1985-86_v08,n04_Imprint

Page 1

Irnpri Friday, May 17, 1985; Vol. 8, No. 4; The Student Newspaper, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario

Epp says Libern'-,will soon govern Liberal leader David Peterson. He also believes that Ontario voters by Rick Nigol did not want Conservative governments in both Ottawa and Imprint Staff The Liberal Party, with NDP support, will be called upon by the Toronto. Although Mr. Epp expects W P support for a minority Liberal lieutenant-governor to form Ontario's government after a nonconfidence vote. according to Waterloo North Liberal incumbent. government, he says there is'ho chance of a coalition government,'' whereby some of the 25 elected New Democrats would be given Herb Epp. Interviewed by Imprint, Mr. Epp maintained that "the NDP cabinet posts. ~ e ' s e e s "no benefit for Ontario" in such an can't do anything but support us." He believes that the New arrangement. Citing similarities in policy positions between Liberals and New Democrats would look foolish supporting Frank Miller's minority Conservative government. "After-lambasting the government for Democrats - including equal pay for equal work, abolition of so many years, how can they now support them?," heasks. Mr. Epp O H l P premiums And tougher environmental protection laws foresees a defeat of Miller's government when the new legislature Mr. Epp says the NDP should not have difficulties in backing his party in the legislature. votes on the throne'speech. In reference to issues of particular concern to students, Mr. Epp Recent comments by Ontario N D P leader Bob Rae lend credence to Mr. Epp's comments. After meetings between Liberal and NDP said that he is in favour of ignoring Bovey Commission representatives last Monday in Toronto, Mr. Rae said his party is recommendations that students pay 25% of the cost of their "committed to reform," and that he would like to see a "different education because "students are paying their fair share." He added that, in his opinion, Ontario universities were underfunded aad that kind of legislature than we've had in the past." Mr. Epp refers to the May 2 election results as a "clear mandate he would like to see a $95 million increase in such funding. Mr. Epp for change." He notes that 62% voted against the Tories and that also stated that "the government of Ontario is being dishonest by although the Conservatives won 52 seats, compared to the Liberals diverting federal money earmarked for post-secondary education 48, the Liberals received 38% of the popular vote t o theTory's 37%. . into general revenue and using it in other programs. In terms of summer student job progliims, Mr. Epp believes that In his own Waterloo North riding, Mr. Epp won by a margin of governments are "more interested in grandstanding" than in 7,000 votes. designing programs that provide jobs. He said he would favour one Reflecting on the Tory decline and Liberal resurgence - they managed to gain 20 seats - Mr. Eoo oointed to what he felt was the or two programs that people could get used to rather than the

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0w students will have to pay more ln fees p fiscalye r 1 hat's tbe-koline In r m- s h . a p i n n MayP. ' Academic fees tuitlon and co-op fees wiU increase in S @ p m b e r and s computer service cilaEge W'ilb bt infmduce$. ?wtlon wilt ifilatase 5 per cent. W o w e v Z r . ' + u a d ~ ~ a d ~ a # e0soIlms:nt at t b l a a i n campus is expected t o be reduced 4.5 per

- recover 89p&&tbemdcect costs *L. .2.3?wM@m <+.,:% .-

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"StuBEnt r w s have been violated.'" says Ontario Federation af Students fieldworker Karl Hetu, who & s*t severa days ~nvestigating the Integrated Stu& situation. kk cited the r e f i h l by tbe administration t o register two IS students - Drew MacGiUiway, ,ad A#& Abdel Auz - and the atbirrary removai of powers from* Operations Councd, which he says the university Senate granted i n 1975, a s the key issues. . 'Students are not just numbers, but human beings," says Mr. Hetu, and the refusal to register people who have complained a b u t the admtnistration's improper prwedure is "harassment and intimidation." Both Mr. MacGiilivray arrd from registermg this term bec charges pressed by the university ltaa -*It of visits t o the campus whik o n off terms. Mr. MacGiliiviay wasaccused of drunk and disorderly conduct, a c h a a e hedenier, and Mr. Abdel-Aziz was charged for "failing to leave (IS. premms) when asked". Mr. AMel-Adz admits he failed to leave but argues that he had a right to be there. Both men say their prosecution is politically motivated because they spoke out against the I S budget cuts and other administration actfons against IS. Both a n due td appear in court June 19, and will be defended bv the Federation of Students' lawver. Tonv Keller. This week In Halifax, the OFS is bringing the matter to the attention of the Canadian Federation of Students. O F S has already started a trust fund tci help IS students. Mr. Hetu sees the IS problem as linked to the Bovey Commission~commendationswhich, if gnacted, wodd allow universtties to close programs and reeuce enrollment without b s b g government grant money. He fears that UW may be settipO a n example of how to close programs apd silence studmtkwf;o complain. He says 1s coordinator Mr. Sheridan's cI-iti&ms of IS are "only statements without proof, only wwds & dbtroy, hurt and damage.But then's nothing t o them." Mr. Hetu said he was extremely impressed by the extensive organization and documentation et theu qq, which IS students have provided. "It's about hsm that we say to the administratkn 'jrw can't d o things bdhind closed doorst' We hovc toSd$'t.fc&em, students have Pights, and you better recognire them et~we'll Pel. . The actionr; *n by O F S to 'date include national . oa &&If af IS students. O t b r

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b k r A st& Of $&.ST3 million July I, although the amount of

> ., , . and w'%&i~bicml-8faflat k c and a f e e 4 m d i n g o n ' the f-wency of w , hwme gmi&&*ilA help m o v e r some of the c 6 ~ n p u t t qe q m m s for instroctional compsting. The university is predicting a n ineome of SI million this year from the cborge. The uakersity is sp&ing $120 million in<1985-86. up from St i3.Psriffian t4is year. It expeets ao income of 119 million, up from 5113.4 miQiop Since tfir expenses incurred in runnlng cI&WS and p M g the salaries exceed the Income

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Waterloo North

.

-lntegrated In addition, a change was made to the expense budget for &tie i4Studies program, reducing the program's budget fmrn , $222,000 to $169,000. Tom Brzustowskl: vice,president acadoiaidl:! , said he-recommended the reduction to bring the figure m ~ r in@ c 'd line wlth the level of support ava~lableto other program. Last year, salary kncnases were aflat 5 per cent for eve~yane,with no merit Increases. The reported cost was 4.1 million. This was&_+ indicate that the total spending on salaries might increase by ? cent thls year. .

Students scramble, for j m=

employment programs for 1984 by stephem ' had achieved positions for just hnpdnl staff ' T h e C a n a d a S t u d e n t Under half of O n t a r i o Employment Cewried applicahts o n a full tune basis, offteiallv on Friday, May 10, and had found temporary or kicking-off what ~ k h e n &M P part-t-we work for about. a John Reimer called "a new era quarter .of the rematnlng of c o o p e r a t i o n " between students. Miss MacDonald said federal and provincial levels of she had "big hopes" for the government. "It's a new summer of 1989, and clatmed attitude," said Reimer, adding that her Miaistry had locats& - t h a t the center was "a great "as many as 95,000 jobs", which resource, offering the greatest will be available at the 450 of all resources - young S t u d e n t C e n t e r s a c r o s s Canada. ~eovle." - ~ l s op r e s e n t a t t h e A placement officer at the banquet/ o p e n i n s were members of the Local business Kitchener Center, located in the community wKo have contri- Caqada Ltfe Square bullding at b u t e d t o t h e _ s t u d e n t 235 King St. E., reported that employment program in the "there is no shortage of jobs" past. The Centef employs and that "the local businesses university students who, in have been more than eager" t o turn, seek to provide other take on students for the sWdents with employment, summer. A look a t the center at available through cards posted noon the following Monday on boards and divided into indicated ihat students are also ca-tfgeries m a g i n g frem more than eager. One flaw in the program t o .~ o n a t r w the lifeparding. In a sgetdt M April of this date is its late initiatiqn. Mosl ,students have been finished -year. Employwent a n d Wnigration Wrnidter Flora s t d i e s since ear& Aprii, and M a c d o e a l * f a l l e d t h e the peried ia between forced

The Center is open 8:appeared. Said student S t e w Iwan: "It's a great grogram, But. t o 4:30 pm. from Morwky L. i t ' s a M t l e b t e . l W t ~ C a s h ~ a Friday and they acee@i'j&; lot of empties in between." wdpm until $:00 pm. . r! -I

3rd World Can A Conrra sl

Solar rat Muddy dreams of uw

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Imprint SummerPulbication dates: July 12 M a m June 2" June 14 July 26 We want you, we need you, we can't live without you. Join Imprint today!! (it's fun)

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2 Friday,

eridan

May

17 1985 p-d

lmer ’

‘by Doug Thompson Imprint staff

Integrated Studies is much calmer and more relaxed this week. IS coordinator Joe Sheridan, who had a second student arrested, and shut the program down for several days last month, has been told to “cool it” by U W vice-president Torn- Brzustowski, according to a well placed source in administration. Two other sources have told the Imprint that Mr. Sheridan has had numerous consultations with U W’s lawyer, Reg Haney, about his attempts to prosecute students and about pending legal actions against the university as a result of some of his recent actions.

T( Ms. Tranter notes that the lack of any faculty involvement in the IS government in the past left the program defenceless in the faculty dominated Senate. Anyone could make any accusation against the program they wanted, she said, and there was no way IS could challenge it. The additional faculty involvement should give the program better communication links, she said.

Although Mr. Sheridan continues to avoid IS Operations Council meetings, and conduct business in his office with the door locked, students feel that there will not likely be further arrests. Contributing to the relaxation in tension is the submission last week of proposals for revisions in IS structures by both the coordinator and Operations Council. The two proposals are very different in character and both have been sent tothesenate Review Committee which will recommend solutions to IS’s troubles to Senate in June. The Operations Council proposal has been circulated widely on campus -and suggests a second tier to IS government to be responsible for admissions, budget development, evaluation and discipline. These are the areas of the program’s operations which have been the centre of most controversv in Senate and administration. The second tier would be comprised of Faculty members appointed by Senate to the current Aacademic Board which supervises degrees, Resource People hired by the program, and students elected by Operations Council. It would have full responsibility for evaluating academic progress and share responsibility with Operations Council for budget a nd discipline through joint committees.

The proposal assures that all major decisions are made by groups of people, and subject to review by other groups such that no single individual is given unchecked power. This is very consistent with decision-making structures in other academic departments in which every centre of authority is counterbalanced by various checks. Mr. Sheridan also submitted a proposal for changes to IS entitled The Next Fijieen Years. His nronosal is still secret. but IS students have been allowed to view the report by Academic Board members. Sheridan’s report describes student involvement in administration of the program as “obsolete” and makes no role for it in the future. It suggests elevating the status of coordinator by giving him a faculty position and places the administration of the program almost entirely in the hands of the coordinator and two full time resource people to be hired by the coordinator in conjunciton with the Academic Board. Students describe the proposal as “selfserving” and an attempt by Mr. Sheridan, who has no previous administrative experience, to carve out a secure niche for himself in the university at the expense of the program. They also point out that it will be considerably more costly to run the program in his model since an additional two full $ime people are called for. A faculty member who has seen the report, but wished his name not to be used, said Mr. Sheridan’s proposal “makes it the very worst of the traditional system without any of the safeguards other students have.” He said students in IS would be at the mercy of the coordinator and resource people, and that there is an absence of normal protections for the student against his own supervisors.

