1977-78_v18,n14_Chevron

Page 1

University of- WateGoo ‘Waterloo, Oii tario volume Y-8, numbei14. friday; septembet 9, 7977

-,I Fed hierarchy in \ 1/_vagt disarray Student,s returning to campus this fall may well wonder what ha\ happened to the federation. It is certainly in a bad way. It faces ;I referendum on whether its fees should be refundable, it is unable to muster quorum’for its meetings and has at its helm only an x,ting president who is due to leave at the end of September.The federation lost its president when, after increasing dissati+’ faction with him on campus the Board of Directors,ousted Doug ~ Thompson’July I8 by*giving hima leave of absence without pay until September-70 at which time the presidency becomes vacant. This left vi&president Ron Hipfner as acting president until September ‘lo. The Board of Directors put him on full salary until : that time. . In a letter to councillors August 23 he suggested that the election* . of a new president, council bye-elections, and the second part oft he refundable fee referendum take place at the same time, in late October. He said this “would give the campu’s a few weeks to and later told the chevron it would also \ recover fro,m orientation” save money. * ’ Sunday, council will choose one of its members to serve as vice-president and acting president until the new president takes.. I office. / In the letter Hipfner recommended that the new vice-president be paid a half-time salary of $80 a week, and that-he himself be hired at $160 a week to “carry on a transition” until the end of September. He says that since “it is not too terribly likely” that council will achieve quorum, 13 members, the Board of Directors will, if necessary, establish a temporary lower quorum. This extraordinary procedure would override federation byl,aws which state that quorum is 13;

Commission Fri. Sept. 9;2:00 Fri. Sept. Everything see& to (and actually does) happen in th\e first few weeks of schooL Here we see students laying out their (or their parent’s) hard earned cash for tuition. For this they yi//, of course, receive one (1) job’ at the successful completion of their school work. The PAC building was all geared up, this week for the throngs of students-wanting to get their course schedules, ID cards, pay fees and the like. /iregistration is getting you down, pEay it smart and register by mail next year, I photo by randy bark&n ,

Mon., p.m.

/

Wed.,Sept.

Mon.,

Sept.

i

questioning of federation president Doug Thompson. presentation and questioning bf fed. councillor J.J. Long, _ former chevron ed-itor Adrian Rodway, former chairperson of the Board of Publications Ralph Torrie. lo:30 presentation of‘ the chevron staff,s case.

6130 -

, “

IO:30 p.m.

19, 1 I:00

2:30 p.m. Thurs. Sept. 22,

2:00

a.m. -

’ There

is nothing

cutbacks

acting

on education president

Ron

Hipfner told. the chevron because “we (the federation). haven’t done

Environmental Studies Society is sponsoring *a beard-growing con’ test which starts Sept. 15. ’ Further details of the events can be found in a back’page advertisement in the Aug. 23 chevron and on posters throughout campus. -nash

dhanani

guaranteeing

democratic

decision

making - paper had a problem recruiting volunteers, - chevron closure, section of the bylaw dealing with principles of the Canadian University Press, aside, \

on council. was trying with the power a politician. He said then editor he found

- ’

questioning qf former fed. president Shane Rob&ts. . Presentation of chevron staff’s case.~ .,

4:OO

~ 5 At its meeting Wednesday ‘the lor John Long. neither appointed nor ratified anyp.m. I’ The actual status of Long is not chevron investigation commission . one as official spokesperson and clear. Acting federation president Hip‘Fner told the chevron the matter got its first taste of the case for closRon Hipfner told the chevron would be raised at council/ on Sunwas legal and proper. (The CUP ing the chevron j,ast September, Tuesday that the federation did not day. principles-which the federation agwhen it heard testimony from two have an official representative and rees to abide by in its bylaws prekey witnesses. In his introductory remarks to that Long,>was just an interested Recalled president _ Shane the commission Long said that by cludes, any federation interference student.. Long, however, claimed Roberts and current president reinstating the chevron the federa/ in the paper.) to be the official representative and Doug Thompson (who, officially has absolute right as tion had admitted, in a sense, that it - ,-federation leaves office Sept 10, having been he was supported in this Wednes- 1 had been wrong, publisher to control finances. of however, he who, though on ousted by-th,e Federation-Board of dayby Thompson, paper and to hire and fire staff. 1 wanted to bring individuals before After his presentation Roberts Directors) were the first part of a sabbatical, is technically still,presithe commission so that they could dent. case being presented supposedly said he would not answer any quesexplain their reasons. Students’council, however, has for the federation by math counciltions from the chevron delegation. :\ Roberts testimony was largely a Howlever, through the chair he rerepeat of charges he made w.hen he sponded, to a question from chevled the closing of the paper S.ept 24, ron editor Neil Docherty. Docherty claiming that it had, been taken over asked why: if ‘Roberts felt there buy the Anti-Imperialist Alliance were so many problems w$th the (AIA), a Marxist-Leninist group on paper&$&d not take recourse to a campus. At no time during his CUP commission of inquiry which hour-long t,stimony did the former any research on that”. he )csuld have called, and had the At last count there were 15pubs, As for the frolic the major highpresident present any evidence to situation investigated. 12 films,-eight concerts, seven cofsubstantiate his charges. This Roberts replied that the execufee houses and five picnics which light ’ is a multi-cultural festival raised objections from the chevron make up the bulk of an-orientation which is going to be held in the PAC tive meeting Sept. 24 decide.d to that his presentation-, close the paper only until the counschedule which welcomes new unquad Sept; 21-22, which will in- delegation was worthless. $1 meeting a few days later which, dergraduates to U W. clude idisplays, food, dancing and For those looking for something perhaps competitions e.gb was to decide on, what to do. A list of Roberts’ assertions inmore substantive, however, the spaghetti Dochertyf told the commission eating. The Molsons cludes the following points: schedule is sparse. The only item in (rshow van is expected to be on hand that this was no answer to his ques- concern over the reporting tion. Roberts took a second stab at _ this category is a panel discussion with trophies to hand out, and the coverage ’ of chevron staffers asit saying that CUP involvement Sept. 20 .on immigrationrfeaturing federation-hopes it will get money sociated with AIA, would have meanttinterference in James S. Cross, Director General from Wintario to cover 5Q per. cent - chevron’s content not related to the paper which he wanted to of Special projects in the immigra!of the costs. \ campus’life, tion department, who contributed Other events include an outdoor avoid. - coverage of the paper too heavThe answer was termed “goobto the controversial Green Paper on concert Sept. 12-with, Willie P. ily directed towards international ledegook” by Docherty. immigration, Toronto lawyer Paul Bennett and Dave Essig providing news and sectarian,, politics, Thompson addressed the meetCopeland and local lawyer David the music. Murray McLaughlin ap-chevron should have wider-roots ing from, a DreDared statement. Co.oke. pears in concert Sept. 15 16, and on campus, which he later iorwarded to the The only other items not as- there is jazz, \ bluegrass and folk - AIA pressure on chevron editor commission. Like Roberts, he gave sociated with the fun and frolic is an sprinkled throughout the schedule. Adrian Rodway to resign, his views but no/evidence to supinformation booth being run by the / Some novelties are The St. Pauls 2 resignation created a ‘port them. federation, and a forum on the Nar_ Black Swamp which according to crisisRodway’s situation, . . Thompson, who was a Fedet-ational Union of Students and the ~the federation orgamsers is a ritual - tension within staff between tion executive member at the time Ontario Federation of Students is at the college when the college’s AS/A staffers and others causing inorientation ‘committee is dragged of the chevron closing; described scheduled-for Sept. 28. stability, The federation is also putting out through the Laurel creek. Also the himself as an opponent to Roberts - paper had no formal procedure a pamphlet on the student aid system and a bulletin on federation boards, according to fieldworker Diana Clark.

y

p.m.

14,2:00-4:OOp.m. 16,6:30,

I

4:OO p.m.

9, 6:30 -;0:30

Sept. 12,

Fri.,Sept.

-

.Meetings

_

He said at the time he to keep on good terms chevron real.izing the paper has to destroy a / he had close contact with Adrian Rodway but. that some members of

staf$, particularly

,

,

then production

manager .Neil Docherty to be paranoid about the federation. He complained that in his dealings with Docherty the production manager had lacked warmth and a sense of humour. On Sept 24 when he heard Rodway and Board of Publications chairman Ralph Torrie had resigned he felt the problem on the paper -mainly centred on Docherty and news editor Henry Hess whom he didn’t want to control the paper. ’ Thompson claimed that though Roberts had ,ordered the’ locks changed on the chevron doors Sept 24 the paper. was re-opened by council Sept 26 and it was really the uncompromising attitude taken by the chevron staff that backed council into acornerand thus caused the closure Sept 30. ~ ’ Thompson. said he saw the conflict as one between a legitimate , democratic authority (the federation) and a special interest group (the chevron). Thompson agreed to return to the -commission today to answer any questions on his presenta@? The commission is presently investigating the first two points of its three-part mandate. They are the reasons for closing the chevron and for termination of the position of news editor and production manager, and the legality and propriety of that action. 1 Later it has to deal w;h the future’relationship between the pape‘r and the federation. 5 To date the commission, chaired by ‘Dr. Frank Epp, principal of Conrad Grebel college, has done some research into official documents re!evant to the dispute and dealt with procedural questions. Wednesday was the start of what is supposed to be the federation’s case and the chevron is to begin presenting evidence Sept. 12. *

-

1

-


\

2

Horses Boarded (about 2 miies Box

from

Stalls

FARM-FOUR

iiichy,

Reasonable

Ridi_ng

Rates

Trails

ENTERPRISES

LTD. 664-2310

-

I

Friday

. sH/PPlNG OVERSEAS? oo ds - Personal Effects - Tourist Purchases household--G K-W I’nternatio~al F’reight Forwarding Limited

1 -

from g-lam. $1 after 7pm. * Math Start,-an informal, course change centre, 9-4pm;-MC 5158.

\

.

General

Library

Tours,

lntegrat-ed

-

Math

bFrosh

Buffet.

6pm-lam.

Church

Take part-in a sparkling comedy by Alan-Aickbourn, direc<ed by John Plank-..-_F.

South

‘MC

5136

movies

’ coliege

/casino/nostalgia

m Open to anyone - must be prepared to attend at least 4 rehearsals per week. between Sept. 12 and Qcti 25 .- I ,‘ Parts available fo; all age grbups .‘ Please phone UW Arts Centre for an appointment, Ext. 2126 or 885-4280.

night. 7pm.

Campus

Rights

ocioss

from

-

THIS

ON

NEXT

YOUR

CARD MEAL

FOR

A 10%

(DINING

Library

Campus

ROOM

centre.

Centre

shop,

Specializing iri Pizza, Spagetti, Lasagna,. Submari$nes and many Italian dishes. We deliver f ram* 11 AM Takerout orders also available -

Coltege

(amateur)

Notre

Monday Info Booth

Field and

Coffeehouse

and Nerve

’ CC

Hall. 8:30 - 4:30pm. Math Start, an informal course change center, 9-4pm. MC 5158. Legal Resource Centre: provided free legal information to students. 885-0840, Room 106, CC. Volunteers welcomed, no experience necessary. General Library Tour, 9:30, 11:3d, 1:30, 3:30. .

Library

Research

Workshop,

Microfilm

Demonstration,

2:30, 3rd Floor Arts.

.

-

Centre,

CC

-Campus .-

Publications

Government

Workshop! 10:30, 2:30; Arts, 5th Great Hall. 8:30-4:30pm. Floor. -Math Start, an informal Course Microfilm Demonstration, 10:30, change center, 9-4pm. MC 5158. Legal Resource Centre: provides to 2139, 3rd Floor Arts. , ’ students. 885-0840, Room 108, CC Campus Centre Pub opens 12 noon. Volunteers welcomed, no experience _ Jim Ledgerwood from g - lam. $50 necessary. after 7pm. Cartoons in pub from General’ Library Tour, 930, 11.:30, 2-4P.m. 1:30, 3:30. ELH free coifeehouse, John Tank Library Research Workshop, l&30, Jazz Band Noon _ 4pm 2:30, Arts & EMS Info Desk. Arts ‘Pub. HH 373,‘12:30-4:36pm; -

2:30, 3rd Floor Arts.

l&30, \

and Nerve

Government Publications Workshop, 10:30,-2:30, Arts, 5th Floor. Microfilm _ Demonstration, 10:30,

‘10:30,

2:30, Arts & EMS Info Desk. Government Publications Workshop, 10:30, 2:30, Arts, 5th Floor. .

10:30,

Info Booth

Great

Expires October 3, 1977

Theatre

Co. Non-verbal theatre. 8pm. Humanities Theatre. Admission $5.50, Students/seniors $3.50. Tickets at UW Arts Centre Main Box Office, Room 254 Modern Languages Building. Coffee House in Rm. 110, Campus Centre, Sponsored by Gay Lib.

Publications Work10:30, 2:30 Arts, 5th Floor.

Wednesday

Centre,

8pm.

Marchowsky-Dance

Centre Pub opens 12 noon. Jim Ledgerwood from g-lam. $.50 _ Thursday after 7pm. Cartoons in pub from Info Booth and NerveCentre, CC 2;ppm. Great Hall. 830 -<4:30pm. ELH free coffeehouse, David Wiffen Math Start, an informal course noon -4pm. _ change cent,er, 9-4pm. MC 5158. SACC smash at Waterloo Motor Inn. Legal Resource Centre: provides UW Concert Choir, first rehearsal. legal information to students. Everyone is welcome to come out 885-0840, Room 106, CC. Volunteers and join in. Major performance in Dewelcomed, no experience necessary. cember will feature Beethoven’s General Library- Tour, 9:30, 11:30, Symphony No: 9 (A Song of Joy). For more information contact Alfred 1:30, 3:30. Kunz at ext. 2439.7 - 9pm, AL 116. -Library Research Workshop, 10:30, 2:30, Arts & EMS Info Desk -

Dame. 8pm.

L

Marie

10:30,

Demonstration,

Hall Pub. Sponsored

by the NDP Association.

Campus

l-5 pm.

I

Workshop,

South Campus

2:30; 3rd Floor Arts.

Coffeehouse.

Church

Research

Microfilm

Freeman,

ONLY)

CC

Government

JB $1.50 8pm. Fed Flicks - Silent Movie. AL 116, 8pm. $1.

DISCOUNT

Centre,-

2:30, Arts & EMS Info D’esk.

