1981-82_v04,n12_Imprint

Page 1

Perspectives Lecture Series: God, Man and World in Western Thought: Drs. Graham Morbey. 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. HH f34. World of Dance Series. A DelicateBalance. Danse Baroque decorously steps back into a time when Bhakti,Yoga Club invites you to an introductory good dancing built good character. 4:30 p.m. ’ lecture on self-realization throygh Mantra- medHumanities Theatre. Admission $2.00. itation. Sumptuous vegetarian feast follows. Free! Chapel. 4:45 - 5:15p.m. Conrad Grebel Chapel. Mantras supplied, or bring your own. Info? Need to World FoodqWeek. Global Food Series. “How the know what mantra? Call 888-7321.5:OOp.m. 51Amos Other HalfEats”withProfessorB.Hyma.5:OOp,.m.Avenue. I _ 7:30p.m. PAS 3005.Series full. . Chapel. Coffee and discussion to follow. 7:00 p.m. Wednesday Night Discussion Fellowship. Topic: Conrad Gfebel College Chapel. Living Seed Genesis 4. Dr. Rem Kooistra and Fed Flicks - No movies. You know that. Graham Morbey - Chaplains. 6:00 p.m. Common Chinese Movies presented by Chinese Students meal. 7:00p.m. lecture. Association. Member, $2.00; Non-member, $3.00. Brush Up Your Study Habits! a study skills 8:00 p.m. - 11:00p.m. AL 116. . workshop. Instructor John Vardon, Writing Clinic. Part of (the series, Perils, Pitfalls and Pleasures of - Monday, October 12 Being A Mature Studekt. 7:30p.m. HH 334. Thanksgiving - so don’t count on anything., FASS Writers Meeting. 7:30p.m. ML 104.Part of the Perils, Pitfalls and Pleasures of being an Immature - Tuesday, October 13 -, Student. Sign up for a Supermarket Tour on Friday morning, Growing Dollars, a National Film Board film ‘October 16,lO:OOa.m. till noon, part of Food Week. followed by discussion at Global Community Centre, Learn about the food system by touring a localsuper94 Queen Street South, Kitchener. 8:00 p.m. - 9:30 market. Sign up at WPIRG, 217B, CC or theTurnkey p.m. Part of World Food Week. Desk by Wednesday, October 14. Guy Liberation of Waterloo (GLOW) sponsors a Environment Day. Sponsored by K-W probe. Inforcoffee house. For further info call 884-4569(GLOW) mation on Acid Rain, Greenpeace, etc. A film on anytime. 8:30p.m. CC 110. Algonquin Park. 9:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. Campus Gratis presents AllThePresident’sMen. Centre’Great Hall. Bring your own environment. . Cinema Free! Campus Centre Great Hall. 9:30 p.m. Birth Control Centre - turn secretly to Monday.’ Sponsored by the Campus Centre Board. Research *Shortcuts Workshop for Psychology - Thursday, October 15 students. lo:30 a.m. Meet at Info Desk, Arts Library. K-W Red Cross Blood Doner Clinic. 10:OOa.m:WJSA (Waterloo Jewish Students Association) 12$0 noon and 1:30p.m. - 4:00p.m. MC. Must have invites you to our weekly Bagel Brunch, featuring eaten before donating blood. And stay off the recToronto Bagels.Interested but can’t attend? Call Paul reational pharmaceuticals beforehand, too; at 884-2428.11:30- 1:30 p.m. CC 110. Birth Control Centre-unobtrusivelyseeMonday.. Brown Bag Film Series - Marriage: Is It A Health Research Shortcuts workshop for HKLS on Hazard? Depression is largely a women’s disease. Government Publications. Meet at Info Desk, Arts (Except for men typing Campus Events). Might deLibrary. pression be a form of healthy protest? (Only if Bombshelter See last Friday. Part of World , someone notices.) 30 minutes. 11:30 a.m. in, \ Psych 2083. Drunk Week. Christian

-

Friday,

October

9 -

The Department of Co-ordination and Placementwill be offering sessions on resume writing this fall. Sign up sheest will be posted on the bulletin board on the first floor of Needles Hall. Tuesday, Oct. 13, 11:30a.m.; Wednesday, Oct. 14,11:30 a.m.; Thursday, Oct. 15, 11,:3Oa.m. All sessions will be held in Room 1020in Needles Hall. This may be hard to believe, but summer jobs for 1982 are now being posted on the Bulletin Board located outside the Cashier’s Office on the first floor in Needles Hall. Deadlines for some of the jobs come as soon as theend of October so students are encouraged to visit the boards as soon as possible. Land & Sea - Viewpoints of Prince Edward Island. Charlotte Hammond and Felicity Redgrave paintings, works on paper and sculpture. Organized by the Confederation Centre Art Gallery and Museum, Charlottetown. UW Gallery Hours: Monday through Friday, 9:00 a.m. - 4:00 .p.m. Sundays: 2:00 p.m. 7 5:00 p.m. Showing until October 11. Bombshelter opens 12 noon. D.J. after 9:00 p.m. Feds pay what he’s worth; others, $1.00 9:00 p.m. Salad and Sandwich Bar hours: Monday&Tuesday: 12 noon - 6:00 p.m.; Wednesday & Thursday: 12 , noon - 6:00 p.m. and 800 p.m. - 11:30p.m. Friday: noon till 11:30p.m. Peers Counselling Centre open Monday Thursday: 3:30p.m. -8:OOp.m. andFriday: l:OOp.m. - 3:30 p.m. CC 138A. Jumua’a (Friday) Prayer. 1:30- 2:30 p.m. CC 135. Sponsored by the Muslim Students’ Association. Attention:

1982

- Friday,

Graduating

October

Students.

9 -

Vegetarian Cuisine. We have live demonstrations andgroupparticipation(oftencalled, eating). Tonight is Chinese night. For further information call Madhavi 886-1707.6:OOp.m. Fed Flicks - No movies. That was easy. You’re A Good Man, Charlie Brown - The alltime hit musical comedy by the National Players. Tickets $9.50, students/seniors $8. 8:00 p.m. Humanities Theatre. Tickets availableat theUW Arts Centre Box -Office, Humanities. Watch for the Imprint reviewer. The Earthen Mug - Coffee House sponsored by WCF. Superb muffins (remember, they write most of this), assorted teaand coffee. 8:00 p.m. - iitjdnight. cc 110. China Cup dancing party organized by the Chinese Students Association. 8:30p.m. Great Hall, Village 1. Members, $3.00;Non members,$4.00;Couples$5.00

International

WPIRG Brown Bag Seminar with Dr. Murray Moo\ Young on Food from Biowa$es.a12:30- 2:00 p.m. cc 135. What’s New in Arts? a discussion by faculty members on new options in the Arts Faculty. 1:30 p.m. HH 373.Part of the Mature Students’ Program. Dr. Ron Weisman of Queen’s University will speak on “Discrimination Learning and Memory.” Part of the Colloquium Series at WLU, Psychology Departmerit. 1:30 13:OO p.m. WLU Central Teaching Bldg. Rm. 3 - 309/313.Admission is free and everyone is welcome. / Research Shortcuts Workshop for Psychology students. 2:30p.m. Meet at Info Desk, Arts Library. (what about member cpuples?) Peers Counshelling- See Monday. Theatresports Match - improv acting games WCF Supper Meeting. Thanksgiving Worship .betweentwo teams of players. Starts after the Charlie Service. Join us for this special time of worship. It is Brown show ends. $1.00or your Charlie Brown ticket held in Hagey Hall, not Village2.4:30p.m.- 7:00p.m. stub will get you in the door. lo:30 p.m. HH 180. HH 280. Bhakti Yoga Club meeting. Mantra meditation and introductory lecture. All welcome. Free. More info - Saturday, October 10 call 888-7321or consult the Cosmic. 5:30p.m. CC. China Cup Soccer Tournament. 16 teams from collegesand universities across Ontario and Quebec. Women’s Issues Group. Discussion on ,Women / Hosted by the Chinese Students Association. Free and Violence. Concerned? Get involved! 7:OOp.m.- . admission. All welcome. 900 a.‘m. - 5:00 p.m. ’ 900 cc 135. Columbia Field 2 and 4. Farm Forum. Jim Sheldon, former People’s Food Bombshelter opens 7:00 p.m. D.J. after 9:00 p.m. Commissioner; Mutale Chanda, Organizer, CanFeds, uncover. Others, $1.00 after 9:00 p.m. _ adian Farmworkers Union. “Working the Fields.” 7:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m. Knox Presbyterian Church, 50 Fed Flicks - No Movies Erb St. West, Waterloo. Part of World Food Week. Chinese Movies - presented by the Chinese Film 1 The Marriage of Maria Braun (Germany Students Association. 8:OOp.m.- ll:OOp.m.AL 116. - Wednesday, October 14 1979) for Oktoberfest! Hailed as Fassbinder’s Member, $2.00; Non-member, $3.00. Do it today, sign up for asupermarket Tour going greatest film. Short subject: Bass On Titles by Saul Friday morning, October 16,lO:OOa.m. till noon, part Bass. Academy award winner. Part of UW Arts ’ - Sunday, October llof Food Week. Learn about the food system by Centre International Film series. Film fee $2.00, China Cup Soccer Tournament. 16teams from touring a local supermarket. Sign up at WPIRG CC students/seniors $1.50 plus 50e one-night membercollegesand universities across Ontario and Quebec. 217B, or the Turnkey Desk before 8:00 p.m. ship. Available at the door. 8:00 p.m. Humanities Hosted by the C.S.A. Free admission. All welcome. Birth Control Centre, - circumspectly see Theatre* Columbia field 2 & 4,9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Monday. Campus Worship Service. Chaplain Rem KooBombshelter - See last Friday. - Friday, October 16 - 9 istra. HH 280. lo:30 a.m. Research Shortcuts Workshop for Canadian Supermarket Tour - here at last! 10:00 a.m. Quter’s Club - Kayaking. Free instruction and Politics students. 2:30p.m. Info Desk, Arts Library. noon. WPIRG office CC 217A. You had to sign up by practice time. No previous experience needed. 4:00 Wednesday for this. Don’t say we didn’t tell you. _ Peers CounsellingCentre - see Monday. - 6:00 p.m. PAC Pool.

@

Food Week. Hear about Diet for a Small Planet by author Frances Moore Lappe. Luncheon 12:OO noon2:OOp.m. NH 3001.$2.00. , Frances Moore Lappe, author of Diet for a Small Planet is speaking at Conrad Grebel College Auditorium at 2:30 p.m. in a special forum, entitled “Politics of Food: Questions on Social Change.” Sponsored by WPIRG, Peace & Conflict Studies, Health Studies, Federation Board of Education. Peer Counselling - See Monday. The Travellers Sing for Kids - Canada’s wellknown ambassadors of song in a lively sing-along concert. Presented by “Our Place.?’ Two performances 4:30p.m. and 7:.OOp.m.,Reserved seating $3.50. Humanities Theatre. Tickets<available at the Humanities Theatre box office. The Amateur Radio Club ismeeting. New members. from all faculties are welcome. Come in if you are interested in becominglicensed. 4:30p.m.E2 -2355. The Vegetarian Club is having seven cooking workshops. Experience satisfying vegetarian cooking, through tongue, tummy and mind. Live demonstrations, free recipes and good food. Free. 5:30p.m. Psych Lounge, rm. 3005. Chess Club’s 3rd meeting. Everyone welcome. CC 113.7:00 p.m. - 10:00p.m. CUSO Information Meeting. There are opportunities in the Third World for people skilled in trades and technology, health, agriculture, education and business. Come andlearn more. There are places for you. 7:30 p.m. CC 110.

Imprint’* Friday, October

9,198l;

Volume

4,.Number

12; University

of Waterloo,

Wat&loo

Ontario

I

\

‘Feds Split on OFS d 8\

World

,

1

Pages3

&5


.

5 *. \ WAT.ERLOO /

.

SPE-~~+L~ IN EFFECT-FRIDAV, -‘THURSDAY, OCiOBEk? . I-

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1.96. S&i al

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plus bottle deposit SpedhI

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GCTOBER 9 t0 I$1981 ’ ’

I

v Partly S&med 2?b Milk 3qt. bag

_ /’

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&hneidefs Side / Bacon I

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’ Special

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,


News

Friday,

s <infll Dissention and confusion has struck the Federation of Students. The flurry of events was precipitated by a Students Council vote Sunday night to hold a referendum on Waterloo’s membership in the Ontario Federation of Students (OFS). The referendum is to be held November 10. The offocial vote results were 9 - 6 - 1, and not the close 8 - 7 - 1 as reported by the Kitchener- Waterloo Record, and believed by some people. The motion was put forward by Dean Nadon, Federation Board of Education Chairperson, and seconded by Chuck Williams, Board of External Relations I Chairperson. After Council had concluded its meeting, vice-president Robert Elliot met with nine other UW students to form the Yes for OFS Committee. Elliott became chairperson of the committee; David Wilkie, Co-op Math representative to Council was established as vice-chairperson; and D’Arcy Emery, regular Math representative became communications officer. Monday morning Elliott called a press conference to announce that the Yes for OFS Committee would be campaigning on campus to show students the benefits of OFS. Elliott also announced that, “Council has called an unconstitutional referendum.” Federation By-law no. 34, section 2, Part 2, states that a motion for a referendum, “shall state the exact wording of the question to be ans.wered on the referendum.” The Council motion did not provide exact wording. Elliot upholds the OFS because, “it is important that we (students) have a strong lobby group to the Federal and Provincial governments.”

n V-P asked

,

Robert Elliott, Federation vice-president, has been asked to resign his position on Council by the president, Wim Simonis. , The move, made at an executive meeting Tuesday, comes as a result of Elliott’s \ announcing that he would the pro-Ontario chair Federation of Students Yes for OFS Committee. Simonis has publicly declared that he will support the withdraw1 of Waterloo from the OFS. “It was something I did personally because it was a very personal issue”, said Simonis. Elliott has affirmed that he will not resign simply because Simonis has asked him to. “I feel no obligation to tender my resignation”, he says, “except to council. They are the ones who appointed me. I’ll offer to resign if council . decides.” ,’ However, Elliott doesn’t feel that his resignation is something necessary. “It’s a communication problem more than anything. I think that is mendable”, believes Elliott. Simonis agrees with Elliott and says - that there is, “definately a communication problem.” Yet, Simonis

Mindp~y~Wis ,*$

October

9,198l.

