1985-86_v08,n30_Imprint

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*OFS criticiz.es Ontario student job ‘plan by Frank ‘Travato Imprint staff

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“That 6i,OOO jobs is a joke,” said Don Millar, Information Officer of the Ontario Federation of Students (OFS), in reference to the provincial government’s announcement that 61,000 jobs will be provided for young people this summer. The OFS doesn’t believe that the provincial government will achieve its goal. Gregory Sorbara, Ontario Skills Development Minister, announced last month that three programs organized by his Ministry will provide these summer jobs. He said he is concerned about the financial obstacles that stand in the way of a university education for many young people, adding that, “for many students, the money earned at a summerjob is the best assurance that they will be back at school next year.” The three programs are Experience ‘86, The Ontario Youth Employment Program and Student Venture Capital. The government has set aside $43.8 million for these programs. Experience ’ 86 is designed to provide types of jobs that will give Young People work experience that is related to their career choice. This is similar to the various co-op programs here at U W. The 7,OOOJobs that this program is expected to provide will come from over 100 ministries and associated organizations. The Ontario Youth Employment Program is intended to help create 53,000 new-jobs by providing a wage subsidy of $1.25 an hour

to Ontario employers: Therwage subsidy% intended to encourage ment’s efforts, there “hasn’t been an enormous amount of pressure to change (their plans),” McVey said. The efforts of the OFS have employers to hire young people. been directed more towards lobbying the .federal government. Student Venture Capital gives students the opportunity to operate their own businesses by providing them with interest-free loans For anyone interested in Experience ‘86 or Student Venture of UP to $2,000. “The spirit of entrepreneurship starts young and 1 Capital, information and application forms for those programs will ‘be available very soon at school placement offices, community am pleased that my Ministry is there to foster it,” said Sorbara. information centres, Canada Employment Centres for students, the “All of these programs. . .(are intended to) assure every qualified high school graduate access to a~post-secondary education,” Sor-’ constituency offices of MPPs and many other Ontario Government offices. bara concluded. OFS is complaining that the new Liberal government has made OSAP changes positive The Provincial government did have at least some good news as no changes in the summer job programs from last year in terms of the number and type of jobs being provided and in the amount of _ far as the OFS is concerned. The Minister announced that the Ontario Student Assistance Program (OSAP) will be raised to money being put into the programs. $145.8 million - an 8% increase - for the next academic year. The The only program the OFS likes is Experience ‘86 because the jobs are being provided by the government itself. This makes it OFS “applauded the increase,” said Peter McVey, who described it ‘as “a good increase.” “easier for the government to plan the types of-jobs and how many,” said Peter McVey, researcher for the OFS. It also makes it the only Sorbara said he wants to use the increase ‘“to reduce the amount of loan which students from low income families are forced to program that can guarantee meeting its job creation goal. assume.” McVey also said that with wage subsidy programs such as The As it stands now, Sorbara is “not convinced that (OSAP) does its Ontario Youth Employment Program it is “very hard to predict” best to make a university education available to all qualified applithe number of jobs that will be created. Last year the Conservative cants.” The Minister has, in fact’ ordered a review of the entire government also predicted that the program would provide 53,000 program. The OFS, who are also unsatisfied with the present jobs. It created only 43,000 jobs, 10,000 jobs short of their goal. conditions of OSAP, are in total agreement with this decision. Although the OFS is not pleased with the provincial govern-

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Forrest : “Chw goal ii+ to works with the. admin. ” _. by M. A. Morley Imprint staff

Scott Forrest, who last week swept to victory in the race for the presidency of the Federation of Students, was contacted this week to comment on his election success and future plans. Forrest expressed his surprise at the wide margin (12%) which separated him from his nearest rival, incumbent Sonny Flanagan. “It’s hard to evaluate what happened,” Forrest said, “I was expecting a very close race. 1 also can’t understand what happened to Willie (Grove). He was a key worker throughout the campaign, and I’m very disappointed.” Grove was Forrest’s running-mate for the position of vice-president, operations and finance. The position was filled by Carol Goulette. Forrest feels that he now has a strong team in vice-presidents Carol Goulette and Matt Erickson to work with, but would still like to see Grove become involved. “He’s (Grove) got a good grasp of financial matters,” Forrest commented, “I’ve been working on a plan to include him in things, but I can’t discuss this further until I’ve had a chance to see what the executive thinks of it.” Forrest said his first priority when he assumes office at the end of March will be dealing with the underfunding issue. He believes this will have to start with a resolution of the Federation’s problems with the Canadian Federation of Students (CFS). The Federation and the CFS are currently involved in a lawsuit over fees not paid to the CFS some time ago. When these difficulties are overcome, Forrest said we will have a better voice at the federal level by joining , the CFS. Forrest added that there is a new chairman at the CFS who seems confident that the problems can be settled out of court. Forrest expressed his own confidence that a solution could be reached. Asked how he nlanned to deal with U W’s administration in terms

three-hour strike is being planned instead, and that the support of U W’s administration could be expected. On the issue of incidental fees, such as the computer fee and the PAC locker fee, Forrest said, “we have to be realistic here and realize that underfunding is the root issue. I will oppose any further incidental fees, but underfunding remains our primary target”. Forrest said that, the idea of converting the Columbia Ice Field fee to a permanent athletic fee would not be an issue during his term, since higher interest rates have pushed back the date when payment on the building will have been completed. In any event, he said, such a move would involve a student referendum. Communication in the Fed offices is on Forrest’s agenda for improvement. He said that communication in the present executive has not been the best. “Problems with the previous executive were that people were not talking and interacting enough. I plan to deal with this by meeting with the vice-presidents every day, even if only for five or ten minutes, so we can discuss events.‘* Forrest also plans more contact with the student societies and residences. He has no plans for sweeping changes in the organization of Fed offices, but noted that he wants people who are appointed’ to positions to know what their responsibilities will be when they accept the appointments. “In the past, part of the drop-out problem has been that people didn’t know what they were getting into, and became discouraged when the work piled up.” Forrest repeated campaign statements, saying that as far as entertainment is concerned, he will be attempting to bring fewer, but higher quality acts to Fed Hall. He plans to-implement Carol Goulette’s proposal to conduct a campus-wide student survey to find out what is wanted-in the way of entertainment.

Scott Forrest, who will assume the presidency of the Federation of af university Students in the spring term, says the problem underfunding will be his first priority. Photo by Simon Wheeler


‘,* -‘.NEWS Forrest, continued from ’

Friday, .__ .._

February

21, 1986-

page 1’ I Focus on UW funding problems

Asked about plans for the Bombshelter, Foqest said, *‘First, it’s going to be painted”. He said that Bombshelter hours of operation would be cut during the summer and that it would be closed some

by Glenn Rubinoff Imprint staff The issue of university underdays. The appointment of a person to fill the vacant Dean of Students . funding dominated discussion at the UW Senate meeting last position is also a concern Forrest will be addressing. “The Student Relations Committee will be looking after this,” Forrest said. “UnMonday night. Tom Brzustowski, vice-presifortunately, during-the campaign, not enough time was spent on this.” The position has been vacant since last year when Ernie Lucy of dent academic, said the NaEmployment and Student Services, declared the‘ Dean. of tional Science and Engineering Women position obsolete, replacing it with the Dean of Students. Research Council (NSERC) Since then, the position has remained vacant. had cut its budget by $16.1 milForrest said the safety van program may expand its area of’ lion, resulting in a four per cent operating operation. He plans to try to obtain further support for the program drop in NSERC grants. The dismal situation is bv having< businesses in the community lend their sponsorship. evident in the 37 per cent cut in the present NSERC grant and

Won’t march against pageant

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’e ate Meetzfl JrL0

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With respect to University President Dr. Douglas Wright’s decision to allow the continuatidn of the Oktoberfest beauty pageant in the Humanities theatre, Forrest said, “1 don’t personally support the decision, but I’m not going to start marching about it. Of course we must express the students’ concern, but my goal is to work with the administration, not against it.” Asked about divestment from South Africa, an issue absent from the recent campaign, Forrest said, “that is something that will have to be worked out with the executive. Right now it’s not a priority,, but we will discuss it”. Asked how he felt he would fare in general under pressure from the administration, Forrest said, “1 won’t back down. We have a good, strong team here. We have to remember though, that our goal is to work with the administration”.

will work with the U W administration to increase public awareness of the problem. Rallys and demonstrations would be-featured throughout the da) and Dr. Brzustowski suggested that university staff and faculty voluntarily forgo a day’s pay to demonstrate the underfunding situation and donate the money to UW’s Watfund. Other initiatives planned are to approach high schools and parents and make them aware of the current situation and how it affects them.

UW President Doug Wright has said he will join the protest by donating a day’s pay to UW, and he is hoping that other staff and faculty will do the same. In other business, a parental policy and its amendments was approved. ’ This policy allows for faculty and staff members to take parental leaves of absence for reasons of adoption, maternity or paternity. This policy, which is in place at other universities, would allow for 17 weeks of leave with 95 per cent of normal salary.

controversy not over yet _ by Janice Nicholls Imprint staff The fight to remove the Miss Oktoberfest Beauty Pageant from the UW campus will not be abandoned despite UW President Doug Wright’s decision allowing the annual pageant to continue in the Humanities Theatre. Angela Evans, the Federation of Students’ Women’s Commissioner, says she personally has not given up trying to have the beauty pageant removed from campus. Pat Aplevich, of the the Pro. fessional Women’s Association (PWA), feels that it is a contradiction to launch a program for affirmative action on campus yet allow the Oktoberfest Pageant to continue in the Humani-

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the postponement of the proposed Heritage Resource Centre. Sonny Flanagan, federation of students president, discussed an initiative developed by the student council to bring attention to the underfunding situation. Flanagan said a protest march on March 12 would focus public attention on conterns about- government funding, and “change the public’s perceptions of universities” as catering to “rich kids”. The -Federation of‘ Students

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Last October, students obties . Theatre. However, in October, Wright was quoted as jecting to the pageant held a saying “the purpose of the . coffeehouse on the night of the pageant featuring singing and beauty pageant does not appear inconsistent with the efforts we dancing of local performers have been making to advance both men and women. The purthe status of women on this pose was to avoid drawing attention to the pageant by campus.” demonstrating and to provide Aplevich believes the affir“real talent”. mative action program recently As well, 1,500 signatures announced by Wright promotes were collected on a petition, equity for women faculty while asking Wright to remove the the beauty pageant reinforces pageant from U W. The petition the stereotyping of women. In noted that pageants are sexist, her opinion, this is inconsistent. discriminatory and reinforce Aplevich says Doug Wright’s traditional views of women. decision shows there “is not exThe PWA’s plans for next actly clear thinking” on year depend on their next execwomen’s issues. She says utive. Wright is out of touch with As a result of a general deviews on women’s issues and feels it is “in poor taste to hold a cline in interest on campus, the PWA says the pageant issue is beauty pageant on campus.”

not being pursued with the same vigour as in previous terms. Aplevich says the establishment of the position of vicepresident, advisor on women’s issues, shows rhat things are improving and provides a channel the PWA will be able to work through in the future. She adds that the pageant issue will be resolved using less noticeable methods. In addition to the pageant, the PWA is concerned with pensions and other benefits for part-time workers on campus (mostly women), the provision of day care on campus, and having more women on the UW Senate and other positions, The importance of these issues is another reason the beauty pageant issue is not being hotly pursued, says Aplevich.

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NEWS. Graduating! engineers cut record- for charity The engrneers’ latest “adventure” is to raise $3,000 through the sale of a 45 rpm record which will open the curtain on some very developed musical talents, says Tom Fulton, a member of‘ the Engineering 1986 Graduating Committee.

The graduating engineers’ gift to the campus is becoming a tradition. Past gifts include the handicapped persons lift in the PAC pool and several ramps around the campus to improve wheelchair access. This year’s gift from the class of ‘86 has not been decided on yet, but suggestions include the initiation of a Braille library, a pool lift for a community pool, or putting the money in a fund to help handicapped people start a business enterprise.

The “45” f‘eaturing two original songs, C’arrle M,I* Nuns in the Arches and NYM~ Wuvt~///d Ocean, will be released on campus this week. It will be available in the Engineering Society’s office on the first floor of Carl CT-NY, a Brampton-based Pollock Hall, as well as in the record store in the Campus radio station, has sponsored the’ Centre for $3.25. project to the tune of $1,000.

CFNY’s David Marsden says, “We at CFNY would like to thank everyone who supports this project, and extend wishes for success to the graduating class.” 7 Other sponsors. include the Engineering Society, the Federation of Students and the Alumni dff’ice. “We think this is a beautiful chance to share our gifts with those who are less fortunate, and at the same time give every person in the university community a chance to feel the warmth by giving their own real gift,” says>one of the group members, Art Gresham.

Imprint,

Friday,

Februarj(

21, 1988.-

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U W engineering student Art Gresham‘ (right) plays bass during the recording of a 45 rpm record to raise money for charity. ‘Studio owner S<6tt de Smit on l~ef~~.~The record will be released next week. I’

Late toboggans ruin race for UW ‘entrants by Frank van Biesen Imprint staff Last Saturday’s Concrete Toboggan Race, held just outside of Calgary, Alberta, was not much of a race for U W’s entries. The three toboggans, which were given to a trucking company 11 days earlier to be shipped to Calgary, arrived Saturday evening, after the event. According to Rudy Tomaini, a spokesman for the teams, it was discovered on Friday that the toboggans were then only in Winnipeg. Several attempts were made to expedite delivery, but the situation was hopeless. “It’s a real shame,” says T’omaini, “we had

More corporate money needed OTTAWA (CUP) -- Education should rank first as a national spending priority, but the governmcnt should “unleash some market f‘orces” while making universities compete with one another for students, says the president of Northern T‘elecom. David Vice said the federal government would like to rcduce education lunding to trim the deficit, but shouldn’t. 11 the government values the future, it has no choice “but to increase f’unding,” he said. “lt will be a measure of our maturity as a nation if we invest more heavily in our intellectual ability. Even if it means shortterm political gain, it will mean long-term economic gain,” he said. Vice also suggests letting universities set their own fees, specialize programmes, and develop centres of excellence. He said the climate for research in the U.S. is so much more advanced than in Canada that “the emergence in Canada of‘ distinguished research and teaching centres seems next to impossible.” lf‘the U nivcrsity of Waterloo,

a leading computer and industry research centre in the couninto try, were “transplanted’, the healthy U.S. environment, “its research would double in two years,” Vice said. But, “if‘ the Massachusetts lnstitute of Icchnology came to Canada, it would shrivel and die within six years.” Big business should also be sinking more money into research, Vice said. 1.hc governmerit should write off’ donations that corporations provide f’or research, Vice said, although he admitted taxpayers would pay the bill while business took the credit. However, it’s the only way “to get business involved so that they’re paying at least a bit more.” Vice said if government and business are going to invest more in universities, students will have to ‘make concessions. He said from “a businessman’s perspective .. . it would be great (if’ students) had to work a couple of‘ years to pay their f‘ees. “Course material must be tailored to national needs and not -just individual students’ interests,” he said.

Campus rec. board supports 5Oe per day locker fee 1by Cameron Anderson Imprint staff At the latest meeting of the Campus Recreation Advisory Council (CRAC), February 10, motions were 1986, three adopted in response to the introduction of fees for day users of long lockers in the PAC building. These were: 1) “That the Campus Recreation Advisory Council is in favour of the concept of a day locker fee; however, the council is opposed to the implementation process that took place. Council also feels that the $1 .OO fee is too large and a 5Oc fee would be more appropriate.,’ 2) ‘Council would like to see some investigation on the fee set >‘I. dnd t‘iFi-da) !ol.-.k LAS”; .3) Y’KAC iab0urb the impkrnt:;;taiion c!‘ a nominal !crm U>Cr 'ij{;'is, I;:Ck:::$

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small locker or- a tote-room lock.” All of these motions were passed overwhelmingly. What initiated these motions said members of the council, was the fact that the day fees were introduced without CRAC being consulted. While a questionnaire had been distributed amongst the CRAC reps as to how funds for athletics should be generated, the results had not been returned to the council, nor had council ratified them. If you would like to suggest other locker fee or money raising plans, please contact your CRAC representative (the list is avaiiabic in PAC 2039 or from Carl Totzke. ext. 2474) before fl!tZ ilUNt meeting, Monday, M;arcii 10.

some excellent designs.” Disappointed, but not discouraged, the teamsof civil engineering students began looking for substitute toboggans to enter into the race the next day. One team visited a local concrete fabricator, who had some scrap sections of curb which he cut to size for their use. They.took these in turn to a metal shop where they had the frame welded together, and some plywood installed to make a new toboggan. This was all managed in a total of five hours on Friday.. Another of U W’s teams was given an old toboggan by the Umversity of Calgary. It was not up to race specifications (no brakes, etc.), and thus the team had to make some last-minute modifications on Saturday morning. The third team was not able to put together an entry. Neither of’ the’makeshift entries fared very well. Says Tomaini of his team’s locally fabricated toboggan, “we thought we had something that would at least move. The starter said go, and it didn’t. We were rocking it, but it just sank.” As a result, his team won the ‘Longest Shot’ award, an honour bestowed on the team whose toboggan is least likely to win the-race. As well, T‘omaini’s team “walked away” with the ‘Team Spirit’ award, he says. U W was also awarded the ‘Best Uniform* prize; all participants were completely outfitted in coveralls (orange, blue, and red for the three teams) covered with university emblems, sponsor logos, and team names. Despite the obvious disappointment of not really being in the race, the teams seemed pleased with their performance. Tomaini says that, according to the rules, they can re-enter their toboggans next year, even though they (the students) are graduating in April. Two of the three teams have already promised to return to Calgary next year, when the event will be hosted by the Southern Alberta lnstitute of l‘echnology (SAlT‘). Says Tomaini, “Having seen what they had there this year, and given what we have put into our designs, we should have a very good chance next year.” The sponsors will be completely notified of what happened,

“Apartheid by Cameron Anderson Imprint staff

according to Tomaini. He hopes they will not be dissatisfied with the outcome, citing the fact that UW still came away with three awards out of a possible total of nine. Inter-City Truck Lines, the company hired to shop the tobogans to Calgary, “would not guarantee delivery,” says ClaudeTollett, one of the team members involved in finding a suitable shipping agent. None of the companies contacted would do so, according to Tollett, stating that “Inter-City was chosen because of the price, and their apparent confidence in being able to deliver the toboggans on time.” He says air freight was also considered, but its cost was at least twice the almost $500 charged by Inter-City. According to Tomaini, the company waited until they were paid to ship the toboggans. Eleven days before the race day, when the sleds were picked up by Inter-City. the driver was offered a money order for the full amount, which he refused, stating the teams would be invoiced. That same evening, the driver returned to request immediate payment, but the teams had left campus. The message w-as apparently not received until Thursday by Kelvin Whelan, the team’s treasurer. He promptly contacted Inter-City to verify whether they needed the money order to initiate the shipment. According to Whelan, the company said this was not necessary and that there was no rush in delivering the payment. The f’ollowing Wednesday, Tomaini called the company to ensure all was on schedule. He was informed that the toboggans had left on Sunday, which would have given them ample time to get to Calgary. Tomaini was not told that the sleds had, at the time of’ calling, not yet boarded the f‘reight train in Toronto. This did not, in fact, occur until Wednesday evening, which proved to be too late. A spokesperson for Inter-City says that payment was not received until Wednesday, Feb. 12, three days before the race. It had been agreed upon that the toboggans were not to be sent until payment was received, according to the company.

is like Nazism9”Says *

As noted in last week’s Imprint, Yusaf Saloojee, spokesperson for the outlawed African National Congress, will be giving a talk about apartheid (South Africa’s policy of legislated racism) February 26, at 8:OO pm., following the film No Middle Ground at 7:O0. Both activities will take place in Arts Lecture Hall 116. In an effort to provide you with a background of ANC philosophy and a hint of what may be said, 1 interviewed Saloojee in ANC headquarters.in Toronto from the CKMS-FM studio. Following are excerpts from the half-hour interview. Q. What do youthink of the apartheid reforms recently announced? A. Talking about reforms in South Africa is really sidestepping the issue. The minority white government is not the vehicle of change. It has no mandate from the people. The black people of South Africa do not need the existing government to say what we can do.and cannot do. We want to determine and shape our own destiny. Apartheid is like Nazism. You cannot say Nazism is not o.k.. - it’s terrible - but maybe we can improve it, you cannot. It has to be totally eliminated, it’s anti-human, anti-people. Q. What about allegations that the ANC is a terrorist organizatio’n? A. The politics of’ violence are the politics of the South African government. The reason five million whites are able to rule over 24 million blacks is through the use of guns, shooting people, and repressive measures such as jail and torture. The root cause of violence is apartheid. We get involved in violence out of’protecting our members, just like-any mother would protect her children. We can’t protect them by sticks and stones all the time. Q. What are your fellings on the Glenn Babb free speech controversy?

