1980-81_v03,n05_Imprint

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Note: Imprint publishes every during the sqmmer. The campus events is 4:oO PM preceeding publication.

-Friday,

otherkiday deadline for the Tuesday , ,

J.une 27-

On the occasion of this Long Weekend , there will be no Fed Flicks.

July. I-'

The CC Pub .is open I again! No covercharge for Feds; ,others, $1.00 after \ 9:00 p.m.

The longlawaited SpaceWars tournament begins today. First prize is a dinner for two at Ali Baba, so heat up your Starfigh+ and get your entry fee in by Wednesday July 2nd. Competition is sure to be fierce.

favorite’stars. Theatre of tl# Arts, tickets available at the door. 8:00 p.m.’

July 3-

happens toniaht in CC 110. There’s music, coffee, tea land munchies, so come out to meet friends for conversation in a relaxed atmosphere. :’ ‘, I The

Womyn’s

The

Coffeehouse

InternatianaJ.

Forum

-Sunday,

Series

~8:00 p.m.,‘Campus Centre r&m 113.‘The Bah’a’i Campus Club presents an informal presentation and open discussion.

, -Monday,

Sumwat Theatre continues. yesterday’s entry for information encouragement. ’

-Friday,

July Z-

See ,and

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Jiily 4-

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Sumwat Theatre% ‘Murder Take Two plays on in Theatre of the Arts. A treat for those who like sood amateur theatre.

At 8:00 PM in CC 110 there will be a Gay Coffee House sponsored by Gay ’ Liberation of Waterloo. Come out for an 1 evening of conversation and meet new friends. Phone 885-GLOW for recorded information on events in the community.

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Murder Take Two happens in the Theatre of the Arts, an original mystery drama produced by Sumwat Theatre. Admission is $2.50, $2.00 for Federation members. Tickets at the Arts Centre Box Office or at the door. A ‘must’ for all living beings.

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Outers Club climbs at Battlesnake~Point. Contact Paul at $8855983 for more information. The CC Pub rolls along with taped music. Prices as usual.

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Fed Flicks features Alice ‘in Wonderland, a restricted tale with more to itthan meets the eye. Friday and Saturday, admission is $1.00 for Feddies’ with I.D. $2.00 for all .’ others. ’ lsatu&y, J~]Y"~-

July - 7-

The Lunar Lander tournament will start today. Each entrant wig have two,chances : ~ to land on three preddetermined landing: sites’. Hint: the trick here is not the landing ,. ’ but how much fuel is used in’doing so. Prize . ‘isa dinner for two at Ali Baba. -

,CC Pub features . ,a D.:J. with no covercharge for Feds, $1.00 after 9:00 p.m. for aliens. _

2:00-4:30 p.m., 6:00-8:30 p.m’. at Grace Lutheran Church there will be a Blood Donor clinic. 136 Margaret St., at Louisa. The quota is 300 donors.

July 6-

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The CC Pub is open. No-cover for Feds, other $1.00 after 9:00 e p.m.

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Friday, June 27,198O; Volume

. The Outers Club Biking and Swimming Trip goes to the Fergus Quarry in Elora Gorge. Meet outside the CC$t 8:00 a.m. Bring your lunch and a swimsuit1 Contact Bob at 884-6436. Good, clean fun.

features ahiscussionon China. Everyone is welcome. Organized by ,the International Students Association.. ’ -

The Outers Club goes to :Bon Echo mountain climbing.. For more information’ contact Paul at 885-5938.

-Wednesday,

This is your last chance o see Sumwat Theatre’s Murder Take i ~ wo uiit’h your

-Tt&sday,

The’ Outers Club sponsors kayaking every Friday in the PAC pool 2;30 - 4:30 p.m. Contact Judy at 886-1449 for more information. \ “The Party” is sponsored by the Gay j Liberation of Waterloo (GLOW) in Hagey ,Hall rm. 373/378&j Womyn and -men welcome for an evening of dancing and, I conversation. Licensed. Admission is $2.50 :.:Members $2.00. $1.00 off for everyone if :I &I arrive before 10:00 p.m. _ : CC ~Pub rolls on with a D.J. No covercharge for Federation members; $1.00 after 9:00 p.m. for aliens. Get your suds now - the “Bombshelter” will be closed June - 28,3.0, and July 1st.

-Tuesday

Episode one of the exciting .new radio comedy drama concerning the advent,ures of the wacky characters’at Canrp-&Me+Luv is aired on CKMS tom&t at lO:oO.p,m -.l, Don’t miss the event of.I .the epoch.

International

Forum

-Series

features a discussion on Latin-American issues. Everyone is welcome. Organized bv the International Students Aesociation. The CC Games Room features a Snooker with first prize a new pool cue ($60.00 value). Double elimination; $5.00 entry fee. Tourney is limited to the first 16 people to sign up; enter-and pay fee by Thursday July 10 in the games room. $5.00 entry fee. . ‘I” , La Fete Du Soleii features Cano Saturday July 12 on the Village Green. ‘-Tourney

Free!

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Friday,

June

27,198O.

Imprint

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Federation backs out of hike strike S “Therefore be it resolved policy& changed by haviag that the said fee-hike strike the public on one’s own motion passed by the Fed- - side, to influence the goveration of students Council ernment. on March 17th be rescinFreeman said that the_ I strike ded...” was’ turning into a confrontation and that that Those words, from Peter was never intended. Hoy, Board of External The strike was supposed to Relations Chairperson, at be a protest, Freeman the June 22 Students Counmaintained. The increase cil meeting, brought inwould be withheldfromthe stant and. angry reactions fall tution payment with an from several students at option to pay it in the the meeting. They verbally winter, to not pay it at all, or denounced the councillors toxhoose some other course arid one resorted to ob: of action. ’ scenities, The ; meeting, Hoy said that the feewhich in any event had was failed to reach quorum (13’ hike strike campaign distorting the Federation’s councillors are needed becampaign, fore any motion can be anti-cutbacks which was being directed passed and only 12 atagainst all social services tended) quickly broke up. cutbacks and not just-the The Federation of Stuincreases in tuition. He also dents Board of Directors; said that the idea of a fee: composed of Neil Freeman, hike strike was negative in President; Wim Simonis, orientation and that he was Vice President; Kent Lewis, anxious to see the antiTreasurer: and Maggie cutbacks campaign take a Thompson, Environmental more positive outlook. Studies Councillor, met Debi Brock, -Board of shortly afterwards and Education and’ External voted to officially cancel Relations (BEER) researchthe fee-hike strike. er, contemplated adminIn justifying the motion ‘istrative’difficulties for the strike. 10% of UW’S he put forth, Hoy said that students are visa students he thought that success for the fee-hike strike was -and she claimed that they remote and that the strike would risk deportation if was building up anti-stuthey participated and that 36% of the students, those dent feelings among the public. He reasoned that receiving OSAP benefits, the fee-hike strike was a would risk losing those bad move since most public benefits.

UW Student

Federation

President

photo Freeman defended his action saying that he had only promised .a fee-hike strike if the Ontario Federation of Students (OFS) agreeded to run it province-wide (see Imprint Feb. 1, 1980.). At a recent conference (see article in this issue) OFS decided not to run a fee-hike strike campaign but pledged itself to suport anv OFS affiliated unive&ity which did. Until Sunday, UW was the only such university commited to a fee-hike strike although tlie University of

Neil

Freeman

by JohkW

Ottawa, a non-.OFS filiated university, plans for one as well.

Bast afhad

Freeman asserted that UW, by conducting a feehike strike alone, would disrupt OFS. He said that students will have an opportunity to influence the government’s education policy in the upcoming provincial election, when it is held. Students on the Cornmittee to Support the Fee Hike-Strike, -the group on camnus in favour of the strice, were very upset by

the move. being a problem, that it was “We were very shocked,” good that UW was taking the said spokesperson Brigid lead in this issue, and that Rowe. She said that the students from other Ontario strike had massive support campuses look to UW for on’ campus among the leadership. students. She claimed, Ai for the Federation’s citing two Surveys, 1/3rd argument that the fee-hike support in Engineering, l/2 strike was distorting the support in Math, and anti-cutbacks campaign, widespread support amongst the committee felt that the the othek societies. strike tias a practical The committee maintains action and should not have that . the administrative been dismissed simply ,beproblems which the Fed- cause it would not solve all eration of Students speaks of the cutbacks problems “in are surmountable. They said one fell swoop”. _that if OSAP refused to send The committee is now out cheques then their offices considering a petition to could be occupied until they present to the Federation to did. They speculated that a have them hold an extratrust fund could be set up to yordinary general meeting on the fee-hike strike. overcome fears from some students’ that if too few The dnly other Ontario students participated in the university participating in strike that they would be the fee-hike strike is the University of Ottawa. U. of liable to punitive actions. This trust -fund, they stated, 0. students council prescould be administered by the ident Pierre Chabot said Federation of Students. that he didn’t “understand Students would pay their why the federation is pulling out of it (the fee hike fees, minus the 7.5% tuition increase, to this trust fund. If strike).” He said that the it became apparent that not role of a Federation of enough people were supportstudents is to organize ing the strike then students everything in’ which stucould put in the added dents can participate and if amount or take their chances. not enough do, then that Before penalties fiould be would be indicative-. of assessed for late payment of insufficient organization. fees, the money in the trust Even then the situation fund would be transferred to need not be hopeless. the UW administration. “Everything,” he, said, “is The also felt that rather negotiable.” than UW’s lone participation Stu Dollar

