1980-81_v03,n03_Imprint

Page 1

Note: Imprid publishes every other Friday during

the

summer.

The

campus euents is 4 pm preceding publication.

-Friday,

May

deadline

for

the Tuesday

Sunset

30-

Them Was The Good Old Days, a Barbershop Quartet performance, will take place until Sunday beginning today at 8:00 PM in the Humanities Theatre. Tickets are $5.00. Enjoy a warm summer evening with. conversation, folk music, regular and herbal tea and home-baked munchies at an Agora Teahouse from 9:30 PM to 12 midnight in the Modern Languages alcove (weather permitting). Fed Flicks presents Monty Python’s And Now For Something Completely Different in Physics 145. Admission: $1 .OO for Fee Paying Feds; $2.00 all others. Rome 1979, an exhibition of original drawings from the, Rome programme for fourth year UW students continues at Ballenford Books, 98 Scollard Street, Toronto. For further information, contact Rick Haldenby of the school of architecture (ext. 2420). ,

May 31-

From 9:30 AM to 3:00 PM at Wilfrid Laurier there will be a gardening workshop: Dr.. Wynnfield Y. Watson will discuss common insect pests and what gardeners can do about them. Registration will .be at the door; there will be a $10.00 fee charged to cover costs.

-Sunday The

Rockway

June Mennonite

at approx.

-Tuesday

Indian Movie: The Indian Students Association presents “Mad Humati” with top stars and hit songs at 7:30 PM in MC 2065. Admission: Adults $2.00; Children $1 .OO; under 10 years of age, free. Tickets at the door.

-Saturday,

perform in the Humanities 3:00 PM.

lChoirs

Theatre

850 PM.

June

at

--

3-

-Friday

June

6-

For information on the Agora Teahouse, see last Friday’s entry. Les Petites

Marionettes,

the story of

a man who lost his shadow and found it Spring Thaw Ha Ha!, a revised, version for the 1980’s of Canada’s great satirical revue, is performed at 8:00 PM in the Humanities Theatre. Tickets are $7.50. (Students/seniors $6.00)

-Wednesday

June

4-

There will be an Equestrian Club Meeting at 4130 in CC 135 to discuss the upcoming Funshow for club members. New members welcome. For information call Jane at 886-0165 or Nina at 884-9900. If you are unable to attend, you can apply for membership and complete entry forms at the PAC intramural office. There will be a Red Cross Blood Doner Clinic from 2:oO to 4~30 in the afternoon and from 6:Qo to 8:30 in the evening at the Grace Lutheran Church, 136 Margaret St. (at Louisa). Quota: 300 doners.

-Wednesday, Cinema Gratis: movies presents 9:30 in the Great

-Thursday

4-

June campus centre “Quadrophenia” Hall.

June

free at

5-

You are invited to the Waterloo Christian Fellowship’s weekly supper meeting, which takes place from 4:30 to_7:00 in the Laurel Lake BBQ pit. If there is rain, meet in the second floor undergraduate lounge of Hagey Hall. I, David Motor

Wilcox plays the Waterloo Inn. Tickets are $3-$4.

The Baha’i Campus Club presents an discussion and informal open presentation at 8:00 pm in CC 113. -

again, will be performed in the Theatre of the Arts at 8PM tonight, Sunday, and Monday. Admission: $4.00. (Students /Seniors: $2.50). Fed Flits presents Wizards, today and tomorrow at 8:00 PM in Physics 145. Admission: $1.00 for fee-paying Feds with I.D.; $2.00 for others.

-Saturday,

June

7-

Shubert’s Die Schoene Muellerin, with Alvin Reimer, baritone and Peter Simon, piano, will be performed at 8 PM at the KWCMS headquarters, 57 Young Street in Waterloo. There will be a Campus Health Promotion Jogging Clinic from 1:00 to 3:30 PM in MC 2065. There will be a $3 .OO preregistration fee (phone Health Services at Ext. 354 before June 4) or a $5.00 fee at the door.

-Wedn&day,

June- ll-

Pianist Walter De La Hunt performs at 8:00 PM at the KWCMS reichstag, 57 Young Street in -Waterloo. Gilbert and Sullivan’s Yeoman of the Guard is presented until Saturday at 8:00 PM in the Humanities Theatre by the UW Arts Centre and the Gilbert and Sullivan Society, sWaterloo Regional Branch. Tic ke”& are $6.00 (Students/seniors: $4.50). Cinema Gratis presents “A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovitch”, at 9:30 in the Great Hall of the Campus Centre.

-Thut;sday,

June

12-

For information on the weekly supper meeting of the Waterloo Christian Fellowship see last Thursday’s entry. The Baha’i Campus Club presents an open discussion and an informal presentation at 8:00 PM in CC 113.

Friday,

May 30, 1980;Volume

3, Number

3; University I

of Waterloo,

Waterloo,

Ontario


The Jeature this ‘week 1dokS , Intramurals ‘are now in full %t. four concerts’which t&k swing.‘wifb . ,action in’q&&~ place in the region in th;i! basketball, doftball and sl.owpast fortnight. The%amones,pitch, to-natik some of t-he / Mai Webster, feqnage He-tid, _. competitive activities, and in - aindLMin&wood are “reviewed. i,n&ructional an& club &tivities.

I. ., J’heBirthcontrolCentre,examples of meterarltes. sponsdi;ed The ‘giarii ‘_topaz is :belng ‘+,.T..g. Federation shown by the. Smithsonian r;ofn?-ncal Instl”ilttirof Wahhington D.C. 'inXrr~ir;~tirr?i

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wliich will also place on : Campus. Centre has anvie& the worlds -1afgest 3nouced its’& niew s@,mnier ; ~oord&ator, La-uric J-Jornell - ,aqUaFarine a-rid One Of the lapgest know-n examples of ‘.u*ril ““II1 hi“G EIIT\~F~~~P~~~~ thn yupbl Y.IOL116LILU

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’ .

Centre’s ,usual ftinctign- ofe the-..ra;re, Afriian g~~~* the

tansinite. deproviding ‘informatioq on family planning and birth . re,‘,~tat~~it~~o~~n~o~~~~c&&al. ~ ~ _-.. --------,sexualitv. -- ~----~, nutiifion. ~~~ will The . Centre I Harvey. veneriaF di&a>e, _. natural ’ tion, Dr. I?aur-Desautes, 2 also b& gueet weaker +t the \ . &i1d;‘birth,-ai?cl othellref&ted’-*, \ coti\rention’s‘ Saturday riight, / tnnifw .---r-7* banquet where ‘he wiy -I’, -,The Senate ’ UndergradNew-this sp&g as well i? of th’e uat& Council put forth a’nd -,*thp release of the revised. r recpurit \the history colSmkthsotiian’s g&m man” poster. S.en;at e passed several “pregnant h?dtiOIl. People who WaXlt‘tq cObrse name ,$?figes Which ~Hobie. Post, a . ’ -Renison attend the dinner should will riot affect the content OF .- --Tstudent, is, the, second in a contact Dr. C. S. Davidson’, any cotirseg. ‘1 m&es of “pregnact men” to 384 Quekn St: W., Kithhener. j , ’ gtace , the , Centre’s poster The: . Deans from the . (742-7222). . Chur.ch colleges hnd _r sin&.! the promotion began in ’ , faculties of Arts, Engine; 1975: i, * ’ .ering, .E’nviromental : Lynne. Verb&k, ‘a vdlp ‘: )unteer,at the Ctintre and past -_ &‘ordi<afor,-stated t-hat the ‘Ceiitre had recently received; s mended’ staff changes and Of these were accepted. _ ti $200 stipend to enlarge-and ’ I ’ Senate alscr- accepted also I;e,furbish Its comprehensive resource library,. and that _ for, information from. their . ‘_ - &pies’. Long Range Planning Copof 1 ‘Ou,r Bod:ie& . .. _. I 4 _ >I . information’ con- \ _ Ourselves, a ’ frequently’ “‘Audi&e& not familiar n?1t.tee9 cesning undergraduate prorequested reference book on with L$tin_America will be . The ‘. Report - fen&e ‘sexuality, -i9 once surpris’ed at the s’cope of grammlng* 6more available \ from the, proposes that the Uhiversity ,these. women’s Awareness’ -L- - Qentre. . -. , _ ,. an.d .their determination to notify other universities Of

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programme

Monday

to

Thursday

in

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again this‘ year. to assisf studenis during their lessons. Ford nc@es that no experien&e with’ horses is necessary; aswill provide’ the group training. Those who would !ike more information about the project can talk to Ford at 884-2579. 2. ’ < *

Grads to -.__ ’’

subject

* ‘.. &Ii;leralogical _ Societies which will be held in.Village The filq, in Spanish with II of UW,May 3X and June l,... .and hosted by the K-w Gem: 1English subtitles, depicts the impact on family life y I Y &xd Mineral club. daysed by the growing gap ‘,,,The event is open) to the . s.--public and will run from 10. between rich and poor.* I_ Saturday and Admissiop is,two dollars. 1 a.m.-to 6 p;m. . 1 lota,m. 10 6 p.m. Sunday. , Attractions af the COP-. .I \ vention will inelude corn- . . mercial exhibits, film presi ’ , T entations . and d;monstra’tenc~mhes ions of stdnecarving and , lapidary .-techniques. The -.$&al Ontario Museum will . * xoatribute a display of - The University of W,ater‘, x -. ,.-Canadian silver specimens 100 Senate- met Tuesday arid the Cariadian Geological _ L,survey - wi11 dis-play sd,me M”Y 20* 1 ’ ’ -. ‘+ >.’ I : : .. 2 I (I ,, . ,1 / . . r’ I .

open

theat Grad earnings must’ keep pace with rising costs. Also, some benefits such*‘as merit increases_ and group -g(X&aII; !?re -not avail-able to ‘-. . -, W&te

P&b’

increwe

,

,

UW saves 1 -.. “7

energy Moderate

seasonal

temp-

judged,

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much as,$210-,000 from UW’s fuel and electricity bill/ for xhperi;.iSCal yea’ ending in