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ANC rep

A. It is amazing that the issue of freedom of speech is being applied to someone, and a government, which does not allow free speech and only represents 60% of the (4 million) white population (the 24 million -blacks have no vote). In 1984, the majority of the United Nations General Assembly members declared that, in the context of international law, apartheid is a crime and the South African government has no legitimacy. The people of the ANC believe in freedom of speech but, certainly, there are limitations. One would not allow one involved in organized crime to come and propagate the workings of organized crime in the name of free speech. Q. What about allegations that the ANC receives money from Moscow‘? A. We receive money from all over the world. We only accept it, however, if there are no conditions attached. In other parts of the interview, Saloo.jee stated that “1986 is a very decisive year in the sense that it will determine the future of South Africa; not that there will be results this year, but, who will have the initiative. At present, it’s in the hand of the black people. Unless Canadians subscribe to racism themselves, they should mobilize. We call f’or isolation of S.A. in totality.” Admission is free for the aforementioned film and talk by Y usaf Saloqjee. For more information, contact the Waterloo Public lnterest Research Group, CC 217, x-2578. Protest In response to the television commercials promoting travel to South Africa airing on CKCO T V , K-W, the Ontario Public interest Research Group and South Africa Interest Groups of Guelph, and local individuals, are holding a protest Saturday, February 22nd. It is to start at 11:OO am. in front .of the CKCG studios, 864 King St., W., Kitchener. For more information, contact Peter Mandell at 888-6375 or x-2578.


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Arbitrary ,laws should be arid will be ignored The subject Magistrate

who k truly loyal ad1 Icever submit measures,

ta the Chief to arbitrary

Those words have headed the editorial pages of The I;IoIN urrd Mrii for many years, but it is oniy in the past week that Canada’s “National Newspader” has hk to confront the implications. T&e Gl~lw? nr3 Mail has broken a new law, recently passed by Parliament, by reporting those named in a search warrant without their permission. The law prohibits news media from reporting the names of parties named as suspects in search warrants without their permission. The news media has generally reacted to the new law with horror and outrage. Ttrc UO~ has asked the Ontario Supreme Court to find the new law unconstitutional, as a violation of fr’eedom of the press. In the meantime, that paper has decided to ignore it.. The-CBC saw nothing to be gained by joining ‘i’hc (;I&” in violation of the new law, and declined to name the suspects in their news stories. Several other papers, including Tlrc Kitchetrcr-Waterloo Record and the Hanriltom Spectator have reported the fact that the OPP

The new censorship law proves unenforceable as many papers simply witI not obey it. siezed* long-distance records from Ronald Burns, Bell Canada’s assistant director of security for the Ontario region. A telephone in the CBC’s Toronto radio newsroom, the home telephone of one of its reporters, and the telephone of a businessman in St. Catharines are also mentioned in the OPP warrant. The search was part of an dUPP investigation into suspected illegal wiretapping by members of the Niagara Regional Police. Bell Canada refused to give the consent required by the Criminal Code for its name to be published. Attorney General Ian Scott said it was “unfortunate” that IIre U&e (and subsequently numerous other papers) “decided to take the law into their own hands”, and added that his job would be niuch easier if “prominent institutions” did not do this. The Press in Western Civilization has had a long and difficult fight to establish its freedom, a freedom almost universally recognized as a pre-condition to the existence of democracy, political rights, and liberty. The only power that can ever stand against the potentially arbitrary and tyrannical power of governm’ent is the power of public opinion, and without a free press to inform it, public opinion is hobbled. Anything that would require the press to seek the suspect’s permission to inform the public of police activity drama&cally reduces the accountability to public opinion of that arm of government. Virtually every Suspect

,

will no! want the world to know. Police would be freed by the law to conduct widespread “fishing expeditions” a‘nd no one but the victims and their immediate families and friends would ever know. To obey this law would represent disloyalty To a fundamental assumption of democratic society, the right to know. It is a healthy sign that so many Canadian journalists, and such prominent ones, are willing to risk fines and jail sentences to fulfil1 the duty inherent in the news-person’s role; to tell it like it is as best you can no matter who threatens you, and no matter what you may be threatened with. \

CBC conrpicuously alone in obeying pubkation ban, One has to wonder why? While the Imprint staff is proud to join the ranks of Canadian papers which cannot, in cc-science, obey this law, we look on the CBC’s decision to accept this censorship with alarm. Reeling under severe cuts to its budget, the Crown Corporation which is so heavily dependent on government grant support has, it seems’, run out of nerve. While the CBC’s independence from the Canadian government is often celebrated, and the quality of its programming is a source of international pride for Canadians, the vital importance of a free and independent press has been pretty clearly demonstrated. This law is dead. An old political ad6ge suggests that you should never pass a law that you cannot enforce. This on& has just proven itself unenforcable. If no one will obey it, except for government employees (i.e. the CBC) the Canadian government had better re-think what its doing. Doug

Ttmmpson

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Carol Davidson, Gtaeme Peppler, Kevin Wood, Mike Urlocker, Sue Baker, Tom York, Alan Yoshioka, Glenna Watts, Peter Stathopulos, Mary Joy Aitken, Anne Fleming, Cindy Long, John Zach,ariah, Shayla Gunter, Darlene Zimmerman, . Edward Wailer, Denise Roeleveld, Peter Lawson, Adam Stevens, Christine Fischer, Colin McGillicuddy, Steve Hayman, Donna-Lee Irwin, Evelyn Nepom, PHRed, Mark Holden, J.D.Bonser, Andrew Dyk, Paul Harms, Joe Muller, Dan Tremblay, Jack Kobayashi, Jack Lefcourt, Glenn Rubinoff, Jeff Suggett, Corinna Robitaille,: Donald Lee, Atul Nanda, Tim Perlich, Cathy Somers, Rico Mariani, Donald Duench, Steven Park, David Merchant, Pete Newell, Grace Schmidt, Darcy Alyea, Meir Rotenburg, Teresa Skrzypczak, Less Beret, Gary Timoshenko, Frank van Biesen, AnnMarie Jackson, Lars Wilke, Janice N,icholls, Harlon Davey, Angie Salewski, M.A. Morley, Frank Trovato, Greg Hobson, Jufie Wailer, Cameron Anderson, Ian Gowens, Michael Wolfe, Mitchell Edgar.

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Fricbqr

Feb. 21, 12:30

p.m.

FPi&a&

Feb. 28,12:30

p.m.

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Monday, Feb. 24,4:00 p.m. , Monday, Masch 3,4:00 p.m.


pi6ixs‘

Imprint welcomes comments and o@nion Worn” ou~““rM3ers~Vhe Fo&m page---kdesigned t-4 provide an opportunity to present views on various issues. Opinions ‘expr&sed ik letters, colu@#/ or other articles on this page represent those of their authors and not Imprint. Letters should w and signed with name and telephone number, and submitted to CC 14a bp typed, double-spaced, 6:00 p.m. Monday. Maximum length of letters: 200 words. Anyone wishing to write ‘loflgq$, opinionated articles should contact the editor-in-chief. All material is subject to editing.

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Athletic. injury centre to close March 21 During the past two years we have demonstrated the need for and feasibility of this general service and have worked in very hot and very cramped surroundings; being completely self-sufficient with OH IP paying for salaries. We had hoped for expansion and support to realize a complete and enlarged university and community sports clinic under the umbrella of U W: Many submissions were made to Athletics, Kinesiology and high officials in the university bureaucracy. To summarize the results one can say that there was lots of moral support but no space and no money for a new place or significant renovations. As a result, the Athletic Injury Centre will on March 21st, 1986 be closed to all but varsity athletes and Dr. Caldwell and physio-therapist lnese Krastins will be moving to other work.

To the editor:

When 1 began undergrad work at U W (1969), the Athletic Injury Centre in the P.A.C. was a place for physiotherapy and the taping of varsity athletes. During the next 15 years, due to a need on our campus, Brian Gastaldi and myself, along with many other student assistants, began to help’more and more students, faculty and staff with their athletic injury problems. By the time I took over in 1980 as the resident Athletic Therapist, the need for physio and assessment of sports injuries other than those of the varsity athletes had grown by leaps and bounds, primarily because people began to realize that the service was there. Between 1980 and 1986 several important changes were made in the Athletic Injury Centre. A night clinic for athletic injury diagnosis was begun with Dr. D.A. Ranney and myself. The night clinic was successful and eventually we were able to obtain the services of Dr. E.H. Caldwell who, by agreement with Health Services director Dr. D. Andrews, worked part time at Health Services and part time in the Athletic Injury Centre. Further, in 1984 we added the services of Ms. Inese Krastins, a physio-therapist, to provide physiotherapy to students, staff and faculty while 1 was free to concentrate more energy on the varsity athletes.

Letter. provides

laugh

To the ,editor:

Thanks to Ian Craigie for his letter to Imprint last week, which gave me my biggest laugh of the day. As for Sid Embi-ee - Sid, I’m amazed you took my letter so seriously when my intent was to show how ridiculousTom Fulton’s comments were. I thought it was blatantly obvious my lette; was a parody of his. Apparently, it was not obvious to you. Since you missed my general drift, here it is in plainer langauge. Although Tom’s comments were objectionable enough for their illogic and inconsistency, 1 objected to most of his infuriating suggestion that women are completely responsible for, a) how men see them and; b) changing men’s attitudes. These are two arguments I reject because they imply that individuals have no control over how they perceive others.-ln fact, we are constantly deciding how to see and treat people, and always have thk power to change our attitudes. Anyone who insists on viewing one sex in a limited, superficial way, ignoring all their internal traits, has only himself tb blame for .vr-j. t. ._ : hi$ rigid and damaging attitude. J net Childerhosen Id?an-Environment !

Brian Farrance U W Athletic therapist.

Feminist columnist contradicts herself on man-haters . To the editor:

Anne Fleming’s interesting column, Feminism 101 (Imprint, Feb., 14) wisely raises the question of why feminism’is viewed as an “anti” cause. Unfortunately, Ms. Fleming does not hear herself as others hear her. The burden of her column seems to be that feminists are not “man haters*‘, and in her last paragraph she claims that “from a feminist’s point of view the charges of being anti-male are false.” But in the second-last paragraph she indulges in the question, “Why . ^ ,. not bust a few balls so they can see what it feels like to live in tear’!”

Action on Equality? by Alan Yoshioka

Faculty

but she sure sounds hostile to

of Arts

I believe you of context. Her question of some feminists who “man-haters.” She most of anyone’s balls. Ed. Note:

are taking Anne Fleming’s quotation out was rhetorical, posed from the perspective may be angry enough to be considered definitely was not advocating the busting

counting all that money -- and 1 never had the energy to be truly avaricious, like Kenneth Fearing’s high-pressure salesman: “And wow he died as wow he lived, going WHOOP to the office and BLOOIE home to

Gregory 1 (he was called “the Great”) subdivided the sin to which we’re $1 prone .into.seven. And since there are seven Sundays in Lent, ministers ihroughout the land (including he) haul out a favourite sin every Sunday (unless they’re ” preaching on the seven last words of Jesus) with which to harangue and entertain their congregations. The seven, in case you’ve forgotten, are Pride, Envy, Anger, Sloth, Greed, Gluttony, and Lust. The very names sparkle with relevance for our time, though Ian Fleming, creator *of James Bond - super spy, came to “the dreadful conclusion that in fact all of these ancient sins, compared with thesins of.today, are very close to virtues.‘?,He suggested a list of seven deadlier sins: Ayarice, Cruelty, Snobbery, Hypocrisy, Self-Righteousness, Moral Cowardice, and Mal- ” : ice. ,

No, avarice in thk guise of gre.ed or.disguised as ambition has never been my thing. As for Pride, if you’re Protestant and proud you don’t need the other six. And isn’t every P;i&estant a! little pope? ‘a ’ So much. fori Pride and Ci‘reed. What’s nexti og ,the hit parade? Lust, I guess. But how many people think in terms of sin anymore, anyway? Isn’t one of the marks of mod&n man his abandonment of the notion of sin? Don’t we talk today about frustrations, complexes, and phobias? Isn’t sin altogether outmoded, if not obsolete? William Temple, one-time Archbishop of Canterbury wrote this limerick: > h “In the church after Freud had hit it I Said .a vicar., ‘There’s no use to quit it! - We can3 be adjusted So don’t be disgusted Just baptize your neurosis and forget it.“’ But whether or not we forget it, and by whatever name we call it, we still co’mmit the same old tired misdemeanors and peccadillos,without a single bold or daring or- original sin to our names. “Go, and sin boldly!” was Luther’s favorite benediction. (The Rev. Dr. Tom York is United Church Chaplain to U W and WLU. His office is at St. Paul’s College.) ;

Of the original seven, says Fleming, “Only Sloth in its extreme form, which is a form of‘ spiritu’al suicide and a retusal of JOY, has my wholehearted condemnation, perhaps because in moments of despair 1 have seen its face.” I suppose everyone has his or her own favorite sin. Mine is ... well, it changes. Of the original seven I’ve slept with all, except Greed. 1 never was very good at math --you know, for

\’ I ‘\

She claims not be be a man-hater, me. Philip H. Smith, Jr.

“What was the minister’s sermon about?” the wife of U.S. President “Silent Cal” Coolidge is purported to have asked him. * “Sin!”

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will table a Later today, the federal government to a report recommending, “comprehensive response” among other things, the full recognition and protection of the human rights of gays and lesbians. The Equality Rights section of the Charter of Rights states, ‘IEvery individual is equal before and under the law and has the right to the equal protection and equal benefit of the law without discrimination...” The section came into effect April 17, 1985, three years after the rest of the Charter, to give governments time to amend offending legislation. Last summer, the Equality Rights Committee held hearings across the country to get public input on issues in federal law. In October, its report, called Equality for All, ‘made 8 5 recommendations, including the following: * that the Canadian Human Rights Act (CHRA) beamended to add sexuaLorientation as a prohibited ground of discrimination; s ’ * that discrimination on the basis of sexual ofientat$n be 1‘elimitiate~ ‘froni‘ihe‘employnient p‘racticesofthe RCMP and the Canadian Armed Forces, and from federal government ; security clearance guidelines covering employees and contractors; * uniform..g@s,d‘copsqnt-for hqrnpsex& an,d heterosexual -, ;’ . 8 acts; ‘a * that the CH RA be amended by the additid; of an override clause that will confirm its priority over conflicting federal laws unless they -purporl specifically _ to apply notwithstanding to the CHRA. The government is obliged to bring forward a response to the report, but is not bound by any of its recommendations. As a result, there has been an intensive letter-writing campaign to ensure that this time protection for gays is carried through into law. (Jn the past, several private member’s bills have died on the order paper.) Opposition Leader John Turner has declared his support for the recommendations. The real question, of course, is how the Progressive Conservative caucus is leaning. A PreCambrian faction, including Kitchener’s own John Reimer, is making predictable noises about immorality, mental instability and any other myth you could care to mention. More encouragingly, all five PC’s on the seven-membel committee set out with ambivalent feelings about protecting gays and lesbians, but now stand unanimously behind the strongly gay-positive recommendations of the report. A compromise such as an exemption of the RCMP and the Armed’Forces from an amended CHRA is possible, but the government can expect plenty of flak no matter what it decides. In this respect, the timing of this response is certainly convenient for the government; any reaction will have only five days to gather steam before public attention is diverted by the inevitable budget controversy.

One must remember that the facility was never designed to handle the level of demand of the past two years, and cannot continue to do so efficiently. One must not blame our personnel who have chosen to leave rather than to coniinue to work in far less than an adequate situation when it is available elsewhere. One must not be too quick to blame the Athletic or Kinesiology departments who are continually struggling to maintain what they have at present. However, one must question the university’s attitude to student needs and community service when an operationally selfsufficient clinic that provided 4,100 physio treatments in 1985, is allowed to die fdr “lack of space”.

i h, ’ 1 ’


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S

‘FORUM-

Imprint,

Whenever 1 start to th nk about masculinity, femininity and androgyny, I recall a scene from one of my favourite children’s books, The Keeper of the Bees. One of’the main characters, a young soldier recuperating from WW I, asks his new friend, a young child named Scout, “Are you a boy or a girl?’ Scout replies, “If you can’t tell, what dies it maiter.?” IJnfortunately, as Scout eventually f:;nds out, it does matter. If Scout is a girl, she must act in a certain prescribed manner; and ii a boy, he must act in a different manner. Both women and men who siep out ol‘traditional roles a female welder, for example, or a male receptlomst - are put under se’vere scrutiny. If they don’t retain their masculinity or femininity, they are condemned; they are “unnatural”. T’his brings up ihe q&stion, of‘course, of what, il‘anything, is natural to the sexes. I think what is trulv natural has been so obscured by societal conditioning as to be almost indeterminant. Yet many sociological studies have shown inherent sex differences to be minimal. For example, the long-accepted “fact” that men have bet. ter “spatial ability” (i.e. the’capacity to think three-dimensionally, which supposedly makes men better suited to fields like architecture and engineering) than women, is currently being shown to bc a conclusion based on l‘limsy, statistica!l\ insignificant evidence. This outrageous misrepresentation o-1 women’s abilities reminds mc ol‘an earlier, equally ridiculous assumption that if women studied Milton, theiritcri would fall o;t or bc otherwise damaged. making them unf’it 1’01 child bearing (Heaven forbid!) . I mentioned earlier that both men and women arc limited by the artificial constructs o! masculinity and fcmlninity. But I think femininity is both more rigidly enlorccd (in adulthood) and more limiting than masculinity. Possible 1 find femininity more limiting because s&ial cxpcctatiolqs 01 me . changed at puberty, while my brothers had to learn only one role. Until the age 01 I I or 12. 1 could dress and behacc exactly like the boys with total acceptance from peers, parent’s and teachers. But at age 12, I was cxpccted magically to embrace a lemlnine role, to change the way I acted and drcsscd. When I didn’t do it (cxccpy on special occasions birthdays, Christmas, weddings) I-laced a good deal of ccnsure. I know that I am not alone in this situation, just as 1 knob that man)’ girls were as coml‘ortablc with Irills and baking and the rest of Icmininity as I was uncomtortablc with it. But I am still irritated at the marvel in people’s voices, talking about a tcmalc prolcssional: “Isn‘t it wonderful the way she’s kept her lcmininity,” as though it would be a pity i! she hadn’t. And I’\c heard the same marvel in the \oiccs that say, “Oh, look, isn’t that-great -~ he’s knitting a sweater,” as though k)litting was’some miraculous achicvcment. Ik seems that it is admirable it a man “doesn’t riced to prove his masculinity,” but sad, or not quite good enough, it a woman fails to pr-ovc her temininity. From all this mess ol‘scx-role stereotying, thcrcl‘orc, I base my dcsirc !or an androgynous society, a society in which personal characteristics are grouped by their dt>sirabiIitl in humans, not b) their appropriateness to arbitrary polar definitions of masculine and feminine. I,would like to be able to be sensitive at times, aggressive at others, to be strong, caring, efficient, thoughtl’ul, philosdphic, petty, mechanical, athletic, and mothcrl~ . . _in short, to be human. not masculine or f’cmininc. W0hh‘t J,OU?

Friday,

February

7

21, 1986

r

-

Imprint

minist rag?

To the editor: As a student, it annoys me to see Imprint, a simple campus paper, becoming more and more like a feminist propaganda tool every week. Many people are sick of the small minority of radical feminists (especially Carol Flctchcr ) nit-picking tri\ ial issues and blowing them out of proportion. Being a malt, and (gasp!) an engineer, 1 would like to provide a l‘resh point of view on certain feminist issues. As a former (yet tasteful) contributer to Enginews, I was appalled to hear that the paper folded up due to feminist pressure. Enginews provided a humourous, brief respite for engineers amid their strenuous workload. Sure, there was sexist content, but it was meant to be taken with a grain of salt, like any normal, intelligent person could realize. Anyone taking the paper seriously should have their head examined. Carol Fletcher may think that Enginews’demise is a victory for women, but all she has succeeded in doing is alienating herself and her cause from a lot of engineers, both male and female alike. Anyone who feels threatened by nudity or dirty-jokes-is probably a very insecure person in the first place. Furthermore, 1 would like to know just what is Ms. Fletcher’s beef about the Miss Oktoberfest beauty contest’? If we have one on campus, so what? 1 myself won’t waste my time attending it, and 1’11 leave’ it at that. I wouldn’t even have known about the contest, were it not for the feminists publicizing it with their editorials. There is nothing wrong with a group of models parading around in bathing suits, if they choose to do so. 1 would like to point out that men’s bodybuilding competition gre even more sexist and exhibitionist than a harmless beauty contest. Yet, you don’t see men protesting about being sterotyped as a bunch of macho muscleheads. In closing, 1 would like to say this to Ms. Fletcher, and any other such-radicals: Get off your self-appointed crusade, and get back down to earth, with the rest of the planet. For crying out loud. lighten up, w’oman! Michael Ajersc h 3B Chem Eng.

