1989-90_v12,n06_Imprint

Page 1

The new niuseum: outs.ide... Cathy Szolga Imprint staff

open Canada Day 1988 and still could not be completed. The outside of the museum, [OTTAWA) - The latest multithe Great Hall, the Cineplus million dollar expenditure of the theatre and the children’s mufederal government lies seum were completed in time for sprawled on the banks of the Otthe opening festivities. tawa river in Hult; Quebec. By far the most popularattracThe building is beautiful, the tion was the Cineplus theatre -, scenery gorgeous and the fanfare a combination of Imax and gloriou,s. Politicians patted Omnimax screens which is supthemselves on the back, visitors - posed to draw the viewer into a exclaimed oohs and ahs and the three-dimensional experience. television cameras and reporters Lineups were long and free were everywhere to record it all. tickets scarce. Only one thing was missing: Also endowed with lineups thk museum. The west wing was the Children’s Museum - a (with the domes and vaults), hands-on learning experience which is the public exhibition for the young and the young at are& was only 45 per cent in use. heart. Children could climb Visitors were carefully herded aboard a Pakistani bus or by yellow CAUTION! tape, barwander along the sea floor in a riers of sheet plastic and makedisplay of underwater life. shift walls. Moving from exhibit Also of worthy note was a to exhibit usually meant a trip smaller theatre sponsored by through construction areas. (Or Telesat Canada, showing clips of maybe they were actual exhibits the 1988 Seoul Olympics on a representing construction in high&resolution screen. The co1980s - “Far Behind Schedule”?) lour was phenomenal aud the The museum was scheduled to picture crystal clear.

.

...and--inside

IThe west

wing is only half finished.

phato‘tiy

C&y

Finished

Szotga t

exterior

of Ottawa’s

Of the exhibits that w& opeti, the one which stead out the most was the showing of contemporary Indian & Inuit art. Called “Shadow Under the Sun,” the collection ranged from more traditional art forms to’statements on nuclear war and the oppression of our Native peoples. Outside, sunny skies toasted visitors as they watched the many volunteer performers. Dancerd, musicians and even storytellers from different cultures and ways of life entertained appreciative crowds. Mimes, puppets, jugglers and impromptu plays kept many of the children occupied. -The two buildings which make up the museum were awe-inspiring. Architect Douglas Cardinal

Abortion injdunction overruled: controversy continues by Shirley-Anne Imprint staff

,

Off

A court injunction over the life of a l&week-old fetus Monda$ July 3 was just the beginning of a swift series of coritroversial events. Last Monday, Justice John O’Driscoll, of the Ontario Supreme Court, placed an injunction over Barbara Dodd, legally forbidding her from having an abortion in Ontario. Under the# ruling, the fetus became a ward of Ontario courts until birth. The injunction was applied for on

behalf

of

Gregory

Murphy,

the woman’s ex-boyfriend. Murphy’s application argued the unborn fetus has rights under the Canadian Charter of Human Rights and Freedoms, It claimed Dodd had planned the pregnancy, and that her gynecologist informed her a potential third abortion - she has had two previously - would place her in physica danger.

There has been no law governing abortions in Canada since January 1988. The federal government ruled the then-existing law as unconstitutional under the Charter of Human Rights and Freedoms and took it out of the criminal code. Costigau, Murphy’s lawyer, used the Charter as a basis for the application for injunction this time on behalf of the fetus. If last Moqday’s ruling were to have stood, it would have acknowledged that an unborn fetus has the right to life, liberty and security. This

ruling

was in direct

oppo-

sition to the 1984 precedent-setting case when the Ontario Supreme Court dismissed a husband’s application to stop a hospital from granting his wife an abortion. The ruling asserted thdt until birth, the fetus was not a person with legal rights. On Friday, Toronto lawyer Clayton Ruby submitted the application for appeal on behalf of

Barbara Dodd. On Tuesday, Dodd and her lawyer appeared in court. Ruby stated it is possible Murphy is not in fact the father, The‘ affidavit for appeal was based on the following: that the injunction ignored the 1984 precedent; that Dodd, who is deaf, did not understand the significance of the application sinceit was not translated to her in sign language; and that Murphy’s sworn statements were untrue. Dodd states her intra-uterine device was removed March 30 &I; ;o;xcessive men?trual pai& 3 as Murphy asserts to allow her to become pregnant. Dr. Morad K. Sarraf, Dodd’s gynecologjst, denied he told Dodd and Murphy a third abortion could endanger her health. Members of the Pro-Life movement expressed, concern over the’ issue, seeingethe ruling

Continued

on page 3

new multi-miltion

dollar Museum

has created a fluid metaphor’for Canada in this building. The obvious references to the topography of our nation cannot be missed but other ideas also come into play. The main entrance, which is symmetrical and humanoid in form, is reminiscent of West Coast native art. The &and Hall is almost erotic with its feminine symbolism. Cardinal’s masterpiece also reflects Canada in more subtle ways. The entire museum is clad in Tyndal limestone from Manitoba. As one wanders along the building, the fossils embedded in the stone become visible to the eye. There is also a rich use of granite, wood and glass throughout.

of Civilization. Photo by Cathy szaltm I Two things become obvious walking through the building. The first was that this is a “one of a kind” building: a Canadian architectural landmark which will probably become an internationally, recognized building. The second was that this museum will be a celebration of the history of civilization to the very present - only a computer could have helped Cardinal design this ’ totally curvilinear building. This museum will be a .mustsee for anyone travelliug to the Ottawa area, Most of the interior work should be completed by the end of the summer. For the first year of its operation‘, the main, theme of the building is the heritage of our native peoples.


a

m 1 CL

Z

0 cn 1 0 z

.Ie E CT


1

CAMPUS QUESTION bby Sarah Clarke Imprint staff

Wh,at har Patricia ,:+

Sex crimes P

s Suomi

Starr done far ym?

by Derek Weiler Imprint staff Despite advance advertising in Imprint and around the campus, a panel discussion on sexual crimes on campus held on June t 28 in the Davis Centre generated little interest. The discussion offered an hour-and-a-half of advice, myth-debunking’ and information to the very few who showed up. The panel was sponsored by the Federation of Students’ Women’s Issues Board and the Women’s.Centre, and chaired by Kim Speers of the WIB. “There will probably not be a lot of interest until something of a serious nature happens on campus,” Speers said of the low

turnout.

Theie was s.p. *: Geography

that

night

&ad

on the Riveria... ’ Stool 3B Account iag

Speers handed out a sheaf of stat is tics concerning sex-related crimes reported on campus. In 1988, there were six instances of “Indecent Act-Exposure‘,” five of “Indecent Act” and four of “Sexual Assault.” The two most frequent sites for these crimes were Parking Lot C and the Dana Porter Arts Library. The first panel speaker was Chris Hutchisori, a representaI tive from Women’s Counselling Services. She started her talk by providing a working definition of sexual assault: any sexual act that occurs against the will of one of the participants.

She gaid.for my tuition. She had my three children+

Reaffirmed politi’cians.

& If

faith

in

Steve - Furino !: NEW Math pipf.

Vince R. Trevor Rubieoff 4A Chem Eng

Hutchison offered chilling statistics. One in eight university women polled in a Ms. magazine survey from 1985 admitted they were “survivors” of rape. One in twelve men admitted to being rapists (although apparently there was a general reluctance to use the word “rape”), The average rape victim was 18. Only one in 17 rape victims reported the crime. Most valuable was Hutchison’s debunking of several myths associated with rape. She

tims. The department .has made efforts to have,more women officers on the force. There is now a female officer on duty 24 hours a day. The department issues bulletins about serious incidenti to keep the campus as informed as possible. Providing counselling for the offenders has become an increasing concern. The final speaker was Marian Dunbar, representing the Victim’s Services division of the ‘Waterloo Regional Police.

stressed that alcohol, drugs, and/or stress are not valid reasons for rape, and that children who are molested are often forced to have actual sexual intercourse. She de-emphasized the role of sex in rape, saying rape is an act in which sex is used as a tool to degrade another human being. Hutchison offered a statement which she said cannot be repeated too frequently: the blame for rape never lies with the victim. $he also emphasized rape’s lifelong impact on the victim, an impact which may have varying levels of intensity; high suicide and divorce rates are evident in rape victims. The second speaker was Marshall Gaven, representing the UW police. Gaven offered information on policy changes the department has undergone within the past two years. UW Police say they have become more sensifive to the needs of assault vic-

Rushton reprinted Affairs

courtesy

Dunbar runs a Victims’ Centre , for Kitchener-Waterloo. The centre is open from Monday to ,Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. With these hours, if an asgault occurs on a weekend, as many do, the centre does not receive the case until Monday morning - well after its most potentially useful time ,has passed, HoweveI’, Dunbar said Victim’s Servibes employees are often on call after hours for emergencies.

reprimanded University

associate dean of social science, who chairs the university’s review board for non-medical research involving human subjects in the social sciences and humanities+ Rushton has also been barred for two yeak from using psychology students for research following the ruling of a departmental ethics committee. The committee found that he had distributed questionnaires to students without necessary approval, Western News says. Rushton’s theories about race, intelligence and sex have been widely debated and criticized since he presented a paper at the January meetingof the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

Controversial University of Western Ontario professor Philippe Rushton has been reprimanded by the university for unapproved research activity, reports the university’s newspaper, Western News. Although the reprimand would not normally have been made public, the university decided to release the information since it had already been given soverage in media reports. Rushton was reprimanded for Failing to get the necessary apqroval for research he conducted at Toronto’s Eaton Centre insolving human subjects, accord.ng to. W.J. McClelland, UWO’s

Got me my important executive position with the Federation of Students. Bernie Harold Manager. SCOOPS

.Leg@l or @@monaIS Continued froni page I as a step towards a law which will protect the rights of the unborn, t Judge O’Driscoll gave no reasons for bis ruling. The judge did however write an article, a number of years. ago, opposing divorce and birth control. Tuesday, July 11, Dodd’s appeal was granted and the same evening Dodd visited the Morgentaler Clinic in Toronto to have the operation. The appeal was granted on the, basis that, due to Dodd’s hearing impairment, she wae unable to understand the notice of injunction served to her by Murphy’s lawyer. A Canadian Hearing Society spokesperson said a deaf person with grade 12 education often has a literacy level equivalent to grade four.

Clayton Ruby expressed relief over the ruling, “If the right-tolife (groups] have their way, women who want an abortion will have to go to court , , . they will be under the threat of criminal prosecution and jail, I’m very pleased that the court has rejected that because it is a very unpalatable future.” Costigan stated that the reason for the injunction being set aside was that Dodd was served insufficient notice: it did not deal with the abortion issue. Murphy has been denied opportunity to appeal the latest ruling. The ruling of January 1988 was intended to make abortion available to any woman who has consulted with her doctor. The events of the last two weeks served to make the decision to have an abortion a legal rather than personal one. ..” . .

Buy an order of Crazy ’ Bread at the regular p&&z, get an order FREE! ValMonlywithc~ut~pwtldpstingLittkCasarr. m JuLYpA

KITCHENER 910lmRAlNEAME.

’ 525 tliWLAND

RD. W.

(Canadian Tire Mall)

741-1119

s78-sQro

465 PHUP ST (Parixbk II plaza)


_ 4

Imprint,

NEWS

Friday, July 14, 1989

.

ess speaks

Horror brought h’ome by Marc Reppin Imprint staff

“Students

didn’t think the’army

would kill their

own

photo coutie8y

people.” The Nlrtetha

A witness to the Beijing massacre of June 4 told an audience of over 70 students and faculty last Sunday night what happened when Chinese troops &ar Tiananmen moved in to Square of student demonstrators. Steven Yanl, a University of Hong Kong student who was in the Chinese capital from May 24 to June 4, recalled the demonstrators’ shock and disbelief at the army’s attack that night, and of the chaos that ensued. “The students didn’t think the army would kill their own people,‘” he said. “They were expecting on1.y tear gas and water cannons.” As he spoke, Yam showed the audience slides he had taken prior to and including the night of the massacre. Many of the scenes’, of weakened hunger strikers and courageous students carrying their wounded comrades away from approaching tanks, were moving; others, of crushed and crumpled corpses in Tiananmen Square’, the Avenue of Heavenly Peace strewn with bodies tangled in the wreckage of twisted bicycles, and cdrpses piled in hospital corridors, gruesome. “During the entire movement there was no attempt to overthrow the party,” Yam said as he showed a slide of students with a banner reading “We are trying to save the party.” “The students hoped for reforms

as Gorbachev was doing them.. . the most important spirit of the demonstration was peace.” He added that what worried the regime more than the student demonstrators was the sight of 30,000 workers out supporting them. “The workers’ participation scared Deng the most.” Yam explained a “uni\tersity of democracy” had been set up in Tiananmen Square and classes held, He said he hopes similar efforts will be made outside of China to encourage debate about democracy. He ended his testimony by showing the audience a large stain on the left sleeve of his shirt, which he said was the blood of a wounded student ‘he had helped carry from the square. Dick Chan of the Toronto Chinese Committee for a Democratic China, who spoke after Yani, echoed the Hong Kong student’s comments when he called for a continuing discussion of democracJr. “One thing we should do is organize education . . . After the demonstrations we. realized we were not clear as to what democracy meang,” he said. He commented favourably on Canada’s reaction to the massacre, noting the Canadian government has called in the Chinese Ambassador four times to voice its concerns over his government’s actions against the students. Furthermore, he added, Canada was the only country to recall its ambassador for consul“I’m really proud of tation!.

what Canada has done,” he said, But Mr. Chan also called for economic sanctions against China by both government and business. He cited the Chinese government’s admission of student deaths after-initial denials, and increases in the official death toll .as evidence that international pressure must be working. Chan and Yam were speaking at the first general meeting of the Association for Human Rights in China, held in the Davis Centre. The group’s list of objectives was approved and a provisional Board of Directors elected. The group will provide financial assistance to overseas students and scholars who can‘no longer return to China, and will lobby the Canadian government on their behalf. The AH:RC will’also lobby the United Nations to establish a commissialn to investigate the Chinese government’s suppression of the student movement, press for economic sanctions against China, and urge a bbycott of the Asian games, to be held in Beijing next year. Finally, it will nominate the demonstrators for the Nobel Peace Prize. The executive consists of UW chemistry professor Dr. Peter Chieh (President), WLU math professor Dr. Edward Wong (Vice-President), UW graduate student Jiang Dti, UW student Terence Kwan (Treasurer],-and Ben Ho of the Central Ontario Chinese Cultural Committee.

Beijing Come and Browse through of l Amefican l French l AraMc l l

/

efltl8h

l l

Can8dlrn

l

WC large seiectlon l Spanish l

Intamrtknd

Gemnun

Italian Polish

Fashion

Maguitw

l Mlp,

Clip this ad for lO?%.off new magazines. One ad per purchase * Mon.

- Fri. 9 a.m. - 9 em.

not

Sat. 9

forgotten

am. - 6 p-m.

I

A student poster. in Tiananmen “Noi yet!” -

GRADUATING STUDE-NTS

by Shirley Anne Imprint staff

START YOUR CAREER OFF RIGHT WITH

ED-

Waterloo North

By special arrangement with a chartered Canadian bank, we can put you into a nei Mazda, with no downpayment, before you graduate. If you have a job waiting for you upon stop by

graduating,

give

us a call

or

our showPoom for details on this exclusive offer for graduates.

.

WHERE THE EXPREStiWAY SAVINGS BEGIN-

ENDS

Off .

Those attending Amnesty International’s July 5 meeting had the opportunity to get a personal view of the crisis in China. Slides taken by Amnesty member Bev Nuttal, who was visiting Beijisg, chronicled April, May and the first few days of June. Nuttal was unable to be present at the show, so Amnest y regional facilitator Wilf Ruland presented the slides. The audience included visiting Chinese students and professors who recognized, sites and interpreted the lettering on posters. The early photos show Beijing residents enthusjastically gathering in the streets. For most, it was the first time in decades that people publicly discussed politics, said Ruland. At first there was no action by police or militia. Early photos depicted students marching down the Avenue of Eternal Peace. in the background, rows of young and

Square:

“‘It’s over?”

-

old watched and marched in the She took refuge in a nearby hotel passive demonstrations. A where she remained for 36 hours, child’s flag read The Rise 6 Fo11 unable to venture _ into the . * of A Cuuntryls the Business of streets. . Everyone. After the attack, curious BeijAccording to Ruland, what sing inhabitants ventured to the was first seen as only a student gates of the square to see what revolt was joined by protesters had happened. On approaching from all segments of Beijing sothe gate& military forces would ciety. immediately open fire - killing By May 28, the slides showed a more than curiosity, she told Ruchange in mood. Within Tiananland, men Square, government propaOfficial Amnesty reports state ganda banners towered above 3,000 people were massacred the throngs of people in an atduring the attack on Tiananmen tempt to appeal to a sense of paSquare. Since June 3, Amnesty triotism’, said Ruland. reports a -heavy-handed apThousands of tents lined the proach has been used, combining square; the magnitude of the intense -governnment-sponsored movement could be seen in these massive arrests, propaganda, endless rows of lean-to’s* Some quick trials, and executions. tents were decorated in posters Media coverage of recent supporting the cause, events has provided insightful One poster depicted two yet detached looks at the horrific hands, chained and making a . events in China, Ruland said. peace sign. One side of the poster However-, this first-hand read, “It’s over?“; the other, “Not glimpse gave a different insight. Watching the slides flash by, an Yet!” On June 3, Nuttal was taken by Amnesty member at the meeting later wondered, “How many of surprise as she was caught in cross-fire outside the square. these people are still alive?”

.


.

\

Imprint,

NEWS

l

Friday, July 14, 1989

5

Meager bus-..subsidy exte~ncbd

by ‘Marc Reppin pass. In the meantime it offered Imprint staff students the 10 dollar subsidy. The number of passes sold to Waterloo City Council this students this past year reached a week extended into the fall term three year ldw despite the subthe city’s IO dollar subsidy for of Students each transit pass sold to stu- wsidy. The Federation argued that it was still too early dents, to determine if a lower fare for Fran Wdowczyk, Vice-Presiwould increase the sale dent [University Affairs), said ofstudents passes to students. City Hall to council at its meeting Monday staff assigned to study the matnight that she was “very grateful ter agreed. to council for extending the subsidy,” but added that “the time Wdowczyk argues that a betallotted is not adequate.” She ter sales strategy would greatly had requested a full year’s extenincrease the number of passes sion. sold to students. In the past KitCurrently, Kitchener Transit chener Transit came to campus charges students full adult fare _ for only two days during frosh for its three month passes. Counweek, Not a good idea, she says, cil’ last .year requested a report since students are caught up in from its staff on the feasibility of registering, moving iti, and taka university student transit ing part in frosh week activities.

Canada helping by Judy Imprint

Chinese

Hollands staff

CIDA will provide $200,000 to assist the 350 CIDA-sponsored Chinese students tiho are curThe Canadian government isrently in Canada and were scheduled to return to China in the doing something to help Chinese supper months. The money will students&they have introduced various measures allowing the help pay their tuition fees and students to stay in Canada until living expenses for the next the current crisis in China subthree months. In additioti, CIDA has prosides, vided $300,000 to an emergency The federal government will provide $1.5 million in assistfund to be administered by the ante through the Canadian InNational Coordination Office. ternational Developm’ent They hope that Canadians across the country will also reAgency (CIDA). Of these funds, $1 million will be used to estabspond generously to help Chinese students. lish a National Coordination OfThe National Coordination fice managed by the Canadian Bureau of International EducaOffice has also set up a toll-free tion (CBIE] in coordination with information line [l-800-267tJ-~e Chinese Canadian YNat@npl ,. .lZSg) enablip *any Chinese stuhours CoundI ~~cNc),:.f I I’ . &efits to get in Bbrmation.24

“It’s not fair to keep it to one or two days in a row during fresh week. It’s better to spread out the days.” Furthermore, she adds, “senior students aren’t here during fresh week, ye.t there are more senior students than fresh who live off of campus.”

