24
P 5 /I ‘i gt <University of Waterloo 6. Waterloo, On tar-i0 ,&hme 78, number 16 friday, September 23, 7977 tlarr)~ Parrott has bad news for students \\gho pfan to go to pr-ofes\ional or graduate school and next to no new3 fk)r- e\er>rlne else. The main feature of Parrott‘s changes in the Onixio Saudenl .As\i\tancct Prugtam (OSAP), announced Wednesday mur-ning i\ ;I limit to eight school terms on provincial grants. The student iise\ ~rny, a-term ofeligibiiitl whether he or she applies for OS-iaP that tzr:,, mu t.br not. .Sftbr the eight term\ students may only receive loans. The Ontario Federation of Students {<IFS\ sa>~s t,his will cut off 20 per cent of the 40,000 students who now receive grants. Some students will be able to receik-e grants without taking out loans. However, the ministry has still not kvorked uut the income criteria and it is impossible to know at this point which students will <be eligible for an all-grant award. Those who are not eligible will have to apply for a loan to cover the difference between their grant and their assessed need. l Under the present system students must borrow S 1000 before they can receive grants. Changes are also planned to the summer savings requii-ement. The present arbitrary contribution table wiPI be dropped and the student’s actual earnings will be taken into consideration. Full details are still not available on this. . Carol Vaughan, executive assistant to Universities and Colleges Minis- ter Parrott, told the chevron the changes in OSAPwere to make sure “that the grant money gets to the needy students when they enter university fc>r the first time.” “When you’re starting graduate studies or going in to the professions the thought of a loan isn’t so intimidating. You can see the end of your studies in sight and you know you’re going to be in one of the professions and can afford to repay the loan,“’ she said. Ontario Graduate Scholarships have been,raised to S 1500 from $1450 per term and have been increased in number from 945 to 1200. These scholarships are awarded on merit rather than need. OFS said the number of scholarships was still smaller than in 1971. when there were 1500 available. Asked about this, Vaughan said, “Yes. but those were in the old days when it was an Ontario Fellowship and they needed more faculty for the -. universities, so they encouraged them.. . there isn‘t that need now.” Today Parrott kicks off his tour of the province at Confederation Col- lege in Thunder Bay. He will appear in Toronto at Seneca College October 5. The UW federation plans to hold a ral%>- on campus and run buses to Toronto for the event. -jonathan csles Contrary to popular belief and official statements, UW’s English Language Proficiency Progl-am is not comp!etely colmpu?sor> At a press conference yesterday Associate Dean of Arts- Ken Led- better revealed, in answer to chev- ron questions, that students who failed the proficiency exam need not attend the clinic, and those who attend the clinic may be exempted from the program without taking another exam. According to Ledbetter, who is in charge of the program, students may be “exempted” from the prog- ram if they show evidence that they can write a “decent” paragraph of about six sentences free from major grammtitical errors. Nor-, said Ledbetter, is it com- pulsory for students to attend the it in the clinic or at one of the These chang es contradict what had hitherto been considered the official policy- that all firsI year Arts students must take ahe exam and those who fail must attend the writing clinic and pass another exam. before lthey receive their B.A. The Undergraduate Calendar is very clear on this. It states: “All students whose initial registration in degree programmes in the Fa- culty of Arts is Fall 1977, or there- after, are required to pass an En- gli s h Language Progicienc y Ex- amination in order to qualify for a B.A. degree, Students must write this examination in their first year: those who fail are required to at- tend a special non-credit writing states that the program is compul- sory . For example in a letter 10 Arts students dated January 1977 and signed by him he stated: “,41i students whose initia1 re- gistration in degree programs in the Faculty of Arts is fall 8977. or thereafter, are required to pass’lhis Examination in order to qualify for a B.A. degree. You are required to write it in your first year. If you fail you must attend a special non- credit Writing Clinic before you can write the examination again.” As late as July 15 of this year Ledbetter said in a letter to the President of the Federation of Students that “Beginning this fall, new students in Arts must pass the English Language Proficiency Ex- amination in order to graduate.” Ledbetter, however claimed yes- _, _ * tutorial clinic. Instead, all that is clinic before sitting the examina- terday that there has been no required is that the-student write a tion again.” change in policy. He said the “decent”’ six-sentence paragraph Also in -numberous letters sent calendar statement is an “over- sometime before they graduate. be out by Ledbetter he specifically statement” made that way to keep U uw cent ndergraduate enrollment at significant number of the 235 stu- has dropped at ieast two per dents who have pre-registered- but -- since last year, and the de- not yet registered actually do so, crease may be as much as four per the decrease will be about four pel cent. cent. Statistics provided by the registrar’s office shcjM/ that 10,850 The largest decrease is in the fa- students registered <lt l.J:W 3n I&Z cult-y of ,4rts, where at most 2190 Fall of 1976, whereas at m<>si students wiil register-. compared to 10,632 will register this term. 7291 registered ‘last year. This is a -- This is a drop ol‘ two Fer CARP. To drop ofnine per cent. date, 10,347 undergraduate studenlts The decrease in each of the othe! have actually registered. t_iGiess a faculties is between one and two HAMELT~QN (CUP) - As is the case at most Ontario universities this September there will be fewer students walking the campus greens of McMaster Univeristy. Preliminary figures indicate McMaster will experience a 10 per cent drop in first year enrolment while overall enrolment will drop five per cent. Dr. A. Bourns, president of McMaster, says the decreases may be for various reasons. “The over- a!! provincial decrease in university enrolment is 3.5% which accounts for a portion of the drop at McMas- ter,” he said. Faculties with the greatest de- creases at McMaster are science, with a drop of 12 per cent and social science with an eight per cent drop, Humanities, engineering and busi- ness have already met their ex- pected enrolment. per cent. The Ontario University Admis- sions Centre in Guelph tofd the che\<ron that applications to On- tario universities dropped 2.1 per cent overall. The centre does not yet have figus,., PC‘ on actual registra- tion this term. The registrar’s office tofd the chevron that, UW does not expect- 10 exceed the pro\ incial goIb,ernment “‘s limit on enroflment. The government recently an- naumticed that Ontario universities which increase their enrollment above their aver;\ge over the last IWO years will receive only half of their subsidy for the additional stu- dents 1 Neither the Guelph centre nox the registrar’s office COLIM provide Ttatistics on the number of foreign students registering this term. However, both offices reported that the number of applications from foreign students to Ontario universities is about the same as last year. , --nick reef$ing .-the statement as short as possible. He explained his statements made in the letters by saying, “There is a kind of shorthand tak- ing place in those letters.” Ledbetter maintained that his announcements were in keeping with the instruction passed by the UW Senate. He also ‘read from a document entitled ‘-NOTES Ts- ‘ ward a History pf the English Lan- guage Proficiency Programme First Year: 1976-77”. He quoted from a task force re- port received by the Arts Faculty Council May 11, 1976 that said: “All full-time thirst year students in the Faculty of Arts would be re- quired to participate in this Prog- ramme, and satisfactory comple- tion of it would be a degree re- quirement .“ This vague statement, however. was made even before ihe program had mr-ted, and has been followed by the more specific statements s~uoted above ’ One of * the major criticisms levied by the chevron staff against the program has been its compul- sory natures, and this drew the brunt of an editorial as recently as last \\-eek. The changes announced by Led- better yesterday caught others by surprise. UUW Gazette editor Chris Redmond told Ledbetter at the press conference that he was now confused ‘“as to what is op- tional and what is compulsory”. Also gJrfl information services chief Jack Adams, who is in charge of university press statements, told the chevron that he had considered the program compulsory. --neil docherty q I Forty-two per cent of UW freshmen students are not capable of writing one decent paragraph according to the results of the English Language Proficiency Examination released Thursday. Of the 1259 students who wrote the exam, 724 (or 58 per cent) proved themselves capable of writing Lb half a dozen sentences free of major grammatical flaws” according 10 Ken Ledbetter, As- sociate Dean of Arts. A 50 per cent mark was required to ‘“pass out”. or be exempted from the English Language Proficiency Program. The results of the test are: Thirty per cent of the students who wrote the exam are being asked to use the program‘s Writing Clinic. The clinic is open fifty hours a week, with 25 full-time tutors. Each of the 380 students asked to usefhe clinic is asked to attend three hours per week. The exam consisted of 40 multiple-choice questions and a 300-500 word essay. Essay topics cyere: How do you expect your life to differ from that Continued on page 13

1977-78_v18,n16_Chevron

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

tutorial clinic. Instead, all that is clinic before sitting the examina- HAMELT~QN (CUP) - As is the case at most Ontario universities this September there will be fewer students walking the campus greens of McMaster Univeristy. Preliminary figures indicate McMaster will experience a 10 per cent drop in first year enrolment while overall enrolment will drop five per cent. Dr. A. Bourns, president of McMaster, says the decreases may U uw cent P 5 /I ‘i gt of Waterloo --nick reef$ing exceed q

Citation preview

Page 1: 1977-78_v18,n16_Chevron

P 5 /I ‘i gt

<University of Waterloo 6. Waterloo, On tar-i0 ,&hme 78, number 16

friday, September 23, 7977

tlarr)~ Parrott has bad news for students \\gho pfan to go to pr-ofes\ional or graduate school and next to no new3 fk)r- e\er>rlne else.

The main feature of Parrott‘s changes in the Onixio Saudenl .As\i\tancct Prugtam (OSAP), announced Wednesday mur-ning i\ ;I limit to eight school terms on provincial grants. The student iise\ ~rny, a-term ofeligibiiitl whether he or she applies for OS-iaP that tzr:,, mu t.br not. .Sftbr the eight term\ students may only receive loans.

The Ontario Federation of Students {<IFS\ sa>~s t,his will cut off 20 per cent of the 40,000 students who now receive grants.

Some students will be able to receik-e grants without taking out loans. However, the ministry has still not kvorked uut the income criteria and it is impossible to know at this point which students will <be eligible for an all-grant award. Those who are not eligible will have to apply for a loan to cover the difference between their grant and their assessed need. l

Under the present system students must borrow S 1000 before they can receive grants.

Changes are also planned to the summer savings requii-ement. The present arbitrary contribution table wiPI be dropped and the student’s actual earnings will be taken into consideration. Full details are still not available on this. .

Carol Vaughan, executive assistant to Universities and Colleges Minis- ter Parrott, told the chevron the changes in OSAPwere to make sure “that the grant money gets to the needy students when they enter university fc>r the first time.”

“When you’re starting graduate studies or going in to the professions the thought of a loan isn’t so intimidating. You can see the end of your studies in sight and you know you’re going to be in one of the professions and can afford to repay the loan,“’ she said.

Ontario Graduate Scholarships have been,raised to S 1500 from $1450 per term and have been increased in number from 945 to 1200. These scholarships are awarded on merit rather than need.

OFS said the number of scholarships was still smaller than in 1971. when there were 1500 available.

Asked about this, Vaughan said, “Yes. but those were in the old days when it was an Ontario Fellowship and they needed more faculty for the

-. universities, so they encouraged them.. . there isn‘t that need now.” Today Parrott kicks off his tour of the province at Confederation Col-

lege in Thunder Bay. He will appear in Toronto at Seneca College October 5. The UW federation plans to hold a ral%>- on campus and run buses to Toronto for the event.

-jonathan csles

Contrary to popular belief and official statements, UW’s English Language Proficiency Progl-am is not comp!etely colmpu?sor>

At a press conference yesterday Associate Dean of Arts- Ken Led- better revealed, in answer to chev- ron questions, that students who failed the proficiency exam need not attend the clinic, and those who attend the clinic may be exempted from the program without taking another exam.

According to Ledbetter, who is in charge of the program, students may be “exempted” from the prog- ram if they show evidence that they can write a “decent” paragraph of about six sentences free from major grammtitical errors.

Nor-, said Ledbetter, is it com- pulsory for students to attend the

it in the clinic or at one of the

These chang es contradict what had hitherto been considered the official policy- that all firsI year Arts students must take ahe exam and those who fail must attend the writing clinic and pass another exam. before lthey receive their B.A.

The Undergraduate Calendar is very clear on this. It states: “All students whose initial registration in degree programmes in the Fa- culty of Arts is Fall 1977, or there- after, are required to pass an En- gli s h Language Progicienc y Ex- amination in order to qualify for a B.A. degree, Students must write this examination in their first year: those who fail are required to at- tend a special non-credit writing

states that the program is compul- sory . For example in a letter 10 Arts students dated January 1977 and signed by him he stated:

“,41i students whose initia1 re- gistration in degree programs in the Faculty of Arts is fall 8977. or thereafter, are required to pass’lhis Examination in order to qualify for a B.A. degree. You are required to write it in your first year. If you fail you must attend a special non- credit Writing Clinic before you can write the examination again.”

As late as July 15 of this year Ledbetter said in a letter to the President of the Federation of Students that “Beginning this fall, new students in Arts must pass the English Language Proficiency Ex- amination in order to graduate.”

Ledbetter, however claimed yes- _, _ * tutorial clinic. Instead, all that is clinic before sitting the examina- terday that there has been no required is that the-student write a tion again.” change in policy. He said the “decent”’ six-sentence paragraph Also in -numberous letters sent calendar statement is an “over- sometime before they graduate. be out by Ledbetter he specifically statement” made that way to keep

U uw cent

ndergraduate enrollment at significant number of the 235 stu- has dropped at ieast two per dents who have pre-registered- but

-- since last year, and the de- not yet registered actually do so, crease may be as much as four per the decrease will be about four pel cent. cent.

Statistics provided by the registrar’s office shcjM/ that 10,850

The largest decrease is in the fa-

students registered <lt l.J:W 3n I&Z cult-y of ,4rts, where at most 2190

Fall of 1976, whereas at m<>si students wiil register-. compared to

10,632 will register this term. 7291 registered ‘last year. This is a --

This is a drop ol‘ two Fer CARP. To drop ofnine per cent.

date, 10,347 undergraduate studenlts The decrease in each of the othe! have actually registered. t_iGiess a faculties is between one and two

HAMELT~QN (CUP) - As is the case at most Ontario universities this September there will be fewer students walking the campus greens of McMaster Univeristy.

