1981-82_v04,n27_Imprint

Page 1

Events

campus -

Friday,

February

12 -

Athena

A special new series of study skils workshops will begin the week of February 22nd. The one-hour sessions, which last for four weeks, cover such topics as Time Management, Listening and Notetaking, Effective Reading, and Exam Preparation. The workshops will be offered on Mondays and Wednesdays at 10:30-11:30, 1:30-2:30 and 2130.3130. Interested students may sign up foranyof these sessionsat the reception desk of Counselling Services, Room 2080, Needles Hall. For more information, phone John Vardon ext. 2464. 2 for 1 in the Campus Centre Games Room. Check for the ad in this issue of Imprint, clip coupon, and come up to the Games Room. Table Tennis Tournament to be held March 1 to5. Sign upat the Turnkey desk by Feb. 24. Prizes! Sponsoied.by The Carnpus Centre Board. Resume and Interviewing Skils Sessions. The Department of Co-ordination and Placement will be giving seminars in Room 1020, Needles Hall on the following dates: Resume Sessions: Tuesday, Feb. 23 from 11:30-l pm., Wednesday, Feb. 24 from 11:30-l pm. Interviewing Skills Sessions: Tuesday, March 2 from 11:30-l pm., WednesdayMarch3from 11:30-l pm. Sign-up sheets are posted on the bulletin board, first floor Needles Hall. UW Ski Clbb heads to Horseshoe Valley Sk1 Resort for $17.00. You had to sign up by Wednesday for this trip. UW Arts Centre Gallery presents Political Cartoons. An exhibition of works of 15 noted Canadian cartoonists. Hours: Monday-Friday 9am-4pm and Sunday: 2pm-5pm. Modern Languages. Poet’s Pub - Come in have a drink and relax after a long week. Pinball, cold refreshments and good company available in CPH 1327.12 noon - 4pm. PEERS. Open Monday 3:30pm. CC138A.

- Thursday:

3pm-8pm,

Friday:

Ipm-

(Friday Prayer). Organized by the Muslim Students’ Association. 1:30-2:30pm. CCllO. Office Hours have begun for the Women’s Centre in CC149. Hours: 12 noon - 2 pm. Drop in. Professor Daniel Headrick, Roosevelt University willspeak at\a history lecture series at WLU on “Technical Factors in the Scramble for Africa.” He will speak at 4pm. In the Paul Martin Centre. Admission free and everyone welcome. Refreshment being served.

Squash

Learn to prepare your favourite vegetarian dishes from around the world. Live demonstrations. For , further information call 888-7321. 6pm. Club.

Athena’Squash Tournament. 32 competitors from various universities will be competing individually. Come out and support the girls or get some squash tips. 6pm-10pm. Squash courts 1068-1073. 2 Chinese Movies. The Orientation and Eight Hundred Heroes are presented by the Chinese Students Associatlonon the occasion of the 15th Orient Bowl. Members$2, others$3. 7pm. AL1 13.

The U of W Drama Department presents a double bill of comedy and drama. Tremblay’s Women and The Real Inspector Hound will be performed in the Theatre of the Artsat 8pm. Tickets are $3.00 for general admission, $2.00 for students/seniors. For reservations and information, please call the UW Arts Centre Box Office at 885-4280.

-

See Friday.

Time:

9am-

presents a novice workshop to teach the basics of improvisation. If you want to learn how to play theatresports, this is the best way to start. Admission is free and the event is open to all. lpm. CC113. The White Raven by Theatre san fil. An absolutely’elegant giant puppet show that brings the mythic story to life. For8-12 year olds. Tickets: $2.50 for children and seniors and $3 all others. lpm and 3:30pm. Humanities Theatre. A Cross-Country Ski Fling is being held by the English Society in the morning. All English students are invited to participate and join in for coffee and donuts in the Grad Lounge, HH373 at 2:30pm. Theatresports

Then you and your valentine should be at the Valentine’s Semi-Formal being held at the Bingeman Park Ballroom tonight. Tickets are available until Friday for $25./coupIe at the MathSoc and SciSoc offices and at the SciSoc C&D Stand. Bar opens6pm. Hot Buffet Dinnerat 7pm. Professional D.J. Rusty Russell; former pastor in Oxford, England, now touring universities worldwide. He ministerspropheticallyand prays for the sick. Sponsored by the Maranatha Christian Club. 7pm. CC135. Indian Students Association’s Winter Potluck Dinner. Forget the winter blahs; bask in the warmth of the company of friends, acquaintancesanddeliciouslndiancuisine. Fordetails call Mohanrao at 885-1367 or any member of the executive. 7:30 pm. MC Faculty Lounge. Chinese Movies - See Friday. Time: 8pm. AL113. Got

a Valentine?

Tremblay’s

and The

Women

Real

Inspector

Hound

-

See Friday. Fed

-

Flicks

See Friday.

- Sunday,

Salat-ul-Jumua

Vegetarian

Tournament

4pm.

February

Worship

Service.

Bhakti Yoga Club (Krishna Consciousness)meditationand vegetarian feast. All welcome. Free. For further information call 888-7321. At 52 Amos Ave., Waterloo at 5:OOpm.

Flicks

The

Earthen

coffees, The

Mug is open. Try some of our assorted teasand and our superb muffins. 8pm-midnight. CC1 10.

Caribbean

and

invite everybody 373.8:30pm.

the

Greek

to a multicultural

Students

party.

Associations

HH Grad Lounge

- Wednesday,

Want to increase yo&r knowledge about nuclear power issues? You are welcome to attend a T.H.I.N.K. Seminar this Sunday at 7:OOpm in the Environmental Studies Coffee Shop. The topic will be Nuclear Wastes and Transportation. T.H.I.N.K. canvassers are requested to attend.

Christian

s

Engineering

February

-

Room

A time of praise, bible 12:30-1:20 pm. EL208.

Fellowship.

study, and prayer. All are welcome.

Futile or promising? Patrice Reitzel, lawyer, and Dean Peachey from Community Mediation Service discuss the law in your hands and social justice in the WPIRG Brown Bag Seminar at 12:30 in X135. Find out what people can do together in tenant’srights,sexual assault, consumer issues and the legal system. K-W Red Cross Blood Donor Clinic. 2 pm - 8:30 pm. First United Church, King and William Streets, Waterloo. Quota: 325 donors. Exercising

Your

Rights:

PEERS - See Friday. Waterloo Christian FellowshipSupperMeeting. Joinusfor supper, singing and discusslon. Tonight’s topic is “What is the church”and the speaker is Clyde Erwine. 4:30-7pm. SCH232.

Lecture Series: God, Man and Dr. Graham Morbey. 4:30-6pm.

Perspectives

World in Western HH334.

Thought.

Science Society Elections. NominatiQns close today! Nomination forms available at the SciSoc Office. 4:30pm. Chapel. 4:45pm. Conrad Grebel College. Wednesday Night Discussion Fellowship. 5:30pm: Common Meal. 7pm Bible Study, Special Lecture. Rem Kooistra and Graham Morbey Chaplains. 5:3bpm. HH280. Gratis presents The Way We Were. 9:30pm. Centre Great Hall. Free. Sponsored by the CCB. program “For women”every Wednesday at 78pm CKMS FM 94.5 Cinema

Campus

radio

Scoops

Thursday,

Centre

Games

February -

Room

18 -

See Friday.

-- See Friday.

- See last Friday. Lunch. $1.50. Come hungry. 12 noon, CC135. - See Friday. Peter Newman, editor of Maclean’s Magazine, and author of “The Acquisi!ots” will speak at 3:3Opm in the Paul Martin Centre at WLU. HIS topic: The Canadian Establishment Rer,lsited. Free admission and everyone welcome. Bhaktl Yoga Club (Krishna Consciousness) discussion on how to break out of mater-la] conditioning through the practice of meditation. 5pm-7pm. CC113 or 135. U of W House of Debates - See Monday. Dancemakers, “a celebration of the simple joy of dancing”, William Littler,TorontoStar.Tickets:$8.50,Students/seniors $7. Tickets available at the UW Box Offite. 8pm. Humanities Theatre. Poet’s

Federation of Students presents Fingerprintz at Bingeman Park Lodge at 7:00 pm. $7 for Feds, $8 for non-Feds. Rusty Rusiel - See Saturday. Fed Flicks - See Friday. BENT

Pub

- Monday,

February

15 -

Neilson’s quality ice cream at a quality price. Open 11:30am - 3:30pm, Monday - Friday. Wednesday night movie night: 9:00 - 1O:OO. Ice cream - taste the spirit of summer. CC Games Room - See Friday. PEERS - See Friday.

The U of W House of Debates is holding its meetings every Monday. Come out and debate with us! You’ll have a good time. 5:30pm, room 250, Conrad Grebel College. Rusty Russell - See Saturday.

PEERS

- Friday, Scoops

Poet’s “A

Everybody Women’s

Way

welcome. Action

(Women’s

of Life”. Free introductory talk. 7:30 pm., Rm. 110, Campus Centre.

..

Co-operative

meets

12.2pm in CC149

Centre).

13 -

15th Orient Bowl invitational tournament hosted by the Chinese Students Association, U of W, this annual event consists of Basketball, Badminton, and Table-Tennis. 10 or more colleges and universities are expected to particlpate.fAll are welcome, tree admission. League game on Sat., semi-final and final game on Sunday. 9am-5pm. PAC Basketball: Main gym, Badminton: small gym, Table-Tennis: Blue Activity area.

Games

Vegetarian

Eckankar:

,

17 -

See Friday. WJSA invites you to their weekly Bagel Brunches, featuring once again, those world famous Toronto Bagels. Drop by between 11:30-l:30 pm., CCllO. Centre

Campus Chapel service at the Conrad Grebel Chapel at 7:OOpm with coffee and discussion to follow.

February

See Friday.

Campus

- Tuesday, CC Games

February

-

Centre Pub

Games

Room

-

19 -

See last Friday.

- See last Friday. - See last Friday.

Vegetarian Club - See last Friday. Fed Flicks - The Rose starring Bette Mtdler. 8pm. AL116. Feds $1, others $2.

16 -

Room - See Friday. See Monday. Free Noon Concert featuring Alec Catherwood, violin, and _.John 1 rembath, cello. Music by Kodaly and Revel. Sponsored by Conrad Grebel College Music Department. 12:30 pm., Theatre of the Arts. Scoops

Salat-ul-Jumua

February

- See last Friday.

Campus

Theatresports presents a challenge of the sexes In honour of Valentines Day. in case you haven’t guessed, the event WIII match a team of women against a team of men. Tlcketsat the door. $0.75 for feds, $1 for aliens.

- Saturday,

-

Scoops

New

Scoops:

- Seems Like Old Times starnng Chevy Chase, Goldie Hawn and Charles Grodin. 8pm. AL116. Feds $1, others $2. Fed

See Friday.

Christian

14 -

Chaplains Rem Kooistra and Graham Morbey. lo:30 am in HH280 The Maranatha Christian Club invites you to worship with us, 11:OOamat 29 Young St. W., Waterloo. Pastor: Ken Green. For directions or a ride call 884-2850. Orient Bowl - See Saturday. Time: 9am-lpm. ’ Campus

-

PEERS

Waterloo Christian Fellowship welcomes everyone to join them at their supper meeting. The topic is “What is the Church?” and the speaker is Clyde Erwine. HH280,4:30-7:00 pm. Vegetarian Club invites you to gain complete vegetarian understanding by tongue, belly, and mind. Live demonstrations, recipes and good food. Come hungry. Bring a friend. Free. 5:30pm in the Psych Lounge, Rm. 3005.

Coming

Events

Table Tennis Tournament to be held March 1 to5. Signupat the Turnkey Desk by Feb. 24. Prizes! Sponsored by the Campus Centre Board.


I

of the 0 Federation of Students presents...

A A

Valentines Day - Feb. 14 Bingeman Park Lodge PO0 PAIL Licensed Feds$7. Others $8.

Tickets available at SAMS, Records on Wheels, RECORDWORLQ 8 Fed Office

Get Involved This -Year!

STUDENTS’ (1) ENV. STUDIES

(CO-OP)

(2) MATH

(REGULAR)

(1) ENGINEERING

(CO-OP)

(2) MATH

(CO-OP)

(1) H.K.L.S.

(REGULAR)

(1) H.K.L.S.

(CO-OP)

Nominations

(1) IS. (REGULAR)

,

(2) SCIENCE

(REG ULAR)

.

open Friday, February 12 and remain open until 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 17.

If necessary, nominations

will re-open Thursday, Feb. 18 and will remain open until 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 24 and will be accepted as acclamations as they are received.

Nomination

forms may be picked up at the Federation

Office in the Campus Centre Rm 235.

Students’ Council meetings are held at least once a month.

13 Federation of Students CC235 885-0370


i-

mews

Friday,

Williams 567 votes. Simonis’ 42 percent of the vote was considerably lower than the 58 percent he received last year wheg he ran against Maggie Thompson. In an interview given shortly after the results were announced, Simonis said that he was

Arts Reps Elected The only seats up for grabs council elections were the three In a closely contested battle Paul and Laurie Wideman have come

in this weeks students Arts Regular positions. Grenier, Calvin Weber out winners.

Weber pulled in the most votes with 186. Wideman took second place with 153. And Grenier came third with 125.

5,600

I

glad the campaign was over and credited his re-election to the hard work of his supporters. He said that “Business will not be as usual” around the Federation office. He said that he plans to be more aggressive and make sure that the students are “getting their money’s worth” out of the organization. He believes that Waterloo students are going to benefit a great deal from having an experienced president “that doesn’t have to learn the ropes”. A priority for Simonis will be to re-organize the federa-

Nell summed jobs?

Are you worried about finding a job this summer? The Federal government Community Stream project may be worth investigating. The project will provide jobs for 5,600 students across the country and will provide services to thousands more Canadians. Projects in the KitchenerWaterloo area last year included building playgrounds for

local children; organizingactivities for senior citizens; renovating local school to make them accessible to the diabled and obtaining career information for university students. Organizations sponsoring programmes must employ three students for six to eighteeen weeks. The project must be of benefit to the community. Employee will be

‘Old’lWathsoc It’s out with the new and back to the old as far as MathSoc is Foncerned. According to Al Bechamp, interim President and Trea-

12,1982.

Imprint

a-,

wins ,Federation election race

Simonis Wim’s back in. Afterdefeating Chris McIntosh and Chuck Williams, Waterloo Federation of Students presideiif Wim-Simonis has been reelected to another term of office. Simonis received 1,043 votes, McIntosh 798 votesand

February

chastises surer of Mathsoc, action is being taken against Steve Lightstone, Steve Wolfe and Joe Geremia. The three are charged with

Prof advocates censorship Hamilton(CUP)-McMasterUniversity’sbookstorehasreturned several explicit books to the shelves, after a professor’s protests had them temporarily banished toa medicalc&tre outlet: Anthropology professor Dr. Hallpike had complained to bookstore manager Bob Crawford that some of the titles onsale, including the Marquis de Sade’s 120 Dalys of Sodom, were “obscene literature”. Hallpike zeroed in on The Jo~j of Gay Sex and TheJoyqfLesbian Sexin hisattack. “Both of them are copiously illustrated and two of the most disgusting books I’ve ever seenon sale anywhere. I don’t approve of selling obscene literature at a university bookstore,‘* said Hallpike. He said the youth of university students added to his concern. “The Joy of Gay Sex encourages sexual’perversion, which is bad enough in adults but when dealing with a youthful clientele who may be uncertain in these matters, it’s particularly bad.” Crawford defused to take the books offthe racks, and Hallpike went to the bookstore’s managing board with hiscomplaints.-The board also refused to stop sellingihe titles. Hallpike then took h&demand that the sale of the books end to administration president Alvin Lee, who upheld the bookstore’s decision. “I wrotealetterto(Hallpike)statingwhyIthoughtit(removing the books) was unacceptable. There is a bookstore board, a generaladvisoryorganization.Adecisionofthatsortwouldbethe manager’s ,” said Lee. Although Crawford refused to remove the books, he transferred some of them, including Gay Sex and Lesbian Sex from the main bookstore’s Human Sexuality shelves to the medical centre bookstore: The sectionin the main bookstore was \ renamed Human Relations. The move was blasted as censorship by a number of McMaster faculty. “I believe it is censorship bui it’s been rationalized on a functional level,” said Wendell Watters, a Medican Centre psychiatrist. “The argument I was given was that humansexuality isa medical problem so it was movedtothemedicalbookstore. It’s aneatrationaleforcarryingoutanactofcensorship.Idon’tblame (store manager Crawford). Certainly he’s underalbt ofpressure.” Crawford denied the censorship allegations but admitted the books were not as exposed in the medical store. “As far as I’m concerned, it’s all one bookstore, just different branches. I resent people whoputpressureonmetostockadifferentway. Wewillnot act as censors.”

paid $140 per week while project managers will receive $210 per week. The KitchenerWaterloo area. will receive T240,OOO in grants.. The deadline for project applications is February 26. Successful applicants will be notified by mid-April. Applicantions are availible from Employment and Immigration Canada, 15 Duke Street, Kitchener.