To remedy the problem, Kitchener Transit has agreed to be on campus on September 6, 1% and 15. To further promote sales of the passes, Wdowczyk promises a “brighter, sharper” ad’campaign. The Federation of Students will place promotional inserts in frosh kits, and announce the campus sales days in the special -fresh week issue of Imprint. Kitchener Transit has so far refused any sdecial reduced

fares for students. As well, the company raised the price of its three month pass 10 dollars to 130 dollars last month. The last hope for a further fare reduction is Kitchener City Council. About half of all students possessing transit passes live in Kitchener. It is in the city’s interest to encourage student travel within its boundarieg she says. But persuading Kitchener

Council will not be easy, Wdowczyk says. She says she has some work to do between now and August 14, when the council considers the issue. “It’s going to take a lot of lobbying. We’ve gotten word that several councillors are opposed to the idea.” To back up her demands at the meeting, Ashe says, “I’m hoping for a large delegation from the student community to come out.”

students a day. The toll free lines will be provided across Canada and will provide students with accurate information’, counselling and referral services. The gdvernment intends to set up an advisory panel on the issue ofXhinese students in Canada. Although Barbara McDougall, minister of employment and imhas reached out to migration‘, Chinese students currently in Canada, she does not intend to change immigration policy to alleviate the crisis.

The Department of External

Affairs recently stated, “We do not believe that it would be appropriate’ to make any adjustments to our immigration program in Hong Kong at the current time.”

---INOvA ’

OPTICIANS

Helping

Canada celebrate.

See story and pictures

\

0

Buy one, get one Free <

from our frame selection *

‘-

Th& Second Free Frame may be used totiards: 8 an additional prescription for , \jour.self or a friend J preskription iwnglasses

s

.’

M.B.A.

P!ROGRAM

SAVE $so:OO- $80.00 r l

Tinting, Coating,

IidorxI&g~on

& Scratch Guard at extra cost

available

Murray Fischer Managing Optician University

Square Plaza

I

(near Weber)

65 University Waterloo, stem Hours: Monday - Closed, Tuesday 8 Wednesday - 10:tD8:00

Thursday 8 Friday - 1000-800, Saturday - 10:00-4:00

Avenue East N2J 2V9 (519) 746-3937

ON.

seszsion:

on pages 10


6

Imprint,

Friday,

July

14,

COMMENT

1989

Patriotic While dismay at the light sentence handed down to Oliver North is understandable and rightful, it would have been naive to expect justice to be done in the first place. Due ta an immensely complex and well-orchestrated set of circumstanced, it seemed inevitable that the ranking perpetrators of the Contragate scandal would never be punished, and that it might even be unjust and undesirable for Colonel North to receive severe reprisals. However, to attempt to make a comprehensive let alone a conclusive analysis of the affair is to assume that we know or will ever know even a fraction of the facts; the very shredding of sensitive documents by North and his staff assured that, and for insurancg, the late CIA Director William Casey came down with a well-timed brain tumour that prevented him from testifying and President Reagan was providentially kept from the stand in the interests of “national security,” a loaded statement if ever there was one. Furthermore, what seemed to be the scapegoating of North pulled the presumably culpable heads of Poindexter and McFarlane from the fray, not so much to salvage their reputptionb, one would think, as to keep the spotlight from shining too brightly on any details they might divulge that would be damaging to th2 government. As a result, we know little more now than we did when news of the scandal first broke; the questtins of who was really responsible and how much Reagan .reauy-knew remain laq@y unans&%t~ed, h~ Knowing as little as we do, it may be somewhat presumptuous to be enraged by North‘s slap on the wrist. If it is true that he is the scapegoat, taking the fall for those who are truly responsible, would it not be an injustice to nail him to the wall while his superiors escape unscathed? Worse, a harsher sentence might have made North a martyr’, giving his plentiful, bellicose supporters yet more self-right-’ , eous indignation.

Humanist protest

The problem is that although it would hardly be fair to make North pay for everyone, it seems an evengrosser miscarriage of justice that everyone should be let off. The wording of the sentence, which stated that North would not be allowed to take the fall for his commanders, did not condemn their actions so much as justify North’s; he is now neither the Nixon-style, bumbling villain ,nor the misunderstood martyr: North is the vindicated hero.

To the editor,

One could not have asked for a better Hollywood ending - the flawed hero pays notiinally for his sins but is rewarded generously for having his heart in the right place. Clearlyi the jubilant-air of the I courtroom turned North’s sentence into a triumph. The talk of North as a hero is another boon to the U.S. government - it deflects all attention away from the fact that a crime was committed, raising his actions from the criminal plane to the patriotic plane. Patriotism becomes above the law, making the issue no longer whether it was unethical to sell arms to Iran and then divert that money to the Contra rebels trying to overthrow the democratically elected Sandinista government in Nicaragua after Congress denied the Contras any support; the barometer becomes whether the move was done in accordance with American interests. To chauvinist&, noble sentiinent. tional law, and countries. Unfortunately, from harmonious. Chris

bullying The world their own the

mentalities, such patridtism is 6 very is filled with patriots flouting itlternalaws, for the good of their respective

interests

tif different

are often

countries

Wodskou

3!Mito~

BoardD

BdiWhB..,

. . . . . . . . . ..Fleurwn

Aawt8nt

mewm

sditor

Rator

BewsAnbtmt OopyBditbr mSd&tar... %pofb

drb

l

.

,

*

Phub lpditm phgfom Pke&mmnme

.

.

.

.

l

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

l

l

.

.

1

.

.

.

.

.

l

.

,

.

.

.

.

l

.

David

.

.

.

l

.

.

l

ImwBcm

SUB&l

.Andma

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

l

+

.

.

.

1

.

.

.

.

.

l

.

.

l

.

.

,

l

l

*

.

l

l

.

smgo

&@laHeede R&h Nlchol l

.

.

John

F&an

. . . . . . . . . . . . . JOISMatt&w8 . . . Michael (Sumnl) Sal-a .*.** I..... Qdamnm l

Dudneaa~ar

..,.I

ctbffbe~or,

.

.

.

.

.

mw.

.

.

..*

..J3ar~Qarke

,......Vlvl+&nTa;mbeau .

l

Mmu@r

MA8&taw,*. DUlzlmtion

.

l

.

~Am$#tamt....

A@vertblqf

.

, . . . Ilmab . . . . . . . . . h . . . . ..JudyHo~

.

.

.

. . . . . ..e.....

Witor

Editar

.

*

.

...*,..

l

.,**....

v-t

. . . . . . . . ..Tedt3rlesWh .

.

.

l

..** ..I. . . . . . . . . . John

*

.*...

l

l vmt Hymem

.

far

-

In -the last few issues of Imprint, I couldn’t help analyzing our reactions to the Chinese studebts’ protest.’ It seems to me that we are overly concerned about the issues that prompted these outbursts. Maybe this is where we “are missing the point.” Of course we think democracy is wonderful because we live in a democratic society which offers freedom of everything (well, almost everything). How could we possibly imagine our lives restricted from these freedoms? But in a-society where there were too many pe,opl2, too little money and an overabundance of corruption’, a choice. had to be made to correct it. China’s solution was through communist socialism [who said it was a perfect solution?) I don’t feel the issue here is whether one form of government is right or one form of government is wrong. If that were the case, why are we so concerned over China and not any other country presently fighting for democracy? And why didn*t we start protesting until the horror of the massacre? Can’t we see that we are crying for these students because they were slaughtered. for what they be-

Professor Beam writes:

Professor DyWand I have been very busy. TO the editor, I read with considerable interest Mr. Wayne Morris’s letter “Work report fee far&” in the in which he has last Imprint:, submitted a signed document incontravention of the “Letter of submittal” to receive a mark for already credited work. He’re’s a bit of background on Mr. Morris’s gripes. Over a period of several yeais the tiathematics Faculty has been a leader at Waterloo in attempts to standardize, the marking of work reports, to provide students with consistent evaluations and to set up services for assistance and remediation. I’m aware of the efforts put in by Professor Dyck’s office in the handling of hundreds of reports per term and his extra efforts to see that students get genuine encouragement and support in I their writing. I / We regard work rep&s ‘as. some of the best preparation for the kinds of organization and expression students will be required to demonstrate as they move into careers in every field. Professor Dyck and I have put in

writers of very different backgrounds and experience on subjects as different as each student’s work experience. This term all markers were veterans and six of the seven were U.W co-op grads, each with at least four work reports, a point missed in Mr, Morris’s snide remarks. It would be hard to find a more experienced, sympathetic and organized group. To get the reports back with the -best speed to provide best service to students, this group achieved a two-week turnaround on over two hundred report& some of which ran to forty’ pages. All were marked in their entirety, all had an evaluation page prepared, with comment& all were then checked by the supervisor and all were passed back. through Professor ‘Dyck’s office to the students, Any discrepancies of the- kind’Mr. Morris alleges were ch&ked by the A@gfke+r aad~sqpd@or and dealt with ignditiidually. I go into this degree of detail because the marking process is new and not completely understood by some students, My main point is that Mathematics work reports tire graded consistently and in detail by graduate students, many with extensive teaching and marking experience #in English courses (including ZlOC - Report Writing], as- well as ,eaising aqd crosschecking in fh@ irvo?k report .ma&ing proceats itself. Few other areas of the university provide SD comprehensive a service in this regard and we hope to increase the amount of remediation and advising as resources

nd small amount of time in discussions on the design of evaluation procedures and forms to lieved in? best advise students of how and where to improve their workand It matters not what that belief them ‘where they’ can wag, no one can be the judge of 1 to show take pride in effective writing. : the validity of a belief. 1 don’t In the marking process itsdf, feel that our hurt and anger and when reports are submitted they sorrow stem from politics at all, are distributed immediately in but from the violent rape and vibatches of about thirty to some olation of their ideas and beliefs seven markers: several reports by the termination of their lives. are marked in common & the outset of each session arid are ‘; permit iti the near future. So instead of approaching the discussed to assure as much conprotests as idealists [Free StuPakl Beam sistency as is possible aniolrg dents!, Long Live Democrahundreds of documents from ’ English l&t. cy:,etc) or criticizing the protests as realistti, maybe we should protest on a basis that hopefully all of us have in common:as humanists. Because I know that since the day the tanks rolled Karen Brooks, Marco Burellt, Carissa Cameron’, Matt Enginto Tianamen Square’, and stulish, Laura Hahti, J. Hagey, Jeff Kohl, Alex. Macqueen’, Shirdents were murdered and exeley-Anne Off, Kimberly Pawley, Mark Reppiti; Robert cuted, I have not stopped crying. Semenciw, Jeff Smith, Cathy Szolgrt, Derek Weiler’, Justin Wells, Chris Wodskoti, John Zachariah. Jeanne Chew 3A Chemical Engineering

lxontri

b.utioh Lkt

,


8884048

s on Feminism misses the point

Avoiding truth with lame excuses To the editor,

Thank you Michelle Blais. The humour in Imprint has been dragging over the past few issues, I’m sure comic relief was your goal in your Focus on Feminism column of June 30. Get your * 1.. prlorirles stralgnt. Fighting for the right to vote and equality in the work place in the name of feminism are honourable pursuitd, but a women’s right to be fat? Come on! Hidden in your long-winded accusations towards the male species about “female mutilation” based on our inherent need to assert our “superior” status is just a lame excbse to avoid putting any effort into maintaining one’s physical fitness, I am not disregarding women’s obsession with losing weight, not their perception of thinness and youth as beauty. By “male stream mddia,” I agsume you mean magazines like Playbov, various B-rated movieOki Po’r.

n

t.

name of God. TO God we belong, and to him we shall return Quran, The recent news about Ayotollah Khomeni’s death overwhelmed not only the Iranian people, but also other’ dedicated Moslems around the world. To these peopld, his achievements were heroic: he was truly guided by his spiritual values; and thu#, his inner strength was needed to rebuild a desolate natioti, once ruled by the tyrannical .and carrupted Shah. When the Shah controlled Irarr, a deep sadness pervaded

ky’s, and possible even newspapers like The Toronto Sun. What about Vogue or Cosmopolitan? These magazines written by women for women are chock full of articles about losing weight to improve appearante and self-image, and until recently, the Iasbions presented depicted unrealistic, “artsy” clothing on models, most of whom men found too thin to be attrac- tive anyivay. It seems that women are not measuring up to standard9 set by meti, ‘but rather ridiculous ideals established by themselves, This issue is a double-sided coin. Though obviously not on the same scale, men-are quite conscious of their appearance 8s well. Do women not place URTiecessary pressure on males to have wide shoulders, a thin waist, firm muscled, and a washboard stomach [or as close as possible)? Woden ogle at a fit, hialthy .a

. .

1.

I

the people. They did not’ have a strong cultural identity hecause their leader supported American interests over. Islamic belief. Thus, the “American way” dominated the country. Gradually, the economy, moral standards, and cultural values were destroyed, Howevef, after the revolutioti, the direction of Iran changed; and a new hope arose among the people. This hope was only achieved because many Moslems under the guidance of Ayotollah Khomeni sacrificed their for their principles. I lives Ayatollah Khomeni ‘established a spiritual and moral unity within his nation. This is why his death was so deeply felt

male body as much as men do a fernale’s. These are aspects of Western society that everyone must deal with. Perhaps I am biased, being in the health-related field of kinesiology, but I feel that MS Blais’ angst is sadly misplaced. I neither advocate connecting fat with ugliness nor da I approve of unhealthy fad diets that many people, women and men alike. use in attempts to lose “unwanted flab.” It ha#, however, been scientifically proven that being overweight increases one’s chances of heart attack and lower back pain. 1. . Is it possiblti, MS Blaia,’ that the modern women is l&sing weight for her own health benefits rather than to succumb to the influences of a male dominated society? I wduld rather like to give women more credit than you obviously do when it comes to taking care of their own bodies and say yes.

and inc his funeral ceremony, over 1Q million people partici.pated. Apart from his national and international influences, I believe that he was an exceptional human being. Islgm was, his -first concern. Everybody can achieve high level of spirituality and can find their identity by self-control and determination. Although he left us the ray of hope shall continue to illuminate the globe. His spirit is amongst us and’ the movement continues. . . Mohammed 3B Chemical

Eslami Engineering

Embarrassing mistakes To the editor,

Although it’s a refreshing change to see an article on the sciences appear in Imprint, the article “Perpetual motion: over-

Fed

‘turd, overturn” by John Zachariah in the June 30 issue mentioned some points that simply are not true. First, the-author states that the cold fusion process seen by Pons

<videos

and Fleischman produces more energy than it consumeti, thus violating the laws of thermddynamics. This is completely wrong. If, as Pons and Fleischman claih, the cell they have constructed is producing fusioti, then the excess energy seen is a

laws

We would like to complement the Federation of Students, or more specifically the Board of Communicationti, for offering a video service for students, This is an excellent service, and can be very beneficial to students during seminars and presentations. Rob Stewart is the Board of Communication’s chairperson. He donated many hours of his time in helping us prepare. a video for a course presentation..

Stewart made some very he@filming and editing suggestions which greatly contributed to the high quality of our video, He was easy to get along with, hard working, and very knowledgeable in his field. Good work ,B, Comm! Thanks for this n&w service, Kelly Cescone ful

4B

Recreathm

Tracy Goldbar 4A Recreation Lisa 3B

Sailor Recreation

potential dangers of being fat . (unlesti, of course, you think that it is propaganda distributed by male chauvinistic manipulators of society) and get smart, not fat! Chris

Suterno

3rd year K.inesiology

I Focus on :IFeminism * Abojttion by Michelle

& hystpria

Biais

The issues surrounding abortion are a particular passion of the patriarchy. I believe that men’s opposition to abortion on demand derived, to a great extent, from their outrage at women’s reclamation of the FepFodUctiv8 process, Access td easy abortion allows women to undo the deeds of men. Since the discovery of paternity, men have made much progress in the control and regulation of a process from which they are fundamentally alienated. Through the possession of wives, the invention of obstetrics and the development of a technology of extrauterine gestation, men have been able to control the use and abuse oC womkn’s bodies and wombs. Sometimes fhis control has masqueraded as benevolence and sometimes it has been asserted as a right. In any case, it has ser%ed to strengthen patriarchy, to.maintain superiority of men over women. If one recognizes abortion as the complete negation of men’s assumed role in reproduction’, one cari, perhaps, comprehend the general mood of patriarchal hysteria displayed in the reaction against abortion. For a woman to self-interestedly maice and act upon a decision without male intervention and especially against the patriarchal party-line, suggests an appropriation of powef, privilege and initiative which is totally incongruous with society’s definition of woman [read: mother). For meti, easy access to abortion contributes to the creation of a creature that is completely beyond their control. To admit or allow this defeat would certainly be embarrassing, emasculating. It would also set a very dangerous precedent. A woman who takes control of her own body does not need a man to assume this “responsibility.” She is independent of him. She does not “need” him for anything. The resultant insinuatioti, that a man can only possess and control women at a wo.man’s discretion’, deflates the definition of possession and control, elements which are ‘fundamental to the maintenance of patriarchy and of men’s confidence in their masculinity. From this angle, rape could be regarded as the expression of men’s outrage, hostility and panic as they experience the nibilistic diminishment of their manhood at the’hands of women. Women who uphold an anti-abortion position likewise have much to lose if society’s definition of masculine and feminine are altered. Indoctrinated with the patriarchal precepts of feminine humility, self-sacrifice and submission to meti, women are socialized to fear independence and to derive their self-worth from their husbands and from the patriarchally institutionalized role of Mother.