Preliminary figures indicate McMaster will experience a 10 per cent drop in first year enrolment while overall enrolment will drop five per cent.

Dr. A. Bourns, president of McMaster, says the decreases may

be for various reasons. “The over- a!! provincial decrease in university enrolment is 3.5% which accounts for a portion of the drop at McMas- ter,” he said.

Faculties with the greatest de- creases at McMaster are science, with a drop of 12 per cent and social science with an eight per cent drop, Humanities, engineering and busi- ness have already met their ex- pected enrolment.

per cent. The Ontario University Admis-

sions Centre in Guelph tofd the che\<ron that applications to On- tario universities dropped 2.1 per cent overall. The centre does not yet have figus,., PC‘ on actual registra- tion this term.

The registrar’s office tofd the chevron that, UW does not expect- 10 exceed the pro\ incial goIb,ernment “‘s limit on enroflment. The government recently an- naumticed that Ontario universities which increase their enrollment above their aver;\ge over the last IWO years will receive only half of their subsidy for the additional stu-

dents 1 Neither the Guelph centre nox

the registrar’s office COLIM provide Ttatistics on the number of foreign students registering this term.

However, both offices reported that the number of applications from foreign students to Ontario universities is about the same as last year. ,

--nick reef$ing

.-the statement as short as possible. He explained his statements

made in the letters by saying, “There is a kind of shorthand tak- ing place in those letters.”

Ledbetter maintained that his announcements were in keeping with the instruction passed by the UW Senate. He also ‘read from a document entitled ‘-NOTES Ts-

‘ ward a History pf the English Lan- guage Proficiency Programme First Year: 1976-77”.

He quoted from a task force re- port received by the Arts Faculty Council May 11, 1976 that said: “All full-time thirst year students in the Faculty of Arts would be re- quired to participate in this Prog- ramme, and satisfactory comple- tion of it would be a degree re- quirement . “

This vague statement, however.

was made even before ihe program had mr-ted, and has been followed by the more specific statements s~uoted above ’ One of * the major criticisms

levied by the chevron staff against the program has been its compul- sory natures, and this drew the brunt of an editorial as recently as last \\-eek.

The changes announced by Led- better yesterday caught others by surprise. UUW Gazette editor Chris Redmond told Ledbetter at the press conference that he was now confused ‘“as to what is op- tional and what is compulsory”. Also gJrfl information services chief Jack Adams, who is in charge of university press statements, told the chevron that he had considered the program compulsory.

--neil docherty

q

I

Forty-two per cent of UW freshmen students are not capable of writing one decent paragraph according to the results of the English Language Proficiency Examination released Thursday.

Of the 1259 students who wrote the exam, 724 (or 58 per cent) proved themselves capable of writing Lb half a dozen sentences free of major grammatical flaws” according 10 Ken Ledbetter, As- sociate Dean of Arts.

A 50 per cent mark was required to ‘“pass out”. or be exempted from the English Language Proficiency Program.

The results of the test are:

Thirty per cent of the students who wrote the exam are being asked to use the program‘s Writing Clinic.

The clinic is open fifty hours a week, with 25 full-time tutors. Each of the 380 students asked to usefhe clinic is asked to attend three hours per week.

The exam consisted of 40 multiple-choice questions and a 300-500 word essay.

Essay topics cyere: How do you expect your life to differ from that Continued on page 13

Page 2: 1977-78_v18,n16_Chevron

2 the chevron friday, September 23, 7 977

LEGAL RESOURCE OFFICE ’

Provides free legal information to students. Room 106, Campus Centre

Volunteers welcomed - no experience necessary

Waterloo Co-operative Residence Inc. .

884-3670

WINTER 1978 RESIDENCE double room (including meals)&0

-

SPRING 1978 RESIDENCE large

double single single room & board $475 $595 $625 room only $195 $315 $345

‘NON-RESIDENT Five full-term meal options available for non-residents in each of our three

residences. 5

APPLICATIONS FROM NON-MEMBERS ARE PROCESSED ON A FIRST COME BASIS SO APPLY

EARLY.

Mathstart Course Clinic: all day, MC51 58. Library tours: 10:30, 11:30, 1:30, 2:30: Library research *or&hop: 9:30, 3:30 at Arts & EMS info desk. Gov’t publications workshop: 9:30, 3:30 5th floor Arts library. Microfilm demonstration: 9:30, 3:30 3rd floor Arts library. Birth Control Centre: needs new vol- unteers, if you’re interested in being a part of an information and referral service for birth control, venereal disease and unplanned pregnancy, come to the Birth Control Centre, CC206 or phone 3446 for more info.

Furniture 81 Fraktur: an exhibition of artifacts from Waterloo County and

,Germanic Ontario, curated by M. Bird and S. Johannesen. UW Arts Centre Gallery, ML, 11:30-5:30. CC Pub: opens 12noon, $1 after 7pm. “Kent County Pickers” g-lam. SCH Pub: opens Bpm. “Wireless’,! Adm. $2. Costume & dance, prizes.;

1 Suzuki String School: demonstration\ lecture night. 7:30 Bilingual School, Erb St. W. (past Hal!man Rd.) Rain date for ES Barbeque: Colum- bia Field. Fed Flicks: “The Sting”, AL I1 6 Adm. $1. Quartet Canada: Program is Beethoven’s Piano Quartet in E flat, OP. 16, The Quartet for piano & strings by Canada’s Talivaldis Kenins & the great piano quartet in G Minor by Johannes Brahms. Theatre of the Arts. Bpm. Adm. $4 stu/sen, others $6. UW Box Office. Sqrieux-De-Deux: a comedy hit by Festival Lennoxville (Language may be offensive to some), Bpm. Humanities Theatre. Adm. stu/sen $3.50, others $5.50.

Saturday Chinese Students’ Assoc: trip to Niagara Falls, open, inquire at Fed office.

Notice ret

e fe re U

Several persons are required to form a Committee to administer the above election on October25 Interested persons are requested to attend the Students’ Council meeting on Monday, September 26 at 6:30 p.m. in Hl-!l334. Those unable to.attend the Council meeting should submit an plication to the undersigned by 30 p.m.

onday, Sept mber 26. 1

Mathsoc’s “l’d rather be flying” Car Rally: reg. in parking lot ‘B’. open event, Adm. $1, 1 lam. Football Rally: begins in VII, Water- loo vs Laurier, 2pm. Centennial Stadium, Kit. Stratford Trip: to “Romeo & Juliet”. Tickets $7 from fed office or Artsoc. Free bus leaves Ipm. Fed Flicks: see Friday. CC Pub: opens 7pm., adm. $1, “Kent County Pickers” 9-l am. FREE All night movies: mystery, ,C6 Great Hall, Bpm., sponsored by FofS, Artsoc, Scisoc., Sqrieux-De-Qeux: see Friday.

SUfIdiNj Furniture & Fraktur: UW Arts Centre Gallery, ML 2-5pm. Ukrainian Students’ Club picnic: Columbia field. Meet in CCllO, 3pm. Fed Flicks: see Frdiay. Transcendental Meditation: Adv. lecture for meditators. Eng3 rml101, Bpm. Tel. 576-2546. U of W C&ed Bowl-ing league: Water- loo Bowling Lanes (behind the Kent Hotel), 8:45. Anyone can still join. F of S Bluegrass Concert: Theatre of the Arts, Bpm., with “Bob Burchill and the Perth County Applejack Band” Adm. $1.50.

Mimday Crafts Fair: all day, CC Great Hall. Furniture & Fraktur: see Friday. ES Stratford Trip: to “Much Ado About Nothing”, pub crawl back. Tic- kets at ENV 138A $5. Free bus leaves ENV bldg. at 12:15. Kung Fu: WLU gym, 1 week free trial lessons. 4:30-6pm. CC Pub: opens 12noon Adm. $1 after 7pm. “Hardtail” g-lam. International Folk Dancing: To learn and dance world fainous folk dances. Location: Senior Citizens’ Centre, 310 Charles St. E. Kit. 7:30-10:30pm. $l/person/evening. info: Mary Bish 744-4983. The Karl Friedrich Gauss Foundation: presents Foundation Licks. Our sex, drugs and violence evening! “Reefer Madness” 1936 dope classic. “Gimme Shelter” with the Rolling Stones. Salvador Dali’s “Un Chien Andalou” Bpm., AL116. Feds $1, others-$1.50. Sponsored by F of S.

Graduating Students’ Career Pllan- ning Orientation Session: Will advise students of services such as proce- dures to register for on-campus in- terviews, resume writing session, in- terviewing techniques, etc. Science Grads 12:30-l, Phys 150. Math Grads 3:30-4pm., .MC 3005.

. Liberal Club Founding Meeting: 3:30pm., CCl35. Any interested stu- dents should attend. Officers will be elected at this meeting. Ukrainian Students Club General Meeting: CC1 10, 7pm.

Roller Skating: ES Orientation at Moses Springer Arena. 7:30-10:30pm. Skate rental $50.

WC!dMSday CC Pub: opens l2noon, Adm. $1 after 7pm. “Hardtail” g-lam. Career Talk: on applying for Grad School. 2:30pm., Needles Hall rm 3006. Mackirdy Chaplains’ Asssc. Presents: “How Should We Live?” by Francis Shaeffer. A ten episode film series portraying the rise and decline of Western thought and culture.. .

‘written by and featuring a foremost evangelical thinker. Episode 1: The Roman Age 7:30pm., ENG Lecture rm 103 Free adm., coffee afterwards. Transcendental Meditation: Intro- ductory Lecture, all welcome, 7:30pm. Hagey Hall rm 227, Tel 576-2546. UW Rennaissance Dancers: A pre- sentation of Authentic 15th & 16th century court dances, in full cos- tume. Adm $1. 7:30-9:30. Theatre of the Arts. Coffee House: CC1 IO, 8:3Opm. Sponsored by Gay Lib. Furniture & Fraktur: see Friday.

Career Talk on applying for Graduate School will be held on p September 28 at 2:30 in room 3 ’ J Needles Hall. i ’ /I

Thursday CC Pub: opens 1 Ilnoon, Adm. $1 after 7pm. “Hardtail” 9-l am. Legal Resource Office: provides free legal information to students. 885-0840, CC106. Volunteers wel- comed, no experience necessary.

Tuesday Furniture & Fraktur: see Friday. CC Pub: opens 12noon, Adm. $1 after 7pm. “Hardtail” g-lam. Anti-Imperialist Alliance: Marxist Leninist literature table.’ Works of Marx, Engels, Lenin, Stalin, Mao Tsetung and Enver Hoxha plus books & periodicals on Canadian revolution

Graduating Students Career Plan- ning Orientation Session: will advise on all services such as procedures to register for on-campus interviews, resume writing sessions, ihterview- r ing techniques, etc. Art Grads 3:30-4pm., AL 105. Seminar on Rebirthing: which is a breath healing process, related to Leboyer’s method of delivering. babies. For more info. call Michael

and national liberation struggles. loam-2:30pm. Arts Lecture Hall.

Rolle, 886-4756. Ccl%, 7:30pm. Furniture & Fraktur: see Friday.

SKILLS G This is a group programme designed to help students with their study problems and to improve their current skills.

Group participants learn to 1. Create a good study environment. 2. Monitor and control many study behavior variables. 3. Be more analytical about their reading process; maximize their rate of reading;

monitor quality of comprehension.

Groups are informal, and participants are encouraged to share their reading and study experiences. Individual appointments and self-help manuals are available.

Groups run one hour per week for ten weeks, commencing on September 21 with an introductory information group. Ten separate group times are available. Choose only one from those listed below. Wednesdays: Thursdays:

9:30, 1030, 1:30, 2130, 3:30 9:30. 10:30, 130, 230, 3:30

For sign-up, come to the main desk COUNSELLING SERVICES Ira G. Needles Hall Second floor opposite the registrar NO FEE

,

Page 3: 1977-78_v18,n16_Chevron

The efforts of a UW sociology student to get his federation fee refu.nded has appeared to reach a stalemate for the present.

Burns Proudfoot is taking the university to small claims court in an attempt to get his student activity fee for the last three terms refunded.

Proudfoot claims that as yet no one has been able to prove to him that the university has the right to collect the student activity fee as a mandatory part of a student’s registration fee.

According to Proudfoot, for the university to collect a mandatory fee the Board of Governors must first have passed a motion specifi- cally stating that the fee should be collected, and should be mandat- ory.

Despite repeated requests to UW’s top administrators he has not been furnished with a copy of minutes from the board where such a motion was passed.

On Monday, Proudfoot paid a visit to the offices of UW president Burt Matthews where he attempted to get hold of any documents which might contain-the motion. He said that Matthews told him that if he dropped the case, then he could see the documents.

Proudfoot felt Matthews was offering him a deal. “I think he thinks I’m three years old,” he said.

Matthews told the chevron that he was in no way offering Proud- foot a deal - he just couldn’t make the document public while the case was pending in court. He said he did have the documents in his possession though.

But according to Proudfoot’s legal counsel, he has the right to see any relevant material prior to the trial proceedings.

When asked how he thought the case would proceed, Proudfoot replied that it depended largely upon the public relations campaign waged by the defence as well as the nature of the document. If the documentin question turns out to be detrimental to his case, Proud- foot feels confident that he can win the case on other grounds. He chose not to comment on these grounds, however he did allude that the university heads of administration would be aware of them and “cannot claim that they have been taken by surprise.”

-peter town -peter blunden

tier come?

Bill C-24 defence fails The new immigration act, Bill defend the new act, and indeed

C-24, came under heavy attack at a helped to expose it as repressive panel discussion here Tuesday and anti-democratic. night. James Cross, the Although Cross tried to present government’s apologist, failed to Bill C-24 as “more humanitarian”

than the 1952 immigration law, it became evident that the “im-

‘Petition called untruthtiil provements” are illusory. The bill’s security provisions in

particular were shown to be medieval, as they deny immigrants political rights: A petition to call a general meet-

ing of the federation is being circu- lated by Renison councillor Larry Smylie.

Last Sunday, the federation council voted to “publicly oppose the currently circulating petition for the calling of a general meeting, on the #basis that it contains inac- curacies, untruths and mystifica- tions of the current situation, both on student’s council and on the U W campus.”