Womim’s studies may help OFS elects new execs - stop sexual harassment

Not a word on strikes... Strategy and tactics for the upcoming year were major subjects of debate at the Ontario Federation of Students arinual General Meeting held at LaurentiarP University, Sudbury, from June 11 tp June 15. During the first’- four days, representatives from student unions across Ontario participated in workshops on subjects ranging from the restructuring of NUS/OFS (National Union of Students/ Ontario *Federation of Students), the W5 programme entitled “Campus Giveaway”, the inadeqvacies of OSAP, to student/media relatibns. Out - of these workshops arose the motions brought before the I final plenary. Discussion the Executive

Members

was fuelled by report (and its

from

*

ahross

Ontario

subsequent second and thirdparts) which described the’ actions which the Executive felt were feasible at the time. These actions included taking cutbacks surveys at the varcampuses, holding a strong orientation, drafting~ a letter- to the Federal/Pro&cial task Force on Student Assistance, and building alliances with interestedgroups (unions, for example). / The Executive felt that planning could not be reasonably done for a period past the summer, because it is unknown at this time what the government plans. This sparked discussion on the role of OFS1-whether it should primarily be a reactive organization or whether it should act independerltly. The discus-

discussed

student

issues

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sion came to no conclusion. Also undertaken at the conference was the election of the new OFS Executive. The newMenibers-at-la&e are Peter Brickwood (York), Eleanor MacDonald (Carlton) and Diana Gwynne-Timdthy (Western). Guy Wright (Ryerson) is the new treasurer while Glenn Smith (Queens) has the newly-created position of President of the Union of Ontario Undergraduates. Lee’ Walker (U of T) will act as the Ontario Graduate Association President from September and Barb ’ Taylor (York) is the Ontario Representative to the National Union of Students. Karen Dubinsky, elected at a previous meeting, is Chairperson. ,

Ira Nayman

and elected

a new executive.

OFS photo . c

As a recent delegate to the Ontario Federation of Student’s (OFS) meeting in Sudbury last weekend, UW’s Debi Brock had had a great deal to say about the conference. Brock ‘attended the -Women’s Caucus, and reports that “sexual harassment was the focal point. It has beep around for a long time . ; . women are only now beginning to feel freer about discussing it openly. But,” she adds, “it’s still swept under the carpet to a degree.” Brock stathd that this is partly due to the fact that the victims are embarassed or fear ostracism by fellow students and university staff. Such an incident occurred recently at t’he University of Ottawa, Brock explained, when a woman “got a bad reaction from exposing .a professor’s harassment of her . . . profs are,kind of clique-ish. This is something a girl has to consider when she brings this sort of thing (harassment) into the open.” Brtick said that the National Union of Students wants to bring out a survey I dealing with sexual harass-, ment. The expenses and methodology of conducting such a survey are now being investigated. Another survey, this one by Dr. Norma Bowen of Guelph University, was disclissed at the caucus, but this one inspired numerous objections, Says Byock, “Some of the questions in the survey imply that sexual harassment is the victim’s fault.” When asked whether women at UW ~$1 notice any changes resulting from the caucus discussions, Brock stated that this “will depend on whether or not the Women’s Issves Group will reassemble next term.” Other topics under discussion at the caucus included employment problems for women, ‘and how they reflect upon adcess to post-secondary ed-

cation. It was pointed out that womkn usually work for a rate of wages 25 per cent lower than those paid to men. For wdmen who work throughout the summer to raise funds for university, this can mean the difference between relying on parents ‘for assistance or being independent. Indeed, it may even mean the difference ‘between attending and not -attending university. In a booklet called Breaking Away (which deals with wometis issues in the student movement) OFS maintained that the move to increase tuition fees “will be bound to have a most telling effect on female enrolmetit .” Brock herself expressed a similar view, stating that there is still too much sex role stereotyping; from a veFy young age girls are taught to accept th? traditional roles of nurses, teachers, secretaries, as being their eventual pigeon hole. Brock feels it is imperative that young women look beyond these fields. Brock feels that a partia]aolution to this problem is the Women’s Studies courses. These studies were also-\the topic of discussion at the daucus, for, Brock says, they may be among the first-to 90 when c&backs are implemented. But Breaking Away expresses the view that these courses are necessary to educate women about the contradictions in their social roles, and about new roles for the-m in society. The booklet also noted the ironic situation at the University of Toronto, ’ .where the head of the Women’s Studies program is a man. All -in all, Brock feels that the conference was a success, calling it “informative, helpful, and, above all, totally exhausting.”

Marie

Smith


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Imprint Publications Waterloo, a corporatiorl. flthout share capital, University pf Waterloo,, Waterloo, OntaZio.‘Phon0 888. ‘~lk380 or exbenpiod 2331 0% 8332. Imprint js a yeniber of t&e I ;NewsEditoP , &.qadian .6nivers& Prya’ (Cyp), a &udhi pr&s,organiz&tioQAI@ Edikors’ I -” .; , . of 63;‘papers’- ac&ss ~@Gda~ ‘zrn$Pb-& is also”& Jnex$er> .?f th?’ Ontario We&i ,N~spaph? A@s&iation (‘OWlQA), Imprint I Vpublishes ever$Fridayd~theterm.Mailsh&ld~eaddres~ed . to “‘Imp~mt,: CaJnpu‘s Centre Ro63tn 140.” We are typeset ?n , ‘&,mpus with a cotip/Set 510; paste-up jts l&ewise-donp on. 1: . - 1-us. Imprint: fSSN 0708-73@0.

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.* . - StuDoilar ,_-I -:,- Celia &&ep; M: Diew Coo& i. T’\ : . J c ,: (,~ * ._ . ’ ._/P I ” ’

qitlmind rkind belhind hi8 bhifty eyes. Thqi~ ux@rlings - &lie DeVoS, Dan I&, Sean Slo”, sylvla Ha.nnigm,Celia Geigq, M, Drew Cool@@sie SkraIk&JvIa2g &nd&son and Carl Fx$sen are professional killers All. . Tlxkrwkll stotr’at r&hin& toa&ieve theiPvile designs.” For.a moment I wokered if&y team - &a Na$man, Marie Skith~U?slie Robinson aqd Ed Icristoyik - would be able to stand the Onslaughts of such a m&volent force. ‘The Gkelph dntarion vQl.l -assist you in this operation.” Thanks, I grinily’thought, we’ll probably need it to defeat thtie fiends. Thowh my team was a group of skilled professionaJs ready to 1~ down their livy, if need be, for Idngand country, they wexq no! perfect (danq nev, but not quite). “Your mission, shoulQouohoose to Wept it, is to &et your paper in on timeand keep Dumc+bUyuntilwe can mount the decisive offensive againstthem. Go&luck2histapewill ,-seSdeatruct in 5. seconds.” SILO,Cover phto by Barry Tripp. /

‘$ - 60 therels not going to be a f& hike strike.. ‘.’ ‘Neil Fr&n&.n~and th;.Federation e%e& are saving their asses. . . . TKat’s &a$ There’s-no sense in discrediting the student movement more than it has already been &s&edited over the past few< years by further demonstrating that soft-voiced, semiprofessional, parlour revolutionaries donot speakfortheir-people,except perhapson“theneedfor more reasarch”, and better pubs. . . .A’n k’as.vAto-understand ex&mtile:there”w’ere two conferences rece’ntlv... The Ogt&io Federation of S&den& (OFS) conference, w.here it.tias shown that only peripheral _issues, which will either , ‘.a) never show a.conerete result, or 4 b) may show some result in a few years, dr t c-)- just tiqn’t’ma’ke any difference*-get work don* on them. For e,xample, more surveys, women’s studies, or the iying of OFSandNUS . . together. ’ The other cbnfereiice wis theCanadi?riEntertainment Conference. It’s.subjC?ct was pubs, bands, and entertainment. It proved that I . _ , / a) studi3nts really cdn org@ye somethtig; ,’ b)., we caqwork for mutual concerns; t_* ; c) those coiicerns are-&o+ 6?nph&a.lJy not poliiics. QFSis very wise indroppinga sttiiketi~~stickingfdmatte~sof, at best, sec6ndaryiApoktance. If f ’ the”y tried som.ethi$g wigbificaiit, thiy’d faii!; : _ * Sorry, 0%. Yoaldse: , Federatibn President Neil Free&an’s platform, his basis, his administration’s guiding &ht, has ‘-been the fee hike strike.-That could be something significant. OFSis working oh wome& s&dies; Freeman’s only prbject left now, that fee-striking is gone, is the CC ‘%ombshelter”. -At leascthe OFS’ project doesn’t us\e $!X,ooqof capital funds. . /Sprry, Neil. Yov ly?e. I ; ,

and warning. of what tb expect in a ’ cheap--porn; cutting these doesn’t movie, but -a government should * bother me. I haveri’f ieeri. this I have no right to r&ove’ . f&r;n 06 ‘, I particular film -so -I don’t know , change. a v!?&k of tirt. A po,litician what ‘the scenes iq question are, pbssing judgemetit b’ased on ter,mb, .’ but Susually cutting su:f;h $cenes II he: doe$n’t -und&r@and, s.udh as I_ , ’ I, ‘&esn’t\ detract.froti the Tilm. bbscetiity, is a fkightening notion. . 1 ’ . , “ *. , I ‘But: t31.e~wo@‘s fu@f frightening ‘ ’ _ __ 8 ,’ I 1_‘, i: notions. : \ I. - . I-think

a lotof rnqW&s are put dut ai

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Stqnl&‘Chow.‘. ‘- Jeabette Van,Gin”kd ‘ 3B Poli$cal &&p,ce 4thyeaf Math (C,S.) % “‘1 I’;,;,: ‘9 *c :’ C’~nsorsh~~.la~s’h~F,e~ar~~~o tight.; _I , ; ,.- . I think. the l_a&s -,a&’ ‘fairly ? If&he rno$i% destroyedby cutting - the scenes; they shouldn’t be c+- . quated.., Films aren’t forced people, and thegovernment ’ Advisory warn$ng,o by the>goverfi-. J-iavk’ any right to - tell t . m&t rqgarding t~he,-c.otitent. offilk ,‘, -. ,, Gonsumers what we should _ ,.aqe enough.1 . .