Deviation from this model of woman has serious repercussions (degertioti, assault, rape, hostility) and the knowledge of such punishment for failure to comply is also a part of women’s socialization. Abortioti, therefore, is a threat to the sanctity of women’s traditional feminine fole. A woman who is “happily” living within the confines of that role would regard the woman who self-interestedly and independently chooses to have an abortion as a traitol’, a cold-hearted monstef, not a REAL woman. This monster’s’ appropriition of control over her own life and her own body must result in the anti-abortionist’s realizatiob, on some level, of hbr absolute lack of authorit over this area in her own life. If she is to continue her ignorant r y peaceful existence, this realization can not be allowed to surface and thuti, the continual bombarding of her patriarchally induced concepts of mother-

~~~l’i~~h~h~a~s~c~~~~~~~ fuels our sun and ot erstars and does not conflict at all with the

To the sditor, ,

If you want to be fat, that is your right, man or woman. Sd, ,Ms Blaig, instead of encouraging the use of male bashing as an excuse to avoid doing a little exercise, eating healthier foods, or maybe just plain eating les#, why not read up on some of the

of thermodynamics.

Furthermore, the article gives a rather confusing and incorrect definition of the second law of thermodynamics. A look at a first year chemistry text will tell you that this law concerns the. influence of entropy on proCesses

in an isolated

system.

It is almost embarrassing to see mistakes like this in a uni- versity newspaper. Please have your writers do a little research in future before writing on subjects they’re unfamiliar with, Michael Graduate

Judge studies

-

Chemistry

hood

and

womanhood

with

women’s

acts

of self-determination

must be stopped. Denial of the patriarchy’s propensity toward the reproductive control of women has resulted in an undercurrent of tension and panic demonstrated in the all too familiar expressions of male hostility, defensivenesd, pros’elytizatiorg, vocal angef, and violence. It then becomes clear how a Lesbian/Feminist ideology of !separatioti, which would systematically deny to men any unlimited, unwanted access to worned, could indeed serve the dying blow to patriarchy.


8

Imprint,

Friday,

July

14,

FORUM

1989

“Creationism

The Voice of Treastm University

lllog”ical faith

of Gommorah

by JmWw Well, it’s about time, I was beginning to think that 1 was living in Scarborough and Gommorah (Sodom?] Decadence all around me and no salvation in sight. A hearty “thank-you” to those concerned River City, I mean Waterloo citizens who want to prevent any new strip clubs going up here in Waterloo [er, River City?, Gary, Indiana?]. We certainly don’t need the ones we have, let alone any more. After all, it’s common knowledge they are breeding grounds for drugs, prostitution and fornication. They lower ‘property values and, worst of all, corrupt our youth. [Just like the pool halls!) While crusading we had better make sure we get the worst culprit of them all. A place where intoxicants and fornication run rampant. A place which will surely lead our children down the road to moral decay. I am talking about university campuses. (Which doesn’t start with “t” or rhyme with “pool”.) Why, just look around. Isn’t it horrifying, degenerative? Sex, drugs and rock ‘n’ roll (what, at Fed Hall? You have got to be joking!) are more proliferate here than on the corner of Spadina

and Dundas in Tarawna [Gary, Indiana? Waterloo? Poughkeepsie?) Everybody on campus knows where to go to get blow. (BMH? BVD? MIA?) And weeman? We haive weeman. Leetle boys, leetle gerls? We haive theem, too. Lawts of theem. (MSA? ASA?) And property values?! Boy, haf ve got a deal for you! You vant land, ve got land. I got a duck pond, never been swam in. How ‘bout grmsy knolls? Hardly been sat on. Come on down down to . . . we12 you get the point. Taking away the liquor license is a great idea. (I am referring to the refusal of the Town Council to issue a license to some businessmen who want to build a strip club on Weber near Columbia,) Then they won’t be able to sell booze and make money off those poor, fallen women. Instead, they’ll have to resort to what a strip club owner in Florida did in the same situation, Qpen up without the beer. Of course, liquor laws prevent anyone under nineteen in bars but, no age restrictions exist in context to viewing nude dancing. And what’s so wrong with little Billy watching a little nookie, as long as he doesn’t have a drink. Three cheers for concerned, short-sighted citizens of Waterloo. Baby-sitters are too expensive anyway.

To the editor, I am writing in response to a letter printed in the June 30issue of Imprint. I think that D. VanderSchee and C. Calef have gotten confused in their religious fervor. They write that it is not aritiintellectual to embrace the teachings of the Bible as the whole and only truth, This is the most amazing leap in logic I have ever seenf Intellectualism is the pursuit of learning following the narrow trail of logic and reason. That is the dictionary definition. All things must be proven with reasonable means, When you believe in something that defies reason then you have faith. Faith is the belief in something that you cannot reason out using logical means. If you could it wouldn’t be much good to you. Both intellectualism and faith have their place with mati, but when either of the two intrude where they shouldn’t you have a whole mess of trouble. Since they brought up evolution in their letter I will use it to illustrate my point. Creationists argue from a dogmatic stance. They have only one belief in the origin of man’, the Biblical beginning in Genesis.

Fighting terrorism by Jeff Kohl (courtesy Aiternatives

/ magazine)

The international shipment of hazardous waste has been compared to the slave trade and labelled “toxic terrorism”: five times in 1988, ships from Italy arrived in the remote Nigerian fishing village of Koko and dumped a total of 3400 tonnes of toxic wastes; in July, 13,400 tonnes of incinerator ash was shipped from Philadelphia and dumped in Guinea. Hazardous waste is a broad term for waste that puts human health and the environment at risk. It includes toxic wastes ranging from pestitide sludge and chemical residuals to pharmaceuticals and radioactive materials. There is no complete international database on the volumes and toxicity of hazardous waste;, and available information is largely anecdotal and incomplete. From data gathered from a variety of sources, the amount of hazardous wastes produced globally in 1984 was estimated at be-* tween 300 and 350 million tonnes. Canada produces an estimated 6 million tonnes annually. In recent yeard, the disposal costs for hazardous wastes in developed countries have skyrocketed to between $200 and $2000 a tonne expensive, compared with the US $2.50 a tonne Benin was paid to import five million tonnes a year. In 1983, -70 American industries spent approximately $4.2 - $5.8 billion on hazardous waste management. Rising disposal costs - the result of increasingly restrictive regulation and public opposition ,to new incinerators and landfills have tempted waste producers in developed countries to look elsewhere for cheap dumping grounds. This has led to a growing number of international waste shipments. Environment Canada is receiving an increasing number of notifications of intent to export waste, and in the US:, the number of notifications filed with the environmental Protection Agency [EPA) rose from just 12 in 1980 to 623 in 1988. Most of the American notices are for shipmerits to other developed countries. Under a bilateral treaty signed with the US:, Canada receives approximately 120,000 tonnes of American hazardous waste annually. This represents 75 -I 99 per cent of recorded U.S. waste exports. Though most recorded shipments originating in the First World are made to other developed countrieti, exports to the Third World represent a growing share- of the total. In lQSQ, the EPA received notifications for three shipments to dev&ping countries. In 1987, it received 22. A study by. Greenpeace International lists 115 shipments of toxic waste to Latin America and African countries over the past two years. Canada, despite its good reputation in Africa, has also been implicated. A Canadian firnl, Danison reportedly ,amanged to. r Mining Corporatiob,

start burying nuclear waste in Gabon. Official figures of hazardous waste shipment represent only the tip of the iceberg, and many illegal shipments go undocumented, (Remember the recent incident of toxic chemicals being added to gasoline?) Waste brokers based in both exportiqg and recipient countries often arrange destinations for a company’s wastes, concealing the corporate name if need be, When the EPA enforcement officials surveyed . hazardous waste shipments passing from Texas to Mexico in 1986-87, they found illegal shipmerits outnumbered legal ones eight to one. Many developing countries have expressed outrage at the prospect of becoming the dumping ground for the industrial world’s wastes..At the urging of Nigerian President Ibrahim Babangida, the Organization of African Unity @AU] passed a unanimous resolution in May 1988 condemning the practice. The resolutionhad an immediate impact. Just three days later Guinea-Bissau’suspended a plan to import 13 million tonnes of hazardous wastes brokered by a Detroit businessman. This refusal, and others, have increased the pressure on producers of hazardous wastes to improve their disposal practices. In Canada, our exports are regulated by a notification and consent process. The prospective shipper must gain the consent of the intended recipient country through Environment Canada before a shipment can be made. But there is no stipulation that the recipient country must be properly equipped to handle the waste. Environment Canada cannot block a shipment, even if it knows the recipient country lacks the technology to dispose of wastes safely. Further, no restrictions exist on the export of wastes not technically classified as hazardous (such as incinerator ash), even though many of these are highly toxic. The Canadian government is currently reviewing its transboundary waste movement policy to determine how best to include United Nations control measures that would: minimize the generation of hazardous wastes and thus eliminate the need for their movement; treat hazardous wastes as ,close as possible to the their point of generation; ship hazardous wastes only to countries with adequ’ate treatment facilities;+ and institute an international management systern to track and control the export and import of hazardous wastes. Regardless of the effectiveness of the United Nations proposalti, both developing and industrialized countries face cbnsiderable challenges. The sheer volume and variety af.the wastes to be handled, and the difficulty of enforcing ‘regulations will require almost unprecedented levels of ’ international co-operation. ’ ’ ,For more information on hazardous waste management, visit the WPIRG office, Rooni ‘123

,$+ner+l Sqrvices Complex.

_, ,

” is an., .

_.

Mutual

Ma tt Charles 2A Bfology

satisfaction?

DEAR SEXPERT: My boyfriend

has been asking me to do things I really don’t enjoy. I want to make him happy but 1 to make myself feel cheap, Is this possible? ANSWER: There is no definite answer to this question - it will depend on the quality of your relationship, You,have mentioned two things that might conflict: the need to maintain your selfesteem [i.e. not doing things you aren’t comfortable with) and the desire to maintain your current relationship. In terms of your self-esteem [and general well-being), you shouldn’t do anything that causes physical or emotional pain. Although this seems obviouti, it is surprising how many people [male and female) perform sexual activities they don’t enjoy to please their partner. It is understandable that you want to please your boyfriend, but you can do this without feeling degraded. Also, if he is genuinely concerned with your feeling& he will not pressure you into doing something you are not comfortable with. A common misconception is that your partner will love you more if you do the things you would rather not do. Perhaps your partner will take more advantage of yoti, but it is unlikely that he or she will, care more for you. If you are afraid that the relationship would end if you stopped doing certain things for your boyfriend’ it doesn’t sound like a very stable or equal relationship. Ideally you and your boyfriend will agree on sexual activities that are mutually satisfying. However, if you aren’t able to agree, you might have to weigh the self-esteem and relationship needs against each other. This is very difficult @ do but, if’there is a conflict, it will have to be dealt with sometime. When you are trying to agree on activitiesthat you both enjoy, open communication is important. Your boyfriend1 does not intuitively know what your personal preferences are. Open-ended questions [i.e. What do/don’t you like?) will likely get more honest replies than closed questions such as “do you like this?” Although you shoul,dn? do anythIng that you really don’t like, it might, be helpful to #be open-minded as well, Think about your reasons for not -wanting to .do something. If in doubt! don’t be afraid to experiment. Just because you try something once doesn’t mean that you have to do it again. ’ Hopefully youwill be able ts find activities that you and your boyfriend enj,oy and. that you will feel good about as well. It was difficult to answer this question because there were a lot of things that depended on your personal situation. If you have bny more questions feel free to talk to one of the volunteers at the Birth Control Centre, This column is prepared by volunteers of the Birth Corrtroi Centre. if you have any questions&r us you can visit us in CC206 or cdl us at 885-1211, ext$%Q&. W&ten questions for thimuhmn ccln be left in the envelope on our door or sent to tbBCC [c/o the FEDS office) through on-.cqmpus* m&L We can also respond to ,letters through the mail if y~quqq&d~.o return’.address.:. in bed that don’t want

1

All other poss,ibilities are quite impossible for them. The view of science in the development of theory of evolution is to provide a reasonable theory that incorporates all the scientific facts that we discover. If new and contrary information comes along, then scientists try to understand where they went wrong before and adapt their ideas. Creationista cannot adapt their ideas because they are based on faith not intellectualism. That’s why their belief in creation hasn’t. changed since it was started somewhere in the dark ages, The theory of evolution is contipually being changed as more and more factual information is revealed to the questioning eye of science. The creationists. can never change their position. It is rooted in dogma and doctrine. An one who has seen ‘Who Shall In K erit the Wind [or read it for that matter) realizes the dangers of confusing faith and intellectualism. Let’s hope some engineers check their definitions before they start running off at the pen.


- Imprint,

FORUM

bse

means of God. Essentially, you have a book interpreted by authoritative inReligion of any sort is really ’ dividuals who are supposed to convince people that some type quite a bizarre concept if you look at it carefully. What exactly of being or spirit exists. This is it? Is it definable? God fellow hasn’t been seen for a long time; the only account of It is a source of war and conhim is in a book about him called flict in many parts of the world, such as Ireland and some midthe Bible. dle-east countries. In our own Similarly, there is nd proof that Santa Claus exists other country, communities are constantly shocked by priests, revethan what songs and our parents rends, or ministers behaving in tell us. Sure, people dress up like him around Christmas time, but unholy ways (molesting children). we know that these are just Yet many sociologists believe helpers relaying the desires of that religion also has a strong the yout.h. No one has actually cohesive affect on society, by seen the real Santa Claus who being a strong reinforcement of delivers presents before you wake up Christmas morning. But society’s morals. Why, I often ask myself (usuhow do the presents get there? ally Sunday when I’m trying to It is to a young child’s benefit to believe in Santa Claus. When find a decent T.V. show to you upset your mother near watch] do people; continue to believe in any type of religion? Christmas time, how many times Let’s look at the basic Christian did you hear “You better be good or Santa won’t bring you any religion. What grounds do you have for believing that some presents”? In church, the mentype of superior being or spirit is “You better be good or you’ll exists? be sent to hell.” Some may not like the analogy, but I think it First, and most importantly for religion& there are millions fits. of people who believe in a faith These are simple phrases yet and attempt to convince others strong re-enforcements-of a type of behavior. No one I have or try to pass the belief onto their young. known has gone to hell, looked Secondly, there is the massive around, and come back to tell work of literary genius called a people about it. No one’s parents Bible, which is a source of learnhave likely ,followed through on ing and authority for Christians. the Santa-won’t-come threat Other major religions have other either. ’ books, such as the Koran for the The church itself is a subject to Islamic religion. examine’, since it is where the Thirdly there exist reverends,, faith is communicated to the ministers, and other individuals people via a minister who is in (TX evangelists and so on) who touch with God. relate their interpretations of the There is a holy atmosphere passages to people who desire to about a church, which causes be enlightened to the ways and people to be sickingly polite and

We believe the column Focus on Feminism is out of focus. Lest anyone think this is written by an oppressive, patriarchal bastard, it is important to know that freedom

ryone

were raised in envirwhere expectations, and acceptance were

based on on factor only: results. We are 4il.r ly aware that a large segment of our society does not operate with the same unbiased, unprejudiced mechanism. By the same toketi, we are not naive enough to mistake a cathartic venting of personal frustration and aggression as an objective assertion of feminist concerns and rights. We are disgusted by the net implication of the majority of columns to date - which is that men are demented, parasitic! organisms feeding on women, If the Focus on Feminism column’s were written with the victims of the attack being a recognized ethnic group in society, this type of literature would be quickly and acc.urately identified aa hate literature. We don’t cake ‘what cause you hide behind, but when

you repeatedly blame one.group for ail problems in society and paint its members as monsters, then in effect you have p~~dttced hate literature. Last week’s calilmtit and indeed many previous coMw& was obviously not researched or

instance, what “economic and patriarchal benefit” could arise by the “fathers of society” keeping women slim. Diets? Pharmaceuticals? Consider the fact that the food industry would be the major benefactor of a society of gluttons (not just women). In addition’, consider just a few of the benefits of maintaining a healthy body weight (as evidenced by large bodies of research): decrease in incidence of For

coronary cancer;

levels.

heart disease and increased

and colon energy

It is easier to criticize than to make valuable recommendations. As evidence for the sincere motivation that drove the expression of our concern’, we feel the following would greatly improve the quality of the column. First, the articles should be &ore objective and less subjective. This should help to -reduce the olarization of the sexes whit 1 the column currently fosters. The column should address current feminist issues which are of major societal concern and more importantly, topics should be researched. Suggestions for issutis are daycare, abortioti, feminist support groups; equal pay and education,

except

the

very

children for the duration service. Each

week

the minister

young

of the tells

a

different story, knowq as a sermoti, which to me was excruciatingly boring every week, It consisted bf a story or stories from the Bible which demonstrated whatever the point of the day was. It alsb seemed to offer some- type of justification for the imperfect (normal] person’s behavior. Do people believe in God because they want to have some type of excusable rationalization for their behavior? Is it because the threat of going to hell is hanging over their head? Is it a combination of both of these? Either way, one has to have an extraordinary ability to suspend the notion of reality from one’s mind. My feeble understanding of the heaven and hell thing goes

something like this. Depending on your behavior during your earth life, your soul will go to heaven or hell. But what exactly is a soul? It is yet another concept that one has to believe in if one aspires to go to heaven, which is the basic and primary desire of Christians. Moving on to T.V. evangelists, the&e people are a wonder of thought manipulation. They have millions of people listening to them via satellite, trying to