The vote was unanimously in favour, but for one absention. The councillor who abstained explained that he was not present for the full discussion and thus could not form an opinion.

Smylie did not participate in the debate on his petition, and left the meeting before the vote.

Smylie, who wants a general meeting before the October 25th election and referendum, claims he has over 700 signatures so far. He needs signatures from about 1500 students (10 per cent of the federa- tion membership) to force the cal- ling of a meeting.

Smylie’s petition lists eight charges which he wants answered at a general meeting. Graduate councillor Dave Carter told the chevron that “There’s not one point there (in the petition) that has any credibility. Some are so gen- eral you don’t know what he’s get- ting at or what his charges are. Some are total misrepresentations of the actions of council; some are outright lies.”

Smylie refused to discuss any aspect of his petition with the chev- ron, stating that he does not want publicity to influence students sign- ing it. When asked for his reaction to council’s motion, he would say only that it was “beautiful”.

During the council debate, Car- ter criticized the petition in detail.

- At no time did Smylie attempt to reply to Carter’s points.

Smylie charges the federation with “exorbitant expenditures and mismanagement of students’ funds in the area of salaried positions.”

He cites as an example “salaried positions in relation to our student

,newspaper when auditors’ reports _ c-az~- .*

clearly show that the paper cost us, the students, $61,693 more than we received.”

Carter said that Smylie’s figure of $61,693 includes all federation publications, including the hand- book, student directory and the “real” chevron.

The 1976 report was the latest full year of operations for the chev- ron. It shows a net cost of $29,899 for the paper, and total cost of B. of Pubs. of $45,926. The 1977 report shows total cost of the Board, in- cluding the two papers and hand- book, to be $44,872.

Smylie claims that “our board of directors and our council over- turned a legally binding decision of the student body, namely the January 13 referendum on the stu- dent newspaper.”

Smylie is referring to the chevron reinstatement and the fact that an editorial control board for the chevron has not been established.

Carter said that referendums are not acknowledged by the Corpora- tions Act, and thus cannot be “leg- ally binding”. In addition, legal opinions the free chevron sought earlier this year agree that the January referendum is not binding on the federation.

Smylie alleges that Eric Higgs, interim federation president “re- fused to stand down from the nomination motion and refused to stand for election from another councillor for the position of vice- president.”

Smylie claims that council pre- vented other councillors from being nominated for the position. Carter pointed out that no other councillors attempted to run for the position.

Smylie’s fourth charge is that “our council meetings are con- ducted in a manner similar to a cir- cus sideshow and also any student councillor who attempts to effect constructive change or question their administration is subjected to interruption, screaming, hollering, swearing and, in general, pre- vented from receiving answers or submitting constructive changes for con?ideration.”

Carter said that this is a misrep- 1

resentation of council’s actions. Although interruptions do occur, council has behaved democrati- cally and Smylie contributes to the “circus sideshow” as much as anyone else.

Smylie complains that council had prevented a councillor (refer- ring to himself, although the peti- tion does not state this) from pres- enting a delegation to council for two months. Carter stated that the two month delay was due to council’s inability to achieve quorum.

Smylie claims that Ron Hipfner, while acting president of the feder- ation, interfered with a student’s use of the federation’s lawyer in a landlord-tenant dispute, even though such use had been au- t horized.

Carter pointed out that this had been rectified at the previous coun- cil meeting, and an apology made to the student concerned.

Smylie claims that “our council shows contempt for student opin- ion by manipulation and misrep- resentation of the student-body- approved bylaws and policies to suit council’s whims.”

Carter said that this charge is vague. But if Smylie is referring to the recent change in council quorum (from 13 to 9 councillors), then Carter disagrees that it was wrong.

At present there are only 15 councillors on campus. If quorum were 13, it would be virtually im- possible to hold a meeting since a 90 per cent turnout of councillors would be necessary.

Finally, Smylie charges that “our council has blatantly entered a conflict with student societies when said societies were only at- tkmpting to get answers to stu- dents’ charges of mismanagement, etc., and to effect changes in OLII

student government, rather than produce reports and answers to students’ societies’ complaints.”

Carter said that the societies have never been in conflict with council. Rather, the societies’ complaints refer to the actions of the federation executive and board of directors.

-nick redding

Sponsored by the federation’s Board of Education and by OPIRG, the panel consisted of James Cross of the Immigration Department, K-W lawyer David Cooke, and To- ronto lawyer Paul Copeland. They had been invited to discuss Bill C-24, the government’s controver- sial immigration act, passed in Au- gust and due to take effect in January.

Prior to the meeting, members of the Canadian People’s (Citizens and Residents) Defense Committee distributed leaflets denouncing Bill C-24 and “state-organized attacks on immigrants.” -

Once the meeting started, strong opposition was voiced against the presence of Cross, making mod: erator John van Mossel‘s introduc- tion barely audible.

Cross, described in the CPDC leaflets as a “major architect of the notorious Green Paper on immigra- tion’ ’ , was denounced as a racist who was using “democratic forums to spout anti-immigrant views.”

Cross was, however, finally given the opportunity to speak, and he attempted.to defend Bill C-24 by comparing it to the current immig- ration law, passed in 1952.

“At least it’s not as bad as the old one,” Cross said. This was met with shouts and protests from the audience.

Cross insisted that entry to another state is a privilege, and that the “absorbing capacity” of the country must be considered. He did not elaborate that point, though challenged to do so.

Cross called Canada’s record on refugees “without parallel”, citing the entry of many Ugandan re- fugees in 1952.

The CPDC leaflet, however, notes that Canadian governments have welcomed “any gang of reac- tionaries, Tibetans and Viet- namese driven out of their coun- tries by revolution,” for example. They . have created great difficul- ties, howeyer, for “progressives and trade unionist militants fleeing fascist regimes in Chile and Haiti.”

David Cooke said he didn’t “par-

titularly like” Bill C-24, but felt that it is “more definitive” than the present law and therefore “more honest”.

He also suggested that most Canadian people are more racist than Bill C-24 - a statement whit h caused another uproar. Some members of the audience pointed out that the CPDC leallet denounc- ing state-organized attacks on im- migrants had been well received by the people of Kitchener-Waterloo and that there was overwhelming public opinion against Bill C-24.

Paul-Copeland, a prominent To- ronto lawyer who opposes the bill and has handled many immigration cases, declared that public views had not been reflected in the Green Paper, especially in the security aspect of the bill.

He called the security provisions “horrible”, adding that they “I-e- tlect a very paranoid government out of touch with reality.” The RCMP “wanted tighter >ecurity clauses” and got them, he said, be- cause ‘*the RCMP have more polit- ical power than the people.”

Bill C-24 allows immigration of- ficials to refuse entry or to deport any refugee who “there are reasonable grounds to believe will, while in Canada, engage in or insti- gate the subversion by force of any government” (section 19( 1) (f) ). Thus, as the CPDC leaflet states, people fleeing violent oppression are not permitted to carry on the struggle for democracy, peace and progress in their homelands.

The threat of deportation of a person who “is engaged in or in- stigating subversion by force of any -government” also extends to per- manent residents in Canada (sec- tion 27( 1) (c) ), as well as visitors and students here on visas (section 27 (2) W 1.

U W psychology professor Doug Wahlsten, speaking as the acting chairman of the CPDC, stressed that the issue was not so much who can get across the borders as what happens to immigrants -once they get here.

He argued that they are “perse- cuted by the state, discriminated against, and given no political rights.”

An East Indian rose to declares that the Canadian people are defi- nitely not racist, but that *‘the state is racist, and Bill C-24 is.”

Toward the end, one man, a Canadian citizen married to a woman from the Third World, said it all: “The government should know that the people realize this immigration bill is fascist .‘.

-val moghadam

Page 4: 1977-78_v18,n16_Chevron

4 t/-i& chevron friday, September 23, 7977

. 137 University Ave. 2 bedroom apartments for rent

Phsne 884-2884

UMVERSlTY g PHARMACY Open prewiption U services

7 Days 232 King N. Waterloo, Phone 865-2530 A Week Opposite Athletic Complex.

I LUNCHEON’ PECIAL r’

- Open Daily - Personal 9:30 to 6, Thurs., Fri.

till 9:30 Closed Stindays

Roast beef on a bun with toasted salad or fries,

Chicken, Fish & Chips, Oktoberfest Sausage

with Sauerkraut & home fries plus many other

menus. “Fast service and low

Pregnant & Distressed? The Birth Control Centre is an information and referral centre for birth control, VD, unplanned pregnancy and sexuality. For all the alternatives, phone 8851211, ext 3446 (Rm 206, campus centre) or for emergency numbers 884-8770. Gay Lib Office: Campus Centre rm 217C. Open Monday-Thursday, 7-1 Opm, some afternoons -counsel- ling and information. Phone 885-l 211, ext 2372.

Spectacular pick-up special t prices”

Take out orders available

3 items of your choice

Past Masters Club (Think Tank): Members’ Ideas Published: $5/yr, $2 Ego-IQ Test. 447 Ontario St. Toronto, Ontario. M5A 2V9.

Delivery on campus with minimum $5.00 order CAFETERIA

Westmount Place Shopping Centre

Inside Mall

For Sale Turntable: Thorens TD 160 with Shure V15 Type Ill Cartridge use. Turntable 1.5 years. Cartridge 6 months. List $380; $195 or, best offer. - Call John or Ruth at 576-2512.

Sansui AU 7700: Integrated Amplifier 60W RMS per channel. List $600, ask- ing $350. 2 years old. 3 years left on warranty. Fantastic unit, like new. Also Sansui QSI Quadraphonic de- coder list $300, asking $50. Call 744-3162. ‘68 Volvo: Good condition. $550. Call 884-0716. 1971 MGB: Michelins, AM/FM, Ziebart. Mechanically good, well maintained. Needs paint. Asking $900. 885-l 460 Jim: 1’971 MGB in excellent running condition: New radials, vinyl top, brakes, safety checked. Best offer over $1600. Telephone 578-4514. One mattress and boxspring: 54 in- ches. One mattress, boxspring, and head board - 39 inches. Good condi- tion, will deliver. $50 each unit. Call 745-4534 after six or 885-2850 9-5 ask for Nate. Bigston (Sears) Portable Cassette R&order with case; 6 months old; uses AC or battery power; demo casi sette included. Asking $25. AGS - AM/FM table radio includes dual speakers; tone control and AFC on FM. Asking $20. Contact Klaus Jederman, 84-3 280 Phillip St.

Wanted Ride needed daily from Dundas, West Hamilton. Willing to share cost. 627-7698 or 560-9581. Jewish student needed to teach re- ligious school on Sunday mornings. Temple Shalom, Waterloo. Must have experience with children between ages 8-12 and good knowledge of customs and history. Phone 576-3745 or 576-0936 after 6pm.

Fast, accurate irq. 50 cents a

50

ton Dick-up. Reasonable rates Cal! Jeff,‘8842831 /

King & University \Materioo

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

Suri. - Thurs. Fri. - Sat.

IQam-2am loam-3am

SUPER SUBS ARE SUPER!

FRIES AND SMALL ShX,E

Expires Sept. 29.

estmount Plaza or King & John locations

Page 5: 1977-78_v18,n16_Chevron
Page 6: 1977-78_v18,n16_Chevron
Page 7: 1977-78_v18,n16_Chevron
Page 8: 1977-78_v18,n16_Chevron
Page 9: 1977-78_v18,n16_Chevron
Page 10: 1977-78_v18,n16_Chevron
Page 11: 1977-78_v18,n16_Chevron

friday, September 23, 7 977 . ’ . the chevron 11

A motion to guarantee members of the federation the right to attend meetings of the executive was pas- sed by council last Sunday after a delay ef six months.

Board of Publications co- chairperson Randy Barkman placed the motion on the agenda soon after council elected him last March. However, due to a large number of agenda changes, the mo- tion did not come before council until last Sunday.

Barkman told the chevron his motion is intended to make the ex-

ecutive more open. He is now con- sidering introducing a motion to make board of directors’ meetings open.

During the past year, the board of directors became known for sec- ret and closed meetings. At‘ these meetings, one of which took place as late as 2 a.m., and as far away as Toronto, the board made changes to bylaws and discussed strategy for settling the chevron conflict.

In other business graduate coun- cillor Mike Deviilaer introduced a motion to prohibit the federation from publishing anything that dup- licates the content of, or could be published in, the chevron.

Devillaer explained that his mo- tion is intended to prevent the fed- eration from wasting money. He re- ferred to the “Fed Bullet” which appeared September 8th, and dup- licated some of the stories in the chevron the next day.

Many councillors argued that editorial control over the content of the chevron, which rests solely in the hands of the chevron staff, pre- vents the federation from using,the chevron to the exclusion of other publications because the staff could reject a federation submis sion.

Deviiiaer’s motion was defeated, but council then passed a motion encouraging co-operation between the federation and the chevron to prevent duplication.

The “ Fed Bullet” was written by Ron Hipfner and Doug Thompson, and an announcement in the paper asking for writgrs suggested that if might appear regularly s

Hipfner (who was absent from the Sunday i=ouncii meeting) told the chevron later that he had ex- pected a decision to be made on the future of the “‘Fed Bullet”. How- ever, council did not discuss the publication and under questioning by the chevron it became apparent that none of the counciiiors present knew much about it.

Hipfner said that he has no plans to organize another issue. “We have made the first step,” he said. Hipfner claimed that most student councils publish their own bulie-’

tins, apart from a student news- paper, and that this is necessary at UW because the federation cannot be sure that the chevron will pub- lish what they wapt printed.

fhsmpssn Assault Charge Ex-federation president Doug

Thompson, who faces an assault charge stemming from an incident with Rension counciilor Larry Smyiie last April, asked the council if the federation could pay his legal costs.

Smyiie claims that Thompson assaulted him in the federation of- fice. Thompson was attempting to clear the offices, and claims that his legal costs should be paid because the charges arose out of the per- formance of his duties as an officer of the federation.

