1975-76_v16,n14_Chevron

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( UniAty of Waterloo--~ 2 .Waterloo, Oprio __- ---A* vohne 16, timber 14 / - friday, septemkr 19, 1975 _-

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Ernst vori&ezold, a UW st$ent; addesses -Kitchefier city _council Monday,ni&t He charged tiuncil ,with contribqting to ,the detetioration of the working employ&s to strike by $&bomly acting-out its auste/ebudgetav policies.

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pfeterminated safely~ and and - r to be membe-rs of the federation, it gnancies would be both “irresponsible and - without -delay. We! believe- that tievented the Federation of Stuimmoral’L~ to 3end this telegram medical facilities where abortions dents Tom consideringwhether to can be performedin ,maximum co&rlt~ingthe religious send-a pro+ortiontelegram .to without saf@y -s&.&d be-,available to all f&+rai*t& minister, OttoLang, minority on campus. : Citing a Canadian &&~t.& bf canadian.women, even if they live at-last Thnrsday’s student council public ~inionsurvey, printed- in, i$ areas without su&facilities, ‘tieeting. if they The telegram, presented to fedthe Sndbnry Star, to bolster his . even if they are poor, even -Lerqtion educationcoordinator contention, St. Jerome’s College are Young. ’ Shank Roberts,. caRed for’ a law _ rep. Brian Miatello said thatwhile A law which provides qss to whjch provides abortion to those eight-in-ten Canadians believe ab~rtim OdY to a-feW,d OdY in some-locations is unjust. We ask not prepared to bear a child and abortions shotild,belegal, most-of advocates planned parenthood those/who hold this view say that that POfig and cpuits immediately abortions should- be- legal only ~stopp~uting DK HenwMo@enprogramsWhen conncil was prepared to under certain c~cumstanees.Sayvote on whether to send thetele: ing that the publieopinion survey, , wmducted ?, August, ii@icates that gram, science rep. Ralph Torrie, whoheatedly argued against the ac- most &muhans are@ in-favor of t$n, stormed out of the council abortion on demand, h@atello &unb+ and broke quorum at the ~.asked counciltodelete majorpormeeting, Qut of 25 councillors,, tions of the telegram whichineffect only 13, the bare minimum forconwould reverse its originaliptent. --Aducting business, were in attenA The telegram pr nteato counmm - _ - “ -;. - --- cil reads: ” Wxelieve that + Torrie arg&d$rat since-council,* motherhood should be voluntary. that Car&&.n womenonly represented a’ small precen- ’ _3Ne &lieve t&e ofUW students, it.couldn’t go %hould _have free.dom of .choiFe. mpept only 2Oper-cent of the. 18-24 ah&d with the pr~abortionstance ._Those-who are notprepared to bear age groupad h~didnWee1 t@i pdl becanser-it-would be stepping on a child, despite_ alternatives66 p?=e”fey by -Miatdlo reflected abortion that society, can offer, j , some student’s religious sentifmMinu@ ,p-page 3, _-_ . < . 1‘ ‘i-- pmyd

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Four f&e&r on a.+f&ld hostile winter’s morning &longs to a bus driver: as does a midniat storm when most other vehicles are off theroad. ‘,’ . Those experiences ph.t~ scheduling which doesn’t allow for a meal, - break, an eight hour daily&rug&? , withcity traffic, and.weekend work forno extra money, are some of the -things. which differentiate a transit worker’s job from other &ty - employee’s* I-- The %triking drivers claim that -since their job is more demanding they shouldn”t be held to Kitchener 15 percent wage ceiling. . council’s 1They Fe asking for a 20.6 Per&eat wage fFrease* In order to get a flavour for ;he transit worker?s-job t,he chevron in: terviewed

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hansit workershave callehti a ’ mass pick& and leafletthg~at the ’ Then between 9:30 toy&&O0 ’ .D~ke23t&& terminal, opposite \ . things. &a,- to-q&et& ;d&vn he -&I9-q gays, and he tries to “boot it UP to at 9:oO a-. %‘he~_woold_l@e People the uqiversl’ty”-so as togain a few to e&e outand support-thgm. ~ t 1 -

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minutes w&h will aRow him time ’ for a coffee ancl a bite to &t. Ifhedoesn’tmakeithowdoeshe eat? “It’s easy, hesays,Isteerwith one hand, h-ave a coffee in the other, and if a\.passe_qger wants a - transfer I rin it off with mv little finger.” Y r * - t 1 10:3O-“Things pick up,&ople -1 start ,coming downtown, and you have to fight the tra@ic.” - -. Du.finghissmJimisallowedto his ’ use only two wash.roomson route: one is at Berkley Square on , . the south side ofKiu%ener, and the other is at the Market’ SquareShould nature call Jii while he is oh campus it mustbe persuaded to _ wait until he gets to the other end of *e Twin citiesm _ Another rule which irks Jimis ’ -

coffee or a i=an of pop when visiting Jim (real name withheld on reSquare w.ashroom, quest) gets up -at 4: 15 a.m., has T the Rerkley such pra&tice is prohiited when breakfast and reports at the bus terminal at 5: M a.m. And it must be. using the one at Market Square. On this shift, one of three Jim -works,.hefinishes at 1:4&tndoften

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’ transit ‘workers, F city council& Whck it&as suggested that the-found themselves lacking meaningi city’s wage offerwot$dg&e the bus I . ful- data, such a~:-.what wage!& are driversonesent an hour more than _ being paid to workers -in other the heavy equip&nt operators, cities, now ,and- in the pipeline; In one driver shouted “we handle * the cities compared, the size of the peoplenotdti’i mer & fd- _ transit operation was not known, lowed: ‘tIfa bulldozer driver tips it - nor were the &pulation@ues for how many losses does he have . the various centres. ijrhe city’s peragainst him?‘” nom-that bus driy SOIUM -departme t WAS asked_,to ers are-responsr&lefor as many as _~ supply this mater& for Thursday’s 90 peopleat one time. Other commeeting. Me&nwhile-‘the - union is merits were ‘ ‘how many. dozer doing itsown research on this. operators work Saturday and Sun-The question of the transit’workd&y at straight time?” and “how ers’ job relative to-other city empmany dozer drivers are ant at 12 loyees’ brought a very clear reo’clock at night on~Sunday.” sponse from the workers present. _ Y ’ - -nsiim / i_ -

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!Mercury poisohing ’ . .l G. . .5. . . . . . -page3 . P&her& noi Serpdpulation .. . . -1. @age 1-l Zngheer~ & unidms .:-*. . . . -a . . @age.20-2I ’ PSl politics - \ . 2 .I .. . . 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . -page 22

striking @an&it work&i& ~ evpntualy: forced && .I , .

take their summer vacation on a Gtchener city counc~ decided _- the city’s offer. . _ yesteqiiy at a private meeting to “Regardless of what thg - do three y-w- rotation basis::. hold fhrtber di&ussions with the with the other issues it’s still the There were numerous cornthat management misstriking transit workers over the ‘money,” he said,- --L- plaints mtrusted.. the drivers and were un,vacatb and.lu.nch break issues, Mazmanian ‘quarrelled with the I nsasarily strict. but ma@ained its position with re’ In addition, the -met that the gard to the 15 per cent wage m- city’s survey of pay scales in the other cities. Theremay be interim crease. , mayor and counCillors accepted Changes in some of the WntrFts in ,Gouncil will hold discussEns salary increases, e&lier iir the year, O&r. Cttll@eS &kWOl$d~@.$t dI’@‘fw h ex&s &&& -& &v&s with the transit workers during the ahead Of e+-a&me&.&s are&&g,moy&j next few d%ys and will meet again ers these far&s eEler dlhXS before a new R@hmost of the workers. ~ .- . next Friday to- &ach a final deciener contract expired next May5 he : sion. . &Gde the council chambers the said. -L.*s In an interview, Kitchener two sides of the dispute soon be? mayor Edith MacIntosh’said~coun1 Y&e&y’s courk$l session was came clear: Union @resident, -Bill 49 reyiewed its positionon the pay- prompted when the alderpersons ’ Mazmanian, argued -that the raise and decided that Gee the c&y agreed to reopen negotiations after driver’s job was ,more demanding rankedseventhinwagesettlements about 70 transit -workers and their than that of other ciwployees, when compared to 22 other Cities supporters appeared at a city counand that Kitchener transit workers to press for with simiiar transit’systems, the 15 cil meeting Monday were losing ground relative to per cent offer was “well above av- ffirthertalks. ’ transit workers in -other Ontarioerage.” Z&e added that all the other Prior to Monday’s meeting, cities. However, council stood-firm @y hall unions -have- already- acplacard-carryingworkers voiced that all city employees must accept cepted council% raise ceiling. their complaints to the &vron. the 15 per cent wage ceiling, and One man said:“‘I’ve been here 20 I that Kitchener’s transitworkers reBill Mazmanian, president ofthe in $hsit workers union, said in an y&us and they’re trying to give me lative position to similarworkers interview afterlearnir@of the decia mmm& holiday once every three other Cities was not that bad. a he w&pative sbm ofthe.h sion that the union Will not accept Z”‘ _ yeqs.‘-’ The city wants the men to \ -.

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friday,

the chevron

Friday

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. . . THERE’S MORE TO A DIAMOND

THAN DAZZLE

True diamond quality is determined by four factors. CARAT weight. . . which denotes size and not the quality of the diamond. CUT. . . brings out the fire and sparkle. COLOR . . . captures the spectrum of the rainbow. And CLARITY. We’ll be happy to explain all these factors.. . come “C” for yourself.

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GEMOLOGIST PrlOW OIV STAFF!

30 KING W. KITCHENER

“Prince Valiant” exhibition. UW art gallery. Hours: Mon-Fri 9-4, Sun 2-5 till Oct. 5th. Campus Centre Pub-opens 12 noon. Phase from 9-l am. 74 cents after 6pm. Informal Meeting of Guyanese’ stul dents to get to know each other. 4:30pm. Camp& Centre Rm. 207 (world- room).\ Ushers for Theatre of the Arts and Humanities Theatre. Organizational meeting. 4:30-5:30pm. Theatre of the Arts. ML Building. “The 1837 Farmer’s Revolt”the ninety-nine cent theatre. Admission 99 cents. 8pm. Adult Recreation Centre, I 185 King St. S., Waterloo. Federation Flicks-The Longest Yard with Burt Reynolds. AL 116.8pm. Feds $1 Non-feds $1.50.

Saturday

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Campus Centre Pub opens 7pm. Phase from 9-l am. 74 cents admission. Federation Flicks-The Longest Yard with Burt Reynolds. AL 116.8pm. Feds $1 Non-feds $1.50

Sunday Chapel. All welcome. Coffee & discussion follows service. 10:30am. Conrad Grebel College Chapel. Federation Flicks-The Longest Yard with Burt Reynolds. AL 116 8pm. Feds $1 Non-feds $1.50 Film-Battle of Stalingrad 8pm. AL 105. Sponsored by the Canada-USSR Association. Gay Coffee House. Everyone welcome. 8:30pm. Campus Centre Rm. 110.

Para-lpgal Assistance offers nonprofessional legal gdvice. Call 885-0840 or come to CC 106. Hours: 1:30-4:30pm and 7-l Opm. Jazz and Blues Club. 8pm. Kitchener Public Library.

Tuesday Crafts Fair-selling leather goods, jewellery, pottery.lo-4pm. Campus I Centre Great Hall. Campus Centre Pub opens 12 noon. Michael Lewis from g-lam. 50 cents after 6pm. Community Volunteer Forum: representatives from Regional Social Services and Childrens Aid Society. 12:30-l :30 Moose Room, Renison College. Sponsored by Renison Academic Assembly (RAA). Anyone interested in volunteer work in the community welcome. Singers wanted for Symphony No. g-Choral. L.V. Beethoven, A Song of Joy for the University of Waterloo Concert Choir. Rehearsals: 7-9pm AL 113. For further info contact Alfred Kunz, ext. 2439. Movie-Magical Mystery Tour and Keep on Rocking. 8pm. AL 116. KFGF: 25 cents Others: $1. Sponsored by the Karl Friedrich Gauss Foundation. Introductory lecture on Transcendental Meditation. Everyone welcome. Admission free. 8pm. Psych 2084. 884-l 125. ,

Wednesday

Crafts Fair-selling leather goods, jewellery, pottery. 1 O-4pm. Campus Centre Great Hall. Campus Centre Pub opens 12 noon. Michael Lewis from g-lam. 50 cents after 6pm. Community Volunteer Forum: representatives from Big Brother Assn. and Big Sister Movement. 12:30-l :30, Monday Moose Room, Renison College. SponCrafts Fair-selling leather good-s, sored by Renison Academic Assembly jewellery, pottery. 1 O-4pm. Campus (RAA). Anyone interested in volunteer Centre Great Hall. work in the community welcome. Campus Centre qub opens 12 noon. K-W Red Cross Blood Donor Clinic. ,Michael Lewis from g-lam. 50 cents 2-4:30 and 6-8:30pm. First United after 6pm. Church, King & William Streets, WaterCommunity Volunteer Forum: reploo. resentatives from Probation and Parole, \ Concert Band. 5:30-7:30pm. AL 6. For and the Developmental Centre. further information contact Alfred Kunz, 12:30-l :30 Moose Room, Renison Colat ext 2439 or in ML 254. lege. Sponsored by Renison Academic Assistance offers nonAssembly (RAA). Anyone interested in Para-legal professional legal advice. Call volunteer work in the Community wel8854840 or come to CC 106. Hours come. 7-l opm. GrandValley Car Club welcomes you Chess Club Meeting. Everyone welto our next meeting. Waterloo County come. 7:3Opm. Campus Centre Room Fish and Game Protective Association. 110. Pioneer Tower Rd., Off Hwy 8 between Kitchener and Hwy. 401. 8pm. General Meeting of the K-W Regional

comes

TAKE

Good N&we Collection $9.00 value - only $4.50 ADVANTAGE

OF OUR

GOOD

September

19, 1975

Folk Arts Council. 7:30pm. Multi Cultural Centre, 20 Queen St. N. Kitchener. K-W Association for ChiMren With Learning Disabilities. 8pm. Waterloo Public Library Auditorium. Further information phone Ted Gaudun 745-6726. Introductory lecture on Transcendental Meditation. Admission free. Everyone welcome. 8pm. MC 3010. 884-l 125. Gay Coffee House. 8:30pm. Campus Centre Rm 110.

Thursday Crafts Fair-selling leather goods, jewellery, pottery. 1O-4pm. Campus Centre Great Hall. Campus Centre Pub opens 12 noon. Michael Lewis from g-lam. 50 cents after 6pm. Community Volunteer Forum: representative from Community Information Centre and Central Volunteer Bureau. 12:30-l :30 Moose Room, Renison College. Sponsored by Renison Academic Assembly (RAA). Anyone interested in volunteer work in the community welcome. Para-legal Assistance offers nonprofessional legal advice. Call 885-0840 or come to CC 106. Hours: 1:30-4:30pm. Circle K Club regular meeting.. Plans for the fall term will be discussed, 5:30pm CC 113. Cha6ber Choir. 7-9pm. AL 6. For further information contact Alfred Kunz, ext 2439 or ML 254.

Baha’i’s on campus invite student faculty, and staff to informal discussion on Baha’u’llah’s principle, “The Oneness of Science & Religion”. For further info phone 885-0983. Student Wive’s Club first yeeting. All women married to students are welcome to come and get acquainted. For more information call 884-9243 or 884-9441. 8pm. E4 Rm 4362. Organizational Meeting. Association of Greek Students. Election of the Executive committee, all Greek students are urged to attend. 8pm. CC 110. The Caretaker by Harold f;inter. Directed by Carl ball. 8pm. Theatre of the Arts.

Friday

Crafts Fair-selling leather goods, jewellery, pottery. 1O-4pm. Campus Centre Great Hall. Campus Centre Pub opens 12 noon. Michael Lewis from 9-l am. ?O cents after 6pm. U of W Golf Tournament. Saturday Oct. 4th. Registration contact Gloria Rudney ext. 3922 anytime before Oct. 1st. Open to staff and faculty.