understand

the word of God. If

the speaker can’t thoroughly pass on his knowledge, you can send in money to receive his book, which guarantees enlightenment.’

(“At the end of every hard-earned day, people find some reason to believk.” Bruce Springsteen One lucky individual south of the border was spoken to by God and told that he had to raise eight point

some

odd

million

dollars

believe

that

he actually

by a certain date or he would be struck dead by lightning. Can you

got

the money in time? That is beyond faith: blind devotion is a more apt description of it. Many people are shocked by some

religions

where

pegple

in-

flict wounds

upon themselves and do other acts of faith which strike most North Americans as bizarre and fanatical. Those peo-’ ple who follow the more strict religions are no different to me than those whose religious activities consist merely of going to church once a week. The socalled fanatics have a much stronger belief due to their religion causing them to perform many more acts of faith, which re-enforce the beliefs even more. Christians are also shocked by Satanists because Satan is an image of evil which all gqod people who worship the Lord don’t want to associate themselves with. I am amazed at anyone who can believe in afantasy that involves an imaginary b,eing, re-

gardless of whether it is a symbol of evil or good. Returning to a point made earlier concerning the morals bred in a religion, I will concede that religion serves a useful purpose in that aspect. The incentive to be good (as determined by the Bible] rests in the ultimate threat of going to hell, not,with what your neighbour will think, Even

an atheist I was talking to said that if she had childreti, she would take them to church just for the&morals that are conveyed there. In summary, it seems that people who go to church and pray find some type of security in doing so. Does this mean they are insecure people? Either that or they have been brainwashed by the sermons from a very young age.

0ne”person I talked to at at length about this suggested that I can’t just say that religion is no good and that it’s a ridiculous thing to involve oneself in, She said I should offer them something else to believe in. So I offer you this. Believe in your-self. You are a strong enough a

person to survive and be at peace with yourself without religion. It’s easy enough to rationalize your actions without using a “God” and a two thousand year old book. If you want a fantasy, watch T.V. If you &ant to donate money somewhere, I’ll take it. If you want meaningless speeches, listen to our Prime Minister. If you want to be a stronger person, believe in yourself and not a fantasy. Finally, I would like to thank Eric Kuelker for showing me what a fantasy religion really is.

To Your Health

l

To the editor,

onments

submissive to everyone. The minister drones oti, --‘makes stupid joked, everyone laughs their innocent so-happy-to-belistening-to-the-word-of-God laugh, The people pray, sing, rise and fall according to the person at the front of the church, The minister has total control of eve-

is. R

Out of focus its authors

9

yourself -not God

by Dave Thomson Imprint staff

Column

Friday, July 14, 1989

Smoking:

the

killer addiction

Smoking is a habit that has been well-studied, globin of a normal non-smoker breathing COand the fact that there are risks and hazards free air will be unavailable to carry oxygen; if involved with smoke inhalation has been welljust a few parts per million of CO are present in documented. What many find fascinating is that the air, up to two percent of the blood’s hemopeople continue to-smoke even knowing that globin is soon locked up, The average smoker of they are jeopardizing their health and the health a pack a day has about five to six per cent of his of others around them. hemoglobin tied up, ~ Smoking is addictive. What this means is that Exposure to CO in the air at a level of 120 ppm the smoker has not only become physically defor an hour, which can happen in a smoke-filled pendent on tobacco’, but is also emotionally and room’, causes headaches, dizziness, and a feeling psychologically affected by it. On top of that, the of dullness, Carbon monoxide, known to cross smoker has made “lighting up” a habit, meaning _ the placenta in pregnant worned, appears to be that his daily routine also depends upon this one factor in lower average birth rate among ritual to function smoothly. mothers who smoke. derstand people who smoke and want to quit Dimethyinitrosamina - are very powerful may go through devastating emotional and psychological trauma, and that they are simply not able to stop what their body and mind have become accuktomed W, no matter how educated they are or how logical the decision to quit would be. Smoicing has been one of the greatest causes of cancer and has been shown to alike. Why? What’s in that smoke? A 1977 reference* gave this information: Benzpyrsne - an organic compound of ‘aromatic hydrocarbon family, Benzpyreti is one of the most potent carcinogens known. When laboratory workers want to induce experimental , skin cancer in test animald, they simply paint a spot with a benepyrene solution. Probably the principle carcinogen in cigarette smoke. Cadmium 2 a metallic element that occurs in nature largely as trace material in’zins ores. Cigarette smokers and those in smoke-filled rooms divide between them from one to two micrograms of cadmium per package of cigarettes.

carbon mohoxids - a colc~@~,, odo+qti, taspoisonousgas. It reduces the efficiency of the bloodstream, iti carrying oxygen from the lungs to all parts of the body (by-binding to the hemoglobin in the blood.) This forces the heart of work harder. About $5 per cent of the hemoteless,

carcinogeng,

mutagens,

and teratogens

imental animals. A smoking cigarette

in experis known

to produce dimethylnitrosamine, and anyone smoking a pack of cigarettes inhales about 0.8 ,microgram of DNA. HCN - eye irritant and carcinogen; cigarette smokers receive a concentration of 42,OoO ppm (the level currently considered dangerous is 120

PPmla nitrogen dioxide I - eye irritant

and carcinogen; smokers receive a concentration of 250 ppm [the level considered dangerous for constant exposure is 5 ppm)i”the smoker does not drop dead simply because he is not continuously breathing air as heavily polluted as his cigarette smoke? radiaectivity T the cigarett,e smoker’s lungs receive some cancer-inducing radioactive lead [at least 40 milliremg/year for the ack a day smoker); this is roughly about a thir if of what he cannot escape because of background radiation. *Reference: Holuti, John R. Topics and Terms in Environmental Problems New York: Wiley and

Son& 1877. *. If you would like to quit smoking or talk to someone about it, or would lik& other health and. safety informatioti, contact .I the Health and Safety Resource Netswork, at ext. 6277, in room 126qaf ,the Heath .and Safety building,


IO

Imprint,

NEWS

Friday, July 14, 1989

Volunteers =. success

.

To the editor,

themselves on the hot sun; and

Another Canada Day celebration has come and gone for the University of Waterloo campus. We were host to over 50,000 people from the local community, university and visitors to our twin cities. The event was successful and many people have commented to me what a great time they had. Thanks go out this year to student directors of the sub-committees and their staff advisors; student societies and councils of both the UW and WLIJ; the Federation and University of Waterloo staff, in particular those that put up with-our disorganization; the over ZOO volunteers that came out on the day to broil

the corporate sponsors. We, the students, host this event for the community at large. It is a lot of hard work, planning, executing, and cleaning up. But for all the hassle and long houra, it is a worthwhile project and can be a lot of fun. WI?, the K-W Canada Day Council, hope we did our best to make it fun for everyone involved. Again, as part of our thankyou to volunteers, there wilI be a volunteer party at Stages, Monday, July 17. Wear your volunteer shirt for free admission and arrive before 9 ‘p.m. to join the FlUI1.111 Terry Playford Chairperson, Public Relations Committee,

Priorities To the editor,

[Shake it up, baby!]

amiss?

I

“Negligible damage” when you consider rainforests cover millions of acres. That’s right, isn’t it? In another case, 3000, or SO, students and workers died at Tiananmen Square. “Negligible

I hate to burst your balloon, but . . . Dave Lawson’s editorial “My balloon has burst,” (Imprint, June 301, seems to tell readers that environmental protection is all well and good, just become inc so long as it doesn’t convenient. Lawson submits that “..everything that’s fun has a cost to it...But sometimes negligible damage can be justified by the heaping amounts of fun it can produce.‘+ I am not sure how Lawson measures “negligible damage.” I am struck with the impression,

damage” in a population

‘*1964”

of one

by Karen Brooks Imprint staff

billion. Get the picture? It’s naive to measure things in solely in terms of degree, in terms of acceptable risk. There is right and wrong and responsibility to what is right is surely more rewarding that the passing fun of one moment. Furthermore, keeping the balloons on the ground did nothing to kill Canada Day cheer. I dare to submit, judging by the delight displayed on the faces of young *and old at Canada Day “balloon breaking” ceremonied, bursting them was fun. Perhaps, then, Mr. Lawson, it’s possible to have fun in a new way, a way that is both fun and responsible.

however, that Lawson has never had to pay the price of “negligible damage.+’ 750,00 gallons of crude oil+ for example, were spilled into the water and onto shorelines in a mishap two weeks ago. “Negligible damage’+ in light of how big the oceans are and how much coastline there is in the world, Right? Fifty or so acres of rainforest, in another example, are being lost every minute of every day.

Daniel Ponech 4th year Environment source Studies

and

as the BeatkS.

University of Waterloo hosted a gala of events July 1, in celebration of Canada’s one-hundred

and twenty-second birthday. The day started at eight-thirty that morning with a community brunch at K-W Hospital, which continued on through the parade, and ended at eleven thirty that evening with a magnificent twenty minute display of firewqrks at Columbia Field. One way visitors found to beat the summer heat was the dunk tank. It was a great success children eagerly lined up waiting to be dunked.

Re-

v

One little girl pleaded with her mother to be allowed.to go in the tank. As she was being lifted up to the machine she jelled, “I changed my mind! I changed my mind!” I Children also found cool comfort under the shade of the trees as they had their faces painted

photo by the Canada Day volunteers. Designs ranged from clouds to hearts to something that resembled Indian war paint. The favorite? The maple leaf, closely followed by batman symbols. The medieval display, put on. by the Society for Creative Anachronism, exhibited medieval duelling techniques. A commentator explained the significance of the duels as they took place. The crowd surrounding the grassy court watched the duel scenes in silence. ’ T-Shirt painting proved popu~ lar as children, students, and parents used their creative abilities to make- the t-shirt of their dreams. , If you can’t have The Beatles, well you could have the next best thing - 1964 “as The Beatles.” 1964 played a two hour gig on the Village Green Saturday afternoon. 1964 certainly didn’t generate the crowd hysteria in the days of the Beatles concerts; however, they proved to be a great crowd pleaser for the young and the

by Dave Thomson

young

at heart. members’, George (Ringo), Bob (GeorgeJ, Gary (Paul), and Mark [John Lennonj, have been playing together for five years. 1964’s

“The spirit is already here I see! We just thought we would joint you!+’ said one of the guys from Spirit, an a cappella band that played at Columbia Field before the fireworks Saturday night. The group lifted the crowd’s spirits, singing songs from the Nylons, Billy Joel, and the Temptations. Three little girIs even dared to grab the limelight for themselves. They got up on stage to twist right along side of the group but were soon herded off the stage by one of the sound people. Spirit ended their show with the song, “Don’t Worry, Be Happy”, followed by an explosion of fireworks - a perfect way to end. the Canada Day festivities.

Cimzgdian Trivia answers And now, the much-awaited, much-debated answers to Imprint’s . Canada Day Canadian Trivia Contest: 1. Queen Victoria chose Ottawa as Canada’s capital. 2, The Mackenzie is Canada’s longest river, 3, John A. Macdonald was Canada’s first Prime Minister. 4. Terry Fox ran the Marathon of Hope. 5. Peurson International [Toronto) is Canada’s busiest airport. 6. Bryan Adams lives in British CoIumbio 7. The Zit Remedy is the band on Degrassi Jr. High 8. Rocket Richard was Maurice Richard’s nickname. 9. Cyril Sneer is the villain on the Raccoons cartoon. 10. Gilles Villeneuve died in a car crash. 11. Montreal hosted the Summer Olympics in 1976. 32, The Canada-US. border is the world’s longest undefended border. 13. The French CBC network is known as Radio Canada. 14. Income tcx was introduced as a “temporary wartime measure’+ in 1917, 15, Newfoundland became Canada’s tenth province in 1949. 16. Jeanne Sauve is Canada’s governer-general. 17. The CN Tower is the world’s tallest free-standing structure. 18, Joe Clark was Canada’s youngest prime minister. 19, Much Music calls themselves “the nation’s music station.” 20. Basil the Po@r Bear and Louis the Beaver live on Sesame Street,

5OC

OFF

WITH

COUPON

ONLY

I4\

4, We’re having o real sole on 0 real trd. Three thick layers of real hot fudge ond crisp. CnJncty peanuts. With cool and creamy DAIRY QUEEN soft sewe in

:

\:

1

.

.

-.

---I

3articipoting \I lrr*I -a-r-

Thanks 1st -

i I

8 8 8 I

1 Come

in after

Webef U UnlvmMy ~8~tl”fWJllt

at

2nd

classes

UdV8l’S1ty

OPEN DAILY UNTIL 11 P.M.

I I I

;

to our sponsors, and congratulations to our winners: Kevin Finnerty ($20. gift certificate donated by Riordan.] - Lori Simpson (Escher puzzle donated by 1,mperiums to

~Ziler*)- Shawn -JuEe’s Flowers - Richard Hung.)

>Shipm?n (Air Walker and G1fts.J Hastings ($10 gift

balloon certificate

buddy donated

donated

by

by Well


+

Imprint,

NEWS

Friday, July 14, 1989

The results

11

of the Canada Day fireworks lottery 1are now in, Angus Craig won the first prize, a pizza a week for a ear, donated by Domino’s. Ho Ply Adcoe wofi the second prize of a Coke beach umbrella and ten cases of Coke, donated by, yes, Coke. Danny Miller won an ice cream a week for a year, donated by 1 SCOOPS. . The children’s balloon tag draw for skateboards donated by The Bay, was won by Cory Andress of Westheights Public Schooi and Colleen Robinson of Centennial Public School. Thanks to the sponsor8, and congratulation8 al!!

: THANKS .

TO.EVERYONE WHO.MADE: K-W CANADA +DAYlA SUCCESS ONCAMPUS Arts Student Union Biology Department Board of Communications Board of Entertainment Brubacher House Museum Canadian Job Strategy Unit Central Stores Creative Arts Board Engineering Hard Hat Band Engineering Society Ernie Lucy, Dean of Students Environmental Studies Society Federation Hall Games Room staff Graduate Student Association Math Society Optometry Society Plant Operations Science Faculty Science Society scoops Societies af HKLS Student Alumni Association St. Jerome’s College Turnkey Desk UW Bookings UW Police UW Retirees Association Village 3 Warriors Band

OFFCAMPUS AU1 Pro Audio ABC Equipment Rentals The Bay Bell Cellular BF Goodrich Cafe Bon Choix Caledon Springs Mineral Water Central Meat Market City of Waterloo Computer Book and Supply Cookie-Connection Diamond Oxygen Flip Top Convertible Club Gino’s Pizza HMS Breads and Buns Ingo Knitwear Inova Opticians Imperiums to Order Jack Frost Rentals Julie% Flowers and Gifts Kennedy’s Catering of St. Agatha Kinko’s Copies Kitchener Jay Cee’s KW Bilingual School KW Hospital KW Ornament al Ironworks KW Record Laidla w Marlin Travel

.

National Men’s Basketball Team New Balance Ontario Glove Manufacturing Parkway Motors pizza Hut - Waterloo Red Carpet Food Services Reitzel Rentals Remax Reuben and Wong’s Riordon Ski and Sports San Francesco Foods Shooters Restaurant Society for Creative Anachronism Stack-a-Shelf Stages Steve’s T.V. Stoney Creek Dairy St. John’s Ambulance Summer’s Touch Tanning Salon Taco Bell Teledirect Towers Department Store Transylvania Club Twin City Trophy Waterloo County Board of Education Waterloo Legion Waterloo Regional Police

Waterloo Separate School Board Wendy’s WLU Students* Union WLU Student Publications VJ Hudel Real Estate &

ALL THE VOLUNTEERS & ALL THE OTHERS,

- SPECIAL THANKS TO OUR CORPORATE SPONSORS

Secretary

of Stale.


12

Imprint,

Friday, July 14, 1989

by Kimberly Pawley, Matt English, Laura Hahn and Marco- Burelli Did you know that UW students are paying Laidlaw Waste Systems to bury thousands of dollars worth of recyclable garbage? Each year we go through 78,000 kg of newspapers, 231,160 kg of glass and 2270 kg of aluminum. If all of this material were to be recycled, it would return approximately $3780 to t,he University of Waterloo. Some of this waste is presently being recycled, but most of it goes toward filling the citybarbage dump Judging by the numerous small recycling programs on campus, students and faculty are finally getting motivated to do something about this problem;, but unfortunately, as these numbers show, their efforts are still not enough. Now you have the chance to change these astounding statistics, If you’ve been walking around campus, you have probably already discovered the numerous small recycling projects which have been popping up. The merits of conserving precious resources have been increasingly covered in the media. UW is essentially a city within a city, with all the movements, interactions, services - and garbage of a city. In fact, we generate about six tons of garbage each day. Recycling offers afl alternative to simply dumping this refuse in the Erb Street landfill. However, one rarely hears or reads about how to act on such recycling initiatives.

The

FEATURE

you begin, however, there are a few factors to consider. When tackling the problem of ting the recycling project off ground, you must consider program,

and deter-

to be collected and recycled. If, for example, the compute room in your faculty building is th subject of your proposal, you mi

make an effort t ink recycling nee x The variety of ma be recycled are su thing from copper wire, car batteries converters to phot chemicals [just to na be recovered, recycle

alone uses the

the

participants,

ong these people are waste disposal

-ti/

vantages

of

the

three

Rs

(reduce,

reuse and recycle), the chances are still great that the answer to-at least one of these questions will be “NO!” While still caught up in the excitement, you decide to take your interest in recycling one step further by starting your own program. Before

companieS, buyers of recyclable materials’, various levels of government and other authoritative bodies and public interest groups. You can work with these people to your advantage - they can offer valuable expertise which may not otherwise be available. Estimate the level of participation expected: this gauge will be necessary when exploring the structural limitations of the buildings [such as lack of storage space) and

means

of

transprxting

will not always assist you with your program. In this case, pool your resources with another recycling program. Current programs are being run by environmental studies (glass, tiu, newspaper and fine paper), Engineering (glass, steel, aluminum and newspaper), Biology (glass, titi, fine paper, corrugated cardboard and newspaper), and the Campus Center (glass, tin, newspaper and fine paperJ, while various computer centers are collecting fine paper. Linking up with an existing program can help to share the responsibility for transporting the recyclables. When all else fails, get a group of interested students or staff together, find a vehicle (car, truck, van or your baby sister’s red

lanned program may go awry if no OM has the incentive to participate,

blue box. You’ve got it...use it!

Now that recycling has become a trendy thing to do, you may find your enthusiasm growing exponentially. Think about it . + . conserving natural resources while also saving your hard earned money. “Hmm . . .” you ask yourself, “does my student society, my home, my work place or even my favourite hang-out participate in a recycling program?” Although more and more people are starting to understand the ad-

s Q if you generate enough interest in it\ /

the

materials to be recycled. If at all possible, try to involve‘the faculty, support staff and fellow students. A recycling program is much more effective if it is sustainable (that is, it carries on even after you have left campus], and will only be