Imprint

3-

on OFS Simonis says that UW did not attend the final plenary in Toronto, “because of our previous experience with plenaries.” He cited as an example the trouble Waterloo had in getting OFS to hire a business manager at the August OFS conference in Guelph. Simonis has had other misgivings about OFS. He believes the August meeting that OFS had with Premier William Davis was, “very poorly prepared for,” and that, “I was apalled at their strategy and tactics. It was fruitless.” Executives from the OFS, including Chairperson Barb Taylor, met with Simonis and members of his executive Tuesday at the request of Williams to discuss OFS financial matters. Taylor came out of the meeting visibly dismayed. She stated that the meeting had done little to advance the causes of both the Federation and OFS when, “in two weeks the .federal government will bring down a statement on a billion dollars in cuts (to universities and social services) and I’ve just spent the whole day talking about (OFS) budgets.” Taylor also contended that if the Federation had had complaints, they should have been voiced at-the boycotted plenary in Toronto. Taylor alleges that part of Simonis’motivationsfor beingdisgusted with OFS was that he had lost anelection bid to becomea member of the OFS executive at the Guelph conference. Of this Simonis says that, “there wouldn’t have been much difference even if I had won. The status quo would have been maintained.” A special meeting of the Federation will be held Tuesday,. October 15 at 8:00 p.m. in the Red Dining Hall of Village 1 to establish the procedures of the referendum and settle the exact wording of the question. Peter Saracino

to leave differs with Elliott on a major pointhe doesn’t really believe the situation is mendable. Says Simonis: “I am very disappointed in his performance over the past five months or so.” Simonis maintains that Elliot took the vice-presidents job knowing that he would not have sufficient time for it. Simonis also says that, “Bob told me at the time I nominated him (for vicepresident) that he could not put a lot of time into the organization and if I could find someone who could do the job better he would step down and remain a councillor.” According to Simonis, the executive decided at its first meeting to always show a position of solidarity to the public, and .that executive meetings were the forum for voicing concern. Simonis says that Elliott has broken this solidarity. Simonis emphasizes that he will, “not ask for his (Elliott’s) resignation at a council meeting. I feel it is the proper thing or him to do (to resign). I don’t feel he can help anyone’s case at this point.” Cathy McBride Peter Saracino

kcoming

at thej same time. The slogan: a’s Energy is Mindpowef’ will be displayed iq

fifteen universities and Ryerson attempt to bring their message to the public. By helphg the public understand the &$e which higher edupaign to emphas&’ t&Z&- cation plays in society, the portance of studento;~~n&$&~ ‘COU hopes to show that edessential contribution& m@$$& ucation grants are justified. At gj,: ; -QC by universities to’ C.&.&&n the University of Waterloo, life today. T&l rector of which is being co-o es, will be the Council of 0 adminisiversities (COU), this camAmerican in scope and is ‘ptign. Be prepared for the ontaking advantage of the U.S. slaught of slogans. The campromotion which is going on ‘paign runs until 1982. it’s you it will affe@ m’ure ,lthi);n ’ % anyone else! .” ‘: “It” is the @&&$ of Ontario Universi&$ “Qirn-

There was an explosion at 3:00 p.m. yesterday on the third floor of Waterloo’s Biology 1 building. Lab technician Mary Ann Vandergreet sustained head wounds and ,possible fractures and was sent to K-W Hospital where she was listed at press time as in stable condition. Several others received minor injuries as a result of the explosion. Officials present declined to speak on the cause of the explosion, but apparently the accident was caused by hydrogen in the glove box Vandergreet was working with.

A glove box is an isolated chamber used for handling. anaerobic or potentially pathogenic organisms. Witnesses at the scene said that explosive hydrogen got into ’ the box instead of the intended nitro<gen, which is non-volatile.. Vandergreet was assigned to work with Dr. Mayfield of the Biology Department. There has been no official comment at press time. John McMullen \ Photo

by Anna

Marie

Hubbard


.

I am keeping busy here at Imprint: m8ryon8 is @viz’@ me WOrk‘tO do. Thaslks al0tJ.W. Bwt, P8t&r8a;raC&O,Sd&t .&&la Hanni@n, and Virginia, Butler. _others 888m’to.Sn.8akln, dropoffasticle$~~~$~~out,likeDa~d ’ Dubinsld,J&mesVanDyke,OinetteR;ivet,JohnGtmretzner, Pe~Knox,~~~on,a;ndAla;nWrobel.Iknowafew of Jh8 fiSlowing na1I188: Bill WoodxVard, Chris Baumqn, I;inda-ml&?, P8rI7 D0mZ8u0, Debbie Elliot, Julie George, John cujptis,‘Anne MCf3Oni48, Jm Ma;rsha& man . Montonen, CatbyLeek;PeierB, Luscombe,P$riciaC. Shore T (pun Patl), and Tim %Cllac8. However, I’m getting sick of %38i1@ p8Op18 lik8 John McMullen, h-m+ Marie Hubbard,

’ -iMurray,

~4tandy j

H-an,

Prabh+kax

Ba#$*,

m

\

Goodman,

annalehn (who lgp888t this for me), and Ir&Nayman in tb bffloe &llOSt 8V8I’y dIQ7,but at 18-t they 4bn’t give m8 worktodo.Mo&ofth8s8peopl8aresemi-INSANE,wliichis t$ pF8P8t@Sit8 for Well, that’8 it for t&i8 Week &%I 1 \ youatchrir3tm8a. i .I m _ ’, i ‘1

h-qXi?X.

should be made more of an issue. In I members, as’well aware of Homeered-what all those mafd&fg %ands ,and ‘misty-eyed’ . happened, -When . .Im,print was One -blimp and a handful of. uates and certainly will continue to ii-1 i L ;ing for a campus question we. __guest lectures. do not an extra- ‘7 do so. Therefore,? we ’ should see :d’ students if , they’, knew i the vaganza,- t make! For goodness qsomething more to attest to the’ .. -sakes, reality of that tradition, especially : *of ‘Waterloo’s ’ tiomecoming. ’ the football team wasn’t , qJ we&given ballpa&figur& by e&en\ f‘home.” . They <were at _ for an anniversary as important as the twenty fifth. .Ia’x ased ‘.people -who askedus Guelph$ IIomecoming! L .*j’IB.-::; . Opportunities to reinforce trad40‘fpn .their .pictures; they d&l ~+I3omecoming should not be so Know. I ;didnot know until an __6&y overlooked. As-- a cele-h I ition (or perhaps restore) shouldntt ’ ’ , ‘V ii nnus;mentyo.ned.,it; We should , ’ -bratioh , ofwhat this university be passed over. Maybe in Si? 1/a._ pif.:-There should16e no doubt stands for, the Homecoming 1 * I. ’ ’ ,’ Virginia Butler -34, -y ~: IL , * _ ,, \ - \ . I :, . t,

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Look, up in the sky! It’s a bird! It’s a plane! No, it’s the first year Architecture students first design project. The assignment was to design and build a kite - not just any kite, but an eight-foot kite! The purpose is to teach students how to come up with interesting designs which not only fly, but

Simonis’ According to Federation of Students President Wim Simonis, University of Waterloo students are “getting sweet dick” for the $35;000 in fees which they pay to the Ontario Federation of Students (OFS) each year. Simonis pointed out that he hadn’t seen an OFS fieldworker since August 7, and that she was only there to introduce OFS to an oncampus organizing conference. Before that, he added, the fieldworker had not been to Waterloo since May. Simonis claimed that OFS was not supplying its member campuses with good material, and that OFS research was of poor quality. While he agreed that there was a lot of it (research), he said that most of it was “repetitious”. Simonis also claimed that OFS lobbying was “very

OFS complaints ineffective” and that OFS has “totally screwed up” its meeting with Ontario Premier William Davis in August. Chuck Williams, Chairperson of the Board of External Relations and Chief Delegate from Waterloo to the Conference, explained that he was “distressed that the opening plenary did not reach quorum.” This meant that direction could ‘not be given to the conference at that time. From attending informal discussions with delegates from the University of Toronto, McMaster University, and others, and in one workshop in particular, Williams came to the conclusion that the conference was a “mockery” of what it should have been. Williams was of the opinion that the workshop % the Established Programmes

Regional landlords asking to up rents Students may be facing substantial rent increases as early as next term, when their funds are lowest. Waterloo region landlords are lobbying to raise the maximum rent increase rate to 11% from 6% per year. By applying to the Rent Review Board, landlords can already increase rent in excess of the annual rate to pass on to “rentees” rising mortgage and “real cost” expenses - up to a rate of 34% per year as one Waterloo landlord has done.

.

Dianna Clarke, of Legal Services for Kitchener-Waterloo, advises students to realize how the increase will affect both them and others, such as senior citizens, who are on fixed incomes. Salaries and governmental funding have not risen 11% per year and cannot cope with the proposed rent rate increase. Should the landlords achieve their objective, students will be forced to live in substandard housing or be prepared to take a cut in food money as $200-a-

month rents climb to $222, or even to $270. While rent increases might occur, landlords are not willing to raise the interest paid on tenants’ rent deposits. Under the Landlords and Tenants Act, landlords are required to pay 6% per year on all money paid by the tenants as a rent security. This rate hasn’t been adjusted to meet current interest rates and is due to be raised to 9%, at least. As tenants, students are losing out but further financial loss can be prevented if tenants are willing to complain to the proper authorities. For additional information on this and other landlord/ tenant matters, volunteer counsellors are available at the Legal Resources Office, Campus Centre. Let your opinions be known. Write to the Minister of Consumer and Commercial Relations and/or Herb Epp, MPP and point out the hardships that such an increase will cause. Penny Knox

Financing (EPF) was a “rehash of what we already knew”. EPF is the arrangement that provides for lump sum payments to the province by the federal government for such social services as postsecondary education. Simonis was particularly critical of OFS’ monetary practices, pointing out that of its $350,000 budget, $220,000 went to staff salaries, which did not include staff expenses. He was also unhappy about receiving a year-old audited statement upon request and then finding out that an up-todate audit was “conviently finished one week after the conference”. “For $35,000 worth”, he stated, “I think that all the books should be open.” A campaign for membership in the Canadian Federation of Students would not gain Simonis’ support. “A name change is pretty”, he said, “but is that going to change the organization?” Simonis wonders how OFS, which he believes rates services as a last priority, will function in CFS. “As far as OFS is concerned, business is a dirty word”, said Simonis, who added that that might have been the root of OFS’ financial problems. On policy-making, Simonis explained, “You have to make a distinction between OFS tactics and those of the local student associations.” He insisted that a provincial organization could not work unless the local student associations “got their shit together”. Williams singled out the OFS petition against cutbacks, now being circulated at campuses, as an unacceptable tactic. Whereas the petition states that “the proposed federal cutback of $1.5 billion to education represents a direct ‘threat to the future”, Williams points out the actual amount of money being cut is not known. The wording of the petition, according to Williams, is crucial, and he believes that the petition against cutbacks is poorly worded. Phrases such as “I demand that the Federal and Provincial Governments and

do so in an interesting

manner.

Above:

the building;

inset: a flight. Photos

by Anna

Marie

Hubbard

spark i Feds arguments all cuts to post-secondary education”, strike him as being the “difference between amiable and reasonable, and being a hothead.” To Willians, informing

Math

students should be the top priority of the Waterloo Federation. “The most effective means of fighting is to make students on campuses aware.”

“I do feel there is a need for a provincial (student) organization”, Simonis concludes, “but I doubt there for OFS. is a need Ira Nayman

rep gets into hot water

A libel suit is one of the options being considered by Dean Nadon, Board of Education Chairperson, as a response to a statement published by D’Arcy Emery, Mathematics Regular representative to Students Council. The four-page statement issued by Emery to Councillors, the press, and others, is highly critical of certain members of the Federation executive, including Nadon.