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.‘I. . - ‘. P+*h*“~~ .‘v’** anti- -j on ‘the . do,esq’t us as ’ -see.’ I ’ .

‘Was-it right or wro& of Freeman to back out of the strike? (Let’s no,t ask if it was a correct decision in the first place-the answer debends dn your id.eology.) i What do yoy~~ani?.A.gloridus,failure? brnow:,‘tq dreepaway from a failed-project, head bent, with the fir& resdlut~on’ to do%&ter next time lmavbe with an easier nroiect I? I The latter alternative has certain tjenefits a-id risks. The @edeiat& c’an &uage its pride by saying that they’ire s’erisitized the public, stirred up somestudent interest (there were, in fac‘t, 300 students at Bette Stephenson’s,visit: but betiirin mind when Sam Wagar pied her, nobody laughed: a touchof satiricaIactivismshockedanddismayedstud~nts,andBettegot thepointsbybeingsucha IS trouper about it.] Thia’Fedei;.ation ‘can contir&to jdstify its existence by putting out a-.iiod iiandbook, by, supporiing the’ Engineering hou‘sing projez, giving Denise Dgnloii-jthe one iyho”org&ized.the Enterta@ment ‘conference) more money for’ concerts, and cont@ing to subgidize the useful p&ripher&ls such as the Legal Resource Office, Birth Coxitrol, etc. And hope that people soon forget about th’e fee hik.e strike. / \ -- ‘Of cours& this policy runs certain risks. j k T&re are some people. who really ,wanted t‘he fee bike strike; there are some people whb have bqcorne convinced of,its validity; lh9Fe’iire’sam.e people who w,ent.along with it-out of misplaced loyalty or tinthinkrng solidarity. These people are now feeling verybetlayed. v6 hat if s’omeof thep ’ carry some influence:? IRemembtir, Neilhyoy haven’t mad& many friends 6n fhe way up.] a MaIik McGuice and Ridk Smit’are the lastzwo presidents td never have had&e s&ious threit of imp’eachment over their heads. Many distinguisheti, hrghly competent people- have been deposed from the Presidency.. If this event should overtake Neil Freeman; t-he next winner would be i someone who never mentions anything at all radical, Entertainment will be the forte. 14is almost -too-b&d. that Freemaq’s cancellation. of the strike carries this risk. I.think_Freeman mpde a Corre’ct decision-his reasoqs are good and sufficient. He doesn’t, however, mention the most.importantfact&.‘His fee hike strike ha$ sweet dam&all mash supp,gt;t-o’n Campus, and, at a maximbm, ZOO students wuld pos,sibly participate and their T 1 adademic term would be flushed down the drain. - , / ‘. ., - - Sorry students. Vau lo&-too. e I_ Let’s make an’assesment. A fee hike strike is a good ide;i ijn pni@ple; b&t due to the wideipread _- beliefs t’ha . \ *I ._ ; ’ Ij , ; D .I l it wout iin’t work; F the fe;! increase isn’t’very much anyway; l even if it &uld work it would endanger one’s academic car-r I -: . ! l ‘I’ll be out in 81year (ti twq) so it really’ doesn’t coqcern me” .,. . ’ l ,4nsufficient&ork was dond aft& the-qotimittment to a strikeso asto&~~.vincestudeatson the I ’ &ove p&n.ts and try andgGe,ra& some soiidarity, I ’ 1 -, ,A . I ’ Ed *r, ‘the fee hike strike was cancelled. a \ - , -Reasonab.ie, right? z On the”otKerMbd;-&&s justone opinion. I.be!ieveit o becorrect,?but as we’veseen from many people over ~~~tiy.ye&@‘titi &is&mpus, talk i! cheap. T h Fre’s a way to find o$ fox+sure. - ’ . Lef Us have tha’t,&@e&@~ti~~-so talke-dabbut in theLetter’s,page fhiswe~k+&“s tiesqlve some doubts. If a thn~~,:~leia~~~s’tnd~~t~s tufti upand demand a fee,hike sirike-&‘ll, tliat^‘s self.

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Friday,

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27,198O.

Im‘print

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Fourteen turn up

June

8,200 invited tb mend WCliI hassles.

/ Fourteen ‘old timer’ residents returned last Saturday to Waterloo Cooperstive Residence Inc. (WCRI) to rectify legal technicalities that the residence had been in breach of since January of 1970.

The Cooperative Corporations Act requires that new memberships _in a Cooperative Corporation be ratified by a Board of Directors of that Corporation. Resident membersof WCRI have not been ratified by -a Board. of Directors since 1970. ’ When the Co-op learned of its error, it was required to call a General Membership Meeting of all those who were legally ratified members before 1978. -The Co-op notified all past members to invite them to the meeting, which, after weeks of address labelling, envelope stuffing and gen--

the ten elected were- Hank Van der Vodnervoot, Patricia Anderson, Shane Fri-, ars, Alan Brownlee, Clayt Mark Smith, Thorton, Mike Dekker, Reinhardt Christiansen, Mike McErlean and Mark Auger. . The majorelection issue was an action taken by the previous Board‘ which resulted in the non-renewal of the contract of the General Manager of the Coop. The action turned out to * be a contentious one am-. ongst the membership. In J’ spite of these disagreements, many of the previo.us Board members were re-elected to the new Board. ’ Amidst the serious campaigning and politicking, Members of, Waterloo Co-op Residence held its general meeting on Saturday. The John Thurston, one of the residence bad been in breach of legal technicalities under the’ Co-operutive returning members who Corporations Act, but took steps at their meeting to rectify the situ&ion. had been active in WCRI in photo by EK the late 60’s broke up the bers were given lifetime clearing up the Co-op’s : r meeting’s tension by dem- . have fun?“‘. in WCRI as a legal’problems. Thurston and the other ’ membership anding of the candidates, Leslie Robinson thirteen returning memtribute to their efforts in “If elected, are you going to

era1 paper &uffling, resulted in a mail out of 8,200 invitations to a barbeque, general meeting and social get-together. The- event was held at the Phillip St. buildings on June 14’. The technical problems were cleared up quickly; the fourteen members present elected ai Board of Directors of ten and that Board then ratified all memberships and all actions taken by Boards of Directors to that date. This step was necessary \since the people who ,had elected past Boards w,eren’t all members, and therefore the Boards weren’t legal either. The newly ratified members proceeded to elect a Board of -Directors to begin operating immediately and to stay for staggered terms of one year, eight months, and four months respectively. Out of 18 nominees,

Finding a home ’ a

Vkrk term.houk ,ng being solved‘ 1

that the project has the number suffered from poor organamong co-op ization and right now has Jennifer students, says inadequate list of Hilton, Engineering “A” tiusing . available. She President,and she is trying hopes to selve these to do something about it. problems as time goes on. _ She has operated the Work Term Housing ProCurrently, the project ject for the past two terms ) works by having students but is currently encountfill out a postcard while on ering difficulties mostly their work term. They due to a lack of staff. receive the postcard with \ Hilton would like the their grade;s. They then Federation of Students to mail it to the Housing take over the project Project Office (postage is permanently and operate it paid by the Engineering from a central location like Society) where it becomes the campus centre. Howpart of a file maintained ever, she says that the alphabetically according to Federation has so far only city. Students looking for a offered to take it over if it place to live ontheir work turns out to be a success term can look through Moving

is

one complaint

and will only pay for half of its operation. The Housing Project could become a self funding operation Ailton thinks, but still has a few “bugs3 in it to be worked out. in the past Hilton said

thesecards

as part of their

search. Ultimately that the

she project

thinks could

expand to assist students in all faculties in moving and in’ organizing transportation to distant places

where working.

they

may

the campus housing office used to carry out this kind of project on an informal .’ basis. - A binder with addresses of accommodations for four-month terms were made note of in it by returning students. He noted, ho,wever, that this was not always up to date. Since thecards have been so recently mailed out, it is difficult to predict the success rate as yet, said Scheinman, but added that the completed cards were filtering into the office, and that students were coming . in to look at them. The Housing Project Office is located in the Carl Pollock Hall, rm. 1338 and is open from 9:00 to 3:00, Monday through Friday. According to ‘Scheinman, the number of times each, housing card is used, is being recorded as a rough ’

be,

When questioned about “B” stream’s part in the housing project, President Lunny Scheinman stated that his administration is co-operating with “A” stream, which originally organized it. Scheinman noted that finding accommodation for four month terms was a major difficulty for co-op students because so many apartments required the occupants to sign a year lease. This was especially the case in smaller cities, he

added.