Thompson denies that he as- saulted Smyiie. He said that he had “touched Smyiie on the shoulder

and pointed him to the door.” Smyiie claims that Thompson

“shoved me once”. He says that when he asked a bystander to be a witness to the ‘&assault”, “Thomp- son went wild to try and attack me again. ’ *

According to Smylie, Thompson had to be restrained by counciilor John Long.

Thompson told council that if his legal costs were not guaranteed by the federation, he would not use a lawyer because he cannot afford to pay if he loses the case.

Some counciiiors had suggested the federation pay Thompson’s costs only if he won the case and the court did not award him costs.

Council decided to defer a deci- sion on this until the next meeting, speculating that Smylie might de- cide to drop his charges.

Math counciiior John Long served notice of motion to oust

council speaker Mauro Mavrinac. Long told the chevron that he is dissatisfied with Mavrinac’s per- formance as speaker and his record of attendance at council meetings.

Mavrinac, who was absent from the meeting last Sunday, told the chevron that he was absent from council meetings during the sum- mer because he was working in Windsor.

Mavrinac last attended a council meeting on June 26th, when the chevron was reinstated. For this he made a special trip from Windsor.

Ad Manager Ratified Council ratified Laurie Lawson

as ad manager for the board of pub- lications. Lawson was elected by the chevron staff last week, as was Jonathan Coies to the position of news editor.

Coies does not require council ratification because he is a student.

-nick redding

Last Fri&lay, students from the Waterloo Christian Fel- lowship made a bid for the Guiness book of World We- cords by attempting to break the standing record of 1817, by the University of Auckland for an unsupported circle. Even with inclement weather threatening to water down this aspiration, this group of supporters seemed bound and determined to spite the weather man.

The efforts of these few did all but break the world re- cord, maybe next-time folks.

--peter town

q

I

CALGAl$Y (CUP) -New interna- tional graduate students at the Uni- versity of Calgary received an un- expected jolt this month in the form of a $300 differential fee.

The increase was charged with- out any prioi- notice to the students. It was not mentioned in the Interna- tion Graduates Guide, on the re- gistration forms or in the graduate calendar sent’to all graduate school applicants.

But it is unclear whether the lack of prior notification will affect the increase.

Blair Redlin, student union vice-president (academic), said: “ Since graduate students weren’t told they had to pay this fee until after they had arrived in Calgary, it would seem to be within their rights to ask that it be waived for this term.”

w ‘Graduate students on assis- tantship who are not permitted to work here are on very tight budgets. To ask them for $300 extra is unfair,” Redlin said.

But /Graduate Students Associa-

tion president Harry Hobb said the absence of notice in the graduate calendar might be hard to cohtest because “there is a stipulation in the university calendar which re- serves the right to change fees without notice.”

“I don’t know whether or not merely signing registration forms is legally binding,” he added.

But, according to Redlin, “the change without notice is a very weak argument. It could become ludicrous. The university could charge students $10,000 without notice .”

By Sept. 13, six or seven stu- dents had contacted the student union or graduate association re- garding their fee problems. The student union and the graduate as- sociation plan to contact a lawyer to find out whether the registration form the graduate students signed is binding.

The GSA was to meet with the graduate faculty dean Sept. 15 to discuss the differential fee and to decide on a course of action.

are now open to fill the following

Chairperson, Creative Arts Board Chairperson, Co-operative Services

Chairperson, Board of xternal Relations Chairperson, Boar

applicatio ersonal

submitted to the und

Page 12: 1977-78_v18,n16_Chevron

12 the chevron ifday, september 23, 7977

A scheme to coerce students council into closing the chevron Sept 30 1976 was revealed to the chevron Investigation Commission last week.

Don Orth, who as a federation executive member was instrumen- tal in the closing. testified last Thursday (Sept 16) that then presi- dent Shane Roberts and his vice- president David McLellan devised

, the scheme. . The paper was first closed on

Sept 24 when the executive changed the locks to the offices. However, it was officially re- opened by students council two days later, and then closed by council on Sept 30.

When the Sept 26 meeting didn’t go as well as the executive had hoped, the decision was made to find some way to coerce the coun- cil, Orth told the commission.

The scheme was that the entire executive would threaten to resign if council did not vote to close the paper. Orth said, that although he knew of the scheme. it was only half-an-hour before the Sept 30 meeting that either Roberts or McLellan instructed him to prepare a resignation speech.

Orth said the plan worked. Council seemed intimidated, and the executive was “quite delighted with the results”.

Orth painted a picture ofRoberts and a close circle of confidants running the show with the other ex- ecutive members relying on the president’s experience. He also de- scribed another tactic of McLellan and Roberts under which they gave the impression that they were split on the chevron question so that the paper’s staff would be confused and wouldn’t present its best case.

Donna Rogers, who was an Arts

councillor at the time, testified that the threats of resignation were what made her vote to close the paper. She said she hadn’t been around in the summer and when she returned to campus she relied on what Orth, Roberts and Franz Klingender, another executive member, had told her of the situa- tion.

After doing some of her own in- vestigation, Rogers, like Or-th, came to support the chevron’s de- mands for reinstatement and.an in- vestigation.

Heather Robertson, an En- vironmental Studies representative at the time. testified that after the meeting McLellan told her that the mass resignation threat was his scheme.

The witnesses were part of the chevron case on the anti- democratic procedure used to close the paper.

It was in the biology am- phitheatre, packed with 200 or more people, that students’ council voted 19 to 2 to close the chevron, and also passed motions to elimi- nate the positions of editor, news editor, and production manager, and to establish a task force to make recommendations on a new student paper.

The chevron delegation pre- sented the commission with the case that the events of that evening were in keeping with the anti- democratic procedure used throughout by the federation in its efforts to close the paper.

The main point of the chevron presentation, read by staffer Gerard Kimmons, was that in the face of a barrage of charges the chevron staff were not given a fair hearing and an adequate chance to present a defense.

Fee s HALIFAX (CUP) - Administ-

ration at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design refused to register students planning to withhold a six per cent increase in tuition fees.

hours or face not being admitted for

foiled the term.

NSCAD president Garry Ken- nedy had earlier indicated that no immediate action would be taken against the boycotting students. But the administration action has effectively thwarted the attempt to halt the increases.

The students had voted Sept. 6 to pay their fees, including the in- crease, into a trust fund adminis- tered by the student union. The fees were to have been turned over to NSCAD when the fee increase had been rolled back. But students were first threatened with losing privileges to preferred courses and later told to-pay fees within two

Student union spokesperson Don Saucy challenged administra- tion claims that only a few students were involved, saying students were solidly behind the action. First-year students supported the protest, but were confused by the administration’s pressure tactics, he explained.

“The administration capitalized on the Intro students’ confusion,” he said: “Many were aware the administration was bluffing, but being unfamiliar with a situation of this kind, they were not prepared to risk their education.”

The students planned to hold-a meeting Sept. 15 to discuss the ad- ministration tactic and consider new ways of fighting fee increases and cutbacks.

A salaried (part-time) position of Executive Assistant to the Acting President is open to any member . of the Federation of Students. The appointment will be from September 28 to October 25, 1977. Written applications must be submitted to the undersigned no k!ter than %I :Q6 a.m. Tuesday, ~e~tern~er 27.

ric ~~~~s~ Acting President eration of Students

The Sept 30 meeting was a mock- ery of a fair hearing which viol- ated all the norms of due process. said Kimmons.

He presented the commission with a legal definition of due pro- cess which he summarised as: “that a person has the right to be heard in self-defense, against clearly specified charges, before an unbiased tribunal, which hears be- fore it condemns, which proceeds on inquiry and hands down a deci- sion based on the facts as estab- lished by evidence.”

One witness testified that the meeting was so unfair that he changed his position and began supporting the chevron staff. Tom Cody, then a fourth-year planning student told the commission he hadn’t liked the chevron and wasn’t upset when he heard from Roberts that it had been closed.

Cody said he went to the Sept 30 meeting expecting it to be a trial, but it soon became “obvious to me that what was happening at the time was rotten”. There was no evi- dence against the paper: .‘It was a real witch hunt,‘. he said, “and the crunch came when they (the execu- tive) all threatened to resign..’

A month later after the chevron had chopped away at all Roberts’ charges Cody told the commission he decided to join the staff.

Much of the chevron presenta- tion to the commission was based on tapes of the Sept 30 meeting which have already been submitted as evidence. The commissioners were asked to listen to the tapes for proof that due process was viol- ated.

The tapes reveal that the charges against the paper were not clearly specified - who? what?‘when? where? how? was never spelled out, said Kimmons. Council heard vague charges of undemocratic procedure in chevron staff decision

making; of incompetence on the part of the news editor and produc- tion manager; and about 50 other charges. -

However, the tapes show that virtually no evidence was pre- sented to support these charges and none was demanded by council.

Also no sooner had the chevron

staff dealt with one charge than another was presented.

On top of this there was an at- tempt to suppress information, the chevron delegation argued. As an example they cited one quote from the tape where then production manager Neil Docherty attempted to answer a charge and was cut off by the chairperson math councillor Robert White with the words: “He may have a point, but he is out of order. ’ ’ The chevron delegation argued that this is typical of how the meeting was handled.

R.A.C. White--the power ot’ the chair.

The Sept 30 meeting was not a forum designed for both sides to be heard. There was no place on the aganda.for the chevron to answer clearly &fined charges. The only pretense made for this said Kim- mons, was that delegations were heard at the beginning of the meet- ing.

Although many societies and groups had been asked by the fed- eration to present delegations, the chevron staff did not discover this part of the agenda until they arrived at the meeting.

The chevron did manage to pres- ent two delegations, it was pointed out. The first, on behalf of the new recruits, used the five minutes al- loted to try and present a true pic- ture of recruitment on the paper.

This was followed by 13 delega- tions most of which made vague, unsubstantiated charges against the paper. Then Docherty was faced with the task of replying to this myriad of non-specific charges in his presentation for the chevron staff.

Motions were required to extend this presentation beyond the five minutes and to allow Docherty to answer questions. --

Apart from this procedure the chevron delegation argued that the questions asked of Docherty further reveal the fraudulaent na- ture of this hearing. ’

Docherty testified before the commission that, though the coun- cillors were about to make a his- toric decision to close the paper, their questions were trivial. He was asked about a late advertisement not going in the paper, about a let- ter from him which although Math- Sot had received math councillor Ron Hipfner complained that he hadn’t seen; and although the paper

had just run a centrespread of pic- tures on orientation there was a complaint that not enough cover- age had been given to the tugs of war etc.

Docherty also said that though Roberts was soon to move to close the paper he did not ask any ques- tions.

Another point made about the procedure of the Sept 30 meeting was that speaking privileges were restricted. It was ruled by the chairperson that non-councillors would only be allowed to speak if a councillor deferred his or her speaking rights to the person.

Chevron staffer Ernst von Be- zold told the Commission that this was contrary to the corporations act, which guarantees all members of the corporation, in this case stu- dents, the right to speak at meet- ings. The relevant sections of- the act were presented to the commis- sion, and von Bezold pointed out that he had warned the council that evening and before that their pro- cedure was illegal.

Also it was pointed out that when people protested the procedures being used the chairperson threatened to have the assembly cleared. And it was disclosed to the commission that Roberts, McLel- lan and White were the only people in the hall who could have called the police.

Robertson testified that McLel- Ian had told her after the meeting about a codeword - “Blue Danube” - known only to those three people and which was to be used to alert campus security if either of them felt the meeting had gotten out of control.

Apparently the police would not have come to the meeting unless they received the codeword. _

--Red docherty

Doug Thompson, Franz Klingender, and Shane Roberts.

Page 13: 1977-78_v18,n16_Chevron

Feds hid guards to maintain‘ order.

Chevron Investigation Commission Meetings

Monday, Sept. 26,2:00 p.m. -chevron presentation refuting claims _ made-against the chevron last September.

Wednesday, Sept. 2$,6:30 p.m. -chevron presentation concerning the reasons for the closure of the paper last Sept.

Wednesday, Oct. 5,2:00 p.m. - questioning of Doug Thompson on his submitted testimony.

Locations to be announced

Course offlered

If defence The Rape Distress Centre will be offering instruction in Wen-Do,

Women’s Self Defence starting September 28, ending NOV. 9. The course will be held every Wednesday from 7:30-9:3O in the Com- batatives Room, PAC, U of W. The fee for the course is $15, mail cheque or money order (and include your phone number) to Wen-Do/Rape Distress Centre, Box 675, Waterloo, 886-3170.

For women who have completed a basic course and wish to train more intensively, advanced classes will be held. Please contact the Centre for more information.

Help Continued from page 1.

of your parents? How do you expect university to be different from high school? and How do your values differ from those of the high-school dropout?

Five students who received the highest marks on the essay por- tion of the exam were awarded Thursday with English Language Proficiency Prizes of $50 each.

These students areBruce Beacock, Evelyn Gledhifk, John McKay and R.ic Nell, all enrolled in Arts, and Cathy Broeren, in Health Studies.

UW president Burt Matthews said the proficiency program was introduced fast year as a result of “concern in press and education” over the Lack of ability of students to-meet minimal writing standards in the English language.

The program was first introduced at Waterloo and is “the only one of its kind in Canada”, according to Ledbetter.

Matthews said those who have reached the standard set by the exam ‘“have been given a clean bill of health.”

Ledbetter said ‘“without waiting for anyone else to do it” UW plans to become more involved in bringing about changes in the education system “that will put our own proficiency program out of business. ’ e

Five small committees have been established to work on five separate areas where they feel English language education can be improved. Next spring the committees will report to an expanded version of the writing skills conference held at UW.

The five areas being studied are: -the effects of various student teacher ratios; recommendation

of changes based on implications of high student/teacher ratios: projection of costs of changes to the taxpayer.

-what can be done to make sure elementary school teachers are prepared to teach language efficiently .

-what can be done to ensure high school teachers teach language efficiently.

-a study of marking procedures. -a study of levels of achievement reached by certain grade

levels, and recommendation of standards to be set. Ledbetter said school teachers have not received adequate prep-

aration in teaching language skills. “They were our students before they became school teachers.

They have been taught literature, not writing skills,‘: he said. According to Ledbetter “UW has a greater responsibility within

Gntario’s education system than we.have actually shouldered in the past.”