-Acdording

According to JWG Sloan, When UW ,-President , to a recent. ’ djrector of plant opergtions, , Matthews makes his ‘ret-’ Ontaiio Research ‘Founcommendation to: the ‘Board dation newsletter, one forms 1 the un&ersitY bad hoped to &have three per cent from the of Governoi;;, concerning ., _a waste T “club”, charges dollars budgeted fees for teaching \assistants, members $20, and it 2.3’million for energy last year. Slbap he will suggest , a 9.93% away. Since- it ~8s initiated iri November 1977, the Canadian

gives

of

disabkd, instituted in 1973, will be in operation again this , suinmer. c According to Central Developement Riding Programme spokesperson JoAnne Ford, the ‘organization services a wide .range of clientele with physical and mental disabilities, and, has proven to. be of both recreational an.d theraputic value. ’ The programme will be , operating at stables. in the Kij,chener, Guelph! Strat,ford, and Cambridge areas. Voluhteers are needed ,_ * -I‘ ,’ .L ,_’ ._ ’ L ,j -’c’ + > .:4-i .I I . l:*itm.

m&y either i‘eject or, as in t’otalling MV,~tons;,andrep-Petites Marionettes (the this case, accept .the ‘resenting, an . approximate story of the man who lost his proposal.’ replacement value. of $~75 shadow and fouyd it again) The rate of inflation, the million. ’ * will be petformed bv UW CPI, tuition, increases, and ’ Fsr a modest $20 annual actors -in the Theatre bf the NSERC funding increases fee; participating companies Arts, June 6 - 9 inclusive. * tire all taken into ac.count receive bi-man t hly bulletins The play is co-authored by during- . the cominittee’s with available f;vastes,dtvided, Laurence Cummings’ and discu’ssions. . -into-ten FatFgories by type, -Robert Wiljer, and will , “Ofi a percentage basis, feature original music by “We would like to see mbre Raffi Arineniap and the the TA i@ease is higher &mpanies actively-particireceived by pacnginLthe-Exchange,” says dilection o’f Dublid A.idan than that Facult-y and Staff,” istates a Dr. Laughlin; “since this will, pagers.’ Grad , Club. newsletter, x The play begins at eight benefit all our memb’ers by . o’cl&k; admission is $4 tind ! “however it was recognized providing< increasedexposure by all: committee members for .our. ,I ‘$2.50. -I 1 -_, _‘.. I. . r . _ I .. _ . ,,~~~~I_;-^.:*..’ . _ ;i’-._. ,, -: / _ {’ I ’ r_ ;, ,.. . . .’ . , I. i . ,, I c . r. , .a. J 1: .< f B ‘r - ,, L ’ , _ -. -I--%1~I ,.i. , , *.:‘_ ,v!\ ._L,b lis.tingh.99


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and$&&%IJy tiork &‘uhd’ th”an ever, despite. the ~.I-- fh&it ‘has-‘betin ‘in bfeach ,of a requi-rkment of the ’ opekative -&‘orporatiofis Act since, 1970, ‘according Mike Mc&ean, \hrCRi President. , It appear?>:that every&e tiho has been accepted me_mbtSrship -by WCRI .‘sincd January 18, >!G& is really a member’at all. That date-was t.be l&t time

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responsible i0 alP-activities of the co-op except cooking mqals and, the’ :,manageri$ -d$ties which are- agsutied:.‘.:, by the one general-n ianijlg.er who is-paid- staff. ___ ‘. . The bui&ngs ,& 280 phillip . St. and‘:- the Dig Hamm.arskjdld britiqing on UniXersity*AYes IY$i$h mak!

&de&s are cw affairs, -washing-its dishes, doing its lagndry and most estimated to be 75~8d ,” -_. ,impbrtantl& living in its dcomodations, are,-accorfding: Th.e dne ,and. tw.o bec$room -A , ~ iv -the, Act, jus$ “intereste % membetis of the public.‘Y apartmetits are always 100% : St I %Ithough .&s ,problem is fv,ll a_nd are dist.ribut@&m a ,. , small, and itsl’em$dysho@d ’ .&eetin\g”.ii &i]f.be n&es&t;y' ‘I.+eniority @asi+ P@texperi&e~ :: I be rat.hac* uncomp!icated, f or 611, qualified w&l- be 1 , membeis ‘, indicates, thi&,rooms I there ar6.a lot of “interested (i.e; those accepted previous hOO% occupied, this fall. ’ ’ I members of the. piliblic” w2b P 1to’ January 1970) to ‘elect a 1 - -_’ 1- a * R:&C &e ,caici.lai&e_as are extrem& &red of ~nard -nf nirpctnrn. That ---Al.--’ -P “. ALpWllSJ,~ Ul i me -a& al ,ad&essing enGelo\pes, foldBoard will then approve t’he operating’cost& 6nd ‘iare kept ini * “notices: and licking mem&erships af all r&s’ lo& due i. the, -m ; v’ st&mps, ‘; embers idents who arrived since , rmTdi#4nntirrrr ’ ir, th1.- r ‘, When. I, + L.io-op first 1970, and all . revised 1by; / bf th; bu~ldines. *KathG I le&rned of its error in Iate laws, and will ratify d.act~ Krywick-, il vice nresident of ,‘.l&s -- April, stated McErlean,. the> taken. - by preyi$u,s, the !currenf Bo&&.point.ed -was legitimate, Boards. i The sedord,s cdmmittee dut that .because WC~?I -is‘ ‘;I newly ratified me@ber& w-ill 1. ieouired eiv-a $he rtisdonkibilitv ‘df .to Fay-munjcipa’l subsequently *re-elect the drawina lrn a. ‘lict nf all ta;es bn-T5ts properties, ‘*&m,bers” of the co,-op since ‘_ present rBoard and businesr s sttidents:gre ‘elieible ---- - to claim tiill*nce again resume.- . t . it+? in’cept3on in l‘b64. OIL le their full rental -Davments-_--- w’ I . . . _ -.\ McErleari is-satisfied that f-rtnnth Isttpr. tb CnmmittPP --- ---,_- -----____ -- -y--. --,. the pro,cedure will work/as ’ their income tax returns .’ ’ a-’ Bent* 8,26GX&lGd.; addressed planned. - and. s’tamoed envelod%s to _ / He is assured that ‘, I a_ * . Stutients _ interested in there are t,wla_residen’ts who, . . the Post dffice. 1 a’, ‘-_ -- -7 ’ -, have hmn re!sidr?hts asin~c! ----.- anDIvine to ,the CO-OD. -for These _ contained .l.&ters l!l&and Board-d$p&ved ‘,,I are therefor’e - l&itima%e, / ntitifying:all past p@de:nts e’s ’ ,ellglble ,for t,he first Gote..A of B general me&in& called n~mrdm nf ‘-WNX, nf th-ese /

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problems, and-t-hat a system “National-protiinGal resho;ld be wbrked out where s,fructuring,l” . begins the OFS would know ho& much National Union of StucEents .money it would have. For (NiJ’S) central c’ommitteti example, if the to.tai fee was pfoposal, “has been consid* _ ered by al4 as an es&&al fi& dollars, -0FS would, .know. that it was to receive I step .t&v&ds ,makihg our perhaps three dollars -pE it. st-udnt Qrganizations at the Freem$ri said- he felt this .fa 7 provihcia1 ahd natieqal view - of a l&elst ‘mo1;e ,. effective in,, be a realis& problem &h’ich ,co&ld come ’ -me&i& the need‘s 0 of . Canada’i post-skcotidary UP. students.” This propoyd progosar. further The restructuring,proved t-o b’e a . suggested ‘that the composmajor topic of ‘dismission ition of thk NUS Central ,and s&&e, &debate at the Committe,e would . b& in-. May 2Iyp5 NUS confereticel creased irr’ size frqm ~it-s 4 - L in Hafifa$‘, x - piesent twelve ’ inembtirs., iJederati,@ of’ Stud&s’ ” .Qne member wotiy, be ’ Predigent yei\,. Ffeeiilan, -i?l@$ed frqin each: province,* I. who attenfie .fh& conference, -it sugge,sted, and thes$/tein, a* ’ . &ted that .t%‘e resiructild.ng ’ Blong with’ fou; nie@bersproposal ’ was- ’ conce&d atlarge., a treasurer, ‘%hair-. iyith ’ having a ~.otrbilg . perspn . and a *NUS- s&vices \ -,provin@l ‘orgbnization co- , repyesenta,tive’ would make ‘ operating with a strorigd up I the committee’s B. full of, (s,evefifeen . ~ natiotial‘ movement.- With compliment : . the proposed d’Mqnges it’ ( rxierp,b&s.’ ; ‘,__s “‘wouldn’t - be’ ,‘OFS’ and - Although. Freeman sa?d I ‘NUS’, but one ,e<entralized that he’ could:“see the rie’ed to ’ - student m&ement: ‘with ~a bring alb students. together ’ I 5 strong .. provincial. and natin dne mo,v&ent-” he vvas 3 .ionalc comp’one~t;” a ,“f%!dera4. -“cautious about h&v -=it . ,>“’

..turing, : accordgng to , Free”_ -I ma-n,. is. thti _pr>op.osal td ,”. ’ cc&32t .o’rae .,fee _ fTom . ‘. stud$nts, 1(pre&ntJy,, .- OFS .” and *NUS fe& Fe separate). , ’ ,.and_ @nd this to. NUS in .> Ottawa. -P~oyincial groups.. I I. such,< as q!FS w,oyld ‘th‘en’ - submit. a tlu_dget, $nd .at a NUS conferencethe ‘prov[r@al rorganizations tiouldi ’ gppfy for funds. .. : ~ Sotie delegates ,beJieve,d t 6%-+,:: thst L such , a.< system of / - --ap@iciations *to NUS would -. create,many: ‘biidgetary ‘.v.‘ .’ ,s,-7 1 \. z -.v-. 1+ r* _-s. I ,

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.^ degree during the ceremony. -/ j, ‘$. -1 ‘.^ Dr. Lemieux has gained 8 wbrld-wide keputationfor-&is 1.’ + work in the field di!prgaGcchemistry, $nldwas the f@t:to ‘, $ prepare a synthetic sucrose, in X95?, Since the@%? h&ed:2k; pioneeie 3&t h&pynt hesi$ qf a variefy”Qfl!nlibi’gtic~; hoti& = I* recently it_e has synthesized. &+I ant&$. Dr‘. ‘Lemieti.$ has’ $ -also been active iii’r;es&arch contiernlitig: thb ti&&$nu#&~ ,: .. magnetic resonance (NMI%) in &$ ,de~e@i&i& o$‘;:;k Y”--‘-“u-.,