‘New’ campaigning before nominations closed which is against the Mathsoc policy elections. Normally, this action would end in disqualification. However, at a meeting on Wednesday, Mathsoc voted to limit the campaigning of the three instead.

tion to make it more representative of the sudents. “I’m very much aware that there are more people who voted against me than for me.. .I have to prove that they made the wrong choice,” Simonis said. He plans to do this by delivering on all of his election promises, which include securing cut-rate transit passes for students; expanding the pub facilities; lowering the costs of the student health insurance plan; and getting student control of the Campus Centre. Peter Saracino

Federation Election Results Chris Macintosh Arts Optometry Engineering Mathematics HKLS Science E. S. St. Jerome’s I. s. Renison Off Campus

Tool missing Charges may be laid in connection with the January 6 disappearance of the University of Waterloo engineering mascot, the Ridgid Tool. A group claiming responsibility for the prank has been in contact with the Imprint. Inits letter the group said the tool was taken from the trunk of a car in a local plaza. The tool had been at the Welcome Back stag earlier in the afternoon and the theives followed the car that was transporting the tool. The tool was chained to the car forcing the thieves to use chaincutters. The letter received by the Imprint labelled the sender as Paul Lampart of 2 Bloor St. W. Toronto. Don Heath, President of the Engineering

139 6 77 91 21 59 66 8 6 2 323

Wim Simonis

Chuck Williams

% 13 14 351/ 1951 18 372/2331 16 1241937 12 183/ 1485 11 250/ 1200 20 671422 14 7 40/151 25 75713359 23 for Irv Robson: 23 Spoiled ballots: 47 Total: 2478/ 14,632 -- 16.9%

96 87 15 11 183 77 ’ 168 105 77 13 57 47 72 102 44 9 1 1 14 21 316 94 Off campus votes

3 4912452

- cops on case

Society, said that the pranksters have been in contact with him and have admitted that Paul Lampart was a pseudonym. Heath added that he has received letters from the culprits postmarked Montreal. ’ Heath called the police because “they (the thieves) went beyond the ethical point of student pranks by damaging the car.” However, Heath is reluctant to press charges, especially if the incident was a prank. A professional student convicted w.ould lose his status. Heath says “there’s something inside me that makes me feel it’s an engineering student somewhere.” Heath is upset and feels that the incident has overstepped

the bounds of normal pranks. “I don’t like the fact that the) haven’t identified themselves.” P,t first Heath was worried because he didn’t know if the Tool was taken by pranksters or by car thieves. He also doesn’t like the fact that a car was damaged when the Tool was taken. The pranksters have been in touch with Heath and have offered to pay for any damage they had done. Heath said that “depending on who it turns out to be”, he may accept the payment. Heath said that the group had phoned himand offered to negotiate the return of the Ridgid Tool. The police investigation has produced no results. Cathy McBride

The motion was put forth by Mark D’Gabriel and passed unanimously. “Whereas: letters campaigning for Steven Wolfe, Steven Lightstone and Jee Geremia were published in MathNews and Imprint before the end of the nomination period, and whereas: It is specifically stated in the MathSot Policy on Elections and By-elections that campaigning may not begin before the end of the nomination period and whereas: the signed writer of the letter is Steven Wolfe in both cases, Be it resolved that Steven Wolfe may no longer use any of the print media in his campaign and further be it resolved that all candidates must run on an individual basis and no group affiliation may be stated.” ’ ‘l‘he three were previously running together as “the New Mathsoc,” using both the MathSoc name and logo. According to Bechamp, “MathSoc objected to its name being used in postersand for sponsoring events not approved by Mathsoccouncil . . . MathSoc was upset that its symbol was being used elsewhere on campus.” A motion was also passed at Wednesday’s meeting banning use of the MathSoc logo elsewhere on campus. Bechamp says that the candidates misrepresented themselves as being official MathSoc representatives at various times around the campus. He cited Steve Lightstone’s appearance at a Board of Entertainment meeting. Cathy McBride

The Ridsid Tool - fabled in song and story - being held in enemy hands. The enemy is as yet unknown, but at the moment police are seeking to bring the miscreants to justice.


~DiamondJohnBradywasabigmaninsociety.Verybig.Therewasonethingm the worldthat he llkedbetter than wellding his sword-cane (whichdoubledas an exact0 knife) and that was consuming mess quantities of chicken wings washed down with even more massive quantities of beer. Then there was the mistress of Agitprop (not to mention of dandy Bandy Flannigan, famous Irishman. Nobody dared ask him why he was famous, for fear of raising his Eire), the inimitable SylviaGoldwoman. Pierre Heathen-Saracenwssleader of a Mongrel horde. His chief concubine was a part time reporter called Anna Iyse. Oklahoma Butress was a side-shootm’ daughter-of-a-gun but all in all a very sporting woman Oppressedworkers of the word (like Bruce, EdBay and such) were led to unite by the aforementioned Goldbrick Visiting dignitaries from foreign powers included King Mark I of Ottawa, and, wearing royal red (socks) and waiting for an age to be named after her w&8 Queen Juliet Fbngo. Then there w&s the red-eyed, red-haired Katherine McGroom, heirress to a fabulous fortune in a spark-making company. Wild-eyed dreamer Dr. Paul Zemenhoff drempt of a universal language, or alanguiduniversity, he wasn’t sure. To capture the fun, there wss F’rench artiste and man-aboutthe-townwith-a-goddamn-contraption-around-his-neck, Rousseau Theriault. Meybe I left some people out (like Scott). Tough luck buster, you can w-rite the bloody thing next week. My rise in these ranks has been meteoric. I can tell by the carbon burns on the seat of my pants. T8

Imprint: ISSN 0706-7380 2nd glass Postage Ekeglstrcltion Pending Imprint reserves the right to screen, edit, a&ndre~advertisLng ’

Something ’ exciting could ’ have happened here,, but it_. didn’t Contest

Rules:

Imprint Photo Contest

-. ..

1) Only the students and staff of the Unlverslty of Waterloo may enter.

/

2) The staff of lmprfnt and ileer’s Camera, as well as persons who recelve mom than 50%of thelr Income from photography, are not eiigibfs.

Congratulations to our first winner a $25. gift certificate from. Heer’s

3)‘Entrles must be black and white photogmphs at least8 v 10 but not iarger than 16 x 20. 4) Imprint will make every effort to return prints to tfte owners, but can assume no responsibility for their loss or damage. 5) Each print submltted should have the tltb, theme photogmpher’s name,address, and phone number printed on the back In pencil.

The next deadline

6) The contest themes are Sports, Bloopers, Nature and On Campus. Entry Is llmited to one photo per theme;a photographer may enter up to4 prtnts totai

is noon

-Good Luck

on Friday,

Feb. 26.

to all entrants

7) Prizes will be awarded as foilowr: (a) Twomonthly prizes of a $23.H&s gift certificate for the best entries submitted in the months of Jan. and Feb. Entries wiii be judged for the month In which they am received. DeadlInesfor the monthiy p&es am 12 noon Friday, Feb. 5,1992, and 12 noon Ftfday, Feb.29,1982. Resuits will be published in Imprint the foilowing Friday. (b) A gmnd prfze of a$100.gift certificate from Heets wiii be awarded for the best overall entry submitted during the entire Winter term. Deadilne for the final judgin is 12noon on Friday. March 26.1992.Entries in 3an. and Feb.wlil autotiatlcaily becOnsldered for the gmnd prize. 8) Photographs will bejudged on quaiity, Interest, composition, and styie. 9) Judglng wlii be done by a 3-person panel consisting of one representative from Imprint, one from H&s, and one professional photogmpher. Decision of the judges is final 10) Entries will beaccepM

by mail or hand dellvery

11) Wlnt&s Photographs and names wlii beused in imprint pubikationr. Other outstanding photos maybepubffshednweii. GoodLuck.

Otie Hour !$aoto WATERLOO 30 Queen St. N. Kitchener 1 GOUniversity Ave 886-8610

.

743-3639

.

Bloopers:

“First

Aid”

by Antony

Chodas,

2A Systems

Design


News Disabled

Friday,

12,1982.

Imprint

5,, 1

stuck

Walking around campus was difficult the past few weeks, and still is a problem. However, for the disabled, a minority at UW, travelling

February

when

about isa day-to-day concern. Seeing ramps built for the. disabled at the Arts Library and at Modern Languages blocked with snow, one won-

” rzme Austen’s

ramp

ders how the disabled enter these, or other buildings. According to Brian O’Riley, in charge of U W grounds crew, there are alternative methods

snow

for disabled people to enter buildings. For example, he believes that disabled persons are allowed into the library through the entrance across from Needles Hall. Bruce MacNeil, associate librarian for reader service at the Arts Library, says that the ramp across from Needles Hall is used for emergencies only. The ramp on the east side of the building is shovelled all the time, he says, except recently. According to MacNeil, the effects of the January 30 snowstorm were not cleared from the east ramp until this past Tuesday. MacNeil also stated that the library regularly calls grounds crewtocleartherampandthey are usually quick to respond. Roy Meyer, office manager for Project Lift, a transit service for the handicapped stated that drivers of the vans generally help their passengers into the buildings. Meyer says that often this involves aiding passengers up steps which are usually slippery. Buildings to which Project Lift vans transport people include the Villages, engineering buildings, arts Lecture, Hagey Hall, and the Campus Centre.

not removed O’Riley realizes not all of the ramps are cleared. Grounds crews, he explained, have not had sufficient time to clear many places on campus because of the quickly drifting snow. He also added that because of the extra staff hired to cope with the recent sotrms, grounds crew operations has over-spent their budget. Concerning pathways, grounds crew knows the regular routes of disabled persons says O’Riley. They can then ensure that the paths used by these persons will be clear at the proper time. Disabled people who are going to be on campus during the winter months usually speak to Carol Moogk-Soulis, Co-Ordinator for the Physically Disabled, before the first snowfall. Moogk-Soulis can then find out at which times specific pathways or parking areas are used. She then

Graduate QUALITY

Portraits

PHOTOGRAPHY IS - OUR BUSINESS

Emma ”

Enma was a very, Very, Very, Very Qaod

pia was

contacts grounds crew operations. Both O’Riley and MoogkSoulis are concerned that not every disabled person has spoken to them. MoogkSoulis knows of only 24 handicapped person on campus (both faculty and students). Of these 24, 11 are mobility impaired (whichdoes not necessarily mean they use wheelchairs). However, Moogk-Soulis feels that not every disabled person has contacted her, and unless they do, there is no way of knowing which areas are used and need to be cleared. Disabled persons having problems with accessibility should contact Carol MoogkSoulis at ext. 2130. Persons arriving on campus after business hours can call the emergency number at Plant Operations at ext. 2256. Anna Lehn

74245363

of literature. It Wtittcn byavery.

pirak studios limitad 350 King Street West, Kitchener,

Ontario

carmpus

Question Do you think Week should all faculties?

Reading be applied s

by Wanda

to Sakura

Lynda Thompson Science 2 Yes, because I’m not in co-op and I like to 90 skiing too.

Liz Hagerty Math 2A It would be nice to have the holiday, too. But the projects and assignments have to go with it.

Shirley Koski Psychology 3 Yes, it makes no sense to me. Students other faculties-need the extra hours too!

Terrie Tyrrell Rec/Soc 2 Depending on the faculty heads and their decisions. If the course load permits, it would be great; if not, sorry.

Jeff Alexander 4B Elec. Engineering Yes, it would give a break in a heavy workload.

D. Crowley

A. Hunter M. Env. 1 Yes, I think it should. I already get it, but I feel that it should apply to all subjects as well.

Maj. Sot.

in

- Minor Kin. Yes, I think everyone needs a reading week to break up the hectic monotony of midterms.


Letters Nukes are the answer to finding economical po wer To the editor: In the Imprint of Januaiy22, David Assman makes an attempt\ to enlighten us on the economic viability of nuclear power generation. Unfortunately, he fails to bring up several important points. He goes on at length about the immense capital cost of nuclear generating stations, mentioning that the Darlington power station will cost $875 for each person in the province. Well, that cost, when spread over the thirty years the debt is held, is $29.16 per year per person. That is approximately the cost of filling the fuel tank of a full size automobile. Mr. Assman also mentions Hydro’s debt. How many people pay for houses with one lump sum? Perhaps he should look up the word “mortgage” in a dictionary. The author of the article then takes a quantum leap in logic when he talks about “artificially low prices for electricity”. Hydro is organization. It has no a non-profit shareholders to pay dividends to, so it can sell electricity for cost. The cost of electric power in Ontario is low not due to massive subsidies, but because of nuclear power generation. I still don’t know what the author of the article means by “replacement cost of electricity”. What are the alternatives to nuclear power? You can generate power with water, coal, oil, natural gas or nuclear fuels, such as uranium. Hydro electricity costs almost nothing to produce: once the capital cost of the station is amortized, the operating costs are very small. Why? Water is free. Alas, there are very few economically practical sources of hydro power remaining. Of course one could flood ten thousand square kilometres, or shut off Niagara Falls, but something tells me that people would not be amused. Next there is oil. Electricity costs approximately $0.‘05/ KWH to produce using oil. Why do you think Wesleyville was mothballed?. The Lennox generating station, also oil powered, is rarely used. Coal fueled stations produce electricity for about half the cost of oil powered stations. However, I personally would rather not breath sulphur dioxide, thank you. Natural gas is better suited to heating homes, where the thermal efficiency is near 100%. The maximum thermal efficiency of a thermal generating station is about 30% (take ME 250 for an explanation). On the other hand, electric power from a nuclear station costs about 1.3 cents/ KWH. That includes all costs such as fuel, operation, maintenance, interest and the capital cost of the building and machinery. Triple your hydro bill to find out how much you would pay without nuclear power (use U.S. electricity bills as examples). Fuels such as oil and natural gas are best suited to heating and vehicular power; nuclear is best for electricity. Finally, we get oil from the sheiks of Arabia and Alberta; coal comes from Pennsylvania (Alberta coal fouls the boilers); uranium comes from Ontario. Why not buy Canadian? R.G. Franks Electrical Engineering ‘83

Anti-A bortionists always neglect some facts To the Editor: - Once again we have a letter from the antiabortionists. That’s OK - they’re entitled to their opinions. But they always seem to neglect some of the facts. It never ceases to amaze me how these people can be so naive as to think that abortion (or anything else for that matter) can be eliminated just by passing a law. It can’t be. And it has historical precedent. Not so long ago even therapeutic abortions were illegal in Canada and the VS. But there were still abortions.Those who could afford to simply went off to Europe where abortions were legal, no questions asked. Those who couldn’t afford to were relegated to illegal abortions improperly done’under bad conditions. The results were often permanent damage, sometimes even death. At least withlegalabortionsawoman knows that- a qualified physician will perform the operation in a sterile environment.