The statement is stipportive of Robert Elliott, VicePresident of the Federation of Students, and of the Ontario Federation of Students. Federation president Wim Simonis said of the statement that, “Emery has done it (issued contentious statements) before.” “I feel poorly when he (Emery) talks about meetings he was never at”, said Simonis. Emery had attended the October 4 Council meeting that voted for an

OFS referendum, but had never been to an OFS conference. Emery’s statement makes claims about things said by Simonis even though Emery was not there to hear them himself. As for Simonis sueing Emery, “He isn’t worth it”, Simonis states. At press time it was not known how other persons mentioned in Emery’s statement are reacting. _ Cathy McBride Peter Saracino

Rugby player injured On Wednesday, September During the operation the 23, a varsity rugby player was doctors found that there was seriously injured during a less damage than they had practice. anticipated, and that the bones According to Athletics Dirwent back in place more easily ector Carl Totzke, “The team than they had expected. was working on the technique However, the player presof a ‘strum’, when the inj&y ently suffers from paralysis occurred.” A ‘strum’ is a play in his legs, and in his arms. in which the two opposing . Doctors are not giving opteams are pushing together as timistic reports at this time. hard as they can in a huddle Totzke says that the player type formation. The ball is “has presently withdrawn then thrown into the ‘strum’ from school, but that a return and the players try to kick the to university should not be ball to their respective team ruled out as a possibility.” mates. Totzke said: “The play Invariably, when an acciwas being practiced slowly dent of such seriousness ocbecause the team was concencurs, one questions the safety trating on technique. Unof the sport, and the compefortunately, while in the strum tence of the people who are position, meinbers of the team running it. Totzke states that lost their footing and they all the coaches who are responfell down on top of each other. sible for the team are fully When they moved away, one trained, and are well qualified player did.not get up.” to handle emergency situaTotzke states that the team tions as well as the regular “did what was right” by not training of the team. Totzke moving the injured player. An says that “The team was doing ambulance was immediately everything right. They went called, and from there, the through their warm-ups thoremergency team took over. oughly and properly, and they The injured player was were using the correct techdiagnosed as having a fracture nique for the ‘strum’.” in his neck with damage to the As for the actual safety of spinal cord. On Friday night, the game, Totzke states that doctors operated tocorrect the “Injuries are inherent in all fracture and align the neck. sports,“ but that this is

most serious injury that they have ever experienced.” To the suggestion of padding, Totzke responded that “The team would never accept it. It goes against the rugby tradition.” The accident itself was not the fault of any person or the fault of the inherent physical risk in the game itself. As Totzke ‘says, “It’s just one of those things.” Again Totzke stressed that there was an investigation into the accident, and that they could find no place to put any blame, because the coaches and the team members acted as they should have. Totzke states that “The only way to avoid injuries is to drop the sport. But the Athletic Department and the students on the team have no intention of dropping thegame.“Totzke says that the “Athletic Department expresses its deepest regrets and sympathy, concerning the accident.” Also the Department, in conjunction with the rugby team, is planning to attempt to provide some financial support for the injured player. Peter A. Luscombe

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Improved,

expatxded / ‘PEERS

offiy%

studerits

or can maks Peers is also planning to “We are there for students to Under the direction of Ian is compa+onate #eople feel at ease because the hold seminars on common talk to, and often students find Chamandy and Gray Eakins, problem bothering the client is problems of students, such as it easier to talk to someone in’ , Peers Counselling Service has time and’money budgets, or the same boat”,- Chamandy imprdved and expanded its important ta him”. , Students chosen as bunexam stress. states. “We try to .break the program for this year. The business hours for stigma attached to counAccording to one Peers co- sellors then participated in $ training session, part of which Peers has also been altered. selling”. ordi∨ Ian Chamandy,“The hours are better now consisted of role playing. Chamandy admits that ’ this alternative counselling hours when students consider Peers’ services are limited aid Members from U.W. Coun-service now ha a larger and the couiisel.lors as well are better trained s J ff as well as an selling Services aidid sin the coming in, for exatiple, after training. supper; if they. don’t have a made to see this. However, expanded information centre: *But the training does not night class, and are lonely, Peers can refer students to Chamandy, who is super6. stop there. Counsellors meet there is sotieone, there to talk tie professional aid. Counvising the counsellors, statei every two weeks for continued to them”, explains Chamandy. sellors are a1s.o trained to spot that Peers qow has a total of 19 training. This year, Peers off&s those who -really do require volunteer student tiounsellors, Another change in the services . in two main areas: profes&onal help. the !argest number-of staff they is - an Listening counselling centre and referral; inPeers counselling is willing &ave ever had. centre. formation. “We see ourselves to help students who have The student volunteers are enlarged information ps glorified dons”, alleges carefully selected. A week was There, stutients can obtain information on such things as \iChamandy, “only we have set aside to interview people health needs, clubs, and ‘&ore training and, considerf&r counseiling positions. -, sclasrrifi~~ , ‘: ‘:Faculty (of the student) has services. “People can vome in ably more information”. and look around and take Sttiderits who fee1 intimino bearing”, states Chastates Chadated by older counsellors mandy. “We look at what the pamphlets;’ may find an answer at Peers. student is like, whether he/ she mandy.

.

help

comparatively small prolilems and do not know where else to turn; for example, where to, make appeals, how to organize - courses. Eyen if. you’ are just plain lohely and want to talk, Peers will listen. Chamandy finds that due to cutbacks in the number of counsellors, Counselling Services is extremely busy with more serious problems and does not really have time for those who merely wish to talk. r “Everything is kept in strictest confidentiality”, avows Chamandy. “We keep

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no records; students can talk to someone they don’t know and it will be kept confidential”. - In fact, if one-takes a liking to a certain counsellor, one can request the same counsellof for subSequent visits. Peer& which opened October 5, is still looking for students to help Gray Eakins in the business aspect. This would include helping out with advertisements, information centre, as well’ as creating outside liasons. Anna Lehn

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Attention! Wayne H. U. of G. all Grotty Beats. Danced night. Had a great time. Love to hear from you. T. 821-2942. _ QPast Masters Club, Only 4 The Genius. Box 6427, Station A, Toronto, Ontario M5A lE3.

fE36chelor of’ Education I I.Ii i i Bachelor of Education I, For more information fill out II ~t his coupon and mail it to: i The &&strar”s Office

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when you have completed your undergraduate degree, the Faculty’ of Education of Nipissing University College offers you a one-year program leading to a Bachelor.’ of Education degree and an Ontario Teacher’s Certifi-

cate. Through this program you select a double conctitration in either the primary-junior grades or the junior-intermkdiate grades: \ Our beautiful 720 acre campus is a natural outdoor recreatioo centre with, nature trails, a small lake, ski tiails and townhouse ,resi.denkes. Spend your. next year at Nib&sing Uaiversity College. Yoti’l ,enjoy; learning and --living in- Northern Ontario. Iqa---*-.----------------II----

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typist; fast, accurate work. IBM Selectric. Need an experienced, patienf Village. guitar instructor for begin- Lakeshore able rates 885 1863 Reason. . ner. Times and price to be discussed. Call Michele 889-2837 Typing by Flash Fingers. All . deadlines met. IBM Selectric evenings* Wanted. People willing to ‘I. Essaysv Thesesy ResumesT Cover Letters. Will deliver. model for beginning artists. No experience necessary. For 576-3883. Ellie. furthbr information call Cliff Typist. 25 years experience. at 884-5808. ’ -No Math papers. Olivetti ’ Editor III. Reasonable rates. wanted’ typists (Theses and Westmodnt area. 743-3342. Technical) Qousecleaners, Babysitters, phone 885-1211 Expert Typing Service (IBM ext. 3803, 11130 a.m. -- k:OO Selectric II/III) - Standard pim. Graduate- Club, -I.&niver- service: correction of errors in sity of Waterloo . spelling, grammar and punctuation. 886-6275/ 886-8089. Services

Speakers Infinity RSB’s $375 each Or best Offer. Phone i 888-7173. Sslomdn “‘555 E’S,” 10 Ll/2 Dfynafit “Pro’? Boots, David S. Reid “44” ‘100% Down Ski Jacket. All in immaculate condition! 743-7617/ 7433669 anytime. Will dotrucklight Also moving with a Student’ Stereo is herb! After small rubbish re two very successful years at moval. Lo& rates. Call Jeff Western, we’ve expand%d to 884-283 1. tpree other Universities in Ontario. For discount prices Resumes - For you,’ we do it on such names as JCV, . all: the wording, the layout; a Yamaha, Alpine, Alkai, Cerprofessional format, a great impression. Don’t wring your win Vega, Empire and much more, call Doug, your campus hands; ring us (886-8089). P.S. representative before you buy. h.--- Ask about our special diskHe’ll beat any. price - we file resume service for Co-op Students. __ guarantee it. 884-5899. Warren Biller, Registered Free 2 Full colour booklet a preview of t-he New BritMasseur. Massage - relieves

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Disk Jockey Service A B C. Disk Jockey Service . Aid *a professional touch to , your party, banquet, wedding or reception! You want good music in all styles and tastes. . we h&e it. Call Paul on campus at ext. 3869 or residence 886-8492.

NORANDA , - ICareer ! Qppbrtunities , y o For G-raduates I \ * Recruiting representatives oi the Noranda Group will be conducting . ’ on-campus interviews this fall. I :, ’ ’ ,Ifyou are interested in career opportunities with a progr-essive \ ,I, I .- Canadian resource company, 5% your placement off ice -/ immediately. ’ ,

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Friday,

Grain

bank answer to hunger

to stabilize the. grain market, Canada could assist Third he added. World countries with food Cooper was speak~ing at the problems by establishing a session of WPIRG’s world grain bank, says a first series, “How The Other Half political science professor. Eats,” held on Wed. Sept.30. “Rather than pumping His topic was corporate conthinas in a verv haDhazard ad hoe- basis, iomd &rt of / trol of-food, trying to provide an overview on the global food systematic coordinated apsituation. preach can be adopted,” said “Generally speaking, the Andrew Cooper. Canadians global corn and rice proshould be moving towards duction and wheat production some sort of small coordinated rose . . . between 1960 and 70’s,” approach with other countries

Coinputer

he said.-But at the same time, we can see that this larger production wa‘s dQne at considerable social cost.” The managers of the food system, the multinational carporations, have a strong belief_ in free trade and lack of governmental controls, he said. The corporations also believe that the American method of agriculture is the best way to farm. However, this method requires the use of

crimes

Interfering with a computer protection of computers, said program will be legislated into Lawrence. This situation has arisen because the statutes a criminai offence and new statutes governing computer were not originally written ’ theft will be introduced, says with consideration for comUniversity of Waterloo’s putersand, as of yet, have not ’ president counsel for mathebeen changed. Hardware can be protected by patents now, matics and engineering. R.-G. R. Lawrence, Q. C., - but software is not patentable also said he believes that the and often cannot be copyconcept and guidelines of writed. Another obstacle to the computer’ theft need to be changed. Lawrence prese_nted control of theft is public a seminar on Law in the attitude. The p‘ublic generally p.erceives computer crime as Computer Age during Homeharmlessly challenging the coming Weekend, Oct. 2-4. Currently, there are no laws machine. In fact, Lawrence said, computer criminals are governing the liabilities and

often regarded as “robinhoods” because the computer is looked upon as cold, impersonal and the tool of big business. Also, computer felons are usually young, intelligent and well-educated, not the average stereotype of a driminal, he said.

Computer crimes such as cover-ups, thefts and sabotage, are oftenvery serious. Ifa person can tap into a computer, then he easily can cover his tracks afterwards. The average computer robber9 is $430,000, while the average bank robbery is only SlO,O~O. Sabotage ca%n co& billions of dollars, a lot of hard work and lives. he said. A for kxample, car:\ tives in (manpower planning . pacemaker, and its implications for uni- be re-programmed to kill a \ versities. person. Jim Marshall I ’ Cathy Leek.