ETS, BOOKS,

ETC .. .

El-T- PRETENTIOU NOT TO LAUGH!

Make-up not just personal To the editor: Re: Anita Nelson’s letter in last,week’s Imprint. Wrong Anita. I’m sure that 1 have not come across anyone who was as violently irked by my letter as yourself, in fact 1 have not come across anyone who was irked at all. This shows that, although my writing is not horrendous, it still is Rot as clearly worded as 1 would have mysel!‘ believe. And in that light I am narrow-minded, yes. Upon checking with others who are renowned for their openmindedness, it seems that the only point in your article which is consistent, is that, contrary to my belief, women wear make-up and mini skirts purely for themselves, and it’s none of my damn business. Obviously I cannot argue, because an opinion is not liable to -. . argiiment. . You say “the thrust towards equality is not going to occur until the image of the female is adjusted in the eyes of the male. And I do not mean visually.” Skipping qver the pun, 1 move to the next sentence to find you adJusting the image through television. Of the three examples you cite, onll’“portray submissive characters” refers purely to female images that are achieved through other than visual images (plot, script. etc). Both “scantily clad”, and “seen as housewives in commercials” include a great deal, if not complete, visual female imaging. is ingrained in our culNext you talk about culture, “make-up ture,” and, seem to use it as a reason for supporting make-up. 1can see culture habing a dampening eff’ect on the move away f‘rom make-up, but tradition is no reason to support anything. Prostitution has been around longer than cosmetics (circa B.C.), does that

-_,

mean we should accept prostitution in our society? (The on14 African make-up that 1 have encountered is ceremonial, or for battle. 1 do not find it applicable to the argument at hand). Although it is difficult to address on a scale a person’s “degree of superficiality of,accoutrement,” I believe that we should be able to define a neutral position (or zero point) on the scale as “Clean”, and it is to this position that 1 meant to infer that we should strive. 1 would guess that on a society-wide average, men would fall below this neutral point and women would be above it. You also say “By claiming that 1 am an ornament due to my wearing make-up is demonstrating your true male attitude towards women as sex objects.” As soon as you say that 1 demonstrate the true male attitude by linking ornament with make-up, you are agreeing that the true male attitude is a least p,artially a visual image of females. 1 must admit that your final paragraph exceeds your intial fauxpas of starting an argument with an insult. 1 do not feel it is my social right to comment on appearance. It has more to do with my desire to share fully the opinions and thoughts of an average man with women since one cannot accurately fight an enemy without knowlag who one’s enemy is, and the only place to find out accurately about male attitudes is from men. In closing-l would like to ask a question in reference to Anita’s statement: “Although the feminist movement is diredted towards equality, especially in the job market . ..” Is it possible to be ej’ pregnant? Tom Fulton 4B M.E.

sort

.Black rhinos need our help now To the editor: Increasingly, the world’s wildlife resources ha\ze been disappearing despite the prcser\ation attempts of national parks and conservation organisations. One of‘ the most endangered species is the African black rhino, which has becomc a bictin? 01 dccrcasing land :irea and incrcascd poaching. In 1960 there were 100,000 black rhino throughout the continent, but this number has now declined to less than 6,000. While the rhino population has declined in most countries. Zimbabwe’s population has remained stable and may have increased. In the Middle Zambezi Valley, between the Lake Kariba and Mozambique, there are now over I .500 rhino, representing the most important population of rhino in the world and their last chance for survival in the wild. In 1985 poaching gangs entered the valley, killing 58 rhino, taking the caluable horns, and !ea\ing the carcass !or -1hc horns are sold to’femen for ccrcmonial handles and to the Far East for medicinal purposes, often receiving more than

dagger

$2,000 U.S. / kilogram. In order to combat the highly organized poaching gangs, antipoaching teams have been deployed throwhout the valley. These teams must be equipped with four-wheel drive vehicles, boats and engines, as well as their personal gear. The Rhino Survival Campaign has been created under the auspices of the Zimbabwe National Conservation Trust to coordinate fund raising and donations. Already, the anti-poaching teams have made a noticeable impact. The message is out that poaching is a dangerous business with penalties as high as death. But, more work and constant surveillance is needed as rhino are still being killed. Anyone wishing more information concerning the Rhino Survival Campaign or wanting to make a donation can contact: The Rhino Survial Campaign, c/o The Zimbabwe National Conservation Trust, P.O. Box 8575, Causeway, Harare, Zimbabwe. J. Ballantine, BES ‘85 Zimbabwe

scacengers.

Labatt ads are stereotypicalTo the editor: 1 have been reading (with amusement) the series of John Labatt Classic ads which you have been running in Imprint this term. You know them, they’re the blatantly stereotypical ones that depict Engineers as having the attitude “Yeah, we like to drink beer and degrade women!” and the Rugby players as, “Yeah, we like to drink beer and bash heads!” 1am writhing in excitement awaiting the next in the series. Maybe you could do one with a Miss Oktoberfest beauty pageant winner! Picture it! NAME: Candy Tanda FACU LTY: Arts, minoring in cosmetics AMBITION: To become an actress or play a major role in achieving world peace. FAVOURITE MOVIE: Gone With the Wind FAVOIJRITE BOOK: Gone With the Wind. FAVOURITE HOBBIES: Looking pretty and smiling a lot! PET PEEVE: People who leave the toilet seat up! FAVOURITE BEERi Johns Labatt Classic, because my boyfriend likes it.!

It’s so stereotypical, that it fits right in with the first two in the series. Speaking 01 beautjf pageants. having lost that battle, Carol Fletcher’s record now stands at 1-i l‘or this term (the win being her success!‘ul eradication of E&news with the help 01 a certain Vice (squad) Prt >sid ent, who shall remain shameless. Sean McKinnon Not ashamed to be a leaf fan Proud to have been part of Enginews! p.s. Thanks for the littly tiny article on the bottom of one of the back pages of Imprint that stated that Engineers had raised over $1400 for Big Sisters so far this term, with many thousandsmore to come in March with the Bus Push. 1 hope that this will “in some small way compensate for past in-iustices!” p.p.s. If you are really concerned about degrading material 1 suggest. you pick up a copy of the March 1986 National Lampoon, and then ask yourself if dumping Enginews was really worth all that trouble.

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Obviously the editorial staff cannot be held totally resDonsible for this debacle. The entire student body must wake ;p td the real issues facing them. I urge every student to find out how much the planned cut-backs will affect their education. Then write a letter to your federal and provincial representatives expressing your concern, instead of ‘wallowing’ in the current rhetoric<of “feminism” and “gay rights”. Rob Flindal *‘Mad as Hell” in IB Geological Engineeing Ed. Note: Imprint is not firtided bJ7 the uniwrsit~: it isjirndtd by student jkes and advertising wvtwuc andpublishes tilhateverparticipating students decide to Hvrite.

are vital for education Social Psychology of Health” effectively being evaluated with a multiple guess exam. The education gained at the university level should involve the accumulation of facts, the understanding of vital concepts, the ability to express those concepts, and sometimes, the ability to use this to go beyond those concepts. Next year is my final year at U W and 1expect to be evaluated on a level consistent with my education. The abolishment of Teaching Assistants will, I’m afraid, greatly hamper this. Fortunately for me, I‘m on the way out. Good luck- to those of you on the way in. Michael G. Baylis Health Studies, 3rd year

Responses to MacD.onald

Summer and part-time employment is available to full-time post-secondaK students looking for a physical and mental challenge. Do You have what it takes? it’s Your choice, it’s your future. For more information, visit your nearest Canadian Forces Recruiting Center or call collect. We‘re in the Yellow Pages under “Recruiting”.

THE CANADIAN ARMED FORCES -‘- ‘. .I-

Assistants

Re: Imprint - February 14, 1986, “Trimming the Budget” Too bad for those in first year. Too bad they’ll only be tested on small, unrelated facts answerable with an “all of the above” or “none of the above”. This is a predicted outcome if Health Studies and other denartments choose the elimination of Teaching Assistants’ support’as the means of meeting the 2.5% quota for citbacks. Teaching Assistants are a vital component in the process of higher education. They provide the perlon-hours necessary in determining the level of information, assimilation-and integration. 1 find it difficult to think of a course such as “Philosophy” or “The

884-1080

There’s no life IiKe it!

As a faithful reader of Imprint, 1am dismayed with the content of the last few editions. The central crisis facing the university this year and’ for years to come is underfunding and cost over-runs. Yet, in last week’s Imprint (Feb. 14) there were only THREE articles related to underfunding and no editorials related to the subject at all. In the same issue, there were TEN articles and editorials related to women’s issues and gay issues, plus a review of a clearly antimale theatrical production. While these may be topical and controversial issues deserving comment and debate, surely Imprint is not, being a university funded operation, the medium for this debate.

. 1’

To the editor: In mockery of Blair MacDonald’s anti-gay letter in last week’s Imprint (“Straight Guy ...“). There is a problem and it is bigotry. As gay men and lesbians, we are faced with this problem everywhere we go. Everyone will turn a page in Imprint and see another letter of a bigot attempting to represent the majority of people and wondering why he is so frusYears ago, pebple thought that homosexuality was an trated. unspeakable disease or crime. Nowadays people are more educated and open-minded. However, there exist those with their mentality screwed up. The problem could be physical, but it is probably , mental. Now we all know that bigots are people, so they have rights too, and there is nothing we can do to force them to keep their ranting and raving out of the public’s eye, and their sob stories out of the newspapers. But as B matter of decency, please, we have all had

enough .. . Yes Blair, you are suffering from ‘homophobia’, that dreaded disease. Do you suffer from frequent night sweats worrying about what will happen if your future (I?) children see two women or two men holding hands? Do symptoms of diarrhea manifest themselves whenever you pass by the GLLOW coffeehouses’? Perhaps you should see your doctor, and in the meantime, please don’t give any blood to the Red Cross. Since you’re in first year Blair, it’s not too late; a few years of university education may improve your condition. As a new member of the Math Faculty, perhaps I should break it to you that your own Math Society was started by a group of mainly gay guys, hence your Pink Tie. I hope you enjoy wearing’your pink tie and pinkbuttons! \ Lisa Simkins \ 4th year Environmental Studies.

To the editok: re: Blair MacDonald’s letter of Feb. 14 Blair, 1 would like first and foremost to ask you~w you can justify appointing ypurself spokesman- for those of u<who are straight. Y&s, us str’aight “j$ys” (t-:-mja girt.blgt‘l l”lt.use -your ter& broadly-) do have.feelingY too - and:~for:some of us, cone of they feelings is that perhaps you are the one with the problem. Aside from yotr blatant inability to contruct simple English sentences (who let this guy out of high school anyway?), you seem to have problems that normal people generally do not experience. You react violently to events that most normal people, who are somewhat more secure in their own sexuality, simply take in stride. Most of us can walk into a GLLOW coffeehouse without feeling threatened.The thought of two men making love doesn’t disgust me,

either. Perhaps that’s because I’m not traumatised by it and don’t ponder upon it as often as you must. Holding hands and cuddling are indications of tenderness and affection, regardless of the gepder of those participating in it. What would your rather have $our QH1l~~cn:cha~e,.up~~~:Z. A :ftither: who ~shi:ts~in.‘& ,pants whe; he ;enco?unltcrs,a:fe‘ewd,gaysiha;v~g: coffee’!.. .. :-JX+;,::” :! , ,,t;. ij But then again, you may never have children, as you claim “there is no longer a need for reproduction”. Do you suppose babies drop out of the sky? Or perhaps some immortality drug has been discovered? Maybe you should consider taking a grammar course and a biology course. You might learn a thing or t&o. Lori Ciaralii 2A CS

To the editor: (Re: Blair MacDonald’s letter on homosexuality) Dear Blair: There is a problem, and it involves narrow-minded people like you. Everyone will turn a page in Imprint and see another letterfrom a neurotic person trying to get accepted as mentally competent. We almost shat when we read your letter. Welcome to the real world, Blair. We’rt ..urprised that the existence of normal people who happen to have a different hormonal balance from you would shock you so. You must have had a , sheltered upbringing. Why should yqu be embarassed to admit that you go to university with a large gay organization. Do you have trouble admitting that you have been to Toronto, a city which has the second largest gay community in North Amercia? People we know have come-across a man and a woman holding hands and &ddling. In fact, people we know-have come across men and women humping in parked cars, on beaches, in parks, in public

swimming pdols, at parties, etc. Public displays of affection and sexuality are certainly not confined to homosextials. Furthermore, just because a person is different from you does not mean he/she hat a psychological disorder. If’ you want to “treat” people with a different sexual preference from yours, perhaps you should also treat people with different religions, cultures, and political leanings. Perhaps you would like to see a society such as the one portrayed in George Orwell’s 1984. Now we all know that homosexual haters are people too; they have their rights, but we wish more could be done to keep these f‘ag bashers from harra?;sing gays. We wish we could keen their sob stories out of the papers. As a matter of decency, PLEASE, we have all had enough. Michele House Heike Krass lam Ptolemy Deborah Bolf

To the editor:

.

~

There is a pr.oblem, and it is homophobia. We arc faced with this problem everwhere we go. Everyone will t-urn a page in Imprint and see another letter of a straight person trying to get accepted as literate and wondering why he is not. 1 was sitting in the ALLOW Coffeehouse meeting a- couple of’ weeks ago, when a straight guy walked in and almost shat. Oh, everybody treated it as a -joke but we sure hope hc made it to the bathroom in time. To think of or visualise a sex act involving two men is kind of‘f‘un. People 1 know, and 1,do it all the time. It’s even more f’un b,hen you don’t have some idiot‘s kids staring at you. Admitting that you go to UW, you sometim& get comments like “. . .hOW do YOU COPC with ,

To the editor: Re: Blair MacDonald’s letter of Feb. 14th. 1986 This is one straight guy that Blair does not speak for. Blair says that homosexuals probably have an incurable mental disorder and, as such, they are a problem to us “normal” people. Homosexuality may or may not be a physical or mental disorder, 1 don’t know or care. 1 do know that homosexuals are people (even Blair admits this) and deserve equality with everyone else. Discrimination of any kind is disgusting. 1 heard one girl last term say homosexuals shouldn’t be allowed around because the Bible said men belonged with women. What terrif‘ic logic. On a work term 1 had in South Africa, a minister of the Dutch Reformed Church (not connected with the Dutch Reformed Church of the Netherlands) told me that apartheid had a basis in the Bible. It was right because God was behind it. 1 guess that we can do anything we want as long as religion $ustifies it (Ayatollah

Khomeini

loves that one), or if we are doing

the,best thing for society. The Nazis used the last one to justify killing off six million Jews.

the rednecks?” In order f‘or a species to survive or reproduce, there is inbred a certain sexual desire for members of’ the opposite sex. Thank God f’or breeders: it’s a dirty job, but somebody’s got to do it. There exist people with this desire all screwed up. Thank God for that too, otherwise where would 1 be on a Saturday night? Now we all know that homophobics are people so they have rights and there is nothing we can do to make sense of‘the letters they write. But as a matter of’ decency, please, we have all had enough. 1 am sorry if’anybody’s feelings are hurt, but you’d better get a grip on your sphincter, Blair: we’re here, and we’re staying put. Nicholas Dobbing - li planning 2B

So discrimination is o.k. as long as it is only against homosexuals. How many ways could we classify Blair as an undesirable deviant

from “normal

society?”

Bruce James 4B Geo Eng To the editor: Here we go again... 1 had preptired a lengthy and vehement response to Blair MacDonald’s letter of February 14. Please allow me to excerpt one line: “Blair, 1 have gay friends, and so do you. They’re just not stupid enough to tell you.” With the exception of‘thc above, 1 will defer to the philosophy of

Ann Landers; ideas as ignorant and disgusting as Mr. MacDonald’s are best lef’t to speak for themselves. Sean Richens 3A Chemical Engineering

,


9

jUEM/S

hnprint,

Student Ahisoiy

Friday,

Februdy

2l,lS86

,-

Council:.

More than one.way-s.toget in the SAC

by Brett Martin and Sue Young SAC Representaties There’s more than one way to get into the SAC. Besides the Fed Hall way, there’s also the Student Advisory Council to the Department of Coordination and Placement (called SAC for short and ‘cause it sounds neat). A famous philosopher, Webster, once said: SAC (sak) n. A group of students who meet bi-weekly (while on campus) to discuss possible improvements to the way things are run by Coordination and Placement. SAC is comprised of four students each from the Math and Engineering faculties and two from each of the other four faculties. Although full for this term, anyone may join SAC in future terms by attending ‘the first meeting of each term, usually the second Tuesday, at 4:30 pm, in Needless Hall Rm 1029. Co-op questions, problems or ideas can be voiced to your faculty rep. through your student societies, by tracking them down from their pictures (ugh!) hanging near the receptionist in Needles Hall (ugh!), or by contacting the student coordinator at Needless Hall at ext. 4064 or on the outside line at 888-4064. This term our student coordinator is Patti. Shapton. Things to Note: Due to staff constraints (read this as underfunding):

- Late postings will no longer be colour-coded by faculty - ‘Resume writing workshops will only be open to graduating students. New for 1986: - An N/A column will be added as column six on student evaluation forps since not all areas covered by the form apply to all students. - there is now an orientation s^eminar on sexual harassment. Times and dates of sessions can be found from the receptionist in Needles Hall. Ideas Presently Being Worked On: .-- combining all information and pamphlets into one big handbook, as useful as the undergraduate calendar. - Further changes to the evaluation form - The idea of employer evaluations by the student. SAC ALSO

Program Arts CAllA

HAS PLACEMENT

o/i:placed Spring 85 - Arts

Engineering Architecture Man Environment/

Geography HKLS Math . Science Overall Placed: 97.2%

by Cindy Long - Last summer I had a vegetable garden. It was the first garden I’d ever had and I- was incredibly excited at the prospect of eating fresh vegetables all summer and generally “getting back to the earth.” Unfortunately, reality hasa nasty way of squashing the dreams of amateurs. My “garden plot” is an abysmally small (about 7’ x 5‘ or less) patch of dry, clay-encrusted earth against the northwest facing wall of the house. Extending it was out of the question t since-someone had the brilliant idea of paving almost our entire backyard so cars could park. The “front yard” is even smaller and faces a busy street and the side is full of stones. Undaunted by space and light restrictions and, armed with a copy of the Ontario Seed Catalogue, a rusty earth rake, and visions of flourishing lettuce and beans, 1 began my garden. After I’d added manure and topsoil and turned the earth, 1 had to sit back and wait until it was warm enough to slant the seeds. While waiting, 1 yanked a bag of potato&, which was quickly becoming a bush, out of the basement; and planted the squishy spuds at the side in the *tony soil. F&ally, May 24 arrived and 1 planted beans, lettuce,,carrots, cucumbers and three pumpkin seeds, On impulse, I planted sunflower seeds in the front along with marigolds, alyssum and, later, tomatoes. -Well .. . the beans sprouted. So did the pumpkins. in fact, all three pumkins began growing at an alarming rate, their vines quickly covering the rest of the tiny plot. (I’m a city girl, what do 1 know about pumpkins?) 1 found out later that carrots prefer sandy soil and 1 planted too early. (My plot wasn’t warm enough yet because of its location). 1 reskeded for cucumbers and lettuce and actually had a few good salads from the lettuce in late August. The beans never produced enough at oie time for even one meal, but 1 had afree Jack ‘0’ Lantern by Hallowe’en. No cucumbers, one tiny carrot, about ten tomatoes and a incredible crop of sunflower seeds tells the rest of the tale. The moral of the story‘? We don’t reap what we don’t sow properly. 1 should have hone some reading. However, 1 had fun, the-flowers looked nice and what a pleasant surprise when, in late September, I was digging up the side where the potato.bushes has died only to discover about 5 lbs. of small potatoes buried in the shallow dirt! They were sweet and delicious. Curious as -to why I had no bug problems, 1 perused the local library and found out that I had inadvertently taken advantage of a technique @hereby you plant certain crops next to other ones to repel certain insects. Beginner’s luck. 1 know summer seems far away, but now’s the time to start %reading and planning if you think you want to try your hand at growing your own. The public library has a wide selection of books on vegetable gardening, composting, etc. As well, Mother Earth News articles often contain valuable gardening tips. 1 certainly plan to try again, minus the pumpkins. Anyone know where 1 can borrow a .iack-hammer?

9

l[mprint!