Open House at Klemmer Farmhouse Daycare, Columbia Street West. Come to *talk about co-op daycare and visitour

PRESENT

and Nerve

Hall. 8:30 - 4:30pm. Math Start; an informal course change center, 9-4pm. MC 5158. . Legal Resource Centre: provides free legal information to students. 885-0840, Room 106, CC. Volunteers welcomed, no experience necessary. General Library- Tour, 9:30, 11:3b, 1:30, 3:30.

,

(Sponsored by SciSoc, MathSoc, Fed of Students) Noon

BB6-4160

Plank. bpen to anyone in the community. Actors, Backstage crews, technicians all required. Parts for all age groups. Call UW Arts Centre for appointment. 7 - 1lpm. Theatre of the Arts. Fed/Fresh Pub Engineering Faculty Lounge, E3-1101, 8pm: $1.

Great

Program: Photo exposition, film, Chilean folklore; Speaker.’ loam noon. Breithaupt Community Centre (-350 Margaret Ave.) Kitchener. Campus Centre Pub opens 7pm. : Chrysalissfrom g-lam. $1 admission. St. Paul’s Black Swamp 8pm. St. Pauls College. Fed Flicks - Silent Movie. 8pm. AL 116. $1.

Square

Waterloo

Info Booth

Audjtions for University of-Waterloo comedy-drama directed by John

Tuesday

in Chile.

Free Beach Party at Columbia (519)

Jazz Band. 7pm.

Association

/

Saturday Human

Students

from

General Meeting for applications for Turnkeys. 6pm. CC 1.13. Doors will be locked at 6pm. Free iazz. CC Great Hall. John Tank

Orientation

Hall Pub, Jezebel.

Sunday SOUTH..WATERL/OO.

Chinese

$1150. 8pm.;. fed Flicks - Silent Movie. 8pm. AL 116. $1.885-0840, Room 106, CC. Legal Resource Centre: provides free legal information to students. 8850840. Room ,106, CC. Volunteers welcomed, no experience necessary.

ACTORS, STAGE CREW, TECHNICIANS Wednesda , September 14 ’ 7to 11 p.m., f .heatre of $he Arts

ST.

outdoor concert, .Willie P. & Dave Essig. 2:36pm. Optometry Free Clinic Tour with refreshments. 7pm. International Folk Dancing. Tolearn and dance world famous folk dances. Location: Senior Citizen’s Centre, 310 Charles Street East, Kitchener, 7:30 - 10:30om. $1 oer oerson oer evening. Info ‘Maj Biih 744-4983.

in pub

Outdoor concert, ‘PAC quadrangle, TBA, 12:30pm. Join a Band! UW Concert Band first rehearsal. Everyone is welcome to come out and join in. (Some woodwind and brass instruments will be available) Major performance planned for early December. For more info contact Alfred Kunz, ext. 2439. 5:30pm. AL 6. _

Bennett,

1.S. Lounge.

Cartoons

Free

picnic/

HH free

Seminar,

of Uniwat.”

- Studies

Laurel Creek. 1pm. Art SOC -Pub, HH 373, i:ZQ-4:30pm.

9:30, 10:30,

Studies

-- “Mechanics 2pm. Free

AUDITIONS

KING

Integrated party/potluck,

tl:30, 1:30; 2:30, 3:30, Arts, EMS, & -- ES at Info Desk. s Engineers Bus Push (then Pubbing) . 2Pm

--

after 7pm. -24pm.

Campus Centre Pub openS 12 noon. Jim Ledgerwood from g-lam. $:50 after 7pm. Cartoons in pub from 2-4pm.

Course Clinic. CC 135. Campus Centre Pub with Chrysaliss

576-8226 ---.-

______-

64

5), 79 77

Near K-W Stockyards

Campus) -Y

Excellent

-

-

.

the chevron

Centre

Jim Ledgerwood

-

ES beard

South Campus ,

,

contest.

ES 107

-

Hall Pub, Ian Thomas

Band. 8pm.

Pub opens 12 noon. from 9-

growing

12:30 --2:30pm.

Murray

lam. $.50

McLauchlan

concert,

Humanities Theatre, $4.50 advance, non-student and $1 more at the

-

\\

. Welcome Back Special Thanks IO: Sound Unlimited, Records on Wheels, Joanne Squire Sun Productions.

Smaile,

Pregnant.

Rick Taylor Rural Retreat 1 I

David l&y ’ Kent County Pickers North Shore Richard Keel,an ’

Wanted

Personal

_

Tep-y Jo&s Vicki Taylor! Wolf at the Door & more

& Distressed?

The- Birth ControlCentre is an information and referral centre for birth control, VD, unplanned pregnancy I & sexuality. For all the alternatives phone 885-1211, Ext. 3446 (Rm. 206, Campus-centre) or for emergency numbers 8848770. -Gay Lib Office, Campus Centre Rm. 217C. Oden Monday-Thursday 7-lqpm, some afternoons. Counseiling and informati.on. Phone 885-l 211, ext. 2372. Past Masters Club. (Think Tank). -Members’ Ideas, Published. $5/‘yr. Club $2.00 Ego-I.0 Test. 447 Ontario I Street, Toronto, Ontario M5A 2V9.

.

ree

Bus buses

service run

to 1 I:00 9:30

and

from

a.m. p.m.

-

festive 3:00 11:30

s p.m. p.m.

For Sale YARD

SALE

. .-

Rain

Temple Shalom, Waterloo. Must have -experience with children between ages 8-12 and good, knowledge of \ customs and history. Phone 576-3745 or 579-0936 after 6pm.

People with experience foods wanted to work . Typing

Student

Typing.

IBM electric. 885-l 863.-

or shine,

Saturday Sept. 10, loam - 4pm. Electric typewriter, bed, paddleball racquet, many household items. 14 Beverley Street, Waterlooo (off Erb Street, 2 blocks east of Westmount).

.

off on any sundae!

_

in Natural

Sept. Call Steve 742-9723.

weekend.

16-18

Reasonable rates. Lakeshore Village.

to the wonderful world of

Fast accurate typing. IBM Selectric. *-50 cents page. Call Pamela 884-6913. Wish

to

experienced,

.-

2&s.

Jewish student needed to teach religious school on Sunday mornings.

bo

essay

call 742-8543.

Wing;

Essay and Term Paper Typing.

perpage. callFran576-5895I$.50 Moving Will do small moving jobs with a halfton pick-up. Reasonable rates. Call Jeff 884-2831.

Good at any of 6 K-W locations

-


friday,

September

9, 7977

?

Vote planned for October

Should the federation The future of the federation of students may be decided by a referendum this October, when students will vote on whether their federation fees should be refundable. Currently, all undergraduates pay $13.75 per term to the federation. The fee is paid at registration and is non-refundable. The referendum is the result of pressure from the engineering societies last March. EngSoc A president Peter King and EngSoc B president Aivars Kakis cited “long-term dissatisfaction with the federation of students” complicated by “the chevron affair” as their reasons for demanding refundable fees. At that time, the Arts society also expressed support for a referendum on refundable fees. The chevron solicited opinions from campus groups and published them on July 4. The federation, and the Mathematics society have expressed opposition to refundable fees. Federation vice-pres’iden t Ron Hipfner listed all of the services provided by the federation and said they would be jeopardized if fees were made refundable. He also stressed student unionism as the most efficient way of handling the problems that students face. Mathsoc feels that federation services would be unworkable with refundable fees. It said that from past precedents, refundable fees can cause the disintegration of student unions. The collapse of the University of Guelph student union in 1969 was cited as an example. However, in the July 8 issue of the chevron, former University of Guelph councillor Ernst von Bezold said that the collapse of the Guelph union was due to the fees not being collected at all, rather than due to the fees being refundable. Van Bezold said that the Univer-

sity of Guelph stopped collecting the fees on the advice of a government solicitor. This action followed a change in the Guelph union’s membership rules. EngSoc claims that. most of the federation’s services are operated on a break-even basis and do not require subsidy. EngSoc also considers the federation’s spending to be “exhorbitant”. Of the fees collected from students, the federation pays out 53 per cent in salaries. EngSoc, and other proponents of refundable fees, hold that organizations can be viable with voluntary membership and largely volunteer labour. Examples cited include the faculty societies, all of which operate successfully with refundable fees and volunteer labour. EngSoc says the federation is unresponsive to the student body. In a statement to the chevron July 4, King said “If the feds won’t listen to reason, then maybe they will listen to dollars! Refundable fees are the biggest stick that the student body can carry in dealing with the federation. If the federation won’t listen to talk, then the students should beat the feds over the head with refundable fees - to death if necessary!” King said that the federation exthrough the actions of ecutive, president Doug Thompson and the board of directors, has “publicly exhibited its contempt of student opinion by its manipulation and misinterpretation of the bylaws and policies governing federation operations.” King was referring to the fede‘i-ation’s handling of the chevron conflict, as well as bylaws introduced to make the recall of representatives more difficult, and to disenfranchise graduate students from the federation. The Anti-Imperialist Alliance

New hw firm himd as Rosenberg goes Kitchener mayor Morley Rosenberg, who has served as lawyer for the federation of students since 1968, has been dismissed amidst allegations that he was being grossly overpaid. The free chevron disclosed June 10 that Rosenberg has been billing the federation for $10,000 per year since 1975. For this flat fee, Rosenberg agreed to handle landlord-tenant cases and corporate legal work referred to him by the federation. A chevron analysis of the work undertaken by Rosenberg for this fee showed that he was being paid at the rate of $25 per minute. Rosenberg’s quarterly reports showed that his work for the federation involved about 10 telephone consultations per quarter, each about 10 minutes long. A subsequent investigation by the Kitchener-Waterloo Record showed that other lawyers in the region considered Rosenberg’s fees to the federation to be exhorbitant. Rosenberg refused to comment about the level of his fees, saying that it was between himself and his client. In a letter to councillors August 23, federation vice-president Ron Hipfner announced Rosenberg’s dismissal and suggested that the law firm of Osboume, Mollison and Boehler replace him. In an interview with the chevron, Hipfner said that the federation will be paying for legal services on a per-case basis from now on. Hipfner said that Osbourne, Mollison and Boehler should be able to handle all of the federation’s work. Last year, the federation hired Gary Flaxbard to take legal action against the free chevron. Rosenberg did not want to take the case as he was running for mayor at the time.In a telephone inierview with the chevron, Rosenberg said that he is “disappointed” that his relationship with the federation has been ended. He declined to comment on whether he considered his fees to be reasonable. -nick

fee be refundable?

(AIA) a’communist group on campus, supports refundable fees. In a statement to the chevron, the AIA said “Membership in a mass student defence organization should be voluntary in order to insure fhat the organization does indeed serve the basic interests of the students. It should regularly be forced to win the approval and active support of the masses by serving their basic interests. This means that members must be able to withdraw from the organization at any time.” Although the chevron staff voted to support refundable fees, a minority expressed the view that refundable fees are unworkable due to,

-----Age

amongst other concerns, the difficulty of preventing non-members of the federation from using “the subsidized services. The federation council has voted to support compulsory fees, althqugh the vote to hold a referendum on the issue was won with a large majority.

Referendum

split

EngSoc asked for a summer referendum on refundable fees, but the federation executive opposed this, saying that many off-campus students could not be contacted and that a mail-out ballot would be too expensive.

of Majority

-nick

redding

CWL

Card to be promoted The Liquor Licencing Board of Ontario (LLBO) and the Hotel Association have joined together to promote Age of, Majority cards in Waterloo County, and until Wednesday, it looked like machines to produce the cards would be set up on campus during registration despite the objections of the Federation of Students. Wednesday, it was learned that the UW administration acted too slowly in its bid to have the machines on campus and therefore they will not appear. Last week acting Federation president, Ron Hipfner,was contacted by Administrative services Director Bill Deeks seeking Federation backing for the machines. Hipfner, after consultation with council and executive members, informed Deeks that the Federation was against the card and didn’t want the machines on campus. “Deeks says he will bring them on anyways”, stated Hipfner. University president Burt Matthews said, “we can’t stop it without dragging people away” added Hipfner. He then promised Matthews that the Federation would campaign against it. Hipfner claims that there is no need for the Age of Majority card on campus. “I think we aren’t vigilant enough; we don’t need more ID.” Currently there is a double check at the pub and South Campus

The federation council decided to hold the referendum in two parts, one on July 6 and one in October. Thus all students could vote when they were on campus. The referendum will probably take place at the’ same time as the presidential election. The results of the July referendum will not be known until the October poll is complete. A notary public is keeping the July ballots until that time. A chevron survey of 200 voters during the July poll showed 136 were in favour of I’efundable fees and 64 opposed.

