1990-91_v13,n03_Imprint

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ONE YEAR AGO on June 4th 1983, thousands of students were executed in Tienanman Squxe, FGjing. These executions are still continuing today. One of the principal student leaders, Wang Dan, has become a vegetable in prison. He says that his “hirst for denlocracy and freedom has made me into a criminal.” These thoughts reflect those of ; nurnerotis other Chinese. _I The Chinese Students Association in conjunction with the International Students Board of the Federation of Students will sponsor events in remembrance of this tragic day. On , Saturday June 2nd there will be a forum held in DC 1351at 8 8 p.m* by the Association of Human Rights in China. Sunday June 3rd from 5:30 to 7:00 p.m., CKMS 94.5 FM will interview a representative of the Association of Human Rights in China and the F’resident of the Toronto Assqciation for Democracy in China. There will also be a march at 290 p.m. in Nathan 1 Phillip Square in Toronto that a University of Waterloo group will attend. On Monday June 4th, black arm bands will be distributed to the students societies an.d the turnkey desk. We urge students to participate in these activities and show their sympathy and recognition of that fateful-day. r

7pwmb

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Produced by the Board of Communications

International. Students Board


GSA offices nat approved y& I-

Crai-b resigns, but divisions remain byPeterBmwn

Imprint staff The executiveof the GraduateStudent Aswiation has spoken out strongly againstthe allegationsof its 1 now former House Liaison Officer Gary Craib in a press release and in contact with Imprint. Craib has since

resigned. The May 18 release from the executivestatesthat the meetingconcerning the rdgnation of the last business manager was closed 1 becauseit was a personnel matter. I[t 1 goes on to say that, according to Senate Bylaws and general business practice, this type of meet@ is closed unless the person being discussed

asksthat the meeting be open to the public. The releasealsodefendedthe creation of the ad hoc office expansion committee by saying fh2lt no objections were raisedat the April 12meeting when the committeewas formed. It difEers with Craib’s version of events, saying that he “was

‘hi by

Joannette presented a more detailed drawing of the renovations recommended by the expansioncommittee and a cost estimate,dated May 5, of

---

repeatedly invited to” join the committee.

\ At a GSA,Board meeting on May 24,the fist order of businessw;ts the announcement of Craibk resignation

followed by a 90-minute in camera sessionfrom which non-board memhers were excluded. Upon resumption of the open porLion of the meeting a motion was madeby ChairpersonL.ornaWang to

One and the UW News B-u ‘The 27th Army quickly pushed into the Squaw, tanks rolling over blockades, soldiers shootiflg randomly at people in their way. One can seeblood eveyhere, people running aimlarsly for theirlives...” - A typical report of what happened on June 4,1989 in Tianarunen Square, Beijing, China.

happened

was

tragic.

various media we witnessed how a new hope for China died. We witnessed how thousands

of patriotic youti lost their lives.

Whathappened was awakening. As the students gathered in Tinanmen Square, &s they put their vulner. . able bodies in front of tanks and loaded machine guns, as they quietly

peacefully asked for basic democracyand freedom,the Chinese and others had finally come to realize thatthey had to speak out Never before had the Chinese racebeen so and

unified, so concerned about what’s happening in China. Never had democracy and freedom been so important to the Chinese. What happened woke up this sleeping dragon, a country which constitutesa quarter of the world’s population.

leave he pition of louse Wn T===dh~dCMdkqmd, dayOfficer open until the restructuring of 1 ing that suchinput would be essential the GSA had been completed. This to the ?rocw. It wasalso noted that, motion was strongly supported by ; accord% to GSA *YbW’sf Joannette PresidentNelsonJoannette,who said would assume the responsibilities of that anyone hired for the job would t the House Liaison Officer .if the post

be “too closetothe simtion”

tboffer remained emPtymThe motion was

input to the the restructuringprocess. passedwith three abstentions.

$4,800, not including electid and heating work Both documentswere preparedby PatSutherlandand were dated May 4,199O.Sutherland is the stme Plant Operationsarchitectwho prepared the original drawing contained in the expansioncommittee’s report and gave a “rough cost estimate”of$12,0OOinaMay9memo to Craib. Craib claims that the plans d&ussed with Sutherlandwhich led to the memo were identical to those

proposed by the expansioncommit. tee. When shown Sutherland’sMay 5 memo at the May 24 meeting, Joan nette refusedto recognizeits validity, saying that only documenti addressed and given to him directly, as President of the Corporation, would be considered valid. “For all 1 know, that could be a forgery,” said Joannette. He alsofailed to indicate to

.the Board why the May 4 drawing and quote could not have been tabled at the May 8 meeting. Many concernswere raisedabout the future effects of the expansion plan. Ah