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resource, sdid Matthews, i&nderscored.by ._ a shortake of’ ‘. : ; e,<-., “.T .’ funds. . Matthews-&l&d ,fdr “‘a n’ew c-‘partnership bk.tween the - . infblntrv

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in the natu& of-,p?ovincial .* p@& ‘.bf the;) o.ounFr;yYt Fb$ government ii .e bigqifibant saudent org.&iationg. UXJ- ’ examti~e~;:the-Ontar~o~-mo~~~i like Ontario,.. ?Jw.hich has me.+.. <q the> old&,&id n&&p J financial contributor.‘: = lack’ c hi,gqy d&elope.& ‘said-%!&, Freeman ngt@ t&+-many _ oFS) som.e prov.ince& . while t&jd~~&af, the &&pitime to go back’ an wkized, ~tU+nt+OiCe, 1 de3egate.q. wagted NJJS is a@n.palled to pro3inceg are *a’t I‘.a.. much’ to the@ co.uncils and. talk , +d ,, fill in ‘the ‘gap-$i providing‘ 6 yotin&$$ stage $: &@-opabout : the ._. proposal in. 0 “+,T. -.’ and‘ m$terials . menf,‘a I preparatiofi, for the Winresources t which would no.rmalljl come “L While t&tie Gay’&-little nipeg NIJS conference in’the gr+p, and ,’ philosophical . disagFeel&nt fail. . I . I,_ from a,provin+ oFten results in the between studeliT.ie&lers in The Ontario Federation .of . which Sta@nts’ (GFS) reactiofi to ciU$catio~ of,seGices, @?S yarious areas, the, question the proposal, whiie ‘expres’ i&formation officer. Pet&r,, of policies and r campaign sing concerns in some ar,eas, Birt maintains: that part of ‘strategies ‘hay’ differ. Birt h:s$ beeFgenerally positive. NiJS restfiicturing must stated that a rev@&- NUS Diana CItirkq, ; of -, QFS, involve “trying t‘6 come t,$&:$&uld be better ‘;ible t&deal I bbliev.es, _._ thit - oaf -_t \.~ 1 “. .. 1/ . ‘.;“,;.F&i .*___l_-2 I,) ..I. “,. . ,‘,4.., / “.\ Fm+@~~,:----~ _- -.\, -.

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~&&‘&& ihe res-truct’&d NUS : p&viding anot&k$ p&t’ ‘F‘. ‘iil~,~&.tibIe to a>d&$& if&elf ~the.: cQu?tPy ,v$tb $I$ -NI f:Tp “t&e fi~lationshi~~-,-~fween ,_ fieldworker ,~I&@$$tly ,Z 1:*:.‘t: he’ .iti@ :gover‘ntibntti .a@d , csi@nbd, .to .Ontagig~c;,‘.-_ . “ r ed&atitin.-“In con#ittiti&al The.:delsg~t~es.‘~~~~~~arri I’ te&$$’ said- Birt, !!ed&ation 3, mation I.ta rpciX@ze ‘a is,++ctly provincid,“ but of provide +liason ’ si$, Lbc course‘ economica!ly, the” -CEGEP and : *.r+$versi ,j~federal lgov&nmeht plays. a levels t--of stddbnt -X:orga ization in Quebec: _ \ m’ajgf part.” Ih adgition to: Freem; O’ne ) of _ ti&. proposals Debi ; ‘Rrock, vice-chal agreed upon at -the con-. ference t wa&” the, ,mtjon, -&rS'O,n of extern+l relation and BEER researcher, =al which. ‘concerned reassi&. Kent 1 Lewis, ” q;‘ederat ic ment of a NUS fieldwork.er? treasurer, -repre&n!Fd U Since OFS h as four of its owh-fieldworkers, delegates ’ at the conference; 1. ’ Marg Sanc+s~ _. -

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‘. Beep!Morebeer! I~~-~~thecro~~~o~thatsoonerorlateraservltorwould comeby - I w~8 not’tooworried, s8 haJfofth6 secondpitcher was still left. Securit$. Visionsdanoedbeforeroyeyes;notthetelevions,~t’~~le&nd~plep mygl~~~eCarolentcombe,AlanO~,Lk~~orpe,andRuthFaldlngcavortedin the bti. Neo-FreuWcit;y. CarlFriesenphotographedmewithahoodoveqhisheadno, tiiiat’s a cigabbat’riear my left eye:-Andthere’s Bruce MO&~ jbgging ‘rouI$dthe ~h~~...(.~wctiterjo~edmyelbowandIlookedup,bletu;-eyedand~.Ioordered - a round of OldThought Provoker. B&r wa8 making masilly.) Barry Tripp, Animal Angold;EdMshoneyandTammyHoirne~a-ado~nguns~~~malnmpshade : while.Qnne parachutedinto the piper tape machineand shotconfetti through the . w-In&s of my mind, nowwelllubricat& Ughtl Horrendous,Searing- whichwq~~ to turn? Ira,the ofaceaardmtrk,p~intedmutely(ararecondition)sndI~graspingthe Viper’sjoystick,threwinfullturbopower,bls&ingtheshipthrou@deepspace.Itooka swig from thebottl9 of @mianPanther Sweat(a guarsntqxlcoronary ineveqQx%tle). -Foi%$fed, I shdt .thestarflghter over the asteroid Base.My Number Three screen lit ‘ ‘showing Conunandmss Marg Sandersonat C6ntrolCentral - forta4aMy ~volume wasoff LandNumber SaTtendepicted~SglviaofTerrsw~~4~0.263a j @isapp~o&l;~withfull cognizanceof ext8n~ting m),Atlesst,I hopeit w&man’s’. And ahead,cent&ng‘in the crosshairs of my_ship*&blas@was Blackie &.%neault,his drive trail a tangledmess 6f two point line giying him away,his cover . bl&vn. And tli&s the 1%of mad photographer JWB. : 0 ,

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According td Perspective III, a Statistics danada study into the,way Canadians i ‘live,-look, act, and play, more than 2.6 million Ca.nadians,are grossly obese; 6,24 thov>and Canadians are alcoholic; the average Canadian drjnks 99’litTres of are eit;her. stiidents, teachers, br . alt%hol per year; 1/3rd of the population fadmihistratars. Murder, child abuse, mental $ness and-suicidb are increasing;/.

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, For years no&, ‘the Qnt&io Federation of Studerits has been calling d& the p’rov!ncial gQvernme&to hold ai accessabiliti, -study, XAHhotigh ,this proposed study is sometimes confused. tii;th“all meanner of other things (particularly a ‘stratificati$ , -study L a study of who goes to university), it is simply a sf’udy of why- people, decide to-go to univ&ify and .why they don’t, taking intd,acc&mt such factors as finance&backgroutid,, etc. sI The .OFS b.elieve:s and has st&ed that those j who .go .to ,u.Gersity: are ,generally frbm- middle ‘ahd up-p3 C‘lasisfamilies, iand’ ‘that _*th’e_ ,.gdal of :,universal accessability. -which, . the gov,e&&&:s& for it.self is--n&t bei& a&hibv,e& if--it e\i_er was. (S ,‘\‘And &o-w-OF2&has a document which corrobGat& its .view. a.,--’ . F.Is T-he Die:,..cast?, a’ study of the “E,dueatid&l, ahd ‘Wohk I

- Randy Bauslaugh 0” Grad _,I \- . History .- . ,‘_ , ’ , .I ‘thihk t,h e quality of life- in Canada is quite good; there is freed6.m and oppoctutunitieq aye ,,there to par- C ticiptit.6 iti those activities whish ar_e . iinpdrtant to me; I find no undue -&strititib&; that’s -Ghy I find the - I .

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I ’ %Iatg+ali and opporStuqifies al-1 .-I p&g one io ent_er: iritb any field 0~9 iva_nts ar& good;*Each, country -. T& -&St ser+s -1 l+. problems. 1 $roblem here. is that things are ver$. ! 3A..: immxsonal. . /

I tuition++ .&&s~~$xpens.es for -.books and ‘/tran-sptirtation, $nd som.etim&s the expenses of room; a-nd board, acqess to post’ Vsecondary e@ucation may be’ somewhat ‘re&i&teg tcr per&tins wifh mor<plentiful resources.” This echoes the OFS fe,ars that. people from lo.;we$ncotie families are not grop‘erly rep&sented ‘f ~ at tiniv&@ty. Further: ‘“CIZ?arly a full pictur.e’ df how’young peoplk meet%he . . ‘\ costs of p&t-secondary.educationrequir3es a f’uiier irrvestig’ation than we h+ve been able to do,“. concludes study~acthor Or. Patil. -Anisef. In. fact, the sttidy,‘fin~&$d by+the Mi-riistryjof‘~Coll~ges I .,:an-,:U~niversities, calls for one of Ihe- major elembnts of 1an i ‘- a&e&bil.ty. study.’ .