-lyla smith

Chevron protests

The appearance before the chev- ron Investigation Commission blonday of former federation pres- ident Doug Thompson. who was an executive member at the time ofthe chev,ron clobure. sparked some angry e.xchanges over procedure. Chevron representatives com- plained that Thompson was the third witness that day who was al- lowed to make unsubstantiated charges while the chevron was being limited in its attempts to cross-examine.

Commission chairman Frank Epp stated that the commission would “conduct its investigation” and was “not obligated to provide time to the public to conduct an investigation.” He said that time would be limited t‘or cross- examination by people other than the five commissioners.

Chevron representative Neil Docherty argued that the commis- sion was set up to be an adversary court system and the chevron should have full rights of cross- examination _

The argument was precipitated by Thompson’s claim that wide- spread discontent with the paper was demonstrated by Feedback let- ters he had seen. Chevron reps de- manded Thompson substantiate his charges by pointing out com- plaints. Epp. however, held that the commission had the right to judge Thompson’s answers.

The chevron delegation em- phasised that it was the commission’s task to find out the truth and nobody should be al- lowed to make charges without providing supporting evidence.

The debate started again when Epp refused to allow the chevron delegation to question Thompson because there were only a few mi- nutes left in the meeting according to the schedule. The commission- ers set scheduled anot her meeting to continue Thompson’s cross-examination.

Thompson’s testimony had re- peated charges made earlier in the conflict, such as: - pressure on editor Adrian Rod- way, eventually causing him to res- ign - ALA disruption of the paper, subjection of students to “ideolog- ical harrang’ ’ - some material in the chevron was libelous, for which the federa- tion could be held responsible

Thompson said he now consid- ers the changing of the locks on the chevron doors was “absolut.ly ut- terly dumb’ l . However, he said he would rest on the propriety and legality of all the actions taken af- terwards.

When asked whether the lock change was accidental, as Ralph Torrie, Board of Publications chairperson at the time had tes- tified in an earlier commission meeting, he said, “Well, it sort of was and wasn’t.” He explained that Roberts had left the special ex- ecutive meeting on September 24 to find out whetherit was possible to- have the locks changed while the

idea uas being dixussed. Thomp- son say\ he then left the meeting himself. and on his return t’onnd that the change had been made.

When asked v+Jhy _ he proceectzd to cloye the paper without invjeL)tig- ation Thompson said “WC had pretty well come to havfe ;I pretty good understanding ol‘ the prob- lem.”

When the commih,\ion askcri federation bu\ines\ manager Peter Yates about the lock change he UN- plained that he had not been aware of the executive meeting which de- cided to lock out the chevron \tat’t’, but was asked to do so by then pres- ident Shane Roberts.

Under questioning Yates said his memory was not clear but he worrld only have taken such orders from Roberts or then treasurer Manny Brykmann.

His testimony seemed to con- tradict Ralph Torrie’s statement to the commission last week that the changing of the locks was an acci- dent - a misunderstanding.

Yates stated: -‘It was a direct order.”

He said he was not aware before September 24 that such a measure would be taken against the chevron and the direct order from Roberts “came as a complete surprise to me.‘. - Federation spokesperson John Long argued that “many of us still believe that our intent and objec- tives were right, although many mistakes were made.”

He claimed that “we didn’t want to stifle the student press - we wanted to make it more open and democratic.”

“We feel the closing was legat, though not moral. At the time we felt it was the thing most wanted by students on campus. We felt that a drastic course of action agarnst the chevron was needed”, he said.

Commission chairman Frank Epp told Long that the commission would need more elaboration on his charge that the student press was not being open and democratic. He noted that Long’s charges had not been substantiated.

Long replied that it is difficult to define freedom of the press. “It’s different things to different peo-

Long argued that corpor:ttion* have the right to clo\< &VA n their enterprise\. He also cf:timed that there was adequate pre\entatIczn .:t the September 30 council meeting by both sides.

Long felt that the federation TV as not obligated to give the the\-ran a “trial” before its verdict. becarsse

“the federation is not a CULLED ok

law. its a corporation.” Martin, in response. argued that

the problem with the council meet- ing was that ‘-it w/as not an or&naFJ, meeting: it was mo\t e~traordi- nary,” and yet it w’as held as though it was just another ordinary federation councit meeting.

Asked whether he thought the council meeting was a proper forum, Long replied, *‘At the time i felt that the federation had the right to close down the chevron. Whether they should have done so. 1’11 answer at a later date.”

During cross-examination Long admitted that he had contributed interviews to The Other Voice and said that Doug Thompson had been editor.

Long announced that Bruce Ror- rison. John Lee, Gary Dryden and himself would make written sub- missions. ,.

Commissioner Martin noted the problem of no direct cross- examination, adding --We wit! ha\-e to draw conclusions that will no doubt reflect that.” However, he said, written submissions were en- tirely in order.

-vaI moghadam -nash dhanani

Dianne ehapitis --jonathan c&es

Motoi Hotel * 871 Victoria Sk IA. - ?44-3511

IEvety Wednesday is Singles Night IN THE CROWN ROOM

Appearing this weekend

Starting Monday

mat 4 licensed lounaes

Page 14: 1977-78_v18,n16_Chevron

14 the chevron

This year we are introducing a new series of three Friday night Pops concerts to be held in the Humanities Theatre, University of Waterloo. They will begin at 8:oO p.m.

All seats will be selling at one low price! They can be reserved in advance. These programmes will offer our patrons an opportunity to hear three of our famous Cabaret Pops Concerts at budget prices, including two outstanding Canadian soloists.

1 October 28, 1977 Verdi - La Forza de1 Destino

Overture Poulenc-- Babar the Elephant Reznicek - Donna Diana Overture Strauss - Roses from the South Strauss - Pizzicato Polka Strauss - Emperor Waltzes

2 January 6? 1978 von Suppe - Light Cavalry

Overture Brush - Violin Concerto - Soloist - Young Dae Park Moussorgsky - Night on Bald

Mountain Barber - Adagio for Strings Bernstein - West Side Story

(Overture and Dances)

3 February 3,1978 Rossini - I1 Signor Bruschino

Overture ’ Strauss - Blue Danube Waltzes Gershwin - Rhapsody in Blue - Soloist - Monica Gaylord Ravel - Pavane Sibelius - Finlandia Ives - Variations on “America” Rossini - William Tell Overture

Programmes subject to change

9 I want to geQ m0re it&mmtiow abut concertos next winter. Please II me your brochure.

Nme . . . . . . . ..“.......................................~....

Add~tzss . . . . . . ..r...........................................

Pilone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

friday, September 23, 1977

ad r

Is size the only criterion you set for judging the worth of a diamond? That’s wrong!

Diamond values are determined by many factors. . e color, clarityy, and cut as well as size.

We’ll be pleased ts show you. So you can be sure your diamond is the finest O o O and priced right.

c kets

up to 50% off

1978 Alpine Skis 15y off Rossignol Fischer Atomic

0

Clearance on Bast year’s cross country skis Skate Sharpening

Page 15: 1977-78_v18,n16_Chevron

friday, September 23, 7977 I Anti-apartheid writings banned the chevron 15

The government of South Africa is escalating its campaign against anti-apartheid publications in the country.

The Wits Student, published by students at Wits University in South Africa, reported last July (in an issue just received by the chevron) that over 30 publications were banned in the first six months of 1977. This compares to 24 bannings in 1976.

The Publications Control Board (PCB), which is responsible for the bannings, has extended its scope to banning pamphlets and posters with anti-apartheid themes. In the past, only news- papers were subject to banning.

In addition, the PCB is now banning publica-’ tions before they can be distributed. The Wits Student reports that “Until recently, bannings were not taken very seriously by student editors. Publications were usually banned long after they had already been distributed and read. Even if banned for possession, they had presumably at least been read.”

Not only can the PCB ban single editions of a newspaper, poster or pamphlet, but it can also close down a publication.

The Wits Student reported that Crisis, another Wits University publication, has been banned “for all subsequent editions”. Never before has a student newspaper intended for campus distribu- tion only been totally banned, according to the Student.

The result of these measures by the PCB will be self-censorship, to a greater extent than is

practised today. The possibility of retroactive prosecution of editors and writers may cause stu- dent publications to become “wishy washy and uncritical, avoiding desperately the niost lowrkey breath of politics,-sex and critical discussion of society or economy . . . And even then, there will be no guarantee that the PCB will not find some- thing ‘undesirable’ (with the publication)“, re- I

VAIIWTY m of Capa Town’0 Stuclent Newspapw

CYQuamw ports the Student.

The case of a former Wits Student editor is cited as an example of “retroactive prosecu- tion”.

Moroney’s conviction is undergoing appeal,

Sean Moroney was prosecuted in Sep-

and the Student notes that if the appeal fails, “a precedent will be set for a formidable form of

tember, 1976 for producing publications in 1975

intimidation of student editors, poster makers and pamphlet writers.”

that were subsequently banned.

Moroney was convicted for producing some- thing which at the time he had no way of knowing would be banned.

The Student concludes by quoting Nadine Gordimer: “. . . control of communication, (and) its ultimate purpose as a political weapon of apar- theid is to bring about a situation in which there is ‘no communication’ between South Africa and the world of ideas that might cause us to question our way of life here, and ‘no communication’ within our society between the sections of a peo- ple carved up into the categories of colour and language. ’ ’

-nick redding

Those who frequented the Cam- pus center on Wednesday found a wide variety of displays featuring ethnic munchies, as well as a host of crafts. Represented countries and clubs offering displays for this premier event ranged from Israel to China and from the Waterloo Christian fellowship to the KW Radio Club. Later on in the even- ing, participants listened to “Chalawa”, a Toronto based re- ggae band. The group has three Jamaican members.

The band managed to play out- doors, but the other events scheduled, had to move their dis- plays indoors because of the incle- mency of the weather.

---peter town

photos by P. .Town

Page 16: 1977-78_v18,n16_Chevron

I6 the chevron friday, September 23, 1977

MURRAY McLAUCHLAN ahd THE SILVER TRACTORS All $729 LP’s - $4.77 Hard Rock Town (Love Comes and Goes) All $7.98 LP’s - $5.19 m $4.77 Columbia TN-29

Large selection of deletions (Mhufacturer’s Clearance) LP - $1.68

Double .LP - $2.80

DAN FOGLEBERG Netherlands (Love Gone By) s-g- $5.19 Columbia PE 34185

BARBARA STREISAND Superman (Don’t Believe What You Read, My Heart Belongs to Me)

s-M@ $5.37 Columbia JC 34830

Store Hours Yues. - Friday 9:30 - 1:. /

2:00-5:

BUR\TON CUMMINGS My Own Way To Rock (Timeiek Love, Framed) m $4.77

Pro&& your albums with. Columbia PR 34698

Angel’s Plastic-lined Record The Only Thing That Remains Envelopes 1 dozen $1.26 Check our many in-store specials.

The Same Is Our Prices.

Capitol ST 11665

Page 17: 1977-78_v18,n16_Chevron

iriday, September 2.5, 7 977

(Sometimes When We Touch, Still Not Used To)

$5.19 GRT 9230-1073

YE Going For The One (Parallels, Wonderous Stories)

-w $5.19 WEA KSD 19106

ASP CASSETTES Here! Look through our exoanded comedy,

Natural Progressions (As Time Goes On, How Can

ve Without Love?) $4.77

WEA 7ES 1107

tore

KLAATU

WE HAVE BEST PRICES roye ’ Unlimited Quantities

We re Off You Know, Madman, Prelude) I=@ $5.19 .

GRT 9216-10057

+ classical and jazz sectio&.

01, Sold On You)

WEA SD 19101 Capitol AL 7001

Page 18: 1977-78_v18,n16_Chevron

18 the chevron friday, September 23, 7977

\ ’ SHIPPI’G OVERSEAS?

Household Goads - Personal Effects - Tourist Purchases

K-W International Freight Forwarding Limited 576-8226 _ -* ‘I

A different kind of love story.

. MART4 FELDMANANNoMARCjRET MICHAEL yORK

PE'T'ERUS'I'INOUm~JAMES EARL JONES "'ITHE LASTREMAKE OF BEAUCjESTE"

also starrmq TFEUOR HQUIARD . HENRlJ CjlBSQN * TERRlJ-T'HOMAS

Screenplay by MARTl.j FELDMAN &CHRIS ALLEN Story by MARTY FELDMAN & SAM BOBRICK. MUSIC by JOHN MORRlS

Directed by MARTY FELDMAN l Produced by WILLlAM S.GlLMORE hex$iie Producers HOUIARD l)Q&nd GEORGE SH,APlRO - _

-- --_-_--- 2 StiOwS NIGHTLY 7:00 & 9:OO‘PM MATINEE SATURDAY & SUNDAY 2 PM

Carole Kin below par with her new Simple Things

It’s only natural that after eight solo albums and almost a decade of churning out hit after hit as part of the famous Brill Building stable, Carole King would run out of interesting things to write about. On Simple Things, she walks through the now staple fare of love songs, superficial observa- tions on the general state of the universe, and the occasional fit of introspection which she usually handles so well. About the only thing that’s changed is the person to whom she pledges her undying devotion. While she remains a remarka- ble tunesmith, the expression of her new found joy just cannot keep pace with the facile melodies which fill this record. Thus, we are subjected to such tired, retread lyrics as “The labyrinth isn’t anyplace we need to be/ Then we can come out from the heart of the darkness/ Into a brighter day.” In other numbers King sounds alternately shallow (“I’ve found my answer to life is living/ The secret of living is life . . .“), blissed out, and

just plain dumb (“Crystal ‘mourners are drawing - me to Babylon. . .“).

The album also witnesses the re-emergence of the unfortunate tendency to preach, which first surfaced in her weakest effort to date, the sudsy Fantasy. On Simple Things this habit is not nearly as marked but does show up in several places, particularly in the closing cut, “One”: ‘,‘Open your heart and let the love come shining through. . . / He is one - She is one/ A tree is one

- the universe is one ” and so on. It’s not that I have anything against such worthy sentiments, however the simplistic, warmed over late Sixties treatment which they are given here simply does not do them (or the writer) justice.