Current

Janet Cann Jonathan Coleman

STATISTICS

No. looking for jobs Summer 86

No. of -jobs open (as of Feb. II)

97.3 98.6 96.6 100.0

152

148

843

863

88.4 99.0 97.7 97.2

60 60 505 254

7.1 71 881 .249

Thomas Corn Marion Cunningham Nathalene Fong Stan Foo Sherry Hedden Sheri-Lynn Kane Scott Kelly Brett Martin (chairman) Anne McNeil1 Brian Murphy

2A 3A 3B 4B 4B 3A 4B 3A 4B 4B

Engineering Recreation Mathematics Arts Math Kinesiology Arts Math Rectreation Math

John Pasternak 2B Planning Sarah Rocci _ 2A Engineering Matt Snell ’ 2A Systems Design Patti Shapton Student Coordinator Rob Soosaar 3B Physics Henrietta Veerman 1B Arts Sue Young 3A Geography Watch here for future SAC articles. The next SAC meeting will be Tuesday, Feb. 25, at 4:3O in Needles hall, Rm. 1029. Anyone may attend (and participate). P.S. contract run to contact

Did you know: Students who work for UW directlv ” or on a basis can get a cash advance to avoid the month-long poverty their first pay-cheque. Students wishing an advance should the payroll office well before they start work.

.-.

SAC Representatives

\.

4B Recreation 2A Engineering

Model U.N. at York is a success by Lois Harris Over 400 representatives from 28 universities, including UW, gathered at the Inn on the Park in Toronto last weekend to attend Ontario’s first North American Model United Nations (NAMUN). York University sponsored the four-day event which involved comprehensive committee dealings with such topics as the Iran-Iraq war, apartheid in South Africa, the use of chemical warfare, and the prevention of hijacking. Waterloo’s eightmember delegation represented Mexico and the Palestine Liberation Organization at the meetings. Most of the committes held vigorous and enlightened debates despite chronic problems with misinterpretations of the rules of procedure which tended to hold up the proceedings. On Friday, the speaking status of accredited bbservers was denied in an unendorsed memoraridum from the SecretaryGeneral. An inquiry requested by Waterloo’s PLO delegation resulted in a formal apology and full reinstatement from the Secretary-General1 The conference daily newspaper was used as a catalyst to report a Libyan-sponsored hijacking. In the simulated event, a TWA flight en route from New York to Tel Aviv was forced down from international airspace over the Mediterranean to Tripoli. Libya’s Colonel

Khadafy promised to release the 250%passengers as soon as it was determined that no “Zionist entities” were on board. Security Council was called to an emergency meeting at 7:OO am. on Saturday, and the situation was resolved by Saturday evenmg. In another landmark decision, the International Court of Justice ruled in favoi of Argentina’s sovereignty over the FalkOn Friday * land Islands. evening, a formal dinner was followed by a speech by Stephen Lewis, Canada’s permanent ambassador to the U.N. Lewis spoke on the importance of the U.N. as an international forum, Canada’s diplomatic coup in declaring sol’ereignty over the entire Arctic, and the fact that Canada does not display a “knee-jerk” response to the United States’ voting behaviour. He also commented on the lack of female personnel at the U.N. and this became the subject of some bantering during the question period. The London School of Economics was given the best delegation award and individual delegate awards went to such schools as Tufts College (Boston), University of Victoria, University of Saskatchewan, and York University. The sponsors of NAMUN are planning a second a”nnua1 conference. A similar model is being held in Montreal in July, 1986, and another in Saskatchewan in 1988.

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f~ -mN EWS.

Imprint,

Friday,

February

21, 19SS

-PCs need to.be.as common as calculators ’ ’

by Gary Timoshenko Imprint staff The experiment with students using laptop computers is showing promise and in future could become a common sight on campus, said Dr. Dan Cowan, a UW computer science professor in a presentation made Wednesday February L9

to approximately 40 interested professors. Last year, Hewlett Packard announced it would donate 300 battery powered Portable Plus computers to U W. The machine weighs nine pounds and can be carried like a small briefcase. It has a flip-up 25 line screen, a 896 K memory and retails for

iUNIQUE...

$3,660. Cowan, coordinator of the prqject, says the experimental uses in the hands of students have worked well. Last l‘ali, 30 of Cowan’s CS240 students were given the computers to take home. Although the machine had some drawbacks, students agreed that portability

was a big plus. l‘his was expecially true for out-or-town students who had had to commute to Waterloo to do their assignments. The unlimited availability was also noted as an asset. The project has applied for a $1 million grant from the Canadian_ government. Cowan is ‘very hopeful’ about this grant.

Already the 300 Hewlett Packard laptops are ‘spoken for’ by various professors. The grant will allow for the aquisition of more computers but not necessarily from Hewlett Packard. Various companies have expressed interest. This would allow a comparison of products and hopefully a lower price.

ANY WAY YOU SERVEIT

Cowan feels the problem with UW’s computer environment is constrained use and limited resources. He would like to see computers as readily available as calculators. The solution he says, would be to buy, everyone a computer. This is unrealistic because of‘ cost, space, obsolescence, power, air conditioning and convenience. The computers would hav,e to be located on campus because of‘ the need to communicate with the university mainframes. The portable lap computer is a possible solution to this. It would solve the problems 01 space, power and air conditioning. Convenience wouldn’t be a problem. l‘he portables can be plugged into a mainl‘rame and all the inlormation the student needs .can be extracted to be taken home and worked on later. Cost and obsolescence would be harder to deal with but Cowan has a solution. It inv,olves students buying their own computers. Cowan states it is not as bad as it sounds. He recalls when calculators came out students would have to line up in class to use them. As the price came down and students got tired 01 standing in line, they started buying their own. He hopes the same will happen with portables. He says he expects the cost of’ a lap computer to fall to the $1,000 - $2,000 range. At some U.S. universities students are already required to buy a home computer. The laptop computer system could be developed to include local area networks, and/or a cellular telephone system, making visits to school unnecessary. Other issues were raised, such as locking the school into computer technology that may not allow the development ot’ critical thinking. The experiment is -just in its infant stages but its possibilities have caused these questions to be raised. Currently Biology 461 and Recreation 429 are, the classes using the portables.

1

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your interestsand your age (18-35s only). ’ Wardair’sContiki tours draw young people from around the world, so you’re sure to meet an interesting rangeof new friends. No one’sgoing to force you to traipse around endlessold, cold buildingseither Contiki tours are planned to appeal to your interests,and if you’d rather plan some of your own activities,that’s okay too. Toursrange from 13to 65 days,and can cover most of the high spotsof Europeand Britain.,A WardairContiki tour is as much fun as you can handle! YourTravelAgent has the new Wardair Contiki brochure and all the information you’ll need to plan to leavehome on the . trip of a lifetime.

In its continuing series 01‘ “Brown Bag Seminars” on careers, the University of’ St. Jerome’s College Alumni Association will sponsor Liberal Arts and the Media on Wednesday, February 26, from I I:30 am. to 12:20 pm. 1 his free carter seminar takes place in the Common Room on the main floor of’ St. Jerome’s College. Students arc asked only to bring their lunch and their questions. Liberal Arts and the Media features St. Jerome’s alumnus Paul Bowen (RA ‘81). a graduate 01’ the Honours English program at the College. Since his graduation, he has worked extensively in television news, first as an Assistant News Producer with the Cl V l’elevision Network and currently as Senior on-AirProducer (Network Relations) at CL’V. Bowen will discuss the ways in which his liberal arts training has prepared him for his present occupation. “‘Our Brown Hag Seminars on Careers try to.show students some o!’ the non-traditional fields Ii beral arts graduates have been able to pursue,” says Alumni Director Rob Donelson. “Paul Bowen’s interesting work ‘in ‘the media will expose students to some intriguing career possibilities.” ’ For more details, contact Robert Donelson, Director of Alumni Af’f’airs, University of’ St. Jerome’s College, Waterloo, Ontario K2L 3Ci3 (519) 8848110, ext. 81.


NEWS.

-

/_

Imprint,

Friday,

February

21,. 1986 -

ore harsh realities of Blacks t,y M.A. Morley f myrint staff

Geceni advertising J~OU‘lyeseen on f’b and in travei~brwhures /Ias ,“,’/ l’etl ;‘ou but II laste of Sourh Ajrica j lreusures. Undoubtrd/w\9, (fur c*uriositml- is uroused und -I*OU M’an[ io jkrther explore [his ~:lu,~nl/icrnt land. here then, is u suggested itinerarUr... South Africa Adventure (2nd Class) L‘ome explore the many facets of this great country of contrasts. i ake time to stop over and en-i.oy the beautiful scenery and warm. Tunny beaches. A voyage of discovery awaits . . . a holiday to rcmember. We leave Johannesburg and make our first stop in Ateridgeville, -,ust west of Pretoria. Here. South Africa’s rich history is being written before our eyes as police courageously whip ungrateful Black women armed with slogans and chants, who have-gathered ‘ilegally to demonstrate against apartheid. Our next stop is the site of the famous battle of Sharpeville. it was here in 1960 that police successfully defended our colourf‘ui naLional diversity against an illegally gathered group of Black South ‘Iiricans who had quietly presented themselves at a police station without their passes in a criminal protest of the law. Overwhelmed

by racial passion, police opened fire;killing 69 and wounding 178 oi the unarmed agitators. Some were even shot in the back, a testament to the emotion which must have blurred the visions of the police at this time of their greatest concern for the well-being of the nation. By now. you areJust aching to visit Soweto, a Black township just a short hop from the comforts of Johannesburg. Soweto is famous f‘or the architectural ingenuity its inhabitants display in modelling . homes out 01 rags and corrugated tin. As in most Black settlements, the inhabitants here are a hearty bunch, doing wtthout adequate 8 running water. sewage systems, health care, schools, employment. clothing, food, and last, but not least, swimming pools. Perhaps wre can now whet your whistle for an expedition through one of the Black homelands. Apartheid, our answer to the rich blend of Zulu. Asian and European cultures here in South Africa, has graciously assigned each of our 23 million Blacks to a,homeland or “Bantustan.” Comprising roughly. 13o/i of South Africa’s land area. these homelands embody some of the most uncluttered, natural desert to be found anywhere. Watch as the “banned” and the scratch a pestilential existence out of the dust. , “superfluous” Now. back to the hotel for a stiff drink. Careful not to speak out against apartheid: your stay may be indefinitely extended.

- \ -:

ix UW

Six‘ professors in the f-aculty of Arts at the University of Waterloo are among the last to be awarded Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSH RCC) Pellowships for 1986: 87. The highly c ompetitive f‘ellowships are worth $10,000 each. in addition to travel and research expenses. The fellowship program has been discontinued by SSHRCC due to a continulrg problem of’ underfundirig‘ currently affecting Canadian universities and their granting agencies. The six UW Arts professors and their respective research titles are: Michael Craton (History), Social History of the Bahamas; Larry Haworth (Philosophy), Autonomy, Coercion and Manipulation;. John Holmes (Psychology), Trust and Conflict in Close Personal Relationships; Donald Meichenbaum (Psychology), Stress and Coping; Ken Rubin (Psychoiogy j, Socialization of Social Competence; and Sally Weav.er (Anthropology), IVational Pressure Groups of Canadian Indians and Australian Aborigines: A Comparative Study of Reform in the Mid1980’s. Robin Banks, Dean of Arts, expressed both pleasure and disappointment in making the fellowship announcements. “On the one hand we’re naturally elated that as many as six of our Arts professors wereselected to receive these highly competitive fellowships . . . the success rate of our applications was 75 per cent, considerably above the national average of about 40 per cent for this competition,” Banks said. “But at the same time, we’re most disappointed by the apparent cancellation of the fellowship program by SSHRCC due to the continued underfunding problem. “It’s unfortunate that fine academics in Canada have to endure the short-sightedness of governments. By cutting back on research funding, you not only lower the morale of some of Canada’s best professors, often forcing them to look to much more rewarding research offers from U.S. institutions, but aiso limit the intellectual / growth of the nation as a whole,” Banks added. The UW recipients will use their fellowships to help support their research programs over the coming year; their teaching duties will be handled by substitutes for the duration of the fellowships.

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NEWS

.

_

_ Jmprint,

_ Friday,

’ FebruaG

21, 1986 -

Boarding Houses

Pressure for 1

Somebody went to a 1st of work to get his Valentine’s message to Diana. This billboard-sized Photo by Dave Merchant love note appeared over University Ave. overpass last Friday.

The adminstration, Boards of Governors, faculty and staff members and students of the University of Waterloo and Wilftid Laurier University wish to express their sincere gratitude to the following members of the Kitchener-Waterloo business community. These companies have each made a personal pledge toward maintaining the excellence of WLU and UW. Their donations, as part of the ongoing

TORONTO (CUP) -- Mary, a student at Ryerson Polytcchnical Institute, discovered that she had overpaid her landlord for a room in a boarding house. When she asked for a rebate, the landlord locked up her possessions and kicked her out. Curtis, a Waterloo student was told by his landlords that he couldn’t have visitors to his rooming house. He didn’t protest because he knew he could be told to leave. If‘ Mar) and Curtis were tenants in an apartment building, their rights would have been protected urider the province’s landlord-tenant act. Since they lived in a boarding or rooming house though, they were at the mercy of the proprietors. Unlike tenants, roomers and boarders can be ec icted at a momerit‘s notice, be hit with rent increases at any time, for any amount, and have their privacy

violated by the landlord. Recently, students ’ have joined forces with community groups to push for legislation to give Ontario’s 80- 100,000 roomers and boarders the sam’e rights as tenants. “It’s a fundamental right, or should be, to have a good. clean place to live,” said Matt Certosimo, student council president at Wilt‘rid Laurier University. W LU and the Ontario Federation of’ Students, along with community groups in I‘oronto, ha\,e sent the government a list of‘ proposed changes to the Landlord and Tenant Act and the Residential Tenancies Act, which governs rent control. l‘he amendments are mainly slight wording changes that would include roomers and boarders under existing - legislati,on. Last fall, housing minister Alcin Curling announced he

We’re for You campaign, will be alpplied equally to the development programmes of Waterloo’s outstanding universities.

APPAREL Athlete’s Foot. The Brodey-Draimin Furs (Kit) Ltd. Collins House of Formals Dack’s Shoes .llz;!;e’s Fashions Kabel’s of Kitchener Lashbrook’s Footwear Lena Klare Boutique Pants Plus Paul Puncher Men’s Clothier . Rav Delion Mens Wear Ltd. Saiah’s Classics/Maternally Yours Scapinello Clothiers Star Men’s Shops Zacks Fashions Ltd. APPLIANCES/FURNITURE1 LIGHTING Beam of Canada Inc. G. Beam & Co. Mattresses Living Lighting MacDonald Electric Ltd. Rentacolor TV Rentals Schreiter’s Furniture Store Ltd. Snugglers Furniture Steve’s TV 8 Appliances Ltd. Tawco Ltd, W H Furniture Washerama & Appliance Centre Ltd. Waterbed King Ltd., The

Ming Auto Beauty Centre Parkway Ford Sales Ltd. Queensway Auto Body Ltd. Radman, The Randal Motor Sales Inc. Schleuter Chevrolet Oldsmobile Ltd. Schlichter’s Ltd. Star Weber Motors Inc. Waterloo Mazda Waterloo Toyota Ltd. Wendell Motor Sales Ltd. BUSINESS MACHINES/ FURNISHINGS/SYSTEMS Add-Type Business Equipment Ltd. Advance Business Equipment Ltd. Brenneman Filing Systems Ltd. Total Office Machines Ltd. Twin City Copiers Inc. Two-Way Communications Ltd. COMPUTERS A B Compvtor Services Ltd. Computer Junction Computerland Data Terminal Sales (Canada) Ltd. Desktop Computer Inc. Home Computer Centre Lyons Logic Ltd. Waitronics FLORISTS Camerons Flower Shop Flowers n’ Fancies Inc. Laura Sharpe Flowers Ltd. Plant Lady, The Schnarr Florists

ARTSICRAFTSIGIFTS Artstore of Waterloo Ltd., The Cloth a Clay Framing Experience, The Gallery lndi ena Inc. Household i?hina 4%Gifts Racca’s Art Supplies

FOOD OUTLETS/SERVICES Bill’s Super Variety Buns Master Bakery, Waterloo Diolomat Coffee Svstem Domino’s Pizza * Donutland bv Girls & Co. Forwell S&r Variety of Waterloo Ltd. Fung Won6 Chinese-Food Godfather Pizza & Subs. The Kasemann Cheese Shob. The Kentucky Fried Chickeri - The Twins Little Short Stop Stores Ltd. M & M Meat Shops Ltd. Mat’s Convenience Stores Mr. Grocer New Orleans Pizza Red Carpet Coffee Services San Francesco Foods Sonny’s Drive-In Ltd. T & J Seafoods Ltd. The Cone Shoppe

AUTOMOBILES Active Towing Service Automotive Lube Shop Ltd. B & L Motors Ltd. B-K of Waterloo Dettmer Tire 8 Auto Centre Fourway Automotive Ltd. K-W Midas Muffler Shops Maaco Auto Painting & Bodyworks

HAIRSTYLISTS Aoole II Hairstvlists C&t & Dried H&r Care G 8 T Men’s Hairstyling House of Elegance Mahler’s Hairstylists Razor Edae of Waterloo. The Terence flair Design Ltd. Westmount Place Unisex

John Weir, President Wilfrid Lautier University

HARDWARE Ontario Seed Co. Ltd. Westmount Home Hardware & Variety Wilkinson Home Hardware HOME IMPROVEMENT/BUILDING MATERIALS/SPECIALTY EQUIPMENT A to Z Rental Center Acadian Upholstery & Interior Aves & Shaw Ltd. Beaver Lumber Cunningham’s Color Centre Eldorado Plywood Specialties Inc. Guy’s interiors Ltd. Hand Pools Waterloo Heibein Quality Upholstering Hill a Glasser Ltd. Honsberger Lumber Inc. Innovation Paints Ltd. Interior Woodcraft Ltd. John’s Nurserv John’s Paintinb & Decorating Ltd. Len Koebel Flooring Ltd. Loschmann F, Plumbing b ieating Palmer Design Group, The Reitzel Bros. Ltd. Snider Plvwood Soecialties Ltd. Strassbuiger lnsuiation Ltd. Triangle Insulation Inc. Twin City Tile Co. Ltd. Vic Sellner Ltd. HOTELS/MOTELS Holiday Inn Kitchener Journey’s End Motel Valhalla Inn JEWELLERS Dunnette Jewellers Ltd. Hatashita Jewellers King’s Jewellers & Goldsmiths Ltd. Ostranders Jewellers Walters Jewellers Ltd LEISURE/RECREATION Central Ontario Cycle McPhail’s Cycle & Sports Ltd. 0 W Soorts Ltd. Pioneer Sportsworld Inc. Records on Wheels Riordon Ski a Sport Centres Sam the Record Man Sportco of Kitchener Ltd. Twin City Bowl Webco Sports Ltd. Wunderlich Amusements Ltd. PHARMACIES Campus Pharmacy Hahn Pharmacy Parkdale Pharmacy Ltd. University Pharmacy Westmount Place Pharmacy PHOTOGRAPHY . B J Photo Labs Bent’s Cameras, Westmount Place Forde Studio

Douglas Wright, President University of Waterloo

Heer’s Camera Shop Inc. PersonalStudio Reprints Inq. RESTAURANTS Angie’s Kitchen Black Forest Inn Chadd’s, Hotel Waterloo Chances R E;tt~z;l* t Steak House Dairy Queen Brazier Restaurant Edelweiss Restaurant & Tavern Grandma Lee’s Harvev’s Restaurant Waterloo Fili -;;‘s Dining Lounge .3 Knotty Pine Restaurant, The Krebs Restaurants Lantern Restaurant McDonald’s Restaurants of Canada McGinnis Landing Mina’s Restaurant Mor?r’s O’Toole’s Roadhouse Restaurant Olde Enalish Parlour Pasta’s l&a & Spaghetti House Shin Shin Restaurant Simon’s Place Smitty’s Pancake House & Tavern Swiss Chalet Wah Min Restaurant Waterlot ii estaurant, The Wharf Restaurant, The -VP

.STEREOS Anderson Sound Mr. Stereo Natural Sound Shops TAVERNS/ENTERTAINMENT Coronet Motor Hotel Heidelber Hotel Kent Hate9 Lancaster Tavern Taps, Hotel Waterloo TRAVEL/TRANSPORTATION ABC’s of Travel Service Airways Transit Holiday Rent-A-Car System Motz Travel Noel Sedman Travel Service Tilden Rent-A-Car Service United Trails Waterloo Taxi Ltd. . VIDEO Movie World Take 1 Video Corp. Video Station . Video Works Videoflicks Videos

Pre-registration All currently registered undergraduate students intending to enrol in undergraduate programs in May, July and September 1986, should pre-register with their department/ faculty advisor, March 3-7, 1986.1nl’ormation regarding ad\ isors, times and places is listed in. the Course Offerings List. Separate lists have been prepared for Fall and Spring: Summer. They can be obtained during the preregistration period from the department/ faculty ,offices. Pre-registration allows you to select in March the courses that you wish to take in the May, July and September 1986 sessions. If you are thinking of changing faculties next term, you should contact the appropriate advisor of the faculty to which you wish to transfer. Undergraduate calendars for I986117should be available from the Registrar’s Office -in Needles Hall by the end of February.