*. :,I _ -Your qualit-y of ii@., is:. yhat.$ati make: it; a’ state ofimind and&j&~~ . ’ be .refle&ed in.obiecti~e-stati~fids,

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I ;, L*.We do O.K.; g lo_t better tf;&~mcrst~. : pl@es and not that mvch tiorse’tban - I - .; ,thii! rest. I think it‘ cduld be a lot”

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1 Life is tifiat J&U. make- of it.. I Happiness is everyove’s maj,or concern, as’ long as you dan go -Out . and get that _ without hurting yourself or anyofie elsk. ’ 1 , -

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-copies/of,the-,s.t~d.~ to-presidents of all the student unibns alcross., the -pr&ncei;kbut “those plans have. b.een scra’pped: The -- ., ..,&ovetih,ment &irnX? that it da>tin@ afford to send.out ,as. man,,y Gomplimentary’h;copies as. are wanted. <Other #an that, -the Ministry d&s not .a.ppear ta be‘working on the matter. \ ,., What has the .Minis$&ne i-n,the.pas,t? In a special,ineeXhg ’ with mi&ster‘ Bette St@hdnsor$ heldonJ%bruary 29, Chris , 3 McKillop, OFS ,Chairp&son,’ outlined’ the organiza+ti&‘S ideas ! : - for an ticcessability @ud-yVIt wa& to t&e-place over aseven year , period, following a s&iectib@of students fro,m grade twelve to thk ‘,I ‘end of .un’ive$Q$ Step henson rejectedyt he propostil on-t hebasis - of.itszVlength and @.s.cost: . , , . ’ . It is.clea$‘thabt an accespability study is necessary to ins’ure the _i:ntegri’ty of thti conce$t.of univetisal acces8. If this study proves ._that Gvstu-&n*s~: fr0-m . ‘a &: !.emjfigpn$&,_anId ,:s&ia.l, ,&rat’a :.&&ter I .t, ~+“~‘~$~.~$$&j$~&.q ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~,~~~~~i~~ j$$&$&,fi~&i;-t*‘~&~r~~~~~pc$..~~ if:: --,’ .,

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on the other-hand, &iv&sal.acce& ‘doeS not exist, :as is fe-ared, the g,overnment sho’uld, -and must, tiake changes igi/ts funding , policcies to universit2s. ’’ The g.overnment can &d-has ignored..the &gges.tions of OFS atid other b%odiesconcerned about -the quality of educXtioti, btit it’ cannot *ignore the findings of++ own stu-dy., Armed with the -information and -recotimen.d,ations of Is The Die Cast?, student representatives _should cdnt.inue,. tb p-iesstire goirernment officialsto have an a&e&ability study. , .., Perhips, justsperhaps, the question o-f universal ac.cessability / . wiil be &syered. 7 L’ . . . .. -I ’ _ c \ PA; Ira N-aymtip -, ._I -Y

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Univepity Is the Die On May 2, Dr. Paul Anisef’s stu,dy dealing with barriers to post-secondary education was released. Is The Die Cast? Educational and Work Destinations of Ontario’s Youth, which was financed by the Ministry of Colleges and Universities, has received a great deal of interest from the Ontario Federation of Students, although the Federal government has not visibly reacted to it. The study is a follow-up to the Critical Junctures series in which 2,555 grade 12 students were surveyed in 1973, with 1,150 being feadministered the survey every 2’ years until July, 1979. obtaining a “Because education postsecondary entails costs including the of tuition fees, payment

Addresses ceremonies.

education: Cast? ’

at Jast week’s

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“Resolved, the Graduate Club, University of Waterloo, recognizes that there are issues which must be dealt with and sympathizes and supports in principle the need to protest, but the Graduate Club does not support the Federation of Students’ fee-hike strike.” After an hour and a half of debate, much of it heated, the Graduate Club Board of Directors voted at itsmeeting of Tuesday, May 27 to accept the resolution above. The vote was 11 for, 2 against, with no abstentions During the discussion, former board member Ray Clement presented a petition signed by 20 graduate students who were against Grad participation in the fee hike strike. It further charged that the Board

Impritit

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At the last meeting of the Graduate Club Board of Directors, held on Tuesday May 27, it was decided that the number of affiliate memberships to be given out for the coming year be 225, 25 less than this past year. It was also decided that affiliate members only be allowed to sign in three guests per visit. The purpose of the changes is not so much that the Club is overcrowded (it happens that crowds get too big to handle, but not often); the Grad Club wanted to reduce the number of people who came in without being full members. The feeling was that, as a “Grad” club, graduate students should be served. The figure of 25 less affiliate member; ,was chosen -because it would not incur a sufficient loss in revenue to cause the Grad Club to run a deficit for the year. It was’ stated th’at 50 affiliate memberships generate between $6,000 and $7,000 in business per term. Ira

Ira Nayman

Nayman

convocation

photo

by EK

Clement stated that the Zrad Club was still a social :lub and suggested that it ;hould not decide such matters without holding some . sort of poll of its members. One member -pointed out that there was a big difference between grads and undergrads and that Ontario is underfunding ‘everybody. He suggested would not be responsible if- not supporting the fee hike that the best way to affect voted in favour of strike would prove counterkhange was to vote against it the government in the participation. productive; it would be a A number of objections case of splitting causes . upcoming election. common to both graduates An informal quest‘ioning were introduced on the and undergraduates, and of a dozen Computer Science subject of the fee hike strike. that the media would blow it grads taken by a member of One member felt that it does up. She pointed out that the the Board from the faculty not emphasize the correct media had already taken showed that none, were issues and that it will only willing to participate in the serve to alienate the things out of context and strike. government. He stressed insisted that the Federation Among the reasons given that the public should be of Students was striking for this decisioti were the made aware of problems in over more than the 7.5% facts that some we?e earning post-secondary education; increase. what they considered to be the university Presidents Jules Grajower, a gradenough as Teaching Ashave already spoken against uate History student and istants, some were visa underfunding in research board member, stated that students who payed less in and development. the tuition increase was Canada than they would in “There are obvious things . unreasonable, that the rise most other countries, and wrong with OSAP, for in-income for students was finally, that the fee hike example...but we aren’t not comparable to the rises strike affects the university, going to agree on how to in the cost of living and that and not the government effect changes...the increase OSAP increases were far action of fee ceiling (in tution) is not unlower than inflation. , increases and underfunding reasonable,” he said. “(The) tuition increases is students wish to protest. Alex Kostiw, President of an attack on the standard of Ira Nayman the Graduate Club, said that living of students,” he said.

Grads out of Fee Hike Strike

30, 1980.

highCuts affiliates

expenses for books and meet the costs of posttransportation and somesecondary education retimes the expenses of rooi-n quires a fuller investigation and board,” the. report than we have been able to states, “Access to, postdo.” secondary education may be The study shows that somewhat restricted to summer jobs rkmain crucial persons with more plentiful for students wanting to go to resources.” university or college. “The This comes as no surprise main source of financial t.o OFS. Peter Birt, OFS suppoti for all postinformation officer, has said secondary students is sumthat “the report simply mer eafnings and was proves --what we’ve been ’ reported by a third of our saying for a long time: that sample as being most money, not ability, is the important,?’ it says, adding main factor in determining that “summer earnings are who goes to University and Frucial to many as their College.” main source of financing OFS Chairperson Chris education and that this is McKillop said that “we are particularly true of- universtill waiting for that key sity students.” element of research on the On accessibility to higher question of accesibility” in education, the study ,made to. the study’s response many recommendations, statement that “clearly a full some of which tiere: picture of how young people l broadening high school

were given, degrees conferred, and medals awarded Photographers, ai usual, were out in full force.

counselling facilities l parents and students being brought,in at an earlier the guidance stage in process ; closer coordination betvarious ween * the schools and the postsecondarv institutions to allow for more intelligent transitions ’ l affirmative action to broaden the interests of women. McKillop said that OFS will contiriue to study the report in detail and will renew its call for a report on the financial barriers to education. He also stated that the Federation will press the government to make conchanges and imCrete provements -to the postsecondary education system as a result of this existing document.

May

Graduates ’ Fall Covocation There is still time to phbne studio for an appointment. Graduate

attire

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1 '. Tired, boys? G# & flue, Frank? Strained your; w&t, Gord? .Too \I * 1drunk, Steve? How about you, Nick - not enough pizia? What’s the story;h&-e? You received $2500.00 to put on a show,. and. Summer madr’less rocked ui what did we get? Certainly not the,freniied (typic+ Head?) rock n’ roll, : pneumatic drill. in an oluerstocke party shdw expected, lo)ut rather a sor:y display of fdur guys riding on I dew&at ing‘ effect of rhpid-f ire ; an imdge. Anvone who has e&erienckd Teenage kead prior to the release of terms Carthaginiati prop& their second albuh, Z&&id dify will know’exactly what .that im*age’is. hype-r-boogie on and off iamp Sfiedifically, it is a band arisen from .the dregs of, Hamilton able to blast. satisfy the most voracious rock: any’ rocker off the grdund sending the* straight into rockabilly heaven. . An energy sensation .of this. nature would hbve been tie11 woith; ihi . “ No less ,than four ‘hea.dliSrs $6.00. “audio-assassin” competitioti. -II\ . Perhaps it was the r&nstrous’size of the arena, only 1/3rd full, whe’6 E&ton Bombers opened the’fest i ’ In past K’-W-gigs the band has pulled in ca_pacity numb&s. I thou$tthis was &pposed to be the”Year of the..H&ad? if-that was not enough Teenagc / Technicalb, they’re pekking. They’ve got ---j new light’ men; n w.2ound May 2ht, only to find morkq men, ev&ything-needed to power and exploit those famous f hree“atid ’ ... , ’ four choid riffs. 1 - -f Frbnkie Venom’s ears. The neber-miss b&t of NickStipapitz, b&king ip steady rock riffing by _ Oii’ May‘ 24th, -the’ Piqb WI Gord Lewis .and ‘th;e st$ght rhythF madness: bel&ging td \Steve flabon I demslition derby as Kim Mitt&x e was there, but sotiething was missing. b&r a p&od ,of four years I*ve seen these boyS grow from 9 hilar&s puntifig aufhority we? ti new _ punk band (reineinber.“M ly Ge Fneration”?) toja respectable par y.band. In n ight. tho&e dapper dudes of &t .the past thes* guys co&is itentl y put out, acquiring a following ! nspirkd by closed theshow with asearing~r the pied piper of minor-chc 3rd pop, Fran& Vqnom. But that was before the Stacey Heydon produc tio n of theirdatest .vinyl exctirsion, which r&en& into spasms of orgasmic anar( :strugk Igold. Q-o!d means easy gigs which lead to e&cy moqey, velv@&n same,’ and.you, ctin tho‘nk your : *. ’ Tjgckets,,red plastic baseball caps and an endlyss geries of T-shirts. s For the band; this is great; The I$ad are reachirig a larger audience, I t&y’re,%uring, their countleq? singles are being played on both AM . and FM A radio ..nstations across *-the country. And they’re hating a good. .’. time. Ur are they! ., _ \ photo _ by EK _ Wedii&day -night they sure looked. bored. They stood, there and Lord Venom struts hisst ff. , 1,. : r _played, gnly moving those muscles necessary to genFr$e sound. Frdm Frank *e received only a few scowls and two minutes of tiafter hanging any rate, Shaker was soori finish&d. And the, percolating people had .. . ’ \. ‘in the last sorig of th& evening. Oh, excuse me,,1 husf mention that we ~\’simmer&d down. - . 1 &ere sIjokeh to, that is, “cussed” at. Hey, Frank, you’ve lost the _ ’ About an hou: &‘rnori later,.the n&n attraction .- picked up theti -1 . I , .,. I ’ sinc&ty so-why bother saying anythin& ,- I guitars... ’ The‘ crowd+-made up mostly of KW teens, was up and bopping -thl Teenage Head’s- music dkpendsheavily on.&ume And the kind if- ’ . se’cond the;&ead hit the stage. They were ready to kock ‘till they frantic melody th&;ma@ ydu start. -to, boun&,in yoQr s&.$ ** spite‘of , ’ .Li I‘, ‘dropped:;‘! while back, .SteLe said, “the band’s excitement and energjl yourself .. s / __ , deije&ls q lot on.x:rowd reaction, we feed off an audience the same way The lead singer looks,l&e & &os+bet&een Fry- ,’ kie Avalon and, one ‘f I , the$f ‘feed?jff cl&” -~ r’ , ; * d the Everly- brg‘th&. fie appeared to be singin4: some sort of words, Teena@ Head &no lam&r hungry. And I’m no lbnger frantic foq ’ but they were indistinguishable; it Ldidt$t appear to be jusf the terrible . ‘crank@, adoustics of a b;ii-ely disguised ,roller rink Ip.at was at faul$ either., L. k$ Milthorpq - H owever,.no one seemed to mind:, A@parently,t& Feder&ti$n of Studen& &$-eng, sot.’ lost $2,900 on * . -&is ‘c?nc&t+ .It -p;obably .h>& $omethiF8 to :do with the 5 hoice of r location, The&“&e;& onl$ abaut‘350 peo$F ‘at tl-ie‘T&eiiage H&ad* .-_ concert ‘and the room was ,nowhere, nedr,.to. being c$owdcd. -+. fTeknage Qead .played,twb&t.s w&h. @et@ &~h approximateiy.45 _I, ‘. I .W&ll, it’s yvt -inother ,Teenage Head concert - the first one for US, . minutes long. They’d har,dly &&ted,-to play a$ suddenly the pub-was. . l&&ver . Our iirst. itipression- yas that every&& -w&s really yoking:. the over, *People were folding up .their .&&it: sui-$%se~ avd gping home. ,.- + . .$each fuzz s’et. Ther+were-very few outrageotis punk freaks, which . LQokitig back at tl-&‘&ncert it mu& be s$id, that ,hunk rock has its . was disappointing. ’ is’ much’tiare ’ fun. than. the appeal’ - the head-tossing-htippini .” _’ - For m&t ‘of the guys, the ideal punk outfit w& a T-sl& with jeans measured prancing of ‘disco. : . and an old skinny tie of. D d’s slung with. calculated noncfi%lance . Nevertheless, in our opinion, punk rocklis stjll j&t a fad. When-you - . 7 - around the neck. , . see a girl in the crowd dressed atid painted to %rm an almost exact ‘- , ’ repbca of Debbie ,Harry c$ Blondie, it. makes orie, Cdndec if she had a The warm-up band, called Shaker, consisted of four fresh-faced guys <. who really would& look too out of place at a Baptist picnic. As Shaker ,Pat&‘G;jlllant costume la& year: -j ,% I Carole Titcomtie ‘skittered into one ‘tif their frenetic numbers, we sipped our diluted brew . . . I Alan Or? ,-< and Alan’scr’ibbled things-like “50% ndstalgia doused in acidtrain”. At \ ‘- ( I. /, _/ ,I \