NATURE

Good Nature Cl&nser-A natural protein and honey cleanser for your face, your hair and your whole body. . Good Nature Moisturizer-tintains sesame oil, wheat germ oil and protein, plus a sunscreen. Leaves your skin soft, smooth and supple with a delicate scent. Great as an all over body moisturizer. Good Nature Cream-A fine, light-textured cream that instantly absorbs into moisture-robbed skin, making it ‘moist, smooth and refreshed with a delicate scent. Makes an exceIlent,make-up base. Good Nature Glo-Here and there color that glows and shines wherever it’5 worn. A natural for cheeks, chin or forehead. Good Nature Lip Gloss-A natural formula gloss plus a sunscreen. Provides a natural wet look-shine that is long-wearing and easy to apply. Ten-O-Six Lotion-Antiseptically cleanses the skin. Quickly- removes heaviest make-up and grime. Helps destroy certain blemish causing bacteria. Receive free 2 oz. Ten-O-Six Lotion with purchase of 8 oz. at $3.95

- westmount pharmacy

place

Expires

Sept. 25, 1975

578-8800

y LION-SAT= 9 am - 10 pm, SUN and HOLIDAYS 11 am - 9 pm

K-W locations


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1 Perhapsmost significant. was . WASHINGTON (LNS)-A -system as it is and allowingit to that the survey revealed a turnabpublic opinion poll commissioned straighten itself out,” while 37 per out in the “you can’t, fight City\ by the People’s Bicentennial cent favored minor adjustments, attitude -of many: people. Commission (PBC) has found that. and a plurality of 41 per cent called -Hall” in every major category of business . for “making major adjustments to While 4? per cent of those surveyed fewhat there is little or no possibiltry things that have never been performance except ,one,- U.S. -/ ity of having employee ownership firms were’ given ;a negative rating tried before.” Asked to choose.between private and control of U.S. companies in by those surveyed. And by a pluralof business, govern- - the next ten years, a significant’44 ity of 49 to 45 per cent; according to ownership ment ownership, or “companies in per cent felt there is “great-or some the poll, Americans agreed that possibility.” “big business is the.source of most which stock& owned by the empl The fact that there has-been virI loyees who appoint their own manof what is wrong in this country agement to run the company’s optually no p-ublic ‘discussion of today.‘? The recently released poll, a &&ions ,” a resounding 66 per cent worker control in the U.S. was also recognize by: those surveyed nationwide telephone survey of favored companies owned and conSixty-seven per cent felt that there 1,209 Americans conducted the trolled by employees+ Twenty per cent voted for private ownership has been “too -little discussion” of week of July 25, 1975, focused’on and 8 per cent for government conemployee control of U.!X corporaissues relating to the country’s tions; only 10 per cent thought that .economic%ystem ayd possible al- trol. In addition- to e,mploy+e ownerthere has been too much.discussion ternatives. The data was accumuship, an overwhelming 74 per cent and 9 per cent felt there has been I lated by Hart Research Associates, the right amount. ’ a @n-r which includes --among its - favored “a plan whereby consumIn evaluating t,he poll, the clients the Washington Post,, CB.S ers in local communities are repon the boards of com- --People’s Bicentennial Commission News election analysis, and 17 -resented concluded that “throughout the gubernatorig’ and senate candipanies that operate in their local Vietnam years, the civil rights region.” Only 17 per cent opposed dat.es. Peter D. Hart, head of the the student protests, fnm, boasts amore$an85 percent the plan. _~ - _ campaigns, Watergate, the energy crisis and success rate in past surveys.‘---- the economic crisis, an almost silThe study revealed that most Americans give business a negativeratingin the following areas: keep1 that “a hidden constituencv-a( ing profits at a reasonable level, -? ---. ...‘.“-Who’s he? The salt of the eadh? What’s”this taK:about -7you can fight city new majority in favour of bold and providing good quality p.roducts , \ ha//‘? The ‘he’ ,is a strikjng worker of Kitchener Transit aqc&e’s a-t city ha/l _ ’ sweeping economic changes-has ’ enabling people to make full use of .. / i demanding @have. his voice heard by so called public,gfficials. In-the quietly emerged in’ America and their abilities, having concern for backgroud, yq.~ can see a ,harcj working chTvron newsman interviewing our nation’s leaders are&otally un-Y the individual, keeping down the cost of living, safe-guarding the health of workers and consumers, and preventing unej-mployment and , A _$lSOO grand prize will be _ inflation. ’ In only one -major category did -awarded in the current Poetry Competition sponsored by. the U.S. business receive a positive World of Poetry, a monfhly newsrating-in paying ‘good wages. And even in that area-4I per cent of letter, for poets: _ North L candidates in >who said that the c+ndidates had a the point where developers can get those surveyed felt that wages are . ‘Poems ofall styles and on any ( L Waterloo inadequate. . subject are eligible to compete for yesterday’s provincial election and _ misguided viewcof the housing the areas-zoned for high-rise de: the grand prize or for49 other cash municipal officials were accused of crisis and should:be directing their velopments . “Block-busting is the Backing up these strong anti-’ energies towarddearning who owns means by which developers can t business sentiments, 49 per cent of or merchandise -awards; Second’ ignoring the “real” housing issue those polled called for ‘+a%ew politplace is >$500. ’ last Thursday at a forum sponsored the capital needed to increase the buy- out property cheaply,” she . ical movement to challenge the in‘. According to contest director, by the Federation of Students. ,/’ number _ houses on the said. Candidates Jack Kersell, NDP; “There isn’t a very serious* tit’ fluence of big- business;’ ThirtyJoseph Mellon, “We are encouragmarketA“the people who are not ing poetic talent of every kind, and Ed Good, Liberal; and Bob Gramconcerned with people’s needs. ’ ’ tempt by -anyone to do anything cX three- per cent of the public -also expect our contest to produce ex- law, PC, were charged with being Webber said that candidates about’ the housing situation.” agreed that “the capitalist system patroni%ig and with viewing housMewhinney told students that itself has reached its peak in terms citing discoverig 1” :; were going through a “ritual” of of performance-and is now the deing as a “privilege rather- than -a ~- talking. about housing problems ‘: Waterloo council-is working on a - Rules arid official entry forms-are? maintenance bylaw” cline . ’ ’ Only 20 per cent thought -available by writing to: World of social need” by Marlene Webber,ra when one of the problems is ‘that - “minimum’ Poetry, 801 PortolaDr., Dept. 211, social science professor at Renison that the systemiis still getting betnew shopp@ig plazas and office which will force-landlords to ,rnake College. ter.” sbuildings have 20 per cent vamcy improvements to~some of the subSanFrancisco CA 94127. A small 17 per cent of the publics standard~housingthat exists in the’ Contest closes November 30, _ Webber’s attack yyupportec! , _ r&s. \ ._ “Capital doesn’t operate in servcity, -ing the social needs ofpeople, “This bylaw -will :- give . IX’s wrong to .assume that one- municipalities the power to set party is moreconcerned than the levels of suitable accommodaf-ion.” , ’ I ~ _ c p She said there is ndreal housing Council is working. in co-scarcity-just a scarcity of people operation with the Federation of ’ who can afford hou,singlStudents on the bylaw, she said. Directing -a charge at Waterloo All the candidates talked about \ alderperson Mary Jane -Mewh-mtheir party policies on rent review ney, she said councils are ignoring or control.. problems such as “block-busting” wherelarge oldhomes arerented to _ - students so they willdeteriorate to

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ElaineSim, is a secretary in the physicsdept. ‘The-other two “the opinion of our peers”. women are ElizabethLehman and .-- In other business, council apl JulyTuscM. * proved a $4,000 grant to’the ailing They are putting- on their own National Union of Students which show because they felt “that there lately has been undermuch fman- * was& enough opportunity in town cialstrain. The federation will hold for independent artists to show - a referendum on NUS membership their work;“‘explained Jansen. She concurrently with the yearly -- _:presialso said that- normal channels --dent@ election. = would have taken. too long’andthe zouncil also accepted the -a& women might not ‘have:been a& ,’ pointment of Art -Ram and Carl - lowed to show theirwork together. Chamovitz as ,entertainment co-The exhibition is-entitled “The’ _ ordmators, and Donna ‘Rodgers as Other Side Show” and will feature communications co-ordinator . The charcoal and ink drawings zpastels, appointments were Tpreser$edto and- acrylic drawings. 1I council by the executive becauseof -G . It opens ,on Sept 2 1 $,orn” 2-5 pm - resignations over the summerholi-and willbe open daily-29 pm until 3 days. ‘. _- ,,‘___j i -Qctober 4. / _ ., , \. ’ . -- > ., -. ; . L-._ page

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Texas instruments SR@u electronic caldirlator,, possibly near-parking lot B. Revt@~ offered. Phone 5786823 after 8pm.~~i, ‘,-

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Kittens to bo given awayto good homes. Approximably two tinths old., For more infwmgtion Fntact Rh~ay~or-~l- via at ext. 2331. I

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brochur*.&ducational Products Unli-mited,. Box $&hWX, Station 4, ;\‘.Mon&al?No obIig&m. .‘” . . wgnt&-*: . , \ -; ‘, I WaitressesyWaiters needed in&boo lounge. Exp&ieri& preferred, -Phone after 12 noon: 7446368. _,.,, : : Person wanted for house cleaning. 3 hours a weekCall 742-,992h_, ;.

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Gay Lib ,Offtw, Campus Centre, Rm. . &eaders for cub and scout groups of 4th 2j 7C. Open Monday-Thursday -1Wat’erloo, meeting at - First. United> Church,- Waterloo. Excellent meeting, ’ 7-l Opm, some aftemoons;Counseiliig arid, camping facilities and equipment. - ‘%nd hformatidn. Phone 885-421 i, ext. : Racked by active Group C,ommittee.’ _ 2372: / \. .’ . Experience valuable but notessentiali lf I Light movingdone also other odd jobs I>. you are keejy interested and can de-, ,f cleanin-c. Reasonable rates. Call , monstrate ‘leadership, call 885-3896: 3ey 745-1283. , / ‘Ride Wanted ’ ‘-- ’ r P&ant l What- am I goingto do? Call I ’ n&&a -ride to Toronto Wednesday BIRTHR IGHT for confidential: help., ~afternoonsj and back to Waterloo $~B~3BBO. Free pregnancy tests?. Thursdav ‘morninqs. Will share exj FDq Sale . ‘1 . 2 . penses. CallMarg &I;7082 .’ , ‘. Ski equipm&t:.skiis, poies, boots (size ,Typi& ’9). $45.885-1857 after 5pm. I 7 1. W&do typing&&thes% and ‘essays., 50 BSR tumtable.‘;~Good condition. Amp cents a-page. Mrs. Norma ,Kirby - ati Pre-amp. No- speakers.$4jL/- -‘742-9357. . _ ,’ ‘* Jr, ’ ’ 885-1660. Diane. Three Siamese_ l& -CWII! do typing of essiys and. thesis in W;e;l point. 8 weeks ok%’ $25.00 . I _my home,. Please call Mrs. McKee at ‘\ . 578-2243. Available until Sept. 23 and . ’ _. ’ Harmon Kardon Quad Receiver andr after &t. ,.i$. _ TMW-5 speakers&o Phil@ps,tape re- ’ Expe&ce&short I hand--typist .would corder, auto reverse, computerized con- -like to do typing at home, 744-5876. trols.,744-55B6. George;.-, t , <Typing at home: 743-3342;.West,m&t -‘For a. mechanically minded student. 1 ?967 Rambler. Radio, heater, motor ex- ‘\ areaftheses, ess@; reasonable rates, @lent. 44,000 miles. Best offer: \Mr&. .exce,llent set)lice;no math papers. 1 .Ada Csanady.~88@0235. _ , . A business’college graduate, wiN@g to do of student typing I1974 Kawasaki 46Oce 2-strokemotor~ centsaH phases a page. Phone 6$3671 2., at 66 . j ’ 5 cycle. Must sell.) Phone-578-0823 after 21 ‘.i, 6pm. ,,( +. . Fast&curate typing: 40 cents a page. : ,Garrard:aro-1 &I- tunitab&$2$6-.’ Call+ ?)lBM Selectric. Located in Lakeshore vil- ; . Jcihn at $76&07m,, ‘:$&. _ ? _( ‘4,dag@cidl s@+tpl 3: itmflh8. ' ,

Hoytsing’ Av.ailaMe -. - . . (used,singte mattresses ,&,,boxRooms.. TM- House, Walk Universfty. ,spr!ngs)-$1 5 and uP;..884BJI32~, . Available first-Qctober. Htlda 884-l Q5. , Beautiful apples a&cider. J&chard under integrated control program, no, Room for-femaA.%&d household, all shared:, $1 OO-$_?.,30 per chemica~inse+ides. $7.00 perbushel l, expenses month. Victoria St. North:’ Telephone;, I__in your contarner. Call 5763676, 7444207, ’ .( ‘- --: ( Cibie headli ht conversions, Konl 1 / I shocks, S&b’, ri exhaust systems, most d ’ &u&g want& , acce@ories at discount, priies., George , T’-eat h’mgstudent needs a bedtosleep _ af!?!%6Pm* 744*$$B8. j ’ ‘-’ ’ ’ ; ,JhuMay nigh&. 88$,-1610, j . :. Harmon-Kardon Citation. Twelve power + he -‘Federation !of’Students requires amp, Dynaco :PAT’ 5 pre;amp, Thoren %--accommodation for .‘itsentertainers TD-125 wi Shum ; S.ME. tone -arm. -* *brought in to play .atpubsand -dances. 94-$gQf.,’ -‘-/’ Rates tobe arranged. Ask for Art or Can ih-the Fed office; Campus Centre, Room Calculators at discount prices-for Sci235, or the Campus Centre* Pub. . -ence and IEngineering students. Free _--2‘ % , , -A’ -, _ , \ j ‘t. /’ ~. / _ ! . ‘/ _,.‘T . 4 .. \ , k, , ,- , _>-;‘,/’ I1 ;- L #I _ r \- -..-+ .\ ,+ ., ~ ; 1,’ 1I- ‘ -,’ ,’ : __ ’ \ Ii .,I i&s

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REGINA (CUP&The Council of document however, the work of the Ministers’ of Education (CME) anTask Force will continue in the upnounced following its closed meetcoming yeZr, and will result in a ings here on September 9-10 that it more detailed report “in order for is requesting ‘ ‘immediate -_ .-amendthe Councilto have a clearer unments 1’ to the Canada Student derstandingof the financial and soLoans Act. ’ cial implications”3f new student But the Council, ‘which consists aid policies. of the Education Ministers from all Student aid consideration willten provinces, refused at a press also form part of the discussion this conference following the meeting November when CME and federal to say anything about the substance ministers meet, again in closed sesof the lamendments being re- sion. r Although. CME refuses to detail quested: And the chairperson ofthe CME, what the proposed students aid-BC Education Minister Eileen amendments entail,.they did state Dailly , in response to questions. . that aid for part-time stud&& a& about open decision-making, took students taking .“short courses” a hard line against student or public forms a part of the proposal. participation in the Council’s stuIt is also believed the recomdent aid policy making. mendations dealwith: tying in stuAt the Regina-meetings, the dent aid to other income mamteCME received what was intended nance programs such as welfare to -be the final report of the secret ’ and m&power retraining ‘schemes. Federal-Provincial Task Force on As well, sources say the report Student Aid. According to a CME deals with the possible creation of a ]

--Na$onal Loans Cqmmittee to not complain about being excluded that the Task -Force hold public oversee student aid programs in because other groups, such as hearings in preparing its report’ to , Canada. the CME. Responding to a’student teachers, and trustees, were also These sources also revealed that - excluded from the ‘Task Force,, question on this, Bert Hohol of Alberta said-that although he did not the report and recommendations of which consists entirely -of senior student aid officials. the Task F-orce were forwarded to favour - ‘ ‘active student participa“They are excluded so as to extion” on the Task Force, he called Secretary of State Hugh Faulkner on August 12, prior to the CME public hearings where “in&rested pedite our national goals far better”, she explained. meeting, and the provinces-feel the groups like NUS” could state their . As far as CMEis concerned “it’s decision for implementation now views, “an excellent idea”. 8 far better for each provincial derests with the federal government. Gordon MacMurphy of Sasp&y-minister to get feedback from The letter, which was sentunder katchewan said he was “open to their students which‘ can then be I the idea”, but Dailly claimed that the signature of. last year’s CME chairperson Thomas Wells of Onpassed on collectively to the Counpublic- hearings would be “too tario, apparently’ stated that the.- cil of Ministers”, she said. much”, adding that public hearings Dailly was not able to speak for provinces wanted- the Students were not the business of the Task Loans Act reopened “‘if necesthe whole CME on the possibility Force. ’ : . * . sary” to deal with the recommen- dations. -The CME press release, however, clearly calls for “amendments” to the Act, but whether this will happen or the changes will be pushed through as new administrative procedures is still unclear. Alberta Education Minister Bert _Hohol told the press conference it 871 -Vidtoria St. N. - 744-35X1 was possible todealwith the propNO JEANS PLEASE ose,d charges administratively Every Wednesday is Singles Night I rather than-by changing the legislaIN THE CROWN ROOM THIS WEEK _ tion. c The--difference in ;he two api . , proaches is that if-amendments to the Act are required the whole subi ject of-student aid could be thrown open for .public debate, something most federal and provincial offr/RONNIE /’ cials appear intent on avoiding. i HAWI(I’NS -Jim Gray and Elspeth Guild of the University of Regina Student _I Union passed out releases at the .Apress conference from the National . - --4Jnion of Students calling for student and public participation in student’aid decision-making. , L The most vocal supporter of .-closed decision-making, the new * CME chairperson Eileen Dailly; said student participation was not FULL HOUSEdiscussed by the Council, despite .-.,/ ’ repeated requests from NUS last year that students be included on . the Task Force. She-argued that students should

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THE COUNSELLtNG CENTRE IS OFFEqtNG A VARIETY OF STUDENT- ,. DEVELOPMENT GROUPS THts FALL WHICH WILL ENAI~LE-~~UDENTS’ -* TO DEVELOP SOCIAL, PE-RSONAL ANCi ACADEMIC SKILLS: THEREARE 8 <SMALL GROUP&:’ VOCATIONAL \ INTEREST SELF-DIRECTED . BE,HAy>OUR . GhANGE; RELAXATION: TRAINING; G-ESTALiCQUPLES/thAFiRiAGE’ EkRtCHMENT\.ASSERTION TRAINING WORK: ?SHOt=FOR WOMEN; COMM’Utilfi; AND COUPLES. , _ . _ . * -CON%ACT US IF‘YOU WANT t&RE INFORMATION 6R TO-.JOIN A ’ -GROUP. COUNSELLtN’G SERVICt%, NEEDLES -HALL, EXTEFklON

TQRONTQ (CUP)-The ability to and the tieing of this directly to th afford suitible accommodation cost of living “becomes obvious” often -determines whether or -not a ‘ ‘As this school year progresses student will ‘attend college or uniit appears certain that more ant versity, says the Ontario Federamore students will be forced to de tion of Students. x tide between a place -to slee? ant OFS spokesperson Dale Martin, their-stomachs.” in a recent Asue “of the Ontririo c ’ Martin believes the way to solv Student said that although the cost ‘the problem will be reaehel of attending a post-secondary inthrough a major effort by all con stitution Continues, to be the prime cernedmto agitate for programs tha deterrent to universal accessability” will guarantee reasonable rents fo ade/quate living space. But he main to higher education, board and lodging comprise the largest extains that students should guarc penditure faced by students. against isolating themselves fron And’ this expenditure, usually thegeneral movement for adequat about 60 per cent, is often the dehous.ing at a reasonable c’os t. _ tenninantior attendance. *. , . “Ways must be found to joi “An immediate concern is the withs’existing groups ‘to articulat, absurdly low- board and lodging althe particular needs-of student ten lowance under the Ontario Assisants, while. at the s’ame time addin; tance Program”, he said. the student voice to ‘those ahead: With vacancy rates of one per demanding improvyd housing.” cent or less in most Ontario By associating student tenant un centres; rents skyrocketing at ions to existing community groups anywhere from 15 to 20 per cent per 1says Martin, the goals of raisin] ’ year; and food cost increasing at student housing issues and estab over 20 per cent per year,, Martin lishing areas of common concerl ,-says the need for an-immediate in- can be much more effectively,pur crease in the -“living allowance’~‘~ sued. ., “In no way must students fine themselves in a position of compet ition with the rest of the communit! for limited livmg space;’ ’ he says According to Martinsuch a situa tIon would seriously jeopardize the chances for any positive change b! directing the attackxaway from the real culprit, the, provincial govern ment. _-

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Go0 silent o.nprof-its’. loud. / onIlab'or. - - ' _. TORONTO (CUP)-In a stinging indictment of federal government economic policies, a top labour leader has accused the Liberal government of compliciky with the corporations to the prejudice of the Canadian people in general. In her address to the Labour Day uncheon at the Canadian National Exhibition here, Shirley Carr, ex:cutive vice-president of the Canalian Labour Congress said the abour movement accepts the chalenge made by Trade and Comnerce Minister Alastair Gillespie ‘to tell it how it is” withrelation to vage settlements which Mr. Gilespie had said, could “kill lanada’s competitiveness and / i rosperity . ’ ’ Mrs. Carr quoted figures showng that while the portion of naional income going to wages and salaries decreased from 72.9 to 70.5 Jercent from 1971 to 1974, the ihare Of corporate profits had risen, Yom 12.3 to 17 percent; during that iame period profits had risen an mprecedented 111 percent while lverage earnings increased by only 5 percent.