“To keep a central file of locations for students where four-monthaccommodation is available will be to everybody’s benefit,” said Scheinman, adding that there students in faculty.

S,cheinman,

are

co-op

almost

every

stated

*that

indicator

of availability

for

each location. .’

Stu Dollar

Patterson,

Pres-

ident of Local 6500 of the United Steelworkers of America (USWA) was the speaker at the quest Saturday June 14 banquet when the Ontario Federation of Students (OFS), held their Annual General Meeting in Sudbury.

Patterson said that students who enter the labour force often don’t know much abo.ut 1 labour. University

for

the B-

stream engineering executive positions have resulted in the following slate of candidates for the July 3 election. ~ Running for the position of president, whose duties -include the official rep’ resentation of Engsoc B and the society’s administration are,Jim Balcon (3A Design), /Rob Systems Carter (2B Electrical), and Jim Clarridge (2B, Electrical). Candidates for first vicepresident, whose duty is to act for the president in his

Speaking on the topic of education and employment, Patterson cited many similarit5es between the student and labour’ movements, and mentioned the fact that- both Bette Stephenson and Bill Davis were labour ministers at one time,

-

,E,ngsocto .get.new \ executives in July, election contest l+Iominat,ions

Speaker cites student/labour problems Dave

Jennifer : Hilton, A-stream Engineering president explains the advantages of the housing project for co-op students. photo by MS

hewly created position of Femme-Eng. Chairperson is b.eing contested by Judy Runnalls (1B General), and Erich Trafnik. _ Polls will be opening at 8:30 am and will close at 2:30 pm on July 3 in the E4 lounge. Students will need their student and Ehgsoc. ID cards in order to vote. According to Chief Returning Officer Fred

- ’

,

!YE lzPX~~u~?~ addition to the usual posters and leaflets, the candidates have‘ had occasion to use flashing signs, and in one. case a

Or her absence- are Jeff bake-off to bolster their

_

_ and college life should reedy people for life in the “real world”, said Patterson, and .

B? that it ’ was his hope, that such institutions’ would teach p&ple .about unions in . - ” i

I.

I‘.-*., ~ #.

the course of their tion/ ~ _1 1

educa: .

Ira Nayman Y* . . . .* a,‘-.-. - : . . ,.:_*. * . . . I ‘- *_

Blake (2-B Mechanical), Bob Cross. (3A Systems De’ sign), Bob Peacock (2.B Mechanical), and JefinY Thi,ers (2B Mechanical j. - , Erich Tratnikand Karen Zptzsche Iof :jA Mechanical and I# ( :hemic:al r&@ctivelyl, are running for the secretary’s position, .and. Dave Graupner

(3A Electrical) has acclaimed as treasurer. ,

:

.>

been The 4

chances at the poll,s. The results of the election will be announced at the Engineering Semi,Formal on July 5. Every voter should be sure to check and see t hat his or her

name is on the voters list in the Engineering Society office by June 30. Other details are available in the same location Q :

Ma&Sanderson

L

.


On July _1, - a nice little . ’ ‘: _i time-bomb is set, TO go off which should change ‘the minds of, many, set them ’ thinking and, perhaps, even movethem to act. The event ’ , is the’ release of ,a -book ’ called Acid Rain, The Silent ’ : Crisis, and it should shake A ’ up a lot of people; I Acid rain occurs when i I, carbon and nitrogen in the air (from the exhaust,from cars and factories) mixes.’ with oxygen to form acids. I’ Theseacids then f@ll to the earth during all manner of - % precipitation (most corn__. ’ mon%y in the form of rain),polluting ’ water and soil , alike. ’ a The book; written by Phil Weller and the Waterloo ’ Public Interest Researsh Group (WPIRG) is a ‘de- - ’ tailed an‘alysis of theproblem, describing the.effects ,’ ’ ” of acid rain on the en. &onment, how it enters ’ L the atmosphere, what can be done about it, and-&herimportant aspects of acid precipitation. ’ According to Phil Weller, - the lakei to the point where+ in 1973,’ only three groups Acid Rain, The Silent Crisis vacationed there. was’ written, to publicize F%om this p.erspective; the the issue ‘of acid precipitation in the ‘hope of I reader is then barraged with bringinga resol,utionto the facts. PH levels in 1,akes which were more ‘orless problem., Weller and WPIRG acceptable in 196.1 (between found that there was agreat 5.2 and 7.4) : have become deal of technical informuninhabitable by fish I in ation on. the .subject, . but there had been no: books k971 (between 4.1 and5.6 written specifically for 3he 7:is neutral). general - ‘pub& which is Officials of the Ontario Ministry of the Environwhat-they set out to do. Interestingly enough, the ment told a recent govern_book starts off with a brief merit committee that 146 descriptionof the plight of acidified lakes in the pro’ vince are now devoid of fish. the Peloquin family ‘rather than a description of the ,The book t&n states the horrifying factthat-a further effects of acid precipitation, . which is entered into on the 48,560 may go the same route within thenext twenty second chapter. ’ Although thi2i.s a little misleading years’ -‘The ‘amount of research (most of the book is taken up with the’ ‘dry reporting of - which went intb this work is evident;. the ‘facts, which facts) it does give the reader apparently are meant to, an&sight into the personal scare, succeed admirably at effects of acid precipitation. To supplement his income this task* Then, too, Weller and as a trapper, Peter Peloquin opened a camp on Lake, WPIRG don’t pull any punches, 'laying the blame for Chinguchi in\1953. Although succes&d asa spotfor good acid‘PfeciPitation fT!Zht ‘fn the doorstep of thqse whom fishing for ten years,:byJ963 the lake had been acidified tc ’ they feel are responsible. are the point that it no longer . The major pollut@s such as Into held -any fish; The loss of corporations and Ontario Hydra, wkn clients to’ the camp continued with theloss offishin pour sulphur , dioxide andl

‘I

nitrogen dioxide into the atmosphere because cleaning up their -adts substantially .w_ould mean. a cost which they are un@.ling to pay. These companies have thus far succeeded in this pursuit, it is stated, .because the government had not, up until, recently, the laws to regulate pollution, and, more recently, because the government is reluctant to enforce the standards which they have set for the polluters. “Government. inaction on pollution %...the product of * a deliberate * .,policy of ’ corporate -support,” the book informs us. Further, pollution is not merely a problem in Ontario, or even Canada, but throughout North America and most 1 of the western world. Thus, a cooperation between governments is needed, although according’ to this book it isn’t . likely. Although normally $4.75, UW students can obtain the boot for ’ $2.50 from the WPIRG office. . ’ Acid ,Rain, The - Silent Crisis is an important It is-- well , publicatibn. worth reading. I Iira Naymaa ~ ’