According to Linda Tranter, the IS rep on Federation Council and one of the authors of the report, the intention is to establish mechanisms which guarantee thorough accountability and responsibility, as well as student input. “We don’t think the previous system was irresponsible or dysfunctional,” she said, “but it should be clear to everyone that the membership of this new governing body makes it rmpossible to even suggest that it might be any less responsible than any other faculty council.”

Last fall the troubles in IS began when vice-president academic, Tom Brzustowski transferred powers long held by Operations Council to the program’s coordinator. Various allegations of of insufficient accountability and responsibility were made at that time and have been repeated by the administration and refuted by Operations Council. Since the fall IS has been run almost entirely by the coordinator in consultation with Dr. Brzuzstowski, and both have been reluctant to talk with students.

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Mr. Sheridan, a former IS student, is one of four authors of an alumni statement on IS written in the late fall which stresses the mtral importance of student involvement and autonomy in IS. When he was appointed coordinator in January,. Mr. Sheridan attempted to “get council under control” by organizing a voting block of students and Resource People. His attempt failed and most IS students felt that Mr. Sheridan was trying to manipulate them, and had betrayed the democratic principles of the program. In his current proposal his idea of student involvement has changed from “essential” to “obsolete.” Throughout the period he has stated that his opposition was led by a “few troublemakers”, students and Resource People. On his recommendation, all the Resource People he didn’t like are no longer employed by the program and two students have been banned from the program on Mr. Sheridan’s orders. Last Spring IS had seven part time faculty. Now it has only two.

According to Ms. Tranter, Mr. Sheridan’s mistake was that the “bad apple” theory of a few troublemakers was simply incorrect. She says the program has never been more united, responsible and reasonable. She said people are upset with Mr. Sheridan because he has lied to them and constantly kept them in the dark. “We’re paying this guy to be a liaison” she says, “but he never tells us anything.” She said students have been forced to conduct liaison with the university themselves, a process rendered especially difficult since the vice-president, Dr. Brzustowski, has been refusing to meet with them, and the IS files, needed for much of this work, have been locked up. Students say they have had to spend a lot of time countering the’ negative impression of the program Mr. Sheridan has been leaving with Academic Board and Senate Review members. And since he has been refusing to tell them what’s going on in those grouns students have learned to find out for themselves. In March, Mr. Sheridan was at a Council meeting and was asked by students to do his job of talking to various administrative groups for the program. At the meeting Mr. Sheridan said, “you go talk to them. I’m not going to talk to them for you.” Since that time students have been doing just that. The result, according to Ms. Tranter, “is a tremendous learning experience.” She said direct discussions with the Academic Board and Review Committee are “clearing up a lot of misunderstandings.” She said response from faculty to the Operations Council submission has been “encouraging”.

No choice on booze? By Ann Marie Imprint staff

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olds in the general population.” “The university atmosphere promotes drinking” says Fed’s vice-president for university affairs, Gayle Laws. Laws adds that she does not perceive an alcohol problem at UW but “would agree that they (the students) don’t have a choice” of whether or not to drink. When asked why she is still concerned when the student

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drinking rate is no higher than in the general population. Laws cited several reasons. “The feeling is that university students have the intelligence, drive, long term goals and socio-economic background we would hope it (the drinking rate) would be lower because of this.” Peer pressure is the main element which prohibits choice, especially for those in residence where activities have “no other focus” for males - “particularly in engineering” - and for frosh, says Laws. The Federation aims to “promote responsible drinking” through a two-fold system of education and structural The education component would be run in conjunction with the local ARF who want to start a Campus Alcohol Policies and Education (CAPE) program at U W. Structural changes would involve having non-alcoholic drinks which resemble alcoholic drinks available in Fed Hall and keeping it dry during next fall’s orientation.

Imprint! % 8


lycllLlul

loksellers’

.

Canadian author Mariaret

Atwood will be the

awa1u,

IYU/,

Association

Two honorary

1llC

award,

May . 25’ afternoon session, C”,....,-.,.2..., l-3--:-I--.-

1977, and the

degrees will be awarded at the

Studies: an anu v. Roy Uuxnury, an honorary hoc&r of letfers (DLitt) degree, at ’ Science and Environmental o(retired), 3 M Canada. the session for the Faculty of Arts, Thursday honorary doctor of science (dSc) degree to Lyman John Chapman, distinguished Ontario afternoon, May 23. During the same session of convocation on earth scientist,. and- an honorary doctor of May 25, the university will, also honor Paul Ms. Atwood, a frequently invited speaker at environmental studies (DES) degree to Yi-fu Meincke, the man who delivered the first lecture Canadian universities and the 1982 Hagey Tuan, Madison Wis. to the fist class back when lecturer at Waterloo,‘is the author of 10 volumes summer of 1957. . of poetry, five novels, a coilection of sh&rt stories An honorary doctor of mathematics (DMath) Prof. Meincke, who taught in the systems and a volume of’ criticism. * She has an degree will be bestowed upon Janos Ladik, head of theoreticalchemistry,design engineering department, retired in 1977 international reputationmore than 200 theses of the, department University of Erlangen, West Germany, during after 20 years of service. He is the second person are currently being written on Atwood’s writings and her work has been translated into 10 the morning session, Saturday May 25; the to be granted the distinction “honorary member of the university.” (The sole previous re languages. session will be for students being graduated from ofessor Some of her past honors include: the E.J. Pratt the Faculty of Mathematics, and the was the late Dorothea Walter,sFrenchpr and U W’s, first dean of women,) . medal, 1961; the president’s medal, University of accountancy studies programs in the Faculty of

arid long tomplanniizg

eiplored

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Conference explotes development issuei \ , *,

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by JoAnn Hutchison -that the conference is “the first attempt on this scale to look at the urbanization, resources, energy, disease, institutional Imprint staff parallels between Canadian and Third World regional planning. developments, information Isystems, development research, human “We need people who are sensitive economically and culturally to One workshop, for example, focused on energy requirements and I resources, and scholarly publishing, Gordon Atherley, president of Third World issues,” according to Mr. Tony Lovink of the energy pl?nning. Parallels were made between energy planning for the Canadian Centre for Occupational Health ’ and Safety, International Development Research Centre (IDRC). He Third World countries and the planning that has taken place in Hamilton, was the chairperson for the workshop on “information . expressed hope that the outcome of the conference on Third World Ontario during the 1970’s. Systems Development”. The problem of the exclusion of Third development held at UW May 14-16, would be that “Canadian There were five main objectives for this conference. 1. to promote World countries from access to information was addressed. Since researchers and policymakers will give more attention to the discussion of Third World research priorities; 2. to.identify areas of information is a major force in today’s economy, it is a major problems of the Third World and recognize that the future of our individual and institutional research capability in Ontario of acutal concern. Software and preventative health-care information “global”village is inextricably tied to the future masses of humanity and potential interest to the Third World.; 3. to’discuss the services need to be further developed for use in underdeveloped ’ in those countries.” relationship between research and socioeconomic development in countries. For those of us whose exposure to the squalid conditions in Ontario and the Third World; 4. to identify processes and What can students do to inform themselves on development which people in Third World countries endure comes only from constraints affecting cooperation between Ontario and the Third issues? At U W there is a wealth of information available for people television, it’s sometimes hard to watch any more, you reach for the interested in such questions. The university has a wide rwe of World research institutions; 5. to invite comments from researchers remote control - click - you are now watching the latest music expertise - from Gertler, who is a world expert on Urban and and policymakers in Ontario on some of the research funding -video instead. With a‘sigh of relief, you settle comfortably into your programs of the IDRC. Regional Planning, to numerous students from Third World soft armchair. ’ Four plenary sessions and 10 workshops were staged. Thetheme countries. By contacting these people, one can become aware of Most of us can place ourselves in this situation. of the first plenary was “Research, Development, and Public development issues. As well, U W library has a large Third World ’ Underdevelopment is not an easy topic to think about. However, Policy”. Three speakers, Douglas Wright, president of UW, Ivan data base which can provide bibliographies and tap information approximately 300 researchers, policy-makers, administrators, and from all UN countries and *other organizations. Head, President of IDRC, and Janet‘ Wardlaw, chairperson of representatives from 11 Third,World countries and 60 universities / ID_RC, ga,ve their perspectives on this issue. Koesnadi The IDRC is willing to help- graduate students who are concerned (mostly from Ontario) gathered at UW to discuss “ResearchI for Hardjasoemantri, an Indonesian goverqme~t:offic.ial, spoke on the abwt underdevelopment. And a brochdre compileda by U W’s L Third World Development”. ii 1theme of “Values, Society, and Techn~I~y’~~~e~~~~~halle~ge” Asian;African, Latin American. and$Caribbean Stu&es.Group The conference was the last one of a series of five regional y during the second plenary session. The thrid plenary session was a (AALACS) lists courses and-faculty’resources. which pertain to the conferences and it was the largest and most complex. The main presentation of workshop reports and the final plenary was a Third World.1 Mr. Lovink says, “’it, makes sense for people to do organizers were Len. Gertler, Director of Urban and Regional commentary on workshop conclusions. some long term planning and orient- courses and careers towards I Planning, UW, and Tony Lovink of the IDRC. Lovink explained The workshops covered a ‘variety of topics: agriculture, Third,World development”. \ \ L .z l

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‘YorkStudents dump Director from B.0.G.

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by Rick Nigol _ Imprint staff \ I Students at York University managed to collect 1,000 on a petition signatures demanding the resignation of Sonja Bata from the University’s Board of Governors. Mrs Bata is a Director of Bata Shoe Company and the students were I protesting the firm’s business interests and practices in racially segregated South Africa. A group called the’ York Students Against, Apartheid delivered. the petition to York University * preside’rit”“@Harry Arthur on’ htay 7. Three days later it was revealed that Mrs. Bata had decided to stop

On Camptis

serving on the university’s , highest governing body. York officials say, however, that Mrs. Bata had decided as early as February not to stand for reelection as she had already served on the York Board for nine years. Organizers of the petition against Mrs. Bata and BataShoe company - the largest direct Canadian employer in South Africa, with 3,500 employees - claimed that the company had fired many of its black employees who attempt-. ed to form a union. They also noted that, beyond profiting from apartheid, Bata has not, followed Canadian government guidelines with respect to investment in South Africa.

Mark

Information about patents, technical specifications, finances, company backg;ounds and business-industry data can now be obtained through a new service offered by the University of Waterloo library. The university, through the library, launched the Industrial and Business Information Service (IBIS) on May 1.. The service can draw upon a vast collection of library materials, at Waterloo and other institutions, including 1hundreds of databases around the world. Anyone can’ use this service,. for a fee: It can be used in person, by phone, by Telex, by ‘electronic mail or by post.