containers? Use your imagination. Some of the most convenient and inexpensive recycling bins can be made with commonplace materials. A plastic garbage can or barrel with a hole *cut out of the top conveniently house tin cans. The hole cut in the top will reduce the amount of real garbage mixed in with the recyclables. Cardboard boxes are great for both collecting and transporting recyclables. There is no need for the time consuming transfer of materials from a storage bin to a transportation container. If the recycling program is at your work place and you expect large volumes of one material, such as pop cans, you ma,y be able to convince a scrap metal dealer to move a dumpster on-site for you. For a fine paper recycling program in your office, look into the Ministry of the Environment’s Project Paper program. When told exactly what you plan to do, the Ministry will supply offices with paper growers [desk top containers] and larger bins into which the paper growers are emptied into periodically. When choosing a method to transport your volume of recyclable& you have three options. If possible, try to enlist the help of a professional recycler. Central Stores will take away fine paper when it is properly boxed and placed on Ring Road or in one of the university mail rooms. Contact Central Stores at extension 2821 before you drop off any papep; and tell them exactly when

and

where

you

plan

to do so.

If you can get the help of faculty or staff members, you can drop boxes of fine paper in the mail rooms. Agaiti, you should contact Central Stores to arrange a pickup , time. Professional removal services

wagon!) and share the responsibility. Now you’re finally ready to go the appropriate people have been identified, logistics ironed out and proper hardware put in place. There’s only one addit ional thing .to think about before you embark on your recycling journey - motivation. What’s the best way to get a group of people to actively participate in your project? Fortunately, the recent [and ongoing] furor over recycling on campus should minimize the problem if uw is your target. Remember, people will recycle! Nevertheless, don’t overlook the behavioral aspects of your program. A perfectly planned program may go ,awry if no one has the incentive to participate. ‘-L


Imprint,

FEATURE

.

Studies have shown that when people sign written commitment statements to recycle (‘Lye& I agree to support this recycling program...“) a high er rate of participation is achieved. Moderate behavioral influences to recycle, like this method, are successful because people believe their recycling behaviour to be internally motivated. Hey, if that’s toci psycho-analytical for y01.1,why not try the competitive approach. Offer prizes to the people who bring in the most glasd, tin o whatever! Last term the arts and f ngineering societies started a recyaling challenge where students were! given participation points for bringing garbage to class. In a case like this, participation points becomet the incentive which sustains the competitive drive. Be careful in situations like this - far too oftea-, when the prizes, glory or other incentives are gone, so is the interest, Students on campus these days recycle for a variety of reasons. They realize that much of their waste can be recovered and recycled !! Promoting your project with the use of eye-catching posters could be beneficial in motivating your group

to recycle. Why not mention staggering statistics of some sort to get your message across? Meaningful statistics can do a lot to create an awareness of recycling. Other promotional ideas include advertisements in newspapers and radio or public service announcements on television: It’s really your choice. Be creative and persuasive.

There is no place in which to “get rid” of wastes... At some point you will need to consider your own motives for starting a recycling program. You may be driven by a concern about the rapid filling of our landfill sites or an awareness of, the need to conserve Canada’s natural resources for future generations. Perhaps you take a more philosophical view and are inspired by the concept of the earth as a closed system where inputs equal outputs. There’s no place in which to “get rid” of wastes because the earth is a spaceship of sorts, receiving no new resources and having no true outlets for trash. Or you may have an economic .

Friday,

July

14,

1989

13

bent and feel that recycling makes tinued the newspa er collection. good buisness sense. Although priThe Greens accepte B the Turnkey’s offerlast week to take over the proces for recyclable goods are low at gram in full. Now glass, pop cans, present, it is possible their sale will newspaper and fine paper can once become more profitable as markets again be dropped off at the Campus fur them develop ; Centre. 7 Well, to each their own motives. When asked who should be doing Whichever the case, it has become the recycling on campus, Turnkey apparent this term at UW that nonSteve McClure echoed the sentieconomic motives are the driving ment of many others. He said, “Recforces of recycling initiatives. ycling should be- happening Last week the Turnkeys, being regardless of who is in charge, stuoverwhelmed with the number of dents want to do it. Since the Unistudents asking them what to do versity isn’t moving on it, it’s now with recyclableg, took over recyup to us [students].” cling in the Campus Centre, The program had to be cancelled ’ The authors are students in envirby WPIRG roughly eight months ago but the Waterloo Greens con- onment and resource studies.

cling

program

on campus.

photo

by Mwco

Burall~

Organic fecycler

A student recycling

in Environmentel

Studies coftee&~op+ photo

by Marco

BumIll

Closely associated with the whole concept of recydliag is the idea of composting organic wastes. Composting is a process whereby organic wastes are broken down to their basic constituents (nitrogen, phosphorous, potasium, and so on) by naturally occuring bacteria. All that’s needed is the oxygen in air, moisture, the warmth of the sun and a little time, The end product is an excellent, not to mention sweet. smelling, fertilizer7 and soil conditioner. It’s an old practice which is regaining ,popularity-and why not given that an average of 27 per cent of household wastes are compostable? The figure forthe Village Food Services dumpsters is certainly much higher. Long Island New York thinks composting on a large scale may be part of the answer to their waste management problems. They’re in the same bind that we and most other North American cities are in when it comes to finding laces to put our trash. Compoating is a o tion we can no longer’s Pford to Rive little consideration. %Iesid&, if applied to the university grounds it could go a long way in in relieving the lawns from the assault of chemical fertilizers and weed killers they are subjected to eve’ry year. Mass composting is very,efficient btit sometimes the individual method is more desirable. If you can’t or don’t want to dig a pit in your back yard for the privilege of composting, there are options open to you. . The most practical of these consists of a four foot cylinder and plastic garbage bag They can be bought pre-fabricated from a variety of companies, Environ-mate of Scarborough makes a bag composter and has seen a steadily growing interest in composting. Company manager John Pinder is pleased with the increasing attention and is currently preparing his bag composters for display at Toronto area schools.

Cornposting, he said “is being explored by a wide variety of people, including gardeners who want to know alid see exactly what goes into their plants.” The city of Toronto has recently begun a composting ilot.project where U,OOO individual composters were made availa ifIle to interested persons at a subs’idized rate ($25 instead of $120).


ITSELF No, not Murrav

Sarah shakes some Ime action by Shirley-Anne Sarah Clarke Imprint staff

Off and

The Bombshelter hosted a near-capacity crowd last Thursday as musician Sarah McLachlan awed, teased and ,dazzled them wit-h her emotional pressive music,

McLachlan hour show mediately

Maritime

and ex-

sultry lows to angelic highs. The entire sound is unique, with the band acting as a harmonizing background free of lengthy instrumental solos or heavy back beat. The audience was entertained with cuts from her current album Touch, While this first album contains some catchy

began her two-

around 1095 estabiished

and im-

her roots with an a cap-

pella rendition of My Lugen Love thbt silenced and stilled the audience. McLachlan is a Halifax

failing to do the songs justice. McLachlan and her new band also tried out some new material that met with‘ favourable applause from the crowd, Judging

from the attention

between the haunting, dramatic Kate Bush, and the intense, passionate Sinead O’Connor, She’s classically trained on the pianb, twelve-string guitar, and vocals. McLachlan gave a versatile performance, merging all these talents, but it‘s her incredible voice that is her claim to fame, McLachlan’s voice flows from

I

A good death has no substitutes

Australian

photo

tempt at composing. She was signed to a contract on the basis of her voice alone and the songs, mostly pensive narratives, came afterward. Despite this relatively quick “rise to fame’,” McLachlan seems very unaffected and natural on stage, She chatted with the audience, and seemed genuinely comfortable with her band members and crew. The only negative thing we can think of about the evening was that the Bombshelter however intimate and however much we love it ‘- was not the appropriate venue for an act like McLachlan’s. McLachlan listeners would have fared much bet-

she got from

the audience while on stage, and the comments we heard after the show, it seems McLachlan could do no wrong. Touch is &fcLachlan’s first at-

Mintal

tracks.

.,oasis

by Sarah CIuuke J

ionmtress:.

-

No small talent

by Alex Macqueen Imprint staff L

folkster Judy Small put extremely-well received (three- encore!] performance last Wednesday evening for a crowd approaching 300 in UWs Humanities Theatre. In contrast to her spartan soloist’s set i spotlight, waterglass, guitarstand and stool - her songs and stories were richly populated with cabbieg, “cockies” (Australian sheep farmers), ‘Nam veteran’s wivest, maiden auntg, aboriginies and other [perceived or potential] outcasts. Small’s voice is both lilting and brash, a dear alto which dips and soars’through the broad on

Aussie an

by Judy HolIands Imprint

First Book of Creotio.rt, a series of nine intri uing paintings by Carla Whiteside, opened at the Library and Ga f lery in Cambridge on Thursday, July 6. The paintings are in clay and elemental minerals applied painstakingly by hand on paper. Each of the works has a phrase, written in French, from the book of Genesis subtly placed at the bottom. The technique includes applying to paper a series of washes of various mineral pigmented clays and then creating images and form from the clay by means of and electric eraser. Each of the fragile works’ consists of six sheets of aper which are unmounted,

He<set s&ted with the selfdefining One Voice in the Crowd, in which she explains what she sees as the responsibilities of the middle class to agitate on behalf of the quiescent+ The next two hours were filled with solos (including some a Capella versions) which demonstrated her own song-writing ski11 or showcased the talents of others. Her latest albud, Home Front, was well-represented: its simple arrangements were more successful live than in their rather sterile studio settin s: Between tunes, she regaled t ii e audience with childhood memorieg, comparisons of Canada and Austra-

rt aff

photo by n8urIlllrcquaan lia [“we both used to be colonies of England . . a now we’re both colonized by the U.S.“), jokti. about her affinity for royalty, and explanations of each song’s . origins. The audience was allowed numerous opportunities for participatioti, end when the time came to say goodnight they showed overwhelming appreciation for Small’s efforts. All the sponsors of Wednesday’s performance

should be congratulated on achieving a real musical coup: Small wasn’t in Ontario touring [which she describes as “bloody soul-destroying”r, only vacationing briefly before her appearance at the Vancouver Folk Festival. Her Waterloo stop should win her some new fans in this area:, and will probabl provide her with material for 1uture songs and performances in cities far and wide.

unframed

and stapled

to the wa P1.

The spiritual theme is stro in the exhibit, but the artist explained that several themes rough her paintings. The use of cla as a medium is a re e feminist re-discovery of pre-C h ristian earth godde the paintings have no specific meanings and Carla mphasized that the openendedness is intentional. *She s her works a “mental oasis.” Viewers can appreciate the description - the paintings draw you unobtrusively into their serene and cool colourg, textures and shapes. Traditionally a ieulptor, Carla Whitesida’s works currently on show at the Library and Gallery in Cambridge could he described as sculpture on paper - or perhaps as two-dimensional sculpture. The artist describes her worktr as “on the fence between image and solid.” Carla Whiteside currently teacherr: art at the University of Ottawa and also at the Ottawa School of Art. A native of Hull, Quebec, she has also been activi as a curator and gallery administrator in the Ottiwa-Hull community, First Book of Creatiort, will be in Cambridge until July 28. It will be at lrXButra1 Ground in Regina from August 5-28 and at Gallery 101 in Ottawa from November 3-25. . 1


Imprint,

*ARTS

A fiddlehead

Especially for music: it is just an insult to music. “But they are the standard promotional device so we.do theni, and we do them in such a way as to not embarrass ourselves and to give them an entertaining

Birminghain’, England. A phone call at 11:3O a.m. EDST a grumpy, woken up lead singer. Thomas David

from Pere Ubu. Thomas? This is calling from Can-

quality

Marbles

bands

quickly point out they hate to be pigeon holed, Thomas doesn’t. But his reasons are unique: “We invented the term. It is a useful description because mean anything, and to mean something.

it

must serve a useful function. Part of that function is to pass on useful information and to serve

as a’questioner of intent and an explainer of,. , uh, to tell you the truth, I don’t think of them that much.”

More modern primitives shared Weltanschauung. The egos got the best of Pere Ubu in 1982 when they disbanded for five or six years. s “In 1982 we were fed up with each other and didn’t like each other, so we split up. It was quite simple,” But that central raison d’etre worked its way around the heartache and found them back together again in 1986. Just what is the s ecial active ingredient in Pere U t u? “There is a series of ideas, a series of emotions. Pere Ubu h’as always been a group that ap-

tialities. Here we had run across something ‘that could be marvelous. You can do two things with music: you can run back and forth to the K-Mart with it on weekends or you can get it out on the highway and see where it will go ind how it will take you and you can open the thing up. We were always more interested in the latter.” Pere Ubu is always changing its sound. Thus, someone once said that their music is not rooted in any decade, so their music always is always timely (or ,.words ta .‘that effect). And Th6tias-hir&&Ifhas been quoted as saying that if they made their newest album similar to their last one, they would be parodying themselves,

Pere Ubu: “Avant-garage” Critics are one thing, but bands need fans more than Mars needs guitars. As Pere Ubu are a band which spans so much musical ground, their fans are an eclectic lot. I Says Thomas: audience that

“Clearly

it is an

usually very open to lots of different sounds and different sorts of styles. It’s an audience that is not confused by the necessity’ to (remain static). SO, it’s an audience that moves across a number of social group boundaries. I’m always interested in the great variety of people that like our music.” As an audience is a gaggle of individuals, a band is a collection of people, of ideag, and often unluckily - of egos. This collection must be held together by some central idett, some is

proaches music from the idea that you develop music from the social hteraction of a group of musicians, and that music is a visual stimulant and that you try to create a cinema of the imagination; that you use all the elements of sound to sculpt a landscape and to people that landscape. You create music that has a life force to it and that fulfills the function of music. The function of music is to describe that which is indescribable, and to most fully document the human experience. And that ‘is what we do. “It isn’t a philosophy. It’s just something that developed. We started playing together and the’ music came out with’ certain qualities and we realized that these qualities existed as poten- -

Howevef,

though

their

style

is

always different, their qualities remain the same, according to Thomas, **The ideas are unchanged since 1975. Marshall McCluhan was wrong. He made the biggest mistake in the last 30 years because everybody bought in to this lunacy that the medium is the message. How can people believe such stupid stufff” The biggest revolution to hit music this decade - before the compact disk - was videos. Videos

are now

pumped

into

E.

Ave.

Waterloo,

MONDAY NIGHTS CiNL -

and

sounds. SC& imagine the surprise that greeted their latest album, Cloudland. It has that indelible Ubu tattoo, but it is very accessible: some go so far as to call it pop. But not Thomas. “We didn’t make a pop record. We made a record called Cloudland. People can say it’s a pop record; we are very complimented b that. People say that because t yhey can make sense of it and it seems to go on the radio

in his mouth

was pronouncing the words so that they could be understood. The other mistake is that he faded away the big guitar outro. The whole point of that song was the power chords at the end.” - Thomas’s voice takes on a slightly hurt tone. “One mistake everybody makes is pronouncing the words,” Nobody could ever accuse Thomas bf consistent and clear dictiin. The marbles in his mouth are usually in full effect. Thomas’s bandmates reflect his

I

okay. We set out to do this record because we wagted to something that was very direct and had more of the impact that we have in a live situation. In a live situatiofi, we are-a very strong, forceful group, and very direct. “It is quite clear from our

music that. we’ve always headed toward the pop format. All we’ve ever done is reconstruct pop music!,

shake

it up, and re-synf not a jazz band. We are not a blues band, and most people don’t thinkof us as a rock band. We are a pop group,

thesize it. We’re

There about

is nothing

complicated

what we do; we are conamazed that people think

stantly we are experimental. experiment; we know are doing.”

We don’t what

we

“Good for what ails ya!... -DR. DISC 172 KING

ST. W.,

-~

7434315

PIZZA SLICES - $1.95 14 INCH PIZZA = $6.49

@FOUR -COKES DELIVERY

instrumentation

otherworldly

Ontario

_Large 1PiZga only $12.99 FREE

weird vocal stylings with their

bizarre

your

house hourly by pretty boys and material girls. Pere Ubu’s stand on video is quite cleat‘, though hardly unique. “Videos are a stupid medium. Video is not very sophisticated. It has very little depth and very little basic central quality to it.

33 University

a3 ITEMS

the

Musicians often cover other’s works: Ex-Bauhaus crooner Peter Murphy did just such a thing to Pere Ubu’s Final Solution a while back. Thomas has spoken out often against Murphy’s attempt, but here it is agaiti, strai.ght from the horses mouth - so to speak. “The biggest mistake he made

doesn’t

yet it seems Ha,” Critics love to hang labels on everything, and they frequently are the bane of musicians. Not the university hacks like mol, but the biggies on the cover of Rolling Stone and other such glossy publications. Though their abilities to sway the record buying public are often suspect (after all, big sellers like Tiffany et al are routinely panned), they can really piss off a rock star. “I usually don’t think of them. I’m sure that somewhere they

does not demean

have something flashy for peopie to look at if you are going to have something on TV. More people look at TV than listen to the radio,”

“You sound like you just woke up.” “Uh, Yeah, I haven’t been feeling that good. I was just taking a nap. sniff.” Pere Ubu is often described in press releases and music mags as being “Avant Garage.”

most

that

music, at least, not too much. “The TV is the big cultural medium+ You obviously have to

John Hymers ada. I was suppo&d to interview you. Your record company set it up.” “Uh.”

Though

IS

woke me up

by J&n Hymers Imprint staff

David “Hello‘,

Friday, July 14 1989

SALAD $2 00

-

-

Olrves

Sour,

$1 50

Items

PANZER0l-U Exfra

EAT-IN

l

$3.50

$

DRIVE-THRU

.4Q

@TAKE-OUT

INCLUDES: Mozzarella Cheese and our famous Pizza Sauce Extra Items: S .75 each Inqredienls‘: Pepperoni. mushrooms. green -_ iairi;, ; onions, olives, bacon, ojnchovids. tomatoes. pineapple hot peppers. sausage. hamI

I


16

Imprint, Friday, July 14, 1989

Kissing Kate: ,Blake wouldrtt

If your

GRAD

by Michael Salovaara Imprint staff

PORTRAIT is important

,. .

Deluxe Sitting (up to 16 full-sizeproofi) _ 9 lJp to half an hour devoted to your sitting! l Traditional, casual and contemporary poses: l Free Permanizing” l

(the only way to make your portraits last)

Photographed else ’ where and don’t look your best?

l