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hS&eral things w&k bn my Find ds. I made the pilgrimage to Guelph for the Ra%rndties sh& on M&dpy night: -_ I.,‘&* w~iula it &mpare to their &iperb El j Mocambo show of last summer? ,2. .How woutd the songs;frol;n the Phil - Spector-produced &cl of the Century album : - -. 1 3. -4 come across? Th& answers: prettJ good; .great! ‘- ‘The U. of G. gym was a bif more than half t full, including several carloads of ,Waterlog,, - ,t$pes, OEping act $teve .-Blimkie and the , Reason iot quite a few people hopping with a good set of fast, dlean, danceable tunes and i fin&’ threeApart barmonies. Good warmup ‘.. -band. i ‘I\, _ ‘&cl then...the Ramones. ,I -Thei jufiped, into “Blitzkrieg Bop”, “Teenage Lob&omy”, and “Rockaway Beach”, followed by a good mix of songs ‘from ’ ali five of their studio albums. They had TheZ%tro&ofPunkblowawayUofGrockers. ‘.-trouble keeping their guitars in tune and +here \ , ~ -tie& a few minor mistakes, but they were as a. Guitarist Jbhnny Ramone proved. once eneigetic and fun as ever. No flash powder, (again that he has the fastest right hand in no lasers, no @mm@ks (except for ‘the roadie rock. Marky Ramone managed to make ‘- -. . \ with, the cretin mask and the ‘GABBA exhausting highihat wprk look casual, and ’ GABBA HEY’ sign); just raw rock ‘n roll ‘at . Dee Dee Ramone, kept pounding out those high volume with- &q-high energy. Somehow bass lines without letting up. As for Joey, I I can’t see siriger Jo6y RamoFe blowing‘up a couldn’t hear much of the vocals since I was T.V. on his head. Who needs it?. ricjht up fronf.‘No matter.,.he looked‘just fine .By the way, the. songs from the n&+&bum up there, and I knew most of ihe words , were terrific. “Let’s Go”, “I Cah’t Make.11 On anyway. Time”, and &speci&lly “I’m Affected” (my fave / The evening ended after thttie long encores of tGe evening) sounded like vintage and after~ Dee Dee had given away a]1.his bass Rampnes, as good ?r better than the oldies. picks. The crowd dispersed peacefully, -’ r Phil Sp@or’s “Wail” was nowhere to be 6 cdntentedly, suffering only. frog a mild case of\ found,. -, /

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audio impairment. I My buddies ‘and< I tracked down th& ; Ramones at the Little Short Stop V&-i&y Store up the r&ad at about 11:15 p.h. In exclusive on-the-spot interviews with Johnny, \ Marky, and Dee Dee (Joey stayed on the bus), I leirned thdt Johnny’ didn’t see an3 bubblegum that caught his fancy <an4 Ma‘rky couldn’t decide <which brand of aftqrshave to _ buy. Dee Dee, the. most extroverted Ramone, gave me some-good advice about’what kind of bass amplifier I should get. End of exclusive on-the-spot interview. . . b I, ’ . \ -


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blues that The Min jj,.ewood Band Seems , most comfortable with,-and certainly, :’ performs most successfully. It featured‘ fLrari;?rr hoor’ the CL-ilk nf &tt arAwh uocak set t0.a’ rambling guitar a------= -, and the stil nging sound, of the harmonica: .i . .PartU. L V.nf .-I.-u Ihat m;lkPn>Thc? .-.--.-- .-- Min&wood ----J--. --k~,j.p~p~~~y~ airs .vFwakaa~.3,a..r auy=.r~L.r;, _ irs, k$‘, , ,‘l;;*;*r*irrG w&bi&‘h@e th& air e!e&iq,x ,,: I+md work is that, de$pite the large . ,,-~ number of instruments that they are: . : ’ -I &c&n and; equally, >” hard . to .‘.. .kL -working with,, their sound’is (for the most I, ,,cqyy-yl,. ’ _ ’ :- -‘..-I_ ‘1,. . . part) nicely layered and cohesive. TTh~‘Mk4m~~nnA’~ FGn~e~p~~y3,61&s ~0blue ~, , $. They spice the . Instruments blend together with one ‘another into aharmonious unit, rather\ ,j -‘r; )f hard?- pure+,,bar. t&m trying to compete witpeach other , +,_ T th&j bj$tLc a FirlAb ‘, _ for music& space., It’s rare that the richness of the music becomes muddy, . _ .and when i t does it’s due more to a surplus of 1volume thanan excess of n. \ ~OUryJS. ..‘If &&re lookina‘ for .mu&cal teabs or bounds or fancy ‘gimmitiks; for@ about L ‘The Minglewood Band. ItsTnot part of’ ,..,: their style. The closest-they get to that , kind of showiness is I@att -Minglewood’s ’ I self confident spruttinga b out the stage, . de ‘uiniqu.te by an ,/ .t .’ ., , 1’harmonica and “Y I + which makes one think of him as a : slightly less sophisticated version of Mick 7 ’ I. b gutt.ar work.. ./ Jagger. , z ‘I%& till I.,Die” slowed the ,~ is a good tight. iasantly and ‘allowed~ e. , -__ \ ‘The Minglewood-.I&nd L- AL, -la--thm>of some, 1 band with a good, tight sound. And that; * _ i,n them pleasant co-mpany I .. 1 &r;-playing; 20. I’ . itself, makes . . I ‘prove-that ‘he can use his. voice not only ^_ : .for an evening. : -- V. J: Sint$rqm to hit &ard, but also- to,$ease and caress. , ,_ ., .,

‘union thatdrove the small crowd almosl -orazy with delight, Whether it was tffe ’ sultry warmth of the evening, the free

LUS with all the -force’/Gf a 2tiyalDoulton warelyouse. The &n roll could be mkasured. in stl,:-fhere PUS enough kick-& .in;thq last ‘coup/e of wetik? to c&Gado. _. ~ , ~ &led for pble po$tion in the tt Min@wood and the Cape‘ i&s,May 15, in the*BaUroom.‘As /@ad-bopped into Bingeman’s, pa& space than- that between., I \ I the site, Of the- Max’ Webs’ter .dqgi Co. kxerciseh their rumizrpgxity “ci-owd. The following ‘ectual oweGght,’ the Ramonq, diWn of “Darling, yousend:me ;:% P@WerlooCwill r@er -be--the &‘rock Stars fdr that! jr1,. :. M Drew&k \a.