G

.

It doesn’t matter whether or not abortion is morally right or wrong because a woman who wants an abortion is going to have one irregardless of the law. By making abortion illegal again, you are condemning more than just the fetus, but also, in some cases, the mother. For, just as in the past, the rich will go elsewhere and the poor will go to the back alleys. The problem won’t be solved simply by making abortion illegal. The answer lies in promoting proper methods of birth control so that all those unwanted children won’t even be conceived. No conception; no abortion needed. Cathy McBride

Goodman reviews not high points in reading Imprint To the Editor: Lately, I have become very disappointed with your once interesting section on album. reviews. The reviews by Cliff Goodman are without question the most stale and unimaginative pieces of writing within the Imprint. They are destined to become models for future journalism students on how not to write a review. His cut by cut account on how each song on an album sounds like shows a complete ignorance to the art of investigation and evaluation. He goes through each song as though he had mental blinders on, pointing out various sounds, rhythms and noises, but never really exploring the total effect. He should present a broader view of the album. The complete effect is just as important as the individual songs. But what seems to be most annoying is Mr. Goodman’s inability to realize that he is not relaying any significant information about the albums to the reader. The methods of communication he employs are inefficient and useless. His presentation to the reader is like trying to verbally describe the taste of a new gourmet dish to someone with a cold. You cannot appreciate something unless you properly experience it yourself. Mr. Goodman is trying to bridge an infinite gap by providing a worded translation of music. Music is more than something to play at a party or get high to. Albums are the personal extentions of anartist, like a novel is to a writer. If only Mr. Goodman could see this side of an album, his views would be more appreciated. Instead he makes them seem insignificant and sterile. I dread even trying to imagine him reviewing The Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper album or Bruce Springsteen’s Born To Run. I hope that in the future the Imprint can keep its standards high at all levels. Henry Husar General Eng. 1B

UW bureaucracy is hard on student car owners To the Editor: In these times of organized disorganization, you would think that more would complain as to the lack of efficiency of university services. The availability and maintenance of the parking facilities adjacent to the villages is atrocious. The problem begins with the gentleman who designed these lots. It seems that he (or she) drives a car that is two-thirds the size of the smallest import. The parking spaces, never having been counted, are oversized by at least 15%. This is compounded by the fact that there are a number of inconsiderate students who feel that a parking lot without a gate is a first come first serve free-for-all. Next on the scene, our wonderful Waterloo winters. Would it be too difficult to organize a parking lot clear-out on a specific day at a given time to plough these lots? This would result in an increased number and size of availabIe spaces. I, for one, am frustrated with the fact that I haveinvested $28 in a parking space only to receive $200 in repair bills to my car doors and a million dollars in headaches! Ah, fighting a beaurocracy. Dave White Year 1 Optometry

‘Right to Life’ fundamental do I have to pay for it? To the Editor: I feel that the letters about abortion published in the last issue demand a reply. I agree with the “pro-lifers” that the right to lifeis fundamental. It is the basis of all rights. I disagree with the “pro-lifers” in defining this right. There are many starving people in the third world. Does their right to life force me to spend every penny I can possible, spare to

y

,Friday,

support them? If the answer is yes, everyone who doesn’t spend every waking hour earning money to give to UNICEF is a mass-murderer. I submit that no human being has a right to live at the expense of another. The starving man in Calcutta does not have the right to force me to support him. I have the right to choose whether I will or will not support him. An unborn child can’t live except at the expense of the mother. It is the mother’s right to choose whether or not she will support that child. The letters about abortion addressed the questions “Are abortionists Nazi-like?“, “Would abortionists murder Beethoven?“, and “Are ‘pro-lifers’ fanatics?” These questions are silly, but are asked so often that they deserve some sort of answer. I believe that every person has the right to do anything which does not interfere with the fundamental rights of another. If anti-abortionists consider this a Nazi-like attitude, I would be proud to have them call me a Nazi. Abortionists could well have aborted Beethoven, but they could also have aborted Adolf Hitler, Jack the Ripper and many mediocre people who we’ve never heard of. I find it hard to believe that only potential geniuses are aborted. Anti-abortionists would use the authority of the state to coerce people into obeying the commandments of a particular religion. When such people march in the streets of Tehran, we call them fanatics. Steve Hutton 2A Engineering _

Bookstore system needs improvement To the Editor: _Having stood in line for two hours in a raging storm, we finally managed to make it to the door of the Bookstore. Another two minutes and we would finally be inside it. Once inside we received what should have been an anticipated shock. The shelves, upon which our course texts should have piled, were desolately barren. All twelve of the texts, for which we were looking, were absent. This was a mere 24 hours after the first class had taken place! Of course, the Bookstore immediately sent out for more texts. But, until they arrive-, we will be at least one week behind in our course reading.If this were only for one course, it might not be so bad, but sadly enough, lack of texts is becoming a common experience. To add insult to injury, we were treated as total imbeciles by the Bookstore staff person we spoke to. We asked, just to double-check, if the texts were perhaps stored, or shelved elsewhere. Rather than tell _ us that the Bookstore has a lack of storage space, the saleslady asked us whether we had looked on the correct shelf! This insinuates that the system of clearly marked shelves, and books kept in alphabetical order of author is obviously too difficult a system for students to be able to comprehend. On the other hand, an understanding of the system can not help students find books that just are not on the shelves. We can only suggest that more storage room be found for the books, so that students may be properly accomodated. (Perhaps a more seldomly used room over in South Campus Hal could be made available for storage purposes.) After all, is the University Bookstore not intended to be a service for the students? E.T.A. Andrusiewicz M. Burgund

No smarts and no skills: c any offers? a.m. or P.M.? To the Editor: I am a university freshman and am in quest of summer employment in Ottawa. I am requesting a job that will give me plenty of free time, so that I can spend my summer travelling or gallivanting from country to country. Hence, I am sending my resume for the position of P.M. I am wefl aware that this job requires little intelligence and remedial skills; and as a result, this cushy job necessitates a small hourly pay; however, I will be glad to accept the minimum wage as my salary. I have little experience in this field, but I noticed that my past predecessors lacked this experience as well; however, like the others, I am willing to receive on the job training. I realize that myjob duration is short, but I feel that I can do more for this countryinfour months than past Prime Ministers have accomplished in their entire terms of office. Admittedly, I am not qualified to deal with the economic situation of our country, but I do believe I can help our present finance minister withsubtractionandaddition. Bytheendofmy. term of office I intend to teach him advanced multiplication. Along with this problem of

February

. 12,1982. , --

-. Imprint / 6-

basic math the minister has misconstrued ideas about the interest rates. For some uncanny reason, the minister believes that these ratesare pubic opinion polls; in turn, the rest of our countrymen must understand why the minister insists that these interest rates should remain high. But with my appointment I intend to correct this problem. I believe that my undertaking of this role will not screw up the country more than it is at the moment. If I fail, needless to say, I can make a fortune off of publishing my memoirs. I will be returning to Ottawa in April to live in my pup tent. Yes, that’s right a pup tent; as you can recall late last year the housing minister made it quite difficult for us home owner’s. Rob Hardy P.S. Please appoint me to this highly distinguished position. (P.M. - Public Misfit)

Election poster defaces work of art To The Editor: This morning, while on my way to classes,1 noticed a poster advertising a candidate for the position of Federation President. Upon closer inspection, I discovered something that greatly disturbed me, and I felt compelled tocomment on it. This person had taken one of the works of perhaps thegreatest Dutch artist of our time, entitled “Hand With Reflecting Globe” by M. C. Escher, cut out the face on this self-portrait, and pasted his own in its place! If it is the intention of this candidate to use great art to portray himself in a favourable light, might I suggest that he modify “The Last Supper” by glueing his visage over that of Jesus Christ. Or perhaps he could gaze contently over the campus electorate from beneath Mona Lisa’s frock. In addition, it would certainly interest me to find out exactly how much of a royalty this gentleman is paying to the estate of M. C. Escher, for the privilege of defacing this masterpiece to further hispoliticalaspirations. Lee Gregory 3B Electrical Engineering

Fed bus good, Fedplane great - how about a car? To the Editor: Is it conceivable since we own a Fed bus, plane, and a host of other material moieties, that we could acquire a Federation of Students’ Lambhorgini? Yes the sports car that, from time-to-time adorns the pages of girlie magazines, and avant-garde publications like the New Yorker. Ludicrous: Outrageous? Hell no! Picture this: a first year biology student falls madly in love with a gorgeous woman in 3B Co-op Planning. His father is a sheet metal worker (local 498) working for Stelco in Hamilton, Ont. The girl’s father is the vice-president of the Bank of Montreal - the classic case of the “Prince and the Pauper.” What chance does this poor proletariat boy have of making this bourgeois baby his betrothed? Slim by the looks of things. But lo and behold through the foresight and ineffable benevolence of the Federation of Students our man’s wildest dreams come within his grasp. The Federation of Students’ Lamborghini - the young lad nervously approaches the Fed. of Students office. Step by step he labours. Up and up. Until, at last, he reaches the door. Nervously he enters. He sees a young girl poised authoritatively behind the desk. She asks, “Can I help you?’ The lad, in a jittery voice, answers, “Yes I’d like to sign out the Federaton of Students’ Lamborghini!” There is a pause. The girl gives our lad the stictest perusal and asks, “Can I seeyour I.D. card, please?’ The boy hastily fumbles through his wallet and finally produces his shiny new card, validation sticker ‘85. *Inevitably the next question is, “Your driver’s license?’ Again the young lad searches for the requisite document. Upon presenting the license he was immediately faced with the question: “What day will that be?’ Caught unaware his rebuttal was simply, “What?’ “What day would you like to have the car?’ she repeated. “Oh, Friday, October 23rd,” he retorted. To our friend’s dismay she replied, “I’m sorry it’s all booked.” “I’ll take the Saturday.” “That’s booked too I’m afraid!” “Well, what have you got?” he anxiously inquired. Continued on page 8

,


Brain

power

answer

Ontario Hydro may soon be centralized sources of electriasking us to change our city. lifestyles to suit its economic Solomon considered cenneeds, says Lawrence Solotralized power sources to be mon, author of the book dangerous in any society Energy Shock. Solomon outbecause they put control of lined this and other theories society in the hands of a few about centralized energy estapeople. He also pointed out blishments as part of a Touch that such sources were very The Earth Week \ address, vulnerable to disruption-the / Tuesday. Great Power Blackout of Solomon argued that Hy1965, for example, in which dro is being forced into a most of Ontario and New position by relying on York State were left without nuclear generating stations electricity because of an equipthat will make it want more use ment failure in Niagara Falls. of electricity during the night,. He quoted Aldous Huxley, It will try to do this, he said, by the famous author of Brave increasing charges for electri- New World, as saying, “The city during daytime peak nuclear scientists will prepare hours and by offering disthe bed on which mankind counts to night users. The must lie. And if mankind result would be that industry doesn’t fit, well, that will be would schedule operations for just too bad for mankind.*’ night shifts while households i “The alternative to nuclear cut daytime consumption. power is brain power”, accordHe compared the forthing to Solomon. He said that a coming situation to that existdecentralized approach to ing in the Soviet Union whee power would not leave people the state controls massive, at the mercy of governments, labour unions, or large scale breakdowns. The approach LONDON would use solar collectors, kWB windmills, wood, methane, methanol and hydro-electricity in combination with each other.

to nukes Solomon said that the collapse of centralized power was already on its way because high interest rates were calling a halt to such “mega-projects” as nuclear reactors and oil pipelines. Peter Sarrcino

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Letters

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Continiledfrom page 6 “Well,” she replied in an apologetic tone, “we do have Sunday December the 5th open I . (noticing hislook ofutterdismay) I’msorry but we only have one car and the waiting list is quite long.” “I’ll take it,” he replied. “Very well, you can pick up the keys and the owner’s manual on the 5th during office hours, just sign here.” Much later (December 5th to be exact), our friend, with keys in hand, hurries down the Optometry Road towards the Radio Station and the Federation of Students’ Garage, where the sleek sports car is sheltered. As he approaches the garage he detects the powerful roar of a machine that sends chills down his spine. He entered the door and presented his request form to an overall-clad fellow, bent over the engine of the car. He took the form and inquired, “A date?” “Yes,” gushed our man. “Well, it’s all yours and it’s all tuned up, there’s 4-bore on the floor, 2 quadroqueek carbs and a double-semi-quasi-hemi just roaring and ready to go.” The parlance was alien to our friend but he quickly replied, “Thank you, thank you, very much.” The young lad in ecstasy, admired the sleek black car and the gold embossed Warriors crest which decorated the hood. He then slipped into the driver seat, and, with a courteous-wave of his hand drove down radio road. “A fine steed indeed to meet my lady in,” he thought. J. Kinney

Freeman only sought simple Bookstore answers To the Editor: In my letter to Imprint (“Store detective could only catch the most foolhardy,” Jan. 22, 1982) 1 thought I was posing some relevant questions regarding Bookstore policies and practices. I guess a case can be made that I am “illiterate”, because the letter was interpreted by the Bookstore employees as an invitation for emotional reaction. Thus, while seeking only simple answers, I got instead a letter

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(‘,‘Bookstore folks don’t like Freeman’s attitude”, Jan. 29, 1982) whose content only suggests to me that the employees believe the practices they carry out for their employer are above question from the University community. So, inanattempt to get these simple answers, I will again pose the questions. This time more succinctly so as to reach someone responsible for these policies. 1.) Would clearly posted shoplifting policy signs reduce the need for a store detective? 2.) Were such signs tested for their effectiveness at reducing thefts, before the store detective was hired? 3.) Is the detective’s salary justified in relation to the financial value of the thefts? 4.) Is the detective professionally trained and therefore able to catch sophisticated shoplifters, instead of only the foolhardy first time offenders as I have suggested? 5.) Besides having shoplifters prosecuted in the courts, does the Bookstore recommend the expulsion of students to the University Registrar (or other official)? I must repeat that my concern is not an attack on the Bookstore personnel, but on the policies or directives (or lack thereof) that they operate under. Since I am such a good-natured guy, I take very lightly their letter’s personal attack on me. I recognize that when actions cannot be justified or defended, it becomes a “textbook” tactic to pursue a character assassination, as they have by calling me “illiterate” and “sexist”. I might say though, I did not have to read past the first sentence of their letter, signed by twelve employees, to find a major structural problem. In response to their obsession withmy spelling mistakes, I will repeat an oft used saying: “people who live in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones.” This is inappropriate though, because I recognize that they did not type the copy of their letter that is actually in print, a point they failed to consider in my case. This stresses the petty and personal nature of the attack on me by the “Bookstore folks”. Further, to charge that I am sexist is totally ludicrous. I am no responsible for creating this demeaning and sexist role that the Bookstore expects from the detective, nor would I feel proper about creating it. I might also add that

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the comment I made to the detective, that was printed in Imprint, was not the same as I submitted to the paper. As a result, its sarcastic nature was lost in the process. The bookstore employees’ letter is quite dramatic and very self-righteous. Why is this the case? It makes me unsure of whether or not to accept their claim to “. . .bear (me) no personal animosity.” Does the answer lie in their possessive attactment to the Bookstore operation. While saying they don’t speak in an official capacity, they do state - “to keep prices on textbooks as low as possible we must keep to an absolute minimum those activities that cost money” (my italics). I, as well as all other students, appreciate the efforts to keep prices low, but surely they recognize their subjective position. They are a cost in the book prices, and therefore are in conflict of interest in making decisions on the detective’sand their own utility. Thus, will the Bookstore manager answer my five simple questions. In so doing, please explain the cost-benefit of this “covert and overt” secuiity system, or admit that it is superfluous. I have never been one to condemn a make work project for its value, and I will continue not to whentheyarelegigmateand inoffensive, but in this case I must speak up. When a member of this University community cannot go in the Bookstore (havingleftanybagorcase at the front door), and walk through the store without being openly followedby an unprofessional undercover detective, something is wrong. That my dear “Bookstore folks” I have a right to complain about. Neil Freeman PSC 4

Students need movies closer to their barbarian so& To the editor: I would like to urge the Federation of Students to limit its choice of Fed Flicks to cartoons and the less controial of Walt Disney’s productions. The choice of Luna for last week’s screening is entirely inappropriate inasmuch as Luna is a film made with an adult audience in mind; a thinking one, at any rate. Surely, to expect such an audience on our campus is folly!