IBlS I co’ordinator”Faye” A brams says this fee.-based service is one of the most extensive of its kind available in the region. “ I t’s a special: unique; service that the library is providing, and it’s customized to the needs of business and industry,” A brams says. The usual focus of the academic library at UW is to teach patrons to do their own library research. But the focus of the IBIS is to provide a complete service tq those patrons who are too, busy to undertake the work for themselves and are prepared to pay to have it done for them. “We have noticed the demand for this type of

information -is growing rapidly,” she says. IBIS will be able to make the normally timeconsuming task of looking for data much easier and faster. For instance, IBIS can provide access to articles in 6,000 j‘ournals of all types, to about 880,000 books in the extensive UW library, and it’ can search more than 400 of the world’s computer databases for information. The databases include InfoGlobe (prc Jided by the Globe-and Mail), Medline (medical journals), Chemical Abstracts and Engineering Index, and many more. IBIS service fees are $15 per item to loan or photocopy UW library materials; $30 per item to loan or photocopy materials

from other institutions; $50 per hour ($15 min.) for reference services, -including manual research, .verification of * citations, location searches, and computerized literature searching (communications and databases charges are extra). 1BIS also arranges for courier service, on request. Abrams stresses that she is I ‘not a- business consultant or analyst. “1 am not here to interpret the material. The role . of IBlS is identifying, gathering and delivering information, not analysing it.” IBIS is located in the UW EMS Library on the fourth. floor of the Math .and Computer Building.

Urlocker

‘$grants$- 1 announced , UW researchers have been ’ awarded 375 operating grants from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) this year. Total value is $9,058,059. U W researchers also received 10 infrastructure grants totalling $8 12,094 plus 18 equipment grants totalling $423,143, and $10,870 in travel grants (six grants). .

Mike

NSERC grants were .announced by Joan Hadley, UW’s grants information officer.\ She ‘said NSERC’s d.ecision on three more operating grant applications is still pending. _

. b


Friday,

“Truth and virtue are competent to fight their own by the hand of power.” . - William Godwin, 1798

S

battles.

They do not need to be nursed

May__ 17 _ 1985 ,-,

and patronized

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AdverGsing l!iikm@r: Carol Fletcher 8884048, or 885-1211, eia. 2332 Imprint is the student newspaper at the University of Waterloo. It is an editorially independent newspaper published by Imprint Publications, Waterloo, a corporation without share capital. Imprint is a member of the Ontario Oommunity Newspaper AssockLion (OCNA), and a ‘member of Canadian U.ersity Press (CUP). Imprint publishes &very second Friday during the Spring term and every Friday during the regular terms. Mail should be addressed to “Imprint, Campus Centre Room 140, University of Wa$erloo, Waterloo, Ontario.” Imprint reserves the right to screen, edit, and refuse yyg=$Y advertising. @I migmnt: ISSN Q706-7380 .

1

Display A& Features

Fri. s:oo pm, Monday

5:oo

pm.

Campus Evknts Classifieds

lubmaay 6:OO pm.

I

Women’s -Dean is.stW needed

:

It was the photo on the front of the Gazette that was so deceiving. Last, issue (May 8th) the retiring Dean of Women,hildegard Marsden, is shown shaking hands with UW President Doug Wright. Smiles on both their faces would indicate that their professional relationship had been one full of successes in terms of the advancement of women here at UW. I However, if there’has been any opposition tothe position it has come from the UMV of Dean of Women, administration. One wonders if the administration reviews all the dean positions (as they have with this one) when each dean retires. Certainly not! The brass knew of Ms. Marsden’s impending retirement for several months and yet it was not until two days before the retirement date that Ernie Lucy, Director of Employee and Student Services, produced his recommendation for the position of Dean of Women, as requested by Dr. Wright. In effect, women at UW are without a resource person who acts as a liaisonbetween students and the administration until the administration makes a final decision on whether or not to retain the position. This demonstrates the lack of significance with which the administration views this position. Within Mr. Lucy’s report are the concerns of one dean: “He does no,t believe we should spend this amount of money in the Student Services area unless we are absolutely sure that this is the best way to use the money.“The truth is, however, that Ms. Marsden’s operating budget was practically nil and her salary certainly did not reflect the time and effort that she invested in her career at this/university. The absurdity continues with male deans making

MIT’s A5Slot.. develops Have you ever been struck by some scientific breakthrough that, to the best of your knowledge, you have never heard of before - in a miniscule article in the newspaper, right next to ads for tires and hair replacement centres? I know I have, and it’s damn disconcerting . This is a phenomenon I like to call “creeping science”, and I’m fairly sure it’s peculiar to the 20th century -when Galileo discovered rings around Saturn, you don’t think they buried it in the back pages of the Genoa Standard, do you? Of course not - they arrested him and forced him to say he’d had too much rice wine that evening, and that was an appropriate kind of response. A wonderful example of creeping science is provided by the case of a certain Larry Slot, who is, not surprisingly, a graduate student at MIT. Faced with the thorny problem of what to get his kids for Christmas, this over-educated ivorytower type decides he wants to give them somethng “educational”. Does he go out and pick up a Speak-andSpell at Radio Shack for $19.99? lie most certainly does not; he develops something called . . . wait for it . . . “Dr.I 4

.*- I

Cloner’s Genetic Engineering Home Cloning Kit”. A small note here - this is not a joke. Slot has a kit to retail for $100, that gives kids all they need to do simple gene splicing; rupture of bacterium cells is accomplished with lysozyme, lINA pieces are purified with gel electrophoiesis and inserted into another bacterium with . I -you guessed it - calcium chloride, or common road salt. Slot, in his naievete’, says that such a kit could lead to great benefits for humanity because kids are “idealistic and \ creative,“. I Let me say that I think science is just great, and I’m sure these MIT lads are wonderful human beings, but I won’t be able to sleep a bloody wink knowing that Mrs. Bloodwort’s little vermin have one of these handy-dandy cloning kits. God only knows what kind of vicious slime is going to come crawling through my pipes at any moment. Imagine, the whole country paralysed, held at ransom by hordes of screaming ruffians armed with engineered viruses - all thanks to creeping science, and Consumers Distributing. Mathew

Ingram

/Forum

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J

important decisions on behalf of all the women at UW. The political hypocricy is enough to madden those who can see through the facade. As of last week, the office of the Dean of Women was unaware as to where to direct people who called to discuss personal problems. It is difficult to lay the blame on the staff as Ms. Marsden was not informed by her superiors about the future of the office. Ms. Marsden was “left in the dark” as to whether she would be consulted on the hiring process of her sucessor (if there will be a successor). Some ask why the university does not have a male counterpart to the Dean of Women position. The facris, if a male at UW has difficulties and finds that he can only speak about his problems with a male dean, he would have little trouble as all the deans at UW are male. A woman in a similar position today does not have the same right. I speak of this as a right because, as students, women should have equal access to such a- resource person. . . If the position of Dean of Women comes down to a matter of dollars and cents, the administration is well aware that if there were no students there would be no administration. It appears that UW’s brass believe that the female students on this campus are not deserving of equal consideration. Again, for political reasons, a woman will be hired for the Dean of ‘Men and Women, as the position will be newly named. Why change the name and thus the mandateof the Dean of Women? The answer was offered by Mr. .Lucy, who said “The title of Deari of Women istoo archaic in these days of equality”. Equality appears simply to a word that is ‘thrownaround and seldom taken seriously at this university. Carol FL&her.

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-< To the editor: to the Supreme Court.-‘Finally, he refunded 6 months excess Having recently read articles in the Imprint and the K-W Record approx $750. I believe the same landlord is still charging cautioning students on rental problems, I was reminded of an illegally high rent. Considering how many places he rents in the incident two years ago which is still relevant. K-W area, he must be ripping off a fortune; Grant Robinson and I were living at 9 Dietz Ave, Apt.‘Z. Rent _ I hope this encourages someone to contact the Tenancy was $395/month for a 2 bedroom basement apartment. The Coinmission to check on their rent (Phone number is 579-5790). landlord was Terry Good. Two letters follow. The first is one from this landlord to all of According to the Residential Tenancy Commission, a court his tenants. The second letter is from ‘me to the landlord. I had set a limit of $258 (an excess of $137/month!) When couldn’t resist letting him know of my accusations in this way. confronted with this information, Good claimed that he’d takeI it Both letters may be of interest ta s&dents, particularly those ,-who rent from <his landlord. \ Ian Kakoshke ‘ . . Alumnus

h. e a

it

December%, 1982 Dear Tenants. In a day and age when landlords have h&en reduced to mere caretakers of re,ntal property and tenants feel the rent they pay is too high, what can I say to you at Christmas time other than the rent is due J=anuary 1,1983, so please be organized. ~ , I am thankful to be in a business where I can provide a service to people, a service which is not only a luxury, but a necessity for everyone, whether it is a room renting for $30/week or a house for $12OO/month. To be able to be of service to you brings me happiness, although sometimes when you call me at 11:OO’pm.and I have a headache, it may not appear to you to be so. I am thankful that all of yonget along so well with each other. The cooperation among all of you with each other is superb. As you each live your own unique life style I am thinking each of you has the right to live your own personal life style without externa interference. My Grandfather was a farmer who ploughed fields in Waterloo County, He was also the Deacon of St.‘Iacob’s Mennonite Church. When he worked the fields-&e used to write poitry. May the poetry of nature be in us all as we’live and work in the city. As you look around you in your old house 01 apartment, the poetry or self-expression of the workers who handcrafted these dwellings is evident. And as we look to God at Christmas, may we find him in each other Yours very truly, Terry Good I Dear kndlord In a day and age when landlords neglect their ceetaking dutiesand tenants feel, that the rent-they pai is far in excess of the Iegal limit, w>hat can I say to you in the New Year other than the matter will be presented to the Residential Tena‘ncy Commission. (He since returned $137/mo) * I’m disappointed that, we weren’t povided with enough~ heat - a service which is not a luxury but an hbsolute necessity in a city which can . , reach minus 20 or 30 degrees. I feel that you are one of those people who are happy to be of service to others, although you are careful to avoid shpwing, it. Yau’ll probably be happy __ to hear _that _we _. all get along sq well with each other, It was dprjng a-s&i? chat,thaj the d~~,crep~c$i&‘$,$$s came up. , j Evervone cooiieF&‘d & vi7dl that we we&?&n aiv&‘a:“tbur dbameciald! of on’e of the-more luxurious ‘(Carpeted, heatedrlarger kitchen)‘-but less expensive (?????) units. As we live our own unique lifestyle (cold and poor)” you must be thiinking that we have the ri.ght to live without external interference. My grandinother was a woman (Nana to all who loved her). She was a regular church-goer and spent much time in her kitchen in the outback of Australia. As she cooked she developed a self-interest in philosophy. As , we look around us i’n &ur old apartment the philosophy of self-interest of those who own it is apparent. And as’we look to God for warmth lryay we hape..fot-~ent.redaotion in the near future.