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19, 1975

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“There can be no sacred cows or ions, the previously deafening silselfish interests left outside. If one ence from the political powers then all turned into a ridiculous cry for \ group is to be restrained, must be restrained,” she said, wage and price restraints,” which would never really means wage restraints, she ,waming that “Labour willingly bend its neck to the yolk in said. , splendid isolation”. All was right when profits were Labour, whose very reason for at an all-time high, she said, “but when wages began to catchup . beingis social and economic progress, has the economic muscle to inflation and unemployment became an urgent problem and the care for its own, she said. Its failure has been its “inability to influence politicians were free to attack the to treat all collective bargaining system and the Liberal government the trade union movement as the groups in an equitable way”. “‘The lack of the political will to act in this cause. “The way it is, Mr. Gillespie, is regard is something for which the politicians must answer. ” that you and the government of which you are a part, akted in an Keynes tossed. l

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seeking to protect-and to serve the into history interests of the corporate community against the interests of the . Mrs. Carr said Canadian society a “subtle yet disCanadian people in general and of had undergone tinct change” in the last decades. workers in particular*” “The new interdependent nature of Mrs. Carr said there’ is no evi- society, the world of administered dence that Canadian ‘exports are prices and of supply and demand, b eing piiced out of foreign markets all of which Keynesian economics nor that Canada is losing its ability assumed, has passed into history to compete internationally. The almost unnoticed,” she said. seven percent decline in exports in “As a result~government no the past year is “due to intemalonger can push and pull on the tional recession and not the loss of Corporation restraint our ability to compete,” she said. monetary and fiscal levers” to con“Where was the government “It is simple common sense that if trol inflation and unemployment. vhen this w&s happening,” she the US. (our largest customer) is “A new power structure is emergsked. “Where ‘were the calls by suffering from a recession, ing in which the financial communboliticians for price restraints? Canada’s exports will also decline ity must now share its preponderYhere indeed were the corporabecause demand-in the U.S. will ance of power with organized ions and those in positions of redrop.” labour. ’ Lponsibility within them to the Ending on a note of optimism, No sacred cotis Canadian people? I would suggest Mrs. Car-r predicted that the share hat the corporate community was . Mrs. Carr said the Canadian of national income going to wages ursuing its own selfish- interests Labour Congress acted in a “reand salaries can be expected to rend the maximization of its sponsible and intelligent manner” turn to its 1971 position. “This is rofits . . . with the blessing of the throughout its talks with govemeven now beginning to happen and =deral government, for the politiment on a consensus for wage and when the cycle is complete the ians stand condemned through price restraints and insisted that pressure on prices from the wage 1ei.r own silence.” any program, if it were to succeed, side will subside and the system During the period in question, must be equitable to& elements in should return to equilibrium. Ty rorkers were tied into two and the community including “old-age tree-year contracts and powerless pensioners, unorganized workers ) act, while the corporations were and&l those who are defenseless .” chasing after every dollar they During that time the corporate ould grab,” Mrs. Carr charged. interests and professional groups “However when the economic took no public stand, except a ycle turned around and these number of “apologetic utterances about their concerns”, Mrs. Cat-r ltne workers could exercise their zonomic muscle through their unsaid.

ART GALLERY, UNIVERSITY

Sept. 11-O&. 5 HAROLD FOSTER “PRINCE VALIANT”

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OF WATERLOO

_ Exhibition

Sunday, September 21, 1975 -7i30 p.m. Room 3006, lra/G. Needles Hall Graduate

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These are-the Council members for 1975-76 Mathematics ’ Arts

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An exhibition of original drawings and designs for the spit adventure strip, “PRINCE VALIANT” in the days of -King Arthur,” produced by- Hal Foster,: a Canadian-born artist: 1 From the collection at the George Arents Research Library, Syracuse, N .Y.

Alan Kessel . Doug Ward Mark Wills Bruce-’ Rorrisor?

Engineering

Gallery Hours: Mon.- Fri. 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. Sundays 2 a.m. - 5 p.m. Free Admission

SAT. SEPT. ‘27 - 2 p.m. Film: .Prince Valiant -

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3ne showing of the 20th Century IFOX,1954, colour ‘ilm, “PRINCE VALIANT”, based’ on Hal Foster’s world-famous Sunday comic strip, adventures, staring Robert Wagner, Janet Leigh & James Mason. 7lmed in the British Isles, the medieval pageantry is amily entertainment. rheatre of the Arts idmission $1 .OO, students and senior: citizens 50 ;ents. ’ .’ ‘\ I 3entral Box Office Ext. 2126.

John Long Gary Dryden , Denis Richardson ’ , OH-Term CQ-op seat vacant

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Paul Chown -Gary Oates c Albert Sweetnam *Hugh Alley Ian-MacMillan

Envirohmental _

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Studies

Michael Gordon’ Lois Lipton 1 Co-op seat vacant .

H.K.L.S.

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Rosemary Postalian Fred Wilson i Don Banyard ) \

Renison -. -

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Barb lnnes Nunn

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Brian Miatello -

Science

Integrated Studies

Robbi Howlett John Carter

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r Tony Di Pasquale . Bill Brown 2 Science regular seats vacant --Ralph Torrie / “Proxied to Len Tremblay If your constituency representative has not returned to school, please .. notify-the Federation Office. Council Members are reminded to notify the office of local addresses and to-hick I 2 up their m-ail. .

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friday, septmber

19, 1975

Feds to take cohtrol of Dub *=

After almost two years of political and bureaucratic ‘haggling, the Fedqation of Students will finally assume till control of the Campus Center Pub “within the next week or ‘so,” federation president John Shortall said Wednesday. ShortaIl said the new agreement with the university will demonstrate that “students can managetheir own pubs.” The federati-ori will be in chaSge of all financial aspects of the facility, including the hiring of a full-time pub manager, The agreement has a “mutual compensation clause” which will ensure the federation against any losses if the tiniversity licence were revoked due to some-incident at the other campus facilities, Shortall said. In addition, there’s a mutual pricing scheme between the federation and the university. To date, the Campus Center-Pub

has accumulated a deficit of over $l6,ooO and the federationI, in order to assume control of thei facility, will have to pay the university for I renovation costs t een in The federation hds negotiation with the u iversity over the pub issue sin! e September, 1973, when the pkovincial government forced univetsities to apply for licences rather than special occasion permits. dents were ineligible

fro+ I I I (

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Tests for 2 To wler. profs . With all the talk about consistent admissioti standards to universities, a .UW senator p&led the classic switch Mgnday. Rick Irving, a student rep,-on se-? nate, suggested that professors, not just students, should be tested in English. While the senate discussion centered on the experimental testing of students in English and mathema-, tics, Irving said professors with a poor command of Engliih may be doing 8arm to students who take courses at the university. UW president Burt Matthews ackriowledged that-it was an “interesting” idea, but said he had never heard of any similar testing. Last Friday, 1,800 UW first-year students participated in an exam which wti to test their achievement in English and Mathematics. the ‘tist resdis are to be compared with the high schocil tnarki Of the studen@. About a m ha the fiist:year dass wrote the test.

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involved in the running of licenced establishments on a university campus. But a statement made by the government last December allowed student unions and university administrations to reach management agreements over the running ‘of liquor facilities. Only students, staff and faculty, and their regis.tered guests are allowed in the federation pub; this measure has to be enforced because of the type of licence issued to the university by the provincial liquor licencing board.

last Friday, the c -position on the Uenis the ‘unitiersity corn debate on Renison, prhcipaI john Tow/ rapid turnover of sta had no comments tI

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no riwponse evron rati.an editorial expfaining its n so caled Affair. And in fairness to unity and in an effort to open.up his space was left open for Renison r to give his version on the college’s f. When contacted, Towler said he make on the matter.

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Quota$ com/i7s? A The Council of Ontario niver-that preference should be given sities (COU) may. -h+Fv taken to admitting qualified Canadian another stip toward the e tablish- \ studerits while at the same time set--m&t of a quota system for foreign ting aside a su@cient number of students in its recent ado i’ tion of places for applicants on student _I 1 four principles for determining adViSaS, ,missions policy. When questioned whether this meant that the COU was accepting the idea of quotas for foreign students, Irish responded that “quotas may be acceptable,. but that is better than keeping all foreign students out.” Fdlowing the meeting,- federation of students president John Shortall expressed theopinion that the COU was laying the groundwork for introducing a quota system to Ontio universities. Canadians; ‘*Although the principles themselves don’t set a quota on foreign students, they can easily be used sity setting, other countries should later to justify that type of sy$em,” be represented; Shortall said.

.JJo - 1you -pass . - Marlbet Square? Beatrice Burton need a ride to school. Beat&e Burton left school f%y years ago. That puts her in her late sixties, but sh decided to come out of retirement, and enrolled in a fmt year A program. Beatrice is excited at. e pros&ts of a three year program, with a rnqior in Spanish. Her f stlanguage lab she said was “fantastic”. Her fellow stuc&nls aret -just as Cllsoriented 8s me, but have more pizzazz * ’ . And she feels$he informality’of today’s students is all to But with the transit she is finding it difEcult to get to school and is seeking help. She omes intc&itchener by bus and can be at

can help her out, you c

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at 6534633

after 7:30 p.m.


friday,

September

the chevron

19, 1975

The slow death ’ I - *’ of t72tWury poisoning

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While Kenora, Ontario, festers on the poison of racism, the native people are dying of the poison of, mercury. Two Japanese experts on Minamata disease-environmental mercury poisoning-say the situation at two reserves near,Kenora is grave and shocking. They found symptoms consistent with early mercury poisoning. Cats at White Dog and Grassy Narrows reserve are dying the same bizarre deaths as cats in Minamata and Niigata, Japan, before the disease showed up in humans a few years ago. . The Japanese experts termed the Canadian govermental officials supposedly involved with the mercury situation as “irresponsible, indifferent, and (they) know nothing about mercury at all.” So far, all the meaningful data collected on the subject in Canada has come not from government, but from concerned laymen. “If you don’t start action you will have a more serious result than we had,” Dr. Jun Ui, professor of urban engineering at the University of Tokyo, told a public meeting at the University of Toronto in late March. Dr. Masazumi Harada, of the University of Kumanmoto, and chief medical investigator of Minamata Disease in Japan, said, “The situation is very shocking. Please don’t repeat the mistakes we made in Japan.” Dr. Harada showed a film of Japanese cats writhing in uncontrollable spasms, or trying to walk on hind legs that wouldn’t respond. Many cats in that country dragged themselves to the sea and drowned themselves. Before the disease was dubbed Minamata Disease, people of that town called it “cat’s dancing disease.” Then he showed a film of a cat from the White Dog reserve. It was going through the same motions. After their investigations in the north, the two experts then spoke at the University of Toronto’s Medical Science Center along with Chief Andy Keewatin. They told the general public it should organize support to force the Canadian Government to release all its reports on mercury poisoning and to stop the companies from further pollution. Dr. Jun Ui said, “I think that in the Dryden (Kenora) area it is worse than it is in Japan. Here, there’s not as much mud and the mercury lies on top longer, while in Japan the mud covers it up and it’s coming out of the various river mouths.” Dr. Jun Ui told the audience, “If it were this bad in Japan, people would actually be taking matters into their own hands.” The two physicians were also shocked at the living conditions of the native people. “If people had to live like that inJapan,” they said, ‘ ‘they’d automatically rebel .” People can get mercury poisoning by eating the types of food in the area: fish, ducks, and even deer which drink the polluted water and eat the poisoned grass along the shore. The disease, which attacks the central nervous system, has no known cure. It makes people act something like a drunk. In 1956, when Minamata Bay in Japan was polluted with heavy metals, the people of Minamata took the struggle into their own hands and won an anti-pollution law which places the burden of proof on the company that it is not polluting. If the people can show they suffered harm, the company must pay 100% compensation, plus

100% of whatever it costs for them to clean it up. The two Japanese scientists pried out of Ottawa officials the information that a cat brought into the area and fed the same fish the native people eat developed Minamata disease within 100 days. The Canadian Government has said that the official results will not be released for 1.5 years. Dr. Ui said the pulp waste in Dryden was incredible in a country that had been described to him as a kind of paradise with green forests and blue lakes. He also expressed surbetprise in the ‘ ‘large difference ween the whites and the Indians, especially the miserable living conditions on the reserves.” And, he added, “all of us were surprised with the meeting with the Standing Committee for Mercury Pollution in Ottawa. Some members of the Government are irres: ponsible and indifferent in their attitude. Some know nothing of mercury at all.” In July, ten White Dog and Grassy Narrows people, at least some of whom are sure to have mercury poisoning, were brought to Tokyo by the Minamata Patients’ Federation, composed of\ Japanese people who are victims of the disease. There they will see medical experts-doctors who know something about the disease. Just a week before, Prof. Tadao from Takeuchi announced Kumamoto that brain specimens of two cats, one from each reserve, showed both cats had been poisoned. One of the cats had died with the classic symtoms of mercury poisoning, and the other cat was killed before the disease itself had finished it off. At the same time,Jhe governor of Kumamoto prefecture in which

Minamata lies added 15 more persons to the list of 723 known victims of the disease. 120 persons on the list have already died. Government experts have traced the source of the mercury in the affected English and Wabigoon River systems to the Dryden Chemical Company in its processes to supply the companion Dryden Pulp and Paper Co. mill. The company says it will be converting to a nonmercury system later this year “if the equipment comes in time.:’ However, it is inherent in mercury poisoning that the mercury will be in the water for generations to come, and people who already have the disease but who have not yet begun to show outward symptoms cannot be helped. Ian Ramsay, director of Environment’s Thunder Bay office, confirmed that the mercury in the bottom sludge is expected to be a problem “for nobody knows how long.” He thinks the Kenora ‘ ‘problem’ ’ is going to be a longer, stretched-out versipn of the Minamata tragedy. Dr. Peter Newberry, a retired Canadian Forces physician, has been at the reserves since last November. He tells of one 35-year-old man with high mercury readings, a man who once had hopes of playing professional hockey, who now has an uncontrollable quiver in his upper lip, difficulty pronoucing some words, and is unable to balance on one foot with his eyes closed. That is the beginning of the end. Grassy Narrows is just 50 miles from Kenora. It’s only commercial food supply is the Hudson’s Bay Company’s store, where food prices are about twice the rates in Kenora. A dozen eggs are $1.65, bacon $1.85 a slab pound, apples $2.35 for five pounds. The Indian Affairs Department had rejected a plea from Grassy Narrows for help in starting a non-profit cooperative store-the Department ruled such astore would be unfair competition for the Hudson’s Bay Co. The Ontario and Canadian governments continue to sidestep the issue. On April 30, the Ontario government offered the Indians community freezers and access to uncontaminated lakes so they may fish to stock the freezers. standard Recently, the don’t-eat-the-fish letters sent to residents of the two reserves were withdrawn. The universal advice now is not to eat the fish. Ontario Cabinet ministers, notably Health Minister Frank Miller, repeatedly told the Ontario Legislature last fall that “we told the Indians to stop eating the fish.” Actually, there were three letters -severely poisoned persons were told no more fish, while those lessseverely poisoned were advised to eat smaller fish, and to fish in waters with lower mercury counts. The politicians and their scientific hired hands were stiIl saying that they lacked proof that the mercury is damaging Indian health. “We are getting more cautious,” they concede. Besides, as Dr. Peter Connop, Thunder Bay zone director of the federal Health Ministry’s medical services branch says, “All the politics of the whole matter are very complicating factors. ’ ’ That includes efforts on the part of the government not to say anything that might further damage the tourist and sport-fishing industries of Ontario’s north, already taking lqsses in their profits from the temporary bans on fishing for food the Ontario Government issued in 1973. As a partial and temporary

measure, native people at Restigouche Reserve on the St. Lawrence River in eastern Quebec announced it would ship freshlycaught salmon to their relatives at White Dog and Grassy Narrows. All costs of the donated shipment were covered by the Micmac reserve. In return appreciation, the Ontario reserves sent wild rice to Res tigouche. Aileen M. Smith, who with her husband, W. Eugene Smith, one of the U.S.’ most famous news photographers, had documented the