Hall. Student ID and proof of age is required. Student ID cards are now in the process of being redesigned for next year and Hipfner had asked the registrar to include date of birth on the card to simplify entrance to on-campus drinking plac,es. The fed&&on also views the card as an infringement on a person’s freedom, allowing the government a greater tool for surveillance. (The card includes the person’s picture). Deeks, who does not feel this concern to be a real one. says the administration is in support of Age of Majority cards qn campus since “it would allow students to buy the card at one quarter of the cost it would entail otherwise.” “It is an opportunity to ‘those students requiring one, it is not being forced upon them.” The card, which normally costs 8 to 9 dollars, is to be available to students for $2 during registration. Pictures will be taken by a Polaroid unit, and manpower will be supplied by volunteers from the LLBO and by the Hotel Association staff. At the moment, Deeks does not see identification as a problem at the University though he admits it could become one. “Hotels run the risk (of difficulties with the LLBO), as we all do, and the penalties are quite severe .”

in area George Schmalz, manager of the Blue Moon Hotel, and chairman for the local Hotel Association spoke for the association. He reasoned that as licence holder, the hotel owners were the ones who were legally responsible for any changes taken on identification. He saw the solution to the problem in “true identification”. “We’re going to recommend that the Age of Majority card is the only card required.” Schmalz, who is heading a program to make the cards easily available in the’ K-W area, sees his efforts as a community service as w’ell as a way of protecting licence holders. He feels the public is interested in greater safeguards in respect to drinking, seeing concern about underage drinking and the raising of the drinking age. “I rather think the LLBO is pushing the Hotel Association” Deeks said. He believes that the Age of Majority card will be the only acceptable card in the future. This is Hipfner’s worry -the more widespread the cards become, the more likely they are to become manditory . When Sam Armstrong, the local LLBO representative was contacted concerning the current campaign, he deferred comment to a press conference which will be held today at Conestoga College. -randy

barkman

redding

Course addition MENU

357111

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-

Lifestyles

for

a conserver

society

TR 3:.30 ENVS

350

Contact:

Jim Robinson, Sally Lerner,

Ext. 2706 Ext. 3065

in relation to the federation of students. From left to right: Greg Merrick, a math undergrad, Tom Hanrahan, a former grad student who got a Master’s in Human Relation:. in May, Don Martin, a post-grad arts student, Dieneke Chan, a psychology undergrad, and Conrad Crebel College principal Frank Epp, chairperson of the commission. The commission was established after the federation council reinstated the chevron June 26. Four commissioners were mutually acceptable to both the federation council and chevron staff. Each side chose two candidates and held veto power over the other’s choices. The four candidates then chose a’ chairperson as the fifth member. Meetings are being he/d in this and coming weeks. Times and places are announced in the chevron as they become known. photo by neil docherty


4

friday,

the chevron

4

WATERLOO LOCATIONS

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September

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September

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nine years cm a four-year programbut this piece of gossip is not investigated to -find out how - many’students are taking too long. TheGlobealsoclaimsParrott _ said 40,000 students wouldbe eligible for grants without loans. This is stiply not true. Vaughan told the chevron the ministry has yet to -work out the criteria and’was un-. n Im I :-- brn able to give any such figure. being asked to estimate their ini the applications in 1974, and once This is the tale of a government The star, one of the Globe’s come well in advance.. . it was again left it & that with no explanaminister who wants to change the competitors put its story on the very difficult and of course when tion. . 4 studept aid policy. But of course third- p&e, but made up for this the year finished we came round However, Kidd explained to the before a government introduces, or with a headline which screamed (and asked for verification .of that chevron that there, was nothing changes, a policy it has to prepare “Ontario stiffens student-aid rules income and of course there was a to end cheating”. public opinion. sinister in the overpayments. The It states the govnumber of cases wherq there were However, that is no problem. All __-. problem was caused because in emment will demand copies of in--~ discrepancies.” .’ was using the esthe minister has to do is make up a 1974 theministry come tax returns to prevent cheatOn the proposed limit to the ‘ing and goes on to quote P&Ott story \.- and even if it does con- timated income of parents to ‘detradict his, earlier statements it’s termine the award,-whereas now ‘number of years students can re- 1saying that his ministry recovers “a they use_ the previous year’s ,in- ceive grants- the. paper claims not going to matter - then he calls lot of money” when it audits OSAP come. the media into a room, dub&-the Parrott’s executive assistant, Carol applications. How much money is “It was very obvious to us that it Vaughan, said there had been comsession a press -conference and not investigated. feeds them a line. was becoming moreand more difplaints about students taking too The paper also states that only parIn th@ case the liiie is that stu- ficult for people, esp&lly long to get their degreei. It quotes students, working towards their ents, to estimate their current indents are. cheats and the media -her saying a studentawards officer first degree will be eligible for come with inflation they were . told her of one student who had seems to have been only too keen grants. Although this is the aim of

and thhmmrs.blav abm

.

copy of a student% tax retum,‘or that of the’ student’s parents, was necessary to guard against cheating ’ by students. He replied that “the yi vast sums of money that are given out in this province go for the, purbut “there has 1 pose intended”, d, * been cheating, there has been abuse of the system, no one’s going to argue that.” He said the ministry recovers over $100$00 for every -one per cent of OSAP applications it audits. However, on a CBC Radio phone-in program in February in response to a listener’s question about students “ripping off” student aid he said: “I& all honesty when we go through our : verification section, and don’t kid yoplf we have a pretty active verification and audit section, we don’t recover a large amount of money - we do some. But I think if the truth were really known, and I want to be serious about this now, if the truth were really known the amomt of ripoff on the system is very----_small.” Faced with this apparent contradiction Parrott told the chevron.. ? ,“If you understand what $100,000 is relative to $74 million it’s not a . large amount of money, but a lot of people don’t like a politician to say that $100,000 isn’t a large amount of money. . .-. it’s a large amount of money tosome guy who is earning ~ $10,000.” . It might not be .much but it was enough for frontipage coverage in t&e Globe and Mail Aug. 18. The > story tells how Parrott says a re; quirement that studemssubmit tax returns is necessary to . guard against cheating and that he re; ceived many compiaints ‘“at cocktail parties and places like that” about student awards: \ The Globe story goes on to cite a provincial auditor’s report - that found 66 per cent of a sample of 1975 applications for student aid “unsatisf~tory”. However, “un’ satisfactbrry” is not explained and the impression is left. that it means\ I ‘, cheating. I ‘+The chevron investigated the situation to find thait, according to a : y ministry executive director Frank Kidd, the reasons for an unsatisfactory application could range from a _ wrong social insurance number, to imig ripkting of years of study or pare@al income. ’ Y But the Globe’s attempt to paint s students black did not stop there. . Reporter Arthur Johnson mz&le mention that the auditor had found .-., overpayments in 25 per cent of

’ ’ /’

I ,

’>

‘thecshewn

5

the. midher he -told. the chevron that “for administrative reasons” the ministry would have to set a [ specific number of years as the limit.. . . - \ _ -Nor is poor journalism a monopoly of the big papers. Th& UW Gazette ran-a story Wednes* day which looked suspiciously ,like the one in the Globe and Mail, ineluding the statement that’ 40,ooO students would be eligible for grants without loans. Editor ChrisRedmond confirmed that the information came from the’, Globe. The story’s headline was “Money for students3 v. .

So’far Parr@ has only dropped hints about the new student .aid scheme. The full details are expetted -within the next couple of weeks, but all the indications are _ that the final scheme will mean less money for students, and bigger L debts, Though you would never know it f?om the press repohs. ea! :

-lonathan

cob‘

’ ’


6

friday,

the chevron

september

9, 7977

But isn’t on air yet -LEGAL RESOURCE Provides

free legal

Room Volunteers

information

106, Campus 8850840

welcomed

RadWat gets its licence

CENTRE

at 105.7. The station will be heard Radio Waterloo, UW~s student in Cambridge, Kite hener- Waterloo radio station, has received apand Guelph. proval of its broadcast application Programming will run from 9 am and should be on the air Oct. 8. * to 3 am every day with 75 per cent The station will broadcast on FM of the time devoted to music, ranat 94.5 MHz with a power of 50 ging from Classical to Bluegrass. The rest of the time will be used watts, the maximum allowed in the low-power FM category, using the for feature programs, news, sports, call letters CKMS. It will also be and a wide variety of items running carried on Grand River Cable FM from drama to multicultural and 1 women’s issue programs. Dave Assman, the station’s administrative co-ordinator, told the chevron that red tape had delayed the approval of the licence application until last Friday. He said CKMS wouldn’t be able to go on air Free Counseling until the third week of this month (No effect on low medical fee) because they had yet to install their Free Pregnancy Test transmitter on top of the Arts Lib(or $7 at independent lab) rary, test it, and have it approved 3 Hour Clinic Stay by the Canadian Radio and TeleviMedicaid, Blue Cross sion Commission and the Department of Communications. We strive for high patient A brief look at Radio Waterloo’s history brings to light the long, arduous road to the inception of FM station CKMS. - On October 24, 1964, Radio Waterloo was born as a weekly student radio show on CKKW, a

to students.

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local Kitchener AM radio station. Four years later the Federation of Students provided funds to set up a studio in the Campus Centre and to investigate the setting up of an AM radio station. The Broadcasting Association moved from Room 1304 in Engineering II and started a closed circuit system originating from the Campus Centre. The quarters were too small and in the fall of 1969 Radio Waterloo moved to its present location in the Bauer Warehouse on the north campus of UW. j In 1970, Radio Waterloo got a spot on Grand River Cable FM and during 1972, drew up plans to expand their facilities. By 1974, it had expanded to three studios from two, added a news booth and built a four track recording studio which it rents out to local artists. RadWat converted to stereo broadcasting in 1975 and hired David Assmann as full-time Administrative Co-ordinator. Due to a -new policy, in January 1976, the CRTC denied Grand River permission to carry RadWat’s signal on Cable FM. An application for closed circuit operation on campus was submitted in February. In March the CRTC reversed their decision and the station went back on cable. Radio Waterloo early this year applied for an FM broadcasting licence with call letters CKMS. The CRTC held public hearings on RadWat’s application on June 21, 1977. Meanwhile a full-time Technical Co-ordinator, Bill Wharrie, was hired, a part-time Office Co-ordinator, Niki Klein, was taken on part time. The rest of the staff has been filled by over a hundred volunteers during the course of the year. Interested students are welcome at the CKMS organizational meeting on Monday, September 12th at 7: 30 pm in CC 135 or call 886-2567 or extension 3273. -nash

Tennis [frame

SALE Resource exploitation Domination of Northern Communities by transnational corporations

-two issues integral ern development.

to any discussion

of north-

OPIRG has produced two publications addressing some of these problems: Quicksilver & Slow Death: a study of mercury pollution in Northwestern Ontario; and Reed International: profile of a transnational corporation (the people who brought us mercury pollution). If you are interested development, come

in the discussion and see us.

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friday,

September

9, 7977

the (.h~~vron

Cameras missing

Lmment The Board

LandlordTenant Relations

Beforeyou signa lease... Over 12,000 students have flocked to the UW campus this September and over half of them will be making arrangements with. various landlords for off-campus housing, many of them going through this little ordeal for the first time. Beloti, chevron staffer Dave Carter outlines your rights under the Landlord-Tenant Act and gives some suggestions on what to do if you run into problems.

Students, either because of their own inexperience or their short term of residence or both, have traditionally had more than their share of conflicts with landlords. Before you sign a lease or make any other arrangement for occupancy there are a number of facts you should be armed with. First, under Ontario’s rent control legislation it is illegal for a landlord to raise rents more than 8 per cent a year without going before the Rent Review Board. Before you sign a lease it would be advisable to find out what the previous tenant paid. It is also illegal for a landlord to demand twelve months of rental payment for a nine month rental period. Yet it is not uncommon for them tp try this trick with students. You might also find the landlord trying to collect a damage deposit from you before you move in. This is also illegal. The owner is allowed to collect the last month’s rent at the time of original occupancy, but this is not to be put towards any damages in the apartment. The tenant is obliged to fix all damages caused by his/her negligence. If your landlord tries to evict you before your lease is up you should be aware that he/she can only do this if you have violated certain sections of the Landlord Tenant Act. Only if you have failed to pay rent, not repaired wilful damages, got in the way of the proper use of the premises by the landlord or other tenants, overcrowded the premises, not complied with the residential requirements of the municipality, or used the premise for an illegal business, is the land-

TEMPLE

SHALOM,

WATERLOO

Erev Rosh Hashana morning Rosh Hashana morning Kol Nidre Yom Kippur morning afternoon Everyone No Charge

lord given the right to evict you. Twenty days notice must be given for any ‘such eviction and if the tenant rectifies the situation within seven days the notice beconies void. If the landlord wants to terminate tenancy where no lease is involved or when the lease is up, he/she must give 28 days notice if renting is on a weekly basis, or 60 days notice if renting is on a monthly or yearly basis. The act also allows you to sublet your apartment before your lease is up. This only requires that you give your landlord notice of such an action. There is one other important point you should know. The Act provides some protection of privacy. The landlord is not permitted uninvited entry into a tenant’s apartment unless there is an emergency or the landlord has given the tenant 24 hours notice of entry. If you have any problems with your tenancy the Student Handbook, soon to be available in the Campus Centre, has a more detailed account of your rights under the Landlord-Tenant Act, or you can call the Landlord Tenant Advisory Bureau of the Regional Municipality of Waterloo. It is located on the 8th floor of the Marsland Center - Phone 885-9588. There is an outside chance you could be forced to take the legal route to protect yourself. In this case contact the Federation of Students in the Campus Centre and inquire about the free paralegal assisante that they offer all students at JW.

to Students Reliaious

School

Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept.

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of Publications

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Remember when your mother told you to eat your carrots because they were good for your eyes? Well mmm take a K,elly’s’system home they’re goo’d for your ears! Fi\\If=“7

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Library Orientation Tours - Arts, E.M.S., E.S. Sept. 6-9 (Tues.-Fri.) Sept. 12-l 6 (Mon.-Fri.) Sept. 19-23 (Mon.-Fri.)

am 9:30, 10:30, II:30 9:30, II:30 10:30, II:30

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Canada’s Largest Family Steak House Chain

884-5850

Pm 1:30, 2:30, 3:30 1:30, 3:30 1:30, 2:30

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Learn to use the resources of the Library in preparing essays and reports (Arts or E.M.S. - meet at the Information Desk)

ow Featuring the All Eat Salaci Bar You

of 3

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(5th floor Arts) All these workshops will be given: Sept. 12-16 (Mon.-Fri.), IO:30 am, 2:30 pm Sept. 19-23 (Mon.-Fri.), 9:30 am, 3:30 pm Arts - Dana Porter EMS. - Engtneering E.S. - Enwronmental

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7


8

friday,

the chevron

September

16

The Federation of Students is operating an experimental If the service is successful, Bus Service to Hamilton. will be operated on a permanent basis.

it

DEPARTS u. of w.

ARRIVES Downtown Hamilton

3:00 p.m.

4:15 p.m.

DEPARTS Downtown Hamilton

ARRIVES u. of w.

FRIDAY (coach only)

IO:15

9:00 p.m.

SUNDAY

p.m.