I \ To the editor: Last Friday morning at lOi00 I was in the Arts ti,bra;ry on the main floor. TM NOISE was,deafeting. I ha&dictionary wcrrk ta , do so I had to: be there at that time. I disioavere$ that an instruct&ml sessim.was beip~f5lm~&: When I complained about tht+OISE I was rudely informed-that the;film was ,mare important than my work. While I understand &he i>mportatice of such films,.1 .am quite ,a*annoyqd that the srgan’izers chose to.da it fat lo:00 inthe morning when the library is’usually ful! ofpeaple trying to study. I realize \,that it was necessary to use thatiparticulac area of thelibrary. Smtdy, ho,wever; they crwuld.h~ve ,fi@ed.the. program when :the, library was closed,:, su& as $arl@irr+the p&&n& .I&-this was inconvenient, perhaps tbex could-&weposted a @ice informing! ’ library tiers ..af the incanvenie&e ,sQ that j otper arrangements , far study could.have been made: ’ . Ai to‘ the staff member’s respan$e’that the’ film. .+va mare impotitant than the work of gmeral users, i am DUTR+GED. As a student’, p@t of my tuition fees go towardsthe upkeep of the Arts Library, as did the fees of matiy studerita before me. Weare ENTI?tiD to full uge Of the librarF;Yes, the film is necessary and important but please -remember that,’ the’ library is far everyone’s, use.. .’ I iave &-ways been happy!wlth.the r’esources &d @ii at the Arts Library. Despiie Friday’s inconvenience, I Will Continue to use the library. However, in future, I, would appreciate a little Please giye mare thought to the mare consideration. inconveniences you may cause by filming or other such disturbances created in the library cfuring regular hours. This letter wits written in St. Jerome’s library where it is vary _ - as those^ sin - quiet. - St. Jerome’s has good resources but not as good Dana Porter - so please understand that we need the use ot the Arts library. Don’t steal preicious time from, us. Amanda’ Wildman a

1 To the editor: I’m m’ad. I’m really mad. I’ni madder than I’ve ever been in the 8 J -years I’ve been’lround this university. On Fridav. Mav 3, at approximately 4:00 pm:, like an idiot I 1 accidentally lefi my wa&t on top of a photocopier in the EMS li&wy. OK, that was dumb,-really $turjid. I know. About half an hour later I rushed back to see if it had been turned in. Some honest student had found it ,behind the ca’pier. Unfortunately. 1 .I,. _L j ’ /

sorpbox is 8 future intemkd as l .fonJm for individu8l Imp*t members to express their opiniqns.

-On weary

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by Mathew Ingram Avi?, Av&! Workers of the world, raise your fists ta the sky in triumph! The ever-vigilant Chevron Club has resumed publication of its an!&imperialist, anti-fascist instrument of the people, fightmg far democracy far over 25 years. Issue No. 1, Volume 26 Pppeared miraculously on the UW campus on Thursday, May ,2, with the triumphant’ proclamation: The Chevron resumes public&ion! In the article beneath, the nebulous members of the Club cite - “temporary difficulties in production” r” to explain. the six month absehce of the paper. , Aocording ta the paper; “many students expiessed their disappointment when we SuspendecEpublicatian, for The Chevron had become ren.owned as a bastion of democratic stydent journtilism”. The article goes an ta gloat aver the -fact that a Globe and Mail article citing the paper’s demise was ‘fwishful thinking” on the part .of “reactionaries”. In the future, The Chevron promises to uphold its principles of. “fighting for peace and sovereignty”, defending the democratic rights and freedoms of the people by opposing oppression and persecution”, and opposing “the militarization of the economy, the danger of imperialist war, and attacks On the democratic rights of &he people.” . What this means in simple terms, of course, is that those of us who take_perverse,pl~asuse’in.Pea~ng the Enq-,. Moonie handouts, and just,, about any other kind of 1ridiculous trash that cqines our wax, will have to look no further afield for daily amusJrment. If we nee.d.exampl,es of the kind of propagandist, machine-like writing George Orwell so insightfully warned against in his *essay “PaliQcs and the English Language,” The Chevron is there. Pages are littered with phrases such as“imperialist war preparation?:, “persecution and+repressian of democratic p*plei3f’, %eactidnaries~~~ “f&&i& +%$&&Qfigitr$~, p“riis$&e‘ the rich pay”, “Imperialist ex#aitat.ion”; and sa.on. There: are even references ta t-&at breed of animal we liaven’t , heard bf since the ’60s: the “capitalist fat cat”. By far the mast noticeable features of the paper ti first glance are: the profiisian af’wards‘ with the prefix “anti”, and theuse of the ward “people”at a rate of approximately once every fifth wprd. One gets the ‘impression that the club is only sure of what they are against, and even that is ,signified by.thq. oep%tittorr, of >emnty clich& If i,t were not for personal knowledge: to the-contrary, I would lbe tempted,ta think that an enterprising.hacker had created a Chevron .pra&am ta ,spew 0~4 this Iweary qbetoric. ’ . In regard to the .use of< the collective gdeople”, it, is ’ ~*rtilative& abvi’od ‘.-$hat-. for those. who wblish ‘T&e ,.Cbevron (which has’i3ieithw.a Iri~sthead~‘~ithstaff;n~~es; nor atiy bylines an -articles),, the use of the term means virtually nothing. It cab be toss+ into any-gap, and takes on the impfession, of .a. massed ph&nx of idealistic ” woEkms.united fotipeace‘aiiid free&m. ‘In act+ fact, of course, this group exie t 6 c&y i&the mimI@ of&e Chevron

,Soapick, up on&so&&&&@ t;iY~h’~~~~e;,;~~~i’~~“~i ‘T&G CeevFiori denounces three Aid ’ far Africci v+u.res as’ sup.porting the “fat cats” of capitalism. You can also see them praise the d&d Albanian,-dictator Enver Ha&a, a . sadistic and twiasted ruler famoua fas shaotinB:his- Prime ~ Minister through the he&d during a Cabinet- meeting,.fbkL Es human&arianis& and dev&i&ta ‘!th&p&@le>’ #Ati& s try and keep laughing. ’ . j“ ’, some dishonest JERK h&J embti.ed it of mdhey f&t. Emptied it of 250 hard e&rqed. bu+. Yeah, I’d just been ta the ban$k (it -. . fig&es). I ,\ Now I ask you, what sort’ of &&ted ‘tiii;ersity student would hang around a libeary ‘arid steal ‘mone’y. fiam people% wallets? I could almnlst lind@rntand .same,lowlife stealing.my mall, but in,4 dollars ait a’ b& statiog or‘ in’ a b+=LV fihniminb -Il--rr---p . university library? I’ve always gone through -life somehow trusting in humaq ’ nature, in the basic goodness af,peaplA Alwavs felt sad. in a way, for those people who buy really SO phisticated locks for their doors‘ or park their,new cars di&gan& lly across two spaces; away from everyone else, or who disasseml-- tile their ___--- hikc?n & thny v----w w“‘d can lock them UP securelv. Also. ever since\ I was a-I---.-e naivr undergrad here ii 1977, fve- feli that UW ,student,s were I . *_’ ” saIpehaw special. A ‘cut above, in same .way. I guess not. It’s really na.wonder that some landlords won’t. rent ta students. Can YOU blame+them? Well, to ,the jackass who stale my money, I can onIy say - I really hope you-have so& fup-with *your windfall.‘IXknow I.was _ being td do’same wild and craz3j things with those twenties . like buy food. Even tbaugh I’m not currently h@ting.fdr bucks, I’ll sure be f thinking of you later in the term, when it’s really hot and I’ve run out of money and I can’t afford a case-of beer. And if by same chance, you’ve had a change of heart about’this money I but can’t brine vaurself to return ---it tn ms- -.w rln --y--*y.--a--e nnmnthino. -- ---, intelligent for once iii&r life. Give the money to some people who real& need it. Donate it ‘to Ethibpiart hu#ger r&l@ or something. I hope it lets you sleep better. &eve Hayman CS Grad , J I

--.


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WLU support To the editor: On behalf of the students of WLU, I would like to extend to the students of UW our support in their efforts to maintain an “accord with the Truth” (Concodia Cum Veritate). At Laurier, many of us have been watching with regret the development of the Integrated Studies “Academic Soap Opera” (Imprint, May 3: Michalenko). While it is not our place to interfere with internal matters at UW, Sonny Flanagan’s actions to represent his constituents must be applauded. The statements made by the Fed President (Imprint May 3) are not the words of a radical youth challenging authority for no apparent reason. They are the words of ageneration of students who want to work to make the system better. The GSA resolution is another fine examnle of the new student approach: reasonable and fair re&esentation of students’ c-o-ncerns is a goal and a right. We iav for a service when we attend University, therefore, a protection of our interests in that service must be SuDDorted bv each of us. In the recent past. students have &en less willing to work to improve the s<stem, seeminglv as a result of the-recessions’ the economic pressures. University administrators from government on down have also felt this ninth and have been preoccupied with matters other than due representation. So, when w-e see our counterparts in student a ffairs taking on the large task of defending students’ rights, the effect of that effort across the Province (indeed, across-the street) is important and far reaching. Best of luck in vour dealings with this delicate issue, Sonny. Your work, and that of the students willing to get involved is not a soap opera. In fact, it is an inspiration.The truth is that your efforts are not going unnoticed. Matt Certosimo President Wilfrid Laurier University Student Union

-

by Matbew Ingram In Madrid for several days last week, Ronald Reagan played the part of the President of the United States with hs usual aplomb - smiling into the footlights for “photo opportunities” - and pretending to be deep in thought as he-watched the oromrjter. In talking to Snanish leaders, Reagan’s aides said he had decide> not- to focus on such-issues as Spain’s opposition to the U.S. presence in Nicaragua, or their desire to ~~11 out of NATO and close four U.S. air and naval bases in the countrv. Instead, Reagan planned to give a spee;h “praising Spain’s democratic progress”. Meanwhile, protest “permits” were denied for the entirety of Reagan’s visit: Those in opposition to the visit stayed at home, turned out the lights, and banged pots and pans together. Reagan, staying in the 63 room El Pardo palace built by the fascist dictator Francisco France, was unable to hear the noise. Being 14 kilometers awav from Madrid, he was also nresumabiv unaware that those who did show up on the sireets in defiance of the permit order were treated to the usual sort of beatings, arrests, etcetera. This is not say that the protesters were well-behaved bv any stretch of the imagination; there was the usual array of stones, bottles and fire-bombs on their part as well: Nevertheless, the whole point of the matter is that all this was taking place while Reagan was praising the Spanish government for th eir democratic progress. Increasinglv these davs, it seems that the President is acting more-out of inertia than anything else. To be more precise, he is not really acting at all - except insotar as he is acting like a President. He reallv seems to be more manipuked, in the true sense of the word. In copies of the “photo opportunities” of Reagan walking through the lush El Pardo gardens, one can see the smudges where inept photo technicians tried to remove signs of the guy-wires attached to his limbs. In fact, if one were to think about the incredible uproar over Reagan’s trip to Bitburg, it would seem that there is a tacit understanding not only among members of the media but Reagan’s aides as well, to present things as though Reagan actually made the decisions involved. When the reaction started, people began complaining directly to Reagan himself, as though the man had even a degree of control over the whole operation. Now, the papers are congratulating him on the “graceful and composed” demeanor with which he carried out the wreath-laying ceremony, and the trip to the concentration camp. His speeches, they report, were moving and heartfelt with emotion. Why do they not compliment his ? If they really desired to ascribe aides and speechwriters any actual complimentary attributes to Reagan himself, why don’ t they compliment him on the refinement of his acting ability since the “Bonzo” and “Hellcats of the Navy” days? Come on now, let’s be serious, if you lived in the U.S. and you went abroad, wouldn’t you feel embarassed to tell someone you voted for an aging hack actor who would be hard pressed to do an Alpo commercial without screwing it up? I’d be afraid Alan Funt of Candid Camera would appear and say: “Hey, let’s get serious, you didn’t really think he was the President, did you?”

