nnn EE AGI te — ear nepae ez Bae a a Agim THE OTHER PRESS ». Recycling Program page 3 PAPER CHASE is an exciting answer to a problem which students face. This problem is the rising cost of education and the lowering of assistance to students. The Douglas College Stu- ent Society is beginning a paper recycling program as one answer to this problem. Through this program we will be raising funds for the Douglas College Student Trust fund so that we may be able to offer more bursaries to students in need of assistance. Early in the third week of classes you will be seeing receptacles all over the campus. These receptacles are the collection bins for recyclable paper. We are collecting, at this time, three grades of paper; computer paper, white and coloured paper. On each bin will be a full list of paper that is acceptable and those items considered contaminants PAPER CHASE All proceeds from the paper collect- ed go directly into the Student Trust fund. PAPER CHASE is run_ by volunteers, and we need more to keep this a successful program. You decide whether this will be a success or failure. Give generously of your time and recyclable paper. Debra Niessen Program Co-ordinator RECYCLABLE PAPER Computer paper (without carbon or groundwood content) White Ledger paper Coloured Ledger paper These grades include: Bond stock (all forms) Reports Writing paper Note paper (excluding backing or newsprint) Envelopes (White) Binder dividers or index sheets Index cards (3’’ X 5’’, 4” X 6”) Padded sheets (excluding backing or newsprint) Manila folders (light brown) Computer printout (without carbon or groundwood content) All drawings on ‘Paper (excluding blueprint) Computer cards Reproduction paper (from dry copiers: Xerox, |.B.M. etc.) CONTAMINANTS Newspaper & Magazines Carbon paper Gummed labels, adhesives Slick waxed & plasticized papers Cardboard Ditto or mimeo stencils Photographic & Blueprint paper Envelopes with windows Thermofax copy paper Chemically treated paper Plastic binders, cups Cigarettes, cigars, ashes Tobacco packaging Cups: plates Facial tissue, paper towels and lunch bags MAIN RECEPTICLES FIRST FLOOR in front of Bookstore 1700 Print Shop 1730 Computer Room 1725 in front of 1612 SECOND FLOOR Social and Human Services 2800 Student Society 2780 Health Services 2600 Library - photocopier rooms 2100A, and 3000G Area 2300 THIRD FLOOR Physical Sciences base 3900 Hall 3921Z, 3011Z, 3601Z Humanities, Modern Languages 3600 Social Sciences base 3400 Computer room 3463 English 3300 Performing Arts 3200 I.M.S. 3140, 3142, 3144 FOURTH FLOOR Area 4600, 4700, 4800, 4900 Hall 4001Z, 4210Z, 4601Z, 4821Z EL 25 Business Administration 4300 Educational Foundations 4200 Haig’s timely B.C. visit Six hundred and fifty party faithful and supporters paid 150 dollars a plate to hear ex-U.S. Secretary of State Alexander Haig speak on Sept. 6th at . by SCOTT LEAF the Hyatt Regency. The event, spons- ored by the B.C. Young Socreds, was to allow the Young Socreds to take an active role in the organizational devel- opment of the party. The event, as expected, drew severe criticism from two groups, the Peoples’ Front to Fight Racism, and an ad-hoc coalition of women’s and anti- nuclear groups named the Sept. 6th Committee. The spokesman for the Peoples’ Front, Charles Boylan, explained his group, mainly Marxist- Leninists,, condemned the Young Socreds for allowing Haig, whom he described as a war criminal, to speak. He went on to say that they were selling out Canada to U.S. Imperial- ism. When asked if the protest was to be peaceful, he replied they would only use force to defend themselves. . The protesters went on chanting slogans such as ’’the people united cannot be defeated,’’ and ’’ Alexander Haig, you cannot hide, we charge you with genocide.’’ They then tied up traffic in front of the Hyatt along Burrard with rope and coloured string, calling it a ’’Web of Anarchy.’’ Not long after, the protest- ors threw eggs at the hotel and tried to force their way in through the side doors but were thwarted by hotel security backed up by 20 policemen. Inside the dining room after a posh dinner, Haig restated his support of Reagan, described American foreign policy as ’’...to establish freedom and dignity of individual citizens.’’ He explained the continental Soviet threat as now being a global one, and more controversially remarked that if the Soviets were not willing to discuss strategic arms limitations, then the U.S. should match them system. for system. In his closing remarks he went on to say ‘’they (the Soviets) should not be the advocates of bloodshed, terrorism, and wars of national liber- ation.’’ CAUT fears spies Canada’s nationwide professors’ as- sociation fears new security legislation will mean stepped-up spying on pro- fessors and students, especially non- Canadians, on campuses this fall. And the law is not likely to change with a Tory government in power, Donald Savage of the Canadian Assoc- iation of University Teachers said. In its August newsletter, CAUT says the spy act could be used ‘’to justify unwarranted interference with the teaching and research activities of university professors.’’ Act C-9 allows the governemnt to target foreign students and foreign professors at will, said Savage, CAUT executive secretary. The newsletter says the security service could pass information on visiting professors back ‘’to foreign states however authoritarian they might be.’’ Bill C-9, the Liberal government legislation to create a Civilian Security Intelligence Service, passed before the House of Commons recessed in June. “Most Conservative MPs did not show up for the final vote on the bill,’ Savage said. ‘Revisiting Bill C-9 is not on the top of the list for a new Tory government. | have no doubt...the legislation will stand.’’ CAUT has been lobbying the federal government against spies on campus for several decades. In investigating excesses in the late 70's, the McDonald Commission found the security forces kept extensive files of dissenters, visitors to Eastern Europe and China, and homosexuals on Canadian university campuses. CAUT recommended to the commis- sion that the files be destroyed and (former) Soliciter General Robert Kap- lan has told the professional associa- tion that thousands of the files are now gone. ‘‘But he’s never said how many of the files were destroyed,’’ Savage said. With the new legislation, ‘‘you can be targetted for surveillance if you raise money for Palestinian organiza- tions,’’ Savage said. ‘‘And belonging to an anti-apartheid group can be a subversive activity.’’ The most recent case of spying on campus involved a Carleton student, Andy Moxley, who admitted last year he was supplying information on peace groups in Ottawa to the RCMP. The police gave the standard response: ‘We don’t solicit this infor- mation, but we don’t turn it down,’ Savage said. “You never know what spying is going on, on campuses, until some scandal erupts.’’ CAUT will lobby the Canadian government when amendments and statutes to the security bill are drafted and will continue to defend professors harrassed by federal spies.