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photo by ASA s:Eo$s first with method,. muscle and m@n&.---‘- . I is just about the worst song they have ever immediately come to,mind),‘and the , . ’ ‘. recorded. It was sad that the’opening bars of - performances of the players fell short of, what I ‘havecoine to expect of the-m: “Paradise Skies”, from Vacations, sparked 6. So what was I doing here, surrounded by ?.,t.he liweliest- crowd response. Sure, it’s not 8* such a bad ba’d‘ song, but... but.:. people who think think only of o7 the Beatles .&atles as the .@ i” McCartnev was in beforeWings? before Winqs? 4. 4 In the March 1980 issue of Trouser. Trouser _ band Paul McCartney Press, David Friake, in’isncarticle about RO _ , . Mix%&ch$nged con$derab& sinc’e,I3a+t them,.a@ f.I- wanted.to wanted. to see what whaktraokb: track\; ,I Wood, makes the @lowing followinb observation: *its 4s its ‘-_ ? saw them,.&d ’ .: 2nd theb and areat great orihinal original ‘&sic ‘music .are not tilwavs always - ‘.‘._ the’y &ye were n& now &i1 ori: And to t&U tell 6oti you & the b&h. truth, I ‘. came away from the show-ver$-i$pr#&ed = i,-, matter’of fact they are rarely - one and the, x same.” t and ~f&ngf.&ch better about the ‘J@ebstersi _ 5. in the past three years; I have-attended -the the I , -. - 7.. The’ni~~f’obvious,change,is ’ ‘&y&cem&t-jtiC TCWV~J _;: lk16 I&Y Max WohdmWebster shnwc; shqws and and as as aa readt result have have ‘replacement&f Terry W~tkincd:WithAb~ Watkinson-withaave “’ ’ Stone. All I know about the new-guy is that; ‘:’ seen them‘go through many change&the introduction and development of new material he was.;with a Toronto-based bandcahd and styles, personnel changes, the increase in . S mphonic, Slam that released a self-titled ’ ’ v the size of the audiences (the first time I was al+iiurn in 1976. The-departure of Mr. ’ one of a huge crowd of about Ifi), and the I Watkinson means that we:*won’t, haveto listen to “Let Go The Line”, or to his often’aimless development of Kim Mitchell as one of my : fl -favorite .on!stage personalities. wanderings on the synthesider ‘(sor-, Terry). . 8 But would-this guy be any better?+ 8 I wasn’t very receptive to the changes implied by Vacations,’ and I began’ having The answer, thankfully, ,is yes. Stoner‘is a , serious do&% about Max after the release of very competent keyboardist- and, according to the young lady accomanying me, could even their live album. ,Liue Magnetic Air is one of be considered good-looking, something that I---‘the most disappointin~g live albums that I have cannot really be said about the other ever heard. It’s not that it’s a bad record, it Websters. / really.isn’t.- It’s just that it is so much less than what it could have been.. Some’of Max’s, It is this degree of normalcy that allows him to fit in so well with the. weirdness of Max - Webster. (If that doe&? hake a”ny sense, and Y’ -* , , z c\... / i -

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don’t worry about it.) . 8. What I was really interested’ in, however, -was’the- new songs. We were exposed to five’ , tunes from the ‘new, as yet utjrelease$, album,. tenatively titlecIIUniuersal’Juueniles.‘They were.all quite good, recalling the‘jazzy, Steely Dan-is,h third album,44&iny Up Ny Sleeue. . There were two songs that really stood out, I N - “Battle Scar’: and “In The World Of Giants”. ‘The latter is a great boogie tune, and ranks with “LilS;,’ and “Beyond the Moon” as one of Kim’s strongest instrumental efforts. .. 9: The entire spectrum of the Max Wibstei sound was well represented including a song. : from their first album, “Summer Turning ,Blue”, which”1 haven’t, heard themJ play for more than two years. Of course they didn’t play’everyone’s favorite (they can’t), but , * obvious absentees were “Toronto Tpntos” and “:Diamonds, ~Diamonds”-(one of- Kim’s s* \

faves). But I’ve become used to it. They / haven’t played my favorite “Lily” for more , _ . ‘ than a year-and-b-half. * ’ 10’. I always thought that the song Mr-. ‘1 Mitchell enjoyed playing the most- was “Beyond the Moon’:, and again at $2 concert it was the stroegest piece of the evening, It .always seems to display May at their tightest, and when Max Websler is at its best, ‘it’s hard (damn n&r impossible) to ,find a better rock , and roll band in this country, period, 11. I still have one question. The old versiog of “Research at Beach Resorts: includes the lines, ‘Take your Dinky Toys to Barbara, she sells hotdogs at, Wasaga &ach’. Wha,t I want to know is, whatever happened -, to Barbara? I-Ias she stopped selling hot do&? Is she no longer takingscare of Dinky Toys?. Maybe she moved. 1’11probably never know. Peter ,.i ’

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w UGal w AAdJGul-GJ.lGlildull ofp~why? . To shoFhowpeople die? To showthecraziness, t$e laziness, the sadness andthe madness and _ . the badness of a generation? I Thenovelisanaccurate , portrayalofthepunkscen& it’s hean and it Thymes in the strangest, derangestplaces. -But it’s a surorise

There are two kinds of Ibooks on science: textbooks which can ?p@ l$e understdod bg s: %ird year science student/s and ‘general’ . *- _. science booksfor those who are i$er&teg in Licience but don’t know all that mtich about it, ~A%T@sK Textbooks must be. ea$er to wfite:*th& writer pyJ-=*. ,I can stick to facts; with general scie-rice books , meant for &‘ss con$umption, the writer has to ,. *- be ectertaining as well as informative. +, 11 that Colliq-Macmillan&hose S.till, general science bdoks flourjsh; ISZI?C L .., *-; b~$kpublis~men,tiouldtqyso -A$mgv is particularly r@ed foi- his tiork in this j L:.’ _ ,blatantlytocashinonatrend -- genre.. Cosmic‘ Landscape, (voyages b%k I aldng the.photon’s track) is 6 pretty good ent+G ‘likepunk. ’ ifito this field, although it has problems. I” j Isn’t itmvwhat peoplewilldo -’ The premise of Michael Rowan-Robinson’s JIbook isthdt e&h band% the spectrum of ligF& ladAlwol11~ri’t.t.hi~ksn. reveals different facts abcut the universe; in ,pprtictiiar, bands other than the visible ones* have, in the p&t forty years, greatly expanded kMcNowwHm? . $hq field of astronomy. Thus, the book is XVNAGROVEL’CAUSEX structur’ed as a series of voga&s: one for each !XKIT’SSOHOT! of visible, infrared and ultraviolet -light, radio <. - ‘: 2nd micro waves, and X-. and gamma-rays. I This appraach, while_ interesting and Lgener.ally handle’d well,, h&6 a drawback: the information gained from, the various voyages and! is very tightly iriterwoven., ..- *-: dovet&, .v : Rowan-R&&on, I t,herefore, mentions other chapters in practically every ’ voyage., The characters’ gestures and emotions. It was as if . 1 these traditidnal imag?s of the Holy Family and [and possibly the most. _ -;;vorst , offender .’ the angels had come to fife in modern fdrm, a confusing chapter in the whole-book) is‘ the _ _ to tell a very old story. . .- ! ; : section On’ yis&leJigl$t: there are jusi td mdny ^ references tc;( :the - folIti@ng,“%s weTl as The story was narrated by *:&nor Paul. < .-. : “’ .prece@rig chapters. --I Trepanier, who certainly had the precision pnd ‘@n, top, Row36Robinson. m+y be tackling clarity necessa?? forthe part, as well as a lovely ‘rich tone. , -+ 9 ‘too. &de a subject. Although. the bopk is ’ ‘1 &en$ibly ori. astronoQy, th&e are short; explaining new-scientific ideas: - a Claude Cbrbeil -(bass) -was a very$fective Cosmic Lani;iscape do&,not outline difficult ’ :.p .- ; dis&ssions of’unive_r$?il cosmology, the nattire ~ raging and tyrannicaL King Herod. In a / ideas, alt‘hough this is not necessarily a _of light and other subjects which, while dir&tly contrasting role as the Householdel: who 1’ -. , r_e!ated.-to astronomy, aren” clejlt with iti the’ ’ -’ .-, drahback. All..it means is that ‘people with a i rece.ives the Holy Gamily, ‘he \nras equally -*, depth‘ which they catild .be. This% ‘is most ’ little mo:e knowledge in science will,not legrn impressive. His diction and delivery of the . , I ihfuriating: just when a disCussion is bedoming as n6ch from it; *foq people who: know little Fren+ te\xt were excellent. ,A,. . about astronomy, I . Cosr$c Lqd~cape is an . int&restirig, it shifty-to another subject. Mezzo-soprano Janice Taylor was veri “Being warned c1_ ‘L‘-Al&g. si*ilar lings> it c?n. he-gxgued #iit *_ _ excgllent iptroc@tioc - I -des.t6d-into Egyptof ,,God, the H&y Family & the field.. _” appealing; :combining emoijon and beautiful . This- simple ndrrative With the caveat that it can become . Cosmic- LandScape, althopgh it has an or-e -tone in both the forceful and tender moAentg. from St. ..,Matthew became a multi-media co;nfusing if the reader isn’i pagng close Y .iginal tioncept;is too*‘general’, that it dbes not Gury _Relyeu (baritone) as Joseph was spectacle M&lay night at St. MLar$s Church, attentiqn, I ,/would ’ recommmend Cosmic ? . Sive any feally new information.’ To make, an consista& throughout. The duets with Joseph when-the Guelph S$ng Festival carLre to tbwn I- * unf$ ,cq&parisoni Landscape (voyages back along $e photon’s Asimov; in diter ’ half a r and Mary were especially moving- although < . with- H@or Berlioz’ “L’ Enfance du Christ.‘” ’ _. Relyeu’ , occasionally ,lacke<l the necessary ’ . - dozen scienbe books/for laymgn, Was always . , - track) to the general reader. . s Be&oz di,splayed unusual imagination ,not +Ira N&mm conveying difficult; scientific concepts and , - 0 only in the music_ he -composed -but ‘in the ’ force. - : / - _-._ Christopher Came&n (bass) and Robert ,a \ ’. I ’ narrative itself:’ King- Herod _has ti recufrknt -. , 51 Missen (tenor) sang ‘the suppdrting roles of a / ;,I -1 dream’ that a child shall one dby overthrow -, - .‘. ;- ( _1 _ , - . _,‘ * - Roman centurion and., Eolydo&, “office; to - _.. him. He consults his sobthsayers and decides , ‘1 IKing Herod. Both sang well althoughCameron ’ to kill all the children hIely born in_ hig had a bit of difficultycarrying the-French text. : kingdom. The Holy family is ev&tu& .. , ’ I Bbth the Kitchener Bach Choir and the - , *’ . received by the_family of an Isbmaelite. .* . Lea\ie your -;:. . . Victor Martens ‘Chamber Singers were well -’ I . The intense dramatic i’wtinct’and urge -to balanced and pro\fided some very colourful probe the length and* breadth of his subject is I. 9, _ I chorus work. very. evident’ in this most original work. ,’ The ‘Angel .Chorus’ of children sang frolh Music&s of the I$W Symphony, Kitchener ‘. the balcony and provided ii light airy sound Bach Choir, Victor Marten Chamber Siligers &hich appropriately cqntrasted to the ad/ult and ah ‘angel chbrus’ of local Guelph children - , soloists, and .the choir. LJnfortunBtely, most coinbined iforces under’ the direction of -e~~‘u(--~$&m We, &e& T - entries wei-e rather &id anfl as a result there condutitor and festival diredtor Nicholaus were minor’, tuning problems. However, the Goldsehmick ‘Six Canadian soloists: were . : .joverall effect was good. ) featured-in the eight .characttir roles. . The )<-W Synlphon’y succeeded &providing ’ The innoOatioA whjch moved the event from , -3 an eqellent orchestral continuity’ to the very ’_ . 1 &‘re-‘irJ-~C l’:e& . , ,;- _ _. music- to spectacle . was the presence of . ’ _ +Q~u,~ . compleR presentation. massive sculptured figures created by Carolyn I_ t * ’ .0%. werit to this perfoFmantie with the ,Davis. , These abstract fdrms, composeda’of ,\. Ii“ 4 expectation c$ hearing some beadtifuj music. / ’ # 11 sculpted disembodied heads sovqr torsos of , ‘, As well, this pizrformance ena!$ed ‘the . 1 . , \ pillars, rods and flowing clothes, were I -, ’ \ / I abdience to participate in the dramatic , gracefully -handled by a teati of darkelad \ \significance of the gospel narrative-which had r . x. . - -L. t J *A I