On behalf of UW and WLU, we would iike to say an enthusiastic “Thank You” to all of these companies for their 1985 gifts, and to encourage our faculty and staff mem”bers, students and visitors to express their appreciation when supporting our business friends in the K-W area.

Donors to the “We’re for You” Campaign in 1985 Acorn Fire & Safety Ltd. Action Air Conditioning & Refrigeration Inc. Bob Grav Music Ltd. Chapmah Sewing Centre Duthler Textiles Edward R. Good Funeral Home Ltd. G & A Lock Service Ltd. Gallagher Moving lncom Construction (1977) Ltd. Lea Craft McDougall Signs Inc. Records Retention Centre * Towers Department Stores Transylvania Club Wail’s Piano & Organ House Words Worth Books Wordsmith, The

reform was setting up a committee to study the best methods of protectmg boarders and roomers. Students are hoping to be represented on the committee and to make submissions before it. Students, along with the poor, disabled, aged and sick, are attracted to rooming and boarding houses by the low rents, said Susan Campbell of ?.oronto’s Parkdale Cgmmunity Legal Services. However, she added that students are more apt to have trouwith landlords. eten bles though the conditions they lice in may not be any different. “(Students) may not put up with as much shit as some of the other boarders and lodgers,” she said.

?

Kin symposium 1 hc Kincsiology Student Association will bc hosting a symposium on the topic 01‘ Kinesiology at Work on March 6 in the Humanities Theatre. Proltissionals will give prcsentations on rehabilitation exercise, biomechanics, occupational injuries, ergonomics, and kinesiology and computer usability. Rcgistration lees are $3 l‘or students and $6 for others and registration may take place in the KSA otlice (BM H 2324) or by contacting Sue Dakin at 8X6-8639.

Graduating? Undergraduate students expecting to graduate at the spring convocation, May 29,30,3 1 1986 must submit an “Intention to Graduate” form. The forms can be obtained from the Office of the Registrar, Ira G. Needles Hall, or from the department offices. If you submitted a form earlier in the year for the Spring 1986 convocation, you need not submit a new form.

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The Guild Show:

Fine Arts students by Chris Wodskou imprint staff The Guild Show, now showing at St. Jerome’s College Library, gives testimony to the high level of talent in the UW Fine Arts Department. Featuring paintings by about a dozen second and third year Fine Arts students, the works exhibited were selected by a jury of two Fine Arts faculty members and one Fine Arts student and show a great variety in terms of themes covered and techniques used. The only thing the different paintings could really be said to have in common is that none would look out of place in a legitimate art gallery.

Tim Perlich’s Mother & C&Id #3 is one of the most concrete works displayed, but it is one of the most oddly disturbing as well. The stark background of blue and white gives a strange feeling of foreboding blankness to the painting while the tilt of the plainly adorned woman and child imbue it with an uncomfortably tight tension. The Bison Hunt, by Jack Lefcourt, is reminiscent of a’scene in some demented monster flick, with a mangy horde of identical “Coronet mutants” leaving their cars with fuzzy dice hanging from the mirror and heading for an unknown destination. The garishness of the yellows and reds provide a striking contrast totheiong-haired,black-cad‘people”. The fiery red bodies in Brent Clark’s Meat Is Murder take you out of the realm of black humour and into that of the strangely sinister. Hanging by their feet over a strangely unconcerned person lying in bed, they contrast vividly against the blue and green background. The bold, strong brushstrokes add to the effect by giving the whole thing a sort of claustrophobic feeling. The paintings by Joel Perron and Lori Mckim turn the tables yet again, being almost antithetical .to the other paintings discussed. Perron’s untitled paintings are subdued pictures of slowly, but gracefully flowing, longhaired nudes which seem to undulate languidly on the canvas. HoIIey’s Comet Ouer Waterloo, by Mckim, ‘is a more dream-like

display

wares

c

l

I ffagood

deal

all

a

round 99

Stratford’s by Sue Baker Imprint staff This summer, the University of Waterloo will clear the stage and welcome into the spotlight Stratford’s Young Company. - The Young Company, a group of fourteen “well-seasoned” professional actors in classical training, will ‘provide the core of a six week in-company residency here at UW, commencing September 2nd. The ensemble will share their

Monkeyshines

proved only in principle- to this date) will allow Young Company members to work with UW drama students each morning for possibly three hours, five days a week. Prepared with four shows ready to go (including MacBeth), . Young Company members could spend their afternoons rehearsing for the general public or high school audiences. Saturdays may include working with “community” actors, and the sixth and final

Dou$as

Rubes

photo:

Mckim’s Jack

Trendy Locks, Stuart has been aware of every intimate detail of Dorothy’s life since he was eight. Stuart never stopped loving DOrothy, although he gives up chasing her when he finds out she is engaged to be married. Decades later, after seeing Dorothy at a high school reunion, Stuart decides to resume his pursuit, but with a difference. For the first time Stuart has decided to make himself known and confront Dorothy with his secret feelings. Dorothy is a separated and, later, widowed mother of two whose daughter seeks to watch over and comment on her every action, and whose son treats her with as much enthusiasm as his .morning prune juice. Dorothy and Stuart eventually encounter one another when Stuart makes his way into her living room where he addresses her for the first time in 40 years. It is not until they have known each other for several days that she finally remembers him as the “Stuey Reese who combs his hair with-axle grease.” It is the Stuart with whom she become-s acquainted throughout the rest of the play that she grows to love.

Susan Douglas Rubes and James B. Douglas should be given due credit for exceptional performances, keeping the audience enchanted (and a little out of breath) for two light-hearted hours. With delicately balanced movement and dialogue, the two mismatched

“Halley’s

Lefcourt’s

Comet “The

over

Bison

piece. Done entirely in rectangular blocks of colour, it has a vague sense of unreality about it, sort of like a picture on a TV screen. These are just a few highlights of The

Waterloo.”

Hunt.”

Photos

by Chris

Wodskou

Guild Show and all the artists selected are deserving of the exposure they are being given. The exhibition runs until Friday, February 28.

to come to UW

week of the residency would be geared to performances for high and workshops school students. During this week less emphasis would be placed on working with UW drama students. This tentative project, set for the week commencing after Labour Day, will cost the university an estimated $125,000. Dan Donaldson, manager of the UW Arts Centre says that, although no money has been raised to

prod.uction

Stuart is eventually triumphant in convincing Dorothy that she is still capable of loving and being loved, and, through one another, Dorothy and Stuart gain an acceptance of middle age. ’

/Susan

Lori

Left

Young Company

talents with UW drama students, community theatre aclocal high school tors, students, and the general public. Details of the company’s involvement with UW drama students remain to be worked out, but second and third year students may reap the benefits of taking specially designed credit courses, which involve working directly with Young Company actors. The tentative concept (ap- ’

by Sue Baker Imprint staff Miserable weather conditions were not capable of dampening ail souls on the campus Tuesday evening, as the play Monkeyshines lifted the spirits of a small but appreciative audience in the Humanities Theatre. The crowd, filling barely a quarter of the auditorium, was undoubtedly rewarded as the three person show of Susan Douglas Rubes (Dorothy), James B. Douglas (Stuart) and a silent “senile” cactus delighted all. The romantic comedy centres around two middleaged singles, Dorothy and Stuart. The play starts out as Stuart seeks Dorothy for the ‘first time in 40 years. Since his youth, Stuart has been in love with Dorothy, a woman three <years his senior. Presently a bachelor and a hairdresser working for

Above:

date, funds will come from both box office sales, and corporate sponsorship.Although considerable funding is needed to see the project through, the move is generally seen as beneficial to all those involved New Professor W.R. Chadwick, Chairman of the Drama Department, sees the move as “a good deal ail around”. Not only will UW drama students be allowed to work with

highly qualified actors, he said, but Stratford players will enjoy another six weeks -of employment. Both community actors and high school students will be enriched by viewing performances or at tending workshops of the Young Company. If ail goes well, it is hoped that this mutually beneficial relationship will bloom into a two or three year contract.

lifts spirits characters final result

blend together with ease and the is somewhat delightful.

The pastel-hued country style set designed by Reginald Bronskili enhances Dorothy’s somewhat relaxed and simple country iifestyle. An added bonus to the plot and setting comes from a most unique cactus which has the ability to ignite audience involvement by the mere opening and closing of its flowers. Under the production and-directional powers of Toby Tarnow and. J.P. Linton (they recently broke box office- records at the St. Lawrence Centre in Toronto with Bernard Slade’s most recent play, Fatal Attraction), Monkeyshines is a treat to the senses and instils a feeling of carefree rejuvenation within its audience.

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At1 fears were exploded upon hearing Brian Ritchie’s familiar bass - throbbing- ori a speed. .. of-light groove while Gordon Gano squealed the greatest anti-Reagan protest song ever recorded in less than 30 seconds:

album’s producer and former Modern Lover Jerry Harrison on organ. Those boogie-woogie gospel-tinged blues are back and proud on the spiritually charged Fh~th, complete with a sing-a-long chorus. If you thought that Gordon Gano sounded like Lou Reed, wait till you hear Brian Ritchic’s vocal debut on Love and Me Make *Three. Scooter commercials to follow. One of the stranger songs on the L.P. is Candlelight Song which has Fred Frith playing ‘homemade instruments’ and Abdtilhameed Alwan adding Arabic tabla and deff while Gordon swoops over the textured ground with Tim Buckley’s wings to enchanting effect. * Surely the album’s neatest lyric turn occurs in 1 Held Her In My Arms: 1 was with a girl but it felt like 1 was with a boy 1 can’t even remember if we were lovers or if 1 just wanted to. Gano is still peerless in the teen angst confusion department. The Femmes leave us with a final Good Feeling, closing the album with Two People, a charming nod to Lou Reed fading out with Lou’s favourite chord change. The Blind Leading The Naked furthers the development of the Violent Femmes sound built on Hallowed Ground, incorporating more instruments and larger bydget production qualities without forsaking any of the quirky lyrical directness that has endeared them to the hearts of millions (or thousands at least). Gordon- wouldn’t let you down.

by Tim Perlich Imprint staff Sam Cooke somebody other singers have to measu; themselves against, and most of them go back to pumping gas. -Keith Richards Following the exceptional Live At The Harlem Square L.P. of late last year, RCA has assembled a two record, 28-song digitally

remastered collection of Sam Cooke’s best known songs. Predictably, for major label cohpilations, it contains all of the hits that have appeared on just about every other Sam Cooke ‘Greatest’ package you’ve ever seen. You Send Me, Cupid, Wonderful World, and Having A Party are all here. It’s not to say that these aren’t precious moments, because there’s no question that they are, but I must admit I am a little tired of hearing Twistin’ The Night Away on yet another album. There are, however, a few unexpected peaches that RCA has thrown in to raise some interest. The fact that someone at RCA

by Tim Perlich Imprint staff Two yea_rs is a long time to wait, especially if it’s accompanied by a gut-gnawing anticipation. Fortunately, the Violent Femmes released their new L.P. The Blind Leading The Naked before any further unnecessary melodrama had a chance to slip into this introduction. After reading the WEA press release a few months ago which said something to the effect that the group’s new album had more of a commercially viable sound (or some equivalent music buzzwords), my approach to the new album came with a certain amount of hesitation.

impossibility of a happy relationship are still being plundered. Things Could Be Beautiful is, well, beautiful, as Terry sobs about how his wide-eyed, idyllic ideas have gotten him nowhere. But, as the title implies, there’s just the barest hint of optimism buried in his misery. Hall sometmies sounds like he’s overdoing it just a wee bit with the angst routine, but the urgency of his singing is always genuine. Frosty Morning follows with a vigorous burst of the unexpected. A romping bit of psuedo-rockabilly, guitarist Karl Shale does his best Johnny Marr impersonation in a song The Smiths would not be ashamed to call their own.

by Chris Wodskou Imprint staff Terry Hall would not be a fun guy to party with. An ex-Specials and Fun Boy Three singer and now front man for the Colourfield, Hall is even more of a chronically miserable moaner than Morrissey of the Smiths. One of the best, most touchingly incisive songwriters on the planet, he does not wallow in gratuitous self-pity, however; life for Terry Hall is a stark and often painful, unromantic reality. Things Could Be Beautiful, the fourtrack follow-up tg the excellent Virgins and Philistines, is considerably more upbeat than its predominantly glum predecessor, but The Colourfield’s themes of the seeming

But the real reason to buy this E.P. is Pushing Up The Daisies, which also appeared on Virgins. Probably. the best thing The Colourfield has ever recorded, the live version’s entrancing bass, Ravi Shankar guitar, 2nd Circa 1967 feedback, double the intensity of the scathing attack on the crass, love-ya-babe lifestyle of the rising star. The most striking thing about this E.P. is the new prominence given to the guitar, making light of Shale’s hitherto hidden talents. Where they went for a lush but concise sound before, they are now taking liberties for a more richly moody atmospheric effect such that one would almost think Daisies is an acid raveup. If this is any ’ indication of what is to come, I can’t wait for the next album.

by Tim Perlich Imprint staff The mere mention of ‘:Qospel music” is enough to make some people squirm in discomfort. It seems that, over the years, gospel has been enshrouded in a myth of religious and glazed-eyed fanaticism. Al dogma Green’s He Is The Light will hopefully put this fallacy to rest. Joining Green on the new albut% is Memphis producer extraordinaire Willie Mitchell, reuniting one of the most potent one-two punches in soul music history. Together with the Memphis Horns (including the tremetidously underrated Andrew Love on Tenor sax) and the Memphis Strings, they recapture the same slow-burning intensity that made songs like: Tired Of Being Alone, Let’s Stay Together, Talk To Me and 1 Stand Accused smoulder with intimacy. Like his work with Ann Peebles and Syl Johnson, Mitchell’s presence is felt in the slippery smooth mixes that are always kept taut and simple, avoiding the muddy qualities that can sometimes enter larger orchestrations such as this. Green is alllowed the freedom to soar above the instrumentation when testifying yet is accompanied with almost close conversation when he chooses to whisper. On the first side, True Love floats effortlessly on his bright falsettos while He 1s The Light bursts through with those familiar shouts of joy that never seem overwrought, ending with a swaggering, uptown tribute fo Sam Cooke in Be With Me Jesus. The second side features a new interpretation of the Clark Sisters’ You Brought The Sunshine and the incredibly restrained Power that threatens to bubble bver at any moment but remains firmly in Green’s clutches.

The

funky

vicar

burns

bright.

He Is The Light quakes with the vibrant emotion of Al Green’s most passionate beliefs. It would be a terrible mistake to let his vocabulary of taith get in the way of enjoying this enormously uplifting excursion.

has heard Touch The Hem Of His Garment and That’s Heaven To Me is startling in itself, let alone actually including these songs on the album. I’ll Come Running Back To You, Just For You and Loue Will Find A Way are also pleasant surprises that tilt the scales in The Man And His Music’s favour. Sadly, the dubious Everybody Loves To Cha, Cha, Cha has also been added. With the spectacular songs that Cooke has recorded that have been long forgotten by all but his most devoted fans, I don’t think I’m alone in questioning if the Cha Cha stuff could have been left behind just this once to make room for some lesser known material. What

about Ease My Troublin’ Mind or That’s It 1 Quit, I’m Mouin’ On, not to mention all the others left floating in limbo. Maybe it’s just too much to ask. As a document of Sam Cooke’s RCA studio years (and a bit of tiis Specialty days) The Man And His Music provides a solid’overview and would probably be a part of the essentials if that desert island should ever beckon. However, for the ardent -fans who have most.(if not all) of these songs already, you’ll just have to wait until some hip Japanese or U.K. label purchases the rights to the Cooke catalogue for the rarer gems to finally be uncovered.

by Chris Wodskou Imprint staff . This second album from The De1 Fuegos, Boston’s progenitors of the American roots rock movement, provides more of the jeansto-grave, ‘6Os-influenced R ‘n’ R that made their debut, The Longest Day, a critical smash. Reportedly one of Broooce’s five ban&, they thankfully owe more to Mr. Levi’s Astbury Park days than to any of the current “Bored with the USA” nonsense. Like The Replacements, to whom they bear more than a passing resemblance, The De1 Fuegos revel in beer joint ,raucousness, but avoid the boozeaholic overindulgences of the Minneapolis rowdies. From the insistent drum-thwacking to the tight, but no-frills, country-infected guitar, The De1 Fuegos don’t take no guff from no one, but they aren’t macho enough to stay dry-eyed when their girl walks out on them. They don’t offer any blinding lyrical insights, but their simple tales of romance at the drive-ins are given new meaning by their sincerity and the potent combination of Dan Zane’s wrong-side-of-town vocals and brother Warren’s blistering guitar work. 1Still Want You and Coupe DeVille manage to

revitalize the cliches of teenage romanticism with the mournful guitar and helplessly sad, yet hopeful singing. Never maudlin, they make for nice, heartfelt weepers. Don’t run wild shows the other side of the coin. Sung with gritty, blinded-by-tearsanger, the intended threat comes out as a desperate plea. The De1 Fuegos are by no medns intiovative, and I can’t really see their somewhat limited brand of raawwk finding its way onto my turntable every day, but Boston, Mass. is lots of fun.. Derivative enough to keep the masses from saying, “What’s this weird junk?“, it is also sufficiently raw and uncompromising to appease the more discerning.


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contemplations.

Woody. Like, WOW!’ by Adam Stevens - human body from the inside, this movie a’bout a man falling Hannah And Her Sisand realizing that you’re actuin love with his wife’s sister. This is a movie that will make ters: how can one begin to ally looking at yourself, Woody Allen does the same you think about yourself, and describe such a movie? To provide any opinions of mv, with people’s actions, emoabout the people around you. My only negative criticism oivn about the movie and the tions, and thoughts, invoking j a parallel effect. about the movie concerns man (Woody Allen) would make me feel so small, and for I do not want to leave you Woody Allen’s acting during the first part of the movie, as anyone to read what I say, with the image, that I worship this man, for no man is worth he seems a little off on his timeven smaller. Whenever Allen comes to worship, but he is very worthy ing, and he’s just a little hard to believe. Yet the movie is the screen, he seems to put of respect. Hannah And Her life right in front of your eyes. Sisters is very entertaining, wonderful enough that such Whether he’s being comical, witty, and enlightening. flaws do not cause any harm. The acting is superb. Misatirical or just plain intuitive and observational, the fin-, chael Caine, Mia Farrow, BarTreat yourself to some inished product is very funny, bara Hershey, Carrie Fisher, teresting contemplations. and Dianne Wiest are all marvery well done and always just Take yourself to see Hannah a little frightening to the soul. vellous. All the characters are And Her Sisters, but more and Woody Just as if you were in af? anatvery unique importantly, take a friend. Allen’s directing is fabulous in omy course examining the You’!1 leave with a smile.

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by Chris Wodskou Imprint staff Look, look. Everybody’s favourite Grade One primer heroes, Dick and <Jane and Baby Sally, are back after a thirty-odd year sabbatical, all grown up now, and living the exciting life of

shallow materialism and what are no doubt exciting careers with lots of room for personal growth. Only 01’Spot didn’t make it to the age of progressive schools and coordinating sweatwear, but that would have made him something like 37 years old now (that’s 259 to you and me). It had to happen, really, what with the skewering of Yuppie sensibilities and pretensions being almost as trendy as the BMW - racquetball - let’s - do - the - lunch - thing lifestyle itself. Dick, now pushing forty, is having a particularly hard time coping in the fast-moving ’80s. He is “grossed out” when his son Brad’s “totally rad” stunt kite crashes on him and by the fact that his precocious ‘kids know more about his new Apple Macintosh with 128K RAM than he does. Dick is even more .baffled when he takes the boys to the farm and finds out that a phar.maceutical plant now stands where the pigs once gobbled their slop.

II .:’ir

“Nothanks

A “Aww!

Not

steak

ig Sig Surprise again,

Dad.”

Wilson:

Jane, on the other hand, is a gung-ho, mercenary Amway -ll=+ cnntend ,with “microwaving Pour-AQuiches” and a daughter, , Jessica, who likes dressing up in punk chic: “Oh Jessica!” cried Jane. “What have you done to your hair? You are 6 punker!” w “Relax,” said Jessica. “It is only make-believe. I am not a real punker. I am your baby Jessica.” The only person who really has it all together is Aunt Sally, an aerobics nut who loves nothing better than Wild Mushroom Salad she’s not 1“networking” with.:-, her:, ,. , with , Radicchio. pm-r- 1 When I ,__ L:.___ -I-. .-I:.