Korclks, an employee of the

university and member of the House Committee, explained that the washroomsof the Grad House were technically too small for the amount of licensed floor space, and that this was overlooked when the liquor licensewas granted. He said that the new renovation plan would not affect the license becauseit would reduce the licensed floor space by converting the presently licensed second floor into offices.However, he continued, when the area had to be converted back to a licensed area, the washroomswould probably have to be expanded for the license to be renewed, The Board,despite strong opposition from the President, moved to hold off a decision on the new plan until new, more precise cost estimates could be obtained for both

it and the original plan for an office addition

ye-ar

front Chinese Studentxi Asswiathn

What Through

Next came acceptance of the minutes of the May 8 Board meeting the one at which Joannettepresented the report of the office expansion committee and Craib was allegedly censuredduring his 0fficer’s report. Those minutes did not include a record of the Chair’s censures.An objection to the minutes was raised from the floor, supported by Boardmember MPh Zul jan’s recollectionthat Gaib had attempted to make a motion and had been prevented from doing so by the Chair. Robert’s Rules of Order state that a motion, even if not seconded or if withdrawn, must be recorded in the minutes. The recording secretary’s 3firsthand votes of the “meeting, however,alsocontainedno record of the attempted motion. The Board passed the minutes without Gaib’s allegations added, again with three abstentions. During his Praident’s report,

\

3 I x3

What happened should never be

Eorgotten As educated selves, as global citizens,as human beings, we should never forget these people who had fixtures, goals, and families

just like everyoneof us.All they wanted was something that every Canadian owns, and sometimes takes for granted. As a student leader, Wang Dan,said,“My thirst for freedom had made me a criminal”

Events in remembrance of th& tragicincident til be held locallyand around the world. Here at UW, the Association for Human Rights in China (AHRC) will hold a forum ore June 2 at 8:00 pm in Davis Centre

Room 1351 that will include videc clip, speeches,and musical perfo~ mantes. The forum is being sponv sored by the UW Chinese Studenti As+ation, with members mainly from Hong Kong; the China Scholars and Students Associatiott whose members are exclusively frorr

the People%Republic of China and are studying at UW and Wilf& Laurier University; the Latin Club oj Waterloo; and the Central CM& Chinese Culture Centre. A3 well, on Sunday, June 3 at 2:OC

pm, there will be a worid-wide march in Tqronto at City Hall’s Nathan Wi#lip Square. We hope that you will honour the memory of the sti students by taking part in these events.


News

4 Imprint, Friday, June 1,199O

Censorship l!Wotioxdnan stops on horizon byJ*HWY

by Peter Brown Imprint St&f

Imprintstaff

“I was Very fortunate because of my participation in sport, recreation, and fitness. It really helped me to forge attitudes and values, to develop critical social skills,” said Rick Hansen, a keynote speaker for a conference sponsored ,by the Canadian Intramural Recreation ‘Association here two weeks ago. The “Man in Motion”, who wheelchaired his way acrqss Canada and around the world to raise money for spinal cord injury research{ spoke to ZOOattendee of the conference at m Hall on May 15, ‘playing games is fun, but it’s what’s underneath it, what people can take home with them at the end of the day and apply to the real world that’s importarC Hansen gave a warm-hearted motivational speech about the ways in which he has grown through adversity and about how handicapped people can and should be allowed to particpate more fully in recreational sport. He began bY warming up the crowd with humorous accounts of some of his wheelchair adventures. One was at a celebrity golf toumamerit organized by David Easter, composer of the ‘%Ian in Motion” theme song. At the tournam ent’s banquet, Hansen, on the way up a ramp onto the stage,rode off the edge onto a table occupied by Wayne Gretzky and Lee Majors. Needless to say, Majors effortlessly lifted Hansen back onto the stage. Q-t a more serious note, Hansen related how he was crippIed in a car accident while hitch-hiking back from a fishing trip at th? age of 15,and how he battled back to achieve-his

.

