office, CC235. Sponsored by F of S and Arts Society. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 30 ALL DAY Artist Print Sale. Campus Centre Great Hall Noon Federation Pub, Campus Centre. Band: TBA 1:OO am. 8:00 pm. ESS Faculty-Student Wine & Cheese Party. MC5’136.
+? ***a*******************&4 4 LEGEND 4 4 PAC Physical Activities Building 4 TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 TBA To Be Announced 4 ESS Library Tours Arts & EMS (see Monday, Sept. 20) Environmental Studies Society, ENV 4 T of A Library Enquire at reference desk Theatre of Arts, located in Modern Languages Workshops 4 Bldg. Noon Federation of Students Federation Pub, Campus Centre. Band: “Little 4 F of S 1:00 am. Boy Blues” cover $1.00 at 7 pm. Humanities Building 4 HH ALL DAY ENV Arts & Crafts Fair, Campus Centre Great Hall Environmental Studies Building 8:00 pm. CONCERT with “Sweet Blindness” and magician 4 cc Campus Centre Building Mike Mandell, in Humanities Theatre. Tickets av- 4 M&C Math & Computer Building 4 AL ailable at ‘Federation office, CC235 Arts Lecture Building Villages Pub, Village I, Band, “Skid Slippo” Engineering Lecture Building 4 EL 8:00 pm. Math Society Wine & Cheese Party, 5th floor 4 lounge, M & C Bldg. 4 4 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 4 Library Tours Arts & EMS (see Monday, Sept. 20) 1 4 Enquire at reference desk . Library Workshops 4 Noon Federation Pub, Campus Centre. Band: “Little 4 Further assistance will be gladly given you at the following 1:OOam. Boy Blues” cover $1.00 at 7 pm. 4 offices: ALL DAY Arts & Crafts Fair. Campus-Centre Great Hall Federation of Students - Campus Centre Room 235, telePLAY AT “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”. $6.00 includes 4 phone-extension 2405 or 3880 STRATFORD bus fare. Bus will leave about 7:30 for 8:30 perfor- 4 Arts Society - HH Room 178A, ext. 2322 4 mance. Tickets available at Federation office, Engineering Society - Eng. IV, Room 1338, ext. 2323 or 2340 CC235. Sponsored by F of S and ArtsSoc.& ESS 4 Environmental Studies Society - ENV 138A, ext. 2321 “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”. ESS students 4 Mathematics Society - M & C Room 3038, ext. 2324 $7.00, available at ESS office, ENV 138A. 4 Science Society - Biology I, Room 253,,ext. 2325 4
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