-Letters

.*

Friday,

4. Condemn the threats of both the March 17 Students’ President, Wim Simonis, Vice UW and U of 0 adminCouncil resolution for a feePresident, Kent Lewis, istrations, against those who Treasurer, and Maggie hike strike in September. intend to participate in the Thompson, Environmental Not only has the Federation Fee Hike Strike. Studies councillor voted to executive capitulated to presImprint Editbr, sure from the UW adminOur President, the first in terminate the fee hike strike. On Sunday June 22nd the Ontario to present the Fee Hike istration and its joe-boys in the This decision was extremely Federation Board of Directors Engineering Society but they Strike option, spoke against the difficult and came about after rescinded Councils March motion, but did not reveal his much discussiorr and debate, have done this iti’spite of the 17th overwhelming 12;2;2; intent to call off the strike, but was the most responsible clear mandate given to them by decision to engage ina Fee Hike merely ten days later. Iti fact decision considering the many students in the Winter term to Strike during September 1980. -prganize a fee-hike strike for Freeman has never once pubadverse c@cumstances. - ’ No other member campus The Board of Directors delicaly argued his reasons for September. cision was made F after the making the decision. Informal of OFS intended to pursue But students at LJY are not Council meeting, called almost discussion followed the ansuch action as ‘a fee hike intimidated by administration two months ago to discuss the strike, which left our threats and have every innoucement on Sunday, in Math mail-out encouraging students campus isolated if we contention of proceeding with the & Computer rm. 5158 was to participate in the strike, fee hike strike as scheduled for discontinued when the Fedtinued to proceed withafee failed to make quorum. Neil eration Executive retired to the hike strike. September. Federation Freeman, Federation Office. Further dis- -*.- The fee hike strike was We are circulating ihe folPresident, later (revealed that lowing petition to call an cussion there was rudely stopped being interpreted .by the only Federation executi’ve and extra-ordinary meeting of the when Wim Simonis called public and media solely as Board of Directors members Security to remoye those students a protest against the 7.5% students at UW to reverse the knew of his plans to reverse the who were’ outraged by the tuition increase and on11 decision of the Federation Fee Hike Strike decision, prior this increase ,rather than executive to oppose the feeannouncement. to the meeting. As a member of hike strike. being an integral part of a Even the arguments within the Bo&d of Directors I would “Whereas on June 22 the whole cutbacks campaign the motion moved by Peter Federation of Students execlike to make it clear that this as it was intended to be. Hoy, Chairperson of the Board - Another group on campus treasonous decision was NOT utive succumbed to pressure of External Relations and Wim a unanimous one, and that from the UW administration was causing much conSimonis, both strong supportheated discussion on the issue and the Engineering Society fusion and splitting the ers of the Fee Hike Strike only and in a Board, of Directors lasted almost two hours. . weeks ago, are weak. The students on the issues. The meeting included Neil With the definite possibility meeting reversed the March 17 possibility of a Provincial Freeman, President; Wim of a provincial election this fall Students Council resolution election this Fall; for example, Simonis, Vice President; Kent . e Federation executive firmly that ‘the Federation of Stuhas very little bearing on the Lewis, Treasurer; and myself dents at the University of believes that in unity and crisis students are faced with Maggie Thompson, E.S. Rep. Waterloo engage in a fee-hike solidarity with OFS and other on this campus. I first pointed out that it was member campuses across strike inSeptember 1980'; and The question I ask, Is the totally wrong for the Board of Ontario we can be more Whereas the March 17 Federa t iori Executive and Directors to rescind Councils effective and ’ productive in Students’ Council resolution Board of Directors responding previous decision, and reminwas based on large-scale, educating the student body to the wishes of the students? ded the President of his conenthusiastic student support and public on the policy of If events last term, such as the demnation of the University restraint and cutbacks in for the fee-hike strike; and Bette Stephenson rally are 0 Board of Governors, following education. Whereas the Federation indicators, then they certainly its decision to over rule the exectitive’s decision to oppdse Until its termination, the are not. Only a General Assemb1.y the fee-hike strike was taken University Senates‘decision to tactic of the fee hike strike had will decide. Following the 3 (for) 10% -withhold using the many positive results. without consultation with or l(against) vote on Sunday, the - The publicity Autonomous ’ fee increasing and informapproval of the students at President remarked, “I think we power, granted by the Proation we provided have UW; and have made a very responsible vincial government, until acWhereas the Federation exe built an awareness and decision today.” How wrong he is ecutive has refused to call a cessibility studies were com‘shown the severity of the for I fear that the future of this meeting of the plete. The analogy betweenthe ‘issues on our campus. general Federation Executive is in grave two events is strong, both the Over 4,000 students on this students at UW to discuss and jeopardy. campus signed a petition decide on the fee-hike strike; University Senate and the The Fee Hike Strike was the We the undersigned stuFederation Council, are the showing their ‘dissatisfacfirst practical acQon this Feddecision making bodies, while tion over the government’s dents at UW hereby call for an eration took against the Governthe respective Board of Goveducation policies. extra-ordinary general ments policy of cutbacks and fee - Over’500 studenTsattended ernors an’d Board of Directors, meeting of-the Federation of increases; it was a good stand, ‘rubber Students to be held in acare overseers or the Bette Stephenson rally therefore the Board of Directors cordance with By-law 21, to (a) stamps’. to hear the minister reject decision should be reversed, and overturn the Federation Board Numerous requests to hold a the Fee Hike Strike movement be our , concerns on postGeneral Assembly, so that the of Directors decision to back secondary education in allowed to continue. out of the fee-hike strike, and students themselves could dethis province. Maggie R. Thompson (b) decide on appropriate’ cide what to do, were made by Our actions and organEntering 4th yr. Env. Studies actions to be taken to advance other shocked students, before ization have proven to the meeting, as well as by the fee-hike strik; at UW.” government and adminisValerie R Miller Jules Grajower myself, during the meeting. tration that students at Mary Gillis Cameron Anderson Basically the arguments Waterloo and across MaggieThompson @rigid Rowe used by the President, and Ontario will not just sit and Rose Aleksic repeated by Simonis and watch Sandy Wong our institutions Elizabeth Rootham Lewis, were that no other decline in quality, and that members of O.F.S. were parwe do intend to have a voice Imprint Editor, ticipating in the Fee Hike in our education. Federation of Students’ Strike. However at the So far, much has been Council had planned a Council 17th momentous March achieved over the campaign meeting on June 22 to discuss Council meeting, when the Fee and we at Waterloo have the the fee hike strike and the Hike Strike was called, counmomentums and mandate to information mail-out. The cillors were well aware that continue our efforts in solmeeting was to commence at Imprint Editor, they were the only campus idarity with other campuses in 2:00 p.m. After a waiting I have often contemplated participating. Since then the educating and providing a period of 45 minutes, quorum University of Ottawafollowed strong student voice on the had not been reached. our lead, and indeed continue issue of cutbacks. The executive proceeded to work towards a full fledged then to inform councillors of a Neil Freeman, resistance to the Governments President motion to be moved by Peter education policies. Peter Hoy, Chairperson, Hoy, External Relations chairExternal Relations During the O.F.S. conference person, which would rescind a motion calling O.F.S. the fee hike strike. Any disi’nembers to, cussion on this motion was 1. Organize a vast campaign made virtually impossible due against the Fee hike. to a handful of non-councillors, 2. Encourage students to pay whose behaviour removed any their fees in two instalpossibility of proper debate. lments to allow the posBecause of the immedite necImprint Editor, sibility of a fee strike -in essity of informing the student As students of the UniJanuary. body on the status of any fee versity of Waterloo we are 3. Hold a special conference in withholding action, the Board shocked and outraged at the November to discuss staging of Directors of the Federation, Federation Board of Directors , a strike in January. consisting of Neil _Freeman, unilateral decision to reverse

Fee Hike Strike should be allowed to go ahead

Freeman defends end to Fee Hike Strike planning

Changes to corporate environment will save capitalism

June

the effectiveness of a capitalistic society in managing economic resources in the most efficient manner. Ideally the price of a resource, be it energy, wheat or human brain power, reflects it’s availability. However, our capitalistic society is far from the ideal. This‘ is because of the attitudes and activities of large and powerful corporations. These corporations redirect economic drives to purely motley making ventures and much of the original efficiendy is lost. In simpler times when. stock marketsdidnot exist and small businesses abounded. the only way to measure success of a companv was bv evaluating it’s output Of products. Once the inputs and outputs were coinpared profit could be calculated. The important aspect is that the m’anagers and financiers were directly in contact with the products they made. It was a bare mabrialisti’c system. With the evolution of larger and more complex corporate systems, management has become alienated from the product. The only measure of success is the growth in value of the company’s stocks. Thus executives have grown less interested in their products and more in profit and loss statements. The new vardstick of success is no long& a direct measure of efficiency of production. The entire svstem has developed into a dlack box with obscure inputs and profit statements as outputs. There is little understanding of what occurs in the middie. As a result resources are not allocated efficiently. What is needed iS achangein the corporate environment. This change can only come from public opinion in the democrafic goverqing process. The government can initiate and enforce the propositions noted below: 1. increase corporate taxation fate so that it is -proprotional to the size of profit. 2. decrease tax breaks to large corporations so they carry the largest portion of the national tax burden 3. limit the size of individual companies to prevent any single one from being a large political force The effect of these changes is to encourage judicious resource management by forcing businesses to be prod’uction oriented rather than profit oriented. The profit incentive can be replaced by incentives ‘to minimize inputs and max-

27,198O.

Imprint

7 ,-

imize outputs. The proposed capitalistic system is closer to the ideal, where resources are used in the I most efficient manner, but still retains the good aspects of the present system. Alex Frei, Waterloo

Lost $ reward. Lost 1 hunt professional squash racquet in PAC mid-May. Black finish and black leather grip. Frank, 885-2773. !-lost a gold-colotired Men’s Longine watch. It had sentimental value. If anyone found it please contact Steve (886-3997) anytime. There is a reward.

Typing Experienced resumes,

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typist, theses ,

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Imprint Editor, I was one of the graduands at the Math Convocation on Saturday, May 24th and would like to point out something ,which I feel was wrong with the ceremony. There were two prayers offered during the proceedings. ’ In itself; I am not upset by this, even though the c&ferment of degrees does not seem to me to be a religious ceremony. However, there was mention made of “the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost”. This is narrowing the people who can accept the prayer down from those who are religious and believe in a god of some sort,to those who are Christians. I am not certain about the number of .~ people on campus who are not christian, but I do have non Christian friends on campus who will be graduating in-the ’ future and who would resent these prayers. We, the graduands, have a right to ,participate in the convocation ceremony without having ourselves, our families, or our friends, who may not be Christians, forced to participate . in proceedings containing prayers which belong to a religion to which >we may not subscribe. I feel that these prayers should be taken out of the proceedings, or at least changed so that they are acceptable to people of all religions. After all, freedom of religion is guaranteed in the Human Rights Code. Surely, the University does not mean to force Christianity upon anyone, merely because they fulfilled the requirements for a degree? G. Simmons

Erratum In Professor Schroeder’s letter of June 13,198O we mistakenly typeset the word “feasible” instead of “infeasible”. The sentence correctly reads: “A science of creation is infeasible, as the appearances of creation are past.” Imprint aplogizes for any inconvenience arising from this error.