ONE-WAY

RETURN

$3.10

$6.20

COST TICKETS:

9, 7977

Housina: less of a EXPRESS - probleii this year

HAMILTON Starts

september

Obtained only on Thursdays at the booth in the North Entr#ance of the Campus Centre. Exact location of Hamilton destination and departure point to be announced later.

last three years. “There’s no need for a tent city this year,” according to UW HousThe additional student housing ing Director Cail Vinnicombe. available this year is produced by Tent City was a $3,500 project of ’ people who have bought new the Federation of Students in Sephouses and need the rental income tember 1974 to set up tents outside to help pay their mortgages, have the Campus Centre as temporary opened up spare rooms in their residence for students who were houses, or just want some extra not able to find housing in the area. company. Vinnicombe said last Friday Students still looking for housing that, “our busiest days of the year should go to the housing office in are usually today and the day after Needles Hall between 8: 30 and 4: 30 labour day” and that “last year we Monday to Friday. A similar serhad line-ups 30 strong in the ofis provided by the Federation fice.” Yet there was no rush of vice of Students in room 106 of the camprospective tenants in the office. pus centre, providing free phones There were 250 vacancies listed and housing lists 24 hours a day. in the housing office on Friday, However, Dianna Clark, a fieldwith about five new listings coming worker for the federation, warns in each day. Last year at the same students that the most up to date time there were only 75 listed vacancies and these were the least de- housing lists will be found in Needles Hall, not in the campus centre. sirable ones. The rent has not gone up sigAll the campus residences are nificantly in the last two years, ac- now full but each year a lottery is cording to the statistics of the housheld to fill in the vacancies created ing office. The average rent for a by students who reserved rooms room with cooking facilities was but didn’t show up to claim them. $18 in the fall of 1975, $20 in the fall The lottery for the spare village of 1976, and $20 again this year. rooms will be held next Tuesday, The number of rooms available September 13, at 1:30 p.m. in the for students has been increasing housing office, and the Waterloo but the number of apartments av- Co-operative Residences will be ailable is no higher than in past holding a similar draw the same day years. The vacancy rate for apartat noon in their offices at the Phillip ments in Waterloo has remained at St. residence. or slightly below 2.5 per cent for the -david carter

UNIVERSITY g PHARMACY SPONSORED

BY:

Federation of Students Board of Co-operative

prescription

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9AM to 11 PM

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Specials valid from Friday Sept. 9 to Friday Sept. 16


it-day,

September

i,

7977

Construction

t/Ma ( bev O/l

halted

Kent State gym opposed KENT (CUP) - A U.S. federal court order has temporarily halted construction of the controversial Kent State gymnasium. --The gymnasium is to be built on the site where four students were killed by the U.S. National Guard on May 4, 1970, as they demonstrated against the American invasion of Cambodia. This latest restraining order comes after a long struggle. The May Fourth Coalition held a demonstration May 4 to protest the building of the gym. Since then they have held a 62-day tent-city occupation of the construction site, seized the administration building and brought 1000 pickets to a Board of Trustees meeting. There were over 250 arrests during the struggle and some of the

jailed students waged hunger strikes-in protest. Construction was begun July 29, but ended the same day when the coalition obtained a restraining order. The order was lifted on August 17 but was issued again the next day, following an appeal. The May Fourth Coalition hopes to preserve the site as an historical landmark and as evidence in lawsuits still pending. The students surviving the massacre and the families of the students who were killed have brought a $40 million lawsuit against the university. Peter Davies, author of The Truth About Kent State, has said the choice of the particular site for the gumnasiuti seems quite intentional. Davies has pointed out that all previous juries visited the site of

the shootings, and erection of a gym would definitely make it harder for the plaintiffs to illustrate their contentions. He adds that of the 52 sites considered and the three selected as appropriate for the gym, the location chosen wa8 deemed least suitable by the engineers and architects in charge of project.

the entire 35th floor of the Waldorf Towers, gave a “dazzling dinner” consisting of Iranian caviar (wh$h costs $120 a pound and more), pheasant, champagne and vodka. It -was attended by many important people in politics and the media. The next day she went shopping at F.A.O., Schwarz, Bergorf, Goodman, Tiffany’s, and Sak’s Fifth Avenue. The Empress also met with Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter before flying back home to Iran, a country renowned for its repressive absolute monarchy. -doug

hamilton

.

annex will also cover the places where two students we;e wounded. The U.S. department of the interior has begun investigating the

national historic:11 I;tndmark, hilt ,I possibility of m;lking Kent State(I decision will not be made II ,-,n! March.

Protesters see the planned gymnasium as an attempt to obliterate the site they see as Kent State and the Ohio government’s shame. The university contends that construction of the annex will not encroach on the scene of the 1970 murders. But Davies says the spot where Jeffrey Miller was killed will be altered because it was on a road which will be cut off by the gym annex. The

Flash-it’s tough to be rich Republicans’ It’s a pretty tough life when you’re filthy rich. A case in point is poor Farah Pahlavi, wife of the Shah of Iran. I On her recent trip to the United States the Enipress required two airline jets to transport her entourage and baggage. In fact one of the two jets carried just her personal baggage and retainers. She arrived with a personal attendant, photographer, a hairdresser, public- relations director, and an entourage of friends, advisors, and assistants, not to mention a dozen royal bodyguards. While stopping in New York City, the Empress took over

Spain’s anti-fascist political prisoners could have total amnesty within weeks, a Spanish Republican delegation reported in a meeting at the Breithaupt Centre in Kitchener August 19. The meeting was the last of a 17-stop tour of Canada organised by the Committee in Support of the Spanish People (CAPE). The amnesty is expected when the parliament reconvenes. The delegation said the government will try to take credit for the amnesty but it is granting it only because it has been forced to by the struggles of the Spanish people. The Association of Families and Friends of the Political Prisoners has a nine-point demand for Total Amnesty and Now! A mass campaign for this amnesty has been rag-

demand

amnesty

ing since 1974. The main principle behind the movement is that-there can be no democracy as long as those who have fought against fascism remain in prison. They reject the idea that the restoration of parliament by *King Juan Carlos. France’s chosen successor, represents *‘democratisation’ ’ of Spain. The protests have taken the form of demonstrations and some of the biggest strikes in Spanish history, involving up to 300,000 workers. In the Basque region of Spain the protest was especially vigourous since many of the prisoners from that area were involved in the Basque independence movement. The protest even spread to the jails themselves. Uprisings occurred in a dozen prisons, including

the infamous Carabanchel prison in Madrid where 500 prisoners battled with guards and police for four days. There were also battles iti the streets between police and demonstrators supporting the prisoners’ protest. The delegation said there were attempts to divert the struggle for amnesty -away from mass struggle to an electoral and parliamentary debate. They noted that all the parties, except the extreme right, had incorporated amnesty into their campaigns, but only as a secondary point. The delegation said the struggle would not end with the winning of amnesty, for the laws that put the people in prison would still be in yffect. -jonathan

RRAY . McLAUCHLAN IN CONCERT THURSDAY

SEPT 15

TW ‘0 SHOWS 7:OO-PM & 1O:OOPM

FRIDAY

9

SEPT - 16

ONE SHOW 9:00 PM

HUMANITIES THEATRE Univirsity of Waterloo Tickets on sale in the Federation Office and Theatre of the Arts Box Office

U/of W Students (Undergrads) $4.50 in advance . Others $5.50 Board

0; Entertainment

coles


10

the chevron

friday,

,

Gray Coach University Service Direct from Campus Entrances To Toronto and Woodstock-London Express via Hwy. 401

The chevron staff brought a nitie-month struggle for democratic rights to a successful conclusion June 26 vyhen Fed&ration council accepted the staffs demand for reinstatement and an investigation into (the original closure of, the chevron. Staff had maintained throughout the struggle that by the principle of due process there should first have been an investigation of the charges against the paper and only then action taken if the charges were proven true. They said the only just’ solution ‘to the anti-democratic closure, based on what the federation admitted were “rumours and allegations”, was to restore the paper to its previous conditions and then hold such an investigation. When the summer term began in May, few predicted that within seven weeks the chevron would be reinstated, but by mid-June it was an open question whether or not the Federation would survive long enough to reinstate the paper. The decisive elements which guaranteed the summer reinstatement were evident in the dispute right fr.om the moment that the Federation president Shane Roberts and six members of his executive changed the locks on the chevron office late on t”he afternoon of Friday September 24, 1976, after the chevron staff had left the office.

\

FALL TIME TABLE: a

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6% a.m. - Mon. to Fri. via Guelph 635 a.m. - Monday NON-STOP Express Sundays or Monday Holiday \ 7:30 p.m.; l-8:30 p.m.; i-10:40 p.m.

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9, 7977

Chevron went

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September

Station

WOODSTOCK-LONDON SERVICE * Express via Hwy. 401 .. Read Down Read Up Fridays Sundays South ,Campus Entrance Ar. 6.45 p.m. 6.05p.m. Lv. Ar. 7.10 p.m. Kitchener T&minal 6.35p.m. Lv. Lv. 5.55 p.m. 7.25p.m. Ar. Woodstock * London Lv. 5.15 p.m. 8.05p.m. Ar. / Toronto and London buses loop via University, West-

tihich he argued that thb chevron staff had never been given a? opportunity to defend itself before the paper was closed. He publicly called for a reinstatement and an investigation of the closure as the only just method of solving the conflict. With new elections in February and May, council changed decisively towards the chevron staffs position, and the beleaguered Federation leadership was forced into increasingly desperate actions to prevent these councillors from reinstating the paper. On March 28, by a narrow margin of 9-8, council voted to remove voting rights from the graduate students. It was a measure to exclude the two graduate student reps, both of them chevron supporters, from participation on council. This contradicted a March Annual General Meeting decision to retain Grad reps on council. But that bylaw change returned to haunt the Federation. As the full ramifications of the bylaw change became known, it became obvious that council and the federation board of directors had no members. Because of the bylaw, all off-term co-op students and regular students, none of whom were paying Federation fees that term, were effectively disenfranchised.

mount, Columbia and Phillip, serving designated stops. Buses will stop on signal at intermediate points en route and along University Ave. ADDITIONAL

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The federation effort to strangle was plagued by disunity, backroom conspiracies and arbitrary and anti-democratic action and consistent refusal to present any factual case against the chevron to the students. On the chevron’s -side, a large, active staff, absolute insistence on democratic procedures, untiring exposure of the federation’s antidemocratic actions, and a policy of ceaselessly taking their case to the students, eventually won the day. From September to December, when he was recalled by 2,200 students, Roberts refused several offers to explain his actions at public meetings and in the pages of the free chevron, which was put out by the chevron staff. At the same time he relentlessly harassed the chevron staff, whidh occupied its office 24 hours a day from September 25 until reinstatement. ’ Several council m:mbers opposed the arbitrary action from the beginning; Heather Robertson and Selma Sahin voted against closing the chevron and dismissing two editorial staff members. Later Arts councillor Donna Rogers joined their ranks. In April, Don Orth, who was a member of the executive which closed the chevron, wrote a comment in the free chevron- in the chevron

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Trapped own manbY their oeuvres, the Federation leaders latched on to increasingly ludicrous solutions. Federation vicepresident Ron Hipfner - who was technically on his work term and ineligible to pay fees and be a member of the Fedgration - came up with the most novel attempt. He bought an ice cream cone for $13.75 from the federation ice cream stand and claimed that it constituted payment of his Federation fees. The bylaw change was rescinded on June 26, just before the chevron agreement was considered. With the Grad reps back on council, the vote was 13-7-2 in favour of ratify. ing a proposed chevron agreement which had been negotiated earlier between representatives of the chevron staff and the Federation. It should be noted that the federation did not produce a paper in the ’ summer. Another factor in the declining fortunes of the Federation was the const’ant squabbles and backstabbing in the Federation camp. Doug Thompson squeaked into the presidency in February as the candidpte of the Campus Reform Group. But the group was never able to function cohesively. By the last week in March CRG member Janet Rokosova was urging couni=il

>’


friday,

si$tember

9, 1977

.

Writing, typing,

ph6tograplny, layout, eaphics, . . . just below the Federation -of Studentis\ office, Campus Centre 140, Ext, 2331. rhis graphic done by new recruit Mark McGuiie appeared in the second issue of the free chevron, Oct. 75, 1976 and Iroved to be an accurate pred-iction i- that then president Shane Roberts was digging hii own grave by closing the :hevron. just over two months later Roberts tias recalled frdm the presidency 63 a petition of over 2,200 students. ,

members

to vote non-confidence in Thompspn. Renison councillor’ Larry Smylie also became a thorn in the backside of the’ CRG with threatened legal suits. Finally on July 18 the Federation board of directors gave the coup de grace to Thompson, informing him that he was no longer president. Vice-president Hipfner, who replaced him temporarily as acting president, has declared that he will resign September 11. Appalled by the federation executive’s “remarkable disdain for its responsibility‘and accountability to its own members - the students”, in :March the Engineering Society demanded a referendum on making the federation fees refundable. The threat of having the carpet pulled out from under them shocked several Federation executive members. A ; ‘ If we don’t succeed (in cleaning up the federation’s problems) we will lose the referendum,” Thompson warned. Hipfner acknowledged that the chevron settlement was a move of “desperation”, an attempt to ‘rid itself of the constant irritant of an tinrighted_ wrong. kut the Federation executive was not prepared to immediately concede Reinstate! Investigate!, as the chevron staff demanded. Thompson issued a bold_“Final Offer” June 17 which presented the the ronstaff with a threat that they ac P ept the proposed agreement or face eviction by a professional security firm. The “Final Offer” was written by, the board of directors without the consent of the executive or council anddid not meet the chevron staffs demands. But it was overturned entirely only three days after it was issued. The “Final Offer” disintegrated during an impromptu negotiations session. June 20 between Thompr son, chevron editor Neil Docherty and lawyers representing the federation and chevron staff. The session was to have been an “examination of discovery” .meeting, part of- the legal preliminary rounds leading upto a court battle over possession of the chevron oflice later this. year. Instead, negotiations were begun when lawyers and representatives for both, sides decided to try to work out a settlement-rather than proceed with legal matters. After more than five hours of negotiation a provisional agree-.----y-~y--------

ment was signed which later’ received ratification with one amendment by- the chevronstaff. On June 26, nine months and two days after Roberts and his execu- ’ tive first changed the locks on the chevron doors, the Federation council agreed to reinstate the, chevron and begin an investigation into the original closure of the paper. The investigation comrhsion is now in the p&as of hearing testimony on the closure. The agreement turned over to thechevron staff a total of $13,500 ‘which is less than the $20,070 subsidy provided for in them 1976-77 budget. (The subsidy is the amount of money provided out of federation fees after, advertising rev’enue is subtracted from total production costs, including salaries for editor, production manager and news editor.) ( * The money will be used by ache chevrdn. staff to cover some of the I costs incurred in producing the first 26 issues of the free chevron since council withdrew funding for the chevron September 30, 1976. The figure is based on back pay for ,Docherty and former News Editor Henry Hess, loans given to the free chevron (mainly from staff, totalling about $5,400) and other costs, like phone bills and publishing bills. The figure does not cover donations made by students, faculty members and other supporters, including the Canadian University Press (CUP) and member papers of CUP and La Presse E tudiante Nationale . Under the agreement the federation payed $1,800 for legal costs incurred by the chevron staff during the conflict. The -1977-78 budget was released to the paper, retroactive to May 1, 1977. The federation wastied in knots by back-stabbing,-acts :of despera-’ : tion and continued contempt for . democratic rights. For example, i-t, contravened its own eIection -policies and procedures by extending the nomination deadline for the co-op by-elections held in June after chevron supporters were the only nominees in two seats. But while the’federation was tied in knots the chevron staff continued its exposure of t-he’ federation’s anti-democratic pro- cedures and launched severalnot’ abie investigations. ’ In June the free chevron revealed- ’ ‘ihat the, federationwas paying Kite hener mayor Morley Rosen-

-larry

at 2:00 ‘\

pm

hannant

-

Applications for alli Ontario medical schools are now available at the Ontario Medical School Application Service (OMSAS) for the 1978 session. Completed or before

*rite

applications must-be November 15, 1978.

immediately

~

to:

OWiSAS

received

.

atdMSAS

6N8

L

STARTS SEPT. 16

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ARRIVES

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From

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At lslirigton Subway I Sttitiqq a

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there

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, an Express Bu’s from.th& University of Waterloo to The lslington Subway ,Stdon ’ -

Staff tibeting today

’ APPLlCAhiTS’iO’ _ MEDlC.AL SCHOOL r

berg $25 a minute for legal consultation, and in May it conducted an extensive survey of graduating students, concluding that 23 per cent of the grads were unemployed. Reinstatement of the chevron after a nine-month struggle brought a successful conclusion to an issue of democratic rights whose effects were felt not only throughout the Canadian student press and student organizations like the Ontario Fede&ion of Students and the Na- I tional Union of Students. The chevron struggle found its way into the commercial media and had its, day in court - even the OntarioSupreme Court.~But in the end itrwas resolved by the University of Waterloo students ’ themselves, especially by those who actlcvely defended democratic rights by. supporting the chevron staff.