Th- e outsider

by Paul Done Imprint staff In the 30 years since the publicatio&,of fh:QuGder, his ~ first book, Colin Wilson has establi%%&~&&as @-neof &e most prolific and diverse authors alive. The over-50 books of his that, have been published include philosophical works, science fiction, murder mysteries, along with encyclopaedia of murder, and examinations of the Occult. :’ A Criminal History Of Mankind is an extremely ambitious work. In it, Wilson attempts to bring history, anthropology, psychology, sociology; philosophy and the kitchen sink together in order to develop a. unified explanation of criminal behaviour. Then again, he is no stranger to ambitious works: at the age of 12 he decided to document everything that man knew. Thankfully, A Criminal History Of Mankind is far more successful than that first epic attempt. Colin Wilson has had a long-standing fascination with crime and criminal behaviour. A Criminal History represents the culmination, to this point, of his work. To Wilson, crime is more than simply violent, irrational action - it is the outward manifestation of some deeper human shortcoming. Crime, the. type of crime exa.mined in the book, is essentiallyan attempt to-find a shortcut on the path towards living more fully and deeply. It is humans making the classic error of believing that true spiritual satisfaction can be obtained through physical pleasure. The diminishing returns from their forays into crime cause the crimes to become more and more severe in order to try and recapture the initial thrill and excitement.

“‘Hew

Ibok!

Is that

a broken

down

Helmuth,

handle

it ourselves.”

Esprit sweats. More Fun With Dick and Jane is a great spoof in a Bloom #-- -___I-. ve111, ..-:- UUL L..c 5yince it onlv takes about six minutes to read LounLy (being impossible to put dew-n) combined with the fact that it costs $6.95 and one reading just about does it, it’s probably the type of book to loiter around a bookstore reading. Or it may make a faddish gift for someone tough to buy for (remember Real Men Don’t Eat Quiche ?!?) It might serve for a conversation piece at parties, but other than that, it is simply overnrfced. ’

checks

car ahead?

we can

in

The book takes the form of a chronological “who’s who” of crime. From Genghis Khan to mass murderer John Gacy, from Caligula to Al Capone, Wilson documents all the crimes with a sense of the truly ironic. He revels in recounting tales emphasising human folly, hypocrisy and stupidity. Colin Wilson always avoids falling into the trap of the voyeur - the tales always serve some purpose other than simple titilation for the jaded.’ The book is compuisively readable either in long stretches or short chunks. Even those with the shortest attention span are captivated long enough to find something interesting and, the longer one reads the book, the greater theclarity with‘which the patternsof criminal behaviour emerge. ’ One of Wilson’s strong points as a thinker is that he is never too proud touse the work of others as a springboard for his own thought. A Criminal History Of Mankind takes as its starting point the work of Abraham Maslow and Albert Adler. Wilson refers explicitly to Maslow:s theories on the hierarchy of needs and .Adler’s work ‘on dominance theory in order to develop his own theories on dominance levels in humans and the expression of the disparities in dominance through crime. A main theme of the book is that the evolution and development of crime closely imitate the development of civilization. Thus, the rise of sex crime in the last century is closely linked to the fact that civilization has now changed the focus of man’s efforts from food and shelter to other activities such as sex: the next’ level on the Maslovian hierarchy. A Criminal History Of Mankind, like the majority of Colin Wilson’s work, manages to combine the thoughtful with the perverse and the entertaining with the profound. It is written with classic Wilson-esqe discipline and clarity. He manages to plumb the depths of human.depravity without ever losing his sense of humour or having his intellect blinded by the horrors he recounts. Unlike the vast majority of Wilson’s work, this book is in print and available in Canada: Hallelujah.

concert series continues, with Glenn performing in the CC at 11:30 a.m to 1:30 pm. Photo by Dave Merchant

,, ,


l8 NEWS

Imprint,

Friday,

February,21,

1986

TP,lanhingStudents to hold <conference On Friday, March 7th, 1986, the Urban and Regional Planning students at the University of Waterloo will present a conference entitled, “Large Complex Projects: Multidisciplinary Perspectives.” The purposes of the conference are two-fold: to provide a forum in which to debate and discuss current issues relating to the field of planning; and to related different perspectives from people who spend most of their time outside the academic environment. The theme of this conference deals with multi-disciplinary contributions to planning with the focus on large complex projects. The conference will begin at 8:4.5 am. with a keynote address from Mr. Philip Beinhaker on the evolution of large planning projects from the ’60s through the ’80s. At lo:30 am. representatives from the three study projects - Ontario Waste Management Corporation, Kitchener Core Revitalization, and the Honda Development Project near Alliston -will present an overview of their project and the perspectives to be covered in the afternoon workshops. In the afternoon, three workshops will be conducted simultaneously. The conference will break up into three groups, enabling individuals to attend the workshop on the project which interests them the most. In each workshop, three speakers who are experts in a field (social variables, economic impacts, engineering, etc.) will explain their role in the project. A general discussion and debate on the issues will follow. The workshops will conclude at 3:00 pm. and the entire conference will be presented with brief summaries of the proceedings of each workshop. Dr. Mark Dorfman, the wrap-up speaker will

summarize the day’s proceedings and discuss the roles and challenges f,or planners in the future of large complex projects. The conference will end at 6:00 pm, after an open informal discussion with the opportunity for people to mingle. The conference‘is open’to everyone and registration fees are $25 ($12 for students), which includes lunch and refreshments. Registration the day of the conference will be at 8:00 am. in the Great Hall

of Conrad Grebel College on the University of Waterloo campus. Pre-registration fees are $20 ($10 .for students). Pre-registration would be appreciated by mail, with an indication ,of which workshop you would like to attend. For further information or for pre-registration forms, please contact: Sheila Trainor, Student Planning Conference Committee, School of Urban and Regional Planning, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, N2L 3G1, (519) 885-1211 (6564)

Several campuses join anti-apartheid boycott O-11 AWA on

(CUP) several

-- DevelopCanadian

At

University in a five-point student on bo>rcottng

McMaster

Hamilton,

referendum South African

products on Eeb.

1 1 and 12 passed by two-thirds. I’wenty-nine per cent 01 the students coted. The student union will not sell products from South Alrica or companies owned bq South African interests, will launch an information campaign, and ask multinationals the union deals l\ith to disincest from the racially segregated country. Jacqui I’erey, who helped launch the campaign and reler-

cndum,

said organisers

were

“ecstatic. (But) 1 would’ce been surprised if it failed.” Per-q said a question dealing with companies controlled bJ* South African conglomerates such as’ Carling O’Keefe, nar-rawly passed because the stakes are closer to home. “I think people MCI’~ concerned about Canadian workers and their jobs,” she said. Carling O’Keef’e shares are conti-olled bq. the South

Africa-based

Reqbran,dt

Foundatibn.

“We decided it was the right thing to do” Perq said there is still a lot of’ work to be done. “Ivow we have to get down to mark. We’ce done (the student union). Eou on to the unicersitj,,” she said. At the Unicersitc 01 Neu Brunswick in Eredericton, the student council has decided to dikcst. In a meeting last month, president John Bosnitch called 101.a council “break (in) all linancial ties uith the Bank 01 Montreal in protest 01 the bank’s policies toufards inccstmerits towards South Alrica.” Bosnitch also presented a motion calling for a divestment po,liq as bell a council-backed information campaign. -1he ouncil also called on the U Iv 13 administration to divest.

At Concordia

Unikersit)

in

Montreal, the laculty association has also withdraun an undisclosed amount from the

Please enter me in the Student Long Distance Contest. Make 3 Long Distance calls, enter the numbers you called on this entry form, send it along and you could be one of two fortunate students to win a fiery Pontiac Fiero. Each additional set of 3 calls makes you eligible to enter again. So go ahead, talk yourself into a fiery Fiero. Area code Number called Date called I

I

I

I

I

‘I

I

I

I

I

31--Name Address City Postal code

Apt.Prov.Telephone No. (Where you can be reached)

College or Univ. attending I have read the contest rules and agree to abide by them.

RUkS and

Re UhtiOllS: 1. to enter, print your name, address and telephone number on an oft?cialTetecom Canada entry form or on an 8 cm x 12 cm(3” x 5” B piece of paper, as well as the telephone numbers (including area codes) and dates of three (3) Long Distance calls* completed between August 16,1985and February 12,1988. Each group of three (3) Long Distance calls may be entered only once OR, provide a handwritten description, in not less than 25 words, explaining why ou would like to make a Long Distance call. Only original hand written copies will be accepted and those mechanically reproduced will be disqualifie cf . Mall to: Student long Distance Contest, P.D. Box 1491, Station A, Toronto, Ontario M5W 2EB . *Calls to any point outside the entrant’s local flat rate calkng area. 2. Enter as often as you can, but each entry must be mailed in a separate envelope, bear sufficient postage, and be postmarked no later than February 26,1986, the contest closing date. The sponsors do not assume any responsibility for lost, delayed or misdirected entries. Only entries received prior to the draw dates will be eliglble for contest participation. 3. There will be a total of four (4) prizes awarded nationally (see Rule 64 for prize distribution). Each prize will consist of a 1986 Pontiac Fiero Sport Coupe with all standard equipment plus the following options: AM/FM Stereo Radio and aluminum cast wheels. Approximate retail value of each prize is $l3,ooO.OO. Local delivery, federal and provincial taxes as applicable, ?r.eincluded as part of the prize at no cost to the winner. Vehicle insurance, registration, license, and any applicable income tax, will be the responslbiltty of each winner. Each vehicle will be delivered to the GM Pontlac dealer nearestthewinner’s residence in Canada. The prize will be awarded to the person whose name appears on the entry, limit of one prize per person. All prizes must be accepted as awarded, with no cash substitutions. Prizes will be awarded to each winner by Telecom Canada. Prizes awarded mav -. not be exactly as illustr&d. 4. Random sek?ctions will be made from all eligible entries submitted, at approximately2:DJl PM EST. November 27,1985 and March 12,1986 in Toronto. Ontario. bv the indeoendent contest oraanization. Prizes will be awarded as follows: Two (2) Fiero Sport Coupes will be awarded from.. . all _.. entries postma&dno later than midni ht, Nove‘inber 13,1985, and two (2) Fiero Sport Coupes ‘il be awarded fromsll entries postmarked no later than midnight, February 26,1986. Eligi%le entries other than the two winners of the November 2 Y draw will automatically be entered in the final draw March 12,1986. Chances of being selected aye dependent upon the total number of entries received as of each draw. Selected entrants, in order to win, must qualify according to the rules and will be required to correctly answer unaided, a time-limited, arithmetic, skill-testing question during a pre-arrangedtelephone interview. All decisions of the contest organization are final. By accepting a prize, winners agree to the use of their name, address and photograph for resulting publicity in connection with this contest. Winners will also be required to sign an affidavit certifying their compliance with the contest rules. To receive a list of winners, send a ostage-paid, sel!-addressed envelope within three (3) months of the final contest close date, February 26,1986 to: Student Contest Winners, 9 elecom Canada, 410 laurler Avenue W., Room 960, Box 2410,8tatlon ‘D’, Ottawa, Ontario, KlP 6tt5. 5. This contest is open only to students who have reached the age of majority in the province in which they reside and who are registered full-time at any accredited Canadian University, College or Post-Secondary Institution, except employees and members of their immediate families (mother, father,. sisters, brothers, spouse and children) of Telecom Canada, its member companies and their affiliates, their advettlslng and promotional agencies and the independent contest organization. No correspondence will be entered into except with selected entrants. 6. Quebec Resldents. Any dispute or claim by Quebec residents relating to the conduct of this contest and the awarding of prizes may be submitted to the R6gie des loteries et courses du Quebec. This contest is subject to all Federal, Provincial and Municipal laws.

Bdl A member ,

of

Telecom Canada

Bank 01‘ Montreal. “We wholeheartedly support the movement in Squth Af‘rica. Just as McGill and. other universities (have dikested), we decided it was the right thing to do,” said association president Shaf‘iq Al\ i.

. -fXirr4

WHEN

----I_-

A

#@Ms

GUN !!!

Go

MAD!!


Advance to Ontarlo West final: l

V-ballers defeat Brock by Ian Gowans U W’s men’s varsity volleyball team moved a st,ep closer in their pursuii of the Ontario championship !ast Saturday by defeating the Brock Badgers three games straight. I’he match was not one designed to keep the fans on the edge of’ their seats as the Warriors did away with the Brock team quite easily. l’he scores of the match were 15-0, 15-10, and 15-6. The win was gratilying to the team as the Badgers had been a team that had given the Warriors problems during the regular season. Since the match was so short, standout perl‘ormantes are hard to define. 1 he team played well as a whole, not giving Brock any chance to gain enough momentum to get any kind 01 consistent attack going. Brock did not seem to know what the Warriors would throw at them next. A notable performance was turned in by Vincc Deshamps, who played well while filling in for the sick Scott Shantj. -1he llu has been making its rounds 01 the whole team and it is hoped that everyone urill be recoccrcd by this Saturday (toWestern Di\ isional morrow) for- t II< Ontario Championship mate h. 1 he Western Mustangs will be the team challenging to take the Ontario West crov/ll away l‘rom’thc Warriors. I he Mustang? advanced by defeating the Lauricr Golden Hawks in three games straight. s howd OM n 1s a classic. I he Waterloo-Wcs:crn

-1hese two teams have met in the West final for many years now with the Warriors winning most of the contests.

This year the Warriors

have yet to iose to the

Mustangs but several 01‘ the matches could have gone either way. At the Dalhousie tournament in late January, the Warriors met up with Western in the semi-final. ?‘he Mustangs won the first two games but Waterloo stormed back to win the riext’ three. Each 01 \the matches so far this year* has been showcased by action-packed, highlq emotional play. with the Western Divisional crown on the link, this Saturday’s match should be no exception. l‘he winner of‘ this match will advance to the Ontario championship against either York or Toronto. Scheduling this year has the Ontario final being played at the Western Divisional Champion’s Gym. This means that if the War-, riors defeat the Mustangs Saturday. they will . host the Ontario Championship ,the following Saturday. Iaking one match at a time seems to be the stratcgq 01 the Warrior team. With this in mind. the game tomorrow starts at 8:OO p.m. Due to the lact that this is a playoff game, the OUAA demands that admission be charged. I he price for the match is $2.00. Waterloo is noted for its awesome ability to cheer teams on to victory. -1his Saturday night make that team the men’s collqball team.

UW skaters are OWIAA -

The women’s varsity figure skating team ended their outstanding season this weekend with another stunning performance, capturing their third overz!l win, and their first OWIAA championship. The two dayscompetition was hosted by the University of Western Ontario. It consisted of 16 events, with points awarded to each skater capturing one of the top six placings. These points were accumulated to determine the best overall team. Thi: Athe’nas successfuly placed in the top six of most evenis, capturing: three firsts, six seconds, one third, three fourths, one fifth, one sixth and one seventh. The first day ended with the Athena’s in first place with Queen’s, York, Western, and U of T trailing close behind. Saturday’s events were filled with tension as Queen’s for the first time in the competition, overtook Waterloo. As the day progressed, Quee& was only five points ahead of Waterloo before the final event. The final event, precision, involved 12 members from each team skating a four and a half minute routine. This event was to decide the OWlAA champions. All the hard work came through for the’ Athenas, as the precision team captivated the judges and the au-

War&s

dience, to secure a first place finish, and thus clinched the OWIAA Championship for Water!oo. There couldn’t have been a more deserving or hard fought win. The following are the individual results of competition. After a’ patiently awaited entrance, Lesley Cross and Anna da Silva skated to a fourth place finish in novice similar dance. Heather HulmC’and Alison Hayes-Sheen teamed up for a third in junior similar dance. In novice singles,, Dianne Aichwalde fared a seventh and, immediately following, Margo Fraser started the team on the upswing with her first outstanding performance of the competition, capturing a second in the open interpretive. da Silva took note of this performance and matched it in the junior singles. Carol Rankie’s determination in intermediate singles saw her acquire Waterloo’s first top place finish. Rankie and Hayes-Sheen teamed up in Junior similar pairs to capture another second place finish for the team. The day ended with a sixth place finish in the formation 14 step, acquired by Hulme, Rankie, Hayes-Sheen and - *.Jennifer Brown. Saturday’s events commenced with a fourth place finish in inter-

down McMaster

by Steve Hayman Imprint staff 22. 1I. 53. 21. Oh sure, you say, they’re all prime numbers, but how does this affect me? Well, they’re a-ll’numbers that you won’t be seeing on any Warrior baskeball player’s back any more. Last Saturday before an 80-73 victory over McMaster, Waterloo retired number 21 to honour Peter Savich, the school’s all-time leading

scorer. “If 1 had to describe Peter in two words, I’d say ‘amazing’,” Assistant Athletic Director Waily Delahey said of Savich to initiate ihe ceremony (later adding the word ‘simply’). “He’s a leader by example, totally dedicated to basketball, and has maintained an A plus average through his university career.” And his 3,122 career points haven’t hurt.

chanipions mediate similar pairs contributed b’y Barb Brubacher and da Silva. Rankie teamed up with Yvonne Devantier for another fourth place in senior similar dance. Pam Hastings, with her second place performance, started Waterloo back on track. Margo Fraser, with two more outstanding performances, gracefully attained first place in open singles and, immediately following, skated to a second place ’ finish in senior solo dance. In intermediate solo dance Trish Locker picked up a fifth. Stephanie Muller and Hulme teamed up for a second in senior similar pairs. Concluding, the precision team captured the top honour. Other performances were successfully mastered by Ruth Brown and Cheryl Stankiewicz. Congratulations to all skaters for their tremendous hard work this season and for breaking the “elite school” tradition predominated by Queen’s, Western, York, and U of T. As for next year, coaches Lori Bramley and Michelle Willey hope that winning the Ontario finals will set a precedent for increasing the development and support of varsity figure skating at UW. With most members returning for the ‘86-‘87 season, it is expected that the team will hold on to this title.

ofi Peter Sivich night

Savich’s #2 I jersey joins the #22 of Bill Jones, a guard for Waterloo’s first championship team of ’ 1960-61 who scored 433 points in his two year

pre-priesthood

career; Jaan Laaniste’s # 11, worn

by Waterloo’s second all time scorer and threetime Naismith MVP fr&m 1967 to 1972, and the #53 of the late Mike Moser, possibly Waterloo’s finest ball handler ever, whose most memorable outing was a 52 point performance vs. Sir George Williams (and four other guys) that led U W to a . ClAU 3rd place finish in 1974. “Peter says thanks”, was all we heard after Savich’s road jersey was draped over a desk in a ceremony, witnessed by his family, that could have been a lot more dramatic if the desk had been slowly raised into the rafters. “We hope to get a few more games out of that sweater yet,” Warrior coach Don McCrae responded when‘ asked “What’s he gonna wear

now?” Waterloo

. 80, Mat

73

Without further ado thcgame began. Waterloo went behind, then tied it, then went behind, the-tied-it again, and so on until the half ended with Mat in front 42-39. and it was exciting, and if you want more details you should go to the

games. A beautiful late shot by an increasingly confident John Bilawey, made while he was falling away from the hoop, helped ice the final 80-73 victory. Unfortunately, the man of the hour was not the leading scorer, as Paul Boyce scored 23 to become the Labatt’s Player of the Game, whatever that means. “Did you notice that at 7:2 1 of‘ the first half, the score was 21 to 21 and Peter (#21) scored the next two. points,” was the most exciting ifiside information Warrior source Deep Shoes could provide. ’ Although the Warridrs retired his number, it was back to work as usual ior Peter Savich last Saturday night. Here, he goes up for a shot .while team-mate Paul Boyce (@33) waits under the basket for a Photo by Rick Yazwinski rebound.

“It was a huge comeback -we were hanging on‘ by our teeth in the first half,” McCrae noted in spite of the closeness of the score. “Paul Boyce _~

did a tremendous job against Mat’s big men. John Bilawey and Jamie McNeil1 did a good job defensively in an area where 1 thought we might be mismatched.” McCrae also singled out guard Jerry Nolfi for extra consideration. “We changed defence every trip. He did a wonderful job of quarterbacking.” The win raised Waterloo’s record to 6-4. ensuring at least that it won’t be the first losing one in a long time. What’s

Ahead

Waterloo closes the Feason at Brock Saturday afternoon. Exact playoff opponents won’t be known until after Saturday’s games, but league-leading Western gets a bye; the remaining six teams square off with one game almost for sure Tuesday at Waterloo. Should the Warriors finish in second place, they’ll host league-trailing Guelph. Tuesday’s three winners travel to Western for the division championship tournament next weekend. This divisions “everyone-makes-theplayoffs” system is a sharp contrast with the four-team Quebec league, where if Concordia can go undefeated, they won’t bother having playoffs. A Few Words

from

Peter Savich

*

“We’re in as good shape as we can be right now. With Randy, we’d be in the top three just by stepping on the floor; without him we’re just another team, and the home crowd hasn’t helped us as much this year.” This Just In / LONDON, ON-I‘ -- Waterloo beat the 6thranked Wcster,n Mustangs 92-70 in a game in London on WednesdaJp’s Kazoo Night (No a\ ailable from the official results were simultaneous Battle 01‘ the Bands.) Peter SaLich led Waterloo with I9 points in a game that Warrior Athletic Director CmarlTot/kc called “the best game l’\c seen him play ‘th?s year.”

l


*O sP.O-RTS

Ini~~int;~Friday,

he week in

,- 1986

-

iversity*b-ball

four games from Winnipeg during the regular season, including a 75-73 decision on Tuesday. Also on Tuesday, Regina beat Brandon 88-85. In weekend action, Winnipeg (1 1-3) swept Regina by 97-78 and 102-77 scores, and Brandon took Lakehead 81-76 and 106-58. Everyone but Lakehead (O-14) is in the playof‘fs.

by Donald Duench \ I Imprint staff ClAU men’s Basketball - The Week (Feb. ‘\ 10-16) Canada West: When the dust had settled, Lethbridge, Calgary and Sakatchewan joined Victoria in qualifying for the CW UAA playoffs. Saskatchewan who have a 4-6 record beat Calgary (93-81) and Lethbridge (92-77) tojust sneak in. In other games, Alberta beat Lethbridge (7368) and lost to Calgary (69-68). Conference semifinal games will feature Saskatchewan versus Victoria (9-l) and Lethbridge (5-5) against Calgary (5-5). Great Plains: Manitoba (10-4) took three of

-February..21

OUAA East: York (1 1-O) clinched first place with wins over Toronto (9 l-68), Queen’s (92-70) and RMC (109-52). In Sudbury, Laurentian (10-4) finished the regular season with a loss to Carleton (69-54) and a victory against Toronto (67-58). The Voayageurs have a two week layoff until the playoffs.