In its choice of entertainment, the Federation must bear the majority of students in mind, and not the few exceptional cases whose cognitive abilities extend beyond the rudimentary level. Last Friday, the poor darlings found to their great disappointment that the film wasn’t trivial and were forced to seek diversion in the alarms of their digital watches. Scandalized shouts testified to the bruising of tender sensibilities by the consideration of something as sick as the complex relationship betweena mother and heradolescent son. They should have stuck to something normal. Violence, for instance: something close to the barbarian soul. This is our institution’s twenty-fifth anniversary. We should, therefore, concentrate on celebrating and emphasizing the rich Philistine tradition of this campus, not straying from it with films like Luna. This is, after all, a place where they blow-up sculptures and erect landmarks like the ES II building. So please, show Tarzan next time and provide old tires and fresh bananas for the audience. Wojtek Kozlinski-

Apple hairdresses ‘frigid and harsh” To the Editor: I realize that people are depressed at this time of year and have their “off’days, but this is ridiculous. I will tell my story. I came into the Campus Centre “Apple II” to get my hair trimmed. The obnoxious hair dresser asked me what I would like done to my hair. I said to trim my bangs but I was open to any so called professional hair dressing suggestions. She only slapped in the face with those piercing eyes of hers. She was exasperated because I did not give her a straight answer. From this point on, her bitchiness made my fear of getting my hair cut only worse. She kept tilting my head to suit her hair cutting technique. This technique was one of frigidity and harshness. The whole haircutting session was a series of motions of head tilting and eye rolling. I felt that she was fighting a battle when all I wanted was a little trim. Nothing too laborious to ask, is it? Continued on page 10


X&1982.

&dia

Imprint

9-

by - train

~Travelling

India

an experience

to remember

asopposed to anything else. It Travelling anywhere in Asia by yourself can be an experience more than they are actually is a definite no-no to bring altogether different from going to Europe, especially if you willing to accept, because most decfbe to backpack. l%ispastfall Ihadan opportunity tospenda Indians end up haggling. Indian rupees into the country However, when the storeas the Indian government has few months in India, and my comments about India wouldlikely keepers catch sight of a some very screwy exchange be representative (at least in some respects) of the Orient in foreigner, they usually charge regulations. You could get general. Although it costs a fair bit to third the size of the United’ ’ much more. The trick is to not away with exchanging Canafly there, living expenses let on the the asking price is not dian dollars, but you would States. are relatively low when corn-’ The water tends not to be too expensive in Canadian not be able to do it as easily. currency (but likely very Also, take travellers’ cheques. pared - with anywhere in pure, so one has tofollowafew expensive in Indian rupees) The pickpockets in the Charles Europe or North America, due elementary health preDickens classic could definin great measure to the cautions. I never drank water and let the guy know that just 1 itely learn a thing or two from exchange rate. Travelling in f ’ their Indian counterparts. India is not overly expensive, You should also allow a fair except by plane, which is A trip through India can be- as good as bit of time for getting to and ‘marginally less expensive than a trip through Europe - cheaper, too. from a place. As I mentioned planes in Canada. with the trains, travelling in It may not be as comfortable India poses no threat to as in Canada but, trainand bus because you aren’t from India unless I knew it was boiled. Western standards of punctravel is fairly cheap (as I write doesn’t mean you’re a greenThings like money belts and tuality (even the planes are not this Indian Railways is selling a lock for the zipper of your horn whenit comes to bargainoverly quick when you take a 90-day unlimited travel rail ing. It can be quite a lot of fun. backpack go without saying, into consideration the delays) pass similar in its use to the and it is also a good idea to take so it’s best not to cut it too fine. Eurail pass for about $210 nothing for granted. As an For those of us who have an As far as communicating is U.S., and the comfort is a little example, when I left the entrepreneurial bent, a good concerned, English willdoyou less than economy class on our northernmost part of India, way to pay for your trip or at fine as far as the essentials are own CN or CP railways). which is called Kashmir, I least part of it - is to take such concerned. The average The catch is that you have to found out that if I hadn’t reitems as Levis jeans or any ,’ Indian won’t speak English, make reservations for overconfirmed my airline ticket current rock music in tape but in most public places you night berths, and this is not as before I went to the airport, I cassettes sell them in India for should be able to get by easy as it sounds - one between 50 per cent to 100 per speaking only English. generally has to book at least a likely wouldn’t have had a seat on the plane - and the only cent more than what you paid I mentioned that Levis jeans few daysahead of timeand you other way out of Kashmir is via for them, and to buy different have a definite future in India, may end up spending a few a 12 hour bus journey through items like silks over there and but there is only one catch to hours in lineups. the mountains! Re-confirmsell the Indian items here. making a fortune in this For someone on a student ing my ticket by itself was not Students in India aren’t as manner - Indian customs. budget, train would definitely necessarily what I objected to, crazy about Levis jeans as they Even if what you have seems to be the way to travel in India but the airline office didn’t are in Russia but they are still be reasonable, half the time since you can go almost bother mentioning this point willing to pay a premium for _ they still raise a fuss, often in anywhere by train in India, to me. them. 1 hopes of baksheesh, which although there is no guarantee As in most places in Asia, literally translates as a bribe. that the train will get there on bargaining is standard. Indian As far as money is conAll in all, though, a trip to time! Also. the average sDeed merchants usually ask for cerned, US -ydollars -- are the India is definitely worth it but of an Indian train ranges between 25 to 30 miles per hour, so if you are in a hurry, don’t take the train! In general, though, the best way to get a feel for India and to see the country is’by train, especially by 2nd class, since --_L- most Indians can’t afford 1st class. It may be crowded, , Wedding you end up leaving through the Invitations and window instead of the door, but it would definitely be an Accesshies experience. India is also a land of Rita Mosser incredible contrasts, from snowcovered mountains to tropical beaches in the south. True, the States has the same variety but India is only one w

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&etiers Continuedfrom Page 8 When the other hair dresser walked by, she rolled her eyes her too, so that the other girl would pity her in dealing with her problem customer. In conclusion to this ordeal, ladies, you may have potential at hair dressing, but lets workat the public relations part. Maybe the next time that I walk in you shop, you might not be sitting on you ass! A little courtesy and a smile will make your day a helluva lot brighter as well as the victimized customer. Maybe the subconscious reason why I gladly cut the girls hair on our floor in residence is to save them from the obnoxious hair dresser. Mary Kae Moore

‘Ascent’comment only asked for more human involvement To the Editor: In response to Mr. Zaharchuk’s comment there are a number of points which I would like to make. First of all, Mr. Zaharchuk has demonstrated his commitment to the principle of human involvement which was the subjct of my editorial entitled, The Ascent of Man?and I must commend him. I was however taken aback at the manner in which Mr. Zaharchuk proceeded to make his

Friday, critical comments. I wonder if this method conforms to the “objective principles” which he so resolutely defends. Personal insults are not the stuff of which good solid criticism are made. 1 would just like to restate the basic point made in my article and which Mr. Zaharchuk obviously mised or misrepresented. The central issue was not a critique of our technological society or an indictment of scientists and engineers. Rather, it was a plea for more involvement in the proces of human development, the argument being that this might pave the way towards a more carefully constructed development program. This does not, Mr. Zaharchuk, suggest that our current crop of scientists and engineers are lacking in sensitivity or have departed from their commitment to-improve the quality of life. I have too great a respect for our engineering and scientific community to make such irresponsible comments. It simply means that we (and I emphasize the collective pronoun) should remain consciously aware of the direction in which our civilization is headed and view with more than scant regard attempts to stunt our creative imagination. I don’t. know on what basis Mr. Zaharchuk argues that the only method by which one can

hold moral values and principle is objectivity. This is almost a contradiction in terms. Nothing can, be “objectively” good or bad. Perhaps Mr. Zaharchuk could have ennunciated some of these “objective principles” and elaborated on his somewhat unusual “objective value decisions” concept. As it is, his statement that . . . the man who uses pity as a weapon against productive, objective virtue represents the worst evil alive; for he wishes those with abilty to apologize by becoming incompetent as a means of removing envy in a naturally stratified society. is as unclear as it is confusing. Finally, I feel that although hedoesn’t admit it that Mr. Zaharchuk has found good reason to respond to my editorial. “Senseless”

February

12,1982.

Imprint

IO-

editorials do not normally provoke such lengthy comments. I therefore, ask that if Mr. Zaha-rchuk has any personal objections to my editorial @at he make them without resorting to tactics of personal vilification. As it is, I thank him for his comment and reiterate that insofar as “involvement” was my chief issue, Mr. Zaharchuk has demonstrated his personal support for my point. P.S. Note that politicians and those in administrative posts are the ones charged with the responsibility for making those critical decisions concerning the shape and future of our society. And so if any one is to be blamed for such fiascos as the arms race then these politicians and administrators must be principal candidates. Bramwell Osula

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Sterling Silver $25.00, Goldplated $10.00. Available until February 19th/82. Cash with order basis. Coins mailed after April 1st. Write to P.O.Box 908, Waterloo. N2J 4c3. The Federation of Students, University of Waterloo, is accepting bids on one (I) ROSS TEMP ice cube maker, Model RC 150-SC cube capacity 100 lbs. Dimensions: Height: 44 314 inches, Depth: 29 inches, Width: 30 inches. Closing date for bids is February 20, 1982. Contact Rita Schneider in the Bombshelter, Campus Centre. Phone 884-l 130. Terms: cash or certified cheque. The above to be sold subject to a reasonable reserved bid.

Services Prepare now for Spring. Bicycle Tune Ups. $20and up. Pickupand delivery if required. Fast service. For more’information call: Steve Cornall 885-2875. Will do light movmg with a small truck. Also rubbish removal. Reasonable rates. Call Jeff 884‘ 2831.

Typing Experienced Typist. Fast accurate service. Carbon ribbon with lift off correction. Satisfaction guaranteed. Reasonable rates. 576-1284. Experienced typist; fast, accurate work. IBM Selectric. Lakeshore Village. Reasonable rates. 8851863. 25 -years experience; no math papers; reasonable rates; West-

motint area; call 743-3342. Fast Efficient Typist, 50~ per typed double-spaced page. 5 minute walk from campus. 8851353. IBM Selectric; experienced typist; reasonable rates; Engineering symbols, will pick-up and deliver. Mrs. Lynda Hull, 579-0943. Housing AvaiLable, I Bedroom Apartment. Sublet April l-30, $22O/month. Monthly or’+*yearly lease May I - on !$f /month. 15 minutes from U ’ Q Phone 885-1449 after 6pm. House to Rent. May to Sept. Fully furnished - 20 minute walk from university. Across the street from L plaza which includes laundry, : : Towers, Mats Milk, Dutchboy, beer store. 4 bedroom, kitchenand appliances. Bus route direct to university outside front door. $45O.OO/month. Phone 886-0098.

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The sign on one df the highways leading into the Ontario community of Port Hope used to read, “Beautiful old Port Hope-the town that The radiates friendliness”. sign is no longer there, but thanks to uranium refining, Port Hope radiates a lot more than friendliness. Back in the early f95O’s soldiers of the Royal Canadian engineers were sent to Port Hope for training in nuclear detection techniques.

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:A war, Eldorado continued to * reopened. In the meantime, “‘ supply uranium to the United radon gas or excessive radia-” ’ States and Britain for the \ build-upof nuclear arms. tion had been found in 550 ’ Eldorado now produces - Port Hope homes and 400 of these required either evacua‘. 5,500 tons a year of uranium tion, ventilating or rebuilding, ’ hexafluoride (UF6) for export at an average cost of $10,000 I I to countries with reactors per home. 1 fueled by enriched uranium. A dump site on the beach, ’ The firm also produces 1,000 immediately adjacent to the -.: tons of uranium dioxide, town beach, was found to have (U02) a year for used in radioactivity levels up to 40 CANDU reactors. One of th.e legacies of times higher than the safe uranium refining in Port Hope level. As a, result, 15,000 cubic

The results of these tests are has been widespread comamination because of the use of I still classified, but numerous ’ other tests have resulted in the ; radioactive wastes as fill and evacuation of homes, the construction material. By the end of 1979 almost 100,000 closing of a school and tons of fill had been removed concern about contamination of the harbour. from the town - at a cost of $7 Eldorado Nuclear Ltd., a _ million - and there are still federal crown corporation, 180,000 tons left. has been involved in uranium In December 1975 the St. refining (and contamination Mary’s primary school was of the environment) for de- , closed after officials from the cades in Port Hope. During Ontario Ministry of Health the Second World War, Eldorfound radioactivity levels in %dore-fr&zduranii.iiii%r use-ii!r the school to be up to 20 times the safe level. the Manhatten Project, which developed the bombs dropped Two years later, after extenon Japan in 1945. After the sive rebuilding at a cost of half

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yards of contaminated waste had to be removed.. The wastes from Eldorado’s refinery operations have been dumped at a site in Port Granby, 25 metres from the of Lake Ontario. shore 450,000 tons of waste have been deposited at this-site and liquid waste has been leeching into Lake Ontario. In 1980, Geoffrey Knight of the Atomic Energy Control Board estimated that water contaminated with radium, uranium and arsenic was leaking into the lake at a rate of 15 gallons per minute, or 8

million gallons per year. In March 1980, a severe regional storm resulted in the spill of 4 million gallons of radioactive effluent into the lake, with concentrations of radium 226 as high as 46 times the Ontario drinking water standard. In the following month, Eldorado deliberately discharged nearly half a million gallons of contaminated liquid waste directly into Lake Ontario during attempts to repair the Port Granby dump system. The harbour has also been contaminated by spills from the refinery. In December 1978 and January 1979, Eldorado spilled between 200 and 300 gallons of radioactive waste directly into the Port Hope harbour. The Ontario Ministry of the Environment subsequently took Eldorado to..court, charging the firm with four violations under the Ontario Water Resources Act. Two of these violations were for impairing water quality and two were for failing to report the incidents. Eldorado did not deny the spills in court. Instead, their defense was based on Eldorado being immune from provincial environmental legislation by virtue ofbeingafederal crown corporation. This defense was upheld by the Ontario Supreme Court in October 1981; Eldorado is le.gally exempt from all provincial environmental legislation.