~~

Who-de-who-who?? To the editor: Doug Thompson, in the simultaneous commentary the ever-impartial Imprint so graciously afforded him to my letter in the same last issue of Imprint, accuses me of dumping on students because of quotations I gave in my letter. He says I said students said it. If he reads my letter carefully, he will note that I did not attribute those quotations to students, either registered or unregistered. Think about it, Doug. Who else could it be? Who indeed? Who-

de-who-who? I find it curious that Thompson would feel it necessary to fabricate new enemies for Integrated Studies where none exist, particularly when IS has so few friends left. Is it an obsession? I will continue to defend IS even if Thompson accuses me of attacking IS and hope that he will eventually learn to distinguish between allies and opponents. Cheerfully, in the name of Micah, ,Greg Michalenko, Man-Environment Studies.

h e a d

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0 year- old I&print fnttaff

In 1979 President Anastasio Somoza fled Nicaragua, marking the end of a militaristic right wing regime largely responsible for continuing Nicaragua’s long history of agrarian poverty - a poverty existing alongside and in contrast with the proportionately tiny yet affluent urban elite. The rift between the two classes was further widened when foreign aid sent to repair nation-wide damages in the wake of a 1972 earthquake found its way into the pockets of government officials and businessmen. The lack of activity that followed the award of reconstruction contracts typified the patronage and corruption dominating the Somoza regime.

with guerilla forces operating in familiar terrain. Another factor contributing to Nicaragua’s poverty Nick left the army in 1978 to spend time with his wife was the Somozan policy of attracting foreign investment with ridiculously cheap labour and resources, thereby in Ohio. Months later, bored, unemployed, and divorced, leaving the largely rural population penniless and Nick answered an ad in a veteran’s publication seeking starving. With the overthrow of Somoza, and the advent “foreign security officers”. He took the job, and late one October night he and three other Americans landed in a of Sandanista rule, foreign business dollars were turned to military purposes in an effort to regain lost single-engined Cessna at a bulldozed airstrip outside investment and restore a leader sympathetic to the Managua, Nicaragua. American interests. They had been hired to train Somoza’s Guardia The campaign was directed largely from neighbouring National, who had been sustaining heavy casualties in Costa Rica, where former Somoza Guard.& National their war with a communist g’uerilla movement spearheaded by the Soviet backed Frente Sandinista members and American advisors gathered at citrus farms along Nicaragua’s border. As the conflict Liberation National. When the Guardia was finally intesified, there were increasingly frequent reports of pushed into fierce street fighting in its cities, Somoza and Americans fighting alongside the “contras” and in 198 1, his Cabinet fled Nick and his soldiers soon followed, slipping into Costa the ~dinis~ government released photos of three undeniably American bodies dressed inUS Army fatigues Rica where the beaten army regrouped at farms owned by American citrus farmers. Faced with a severe that had been stripped of insignia. The Carter Administration responded with a tersely worded release shortage of troops, Nick and other Americans took up pointing out that “some Americans feel bound to the rifles, joining the Contras on their hit and run missions opposition of global communism,” but denied official into Nicaragua. involvement. He returned in 1981. An interview follows.

A dead American %ontran, killed in action North of Ma3mgua before the Contras were &i-n from the cities by the Sa~~Wtase

speaks out

American mercenary Imprint: Precisely what do the Contras hope to achieve in Nicaragua? Hick: The overthrow of the communist Sandinista, government. I: What would follow that event? I!& An election. I: What if the Nicarguen people opted to continue living under a communist government? n: I cannot see that happening. I do not believe anyone, anywhere, truly desires communism until the situation becomes so far gone that they will try anything* I: Nicaragua has traditionally been governed by people sympathetic if not directly linked to American/capitalist interests. It has never been a stable, or prosperous picture. M: Unfortunately, the Somozan government exploited capitalism to its ugliest ends, and there were always American businessmen happy to see it continued I: Does the presence of American combattants in Nicaragua not indicate the continuation of those interests? M: I would say, for the most part, the American citizens fighting in Nicaragua see themselves as communist fighters rather than capitalists. I: A large portion of your funding comes from interests. Are -you not then private sector responsible to them to a certain extent?

where

is always a cost for fkeedomn

MZ That money comes from businessmen who lost considerable assets when the Sandinistas took power. I don’t think they wish to see the people in Nicaragua suffer. I: But they are willing to finance a war that has killed a lot of innocent citizens. l& There is always a cost for freedom. I: Perhaps too high a cost for many? l!& Unfortunately, that has been true in rnany countries where comntunism has taken root. I: Does it not seem inevitable in many underdeveloped countries that have little to offer the world market? lk Only when no one cares enough to oppose it. I: Wouldyoulike to see American troops committed to battle in Latin America? l& If properly trained, yes. I: Does this not evoke parallels to the Vietnam war to you?

Mewsweek called the Americans fighting in Nicaragua “Vietnam era mercenaries” and soldiers of “misfortune”. The American Contras are both: men who seek the high pay and excitement of war, and men whose war with communism was born 20 years ago in the jungles of Vietnam. Nick is one of these men. He is a tall, middle-aged man with wire rimmed glasses and a faded tattoo that says “Army”. In 1966 he landed at Danang, Republic of Vietnam, as a machine gunner with the newly formed Special forces, a unit recruited and trained as guerilla warfare specialists. Nick spent a total of four tours of duty in Vietnam before returning to the United States in 1972. He remained with the army, acting as an instructor at the Jungle Warfare School, a program created to prepare American soldiers for future wars

M: Yes, it does. Again, the American public would rather allow the Soviets to scoop up defenceless countries rather than defending them. I: Many feel Nicaragua has been stabilized by the Sandinista government.

We%

I

kick

the

Soviets

back

Russian

fgto

m: I have not aimed a weapon at anyone not wearing a communist uniform, or known to be a guerilla. I: If, ideally, both superpowers withdrew their influence in Nicaragua, what would be the result? 1p: A vacuum. I: The Nicaraguan people cannot govern themselves? M: Not presently. I: Then why hold an election? m: There would, of course, be support from America. I: Guns and tanks? M: An economy. I: Based on what? l!& Whatever can be established. I: Nicaragua has little to offer foreign markets. M: That could change. I: Many economists would disagree with that assessment. M: The issue is freedom here. I: At what cost? m: Any cost. I: L3sWn.g people cannot live on rights and privileges alone. M: No, but they can die without them. I: But there are concerned Americans? M: Yes. I: Mercenaries? M: Concerned Americans. I: That concern does not seem to be reflected in Congressional circles. M: It is no longer fashionable to fight wars. Nobody is willing to go out and fight anymore. I: Some people would say that is a good thing. M: In itself it is. Sadly, it has left borders wide open for other people who are willing to fight. I: How many connnunists are you willing to kill? M: (Laughs) All of them. I: Until? m: [Until] we kick the Soviets back into Russia. I: But these are Nicaraguans. M: On Soviet strings.

I: Instead of American strings? M: With American involvement, there was always hope for a change. I do not believe that hope exists any longer. I: After Nicaragua, what then? Cuba? M: Perhaps. I: This could be a long war. M: It already has been a long war. I: But you will not give inbecause youknow what is good for all countries?

“The Bbzis had some good ideas” M: I know what is not good. I: I would say war is not good for any country. Mz It is a necessary evil. I: Do you think President Reagan’s recent embargoes on Nicaragua will accomplish the same thing? M: It is only an alternative now that military aid was vetoed by Congress. I: Does that not indicate something to you? Those men are representatives of the people. XZ As I said, no one wished to fight for what they believe in. I: It seems that both systems have enslaved the people to some extent, but the Sandanista government has been returning the wealth to the country, rather than squandering it to the highest bidder. . M: What Nicaragua needs most is money to develop and progress. I: You cannot feed farmers money. M: But you can purchase anything with money. I: That sentiment sounds rather like Hermann Goering’s “Guns and Butter” speech. I!& The Nazis had some good ideas. I: Would it be safe to compare American involvement in Latin America with Nazism? M: That would be stretching a point. I: But not too much? M: Like Stalinism and socialism. I: Is . Manifest Destiny an excess of American . adnunistrations? M: We do not seek to govern Nicaragua, simply liberate it. I: I am sure the Soviets would say much the same thing. M: Yes, just look at Poland. I: This is not, then, an issue of freedom as much as it is a locehzed struggle between east and west? M: In many ways, it comes down to that.

.


Student bursaries announced

Applications for the following awards are available from the receptionist in the Student Awards Office, 2nd floor, Needles Hall. APPLICATION 31, 1985. . Faculty

DEADLINE

IS THE

SAME

FOR ALL:

May

of Engineering

J.P. Bickell Bursary - (All Chemical engineering) Bechtel Canada Ltd. Bursary - (All Engineering in 2nd or subsequent year) Research Division Award for Canada Packers Inc. Chemical/ Mechanical Engineering (2B - OS/ 85) Norcan energy Scholarship - (2B -OS/ 85 - Chemical Engineering) MacDonald Dettwiler and Associates Ltd. Scholarship - (4A OS/ 85 - Electrical Engineering) Stears-Catalytic enterprises Limited Scholarship - (2B - OS/85 All Engineering) Proctor & Gamble Engineering Award - (2B - OS/85 - All Engineering) Faculty

Phillips Cables Ltd. Educational Foundation Bursary or 4th yr - Computer Science) Aetna Canada Award Scholarship - (IB - OS/85 Science) Sunlife of Canada Award Scholarship - (2B - OS/85 Science) Norcan Energy ScholarShip -(2B - OS/ 85 -Information Option in Computer Science) MacDonald Dettwiler & Associates Ltd. Scholarship 05/85 - Computer Science)

(4A or 4B Actuarial Actuarial Systems ., -

(4A -

Faculty

of Science

Canada (Edible Noreen Chevron Science)

Packers Inc. - Chemistry co-op Option Scholarship oils and Dairy Division - (2B - OS/85 - Chemical) Energy Scholarship - (2B - OS/85 - Geology) Canada Resources Ltd. Scholarship - (2B -OS/ 85 - Earth ._

Faculty

of Human

R.A.W.C.O. Required)

-

Kinetics

and Leisure

Studies

(2/b - OS/85 - Recreation)

(Special Application

of Mathematics

A.C. Nielson Company of Canada Ltd., Bursary Computer Sciencej -

(1 B - 05/85 -

Susan M. Schmidt, Secretary, Student -Awards Office

dangerous

river crossing.