1

SPONSORED I

BY: Federation

of Students,

University

of wat&oo


, .

-

/ v

_-

.

,

Fir.+ye,~ .\I t4,,~nd HKLS students wrote an exam Wednesday whi,ch claimed to te.\t tkir abilities in Ec7glish. Arts student?; ~vho i,-lil the test must attend a writing clinic and sit the test again. NO m,ltter how well they do in their courses ‘they must pass the test in order to ,q-aduate. The chevron has in\:estigated the Engl_ish Proficiency fro&am and ’ found that it has almostnothing tddo with students’sbilities in English ’ and altiost everything to do with cutbacks in education. The chevron is reprinting the articks it ran on the program during the summer, sincq many students directly affected by it, those in first _ year, have not ‘seen them. “Poor writing, or cutbacks?” and “Burt blows his grammar” appeared as editorials lune 70 and 17. “More writing skills urged in new report”‘is a UW_ Inforeation Services -bulletin summarizing a U W report 00 ‘student literacy. “But how would that have helped Herr Hitler?.” is a criticism.of this - report. It was writtenby Don Martin, a superGisor for the proficiency program. Both these articles appeared luly 4. ’ ’

Poorv\iritina.or -

---

v.-

cutbacks?

. The conference on Writing Skills and the University Student, - held at Conrad--Grebel College on June 3 and 4 as “a research project” funded by the Ministry of Colleges and Universities,. was a pseudo-conference and an attack on students. High School English teachers from across the province were informed that large numbers of the&graduates were poor writers and were soothed with booze and kind -words of concern over their heavy work loads. The possibility that students write as well as they-ever have was _- never seriously considered at the conference even though a report issued by1 the Ontario government- in January indicated just that. The I confere>ce also failed to examine the allegation that t the so-called problem has developed only recently. ‘In fact, 65 per. cent of U. of T.-English students failed a basic English test back in 1950, in the so-called “good old days” when students knew how to write, and the president of the university concluded then that High School English was no longer adequate preparation for university-l -Since the so-called problem is neither real or new, what is going on? Why this flurry of activity with conferences and Proficiency programs now rather than back in 1950? A squeeze is going on. In following issues the chevron will examine this clamour for English Proficiency in its relation to cutbacks r , - in educational spending. ..

L

-

-heXron

..

staff

r

3.

September

9, 7977

_ What is good English? people questioned whether the universities were English is not,,completely described and defined ‘out of control’.” ’ in-any book, eve-n though some grammarians seem He has forgotten that the conjunction “and” to thinkit is. What constitutes good English varies must join parallel orco-ordinate elements. Here he through space and time, and even in a given place has used it to join a dependent clause to an inde+-’ and time good English changes from one- situationpendant clause. As it reads now. it is the university to another.,Whatthen is goo.d English for a newly which is viewing the scene from outside. He should graduated High School student writing an imporhave said, “ . . . as universities struggled .to actant exam under tense and impersonal conditions _ commodate .new attitudes, some people, viewing with hundreds of strangers in a huge room on the the scene from the outside, questioned whether the first day at university?. universities were ‘out of control’.” + _ Leaving-aside, for the time being, the question-of . In his afternoon remarks, he manages a rather whether or not _such an exam determines -anything humourous misplaced modifier of the “piano for other than a student’s ability to write exams in a sale. by lady with Hepplewhite legs” variety when huge room, what are the standards of adequacy? he has the School of Optometry contributing “to Obvi-ously first year students under such condipeople in remote areas of Ontario using three tions cannot be expected to write so well as schofully-equipped travelling vans”. lars writing in journals. In his remarks of May 28, he throws in a supe’rfPerhaps one way of answering the-question is to luous preposition saying, “. . .and the first class of examine other writing done in and around the uni75 in number, attended . . .“. versity. No comparison, of course, can be really As has already been remarked, it is hardly fair to valid between English produced-by a highly educompare the English of someone as educated and cated person at relative leisure and that produced -experienced as a university president with-that of a by a High School graduate under rather harsh connew university student. If the president of this straints. Nevertheless, with that warning in mind, university is allowed grammar errors in the final the remarks which Burt Matthews addressed to versions of three out of four attempts, how many convocation this spring may serve as samples for errors ought a recent. High School graduate be .examination. allowed in one attempt, revising under pressure? These/remarks consist of four separate pieces of We call-on the designers of the English Language three or four hundred words apiece. Threeof the Proficiency Programme to reveal to the university _ four pieces have errors in grammar and the fourth at large, and especially to students,‘_just exactly has some dubious diction - “educators” instead what criteria-they have been using to judge adequof “teachers”. sss ‘acy . How many errors, and of w hat sort, are con siThe remarks made on the morning of’ May 27 dered acceptable in the written part of the profi’ have in them a fairly serious grammatical error ciency exam? -Are the topics given in the exam sometimes called “faulty parallelism”. appropriate to young, imaginative adults? If thereMatthews says, “Often during those years as ‘are students who need special help in English,Kw universities struggled to accommodate new atmuch is the-present programme helping them? titudes and viewing the scene from outside, some -thg chevron staff

Mare writing, skills urged- ifi- n#w’keport x-More emphasis on writing skills, from public school through university was recommended in a report just released by Ken Ledbetter, associate dean of arts at the Uni-

friday,

/---

.-

UW campus earlier this month-;education officers, consultants, . preparation of elementary and The workshop, was attended by guidance counsellors, elementary secondary school teachers (by school teachers and - the largest almost 100 interested persons inemphasizingthe importance of eluding university English profes- - group - high school English good writing in their university sors, writing tutors, ministry of teachers and department heads. - courses); The workshop itself was stimu(5) help teachers in the system imlated by current concern ov& the and inability of Canadian students to prove by offering workshops short courses and by. helping to use English as well as they should. develop more effective and workThe -Ledbetter report states able curriculum guidelines. clearly there are “large numbers-of students whose writing skills are deficient” and gives five reasons To Queen’s Park for this: (1) ‘Require six credits- in *English (1) Society has become less in- .for the secondary school graduaterested in literacy; tion diploma and one additional (2) the numbers of students at high credit at the grade 13 level for the school and university have inhonors diploma (many nowadays creased substantially; acquire only four such credits); (3) many teachers -have not been (2) limit the number of students adequately prepared to teach writeach English teacher is expected to ing skills effectively; teach to a maximum of 120 (so / --, -, ;- ’ 2_food .‘: ; (4) too little time is being spent on teachers will have more time to 1 it (by too few teachers who have wo”rk with students on-writing ass too many students), and. , 1 signments) ; (5) not enough emphasis-is being (3) increase the time allowed for placed on the development, of lanmandatory English classes to 10, guage’ and-writing skills . . .even periods per week (a considerable by the English teachers. increase over the usual situation lhese. . are OPIRG-Waterloo’s priorities. -project , ,. A. ”.A_. _j Ledbetter offers a comprehen. today); sive series of recommendations to (4) ‘require more training in the - OPIRG is *funded by a voluntary student fee’ to ‘do - -. the universities and to Queen’s teaching of language skills for all Park <(the ministry of education, elementary school teat hers; public interest research. #As a student, you can, work _ and the ministry of colleges -and (5) require more training in the ’ -- with OPIRG on research or education projects addresuniversities). teaching of writing skills of all sec-These recommendations, ondary school teachers; sing real problems in the community’ from ‘a critical . . unanimously/. approved by those . (6) initiate more effective liaison. -[ .attending the Waterloo workshop, I. perspective. . -_ . programs among_ teachers at all indicate “educators at all levels levels - elementary, secondary and in all disciplines must assist in : and post-secondary, and tf you want to work on one of these project areas, on bringing student writing skills to an (7) continue to <fund..* “writing s Y acceptable level,” says Ledbetter. an independent project, -or form a .p-opular education - ,’ skills” workshop such as was held“No single group - for instance, on the -Waterloo -campus this -_. . team - with classmates,come and see us. English teachers alone - can do month, on an annual basis., , it.” Ledbetter said educators at all, 1 ’levels - public school, /high, To the Universides school and university - indicated -(1) Require seven English credits, a willingness to work together on, including ,grade 13, for admission the problem. Their goal would ,be. to university; students who* could write clearly,.develop ideas coherently and who. (2) require continued instruction in could avoid grammatical.crudities. writing skills at the- university The UW workshop was struclevel ; , tured around an examination by (3)stress writing competency in all participants of several papers writcourses and in all programs; ten by first year Waterloo students (4) take a more active p%? Iin the during the last school year-i .-- ’ versity of Waterloo. The. report summarized conclusions reached at a two:day. workshop on “Writing Skills and the University Student’-’ held on . the

P.ubii.c Interest Research . _ ’ ahd Educatih

-

I

T

L freedom of Mformati-on ---pub-k access t@ private info‘rmtition - the right toSaccess or \ p ri,vacy., ’ - Occupationalw health ‘and safety \ -

dev&opm&nt

5

ln’Cabada-%north \.

-I

Physics 226, e,xt.I 2578 i . ‘--I -_., , _’ _ -,Cg, Ontarib >Pub[ic Interest Research-_ Group _.-.


friday,

September

9, 7977

the chevron

But how would that have helpe Ken Ledbetter’s report on the seems spurious since both the fifth conference on “Writing Skills and and the sixth questions assume the University Student” should be that the answer to it is already examined by all students. It conknown and that the answer is tains assumptions, both stated and “yes”. unstated, with which perhaps not The answer to question number everyone will agree. two would seem to be very, very Is it true, for instance, as is important. It, above all, should not be passed over lightly, nor should stated in the foreword, that people the answer to it be taken for achieve humanity to the degree granted. that they can bring form and order A gathering of concerned people to their experiences through the ought to have discussed in detail use of language? Would an articujust how the answer to that queslate Hitler be human to a greater tion might be found. The conferdegree than an illiterate midwife? Or is it true, as the next sentence ence ought to have looked over the exams which implies, that all those people in thoroughly were administered last year to see Canada who do not read or write how appropriate those exams very well also do not think well were; it ought carefully to have enough for a free and complex society? (emphasis in the original) gone over the grading guides, discovering the strengths, suggesting In the second paragraph of the improvements; it ought seriously to report the supposition that stu‘have considered the effects of dents are worse writers now than the examination conditions on new they used to be is placed decepstudents. tively close to the statement that When reading the report it is universities have claimed nearly to keep in mind that half their students are deficient in necessary none of these things were done. language skills. When the question came up for The’implication is that the findings of the universities confirm the discussion at the conference the supposition that students don’t moderator began by saying that he had no doubt everyone agreed the write as well as they used to. answer was “yes”, and he moved In fact, of course, the university right along to the causes. proficiency tests confirm no such That question two was not thing. They merely indicate that genuine is also suggested by the many students, for whatever fact that “people who had expresreasons, don’t write very well sed special concern with the writnow, and the truth is that the very ing skills of their students” were few comparisons which have been the people invited to participate in made between student writing now the conference. Had the question and student writing earlier seem to been real, special effort would indicate that there has been no sighave been made to search for peonificant change . ple who felt that students wrote adequately. Besides the report itself, the The answer to question two, of very structure of the conference course, is dependent on the ansmust be questioned. Since the conwer to question one. It would seem ference was funded as a research therefore that a clear answer ought project it is certainly appropriate to have been given to question to examine the research methods. one, but the answer to question Basically, an assembly of about vague. The one hundred teachers and other in- one is distressingly answer given in the report is that terested people discussed ques“students should be able to write tions and informally proposed at the level illustrated by Papers 1 answers. The questions were: and 5” (the papers are included in 1. How well should an entering the report). university student be able to Now, without going into the write? papers, surely it is obvious that 2. Are there really large numbers answering such a general question of university students with inadeby providing two specific samples, quate writing skills? If so, what are each of only a single paragraph, is the causes? less than adequate. The report 3. What should universities do to does give the general catagories help those students who are consiunder which a paper might be dered inadequately prepared? graded, but it fails to give any indi4. What kinds of writing should an cation of the standards applicable entering university student be able within each catagory. to do? There is no doubt that arriving 5. What aid can universities give at such standards is difficult - so the secondary schools? difficult that one hundred teachers 6. How can universities and secought to have taken the opportunondary schools jointly develop a ity of arriving together at some agprogramme to assure competence reement. in basic writing skills of entering The report suggests that papers university students? be judged under grammar and mechanics, style and organization, First of all, are these questions word choice and arrangement, genuine? Are they reasonable and persuasiveness and clarity of fair? The, second question, at least, ideas, and finally, depth and preci-

sion of analysis. Grammar and met hanics? How many grammar errors per page or per hundred words or whatever other unit might seem appropriate? Style and organization? What different sorts of style and organization are there? Which style and organization is appropriate for a given topic? For each one of these catagories the conference ought to have proposed some definition and some means of measurement. What is the value of listing these catagories without exploring them? The list might have been posted on any bulletin board without the weekend conference. As for the causes of the (unproved) student deficiency in En-

Herr Hitler?

glish, the first one given, that society has become less interested in literacy, is certainly not borne out by the amazing brouhaha of recent years. If society is less interested in literacy, then what has given rise to this plethora of English tests? The second reason, that there are more students these days, does not in itself mean a damn thing unless someone has rigorously demonstrated that English skills decline with increasing numbers of students. A university research project ought to do more than make unproved statements and vague generalities. The unanimously supported recommendations to the universities and to Queen’s Park may or may

not be good ones. It is impossible to say whether they are good or bad since the investigation which produced them is inadequate. It must, though, be seriously considered whether an increased emphasis on English studies will not be discouraging to many prospective students. A good question for another conference is: Does increasing English requirements for university discourage some students from applying for admittance? If so, which ones? In this time of decreasing support for universities it is all too easy to become callous; it is all too easy to let slip, without thinking, the ideal of universal access. -don

presents

STYLE ‘77 FASHION SHOW Thursday, September 15, 1977 7 PM inside Mall Admission Free Door Prizes and Free Coffee (only ticket holders eligible)

WESTMOUNTPLACE 578-5451 c

WESTMOUNT

13

ROAD AT ERB STREET

martin


14

the chevron

friday,

September

9, 1977

Soccer Schedule’ This the men’s and year women’strack and field and cross country teams will be starting practices on Mon. Sept. 12 at 4pm at Seagram’s Stadium. These practices continue through to Thursday every week. There will be an organizational meeting on Tues. Sept. 13 at 4 pm at Seagram’s The

sprints

t$arb_Chitovas, throw.

and field

gold medallist

events

at the

coach this year will again be Gord Robertson who was recently named Ontario Field Coach to the Canadian Senior Championships. Gord is an Ontario Senior Coach in the horizontal jumps as well as being an ex-hurdler-jumper for the varsity team for many years.