~-----~~~IL-.mmD~~~~l-mr rI Bring this ad and we ~111 1 give you $LQO off our reg’1I ular green fees. (Only one 1 ad per greenfee’good I, only on weekdays. i- --~~~~~~~~~--~-~.I

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in do wntown

669-3795

1

Graduate calls change in prayer during convocation

Students outraged over Fed de;cision to stop strike

-Classified-

\

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Elmira


j, Reid’s character was much more complex . The only act&of the play is the recurring _’ . and was inter&ting because it developed i .’ ’ 1 gin game, the intermittent temper tantrums] -. throughout the play. Enteiing.as a naive and ‘*% . _ 7, and ,Jarguments ,L which end’ successive *. L, shy innocent’ she , develops‘. into :a. card ;- ’ , ‘. , player- who excels at strategy. For her it js ‘:C‘ YJ;rounds.. All/of ‘the narrative background I ,,:‘_ ,inform&on* is firovided. in static and :most distressing I to reveal -,her lack &f : t sometimes laconic prose delivered titween, ” ; I education and that she is unloved. shufflhgs and discardings of ,~a&. The “;+j Reid’s performance can be faulted: in.its \ ~1 ‘sheer dram&& power. and. the. rivetted early stages because of the: &er4&yitigof attention required for the play is a tribute to. * -’ i.nnocenc,e. Her vindictileness and hateful i ^ D,L. Coburn’sexcellent, tight writing. I ’ ’ , . qualities are cloaked within a cloudyiminded ! I \ ‘1 _.~ Asthe play re@esits, resolution, one ’ ‘, 1 good nature, andit is hardtoimagine that this 1:. ,’ rL*-, discovers,that Fonsia and Weller, whoat first . .- ‘is the same woman who i6 hated by her sonL+1seemedtobe disparateomosites, have very t .’ ---Under the direction, of Mel Shdpiro, an \ ,A simiiar personalities.. They have lived their essentially boring round of gin becomes is A’ lives in the’ same way and have come to’ihe ~\ ’ exciting. The play nevei’lags.‘Although&his . -:‘. same place. fi ‘I . ’ / a very bitter play the comedic aspects ‘are . We&r blames his b&ng streak at cards on . wisely allowed to reign and t reinforce . \ : bad luck; his business failure was the fault of Coburns sardonic insights; ’ 9: 1%“his partners, not himself. Similarly, Ednsia . ’ Celia ,Geiger I

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1, In , the spring of 1978: a number of ._ -: y enterprising ,FASS alumni with f‘something . different in mind than a multitude df sketches ,tied together ‘by a preposterous 3’ ’ #plot;” produced the highly successful Its. ’ j dust a Stc@e He’& Gobig-Through under the - .. name of Sumwat ‘Theatre. . \ , The effort; \accOrding to it&e Hull, a ,_ ’ ., t member of the originalgroup, is “very much ’ a bunch of friends getting together” since j *T:i. .’ *y, the total prtiuction ‘is carried out “striqtljr .li .

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.-Young Detectives are‘ faced with their&t real case. -.I ‘*. . . ’ ( ‘;,: _ The writer/editors of the%-scr&&are~ the same team who created!: Sumwat’s two previous- . shows: Jim Gardner, ,Marney . Heatley,, Steve Huil, Ian1 Allen, ati$ Ron Dragu&&n. 1.: . . ., $ Is it diicult for five writers to ‘collaborate on. one script? Hull” sa$ not, aItho@h continuity isalways a potential problem. The \ easy solution; ‘he maintains, is to plan

Jqjlp Carnegl e portia$diDavey. in.Iast %e,eks Integrated+tud@ -_ I _ , . _3% I._’ .

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[“k$le‘d him’s, b’&r when he was’or@%h&e~‘J one manproduction d the same name. Phqto

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r. z _j ~:: %a&$<, &b&k’s -: “The- Shinitig” i”s 8:. ence_,inember may we!1 wonder. w’hy he -- Perhaps, however, K&rick knows d few /defiriitely 21.fl&&d film. But dog’t miss -.jt;‘5 --I.; 1. h’asntf fguiied the’m out already: Simp!icity to9 many tricks,% His technical fiddling about I$&y ertoi.2 ‘have *been made with this film I:. , .js &$ly twisted here. This is bn& of th& few becomes intrusi\ie.at times’. .He uses sound arid la$k, of sgund& %inferestipgly but unk(mpst c$ t&m by Ku&k), b u t netie;theies8 :,: ..: .*insta&s of subtlety in the pictu% Most of the ‘soundtrack th’at he ItheFe are&ever+ s&ties arrd p&for&tic&. _-: ‘. “The‘ sh‘ining’:’ suffers frqq two major ’ nec&s&rily. liti “The~~,il’linS1’th~tare probably.amo~~~~~~,‘-~..~ Ic &&s:,~$ weak fplot %nd diiectol;ial. overkill. has chosen td u$els overly loud, shrill and *o&i en@&$$lli$ &&-, @G$&’ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~&s&d &n Stq-&eh King’s hovel, _, jolting. ‘Rather than criating mood it , , overpowers s&eral scenes: ’ : .sur&&$$&c~ :-Nichdlson’s ‘p$foi&ce::,T L &~oni&s Jack’s regr.esr;ion intd madness, . -Plot advancing’titles have been inseted at &ne i? ;yj$@:fhe price of admission,, : 1 _~4,~-’ ‘: ’ cal$n feber, or spiritual p9ssession. _ i _ ’ t Nicholson: plqys d. writerl,ja~~;,Torrrin~e, ’ s . I_.. P&.rhaps h& is a reincirnated ‘murderex. intervals in the film; In 9 few instances they i’$hb, alon&&ith ks Mife W&&; d@&$,%-.:-.. ./4&o@+ fio’rce- d&es .hiti to repeat the fatiily are quite effective in c’ombination with the derformanc& that follow them but after a’ spend a #$er: in- isolatiOni’- maititaifiitig, a’. ’ ,, sty!e n&rder that has occurred at the lodge Coloriscio,‘$um-*e2’ ‘&sort. Jack hopes t6- ,. j .-several yea& befdre- his stay there. The film ’ . time they sim$y.t,end to.cliop’up the film’s, .++tii great .~~rks’in’~olit_ud~~ resbrt ‘is, I *.never.r&ly makes it clear exactly what this narrative. Kubrick can be a,fine director but this film is at it’s best when actors are g&en a hQw@er,- dn#hiag..lSut a des&@d p&e. -If Y - forcc~ is2 -I chance toi act arid’ Kubrick quits playing *was byilt on-ari old~I&iari btiria! gFound a_nd h - ‘;; _ ,Taies :of reinca,rnation, haunted houses,’ ‘was -the. :3$fb-; of I a -rather’. \iicidus in- .’ _ &n$ @ossession are, anythirig but new.-This, around. i fiimis’foo deriv$tjveIto be considered a &ye’ The comtiination. of the horrible and the ~aiiiti~~~/rnu~;derJsuicide; The ’ buil;&ng ?&in~s” &it-h,+$rits and im*a@eSof its @%5-ti~--, _’ 1’ epic horror film: humourous iS a.Kubrick trademark; witness ‘; I’ ,$&t* . $“;,e?. \ j ‘.L‘i I ,-:,,: -,- “T,‘ #&fiy “thrillers” of latq ,seem t&deal with .’ ‘T>r. Strangelove, and A Clockwork qya_nge. 1.. J&k’s$& D&r@is eSp&ll$seii+iv@to -. t& ~mii’rder,, of. childr.&“The -Amicyville -:. Ipe;haps he, and .’ co-scripwriter . Diane “\The Changelin$’ and. now “The Johnson have not blended them too well ‘thi~sl&&g%&the &die&e pefceives m&y -,, (: I+rr$$ of th~&$$a”&. si.njst@shadows t;hrough- :‘- -: Sl$iing~~ all kontain quite gruesdme scenes %toggther in this picture. - So@etimes the his i+$&+t$ Iehildlike,-,;~~d~~~taAdirig.~-of~: ji 1g,of. cl$ldfen being .&11&d. Later:, she kid&es humour undegcuts stispense. The film et’hetit @$%leti,&e iS us$d effe++$ b$, K-U .,‘. ‘.ci .&$n~~ $+- uns&ed >spirits. .@s* enoigh to confuses vie,wersas to whether they should b$$i,;$~ r’nysteries a& rev+l~$~~ audi- ~v-T _s. ‘I1.~‘ma$g&e/ :- afraid of ,-Sme cherub-fgc&d I :. tyke ’ , laugh’or be terrified. I think that this may be a : -; _c .‘I’