Minamata disease, tells how she had talked to her friends in Japan about what was happening with the native people in Kenora. “They shake their heads. ‘Won’t we ever learn?’ they say. I wish the Canadians could hear Minamata patients speak of Canada as though it were just as close to them as any part of the Minamata area. I wish somehow that I could make those people in Canada feel the anguish in the eyes of the Minamata patients for the patients-to-be. ’’

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11

ow- pove r tY Ever since the 78th century when Thomas Ma/thus drew his correlations between population growth and the development of resources and concluded that population would inevitably outstrip production, there has been an increasing interest in the nature of the relationship between overpopulation and poverty. In the foliowing article which appeared in Ramparts magazine Barry Commoner, director of the Center for the Biology of Natural Systems at Washington University, examines the problem of world population and concludes that overpopulatipn is the result rather than the cause of poverty on a national scale, and that it can on/y be remedied by “returning to the poor countries enough of the wealth taken from them to give their peoples both the reason and theresources voluntarily to limit their own fertility. ”

by Barry Commoner The world population problem is a bewildering mixture Df the simple and the complex, the clear and the confused. What is relatively simple and clear is that the population af the world is getting larger, and that this process cannot go on indefinitely because there are, after all, limits to the resources, Such as food, that are needed to sustain human life. Like all living things) people have an inherent tendency to multiply geometrically-that is, the more people there are the more people they tend to produce. In contrast, the supply of food rises more slowly, for unlike people it does not increase in proportion to the existing rate of food production. This is, of course, the familiar Malthusian relationship and leads to the conclusion that the population is certain eventually to outgro\j the food supply (and other needed resources), leading to famine and mass death unless some other countervailing force intervenes to ljmit population growth. One can argue about the jetails, but taken’as a general summary of the population problem, the foregoing statement is one which no environmentalist can sucCessfully dispute. When we turn from merely stating the problem to gnalyzing and attempting to solve it, the issue becomes nuch more complex. The simple statement that there is a imit to the growth of the human population, imposed on it ?y the inherent limits of the earth’s resources, is a useful 3ut abitract idea. In order to reduce it to the level of reality n which the problem must be solved, what is required is that we find the cause of the discrepancy between popdaion growth and the available resources. Current views on this question are neither simple nor unanimous. One view is that the cause of the population problem is uncontrolled fertility, the countervailing force-the death rate-having been w&ened by medical advances. Aczording to this view, given the freedom to do so people will inevitably produce children faster than the goods needed ;o support them. It follows, then, that the birthrate must be deliberately reduced to the point of “zero population yowth’ ’ . The .methods that have been proposed to achieve this sind of direct reduction in birthrate vary consid&rably. 4mong the ones-advanced in the past are: (a) providing 3eople with effective contraception and access to abortion Facilities and with education about the value of using them :i.e., family planning); (b) enforcing legal means to prevent couples from producing more than some standard number If children (“coercion”); (c) withholding of food fi-om the 3eople of starving developing countries which, having Tailed to limit their birthrate sufficiently, are deemed to be ;oo far gone or too unworthy to be saved (the -so-called ‘life-boat ethic”). It is appropriate here to illustrate these diverse apbroaches with examples”. The family planning approach is o well known as to need no further exemplification. As to he second of these approaches, one might cite the followng description of it by Kingsley Davis, a prominent denographer, which is quoted approvingly in a recent statenent by “The Environmental Fund” that is directed igainst the family planning position: “If people want to .ontrol population, it can be done with knowledge already Lvailable . . .For instance, a nation seeking to stabilize its copulation could shut off immigration and pemit each :ouple a maximum of two children, with possible license br a third. Accidental pregnancies beyond the limit would je interrupted by abortion. If a third child were born vithout a license, or a fourth, the mother would be

sterilized.” (Quoted from the Environmental Fund’s Statement “Declaration on Population and Food”; original in Daedalus, Fall, 1973). The author of the “lifeboat ethic” ii Garrett Hardin, who stated in a recent paper (presented in San Francisco at the 1974 annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science) that: “So long as nations multiply at different rates, survival requires that we adopt the ethic of the lifeboat. A lifeboat can hold only so many people. There are more than two billion wretched people in the world-ten times as many as in the United States. It is literally beyond our ability to save them all. . .Both international granaries and lax immigration policies must be rejected if we are to save something for our grandchildren.” Actually, this recent statement only cloaks, in the rubric of ari “ethic,” a more frankly political position taken earlier by Hardin: “Every day we (i.e., Americans) are a smaller minority. ‘We are increasing at only one percent a year; the rest of the world increases twice as fast. By the year 2000, one person-in 24 will be an American; iri one

hundred years only &ne in 46’. . .If the world is one great commons, in which all food is shared equally, then we are lost. Those who breed faster will replace the rest. . .In the absence of breeding control a policy of ‘one mouth one meal’ ultimately produces one totally miserable world. In a less than perfect world, the allocation of rights based on territory must be defended if a ruinous breeding race is to be avoided. It is unlikely that civilization and dignity-can survive everywhere; but bet& in a few places than in none. Fortunate minorities must act as the trustees of a civilization that is threatened by uninformed good intentions . ’ ’ (Science, Vol. 172, p. e1297; 1971). -

The Ouditv of Life

But there is anothe;view o&opulation which is much more complex. It is based on the evidence, amassed by demographers, that the birthrate is not only affected by biological factors, such as fertility and contraception, but by equally powerful social factors. Demographers have delineated a complex network of interactions among these social factors. This shows that population growth is not the consequence of a simple arithmetic relationship between birthrate and death rate. Instead, there are circular relationships in whidh, as in an ecological cycle, every step is connected to several others. Thus, while a reduced death rate does, of course, in-

crease. the rate of population growth, it can also have the opposite effect-since families usually ‘respond to a reducedI’rate of infant mortality by opting for fewer children. This negative feedback modulates the effect of a decreased death rate on population size. Similarly, although a rising population increases the demand on resources and thereby worsens the populatiop problem, it also stimulates economic activity. This, in turn, improves educational levels. As a result the average age at marriage tends to increase, culminating in a reduced birthrate-which mitigates the pressure on resources. In these processes, there is a powerful social force which, paradoxically, both reduces the death rate (and thereby stimulates population growth) and also leads people voluntarily to restrict the production of children (and thereby reduces population growth). That force, simply stated, is the quality of life-a high standard of living, a sense of well-being and of security in the ftiture. When and how the two opposite effects of this force are felt differs with the stages in a country’s economic developmenti In a pre-modern society, such as England before the inducttrial

revolution or India before the advent of the English, both death rates and birthrates were high, But they were in balance and population size was stable. Then, as agricultural and industrial production began to increase and living conditions improved, the death rate began to fall. With the birthrate remaining high the population rapidly increased in size. However, later, as living standards continued to improve, the decline in death rate persisted by the birthrate began to decline as well, reducing the rate of population growth. For example, at around 1800, Sweden had a high birthrate (about 33/1000), but since the death rate was equally high, the population was in balance. Then as agriculture and, later, industrial production advanced, the death rate dropped until, by the mid-nineteenth century, it stood at about 20/1000. Since the birthrate remained constant during that period of time, there was a large excess of births over deaths and the population increased rapidly. Then, however, the birthrate began to drop, gradualljl narrowing the gap until in the mid-twentieth century it reached about 14&00, when the death rate was about lO/lOOO. Thus, under the influence of a constantly rising standard of living the population moved, with time, from a position of balance at a high death rate to a new position of near-balance at a low death rate. But in between thti population increased considerably. continued on page 12


Simply stated, the world has enough wealth to. support the The trouble is tha)t the world’s -entire world population. wealth is not evenEydistributed, but sharply divided- among r l

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This procesd, the -apti tr=sitian, is &ally cbaraevgistic of all western countries. In molstoftkm,tkbirth&edoesnotbegintofaII appmebly UntiI ,tk death rate is reduced below about .~IOfM. However, then the chop in birthrate israpid.AsimilartransitionaIsoappears tobeunder wayI .in countries_ like India. Thus in the nudinQeteenthcefltuly,IndialladequaIlyhighbirth ad death rates (about 50/1000) and tk population ~8s in approximate baIat.uz Thea, as Iiving standards improve& tJIe @th rate dropped to its presentkvelof~~15~1ooOand~~~droppcd, at Grist Srowly and recei3tly more ra@Iy, to its present levd of 42/iooO. India is at a criticaI point; now

balancing) phase of t$e demographic transition couldmttake@ce.Insteadthewealthp~in tk CoIolly was largely diverted to tk add mtim+wkre it hdped that country-achieve for itself the second phase of the demo5@ic transition. Thus coIoniaIism invdves a hind of demographic parasitism: The second, populationbaIancingphaseoftkdem~ctransitioninthe advanced country is fed by the SuppreSsion of that same phase in the colony.

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T%@iefmrsonfortkrCIpdriseinpopuIationin ~dop&cmnt&sistImtthSasicconditionhas not been met. Tk ex@natkEdis a @ct about devdapiqg ccmmia which is often forgo-t 4u~ywgr~recently,8odintheecuno~sense~n still ramin, c&&s of more developed countries. Intkcdwialpaiod,westernnationsh~d improvedIi~couditions(ioads,communications, eng+ehg, 2a&ultural and medical services) as incm!Betklaborfarce p=mtbEircampaign~ medal to exploit the colcmy’s natural resources. Thisinaeaseinlivings~‘~tkfmt phase oftk demographic transition. . s tk

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books-From 957 to 1960, I never readitintkir fakd.‘AsaSii,however, MOllWIlOhlUlbeen boru SoMetime in “I& 1958 % 19!!9.’ At our third ‘beeting I pointed this out + him . . .Fidly k Iooked at me and respondeqk ‘Babqji, someday youll understand. It is sometimes better to lie. It stopsjmfbmhmtingp&@ ,doesnoharm,and mighteirenklptkm.‘Tkne tdayA!3asiito& me to a friend’s house . . .ad ” saw small rectangular boxes and bottles,~0ne

IthaSlongl3eenknownthatthe~nclirve ofweaIthandpowerdWesternElrropc,aadIalerof theUnitedStatesandJapan,hasbeenheatiybased

-on exploitation of resources taken from tk less powerfid nations: colonies, whether governed legexpect the birthrate to-fall ally, or-as in the case oftk U.S. contrd ofcertaip tk death rate & furtkr recountriesAy extra-IegaI and , Latin American , living condi~ns. economic means. Tke result has been agrossIy ine, quitkble rate of deklopment amow the nations of One indicator of the quality of life-infant tkworId.A~tkweaIthoftheexpIoitednationswas mcn-tdity-is qxcially decisive in this process. diverted to the more poweM ones, their power, arad And~tbtaeisac~~pointt~rateofinfant. with it their capacity to exploit, increased. TIE gap morMity below which birthrate begins to drop betweenthewealthofnationsgrew,astkrichwwt sI~~@yand,apppachiqgtbedeathrate,,c.reatesthc . . fed by tk poor. * cxm&wms for a balanced population. The reason is that couples are interested in the number of Whatisevidentfromtkabovecons~is ri~&&chiIdrenandrespondtoalowrateofinf~t that this pnxess 0finternaW expl0bth.b ~byreatizingthattheynolongerneedto had another very pwerful but unanticipated eB&fS: haye nmre chiIdren to replace the ona that die.. rapid gruwth of the population in the fon&cr cdBirth co&d is, of course, a necessary adjunct ‘to onies. An analysis by the demographer, Nathan this process; but it can succeed-barring Keyfitz, leads him to conclude that the growth of compuIsiob-only in tk presence of a rising Stanindus~ capitalism in the western nations in the dard of Ii*, which of itself generates tk necesperiod 180&1950 resulted in the de&o-t of a sary lmtivatim. -one-billion excess in the @d population, largely in \ the tropics. Thus the pres@ world popuIation TlGprocessappearstobejustascharacteriSticof a-israpid growth of population in developing devdopii counm of deveIoped ones. This can countries (tk former coIon+M tk resuh not So ksanbyplottingtkpMentbiiatesagainsttk~ much ofpoIicies pllKk@dbytksecoun~~t present rat& of infant mor&ty for aiI’ava&ble ofapdky, colo~.explo+ati&n, forced on theni try natimd data The highest rates of Mtit mortaIi@ de&o@ countries. + atein~countries;tkyareintherangeof 53-175~1ooO Iii births and b&hrates are about 27-52/1dMMk Iu‘tho6e czz5untries where infant&or&al-~ ity has improved somewhat (for exampie, in a numkrdrAmAmericanandAsjall~~tries)tk dropin~is sIight(toakut45/1ooo)untiIthe ‘;Giventhisbac&round,wha&besGdabcmttk infantmortality reaches about lJQ/lMKl. Then, as - vari6usalternativ&&IGdsofachievingabaIa&ed infantmorMitydropsfrom80/1060toabout25~1ooO worldpopuIation?IaI@ia,therehasbeenaai& (tk Qpe cham@ristic of most deveIoped count4Fnshg,if~y-&~~te3torF -),~~~~pssharpzyfrom~toahout two-7 ,of the possible approqzhes: hmily planniq 15-181i;00D;:*aratcufmmortalityof&011800 procparns and efhts (also on a family b@s), to isacri&aItMingpoi.ntwhichcanIeadtoavery d&tetkIivingstan&ud.‘~ofth.ixtest xapid&cIS%bir&ra&inresponsetoaf&ther show that WIliak iitnjly pJanl& eifixt itsdf reduction in idhnt mortality. Tk htter, in turn, is fiBikttoreducetk~,iui~livi4gs~ ’ adways vexy responsive to nutrition. Consequently, dards~ed., _Y . tkreis-akiird&mcialstandardofti~whlch,If achieved,canLeadtoarapidred~tioninbir&ate Inl944, aHarvard ttam -thefirst* ad an apprpach to a biaIMced~~uIation. -fieIdstudyofbirthcontrdinIndia.l%epop&ion ofanumberoftest~wasp~videdwitlrcoaThus,inhumansocieties,tkreisabuilt*crwtraqptives and suitable educationaI pmgqms; trd IIJL popdation size: If tk standard of living, biidCa;thratesMdbealthStatllSi.KlMequibhich~tkrJseinpopuWbn,cm&~to valent population in contruI villages. The study coincmsek, tk$o@atbn eventud@.kgb to levd vered tk six-year @eriod 195&1%0* ufKT%kdfke@aGngprocessbegkwiYthapopuA,f$Iow-upin1%9showedthattk+dywas-a Iationin~,butatahighdeatbratemdIow faiture. Ahhough in@e test pop&%&m tkcnlde standMdIi*.Ittknprogresscst&azdapopu~ , bi&ratedropped~4Oper1,oo@inl957to35per latiaawhicbis~r,butoncemoreinbalancc,ata 1,060in@68,asimilar~ctionaIsooccllarradintk krarda&rateandahighstandardofIiving. contrdpopulatioll.-m~~trd~hadno mei3surabIe effectoi t&&rate.

. mo@eratelyw&off and ric much larger number of pet countries have high birth? .