- deduct THEIR sittingfee from your order with us!

9 Appointments at YOUR convenience; l Mail order or personal order service. 9 Your choice of backgrounds. /

\

2-8x10,

2 - 5x7, &Wallets;

5 Black and White Glossies; ALL NEGATIVES!!! ‘some

conditions

apply

UNIVERSITY PHOTOGRAPHERS 258 KING ST. N., #211 (King and Universit 7

in

,7nnn

THEATRE

yj

Kiss Me Kate is a Samual and Bella Spewack book based on Shakespeare’s Tamingj Of The Shrew, with music and lyrics by Cole Porter. The romance between Fred and Lilli parallels the romance of their characters Petruchio and Kate (same deal with Bill and Lois who play Lucentio and Bianca), The mixing of the two stories as the scenes shifts smoothly from the on stage performance of The Shrew to offstage fiery romance of Fred and Lilli takes the audience to Padua in one scene and Baltimore the next. But all’s not well in Padurt, or is it Baltimore? In this enlightened age of equality andliberty a musical comedy about breaking the spirit of a fiercely independent woman does not seem that funny. To be free is the dream of all persons; the imprisoning of Kate is as funny as knife through the heart. William Blake deplored the

control placed on people when he wrote of the “mind forg’d manacles” in the poem London, For Blake a person’s vitality is displayed when [s)he is free from outside restrictions. With Blake in mind this musical comedy transforms into a musical tragedy. Of course there are plenty of antics, allusions, and fancy foot work tomake this a less than a waste of time it would otherwise would be. Generally the perfarmance is strong, except for a few songs which failed to inspire interest. The main characters [Victor A. Young and Jayne Lewis) give a strong perfo,rmanc& working well with each othef their singing is kindness to the ear. Bill/Lucentio (Dirk Lumbard] gives a ho-hum rendition of Rose Danbe. He redeems himself in Too Darn Hot with a sparkling song and tapdance routine. Lois/Bianca [Susan Henley) was cute and tiresome. Her sold, Always True To You [In My FQ&ion], ran on and on and on and.

204 *ears

later - still

sumptuous advertising campaign and, like lambs to a slaughtef, the audience will be ’ lining up to politely take their What more could an audience seats, buy trendy souvenirs (20 want? Actors with ‘perfect bills for a cheap t-shirt !I, line up DOLBY TM voices, big sets for the bathroom for IO minuted, [tits?) that move with surprising politely give a standing ovatioti, dexterity, larger than life perforand quietly file out when the mances, big budget advertising lights come up. campaign‘, beautiful theatre, Les Miserables, the musical, is beautiful audience, dry ice, air based on the famous book of the conditioning . . . same name set arou’nd the time of Is t heatre becoming a mere forthe French Revolution’, [.which mality, a banal tradition, a waste by the way was 200 years ago of time? Not according to the this year), but is in no way of the producers who dabble in “big” qame epic proportion. The musitheatre in T.O. (Cats, Les Miz, c&l is a watered down plot with a Phantom, etc). There is no secret little good versus evil, unreto their success, and not much quited love’, true love‘, triumph risk. and more joy in just take a large prestigious I over injustice heaven thrown in. theatre, a play that did well on Don‘t expect to learn much Broadway (and if did’ well in #about the plight of the working England that helps secure financlass at the time of the French cial,, success), a full scale preby Carissa Cameron Imprint staff

welt who really cares how iany gifts she received for services rendered? Strong mihor roles by two

gangsters [Dale Mteske and Deryck Hazel] helped to provide comic relief when the performance waned.

Miherable

Revolution. It’s intended to be a tear-jerker and that’s about how deep it gets. Les Miserables is a good production. Expect to be impressed. The actors and technical crew deserve every ovation they receive, unfortunately they haven’t done anything very startling or revealing but that’s the fault of the play: Don’t expect to be inspired this sort of theatre will not stand the test of time. There was no-thing done on stage that couldti’t have been better achieved in a movie. So why the theatre? Well it must have be’en something to with that mythical place called Broadway, where blockbuster plays are born and then farmed out to theatres spanning the globe, much to the delight of drooling producers and less fortunate 1 ._ audiences I 1 who m. _can‘t aftord to make the pilgrimage to the Big Apple. What is Broadway supposed

to mean to a Canadian when we‘re paying a hundred bucks for a pair of seats with a.decent view of the Canadian version of the Broadway smash hit? And why, in the lobby of the Royal Alec theatre are they selling the original Broadway soundtrack (and they aren‘t even embarrassed about it) - is the Canadian cast chopped liver??! They arun’t in fact they lend a certain “Canadian somet hing’y to the productioti, for whatever that‘s worth. A week of sellouts would easily produce a. nice kitty for a quality recording of the Canadian cast in action. And even though the play isn‘t about us or our lives, the (audience deserves to be able to take it home with them if they so desire. Unfortunately, it seems Mr. Mirvish has concluded this to be unworthy or unprofitable. Hate to say it but you sold yourself short, there Ed.


Nick Cave and ha&f his Bad Seeds: this has none of the sfiarl and growl of Cave’s misanthropic and apocalyptic reworking bf blues and folk traditions: Blixa Bargeld’s work with industrialists Einstarzende Neubauten comes to the fore with stark, minima-l atmospherics throbbing /behind Hale’s muted voice and the cryptic mumblidg of an inmate named Glover des- ,cribing prison*Jife and the inmate mentality. by Chris Wodskou I&print staff- . Gho@s . . . of the Civil -Dead is the story of David,Hale, a former prison guard at United States Penitentiarv Marioa, Illinoi8; a prison pop;larly knowh as “The. New Alcatraz,” the highest level security prison in the U.S. All inmates have bee*n confined to their cells since an butbreak of violence in 1983 which resulted in ‘the murders’ of .two prison guards. However, ‘the story Hale tells is not so much concerned with the Rctual killings as with the events leading up to the murders - most notably the fact that they could.have been prevented; inmate acquaintan’ces of Hale% warned him-of the violence that w,euld- transpire, but the prisbn administration ignored Hale’s pleas to take action. ‘Rathef, afraid of bad press and wanting to maintain their image of being irod-fisted snd in complete control, _,t-hey Dranded H-ale a f‘shit-disturber” snd ordered him to keep his ‘rumours” qqie t . The’ soundtrack ,is centred around Hale’s words, his dis:urbing and often chilling re:ounting of his conversations Nith inmates culminating in his graphic description of the obs:ene violence of the killings. I However, the real surprise of he soundtrack is in the music :omposed and 1- performed by .w -- --

I ’

CIA makes

history

I-

The droning tape loops and the oft-repeated theme of c,ell~, clanking percussion and sibilant flute- are foreboding &nd positively eerie when juxtaposed with Hale’s and Glover’s .grisly monologue,@, making for some genuinely spooky late night listening - at .-least for the first couple of listens. The problem with Ghosts .. . of the Civil Dead Ss the satie that ‘besets many soundtracks and spo,ken. word albums: once you know what they’re going to say, they become predictable instead of shocking ; or horrifying; the theme music!, toti, which may be arresting enough on the first hearing even repeated throughout the course of a film, simply ceases to’be interesting when it is essentially all you hear every time you-play the record. Still, Ghosts’ . . . of the Civil Dead is a- remarkable and coinspelling sdundtrack, assuredly the-type of albtim which relies on impulse shoppers who hear it in I a’ recdrd i&e alid are imm& diately fascinated by it. Just don’t let,it wear out its welcome. ,

by J. Michael Imprint staff,.

Ryan .

with. the passin; ‘years, I’ve come to realize that not only is my life bereft ,of meaning and direction but everyone else is wandering blind, purgoselesg, lifeless. However‘, I ndw know that the future should be the last of my concerns. It has become -increasingly obvious’ that our time - at least op this plane of existence - is rapidly coming to an end. I can see how noi-existence will have .its advantages: no longer will fhave to endure endless nights worryingabout which af the infinite consumer choices I face daily will bptimize my lifestyle; Bqt until such time as deathcomes,Imust go through the motions - in a pale imitation of “life.” For this charade to achieve maximum realism I must pretend that I’m still capable of being “eritertained”; that I enjoy some things’ more than others. Since so much of the mtisic that I come across is hopelessly banal and soullesS, I am forced to make arbitrary and random choices as to which I “like” or “dislike”. I flipped a coti, and this particular record came up a’ winner. Thumbs up to a great album!

Germany- .- wq$ not responsible for starting ’ World HIar II d

by Derek t\ieilkr Itipriqt staff

The following is an excerpt from Popular Music as a Force for Social Change in the Late 20th Century by Professor James Darcv, Piexoto (Nunavit: Univ’ersity of Denay Prtisg, 2203), plj. / 212-213. _

Chapter 12 The- onset of what is now known as The Daisy Age began in 1989, with the quick rise to fame of the group De ia Soul. De La Sotil was nominally a hip-hop grciup, but even from the beginning it was obvious their range e,xtended much further. Their ’ early releases - the 3 Feet High and Rising LP and Jenifa and Check This Out EP$ -displayed unprecedented wit, originality and inventiveness, in a genre that was becoming increasingly That’s where De L;t Soul came in. The “Daisy Age” (the term is stale .and predictable. What is of primary interest to believed to have been coined as early as 1987) was centered‘ofi us -today, of course‘, ‘is De La Soul’s message. Far from the milspirituality and inner awareitant, rabidly antiunificatibn poness, for the three members of De La Soul realized that this was the litics of other rap groups (like Public Enemy], De La Soul. esnecessary stepping stone to alleviating the world’s ills. poused “da inner sound,” which was summed up in their maniDe La Soul was unique in their perception of both the dangers of festo Peace and tranquility ;is now resumed under a Daisy-Iike modern society, and of the .solution. Clearly then’, De La Soul condition! De La Soul has now enteredy+our MIND, BODY- . and was humanity’s last hope. But in mid-1989, it remained to SOUL. Not only.pas such a message be seec whether or not humanity timely, it W&J becoming increaswould allow itself to be saved.ingly neces‘sary. North America in the. late 1980s was clea/rly a (End of excerpt) c

l.Suependere .

,y J. Michiel mprint staff

Ryan ,

L! Guitars’, guitars’,. guitars. We’re packed to the wall with zin’and they’ve got to go. For the nere purchase price of *tin6 of hese‘ albums YOU too can have he Sound of monster dueling &es ringing in yqurears forever .)I I nore. . Live Skull has beeti treadinghe boards for the ‘past ‘six or even years. For most-of their caeef, the Skullsters have sufS TOLS CONCER,i ered in the shadow of the imilar sounding but far more of- your usual hardcore tales of ?In effect, they snatch victory uccessful Sonic Youth. madness and ang$t, the, Susa.ns ..from the jaws of defeat in the So what is this sound?-Like I warble -about l&e, its lessons .f;orm of a rocking good time, . and ldss. aid, guitar m@d,ness: clanking, * - Then there% the B&d .o,f Sugrinding, cruni=hin$;;’ blah, blah, While. hardly being radiosang, using a triple axe attack as , friendly fluff, (the Sugans’ mateblah. @ding over a pounding, their strategy for world ddm‘inabulsing, throbbing, etc, etd, etd, rial is chock-full of hooks and tion; Here the’tunes aren? as dis10 wave type rhythm. With some foot tapping rhythms.. This bcordant .:and henacipg, nd; here c;reechy vocals thbow& -.iq for album and the welcome news of .tie havsmore of ti pop afi@oach *tied measure. *.y.. the Trooper reunion s]hould a - ‘picture’ the (gulp) Bangles make this summer one of the best Mmmmn& sounds like a recipe 2 (8 with sbjme guts, . brains. and or boring “alterqative” music ever $resse$ .ia mpre than ‘thieir un-7,; ..i disaster tind tedium, iBut some- _*,*-‘- #me&&. ‘S$’ whtire Skull siag c~_ ‘, - Live I :-1b)) $ ‘.:. 56, low the$; mana’g&to pul;l it”‘5’ff. ‘hrough some unholy pac$ wi#% le.who-cannof-~~narn~~,~th$y ontrive to. make .th&;tirti -CM rt damage formula work.

once-great civilization on the brink-of demise. Political unrest and anarchy abounded, ebvironmental catastrophes were piling up upon each other, an-d economic conditions were steadily worsening. Worse’, these were problems which showed no sign of being solved: the world population was caught in a spiral of ever-increasing consumerism and materialism. The shortsightedness -of these pedple was appalling. They seemed to have no time for - or even interest in-any sort 6f spiritual, inner values. ,

(Worn

up if non-violent,

down if looking for a fight. ZSteel-toe work boots. S.Black motorcycle cap. 4,Sid Vicious ‘YBelsen was a gas” 5.Copy of Imprint Arts.

-.

_

%birt.

WATPUB Cd-6RiNNATORS..

‘. NEEDED ‘. FOR THEFOLLOWING ClTl+ .

/ ,iORO-NT0 f ,‘. ()TTAWA*

CALGARY .-_ IWONTREAL.

i , .\

t

* .I --


-

18

tmprint,;% Friday, July 14; 1999 -1,._ .._ -

by Justiq Wells Imprint staff

.

I

:

,

,

1

i

..- _ -

aginati&; i Million Things;.and especially In ,A‘ City which harkens back to the days -of .a slightly more ~.noble-sounding Clan of Xymox. 0‘ - ’ . Although not nearly as’good as their previous work, this album does show. promise and very good things may corn; oui of this band in the future - but don’t . expect that these things will resemble thevery good things that , have corn-e out of this band in the past. I. B ’

j

&l’s a

-T

.I

I .I<

,‘I

‘if&s La&gne i . Angels.:.. Taking Care & , Business Deneau & Wayne . I 344 pages

i”

I .

by John Hymers Imgtint staff

,

-

.

-%. .-

In the mid-sixties, back whenanybody who rode ‘a bike sufThis album is much smoother fered from the -outlaw stigmEi;. and more danceable than any gonzo .journalist .‘Hunter . S. previous. I Xymox release. It Thompson penetrated the Hell’s really is, as -the pso,mo sheet Angels..,He drank, hung out and says, “the:most acdehsible album got-stoned width them. He also got to date.” It’ seems to be a transistomped after falling from their tional album, with the band -good grades. moving out of the Cure’s shadow The purpose of all that was to / atid into New Order%. . research a book he was writing, Fortunately they-retain some ]And it,wasl a gobd one: shocking .To be fair, some lyrics on this’ of their traditionally ‘.mysteand interesting, clothed in the album are interesting. In Ken: &realist, prophetic ., rious’, immediacy’ that. only first person neth Bakef, he -writes, “And r sound; Xymox still sound like narrative can deliver. Now, in by Judy Hull&de there are those - heaven knows / the late eighties, they’re &tight up in some kind of Yves Lavigne staff ’ Who wank kids brains off every 4 I religi.ous fervor centered around I Imprint .*has attempted t-o write .a -Hell’s night on thetelly”. Songs top,ics some secret nobility. They sound * Angels book based on police files rahge from’ romantic, nostalgib Three months, three week L like they’re trying to pass on se‘and interviews, . .and two days, by Bill Pritchard, glances to social commentary. cret revelations ,an’d oldtruths. j It is not that’good; , , is good, mainstream, BF@~s~‘POP-. Some of.the writing consists of . Xymox isan eight-year-old band I .-The book’is tin endless litany . The most striking thing about it hit-youlover;*‘the-head-.with+afrom the Netherlands ~who have. of bad. things- thiit- t.he Allgels is MF. ‘Pritchard’s *smooth voice , baseball-bat messages..’ In Cosy had three ,albums to- date’. and (and ‘a selected few other gangs) which is in the-“fatalistic exisEvenjngs, he writes, “Mouths who were originally named Clan have ,perpetrated.It gets quite I tentialist” genre he sounds I &ed feeding,. a-ml if the system ! of Xymox. ,kThe -word “Xymox” tiresome after a whilg, andsome-‘: like he issinging >slightly flat all sc’reWs ytiu ..mouths~:get desper~ originally h:ad something. to- dohow loses -sight of ’ the ; point*- 1 :ate”.. ., “,.:,-. _i.,* the time. with distilling alcohol, but the. ,promisad on the cover an& in the-1 ; >j rt’ Unfortunately, mainstream ’ Bill Pritchard’ studiedian-. int&u&op. ‘A:--< -band now says it has no meaning pop is fun at first but becomes guages and he has obviously , and that they merely like the letWe all know that the -Angels boring when $0, rea-lize that you mastered Frerich because he oc-’ ters. If you’ve never heard of aren’t nice peopld;but most of us casionally slips in a French dan’t remember when the last Xymox before you probably still think of them as bikersnot ^ song ended. and the current one phrase or two. He doesn’t have shouldn’t start with this album business men insports cars. AC-~began. Most of the songs consist ’ an’entiresong iu French; it seems because you’ll get, the wrong imcording to Lavigne, though, the. of acoustic guitar and fairly simto me he is being pretentiousIt’s pression of a once-great band. If Angels indeed are finely tailored ple .rhythm. like he is saying, “Hey, I’m cool, I crime %rds you ‘have heard of them, or if .and bring out the Cosy Evenings consists of know French.” to shell out big Harleys only on weekends and ’ you’re unwilling piano and vocals but doesn’t This is Bill Pritchard’s third ’ for runs. bucks for the previous two imseem to work. In fact, the piano album and he is ‘popular in the port-only 4AD. albums you Though he teases us with this thing reminds me of my brother’s UK;and Europe. His sound.is inshould check this out. startling revelation in the intro-band recording a demo tape ifi offensive, elegant and even digThere is one great thing about our-basement in grade twelve. It nified’ but I don’t find it very this album: Obsession sounds was really good for back then, interesting. There are two songs nothing like the dance single it but it doesn’t seem to have a of the. 11 on the album which are was remixed into. Other great upbeat and I like those>best.:_‘. ‘. , place on an album. songs on this album include Imr -.-. d’,-‘_ %..

hctioti, and drogs it in here ant there inthe book, he fails to explore-it;:Hi-s-book deals with tht antics of the more primeval An gels - the wild ones who murder for fun and gang bang for ever .ltiss important reasons. ,Hell’s Angels: Taking Care‘ 0; Business. thus-fails to present an ything new. Even the extensive section on Canadian Angelr! paints ‘the same picture Thornpa son painted in 1966 of the Sar Bernidino Angels. Lavignf shows the North Chbpter (a:par .@ularly rough Quebec chapter: .a$ bloodthirsty maniacs and re. counts .many of their crimes. But as there is no p@rticuiarly Canadian way to: murder, tc <rane. or to terrorize: this sectioi @Go falls flat. Lavigne’s prose damns tb hooki His insistence throughoa on using present tense results tn confusing priorities., Introdu& tions to minor characters read the same,way as the mea* of the various _anecdotes: confusiq and maddening. His adapftition of the bikers’ vernacular also is distressing, When .any* adjective is used toa :much, it loses its effectivene&r.& land the gratuitous use of “fuck,” really. fails,’ ‘Hd just ,doesn’t ‘swehp; his style ‘brings attention to his language asif he expects it PaIaqquipe &SF shim some ‘sort of instant street-cred, 1 . . . Lavigne’s ,baok.is in some way ‘supposed to be a chronicle of the Angels’ change from greaseballs jo business suits. So what. If the Hell’s Angels are as’civilized as he h.ints, why doesn’t he write about it?. A - Answer: h.e .didn’t have Thompson% advantaie *of b,eing there. And thus,- his book ii only as good as his sources. .’ e’ _I_

.,AND.AGAlN~THiS YEAR IT IS ABS-O-LUTELY ‘. _, _. A,’ F-.R- E,& . : 1.:. ;x, . _.I : i. . ._ / - COME’,.ON. OUt AhiD. W,ii~$R&-W&L B.E .WON ’ FOR .-’T*HE .:.BEST 3ACKIE. _. ,*’ ST~WART-Ih/lp~~‘~dNAil~pJ, THE ATARI- , . - ROAD. RACE--CHAMPION, SCRATCH.: & : : -. WIN, %ANDMOLSON INDY fRlVlAl’. :. - -You ‘-’ cgbtd :WIN Tickets 1 . :ta the-NtOtSON INPY . f&r the who16 weekend Provided & Sponsorecf P


, _- -

, . _*

L**&

"

u~aauur

AAAU

LUA