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many pesticides, fertilizers and credit, techniques not well suited to Third World farming. . Nevertheleys, the green revolution of the early sixties transferred the American systern of agriculture tq the Third World, notably the Phillipines, India and Mexico. The social costs exacted by this transfer were considerable. 1 Only the farmers rich enough to afford credit benefitted from the influx of American technology. .Sharecroppers were pushed off their land as tractors replaced the workers. Participation in communist * and guerilla groups rose in reaction to the sdcial dislocation of the farmers, Another effect of the green revolution, he said, was the replacement ‘of the barter system with a cash economy. Farm workers were no longer paid in produce but with cash. Also, many countries moved away from producing staples for the natives to producing cash crops such as coffee, tea and grain intended for cattle feed. Julie George

October

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UW Senate endorses report The Senate Executive Committee endorsed the Report of the Committee on the Future Role of Universities in Ontario (often called the Fisher Commission Report) at it’s Meeting of’ October 5. The Report revikwed the present status of Ontario’s universities and made recommendations on their upkeep for the coming years. The Senate committee was of the opinion that the report will play a major role at the _ annual meeting of university executive heads with Premier William Davis and his cabinet on October 22. The committee also discussed several upcoming priorities for the year ahead. They were: university public relations, promotion of interuniversity cooperation, and a study of government initia-

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. . / “, *. _ .’ - 1 I . I ’ /< L ’ _’w’eO~,e,aime aQ&ir ‘du ban141,pays rec+sCs,‘ le Can- / --flation, 9,~ rpoiqs jus@ea 1979: ‘ie Canada depensai$, pemYent ($514 millions en, _($2.8 -milliards), de J28 - p-our cheque soldat$48,573 1970)--sercent g des fins ada’.&+ ‘situe .ac, 8e, rang 1985. Malgre les beaux dischars. d’assaut _(180' mil* ’ \-I’ ado .une imoFe-de boys poci -et se. situait&n cela au 6e militaires. S’appuyant sui. ifist& un payp,liberal, den+ ... mbndial!JSource: S!*ard, tours de faGade de P. I$ liorid) de navires ($,3.5 mil-, ,_ L Trude& qui &claie v~ul-,,, liards), d’uh syst’8me ahrien rang mondial (Source: Si- ,_1~s seuls chiffres, son-’ &Yratique,‘ d#eiiseur d.ti !a ’ 1978). Eti flollars USA con+ia@s de l,b78 d’est-&-dire ’ dir ‘“&ouffer, les dcpense,s de surveillance. et de convard, 198Q). Pour avoir une sertateur’s, du,+$nisttire de .’ /x’ pa&, et+ des Zi-bertf$s, bIli6 le Can,ada a trale’pour ~i*obn ‘et des ~ ~&~~~el d,ei paj;s pauvreset CnefOiS l’inflation CdCUk,, mrilita!re!,” vision comptite de la r& le D&n= nbtlonale, SIPRI et 5 ces place le Canada au.66 rang, de trans-ce ’ alit& & ces chiffr& ‘1. f&e& n&&at&r de bon-e..: les .@Penaes militates gr: repqn+du positiy;m;+t ;;t , vhhicules Port. ($55~blind& miilions1 . , ‘dCpenses, il faudrait - a- dans le monde-,occiden_tal, sont -pags es de g&.kreusemeat 1’ ‘*voloil tB ’ dans les conflits , Catiad$ dont le ;bta-l jo&er les effectifs et .les -pour les dbpenses de re$1,271 milliird en 195O’“a -; nidhde d& L’OTAN, . aug:’ programme, I’ ,,inter@ationhux, ’ ‘; pa-riici-L frise 1$$8 milliardg+ re& budgets de; “forces sphcherche militaire. En 1978, dgpenses;po&r ‘.T I&et cvx fafcei de'paix&s: -$3<877 ,milli@ds . in l’9?9<- m&tant.s-es -iales” (para-militaires) que 90% de toutes les subdons .: fe une augmentation dp w5%;; l’annke 1$&l, de 4% de-p_ius r@$e uric augmentation -. - !@tio&i- W&es ;con&itu&nt les Services de ventions h’la recherche in.L’OTA,N-(Organization du que le taux d’i@ation! annuelle reelle, , (i.e. l’ii . -&Edk$ette-irna e cores--’ ’ p&d.-File Skcurite de la GRC, de -la dustrielle accocdhes par le “ -.Tr.aitK’ de I l’Atlantique:‘Le pfogrammed’approv- flatioq exclue!) ,de 12% au 6 \1,cr& - f i%h?.’ 1 ’ Nod] r,,I. ; i-1 .a demafide & -ses$ isionnement maitaire p,r& n+ns (3ource: DEC II; pi S$rbtb du Quebec, de la Minis&e fkdkral de l’!n-__. “.< Police,de Montreal et des, dustrie et du Comtierce ,:Ihke~96b &976, le &. membres d’augmeq\tg?an-voit l’achat’ de 18 avions de 2.) autres polices provincialesktaient r&ervkes & la’ re,’ ;’ a&: a:.dCpns&plu.s .:de,$,35 --nudlleirlent -l&u.+ dspegses patrouille ‘\A , long riyon Envirdn l>S,OOO personselor_l ,i+ ta.ux d$ d’action ($lmilliard), d’en&lli&ds B bdks ,‘firis .mili-, ‘militaires nes partjdipent .activeme$t . ou municipal&s5 traversle cherche@litair* (G. Pro” t&es. ,A’lce jic,hapitre, ,suc _ 3% au t&x d’in; , viron ‘130 avibns .I de combat ~ au\activit+ dti Mitiistere +- Canada (Source: Ligue des ~ vost, Le Devoid, 11/6/1980; I . supkrieqr dro’itg et libert& du 1esfilialesCtrang~es~plus de la. Dgfense nat,ionale: , 7&000 mi&bres de.la Force Quebec,, ycilice -et Liberte, -de 50% ont ‘rafl.4 les 3<3 de 1978). ’ ces subventions!) aarnhe x+guliGr& Zi,OOS r& Depuie 196b, le i=a_nada a servistes: 37,000 employes .. ’ export6 pour plus de $6 .. ’ - ’ civil& -pe plhs, ijuelqties En 1980, un programme milliards d.‘armeme<t s sphcial ’ 6d,OOO adolescents, memd’aide & l’industrie, bties des, cadets et ,deS naufs (G* Provopt, &e De-; de la dkfense (DIP, pouj: -milices,;sans participer divoir, 9/6/80)* A ce’c!aPitre I Defense Industry Pr@duc- ’ rectement-A l’actikite -dir des exportations, en 1978, . . ’ Miniit&r&,,soit considerbs le Canada s't%t situ6 au 9e ~~~~s~~~~~-~)e~~~~~~~ \ rang mondial avec un total. & jus+ titre comme faisant d’armeme’nts des subven-. partie de la “famill$‘milde $402 .millions (Ploughtiocs totilisant sloe militaiGe (Soutce: Cbnseil due- _ shares ,Monitor, no. 4, NOV. lions (F. ,Berger, La,Press’e, 1979; p. 1). Une bonne 1 y b&ois de la- Paix c ‘con15/3/80). -De -1962-6‘5 & f&e’nee q.ueb&ois& hour- le partie de,_ces -exportations& 1973174, ’ les ‘compagnies &sarmefner$ 1978). -En s”Gt destinees aux USAs .benefi,diares des programs’ i‘ *.. mais le-Canada vend aussi & .,:I. ._. .- _ ;‘ 7, . ,_--i- ._ * ..- \-, ~ d’aide g la recherche et & la des payS: du Tiers -Monde: ,prodtictivit& pour des fins 1 Pour ‘as P’riode globale militaires (DIP-&t DIR) ant allant de 1955 ti 1977, le requ un mini&& de $375et I Canada s’est situ& au 9e miirions A elle seule 7, rang mondial po& les ven- 2 tialgrb 1: c&bre grkve’qui tes d’armF6 au Tiers h;londe l’a-paraldsee pendant 2 ans; . (Sgurce: Sivard, x979).(exLes clientes les plus pgg-.’ le Pratt and Whitney de Longuliers du Canada on, 6th United Aircraft) ueuil aura reeu en 12’ans l’tifgentirie, le Brksil, le de subvenChili, la Malay& et le $105 millions I Pakistan, i.e. des pays par- , tions tii.litair&. ticu!i&rement rCpre&ifi oh - . les‘ .armes, ont se& et Nous povrrions contjn-, servent principale-m,@t g uer longuement B aligner hcraser les;‘organiz&tioqs des chiffres nohbreux,, et populaires et=-tiyridicales,et qui &fient l’imagination, sur le milit&isme du CanB I maintgnir Jes I profits d’utie~. p&te tiinqritk priada. Le Canadaiest-il un et des grandes __pays -‘pacifiste? L’examen *il&iee compagtiies. i multinationobjectifdes chiffres et des ales. a“M1 Pierre,de Bang a faits (apparemme‘nt, minm9m& indiquk au Devoir imes -par- rapport a l’en<ue le Canada a -deja con- 1semble mondialet auxdetix . dlu des arrangements avec super puissance?, - les I , Jeg Et+&iJnis pour qu’ils USA et J’URSS A mqis eicpedient &:notre place dti bnormes par rapport & la mat&e1 militaire g des ’ taillb du Ganada et par pays & qui npus preferions rakport & tdus les autres pays dumondie) montreque bne.pas vendre trop ouvertement, en Israel, par exem,le, Canada @st I’une -des ’ pie” (G. Provost, Le Deprin’cipales puis?ances ), yoir, 9@/8$ militqires du monde. e D’aprBs E. Regehr __ ‘’ L Fabik Leboeuf (Making a Killing, p. 68), 'keOuvrire,Diic.~980 plus de .50% de-s tous les Reprinted from La R&unde,. fonds fkderaux a!lou& & la University-bf Ottawa cecherche , et _’au dhvelopI I- * I l

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News B’horts Sadtit leaves shaky Egypt The recent assasination pf Egyptian President Anwar Sadat has brought widespread response in the University community. The Muslim Sttidents Association, led, by Hasim Raasat, has described the assasination of Sadat as “destiny.” In an official statement aired on CKMS-FM last Wednesday, Raasat stated that “recent decisive events in Egypt have proven without reasonable doubt that tyranny and oppression anywhere at any time does not last.” The statement read by Raasat went on to say that “President Sadat has repeat-. edly proven by hisactions how un-Islamic he had been and ultimated faced his destiny.” Else where on campus, Ashok Kapur, . a political science professor at UW , in charge of foreign affairs, expressed optimism on the future of-Egypt after Sadat. “If we go on the basis of what happened in Egypt after Nassar (the president who secured Egyptian control of the Suez Canal) when Sadat emerged as an unknown entity. (It is possible) something similar may happen in postSadat Egypt,” Kapur said. Frank Epp, a professor at Conrad Grebel College has done considerable research in the middle east and also has written three books on the Palistinian-Israeli question. Epp stressed that “we should not be pessimistic” by the current situation in Egypt. “When leaders fall for one reason or another there usually are other leaders who .grow into their shoes,” Epp added. Though optimistic about the future of Egypt Epp cautioned that “things could go so rapidly in any one of a number of directions.” Mike Ferrabee, CKMS

tigation into offStrack betting, the Waterloo Regional Police had broken up one such oper. ation which had -been operating out of the Grad Office. This story, which, cited two deans as part ‘of the ring, is fictitious and should be viewed only as an attempt tit hum,our. Better luck next time! World

Food

We&

What can one person do to ensure adequate, widespread fpod resources at home tind abroad’? Frances Moore. Lappe, the author of Diet fpra Small Planet, has some answers to this question which she will approach in her @lk on “The Politics of Food;“’ m&. j3, a% Conrad GrebeI Ckllese. Lappe

is ow

‘of the many

Speakers who’ IMill bk on campus during- World Food Week. October 16th has been dqlared WorId Food Day by the United Nations and a 1 group 01 community groups including the Global Community Centre, WPIRG, CKMB-FM, and the Ebytown Food Co-op, has sponsored World Food Week, October 12 - 16th, to promote food issues. Besides talks and lectures, there will be a Brown Bag seminar, Supermarket Tours, and Campus Centre displays. Most of the events are free or are-offered at a minimal cost. You may register or receive information by calling 743-7 I 1 I or 884-9020. Remember, Food First! World Food Week Agenda Tuesday, October 13 Frances Moore Lappe Luncheon: Rm. 3001, Needles Hall. Topic: “Diet for a Small Planet .” Cost: $2.00 Time: 12 noon. Forum: Conrad Grebel College. Topic: “Politics of Food: Questions on Social Change.” Time: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m.

Friday,

Wednesday, October 14 Global Food Series: PAS 3005. Prdf. B. Hyma. Topic: “How the Other Half Eats.” Cost: $6.00 (fee for series), Time: 5:00 - 7:00 p.m. Thursday, October 15 Brown Bag Seminar, CC 135. Topic: “Food from Biowastes.‘* By: Dr. Murray FooYoung. Time: 12:30 - 2:O0. Friday, October 16 Supermarket Tours: CC2 17A, WPIRG office. Time: IO:00 noon. Campus Cen’tre displays: all day. -.

Get Elected Don The position of Don in iillage 1 is open .for the academic Spring term 1982. Application forms are available from the Housing Office in Village ,I and will, be accepted only until October 3 1, 198 1. Applications received

after this day cannot be considered for the’ Spring Term appointment. Good luck. -

SciSoccers Elected SocSci Elections took place on Tuesday October 6th during which three positions were contested and twelve acclaimed. Eighty-eight members of- the society came out to vote. Results yere as follows: President: Chris Matthews (a 3B Physics student) Vice-President: Sandy Kay (I A Physics) ’ Secretary-Treasurer: Adrian Stone11 (4A Applied Math) Social Director: Tf&ey Allen) Advertising: Roy Adam, ! Sports Director: Al MC- , Phail C & D Manager: Don Sturgeon

October

Editor: Ronald Spencer Ramshaw Red Rep (reg): J. Bentley Fed Rep(co-op): Ian Gorlick B.U.G.S. (Biology Undergraduate Society: Joan Torrie Chem Club: Danny ‘Archambault 2nd VP: Tony vanDalen Adrian Stonell, a 4a Applied Math student, paid his

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membership fees and therefore was allowed to run for Vice-President. Most. positions were filled by appointment, but the positions of President, Vice-President*,’ and Secretary-Treasurer were won by healthy margins, with the winning candidates receiving approximately sixty percent of the votes. Best wishes for a good term!