Fears of censorship were raised about one of the new Senate guideline updates. The major controversy is over the Ethic Committee’s redefinition of discrimination as “any act of communication whether oral, written, electronic or nonverbal and which lacks any redeeming artistic, intel&uaI or literary merit and which promotes disrespect or intolerance for any person(s) based on race, ancestry, place of origjn, colour, ethnic origin, creed, sex, marital status, sexual orientation, family status, handicap or medical condition”. These changes are considerable from the original document which described discriminatory behavior and actions simply as those “which denies or has the effect of denying Hansen then described his personal goalswith the help of family, any services, benef& opporhmities, friends, coaches, and teachers. achievements as a world-class andfor facilities provided by the ‘Teamwork, visualization, go&et- wheelchair marathoner and the University. . . “ ting: these were all things that were beginning of his ‘Man in Motioi‘L” Since Ethic Committee decisions dream, inspired by Terry Fox’s run important t6 me,” he said hold the power of the Senate,all other across Canada. He was reminded of policies on .campus regarding disthe seriousness of his goal to crimination are supplementary to He especially mentioned his physi- wheelchair across Canada and these guidelines. The major concern cal e$ucation inst+tor in high around the world by one of the over the ‘new discrimination definischool, Bob Redford, for telling him organizers, who told him: ‘?Vheeltion is the potential threat it poses to that he could so whatever he wanted chairing almost around the world the library collection policy. with his life despite his disability. “He ain’t gonna sell beans.” Essentklly, the Et&s B&d is conexplained to me that how I handled The tour, which ended in May of , cemed with expressions of dismy life depended upon my attitude 1987 after travelling 40,000 kilometcrimination on campus. This is why and my perspective.” res over four continents, raised $23 Head Librarian Murray Shepherd millioni dollars for spinal cord does not feel that the campus libraries After high school, he appiied to research. Soon after, Hansen was have anything to fear. Phys. Ed. at UK, but was initially tend@ his injuries and planning for ‘The Committee exists to prevent refused becausethey had never had a a professional 43reer. He is now individuals on campus from commitwheelchair student in that program. involved with a National Rehabilitating discriminatory behaviour not to So, he spent first in year in general tidn Centre at his west coast alma restrict accessto librarv materials.” arts/science at the university and mater and with the 40-team Canadian Others are not as &nfident applied again. This time, he made it. Wheelchair Basketball League.

We

The recent “Ah” computer group cancellations, rumoured to be based on the cl.aimeddiscriminatory nature of less than 10 of the roughly 80 groups, iisfelt by many to be a rest&tion of resource materials similar to those in the library Like library materials, the “Ah” groups do not originate on campus, but were received from outside sources. Inside sources say a judgment on value of iti the Alt groups, based on a few possibly offensive groups, led to them all being banned. However, this judgment was not made by the Ethics Committee, but within the computing facility itself. Section 1.1.3 on the Academic Freedom. and the development of Library Collections cites “freedom of expression in the interest of the University community through the intent that all necessary facts and points of view be represented to ensure that scholars are enabled to make right judgments through weighing and selecting from amqng conflicting and contrasting ideas, irrespective of politid moral or esthetic views which are commonly accepted.” With the “AYgroups now one, and w&h no viable explanation ii rthcoming for their being dropped, students cannot make decisions one way or the other. Will this become an attitude towards materials in the lib-

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News

hqmint, Friday, Jim 1,199O 5 -

First line of defence for Women byJa!Iula rmuzi

QlairpmKar, Women’shwueBoard

The Women’s Issues Board of the Federation of Students is offering a Wen-Do women’s selfdefence courseoncampus.ThecoursewiIlbe taught by instructors of the Wen-Do corporation of Toronto. The

technioues

tauht

in

the

course are des&ned for>on-violent women to defend themselves against stronger and more violent attackers. In the basic 12 to 14 hour course, women learn how to release themselvesfrom chokes and holds, make a fst, kick effectively; and locate vulnerable points on the attacker’s body* Effective defencesagainstmore than one attacker and those with weapons are also covered. Along with physical selfdefence,i topics such as rape myths, wife and child assault,and sexual harrasment will be &cussed in the class.Women are encouraged to ask questions and share experiences in the open and non-competitive atmosphere. This combination of discussion with practical physical instruction is meant to allow an integration of mental and physical prepare&w in coping with sexllal assault. Wen-Do is appropriate for all women, regardlessof age or physical

promote equal status for themselves in society, the least they can do is learn how to defend themselves effectively against various abusive violence. The statistics on hand are overwhelming and give even more just&&ion to self&fence: I 27 percent of women in Canada (aboutlin4)~expecttobesexgy assaultedat some point in their . - 4b.5 percent of sexually assaulted women are under the age of 17 at the time of the assault - 6&S percent of women are sexually assaulted by men they know, - 35 percent of 12 to 17 year olds in Canada express interest in watching sexually violent scenes(rape, torture, bondage, etc.) - 50 percent of all sexual assault take place in dayight prior to the onset of the actual sexual - 40 percent of wife assault ocm assault Furthermore, women who during the first pregnancy. avoided rape were more likely to -0nly1in1oca5esofsexualassault resist immediately and appeared are reported to the police. more determined to deter the rape at - Only 5 percent of rapists in Canada are convicted for their crimes. any cost Women in self-defence classes - The average sentence* for _ men conlearn the necessityof constant awarenessand early recognition of danger. Unfortunately, the problem of sexual assault has deep roots in societal attitudes that rec@re time, education and effort to be changed. While women- everywhere are fighting to

limitations, as the in&uctor &iilors aggressively and screamed, ran, or the ‘ques to suit a variety of fit- used verbal aggression,she was less nessT vels.All femalesover the age of likely to be raped Mclntyre ack12 are welcome in the course, nowledged the role of situational kcalthough it is encouraged that tars but stressed the imlxxtance of prompt action. teenagers under 15 be accommed byanadult.Femalesasyoungas10 ’ Other research has shown that years old have participated in this women who avoided rape tended to cotme. Also, standard safety be more suspiciousand to respond in a rude or hostile manner to the rapist measuresaretaken so thakto women