The music, however is a totally different mat- ter. King has rarely sounded so fresh, as she strikes anear perfect balance between constantly shifting melodies and her more familiar three chord progressions; and the backing from a re- cent discovery called Navarro (they have their own album entitled Listen) is surprisingly tough and imaginative.

Part of the problem here may well be time. For although this is King’s first kP in well over a year, she had a complete album, tentatively titled Easy Does It, in the can as her final obligation to her old label, Ode, before recording this debut for Capitol.

In the meantime, if you have all her other al- bums, you probably already own this one. If you’ve long since worn out your copy of Tapestry and have been thinking of buying another Carol King album, pass on Simple Things, and wait for the Greatest Hits collection which Ode is prepari ing. Or hold off until the next King offering; look- ing back over her track record, she rarely misses more than once.

-john sakamoto

from Ornette Coleman

a If you’re beginning to agree with

Mick Jagger, who has been quoted as saying, that “rock and roll musicis for adolescents. Its a dead end.. .“, then maybe you are ready to radically alter your sense of what music is by digging the sounds of Ornette Coleman’s latest album “Dancing in your head.”

Ornette has been making waves in jazz circles for almost 20 years

You are invited

and Play; he University terloo’

onctirt Symphony Ore

Please see Alfred Kunz in ML 131 A II 885-I 211 Ext. 2439

or Deborah Fraser in ML 255 885-1211 Ext. 3457

Sponsored by Federation of Students Creative Arts Board

(and more albums) after the re- lease of his first album “Some- thing Else” (Contemporary 755 I), which has been heralded by some critics as the jazz album of the last quarter century. An alto-sax man, Ornette has been one of the most innovative and influential forces in contemporary jazz. Since he burst on the scene, in 1959;at the NYC Five Spot he has been the center of heated controversy.

Ornette has provoked such var- ied comments as; “If thats liberty, boy, they’re making an ass out of Abraham Lincoln,” from Quincy Jones during the Down Beat Blind- fold Tests; to R.B. Hadlock’s stead,ying comment, that “it’s emotionally direct, uncluttered and essentially simple . . . no har- der to grasp than the free guitar improvizations of a good country blues player.”

Certainly ‘this critic has to go along with R.B. No matter how radical Ornette may sound on a first listening, he, like all great in- novators, is standing firmly on the solid ground of tradition. Ornette’s music usually referred to as “free jazz” is not just chaotic improviza- tion. He says of his exciting

A CLOCKWORK ORANGE

Sept. 22-25 Thurs.-Sun. 7 & 9:30 pm

9:30 only Sun. l *ooooeooooo*oooeeo~

LENNY BRUCE

-PERFORMANCE\

1 Sept. 26-28 Mon-Wed 8:00 PM

t

l ooooooooooo~ooooooo

CATCH-22 n Sept. 29-Oct. 2 Thurs. -Sun 7 & 9:15 PM n 9:30 PM only Sun.

“Theme from a Symphony” on his latest album, that “it was written by means of a musical concept I call ‘harmolodics.’ This means the rhythms, harmonies, and tempos are all equal in relationship and in- dependent melodies at the same time.’ ’

Dancing in your head may be the most approachable of Ornette’s albums, for rock listeners with a taste for something new. Al- though, as Ornette says, “I haven’t made a transition to fu- sion,” his first electric album has the hard, exciting power usually. only found in rock. This is a direct result of Ornette’s attempt to find a place for the guitar in his music, and consequently the use of rock guitarist Charles Ellerbee and jazz-oriented guitarist Bern Nix, who both do excellent work on this album.

Another interesting part of “Dancing in your head” is the piece “Midnight Sunrise” re- corded with the Master Musicians of Joujouka, Morocco. It was here, jamming with these tradi- tional musicians who use nontem- pered reed and string instruments along with many varied sized drums, that Ornette realized “the responsibility a person has to him- self to relate what he believes and the medium he wishes to perform in to the people he would like his music to be heard by.”

Maybe Ornette Coleman can re- late to you.

-george free

Page 19: 1977-78_v18,n16_Chevron

frriday, September 23, 7977 i the c/7evrm 19

av d

an performs “in best style” Last week, McLauchlan’s troupe

(the Silver Tractors) appeared at the humanities theatre for three concerts over two days. Needless to say, the performance was ar- ranged by the Board of BENT, which registered satisfactory re- turns after all tickets were tallied.

With his Canadian tou1 launched. genera1 acceptance seems extremely favourable due to several innovative ideas that are used throughout the stage show. A largei’ monitor system and smoothly synchronized coloured lighting cues imbilecl the perfor- mance with added depth and col- our. These additions are a vast im- provement over McLauchlan’s previous efforts.

The visual effect of the group playing together is similar to watching a bunch of university students wearing addidas jamming in someone’s basement, post Woodstock days. McLauchlan manages some distinction by wear- ing shades and a black Karate Gi with Chinese lettering, over a T-shirt. The only other notable exception was the electric violin and mandolin player who imparted a unique flavour to this potpourri, something akin to a soloist with the Philharmonic. The drummer and bass guitarist would have looked great on Don Krischners Rock Concert.

McLauchlan’s dubious claim to fame with his sidekicks however is not warranted when it comes down to the piece de resistance. The music was non-stop and in McLauchlan’s best style. Certain selections elicited a healthy re- sponse from the crowd and al- though at times the decibels ho- vered near the pain threshold, a wall of noise never occurred. The sequencing and the dynamic range of the tunes was relatively well

lyrics and style. ’ Everyday life occurrences are a

dominant (recurrent) theme in his repertoire,, from taxmen and far- mers. to gorgeous girls and the boys in the band. Lyrics about events that really pissed him off at one time or another were well done. For instance, he wrote one song in honour of a junior high- school teacher who punched him in the mouth, and was a teacher only on the merit of being taller than the boys. One song entitled “She’s playing your emotions” was dedicated to an absolutely gorgeous woman who has stretched many a trouser seam and drops men when they start to steam. Not to be intimidated, he also wrote a melody for a woman he detested: “go home and make love to yourself like you always do”. One of his initial numbers *‘Little Dreamer”, was about an innocent young girl from out west who was lured to Hollywood by advertising.

Murray definitely possesses a flair for showmanship and is essen- tially the whole show. His antics include “Count Dracula” talk, clowning around with the band members, occasionally saying “Oh, shit” and at one point “its only fucking Rock n Roll” as he gave up trying to tune his electric guitar. He also gave the impres- sion of being a virtuoso on a number of instruments. These in- volved the electric acoustic guitar, electric guitar, Yamaha organ, piano (some nice numbers on this) and harmonica. In fact, the appar- ent lengthy silences between songs were the result of changing to other instruments.

Upon completion of his entourage’s set, the audience re- called him for an encore, with ap-

thought out, with soft and l&d al- plause Russian style. He came ternating but never saturating. back doing up his fly and capped

Between songs, he would fill the the evening off with that unique silence with snatches of his life and blend of country and rock that is other superfluous small talk; eg. “I his trademark. His parting remark like that song.” His songs reflect was “thanks for coming on down” his thinking directly, and conse- in typical down home style. quently are embodied with unlrque -rick pluzak

Murray Mclauchlan rode into town last week with his Silver Tractors, a mobile home, and a transport truck full of sound equipment. The band played three rather lackluster concerts, typical of McLauchlan’s “electric” attitude these days. Oh Murray. . . . . . . what ever happened to that sweet acoustk music you used to put out so well?

ohoto bv Andre Gervasio

ts Centre

Tickets for the professional en- tertainment season at the UW Arts Centre will go on sale at 9 a.m. on Monday morning, September 26. The Main Box Office for the Arts Centre is in Room 254, Modern Languages building, U W Campus. Starting on October 3, the tickets will also be available at two outlets off campus - Bishop’s Style Shop at Stanley Park Mall in Kitchener and the KW Symphony Office, 56 King St. N. in Waterloo.

Individual tickets for the UW Arts Centre series attractions Lb We have the Stars”, as well as nine other off-series shows will be av- ailable. The Arts Centre has an- nounced the following have been added to the line-up of entertain-

Fall and Winter season: Oct. 7 - “The Primary English Class” by Open Circle Theatre (a hilarious hit show still running in Toronto after many months); Oct. 16 - “The Miser” by Molikre, National Players of Washington D-C.; Nov. l- Th&re Populaire de Qukbec with two one-act Molitire plays in French, directed by Jean Gascon: Nov. 11 and I2 - “Cruel Tears”, the national tour of a country and western opera by Vancouver Arts Club Theatre; Jan., 27 - Yass Hakoshima, a brilliant Japanese mime artist; Feb. 10 - Woody Herman and His Thundering Herd in a big band concert: Feb. 11 - Judy Jarvis, one of Canada’s foremost contemporary dancers, in 8 solo dance performance: Mar.

Four performances of the theatre series have already sold out in the early campaign. These include the Oct. 15 performance of “The Boys from Syracuse”, Wil- liam Windpm Plays Thurber, “Sherlock Holmes and the Incred- ible Murder of Cardinal Tosca” and an evening with Orson Welles.. Tickets for the Oct. 16 matinee of “The Boys from Syracuse” are still available, and the Arts Centre is hoping to negotiate a second performance of the William Win- dom show. A waiting list for tick- ets to this performance is being es- tablished.

For additional information ment attractions offered for the 4 - Toronto bance Theatre, a phone 885-4280 ext. 2126.

dynamic, young modern dance company.

Singers and Instrumentalists

for Beethoven’s Symphony No.

(A Song of Joy) N.B. This major work will be performed Dec. 1, 2, and 3 in HumanitiesTheatre .

Rehearsals: Tuesday Evenings 7-9 PM. AL-1 16

All interested please see - Alfred Kunz in ML 131 A

/ 8851211 Ext. 2439 or

. Deborah Fraser - in ML 255 885-l 211 Ext. 3457

Sponsored by Federation. of Students Creative Arts Board

Page 20: 1977-78_v18,n16_Chevron

20 the chevron h-day, September 23, 7977

Show us your student ID card and get 10% off regular priced merchandise in the store.

WestmoUnt Place Waterloo

K9ai ly 9:30-6 Thurs., Fri. to 9:30

95 King St. W. Kitchener Daily 9-6

Thurs., Fri. to 9

Deadline: September 30. If you need financial assistance to continue your studies this year and haven’t applied for OSAP yet, do it today.

Ministry of Colleges and Universities i-

Ontario

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

A fine crop of

The Athena track team, al- though weak in numbers, has a fine crop of athletes this year. Barb Chitovas will lead the team in the javelin. Barb is the OWIAA record holder but was injured last year. In 1975 Barb won the javelin and placed second in both the shot and discus. Janet Carwardine will be giving Barb some much needed help in the shot and discus events.

The sprinters this year will in- clude Faye Blackwood the OWIAA indoor 5Om champion and Pat Sparling 6th in the Ontario

Summer Games 2OOrn. Sylvia Mal- gadey should also be joining the

lteam this year. Sylvia is a veteran from McMaster who has had a serious knee injury. She and Pat should be able to dominate the

OWIA-A long jump if both are heal- thy.

In the middle distance events re- turnees Sandra Ford, Marg Les- perance, and Rena Klevering will be top Athena runners. They will be assisted by Mary McKenzie and rookies Dorothy Laska and Patty Greer who will also be com- peting for the University in cross country running, a new OWIAA event.

Female athletes interested in participating in the fall programme should ~ contact either Gord Robertson (sprints-field events) at 884-2927 or Les Roberts (distance-cross country) at 743-9195. Practices are at Seagram’s Stadium 4-6 PM Mon- day to Thursday.

-rabbit

The men’s track team is looking stronger each year. This year’s team is especially powerful in the throwing events. Rob Town, the defending OUAA shot and discus champion, will be back after an ac- tive summer of competition. Bill Daub, a veteran hockey Warrior, will be joining Rob in the javelin event. Bill threw a personal record this summer of 71.86m (235’) which may be enough to win the OUAA championship.

The sprint events will be led by rookie Noel Grant and Steve Har- rington. Noel was the TDIAA 1OOm champion and has personal

bests of 10.56 and 21.7 in the 1OOm and 200m. In the jumps Jim Baleshta is the only vaulter. Jim recorded a personal record this

summer of 3.81m (12’6”). Paul Dowhaniuk will be carrying the load in the horizontal jumps after having a serious knee injury last winter. Steve Strecker, a silver medallist in the OFSSAA long jump, is also on campus but has not yet reported in. Another OFS- SAA runner-up has joined the

middle distance team. Gary Hutchinson, a 3000m runner will join veterans Howard Saunders and Gary Crossley.

Persons interested in competing and training with the team should contact Gord Robertson (sprints- field events) at 884-2927 or Les Roberts (distance events) at 743-9 195. Practices take place from Monday to Thursday at Seagram’s Stadium, 4-4 pm. ,

-rabbit

66

Ca

99

ar. Juno Award Nominees. Latest Single-“It’s Alright (This Feeling)“. Latest LP-“The Crack of Dawn”.

ROUGH TRADE” COMING SOON

“BOND” “IAN THOMAS”

Come In and Hear the Finest Sound System This

Page 21: 1977-78_v18,n16_Chevron

friday, September 23, 1977

Synchronized Swimming wilt have an organizational meet- ing: ‘2

Monday Sept. 26 6:OOpm in PAC Student Lounge ,

Anyone interested in recreational and competitive Syncro is WELCOME. Come and learn have some fun.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Wqmen’s Syncro Advisor is needed.

No Experience is needed,

just Enthusiasm

Faculty of Grad Student

Please Contact Ms. P Davis in PAC or Kathy Howard 884-1051 b

t Q

STEERIIKE !!!! Two, yes ladies Park in which an individual can VI East with Rob Brown (Faculty .and gentlemen, what you are wit- truely compete against himself. An Joggers) placing second. David nessing before your very ears, is excellent day was enjoyed by all, Zapparoli came third and Joe Sup- the first ever clash between Co-op especially the top three runners pie, 26th. Congratulations Ray and and St. Jeromes, during the final who sprinted their way past the Joe, try a few more bowls of Trix. game of the 4th Annual St. Jeromes finish line. Total Points: Grads 45, St. Jeromes Invitational Softball Tournament Results: Ray Costello was first for 72, St. Pauls 75. which was held on September 16- 18, 1977.