This year’s cross country coach mer. These include Barb Chitovas will be Les Roberts, not -a newthe OWIAA record holder in the comer to Waterloo. Les was the javelin who was a bronze medallist manager of the varsity teams which at the Canadian Championships won a total of five Ontario champand gold medallist at the Ontario ionships during the years 1968-72. I Summer Games. Bill Daub, also a Since that time Les has been very javelin thrower and Varsity hockactive as a coach and official. He is ey player, was also a gold medalist presently the Treasurer and Cerat the Summer Games, in additification and Membershin Secrettion to placing sixth at the Nation: ary to the Ontario Track and Field als. Bill threw a personal best this summer of 71.86m making him one of the top throwers in the country. The Summer Games saw Faye Blackwood take home a string of medals including golds in the 200m and 1600m relay and silvers in the 1OOm and 400m relay. Pat Sparling, another Athena athlete, was also a member of the 1600m relay who, in addition, captured a bronze medal in the long jump and 8th place in the 200 m dash. Decathlete, Rob Town, last year’s Rookie of the Year, was U‘of W’s final gold medallist at the Summer Games accumulating 6041 in this gruelling event. Rob, who competed in the Canada Summer Games, will be an important factor in Waterloo”s scoring at the Universities’ championships. Rob picked up 26 of a maximum of 30 Ontario Summer Games for the javelin points in the individual scoring last year. Coaches’ Association. He is also Other Varsity athletes competan Ontario Senior Coach and ing this summer include; Tom Western Region Coach in both the Boone Western Region junior steeplechase and long distance 3000m champion, Brian Burke _ , events . bronze medallist at the Summer This year’s team promises to be Games 10 Km walk, John Bosgood much improved over last year’s third in the Canada Games Trials, team judging from the number of and Jim Baleshta personal record in active members during the sumthe pole vault of-12’6”.

at Laurentian - Tournament Sat. Sun, Sept. 10, 11 Conestoga here Wed. Sept. 14, T.B.A. at St. Catherines Roma Sat. Sept. 17, 2:00 p.m. at Western Wed. Sept. 21, 4:00 p.m. ’ T.B.A. here Sat. Sept. 24, 2:00 p.m. Ontario selects here Wed. Sept. 28, 8:00 p.m. at R.M.C. Sat. Oct. 1, 2:00 p.m. at Queen’s Sun. Oct. 2, 2:00 p.m. McMaster here Wed. Oct. 5, 4:00 p.m. Guelph here Sun. Oct. 9, 2:00 p.m. Wed. Oct. 12, 3:00 p.m. at Toronto Laurentian here Sun. Oct. 16, 12:00 p.m. B&k here Wed. Oct. 19, 4:00 p.m. York here Sun. Oct. 23, 2:30 prm. ’ Sat. Oct. 29 OUAA Final (at site of first place team) Fri. Sat. Sun, Nov. 11, 12, 13 CIAU Championships (at Waterloo)

Season looks tough ~for soccer warriors The University of Waterloo Soccer Warriors have just begun preparing for the 1977 OUAA Season. This year promises to be an exciting challenging one for the Warriors and head coach Ron Cooper.

To begin with, Cooper will have to replace graduating seniors, Marcus Klein (goalkeeper and OUAA all star), Jim Valliant (sweeper and OUAA all star), and Tom Dabrowski (defender and team captain). The Warriors are also facing their toughest exhibition schedule ever, beginning with the Laurentian Tournament and following through with successive games against Conestoga College, St. Catherines Roma (National League), a team yet to be announced ‘on the 24th, and the On-

tario select under 21 team. Coupled with a tough exhibition and league schedule, the Warriors will also have to prepare for the Canadian Championships (CIAU) to be hosted in mid-November by the University of Waterloo. Despite the challenge -ahead, Cooper is optimistic about his team’s chances. Returning veterans Paul Stevenato and Brain Filmion (mid-fielders), Sip Akbar, Zenon Moszora (forwards), and Dave Grundy, Bob Stevenato, Brian Miller and Jeff Balon (defenders) are part of the reason for his optimism. The Soccer Warriors need your support. All games with the exception of one will be played at Seagram Stadium so whv not come out and cheer for your team.

The summer games were held in the Kitchener-Waterloo area Augus,t 26-29 and garnered more community response than anyqne expected. Besides the wide range of sporting activities, with participants ranging from all over Ontario, there were many social events in the area. Headquarters for the Qames was the University of Waterloo Campus Centre.

photos

by Rick Pluzak


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Camp. Jeremy has won many comable talents to their home comIpetitions, including several munities on the eve of their deparKiwanis, and many awards includture. Known and loved widely in ing the Edward Johnson Foundathese cities already, their concert tion Scholarship and the Contemwill be a treat for all of us. Prwam: Andrew will play the ,,tively, both are to study with the the National Youth Orchestra _---- of - porary Music Showcase. A scholarship concert by K-W’s Both boys.spent the past season Canada, K-W Symphony, and Beethoven 8th Sonata and the celebrated vlolm master teacher, )$lii+t yog$ violinists, Jeremy at Meadowmount Music School in Sarasate K-W Junior Symphony. Won many Zigeunerweisen (pron. Ivan Galamian. All proceeds will Constant and Andrew WasylNew York State, where they reKiwanis competitions, locally and ‘tsigoinervyzen’); Jeremy plays the uszko, will E>;:held September 10 go to scholarships for this purpose. ceived training from Mr. Galamian in Stratford and Toronto, and variFranck Sonata in A Major and the (Saturday) pUniversity of Waterloo I?&ctts &OU~ the Musici&; and others. ous other prizes and scholarships. Kreisler Introduction and CapTheatre of the Arts, 890 p.m. Just Andrew Wasyluszko of KitchAlthough Jeremy and Andrew Jeremy Constant of Waterloo pricioso. They will also join in two ,pt of high school and about to at- ener studied violin’ from age 6, both have scholarships to the studied since age 7, with Dorothy Caprices for violin/violin by ‘&nd the Julliard School of Music mainly with Dorothy Pearce, last schools thq’ will be attending this ’ Wieniawski, taking turns with the and Curtis Institute of MuSic (New four years, with Hans Bauer of Pearce and, for the past five years, coming year, both will require exsolo part. resDecGuelph. He has been a member of with Gerard Kantarjian of Toronto. York and Philadelnhia) This conMember, and concertmaster. of tensive further support. Tickets, $5 or $3 for -F. -K-W Youth Orchestra, member fdr &x-t was conceived by- the K-W Students/Seniors. At door, from U Chamber Music Society both for of W Arts Centre, or K-W Chamber Ifive years, formerly member of Nathe purpose of helping them out and lMusic Society, 8% 1673,57 Young tional Youth!Orchestra, spent three St. W., Waterloo. of displaying their already formidseasons at Kelso String Quartet

ent se centres across Canada - rancouver, Calgary, Regina, Winnipeg, Toronto, Montreal, or Halifax - where a panel of judges composed of representatives of the du Maurier Council for the Performing Arts, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, and regional performing arts organizations, will select a total of fifteen semifinalists. Each of the acts selected as semi-finalists will be awarded a $2,000 btirsary from the du Maurier Council, arid will be featured in a series of three one-hour prime-time CBC television specials entitled

Talented Canadian performers, over 18 years of age, in both the classical and popular fields of dance, music and theatre, have until September 30th to apply for an audition in the nationwide “du Maurier Search for Talent”: All performers selected to audition from applications received will be invited to appear at some time between October 1st and December 1st in one of seven audition ~BalDoam~<~

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All new Arts and HKLS students wrote the English Language Proficiency Exam Wednesday. Beginning this fall new Arts-students inust pass the test in order to graduate. Those who fail must attend a Writing Clinic for special tutoring and take the test again. The new HKLS students, although required to write the test, do not have to attend the clinic a@ will not be stopped from graduating. if they fail the test. This was the case last year in Arts, and at that time HKLS did not have to write the test.

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The testing sessions did not go unprotested.Both the chevron %d the Anti Imperialist Alliance, a campus Marxist-Leninist organisation produced and distributed leaf- lets calling the test a fraud and part of education cutbacks. The chevron leaflet invited students Xo join the paper and investigate the cutbacks. We are -printing our articles on the English Proficiency Program from last term since the first-year students, those directly affected, have not seen them. The article “Poor writing, or cutbacks?” appeared June 10 as an editorial, as did “Burt blows his grammar” on June 17. The article “More writing skills urged” appeared Jdly .4. It is a criticism written’ by Don Martin, a supervisor in the English Language Proficiency Program, of a UW report on student literacy. The article “More writing skills urged” appeared July 4. It is a UW Information Services bulletin summarizing a UW report on student literacy. The article on the next page, written by an English Proficiency Program supervisor, Don Martin, criticises the report. A lengthy feature, also written by Martin, appeared in the August 23 orientation issue, which is still available in the chevron office, cc140.

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17

the west l

J.B. Freeman drifts nto town 1

Just about everybody you meet these days tells you about their plans to go out west. It’s almost become something of a movement, though next year they scurry back and hole up in the East again. J. B. Freeman is not one of those sorts. No, he’s become something of a legend out there in the square states. J. B. used to live in the jungles of Australia when he was a kid. He left home and was a trapper for three years until he lost his partner to a bush snake. Out there in the jungle there’s an unmarked grave that was dug with a rifle butt. J. B. moved to California at that

point and has spent the last decade becoming one of the most pioneering of the new breed of North American hobos. That’s no two bit phrase either -- he has ridden every freight train route from Canada to Mexico and thumbed the fastest trip recorded across the USA on Interstate 90. This year marks his first eastern tour and thank god the folk music scene will have one of the most “goddammit” singers to arise in recent vears. His songs are about the west and its wealth of beauty and legend, his ballads are about

Winters and Waters

Nothin’ but the blues

around the west and bummin gambling and the open spaces and frontier spirit. J. B. played both here and at the Mariposa folk festival this summer to audiences that continue to rave, both about his soft prairie falsetto and about his many honest retellings of what ten years on the road has taught him. In the field of folk music the spirit of the songs and the fireside aura of the performance mark the master of the stage from his apprentices. J. B. is real. And the stage he sings on is more than his home, it has become his passage, a passage tempered with freezing nights and the daze of headlights ignoring the sole, stranded hours on an Albertan turnpike and the joyous, eternal moments of springtime in the Rockies. Few people understand the spirit that makes them strangers in their own land and keeps them moving always, and yet fewer understand the west for what it really is. J. B. is one that’s seen it all. J. B. will be opening the Campus Centre coffeehouse this year on Sunday September 1 lth at 8 PM in the pub area. Monday at 10 AM he will be talking at the Integrated Studies lounge on the traditions of Hoboing in North America and will as well be providing musical accompaniment. J. B. is one of the few authorities on songs of the migrants, hobos, and itinerants of the past. -joe

Earlier this year Johnny Winter and Muddy Waters got together for Waters’ first album for Blue Sky records. The resulting album, Hard Again, was critically acclaimed as one of the old master’s best. After that album’s release, Winter, Waters and friends went on a tour through the States. The tour took them to mostly small halls and several “intimate” clubs. After such prolonged exposure to “de blues”, Winter went back to the studio and started to record this album. When he was finished he had a product that reached back into his past to his blues roots. The album, entitled Nothin’ but the Blues, is both musically, and in production, true to the blues form. There is a very capable crew of performers in Winter, who plays guitars, bass, and some drums, James Cotton (also on Hard Again) who plays harmonica, “Pine Top” Perkins on piano, Bob Margolin on guitar, Charles Calmese on bass, and Willie “Big Eyes” Smith on drums. The sound is very sparse, but clear. There is a very noticeable intimacy on the record that makes the album sound like the band is playing a live concert for you. The sense of the record

being “live” is assisted by the low number of overdubs, the spontaneous playing on the album, and its dylanesque non-production. The rough sound of the music is part of this genre’s beauty; it doesn’t matter if you hit all the notes perfectly as long as you have the feel for the music you’re playing. All but one of the nine songs are new Winter creations. The other song, Walking Thru The Park by MC Kinley Morganfield, is one of the highlights of the album with Winter and Waters (making a guest appearance) trading verses during the song. The whole album shows the skills of Winter very well as he plays electric quitar, slide guitar, Metal Body Acoustic guitar, and drums at various points on the album. It is quite certain that many people won’t be appreciative of this fine work, which is a tragedy, simply ‘because people haven’t been exposed to this kind of music. But those blues aficionados can be sure this record is well woth the money it costs, and those who would like to diversify their collections would be well advised to pick this one up. It’s a classic. -doug hamilton

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Obnoxious, punk lyrics t April Wine’s music sour April Wine’s major claim to fame these days is that they helped cover for the Rolling Stones during that group’s troubled stay in Toronto last March. Both groups were in town to record live albums, and both were to do them at the El Mocambo. So now we find a new album by the name of April Wine Live at the El Mocambo on our record stands, replete with numerous mentions of the group’s brief bout with fame. Among these is a short bit of liner notes by Larry Wilson of CHUMFM which happens to mention the band, but only in passing. But listening to this record you soon realize that the Stones aren’t the only people that the band has been drawing on for material. Musically this album isn’t bad. April Wine play well and execute their material with a professional touch. There is also a visible kineticism to the sound that most observers at one of this band’s performances can attest to. But like most albums that ever come out anywhere, there is very little new stuff here. Certainly there is the chance to hear one of Canada’s better bands perform live. After all, there must be thousands of people in Frobisher Bay dying to hear this piece of 100 per cent pure Kanadian Kulture. Yet, as any person knows there are very few innovators in music, and the person who does something new can usually count on it being worked to death in a very short matter of time. The Live at the El Mocambo album is a case in point. It sounds like a musical salute to the greats and near-great of yesteryear. That in itself is not a bad thing for the band since they have the musical ability to make it an album that is interesting to listen to, and to listen to repeatedly.