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What thisdiscr~ c&m to&e.per~~~yealth of developed j Thus there is a-grave imbalance between the . ofth&world-(at- countries. world?3 wealth agld the -waEwq.teagge. ButthdMl&st as rntmmedb~-~GNP)Lwer&i-b ehnly dish ,-Food plays a critical rdein these relationships~ b~~~is~tbe~disparity~bctwien~,.” tribyted amo@he pe@e ,pf the--world&e entire Hunger is $videspre$d in the worldand those who world% total wkaIth and tobl population. Rather* it . world pol5ulation should have a low. birthratebelieve that the world’s resourc& are already ipsuf- is due to the gross dlMIu&e iml&nce amongthe -about 20/l ,OOO-which would- approach that ftientto support the world population ci&e this fact n&ions of the world. What the problem calls fk, I characteristic of most European andNorth Ameriz as the most powerful evidence that the world is _ - believe,& process that now figures strongly in the 1__ ,~ overpopulated. Conversely, -those who are conthi&ingof%e~ftheThirdWorl&aretum 1 - cancoun~es(15/l-,800).l _ Simply stied, -the world hasenough wealth to ) cemed3vith relieving hunger and preventing future -o~~~~eofthe~~sweaithto’the~~whose i famines often ‘assert that the basic’ solution to that support the ent$e world population at a level that resourcesandljeoples h&&borne somuchofthe appearsto convfnce,most people that they need not problem is to contrd the growth of the world populaburden of pr~odu$ngit~ developing countries. , , numbers of children~ The trouble is .- tion.. . .. . have excessive wealth is nutevenlj+W.r&uted, but Once more it is revealing to, examine actual data -. -‘MM& lArnong NlirtiOnS ~ that the wqldk __ -&u-ply divided among moderately well-off andrich regarding the incidence of malnutrition. From the There is no denying that this proposal would in- , ;_ countriti on the onehand and a.muchlarger number detailed study of nutritional levels among various volve exceedingly diflicult,~~~ social and ’ of people that are very poor. The poor countries populations in India by Revel& & Frisch (Vol. lIl, political-problems, especially for the richkountriesl. ’ have high birthrates because ’ they are extremely ,LYlhe World Food Problem”, A Report of the ..Butthealt&&tivesoh&ionsthusf&radvaricedareat poor, and they are extremely poor because-other President% Science Advisory Committee, Washingleastasdilii&ultandsociallystressful. -__, - w~trks are extremely rich. ’ ton, E&7) we learn, for example, that in Madra$ -‘A major source of&nfusion is that these div&se. I ’ ,Lj State more than one-halfthe population .consumes proposed solutions to the population problem, , - ;. _significantly less than the physiologically required whichdi.ffersosharplyintheirmoX%Qostulatesand number of-calorie6 and of-I&em in their diet. How- - - theirpoliticaleff&ts,appeartohavea~nbase . -’ ever, the average!values forallresidents of the state _ iu scientific fact. It-is, after all, equally true, s&&irepresents-99 pe&entof the calorie requirement and fically, th& the birthrate can be reduced by promul98 percent\_of the protein requirement. What this - gathg contraceptivepractices (providing they are? means, of tiurse; is that asignificant part of-the used), by elevating living st@da+,‘or by withho& population r&ives mere than the required dietary iug food fi’omstarvingnations. intake. About one-jhird of the,population r&ives ’ But what I find~arly~disturbing isthat be- - -’ 106 percent of the required calories and 104 percent - hind this screen of confusion eeen scientiiic f+t a+lpoliticalintenttherehas~elopedahescalatrog of therequired protein; about 8 percent of thepopulation receives 122 percent or more of the calorie , series of what can be only q$arded,.in,my opinion, requirement and 117 percent or more of the protein aS inhumane, abhorrent-political schemes put fawardinthegu&ofscience. Firstwehkl~l?s . requirement. These dietary differences are-determimqtl by. in&me. -The more than one-half of the“triage” prop&d, whichwouldcondemnwhole-na, population that is signifi&ntly below the physiologi: _ tions to death through some species ofglolml3etally required dietearnless than $21 per capita-per nign neglect”; Then we have s+emes fi#&er%ing ’ ,- year, as compared with the statewide average of ~2 ~~e~;f-@tyv by #YS=Wd . .$33.4-o. ’ ommously-left~ti~. ,N6w ‘2What thesedata indicateis that hunger in Madras’ wti are %old (for exan@e,-in thestatement of ‘YThe St/ate, dei5nedsimply in terms of-a signifi&tly in- Environmental Fun&?) &-we must curtailr&her . adequgte i&&e-of caloriesand pro.@&, is not the ->_~ thanextendo$eff?Hstof~~thehungrypeo@lesof -result of a biological f+.or~theinadequate producthe world. Where will it er+Is‘it conceivable that - tion .of f@. Rather,% the strict sense, it results th& proponents of coercive @@t&ion contfol will- . be g&did by%ne of ‘Garrett Hardin’s. earlier, asfto@ the so&l f&on ihit governthe d&trlbutik of available food among the population. .- + ’ to@&ingproposals: . -‘., LIn the last year, news&& -stories of -a+al H~~au,webipafaicigi~~~aecr-: - &miua @various part&f the world have alsosup. -‘-popd~?clearl~the:~~ritamdaipd -qpt&-fhe view hi st&-$atim is usdy-not caused fOga .,. .A,bombs ~ouId bt k&w, FOG a&w-,. by the insufficient juoduction of food in the world, 3BJQmeatst&e~wdbercajc,b8ttnoqldso8n * bijg by di&-f&,c&ws t#ggprevent the-I;eqj%ed di&--* a6~ to au eruI fm*rm& oft&16~ triktion. of. fd.’ Thus, in Ethiopia mtiy&ople ’ suffehd fhi starvation becaum governr&nt~oflI-n ’ _ -Aals failed tomobil& readily available &p@ies of-‘: ‘*I%%&’ ’ ’ ’ , ,Therehasbeenab;;lqgatandingallian&between~ ,I ,- ; foreign grain. In India, &cording~ to a recent New = pseudo+ci~~ andrepress*, the N&is; Jhr&S+es report, inade@ate food supplies were ~~~ctheories,it~be~iwetetofietested‘~ -due in part from a government p$icy ‘wl#h-“re ‘-s* in a booming Macli; m&et, aqgg r&e-hQnent _-% -iii the ovens at I&U&n. The evil Zdl+lW f& on _ among farmers and traders, and-a b&&down in ’ infusion.” Thepreseqts@imce.canberemov~by~_* ‘. supplies? The reportaSserts further th&Plhecentral problem of Ind.u&rooted poverty+emains uny ,’ _ ingjtIlofthectirrentpopulationpropo&sfkvhat they are+tot scientific observations but value-. * checkeda;nds~tobi:gettingworse..For~third yearbut0ff0~r~~capitaincomeis.expected tr judgmeqtsthqt~8barplyd~~ews drop. Nearly 80 percent of the children are -.andpoliticalintentions.The&milypla&ingap-~ malnourished . . .T& economic torpor seems sympji%bacb if applied as @E exqhsive scWion $I thq -. _ * _. !’ tomatic of -deeper problems. Cynicisms is ram@n&-problem, would-gut the bnrden of remedying a fault ’ \ ----I . r, -the Government’s socialist slogz+kal.ls for aucreated by- a social’and @#iiicalevil> stetity are mocked in view ofbribes and &rruption, -WhXhbl~V~M~~~~~indivicinralrange ill the way iw&bo& &c’Jsdi luxury tinstruction~and.vi&rdlyopen illegal conI- of the evil. The so-calM> er year; birthrate - Inasensethedemog@&ictransitionisa tnibutions by businessmen to theCongress party.” compound the or&&al evil ofcdokknby fh ’ pr capitaper year; (l&w yiiilikm, Apr. 17,1974) ‘its victims to forgo the humkne course towatxla -’ -tramthe availabihty of-a decent levelof re-wuQtryofall,the ! sourcgsFespicidy _ Giverithese observations knd the over&fact tlkt ’ b&r&d popumon, inlpmveanent.of living Stan-, . fobd, intq avduntary reduction kthre 18/1,000). the ahotmt of food crop -is sufEcient to provide.an in birthrate. It is a-striking fact that the efficiency -~,oriftheyrebose;ti~fbemtodestruc” to bring the birthadequakdiet to about eight billion peopl&m.ore ’ tion,_or even-to thrust-them toward it.d wia which sueh resources can be .eonverted into a T-than twice the worlQx@.ilatio+it ato me B to the low levels nay own purely personal -ion is, like a&ofreduced birthmte is much higher in the de-loping 5 poor countries do : co~tries that the present; tragically wides-pread hunger in the these’, not s&ntific but@&ti&& th&t theworld than in the_advanced ones. Thus an imleastasmeasured, qrorM-~~re~d~~evide~ethatthesizedf provement in GNPxx-capitaper year from let us population crisis, which-is tk &mate outcomeS :-U;& Achieving a say $682 (as in Uruguay) to $4-338 (U.S.) reduces. ’ the world population has outnrn the world’s capacthe exploitation of poor nations by e omqqmght one-fti of that of. - _ birtkak from 22]i,OOO to 18/1,000. In contrast, a& ity to produce food. I have &rady ‘l&r&d o&t&t toberemsdispby~tothepoo1:~~ r-thesekq~@r: we caqregad the rapid growth of populat$on iu enoughofthewealtbtakenfromth&ntogiveth&r , cording&~&e above relationships if the GNP per ‘deveropingcountries~d~~~~v~-~ch .’ elationship, reach capita per year chara&rist&of India-(&out $88) peoplesboth-ttiereasontithem ources-i*mF@Euiopqwd' were-increased toonly about $750, the Indian birt& -’ .‘engendeFit as a distant outcome of-colonial qy to limit their own fe. exploitahow polic$ imposed on the antecedents _~ Insum~Ibelievethatiffherootquseofthuworld .. rat&%hould fall from its actual value of about rthrate is 34/l ,OOO,42/1>ooO to about 20]1,000. To put the matter more __ of the developingkountries by ~the -more advar@d populatio~crisis ispoverty; thento end it we must hateofgrowthof'~‘simply, the per capita cost of bringing the staklard OIMS This plicy has forcefully determined both the abolish poverty. And ifthe dypoveayisthe veragecrud6dath 4 bf living of. poor cqountries with raljidl~ntqti~~ distriibution of the~world% We&than of imerent grossly unequal distriibution r w&l% wealth, then the world averz&z ~.populations to the levelwhica . pO@btiofks, accumulating’most of ti e-wealth-in the _I : toendpoverty,andw$hitthepopulationcrisis, we’ :r year-&level of WeSttXIJ c0iu+ies and most of the people in the hiiviour of peoples all over the world-would nioumust,redistribnte that wealth, among nations and 7 _1 , \ -7 of a number of navate voluntary reduction of fertility is very small, ’ remaining, lqgely t,ropi&l, ones; - withiu them. .,’ -8 d to per&t the rest rdoflivingandlow i .s. :’ readily apparent ifmship bet&en theof different coundive’ measure of ta3 &Jeglectingfor a JP as-a measure of teagainstGNPper worest countries pet *ear) have the 00 population per yexceeds $500 ling abotit 20/l ,080 nations in .North I the USSR have -15=18&OOO-ht

/ The Rot& of Ht.~n&r~~~,


14

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University ,

Saturday

Cathok

Mass Schedule 9:00 a.m. Sunday 7:00 p.m.

Parish IO:00 a.m. 11 i30 a.m. 7:00 p.m.

Weekdays

7:00 a.m. 12:35 p.m. 500 p.m. Confessions Saturday 6:15 p.m. Father Norm Choate C.R., Chaplain Father Bob Liddy C.R. call 884-8110 or 884-0863

, Notre. Dame Chapel

Intramurals: Upcoming II burneys Dates to remember The following events will be held this weekend, weather permitting so come out and support your favourite team or individual. Men’s Tennis Singles (Waterloo Tennis Club) 9-12 noon Sat Sept 20 1-1Opm Sun Sept 21 Ring Road Bicycle Race (North Kiosk) 6:3Opm Sun Sept 21 Little Olympics Track & Field (Seagrams) Mon Sept 22 6:30pm

were rained out and rescheduled for Sunday. As with all tourneys, there evolves a winner and this year Optometry defeated the defending ‘74 champs, the Baseburglars. In the first final game, Baseburglars squeaked a win 2- 1 over Optometry forcing them into a second game due to the double elimination rule of the tourney-. The second game proved too much for the Baseburglars as they had already played 6 games and had to bring in a cold substitute pitcher for the rest of the game. Optometry, with a pitcher and power hitters had a big inning where they scored 8 straight runs being victorious over the Baseburglars. Congrats to all teams who entered and hope to see all teams next

Events and dates of in- year* terest FRI. SEPT. 19-8 p.m. AUDITIONS-for THE WILD duction dates Nov. 18-22)

DUCK Ipro-

by Henrik Ibsen -$ directed by Maurice Evans Humanities Rm. 180 Rehearsals begin Tues. Sept. 23 and will be arranged to accommodate the acst. For further information contact Maurice Evans, Drama Director Modern Languages. rm. 121, ext. 2533 , Creative Arts Board, Federation of Students

SINGERS WANTED NO. 9 - (Choral) LmV. BEETHOVEN A SONG OF JOY

FOR \ SYMPHONY

for the University of Waterloo CONCERT CHOIR Rehearsals: Tues. Sept. 23 Every-Tuesday - 7-9 p.m. in Arts Lecture rm. 113 (Little/Symphony Orchestra rehearsals begin Sun. \ Oct. 5 AL 113) (String players needed) For further information contact Alfred Kunz, Direc. tor of Music ext. 2439. Creative Arts Board, Federation of Students

THURS. & FRI. SEPT. 25 & 26 - 8 p.m. THE CARETAKER , by Harold Pinter directed by Carl Gall “The production is performed with professional polish by all three performers, with Maurice Evans dominating as the old man. William Chadwick and George Joyce portray the brothers.” V. Stanton F K-W Record. Theatre of the Arts Admission $2.00 . Students & Seni.or Citizens $1.25 Central Box Office ext. 2126 Creative Arts Board, Federation of Students

MON. SEPT. 29 - 1:30 p.m. & 8 p.m. CANADIAN MIME THEATRE presents “BEYOND WORDS - MIME BY FIVE” I:30 matinee - admission $1 .OO (1 hr. long) 8:00 evening - admission $5.00 students‘and senior citizens - $2.50 Humanities Theatre Central Box Office ext. 2126 .

Men’s Golf Tourney: After playing qualifying rounds, Sept. 15- 19, championship rounds will go on Saturday and Sunday the 27th and 28th of September. Men’s Lacrosse Entry must be in by Monday, September 29 and tournament will take place on Columbia Field at 10:00 a.m. “Through rain, through hail, through dark of night the IM Department Tournaments will go on. . . This past weekend the St. Jerome’s Invitational Softball Tournament was held. What was originally scheduled to be a short 2 day tournament with the finals on became the IM Sunday Department’s first marathon baseball tournament for all teams entered. With the terrible weather on Saturday, most major games

w. W S W R I T

Rugby:

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here Saturday

Last year, University of Waterloo’s Varsity Football Club finished the season with a winning record of five wins and four losses. This year, with the nucleus of last year’s team back, head coach, Dereke Humpheries feels that this year’s team will be a first place contender. The team is far more experienced than last year’s, and many players have been playing throughout the summer with citysides.

friday,

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19, 1975

For the past week, practices have been held to condition and train players in the fundamentals of the.game. These practices will continue throughout the rest of this week. Humpheries hopes that anyone who is interested in the game will attend the team practices. He emphasizes that the club has two teams, all positions are open and no previous experience is needed to make either of the teams. The Rugby Club is an independent club. The team known as the Warriors competes at the varsity level in the Ontario University Athletic Association (O.U.A.A.) against eight other Ontario University teams. To be eligible, players must meet the O.U.A.A. criteria. The second team, known as the ‘ Troj ans ’ , is composed of players who are not eligible for the O.U.A.A. or those players who need more game experience before they compete at the varsity level. Throughout the year, the club holds numerous social events that are set up by the club’s executive. This year, among other things, the team is planning a trip to the New Orleans Mardigras fifteen aside tournament. This year social memberships are being made available to men and women (rugger huggers !). Social convener, Frank Zinzer, is encouraging people to enquire about and participate in the lighter side of the club’s activities. If anyone would like further information about the club and its activities, they’re asked to contact Roger Downer ext. 3226 or Ken Brown ext. 2304 or go to Columbia Field, weekdays, between five and seven p.m., where practices are held. The first league game this year is against McMas ter University, last year’s Ontario University seven aside champions. It will be held Saturday September 20, at 2:OO p.m. on Columbia Field. This game promises to be exciting-hope to see you there !

*.F* E\ h/l II . N A R .

Frank Gobpink, a former chevron staffer __ N with experience on a news daily and cur= working for the Elmira Independent, G -rently will be conducting a newswriting seminar on Thursday, Sept. 25. All persons with an interest in journalism are invited to attend. The seminar will begin at 7:30 pm in the chevron off ice, campus centre.


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IJVV SWimmers str&gb’. If first impressions are significCronin, a Kin-grad student with 12 ant, I then Waterloo’s “Swimmifi’ years of competitive experience Wimmen” should have no problem packed into. her suit, should be able clinching their fourth consecuto help the Waterloo squad in this tive OWIAA championship and tough event. Other valuable with a little help from the Warriors; rookies that coach Cartiledge will make Waterloo the “number one” be able to utilise in his plan include; swimming Uniyersity in Canada. Peggy Mattson-a native of KitchAs training camp opened last ener who should be able to give week, coach Br@n Cartiledge was Marg Murray a go&l size hand in more than enthused. T:his year’s the backstroke, Michelle Athena tee is positively &inamic McDonald-a competent swimmer and thk Warriors are looking-. from Oakvi.lle_who seems able tm stronger than ever in their quest for swim just abqut aFything, and the OUAA crown. Karen Murphy-a conscientious The Athenas, coming back from swimmer from EMAC who will be a OWIAA win and CWIbU third a real asset in the breaststroke. place- finish last year, are looking For the Warriors, the -watchfor the national laurels this year. word ig depth. While having tradiWith only a skeleton crew the tionally been a middle distance Athenas were able to pull off &I freestyle club, they now have the amazing victory ‘over the always power in most events to give the U potent Toronto squad. This year it ‘of T Blues their first real case of the should be no contest. The team is - . blues since 1960 wh&n they lost to loaded with talent. Last year’s couwo. captains: Maida Murray and Cathy The triumverate of last yea& Adams will be expected to show \ co-captains: five-year veteran Doug Munn, distancefreesty!er Ian the way in the I.M. events, while veteFq Marg Murray will be the Taylor and dependable Dave Wilsolid perfomer in the backstroke. son along with such stalw~ts as Second year returnees Elaine Jim Lowe who will be with us for Keith and Pat Goiozdowski will be* the entire season, the three foreigthe strength of the team in the disners on the team: Richard Knaggi, tance events, G&ile Daphne Paul Ahloy, Randall Philips, Dick McCullough ‘and Marianne O’Neil Dago and second year returnees should provicIe the necessary depth Alex Kowalenko, Raduz Jacubeck for the breaststroke. Of course bur and Ken Edmunds will provide a sound basis on whkh Brian can favoriteboard bouncers ; Val Quirk and Sydney Bennett will be on build. And he most ‘definitely has hand to give the Athenas ;ill the the material to build-with. Rookies this year will play a big part in the help they need in that section. lineup, and they can not help but Sprint freestyle, an event which tias been a constant problem to strengthen the team. Athena coaches of the past, seems New acquisitions for the War-, to have been resolved. Claudia riors include: Jo_hn MacClean from

-THE UPPER CRUST

._

~ Orillia who will add more depth to ’ th‘e middle distance events, Bruce ’ Lewis-Watts a strong all round swimmer who is exceptionally capable in the breaststroke and I .M. events, .Philip DerJieuw ‘a backstroke artist fiom*the nation’s capital, and Michel Brule from somewhere called Smooth RockZ&lls where it has bec.ome apparent that he too can swim. Another Transfer student to UNIWAT is Claude Xormier who is said ‘to be able to put together somee reasonable dives, will be helping Bruce Holli: day and Steve Brooks on the boards. Under the tuteledge of diving coach Marnie Tatham he will have the opportunity toIlbe of real -. value to the Warrior Squad. I All in all it looks as if Waterloo is . in for an excellect year <iri the natatorium. Last year the Warriors were able to give the Blues a good scare, this year they will not be drinking from the champhgne cup for the first time in 16 years. The Athenas will take their 5th consecutive OWIAA championship. Then it will be an all out co-ed effort for the National Title. As the a Cdach says-“ if firstimpressions are significant . . .’ ’ . , . +oney .