photo

by Steven Park

UW team wins solar race degrees and Manitoba trailing at 25 degrees. Temperatures were to be taken again at 5:00 and 6:00 pm., but the weather did not hold long enough and the final recording was taken at 4:30. Grey skies, brief periods of very light drizzle and cool The race was instigated by Steven Thwaites, a 4th year temperatures are not ideal conditions for a solar energy race. mechanical engineering student at UW. The idea came to him Nevertheless, on Saturday May 4th, the University of Waterloo during his 3B term when there was a presentation on an off-road hosted the first annual Great Canadian Solar Energy Race. It was vehicle contest. He knew that he wanted to do a solar contest. “It not your average race ~ it was a race to heat water to the highest captured my imagination, and I thought we could go with it,” he temperature possible using solar energy. said. The competitors were all graduating college and university After speaking with professors and graduate students, he engineering students. Each team designed and constructed costefficient thermal-heating devices. Water was heated by circulating it contacted the Solar Energy Society of Canada. Although they throughplastictubing attached to an absorber sheet. After going couldn’t provide enough funds to pay for the first prize - a trip to the International Solar Energy Conference in Montreal - they did through a collector, the hot water went back into the tank. Seven teams were to compete, but Centennial College failed to provide some materials. Thwaites managed to get government cooperation and support from many organizations, including the show. The University of Western Ontario and two of the three University of Waterloo teams developed problems with seals of Ontario Ministry of Energy and the federal Energy, Mines and Resources, who helped fund travel expenses. their tanks and were forced to withdraw from the race. Tim Gentz The public was invited to attend the race in the afternoon, of Western said his team was preparing for the event for weather permitting. Because it was such an overcast day, Thwaites approximately three months, and was “pretty pissed off” at having felt there was some confusion as to whether the event was still to withdraw. He did admit, however, that Western will compete taking place. He thought that more people would have attended if again next year. George Brown College, the remaining UW team the weather was good. and the University of Manitoba team (who drove 25 hours non-stop Thwaites, and his U W partner, John Mitterling, won the race and to make it to the competition) were the only remaining competitorsthe trip to the International Solar Energy Conference later this The designs were judged by a team headed by Steven Carpenter year. Thwaites indicated that “I really didn’t expect to win at all”, of Enermodal Engineering on such aspects as appearance, since more time was spent organizing the event than on the design. creativity and durability. George Brown College received the most When asked what the future holds for the Solar Energy Race, he points for durability. Andy McKegney of Solartech in Toronto, said he is already getting suggestions for next year’s race, and “now who was a guest speaker on solar energy, commented that the other that it’s off the ground, it’s going to stay around for a while”. He designs “just weren’t built to be durable; they were built to be low cost and to perform for today”. He added that this would be displayed enthusiasm for its future, adding “I think we did a great job and next year we’ll do even better”. In fact, one of the things he expected since they were not built for future use. woulaIII.1uKe to see at next year’s competition is a solar heated cooker Water temperaLures were taken at 12:00 noon. At that time, Waterloo was in the lead at 47 degrees C., George Brown at 37 to prepare hotdogs for the spectators. by Angie Salewsky Imprint staff

Co-designer John heater.

Mitterling

stands beside winning Immint

Photo

solar

bv Steven Park

Send friends to Japan by Dave Easton

On May 26 UW will be the site 0fTransamerican Life’s ten km run for Kobe. The race will be run on the inside of Ring beginning at 9:30 Road, Sunday morning. Twenty prizes will be awarded, with fourteen going to individuals and six to teams. The individual categories are open to men and women (under 40), masters men and women (over 40) and the

first male and female university students. Team awards will be given to top two teams in men’s, women’s, and mixed categories. Teams will consist of four members at most, with three to score. ‘Mixed teams must score at least one woman. Entry forms may be picked up at the receptionist in the PAC or from your student society. This race, organized by the Department of Athletics, will

feature several of UW’s top varsity athletes. This will be one of the very few times these athletes actually compete at the university, so it is an event not to be missed. The event is in support of Canada’s team attending the World Student Games in Kobe, Japan this August. Participation by members of the university community is encouraged; come out, run, and get a free Kobe t-shirt.

Kids Computer Camp \ For its third summer of operation, the Arts Computer Experience will be running its day camp for children 7 to 12 years, at U W. The camp is held in four two week sessions, beginning on July 2nd. Each day the campers are instructed in computer (IBM and AFTEK PC’s), -art, music and drama. An hour of supervised swimming or waterplay is included as well in the daily program. Special performances by guest artists, workshops, outdoor sports, a field trip and a parent’s night, enrich the

program. Children bring their lunches and milk will be provided. Detailed brochures

including

a registration form can be picked up in the Modern Languages building or by calling Marian Apieker, the camp director, at 885-l 211, ex. 2005

Join Grad House Affiliate Memberships at the Graduate House are still available. Undergrads. Staff and Faculty are invited to apply. Come to the GSA office, upstairs at the Graduate House

Monday to Friday, noon until 4:00 p.m. Cost: $15.00 per term. TX Tustain Office and Services Manager


/

1Oi

Friday,

~,

May

17 1985,

Part 4tinie jobs _ The Ontario Work-Study plan offers part time positions to full time financially needy students. The following Spring ‘85 part time positions are still available and full time students interested in these positions should apply for them in the Student Awards Office, second floor, Needles Hall: Bookkeeper, St. Paul’s College Good bookkeeping skills and legible handwriting, familiarity one-write system an asset. Rate of pay: $5.501 hr.

with a

Religious Studies Dept. Assistant. Legible, small handwriting. Ability to work without supervision, attention to detail and accuracy. Minimum of 5 hours per week. Rate of pay $4.50/hr. Student Information Officer, Architecture Ability to communicate with a broad range of writing and graphic skills.

people,

possess

Student Assitant, Chemistry Bus Person, University Club. General waitress/ waiter duties. Third or fourth year Chemistry student. Testing and developing Student must provide uniform. Hours 11 am. to approximately 2 detailed writeups of instructions for new undergraduate lab * pm., weekdays. Rate of pay $4.00/hr. plus gratuities. experiments. Rate of pay: $6.00/ hr. Clerical Assistant, Sociology, St. Jerome’s College Ability to type and access to a tape recorder and typewriter, transcribe and type taped interviews. Rate of pay: $6.5O/hr.

to

Morning Staff Wroker - Cambridge and District ASSOC.for the Mentally Retarded. Interest in the field of mental retardation, ability to develop a friendly and caring attitude and ability to operate emergency equipment. Primary responsibility to assist each resident in their personal care and morning routine. Ter: hours per week. Rate of pay $5.791 hr. Clerical Assistant, Faculty of Arts To handie overflow of clerical work in the Associate Dean for undergraduate affairs and the Associate Dean for Specia! Projects offices. Typing and filing. Rate of Pay: $4.86/ hr.

Sales,

I

I

Course CALL

NOW

GROUNDHOG

Federation

TO

BOOK.

DIVERS

l

Service

Completion . 742-5415

692 KING

of Students

ST. W

by Rick Nigel Imprint staff A day of “music, fun and fireworks”, is how Creative Arts Board chairman Dave Lawson describes his plans for Canada Day (July 1) celebrations ori campus. Billed as “U W Hosts Canada Day ‘85,” the day’s festivities will include outdoor concerts on Village Green, a barbeque, kite flying, a parade, clowns, jugglers, face painters, and

University

Temporary Research Assistants, Sociology Some experience with coding social science questionnaires entry would be an asset. Ten hours per week. Unless othersie stated ail positions nour.

I

Joanne H. Wade Financial Aid Officer ext. 6039

and data

are paid at the rate of $5.00

r Student Awards

per

Office

will take place on

Wednesday, May $2,. 1g88 to elect Spring Term co-operative representatives to Students’ Council in the faculties shown below. Polling stations will be open from 9:30 am. to 4:30 pm. in the buildings indicated:

CPH (EngSoc Lounge) l!K & C (3rd Floor)

Chief Returning

culminate with a fireworks display on Columbia Field. Both the Federation of Students and the university administration have committed $1,000 to this project and Lawson has applied for a $6,000 grant from the Secretary of State’s office to cover major expenditures such as the fireworks and outdoor concerts. As well, UW has agreed to open all of the parking gates on campus for the

day, foregoing approximately $2,300 in potential revenue. Lawson also notes that the WLU student union has donated $250, but more’ importantly, they are contributing human resources. Although the celebration emphasizes the participation of youth in accord with International Youth Year Lawson cautions that it is not just for 15 to 24 year olds. “My concept of youth is anyone who

feels young,” he says. Lawson hopes the event will be “a totally integrated community effort.” If anyone is interested in helping out with organization, promotion, high school liaison, etc., or if more information is desired, Dave Lawson can be reached on campus at ext. 6329 or at 745-6946. Don’t hesitate as this is a major undertaking (Lawson is hoping for 10,000 to attend) and he notes that “time is of the essence.”

of Waterloo

15tudents’ Council f!3ummer Elections

Engineering: IHathematicst

Assistant, Math Undergrad Office at least introductory CS courses and have a good Prior experience with WATFILE an asset. 8 to 12 Rate of pay: $5 to $7/ hr. dependent on experience.

Feds plan Canada Day celebrations

SUMMER SPECIAL I

System Support Must have taken academic record. hours per week.

Officer

Federation

Hall

Fed Hall open daily Mondpy through Friday 1 I:30 a,m, - I:00 a,m, Dancing and Video Nightly Open Saturdays 8:00 p.m. - I:00 a,m, Thursday,

May 23 8:00 p,m, Eng. Sot presents CFNY Uknow Award Winners DIREKTIVE 17 most promising independent recording artists 1984 feds $4 others $5 open Closed

Saturday, May 25 II:30 a.m, - 3:00 p,m, Saturday evening due to an exclusive booking.


by Mathew Ingram Imprint Staff Manteca (MAN*TECH*AH) is a word that means lard, fat or butter in Spanish. It also happens to be the title of one of the first popular latin-based jazz tunes written by Dizzy Gillespie and Chano Pozo in the 1940’s.

Despite its etymological origins, the band of the same name plays music with nothing lardish or fatty about it. They proved this to a small but lively crowd of approximately 400 at Federation Hall Thursday, May 2, playing 2% hours of passionately danceable music. Manteca, a Toronto-based group founded by percussionist Matt Zimbel and Bassist Henry Heillig in 1979, has two LP’s and one 12” dance single out, and has received acclaim in both North America and abroad as a world-class instrumental group. They have played at Jazz festivals in Montreal, Ottawa and Toronto, and were recently invited to the prestigious Montreux jazz Festival in Switzerland but were unable to attend.

The kind of music Manteca plays so well is difficult to describe. It is, in fact, a synthesis of a number of styles from a variety of cultures, most of which are themselves a blending of several influences. Some of the more identifiable styles include Salsa, Jazz, Funk, Calypso, and African rhythms. The band is made up of nine members, all of whom have an abundance of talent and energy. They are: Matt Zimbel (percussion and congas), Henry Heillig (bass), Aaron Davis (keyboards), Herb Koffman (trumpet and flugelhorn), John Johnson (tenor, alto sax), Rick Tait (trumpet, flugel, synth), Art Avalos (timbales, percussion), Charlie Cooley (drums, Simmons) and Gary Boygon (tenor, soprano sax).

As a perusal of ‘the list will show, there is no guitarist, nor is there a lead singer (though Zimbel occasionally yells or makes jungle sounds out of sheer exuberance). .Nevertheless, these components of the average band are not missed - this is most definitely not an average group. One would certainly not get the impression that the audience felt anything was lacking; the dance floor was filled to capacity for virtually the entire performance. The musical tightness of these nine individuals, borne out by the performance, is evidenced by the fact that there were three live cuts on their last album, Strength in Numbers, and that the tape for the new album - due out sometime in August - was done live to half-track in just six hours in the studio. The musical spectrum that they encompass is also shown by the fact that the band plans a “New York City Tour”, in which they will play dates at a jazz club, a latin club, and a rock club. Playing tunes such as Dainty Potatoes - a samba pattern from Brazil’s Carnivale during which people dance “naked in the streets, lose their American Express cards and don’t even care,” according to Zimbel - and the alldrums Fungus Amungus, with Zimbel leaping about on stage and in the audience, Manteca flawlessly- held the audience’s dancing and listening attention.