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The Great Shark ,Hunt -Rolling Stoire Press,. Suinmit Books, 1979

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Where the Buffalo R&m ,, ‘-. with Bill Murray and-Peter Boyte -. / 6

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- x Readers ‘of Rolling Stone will imme&ately %aT recognize the name and high-voltage’ style of ,Dr: Hunter- S. - XThompson. Readers of Doonsbwry may recallthe excess of the Uncle Duke character,, who is . modelled on’ Thompson,. Readers of all types should get ’ hold of’ a ’ copy ,of 7%e Great Shark Hunt -. (TGHS), a compilation/of some of the most unusual, and entertaining journalistic work donerecently. t Thompson lies somewhere within the like -one of this piece&, darting from mood to ;* , tenuous borders of the “New Journalism”; a . mood. (Together, they’ form a Msted ‘but - genre mainly characterized by unusual streth eloquent portrayal of the non-era .we live in. --thing of the limits of the English language and a \ willingness to abandon the strictures of . .Attempting to cover the ISuper Bowl was conventional journalistic form. His technique _ recently referred to‘ as “The Great Theme ’ 1 Hunt”:Thompson startsoff his account of the, -1 can perhaps be ,best ‘represented’ by a -description of the tools he used in his book, 1973 contest with a description of a sermon he Fear- and Loathing in LQS Vegas: gave on the morning of Superbowl Sunday, from the 20th. floor interior balcony of. the. We ]had t;o bags sf- grass, seventy-five Hyatt Regency . Hotel ( in ~ Houston, while pellets of mescaline, five sheyts df highpower?d blotter acid, a salt shak,er hulffull of frantically attempting to write a:eon’ventional cocaine and a whole galaxy of multicoloured story lead as (according to him) a-giant leech Sup$?rs, do&%& sc%&ners, laughersI..& ci ~ that,had been sucking blood out of the base of quart- of tequila, a ‘quart of rum, a case of’ his-spine started to climb‘up his back: -’ The precisioi+jackhammer attack of the . Budweiser, a pint of raw ether, and two dozen . amyls. ‘&be only thjng that worried me was the Miami Dolphins ‘stomped ‘the lbqIls I<off the;/ ether.TThere is nothiqg in the, @orld more Miamf Dolphins today by sto-mping and hammering with one precise‘jack+$hrust after - helpless and. i_rresponsible -than a -man -in the ‘. depths of an -ether binge..: Se . - * another up the middle, mixed r@th pinpoint- / -)His strategy inlas .Veggs; as’in many of the ‘precision passes +nto the flat. and- numerous pieces- in TGSf-& is to examine the ,effect , . i hammer-jack stops around- both .ends... :; - external events have on the finely engraved-, .His account of- the -game runs ,o%ily half a * interior of his. ow.,n sk&.,and what saves/his- .’ - page., -be&g concerned mostly with how;/ ,betting progressed in the press box., The rest prose from being journalistic masturbation are r ’ . the incredible flights of metaphor, the tenuous _ ,L,’of the--piece details his experie-n,c,es with the cofinectionsthat.harden into spidersteel webs ., player-managemen@ress-fans . interfaces, drawingcon the parallels between pro foeball ’ -of, syriergy, ,laced through a,with ’ insults’ and s. and politics, zigzagging back- and .forth ’ underworld argot. . ’ ‘. Thompson;is a maste-r of paranoia. When . between pre-game rumours and - postrgam.e’ .n,$ chemically distorting reality,-he iittacksit inquot& memories of++y pro football_ and&e, 5. ’ 1 . depressing economics of,the whole- shebang. 1thesame manner that Keith Moon attacked his drums..: His bieces .bristle with -page-long-‘ . Here under-,.one cover-are all those pieces tangents, ‘wild-conspiracy, theories, pie;tingly ’ .. one would have to resort to @erlibrary!‘ogn to barely / coherent , obtain: “The Kentucky” Derbyis Decadentand sharp profanity ‘and J Depraved”, an account of how he and artist ramblings. But if he ‘appears on the ends of nervous. collapse, it seems .natural ’ when Ralph Steadman ,.descended into the11 in confronted, with -- the hypocritical rationr .;Louisuilie, Kentucky; “Fre&k - Power In the ‘Rockies”, an account Jof i an abartive Gorizo ’ ales- of the people he. covers -L Jean-Claude’ Killy, Richard Nixon, the bigwigs of tlie,NFL -1 - _ A takeover attempt in. Aspen,. Co!ofado; a previously unpublished preface?0 Las Vegas; and 1.the people who surrobnd I them. , and the title piec,e, an attempt to cover a fishing : ’ Thompson’s? main beats are .sp&ts‘ Bnd C.ozumel that ended-up &.‘a Las politics, and he 1,ooks at both with the same . ‘tournamentin ” Vegas on.wing.as-he and ,a.friend tried~ta$kip , bloodshot eye. j a TGSH exerptstwo of the-f.unnie&incidents ‘. ’ massive hotel and car rental bills by flying back in Las-Vegas; it a1s.o contain&forty-four other j to!he contin~~~;:~?ni~urnjngall:the drugs they; ranging from :...Thomp,son’st more - - .had$& their ,_ p.,ossession i.;I*r ,~ to &id Tarrest upon . p&es, traditionhork ;for ~~~.~&t~arpil. Obserqer$ti .._ their. touchdown.:in Texas; _.. : ’ _c’-IL I the early ‘60’~:~through Ithe first ‘examples of Qne’:woufd imagine, then, that a movie Gonzo Journalism-for ScanZon”s Monthly topurpo@g to be “based on the twisted legend c the double article- on, Muha~mmed. -Ali.- heof. Hunter S. Thompson” -would be a keen, I publishedin. Rolling Stone% the spring $4978. ’ 4 -.*incisive looklat American realities in the past Thankfully,, tk& are --not- ‘arranged in + -decade. .Thompson’s drug-inspired flights of chronological order, but forma _.-pastichemuch ’ .2ancy would provide . a rsurrealist filmmaker

’ with enough material to make hi% point without . of bits from Thompson’s work: :phe early ‘r <hammering one over the head. ’ pieces on Acosta, the Super Bowl, the 1972 Unfortunatly, “Where the Buffalo’ Roam” P&idential campaign. Every situation is was .made by .Hollywood, sticking to ’ milk>d for an Animal ,%use meets Up &I conventional production values, and the result Smoke effect; what we get is the worst of both. is ‘all the ;more agonizing because of the The only scene with any hope is one untapped potential. , supposedly co-written by Thompson himself . .Bill Mur.ray (of Me&balls and Saturday I - ’ ’ ‘(he appears’ in the credits as -Executive Night Live fame) plays Thompson as he no . Consultant, and how he let this farce go on’is a ._ . doubt appears in person: a burnt-out, mystery) in which Murray meets Richard: mumbling Martian. But- this isn’t the way . Nixon in a washroom. One of the film’s new - Thompson’s prose appears, and i$‘t the: way I ventures into S.urrealism, it is,*,ruined by I , * ’ he should be portrayed for, maximum’ effect. Murray’s lack of ;b?ticulation., . ,’ Most of. Murray’s lines are lost somewhere 1n:the preface to‘ TGSH, Thompson dr,ops behind his teeth, and.the resulting character ‘ hints of a “First Life that is now ending”, and in seems totally incapable of producing, any : _ “Last Tango in Vegas: Part 2” he writes, “This ; lastinglwork. is ,my fin&adventure in fishwrapjournalism.‘! *‘-Peter Boyle performs a similar corruption, Despite that, and the almost fatal blow.deaItxo +’ playing , the movie counterpart ot Chicano his image by this movie, I don’t believe that the _ Hunter S.- Thompson of;this’book is dead. I 1.awyer OS. ar Zeta .Acosta (the 300 pound Samoan at ! ourney”,in Las Vegas). Acosta think that, 1ike‘Kurt Vonnegut,,he just needs a comes across-in Thompson’s work as a,man - littletime to rest. He’ll be back when the heavy _ driven by hisconcept of fairness,‘taki’ng on the -shit starts coming do-n again:, We need a man. _ ’ legal system from .a11&es and finally-dropping - who can’ call .Richard -Nixon, a “cheap little, ,into the-underworld searching for the best way ‘ - gunsel” ‘in print and not only get away with if, %to,help his people. Boyle’s characteris a wild- 1 but make all ,our ‘efforts at journalism seem- 1 ’ eye-d freak, an impracticalldreamer with no ,pathetic in comparison. * credibility whatsover. - : Buy the book.-Avoidthe film. . ” ., - ‘lx