\ Any-women interested in joining ’ the Varsity Team please contact Pat Davis, ext. 3146 or come to * practice at-Seagram’s Stadium at 4 pm Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays or Fridays.

“Just

years,

work hard for the next 20 maybe you’[l be whctie I ami ~ow.“~ 44Where’a that, Pop?“rrm thi, aide of the machine+

tin,

and

Charlie Farquharson ‘- . p- ‘\- (Don Harron) ,’ = I

.

Hum&ties- ~Theatre Tues. Sept. 23rd; 8 pm /

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.. Tj&t&

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advanCcG$3.50 Univ. students ’ T _- $450 Other 50 cents boreS@t door

Don Harro,n will be at the U of W Boo;ksiore - between 3 - Qm, Tues. Sept. to autograph his book

~ --

/

23rd

, --

’ 1 / Pt

_ Available at: Fe-deration of Students and - ---Central \_.d Box Office at U of W, ’ WLII SAC office, Conestoga __college, Art’s’ ‘Ret;, -& Sa m’s*--+.I:-; .: ._ I ,b<. I ;i2.: / , ’ ., ---

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Tonight ,in the Theatre of the Arts, UW and K-W residents cti hear one of Canada’s outstanding performing-arts organizations, the Orford Quartet. Formed in 1965, the Orforders have been playing together for ten years, during which the group has risen to fame as one of the world’s important quartets. Its members, Andrew Dawes, Kenneth Perkins, Terence Helmer , andMarce1 St-Cyr, have won various prizes and awards as’individu* als, and last year the quartet won first prize in the European Broadcasting Union International Competition for quartets in Stockholm. The Orford has appeared at UW several times in_-. the- past, and to-

PHANTOM OF THE PARADISE Fri. & Sat. Sept. 19&20 7&9pm. Daa*aaamaaa*omea*eaI

night are presenting perhaps their most ambitious progra yet. Debussy’s Quartet in G inor is one of the fnest quartet’ i In the Fretih liter ai ure, full of arresting “impressionist” effects nd imbued with freshness, vital ‘1ty, and lucidity. The Quartet No. 8 of ~Dmitri Shostakovitch. the great’ Soviet composer who died-just lover a mbnth ago, is of special i terest, having been written w a rb suit of the composer’s visit to the Hitlerian death camps in E st Germany, and intended, to ev ke the horrors and to cornmemo “pate the victims of fascism and of ar. Concluding the con ert is Beethoven’s 13th Quartet i B Flat Major, one of the famous 1 t quartets which tie widely re ded as the highest pinnacles of th quartet 1 form, and indeed, of all m1 sic. ’ Written in the concludi years of- his life, at a time whe 2 Beethoven was suffering from onstant physical and emotional t rtures, the 13th Quartet is one of t e great of the testimonies to the stren human will. Written wr r i unsurpassed technical mastery a$ w&as ork, it being a radiantly moving should provide theI listene with a

MAJESTIC THEATRE

FINEST IN . MOVIE ENTERTAIhiME

THE FDiER Mon. = Wed.

._

Sept. 22 - 25

19, 1975

musical experience of real significance. Tickets are available at the Arts Theatre ‘Box Of&e at $3 for students and senior citizens, $5 for others. The concert is the first in a series of eight which the student can buy for only $10, sponsored by the K-W Chambr Music Society. The Box Office has information on the series as well. ’

Cashier Wanted Expehence helpful , Thurs. & Fri. evenings 5:30-9:30 pm. ..

FOR THE

Sun. Sept. 21 7&9pm. Da*oa*4aa,aa*m*a**a4

All he had left was one obsession. Toget even. To pay them back two for one.

September

Pleasant Personality

/~. ZKGFIELD GIRL

HE WASTAKENBYsR/ER’YONE, FOR EVERYTHINGHE HAD.

friday,

6 Prhess Waterloo r

df

8 pm.

St. W. * 743 91 4

a

Apply: ’ Waterloo Meat Market 14 King N. Waterloo (beside Whrloo Theatre) r(

. I

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>,

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SPEClALVkljlJES ; ALL-SONY

ON

/

PR(XNJCTS /I I

1.

,

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f~AlbUElDEll JOHNWlEY lllUlCKm - r NOW PLAYING

AT BOTH THEATRES

p!!!EFcl 2 SHOWS MAT:SAT.

NGHTLY 7:00 9120 PMs & SUN. 2 PM

, (

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,REG. $79.95 1

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1.-

/Iy-vhirFipgJj -_Box OFFlCE OPENS 730 PM SHOW STARTS AT DUSK

1\

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NOW 8FC 1oow

$59.95’ I

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St: S., Ontario’

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friday,

se‘ptember

1

19, 1975

I

the Disco *Kid

Main Course TheBeeGees’ RSO Records

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The Bee Gees, those charming crooners of at least half of all the standard AM radio ballads written _ in the last eight years, recently found themselves faced with a rather large dilemma. While the onslaught of discotheques must have brightened the eyes ofnumerous music hopefuls, -the insis tent beat which characterizes disco music effectively eliminates the I tender lyric content which distinguishes the majority of theBee Gees repertoire. So, following a two year period in which the group failed to achieve any-success on either the singles or albums charts, the brothers decided to modify their sound, to hopefully capitalize on today’s latest music. craze; and however unsuitable the move may sound, it definitely works. Actually,%AIN ‘COURSE, the Bee Gees eleventh album, contains only, four outright disco-oriented cuts, wnd these surprisingly stand out-as the best songs on the LP. “Nights on Broadway,” the follow-up single to “Jive Talkin’ ,” opens the set with a heavy beat and some great singing from Barry, whocontinues to prove himself as a talented rock vocalist (listen to -1 “Down the Road” from their MR. NATURAL album) as well as an accomplished craftsman of we&sung ballads. The chorus is catchy, and ‘- although it breaks in the middle for ,a brief “change of pace, it remains very danceable. Of course, “Jive Talkin’ ,” their recent number one . single, contains all the elements of a successful disco tune, with Maurice’s pounding bass, Dennis Bryan’s constant drum beat which” is mixed much louder than most

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non-disco material, and a repetitive but catchy melody. It could turn out to be the Top 40 dance record of ’ the year. It is “Wind of Change” however, and not “Jive Talkin’ ” which most obviously illustrates the Bee Gees’ new sound, opening with a patented Gloria Gaynor-like introduction which is recorded loud enough to make the listener momentarily rip off his headphones in deaf surprise. The song-is a perfect imitation of the popular “ahenation in the big city” theme, with lines such as: “Like me, there’s no room for us out there/You can lose your hope and pride/Whenit comes to broken dreams/You’ll get your share,” sung over a pounding beat and complimented with a strong sax solo from Joe Farrell. “FannryBe Tender With My Love)“, which closes out the first side, is less. a dabbling in disco than it is a standard Bee Gees ballad with a good beat. It manages to sound ,&h and full without any massive orchestral accompaniment, and it evokes the sound of prominently felt on “five Talkin’ ” the old Bee Gees with a slight twist. and “the light-hearted “Edge Of, It is the most instantly likeable tune the Universe” on which he effec- on the’ album. tively fills in any gap‘s which are inherent in most three-men bands. In addition to the four most atyp-&al cuts on the album, the Bee Drummer Dennis Bryon ‘and Gees‘have penned two memorable guitarist Alan Kendall have been ballads, ‘ ‘Songbird”, and ‘ ‘Baby touring with the group for two and As You_ Turn Away”, .two near three years respectively and are “Country Lanes” and more than competent\ on their inmisses struments. The albumis expertly +‘Come On Over” and two solid novelty ’ items “All This Making Love” and “Edge Of the Unil verse” to round out the LP. The ten songs are excitingly_ _-_ performed by the, new band which 1 consists of the brothers Gibb on guitars, bass and vocals, and the invaluable addition of- Blue Weaver, ex-Mott the Hoople, on 50 WESTMOUNT PLACE synthesizers and assorted other keyboards. His importance is most -. 8 MARKET-VILLAGE _I

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produced by genius Arif Mardin - -don’t), or if you consider yourself a who can cite AWB as being ‘among diehard supporter of the “old Bee his most recent successes, and Gees” (as I once dJd), you’ll probMardjn’s string, horn and woodably enjoy this album. It contains wind arrangements are nothing some good dance music, a couple . short of superb: of pretty ballads and enough variAbove -all, Main Course, is a re- ety to remain refreshing without cord for the masses. Even if you do becoming di@ic& or unsatisfying not find yourself jurnping -for joy .to listen-to. It is probably the best over the recentdeluge of disco Bee--C+ *;ilbum ever. material bn the airwaves (and 1 -job sakamoto

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Friday, June 20; 1975 I reviewed Lou Reed’s Live album. One of the stronger comments was that I felt this record to beindicative of what he was doing with his-music at that point in time. Since then I have discovered some facts which contradict this. Also Lou has released another album, Machine Metal Music, which further proves the original statement false. I would now lik% to set the facts straight, and apologize for the error. In the fast place, most of the band members on “Live” have now been ,,working with Alice Cooper since he began -his solo career with “Welcome To My Nightmare”. They have been recording and touring with Alice, ‘which makes it impossible for “Live” to have been a recent recording. For the record, these people are White Glan, Steve IIunter, Dick Wagner, (who has co-written over half of the songs on “Night* mare”), and Frakash John. This band on “Ltve” is also the same one that Lou Reed had for ‘ ‘Rock ‘11” Roll Animal”, his previous live album. Also, there are no songs on “Live” which date after “Rock ‘n’ Roll Animal”. The facts are that what Lou Reed did here was to take some two year old tapes off the shelf and press them into an album. The album gives’ so little in,formation that it is impossible for most people to see what has happened. Lastly is the point abo,ut “Machine Metal Music”, the dou-

ble album that Lou released in July’ 1975. Each side of this’album is the . same 16 minutes and 1 second long. In summary it is 64 minutes #and 4, seconds of the w,orst musical joke. that I have ever heard. It is an extreme condition of ego tripping; for, Lou admits, (only after the album has been opened), that most people ’ will not enjoy the “music”, \and that at the least he just made it for ’ h&$,elf to listen to. There are other instructions %hich describe how the music starts nowhere, goes nowhere, and after listening for only a few minutes it becomes obvious that the album is really nothing. What Lou has done isto combine ’ ‘- three different frequency ranges of sound, (low, medium and high), which come straight from an amplifier and mix together to form a twittering kind of electronic chatter. The closest comparison would be the noise that -comes from a short-wave radio, between sta. tions. In a sense1 understand--why he made the album, but I will never understand why he released it or why RCA record company allowed it to go out on the market. To wrap it all up I’m not sure anymore what music Lou Reed is into now. I don’t dare predict what he will do next, because he may have committed career suicide with these last two attempts. We’ll just ’ * have to wait and see. This sets the record straight for q. Lou Reed’s “Live”, and again apologies for the mistake. ’ - -bill mcrea

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responsibilities of scientists and public. John Q’Conner Music Helvitica Ken Mitchell and Mike Kelso Ray Marci now Sign-off

Friday September 16 9:00 Doug Young ’ , < 12:00 Mike Ura 12:15 ‘Story” ‘Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland’ Marilyn Turner 12:45- Mike’ Ura 3:00 Gardening For Fun and Food-Part Three Today Indoor ,Gardening M.-Tsujita . . 3:lO Dave Thompson 6:00 Phil Rogers 9:00 Discussion on Transcental Meditation ,’ 9:15 The Mutant Hour -Bill Wharrie 1200 Jazz with Ian Murray Saturday September 20 9:00 Robert Statham 12:00 James Higginson --3:00 IanAllen & Sandy Yates 6:00 Hans Zschach 8:30 People’s Music 9:15 Dave Moss c 12:OO Don Cruikshank

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Canada Today” Anne Francis, Chairperson of the , Royal Commission on the l2:OO‘ Bill Culp Status of Women . 12:15 ’ “Story” ‘Alice’s Adventures 6:30 Donna Rogers in Wonderland’ - Marilyn 9:00 Bill Culp Presents Turner 9:30 Labour News with Tom Kral 2:45 Perspectives - United Na-1O:OO Jazz with David Scorgie tions Radio 12:00 Nigel Bradbury 3:00 Jeff Parry & Gord McLean \ \ ., 3:00 Sign-Off 5:30 Canadian Civil Liberties Union - Goals and history are discussed with Don Thursday September 25 W hiteside, President 600 Steve Atkinson l&O0 Greg Yachuck 8:00 Folk Music - Stan Gap 12:15 “Story” ‘Alice’s Adventures 9:00 Sexuality & Humankind in Wonderland’ - Marilyn I Wages for Housework Turner 9:30 Jazz - Dennis Ruskin 3:00 Disco Music - John Williams 12:OO Sign-Off 5:30 “Can Quebec Afford A Bourassa’s Latest Dream” Etivironmental, Political, FiTuesday September 23 nancial, and Moral Stand6:00 Johnathon Coles _ - ’ ’ points of a proposed $6 bill- ’ 9:00 Gray Eakins I ion enriched uranium plant I 12:OO Dave Gillett c \ in northern Quebec. 12:15 “Story” ‘Alice’s Adventures 6:30 Andy Bite in Wonderland’ - Marilyn ,9:00 Foreign Student Prog/ . Turner ramme ’ 2,145 Scop,e , United Nations 9:30 Mike Devillaer /‘I _ Radio Economic Commis. sion on Activities of Women ’ 12:00 Larry Stareky & Lou Mon. tana in Africa / \ 3:QO 3100 Sally Tomek - Sign-Off 5:30 Symposjum on Nonviolence - The Inner Spent of Non-violence, Roland Fisch, Mission worker 6:30 Mad Frog Part One - Phil Rogers 9:00 ‘Is This It? News & Commentary 9:30 The Student Movement in Ontario Part One ‘iO:OO Live ‘Broadcast - Campus Centre Pub - Michael Lewis 12:Q0 Kim St. Pierre ,, W6 sell Mopeds 3:00 Sign-Off 2, I Monday‘Sept&mber

22

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19

the chevron

1!& 1975

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It’s for -real

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‘Engineer8 seek ‘uriionizatid-n status

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By Larry Gamer Unionization of engineers received its greatest impetus not during the Depression years but during the war years (1943-45). That is to say, it was not so much economic deprivation whicl+ led to large-scale unionization, but rather the .monumental change brought about by their employment on % mass basis in large warplants. The image the engineer had of himself (herself) as something approaching a “free professional” was inexorably deflated by the reality of having to punch in at the rime clock. Much of the unionizing effort was aimed, however, at recouping &he loss of profe<sional status arid recognition entailed by this change. In many instances, engineering unions were formed during the post-war ye;trs in order to prevent the inclusion of engineers in bargaining units dominated by “non-professional” employees. On the other hand, the gains won by production workers through union action were o&en the catalyst that spurred on engineers to organize (in m, in order to maindn the wage differential between the two groups). Despite these features of engineers’ unionization which makes it appear a purely defensive maneuver (to define and protect their distinct professional status), basic structural transformations in industrial work processes were moving engineers in the direction of Unionization. First of all, work was increasingly’ organized by groups or teams of engineers, so that the concept of rewarding individuals for their personal achievements had less and less real mean&g. Second, the pressure to spe&Iize ever more nmowly left the engineer open to the possibility of being pigeon-bole&n a slot which, with a change in technology, would make his specialization obsolek. Third, job insecurity became a built-in char&teristi~ of the engineer’s work by virtue of the fact that their employment on a mass scale was premised on the continued existence of government cc@racts. In 1947, as a result of heavy lobyi‘ng by professional engineering societies, the Taft-Hartley Act was amended (section 9 b 1) to allow engineers to exclude themselves Corn bargaining units dominated by “nonprofessional” employees, unless a maority of “professionals” decided they wished to be included. For. purposes of the NLRB a professional was defined as “one whose work is predominantly intellectual and varied in character, involving consistent exercise of discretion and judgment, incapable of standardization, and requiring advanced scieti’fifc judgment.” _-. In spite of the Taft-Hartley law the movement tow* unionization continued. In 1952 a national engineerins union was founded, Engineers qnd Scientists of America. ESA was more.& a central clearinghouse fw an eschange of ideas than a national union with the power to call a national strike. It3 main: objectives were to participate in the process of vreditation of engineering schools, to promote the licensirlg of engineers, and to encourage &gineering education, It also kept statistics on the’ growth of unionization among engineers. It estimated that by 1957 there were about 55,ooO engineers represented by cdlective bargaining units out of 500,000 engineers working in the country (this compared with over 70% in a country like Sweden); of these SS,&lQ, 20,000 were actual members of ESA.’ From its inception ESA was sprit into tyo groups: “Qne essentially wanted to form a pational labor unioxrfor engineers; the other wanted to form an engineering profeSsional society that would sequester the collective bargaining franchises and place them in cold storage.” This divergence came out -when. ESA had to confront tk question of mix@ unions (i.e. those which included technical and/or production workers in addition to engineers). This was a decisive question for ,,rnany engineers and test&the mettle of their class’ consciousness. At a time when the engineer’s distinct professional identity was being threatened by technical developments requiring a diminished use of “professional skills,+’ the inclusion of t&h&al workers in engineering locals aroused the fear that the engineer’s status might become indistinguishable from that of the blue-collar worker. The mixe&.&o& di8ti f&V di‘spiay a high,er level of trade union consciousness than