New wave folk

a potent These artists seem to come from a variety of backgrounds, and they have their own particular blend of styles and influences, but they all seem to be striving for an amalgamation of some of the concern of folk, some of the diversity and spontaneity of new wave, and frequently a healthy dose of the anger and frustration of punk. They play anything from minimalist keyboards to conga drums and modulated echo guitar, yet they all seem to have elements in common with each other - a common focus I tend to think of in terms of “new wave folk”.


Friday,

May

17 1985 .,_

esis makes foti a good re James Scott Of Mud Ryerson

and Dreams Press,

Toronto

by Marc Adams Of Mud and Dreams chronicles the birth and development of the University of Waterloo during its first ten years of existence. It is an old book (copyright 1967), but in its pages are many facts that are still relevant today. And for anyone who likes to dig into the roots of the society and culture he is a part of, in particular this university, this book is a real find. (In this case, and accidental find while combing through the stacks in the Arts Library.) The chronicle opens with a convocation procession. The author focuses on each of the groups marching in the of the city councils procession - the students, representatives of Kitchener and Waterloo, etc. - with comments and remarks that foreshadow the thoroughly detailed chapters of

the different aspects of the university that make up the book. So detailed is the book, however, that, like a proud mother boasting about her child, it would be quite boring unless you are Biated with the child or, in this case, university. But there are many interesting passages between the covers. Did you know that at one time the University of Waterloo and Wilfrid Laurier University were to be the same university? Because of a dispute over who would control the Arts faculty, however, the amalgamation never occurred and two separate universities evolved.

During my first year at Waterloo (1980) I was uncomfortable with the way courses were geared to current trends in the market and I remember thinking that this place was more like a job factory than a place for academic study and research. When I read Of Mud and Dreams, however, I learned that the University of Waterloo was founded on the philosophy that “education is best accomplished when there is lively interaction

between the academic community and the larger community which it serves.” That principle is the reason why the nonacademic world figures so much in the University of Waterloo’s approach to education. It was, and as far as I know still is, a new concept of a university education. On a less personal plane, there are also some interesting chapters on the students of Waterloo. One of the first pranks by students here was pulled by two engineers who painted “BEER” in big letters on the water tower just outside the university. Student government was set up in 1960 and its constitution was written in the fall of 1964. The major achievements of the Federation of Students up to 1967 include requesting and receiving the inclusion of students on the policy making committees of the university, and the establishment of counselling services and health services. The chronicle ends by returning to the convocation recession. Scott reviews the many things he said about the university and summarizes by describing the Waterloo graduate as someone “conditioned to perform with excellence regardless of the handicaps which may confront or surround him” and who is “fully aware of the world around him.” The book is dated, but much of it is enlightening and helpful to understanding this university today.

Northwinds: music, crafts, food & fun by Mathew Ingram Imprint staff The Northwinds Folk Festival, to be held on the Toronto Islands June 21-23, has - from a glance at its promotional material a staggering line-up of close to 50 performers and musicians whom the organizers refer to as both the “traditional and the new wave” of folk artists. This is glaringly obvious

Larry

Strange

Gowan

Animal CBS

by Harlon Davey Imprint staff Larry Gowan is a strange animal indeed. No Canadian this side of Bryan Adams is getting as much attention these days. In a matter of months Gowan has gone from the university circuit (Fed Hall) to larger concert halls (Centre in the Square). His first single, Criminal Mind, is being followed with similar success by Strange Animal - the title track of his debut album. With all this progress, I was expecting greatness from the album. My first impressions were, however, that someone at CBS really believed in Gowan, so they gave him money for a smartly

after a skim through some of the capsule biographies of the featured guests: Dave Van Ronk, a fixture in Greenwhich Village in the mid 60’s who helped shape Bob Dylan’s guitar style; Joe Hall and the Drift, a Toronto band headed by the irreverent and talented Joe; Jane Siberry, who has moved from doing acoustic guitar in Elora to synthesizer material all over

North America; K.D. Lang, the self-styled bizarre reincarnation of Patsy Cline; John Sebastian, ex-lead singer for the Lovin’ Spoonful featured at Woodstock in ‘69; Scott Merritt, another new wave folkie from Queen Street; Mose Scarlett, 20’s and 30’s blues master - and the list goes on. There are performers featured at Northwinds who

play children’s songs, there are those who play traditional Celtic music, Scottish reels, feminist-inspired songs, blues, country-and-western, and virtually everything in between. Instruments used range from pianos to guitars to bagpipes to dulcimers to banjos to flutes and the performers range from little known artists to those filling stadia, albeit small ones.

In other words, there is a tremendous variety to be found, and that is not limited to the musical side of things. There will also be a large-scale art and craft market, with over 20 stalls ranging from personal touch crafts and designs to handmade clothing and artwork. In addition, when wandering about the stalls and stages has worked up your appetite, there will be

packaged album and the backing to make some slick videos, which these days sometimes means more than the music. But they take away the fine trappings of this album and all that you have is an ordinary offering. I agree with the record -company, Gowan does have talent and he does deserve the attention and support that he has earned, but I’d like to hear him without the gloss and cosmetics. That is the real test of talent. The production by David Trckle is very good and gives the album its uniformity. Gowan’s band also does a good job at backing him up. The songwriting unfortunately lacks the sincerity that is necessary. Too many of the songs are similar and do not present any insights. Criminal Mind is a good track, and a few others like Keeping The Tension On are noteworthy,

but instead of presenting a bold punch as had been expected, the album emits a dull murmur. It will be interesting to see how Gowan follows this up, and how his style develops. I’m also interested as to how he will measure up in the States - supposedly the real acid test. I hope he does well, I like to see a Canadian other than Anne -Murray do well there.

collection of textures taken from the Toronto-sound vocabulary. Production strongly alludes to the Goldsmith/Cockburn values evident on Jane Siberry’s “No Borders Here” or Cockburn’s “The Trouble With Normal”. No accident here, because Marsh has become an invaluable fixture in Cockburn’s live line-up. Live, Hugh Marsh has been known to upstage Bruce with frenetic, electrifying solo work, but he seems to need the context of a songmaster like Bruce to pull off his most inspired licks. Marsh’s best work on the 12” single is a half-cocked reminder of similar but better executed feats on “Inner City Front”. From the “Hooked On . . .” backbeat to Genesislike horn jabs, the gimmicks make for a danceable mix that

is insipid save for its rhythmic colour. Hugh Marsh’s bow continues to slip into a groove .in which he is altogether much too comfortable. Vinyl will yet capture Hugh Marsh’s true improvisatory genius.

Hugh

Marsh

Versace Duke

Street

Records

by Dave Lawson imprint staff Hugh Marsh is Canada’s virtuoso jazz/funk fiddler. “Versace” (pronouce: VERSACH-EE), is the spin off from his recent solo debut “The Bear Walks”, and fails to impress as an unmemorable

Various

London

Artists

Sampler

PoIygram by John Jongerius ’ According to Imprint’s weekly listing of the top selling records at the Record Store, the London Sampler was the top selling album for the month of February. The record is a collectionof 12 songs by various English groups at a phenomenal price of $2.48, The musicians represented on this collection are either on their way up in popularity (mostly due to

a profusion of booths and stands serving made-whileyou-wait food All this presented for the measly price of $32 advance, $40 at the gate, or $12 for Flay, and $15 each for Saturday and Sunday For more information contact Northwind Arts, 24 Ryerson Ave., Toronto, M5T 2P3 or BASS at 698-2277.

campus and FM radio play) or are new to the Canadian music scene; included are Bronski Beat, Blancmange, Bananarama, Kane Gang, Carmel, Dainties, and Junior and the Redskins. These groups have provided the record companies in England with many top sellers. Polygram Records Canada is betting this sampler will help establish these groups here. The company is hoping that people will enjoy at least one of the groups enough to CJO back to the store and purchase a full-priced record/tape. For collectors and fans, the Blancmange’s “Feel Me (live)” and Bananarama’s “Cairo” are previously unavailable on any. album. The London Sampler is also a limited edition album, only one pressing run was made.

Wanted, dead*or alive: ART by Harlan

Davey

and Andy

Marshall

This is an appeal from Imprint’s Art Section for articles - as many as we can get. We feel that the more articles we can choose from each week, the greater the quality of cultural ,journalism you, our readers, will receive each week. If, however, on the off-chance that we do become inundated with articles after this appeal, we’ll write again saying “STOP!” However, allow one caveat, please: “quality” is a tricky word these days and, like any word, its meaning is relative both to its user and that to which it is applied. For example, it is more than likely that to each of you the concept of quality, or rather, degree of quality, differs substantially when it is used to refer to the “artistic” features of “fine” art, popular art, architectural works, journalism, literature, advertizing, or ) “creative” research (in whatever field). The same applies for creative actions or events (whether plumbing, line-work, dance, writing, writhing, cooking, cleaning (or smegmatics), sex, plagiarizing, partying or whatever . . . ). And, further, for each one of you, your quality assessment of any one of the above artistic features or events is likely to differ from your peers’ assessments. Granted. In the Arts Section, we would like to concentrate more on the validity of each work given us rather than the “individualities” which will exist simultaneously and with equal weightin each and every article that will be submitted. Further, as artistic features (or “qualities”) in the long list of human (or

cultural) activities that we’ve just listed, these features give each of the objects or events in which they reside at least one constituent element which is “art” (“Life’s like that.“, Reader’s Digest, any issue.) In fact, you might say that there is no hurnan activity which does not have some artistic element or part. We want your parts! - the so-called artistic ones. And please note a few other things: 1) We are here referring to “art” in the broad sense. 2) Often, the “neophyte” has a fresher, or less-biased, outlook that the “seasoned pro”. 3) If you can say the same thing in fewer words than more (and bigger) words, then your reader will be less likely to be distracted from your words and, furthermore, a greater variety of opinions can be presented. But we do want to hear your opinions on anything to do with art in the broadest sense of the word and how YOU view it, objectively, or non-objectively, or bothSomething you might keep in mind is that this year has been labelled by the United Nations as “International Youth Year”, of “I.Y.Y.” (pronounced, Eye-Why-Why). But please take the existence of I.Y.Y. as information, not as a limitation. Thanx for your attention, and we’re hoping to hear from you (and read you), whether student or not.


e by Peter Lawson Imprint staff ’

With uontrasing program of Beethoven and Bartok. the K-W Symphony Orchestra concluded their 84-85 masterpiece series at CentreIn-The-Square on Friday, May 10, and Saturday May 11. The Beethoven Violin _Concerto in D major, with soloist Moshe Ha-mmer, commenced the evening, and the Bartok Concerto for Orchestra completed the program. The Beethoven ,Violin -Concerto in D major was the only violin concerto penned

by Beethoven and it is now a premiered by the Boston Ifaniiliir work renowned for its S mphony orchestra in 1944. demands on the violin solosit. d is concerto, titled by The soloist. Moshe Hammer. Bartok because he treats was equal to the chdlenge of single orchestral instruments the difficult cadenzas (solo as soloists, displays each passages) in the first, allegro, section of the orchest,ra in 5 movement and the Rondo, allegro. , Mr. Hammer’s performance was sharp and expressive, and his positive stage manner flowed through his bow injecting charm into, the cadenzas. The second performance by the orchestra was Bela Bartok’s Concerto for ‘* Moshe Hammer , Orchestra which is a 20th movements. .The music century impressionistic work l

I

encompasses impressionistic sounds, pastoral melodies, and variations on. Hungarian daEce2-. . tram Armenian stat - ‘ed that this Bartok piece was _. the most demanding orchestra .work which I- the.KWSO -- - has encountered. T.hough there were a few frayed edges, the string section was especially precise in this . piece, and moreover, through the entire program: Mr. Armenian and for a solid performance. NOTE: This program will be broadcast on CBC’s Mostly Music, Tuesday, June 18.