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; Associat’Pro~ucei-RoeERF fW2LhkR~ Directif &Phtography ARTH@lORNITZ’ I ’ &eenplayby IQYCE BhJEL. -B&d-on astoy by-BOB BRO$l(S -Pr&hced+y9@EPH [. LEVINEa@RICHA!W?‘iE~lNE .!Direc@d @BOB BROOKS_ -

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1980

&artaches is the kind. of On-her wayto the big city (in ‘more popular‘ with far ‘less film that probably w-ill open ’ this case, Toronto), she meets believable concepts (including, with littje fanfare (or ad- up with Kidder, a “noisy, foul;- the two starring Miss Kidder). vertising) i.n ,a few theatres mouthe,d, man-hungry 1 The cinematography is very * -across the country It will run a wenc’h.” (Kidder plays a nice. More to the point, ’ blonde; one gets the imHeartaches .does, to. some modest two ‘or three weeks ’ i and-then .be relegated to the I pression that the makers of extent, for> Toronto what ignominious obscurity of late the film wanted no possible Manhattan .did for New night television. ’ ’ connections to be drawn betYork: glorify and show off the ween her character and Lois It is, afterall, a Canadian‘ city. Moreover; Heartaches ’ Lane. ‘They had nothing to is a much more honest porfilm. ’ I To mention that the film/ - worry about.) I *trait; not all of its visions are the two rad-. pretty. stars MaTgot Kidder (a Can- 3 , Predictably; On the other hand, the.CN -’ adian actress‘ who has gained I ically different people hit it off and take out an apartment to- To,wer appears far more often international attention playing than one, Lois Lane opposite Chris-. I gether when they’ get to the ‘in the background \city: As the title suggests,’ the would like. Thereis, after all; topher’ Reeve’s Superman) bulk of the moy”e deals with will likely add a week to its run. more to the city than that one To add: that Don Shebib, how-these two characters deal piece of skyline: f perhaps Canada’s’ best, di- - .w<th their / respective emo- \ (The writer pauses for a ‘3cted it might add a few more ‘tional problems, which aren’t moment. Toopicky?Possibly, 5 days. ” ’ L , really all that different. but I have only two cans of ’ Pointing out that. it placed _ The story is wonderful: the liquid refreshment to ‘last me _- third in the race for, the humour is never forced and the rest of what is likely to bea Labban?& most popular film long, wark-filled evening and I , does not, as’often happens, a undercut the dramatic momawardatToronto.‘s F$stival,of haven’t.etien laid my heaviest, j ents-in the film. The’transition point on the reader y.et. I’ Festivals-might impress some from wildly *‘humourous to deerue a break, you know.) - people (although I have yet to ; /-be convinced that ‘8weighing tense1 scenes (which can be Heartaches is a ’ . wellquite abrupt,) is handled very the ,‘votes. infavour of the written, well-produced, weltwell,.what one might consider :-smaller theatres rwas a Statacted film. It and Threshold, - istiCaj]y &jr&f &a). , - . as very natural. c starring Donal,d Sutherland, the scene in held their ” own against the _. To add, almost as an alter- . (Consider which Kidder is finally making -thought, that thelfilm is very international competition ‘at gdo>d and deserved its high ‘out with the man she has the Festival of Festivals and . rank among the, international ’ ’ drooled over for ,mdst of the gave lie to the mistaken belief movie.j’Pott’s husband, be-- that Canadian films are only movies at the Festival will unlieving her to be the wo”man in . good at bonfires. * doubtedly impress _nobody. ‘,,- Not in &his country, in any the room, bursts in onthe un: I -I !’ &se. -’ suspecting couple, catching Why, then, is there an his foot in the door. Th* after’ ’ Heartaches‘ i‘s the ‘humalmost- national *misconcepmath of this scene, obviously, ) our-o&, often touching story tion about the quality of films ..of a woman -(played by Annie ’ ‘is a show of anger.) which this country produces? ix Potts) - who, ‘having /_become One must be able to accept the original premise, which . ’ pregnant -during a, -one-night I wholeheartedly recomstand. with one of her hus-s * has bednusedmoreoften than mend Heartaches. But, be . ” band’s -friends, leaves him is good for it, to-better enjoy quick in checking it out; it isn’t rather than have ‘him fiid ,out the film. Why not, though; likely tolast very long.-. t&_childA’is rfcg his. * I \ worse movies. have beco-me . Ira Naybnaq - ’ __j. , ! ) . I -.. I . . J : -\

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8 \ Bob, Dylan is coming to . -Montreal, Ottawa and Kit* . Kitchener. He will be playing in chener. concert at ‘ -the Kitchener Tickets are ongale nowfor Memorial \ Auditorium on the Kitchener ,concert at the October Jlst. , , . I Kitchener Nauditorium box It will be the old Dylan bn office,, Sam’s in Kitchener, this’ tour, -He‘ will be playing Kadwelb in Waterloo Square, music which made him famand Records 0~ Wheels in .- ous in the sixties. As part of his - Cambridge; tour Dylan will be doing four All tickets are $15.0Q.for Canadian dates, Toronto, reserve seats.

.

, ,My God,‘1 remember Groucho. . . Julius Marx, really. I remember Rufus T. Firefly; I remember Dr. Hackenbush; I remembercaptain Spaulding.. I remember Chico - (it was supposed to be “,Chicko’i, but someone dropped the “k’” by accident) and Margaret Dum,ont and scripts by , S. J. ,Perelman or George S. Kaufman. j . \/ ’ Duck Sopp. 4 Night-At The Opera, A Q&G At The i , Ra&s. v ’ YOU &t iour Lif& “Here hh is, the one and only -”I “Gro&-ho!!’ \ 1 -. / ‘That’s me.” . 0 ’~ So John Bay, an Americarractor, brought Groucho to life again in) a one-man (a man and his pianist, actually) show Saturday-night in-the, Theatre of the Arts - An . -Elephant in my Pajamas. ; .

He applied the greasepaint moustache and eyebrows onstage,.during the opening song. Then, with a brief biographical sketch of Marx, he launched into’his act. A’ nightclub act by Groucho, if you will. Bay had the physical business ‘down pat.. He had the ’ stopped, loping flatfoot walk, the voice, the leer: He shot off the Ii-n& quickly and, accurately; onlycoccasionally did they get lost or inaudible. The-lines were from the Marx Brothers’ movies+0 were the songs. I’m sure that anyone who:didn’t know the films was completely.confus~$d. \But* ho.w could it be Groucho without a foil, like. Margaret Dumont;or even any of the people who walked L onto Yo,u Bet YourGfe over the years. This proved true again - Bay was at .his best when playing off his pianist, (David Rose’: When he did the contract scene from A Day At The c: ‘Races, mdears ached for Chico’s Italian accent. ’ i It ‘wasa Groucho. anthology, a collection‘of his public I lives. But that’s> all ?tts. There were no+-isigh$ts into - J.gIiuS Marx. _ ,’ E>wish%e had met him as well.’ ’ \John M&lullen l

I


Friday,

‘Orches

1 Manoeuvres’

Say it is 1977, and Andy and Paul get together with about Electricity, just keyboard and nine of their old school-mates andform a band called the Id, and vocals. It attracts a lot of <attentiori. They quit their day do gigs on weekends in tiny clubs in the backwaters of the Liverpool pub scene. It’s the summer of_ punk madness, and no. s jobs and get the hell ‘out of _ Liverpool. one knows quite what’s going down, and for the first time in a Things are speeding up; ,-- long while people will listen to just about anything. Schoolmates peel off the ends until the band is a five-piece. you’ve outstripped the people Meanwhile, your musical awakening is well under way; who got you into this. Your tapes contain the Jam, the you’ve seen yourfirst rock concert, you’re old enough to drink Clash5 Patti Smith. YOU don’t in bars, and the small stack of reel-to-reel tapes on your shelf contains such luminaries as Elton John and the Doobie listen to the radio anymore. Too bad; they’re playing Brothers. You listen to CHUM-FM, after a brief but nonetheless embarassing flirt wi.th Rock 102, and Bruce Springsteen is Electricity, though not on any God, at least for a while. of the st$ions you’d be able to Then, it is 1978, and Andy goes off to join Dalek I Love You. receive. Paul and Andy switch to a label called Dindisc and reThis band also contains Andy Gill, who was in the Id and who release it. It goes Tap Twenty. will later be in The Teardrop Explodes, and Malcolm Holmes, 1980; relativistic distortion who will aid Andy and Paul much later. They’re still in is starting to hit you, the Liverpool. They have more success;‘euentually Andy leaves. universe is altering. You find a They stop gigging. Polygram offers the remnants a recording strange world of people with contract. , milk crates full of records on You’ve moved on to Yes, Genesis, Max Webster. You listen to a new station called Q-107. You see the occasional band in their living room floor-: whose names you always see on the . Humanities Theatre. Bruce Springsteen is still God, but you order lists in the record stores, hear a song called Anarchy in the U. K. by the Sex Pistols, and who buy the same song in much to your surprise you like it. album 7 - 10 - 12-inch dub Using the lovely name of down so&e demo tracks and versibns, who read obscure Orchestral Manoeuvres In sign tith an obscure label English musical tabloids, who The Dark, Andy gets back called Factory Records. 1979 hang around the backdoors of together with Paul and a 4- comes along. In the spring venues in the aftermath’of a track TEAC tape recorder they release a pleasant, concert until the band shows -named Winston. They put bouncy pop number called up and signs the albumless covers they brought along for the purpose. You listen to . l eoUltravox, Talkirig Heads, Elvis Costello. You discover and lead guitar. It continues something called CFNY. Stick Figure very quietly, with the sounds In March, Andy and Paul Neighbourhood weaving in and out amongst put out their first album in a The Spoons each other. The only lyrics beautiful die-cut sleeve, orReady Records are: ange inside a black/white Somebody handed me this matrix. It coasts onto the album yesterday. When peoRed light charts along with the singlet Free man’s world ple just hand me albums, I Green light Red Frame/ White Light. They expect the worst. This time I Woman. do a tour with Gary Numan, was wrong. just the two of them with son of To begin with, a small The subliminal message Winston, and a few guest history of the band. Gordon spots with.. Talking Heads. Deppe is a psychology grad- . here has a lot of impact. Listen to this piece a few You don’t hear the album until uate from Vancouver (that’s in times, and the next time you the fall, but to your credit you B.C.). \ Guitarist and lead hit a slop light, well, I’ll leave fall instantly in love with it. Just singer, Deppe formed the it to your imagination. in time; the second ‘album grobp with now ex-keyboardcomes out in September. Do ist Brett Wickens. Sandy ’ “For Tran” has some excellent lead work in it. Deppe you sense the impossibility of Horne (who is a mere 19 years really stands out in this cut. lightspeed? Do you feel like of age) is a computer operThe. story behind the song is Alice. with the Red Queen, as ations graduate who really about a young girl who falls in holding onto the hand of knaws how to play bass. love with her computer. Music you run madly just to Derrick Ross, the drummer,is The first piece on the stay in place? the most subdued. onstage, second side is called “Ice 1981 arrives in a shower of but apparently the wildestAge.” This is an instrumental sparks, Andy and Paul are offstage. When Wickens left depiction of the age of the touring with a couple of old the band in 1980, the Spoons and is filled with frieklds to help out. Malcolm is obtained Rob Preuss as ‘a glaciers, one of them. Enola Gay was replacement. Preuss is a- multitudes of primeval sounds. It could be off a Top Ten in England; Organmazing on keyboard, especit6 a ‘caveman isation remains on the charts. ally due to the fact that he is soundtrack movie. It is, however, definIn the summer they go into the but a child of 15 years. itely well done. If you close studio again. Everyone loves The Spoons have opened your eyes, you can almost see them. I for such noteables as The those great hunks of ice .Yeu’re almost on top of it; Diodes and Martha and the Joy Division only got one grinding down from the frigid Muffins. Their music is “biz.- -northlands. album out and Depeche Mode “Dropped Dishes” is a piece three singles before you disabout the consequences of covered them. Your stack of breaking a dish in a restaurant. tapes hasn’t much more than It starts out very rock-like, and doubled over all these yea,rs, then becomes new wave. The seemingly a musical window, a sound of a glass hitting the sliding timeslice of history floor, found somewhere in the trying to become present. middle, catches you unaThey contain Echo and the wares. Buntiymen, The Teardrop Ex“&ys are just boys when off plodes, the Gang of Four. You the field” is the whole idea in cah’t remember what hap“Only For Ath,letes.” Deppe pened to Bruce Springsteen. handles the vocals on all ihe Someone.decides to release other cuts, but “Only For an American compilation of Athletes” the two albums, and OMD also performed Thursday features bassist night as the warmup band Sand-y Horne’s voice. She must tour the New World to sounds much like the singer support it. They add on one to OMD. from the .Pretenders. single Canadian date, for Photo by Bill Woodward That, ladies and gentlemen, reasons still unexplained. And arre, ” “neurotic,” and is filled is the whole story. If you saw so you and Andy and Paul the Spoons last weekend come together at last, in a with “emotional catastrophe.” (they were at Bingeman Park roller rink at a recreation And now on with ,the review. with Orchestral Manoeuvery complex somewhere out ‘on Throughoui the album the In The Dark) then you can the’ highway to Guelph. make your own mind up as to Concerts are your nemesis. Spoons sound very much like how good they are (unless a blend of Genesis and New Yyu arrive and find your acyou’re an artsie). If you wan Music. quaintences who have nipped my opinion, well, you don’t around from the backdoor to Here are some of the want it really, but this album, be the first few to stand in line highlights of the album. and this’group are definiteb “Red Light” is a very while the trendies strut up and going places’. interesting piece. It starts off down posing for the traffic and 1very quietly, with keyboard the line grows- around the Cliff Goodman

So were‘Spoons

-concert , / block, periodically compacting together until long pa& the appointed hour the doors open and you are, brusquely ushered into some small seatless hall almost instantly smoky with the com_bustion products from a thousand legal and illegal- cigarettes. If you a& lucky there will be alcohol to load up your system with; licensed or not, you must endure sotie nonentity of a warmup act arid conversation made near-impossible by taped music, if that be the term for it, played at irritating volume, _And even when the blessed event occurs, when it makes the rest worthwhile; there’s the schizophrenia, reviewer versus the fan; do you distance yourielf enough to write coherently about it and remove some of the joy, or do you go mindless, shirk all your commitments and not remember anything afterwards. save a vague sense of pleasure or pain? As always, the decision is to make no decision ai all; dry ice fog starts seeping from the stage and you forsake the introspection, forsake the girl you are with, saueeze to within five feet of the stage dnd the taped opening somnolence of Stanlow, watch OMD emerge from a brilliant violet radiance. They are now fourpiece:, two A-frames stand loaded with synthesizers, there is a bass guitarist, and, drums.