6 truth. By the late 508, the lettrists had mutated into the Lotrrist International, and then the Situationists. It is this latter group that Marcus seems most fond of; ’ their ideas drench the book and * their leader, Guy ,Debord, ismentioned more than almost anyone else in Lipstick Traces. IL The Situationists loathed late ’ capitalisti.. “Comfort,” thevsaid. L -“‘will never be comfoitable enough for those,who seek.what is not on the market.” . But their ’ most important : -statement, m.ade while still -called the Lettrist International,. went like this: We believe the ’ most urgent expression of freedom is the -destruction of+idols, -Athe -especially when they claim torepresent freedom. If Lipstick Traces can be summed up .with one quote (truthfully, no one quote could do it’ justice), it is that one. All the movements, all the pe.ople Marcus talks about and brings alive are in the idol-destroying . . *f /-. business, and the freedom-creating business as well. That, says Marcus,. is the significance of punk. Yeah, that sounds pretentious, but .‘Maccus brings ?,a rigorous ,,L-l--l-~tilrularly tlpproac;1 -------?I &nd a ton of referen,ce points from as Jong ago 2’;hreLXX Ages to as recent as last year) to create a true history, a.collection _ IN EYE-CATCCilNG of interrelated facts and events which he saw it as his job to bring together. The book is in the 1950s with their fo&of dense, +ometimes almost’ un- . aesthetic terrorism. Led by the, rkadable (the story of%he dada-, intelligent, charismatic Isidore ists in particular), but it is still Isou, they championed the spirit affirming, a fine piece of work., ,of youth, not in a temporal sense, When you finish it, having just but as a social condition; you - read abouf\the May 1968 upriswere youthful, they said, if you ing in France, you feel weightdidn’t belong, if you had no job, less and empowered. Read no family, no prospects; In such carefully, Lipstick Traces, aa a position, not having been abbook about punk and many other sorbed into the accepted cultural , important things, will give you mileiu, you could apprehend the new eyes to see with.

y )

been various. artistic and politi- / cal movements (including punk] which,. despite havinahad little tury in the soci& political Greil Marcus . - influence cr , cultural mainstreiam and Harvard . which have no overt connections \ 496 pages I to each other, are manifestations of a basic need to be free, to resist both social ossification and the ., official version. Marcus starts _ by Johp Zachariah out his history with punk which, Imprint staff in his view, democratized rock, at least for a short time. Punk ,I It’s hard to imagine a book I was empowering because it rebeing less hip than Greil Marcus’ jetted talent and ability; her,( new‘ LiIjstick Traces: A Secret points ,fo bands ljke The Slits, _ History of the Twentieth. Cenn awnose first record was, by contury. Amidst books on particle ventional standards, garbage. physics, New Age mysticism, But it .was a record, it ,was real, cyberpunk, the information age, and its reality debunked what postmodern fictiod, and so on,,a mostpeople thought reality was._ &T-page tome dissecting the Says Marcus, I”If . one’“.could philosophy of punk rock, disshow that rock ‘n’ roll by the _ cussing its cultural andtheoretid mid-1970s. ideologically empo- . cal - antecedents and, . in -the were d,as the rulin&exception to process, revealing an alternate the _,. 9, urndrum, conduct. of social history of rebellion transcending life;.had become simply the shinleft and- right, would seem to be a order, ’ iest;.cog in. the established bit of a step backwards, : then a.demystification of-‘rock ‘n’ To begin with Punk; rock is . roll might lead to a demvstificanow usually regarded with-.-no t ion of Isocial life-.” ( ” small amount of patronizing That’squite, a -mouthful, and smarminess (a comic I once saw Lipstick Truces is full of them: it cracked,“‘Punk is really great because, it gives ugly people a is,--. often, -riot an easy book -to read, but peheveran&pays off. chance to socialize.“) and an aca-... Reading the .book is like riding:a demic treatment bf Tpunk ‘as ,an bike across town in twelfth geab: important .philosaphic.al moveit’s hard work, but it’s, paid off ment rather than’a‘hiccup in the with occaisional spells of ‘dizzyWestern sociological fabric ing, I. intoxicating activity. For would eeem, to many, dubious. enough times to make the .book To turn such a treatment into worth its rather hefty . cover an in-depth historical inquiry price, Marcus’. writing reveals spit on that, That’s just a taster; would appear even more questionable. Reading the dust true insight. and wisdom. an in-depth description comes After dealing with punk, he later. jacket, it looks as though Marcus takes us back to the time of dada, has written an interesting but &. This is the character. of LipWWI era Zurich, when a small stick Traces, a book which sends . timately inconsequential \book, group of artists spit on art, made an es&e&c ‘chronicle full of out tendrils into past and future, a joke of it, produced nonsense at and draws portions of both into trendy trivia. When there’s so their club, the Cabaret -Voltaire. much of consequence to write the -narrative, creating a lively, But wait, before we learn about scholarly story rather than a dry about, one asks, why pillage the that, Marcug slips in a bit about history. maggot-ridden corpse of ‘punk? Guy Debord and the SituatuioFrom the dadaists we move, tipstick Traces answers this nis&.who,w.ere bored to tears slowly but surely, ,to the letquestion with authority. Simpliwith , j .I-:.pg&&&. ,and fied, the thesis -cf. the book is that trists, who made ripplesin Paris >‘-,,tpr-i‘r ‘.4-J% c. capitalisti,. X Lipstick A SecretHistory

Traces: of the 20th Cen-

,

P”iroseSH0ES.Ofy

GRAEPO-VISRON

-

.

1

x

_I

KG8 agent directs IUS foreign policy after wwli

:-\

Th& Best Bid-Not The Best Known m l

l

14,000 consultants in 229 offices and 49 countries. _ -_ e-7, ” Over 500” G&a&tin consultants * s&w% ticlient base’ of large- Canadian manufacturers, distributors,. airlines, financial institutions, oil & gas and utility companies. -we.* PI?&” design a$d implement computer-based - information systems, @$d ,, %$@qturi?Ig solutions. Our expertise includes Artificial Intelligence, *Tele&mmunications, Computer Integrated Mpufadufiry) aM,..PIant prsdud~y~=a A@men Consulting cffers oppSKt&y, v@k%y’ and, :$wst’~ of all; chalenge. .I1P ’ r . ,

The I.kiversity ‘of ‘~aterlob has ..top-quality piofes$ionals. ‘Those technology; innovative, business. “quality service. Thirty- percent of. Waterloo .gnduates and’ c&op-

The Midnight Examiner William Kotzwinkle Houghtoir Mifflin _ 227 pages , ,. ‘. r. . -_A”. I

by J+ M. Ryan Imprint staff Although there are some good’ laughs “in William Kotzwinkle’s latest novel,< it comes up a bit short in the socially significant, timeless read stakes. It starts as an enjoyably sardonic piss-take of the cheesy world of supermarket tabloids. Kotzwinkle provides -US with the obligatory cast of misfits and zanies, as well as a hopelessly jaded protagonist all making up the staff of the exquisitely corrupt Chameleon Publications - publishers of Young Nurse Romante, M&IO Man; Knockers and

, ,

prcved ‘to be an excellent -&me forwe attract I value state-of-the-art . solutions, professional r training and our Toronto cons&ants are University of students. ‘, ’ . ,

’ / ‘

of course, the Midnight Exe-’ miner, As you’d expect of the author, of E.T., the Extra-Terristrial, Kotzwinkle is a craftsman; he effortlessly constructs a set and cast of characters full of comic potential. The basic premise seems almost foolproof: how can you screw up a satire on the morally bankrupt world of yellow journalism? There are so many possibilities and if the action starts. to flag; just have one of the hack characters write one of thoseimprobable hehdlines like ’ “UFO Found In ‘Cheerleader’s Uterus” for some cheap laughs. Trouble is Kotzwinkle doesn’t do anything with this great-foun‘= dation. He leaves this fertile field for satire fallow, letting the story drift into some mindless subplot involving strippers, Mafiosa ,and \yoodoo ritual. Some scenes -are funny enough, but ultimately the novel is a missed opportunity. I think , h e made the same mistake with this book that I’m with my lifexealizing hoti many posd sibilities there are, he refuses to . choose one and drifts helplessly ;into the second-rate, For God’s sake don’t make the same mistake: turn back before itis too late, -.-. i

_

1. .

I

;. ! l. _’

&king

-

;

.To :-: he& more; join us fbr

>I-.win.e ’ & ’ C~heese ,

r /


by R&is Nikhirl,) . . I&print staff ’ ;. :

-

..

‘Towthds .the’ ena of the 1987' Warrior football sea&n, a-player rebelhon resulted in the-ousting of head coach Bob McKillop from 111his duties. Then in February of l$88, )!Dave “Tuffy” Knight, per-. sonnel director of the Toronto Argonauts; left his post to beof UW’s , come ‘the next skipper: crumbling football program. _Knight, the second winningest coacht-in CIAO history with a 104-49-4 record, was determined to put theteam back on its feet. With the,momentum of the “newly-spirited” -Warriors, you, could smell a-win approaching in the 1988’season. But it was not to-be. _ Even before the-- season -. started, disaster, struck the batttired Waterloo’ squad once ’ again. On September 3, 1988, after -coaching ,through a tough ~. 28-3 loss in _ exhibition play’ against Laurier, Knight suffered . ._ a heart @tack .and was hospitalia’d, Upon recovery, Knight could not return-to the Coadhing. 5 du-ties in 1988 at the advice of his doctor. TAssistant. coach Chuck Mdtiann was qualified to take over but did noyhavethe sideline‘ -~’ + in,fl.uence that. Knight c had:. For . the fourth -consecutive seasoni,:: ’ W*&erloo fi&shed the season \ with an O-7 @ord. c ‘_

f$eptembgE10 at Wsestern:It

?.

, e. . -. ,, . .

v&i.@ cat&troghic s.tart f& the‘ Warritirs in th~jE~~cons~~uctlqn /season. The. ‘Mustangs pummeled Waterloo 89-l before. 7,200 fans at J.W. Littie Stadium ‘/ ’ in London. .’ -’ offe&e%ombined . The Western f&r a g$in.of $1!$yards, including 19,q passing f ‘:.$rZls and 12ti’rus& ia’g yards. _f ,n$omP&&on,~ the a+m$cj offen$ of -WateiiGo ~61; leGted just 125 ,ya+d&,: $/&+@

IThe agonizingly ‘“,Lr; Waryiors .i , -: cgme . - ;“A I:- ,.: ~ T,omc

.

I/

.,-

c

close to stopping th’eir 30game .I

;. % I. Y ’ ‘,“bl[

,

2,s

.

ldsing~stbak

3 _Is; . 3.c_- +_ .\,_,-WI* -‘,.. a 1 .-

-

.< _ f

.

:.

.I

l

~@i@&.*@j3..

..@&q<

.JxffjS;

., .‘\

.,_ , ltiprm flk.*photo i: .- _a’...e ,:.:. .I,’ _,c ., .I^I.-

‘-IL

.

.

.

,c

t ,

Interestingly‘enough; all of U touchdowns’ -%$ a~ different _ clobbere& %k2,dby thk Torc&tdq’ game,” formulated McMann; ,Bh@~,~ despife+n . im- ’ of T’s points were scored by spe-‘,. V+$ cial. teams.. Waterloo’s defence, I after the, game. Evidenie shows, Prove d Performance over last week’slambasting..by Western. led by veterans Dave Shaw and however; that Wa@rlpo’s 01ffence Larry Vaughn, held Toronto to _ is improving.’ special teams made - i - F ,’ I Waterloo’s just 265 offensive yards; I &toh.e~ 1 v8r&Skork: W&e& many costly errors, most of 24 a! Gwdph: After 100 arid YGW~ ;eow &a& 0-s rewhich were in the first quarter of- 1. September the game.,’ While attempting to %. two , gamks : and three single cords ’ in the base,m@nt ‘of, the were finally OUAA. If Waterloo was going to return, the opening kickoff, Eoi- * F:*points, the Warriors the ball into the end !: j~ able to ‘put. a couple% of touch1’ se1 bobbled .end the 26 game losing streak, 6 itie-for;a si;ls!& p&it gift .fok u ‘; Lc downs on the score sheet in game this game’ agtiinsfthe *Yeomen < >._ three. But both TD’s were saored _ of T. . %.. +c,3,wTou.ld bethe. bestchance for,UW defence; in parin 1@8. . . : :. . 8n.. Waterloo’s next drive, - .-by the Waterloo I,. titular -Vaughnand Shaw, on in- -a After. ‘,a fumble/i;eoovery ‘by -3erception returns, of: .45: and 26 ‘,; Shaw,~,;;Tdhir~. ki.&eda ‘,&,yard fib14 @al t9 giye W$e&3ob’ a 3-O lead in the opening -quarter. Three .-plays ,&tter~~ the. ‘Ye&men replied. with a$iel,d. g.&l of their “own. Early~‘in the’3&&on,d frame, Tchir hoote& another b‘;ill be-‘ tween the uprights. - -Waterloo 6 York 3# However, York’&ame~b.acktiithtwo unans“wered majors-andled 17-@at the half. . ’ :- .‘_ + L .z . , =. Using l#ka&vright &‘cB, Wa.

the lead to,h-o after the fir&five ^ fence. .. ‘: lowed him to b&ome.the league ‘ye A highlight of the game for’ leader in kickoff return yardage minutes. ’ +. ., after .the first week of play.‘Loi-~ I Matters just got worse’for the Waterloo, .w.as when ’ Vaughn 1’ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ J!kyWrs7 &the ‘secon.d- qua&r. sprinted back (from a missed >;*t’ ,*.* 6. , ‘yfi+&., b::“. -::@rit,~~$j~&@$ kicked the longest i. field goal) 168 yards -from the’ rugs. ’ . .,:A ‘titing &&it,- w&, ,a&&~&$-L~ ;; pu$ _I60 “&+sethis year< <in. the rc Warrior end ione and was fi‘1 f,$th .:_by w&&ior . ki&& $&;:. :ouhx -(& ;i;&& j;;B+&fonto nally stoppe;d at the Guelph 12Harding who” pugted -’ an* as+ . :xaneered. baqk j withr’a-, 94. yard - -yard line. This was the longest - <punt return of the season in the taun&fi&, 13 t@q :t+@th an aqp-. ,punt return. for the fouc$down. - Another ,convert. The I Wattirloo ’ OUAA, but the Waterloo offense age dist&nce of‘ 3.4.4 jZti~ds,WCi4 one of yarding’s kicks that re-’ ..deficit, was ‘now 21-O. -- ’ ’ T failed to use it towards a touchdown drive. third quarter, ,. &ted ‘in. Waterloo’s single point- c After ,a scoreless The Warrior offence did make Harding kicked another rocket in’the Western end tine. . ’ a couple of appearances in the ,!34-yard’s into the Blues end zone “For -the rmost .part ‘though, 1for Waterloo’s first point. Later, ’ - limelight.. On the second play 1 Westar&dor$nated all ‘aspects from scrimmage, quarterback goal- kicker. Peter Tchir . ’ of the game and waslater given a ’ field Lenart dashed 66 yards on an opsixth place XXA~ a@kitigaS’ - : ., missecJ a’lting field. goal attempt tion play to the Gryphons five but settled for a single point once <-, s8pt#mb8r>d7 \iersw# Tormto: qaving a stdngdefenca will do a. again: Toronto 21 Waterloo -2.. I- iI yard line. Then on third down, a wall of-defendFinally,: th# Blues added a.& I Lenart ran’into t$am absolutely .no good if it has * a‘ pow&+as ,offe*nq! ..“The, Waryardfield goalto finish the..b*h-, ; ‘ers just one gard @hart* ‘. “If we ha - scored those two ,*$s.‘-. ./T-p&-I: <+-+-tr.‘C: ..&-A:: -.” - -. . , . I@&~~~~

.

with a 20;‘19 hss at

,.:i$t*..

Z?$

7

: .

‘-

.

-.

.

terlob stormed out of the dress ing room‘and racked up 18 point . in the , third quarter. : Tchi started it off with’s 26-y& fielc goal. Then the Warrior ,offenc got its first touchdown, of. ,th &ason,, when wright hit-receive Kevin Dutcher on’s slantPat,ten from 24 ,yards out. \ ‘. p . I . The teams exchanged fielc goals and Yorknow led the nail biter, 26-19. ‘-With, two seconds left on thj clock, Waterloo lined .up fora 8.9 yard. - field goal. Could this be thl win? ^ Unfortunately, ,’ a bad. ‘snai spooked placekicker T&r. am his kick into a gale for&e wine sailed wide. ‘But, the ball was il *the. end zone1 If Waterloo coulc keep the ball there, the game would be tied.!. j . However; -the’ dream turnet ‘-into a.heartbrea,ker as York rai the ball out of the .end zone tr pqs.ey the victory. ’ . The Warrior offence .wa! praised forits~fforts, ‘collecting a much, impr0.ve.d 24.4 yards ahc ‘12. first downs. Mean~whil~thc defensive unit held Y.ork $0 24: yylq. _ I -/ . ; j$tobe~, 8 I.ikrp!$ ’ M@j&&m Waterloo went ‘flrom a.n impres .:;.~fvle Pe~f~rm(.&C~.~. @&$?@.‘rsrl last ‘week to a pathetic 21-7 los!

l

starting offensive

*quarterback, Mc!Mann’! crew- gompletedo&

14 ()f ~@p&&~ f& jO& X1(

- yard?, with a meager gain of.1‘6r I 9 &$t&l’ yards and36 fir&downs i ji’ The Wm+iors could noi get pas the Marauder 38-yard line unti the final minute of the.game. , _. In ,,a 2gwts,y , effort;” Waterlot -halfback Qville Beckforc: , ‘plowe& in from-the five with 1: seconds r&n~a,inin to remove thl 1 bagel. from, W$er 4 oo’s swre co .;,:’ luplfn.: Tghirr, l&&d. thh. conver to help) ut some dig&y i&o khc . lopside’ x loss., ,( -‘_ .I&@ the storJr,;of -the day’ wal ./_ &&Master ’ veteran Sam Laud’ks wb ..‘eme’rged~~ as an unlike& hero, r&plac&’ Mac’s injurei star, tailback. Laucks caught l A ” -pass for ‘one-totichdown, rushec ‘-for another, &id. topped it all of: <.by for a’third.I In total, hf . . p&sing “!’

ip ,c&t$imd on page21 ‘, .I I..


-SPORTS

-

. .

Imprint,

Friday, July

14,

1989

21

Jeam to fgrm .at UW?

Wo:men by&h Imprint

hicol staff

It was a typical cool and foggy morning in the early days of September 1985. While many people were still asleep, about 35 players hit the ice at 6:30 a.m. for our high school hockey team tryouts I noticed as I circled the ice during the warm-up that there was the usual mix of talents and sizes, all anxious to show their abilities and hopefully survive the the final cuts coming up in two weeks. However, one player stood out in the first week of practice. This player, much to the surprise of all,.was a girl. She could stick handle as good as most of the other players on the ice, but unfortunately, she did not have the speed or the size needed for high sch=ool hockey. It was a hit of .a shame because many of the players, myself included; were rooting for her, We all admired her courage and determination to break tradition in this male dominated sport. Many, women and girls are following in the footsteps of a girl named Justine Blainey, who won a court-battle to be able to play in the all boys Metropolitan Toronto Hockey League. But while the controversy goes on regarding the right of women and girls to play in men’s and boy’s _ leagues, there is a growing frenzy of interest in women’s leagues. In women’s hockey alone, there are over 500 registered , teams and about 10,000 players

Football Continued

from page ZO

ran for 60 yards on 11 carriesand caught four out of the air for 20 yards. Waterloo’s one man kick return show, Larry Vaughn, displayed his all-Canadian style with an amazing effort in the second quarter. When a Mac field goal attempt sailed wide, it landed in the arms of Vaughn five yards into the end zone. Vaughn busted out dodging numerous tackles on his way to a ll!%yard touchdown romp. But this was too good to be true and the Waterloo faithful realized this as they stared at a sea of penalty flags. The Warriors were called for clipping, bringing the ball back into the. Waterloo zone. -_ Waterloo will have to really ’ improve to beat the CIAU’s fifth ranked Laurier squad next game. October 15 versus Laurier: It was the same old swan song for the Warriors; a strong defence held UW in the game, despite a sputtering offence, but eventually it ran out of energy. Consequently, Laurier pummeled the hapless Warriors 29-0, leaving UW with only one more chance to avoid another winless season. Waterloo somehow managed to slow down the high powered Hawk offence to only 11 points in the first half. After collecting a single point on a missed field goal, Laurier converted a UW 15yard roughing the passer penalty into a major, complete with convert, to widen the bulge to

in hockey

in Canada. The only side affect of this is a probable decrease in the size of ringette leagues. i Unlike men’s hockey, most women’s leagues do not allow body contact. This creates a fastpaced, quick passing style of game in which the only means of intimidation is through straight talent. Meanwile in men’s hockey these days, in order for a player to skate the length of the ice with the puck, he must be willing to drag three opponents with him because they will all have their sticks hooked around his ribs. The hitting, clutching and grabbing is slowing down the momentum -of men’s hockey. Alternatively, women’s hockey is becoming a refreshing change for pond sport enthusiasts. Canada has been holding national championships for women’s hockey annually for the past eight years. Of the eight teams that competed in this year’s tournament in Coquitlam, B.C:, seven were coached by men, proving that this sport has the interests of both sexes. Women’s hockey will be added as an event in the 1991 Canada Winter Games for the first time ever. But the really big news as of late was the announcement by the International Ice Hockey Federation that Canada has been selected as the host country for the world’s first women’s world hockey k championship next March. Somewhere in Ontario - the

dlowly

citv will be chosen at a later date - “Canada will compete against seven other countries in an eight team round robin tournament. Canada’.s opponents will be the U.S:, Finland, Sweden’, Switzerland, West Germany, probably Czechoslovakia and an Asian block team (Japan or China). Canada does not have a national team, so the Canadian. Amateur Hockey Association will either start a selection process or pick a club team. A Quebec team won the national title held in March and a Hamilton club clinched a 1987 world invitational tournament in Mississauga. Maybe we will even see women’s hocky as a demonstration sport in the next Winter Olympic Games. , Currently, there are six women’s hockey teams in the Ontario Women’s Interuniversity Athletic Association (OWIAA). So with all of this growing interest in women’s hockey, you are probably wondering when Athena hockey will start at Waterloo, right? Well, it will depend on two things: interest ,and money. The interest is fairly strong at Waterloo. Hockey can be a very expensive sport because of the all the equipment. But if Waterloo can get a major sponsor like New Freedom, CCM, or Cooper to support them, you could see hockey action at UW, complete with ponytails under helmets, in the next five years.

improving’