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abcal’sol,0 ability ,

tv

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.

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Tears for Fears - Songs ‘ From the. Big Chail The Language of Attraction Animotion 25 o’clock Dukes ~of Stratosphear 7 Howard Jones Dream into Action Leonard Cohen Various Positions U? _ The Unforgettable Fire; mini LP Miles- Davis You’re Uncier Arrest Peter Gabriel Birdy Soundtrack Building the Perfect B&t Aural Sculptures

1. Belouis So*e 2. Al Di Meola 3. Quintessense -

1

by Peter Lawson Imprint’ staff

Stephanie Bogle, possesses a RWWARMEM powerful, .‘wide open vocal Imprint file photo Mmk D/iecror . -W.--m” style 1and,I.,receives the vote for - I . r .a me oesr nign notes 01 the 1 evening, although her English diction fell short on both Lehar’s Villa and Gershwin’s Summertime. Linda Bennet, mezzo-Soprano, , .displayed ’ aamirable I . II ... .but vocal - ability earns ‘her highest praise for , her delicious, stage presence and characterization shone. in Rossini’s Unk LI% *poco fa, and as a darling JWt AmdmddL large collection country gal in Oklahoma1 From Marriage of Figaro, the classical, jazz; blues, internatio~, Count’s Aria was a bright -: moment for baritone Bruce , calypso, reggae, etc. ‘. Kelly and his English diction was flawless, especially in $1.99 each 2 for $2.99 ’ Rogers’ and Hammerstein’s Surrey With The Fringe On* Top. And finally, the judges granted tenor Mark DuBois the Molson Golden award for his smooth, tastefully done singing of Lerner and Loewe’s Come To Me And Rend To I Me. ’

c .

11

The Kitchener-Waterloo Philharmonic Choir’s 84-85 season expired on Saturday, / ‘May 4 with a program whichoddly did not highlight the choir but was an evenina of opera and musical favou&es performed’ primarily by soloists. The evening was ,entitled “Spring Sing’?, and the. ’ Centre-In-The-Square, ornately decorated (‘with vibrant pink and mauve flowers and ‘small shrubs, featured the Philharmonic Choir, conductor Howard Dyck, the K-W Symphony Orchestra and soloists Stephanie Bogle, Linda Bennet, Mark DuBois and Bruce Kelley. . f 1 The evening was billed as achoir performance but it was highlighted by the soloists, and the four had some special - T&e * s&@$&~, moments.

of

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Waterloo hosts swordsmen

\

by Vijay Prasad Fencing, a sport dating back to the 16th century is finding new life at UW. In early March of this year Waterloo hosted its first fencing tournament in over a decade. For the spring term, the Waterloo Fencing Club, in conjunction with the Ontario Fencing Association, hosted the finals of the participation circuit for the 1984-85 season. The competition took place at the Physical Activities Complex on Saturday, May 4. Spectators had the opportunity to view the diversity of a 3 weapons competition, as well as the up-and-coming fencers Ontario has to offer. The main gym in the PAC appeared to

Etobicoke

fought match to Miss Bozek, 10-8. Third place was won by Catherine Pye of EFC In men’s epee competition, George Krupka of the EFC showed more than his usual finesse and timing to take first place. Krupka is proving himself to be a graceful newcomer to Canadian fencing. He is presently the Ontario Provincial champion for epee, having won in St. Catherines at the Winter Games. Second place was won by Bob Spear of the London Fencing Club. Mr. Spear put on an elegant display in another exciting final match. In third place was Aaron Zorn of the University of Toronto Fencing Club.

dominates

Match

take on an anachronistic visage as six pistes (fencing areas) were laid out. Electric machines for scoring dotted the gym floor, and their respective cords snaked around competitors and spectators. The set-up was perfect for the foil, epee, and sabre championships that ensued. Foil was fenced by both men and women in their respective categories. The winner of men’s foil was James Ireland of the University of Ottawa, Excalubur Fencing Club. Second and third places were held by Steven Gavard, Niagara Swordsmen, and Brian Clark of Ryerson respectively. The women’s foil was keenly competitive with the ladies attempting to gain a wildcard to the National Championships to be held in Ottawa. The winner was Christine Bozek of Etobicoke Fencing Club (EFC). Cassie Girard of EFC was second, losing a closely

CAMPUSRECREATION There are still openings in the following classes: Fitness - all beginner and advanced, intermediate T, R. 8:15, 12:15 and 5:30. - Aqua fit - Dance and Exercise - Jazz and Exercise MWF 12:OO

keenly

competitive

Sabre fencing is becoming more competitive in Ontario, largely due to the exceptional coaching provided by Marion Sakrezewski of the Etobicoke Fencing Club, now the coach of the national sabre team. Not surprisingly, first place in the Sabre category was won by John Makele (EFC) and second place by Paul Emerton of the Hamilton Fencing Club. Eddie Chee took third place with a victory over Scott Collings of EFC. Eddie Chee is a familiar face to university fencing, having contested OUAA sabre for the University of Toronto. The fencing club at Waterloo looks forward to hosting further tournaments on campus over the coming year to provide club fencers with competition, and the university community with access to this visually exciting sport.

Tennis - Beginners W at 6:00 and 7:00, R at 6:00 and 8:00

Special Interest Programs - Bicycle skills and maintenance workshop -Cycling for fitness MWF 4:30 - Juggling W 12:00 - Learn to skate T 5:00

Power skating; Ret figure skating; St. John’s First Aid; Social dance I & II (especially females needed on T 8 pm); Weight training beginner and intermediate; Yoga.

Swimming - all levels are open - NLS recert is on May 25 9 am.

JOB OPPORTUNITIES Squash - we’ve added two new Beginner classes, W 9:30 and R 9:30. Interested in earning extra cash? Referees and pool staff are still needed. - Beginner II all Tuesday classes and R at 6:50 and 7:30. If you can ref a sport come in to PAC and fill out an application. If you’re a - Intermediate I R 9:30 - Intermediate I1 T 8:50 and 9:30, W 8:lO and 8:50, R 8:50. , qualified lifeguard fill out an application at the PAC receptionist.

Friday May 24 8:OO pm. ’ = DESERT INN ,..,,, 822-9369 (Woodlawn Kd. Guelph)

EXCHANGE New and Used Books Come and Browse large selection . American l Arabic l Sritish l Canadian l French l German

with special guests

Edgar

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$8 door

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- Buffet

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and,

Jamie

Campbell

l l l l

Italian Polish Spanish International Fashion Magazines

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Resume Science documentao, Admission GLLoW

Writing Workshop 12:30 for Peace presents The based on information Free, everyone welcome. Coffee House 8:00 pm., understand. Campus tn Wesley

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Free

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12:30, NH 1020. WIII be offered by Counselling services, The workshops deal with time management, reading and exam preparation. Please Needles Hall 2080 or call ext. 2655 for

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Fri. May 24 -

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Mon May 27 -

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Typing: Essays, theses, work reports, resumes, business letters. etc. Neat, accurate, wil correct spelling, grammer & punctuation. Reasonable rates, electronic typewriter. 7 yrs. experience typing for students, Phone Lee, 886. 5444, afgternoon or evening.

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Thanks to all you folks that helped me survive the Imprint experience. I’m glad to be able to leave it in good hands. Good Luck, and don’t let the Feds get to you! - N.M.

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Are you looking for stream to alternate looking for a 3 or 4 townhouse etc. for 86. Wiling to co-sign terms with you. Must to UW. Call Denise at

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‘86! FASS Writers years’s comedy

- Wed. Self

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large grey at Manteca Budding,

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Fall 85 house or townhouse for year non-smoking CS majors. to take over lease of sublet with of alternating terms. Within distance of UW (preferabl 15-20 Call Jeff collect at (41 f! ) 488.

Wanted: share negotiable.

Pentaq KlOOO 35 mm camera with 50 mm lens, soft case, and strap. Tokina 80. 200 (f.4) zoom lens (new). Hansa sky filters for both lenses. Blacks camera bag. $300 firm for package. Call Steve at 888-64671

Funny Newcomers

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Attention Co-ops! people on opposite housing with? We’re bedroom apartment, Fall 85 and Spring lease and alternate be walking distance 885-3540.

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Sunny 2-bdrm apt to share in Downtown Waterloo. Upstairs of old house. Balcony. cat. Partly furnished. I5 Min walk to UW. $150/mo plus hydro Females only, starting Sept. Call Linda, 886-0525.

1983 Plymouth Turismo Hatchback, auto, 2.2 I., front wheel drive, radials, power steering, FM cassette stereo, rust proofed, warranty, one owner, lady driven, excellent condition, wil certify. 55 km., $6,400 (negotiable) 746.1843 (after 4:OO)

Salatul Campus

One room available Albert St. (Not Parkdale Plaza. Bruce 884-4653.

rally free but not apartment ful Cali Dave 886.

An

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for sale $80. (negotiable), sping, good condition, Kurt or Sandy.

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1975 Suzuki Motorcycle, Excellent condition, well maintained. The bike IS a peppy 2 cyl, 2 stroke. bike for beg&%< ci$use. Great $500 o.b.o. Call 744-1563.

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steel office desks, cabinets, odd boards, shelving, beds. Call 884-2806.

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- Sat May 25 Friday

May

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A new twist in writing instrument design.

Friday,

Pat Travers

May 24th

Saturday,

May

25th

*Advance 871 Victoria

Introducing TFIZ from SheafM Precision ballpoints and matching pencils with a sleek new profile. In tie Sheaffer tradition of fine craftsmanship. Choose from six distinctive models Giit boxed singly or in sets, the@ perfect for all your gift-giving needs’ TRZ &pomry writing instruments from Sheaffec Quality and style at an afwdable price.

-

Green

River

(Tribute Clearwater

to Creedence Revival)

10% off AlI

University

tickets on sale at Coronet

St. N., Kitchener

of Waterloo

From May 13 -24 The Open Door Gift Shop

744-3511

11 Young

TONIGHT

St. at King

(Upstairs at the .Mayfair)

TOPAZ SAT,

TRZ Pens Engraved

For the Iatest

MAY18th

OZONE

RANGERS

(Tribute

BritishandNorth American Releases!

set to ZZ Top)

Fri. May 24th

MOONLIGHT Two Hours

/ DRIVE of Powerhouse

itchener-Waterloo's onlv

Doors Music!

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Sat. May 25th

A Great Nite of Rockabilly

SKINNYJIM AND THE WILDCAT STRIKE

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Saturday

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