Toronto (8-S), Carleton (7-4) and Queen’s (66) are still fighting for the two remaining playoff positions.

qualified tions.

for the four

conference

playoff

posi-

CIA U Rankings (as of February 17th) 1. Concordia (1) 2. Victoria (2) / 3. Manitoba (3) i 4. Winnipeg (4) 5. York (7) 6. Western (8) 7. Dalhousie (6) 8. Lethbridge (5) 9. UPEl (IO) 10. Waterloo (NR)

Quebec; In weekend action, Concordia (10-O) 87-71 and McGill trounced Bishop’s 97-68. The QUAA season comes down to tonight’s game between Concordia and McGill (TSN, 7:30 pm). If the Stingers win, th,ey will be QUAA champions, avoiding a playolf game. Atlantic: In Tuesday’s action, a layup by,Acadia’s Peter Morris gave the Axemen a 59-58 decision over Dalhousie, and Andy Ledoux’s jump shot at the buzLer made winners of St. F. X. 67-66, over St. Mary’s Dalhousie, UPEI, Acadia and St. F. X. have

defeated UQTR

B-ball~_Athenas are 9-3 for year by Colin McGillicuddy The UW Basketball ww - . . . . .

first

_ _ . “ _

r

nlacc-

<Iin

- - - -

- - - =

Athenas

awav

-

. . - ,

from

- -

- - - -

them, as they lost to McMaster f~ullar w-2-. 53-49 in their final t-La,.,. U-I son game. The familiar confines of the PAC gym did not inspire the Athenas, as they came out flat in the first half, and were unable to score for five minutes. Michelle Campbell provided a much needed boost to the offense, with her quick baseline moves and accurate shooting. The Athena press was ineffecti\e ag;tinc.t AAslr’c ,~tnieL cm’>r+ ,.. Ir, ..AL. and often only, Corrina g;ualus, Laueg’s quickness under the basket prevented disaster. Despite their early difficulties, the Athenas came on strong defensively and led at the lll,JC

l"iclb

J

qUILlY(

the clock. In the final analysis, it. was the Athena’s misera-ble shootmg percentage which resulted in a loss to a team thev should ------

----

----J

have beaten handily.

-~_-

They ran

hard and played solid, fundamental basketball, but their shots were finding a lot of rim and very little twine. Kin Rau led all Waterloo scorer-es with 13, while Michelle Campbell and Sheila Windle added 8 each. Mat proved nemesis

tbi<

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to be Waterloo’s

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team to beat the Athenas twice, and dashing their hopes of a first place finish. This will surely make for an interesting ride to Laurentian lor the Ontario finals this weekend, as the Mat

17

and

trnmc

sat-t’

sharing a bus! Waterloo finishes with an 9-3 record, good enough to tie Brock, but the plus/ minus difference gives the Badgers first place in the West,

Photo by Kick

Yazwmskl

In the second hall, Waterloo‘ ran into some difficulty defensively. Their transition from press to zone defense was not smooth, and this proved critical as the game wore on. Mat’s out-p&f #ooter ., ::* . ’ ‘,Ein the &&ga$~tg lj board.’ The II see-saw fashion, and the deciding basket dib not drop until.$i . coaches are to be congratulated on a splendid season. only four seconds ream&red on

Track team prepares for CIAUs are vying for the last few re6 0 metres and placed 5th overmaining positions on the team.. a$1in a time of 1:26.4. His effort This inter squad competitive.< was a solid performance considness was no more evident than ering the tightness of the turns, in the 1500,.metres, where no ‘which undoubtedly slowed less than five Warriors-toed the times in all distances on the line. Mark lnman and Chris main oval. In the sprint lanes, Lane, who had both already seBram Wittenburg suffered from cured positions at this distance, a poor start but recovered to led the men, with lnman snagpost a 6.46 second showing in ging the runner-up positions in the 50 meters. His teammate, r a time‘of 3:57.0 and Lane setAndy Garrison fared better out tling for 9th in 4:01.2. Other of the blocks and continued to \ Warriors who contested the show improvement with a seevent included s Tim Collins cond place finish in his heat and However, to the Waterloo (4: IO. 5), MS ke Affleck (4:20.0) a 6.40 clocking to his credit. contingent, the highlight of the and Chris Rogers (4:20.9) In women’s action, high meet was the university section The+ Warrior sprint troops jumper Elaine Veenstra slipped that grabbed centre stage dur- , were rrot to be outdone by the from her earlyseason brilliance, ing the afternoon program. distance men, as they racked up as she struggled at the 1.64 With the conference championsome impressive finishes. Scott metre level and wound up a diSships set for the end of this G,allichan won his heat of the appointing third. Nevertheless, month, a number of Warriors Hamiltonians got their first taste of international track and field this past weekend as the Copps Coliseum played host to the Spectator Games. To the track aficionados the main event was the 50 metre dash dual between Canada’s Oly’mpit bronze medallist, Ben Johnson, and the powerfully built American sprint star, Emmit King, in which Johnson won by the narrowest of margins.

l

-_-_~

she has already qualified for the ClAU

Indoor

Championships

to be held in Edmonton during March and will be in the medal hunt in the conference championships. Other ClAU qualifiers who will join Veenstra westward, thus far, are long jumper Ken Berry, 1500 ‘metre man Mark lnmari and the team of Andrew Krucker and Robert Hardy at the 5000 metre distance. Heading into tonight’s action at University of Toronto, in which all schools will have one last chance to review their team selections for next week’s OUAAOWlAA final, the Warriors have moved up to 8th in national rankings, and the Athenas are positioned in 11th.

..

4 ~~O-I-HEU

difm

C-R dates

Room 2039, PAC, 4:30 pm. Thurs. Feb. 27, Men’s! Women’s Squash Singles, Rules Meeting, Room 1001, PAC, 1:OO pm. Fri. Feb 28, Final Entry Date for Men’s/ Women’s Broomball. Deadline for S.A. Applications, Spring 1986 Flyer Copy. PAC Receptionist, 4:30 pm.

Women’s basketball

Mid season play in wgmen’s basketball has wound up with the Partying Pink klamingos in first place after winning ali their games. This week they downed the Basketcases 36-24. Kinners et al doubled Notre Dame 34-l 7 to take second place. In third place are the West B Oldtimers. The top scorer of the week is Mary Bloem f‘rom the Kinners et al., with 18 points. The game of the week featured St. Paul’s Dolls and the Leftovers, a 33-32 overtime victory for the Dolls. Onlv two league games until~thc plavol‘fs. Good luck. left

..

Men’s hockev UlclUCA3

aiL

ItL”-l,

111

Oll

~JIQLC

_ ;

[3-U-U).:

. n

‘,

_ (

-’

-my

;

J, In the cellar are:SoutbE-rot’&, Knights o!‘Chemalot, the Blades, , the Hard Contacts and the Engineering Huskies, all ,without a, >’ point. T.he “A” league is topped by the Engiineering Screaming Eagles’ ‘(5-O-O). followed up by St. jeromcs-A’ (3-Oil), and the flying: Buttresses (2-O-l). West 3 (0-4-l) and St. Ceasars 11 (0-3-l) rest quietly on the bottom.

Men’s volleyball

by Dierdre Meir With 24 teams competing,

^ the men’s volleyball

season is off to a great start. Each team will play five matches over three weeks before entering the league playoffs. Teams to look out for this season include Six Pack, Half a Dozen of the Other, Shank, Ray’s Raiders and Conrad Grehel - after the first week of league play these guys have maintained undefeated records.

-Table tennis

Results of a tournament held Sunday, Feb. 16th “A” Champion: Frank Erdelyi “A” Runner-up: Erwin Kessler ‘:\ : I. “B” Champion: Lyndon D@dyna “B” Runner-up: Mark Heydrich ‘d Women’s Champion: Annie, Hardock .! Doubles Champions: Chris Edwards ‘/ Mike Michalski ‘I Two UW,+teams wih be com’pcting at the inter-university tabletennis championships in Guelgh an Saturday, Feb. 22nd, and r’ 3 ’ Sunday, Feb. 23rd.

. Squash Tourney

OFFENSIVE’ LINE-UP. ELEVEN PLAYERS. SEVEN in-the LINE OF ScRlMff’lACZ. FO,yF! in the BACKFIELD. j&

ImDortant

Wed. Feb 24, Me$s Volleyball starts, Gym PAC, 7:45 pm. - I1:45 Pm. Tues. Feb 25, Men%/ Women’s Squash Singles, Final Entry Date,

.

The. K-W Racquet Club will be holding the Ontario Provincial Men’s “B” Doubles Squash championship from February 21st23rd. Play starts Friday, February 21st at 6:00 pm. with the finals on Sunday afternoon. There is no admission charge for spectators. The K-W Racquet Club is located at 138 Duke Street East, Kitchener. To obtain further information call 745-6108.

Athena synchro team: places 6th WIPE RECEWR

R16HT . TACKLE

R[6HT, 'GUARD

CENTER

WT GUARD

6LocR -MT

BOOK 2

&TActU END ’ ENP.

z

Last weekend the Athena Synchro swim team travelled to Trent and finished 6th in OWIAA finals. The team routine placed 8th, and Shelly Hurlburt’s solo placed 5th in me “B” category. In senior figures, Jody Pilbeam came 12th place and Val Perkins finished 15th.

Renata Brillinger

placed 3rd<n‘

intermediate figures. In novice figures, Shelley H urlburt

placed 15th and Mavis Dixon came in 17th. Overall, the team was pleased with their performance and is hoping for an’other’ successful season next year.

‘,.


’ SPO RTSI

0 1-7-l record smce Chr istmas:

Hockey team. loses a gain by Cathy Somers , Imprint staff ,The hockey Warriors travelled west to Windsor this past weekend and lost a Saturday evening game 8-4 against the Windsor Lancers. l‘hc Warriors displayed a strong first period effort when they put’l’our goals past the bewildered Lancer goalie. However, these goals were the team’s only ones -01’ the game. I he

Lancers, who are currently in fifth place, are having a much improved season. With the playoff‘s approachihg. the Warriors must regain their strong work ethic shown during the first hall‘ 01‘ the scason. l’he Warriors were Y-2 in OUAA play belorc Christmas and have recently managed only one win, one tic, along with seven losses lor a 10-g-2 overall record.I

The Warriors must concentrate lOO$i on their hockey as well as their positive attitude not only from an individual standpoint but also from a team standpoint. it‘ they are successfully going to strike gold in the playol‘l’s. ..,., wnat appears to be lacking among the players is that ‘killer instinct’. 1 his is often the case with teams late in the year. Howecer, one only need look at the playol’l’ perlormance 01 the Kitchener Ranger B’s, whose assistant coach Shane Parker, l’ormerlq the coaching assistant at UW commented, “I’m sure Don (coach Don McKee) is frustrated with the team’s perl’ormancc, however during the n~acoj’f‘s.

the

tcanl

will

. . -

Athletes of the Week

11w their

- - -

- . . - . .

d

iesources and perform up to their potential capabilities. From personal experience this year with the d’s, 1 understand the Jcckyl and Hyde psyche 01 hockey teams.” l’he Warriors played the Brock Badgers in St. Catherines j’csterday and theq face the lourth ranked C’IAU team and cross-town ricals. the Laurier Golden Haw,ks, tu ice this coming weekend. I’he Battle 01 Waterloo on Ice, as it has traditionally been known, happens this Sarurdaj evening at Waterloo Arena (I’hc Barn), a 7:30 start. and Sunday afternoon at Columbia icefield, a 2% start. I‘his has traditionall! been an action packed weekend with the War-

MARGO FRASER Margo is a third year co-op kinesiology student from London, Ontario. She is a Gold Test Figure Skater and has competed at the national level. 1 his past weekend at the OWIAA Figure Skating Championships held at the University of‘ Western Ontario rn London, Margo led the University 01‘ Waterloo Athenas to the championship. In their third year of competition, the Athenas were able to win after finishing no higher than l’iI’th place in their first two years. For the first year coach, Lori Bramley, this was an especially big victory. Margo took the goId medal in the Ladies Open Freestyle event and followed that up with two silver medal pert’ormances; one in the Ladies Open Interpretative and the other in the Senior Ladies Dance event. These forty points that Margo was able to earn at the competition, all in tfic highest competiticc IevcI, were what was needed to put the team in first piace.

PAUL

BOYCE

Paul Boyce is no stranger to Athlete of the Week, as he has been nominated and awarded several times throughout his basketball career at Waterloo. Paul is a 6’4”, 210 pound. native 01 Sud bury who attended LaSalle High School. He is in his tourth year, studying computer science. Waterloo’s power forward, playing with thc 1.1~1,led the Warriors to a 80-73 victory over the. McMastef Maurauders. Paul was recoinized as the Labatt’s Player of the Game, with a 23 point 10 rebound performance. He played the Maurauders’ platoon of’ big men to a standstill. Paul is second on the team in sczoring, with a’ total 01’488 points iri 28 games. He is the leading rebounder, with a total of268 and an average 01 10 per game. He shoots SS$i t’rom the floor and 72% from the f‘rcc throw line. Sure to be an OUAA All-Star. Paul’s true ability has surl’aced with the loss ol’ Randy Korris -- also a Kational

I’eam candidate.

riors playing their best hoeke),.

-

*Pre-university courses in a wide variety of academic subjects l l3right facilities in downtown Guelph *Fully equipped computer and science labs *Small classes, personal attention, experienced staff. For information or a visit, contact Mr. D. McCaIium, Principal

Wyndham

College,

12 i Wdbam

(519)

St., Guelph

N 1H 4E9

8224515

SUMMER Position/Wage

.

ApPlY

Location

College Pro Painters 200 Bathurst St. 1 (Various) Toronto, Ont. . MSP 3Ll LiSeguard/b.43

Student

Placement

Ikernal Auditing (3rd yr. Accounting)

International Development 60 Queen St., Box 8500, Ottawa

Beach

, Wasaga

/ $8.50

Career Centre

Treepianters$f)

Historical Interpreters

/$5

Information

Curator ot intkrpretation & Programmes Doon Heritage Crossroads K-W R.R. #2, Kit., N2G

Ottawa

(various)

K-W i

3W5

After your favourite activity here’sa ‘coolblast of freshness. PeppermintSchnapps,SpearmintSchnappsand new OrangeSchnapps. Sowhat are you waiting for?Schnappto it. .-

TASTETHE DIFFERENCE


THE QQDFATHER THINKING

I60 University Waterloo,

ABOUT

Fdzza & Subs Avenue Ontario

West

CONTACT LENSES SPECIALRING IN THE FITTING CONTACT LENSES x Bifocal contact lenses x Soft Toric lenses x Gas Perm lenses

OF ALL

GREATPA

x Daily wear Soft Lenses x Extended Wear Lenseq

886-6122

,

GREAT

HIKE

Home of the $5.99 8Slke pizza ! I -

22 KING ST. S., WATERLdb (across from) Waterloo Square 888-6980 Eye

Examinations

Arranged

if there’sno caviar. -BIGGEST FEAR:Missing out on anything, especially trips to Europe. PET PEEVE: Slobs. FAVOURITE HOBBY:

MONDAY SPEClAL ,@’ Buyone :ombhution Subat the

TUESDAY SPECIAL LIMITED

TIME

OFFER!

x


\

.

.CALENDAR. FRIDAY Fed Flicks - 8:00 pm., Blood: Part II

FEBRUARY and lo:30

21

pm.,

AL

116. Rambo

8:00 pm., and lo:30 pm., AL 1 16. see Friday IFed Flicks Saturday Night at the Rallies. Car rally sponsored by Grand Valley Car Club. 6:30 pm. WLU Torque Room CTB. Phone Roger at 885-2122 for more info.

Flicks

Anglican Chapel,

- 8:00

pm.,

Prayer Renison

Contemporary Room, Men’s

AL

23

Book Eucharist. College.

am.,

St.

and

H&SING Comfy couples.

1 Brm apt. $260/mo.

Very Call

to UolW. or Joanne,

by the - Lutheran 177 Albert St.

“Nicaragua

WEDNESDAY

24 -.

Toda!y:

The

invites

you

to our

Euchatjst,

FEBRUARY

St. Bede’s

Student

SeJf-Fulfillilig by K-W. info call

12:30 pm.,

& Westmount. 746-0684 for

Perfect

to;

‘86 p&o

Summer room, dale.

- tour deck.

bedroom Call Georgette

Townhouse unit wrth turnlshed.

clean Partial y

house

available magnrtrcent Rent

4-bedroom (Non-smokers).

WANTED! lease. Grad May drsldnce

avaIlable 578-2957

house Call

3-bdrm. Students.

Senior

May.August. skylight month.

$4721

bath,

A

large, sundech Now

and Call

open.

3 bed 111 Sunny

house Fully Call

Sunnydale dvaiiabte.

wrth

Access pool.

swlmmlng

May walk

to

ootlon In

on Unlversrty Enough

female: heat, hydro;

for

Sublet: $99, Sam 576-8818.

Summer Large, sundeck Now

Townhouse open, 3 bedroom, In Sunnydale. 746-6969. for large $1481

one

al

Lester. 5 min. tor 4 people.

room

18. _______ tar summer. Locdted on both unlversltles. hrtchen. & dryer, sundeck. Ample to

take

lease Rent

Sunnydale. skyllght

to May. $ I98/ mo. U ot W laundry

Room laundry,

RENT with

available lurnlshed. 746.02

wrth

Summer room,

May

rn Fall. $470/month

to

May

mo.

available hea:; taclltles

2 min.

SAM

-

I6

uptown references.

2 + bedroom for September. Phone Dave

Fall!

86. 884-9668.

or Jay Waterloo.

WIII

Sept

take

Ave. Ilvrngparking. with

Includes

bath! Included.

May-August. unit with Furnished.

clean Partial y

_____Available patlo and roorn plus Sunnydale

summer.

for the ample utl ltles.

share

also

tacllrtres

entrance Sam

2

$240,

mo..

576-88

laundry

tacll tles.

One magnltlcent Net

month

summer. parktng. Telephone

18. lockable tree

rent! dnd C&l

skyllght month.

$3601

to sublet bartlaly turnlshed, pay $250 towards also leave the

(wil we’l

Lease

Five Close

bedroom to both

746-0335. for

summer term dryer. In excellqnt one month 5 rent). bils In our name.

8J34-6524. MONTHS FREE sublet tor SIX people. blues In a luxurious Call 743-6896.

Large hv~ bedroom walk to UotW (Erb furnished. $372.53/month. bedroom $4 191

Quality Punctuation arranged.

Typing $ I a double.spaced

or

mavbe one month. Big rooms, balconies. house at a bargain

apartment G Unlverslty).

to Utl ltles

townhouse

sublet. Sauna, Included. available 886-36

PHILLIP bedroom, Phone

STREET townhouse availdble May washer/dryer, partialy turnlshed, (4 16).62 I. I 738 or 888-664 I.

APARTMENT FOR RENT, May. Aug/86,3 room, kitchen & dining area, 2 - car Indoor room, nOrI-hCtlOIX!l sauna, vdst storaqe vard, access to washer/ drver, 5 mrn. walk and liquor stores, 25 min. walk to UW.

term. balcony,

trom

bummer lot. Beat the, VISIT 93 Ddvld IO

885-4655

two Rent

Phone

price.

Summel laundry,

Clean 1986.

month.

Super larg’e

minute p&rally

Jantne. May

to

September

17. ‘tl

August rent

very

1986. negotiable.

levels, 4 bedrooms,,llvrng garage, plrlg-pong space, balcony onto to arocerv. convrence. option to take over

Four

table & courtbeer lease.