19-0, The Hawks polished off the third quarter with a z&yard field goal and put the nails in the Warrior coffin in the fourth with an II-yard TD march through a gaping hole in the Waterloo defence. With Lenart back as the starting quarterback, UW gained only 131 yards. Lenart tossed 16 -passes, completing six for an inexcusable 21 yards. Once again, Beckford was the only star on the Warrior offence, dashing 42 yards on 10 carries. Waterloo does deserve credit for a strong first half though. “If we can play a whole game, even to the extent that we played in the first half against Laurier, then we have a chance,” said McMann. Oct. 22 at Windsor: Waterloo brought its football season to a close with its thirtieth consecutive defeat, rounding out a fourth straight 0-7 season.But this time, Waterloo went out in. style with a respectable performance from both the defence and offence. The Warriors gained 281 yards and earned 17 first downs. Running back Dave Ropret led the attack for UW rushing 26 times for 132 yards, in a replacement role for the injured Beckford. “It was a positive end to the season’,” said McMann. “I’m proud of the offence’they moved the ball really well.” Windsor took the early lead 91 in the first half on several Warrior. fumbles. But Tchir answered back with a 43-yard field goal to close the gap. Waterloo took a brief lead, 11-9, on a z&yard touchdown romp by running back Tom Chartier late in the third quarter. However, UW was called for pass interference on two consecutive plays,

bringing the ball back to the WarFior one-yard line. Windsor then dove in for what proved to be the game-winning major. Yet, in a remarkable effort, the Warriors never gave up, forcing the ball back into Lancer territory. But on a third down and four gamble at the Windsor ZOyard line, Waterloo fell a few inches short of a first down. Moments later, Lancer running back Chris Porter collected his third major on an 88-yard run to put the icing on the cake for Windsor. At Season’s End: At the end of the 1988 season, three Waterloo players held OUAA records. Marc Loisel had the most yardage on kickoff returns with 336 yards on 19 runs. Larry Vaughn’s punt return record of 103 yards held to the end of the season.,Finally, Jim Harding had the OUAA’s longest punt in 1988 at 66 yards. Overall, Waterloo finished in the basement of the eight team league, but managed to place seventh in offensive yardage. The Post Season - Looking Ahead: Not long after the end of the.- 1988 season, Knight was back on his feet and got a head start on recruiting high school grads for next year’s rookie crop. As of early March, - Knight,S McMann, and Ken Hussey have visited 125 high schools in Ontario. , Also, Knight has been holding winter workouts and spring training since’ early January for players on campus. Therefore, the upcoming football season will have a better outcome for the Warriors with the strong sideline influence of Tuffy Knight.

And he’s off! UW Engineering’s Ring Road Classic was held Sunday, July 9. first place finishers were as follows: the 40 km novice category won by Brad Day; David Lum won the 25 km men’s open division; also won the mountain bike race. Team Yoshi won the mountain relay, and the running relay was captured by the Psychosis team. 15 km women’s open was cancelled. photo

University

UNIVERSITY

by Jonathan

The was Lum bike The

Matthews

I

of Waterloo

CH\OIR PRESENTS

A SUMMER EVENING OF MUSIC Saturday, July- 15, 1989 8:00 p.m. Theatre of the- Arts University of Waterloo “Creation

“Liebesslieder Polkas” by P.D.Q. Bach (A Rock Opera” by D. Bobrowitz and S. Porter Opera Choruses and Polka Melodies Robert Shantz, Director

$5.00 (Students/Seniors $3.00) Tickets Available at Conrad Grebel College, the UW Theatre Box.Offi~e and at the dolor. Presentedby Conrad Grebel CollegeDepartmentof Music and the Creative Arts Board, Federationof Students,University of Waterloo

2’/2t COPIES - July17-22

__ kinkoy

thecopycenter

’ Open24Hours. 170 University Avenue West Phone: 746-3363 FAX: ‘746-80 17 8!/2” x 11 N 20#

bond, auto-fed

sheets,

at participating

locations.


22

Imprint, Friday,- July 14, 1989

Basketb la/l fhals

Le

. coming 442’

e

g

by Susan Ratkai, Christina zell, and Phillip Bertrand ’

Frix-

Baseball, Spring ‘89 men’s competitive softball season came to a close this past weekend. The weather was beautiful, and the calibre of play was high over on Columbia Fieids. It was a tight race at the season’s end for the top spot in the fastpitch league between Jim Lynch’s Exports, Rob Carmichael’s Special K’s, Todd Hinton’s Wild Things and Bud Mountsteven’s Heavy Timber. In the end, a higher net difference gave Heavy Timber the number one spot and advantage heading into the playoffs. During the playoffs last weekend, ’ the Special K’s upset the number two ranked Wild Things. The

Special

SPORTS

K’s

continued seven Players where they lost 16-4 to Heavy Timber, who rallied late in the game to take the title. Preschoolers, Rat Packs, and Chemikaze finished at the top in the slo-pitch league, each with a perfect record. In the A division slo-pitch final, the 2nd place Rat Packs played a tight game to’defeat the tenacious 4th ranked Grand Slammers with a 6-51 score. In the B division final, the 13th Place Ryan’s Team challenged the 11th place SJC Ducklings (outcome not reported). In the C division final, the 21st ranked Out of Control teamed up against the 22nd ranked EMR,

through to the final with

who after

_-

W

ap

clinched the division title yet another close game.

Soccer The women’s seven-a-side soccer league came to an exciting end as the Spazzes edged out the Sock-hers to gain the advantage in the playoffs. Systems Sox finished third. We Kin Kick Ass fourth, and -Applied S It udir ?S fifth. The Spazzes took first place -based upon their record against the Sock-hers, who had a better goals for and against average. The women’s playoff games started on Wednesday and will continue on Sunday with the final on Monday. The men’s soccer leagues were also competitive with a pair of tie games to end the league play for the A division. The Old Boys with a -_ 3-3-O record 1. clinched first . .m Dlace. Uien; lstv tinished i 3e iecond with a h-1 record, Vatican City F.C. pulled up in third, Merkin ended up in fourth, and Bayern Munchen made the playoffs in the fifth spot. The final two A division games will be played on Tuesday and Thursday, after this week’s first and second round games. Each with 5-1-O records, Psychosis and Civil Grads are favoured to meet in the Bl division f*mal. Hoping to upset them are several teams who 1 ave four wins under their belts, including the third placed W.C.R.I:, the fourth placed N4 Hmricanes, and the fifth ranked Cha3s, who tied Psychosis during the regular season. In the B2 division, Shafted --

up (611, East 5.5 (SZ), Chemadians (X?), Maverick (84), Liberachie Bunker (65), 96 Proof (86), and W3 Wandering Jews (67) will challenge each other over the weekend to determine who advances to the final on Wednesday. In the B3 division, Bible Thumners f611. Dirt l62t. Rampage (631, Anabolics (841, West 4-gkins *(85), Crazed Iguanas (66), Renison Beach Bums (67), and Oriental Express (68) -will battle it out over the weekend to send finalists to the championship game on Wednesday. So, there will be lots of soccer action on Columbia Fields this weekend! _

-

-

-

_----

I--J’

Basketball The men’s champi onsnip’ ’ -m-s.LI LLglalrlt:~ l!1ur lilt: A,A. De DI, nm DA, DI DC?,and C leagues will be played on Tuesday

in the

PAC.

The

:: :.:~:‘.::....::..“:‘-:,:~~“:“.~:~.i:,.:~~~:.j

.<,:p;:.,:..:,. .... ~-~.::...:"'~,.:,.~~~~;~~~~:~~.'.~~:;.;~:

C division

final starts at 4:45 p,m:, the B _ ,.,:.,'~.'~~~~,~:.-::,.,.":.~~:~,'~.; ,,,. :,,.I": ':.'..'I.,_ division finals go from 5~45until ::'i,....-.:y&,j!;...:.";;, _,.'f_i_i. :..__ the A league champions hip game $:: ;.‘,‘:..~~,::.: :‘,.~“,..i:,,~:~~~:~~, ‘,,.,.?: ~:,,b.,~., . .,.-“.: ..:.. ,..,,:.. .: :,yA.. ;,.,.: <$$. :, .,.... .’n__,.’.:.: ‘: ..,i .’ ‘. .A. begins at 8:45 p.m. :,,..I.:....,n;;G; : ‘..,. ,..:,.::‘V __: -.“‘~:~,:~.:‘.~,:;I.,~~:~~.:‘.:.,’;:’.,’:: The finalists are - A league: .;.:ll’iI,. ‘::J wet ~~~~~ from Hell verSuS Tar;“;:~:‘_1’:,‘;,. ‘:.:~~,~~~~~~‘~~~“~~..~:~~:~~.:~ nadoes, Bl: Buster Highman versus Dunk-a-Mania, B2: Tamil Taximen versus Chiefs, B3: Massive Kintusion versus Spent, and in C: Chemadians versus West 4.

Going for \ it!

-

-

The Canadian National Basketball Team trounced Toronto’s Estonia at Monday’s exhibition match in the PAC. Over the past several weeks, organizers have selected the national team from 50 top players who travelled to Waterloo for tryouts. The team will play in the World University Games later on th.is year.

Hockey The hockey playoff championship game also goes next week. The Pool A final starts at 9:00 p.m:, with the Pool B championship game at 10:00 p.m. at Columbia Ice Field on Wednesday.

photo

“EXPERIENCE

OUR EXPERIENCE”

by Julia Kefter

r

,SUMMER TENNIS

q: a PRINCE GRAPHITE

‘l,,Y

PRO -reg224.98 _______m__ *l-24@8 GRAPHTECH DB widebody, reg 249.98 ‘1 Q908 CTS GRADUATE widebody, reg 300.00 $24998

JULY’ 19 ,20,21

~J3AR@W’VS GALORE GIFTS BOOKS UW

GIFT

CLOTHING STATIONERY SHOP

SCH

ITEMS 1

HEAD

GRAPHITE EDGE strung, reg 124.98 ----*8Ss8 MAGNESIUM PROreg 49.98---- ‘6ga8 ELECTRA Master, widebody, reg 300.00 -___ $249@8

WILSON

MATRIX widebody, reg 119.98 ~~--~~.~..~~~~~_-~ ‘Q-9” DYNAPOWER widebody, reg 164.98 ---- ‘1 2Qa8 PROFILE widebody, reg 399.98 .--t---‘-----s $27Qa8

D U N LOP

MAX IMPACT Mid, widebody, reg 144.98 “II 19” MAX 200G rig 234.98 ~~~~~~~~~~~-~~-___ ‘I 7QQ8 POWERMASTER reg 79.98 -Wm-i-----WWIW ‘6gn8

c

II)I~II--~m~II~I~1)rnmIm~

: FREE TIN OF’ : -:I WITH TENNIS BALLS : THE PURCHASE OF ANY RACQUET : I ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER 1 . EXPIRES AUG.’ 1’/89 L m~mIrmm0~~mIImImIID-I

166 University h& W, Wbterloo 886-0711 / Mm - Fri: 9-9; Sat: 9-6

,

J

/

I


,_--

.keep the money si, ‘Vib s$lji.~g it :fq JeSs than cost1 -Call- Akbelr! at @Ia

Bedroom furniture: King wat&ed with Geryihing. F14XPOy Nigl%bia $30?. Antiqus: chest: -of &&&i; .$6ooo. ,Paul at 746-646O’or x+3666.

-

. 88()6;..‘--

.

/ -,

A

:1 -Aa

!y . print.’ Pick-u$deli\ieiy availabth. Fast service, $150 p&i do& ble spaced page, CalFMark 746--$35X

_.

1

.:

.

.-

km--$nt in Townhouse for ,,/Winter ,90. H@f ‘ba:rowa&; closer to, laundry, a “-ai store, 15 min walk .&table for 2 people. .. ~0 campus. $330/month ‘746-31.48. I._

or $165 ,e;lch. Call Bev ’ . * .

/

‘,

infor.m&‘ion

,I _ . _I

\

ACCKW~ AID&&jtiqftteb -bridge”Kitch&ei/Wat&rlG is a vplueteer qrgafiizati~q to provid.ini, ed&%ti&@and Irru~4luuals

+lIlu.

WIG

LAPr~rl~ILullry

bi Camand&ea Pe$ib@d &p&far ’ . U,UUUL

L

prr1, ax yluual Lutll l UIIICy clt?ll !G, : Today ‘is AiDS Awarenes&Dai. There Sctibbie Players CJu$ meeting, at Topic and‘group vary weekly so that all will be an’ informatioir b6otti in the 7,30 pm. in MC 3012, Mathematics & women ale welcome anvtime. For .. Chin&se ChrisFiln fellow&ip - weekly ..--.. CampuS Centre from, 10-2 a.nd a disComputer Building. Bring boards I$meeting. 7:00 pm., WLU _Seminary =. more c.ipform-;atidn _____ _579-3941. ,- _ cuSsian/pre$entation (Putting a fa.se , dictionaries.. Phone 579-36-95 for de-. . _Building, rqom 201. All welcome. For to-AIDS) inCC 1 l.O’at 12:3O pm. L-k Amnesty [ntemations ,I-Group - . ,118. .- tails. .Vis.itors, -beginners, other- tatitransDortation call .746-5769. . for Ca&a,in Condom at Fed HalC“toCome j,oin -the Conspiracy 07 nope. . guag’es welcome. English, -French, Work or-i behalf of orisoners -of connightl.. _ ak Aw* Ll1nhrnurlY”l hnakk .a“IYIIYY.” \railahb __-.._ -.. --. -. -. IP~mehi ,“3G?,“~ I V.. .Y”Y. YY scieqcif th‘~~ughoutr~~~-\ivort~I :Eve’ ’ SUNDAY Comedy-co lme titch an evening of far p@y. . . 1mamc m-6 ryone welcgme. uG 135; /-:du ‘pm. , -. . liye improvisational comedy. Tonight _-:TUESDA~, JfJLy 2s ‘. Laymen’s and toinorrbw night. K-W little the8tre Play Got edgiticers in&tf -to -Go Evan~~iicai fellowship ev-. bui’lditig:~-9 P$in&ss St. -Waterloo, 8 . clz+sq at 790 pm! in B.%.=-Matthews’ - ening service.. 7:00 pm.. at 1 e3 Univerpm. (ju@‘acroSs- King from the:Prin-. -, H&II, room-l-@@; Fr@playi@#ime-for c-LSity AveT W:,:*Apt- 293 :&%A):~-All-aF Cinema Gratis. This week’s feature: fimcc Pi“IInnmal .vr,..u,. . -welcome . ,, ._ VYeQ aII -layers at ..7:30 .. I- .pm. call , x4424 . \’ or _. . F. -. ._-. . -, -,.-.‘..?The’ Sweater”, followed .by ‘.‘Blues . ‘I, 3 Brbthers”. Movie-starts at 9:30 pm. in LWUU, UC 3.“” w.1.. OwO,NG EVENTs . ISATURDAY, Jl#iY $S the Campus.Centr,e Great Hall and is ’ - ‘-7 24 be1 _ * free of charge. . , College, Chapel... There -0 . ‘, are no Sunaay .evenlng servdces- -_fnls . $Jfhl$ evening of music, present@& !-. -.. -. . ? tsp -. I,. ’ ‘* . , term. _ .. . Old country games, here and now. c ‘;.i; WEDRE#jAY,>Jt#LY 26 . by thei University Choir fbaturing “Lie- 1: NFW -exhibit -of .miJlticultural games ’ bymen’s Evangeiicai fellowship‘ beslider Polkas” by P-D-Q, Bach; I:, a?.e- *” I: _‘, featuring German, Mediterranean, Bible study. CC 110 at 7:30 pm. All ar& .. “Cretition”-(Rock Opera)by Bobrowitz, Amnesv-injertiational holds a special O;ieht& and Korean gam-es. 9:OOam. --A,- welcome.-I * ‘I ..&a .---, ‘_ .__ meeting focussing on let’-Fer -. wrinng. -tp-5:04~m;.S’undays;l:OO - 5:qO pm. . melodies. Show starts at 800 pm. in and booth design, upstairs at tne .LUwY, Lum3 ’ ‘-‘*,us&the force Luke. Go to braa l%seuin and Archiveof Games, BM‘H, the Theatre tif the-Arts, tickets availa_ -the &Jniv&%. itv-, of _. Waterton _ ___-_ _-- at i.. -House, .7:30 pm. Ne\iv met$&rs ti$l-- f?*fXI ----r’--- nm Tree. ble,af-Conrad- Grebel Music office, UW mcbme.e. eai=h, Wbdnesdav, There in the Clubs :-. I’ _‘, Box Office ‘or at ahe door. .$5~($3w A -----r- L ‘I “I ‘, . . t 1 , room of the CC ybu will find WAT$FIC~ . studehts/seniors). For moi$ informal MmiDIY -There you-will be able tq legr! to use,. tion call 885-Q22&-ej& 2& i -.: . r 1:. .i . ‘- I the for;ce, But bewar&the-dark&@... %7 I 1.. - .‘{ The KW~Vegetari~.~~~ciation.h~ids .‘:y:h&@se of .Deb;ates meets every Moniis annual barbec~~~~ik-;irlictoria~.~ar~ ‘~-&&.$t . = 5G. 6:~ pm, at St. jerorr;les’ room from 6:30 pm. Bn”iig,$&iI - a_ .cab-eat burgers, as v\ieft As-tlunsiconcome, . ’ -di@ents, an&-ice tea will‘b’$! provided. j 2 . , ._ _ Cost is S5/$6 adults and 82 fdr child.‘ment has a weekly‘ meeting at 7:30 . *oni+ Group -- meets in CC 135 --I pm. in CC 1388. If yoy.want to.organ(uStiaCly) qt 8~30 ~$6 Come’out .and - ite pq*itive change ii7-s@ety, you ari3 enjoy movie nights, e&cational even-- I good girrie atthe Ca@r&, corner- of .__welcoinel \ ings; drinctis, road trips tind. dasual King and Queen streets, frgm-q@m.-. , discussions. Foi weekly events call I until .I ‘%m. Cogf 1s qg&4. For details ‘TU.ESDAY - f ’ 884~GLOW or listen to 94.5= FM, ZalC 8&$-GLOW. ‘” -;’ .. , Thursdavs from 6-8 om.’ -. Db you think’ you have ‘a ‘drinkin. Eckankar Centreopen on Tuesdai-&v.&N~AY, JULY 16 Perhaps Aic6holics Anoenings froin 7:30 to 9:OO bm:For in’ -., problem? nymous can help. Call 742-6183: ;. formation .+r bo.oks. Eyeiyqne Edwwdian ~usic@e~&hon Herit: Weekly meeting,,open to the pliblic .,welcotie’d. ’ 171 Queen St. S., 886age Cr&sroa.ds, R.R...2, .&$cheger. A. d759,, . . , Thursdays,:300 pm. Village Two-C& . celebration of Waterloo’CourIty’s tihi_’ ference retim (beside main gfflce): qtie- heritage of one hundr’ed ‘and WEDNE$DAy - ’ Wat&&$& Jewfib &u.der%s Associ& _ twetiG five:.yeass of +nusic making. . -_ tion Bagel BrLifick fodd, pi%bple, that Enjoy pe~riod singing; orgqp tiusic and . . band .perf&ti&ti.ces, ‘Fm more inforGLOW (Gavsand’lesbians oj Water- ’ -- .kind Of thing. 11:30 to.l:30 in-CC i351 : .

-.

.v.,

VFW.

Y

_

‘ I p - *

“I,“IYV”V

, - >

“l.”

- * -

l”lR

. . _

I .

n South Africa . New members

at .CC 135 we$ome

_. -

.

‘.

-.

. _

I

C----l-L--A

.-

. -m-A._ _

on the day’s ey@+ts.

ihe f-lumqn tw:u”c@eficiency%rus ‘Brand new 4:level split liouse, 4 ab‘iakkshok iesidents, professional ‘-pliances, Fischer-Htillman/Univeisity (HJ’V). h& e&ide -an inforr&tiqn, refword proctisirig ‘available in. your ’ Ave. area-(only 2,5km) call 578-4935 eira! and eootisell’ing- ho&e: -7ar’c Sl@ per dtiu@l$neighbourhood. 4 oi 1.-7@@66. after 6 pm. 8300, Monday to Friday, 10:UO~ati. .‘t.[gpacfld$age.- Call M-a& 746-4357. 7 , wmF.-,---, 7 -7 ’ I $2 T* -‘Le. , .,._ -5:O@p&I., 7:oo pm: ’ . . -.-. ,-(.Ik ~ CL’ , I, L _* :_ ‘_ 1 _I;00_- pni:, If y& :_ . _-. . L----4 for rent weekly ,. : -, ‘* . . :-.-, _,,. , . . Fyls”,eo ‘,,“““T” - . r F;asti professional word-processing by 3 13~ snarea room $50°0, non-smokor dropin& our H&se, at 8,86Queens kib ..”- Uniyeisity G ;ra’d (English). Grammar, --am Am.46 I . Gary’s ibvinh - man $&&all. Blvd.,.Kitghener. Get the facts about Laser .er? ‘4b-Y81b* . ’ . van’and appliance cart available wee&.- . spelling; correcti&sTavailable. * I 4lDSl , , kriights,: week&de.,.-, ,$3O/hr. in Kit--< ,prlnte-;. Sutanne, 886-3857.,<, . , - ‘; ; ,. - -.. j- 1: , -. St. Catherinb Large double room. e-1;, . j _ ch&r-W<t&~o& aut-of&&n ext&:; : Sepaiate kitchenette; fully equipped.I ’ Tcp th&c&d&%of Copy I vow my liter,, trnnn &mmue /rannr+c Gary 746-716&, _.,,___ :- 11 . >. . “ior 85C d.s.p I. i’n I I, Lyysz G3Jayi Y ’ t ayvr LO. . -3 _I: -.‘. ‘^ ar’y sou1.1 AS;. Let% get wprking on our ._.. . &r-conditioned. FireDlace, laundrvfa-I r*. .y : L%ast -eificier %+I& ., sarr#;na 3GI v ItiG I a++are project, bkfore it’s time to go. - 1 C i I it i es, Ui i I i*t-jf$s i n-c I udled. --. _~~~p~&j$& ,-;: $.-.. e-Y suir;es thesesals6d0ne.~~~~~u~: -- __ .-.$4OO/month for~-~2. Laura~~ 884-3759. I . Erb aria. Phone 886-9153. - . ~~ ___ _ . hake a Birth Control Centr& coun-‘ Week&d. COU&@~O~,~ for develop-. wlorcc. ~roe;er - seller part of your foreplay-get the Bsing. Will type ierm pap- , Apartmer(i.to share.1 female.Married mentally d&&&d indi~id&& #Ilin‘facts from us before you gepinto‘bed. ers; iheses, i rep&s, resumes, etc.. Students Apartmerits, fully burnished _ imum ‘8.tionth commiiment; 6m/hr;.: _a~vai’lable immediately. Rent is negotiVisit us ih CC 206 oi &@88&1ill.,‘ Gave message for Don.Mader after 2‘ Letter qualit! 1 pkinter. On campus deable, call Silviti 888-7707 tit evenjfigs. ext. 2306: ; : pm. 884-6012,.886-5201. 1: live& pickup ). Call Sharon 656-3387. \I I _\ , CALENDAR ‘--’ , ,. -I _ I. : _ \ .I Aiir-11mmv 4Bk I Faminiat I’Macua’rien kr~ In Mc?&k FRIDAY* JUL+ _ ’ ila . _

WV

.

_--

_ -Is; cokfi-. .*.1denti& .“te[ephone ‘~‘djstress+iin*, . _’ Call Us 2@$ C@ - students in fiiit akd.s& ‘- Lonely? Weirried? Tioubledi )- .,?-a-*. tilt). D,ay or Ixl?gnn . c&d .*r bet@eec ‘18 - 25. tyears $ ’ .658-6805:&&i . atie a& invited to paniciptite ‘iti a carOb&d wlthyiur weighti If y&.&e* . diovasmlar Reactivity Si;udy. Nti exersuffering from anqrexia or.bulihiia ;a& cise ( nedessary, onI+ healthy, .males are interested i.n- joining a seif-help and: fen$es +li’ng. to, joifi the other group composed of others in your ii160 stirden&. Call Baib or Antia ea. tuation, ~911 Marie at 885-4341. . .6786. . .--. _ -. ’ c :- I ‘-.. -. r&ce

4 bqrdrqom Towbh?uS;e -& *corner of Albert St. and VV@er St., en major bus coute, Spacious with clothes.wash& . $250 & utilitiescall Richard519,634-

PERSONALS

.

.

,

-fiaye you taught English in Japan or Taiwan? I would like to fihd.out about your experience. Would I youidrop,mea ’1 I--,:-i3 n-line al -& lrrlprlnrr uave L. . -. I -

L

h&e an k’Need *pd_l itg money?‘We you to barn 30% AN tie ~~~~sw~~rfs~~ f your, time:of which oneis yours to re lax i.n q Laq&oy. No excercising-req u-ire& 1st or 2nd yrstu. dents onlv. C all: 88511,$ l- e& 6786. 2.i , c , , . -A . . . ---I--‘ _____I--I _ _ _“I--. I-U‘ Pp W SeeKS marrleo CouPITar - .s$dy examining fa*ily, strtictute. 1 .’ Must be ‘planned parents or peqmanently childless t~v chqice. Call. 884; ‘. 4I con -uuv.,

__ ,

cnuym I --.w_

.

-- .

’ ’

--

halog

watti found on roa$, at en- fiance to village, around June IO.> It . _\ still works. Call Larry 746-0208. , ‘) s -- f

* Counselllna

_

’ Sen&iei

I*resents “CaiOices)“. Y-3. gossil$irrrprv. F yvu. ties u&g _the latest person@ kompu-ter techn.olotigl 0ie-hour labs ’ I . thrbugho& the-ieim. lnfdrmatbn. and: in Coun/ ’ sign-up sheets a‘ie ava.ilabte sellina ~-.-.-.~ Servic& _ - ---. Needles ~~ Hal II, second ’ . ~1 I. fl@oq room 2080. -. - _. _ .I Y & U C

v

“US

. _Answering Questions on caieer pla’ri-:-*I--, JUU, :-I searcn ---,-I--*-.--,’ ning --A anu .me process-.-that’s,. what your’ summer SVA \ (Student Vocational Advisor - Card 1:. . Williamson) is here for! Plan to-drop . into t+,& SVA hffi;ce - Mondays and Wednesday? ,from 1O:OO am., .’ 1?:OO- pm., Campus Centre, room l-38, All

.

- ANNOUNCgMENTS‘

LUniversity Atienue closing for repairs:, Wate_rloo flegional Engineering De’ parteent is closing University Avenue . I from the railway tracks to Westmount b--A nucw

s-m ,,-A lpl.iyau

---a:-repairs.

5 -


EMP 300 modems $9 999 \

EMP 1200A modems

DTK Tech-1260 l l

l l l

l l

DTK, 1060

i

l l l

FullylBM’“Compatible l Ingenious small Footprint Design l 10 Mhz, 640K-B memory l 360K Floppy Drive l Front Panel >keylock, turbo button, reset button, power & hard drive L.E.D. l monochrome/colour graphics video display 0 84-key keyboard l Parallel/Serial/Games Port/ Real-time clock/calendar l

l

l

80286, 12MAz Processor, 0 Wait State Uses VLSI chip set ‘lMb of RAM 1 3.5” 1.44Mb Floppy Drive 1 40Mb Fujitsu Hard Drive 32Msec Access time, operates with v&e coil for maximum speed, does auto-parking 2 Serial and 1 Parallel Port Extented VGA Graphics (600x800) Monochrome VGA Display 101 Enhanced Keyboard 3-l 6 bit, 2-8 bit, Expansion Slots, case will take up to 2 3.5” l? height Devices and 2 5.25” l/2 height Devices

2 yr. Limited

Warranty

A’NDwe’ll ive ou a FR.Ef MCflJSE’ with every -DTK computer sold!

2 yr. LlmNed Warranty

170 University SUMMER

I-KWRS:

Ave. VII., (University Shops Plaza II) Waterloo ml: 746-4565 fax: 747-0932 10 am - 6 pm, Mon - Thurs; 10 am - 8 pm, Fri; IO am - 4 pm, at.

1


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.