October

great Andy is sincere, singing with real emotion, swinging his arms about and dancing to the electrqnic rhythms. Paul is shyer; he comes out front for a single lead vocal and alrriost scurries back when it is done. They run through much of. the best material from the aldums. The dance floor is pakked. Grandson of Winston helps out on material that would otherwise not be possible outside a studio; the alteredspeed effects in Dancin, the percussion on Mbstereality, The crowd is vocal in their appreciation. Sound is wonderful considering the environment. “Sorry for not doing any new material, but this is suppos&l to be an American tour,” Andy says, and slides into a song from the forthcoming album, Architecture and Morality, that makes you want to weep. (“It’s a pretentiou$ title,” he would later say candidly, “and sotie of the songs are failures.“) They repeat songs in the encores, though there is older materialthey could do. We all leave happy. Enckugh. of this impressionistic mithering; make a judgement. OMD are great. But why? Because’ their music is great? Mostly; they don’t add too much to the music live, just enough-to confirm their essential humanity. There’s not a single dud on either album; the embarassing stuff is hidden away on the B-sides of sinties that no one listens to.

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dd This is pop that isn’t just surface gloss; though their tunes may all sound like love songs, there’s a crucial ambiguity in the lyrics. Electricity is about alternate sources; energy Dancing is the closest musical . approximation to extreme drunkenness I’ve heard. Love’s not a simple matter to these boys, though it’s an important one. Because they haven’t gone anything to let us down? That’s very important; you’d like music to be something you can depend on. You know your tapes will always sound the same, long as you don’t leave them on radiators; but it’s nice to believe that you’re also going to like the next album. It’s incredible to be_ lieve that your mother’s going r to like it too. OMD are great because they showed us it’s possible to book someone other than aging folkies and unrepen’ tant macho-rockers, someI one who doesn’t even use guitars, have them play in an ugly concrete. structure four miles from the.University with about a week’s advance advertising and still make money and have the crowd screaming for a third encore. At Binge’ man Park on Saturday,there . were more than four times as many people as at .OMD’s Chicago gig. We all passed the test. Good music is coming. And no, they didn’t do Red Frame/ White Light. They don’t do- that song anymore. Even for Americans. Prabhakar Ragde


k -: R-*~~~~ ~brilig ? $ -,% . .’ in the’uniierse of discourse which fill&he Arts section of ‘. . Imprint. --i everything from - ’ punk to heavy metal - it’s , good to know we can sta get _ tickets to somethii-ig I f&U& alike - songs yelp can under- stand the tiorc&of, with lyrics ’ ’ that occasionally strike to the ’ roots of whtire you live (there ’ % were a lot of drinking songs. . .) * The Rovers, last S&day . nightat Centre in’tbe Square, I“ ” provided an&$oyableevening to a near-capacity crowd. 1 3 I myself (WHj etijoyed the v a eeening though ,/Ii- am 1not _

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usually f&d of folk mu&. Z the best parts of their tradpeople were well represented itional, Irish backgropn4 with - as evidenced by shouts-of believe the audience reallg made the show. They were en-’ a riew ‘country’ i$luence (al- delight when the Roversper’ thus&tic, @s&y the least. The thobgh one of their tiorks, formed Wasn’i That A P&y’ Rover4 rriade a red effqrt. to NO aread and Bufer seemed - a popula; favorite dotinbet their audience involved, to have. b&en heavily influ-, s&s at fhe Kent. I enced ky the old Neil Sedaka. and. succeede,d 1ddtialjly. The Rovers <eceived a They played Tavy old fav- ‘5F)‘s style’.) ‘~ x I standing‘ ovation 2 pet-- orites, iticluding the Unicor_n /- This is the RoverTs eightsuading them to do one eenth ,year together. One of ,encore and if the audieriti song,. and mapy .+ditional Lballqds, which tiere clearly _ the highlights of their career ” enthusiasm of this perftirm” known to’everyone present. was their 5-year run of tele- ‘ante, is any indication, their Their new’songs were veiy vision ,shtiw$, and that obnew album (appearing, appar’ good, t-00: Though in-a &meviously attracted’ many dieently, in about two we&:) will what different str+m than- hard fans. Much of the audbe a huge succe-q:. \ older works, they seem .to ience was of aq older- genAnna Marie Hubbard have succeeded iq combining eratio$ ~ though% -younger _\ T 1 , JO~Q W. Bast

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b’.&. Victoria Park Pavilion. bformation: 886-4127. $5.00; Students/Seniors $4.0@ * ‘UW Arts Centretpresents You’re A Good Man, Charlie Brown by fhe’ National Players. 8:00 p.m. Humanities-Theatre. $9.50, students/seniors $8.00. Artistic Endeavours presents John Otw+y and Wil&‘Willie Barrett (from Englaed). Upstairs at-the Kent. $5.50at the door.

Satiirdhy’

October

10

Tuesday,

October

i3 .

How the 0ther)Half

\

Loves - see Friday.

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The Travellers Sing For Kids. 5pdnsored by bur Place. 4:iO ’ \ and 7:00 p.m. Hunianities Thedtre. $3.50. \ ’ Annual Oktoberfest Operetta, “The Merry Widow” with the.KW Symphony- Orchestra. 8:00 p.m. Centre in ,,the Square. / j $lQ.OO, $12.50, $15.00,,$17.50, $25.00.

Wednesday,

October

14

World oFDance Series prksehts A Delicate Bala&e-with Danse Baroque. 4:30 p.m. &vanities Theatre. $2.00, . bktoberfest Operetta, ,(+fhe Merry Widow” - See Tuesday:

Thursday,

15

October

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K-W Little Theatre presents “How the Other Half LOties”. Se& ’ / ,-Friday. -2 Internationdi Film Series’ ‘The Marriaie Of Maria Braun” with short subject “Bass on Titles.” 8:00 p.6. Humanities Theatre.. Film fee $2.00, +udents/seniors $1.20 plus 5Oq for one night\ memhprship at the door.

+-:;

Friday,

October

16.

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K-W Little Theatre pr&ents!f‘How the O.ther Half Loves.” See last Friday,, y ’ Annual Oktoberfest .Operetta .“The IMerry Widow”. See \ Ttiesday.* L , ”

CAPITOL

OF’CANADA

rriday &.-Sat&day October

PRESENTS

..-

9 & 16

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A later piece, Biljana, was about a maiden and her friends preparing for the woman’s wedding. The women wove strips of linen into aveil.Eachgirlhadastripandbeganamaypole pattern which evolved into a starburst effect heightened by over-head yellow-red lighting; the starburst becameanarchfor the maiden to pass under; the arch turned into dandelion fluff, to a cross-stitch on a two dimensional plane, flowing like an angled ripple. One image melted into another, seamlessly; a very well done visual effect . The final piece was abound with razzledazzle. Women swung from the necks of men by their hands; some whirled, anchored around waists by legs; men hopped around the stage on their buttocks, double somersaulted in the air and sprang into the stereotypic Russian kicks and split leaps. Eight women, heads and arms high, were packed like so many paper dolls. From behind this shield flew a human cannonball (at least fifteen feet up) to land centre stage in one piece! Not a bad finish to an evening of great versatility, skill and enormous energy. Chris Bauman.

The curtain opens on a dark stage; dim lights reveal moving bodies on stage. Yugoslavian music is muted and movements are minimal. The bodies slowly extend and form a long line; the swaying motion is very subdued. Tey! Hey! Music up! Lights up! A visual version of Haydn’s Surprise Symphony. But in this case, it wis a shock more than a surprise. The taped music was of poor quality crackly, it faded away and blared out. -The lighting was distracting and detracting - one hue too intense, a switch in colours too awkwardly abrupt. Both elements were annoying but the dancers - of the Yugoslavian “Frulica” - overcame these obstacles as demonstrated by the warm reception in Humanities Theatre last Thursday night. These twenty-two dancers from Belgrade, were on their first Canadian tour. The-dances performed were not authentic but the primary aim was to present exciting adaptation of lengthy, repetitious works while maintaining the style and tone. As there were eighteen dances performed, this writer will attempt to describe only a few of the outstanding pieces. Dances from Bunjeuac was-a footwork extravaganza for the men. Bells accentuated the rhythms of stepsand movements. At one point they did an amazing series-of toe-heels, heel clicks and jumps weaving their feet in front and back of each other (entrechat is the term used in ballet) at a speed associated with Spanish dancing. The pattern was endless - there seemed not to be one, yet all the dancers were precisely together - the bells would’ve told otherwise. The floor patterns were sharp and intricate (the lines formed perpendicular to the audience were regimentally cut) from couples to circles to a line to arches and so on. The first half ended with a slow-moving, seductive beginning by the men. This built wonderfully to a frenzied finish with twenty bodies leaping about like so many flames in a bonfire. Cikos opened the second movement noless spectacularly. Six male dancers each had two sticks, which they flipped around as nonchalantly as Fred Astaire with his cane. Two of

the men then snapped whips to the Banat music - the cracking became exceedingly loud and came uncomfortably close to causing harm. However, the piece ended on a more congenial noteas the competitorsceased to be intent on killing each other. One dance removed the audio assault by movement without music. Six women in white ruffled blouses and brightly coloured aprons over skirts, entered side-ways with hands joined in the classic “cygnet” fashion. They included their heads from side to side, in a quick steady rhythm, in opposition to the rhythm produced by their feet! That’s more difficult than tapping the beat to Hit TheRoad, Jack and singing a Bob Marley tune. And to add to this, these women joined men, maintaining both beats and moving into circles and double circles (two circles going in opposite directions)) And then, the men changed the rhythm of steps and the speed but the heads were still going. It became comical by the work’s end but the three dimensional intricacy of the dance was not lost on the audience. /

iKid’s artist has his place It is obvious from his music and approach to music that Fred Penner does not believe in being condescending towards his children’s audience. Penner feels that while the songs should be fairly simple, but with a good storyline, they should not be simplistic. Penner also feels a great responsibility towards hisaud-

ience, feeling that a performer can leave an indelible impression on a young child and that self expression, self worth and a positive approach to living are important aspects of a child’s growth. It was apparent from his performances last Saturday at the >Humanities Theatre that Penner’s approach tochildren

Fred Penner, a children’s entertainer, in the Humanities Theatre.

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works. His antics on stage brought howls of laughter from the children, as well as from the older people in the audience, and the kids were quick to pick up choruses, to the songs as well as timely gestures. Penner, 33, is from Winnipeg and has been performing professionally sincehe was fifteen -years old. During the sixties he travelled as a folk singer, got involved with some theatre and later formed a group called Kornstalk, a trio that performed songs, skits and musical numbers which were geared towards family entertainment. In 1977 he left that group and went solo, concentrating on the children’s concert and in the fall of 1979 recorded his first children’s album called The Cat Came Back. Penner records on the Troubadour label which is owned by Raffi, another well-known children’s artist and is distributed by A&M records. It was this album that earned Penner a Juno nomination and has put him in the top three children’s performers Blong with Raffi, and Sharon, Lois and Bram: Penner’s second album will be released this year and he is working on a children’s show for CBC. It seems that Penner has found his niche as a children’s artist and he should be in the forefront of children’s entertainment for some time to come. Randy Hannigan

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The cover of Raw Number 2 proclaims it to be the “graphix magazine for the damned intellectuals.” One .might assume from this, without actually reading the book, that Raw is terribly pretentious. While it is true that many of the stories are somewhat. . . raw, Raw 2 is nonetheless an interesting graphic magazine. The problem for the reviewer is drawing the line between art and trash. The Clock Strikes, for instance, is a fairly straightforward story, entertainingly told with fascinating art (the use of ietratone is very creative). It is pretty good. City of Terror or Fishing With the Moon, on the other hand, have incomprehensible stories complicated by the use of very poor art. Some would say that such art is very stylish, but I feel that, in most cases, it betrays a lack of ability. Unfortunately, most of the stories aren’t so clearly good or bad. Pussyfooting is a cute idea, but the point is rather blatant and the art is questionable. Comic Strip, on the other hand, has some interesting art, but the point is obscure. (Is’s picture of a million Popeyes really art?) , . The centrepiece of Raw is Muus, k Survivor’s Tale, in which a young artist tries to get one of his relatives to tell him about “life in Poland . . . during the war.” The main plot device in this 16 page story is that all the characters are mice. I’m not certain that I like Maus. The art is acceptable. The story is straightforward enough and could easily have been worked without the strange plot device. (Apparently

Hitler is portrayed as .a cat, giving the story a sort of symbolism, but this isn’t really made clear in the first installment.) I look forward to future issues to see this cleared up. The most interesting part of Raw 2 for me was the text pieceentitledHonk!Honk!lt’s the Bonk! Written by David Levy and Art Spiegelman, the essay convincingly states that the mass media, particularly television and movies, b&, to alesser extent newspapers as well, have altered our views of reality to the point where we no longer can accurately determine what is real and what isn’t. Consider: While the news is an extension of the drama, the Docudrama has made the converse equally true. Through historical reconstructions and biopix have a long pedigree, the docudrama - yesterday’s news semidigested in even more heightened form has become a TVstaple. After Entebbe, every network rushed its own version into production. Even before the Jonestown bodies were cold, it was easy to imagine the television prop men mixing their own batches of Kool-aid for the reconstruction.