-

~ Despite the unions’ support for the principle of individual rewards and merit ratings, a !number of their other actions generally work ko undercut this commitment. ‘Engineering (unions which are active bring “order, stability, aiid regularity to wage, job and personbe1 policy.” They attempt to establish “debonstrable and reasonable criteria” to serve ias standardized guidelines . for promotions pnd merit increases, and they publish data on ~individual salaries and the average me&t increase. To bring all of this out into the open ends to have a levelling, equalizing effect on r,salaries and promotions, since levelling is Ithe easiest way to avoid the appearances of (arbitrariness. l

Characteristics of Engineering Unions Much

thi hbmogeneous units. Whereas the latter emphasized the use of tactics such as legislative lobbying and public relations, the mixed unions were more inclined to engage in’picketing, to call’s strike, to adopt a union shop, and to call for higher dues and expenditures for organizing drives .-The issue c;tme to the fore when the mixed unions attempted to affYiate ESA’with the AFL-CIO. When this attempt failed, major locals (Minneapolis-Honeywell, Sperry Gyroscope, and Westem Electric, among others) broke away from ESA and sought to.establish a connection with larger labor organizations at the local, level (MinneapolisHoneywell with UAW and wrry Gyroscope with the IUE). The schism debilitated the national organization to the point where it dissolved,in 1960. Soon thereafter decerttication of the unions at such major sites as Western Electric, Minneapolis-Honeywell, and Sperry Gyroscope took place as ‘result of NLRB elections; a majority of t% e engineersielected to withdraw from the collective bargaining had declined to 45,000 and the numbr of union members had remained conitant at 20,000 while-the number of engineers working had increased to over, 800,m.

of the power

of attraction

of en-

. tions engineers as agroup tend to have ta@ a heavy dosage of “rugged individualism” that disinclines them Earn collective action: Engineering schods instil1 in them an identification with the aims and purposes of management; they imbue them with a pride e local engineering union with in individual achievement and reward that orkers’ local in exchange dverlooks the collective Supports which are and in most cases, the enthe premise for individual creativity. Enected, for “professional gcneers generally fear that unionization a (although during the fifwould mean that salaries* and promotions g strike at Arma achieved would no longer reflect individual achievese the engineers pledged affiliments; and the feeling is wide-spfead that Engineering Association of “the mediocre people want them (the une IUE in return for support at ions).” e picket lines). One opinion survey conducted in 1965 showed; for example, that 71% of the responding engineers rejected the argument Gharacteri#ics of that the need for a dnion was dictated by the Union Membership reality of employment on a mass scale; 73% Union membership does not appear to agreed that unions discourage individual ,have anything to do with the social backachievement; 76% agreed that unions were Iground of engineers (their class origins and inconsistent with professionaliim. education, whether their father was a tinion In addition, the great expansion in govman or not), nor with their general political ernment expenditures in-space research and weapons systems during the late f/&ties and. orientation (liberal or conservative political attitudes). Rather, it corresponds most sixties created labr market conditions for engineers which were highly conduci@o clwely with the engineer’s degree of disindividual bargaining. From 1953 to 1960, for satis&ction with his work environment (inexample, engineers enjoyed a 48% increase trinsic aspects of the job assignment; extrinsic rewards such as salary and prestige; in med&m annual income, much higher than Oppositfon to Unionizatlon for males in any other occupation. Rugged treatment by supervisors; adequacy of The main source of organized opposition ’ individualism seemed to pay. equipment such as laboratory facilities). to engineers’ unionization has been the Engineering unions have tried to counter Another s#dy has shown that the more -manwmentdomin&ed National Society of the argument that there is a fundamental militant engineering unions have a high perProfes$onal Engineers. This organ&&ion conflict between the principles of profescentage of their members engaged in routine, has m the p_rimary vehicle for promoting sionalism ‘and unions by stressing differrepetitive work and that a substantial perthe proposition that union membership is ences rather than solidarity between workcentage of these members possess a degree “inconsist&t with professionalism.” It has ers. The contracts negotiated by engineering from a night schobl or have 00 degree at all. argued that the “regimentation” and ‘Istanunions include terms which reflect the proLength of tenure on the job also appears to d&&&ion” inherent in unionizatiort are infessional status engine&s believe they have be an important factor. This is to be expcompatible with the professionaI5 sense of a tide to: employer payment of professiond lained by the fqt that in the engineering field individual judgment andlresponsibility in his dues; paid time-off to attend professional salaries level off considerably after the first 5 to 8 ye& and that one’s job opportunities work. As a professional, the engineer recogmeetings and university lectures and to fead nizes the duty to mait&& the highest stanprofessional literature; tuition refunds; - are limited by the narrow specialization encouraged by the firm (a specialization that dards in h@ work-a sense of dtity which is leaves of absence for educational purposes. buttressed by a system which &wards him on also threatens to make one’s knowledge and Engineering unions intend to prove thattheir the basis of his demonsmted individual rnernkB are not “just anoither employee training obsolete With changing technology). merit. As a union member the engineer’s to the notion ofjoininga group.” Much of the individualistic ethos of , Thus, receptiveness union appears to be linked to phenomena personal relationship with management ti. ideology of professionalism also finds its which are generally associated with the would be replaced by a system of itiwrsonal way into engineering contracts in order to rankings and classifications, an& Only those make this point. Contracts often stipulate “proletarianization” of technical workers. engineers who follow &e lowest common the maintenance of certain qualifications in Professlonalisti and Unionism denominator in their .work would stand.‘to order to be able to perform particular tasks Nonetheless it could be argued aat there benefit. Furthermore, collective bargaining (“job standards”), thereby excluding those would break down the internal unity of the ’ without “professional training”; usually no is more to professionalism than the ideology profession, since supervisory engineers attempt is made to standardize pay rates, but of professionalism disseminated by man- , only to ensure that individual merit is prop agement. Professionalism also contains the would no longer be able to evaluate their germ of a sense of collective identity and subordinate colleagues in a non-adversary erly rewarded; telescoping of pay differenposture. The NSPE prefers “sounding tials (lessening the spread between the consciousness which has nothing to do with boards” to unions; these labor-management higher and lower grades) is generally opits ideological form: the principles of rugged manageposed; seniority as a basis of promotion is individualism applied to councils wotid enable both p&ties to disrelations on a mass scalecuss differerices in a professional manner, also opposed, although it may be adopted as m$nt/employee The colleceive sensibility implied in the free of the stridency of union tactics. The um of the factors in determining the lay-off idea. of membership in a profession perlongterm approach to improving the schedule; the union shop is opposed on the tains to,notions about the most productive grounds that membership should be volunengineer’s economic status lies in fostering use of one’s distinctive creative energies (or profssional societies which seek. to “raise tax-y amdng professionals ; percentage pay raises are preferred to?! ‘blanket” increases ; labor power). They entail a desire for auprofessional qualifictitions” and to win greatonomy: “the right to decide how (one’s) patent rights of indiviqual engineers are ter recognition of engineers’ services from function is to be performed and to be free made a matt& for negotiation; pay detiands the community; i.e. the engineers reaIly from. restrictions by non-professionals. ” focus on increasing the merit pool and movneed “something like the AMA,” as if they One’s professional identity in this senge is ing up the top salaries, not the bottom ones, too yere -independent entrepreneurs s often in conflict with the endq @nanageon the assumpson th$$ the shopwakers will Even without the organized oppos5tipn of see to it that the bottom is pushed up. continued & pa(le 21 the NSPE - and other professional @an&a-


friday,

September

19, 1975

page 20 Morrison-Knudsen,proceeded with conment and capital. There are several cases to struction. Almost immediately afterwar’ds , illustrate this. ’ did occur, causing 31 deaths. , the rockslides In 1970, Carl W. Houston, an engineer Morrison-Knudsen then asked Pettis to employed by Stone and Webster, was ascharge the cost of removing the slides to the signed to supervise welding at the construcPeruvian government. Pettis refused to do tion of a nuclear power plant in Virginia. so, claiming that the slides could have been From his first day at the site, Houston avoided and did not appear in the original noticed many defects in the welding of steel contract. After two years of conflict between pipes which were designed to carry cooling Brown and Root, Morrison-Knudsen and water to and from the nuclear reactor. He the American Consul on the one side and pointed out to his employer that these dePettis and the Peruvian government on the fects were potentially dangerous. Loss of other, Peru finally terminated the’ contract water through a break in the pipes would and Brown and Root fired Pettis. Like Houscause rapid overheating of the reactor, acton, he has been unable to find work since (as cumulation of radioactive materials, and of early 1972). He received many job offers, but the offer was always withdrawn after the their release into the neighbourhood of the plant through steam explosions. Houston new employer reviewed his job references. rep,eatedly tried to warn Stone and Webster He sought but received no help at all from in Boston of this situation. But his efforts the American Society of Civil Engineers. were in vain. After two months on the job, in Here are two engineers, experienced proApril 1970, Houston resigned after he was fessional men, who held the public interest told by a Stone and Webster welding inspecabove the narrow interests of their emptor that he was to be fired for “lack of exloyers. Both were fired; both were probably perience in welding,” a charge Houston blacklisted. Hous ton’s professional integrity found hard to take seriously, since he had was of no consequence to his professional been a journeyman welder for twenty-four society, the ASCE, which like the other proyears and his engineering experience was fessional societies is apparently employermostly in welding. As of early 1972, he had dominatad. Would union ,rebeen unable to find another job, and his court presentation have preserved the jobs of suit against Stone and Webster was flounderthese two engineers ? Very likely it would ing for lack of funds. He believed himself the have. Most union contracts prohibit firing victim of a blacklist. ’ without “just cause.” With a good union Or consider another example. In 1966 contract, neither one of these men could Charles Pettis was assigned by his employer, have been fired without due process and a Brown and Root Overseas, to be resident fair hearing before an impartial arbitrator. engineer on a $47 million U .S .-financed road And with a strong union organization, the building project in Peru. Shortly after arrivcase might not even have gotten that far. ing in Peru, Pettis suspected serious probHere are two more case histories, taken from lems in the engineering design and discothe same book as those above,-but both convered that adequate geological borings had cerning blue-collar workers who were union not been taken. He predicted serious rockmembers . slides and pointed out that the Peruvian govIn 1966 Edward Gregory was a quality ernment would have to bear the cost. In spite ’ control inspector in a GM Fisher Body plant of his objections, however, the contractor, in St. Louis. He discovered a defect in the from

the chevron

welding of Chevrolet rear-quarter panels which could permit exhaust fumes to leak into the car. He repeatedly pointed out the defect to his superiors and later to executives at the plant, but all to no avail. He only succeeded in being transferred to another department where his protests were less effective. It wasn’t until three years later, after at least four motorists had been asphyxiated in their Chevrolets, that General Motors finally recognized the defect and recalled 2.4 million automobiles for repair of the rearquarter panels. Once, when Gregory was subpoenaed as a witness in a trial involving the defective cars, he found himself terminated upon his return to work. Through the intervention of his union, the United Auto Workers, he regained his job back immediately, as well as back pay for the time lost in court. He also used the union grievance procedure to try to reverse his involuntary transfer and recently won the case in arbitration. The arbitrator awarded him his old inspector’s job back. Gilbert Pugliese is a steelworker at the Jones and Laughlin plant in Cleveland. On July 14,1971, Pugliese was ordered to pump oil into the Cuyahoga River, already described by the City of Cleveland as a “fire hazard.” Pugliese refused, and was given a five-day suspension with discharge likely to follow. His nearest union representative, the assistant chief grievance official, was unwilling to help. But his fellow workers threatened a walkout unless Pugliese was hired back, and the chief grievance official then stepped into the case. Two days later, Pugliese was reinstated with back pay. He found that J & L was now using drums to dispose of the oil-which was the same solu-

5

21

tion he himself had recommended. The interplay between tendencies moving in the direction of greater worker initiative and greater ‘ ‘proletarianization” is perhaps the key element for gauging the union movement among technical workers. The working class is still far from being homogeneous in its work conditions, and unions must take a differentiated approach to technical workers if they are to meet with success. The approach should take into account at least the following differences in work conditions among technical workers : (1) workers in repetitive, fragmented jobs with’regulated rhythms (so many operations per unit of time); (2) workers with margins or discretion in their work within the framework of subordinate tasks which no organizing or rule-making power; (3) workers with innovative functions (new products, new technology, new information systems) who have a large measure of discretion within a narrowly defined field of action, both in substantive and methodological terms; (4) workers in management functions with large margins of discretion within narrowly defined tasks and fields of competence (here the standards of efficiency are not technical-professional but those of the ends set by the firm); (5) researchers with nonrepetitive tasks but highly fragmented and specialized, lacking autonomy in the choice of their activity and often subordinated to hiearchical structure of authority. The demands of the workers are likely to differ according to where the workers are situated along this continuum of “proletarianization”. reprinted

from Science

for the People

-Science & Technology

Those who would have envisaged achevron witha science and technology section as being somewhat analogous to, say, a skyscraper with flying buttresses, will no doubt be surprised to find the aforementioned animal abruptly gracing our pages today. This development has come about primarily in recognition of the obvious fact that many, perhaps most, of our readers have academic interests that lie in scientific and technological areas; we realize that it is important that these interests be reflected to some extent in the paper. Our problem in meeting the postulated demand for this type of material has historically arisen from the general lack of expertise among chevron staffers in matters scientific. In this issue we have reprinted a feature length article from New Scientist. This is a practice we would like to do away with as far as possible, in favour of features generated within this university, by people whose scientific background qualifies them to speak of such matters intelligibly, which is where the imbalance in the interests and a talents of our present staff becomes crucial. What we will avoid at all costs, however, is that species of writing of interest to and readable by, scientists exclusively-the chevron can not and should not attempt to duplicate”the function of scientific journals, even within a section whose main orientaI tion is towards science. This means that the articles we would like to print would be in language sufficiently non-technical to admit the layman’s understanding, and in some way connecting scientific research with its possible effects on society. The whole question of a scientist’s obligation to society, “pure research”, and academic secrecy are as relevant today as they were when the first atomic bomb exploded over Hiroshima, or when it first became well-known that weapons developed in Canada by Canadian scientists were being sold to the United States Army for use in the Indochina war. This question is badly in need of examination, yet is virtually ignored outside of armchair discussion. Perhaps it could be opened up by scientists on this campus, who must have given it at least some thought. It is to answer some of the questions raised in our minds concerning science, technology and their implications, that the science and technology section of the chevron exists . Finally, the chevron hopes to start a dialogue on the role of scientists, pure and applied, in present day society. The subject matter is certainly not new, but always worth dealing with, as the world surrounding and influencing the scientific community is far from static. Variations in job market, economic conditions, and status in society are quite readily recognized by most individuals involved. Other relationships between scientists and society require analysis which not only defines the scientists’ concrete role at a particular point in history, but also tries to determine reasons for this relationship, how it developed, and how it is maintained. This section of the chevron will provide the opportunity for students and faculty to express their concerns as well as to familiarize ourselves with the views of colleagues in industry, other academic institutions, and other countries. With the cooperation of people within the Science and Engineering departments we will be able to carry articles on local research and cover related news events. We invite and encourage participation in the gathering of information and news items and in the coordination of this section of the paper. 1’


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,PSI by Robert Anton Wilson A British paraps ychologis t with a string of academic credentials long enough to choke a horse and a young mind-reader described by the Continental press as “the English Uri Geller” are preparing a book they claim will be “the Watergate of the occult world.” The parapsychologist, Dr. Peter Bander, editor of Psychic World is an expert on criminology as well as ESP and spook stuff. He is alarmed about growing signs that governments are moving in on the psychic world, monopolizing it and perverting it toward a new kind of international terrorism even worse than the nuclear arms race. The young psychic, 19 year old Matthew Manning, is equally concerned and had demonstrated powers that make him even more astounding than Uri Geller . Some have even said that he seems to have all the psychic abilities of Geller, of clairvoyant Peter Hurkos and -of Edgar Cayce combined-and perhaps even more. Like Geller, Matthew Manning can bend metal and change its molecular structure without touching it. He has demonstrated this to several scientific groups and, after observing Manning perform for the New Horizons Research Foundations in Toronto, Nobel Prize physicist Dr. Brian Josephson exclaimed, “A redefinition of reality and nonreality is needed now. “. .We are on the verge of discoveries which may be extremely important for physics. We are dealing here with a new kind of energy.” Like Hurkos, Matthew Manning can read mindsat a distance and (according to tests by Prof. Hans Bender in Germany) with a greater accuracy than ever recorded by any other psychic in the history of parapsychological investigation.