The lyrics are another story. Over half of the songs on this album are new, and from what Myles Goodwyn and friends are saying it looks like the band is contemplating cashing in on the new “Punk” craze. Since being picked up on by the commercial media and musical establishment, punk has been labelled as the “new wave” in music. And, it would seem that April Wine is trying to make a few quick ones off all the hype that’s going on. The place that this shift is the most noticeable is, as I said, in the lyrics. The words to these new songs contain some of the worst “crap” that I’ve heard in quite a while.

Though their earlier material wasn’t exactly pure, it still reflected a more innocent outlook on life. But on this album Myles Goodwyn’s lyrics stand out as the worst junk I’ve heard in ages. The lyrics to the new material are insipid, contrite, sexist, obnoxious, repetitive to the point of boredom, and mercenary. Goodwyn and the boys have been reading too many copies of Hustler and Rock Scene in the past

few months. The fact that they are trying to cash in on this punk craze is obvious from lyrics like: “You want to put us all away Well you should have done it yesterday ‘Cause it’s too late - yeah!” and: “Hey man, I said don’t push me around Hey man, I’m eighteen and I’ve been around” But that’s not the worst of it. Goodwyn is also suffering from an inability to recognize women as part of the human race, or if he can he doesn’t like to admit it. What he pushes in his songs is not any conceivable form of love, but rather a harsh style of exploitation. Myles has discovered (?) that all women are basically masochis-_ tic, self-abusive whores who are best suited to trades like prostitution and procreation and certainly aren’t Mr. Goodwyn’s equal. What Myles writes about women indicates an emotionally and SOcially stunted person. Hopefully someone will sit down with Myles and re-explain the facts of life to him since it’s obvious to me that he got the story from the wrong sources the first time. Some people can write lyrics that express what Goodwyn is saying in a manner that is much closer to what an honest, healthy relationship is, rather than the demeaning double standards that you hear on this album. And until such time as April Wine can correct this they will continue to be just another band among a sea of others. They are like any other band around, capable but not excellent musicians,. good showmen, but until they realize that you can have something other than “crap” for lyrics then the band is doomed to remain playing high school gyms and hockey arenas. -doug hamilton


, 18

the chevron

friday,

A fraud!

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The Anti-Imperialist Alliance, the UW student wing of the Communist Party of Canada (MarxistLeninist), considers this English proficiency exam and the whole program to be a newly-launched attack on students which has nothing to do with their grammatical capabilities and everything to do with government cutbacks in education spending. The ,chevron has already shown this exam to be a fraud (see the chevron, August 23, 1977). The program is academically indefensible, and is not at all intended to improve students’ English. The real reason for this attack is that the government is cutting back on education spending. This has been going on for several years. Since J971-72, the real value of provincial government funding to the universities, expressed in the Basic Income Unit, has declined steeply. Also, capital construction at universities has been frozen since 1972, faculty numbers have - declined while enrollment has been steadily increasing. The net result is that the quality of education has been declining. The equipment students work with is deteriorating, library hours have been cut, as have many other services, and the student/faculty ratio has increased, forcing students into larger classes and giving them less time with their professors. At the same time students have had to pay more for this inferior education. Tuition has increased, and as the government moves toward an all-loan aid scheme, students are being forced deeper into debt. Even with record unemployment levels, students are expected to save more during the summer to finance their education. Having squeezed the system and decreased the quality, of education

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because its academic foundation is weak and because students are already struggling against it. A concerted push by students can demolish this attack. But it is important to see that the proficiency program is only one of a series of attacks on students. And students are not the only ones being attacked in this campaign. Increasingly, the working class and other sections of the people are being forced by the reactionary bourgeoisie to shoulder the burden imperialist crisis. of the The bourgeoisie carries this out by increasing unemployment, high levels of inflation, speed-ups, overtee hnological change, time, rationalizing production, and by cutting workers off unemployment insurance, just to name a few. At the same time they blame the people for problems inherent in the system. They blame immigrants for unemployment and other social ills and workers’ just demands for wage increases are blamed for inflation. Proficiency exams may have no academic merit, but they do play an important role in the whole cutback campaign. They discourage new students and provide the university and government with an “objective” standard on which to judge which students should remain in university and which should be exeluded. Furthermore, the clinics and further exams are a heavy added burden on students during the first year of university, which is already a great. hurdle to students unfamiliar to the university environment. Because they both are victims of these attacks, students and workers recognize their common enemy. The enemy of the working class and students alike are the U.S. imperialists, the sell-out Canadian monopoly capitalists and all reactionaries who serve their interests. The basic interests of the students are the same as the basic interests of the workers. Workers and students should resist all the attacks of the boureoisie and its state. The Communist Party of Canada (Marxist-Leninist), the Party of the working class in Canada, proclaims that the only solution to the bourgeoisie’s campaign to make the people pay is to Make the. Rich Pay! Students, workers and all the people suffering from the attacks of the bourgeoisie should unite and launch offensives to Make the Rich Pay. Localized offensive struggles may win some genuine reforms from the bourgeoisie. But in the long run Make the Rich Pay means to overthrow the U.S. imperialist domination of Canada and the monopoly capitalist system itself. The Canadian people will face one attack gfter another by the reactionary bourgeoisie until we carry through to the end the struggle to Make the \ Rich Pay! DOWN WITH THE FRAUDULENT ENGLISH PROFICIENCY PROGRAM! MAKE THE RICH PAY! Anti-Imperialist Alliance

n-

OPIRG has the resources Come and use them. .

Ontario

so that more graduates are churned out per dollar, the government has now introduced a new tactic in its cutback campaign. It is now trying to cut enrollment. For the first time in a decade Ontario universities will not receive full government grants for increased undergraduate enrollment. Instead, a ceiling has been imposed on each university. Universities are penalized financially for enrolling more students, and the institution can actually receive more money per student by holding enrollment beneath that ceiling. In order to understand this campaign of cutbacks it is necessary to examine the Canadian political economy. Canada is a monopoly capitalist country dominated by U.S. imperialism. In the 1960’s, to service the expansion of U.S. imperialism into this country, the Canadian state rapidly enlarged the education system, and provided other infrastructure like improved roads and hydro facilities. New universities were built, funding was provided to encourage growth, and the youth of the country was beckoned to university. The result was educated workers and lucrative profits for the imperialists. The people paid higher personal taxes while taxes on corporations were kept low in order to attract more foreign, mainly U.S. capital. But today, U.S. imperialism is in crisis; monopoly capitalism is in decay; the economy is stagnant and the system cannot provide jobs to educated youth. The government plan is to reduce university enrollment, using the combination of reduced funding and proficiency exams. Money is being diverted from the education and other social sectors into usurious interest payments, outright giveaways to the U.S. imperialists, like the Ontario government’s $100 million gift to the Syncrude partners in 1975, and into preparations for war and suppression of the people. This campaign is part of the attempt to shift the burden of the economic crisis onto t.he backs of the people. It is a campaign to further enrich those who own the capitalist system lock, stock and barrel - the bourgeoisie. It is their system which is in crisis. It is they who are responsible for - unemployment, debt and inflation. Yet they want the people to pay for the crisis ! In response, we proclaim that the solution to the crisis is to Make The Rich Pay! And there should be no doubt that the rich can afford to pay. In the first quarter of 1977, a year even the bourgeoisie acknowledges to be a recession year, and at a time when real wages of working people are declining, corporate profits rose by 16.1 per cent over the same period of 1976. The proficiency exam is an attack on the basic interests of the students, and students have every right to resist it and fight back. The AIA will vigorously support any resistance or rebellion against this program. This particular attack by the state is a flimsy one, especially

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19

the chevron

..

I was impressed by and,‘as regards most of the article, in agreement with Don Martin’scriticism of the English Language Proficiency Pr0gra.m. But I was infuriated by the headline of the article, Martin occasionally expressed his opin ions sarcastically, an-d in his reference to the ELPP as an “attack”. on the students he misrepresented the situation by implying hostility towards students on the part of the program’s originators. But Martin’s few excesses seem to be reasonable rhetorical devices in comparison with the absurdly highcoloured wording of the headline. “Racket”, indeed! “Racket” suggests villains twirling oily facial hairor malign forces ,conspiring to extort money by violence from widows. Such suggestions are not atall consistent.with fair-minded, responsible, effective criticism;If sides are to be taken on the issue of university English language proficiency programs, I must align myself with the critics. But I am not willing to. believe that all good will and intelligence in the debate resides with people of my persuasion. The headline of this article indicates that, in fact, there is a tracecat least, of ill will and tactical stupidity among those who think of themselves as “Us”, as opposed to “Them”. I don’t think an abusive headline contributes positively to the establishment of clear-cut stands in the debate. I thini it only infaates people who would ordinarily -be accessible by rational argument and public pressure. - I hope to see progress made-in improving the teaching of writing skills in this university. But my hopes become fainter when I see debate on the issue set back by contributions such as the headline, “English profiency (sic) examaracket against students.” Shirley ,

Tillotson Tutor ELPP

I chevron &trite, dull . Any student newspaper.that recommends eating at MacDonalds and Harveys, accepts. advertising from Birthright and from Terry Good, spells proficiency incorrectly in-a - head above an- article dealing with English proficiency tests, has full page adaptations from People> Canada Daily News and contains over 50% ads in a skimpy orientation issue almost ‘devoid -of creative thought should re-examine its reasons for existence. The August 23rd issue of the Chevrpn’ is trite, duly and self-congratulatory. -^ . l David Assmann

.

Bill Wharrie Andrew Wedman Niki Klein , Lettitor The chevron welcomes feedback and criticism, however, this is just’an insult merely a list of complaints with nothing to substantiate them. The only substantiated point is that proficiency wa&misL speh, and for that we apologise: As for the rest of your points: . : 1) Your complaint about our reviewer recommending MacDov@.ds and Harveys in an article whiti was un# ashamedly entitled “Junkfood Junkie set loose -in K-W eating spots”, but don’t explain your objections and the reasons behind them. 2) Also, what are your objections to us accepting advertising ftiorn, Birthright / I andKerry,Good? / / .3) You make a blanket statement that it is bad to run full-page adaptations from People’s qnada Daily News, _ without dealing wcth the content of the article or explaining why-this is bad. 4) The ad content was high though it was under 50 per qnt. We.normally run a

high ad content in the first couple of ’ issues when it is easy to get ads. The revenue helpsus pay for other issues when the advertisingmarket is tighter. Our average through the year is usually around 30-35 per cent. You should bear in mind that the more ad-, vertisjng revenue we generate the less the student federation has to subsidize us from student fees. Advertising is our inain revenue source. - Also this year our budget from the federation has heen cut by $2,000 and - this combined with higher costs makes advertising revenue more lmportant. 5) skimpy? perhaps you could ~explain that. We thought the 20 pages were sufficient. Welcome to campus for another year of 6) Devoid of creative thought? What rollicking fun and frolic ! does that mean? And for those people who get their kicks . Are we supposed to make things up? by actually doing something useful, welDr, you consider hard-nozed research come to thti Chevron. where vou can write. into the cutbacks and the English Landraw, take pictures and generally have fun guage Proficiency Exams creative while learning new skills and sharpening \ thouaht? , those you may already have. PrgmI’all these bald assertions you The Chevron particularly welcomes peoclaim that we are “trite, dull, ‘and selfple who want to c,ome, down to the paper, congratulatory.” But without substantiabecome-involved in its production, and betion of your case this is just mouthing-off. come staff members themselves.

_. -

I

Free @w&s.’ _ maintiiiied,.. Dear Chevron Staff: belated .con- This letter is a somewhat gradulation on your victory in maintaining a. free student press at 1Waterloo. We have closely followed the events after the arbitrary attempt of the Federation to destroy the students’ paper. Throughout this time we have been impressed by both the very survival of the paper and the quality of journalism that was practised: The Chevron and the. Free Chevron were willing to seriously and critically examine issues facing students, and did so with an excellence found all too rarely in student papers. We are looking forward to the results of the investigation into the matter. Good luck in the future, and thank you for the example you have provided for other papers and -for students on other campuses. The Sheaf Staff of Saskatch.ewan

University

. ..&$d an: example set --

d

-

It was great to hear about your reinstate: ment ! + All year the Gazette has admired your determination in printing a paper despite your council’s actions. Your endurance and your strong beliefs in the rights of the student press willprove to be an ex-ample for other student papers should they become involved in a similar situation. Student Councils, hopefully, will someday realize that they do not have the right to interfere with the operations of a campus newspaper. We hope everything works out well for the Chevron in the future and that the Waterloo Student Federation leaves you alone! _ ’ Best of luck. The

Dalhousie

- 011the chevron ’ I.-AD MAffAG#R 2. NEM(S EDITOR

Gazette

:- ”

Terms run from September I2 to . April 30, 1977/78. Applications are ’ due the day of the election:-MondaySept. 12 at noon. Hand in applica? tions to Randy Barkman ,-- cochairperson of the Board of ,Publica\ tions. : _- _

to

the

evron

the responsibility of the chevron staff. Any article submitted may be rejecte.d by the majority of the staff who consider the article, or, on appeal, by a majority of the staff. CO

lum

“s

.

No person or-persons can be promised or expect to be *promised any specific area in the chevron for their articles or ‘column’. No person can be promisedthat his or her article will’be run in the chevron without that specific <article being first seen -by the chev?on staff. Anything that is at all ‘newsworthy’ can and should be run as a news_ _ stow _ not a column.