Here’s the situation folks; bot- tom of the 5th inning, man on first, two out, Co-op’s at bat, the score’s 2- 1 in favour of St. Jeromes, the count on the batter is 2 and 2, and here’s the pitch. . . the ball dribbles off the bat for a single but banana hands errors and the runner and batter round the bags to secure the penant for the 1st EVER VIC- TORY FOR CO-OP. Congratula- tions to all you who participated CUSTOM PRESSING - FRiSH CIDER & GRAPE JUICE -APPLE - Y and enjoyed the festivities. BUTTER - WHOLE GRAINS - FRESHLY MILLED STONE

The varsity men’s cross country team had their first competition last This year’s Engineering C hal- GROUND FLOURS, GRAIN PRODUCTS - BEANS -DRIED FRUIT

Saturday at Western over their 8Km course. The host institution won the lenge Run (Pant, Pant) was held on -NUTS-CHEESE-HERBS&SPICES-HONEY&MAPLESYRUP

meeting, with Jackson College from the U.S. second and the Warrior Thursday, September 15, a day in Call 6642182

New blood to help Cross Countrv team

NATURAL ORGANIC FOODS WHOLESALE & RETAIL

harriers fifth. which many a runner will re-

The winning runner was Brian Stride of Brock University in a time of member. The Challenge Run is a 5

28: 17. The top Waterloo runner was sophomore Tom Boone with a time of man/3 mile course thru Waterloo

30:44 for the sixth place medallion. Tom appears to be in top shape after an active summer of track running. Tom was the Ontario Western Region’s 3000m champion. Ex-Warrior Alan Baigent was the top West- ern runner placing eighth.

Other Waterloo placings were: Greg Kay, 40th, 33:48; Peter Piercy, 44th, 34:05; Garth Jones, 49th,35:46; Tom Fitzgerald, 63rd, 5:46; and Tim Bradich, 73rd, 37:05 of 93 finishers.

The Waterloo showing should not be indicative of its ranking in the OUAA since the team was missing its top veteran runners Gary Cros- sley , Paul Barron, Howard Saunders, and Dale Irwin.

In fact, a new crop of freshmen should bolster their chances of a championship considerably. These newcomers include Gary Hutchin- son, Dave Zapporoli, and possibly Ray Costello. Coach Les Roberts feels that the team has definite possibilities since last years champion team, Western, has lost most of their runners.

The team will compete next at RMC this Saturday with some of the team’s top runners competing at the prestigious Springbank road races. Persons still interested in joining the team should not hesitate to contact L~S Roberts at 743-9195 or attend a practice held at Seagram’s Stadium 4-6 PM *

Myers’s Famous rums the world over.

a IMPORTED HEINEMEN -AVAILABLE /iT LIQUOR STORES

Represented in Canada by Sambury lnternat~onal Agencies Ltd.

Page 22: 1977-78_v18,n16_Chevron

22 the chevron Friday, September 23, 7977

Letters should be submitted fully typed on a 64 character line (you can even use our tvpewriters). The deadline for all letters is i6on Tuesday. The chevron staff wholeheakedly promotes all constructive feedback letters portraying the thoughts

1 of concerned students and readers.

A/A persons undemocmtiii

The Anti Imperialist-Alliance (AIA) is a campus organization which claims to be re- volutionary in nature, to represent “real democracy”, and to “defend the basic in- terests of students”.

Last Thursday (July 14th) I saw an exam- ple of how the AIA applies these principles in practice.

I had gone over to Conrad Grebel Col- lege, where CPC(M-L) (AIA’s parent or- ganization) was holding a “Report on Al- bania” (see news article), to find Chevron editor and AIA member Neil Docherty. While there, I caught the eye of “AIA spokesperson” Doug Wahlsten, a UW psychology professor. Wahlsten pointed the bamboo cane he was using to put up posters at me and said “Out - get out of here”. I left.

Later, at the chevron. office, I met Docherty ,and commented that Wahlsten’s actions appeared undemocratic since he had acted entirely on his own in making me leave.

Docherty asked me how I knew Wahlsten was acting on his own. I asked him if AIA

. had a position on me. Docherty said ” you’ ve been discussed”.

I asked Docherty if this “discussion” was at a meeting, and if it was voted on. Docherty said “Well, how do you think we make our decisions”. When I asked Doclierty how he expected that I would know how his group made decisions and re- peated my question he then refused to ans- wer.

1 then asked Docherty when this discus- sion had taken place. He told me that the orily thing I needed to know was that I wasn’t welcome:

Continuing, I pressed Docherty for an approximate date of the decision. Eventu- ally, when I pointed out that his refusal to answer any questions was reminiscent of the “Canadian state’s” refusal to comment on their evidence against Wahlsten (see,last weeks chevron) he said “Look Ciaran. I just don’t remember. Ok.”

Wahlstens opposition to me stems from an argument this May when I was rash enough to say that he was “as fascist as the Canadian state”. I believe that AIA’s claimed parallel between today’s Canada and Nazi Germany is Absurd. But for Wahl- sten, to be compared to the Canadian state is an intolerable insult. And his intense ob-

jections to me all stem from this incident. Nobody else connected with AIA has

backed Docherty up _ip his claim that the decision was made by the group. But if he is telling the truth then: 1) Why did Docherty give me a poster ad- vertising the meeting, an action tantamount to an invitation. 2) Why on July 1st did Heather Robertson, while canvassing for AIA, invite me to a meeting organized by AIA and CPC(M-L) to “denounce the reactionary bourgeoisie”. 3) Why was Wahlsten the only person who saw me at Conrad Grebel to object to my presence. 4) What stops Docherty from “remember- ing’ ’ when the “discussion” took place. 5) Why does nobody back Docherty up by giving the details of how and when this de- cision was made.

AIA have now decided to support Wahl- sten in retrospect. But all this evidence points to an abitrary undemocratic action by Wahlsten being covered up by Docherty and supported by AIA retroactively!

Just why might Wahlsten act on his own in deciding who can and who cannot attend a meeting?

At an AIA study group last year, I talked to Wahlsten,about his ideas on “bourgeois science”. .

One topic was quantum mechanics. This cornerstone of modern physics holds that energy (and hence matter) comes in discrete quantities. I was amazed to discover that Wahlsten didn’t believe in it since a science which holds that continuity doesn’t exist in the “real” world (quantum mechanics) con- tradicts a philosophy which, according to Wahlsten, assumes the existence of con- tinuity (dialectical materialism).

We also discussed Godels incomplete- ness theorem, a mathematical landmark which: shows that in any consistent first- order logical system complicated enough to contain basic number theory there are theorems which are true, but which cannot be proved inside the system.

Again Wahlsten astounded me, by saying that he didn’t believe in it. When I asked him if he had seen the proof, he said yes. When I asked him where the error was, he said that he didn’t know but he knew it was wrong

-because the r&ult was wrong. -- Wahlsten said that putting bounds on

what can and cannot be proven is putting bounds on human achievement, an anti- people attitude.

Wahlsten’s replacement of scientific facts by a dogmatic philosophy is reminiscent of the Catholic Church’s persecution of Galileo for holding that the earth was not the centre of the universe.

Once, in the chevron office, Peter Thompson, a fellow staffer was reading a Zimbabwe liberation magazine. Coming ac- ross a poem of the “it is a great and glorious thing to die for one’s country” variety he gave it to me to read. I commented to him about “The old lie”.

At this point Wahlsten stormed over, stood before me in a threatening pose, and told me to leave the office.

He backed down when he realized that as a staffer, I had as much right to be in the office as he did. But he then insisted that I cease to read his magazine.

Wahlsten’s language is punctuated by phrases like “dirty little dog”, “run you through’.’ and talk of bringing freedom- fighters to UOW to get rid of “fascists” like myself.

The above portrays Wahlsten as dogma- tic, childish, and undemocratic.

And it poses some fairly serious ques- tions.

What is a person like Wahlsten doing as “spokesperson” (leader?) of AIA‘? Why is an openly advertised meeting actually not open to the entire public? And why might Docherty defend Wahlsten’s arbitrary ac- tions by pretending the decision was made by the group?

Ciaran O’Donnell

Reply to Mrm Coates

This is in reply to a letter written by Stephen Coates to last week’s chevron. Coates’ in his letter says that the chevron has printed “very few stories about Angola, Al- bania, Rhodesia and CPC(M-L)‘s scrapes with the law.” He then persists that these articles “are,printed at the expense of stu- dent news.”

We would like to express our total disa- greement with this bankrupt analysis pre- sented by Coates. For the chevron not to print about the heroic struggles of the Ango- lan people against an invasion army of 15,000 Cuban troops is to deny students informa- tion which affects them in every way. In Angola today Cuban troops with Russian weapons and East European mercenaries have slaughtered over 100,000 Angolan peasants. The Angolan people led by their liberation army UNITA are heroically resist- ing this onslaught. ANGOLA will be to the Soviet Union, what Vietnam and Cambodia were to the U.S., that is its defeat.

Albania is a small country in Europe. It is the only genuinely socialist country in, the world and serves as a great example to all the world’s people. Among other things, Al- bania has no unemployment, taxes, or infla- tion. In Albania there is fullest democracy to the working class whereas, the remnants of the exploiting classes have had their right to exploit suppressed.

L , 4

Today in Rhodesia, the ra,cist and fascist Ian Smith regime is committing one atrocity after another. It has herded many natives into concentration camps and slaughtered many others. Reading articles on how the Zimbabwe African National Union (ZAN U) (the liberation movement in Rhodesia) is dealing heavy blows to the racist Smith re- gime and to its American supporters must frighten our dear Mr. Coates. ZANU is de- termined to end the barbaric system in Rhodesia and to set up a genuinely democra- tic system which serves the interests of the vast majority of the people.

As for “CPC(M-L)‘s scrapes with the law” we must conclude that Mr. Coates means the attack by the Canadian State on a research centre operated by the Communist Party of Canada (Marxist-Leninist) in Kitchener-Waterloo. In a raid that took place Feb. 23rd the RCMP arrested 17 peo- ple including Chairman of CPC(M-L), Com- rade Hardial Bains. The charges were all concocted and the Canadian state has been forced to withdraw every c_harge connected with the raid on the research centre so far. The chevron has played a good role in expos- ing this frame up by investigating both +des. (The capitalist press, by the way Mr. Coates, relied entirely on a press release from the RCMP and refused to print letters exposing the lies in this release). Not to investigate this blatent case of political persecution would be a betrayal of investigative jour- nalism and seeking truth from facts.

We can only conclude that Stephen Coates’ reasoning is that students should be isolated from what is going on nationally and internationally. That the typical student should be an ignoramous who leaves the running of the country to a handful of people. To Mr. Coates we suggest a comic book and a good closet for the rest of his life. We think it is excellent that the chevron popularizes the struggle of the people of Angola, Zim- babwe (Rhodesia), South Africa etc., and’ that students actively support these libera- tion struggles.

Mohammad Guita Salah Bachir Hafiz el-saad

James Ho Peter Murray

I have followed your exposk of the en- glish proficiency exam and would like to add my voice to your editorial and call for the publication of the standards of profi- ciency to be made public.

I also agree that “a writing clinic truly designed to help students who have prob- lems with standard English” should be vol- untary and democratic and should solicit suggestions from students. The chevron taking on thi s exam and exposing it thoroughly has shown in my mind that this exam is designed to decrease university en- rollment.

Once again, Faculty of Arts, make the standards of the proficiency exam public, and/or defend it in the chevron (if it is de- fensible).

Peter Dyck

More on the ELRF .

Regarding the controversy of the English Language Proficiency Programme of which I am in favour of to a certain degree. In your orientation issue I was lead to expect the exam to consist of such idiotic questions as placing a number of items under the topics a) blacken oval, b) automobile, c) bicycle and d) horseback such as ‘powered by human muscle’. None of the example questions you gave us ever appeared in this exam which I have written. For those whom did not write this exam it consisted of the follwing.

1) Forty multiple choice questions each having four similar sentences except only one was free of any grammatical errors. If a student cannot spot these errors then what is

to stop him/her from making such errors all the time when writing something? 2) A 300-500 word essay on one of the three most idiotic topics I have ever run across (eg. How your values differ from a high school dropout). Though the topics were nuts the point of the essay part of the exam is to see if the student has problems organizing his/her thoughts, writing good sentences and spelling. If no one tells us how bad our writ- ing ability is how are we ever to know? We might go through life thinking we could write good when all otir friends know that we can- not. Remember writing English is a whole new ball game from speaking it.

I would like to see more grammar em- phasized in our high schools instead of spending so much time analizing stories by Shakespeare, Shaw and others. Also the chevron claims that writing skills in Canada have not declined in the past twenty years. However, what if in the past twenty years writing skills of university students have only remained adequate? Certainly there must be, room for improvements.

I do however agree with your view that writing and passing the exam should not be mandatory to get a B.A. Also the writing clinic should not be forced down our throats’ if we fail the exam because no one learns something they feel that they are being forced to learn. If a student does not wish to improve him/herself by going to this clinic then it is his/her loss. Forcing someone to do something against their will goes against the grain of every student I have ever known:

F.J. Kennedy Jr.

emocratic

J-9. Long made a most astute point in his statement to the Monday session of the Chevron lnvestigation Committee which at first glance seems to strike at the core of the issue, He said that there are two opposing positions with respect to freedom of the press. One is that the publishers, that is those who put up the money for the enter- prise, should control the content of the pub- lication. The other is that those who work on the publication, that is those who pro- vide the labour for the enterprise, should control its content. For those unfamiliar with the ‘chevron affair’, J.J. Long and the Federation hodd the former position and the chevron staffers the latter.

The Federation’s position is also the one predominantly accepted in society. This conception cbmbined with the monopoly struct&e of the economy means that actual decision making power over what is printed is limited to a very few small group of people. If the contrary conception were to prevail then there would be large numbers of small groups controlling publishing re- sulting in a more democratic sharing of power.