Prescriptions Like Cayce, Matthew Manning can diagnose and presc-ribe for patients he has never seen, although he has no training in medicine. (Unlike Cayce, Manning has learned the identity of the “entity” working through him in these medical miracles. It calls itself Dr. Thomas Penn, but “Penn” has never revealed whether he lived in the past, in the future, or in another dimension.) Matthew has a bundle of other documented “wild talents.” Hecanproduce automatic drawings in the styles of Picasso, Durer, Goya and other masters; write in languages he has never studied, such as Arabic,. Japanese and Russian; cause knives, vases and even heavy beds and dressers to float around like ballerinas. He also received messages from various dead saints of the Greek Orthodox Church (some of them containing information known only by Archbishop Athenagoras, who takes these messages very serioualy), from 593 past inhabitants of the village in which he lives and . from entities who signed themselves in as Samuel Pepys, Winston Churchill and even agnostic Bertrand Russell (who has changed his mind-naturally enough-about personal survival after death.) To top it all off, on three occasions when Kirlian photographs were taken of the energy unleashed by Manning, the Kirlian machines were blown out. I met with Matthew Manning and Dr. Bander during their recent visit to the Bay Area to plug their current book, The Link (Holt Rinehart, $7.95 .) Although impressed by the scientific reports on Matthew included in the book, I asked for a personal demonstration Matthew went to one end of the hotel

room and I went to the other. I started to draw a sketch which he attempted to pick up telepathically: I considered a star, but couldn’t decide whether to make it one point up (White magick) or two points up (Black magick) and instead drew a tetrahedron. Matthew showed me his sketch. He had drawn the one point up star, the two point star and two tetrahedrons interlinked. We tried again. I drew a pair of concentric circles with two dots inside the inner circle. Matthew, across the room, drew a pair of concentric circles with a series of dots in between them. I next asked for a consultation with the mysterious Dr. Thomas Penn, who diagnoses on the basis of birthdays only. Unfortunately, I slipped up and instead of giving the birthday of my eldest daughter, as I’d intended, I gave the birthday of my second daughter. _ “Dr. Penn” was befuddled, evidently. He wrote several lines which applied to neither daughter-but they all applied to me. He duplicated in exact detail the diagnosis of my lower leg problem recently given by my orthopedis t. ‘At this point I was convinced’ Matthew Manning was the real article and not just a clever stage magician who had been going around duping credulous scientists . Anyway, I have never really believed that clever stage magicians can dupe scientists, who are usually quite incredulous. Dr. Bander had been a friend and counsellor to Matthew Manning (and his occasionally worried parents) ever since Matthew’s powers first appeared, in the form of poltergeis t disturbances, when Matthew was 11 years old. I began discussing the scientific implicationsof Matthew’s powers with Dr. Bander and somehow we got onto the subject of government persecution of dissident scientists. Among those discussed were Dr. Wilhelm Reich, who was jailed as a fraud when he discovered the bio-energetic field in the 1950’s only to be posthumously confirmed by Kirlian photography in the Sixities, and Dr. Timothy Leary . (currently / among the missing.)

Occu It Watergate Dr. Bander then dropped a little bombshell. He told me about the new book he and Matthew are preparing which he de-

scribed as ‘ ‘an occult Watergate. ” “The real truth about governments and occult science will be even bigger than Watergate,” he said grimly. Among other things, Dr. Bander said, the book will deal with attempts to force Matthew to work for the Ministry of Defense; which Matthew, as a pacifist, refused. Shortly thereafter Matthew was persuaded to perform for scientists at London University, only to discover that they were operating under a grant from the Ministry of Defense. Matthew and Dr. Bander indignantly withdrew. After this incident Bander issued a public statement saying: “Neither Matthew Manning nor I intend to work under the auspices of any defense organization and/or participate in experiments which could conceivably become ‘classified information.’ We believe that any gifts or abilities which may be discovered should be made known and available to scientists and be used for the benefit of mankind.” That was when the real trouble started. Dr. Bander claims that agents of Scotland Yard’s Special Branch have infiltrated his business office under fake credentials representing themselves as scientists. Furthermore, he asserts, his phone has been repeatedly tapped, veiled threats against Matthew have been made by government officials , the CIA had been investigating and trailing them around and a letterbomb has been sent to Matthew. Matthew confirmed all this for me and implied that there was much more of the same, which they don’t care to release at this time. “The Ministry of Defense wants to control these powers and use them destructively,” he charged flatly. (A week later, Uri Geller gave precisely the same warning on the “All The People” TV show over Channel 2, Oakland .) Matthew added that he had been cajoled into a private demonstration of his powers for Lord Rothschild, chairman of the Think Tank (real name, not slang), the English equivalent of our Rand Institute, where War Games strategy is decided. Lord Rothschild later denied that such an interview/demonstration had taken place. Dr. Bander showed me aletter, on the letterhead of Lady Teresa Rothschild, requesting Matthew to meet with Lord Rothschild.

September

19, 1975

This is especially interesting to those who believe in the Round Table conspiracy, allegedly founded by banker Cecil Rhodes ir 1888. According to this theory, the Rothschilds, acting through the Royal Insti tute for International Affairs, and the Rock. efellers, acting through the Council or Foreign Relations, have largely staffed the English and American governments with their own hand, picked servants all through the 20th Century. Oddly, both the Birchers and the Weather Underground have pub. lished documentary exposes of this “conspiracy.” Highest Psychic The real pressure on Matthew Manning to force him to work for the government began after the tests by Prof. Hans Bender in Germany. These tests showed that Matthew scored higher than any previous psychic in reading the minds of subjects over ten miles away. According to Dr. Bander, an English official told him that since his home was only five miles from Checkers (the Prime Minister’s country estate) there could be nc more internal security until Matthew became a government employee. Dr. Bander insists that this was accompanied by an implied threat in the form of a remark about how many young people die in auto accidents everyyear. An interesting chronology appears in the following: 1956-Dr. Wilhelm Reich, after years of persecution by the AMA, is finally hustled off to jail, right after announcing his contacts with UFOs. He quickly dies of a heart attack, which some of his admirers still claim was suspiciously opportune* for his captors. 1953-The CIA dictates to the Air Force that a negative and skeptical policy on UFOs must be adopted. Maj. Dewey Fourno and Capt. Ed Ruppelt later leave the Air Force and subsequently announce that the evidence collected by “Project Bluebeard” supports the extraterrestrial hypothesis of UFOs. 1971-Dr. James E. MacDonald, who had been at the 1953 meeting in which the CIA browbeat the Air Force into the negative UFO position, and who thereafter fought long and hard to have the relevant documents declassified, is found dead of a gunshot wound. Verdict: suicide. 1973-Uri Geller, after being accepted as genuine by several scientific groups in a dozen nations, begins to talk about his extraterrestrial contacts and their attempts ta promote world peace. The Rockefeller owned Time magazine launched a long vendetta against Geller, alledging that he is only a stage magician, and that the many dis tinguishedscientists who have endorsed himare incompetent clods. 1973-Dr. Timothy Leary announces his contact with extraterrestrial higher intelligences via telepathy. Dr. Leary is removed from the prison system and held incommunicado ever since., 1975-Saturday Re?iew Press and Dutton: two respectable and unsensational publishers , release The Mothman Prophecies, by reporter John Keel. Keel, in interviews with a number of UFO contactees, receives basically consistent *portraits of the alleged “Men in Black” who have been repeatedly described in sensational tabloids. The “Men in Black” have been intimidating UFO contactees, seizing evidence, and breaking laws for over three decades now, and Keel does not think they are a hallucination of the “kooky’ ’ contactees . What governmeni bureau is able to act above the law in this way and even treat the Air Force and FBI with contempt? I have had it on excellent authority that for some years now, the U.S. government is heavily involved in research using psychics and “sensitives” for war like purposes. One of my sources is Isaac Bonewits, first man to graduate from University of Cal with a degree in magic and editor of the nation’s largest selling occult newspaper, Gnostic News. The other is a Ph. D in physics who has asked me not to use his name. Both tell basically the same story: the research is heavily funded. Top Secret, has produced amazing results and goes hand in hand with a 1 policy of discrediting or harassing occult researchers‘who won’t join the War Game. If Matthew Manning and Dr. Bander blow the roof off the English end of this, then the - American end will start to blow up, too. The CIA probably isn’t reading yourmind yet; but they almost certainly are trying. (reprinted

from Berkeley

Barb)


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Engr’neer CIA. in- the Chevron

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. Large articles have appeared in the chevron lately about CIA Assassination plots. However, the Rockefeller report turned up definite plots on only one foreign leader: Fidel Castro of Cuba. All other plots range from speculation, in the case of Dominican dictator Trujillo, to pure fantasy in the case of Kennedy. Because it is unlikely that the Soviet government will launch a public investigation of SMERSH, a division of their KGB (formerly known as the NKVD, and the CHEKA) of the KGB itself, the chevron could write an article on this topic, in the interests of equal representation. While people may seem shocked at the thought of foreign political assassination, an assassination of Adolf Hitler in the early 30’s, before he transformed Germany into a fascist state, may have saved the lives of the six million Jews who were murdered at his command, and the 15.3 million people who were killed during World War II. An assassinatiorr of Mao before the Communists took power may have saved the lives of the six million to 36 million Chinese that were murdered by that party between 1949 and 1973. (A large percentage during the ‘?Great Leap Forward”). Andan assassination of Lenin before he returned to Russia in 1917 may have saved the lives of the 15 million to 25 million people thatwere killed by the. ’ Bolsheviks,-mostly in the waves of 1929-30, 1937-38, and 1946-48. These last figures come’ .’ fi-om “The Gulag Archi$lago” by Solzhenitsyn. One last-word to those chevron writers who might try to justify these killings; I would rather be alive and “exploited” than dead and “liberated”. I Stephen Coates 2A dpplied Chemistry ,

Chevron people ain’t people . . ;

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This letter is in regards to a pair of articles in the July 1 lth issue of the Chevron. On receiving this and only this issue of the Chevron on my work term I read it over quite thoroughly. I then came across two articles that interested me from the standpoint of an engineering student. .The article “Whiplash turns down Eng. Sot. pub performance” depicted all engineering students at the University of Waterloo as perverted sexists, Such stereotyping is uncalled l for, it is the actions of a few outspoken engineering students in Eng. Sot. which are pushing (i.e.Enginews) bl a ta n t sexist and racist! propaganda of which many engineering students are not for. The meek majority is following the outspoken minority. It must be made known that this degrades the image of engineering students who are (in most cases) studious, individualistic (as exemplified by the article *“Omigod!” by Len Trembley , 3A Electrical Engineering), non-racist and non-sexist. Also, Judy McMillan forgot about the women that are in . . I. wonder v-v if BWhiplash . theyand also engmeenng at. Waterloo. Are targets for this criticism? --

There are many questions I would appreciate it if Chevron and if it is put in, I to see what reaction it had To conclude, I would like (i.e. on housing, co-op and \

to be-asked and answered on these issues. 5 you could put the’attached summary in the next issue. of the would like to receivesa copy of that issue and the following issue brought about. ~ to add that the July 1 lth issue had many very interesting articles government vs. student). Keep up the good work! Jerry Horban 28 SystemaDe@gn

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Member: Canadian University press (CUP). The chevron is typeset by members of by the federation - the_I workers _ _union of dumont press graphix (CNTU) andpublished of’students incorporated, university of Waterloo. Content is the sole responsibility of 1 the chevron editorial staff. Off icqqre located in the campus centre; (519) 885-l 660, \ I know mostofthe people whosenames appear in the chevron. I know themas persons, not or university local 2331. as the president of acertain association, but probably they don’t know who I am because I am , lf you didn’t vote yesterday don’t fret, your vote wouldn’t ha%e made the slightest bit of difference. always so ,si.lent in theirmeetings. They would never know I have such, a strong feeling for Elections are meaningless,thatls the truth. Here’s an excerpt from a pam-phlet circulated in the Twin Cities on the provincial election: “We hear things that are wrong with government: personal everyone ofthem. One day after class, John helped me to look for my handbag. (If they had known him as a corruption; strategies and laws that fall to deal with social and economic problems; a machio.? person, they would not have been physically violent to him.) The other day I saw Barb’ like bureaucracy operating without feelings. We are told that these problems will disappear if we elect a dlfferent party to-power, or that these are only temporary failures and will clear away if we talking affectionatel,y to her little daughter and a few minutes later she presented herself asa continue to have faith in our government:’ “ No political party ever ties all these factors together, capable woman of great leadership in a meeting; and the International Counsellor is just a for, if we were to look solidly at all these problems and realize how often they have been repeated, sweet little girl when we talk on a personal basis, although she made me feel that I was her we would glve up in disgust on all politicjans. We can already begin to see through t ir fancy worst enemy as I discussed the recent Immigration Issue with her. language, and how they have made promises to us time and time again and which they h1 e failed I don_‘t know what is in the chevron that keeps on reminding me that I am an alien here in. to keep.” “ When we vote we are entrusting decisions concerning our lives to a small group of tprofessional politicians. They see it as their business to hain control not only over the money Canada. I spent in our c&stituency, but also over our activjtles and f&doms. They also &e their business I felt empty and futile after I read the chevron. Everything in the chevron is so matter-ofas so important as to run oureducation and as to decide how much and what kind of services will fact. I believe that in life, there is a lot more. than just facts. Individuals attack individuals, be available to us, despite the fact that we pay for thoseservices.” It all u$in a nutshell, groups attack groups. Ever since I learned to stop using my mind for a few minutes, and right? Helping out this week were: henry hess, glen dewar, doug ward,Sums’ gary robins, who was left concentrate on feeling every part of my body; feeling how the air passes through my nostrils ’ out last week, diane ritza, Sylvia hauck, who’s hopefully getting better, neil docherty, donna into my lungs; feeling the other person’s eyes; feeling my hair brushing on my neck; I no harlamow, llbby warren, bill mccrsa, john sakamoto, john mahoney, stan:gC?Js++dirn carter, longer need the intellectual games to fill-up my mind. , emest von bezold, Charlie farquason, who dropped in to say hello and who’s he anyway, and ’ I Po-Ming Lo ’ randy hannigan. s . -St. -Paul’s College H .

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student newspaper

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--_ Working for the student newspaper can be- both a learning experien& and an occasion to meet lots of interesting people. It can provide you with essential writing and verbal skills which tindoubtedly will be of some us&when you leave university. Ii can sharpen your senses to the myriad of problems facing society today. And it allows you to put youi thoughts into words so otbr,s can share r your_ ideas. * ‘The hrndion of the student newspawr is .primarily to ask and ~~tho& q-s which are not raised elsewhere; questions coneming the way a university is run, forexample, or ttW operations of astudeagavernment, or the meaning an&purpose of education, Student nev unbound -by the restrictions that shackle the daily press, &re free io enquire into the structure Of-the university, and to challenge the underlying assclmptions upon which the School system has been built by its parent society. N is dearty not enough.simply’io accept the notion of the uniVersity as knowMge.dispensary, as a r&e peparation for lite in the “rd’ w&l. m years speflt stdying must a&i be employed irl examining the nature of that world and-often qbestbing tb roles which it c&s on us to fill, as m-n and women,’ as histcirians or m&har$cai engine&s, as teachers or layaboutsl We must also look at thosewho, unlike-us,-have never-been inside a university, rqcog@zing that it is--often no more than wealth and social class that sepqte oursehres.from them. I Thugh a ~wspaper; we can bring all the&matters f6 discus&on w&h every other member. of the ‘Mudent .body, and-so’ bfing ourse)re~ m a common understanding of the factors governirig them.

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We can also write and pub& I feature articles on the many - problem&at presently beset’ety such ‘as pollution, skyrocketing food prices, the reasons behir j increases in oil prices, the lack of adequate housing which affec ts low-income groups including students, and the nutrition value 1 of the.food sold in the ‘chain supermarkets. Students by dint d their access to research can . provide society with proposals wt ich might redress at least in part some of the above problems. “But I‘mn:t write/ m&$e not but writing, like most things, is larwly an quired a&&d you dd n’t need to be Mick Jagger to say mat m to b @j. Even if yob I interests don’t extend to writing, of course, there’s (ots more you c Rn do. Wh@her your forte lies in such tasks as mpy+&ing 0~ typi tg, M whether you’d feel more at home doing page design, photo Iraphy,- graphics .4x a couple 01 dozen other ming pastimes, he ch;evrorr is able and willing,to accomm&ate you. This year’s chevron is co&r you clos6 to $25,473 from the Fe&ration of Stud&@ b-et, ; hich works 6ut to about two and one half doll& m -dent. This hefty piece of the Federation pie goes to pay m1-s for t&m full time chevron workers,, assorted &ninistrativ~ costs, and those zap&al expenditures, major and minor, which are necessary to k 3ep a paper alive. An additional $59,000 in @nEng and publishi 1g costs is met from advertising . ’ _ revenues. It’s a lot-*f money.z~nfOrtunate y, it takes a good deal more thar just monby to make the ch@~roa a useful and meaningful service for the students who pay for fi. Lik. any volunteer student vganization, the dre~mn is hays in MS Iof student volunteers. So here-it is-we’d like to have you work@ with us on the chev.Wn.


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