How to become a member of staff? Well, anyone with six contributions 1 articles, graphics, photos, or layout (or any combination - of-. these) -, from - _the beginning - of- the _ preceding term to the issue currently being produced, qualifies as a voting member of the chevron staff. _ / For new people, what this means is that as For news copy, the deadlines are: for soon as you’ve,had your six things accepted events that occur from thursday to monday, for publication, you have a vote. deadline for copy is Tuesday noon; for But (he chevron also welcomes contribuevents of tuesday to Wednesday morning the tions, not only from people who are, or indeadline is Wednesday at noon. -tend-to become, regular staffers, but from ’ Deadlines for sports and entertainment is _ the entire university community. tuesday at noon. For features, deadline is noon on friday.of The chevron operates under a number of theweek immediately preceding the week of policies which have been drawn up and appublication, proved by staff. This week we publish some, If copy has no? appeared by the time of of our key policies w.hich would be of indealine -s”et, it may be rejected; or it may ‘tile terest to .anyone who is interested in con, held, where possible, for the next week. tributing to our pages. A ’ Now that you know how to become a chevric, and you also know some of the more important guidelines involved in contribut? ing-to the chevron, remember to come down Feedback letters must. be addressed to to our offices, number 140 in the campus c Editor, Chevron, Campus Centre, University of Waterloo. Letters must be typ-ed on a - centre building. If you have a news-tip, or just want to drop by and talk about the paper , 32 or 64 character line and-double-spaced, - we want to hear from you! -/ and may not/be run if they .-are not typed. Letters. should not be longer than 1200. words. Longer letters may, with the author’sconsent, be edited to’ meet space requireTWOC stands for everything that is happenments. Letters must besigned by an indi.‘vidual, not an organization, and should have ing -This Week On-Campus. It is a free sera phone number and address (for authenticavice offered anyone, ‘or group,%0 inform the tion. Pseudonums or organizational names . Uuxersity community of an event happenwill be run if the chevron is provided with the ing. Tell thechevron the working you wish real name of the author. The deadline for to-see in t,he paper by Tuesday noon for the feedback is noon Tuesday. If letters are re- following Friday’s paper. ceived more than two weeks in a row from one person, the chevron staff- may elect to refuse them.

Feedback

Deadlines

for -copy

TWO%

-

H

:

-

.-

Classified.

News and o&er’ -coverage I 1. News--coverage, as well as that of sports,, entertainment, science and features, are all

Classified ads are open to all for any sort of blurb. Do you have something to sell?, anything you want to buy?, are you offering your typing services2. . . well take out a classified ad at‘15 words for 50 cents and 5 cents each each extra word. Classified and TWOC can usuall-y be found on page 2 of the chevron.

Member: canadian, university press (CUP). The chevron is typeset by members of the workers’ uniqn of du6ont press grqphitind published by the federation of students incorporated, university of Waterloo. Content is the sole responsibility of the-chevron editorial ,staff. Offices are locateqi in the -campus centre; (519) 8854660, or university local 2331. . _’

Once upon a time there was a very large lizard, or so it seemed. At least it seemed so until it was compared to something much bigger than itself. Of course Einstein picked up the consequences of thisvery samestory and-promptly made a bundle- But lets not harp on preaching’, for ours is a generation where too much is said and too little gathered. Now is a period where one lives-off the< writings and exploitation of past crimes committed. The -more corrupt, the more desperate, the greater the royaltiesj the greater the royalties, the greater the crime. But then so are these: larry hannant, neil docherty, jonathan coles, peter blunden, jules grajower, gerard ’ kimmons, don martin, nick redding, rob kobayashi, loris gervasio, doug hamilton, Sylvia hannig,an, dave carter and nash dhanani. wrb.

--


CQMPETITIiTE This ievei is the regulations. / HOW TO ENTER: 1.

\

most

structured

Contact meeting. Please-make.sure

5.

part

your 4.

intramural Form

ENTRY

DATE

of

the

intramural

Unit independent entry

an your

program.

There

Representative. team and form is complete.

2.

MEN'S ACTIVITY Bail

FINAL Hockey

Flag Football (Deiahey Trophy) Socce'r (Mackay Bowl) Basketball (Condon Cup) Hockey (Bulbrook CUD) TrTllPNAMFNTC .

“ - . . , . , . . . w . .

St. Softball Paul Tourney

.

I

-1

I

Mon.Sept.19 room"2040 Fri.sept. room 2040 Fri.Sept. room 2040 Mon.Sept.19 room 2040 Wed,Oct.iZ room 2040

CAPTAINS POLICIES, WediSept.

4:30jp.m. PAC 1 16 4:30 PAC 16 4:30 PAC PA~'30 4: PAC

pm

'm p.m.

30

Invit. Knight

Wed.Sept. room 2040 ked.Seot.21

Golf (Team

p.m.

7:00 5:30

pm pm

room room

II

I

-

21

14 4:30 PAC room

p.m.

Thurs.Sept. room 1083'~~~ \Uoon reaistrati'on

2040

I5

4:30

LEAGUES

awards,

in AND

officials,

ln$ramural accepted Intramural

Offices. after Offices

playoffs

and

more

3. Attend the Unit team entries. or P A C Receptionist.

the

stringent

rules

appropriate

and

organizational .. I

TOURNAMENTS EXPLANATION

PREVIOUS

CHAMPS

,

5m 15

points, the onlv

TIME/LOCATION

.

8:

leagues, through teams are be obtained

COMPETITIVE

SCHEDULING RULES HEET,ING 21 5:30 p.m.

log3 PAC Mon.Sept.19 1083 PAC Mon.Sept.19 1083 PAC Wed.Sept. 1083 PAC Mon.Oct.17 II083 PAC

pm-

are

Register These Forms can

enter.

Start Mon.Sept.26 Seagrams Gym Mon.'& bled.' 3:45-II:00 p.m. Tues.Sept.20. Every Tues.&Thurs. Vilage Green,Co\. 5A & 58. 1 Start Wed.Sept.21 Col. I and 4 Mon. Tues. Wed. Thur.s. 4:45-7pm Start Sun.Sept.25 3:45-9:45, Mondays 7:30-10:30, Main Gvm Start Tues.Oct.19 Ypm-lam HcLaren Arena & Queensmount afte IOct. 25. I

p.m.

Start and, Eimira

in

Fri.Sept. Sun.

16, 18.

Sept. Golf

Sat.

Course.

Like

Road

Hockey

New

A and B-levels A-advanced, B-Beginners, and playoffs. A advanced, B-Beginners, ' and playoffs A advanced, B-Beginners, 5-6 games and playoffs A advanced, B-Beginners, rl and playoffs, 35 teams I

5-7

games

5-7

games

C

A-Kinesiology B-Renison A-Renison B-Golden Guys A-Firehouse B-Epgineering A-St. Jeromes 1 B-02 West A

leagues

5-6 only.

Event

games

Ii

I I ,

Sept.17

Fri.Seot.23.

Event

Tennis Singles (Tennis Award) 7th Annual Bicycle Race (TlShirt Aware Engineering ‘Challenge Run

(Highfield) English (Moison Hen's (Silver

,Sicw

Squash Award) Curling Beat

Tues. Tues.

Sgl,s Sdt. equality

-

Singles

SinglesLadder -CD-ED

Little Track Vilage Coled

Olympics Field Invitation Slm Pitch b

Wed.Sept. room 2040 Mon.Sept. Iroom 2040

Day

20 4:30 PAC 26 4:30 PAC

6

!

,

. General

Equipment

Racquet

Rental

Towels

and

Injury

Center

Hqdicai

Lockers

Coverage

CLUB

1

Archery (yjeuvenated

Club)

Mon. Activity

Sept.

Sun. Waterloo

Sept.

I '

Curling

Hon.

AND MEETING Red p.m.

Cost Friend,iy

8:3Opm

Enjoyable basic

Lanes

3 7:30

Oct. 1083

PAC

members)

12 PAC

i Gymn!astics (20 members)

Mon. Blue

Sept. Activities

Wed. room

Sept. 1083

Outers (Combina-' tion of former Outers, Whitewater and Orienteering Rugby (IQ0 members)

Tues. COI.

-

Sailing (100

19

14 PAC

Sept. Field

pm

7:ODpm Area 7:OD

6 5:DOpm

Mon.

rcom

Sept. EL

12

8yD

iO3;-'

pm . pm

COSt..S5,06per Table

pm

#2.

jm;tio:.8:Q0

Tennis

Tues.

.

room I

TOURNAMENT

30,

Oct.

1 &

2,

Fri.

Sat.

Sun.

I

Pitch inning.

to

yoer-own Teams

team. guaranteed

Ail

hit/ 2 games.

1 St. 1

_

a

Pauis

1

c4 "OWL

do& CLUB

youth

it ducted

Qm

.they

theit

ahe and

~LLU'AU

co-ed instruction,

target league

play, several

shooting. tournaments, free nlghts.

.take

rntif

w.Lth ."

buch

an

paht dmobphehe

in

a&! they

/

REGULAR

undecided instruction,

yeahs

not wvwunded V~JIAWUA citizens

PROGRAM

Basic instruction, men,mixed, women's leagues, extramural competition. Sl5/term. Granite Club starting after Oktoberfest. Only in its second year of organizatlon has shown great success. People eager to learn about foil, epee or sabre should attend. instruction and competftion.avaiiabie. Low key friendly group of people, interested' in maintaining their-interest in gymnastics or those wanting to learn: No charge. For those who enjoy the outdoors. Camping equipment available on rental basis. Pool instruction in the art of Kayaking, trips and hikes. Social events, varsity and 2nds competition 7 Aside‘lm tournev and soecial extramural events. Cost SlD'piaying fee 55 social.,

7:OOpm

, / members)

Sept. land

&he moae can devti

To be availability facilities

determined

Every $1.65

Sunday including

Sept. 1083

20

year. 7:OOpm

PAC I

5 sunflowers available, Regattas, or simply recreational saiinq Cost. S5.00 per year or SL.OO-for f;SA;l sessions, clinics, movles, weekiv trios in the winter MounTain, Jay Peaks and possible Regular table tennis ret times, aments, special open tournaments,“instruction on request.

on

instruction Coi. Lake. just Fail. fashion to Blue longer trips club tourn-

by interest coordinators pm shoes.

Mixed league Hon. 4-6 League Tues. 10:30-12:3D LeagGe Thurs.' lO:3O=i2:3O Type wil be decided Contingent on availability instructor and faciilties. Usually: 'Sun. 7-9 Tues. G Thurs. 5-7 Activities Area. Club meetings and by need. Contact (60 members) Cost: S5/vear and Every evening 5pm., reauiar scheduled functions. Everyday Special decided ILook' reoulariiv socials, Cost. sessions lJJ&

for

Tues.6 - 7-5

04 be

play, W&Y \

and and

Waterloo

75C

pm.

. Bil Ron Jane Dave Ken

Women's pm., Men's pm he meetbng. of

at

pm; pm trips Club

Mon.& in the

$3/term. Thurs.

Wed. Blue

Cam Jim

7-Ypm

#2

plus and

social

are Meeting. has shows. .

-

213

884-7136

885-6 :::::z

Smith Hamilton

Eric

Flanagan

Greg John Brent Tom Steve Peter Brian Derek Leslie Mike

Derbyshire Hannan

7454733 Ext .346

Vlcki Lorraine Deb

884-3319

Hegadoren 886-4855

Cargii Webb Muirhead Terrei Humphrey's Dickson Ruwald

885-6915

884-7343 084-9042 Ext.3 BB4-st7$884-348:

Behune Mitchell

Adams i

Regular 7-9

3

Bunker Hope McCienahan Potje Lynch

._

are determined Executives.

S3/term Coi. business

PERSON

D 1 Miner V f East

Lanes membership.

the boats are available. instructional times at the Organlzatlonal advertisement Fa,il scheduled fashlon clinics, demonstratl.ons.

SS/year,

60~16 up ti

CONTACT

of

8:30

.&wd~e grow

so&u&A

SESSIONS

.

i

Sept. 1083

-

COMPETITIVE

in

pm

PAC

EXPLANATION‘OF

I2

Mon. room

membersJ

'

i

8:90

room

(80 Flencing (20

pm 5:30

cI;UB-s,

ORGANlZATlDN REGISTRATION

Bowling members)

pA;:3o

Sept.28 1083

\.

‘ATHLETIC

(40

Frl.Sept.23 1 room ,o83 IWed. Iroom

/ The Intramural program is open to the entire U of W community, full-time students are eligible as long as they have validated LD cards. The following are eligible to purchase an IM membership: a) faculty: b) staff; c) alumni: d) Dart-time students: e) spouses of faculty, staff & students. Holders of ID cards or It4 cards are entitled to'fuii use of'total IM programs: Children of members can use P A C facilities on Sun. l-4 pm witha member. HOW TO OBTAIN: U of W member: (those eligible who are not full-time students) must purchase an Intramural Activity Card on an an-basis through Financial Services, Admrnistration Building (Cashier's Office). Membership fees are: Annual $30lyear with locker; $20/wfthout locker. Term: SiS/term with locker and SiO/term without locker. There is a limited supply of lockers so it is first come first serve. General equipment (balls, horseshoes, frisbees, bats, nets, footballs etc.) is available through the toterooms at the P A C and Seagrams during normal hours. HOW.TO OBTAIN:-Exchange ID card for equipment. When finished, return equipment (even if broken) and obtain your ID card. If a speclai event, see It4 Directors for special equipment card. Racquet rental available for tennis, squash, racquetball, badminton. HOW TO OBTAIN: The rental machine is located in the Red North lower level corner (ladies toteroom). Deposit 25~ receive a voucher and with ID obtain racquet from toteroom attendant. Return racquet'for ID card. P A C available in men's and women's toterooms. Seagrams available in toteroom. Service durinq normal building h,ours. HOW TO U S E : Exchange ID card for towel. Return tewel for ID card. Lockers/baskets assigned duringfirst =rt of atFirst come fisste Ail injuries must be reported to the IM Office (Ext. 3532) or train,ing center (Ext. 3655) regardless of severity. Ail treatment, of injuries conducted by qualified staff and head athletic trainer Mr. Brian Gastaidi. HOW TO U S E : Just go the Blue North PAC during hours posted-on the door and talk to Mr. Gasdaidi or-staff and arrange for treat-m. Mon. to Fri. usually open over the noon hour). Ail participants should have a medical before engaging in new or viqorough activitv. The Intramural Department does not have medical coverage for participants in its program. HOW TO OBTAIN: Each student is PersonallY responsible for his own medical and hospital coverage. OHIP information and forms are available at Health Services.

',

Pin

p.m. p.m.

jRVICES /

Eligibility Membership

5

play.

Day

Badminton

.

of

Pitch

Tennis , Squash

Thurs. Thurs.

’ Award)

Flag-Football Soccer

and and

10:30am-12:30pm

Dave pm

and

Berman

n / t .r .-a .I..,rn u ’ r t. 1f

184

'

0

r . . t , s1


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