Typing

- Essays,

term papers, Resumes

page.

and/or and

Reports, Phone

25 Call

Experience. 3342.

Years 743

theses.

proce&ng. checked.

theses, a pg.

$5

take trom walking

resumes, ACCU-TYPE

Call

R&Jmes Fast, accurate

stored service.

etc.

photocopylng

manuscripts. 576-7901.

Nancy,

75C

Dresser,

per

double

Processing.

24

Also

spaced

page.

etc.

Resumes copres).

Near

Processed! Seagram

TYPING English

- only degree,

$ I/ page corrects

$3

per

Stadium. for

typist spelling.

page Phone

living Call

(25C 885-1353.

typing

typist. rates.

IBM

. Theses, lypewnter. educational

Essays. Selectric.

reports, Have material.

work

(It you Near per

essays, Bachelor Near HELP

etc.

K-W Blood Donor College, Siegfried

STUDENTS!!! make big bucks. For rhore Into., 7 104 or Scott SUMMER tun outdoors the placement

JOB

sitter. Friday,

See

the

1982 s 1,000.

Honda Call

Portable RMS dual Included.

Stereo: play and voltage, Aslilng

bookahead) Seagram for

(MSA). 127.

Fast, ~-letters, Degree Call

Some Needles

Opportunity. being a College othce now

contractors commercral Hall Employment

take In the as becoming otflce tor’applrcatlons

CC

adult pm.

5:30

CB45OT Bernie 746-056 record timer in

must

be cheap. DCSUSERID

at

after 886-24

5 year 18.

885.2978

wanted Phone

to She@

look

Super

West night. Looking

old,

double memory), Mlcrophone, 884.5346.

of

Square has lust make you own LCBO costs.

received lnsh Creme, 885-4060.

SUMMER cdreer selvlce

to

5pnng. call Steve

Light JOB: plannrng. by the

Get

that AT

at

Good Hysterical pm.).

ot and

Karen, You

bicycle P -____sports

Movrng Call Jett.

wrth a small 884.283 I

We MC

re students 3035 1330.430 program.

SVA

tune

up

now.

For

Qualrty

R.B. Win name ____“Who’s lead

and

Wil

helping

also

take

students W 130-230

away

In Job R I230

garbage. search 130,

has

accurate work. near Sunnydale. Smith and Kathy

qorona experience 886-8843.

require experience

sites, work a paIntel

Be part of a team, earn Pro Painter. Applrcatlons or phone Mike Hannan

money and are available at I .657-3696.

Pickle began.

Lost?

Since

you

Puke,

your

quest

~111 end

where

mine

DEB the

Shy, Thurs.

111. You are a bunch-backed cut out with a sacnfrclal Rick

111. I trusted

?ough

To Weatherhil trails,

All

Student occupancy;

ot

Ski

toad!

tn

my

Give

me

prime.

have wrth

back

Love

my

Uncle

‘I’m Stop

The the

my you.

Rick

your

trying

to make

wishes

man

s room-mate

Package, kitchen,

fireplace

come

111.

Davrd

$12/night

contact.

Wil

With

Love,

true. next

week

includes . .Room

for

20.

wrll x-country Call

Anne: Il

favonte

claim any

Bermuda! s the weather

meal?

no

possible 28th:

to laughter

all

I was right are a Savage! Hipsway.

Green. We we’re sure An oxygen

for P.S.: emergency. at Picky’s back(just Carol.

Stock

up there

(Hint:

responslbl rty explosion outside

tomorrow klddlng!).

on now?

It starts

the rum. Sun. Give my love

with

a “K”.)

of the prohibited

participants until

along! Philosopher.

The

the

In test

the CHEM IS completed

the

chains,

368

drch

all

paradise dlck

got

the

back

whip’s,

soon. _____ trees ahd

(palm

the

TAXES

6 of

clubs?

HIC!

waves)+Slmply

Sly-Dog,

else,

HK!

Agents tor having to

504,529,657,735,766, the most up prizes.

each last

elrmlnatlons

26th cost

boonyman, you $2.

we’l

have Pooky.

Love

a special

Who? Kil er

Domlnrc Goldtrsh.

Going being

for

the a dlck

Answers Dick Innocent

drop

the

Weiner. face!’

to

UN

Names:

soap

and

dinner

I II shave

win week.

IMPERIAL

a $35 pass Contact

toilet seat where-about% tee. on In

Benny,

Bert,

Cordella,

Eddie,

It

my

bum!

s! eh!?! I

Guldough

Wanna be

a

and

ZZZZZ the garlic ya Bunches

your

must

of

Speclalze

Monday

So she s a dlck woman So I played It dlck face!

UN2. Contestants

I or

legal,

Beer? wlllng,

Loulou.

and

Wlndex,

and

Bystander.

Blonde Come

&

Fit: In,

Flattered! Say hi. CS.

Like

a fit

I’ve

had Food They

my

eye

on

you

Supplements work. 576-0564.

distressed the during

by

for

girl.

some

for

WT

Room

an

biggest fhs Important

time.

Its

energy

and

cnsls

pregnancy, of your makng

unwelcome personal decrslon

5-7

lnevltable. mental

pm.

i ues,

you Ilte. time.

Love alertness. are probably We are he!e Call 579-3990.

TOO HIGH? s

’ QUALIFIED

BORROWERS PROGRAM

STUDENTS

COMMERCIE

dlck your

prck

co-OP CANADIAN

the ‘It s not

weed

SPECIFIC

BANKOF

smile!

match

who

IN RSP’s

RSP ARE AVAILABLETO

6: 10

sadrstrc

quote.

Winners. Raiders headquarters

If you are expenencrng assist you

Sue,

LEADERS

LOANS

Midterm. (about

Talk to the

The Federatkk’ ” ‘of Students congratulates the University of Waterloo Athenas Figure Skating Team on becoming the _OWIAA /Figure Skating ChamDions!!!

r&v. Sur&.

a lamp

for damages to life or property between 1 1:59 and 12~0 1 am. South 5, room 2 IO. Slclned K.

1986.

Coming

a trip to to the

Harrison natural.

not

1-824-5877.

INCOME

to

“Kelly”

“Bean Blitz” The Turnkeys In conjunctIon W&I the Food Bank of Waterloo Region s “Bean Blitz , would like to ard In their food drive which collects food for needy residents In the Waterloo Region. During a two week period, February 17th to March 2nd, we wil be collecting trns of canned beans. Bins wil be provided by the Turnkey Desk In the Campus Centre. We would greatly appreciate your support In thrs endeavour. Its a worthwhlle cause!

crown.

Richmond.

Have been strangers. - Hope

red

and I would rather tace the Inevitable

discontent?

Tom. friendly

The Birthday The

lying I m

winter

Seeking

Concerned: double

you

nephew.

your

toad than

knlte

you,

luck,

111. Is thrs

Kerry, Dan. Happy the thrrd mealkateer.

In

my

Rick tongue Anne.

Stil Desperately arrange rendevous.

have

stole

colsr? adventure censure. of an

Olives & Pimentoes! So I ve bein teling you stones Nothing s better than being your teddy bear, but watch I ve always got a heart on when you’re nearby! Love Bunches!!

Send able.

Rick

and Pro. at 888.

compasslonrn the world you. I wil fol ow

OSSM6: The Final Chapter. The tradition contrnues tar the last time. Keep Good Friday rn mind. More details next week. You know who to n<k --. . -___ TO the JEWEL ot my heart, 4 months of NON-STOP laughter, memones of Teenage Head, hot peppers and Mount St. Anne. Stay tuned, there s much more to come! Love ya Bunches & Bunches!!

Eddie.

Center_____

ds team with

Luck

Happy WIII only

OUCH...ouch...fuck!

Uncle Eddie.

managers required.

outdoors lor College or call Ed

VlEUX . If you can always be as patlent. as torglvlng, ate, as warm as you are now. we wil make the best For evevday IS such a perfect day lo spend alone you, wil you tal ow me? . ..K.D.

at hurier will a reading and book “Cracked the Paul Martin welcome.

Desperately Seeking ‘Ralph’ Last seen near 1 st floor house on Austin Drive. Anyone knowing “Ralph’s call Joe or Orest at 886-19 12. Beer Anyone!!! - please KAOS Agents! Can t tend you target? I wil ! For a small In engineering. Call Gord Denny 888-7488.

and a tree

printed

Typist

-

Philosopher.

KAOS to Flag KAOS -____-

885 152 1 truck.

torward t watt...How Carol.

a student’s

Notice. I hereby as a result ot Friday, February Heinz.

dubbing, mrx mlc, 25 tapes

a shipment Kahlua

seating

A Poem. By I. Rathwell. Roses are red, violets are blue, my name’s how ‘bout iou? I got to class, I am a good boy, how ‘b&t you? That’s good. Very good. Ten out of ten. How ‘bout you? I have covered in.tinfoll. Flowers grow rn the ground. Bye.

Askrng

deck, slow and tast 4 band radio, dolby, earphones and

a new “toy truck The of luck with thrs l t le this paper would surely WIII be available In case

best

Baby: Looking sea and...can Qulgley. Love

What’s

.

I.

AlWA,CA-WZO, ( 10 song record. $425. Call

Limited

C Cats unrte - 198 l/ 82. Great year! Dinner If you’re not there then we II talk behind your torward to reminiscing wrth all ot you.

Cheryl sand to Mr.

car amplrtrer (max. amplltrer (max. 95 (box style -surface mount) 894-1828 or Larry: 742. Certlhed.

- 4:00 pm: St. Jerome’s

Dept. presents SKIRMISHES. 8:00 pm. HH 180

be seen. He’s getting all wish Dave the he II try some things tank and a trapeze

250 car

Condltlon.

1O:OO am.

Psychology Orientation Meetings for 1st and 2nd year students who are planning to major in Psychology. PAS. 2083 from 1130 to 2:30

SALE

Hawk.

Waterloo You can a traction

at

but

Drama early.

Clinic: Hall

Music at Noon at Launer: This week’s Music at Noon concert WIII feature Van Volodarsky, viola and Yana Volodarsky, plan0 at 12:00 noon in Laurrer’s Theatre Auditorium. Admission is free and everyone is welcome

SERVICES

Be ready Atlordabll ty

area.

WANTED

student

World, It I S as easy see placement at 884-1384.

Responsible 12:OO

condltron,

27

Meet the Author at Laurier: The bookstore present Canadian writer Hugh Cook in discussion session based largely on his Wheat & Other Stories” at 3:00 pm. in Centre. Admlssron is free and everyone is

the wall, where am I headrng? 1 he tlrst step on the way to your lobi career IS the mighty mirror ldentltylng your Interests and skrlls. Slide, vlsuais. lrvely presentation, exercises, dancing bears. Sign up at Math Sot (MC3038) for this tree Student VocatIonal Advisor workshop. March 3; I 1.30 12.20 or 12.30 I .20. Locatron to bednnounced

roxlmately 4 hours per ddy. Part-time data collectors needed. Ap horn March I7 to April 28. Pay IS 9 8.00 an hour Involves data collection rn High Schools. Must travel each day (travel time 15 pdid tor). The schools are located In. Hamilton, Oxford County. Brampton. Mlsslssauga, and K.W. Contact, WSPP X6553. Student Painters - Canadian tor Toronto and Suburbs. Apply betore March 7 at

UWk come

year PAS

or like, any or Malcolm

Triumph 579-0737

FEBRUARY

English Department is accepting applications for Cooperative studies in the English Ltterature and Rhetoric and Professional Wirting programs from all Interested first-year students. Introduction to the various options and their requirements and a brief description of the scope and benefits of each will be followed by a question and dlscussion period and an opportunity to talk with senior students in the program. Application forms and preregistration information will be available. Please plan to attend this session. 4:30 pm. HH 373. Humanities Graduate P Lounge.

Mirror, Mirror on

and

page

Vilage,

resumes. of Arts Unlverslty.

pm.

Fiat Spider, Call Andrew DOME8754.

MGB.

crisis. The film NO AL 116 7:OO pm.

Waterloo Jewish students association.invites you to our bagel brunches held twice weekly. Come for the food, the fun, the friends. Speakers scheduled throughout the term. cc 113, 11130 - 1:30.

PERSONALS

on campus. Karen, 746-3

reports Lakeshore

9:30

of Students event: Y usaf Soloojee, of the African National Congress

___-

for

Indehnzely. Delivery

University graduate (English & Latin) available to type/ word process term papers, theses, reports. resumes, letters. Basic or Comprehenslve edltlng. Personal Computer and Letter Quality printer. Disk storage. On-Campus pick up & delivery arranged Phone Judy 699-4082 anytlme. Experienced Reasonable Call 885-1863.

Concert.

WPIRG and Federation Canadian rep/resentatrve

BREWSKI’S liqueur extracts. many others

letters Reas

Westmount

turn-around copy provrded.

haul Dratt

paqe. j53:

The

21, 1986

abcut

Informal distiussion of the topic “Religion and Education in a Secular Society ?” Campus participants are welcome. PAS Km. 1 10 1 . Independent Studies. 3:30 _ 4:30 pm.

Wil Do Reasonable.

Same Day Word s 1 oer double-spaced Stahl Phone.885.1 --- urn. Word

word

spellrng 576-1284.

Diane.

TYPING. binding.

TYPING Electric typing

- The

Alpine 7 162 AM/ FM cassette - $250; Proton 100 watts/channel) $250; Onon 240GX watts/ channel). $300;Vlsonlk by David Car speakers (40 watts each) $175. Call Mike. 405 I. Have all receipts/ warranties.

year

86. Wil 578-4758.

Stephanie.

apartment or townhouse Desire quiet area within or Dave at 885-4790.

TYPING - Essays, Theses, Work Reports, Resumes, Busrness etc. Neat, accurate, Wil correct spelling, grammar, punctuation. onable r&es. Electronrc typewriter. Seven year’s experience students. Phone ~__- Lee - 886-5444, afternoons or evenings.

Ezra

3 bedroom

Included; 576-8818.

to UotW,

available

month. outdoor month;

this

hydro

private services

cleaning

4-bedroom townhouse In Large bedrooms, I $2 bathrooms, condttlon. $504/ m. plus gas And It that s not enough, FOUR mansion , townhouse St. or

Professional Papers

746-8360.

townhouse Call 885-0956.

FREE house unlversltres.

of Westmount/Vlctona. laundry room,

in spdcious house minutes walk from 1 !r bath, washer

townhouse and sundeck Call Anqele

Rooms min.

corner Balcony,

Gratis

Afternoon Monday

886-4347.

3 Bedroom campuses. & utll tres.

available WLU; sunroom. 886-4207.

Summer skyllght utll tres. --_-

May,

2623.

May-Sept. tram both $600, month Room behind room, Call

AvaIlable I ,l2. Large

discussion

Slavic Culture Club: presents a free film in English “Around the USSR (from Moscow). All are welcome. 1130 am ML 245

FOR tor

February

THURSDAY

WANTED Ilreplace,

888.7873.

Friday,

will be speaking on the South African Middle Road will precede the speaker.

Conrad

-Native Students, if you are interested rn forming a native student association please join us in C.C. 221 at 4:00 pm. For mpre info call Elaine at 743-2303 after 6:00 pm. Nicaragua --A first hand account by Dr. Arnold Snyder, director of Peace and Conflict Studies at Conrad Grebel College. 12:30 pm. Modern Lanaguages 117. Sponsored by Science for Peace. Everyone welcome.

WANTED

or townhouse Jon 884.91

something, Excellent

Students require I st. Want lease ot campus.

152 Waterloo.

TYPING Apt. 8,l

the Christian Faith: Informal Wesley Chapel, 7:30 p.m.

___-

Summer garage,

details.

Renison

sponsored by the Lutheran Lutheran Seminary, Albert C

HOUSING

742

p.m.,

Psychology Orientation Meetings for 1st and 2nd students who are planning to major in Psychology. 2083 from 2130 . 3:30 ---~

26

Chapel,

’ Candlelight Holy Communion Campus Ministry. Waterloo Bricker Sts., Keffer Chapel.

WANTED! lease.

Bachelor to buses Phone

4:30

WPIRG, GLLOW Event: “Track Two” IS a documentary film concerned with the gay population of North America. It centres on the 1981 police raid of Toronto’s four largest steam baths, in which 286 men were arrested. Admission is free. All are welcome. Room 110, Campus Centre. Contact: Coug MacKinlay x2578 or 884-9020 .

746-8 103.

trb

and choir.

Gay and Lesbian Lib of Waterloo, weekly coffeehouse. A safe and friendly place to meet other gay men and lesbian women. Everyone Welcome! 8:00 - 1l:OO p.m. CC 1 10

Cinema

AVAILABLE

close Ian

Perez:

student-led E. Morbey. Midweek College.

FEBRUARY --students association

Jewish

Exploring Christianity.

following,

Sunday, Graham

MONDAY Waterloo

sermon

Huron Campus Ministry night fellowship Common meal 4:30 p.m., meeting time 5:30 p.m., Dining Hall, and Wesley Chapel at St. Paul’s College. You are Welcome.

Relaxation Training: in a group setting statitig today from 3:00 to 4:30 for four consecutive weeks. Thrs includes instruction and practice in progressive muscle relaxation, deep breathing, and concentration/meditation methods. If you are interested, the sign-up sheet is available in NH 2080 (directly opposite the Registrar’s Office). Offered by Counselling Services

Moose Waterloo

dlscussion

on Campus: “,‘“y mostly by Chaplain

Bede’s

am.,

am., Keffer Chapel, & Bricker Sts.

Service with coffee Conrad Grebel College.

Christian Worship services. Sermons All Welcome

9:30

Eucharist. 1 I :00 Renison College.

1 I:00 Albert

Andreas

25

Prophecies of the Right and Left-” SponSored Branch of CIIA. 8:OO pm. Waterloo Inn. For more Irene Knell at 885-12 1 1, ext. 2765.

1 16, see Friday

Anglican Residence,

Holy Communion Lutheran Seminary, Informal 7 p.m.,

FEBRUARY

FEBRUARY

Bible Study, Sponsored Movement. 4:00 - 5:00 pm., Mr.

Fed

with

22 TUESDAY

SUNDAY

Evening Prayer Grebel College.

Bean Blitz Blast-Off Lunch. St. Peter’s Lutheran Church (Queen and Duke Streets, Kitchener). 12:OO. 200. Admission is two cans of beans or two bucks. Call 746. BEAN for more information

K-W Chamber Music Society present Jeffrey Cohen G Lucy Robert. $12/$8. KWCMS Music Room 57 Young St., Wloo. FEBRUARY

, Imprint,

held twice weekly. Come for the food, the Speakers scheduled throughout the term. - 1:30.

In Celebration of International Women’s Week. The Sociology Society is presenting Maria at 7 pm. and Silkwood at 8 pm. Maria is a Canadian film alqout a factory worker starting a union. AL 116

First

GLLOW a Go-Go Dance for lesbians and gay men. Door prizes, womyn‘s music. Admission $2.00 : 8:00 Cabaret

SATURDAY

:

bagel brunches fun, the friends. cc 113, 11:30

23

FOR

Rick All

to


so

COMFORTABLE IT9S . HABIT FORMING.

/;yytT?,? .Education WHEN:

Deductidn

Certificates

Starting February 27, 1986

Once you’ve tried a Berol Cassette mechanical pencil, you won’t want any other. Classic design. Comfortable feel. And incredible convenience. Loading is . now as easy as putting a

WHERE: II’ FULL-TIME,

ON

C+MPUS

FTUDENTS:

can pick up their Tax Receipts and/or Education Deduction Certificates at the former cashiering wicket located at the head of the stairs on the second floor of Needles Hall. ST. JEROME’S & RENISON COLLEGE STUDENTS: can pick up their documents at their

college

office.

I-

ELSE: (part-timers, including partptime grads, co-op students on work term, etc.) will receive their .documents by mail.

EVERYBODY

cassette into a tape deck.

PLEASE NOTE: If you received a tax receipt last year, it included Jan. 1985 - April 1985 fee Inrents, if any, so these amounts would not be luded in this year’s receipts.

.n

at

\

UNIVERSIPY OF WATERLQO BtNKSTORE ‘

AN INTRODUCTION TO ISLAM . A Slide Presentation BY

Dr. M.I. Elmasry Place:

Math and Computer BI ilding MC2065

Date: Tuesday, February 25, 986

RETURNTOYOUR HIGH SCHOOL The Joint Action Committee on ,Underfunding, representing Federation of Students, GS.A., and UW, is organizing a campaign to inform high school students across the province of the difficulties that face Ontario Universities. Students wishing to volunteer to write letters to their high schools or return and speak to students there, can get more information at the Fed Office, CC235. All volunteers

must sign up in the Fed Office,

CC 235.

Time:

7:00

pm.

All Welcome Donuts

.

and Refreshments will be served

Sponsored by . The Muslim Student Association of The University of Waterloo

SUPPORT YOUR FUTURE


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