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ida.time 01 6l.T.: the 10! ti in 1-$,7%.‘.apd .was, p&t. ofi.$e . d ‘x 400 m’ rtilay @&in+ .te-am. “‘. ’ I - &falgadef r%n 14.0 tb ,fin&H secorid in t”he $00 m y;::+ , :hurdl&$ and,_ grabbed.- Y a ‘i. , I;‘.~ foutith ‘in’ the ioo m with a \

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’ ,’, ) Thij is th,e sec’ond in a six :/ t,.. df artic&s OR S,’ . ’ ‘port “series Health

Your exercise ‘programme %onsisDs oLthre& Idifferdzt the:. -warm tip, the IIY? P ;it,

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ponents pf fi”iness: flexibility, muscular streqgth and car-

1.3: ,+jjJii: $y$gg :><e< :Pd dependent upon the intensiiy df ; ~~~~~ the exercise phase +nd ‘fitness. .

the&e aomponents will ;bediscussq+in detail. The -b&y, like a car on a .

adequbte. Following pro@essive

warm up before it goes into_ full g@r, Warming up helps .guard against cramps,

heavy exercise, a cooldown is also -

iurt Mitchell, a third y-ear engineering student at UW and. .a’ tiembe’r of ,the National Shooting team, performed ._ &illiktitlb in the Oly&pic trials held at the.Concordia Farm near Baden winning the three-pgsition [standing, kneeling 8bd”prone) eyent w&b- a Canadiaq record 2308 points. He’ also finished skcond in the,prone.competition. T,~vitchell,‘28.and a native of Alberta, competedin the 197.6 ‘-*Montreal Olympics whe:e he. finished .>6th place in the . 1 three-position event. Iv As a,.lresult’of :the Olympic boycott, the trials at Badenwere used to. select instead ,a team to compete in an international &mpetition iti Phoenix, June 13-18. Mitchell will be one of four members of that team. Also on the_ team’hre Art Grundi of Windsor, who finishedahead of I vitchell in t,he pi;lonegosition, Guy Lorion of Montreal and . E&e Sorenson of Calgary. .Mitchell was particularly pieased with his performance &ice scho’ol work severely res’tricted his trainingibetween / J-arm&y an.d ‘April. “It may &und ,a little strange, but the layoff actually helped,” he said, in an’ interview with the K-W Record last wee’k. “Within thl;ee day:, .I was b’ack to my-old scores. The layoff ,helped me to @get some bad ha-bits and1 madeconsiderable -@ogress. When I gdt back, I found that \ wasn’t-as ani<ious and I didn’t daydream. I ‘developed better concentration because of school work, “I, used the same kind.-of mental pretiaration for the shooting as I didffor my exams. The nient‘al preparationis 80 t@ 90+ per ee-pt of thti.sport once you’ve developed your techtiique.‘: , ‘

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of bl&d is sent the working . muscles. ‘I%e ~que&ing ,actiQn &f the working %muscles pushes

when- warmed, promoting aI suddenly the squeezing action <more ap~~~~iate adjustment * is gone’ and thep wiU be no Ito eTFrclse&-- ‘I i ovement in the mtiscles- to ; .y , -1’ ‘r,bl’ood back; 7h Ip circulate’the to the heart. The blood will i * then pdl~l in the I working 1:-$muscl&, thus depriving the “Lb+ain, heart and other .vital

Sometimes playing s&tic&%n captic-atitigmidments,’ This caught &pin it. ’

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Columbia Field can ha;e its little felIpw wdrs ckrtainIy .photo by Jacob Arseneqult.

ipi .%hotibalids., -.-’ ,’ .

SI2ES5x10-5x1.5 i0x1040x1540x20 OTHER &ES AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST .


. S.ai1ixQ.gClpb

,beg&ers and-, ‘for experiencedkider?. Classes are 3ailors. its ~-time to’ bet y’otir anchors out.of the in&, held. Mondays (5 PM). and and, hoist those ‘sails, Lake ,Thursday 5:30 PM). New Columbia is finally full to members-sh.ould fill out a-? -@plic&on+form tit th-e PAC; the -brim.\ I . For you new s+lirs, &ho- _1They $211 be con.tacted. T-he’i;e will be ti fun show have not y&t been &xposedto 65 i&h ‘waves, gale fQrce<, _ dnjune 14 for club members. Jwinds; wet and tilted cock . There is a mketing June 4 at pits, despair not for the club 4~30 in the Campus Centre to _-- &as several learned in- .discuss the show. @n&act who will be-Nina sat 884-9900 f6r mare.j strtictors‘ . pleased to help’ydu learn. i’nfoirmation; And (especially dn ti sunny day): Paul Barren, 884-6435; ’ Basketball Lesley Agar, 886-0288; Brien Women’s Competitive ’ / Ross, _886-4309; Pete &sketball is back in full Gaskill, 8.86-2076; Alisor?, swing for ,‘the Summer -Mahoney, 886-9675; James ,seasqn. The 5-team league Morgan, 884’7326. ‘se&s SaJtidti e&ry Thursday night- yitb games slated for a The Colleiiate team wiil ‘fCanadi&n,, @OO .and 8:O0. At 9:00 the. *the ‘be at sailing players attehd a ‘basketball Intertioll.egi663-clini,g- cbnducted. by Jan racing fhampiotlship-s,” _le&gue conagainst teams from Queens, ‘. ,Ctiwedine, The ‘gameYwhs’~$$yed last.Mondav”at Western,U ’ of .. T, and v&nor!.,arid Sue PoFter. Bpth Bruce Wolffe of Rita’s Rat; ta& out Barb Thompson of T#aitrehembeys of the women’s The Rats won +1%X3. ‘., . photo.by Bishops.,‘ ._ : Horst Badorities Fan Club iti a &se play at third base. ._/ 11 I varsity. b&sketball- team. - Mav 31 ’ and lune leading scorer. with-5 goals -<On May $5, Sue Porter 4ntramuralV Soccer “Canidian . ‘- Inte&lle&‘ate ri6tche.d.,: $2 *points to lead Omar Halim; thiee of which ’ Sngle Hatidbd Champion-;Intramura! Soccer’ this at Qrillia /Genev,a- _ &!-State to a 44-30 win over summer, with its rectird 22 he scored against 2 Bee, whc ship$,” other inci$ebtally+ have* the bes Cheetahi. __In teams, is b&g played af a ’ Park). Weekend _cpst -is thi! in the competitive, . s killful and -, t,uln. out-for -players : i$40.00:-All sailing . -club action; Ball Ha_ndlers sque. leagge, but cannot se.em ti ezed by Cheetahi 343?, in entertaining level., * ’ , , members are welcome. blend player talent into i -t .L.&&mbershl”i, in.the sgilihg ovefiiip.6; ‘and All-State . A t+%e;way tie exists in winning unit. The tiajoritj lc!gue A; Math Soc’ers, ‘club is -.$‘5@. This gives @cked~ up its second win of *of B2 league games ge’t under TNT Village3 and Dirty ‘Feet; S’cot members aixei& _ ’ to.. ;2 -*_the evening outscoring W&Y this : week, the earl: / _ ,gailboat$, and sailing lessons 32-22, The Ball Handlers Pepper ,ir?. impeccable ,form there being ‘LOW lead& were’ also double winners, for Dirty 1 Feet should be /’ are provided for beginners. . . Anile Thrush,’ who hope , with a 20-4 victory oirer S$ applauded for a fine. hat fully will ‘have Bill Clark1 P&1’S College. ’ Jennifer -. trick against the Caribbean SpenCer paced.. the winners fully fit for their next g&ml $questrihdClub, Students.’ .--7 I _ club -will with 6 points, ieag-ue- Bl” leaders, Civil I ori June 4th. *: . \ -,The -equestrian Good,luck to all! Tainmy Hdrne -be’ holding class& fpr ’ ‘, Flurries, _has the league.

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Columb& &‘ieTd., Jacob krseqeault

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t’ fhi;; & p&fj&{y,jile .&g&f s&e .&hiv& ever Gad! .%‘re ielmatih in W&st&unt-Pla& 8nd bverything must be sold! .l ~Take.a&antaae af our r8duCtionS ‘Of ub t0 so,96 Off!- PIiceS . h&v~-~~~ cut bn’diambnd HnQs; all dihond jew&iy, gold ,@wellery. men’s &id Ja$$$isfone rings. wecJ@n$ ba$@, all names such as giftware.. . even -our- watc*s ‘. . . famous - I Seiko,. &l&a, p@ar. Accutron and G&avelle. ‘MI merchandise cariies WaItei’s usual reliable guarantee as well ‘al; fre& insurance on diamond rings,

fixtures. This is ~~-c&&o#ot 811,’ .-stock to facilitfty ovr relocatfng - -I =. 3 ./** in the mall. .

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Our new store prdmises:to b;e one of the most up-to-date jewellery stores in Kitchen&-Waterloo. You know Walters for quality and service, so you know‘that when we have a rea$on for a sale, it’s genuine. Don’t wait. Buy now for yourself or a g#ting. Weqtmouitt’Store only. . -.

the ’ ., Prtivident

Booksto&


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Duke ‘h-_ (Behind The Lines, Misunderstanding, s Turn It On Again, Duke’s End) $6.61 Fed member: $5.61

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To- receive Federation’&Students ’ -price ,’ L_ discount .’ .($l.OO.c&f all , items) show y&w undergraduateUnive+ sity of -WaterlooI.D. card tOcashier * :-Full line .OfIRecord Ctire,P~od~c~s: ’ Discw&&r, - : j Per&b&t.

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Sobnd Guard, atid Pia.

; _ ,,Hours: \. . c. Monday, ‘Ii&day, Thursday, F&jay: ’ .9:30 ,y- I?:45 ’ ,( “c, ,.. N ;.~$)(y -I 5q)o- ’ . i .-.’ P j _I ’ Clbsed Wediesdcq,& / .

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Good Brothel-s -&&est Of (Fox On The Run, The fiabbit ~Lucky Lady, Missing YG) $6.37 Fed.memberc?$5.37 -

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