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1 I-2 I silly inoffensive-demeanor can be comhared I to that of Suzanne Somers and other goodlooking but j dopey screen decoratia Ins. Perhaps he wF!t:%_h:d:better luck-inL the -. A L. _^WI -L Al--r. -S!I~IIL rrkumee 1awis: * ‘. i The , world <of director dames Brld! sed’ u&an. cowbody is firmly based- in the .-_ --Jhtric ? vested, cowboy wing south. These gentlemen work hard. nd women will hQ 1 IlkC$,! dl3U $IldY. 1ldK.l dl Gilley’s 1b.af iti’ ,’ Houston. A “Cowboy” pro\: IOPCWV .hi&..+.-manhA . ..y.a..s.vvu through hard d@hking, hard &mching arid -: riding a mechanic’al. bucking:machint$ Soft’ mats rather? than solid, soiledearth:receive I . ‘ Guelph, God help they if thqy get BnywhsJre ihe fallen herbs. near a real horse or cow in their two hundred Travolta enjoys t& - scene at Gilley’s. dollar’ enslemble’s. Ah, the virtues of artistic‘ According to the film, woqen exist for irifluetice in the soul of.mankind. .cookinls and sex and thev mllgt hP rnlInt& ,_ Anyway, 50 th” til,m. 1ravolta tans may or 1 Ymirroring” ettect is aqcieved by two reveiers , courted..Travblta, 5s main protagonist Bud left f&a& and react to one another at .the’ ‘may not be sa&fied.+Ie walks, heitalks, he Davis, strikes his young lady during a ‘fslap-. ’ r>p@iigs of+arti.cX+r seen+!. ’ * nce.5. But the sdancing is slow and rather * and tickle” epcounter. She cohDlains’ that _.* .* -, . .r _. . .. . . sne nas oeen niE roe nara.’ Bud tells her she !‘+iturdqy yigl$<Fever”, i , <pei-et$a; a on&act pld$entitle& This is the doesn’t knaw w&t hard is. After-all, cpnsi’der Pkrce, an oratoric&+@$+op@ras while ,-- There @ ,$$e;‘lon~ .crgpe shqf of Travojtd -i I) the knp#irtg ‘about-* he,_, . ..__ .Y.. _ _..__ “ivhicli’.‘pau’ses ever $o sligh’tl’i; on !his C&.ch: ppgers h_as publish&hi&&$ry in Liiti:don .-dimestore horsev he .rides. * but he i$ fully clad ‘and he seems to have J%gc$ine, Poetry @&ago;,F and.’ Queer!‘s James BfidGe> and Aaron Lathah’s script ., I, deve’loped> ‘%- pavqch ‘cof late. His poorly Qtqrterlir,‘. . makes some sort _ of. r;il&ed up ibcial ,bady makes-his macho iFage An analogy ‘:‘froti‘ the play n&ii be - ’ cor$itic$ed . commentary regardi,n&&tionships” an& appear,r&ther ridiculous. Y &r,owed to c&scribe it: “I&he beginning, all love. E&id’s mariiage breaks Gp and another I don’t,. ,want to -cotidemn. poor John ~,th$$jsU existed primordial/iv i$initesimal ’ woman moves in with him: His wife faflg fbr a c+npletety: 3He may 1be. trying to becqme a f&,men$:bf ‘thetiselves,/Endless,jn c?l;tnt, convict. These scenes, however, arti written! f serious actor of sorts. The proble-ms are that itie&ii,ab&’ c~mb;in@J@I%@ou~hout ,, ?ths and played with the maturity and fin&se of. I he hasn’t .got the brainy, tb vo@ or tl;e cosrnic-~,~~e~~~;~g~~~~d, inchoate .” T$see “Archif co@ics or ‘early sixties beach{ Lest Pet& Z&ridn@tes only once is to:tiiss. x. talent to becpme one. After the success of movi&s., Donlfcworry. By the end of t;hti filtiit Fever”, Mr. Travolta should ,tiuch ‘@f the; &&‘ness &d rne&$og .of ;the- ‘f’%turday,Night turns out -that na “fan&y city woman’? can rhave used his brains, (if any), and care.ffilly work: Indeed; i,t be.+rs closer examintition,, break tip a’marrim made in Gilley’s. “chosen g&od. &rip& that w,?uld have helped and is w.&h a;=se&ndi‘&ven a third,‘viewing. A woman at Gilley’s states that sfie prbfeis . I> ; , i Rosi Skgapits , him to dispfay his ability (if any) to play ‘~&,&oys”becau~ they are- Irnrnmnfir;r ‘“..--..‘~‘.-w.---. tod assorted characteis with varied personI’ . . Give rn; ,Woody All&sque paranoia and allties. Instead he qhose the. disastrous i * eelf-centeredness. ./before irtificial saddlenow this Urban ‘,, sorkapy tlmqc I 2 - , ,. rplece--. -. t 3 ’ , - I. IThe-‘t&ban Cpwboy” , iS a joke. Ih . I*’ - ; rh .r---pitched-- voice ----- &df& ---- an;i u- --/ , ,-I uannay,, lalanh wil ;rlr~~~~~ch’in&r hicraroor Fl;cra~ho+ -’ . .’ .’ ’ 1

- Direct& of the K-W Symphony Orchestra, * whigh. t’hreated through,. the three acts with ,:. fi’!. .. , /-: 1. :;,;:-:; ’ the intention-of reminding us that the play is .i . * ) “,, .,_9j- ‘.. , - - . b&d .&I a @ry tale by-.Haris” dh@tian , .Ir r . ,’ ~, .. ,_ . . . ..I_. #&ider’son. - ; I. _.I .._ The wnrk~ is tta&&&d.u 3n ‘9 ’

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His .sceFes with the ghostly bartender Lloyd are the ‘best in the film. -There are few actors with such an expressive face as that of Nicholson. 3 - Whether or not he plays the fool too much his performance is unforgettable. Shelly Duvall plays h&r role with adequate . -1 Fkill even-though she is given little to do ‘oui hold Nicholson at bay. Scatman Crother’s is ‘undoubtedly a nice. ma0 ,who- plays a. nice J.m‘an in the. film. Danny- Lloyd does quite 2 good job as the young- son. He sustains z character voice over a fairly long period. Although I absdlutely c&agree wi$ ani -.I-” &je of overzealouS.cens&hip 1 wosder il filmmakers aren’t rather:-- cheaply @ins children in bloody, sensatfantilistic sc&@s tc keplace a lack of real suspehse br thiills ir i \ +heir films. I must &e~sb again, howeve$hai this is a matter to be dealt with thrvugt audience reaction and criticism; an4, no1 ‘.. thrdhgh legislation. Do@ miss “The Shi&ng’< It may be a failure as a ‘piece of “serious” cinemq. but &hether you laugh or shiver or both, cc@ will , ,’ ’ definitely be entertained. h-,-Kay i , ,

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. $$mit@pends mGch Qf hi&.$me sirigihg at meetjtig-of t’hie.club. The &b’s lead&‘-i&c&z&d ai -Pa&o;, qn$ cc#le@es thrdughout ,N&th ’ un&rsities LdL--&d qff the &ion with a w&ome -, ’ AFerica’. ’ : .’ -I’ , _ . - e. ,- .DOO’ smr _ Snrl nr &y&. On the whble the event was i&er&tirig, ~ U‘SU ua ya The Audience, about 60 in but anyone who came expectinmncertin :~ number and predbminafely female, wa6 1 ,,asked, to &r&and join thd inst,rumebtalis$ ; the. normal sense of ;wpuld ’ have. been disappointed.;During .the whcjle two hours, in s&gs such/as “&SUS is Alive- T~da$‘.~~ 1 ‘. -: ’ Smith s&s otily eight songs. Howwer;:the I. ’ Mobd tiusic from.‘. .the electric pi.ano 1 1 :, provided backg,mund .&ring Pastor -Bob’s’ ’ v$ majority of people there seemedto enjoy immtise’ly . and. were’ sati&ed , *, sermonettes @tween the ssi-r;gs .about the ” ’ fI themselves with what? had5 bhen offered; this -was I -,7 %kight way to live the Christiae life. ; primarily a gathering of the F,onverted.’ F” : -. ,After about 30 minutes gf warmup, Craig ’ ‘? it .see’tis r-to me that if ihe ,’ Smith himself appeared onstage; He St&ted ” I. N~evertl$&s; Maranatha dlub advertises a conceit :: bw des&ina his earlulife in a rock-and roll . it deliver the same, andsamp niee&gs. 1 ’ic.1; b&d and hialtiter <&m&rsion and life as!a d’ -should . .

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.Per%e’ct , condhions and from’ %teri& - thisl ’ year, 1 free soap samples g~~t2lt2~ L;~~lIl~t:LW..l~ 111 _ll t: ,‘UZ~~ JUIlty p.artici ants, athlete’ and i and the; T,hurdleb. “In ,the she, j.utiped .5.51 spec,, as or .i...,‘&like, i in J. the i. for‘mec, Co1 2 ate @omen’s Games. ,m@r&, ~011:. sh&t -ef her* staged:. ‘at Etobicoke Cen: persoiial best /of 5.81 rn.” -tenvial Stadium last week- - recorded. during the indooe end. This annli‘a’l, and season and repeated at ‘fhi? regr@t&l$y unique;-. ‘track last .Olympiq selection meet and field. meet for women in . qhe,rbro~oke the tieek Bttracted -hundieds of combefore. In .the sprint hurdles, petitors, incl,uding, several of her $peti&lit$ she -breezed Canida) ‘best’ ’ athlete?, through the--heat& (runhing . including Diaq& Joneb I&mthe fastest ‘time ‘of the’tmeet ihowski, _ ‘Angela Taylor, in thFs event, 13.97 sec.j and Car&m Ionesco and Penny ~the s&&finals,.but fellprey ,WertIi&i;; .appe&red drawn to a poor, start in the f+al by’\ the disi&qtiqri 6f-. thesgr finishing third in 14.84. Anoihek ex-Athena, .Rina g&m&s aS +n Olym@iti seldction meet; \while no &everi’nb, who also gradCanadians *ill seb Qlympic uated.. this,; spring, doubled actidn this summer, place$ effect,iiiely +n the i 500 ‘and on teams travelling t 0 80@; run&xk 4.42 and 236. Europe/ may be determined Lisa Aqsdep,, in her first partially on the basis. of 800 metre race of,the seasop, &sults from last weekend. r,an ‘a? eqqouraging i&14.5 Sylvia Ma1ge.d y; winner’of and had a relaxed Pntrdthe Dean of,‘Wom&‘s award duction :tb- the 1560' with a as outstandingathlete. clockin$of 4’.49.8.‘ among women -graduating ‘I x Alan I. Adamson