In September 198 1, a federal-provincial task force confirmed that maximum concentrates in the harbour at Port Hope were 30 times greater than that of ore mined at Elliot Lake, and that levels of radiation in invertebrates tested in the Port Hope harbour were alarming enough to consider an extensive dredging campaign. This study corroborated a 1968 Ontario Ministry of the Environment study which found invertebrates had “con-

uranium, and a price drop for uranium from $45 a pound to $25 a pound in the past two years Eldorado has extensive expansion plans. Eldorado currently plans to build two new refineriesone in Blind River in northern Ontario and the other in Port Hope. A plan for a uranium refinery in Warmen, Saskatchewan has been scrapped after extensive local opposition. In the meantime the firm’s financial position has continued to deteriorate. In the first three months of 1981, Eldorado lost $200,000 and the company’s long termdebt now stands at nearly $100 million. -In summary, uranium refining, like other components of the nuclear fuel chain, has resulted in the creation of health hazards, environmental contamination and financial liability. Next week I’ll take a look at reactor operation and safety considerations. David Assmann

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centrations within the harbour ranging from 128 times to 2,800 times the norm for gross alpha radioactivity, 79 to 1,300 times the norm for gross beta radioactivity and 86 to 460 times for Radium 226.” Eldorado has come under fire for other reasons as well. Last July, the company came under heavy criticism for refining uranium from Nambia, in direct defiance of a United Nations decree against such arrangements. Not only is the company refining uranium under an agreement with the apartheid regime of South Africa, but Eldorado is also exporting the processed uranium without identifying it as , Namibian uranium. All the uranium exported from this country is identified as Canadian; regardless of its origin. Eldorado, is the only company. refining uranium in Canada and is responsible for refining 6,500 tons per year about 20% of, the world’s uranium refining capacity. Despite a drop in demand for

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remark. Vociferous critics are caught off guard by the fresh simplicity of his“first let’s have a jelly bean” approach. Reagan’s act has been perfected through years of stage practice at dramatic projection in which meaningless dialogue is pumped up with rationalized, temporary sincerity. It is a trick that any good actor knows. Talk yourself into believing what you are saying and the world thinks you mean it. No one but a professional actor could bring it across with similar class and wit. In terms of effective style, Ronald Reagan should certainly go down in history as number one.

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lates the press, the U.S. Congress, the American public and in s,ome measure the world more successfully than few people ever have. Heads of State and public figures file from his office speaking of his sincerity and grace. They are often won over to his point of view by what they refer to as his “awesome powers of persuasion.” On the air and in public he is poised and relaxed. When he speaks he does so with a controlled voice and demeanor that come across as perfectly natural. Ronnie is ‘real people’. Hostile questions are deflected with a ioke. Jeers are neutralized with a thoughtful

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But the trouble with Ronnie isn’t his style, it’s his substance. The following is only a partial list of Reagan’s “accomplishments” since he assumed office as the most powerful politician in the Western world. He has substantially damaged the U.S. social welfare program. This program, designed to help improve condition of the large social underclass, took 30 years of work to build. This segment of the U.S. populationcomposed mainly of inner city racial minorities now shows signs of becoming a unique and permanent American phenomenon. He has given large multinational corporations, through,lax enforcement of antitrust laws and special tax breaks, the green light for unrestrained expansion in North American and abroad. The multinationals already have a power and influence which many people believe exceeds that of government. He has strengthened and aided, through pledges of friendship and arms, undemocratic and dictatorial regimes all over the world. Some of them indulge in worse repression of their civilian populations than anything the Soviet bloc has ever dreamed of. He has demolished Jimmy Carter’s well intentioned human rights campaign. Carter’s effort, as in the case of the Jewish expatriot newspaperman Jacob0 Timmerman from Argentina, actually saved people’s lives. In so doing, Reagan has also jettisoned a rationale for popular Third World support of the West. He has substantially eroded, in a single year, the living standard of lower and middle class Americans and _Canadians by raising interest rates and purposely causing a recession. He has continued to push nuclear power down the throats of a growingly unwilling population, even though it has been proven dangerous and is now economically disadvantageous. Since no safe method of disposing of nuclear waste has been developed it also represents a growing future menace of unparalleled proportions. He has brought U. S. Canadian relations to a 30 year low by attempting to bully the Canadian government on its energy policy, by reneging on the Fisheries Treaty and hedging on the Alaska gas pipeline.

In addition, his government has steadfastly refused to seriously address the problem of acid rain. He has denounced gun control, dismantling the federal agency which is responsible for what little there is. Through this attitude he has further aggravated the principal reason for the U.S. having one of the worst rates of violent crime in the world. He has even become a victim to it. He has psychologically set the stage for what was formerly unthinkable: a limited nuclear war on the European Continent. In so doing he has alienated European opinion, isolated the United Statesand, some think, irreparably divided the NATO alliance. Worst of all, through intentional agitation and a demonstrated unwillingness to seriously negotiate, he has set into motion the most gargantuan struggle for arms superiority the world has ever seen. It is a race which shows every indication of draining the world’s resources and heightening tension in every world conflict. He has pushed the arms race, formerly out of control, into the twilight zone. Even, if there had been no formally announced intention to start a monumental military buildup, as Reagan has done, the race would have acclerated. Technological advances in recent years have caused gaps in defenses to appear at a much faster rate. These gaps, or windows of vulnerability, as the Pentagon sometimes calls them, are simply weapons systems or innovations for which an equivalent weapon is missing on the other side. For every “window” that appears, the opposing side must build a counterforce system. Each gap now requires much more sophisticated and expensive technology to fill, meaning that money spent on defense is going to increase at an even faster rate from now on. This drama can have only two possible endings. One involves a mutual attempt to reverse, or at least slow the arms spiral. Jimmy Carter did his best to achieve this through the SALT II treaty. However, when Reagan came to power, SALT II went out the window. The real effect of this concerns the other possible ending. It should be extremely obvious what that is. But it does not seem to be obvious to the administration of President Reagan, His Vice President, George Bush, last year spoke of emerging as a winner in a nuclear exchange. Reagan himself recently confirmed Europeans worst fears by affirming a report that the U.S. entertained the possibility of fighting a “limited” nuclear war. Secretary of State Alexander Haig, with his usual flair for bluntness, even publicly mentioned a plan to explode a bomb “as a demonstration.” He did not volunteer where to explode it and so far, people have been too afraid to ask. If ‘Haig’s title followed his function, he would be know as the Secretary of Belligerence. The theoretical basis on which the arms race was built goes back to shortly after World War II when it was recognized by world leaders that it has only been in times of military superiority by a single nation that the world slipped into conflict.

Accordingly, there would be peace as long as there was a balance of power. Dr. Geroge Wald, a a lecturer on disarmament,has stated that the Pentagon operates on a somewhat different principle. Wald feels Pentagon thinking is: “Never negotiate from a position, which is equal to, or inferior to that of your opponent. However, if you are ahead, there is no need to negotiate”. But there is a need to negotiate. The arms race hurts.

ties, free medical services and does all this ask, “Where money come from?” The place where Canada’s money is not invested, for the most part, is in things like aircraft carriers that have crews which exceed the population of some Canadian cities. What’s more, this tremendous investment in arms and technology does not even win friends. The U.S. arms supply to Iran was virtually a bottomless pit, but when thecollective consciousness of the country turned anti-American,itdidn’t mean a thing.

That hair!!!

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...that turkey gobbler neck!!!!!!!!! In the Soviet Union, the land of central planning, Ivan stands in a long line to buy a toaster. Why? Because there are only so many factories in the country and some of them have to build missile guidance systems. There is growing eveidence that the increasing pressure on the Soviet Union to pour ever more of its gross national product into defense will eventually drive the whole system into something akin to bankruptcy. This in itself could destablize the country, destroying the balance of power/ and inviting catastrophe. Americans, for all of their relative affluence, are oftenastounded when they come to Canada. They see clean, well lit streets, good public facili-

Concerning Iran, the Reagan administration has recently undertaken an endeavor which the Soviet Union often calls “revisionism”. It consists of makingex post facto changes in history. In this case the fall of the Shah of Iran is being blamed directly on former Democratic President Carter for not having propped him up. It’s a little bit like saying that the Mount St. Helen’s eruption could have been prevented by cementing up its crater. The other thing the arms and technology banquet cannot do, besides making friends, is win wars. There is a picture of Vietnam combat which stands out vividly in the memories of many people. It is of a U.S. army helicopter which cost

February

12,1982. . .Imprint

13-

several million dollars to build fidence in the government’s and design pursuing an undereconomic policy’ anymore. nourished Vietcong soldier Being an economist means wearing sandals. never having to say you’re Michael McLear’s artfulTV sorry. The real losers in Reagandocumentary on Vietnam, omics have been the lower “The 10,000 Day War,” made middle class in the United one thing absolutely apparent. The United States was not States and Canada. In the beaten in Vietnam, by Chinese period since Reagan took or Russian arms or because it office they have been hit with the triple whammy of reduced lacked any sort of technological superiority. The United social programs, layoffs due to States was beaten by the sheer recession and an inability to tenacious determination of a borrow money because of people who felt they had tight credit and godzilla internothing leti- to lose and est rates. everything to gain. Reagan is the first American U.S. military architects of president in 50 years to come the Vietnam era lost sight of to office without some kind of two basic and important moral or economic mandate to factors. First, people do not help the poor. They have quite fight well without a reason. simply been written off. Second, in their own words, Crime, which has been “the world’s most efficient proven by 20 years of study as fighting machine is the indivibeing directly linked to poverty, has been conveniently dual soldier.” disassociated from it. Instead, These items continue to lie at the bottome of the trash can Reagan calls crime “a problem of the human head.” True of military priorities, in some enough, but he fails to mention measure because there isn’t much that can be done about that the problem is most acute them. under conditions of gross The Western world is runinequality and poverty. This is ning out of reason to hate no secret. communism. The Soviet type Reagan once told a reporter does not work. The Chinese that the role he most coveted are friends. There is not a was the one for which George single well functioning demoC. Scott won an Oscar in cracy anywhere without so“Patton”. Patton was the cialist features built into it. so Second World War General why is communism the Ameriwho had to be restrained from can’s enemy? Is the Russian marching right across all of system more efficient, more Germay and into Moscow. He repressive, more secular? was convinced that he had Maybe not. learned exactly how to take It hardly constitutes a moral Russia from studying Napobasis for risking a holocaust, leon’s errors and actually entertained an ambition to do or sacrificing a nation’s young. so. Patton was a talented and As for soldiers, they first have to be located. There is no brilliant man who is often more reason to think that characterized as being born several centuries too late. young Americans would be much more willing to march There probably isn’t any off into the next war than they connection between Reagan’s were into the last one. The aspirations as an actor and his place where they would be current frame of mind as a marching off to is here, unless world leader, we should hope. Canada were dragged into it. What cannot be said about Indeed, with today’s low birth Reagan is that he is in any rate, it is much more likely the sense a failure as a politician. average family would object He projects strength and strenuously to donating its competence. He has the popupound of flesh. lar support and respect of a The rationale for Reagan’s large majority of the U.S. foreign policy, which one U.S. population of all ages and Senator calls “spewing arms social classes. Many Canaall over the place,” seems to be dians admire him as well. nothing more than the old Reagan, in fact, seems to Cold War fear of communism. grow younger and more vigorIt was an irrational fear to start ous in thejob. There is no other with and continues to be so. In world leader who can possess Reagan’s case it has become his skills of human persuasion without seeming overbearing pathological. The irony is that the basic or tyrannical. Reagan just profound differences which; ., comes across as a nice guy, separated the systems ahve who is full of good will. In that largely faded away. All that is sense, he is a true statesman. Reagan has the potential to left is a great void of fear and distrust. be, possibly one of the most But Reagan with his 50’s effective world leaders in haircut and tunnel vision, history. The timing, however, continues to see Red peril. The is off. Reagan is exactly the real menace, of course, is the right man, but, like Patton, at growing division between two exactly the wrong time. opposing camps, neither of What is worse, he has which has anything approachassumed office just at the point ing a moral foundation. when there is a strong backlash The bill for all this madness from a period of popular is the inflation and debt that liberalism. It has left the threatens to lead the economy United States nationalistic of the United States and, thand prone to irrational and simplistic patriotism. rough close economic association, Canada, into a quagmire. When Ronald Reagan leaTo combat this, Reagan has ves office, it will likely have employed an imaginative supbecome a world of sharper ply side economic theory class divisions, receding huwhich was first sketched out man rights and undoubtedly, on a piece of toilet paper by a two opposing piles of arms named Arther Laffer. The spiralling madly out of conpity is that it wasn’t flushed. trol. In less than a year, Reagan’s Perhaps that is why a crony economists have gone remark made by sometimes from predictions to tax cuts activist Shirley MacLain becomes hard to forget, once you and a balanced budget to suggestions about tax increhear it. “Ronald Reagan”,-the ases and an impending recesactress said unequivocally, “is sion. Not even Reagan’s own the most dangerous man in the director has conworld.” _budget

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,-:TheArts Women One of the problems I always encounter when I read reviews is that of familiarity. The reviewer deals with obscure details (probably pertinent if you know about them), discusses the subtle changes of meaning worked on the script and all you really want to know is, Is it good and Should I see it? In reviewerese, then, Tremblay’s Women is an interesting play that runs too long and occasionally lapses into self-indulgence but is worth seeing. The Real In-. bpec tor Hound (playing on a’ double bill with Trembluy’s Women) is a finely-wrought Swiss watch of absurdity. (Not without its flaws, but so wonderful anyway!) To deal with Tremblay’s Women first, since it happens first, and I’m reniembering in chronological sequence. Did I say it is “interesting” already? The play consists of monologues spoken by female characters in Michel Tremblay’s plays. Tremblay is a Quebec playwright / novelist. This is where ignorance comes in: I know nothing about Tremblay that wasn’t in the program. However (I console myself) this means that I approach the show with an open mind. This is not a play, nor a stagedstory. Thereisachorus of six women and one man who set the stage for each monologue. The monologues themselves are performed by Madeleine Paquette. I didn’t like the chorus. ‘They were effective, but self-indulgent. The chorus went on too long. It became boring. They were staged in sue h a way as to look “busy”. Motion without direction. Perhaps this was the-director’s.intention; all eight of the women play their lives out against a backdrop of meaningless pathetic trapped suburban boredom. The monologues themselves? What can I say, not knowing the plays? I thought that Ms. Paquette was a little unsteady at the beginning of the first monologue (a character identified as Lise Paquette); she settled down to a competent performance. The monologues I found most effective, most real, were the third and fourth - the characters were Berthe and Marie-Lou. (I’m sorry this seems so contrived and artificial - I have nothing to hang a criticism on. I am working in a vacuum.) The major complaint I have is that the characters fail to stand out in my memory. They run together. Perhaps it is the lack of clearly defined relationships between ea& monologue character. Perhaps it is my memory. Still, it was worth it. It should be seen. There are flaws, but the monologues themselves are . . . right. Now we come to my current infatuation. I was very impressed with the production of The Real inspector Hound. The script by Tom Stoppard is literate, witty, fast, and clever.’ It is a play within a play outside of a play. There are flaws (there are always flaws) and I am going to list them right now and get them out of the way so I can go on to the good stuff. Some of the actors had difficulties being heard. This was noticeable with the critics,

Friday,

worth seeing, but Houndis Moon and Birdboot (fear not; I shall attempt to describe the play in a moment), and with Chris Dubois, who plays Simon Gascoyne. Another problem was diction and enunciation. I could hear the technicians pressing the buttons to give

some of the sound effects (notably the phone ringing). How tacky. Now - The RealInspector Hound deals with two critics, Moon (Jan Zwicky - a good performance) and Birdboot (Christopher McHarge) who are out to review, for their

February

12,1982.