The economic relations which prevail in society are not to be found amongst the stu- dents at the U of W and therefore a proper analogy can not be drawn. The fact is <hat the political structures here are different fro& society’s and therefore the question of freedom ofthe press is different and its sol- ution somewhat unique.

There are three political niches here, based on functiorial differentiation, which afford campus wide influence. They are the Fede.ration, the chevron, and Radio Water- loo. I call them niches because each attract different types of individuals. This is primarily because they involve different types of activities just the same as a track club and a chess club would tend to attract different types of individuals because not all individuals interested iv track are necessar- ily interested in chess. They are political niches because of the potential power in- vdlved. There is very little overlap in Waterloo’s political niches primarily- be- cause students have little extra time and must lizlit their outside activities. What we have then is three interest niches of campus-wide political significance with al- most mutually exclusive membership.

Continued on page 23.

Page 23: 1977-78_v18,n16_Chevron

friday, September 23, 7977 the chevron 23

campus CeiltIre 14!Q

e part of a fighting democratic newspaper that defends the basic interests of students

Continued from page 22. ‘“Humanities”. As the cons&6%iZ~stands the Fed- The ISAUS extended its demonstration to

eration has hegemony over the other two the “Iran Imperial Government Tourism functional units on the premise that it has the mandate of the students. It ‘owns’ the

and Information Center” in Los Angeles,

chevron and RadWat. I would contend that where nine of the ISA members and suppor- t ers were arrested. One of the Iranians ar-

rather than being the representatives of the students, the. Federation hacks are a par- ’

rested was seriously injured. The nine ar- rested were falsely charged with “kidnap-

tkL.lkir pOli&d elite On this CaIllpUS who ping” and “burglary" The charges being occupy the student government because

.

their extra-curricular activity is that of gar- so ridiculous, were dropped later. HoLever,

nering student’s votes (the few who turn out they were allegedly accused of “battery”,

for elections). In the light of this perspective “malicious mischief’ and “criminal tres-

the ‘chevron affair’ appears as one political passing”. Due to the nation-wide publicity

elite attempting to eliminate another. The of the ISA actions, the fascist police of L.A.

group that exploits the Federation niche, were forced to announce the release of the

through their special skill at winning votes, arrested students without bail, after setting

attacks the chevron staffers who have been the date of =trial; but immediately handed

applying their journalistic labours in a self seven of them to the Immigration.

determined direction. The problem with the Having full support of U.S. imperialism, Federation’s scheme was that once the the Shah has maintained a police state in Iran.

journalists were locked out there was no There are over 100,080 political prisoners in one left with the devotion and competence Iran, under the brutal tortures of Savak (the necessary to turn out the largely volunteer campus paper. Their attempts at a ‘real

Shah’s secret police). Every year hundreds of Iranian patriots are either killed under

chevron’ failed miserably. They were even- tually forced to reinstate the original chev-

torture or executed by the firing squad.

ron and will soon have to recognize #hat In spite of the Shah’s terror and suppres- which already exists- the chevron’s politi- l sion, the just struggle of the Iranian people cal independence from the Federation. (workers, peasants, students, progressive Those who fear that an independent chev- clergy and the revolutionary organizations ron will pbrsue an undemocratic course of Iranian People’s Fedaee Guerrillas and should know. that one of the chevron’s re- Mojahedin of the People of Iran) is growing commendations to the Investigation is for rapidly in every dimension. the constitutional recognition of the democ- ratization of its internal structure which it

>, The ISA, being deeply committed to the struggle of the Iranian people, continues its

completed under its own initiative. John Morgan

fight against the Shah’s regime and exposing its collaboration with the U.S. police and Immigration.

VAK

Once again, the fascist regime of Iran, with the blessing of the U.S. police, is trying to put pressure upon the Iranian Students Association, and to halt its extensive ac- tivities against the repressive regime of the Shah of Iran.

On July 5, a/massive demonstration was staged by the ISAUS and other progressive Iranian students and American supporters, at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles, to protest the U. S. visit of Farah Pahlavi (Shah’s wife) who was being “honored” with a dot-toral degFee in

It is the responsibility of all progressive and freedoF loving people to expose this unholy collaboration ahd the repressive re- the

gime of Iran, by supporting the ISA in its just cause, and condemn the act of U.S. police Member: Canadian university press (CUP). The chevron is typeset by members

and Immigration, by sending telegrams and of the workers’ union of dumont press graphix and published by the federation letters to District Attorney or by signing the of students incorpor$ed, university of Waterloo. Content is the sole responsi- ISA’s petition.

STOP HARASSING IRANIAN STU- bility of the chevrdn editori@ staff. offices are located in the campus centre;

DENTS. (519) 8854660, or university local 2331.

. DOWN WITH THE SHAH. It’s too late to say much lmore than we have lots of news in store for next week and we still need VICTORY TO THE PEOPLE’S JUST more people to help put it out. So if you would like to contribute to a fighting democratic

STRUGGLE IN IRAN. newspaper come into cc 140. Those who helped this week were: Henry Hess (in Passing), john w

Down with U.S. Imperialism. bast, robert, tony, peter town, loris (known now as andre) nash dhanani, lyla smith, ron reeder,

D.A.‘s Address: ted mallet, dennis rekuta, dave and all the people who are helping with the keypunching or the

Marvin Kaye, D.A. unemployment survey, salah bachir, jayne poollack, Sylvia hannigan, nick redding, jonathon

Division 1 Beverly Hills coles, randy barkman, doug goodfellow, peter blunden, scott barron, juJes grajower, don

Municipal Court martin, laurie lawson, gerard Wmmons, heather robertson, diane chapitas, Chris the photo-

Beverly Hills, Ca. 90213 ‘grapher, all the sports and entertainment folks, val moghadam, and there was must be mqre but ‘its too late n-d.

. Iranian Students Association

Page 24: 1977-78_v18,n16_Chevron

24 the chevron fi-dav. seutember 23, 7977

Leading 14-3 with just over 8 minutes remaining in the game Waterloo Football Warriors were un- able to hang on and lost their season home opener Saturday at Seagram Stadium to the Windsor Lancers 1% 16.

Warriors defence literally stopped cold the Lancer ground game by viciously mauling the Windsor backs and placing good pressure on Lancer Quarterback Scott Mallender for most of the contest allowing only 53 yards rushing.

It was a Warrior turnover late in the game ‘which ultimately resulted in the Lancer victory.

In the fourth quarter Windsor QB Mallender found success in throwing against the fired up Waterloo Defensive unit and found Bruce Walker in the end zone for the first major of their come- back.

Immediately following the touchdown, he spot- ted Lancer Roger Adams and completed the 2 point conversion making the score 14-1 I for the Warriors.

In the next-sequence of plays Warrior QB Gord Taylor rolling out on an option play fumbled and it was recovered by the Lancers on the Waterloo 31 yard line.

Nlellander then began ‘a 7 play, 3 1 yard touch- down drive capped off by his own 1 yard plunge for the winning major.

In the dying seconds, Warriors started a final drive vvhich was stalled at the Windsor 25 yard line on an incompleted third down pass to flanker

George Lomaga around the Lancer 15. Lancers killed the clock and the Warriors hopes of evening their won-loss record by conceding a safety touch.

Warrior Quarterback Gord Taylor directed the Waterloo offence completing 5 of 19 passes and carrying for 86 yards including one major from the 1 yard line finishing off a 106 yard drive in the third quarter.

Warriors first major came in the second quarter on a 3 yard run by Dave Goodwin.

Warrior Dave ‘Disco’ Jones again was the bright spot in the Waterloo backfield carrying 18 times for 127 yards.

Kicker Mike Karpow converted both his single point attempts and had a 51 yard punting average on 6 times including a booming 70 yard single.

Lancer QB Scott Mallender completed I5 of 28 attempts for 171 yards and 1 touchdown as well as rushing for a personal major score.

Warriors outrushed their visitors dramatically in the contest 244 yards to Windsor’s 53.

Waterloo also improved their penalties, taking only 5 for 71 yards in comparison to last weeks 170 yards. Lancers were penalized 10 times for 104 yards. HASH reMARKS: Warrior Mike Karpow’s 70 yard punt is the longest this season in the QQIFC . . . Tomorrow the Warriors take on Wilfred Laurier Golden Hawks at Centennial Stadium in Kitchener.

---_--. - _. E,t kdsor Lancers Saturday nipped Warriors 7 8- 7 6 in the dying seconds. Here Windsor Q5, Scott Maflender, kooks ib an open receiver over the fired up Waterloo Defensive Squad. Below Vdaterloo Greg Iones had a big afternoon carrying 78 times for 727 yards.

photos by Chris Dobbin

The Warriors Rugby Football Club started off their season on the right foot last Saturday when they trav[eiled to Western to meet a team they had well beaten in the last season but whom this year. were supposed to be the dark horse in the league. The Warriors won the game 9-7.

The close score indicates what a tight game it was, with Western constantly threatening and being in the Warriors’ twenty-five yard area. But the Warrior forwards kept the Mustang pack in check, while the Warriors’ backs mounted an offensive of their own. Ron Fukushima had a breakaway during the first half but was delib- erately tripped by an opposing player; the ref did not see it.

The first half was a kicker’s game with both sides booting the ball in order to gain valuable yard- age that could rarely be gained by running. Though the Mustangs’ kicks were good i they found their attack stymied by fullback Mitch Hammer and the backs. Dave King scered a penalty kick from the Mustang twenty-five yard line to put the Warriors ahead 3-O.

The forwards won a lot of ball in the strums and lineouts, and thus it was from a set strum in the sec- ond half that the Warriors got then only try of the game. A strum was called on the Mustangs’ five yard line. Strum half, Phil White. got the ball which he took and after dummying to standoff, Dave King, passed the ball to winger Jon Isaacs who ran the ball over for a try in the corner. Dave King miss- ed his first attempt at a conver- sion but due to a Mustang Infrac- tion, was given another chance. This time he did not miss.

The Mustangs replied with a try of their own but missed the con- version. This brought the score to 9-7 as the Mustangs had made a penalty kick earlier in the game.

It was a great defensive effort on the part of the forwards that kept the Western team from scoring and it was a tired but happy Waterloo team that walked off the field at the end of the game.

in the second game of the day the Waterloo R.F.C. Trojans played a more impressive game than their Warrior brethren. The game had been on less than five

minutes when inside centre Pcte~- Kewan took a bad pass from 172~; opposition tin his twenty-five ya:-d line. A try seemed assured as Per=: racsd almost unopposed toward the Mustangs rryline. But he was tripped up. his momentum car-r>,-- ing him over the line. A try should have been given but the ref ruled that it was not a try. Later in the half outside centre, Todd Gird- wood intercepted a pass and ran fifty yards for a try. putting the Trojans ahead 6-O when Bryan ‘&The Dog” Tyrrell converted for two points. “The Dog” also made a penalty kick and the first half ended with a 9-O score. In the sec- ond half the Mustangs pressed but the Trojan defense allowed only one try. “The Dog” converted another penalty kick and the game ended with the score 12-4.

A double win for the Warrior R.F.C. but much work is still needed to be done as both teams looked scrappy at times.

The rookies Marty Vink, Mur- ray McCormick and Phil White playing for the Warriors had good games. But it was such rookies as Warren Arbuckle, who tackled so well, and Dan Tout and vet Mark Cranfield, who had to be taken out of the Trojan game due to a dislo- cated shoulder, all former football players, who impressed those who watched the game.

The next Warrior rugby game is on Saturday the 24th at Columbia Field against Queen-s. This prom- ises to be another classic match-un because Waterloo tied with Queen’s last year. So come on out and expect to see’ some exciting rugby. Support your local hooker. not to mention the rest of the team.

Sunday, September 11, the War- riors R.F.C. took on an Alumni team made up of such past greats as D. Dyer, Steve Diebert, Derek Humphreys (present coach of rhe Warriors), Ken Brown. M. Rz- naud, D. Parrot and some other mean boys.

The Alumni were allowed to substitute every twenty minutes - Old boys need rest, you know. gut despite such substitutions, the Warriors won the game. To avoid embarrassment on the Alumni* s part the score will not be printed.

A good time was had by all, and the usual singsong followed at a barbeque held at Webber’s place.

It should be another banner season for UW’s swimming and div- ing men and women. Coach Claudia Cronin 1s especially en- thusiastic about her 1977 C.I.A.U.

’ championship men’s team which returns virtually intact from last year. Lost through graduation or transfer are Boris Jacyszyn and Tom Hett. The rest of the men*s big point getters are back as well as some talented freshmen.

Leading the returnees is Cana- dian Olympian and American N.,4.H.A. champion Dave Hein- brpch. Dave can score points in many events with his most experi- ence being in the breaststroke. Dave has been swimming at the university level for 3 years, two years at Simon Fraser and one here, and has never lost a national championship.

Also returning is Worid Student Games finalist and C.P.A.U. champion Ron Campbell. Ron will compete mostly in the breast- stroke. Double C.I.A. U. record holder Tim Wilson is back from work term and will be at school all year to compete in the sprint free- style events. Backstroker Brian Harvey is also a C.I.A.U. record holder as well as being a capable butter-flyer.

U.W.‘s Mr. Everything, John Heinbuch, will again be called upon to compete in swimming’s most gruelling events namely, the mile ~ 1000 free and 200 fly while relay specialist Carl Cronin and Dave Wilson will keep LJW in many meets with their experience and desire*

A promisin g rookie is Oakville’s Murray White. Murray is very

versatile alTd brings a wealth of swimming experieice Po UW.

‘The womer& team is much Ym- proved over last season with many first year swimmers adding much needed dep;h to the Athena lineup. Returriing as-s C.I.A.U. finahsts Karen Murphy, Patti Goraz- dowska, Leslie Patterson and Karen Stuart. The girls should im- prove on their sixth place finish .&% this year‘s C.H.A.U.‘s.

The iJW diving team will courrt on Canada Games participants and C.I.A.U. medalists Claude Co:-- irnier and Steve Brooks ‘to be their big point getters on bvth boards. National level coat h kzarney Tatham will again be back to coach the Warriors and Athena divers. Anyone interested in being on the swimming or diving team should contact Claudia Cronin at the P.A.C. office.