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Thse golf c&rse. at. Colum: ’ bi’a fief$has b&41 open/for busige+ all summer .but usf2tof the j&i&y has been 1 . Z,ow, due in pa:rt-to &I&k of , j u.wareneSs of itz$4?xist&nce, accQJdinLg -‘to Peter Hopk,ins, U.W Men’s Injramtiral ‘Dir&tor: The. course, which as you can see frqrn*, the pi&Ire with 3yhe librory.to the left bac.kgroqnd and the village, to the rig&’ is just no+ of the soccer fields. There are eight ‘sets I of clubs availa& at. the tote-room. ..* , -photo by @arry Tsisp _ -. . -: “.l . L ;

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*-adoption of the, four-year eligibility; r’u,l&;~.,, ’ *. 7: * changes .to’” the :CIAIJ transfer ruKes. The prc?pos,ed. alteration would Ipermit’, ‘. transferring to- ( +~;y!entC , ’ cont.inue~~~~~~~et.1t~~n under limit,ed-conditions; j_jc *, Super Hockey .League. This- _proposal would <re,strueture intercollegiate~,.i$e hockey, creating -a na&oti- *-: .1 -1 P ..A :- t wise real gue orI super te,ams; with g reatly expanded, A / I budgets for travel’ (see , headed by d Zmprinf; ‘VolumeZ, NumtierX diih$l$ist I,.‘ 91; *’ &&n*e &her when baske@alt &am&mshipi. -concrete8 things to say except This firoposal would have ’ of.. that ; the re, ‘-o@ would be“ .four regional tournaments - ready ..ir ‘.:.8 istribution in four teams -each, ;the winner -four weeks:- ;.: I , ,, . of ea4ch .to adGyan,ce toI the 7. *:11.+&. _ : li final; ys , /’ ‘He did,..l&wever, ‘manage ^ -‘* change, in the Lenue fort he /, , \ to ind.ic#k* #he direction , College Bowl; competitionwhich the r@brt might take! ‘wr-International There willi. ..be, , he . said, in soccer and basketball Canada ‘and the “something 1positive in the between .I +u report abput-scholarships.“U.S. ~ . . r ,_ .\:

,‘-,. I ~TbSzke’ $@i:,PB cons&l&ring )Ir * i% ” :.~ ~_ pro,vinc\al scholarships.. -* Ptipdr+mtg+-f+the &h lqr.. ; In,. a @ndqn’. Fl;ep’, Pr+i - - ship .idea feel it will.’ 1 ‘elp,_ article from. .Dftcember $f MWrdc? ~‘4xwrent j athletic 1979, , Reuben, Baetz, ,Mi& "a)&<,-.*;_ ; * ';:: .,d--c;Lq-.,-I-Y?-*og~a,ms.a~~d+@$l al&&em : z ister of Culture: and ai+ ‘- .1he PMw OF ~th1et~@goin.g I, ‘. Recreatio’n, ._was: cfu@,ed 19,s +s&&?We&a.ve reac’hedthk 5. scholar-TO--------~ -- .~~_ , ,, ‘: point :ai .$,$cli %e-. need to ~ -VT- adjoi&ng --( ‘Britis’h &$Cmbia has ._a . , ‘“‘F-’ , step~back,fora moment,‘take, :.: :IMcConachie; ,CIAU techniartrcle,+ZFmore information a ‘fresh lobk at what w;e:re ; ~ cal director; was reported as _long ,,history of athletic . on -&h&r&&&~+) ’ , Simon praser, : ‘I O&aqio,. meaaw,bfle, is in -* doitig\ o~~~;all, L assess $tii k-,.,sayingthe ‘motion was. al--: scholarships. chart. Fi,?,most,,pas~,ed’ at4last ‘year’s one: of ‘the pro&me’s* thre$ the last s&g&of pre$$ng a. I’ effectiveness and r. d.+eeting. :I*, _. . :. L_- * ’ a \ universities, has -empla.yed - ,lis~. 2of ,“r&mmendation,s. some \ direction for the 3:.3,’ He was quoted as saying. . ,*‘.\ . such scholarships since ‘its * designed *‘,‘tot ,( make .the, ‘future.!‘. !qi::“It.‘.was, the first time (last inception in the 1$66s. taker-i, by ptoviBce’s \ spending on . .The appro>ch 4 r ,-\ . g &pap, Park involves -:a that’ -‘is) that. -. thF-* I . ‘Recently the .B.C. govern- ,.: i..athl~tlcs ,yy effy~lve. I., Queen’s‘ , ment intr*oduced.. a _._w..ider ! g, ,-‘&legates . voted I on. that ..:” .$typos,91 and ,it ‘missed %y’a tprogr’am >of s&olarshiRs. _ - .’ .only six= votes. There. is a. According to D&n McCrae, -k, {‘ivery: good chance’it will :be coach ‘of ‘, the.’ ;‘Women’s i5.wt-‘.passe$ t.his;time.‘! i , National Basketball Tea,m, L. 2;.. 7. Any .; motion needs 30 B.C. introduced I athiletic - Z*ilvqtes from -the 44 member ‘scholarships last year to ” institutions-in order to pass. membdrs of major sports I- , -5 , -_ 2The bul,kIof fhe,sutinor% f&r- teams. I. There was. some .& : A. ii;; to .y-,$$;e ..q--. ;- ,a’. r. ..‘” . ~mp,ro~ing’*&~ ,ii;aiii @ien- &@-;“- much in favo& c o.f contention created by the I ~~.Lathletic :.comes’ j choosing to accept American . . _schc olarships *<% -,, ? .vironment $vit.h better facilischoiarships”; he said. . .:; athletic scholarships ‘into scholarships are financial and othThe #fear that good’,.cop!,_ Canadian universities mav. need. better comoetitive -- / ties and equipment A *I -er ,similar+‘@orts” said Totmight cloud $oX’fndgement .’ _’ and 1 grograms and better coaching. : infact, backfire zke in his letter’to Fisher. was one of ‘his concerns jeopardize current broad’ The survey.‘has been made conducted expressed to Fisher. ‘_ I,, based programs in,f:avour of part I of a submission to ._ In an’ inte&iew last week< Totzke made the + “And if the ‘scholarships’, profile, developing _ high Douglas. Fisher, columnist, former MP;and now head of a claims that. “to introduce are seen as -the missingrevenue producing-sports. j athletic. ‘, sc@~arsl$ps here ingredient that , distinguishes* ;: ; This i?oncern,. expcqssed’ ‘study ~ loo,ki/ng’, \aP Ontario’s : lI ’ .Tjy UW . Athlet.‘ic‘: ~ii&$of ’ I s~~rts:.p6~icy..:‘T~e study is - would RU! a’ strain; ‘on our relatively modest inter-, resources:” collegiate- efforts from , the,: / Carl. Totzke, on the eve o&he : fj$‘@g &n&d f& &e &fIn&+ry said. that while super-hype, show business ;I annual .C$.AU ..l.(C$ra,dian of Cul&re and Recreation.’ , Totzke 1 ‘* fdtercolle.giate 7‘Athlefic UIn: ‘Ihis . letter to Fisher, scholarships “would brovide - sfiectacles in the -U.S with I 1 i their thousands upon thou-1 __ is Tot zke questioned the, motives athletes with‘money to attend . nion) mke?ibgs in, Hali& -Canadian universities, they sands of spectators. . . that is ‘with ( a .gr&rnd,,>of’t:I.? ho,se pushing fokscholarj~~~~pq+i~ ,:‘e-y Lu&+-Tgy.e*$y$y&*g*g ;-yi us .-.. j ,y \‘. ” c -y : ;,2 ‘would not. ’ in all nrobabilitv. obviouslv a naive evaluation I‘I;c irovide the unKe&ies wit”t; .of- the problem.‘! j athletic scholar@$s:‘.‘ . ’ . “Xf *they ‘-(the-’ scholarships) more -funding to’ upgrade . “You’re getting away from Totzke’s, ~ .apprehensions are Q ’ help financially the educational approach,” _ .’ stern, in part,.from.a survey troubled students obtain programs and competitive schedules nor, would they help Totzke claimed last. .-week. ,he.7 ‘is c.o.&ucting among funds for education,.we’d have ’ Scholars hips will ,produce Ontario’s high school& The to ‘be in favour of that.; -_ - to\ imnrove’doachine. ‘g@ect(jf fb<.survg$y.is “io that’s motherhood”, . ’ Totzke high ,,profile s@orts. aid ‘will ‘, “Correcting athe ” financial need is on.ly part‘ of the / .force concentration on reveg-: L locate the I- reasons high ‘, said. ‘+ Ho,wever, he said, ‘if sohnion to ‘:stemming the ., tue ‘producing sports at the’. school athletes- ichoose to Totzke , told .,expense, of minor ‘sports. i accept .scholarphips and to . *:scholarsh@ps ‘,are~ intended to departures’y‘ II _. *Those opposed to scholarsearch for the weaknesses of stop the flow ofeathletes to the Fisher. A significalit’Frop,ortion of ships have been accused by. . the, American system./ States, there may be a better the. groundswell of support, the media of ’ being. ~~moss~ * 1 ?relim.inary results (basway.Y “Significant results- may be. behind thescholarshi& comes covered traditionalists” ;but, s , ed on 13-7 responses from fromthe media, Totzke claims. * counters Totzke, “We’re not inl . 690 -requests) indicate that achieved’ in this. area by the three.major reasons f& upgra&ng, -“‘Media , * would, appear to be show -business.” our -,:co@hing, -1. - -

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