Imprint

15

impressive

papers, a second- (possibly third-) rate whodunnit. This play within a play is lovingly overacted, it is wonderfully terrible without being boring. I like it. Special mention goes to Raymond 3. Simanavicius as Magnus, the crippled half-brother of Lady

Cynthia Muldoon (Tracy Cunningham, in another special mention). I do not mean to detract from the other actors; I just felt that these two were outstanding. There is another plot surrounding both of these. It is

\

complex, to say the least, but also very good. _I’m repeating myself. Time to end. Both plays are showing at the Theatre of the Arts, until Saturday, the first one starts at 8:00 p.m. and it costs $2.00 for students, $3.00 for others. Go see them. (J(McMullen

IVGte Raven to Hurgnities-

wingS Feb. 13

A legend of the Canadian cow, a dragon fighting a giant Pacific coast Indians will come octopus, and other bizarre, to life in a highly visual show at unexplained occurrences to set the stage for this Indian the Humanities Theatre on Saturday, February 13. - legend that’s surrounded by The White Raven is being myth and mystery. presented by Montreal-based The Theatre sans fil was Theatre san fil (the no-strings founded in 1971 and now has nine productions to its credit. puppet theatre) with giant The company’s reputation puppets turning the stage into a kingdom of artistic imaginahas grown steadily over the tion. The show is being years and it was chosen to represent Canada at the presented for children from 8 to 12 years of age, but Theatre International Puppet Festival sans fil is fun for any audience. in Washington, D.C. in June Two performances are sche1980. The Theatre sans fil has duled at 1 and 3:30 p.m. and mastered the techniques of a tickets for reserved seats are unique medium, the art of $2.50 for children and seniors, giant puppets, and has creat$3.00 for all others. ed a repertory of original The White Raven is one of productions composed of inthe Tales from the Smoketernational masterpieces of

BENT is giving you that special place to take your loved one on Valentine’s Day (which falls on a Sunday this year): Bingeman Park. Why, you may ask. Well, Fingerprintz is playing there, and I think that is a very good reason. Fingerprintz is a band of Scottish origin who have just put out their third album, called Bent Noir. This album is a bit of a change for the band. Both earlier album, Fingerprintz and Distinguishing Marks contain commercial pop-style music. Bent Noir

tends more towards experimental disco, with a prominent backbeat throughout. Two of their more memorable pieces are: Wet Job, which is about an assassination which happened a while ago in Britian wherein a diplomat was poisoned by a pellet from an umbrella (remember?), and Beam Me Up Scatty, a very ‘Star Trekish’ piece. The show starts at seven o’clock (p.m.) and the bar closes at eleven. Tickets are $7.00 for Feds and $8.00 for all others. Show your love some

run, flowers, Flngerprintz, and . . Bingeman Park, see you there. Cliff Goodman

-Battle ofsexes hits next Theatresports In case you were wondering what has happened to Theatresports lately, you may be glad to know that it is returning to the entertainment scene with a game Friday and a novice workshop Saturday. This week’s game is a challenge of the, sexes in honour of St. Valentine’s Day. The game, matching a team of woment versus a team of men, takes place Friday, Februhry 12 at 9:30 p.m. in HH180. Admission is 75 cents for Feds, $1.00 for aliens. If you have been looking for a chance to-learn how to play

Theatresports, then reserve this Saturday afternoon for attending this term’s novice workshop. This will take place in CC113, starting at 1 p.m. and ending around 4 p.m. Theatresports, for you information, is improvised acting games. In performance, two teams take turns challenging each other to play variou6 games such as Endowments, A Day in the Life, or Death ina Minute. The outcome is determined by a panel of judges, who score each scene on a scale from zero to five.

Caning Events Friday

February

12

Tremblay’s Women and The Real Inspector I Hound - 8:OOp.m. Theatre of the Arts. $5.00 and $3.00 students/seniors. K-W Symphony 0rchestr.a with The ,/Mae Koffman Jazz Quintet. 8:00 p.m. Centre in the Square. $12.00; $3.00 students/seniors Saturday, February 13 The White Raven by Theatre Sans Fil. 1:00 p.m. & 3:3O$.m. Humanities Theatre Children/seniors $2.50, Others $3.00.

world. The show begins totally phantasmagoric rience, using black light niques to produce spectacular sights: a

with a expetechsome ghost

Tickets are $2.50 for children and seniors, and $3.00 for all others, from the UW Arts -Centre Box Office, Humanities Theatre.

e TALK! On February 22 and 23 we’ll be on campus to talk with Computer Science grads and students who have their eye on Calgary . . . and a new comp!ny . . . and an opportunity to make a mark in the West’s newest growth industry - - COAL.

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(Music 6rom)The KISS Polygram

Elder

When you here this album, the first thing you are going to say is “this is not KISS”. Wellit is, but it is not the KISS known to millions of fans far and wide. To say they have changedisan understatement. The Elder is a concept album. It deals with the Elder, a race that was old when the Earth was young, and their battle against evil. They need a champion to conquer the evil,

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and they find it in a young boy. The album deals with the boys doubts and thoughts about becoming the warrior of the Elder. It all begins with The Oath, which could almost be an average KISS song, except it is not quite as hard, the instruments blend beautifully, and the lyrics can be heard. The American Symphony Orchestra appears for a little over a minute on the instrumental Fanfare. It starts with flutes and clarinets and builds up slo.wly into Just a Boy features good lead guitar and percussion. The keyboards are more a feeling than a sound, but they are still an excellent feeling. Darklight begins with some really great lead and bass guitar work. The drums come in just a touch too strong, but still acceptable. There are some ‘lovable’ voice effects that run throughout the cut. The first end finishes with Under The Rose. The drums are played in a march rythmstyle, and the guitar floats nicely throughout this soft rock piece. It sounds akin to something off Pink Floyds

feeling of peace and swells to some great piano. The last song on the album is 1. The album finishes the way , it began, I is a hard rock piece that is almost the old KISS sound, except that everything blends well. The music is‘ finished, but the album isn’t. I fades into some gentle piano and guitar, and the sound of footsteps on gravel. Morpheus, the Elder The Wall. ,caretaker, here informs the The second side continues with soft rock: A World i other Elder that the boy has Without Heroes is the single i been deemed worthy of behit on this album. It is a little coming the champion. It ends nicely, in a way that faster than it should be, however, the guitar solo is almost begs for a sequel album concerning the battle between worth noting. the champion and the forces The next cut, MrBIackwell fades into a siren which begins of evil. Do not buy this album if you Escapefrom theIsland. This is are a member of the KISS harder yet than the last cut. It Army, for this is not the KISS is one of the few non-repetitive instrumentals I’ve ever heard. that you know and love. But it is still an amazingly excellent Odyssey is a stately soft album: coherent, listenable, rock piece featuring the return and definitely a damn good of the American Symphony Orchestra. It begins with _a release. Cliff Goodman

Questionnaire Chas Jankel A&M

One look at Chas Jankel’s background might lead one to believe that he would be an instant suCcess with the release of a solo album. His credits include being musical director and co-writer with Ian Dury & The Blockheads, touring England and America with the famous first “Stiff Tour” and writing Quincy Jones’s top ten hit Ai No Corrida.

However, Jankel’s second solo effort Questionnaire has provided nothing more than shallow disco-funk music through-out. Even the strongest cut, 3,UO0,000 Synths,is ruined by the Stars on 45 beat in the background. There are, however, ‘some strengths to this album. Ian Dury provides ‘his usual idiosyncratic lyric wit bn five of the eight cuts and Jankel has used his own 24-track studio, which he built with his own savings and a substantial bank loan early in 1980. Another strength of the album is the use of state-of-the-art instruments, such as the simmonds drum synthesizer which blends in well with the overall tight sound of the album. The only departure from LIIC

umLu-iulm

iI 1t311c

u1

11it5

album is Magic of Music, a reggae tune which clearly doesn’t fit in with the rest of the album but ‘shows that Chas Jankel is at least a diversified artist. Through out the album Jankel plays keyboards, guitars and bass very well, but his singing ability is questionable. Jankel claims that his music is a combination of Latin and Funk rhythms and also says that “I like to think it’s instant, that the ideas come from sensations, that the music reflects my mood at the time I’m making it.” Let’s hope that his mood changes for his next album. Otherwise Jankel may remain as an artist more “heard of” than heard. I recommend Questionnaire to anyone wanting an album to merely dance to rather than listen to. Mike Spencer

sojust sayo”Wh~?

The Imprint Write.

,


Poem to the Wind You sing to me, signing, your voice and its illusive cadenzes gently passing by trees, souls who will patiently mark your passage. Your strength fills me with a curious exuberance. You hold the power to create and the power to destroy, and my heart quickens as I realize my existence comes from the whims of the air. Teasing, you and your magic drift to other branches and consummate their waiting with a smile-like breeze’. I look-at blue sky and sigh with you, my breath mixing with your immortal energy. You carry a part of me with you always.

Square neck bottles depression’is like a burdensome relative come to live with you wants you like an impotent

Joy Mason English, Year II

lover

drains you leaving a heavy residue like greasy dishes in the sink or the attertaste of a long drinking night of running down blind bottles hiding behind the wine thinking hoping you have lost this unwanted companion

written With regards to audience February 5th, 1982.

response

to the showing

by Mark

of the film “Luna”

“L” is for the moon 1.

Itty. Bitty. We are all children sometimes. Children of wrath. Their backs are up. Children of fear of irrational emotion feeling all right (ha!) on a Friday night feeling that they are right Righteous

2.

Incest

is is is is

children

of action.

anyway I’ve never been able to put the cork back in a bottle

disquieting very disquieting very upsetting “scary”

the neck becomes square as soon as you remove the cork that held it in place

It is. Repulsion

and attraction,

In its face reaction

Thesky bends into barriers of pale electricity

. . . whatever.

One of them I know. He is young and strong and confident and intelligent. - yet I think he is unimpressed . or is it immature? Or is it narrow? Or is it incredibly discourteous? Or is it afraid? It is.

b.

When

The Clay is Drv Her gingers burn sulphur-yellow”

fear and desire

is “violent”

3a

I

Ferguson on Friday

I tried to run back out the neck and pop the cork back in the bottle hoping he would be ’ bottled up and I could throw him in the sea to be carried away by waves and some poor other fool would open the bottle somewhere on a shore thinking what fun this is and out would come the stench of my morning breath

so I am left with depression the empty wine bottles with square necks useless corks and a foul taste in my mouth Donna

with something

he cannot

seem to deal with.

. . he

ridicules, he laughs, he hoots, and he groans in fear, and so many others do likewise. . . strength in numbers. ..

,

couldn’t they just shut-up won’t/can’t/don’t I stand afraid to say something

/ C.

I touch the red ground

faced

up

couldn’t they just leave ask them to shut-up ? a

why why am I

They continue. He makes everything black and white. Jill Clayburgh is a “bitch”, and that is all she is. He cannot get down to any other level, (the fear), cannot see that sometimes we are all “bitches”, cannot see he, himself, at times is reduced to an irrational, frightened, reactionary human. Is he? Yes.

The desert moves the desert sighs the heat eviscerates

4.

The haze 1s

no protection the flesh twists into tawny card board Jeff Ardon

“Disquieting”

film.

Disquieting Disquieting

responses. insights.

-

Masse1 1981


,Secordg

~-.The&W 1occ Ten out of Ten Polygram

There has always been more technique than feeling in what 1OCC have done. Despite this, the.ir- output during the mid ’70s had it’s moments. I’m not in Loue, their 1975 single, was a nice enough piece of fluff, 1and their Sheet Music L.P. may still, on occasion, find its way to my turntable. But, on the whole, I must confess that I have grown rather ambivalent towards much of their output during those days. This, however, is not how I feel towards the band’s recent output. Their music,

i

the songs include such earthshaking topics as: having firiancial problems, being ‘cool’ at the club, vacationing with the nouveaux riche, and, of course, being in love. The arrangements to these songs are about as exciting as a bowl of milk.

subsequent to the departure of band members Lo1 Creme and Kevin Dogley, can be best described as boring. Where, in the past their writing was clever and at times even witty, now it has become cliched and forced. They have trimmed any rough edges from their sound, resulting in music guaranteed not to offend anyone. Whether it will interest anyone is another question.

If your tastes run to something more than aural wallpaper, pass this one by. If that’s not the case, however, you still shouldn’t buy this Their newest release,Ten album. Instead tune in to the out of 10 is probably 1OCC’s radio (almost any station will worst to date. This band has ! do) and catch the ‘originals’ stopped even trying to come like Perry Como or Tony up with anything fresh or Mazola and his orchestra. original. Subjects covered in Tony Brouwer

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February

12,1982.

Imprint

lmFb

1

Thin Lizzy Renegade Polygram

This type of- music Usually leaves me cold. What we have here, for the most part is tie usual assortment of standard heavy metal riffs, silly lyrics about things like ‘A Holocaust the likes of which you have never seen’, and the usual sturm und drang associated with most heavy metal music. I’ve got to admit though, that I find Phil Lynott a more charismatic than usual singer. And the complete absence of any blustering about the singer’s sexual prowess is a gratifying change from the rule for this genre. It’s hard to escape the f&ts though, and the facts are that this is pretty ordinary stuff. There are a couple of exceptions though, and they lie back to back on side two. No one told Him is the‘type of song Thin Lizzy should be doing more of. In it we have the singer admonishing a girl for not playing straight with her boyfriend. Hey guys, leave the revolution and holocaust songs to the others, you’re good at this. Fats has a nice shuffling beat ‘to it and represents the biggest departure from the H.M. formula on the album. It comes complete with finger snaps, funky bass line, and tasty piano break. Phil Lynott sings in his best imitation Tom Waits grbwl. As evidenced on these tkacks, Thin Lizzy have the potential to be a good rock and roll band. But if they insist on wagting their time on this heavy metal material they will have to settle with being very ordinary. Tony Fist Fleet A&M

Brouwer

Street

Fist is an aggressive name for an artistically feeble new band from Canada. Their most recent venture, Fleet Street, is a testimony to the fact that you don’t have co have talent to cut an album. Each new song is suspiciously of the last. reminiscent Themes include: gambling, motorcycle ladies (if that is a possible combination), hard rock; blood, death (mostly by unnatural means), and anything else that is more or less of questionable repute. An inspiring album, Fleet Street, gets its title from a song by the same name, which features an unexpected dia-

ANTI-RUST COMPOUND

,Fdday, _. _

Now to the matter at hand: with the drummer, Michael Sh&~g analumnus of Santana, and with a name like Novo Combo, it’s not surprising that the tracks are infused with the Afro-Cuban beat. (Jeez, you blitzers sure overlooked a hell of a good dance style here. You can even dispense with the Third World political undertones, if you like.) But this is not the same old drum schtick, as it were. There was hardly a new or even established band during the ’70s that didn’t give at least a passing nod to the influence of reggae. For an ethnicallyoriented drummer like Shrieve to incorporate that rhythmic mode into his approach is about par for the course. The best songwriter of the group is Stephen Dees. He provides Up Periscope, a song about life on a submarine, although not one of the yellow variety. I wonder if this is another tune with subtle drug references? I guess I’ll have to Karina Kraenzle ask the Maranathas . . . Novo Combo Another Dees composition, Novo Combo Sorry for the Delay, is the WEA story of some poor burnout Back at the turn of the last whs to be trendy; he’s so damn decade, Carlos Santana and gauche he prefers rum to pina his namesake band forged a coladas. People like that new direction in rock - by deserve no sympathy, stepping backward. y’know. They scooped up fragments The production overall is from jazz, blues, Latinhigh-quality, but the voices are American and rock, and sometimes mixed in such a signed a deal with CBS. The way that they don’t come out amalgam of styles could be front enough, and end up crudely likened to Xavier sounding pinched, as if the Cugat meets Muddy Waters, , singers were recorded with featuring Buddy Rich and Eric i one hand squeezing their Clapton. As Eddie Shack used throats. to shy, that’s a real bargoon. Performances are generally laudable. I don’t mean to slam the disk on the whole, but I’m surprised I haven’t heard any airplay for some of the songs. Tattooand WeZVeedLoueare at that high level of mediocrity that AM producers have decided we deserve. (Top 40 is to music as cafeteria food is to gastronomie-but that’s another article. . .) For those wanting a cubbyhole to fit this kind of music into, I’m sorry that I can’t accommodate you. Just as Shrieve’s last incarnation jumped ‘all over the musical yap, so it goes here. A teaser though: at times they capture the sound of Sting and Co., not only in musical texture, but also in the wryness of lyric. Good stuff. dgbr u bc Creamery in New Dumb)

logue between Sherlock Holmes and ever-present Watson discussing the notorious demon-barber of Fleet street, the man with the razor and the unsteady hand. The music following is basically a repeat of the dialogue with a heavy metal background. There is, however, a welcome break from the raspy vocals during an unforseen spurt of electronic innovation, which lends an appropriately evil touch to an otherwise mickey-mouse approach. Basically Fleet Street is a good idea that goes nowhere. The album sound, in general, is cold and tinny. While perhaps a blessing in disguise, the Fleet Street lyrics are usually indistinguishable due to large racket in background. What can be heard and understood is, to put it gently, bland and unoriginal. The album merits no more time or space. Lacking in control and polish, Fist’s Fleet Street is an album easily, eagerly forgotten.