Or the conclusion: C. P. Snow once observed that “the most dreadful thing of all is that millions of people in poor countries are going to starve beforeour very eyes. We shall see them doing so upon our television sets. “A horrifying truth. “Equally astounding is the notion that the survivors will watch a docudrama reenactment shortly thereafter.”

At $4.00, Raw is pretty expensive for what is, after all, just an over-sizedcomic book. This essay, though, makes it really worthwhile. Ira Nayman

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MahlersymphonystartsSeason The Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony Orchestra made no mistake by opening their second season in the Centre in ‘# the Square with one of Gustav Mahler’s epic symphonic poems. Last Friday night’s performance of his Symphony No. 3 in a combined performance of the London and K-W orchestras was, like last year’s staging of Mahler’s equally enthralling Second Symphony, a highly successful and engaging work. Mahler’s symphonic epics can be difficult for both performer and listener alike. His is eclectic music that conforms to few of the conventions of the symphonic tradition. The Third’s very long first movement, followed by five very short ones, is hardly the architecture of the symphonies of Beethoven or Schubert, or any other of Mahler’s models. And Mahler’s symphonies tend to be programmatic, for it is the story that he wants to tell, not any sonata, rondo, or scherzo form, that gives shape to his movements. The first movement of the Third, for instance, according to the composer’s score tells the story of winter overtaking summer. The ominous bleak and wintry brass passages, highlighted by a superb performance by trombonist Joseph Costello, continually interrupts the light pastoral passages of the strings and woodwinds, the movement culminating in a tumultuous winter gale. This is hardly the exposition- - development recapitulation of the classic sonata first movement form. The programme of the last five movements, performed as a group with only very brief pauses, is much less obvious and much more metaphysical. The’ five are an eclectic collection of orchestral sections. a mezzo ‘soprano solo set to a poem of Nietzsche, and a chorus set to the text of a collection of German folk tales. A visit to the current exhibit at the Art Gallery of Ontario of German Romantic painters, many of whom were Mahler’s contemporaries, would help a listener appreciate Mahler’s musical philosophising. The paintings of the German romantics always state more than at first meets the eye, and embedded in their pictoral art of portraits or landscapes are often very elaborate metaphysical statements. A solitary tree that breaks the mountainous horizon, for instance, is a symbol of the cross, and therefore of Christ’s unification of the infinite and the finite worlds. A portrait of two children by a stream with a rabbit symbolizes baptism and the adoption of Christ as saviour. As these painters speak to us through our eyes, Mahler speaks to us through our ears. But the second half of the program was only a qualified musical success. Canadian trained mezzo soprano Janice Taylor gave a hauntingly beautiful solo, and there was a superb off stage trumpet solo by James Ford. But Ford did have trouble with some of the high notes, ad there were some periodic timing and pitch problems. These flaws, slight though they may be, distinguish the truly professional

orchestras from the ambitious community orchestras that the London and K-W groups are. This is not to take away from the sparkling performance of the entire brass section (I think the stars of the evening) who handled their formidable parts with laudible ease. Nor is it to take away from London conductor Alex Hauser’s interpretation, stamina, and memory (he conducted this titan without a score!) which all deserves top honours.

Contemporary critics praised the enthusiasm and sound interpretations of Mahler, himself a celebrated conductor, but deemed his apparently wild gyrations on the podium excessive. The same might be said of Hauser whose exuberance is prone to turn into histrionics. But perhaps this excess was needed to pull off this epic. Mahler was a Viennese contemporary of Freud, a physician w.ith whom Mahler consulted in the later years of his short life. Because of this connection, I can not help but feel

Austinsnice, The Austin String Quartet with pianist Kenneth Huall presented Quintet in F, Op. 34 (1864) by Johannes Brahms, in Four Movements, at the Humanities Theatre, October 7th. The lunch-time performance opened with Allegro non Troppo. A soft entrance must be distinct and incisive to introduce a work and the entrance here was a bit to pianissimo to be effective. The piano came in well, but it was noticeable that the violins were too weak and were out of tune. The first piano theme entered well indicating its deference to the strings. This deference was well adhered to throughout. The four part quartet was mellow, typically Brahmsian and hymn-like, but the stretti parts lacked bite reminiscent of that in the Istomin Stern Rose Trio recording the Archduke Concerto. Musicianship was not lacking here, but rather, quality in stringed instruments. The violin solo which followed was very nice but it was

but-awed

hampered by either a tuning problem or a cheap instrument. The bowing impressed me through,out with its togetherness and the excellent violin music produced.

Andante

un poco

Adagio

portrayed excellent adagios that Brahms wrote so well. One never knows where they’ll go but the music is always devoid of saccharine sweetness and is always relaxingly reminiscent of some great organist doodling after Mass on the rich registers. The spooky introduction of Sherzo: Allegro was appropriate for the forte’s which followed but it should have been more distinct. There was a brief letdown after the surprise szforzato. More legato was required from Ken Hull in the heavier chordal passages to keep the trebel powerful. When competing with the grand piano, better string instruments prove their worth in their staying power. Besides this, I enjoyed the good amount of ‘Indian’ excitement produced here by the fourth’s and sixth’s stretti.

I

“Errod’good “The Abbess wore a nun’s costume to show that she didn’t go all the way.“(Answer to question from the audience at A Comedy of Errors, Ott 6th) Stratford’s production of A Comedy of Errors showed the firm, controlled hand of director Peter Dews, and was a fine forum for the acting talents of Fiona Reid, Peter Hutt and Susan Wright. Superbly directed and timed stage business, although occasionally difficult to see, carried off this early play of Shakespeare’s in an effortless manner. The choice of time period (1820’s) upset some patrons, but the costumes were extravagant and the passion of Italy in this period well portrayed. A Comedy of Errors plays on one continuous joke developed brilliantly by Shakespeare. Two sets of identical twins separated as youngsters and united -by chance in the Port of Ephesus, are continually mistaken for each other, igniting fear and mistrust within friends and family alike. Surprised “What”s and bewildered “Are you speaking to me?“s, were delivered with much aplomb and variation that the ridiculousness of the situations kept growing.

that there was in those last movements a Freudian id struggling to break through the oppression of form, the musical super-ego. Many might protest this application of psychology to music, but few who attend this performance will deny that those tremendous last chords liberated something in the psyche, or as many now seem to prefer, the soul. The KWSO next performs in the Centre in the Square on October 30 and 31 with guest Liona Boyd. David Dubinski

Miles Potter and John Jarvis, as Drumio of Ephesus and Drumio of Syracuse, deftly acted the beaten servant, the glib companion and the harried, confused messenger. Fiona Reid and Susan Wright were well cast as the sisters, Adriana, wife of Antipholus of Ephesus, and Luciana. Ms. Reid’s hysterical wife was convincing and empathetic. Susan Wright’s coy Luciana was well-received, and her off-the-cuff answers during the postperformance question period endeared her to the audience. Peter Hutt and Ian Deakin played the long-lost brothers named Antipholus. Their command of the stage and control during minor flusters of stage business definitely displayed their skill. Kenneth Pogue was adequate as Solinus, the Duke of Ephesus, but his opening speeches were difficult to hear. Tuesday afternoon’s performance, attended majorly by high school and university students, was comparable to any I have seen at Stratford. The quality of Shakespearean theatre has not been neglected in the Festival struggles of organization. Stratford has “Will Power”, and they’re using it. Patricia L. Shore

Good octave playing could be discerned here, and one could well appreciate the pianist’s fun in letting out all the stops at this point. The finale: Poco sostenuto

- Allegro non troppo - Prest non troppo had a good introduction followed by a semifinal cadence. It was nice and Mendelsohnian here, but as always after a fortissimo passage, the quiet playing lost its bite and sometimes its legato. However, the togetherness and unison finalamento was effective here. In taking applause, the quartet could have funned it up a bit more. Borgeism is always welcome. Ron Porter

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“We have already entered an era in whit h the erosion of a wide range of personal liberties to which we have become accustomed, and which are often constitutionally acknowledged, is general and accelerating.” So ,writes Robert Fripp, introducing his most recent work. Let the,Power Fall, the fifth and final step in the “Drive to 1981,” is a fascinating and idiosyncratic record of Frippertronics cul1 led from Fripp’s 1979 tour of 1 Western Europe and North America. “What is Frippertronics?” you ask, launching us into a‘ discussion which may never end. . . Frippertronics is a music created by ,Robert Fripp with the aid of his guitar, pedalbotird, and two reel-to-reel tape decks, using a single reel of tape. The first deck records whatever Fripp is playing on his guitar. The tape travels to the second deck, where the signalis replayed. As it is being ‘heard, this signal is also being fed back to thefirst tape deck, where it is rerecorded along with whatever the guitar is playing. The first notes of a piece, therefore, are heard over and over again at regular intervals, gradually fading away to be replaced by newer sounds. Pieces are built gradually, usually one note at,a time, and although it,, may soinetimes seem very repetitious, the music is also constantly changing. Frippertronics is an extensionof the technique used by Brian Eno and Fripp to produce two albums’ in the i mid-76’s, No Pussyfooting and Evening Star. Since that time, Fripp has workedasproducer with-such diverse talents as Peter Gabriel, The Roches, David Bowie, and Daryl Hall, among- others. What he learned in the studios with them he has since applied to his own music: the production (sound quality, use of stereo, etc.) is-again remarkably imaginative and clean. The six pieces comprising Let The Power Fall, en-titled 1984,1985, and so on,*pick up where last year’s God Save The ‘Queen left off. They demonstrate Fripp’s growing familiarity with his two-deck

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system and his increasing comfort, with the improvisation which the system demands. Most of the music is quite gentle and soothing, although it is sometimes punctuated by searing and/or dissonant notes. One can never know what to expect, and in this respect; Let The Power Fall is not far _ removed from Fripp’s first recorded project, King Crimson’s In The Court of the Crimson King, which has co’me to be regarded as a rock - ’ classic . . . Which reminds me to report that yet another incarnation of King Crimson is on its way, this one composed of Fripp,- bassist Tony Levin, guitarist Adrian Belou and percussion wizard Bill Bruford. So as we wait for the new King Crimson album and begin the Incline to 1981, we still have some-time to savour creations of the Dr&e to 1981, which began in 1978 with Exposure.

..

If you’re not sure whether to buy Let The Power Fall, why not at least read the album’s back cover? Fripprs way of explaining what he does is

queeze the juice of a quartered lime over ice. Throw in 1 NDunces of Yukon Jack, top it up with cola and you’ll have trapped the Bear Bite. Inspired in the

necessarilv more dirt :t than my interpretation. If you are inclined to buy the album, I suggest you do it soon;, my copy came with a five-song sampler of Brian Eno’s recent work, with Fripp and others as well as Eno on his own. This bonusEP is not advertised as a, “limited edition,” but you never know how long -a bargain like this will last . . . Or, as Fripp concludes his liner note, “Now forget all of this.” Perry Domzella >< ._ Sitting Targets Peter Hammill Rio Records

It was July, 1979. My friend Dan marched into the record store where I was working, threw an envelope onto the counter, said “Merry Christmas!” and marched out. I had ridden by bicycle to work, wearing jeans and a T-shirt. It certainly didn’t seem like Christmas . . . Inside the envelope there were two tickets for Peter Hammill’s concert in Buffalo that evening. I had heard the name, but knew nothing of his music. I rounded up an interested friend and we heaw off to Buffalo . . . My friend and I, along with maybe 200 others, spent two hours that night with our mouths hanging open. It was a state related to both shock and awe, one I can only call The Eternal Wow. . . My search for Peter Hammill albums was on. I found Vision and ’ The Future Now. The liner note from Vision mentioned the band Van der Graaf Generator. A new search was begun. Treasures began to appear in cutout bins VdGG’s Godbluf’f Vital, Still Life, Hammill’; Over. The list goes on. . . and ;. . and on.. .