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Schneider

I


mThgOL@~ 1-------_.---_-* 1 Fygss a show with ‘\.,‘82

FASS ‘82 was a pretty good show. It was not the best FASS I have experienced hjy one does have to remember this was their, first time in Humanities Theatre, and I understand that the scriptwriters laboured under a curious concept that from one angle is defensible, but as far as I can see, didn’t work out as well as it might have. The former was a problem in that FASS - the annual musical/ satirical/comedy review - commonly works in the Theatre of the Arts, using the ‘theatre in the round’ that stage provides; as, well, T of A, being a smaller theatre, does not demand as strenuous projection of actor’s voices; the tomb of Humanities was too much for matiy people. Not hearing the play can be a most frustrating phenotienon;

1 -laughs

regard. He provided some distraction as scenes were changed, behind the curtain. A scene would end, curtain closes, and the Caterpillar would creep onstage in front of the curtain. He would leer at dirty books, get stoned on his houkah, drink, and generally carry on in a non-verbal way. The costume was very clever - -six arms. Great! Then the spotlight on him would suddenly brighten, he would realize the audience is present, sober up quickly, and take up the role of narrator. It doesn’t sound as funny in print, you had to be there.

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Another outstanding part was the duet of Better Holmes and Gardens - Preston Gurd and Andrew Welch, both seasoned FASSites. Their dialogue was brilliant, their chain of reasoning so obscure as to be incredibly funny. The absurd can be wonderful. The Association of Lapines in Criminal Endeavours are also memorable. Much of the action centres around these bunnies, especially Rock Hopster, John McMullen, and overall they handle it well.

The latter - the ‘curious concept’ of FASS this year - I am told, was that FASS wanted toavoida‘star’to the show - that is, avoid having any one person or group of people stand out above the others. While this is laudable from a democratic point of view, it seemed to create a ‘leavening’ effect on the production, keeping it from achieving any really high points. It is hard for an audience to focus on about sixty actors and actresses (especially The songs suffered from the same problems the show in when, perhaps, they are more used to looking for a ‘hero’ or general experienced. They were “just fine”that is, none were ‘villain’ or whatever) and consequently the production lacked a poorly done, but few were outstanding. Personally, “I Mock certain sharpness; climaxes usually didn’t quite make it. Turtles”, “Higher Education”and“It’s Called University”( to the tunes of “I Love Onions”, “ Stairway to Heaven/Gilligan’s Island” Generally speaking, this FASS likeall other FASSes was what and “It’s Still Rock n’ Roll to Me”, respectively) stand out in my one expected of it. The traditional snipes were taken at mind, but the audience seemed to love “How Do You Mend a Engineers, Arts students, the UW administration, effects of Broken Egg” to the tune of “How Do You Mend a Broken cutbacks in education, Security - hey, even Imprint. The Heart”. I suppose I just can’t stand the BeeGeeseven when they plethora of puns were there - though I felt they overdid the ‘fish’ are satirized. The audience stood up and applauded for it jokes. The funny names were there; and these were done more every show. cleverly than I remember having seen in FASS before. Often, a name of a character that had been floating around for a scene or I should note the Humanities holds more than800 people; that two provided the punchline of a joke at an unexpected moment, it was nearly filled every night that FASS played, and was usually cleverly ending a scene. completely sold out twice. I’ve heard it said that this FASS was the best yet. Others have What one largely expects of FASS, of course, is laughs and it said that last years was better. I find Iagree with the latter opinion must be said that,this FASS had plenty of that, no matter how the more, but I really enjoyed this show. ,. laughs were created. Mostly that creation was through sure-fire If you missed FASS this year, see it next year. You owe it to tricks - puns, visual comedy, allusions to odd happenings at you&elf. Like Johnny Carson, FASS seems to be able to pick UW. I am afraid that FASS is falling into a formula-writing trap; out the sacred cows of the society we inhabit and exhibit them things are getting predictable. for public and healthy laughter - not so much ridicule, but a Some really creative things did happen, however; the satire that strikes to the heart of matters that deserve something Caterpillar, played by Peter Carette, was outstanding in this other than quiet acceptance. . John W. Bast

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ELECTION 1982 Grad Club Board of Directors

Friday,

Classic

VOTE ___ ’ on FRIDAY, MARCH 12 9:00 am to 6:00 pm at the GRADUATE HOUS ;E NOMINATION

FORMS

may. be obtained at

the

Grad

between

from

Club

noon

and

NOMINATIONS will be open

3:30.

from to

All paid to

full-time their

the

Mondtiy, Monday,

grads, Grad

Board

HEATHER

Office

Club of

Directors,

and fees,

February March

part-time

grads

are

eligible

and

are

who for

eligible

15

1, 9982. have

nomination to

vote.

J

ballet

La Fille Ma1 Gardee is a classical ballet almost two hundred years old. It looks it. It is a creaking light-hearted piece of fluff that, at best, mildly entertains. It contains little technical difficulty, the acting challenge rests in not looking ridiculous and the storyline fades from pale to paste. Is it any wonder the Centre In the Square box office took a beating when the National Ballet performed this past week? This ballet then, is a great challenge to mount. Performers cannot dazzle with brilliant dancing, nor will a strong dramatic plot push the action along. Instead, the dancers must allow that this is a faery tale (in the unreality of-- it. all,

8

-

a creakerfull

complete with one-dimensional characters) but at the same time, not play it so broadly that all resemblance to ‘human’ people and situations is lost. Vanessa Harwood, as Lise, begins well in her role coquettish, spoilt (she must have a quota to reach on stamps per act) impertinent. She flounces by her nattering mother and pouts when chastized. She is most espressive,’ however, when churning the butter, with attendant clumps and halfhearted presses. She complains through this to her mother Widow Simone (Constantin Patsalas) who responds with firm, vigorous thuds. Lise’s - -..unwanted suitor is

Announcing the

All. in One 4s Fun Packed ’ Long Lasting High Roll@

HEALTH

STUDIES HOOT

2 free beer tickets-for health studs! Advance tickets available at MC 6005 in the afternoons.

February 12th, 8 p.m. PSYCH LOUNGE PAS 3005

February

12,1982.

Imprint

20

of fluff

the modern day “wimp”. Small and snivelling, he cowers as he tiptoes about, or barges in with arrogant aplomb and disguised skill. His control over pirouettes is so absolute he can finish awkwardly or turn off-balance and stagger all over the stage. No so. His every misstep is minutely planned. He, as Lise’s mother, is a caricature, but they get away with it more often than not. The clog dance by the Widow is passable. The original dance is much more complex and funny and it is unfortunate that Ashton’s remake could not retain this bit of humour. But Patsalas’ horse clomps, self-satisfied grins and moments of embarassed weakness, save the piece from death mediocrity. Lise is not immune to this slapstick cavorting by these two. She leaves her charming, coy self to become a brat no, the epitome of brat. She annot redeem herself even ‘with her beloved suitor, Colas (Tomas Schramek). They admire each other’s display of courtship but there is no spark between them. More like two teenagers not interested in havinga beau but “everyone else does so we had better too.” But to them, it is a game. The other ends are held by twenty girls who pull the ribbons taut in order to keep Lise balanced. They * circle hei; as she,‘the maypole, wavers about. But she does not fall! And for the clincher, taken verbat im from the programme - “Lise runs to the door and makes love to Colas through the unfriendly bars.”

It sounds like some kind of bizarre contest. The actualization of this is quite a bit tamer. But the action picks up. Lise is upset. Colas tries to comtort. She turns away from him, but one hand is left behind. Colas takes it and tenderly kisses her hand, wrist, lower arm, elbow. . . and she whirls to the other side. Her hand is definitely open towards him. Same ritual. She turns away again. Her arm is nearly straight out behind her. This time Colas kisses her until he can turn her towards him so he might soothe her. Silly, trite and rather sweetly delightful. Then he makes Lise blow her nose in his scarf - hard. After this bit of mundane reality, Lise again settles more into genuine expression. She is less obvious, more certain of herself and her ploys to entice her beau to the predictable end. Perhaps the National Ballet’s rationale for presenting La Fille Mal Gardee is similar to that of thirties film producers. Bad times, we must have people forget their troubles with pretty girls, dance and music. Well, we do have bad times but these elements can be found on television every night. Instead, give us either the real classics - like the white ballets, Swan Lake or Giselle or more contemporary works like Efudes or Mad Shadows. This ballet, being neither white nor black, is difficult to perform and harder to watch. The National will next time perhaps give us credit for being a more discerning audience than it does now. Chris Bauman

a ‘bouta Saudi? ._

,


Boom .

Afikville’

c

Africville: The Life and Death of a Canadian Black Community Donald H. Clairmont and 1Dennis William Magi1 McLelland and Stewart, 1974 Works of science or nonfiction once imparted to the reader not only knowledge of a given subject, but also wisdom (that is an understanding of the function and mechanics of moral and ethical laws in both the social and the natural relations of human beings). Such books as The Earth and Man: Lectures on Comparative Physical Geography by Arnold Guyot and Acadian Geology by J.W. Dawson are as much concerned with moral absolutes as they are with scientific laws or theories. This fusion of the ideal with the practical, however, has been abandoned: the former appears fitfully in either works of fiction or sermons, while the latter is represented by dry, soulless books of interest only to those in search of an obscure reference for a thesis. Over the years, however, a few works of non-fiction have appeared that have dared unite knowledge and wisdom, and one of these is Africville: The Life and Death of a Canadian Black Community by Donald I-I. Clairmont and Dennis William Magill. Africville is a serious sociological study of the birth, growth, decline, and destruction of an older Black community in Nova Scotia. It is also an exploration of how bureaucratically-engineered social change fails due to its insensitivity to people and its inconsideration of moral questions. Africville was a community founded by Black refugees and soldiers in North End Halifax after the War of 1812. It existed for over 150 years, but though it was “always physically part of Halifax, socially it was just an appendage.” Its residents paid taxes to the municipal government but received meagre city services in return. Thus, inlieu of water and sewage facilities, signs that read “please boil this water before drinking and cooking” were placed beside the community’s “improvised” wells. In lieu of a playgroud, the City.of Halifax located its dump beside the community. In lieu of a proper education for Africville children, classes were held in a segregated school. It was not long, then, before people began to refer to Africville as “the slum beside the dump” and to regard its citizens as “marginals and transients.” Clairmont and Magi11 document this disintegration of a community’s social fabric as a preface to its eventual redevelopment into oblivion by a city that required Africville property to further its own expansion. Africville, then, is a record and critique of the implementation of the I962 decision by the City of Halifax to “relocate” Africville residents, but it is also an inquiry into the socioeconomic and cultural history and status of Nova Scotian Blacks. In their critique of the relocation decision, Clairmont and Magi11 take issue with the so-called “liberal-welfare model” of relocation. In the authors’

Friday,

__

text a catalogue

minds, this type of relocation and its failings is best illuminated by the Africville fiasco, for: The community of Africville was defined as a social problem, and relocation was

regarded as an intervention designed. to help solve the ‘social and economic problems of Africville residents.’ The central actors in the formation

and implemenation of relocation policy were politicians, bureaucrats, experts, and middle-class caretakers; there was no meaningful collective participation by Africville residents. The relocatees were to be major beneficiaries throughcompensation,welfare payments, and rehabilatative retraining programmes.

of Canadian However , the liberal oriented (in terms of its aim of “ending segregation and providing improved opportunities for the disadvantaged”) and welfare-oriented (in terms of its aim of co-ordinating “employment, educational, and rehabilatative programmes with ‘the rehousing of people”) relocation plan failed to achieve its “manifest goals” because it was social change that was made without consultation of the people it was to effect. It was social change out of a government and media machine that had no time for people, only the exigencies of statistics, efficiency, and guilt. Clairmont and Magi1 state their argument in clear, terse prose that should be comprehensible to anyone with more than a passing acquaintance with the English language. They eschew the jargon that obfuscates scientific and maintain an writings, objective analysis of the relocation; however, there is an undercurrent of righteous anger which rises to thesurface whenever particularly immoral behaviour of the’ City of Halifax is discussed. Thus, a report of the shamefulattempt by Halifax City Hall officials to bribe “Pa” Miller, the last Africville resident, into moving by offering the elderly man a suitcase full of money is described as having been a “singularly inept and sour” act that seemed to prove that ifthe relocation had begun with “a promise of positive change and administrative good-will” it ended in “over riding attention being given to the

Februag

12,1982.

Imprint - _ --. 21_..

shame

city’s economic priorities”(for Mr. Miller was holding up the city’s plans to use Africville land for an approach road to a new bridge). Africville, because it opposes a philosophy of social change thatignores the wishes of people, is careful itself to allow the people it discusses (residents, social workers, politicians, concerned citizens, and bureaucrats) to express their opinions and views of the relocation through the agency of quotations taken from interviews conducted by the authors and others both before and after the relocation and from newspaper articles, editorials, and reports of the day. This device, liberallyused, permits the reader to experience the relocation through the eyes of those involved and reinforces the authors’ belief that the failure of the relocation was due more to a combination of poor policy decisions than to a Machiavellian plot by a single person to destroy a community. Thus, an, Africville resident sums up the relocation in-these words: “ ‘They said the people in Africville encroached on the government, but I would say the government encroached , on the people’ “. Another resident describes services given at Africville’s major institution - The Seaview African United Baptist Church as “ ‘beautiful services (to which) people used to come from all around - coloured people and white people . . . People called it a spiritual church’ “.

And there is this poetic description of the view from Africville (which was situated on the coast of Bedford Basin, a part ‘of Halifax Harbour). “ ‘ . . . If you know art, or could feel anything about art, and could see the sunset over the Basin on a summer evening it would strike you right in the heart .’ ” Of course, this device makes the book very human. The writing in Africville is colourful, even allusive (as when the authors state that the Africville relocatees found themselves “in a Kafkaesque web (of) bureaucratic buckpassing” as they were passed around from the concern of one city department to another with the result that they had the concern of all and the care of none). Africville is a well-written, text-book study of the planned destruction of a community, destruction worse than that meted out to Lidice, Czechoslovakia, for at least the demiseofthat town was the result of rage and not the “rational” decision of a government. Africville: The Lzfe and Death of a Canadian Black Community will set you back by $4.00 in its soft-cover version .at most bookstores, though it has been known to sell for $2.00 at the Used Book Store on campus. It is ii-. lustrated with 19 pages of photographs and a cornucopia of maps, charts, and diagrams. It is 267 pages in length; thus, it is suitable weekend reading. Africville was bulldozed to the ground in 1967. . . . George Elliott Clarke

+ln la uamel Kodier. Scholarship student. Dedicated to becoming a marine biologist. WU he make it?

No, he work

Yes,he will.

Danny’s a brilliant student. There’s no end to what he wants to learn. Yet Danny’s no hermit. He really enjoys a good time. That’s the problem. It’s not that he setsout to drink too much, but once Danny starts he often forgets he has a limit, and then it’s too late. Danny would be wise to see a doctor, except he says it’s just a phase he’s going through. His work hasn’t suffered yet. But if Danny doesn’t change, it soon will. And, no, Danny won’t make it.

Danny’s a brilliant student. . There’s no end to what he wants to learn. Yet Danny’s nohermit. He really enjoys a good time. One of the things Danny’s learned at university is how to keep those good times good. When he drinks, whether it’s beer, wine or spirits, he knows his limit and he respects it. Another year or so, and Danny will be working in a field that’s fascinated him all his life. He wouldn’t risk spoiling the opportunity for anything. Yes, Danny is going to make it.

~


RECREAIION AECllEATlON RECREAIlON BR Competitive

I Leagues

The competitive leagues are now well under way and listed below are the standings for Men’s floor hockey and Women’s Basketball. Men’s Basketball will be listed next week. Note that only the top three teams from each league are listed.

Men’s Floor H&key League Al

GP W i

Barbarians Free Radicals Lords of the Ring League A2 Mech Advantage

15%

T I’FPATP

2200814 1 1 0 0 2 0 2 1101092

-c

off with

2,

Screaming Yaks Old Timers

2101543 3 11

League B1 Diamond Dogs Moody Blues Half and Half

2200624 1100512 2110432 .

League B2 Mohawks W. W. R. F. C. East E Eagles

2200624 3 12 0 6102 1001111

738KING ST E KIT

League A Wrecking Crew CCM Math

3 3 0 0147 3300836 3111583

League Bl E. S. S. South Ale’ers St. Paul’s

1100612 2 1101072 2 .I 1 0

League B2 Civil Steelers St. Jeromes West Quad Quacks

2 2 0 0173 2200924 2200954

League B3 Creme de la Chem Norsemen Free Radicals

2101533 2101533 2110782

League B4 The Boys Norsemen V2 Carbon Black Hawks

2200714 2110422 2110452

6

1 7 2

,. I d

4

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2 2 0 0102 2110562 1100212

League B6 East Alumni West D Alumni Co-op North

1100602 1100412 1010060

League BT NE Alumni Wally’s Warriors Sunnydale

2 2 0 0 122 2200824 2020280

League BS Campus Cox Clamstabbers Recreation

2200834 2110762 2110552

For more Yukon Jack recipes write: MORE YUKON JACK RECIPES,Box 2710, Postal Station “U:’ Toronto, Ontario M8Z 5Pl.

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’ ’ 4

League A The Bear Hunters Joanne’s Jumpers E. S. Hustlers

3 3 3

League B Div 1 Ballhandlers Eagles Hoopfuls 1

3 3 0 0 75 24 6 3 2 1054524 3 2 1053404

League B Div II West B Bruisers Inside Hookers Southern Comfort

3 ‘3 0 0 106 23 6 3 2 1061304 3 2 1050614

3 0 086286 1 1 147553 12 029492

Room Available in Instructional Swimming Programs Starting February 23 for five consecutive weeks (twice a week on Tuesdays and Thursdays) there will be room available in all Red Cross Instructional swimming programs. The various levels are as follows: Level IA Yellow, Orange, Red Level 1B Maroon Level 2B Grey White Level 3 Registrations are being taken with the PAC receptionist. Come orrout and get into shape.

Curling’s in the Ayr Saturday Feb. 6 marked the Campus Recreation Mixed Curling Tournament/Bonspiel at the Ayr Curling Club. A record number of sixteen teams participated in the event that lasted from 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. The pleasant surroundings and -theopenbarcontributedtothesuccessoftheevent.Intheendthe rink skipped by Jim Wright won the event finishing with 52 l/2 points. The rink of Brian Arbogart took second place with46 1/ 2 points. The winners and runners up were as follows: Winners Runners Up Jim Wright Brian Arbogart Diane Watson Luc Dumas Paul Phelps Pam Martindale Wendy Kovacs Andrea Svenningson

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League B5 Fubar Spitfires Civil Barbarians

Defeat Physics

Thursday Feb. 4 at McCormick arena was the time and place for an exciting Co-ret broomball match between the Kinucks and Physics. The Kinucks jumped out to an early lead on a sprawling goal by Ruth Henderson and a few minutes later took a 2-O lead on a breakaway and pretty shot by Dave Stout. From then on it was end to end action with Physics having the edge.-At about halftime it was 2- 1 but the Kinucks managed to hold off the comeback with the help of a couple of goal posts, and the game finally ended with a Kinuck victory. The game was fast, fun, clean, and exciting throughout. A special thanks goes to those players from both teams who made

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153 UN-ION ST. E. WATERLOO

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Mustangs throw Weekend basketball saw the end of the Warriors winning streak. In a heatbreaking finale the Warriors lost to the Western Mustangs 70 - 69 although their last minute foul shots gave them an opportunity to win or tie. The game was nowhere near the disaster that ,the Warriors last tangle with Western proved to be, when they suffered a 27 point defeat. Still, they played a lacklustre first half and it hurt them in the end when they came so very #close to nosing ahead of Western. Once again Savich led off for Waterloo but Western was quick to get ahead. Waterloo had traditional trouble at the boards although in their last few games they have been playing hard to get rebounds. Western who are fast ballplayers and good ball handlers were only up five at the half but were evidently outplaying the Warriors. One of the Mustangs, Ross Hurd enjoyed a great game finishing as top scorer and making a crucial difference to the Western effort.

Waterloo played much better in the second half when the team begangiving Western a fight, enough to pull ahead momentarily, 69 - 67 when Savich charged through a tight Western key for the bucket. Paul Van Oorschot gave his all. . . including a pint of blood when he took a shot in the nose that bloodied him. As the time ran out the tension mounted. Both teams had missed shots but Western had edged up by one point exhausting the Warriors’ hopes of holding out for a win. Western madea near fatal mistake, fouling two Warriors but in the nervous end they were unable to connect and Western walked away with the win. Warrior Coach Don McCrae said the team, “didn’t play well. We struggled for way too long.” The tough part of the schedule is just beginning. As well as Guelph the Warriors have to meet Windsor (tonight) losing their bye week to make up a game cancelled due to poor weather. Next week they meet Mat (here) and Brock pitting them

Athletes of the , week Mark Inman Indoor Track and Field Mark is a 3rd year Kinesiology student whose hometown is Hamilton, Ontario. He runs for coach Don Mills of the Track West Club in Toronto when not running for the Warriors. He has had an incredible indoor season so far this year. On Sunday Mark finished 2nd in the 800 M event at the Ontario Provincial Championships even though this is not one of his standard distances. Since returning from the Christmas break mark has also finished 1st in the 1000 M at the York Invitational, 1st in the 1500 M at the Western Invitational, 2nd in the 1000 M at the Windsor Invitational (the first Canadian) and 3rd in the 3000 M at the Ontario Track and Field Association All Comers meet at York. During the course of all these events he has set

University of Waterloo records in the 3000 M and also the 5000 M. As a result of these performances Mark has qualified for the CIAU finals in the 600, 1000, 1500 and 5000 M events, a truly remarkable feat when you consider that these distances emcompass both sprint and distance events. it is very unusual to have a competitor this accomplished in both types of running. ,

Lynne Rougeau Gymnastics and Diving Lynne is from Montreal, Quebec. She is a 4th year student in the Faculty of Mathematics specializing in Computer Science.

Warriors against all of the top QUAA teams in the stretch of their season. The question will be if they can start up the streak again.

B-Ball defeat

Last Saturday Lynne had a day-that ail Athletes dream of. In the afternoon competing at the mcMaster pool with the Diving team, she finished second in both the 1 and 3 metre boards. She qualified for the CIAU diving finals in the combined totals. Lynne then rushed back to the University of Waterloo to compete in the 2nd OWIAA Gymnastics qualifying ‘meet on Saturday night. Despite missing a large portion of the warmup Lynne placed 6th overall in the meet. She was second in the floor exercise and 3rd in the bars. She finished more than 3 full points above the CIAU qualifying standard and therefore qualified for her second CIAU final in the same day. Lynne has competed for the Athenas gymnastic team for three years and has qualified for the CIAU finals every year. Last season she injured her leg and could not compete in gymnastics, so she took up diving to keep in shape. It didn’t take long for her athletic versatility to surface.

Next Warrior home game Tuesday February 16 against Mat 8 p.m. at the PAC.

Warriors Guleph toughies\

The Gryphons are a tough team to come up against at any time of the season but most particularly coming down to . the wire as the Warriors are. Waterloo came ready to battle though and as Warrior Rich Kurtz put it, “We were so into it. Guelph knew they were going to lose.” Lose they did as the Warriors toppled them 8577. “It was the first game that every guy on the team played together,” Kurtz said. He hit the nail on the head. From the moment Jarrett popped in the first bucket, the Warriors were off. They had an 8-4 lead by 17:22 although Guelph came out playing tough. The game was aggressive from start to finish seeing such classic incidences as Peter Savich’s attempted dunk that saw Savich slam into the back wall of the gym and Scott King wrestling two Gryphons for control of the ball. The long shots were dead from the baseline and from above the key. At the half the Warriors had a 46-35 lead that built going into the second. Waterloo managed to work up a second half fourteen point lead that held for better than five minutes. Some tension stirred when Savich and Van Oorshot got their fourth fouls but Waterloo neverrelinquished control Heslip, Guelph’s little but mighty general aided by Mike Sesto Kept the Gryphons playing hard tallying 20 points but Waterloo was able to penetrate the key and

Curlers

70-69

finish

The Athena curling team of Nancy Lawlor, Sandy Smith, Barb Campbell, Janet Matsushita and Jennifer Coleman, finished second in the round robin play of the OWIAAcurlingevent. Finishing with a 6 - 2 record, behind Queen’s first place finish, the Athenas lost only 1 game this past weekend. Game scores were: Queen’s6; Waterloo,-5; Toronto,-3; Waterloo,-8; Waterloo,- 10; Laurentian,-6. “Although we didn’t curl as well as we have earlier this

relax Guelph’s press enough to build their total. “It was a good game,” Kurtz maintained, “we won the game on the offensive boards. We got secod shots. Needless to say the Warriors and coach were jubilant. “Harry came in and played the way he should play. He really helped us get going. He blocked Sesto’s shot. Phil’s the leader on this team.” Kurtz continued, “They played well. After Western we could easily have given up.” The coach agreed with Kurtz’ estimation of the situation. He called it the “best game they’ve played all year. They went right at them.” The Warriors have their workcut out for them now; they meet Windsor, Friday. They are a “very hard team” according to McCrae, but “for the first time in two or three years we have the depth to go with the fast tempo they like to play at.” With Guelph under their belts the Warriorsshould have added confidence going into the last -week of season play. . . hopefully, the best is yet to come if they keep playing with such welldirected ferocity. The intense effort slowed: Jarrett shot 18 points, Scott King shot 80% for the game. Paul Van Oorshot and Rich Kurtz shot 100% in the final half including a I3 footer from Kurtz that counted the Warriors last two points of the Game Final Warriors 85Guelph 77.

Last weekend marked the first weekend this winter that the Varsity Nordic Ski Teams’ events were not disrupted by weekend storms. On Saturday the University of Toronto Invitational Ski Race was held at Medonte Mountain. In this even each universities fastest 3 times from the womens 10 KM race and the fastest 3 times from the mens 15 KM race are totaled with the team trophy given to the team with the lowest total. This year the Athenas and Warriors combined to take the championship leaving the Guelph and Toronto teams to claim second and third.

at track

Mark Inman struck again at last Sunday’s Ontario Track and Field Association Championship meet, picking up a silver medal in the 800m. In 1:55.8 and becoming the only runner who qualified to compete in all events from 600, to 5000m at the CIAU championships. Athena Lana Marjama joined the ranks of Waterloo’s CIAU qualifiers with a 10:0 1.8 time in the 3000m; a personal best and good enough for third place. Also earning a bronze was Lisa Amsden with a 2: 14.3 800m and Betty Ann Vanderdruk Schnurr right behind her took fourth in’ 2:\15.9 also a personal best.

Warrior

secOnd season, and, certainly not as well as we are capable of, we advanced to the finals,” said Coach Judy McCrae. The finals are a 4 team double knockout event at Guelph this Friday and Saturday. “We won’t have the luxury of poor or average curling at the finals. We must be far more demanding of our performance.” Waterloo opens against Guelph and then swill play a winner or loser of the Queen’sWestern game.

Sncno didn’t

silver

Tuesday

meet

Earlier, Lisa had run a 59.37 400m. Another bronze went to Warrior Gary Hutchinson, who ran an 8:35.6 3000m Andrea Prazmowski ran a fine 1500m in 4:43.6 and a 3000m in 10:28.3. Athena Lisa Campfens tried an unusual warmup for her 1500m race, having to sprint across the track to the start of the race and then sprint to find .her number. Somehow, after all tht, she still had the energy to run a 4:50.3 1500m. A contingent of Warriors and Athenas will head to UofT today to compete in a track inivational there. A. Adamson

Home

Game

February

.

16

vs McMaster 8:OO pim. PAC Could be the last home game of the year! S

star, skiers this time 1

Top Athenas were Donna Elliott and Lois Donovan who placed second and third behind a very strong Kelly Rogers from Guelph. Gwen Lowe-Wylde and Susan Budge finished 7th and 8th respectively. The Warriors swept the top 4 inidivdual placings as Peter Laurich, Kevin Jones, keith Mercer and Ian Lowe-Wylde skied excellent races to secure the victory. Also competing for the Warriors were Richard Rawling and Marc Adams. In other action on Saturday jeff Walker placed 6th in a 10 KM event in Barrie. The effort

left Jeff just short of a spot on the Southern Ontario Division Team which was selected to compete in the Junior Nationals in Flin Flon Manitoba. Last weekend also marked the end of a six month preparation for the Ontario University Championships which will be held near Kingston this week. Competition will be especially keen this year as many universities will be sending very strong teams. The women will find their toughest competition from Carelton and Guelph as the Athenas fight .to defend

their title. For the men’ Queens, Laurentian and Waterloo will be battling for top honours. Members of the womens team are: Lois Donovan, Donna Elliott, Gwen LoweWylde, Jocelyn Piercy, and Pat Wardlaw. Five of the women are returning skiers while Gwen is the only newcomer to the team. The mens team is made up of Kevin Jones, Peter Laurich, Ian Lowe-Wylde, Keith Mercer, Richard Rawling and Jeff Walker. Richard and Jeff are the newcomers to the mens team. Peter Laurich


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(offer

8 p.m. Humanities Theatre Tickets $9.50 (Stu./Sen. $7.00

valid

at Phillip

Street

location

only)

Thurs., Feb. 18

468 Phillip St., Waterloo

also part of a

886-6639

Complete Treat Package includes dinner at Chances R, $19.59 (Stu./Sen. $18.00)

HOURS: Mon - Fri Saturday

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Tickets $9.50 (Stu./Sen. $8.00)

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Feb. 20

H umanities Theatre

8 p.m.

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OPEN 7 DAYS A;. WEEK Monday - Friday, 9:30am - 1245pm Saturday 1:30pm - 12:45pm Sunday 12:30pm - lk45pm

FOR YOUR ENJOYMENT WE HAVE AN ASSORTMENT OF 31 PINBALL & VIDEO GAMES! W Avenger W Vanguard n Black Knight W Gorf W Pat-Man n Space Invaders W Asteroids AND MANY MORE!. mmmmmmDmmmDDmmmmm I r 1

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1

‘!i Bring2 this forcoupon 1 COUPON ! to the C.C. Games i 1 Room - Put one quarter iti any game of 1 your choice & we will put in the second quarter. Valid from 6pm to 12:45am only I- COUPON EXPIRES FEB. 21st, 1982 L mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmr

I i , I


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