1-cc’1 -

l!~

What makes Peter Hammill’s music so great? The melodies haunt you. You can hear a tune just once and find yourself humming it three days later. The poetry may be difficult to understand at first, not because of discontinuity or nonsensical lines, but because Hammill expresses himself so concisely.* The arrangements are imaginative almost to the point of being erratic. Yet somehow the music and the lyrics fit together perfectly. Hammill’s main strength,‘if not his poetry, must be his voice. He has enough range to singallthepartsofmostchoral music, enough power to sing rock, and a phrasing technique all his own. And that’s not all. Hammill plays piano and guitar very well, has learned synthesizer, bass and drums, and perhaps most importantly, he has learned how to get the most variety from a limited number of instruments. No two songs on this album sound anything alike, but that comes as no surprise.. . ~ The problem with this album is that it is very difficult to write about. No lineor even verse could be construed as representative. But ‘perhaps this anecdote will shed some light: Last month at Hammill’s show in Toronto, there was an island of quiet which someone sunk with a shout: “You’re a genius!” The audience cheered and screamed for what seemed like a long time, and when it subsided, Hammill turned to his microphone and asked, “Definition, please?” A girl screamed, “You’re crazier than any of us,” to which Hammill replied, “Aha! It’s a fine line, isn’t it?” Perry DomzeJla ,

/

’ 111Ted Bennett OtD. Optometrist 55 E&St. East Suite 303 Phone 8854550 for Appt.

111 -


Jane Gaudet came fifth in the John Clayton finished sixth in Windsor welcomed visiting the 100 m and eighth in the200 teams to its annual Invilong jump and in her first metre. Rich Sandborn and ’ tational Track and Field meet attempt at the 100 m hurdles in last Saturday with far friendsome time finished fourth and James Pickett ran the 400 m. cleared all the hurdles (no finishing ninth and eleventh. lier weather than in recent small achievement). Sylvia years. Consequently, the AthNick MeIoche came fourth in Ounpuu took asecondplace in the 800 m with teammate‘Dave enas were able to open their her first attempt at the discus >Stuart in ninth; Dave ‘also outdoor ,.track season under in several years. came seventh in the. 1500. sunny skies and in temSeveral Warriors particiThe meet finished with an )peratures almost suited to as well. unusual relay. Only Waterloo running and several excellent ’ pated at Windsor Doug Brown ran a fine 15: 14.8 had entered teams in the men’s uerformances were recorded. for second place in the 5000 m. and women’s 4 x 100 m relay. Lisa Amsden came back from a fine 58.7 in the 400 for third place to win the 1500 in 4:42.2. Lana Marjama and Ulrike Zugelder ran the 300 m, Lana finishing second in 10:20.8, Ulrike seventh in A partial Waterloo men’s 11: 12.6. Nicole Durocher was lagging in fourth place most of an easy second in the 800 m in cross-country track teamcomthe way. With two and a half peted in Guelph and led by 2127.8. miles to go he took over the rookies Ted Murphy, who Laurie Vanderhoeven, ill lead and finished in 31:55, with the flu, nonetheless placed first, and Thorn Schdefeating John Harper of reached the finals of both the midt,. who placed 8th, came Western who ran in at 32:05. 100 m and 200 m and ran a leg away with a fourth place team Other Warriors who finished finish behind Western, of the 4 x 100 m relay. Cathy were Cal Orok (26th), Alan Queen’s, Laws took a fifth place in the and Guelph re- I Wrobel (28th) and Penteley 400 m, a fourth in the 200 m, spectively. _ (4 1st). Murphy ran a fine race, and was on both relay teams. Alan Wrobel 1

Murphy

Oct. 3rd and 4th, Columbia Field, answers the questions when and where the two part Women’s Field Hockey Tournament took place. Waterloo, McGill, Guelph, Toronto and York answers the question of who took park. How is the game played? With a lot of determination and skill. What is field hockey? It entails running non-stop for seventy minutes with only a five minute break at half time. Such matches were strung together in a two day battle. In their first game, Waterloo met McGill and was defeated 3 - 1. The lone goal was scored by Cynthia Struthers. Waterloo just needed some warming up.

I

That same day, Waterloo played one of their best games, of that tournament, against York. Judy McCrae called it a “dog fight” as her team fell to defeat, 5 - 4. The coach felt good about the game considering nine of Waterloo’s team members were rookies and York had three national\ team mebei-s. Waterloo fought hard. Within the first minute of play, everything looked grim

when a goal was scored on a penalty shot awarded to York. Cynthia Struthers, Martha Whitten, Jennifer Shaw, and Leslie Yeats managed to keep Waterloo in the game with one goal each. York’s skill was matched in’ all but one case. The potential .of the girls was apparent. The nexyday: the previous skill of the girls seemed to have diminished as they were beaten 5 - 0 by Toronto. Toronto had all the experience of York with two national team members to its name. The Waterloo girls neededtime and practice.

wins

Waterloo’s’ final game was played Sunday afternoon. Again the girls managed to keep up with the Guelph team but . Waterloo lost with only seven minutes to go. The final score was 2 - 1 with the lone goal going to Lisa Bauer. Judy McCrae’s concluding comment was, “They had them but they didn’t finish them off.” Maybe Waterloo will do that during the second half of the tournament in York. It will take/place Oct. 17th and 18th with finals scheduled for Oct. 31st and Nov. 1st. Debbie Elliott

Wonien’s Field Hockey Tournament

Toronto York McGill Guelph Waterloo

Waterloo vs. McGill Waterloo defeated 3 - 1 Waterloo vs. York Waterloo defeated 5 - 4 ’ Toronto vs. Waterloo Waterloo defeated, 5 - 0 Waterloo vs. Guelph Waterloo defeated 2 - 1 Standings after one tournament W+T I 3 1 3 1 2 0 1 0 0 0

, L 0 0 2 3 4

After some hurried consultations it was agreed that the Warriors would run a 5 X 400 metre race against a 4 x 100 m Athena team. This handicap was hurriedly arrived at and proved excessive, as the Athenas won handily. Next time, maybe a 6 x 400 Warrior team against a 5 x 400 -Athena team. . . The Windsor results were encouraging in an off-season, especially since almost all the competitors were either just

‘recovering’ frqm or just corning down with colds. Meanwhile Warriors and Athenas cross country teams were competing in the-Guelph Invitational. Andrea Prazmowski put in yet another-outstanding performance, this time finishing third behind her Durham Striders clu bmate Sylvia Ruegger (running for Guelph) and Anne Marie Malone of Queen’s. Pat Wardlaw was Waterloo’s second finisher in the 17thfollowed by

Jacquie

Gibson

and Yvonne

deJong. The cross country Athenas have one more meet before their finals, a race to be held this afternoon (Friday) on the North Campus (CoIumbia Field) featuring competitors from Western, Guelph, Queen’s and several other schools and will probably be decisive in the selection of team members for the OUAA and OWAA finals. Alan Adamson

/

Athkte,s of the Week

Cathy Laws ( Track and Field Cathy is currently in her second year with the Athena track team. She hails from Toronto where she attended North Toronto Collegiate. While a high school student “Claws” (as her teammates refer to her) won an OFSAA gold mdeal as a member of a4 x 100 meter relay team I I and a silver medal in .her 80 meter hurdles. To show her versatility she was also a member of the city of Toronto Cross Country Champions. 1 Cathy continues to show how valuable her versatility is to a team as last weekend at the Windsor invitational in which she competed, and placed very well in four separate track events. In the 200 meter she battled through the heats and eventually placed 4th,in the final; she then came right back to finish a commednable 4th in the 400 meter behind a very strong field. She then ran on both the 4 x 100 relay and 4 x 400 meter relay teams, with the 4 x 100 team finishing in second place. The Athena track and field team is very pleased with Cathy’s accomplishments. Coach Alan Adamson says,“This is the kind of person that the program is about!”

’ _

Peter Bulfon Soccer Peter is a Geography major in his second year with the Warrior soccer team, His hometown is Richmond Hill, Ontario. Although only 5 ft. 9 in. tall, Peter is one of the premiere goaltenders in the O.U.A.A. soccer league. He continues the excellent tradition established by Warrior goalkeepers in the past. In the pre-season tournament, the Warriors played in Oakland, Michigan where Peter was named M.V.P. of the tournament as the team lost 3 - 0 in the final game. During league play, Peter, with his cat-like reflexes, has time and again thwarted opponents who had excellent scoring chances. This past weekend he stopped two McMaster clearcut breakaways in the first half to keep Waterloo in the game, a game the Warriors eventually won by a 1 - 0 score. In six games, Waterloo has had only six goals scored against them, a major reason why the team is undefeated in league play. This shows the skill of the Warrior defense led by Peter Bulfon.

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_)

>Quizof the Week

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:

b’ :

-y- J

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Guess the number of towellsused by CampusRecreationparticipantsat the PACdufing s. 4 the week of Sept. 28 to Oct. 4. Hint: between 5,000 - 10,000.’ Submit your guess to the campus ret office.,The closest,guess will receive a“winit award:‘.

Competitive Leagues

_- Most

_

competitive leagues are now well underway witha good,amount of enthusiasm and ) fine play. Some of the early leaders in the various activities are: I ; W-en’s, Flag Football (as of October 1) WL’TP ‘, NFL Division .Fighting Irish 3 0 0 6 1:- * * / EastC ~,I 2,. 1 0 4 -\ \ w Ret _ , _ 2004 ’ CFL Division. ;Minolta Hageyt ~3 0 , 0 4 _ 1 . Renison.’ - , r - . - ’ 2 0 0 _ ‘4South 3 2 1 ! o_ 4’ I -Men’s’ F!?g Football - First place p,ositions (as of Oct. 6) I/

1’ Flaming A’s 1 \ 2 I Purple Haze _ \ 1 ’ - 3 West ExWasties ’ . ” ’ ‘ _.’ . 4 RenisonPastifarians 1 ,’ , , ‘, 5 Orgasmechs I ,6 South 2 _L 7 _West D Alumni _ ’ 8 St. Jerome’s ‘A’ ~ 9, Gang Green I Men’s Soccer League A Montezuma’s Revenge ’ 2. 01 i 3 The Generics i 0 1 3 . --/ Dweens United ’ 2 0’1 3 ‘. ’ B 1- =Hammar Machine I 2-o 0 4 Dirigiballs _ _ i 0 0, 4 . B2?CSA (B) --2 0.’ 2 , B3 Whoof 1 Y-l ’ 3’ South A Alumni - 3 1 0 2 Flames j .lli,2 Look:for more standings of various leagues in future issues. This is the latest data from the 1, Campus Ret-department./ , * Thank-you for yoursupport. As of now we have enough officials for football to make the ,- league run. If you are still interest-ed in being a ref contact ‘Sharlene Murray or Paul Laking . at the Campus Re’creatio-n Office. League ‘.

,

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Football Qfkials

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Fikr (fi-lur .), n. In newspapers, anything which causes space which othbrwise would be left blank to be filled. Blatant filler; n. Filler\which serves no purpose other than to take up awkward space and hopefully amuse the reader, like this ad..,

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The Waterpolo Warriors managed to hold onto their undefeated status this season, chalking up a win and tw.o ties in weekend action. Offering a great effort, the team fought to \ tie McMaster in their second game. This is the first time I McMaster has not won a reg- ular game in eleven years of competition.

In a thrilling second half the Warriors closed down McMaster’s offense ,while building their own &ore. John Saabas scored with only a minute left in the game. A In game one against Westcontroversial call late in the ern University, the Warriors game called back the Warriors established a four goal lead go-ahead goal and both teams and proceeded to coast to a had to settle for the tie. 14 - 11 victory. Bench players Waterloo’s defense proved were used extensively in the strong when faced with Mat’s nine man advantage. last ‘two quarters to save Waterloo’s last game of the starting players for’ the folday pitted the Warriors alowing games. Second year gainst a relatively fresh Blues player John Tyson scored two squad who were only playing goals coming off the bench. their second game. Waterloo took an early 5 - 1 lead but The Warriors’ second game tired players were unable to against McMaster proved to score in the second and most of be the most exciting yet in the the third quarters. Toronto young season. The game was lead 7 - 6 going into the close from the beginning as the Warriors gave their all against - fourth. Each team managed an early goal and late in the game the perennial champions Toronto was still clinging to its Waterloo the Mauraders. lead tightly checking the never lead the game but they Waterioo players. During a were never down by more than

Rugby Warriors returned from RMC last weekend with their third victory in as many games. As was to be expected the Redmen played their usual style of rugby undisciplined, un/eventful and unsportsmanlike 2 also to be expected, the Redmen lost 15 27. The Warriors came out somewhat flat the first half, trying to play RMC’s game instead of their own. As a result the half time score was RMC 4 - WaterlooO. Injuries which have hurt the Warriors all season reared an ugly head again. Waterloo’ lost Ontario Provincial team player Ian Carthy with an ankle sprain. With the whistle for the second half Waterloo decided

0

to play its own style of rugby and shortly into the’ second *half, outside centre Jim Allen made a splendid break running through some five wouldbe tacklers and giving the Warriors their first score. Phil White, theleadingpoint scorer this season was good on the convert. Having gained momentum it was clearly Waterloo who dominated. Fine efforts on the parts of ‘Glen Harper and Fraser Jennings gave Waterloo good field position for White to add nine points with three fieldgoals. In other action last. week Waterloo downed Guelph I2 - 4. All points there courtesy of Phil White and his “tremendous toe.” Tim Wallace

SKIERS TRAVEL

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Toronto nossession Mike Obremick bloke away hoping for a Toronto turnover. The turnover came with only two seconds remaining. A quick pass to Obremik: who scored the goal kept thewarriors undefeated.

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The Waterpolo Warriors will have next weekend off returning the follo,wing weekend to play in the Oktoberfest Tournament at Laurier. Current OUAA Waterpolo standings: McMaster Waterloo York Toronto Western

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