The important

first lines of defence from sexual assault are assertive body language and verbal skills s. will be physically hurt, thrown, or hit The important first line of defence from sexualassaultare assertivebody language and verbal skills. Through Wen-Do, you wi.Udevelop increased self-trust and self-confidence in cop ing with assault.In a study conducted by Jennie McIntyre (1980) in Washington DC, 320 women, of which 192 were raped and 128 had managed to avoid rape when attacked, were interviewed. The study concluded that if the woman acted

Security force finds summer fundina by Dave Thomson

Imprintstaff

A student security force will begin operating on the university campus sometime next week if all goes well, after a brief hiatus in services since late April of this year. At the time, the force had been operating for approximately two months and it was unclear who was going to continue to fund the security force. The Federation of Students has decided to provide funding for the summer months and in the fall the University will share the responsibility with the Rderation.

tion for students who are afraid to walk home in the evening, many students have been left with out rides due to a lack of space in the van. A security force that could escort persons between locations on campus would alleviate some of the pressure put on the Safety Van service. ’ The Waterloo Student Sec&ty Force is modelled somewhat after York University’s program which has been in effect since 1985. It would consistof pairs of uniformed students who patrol the campus and carry two-way radios to notify campus police in the event of a crime. Normally, the students would not try to interfere with the suspects but instead wait for the campus police, except in extreme circumstances.

around campus. The student patrols will be operating 6 days a week from 9:00 pm to 2:00 am and on Sundays from 9:00 pm to 1:00 am. The students will be trained in firstaid and how to respond to different situations they may encounter while on the job and will be equipped with flashlights and two-way radios.

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The purpose in setting up a student security force is to help fulfill “a need The primary purpose of this to feel prgtected on campus” according to a proposal by Kimberly Speers, security force is to escort staff,faculty, Vice-President of University Affairs. and students who would like to be Although the Safety Van service walked between locations on camoperated by the Federation of pus. When they are not escorting Students provides free transporta- people, they walk a regular patrol

Ethics policy passed crimination is any act of communication whether ora&written, el~nic or non-verbal, and which lacks any The revised version of UW Policy redartistic, intellectual or 33: Ethical B&&our was passed on literary merit and which promotes second reading during the May 22 disrespect or intolerance for any perWW Senate meeting with only three son based upon race, ancestry, place votes in opposition. of 0ligi.Q colour, ethnic ori@& creed, sex,age,marital status,sexualorientaThere was ,some debate on WOT- tioq family status,handicap or medidings and some slight semantic cd condition. changeswere made within the docuWide the lone raised voice of ment, . . The -new definitiun of discnmmation was moved to another objection spoke about the possible subheading but in essence,the docu- consequencesof such an open-ended ’ ment was posed on second reading policy. However, the body of the without major change. senate was not moved. byp;rulhe Iln*t staff

One senator spoke up in opposition to the new definition of discrimination contained in section 118.2of the policy which reads “Dis-

The revised policy now needs only approval from the UW Board of Governors at their next meeting on June 5 to become official.

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months. - The most successful way for a woman to avoid rape is to ye4 hi& or fwUndoubtedly, active resistance, both verbal and physical are the most viable methods to prevent d assault Wen-Do addressesthis most effective prevention measure through education and proties women with successful su&vaI strategies. It is true that “No means No”butforal0tofaggressors,nois not enough and physical resistanceis the only meansfor protection against sexual violence. Wen-Do was offered on campus last term by the Women’s Issues Board and it had a very positive turnout. A lot of women requested for thecoursetobeofferedagaininthe summer, so we are offering it for the second time around on Sunday June 10 and Sunday June 17. DetaiLsfor registration are available in the Federation of Student offices, and the registration deadline is TuesdayJune 5. If you would like more tiormation about Wen-Do, please contact the

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6

Meech Lake is dead. The. chances of the Accordbeingpassedhavebeenclosetonilfor -months now, distant hope lying only in a last minute reconciliation among the dissenting, pmniem Furthermore, the issue has been’ run into the ground by means of redundant media coverage and analysis, while the majority of Canadians probably 1-t interest long ago. Nobody is sure exactly what effect the impending rejection of the Meech Lake Accord will have on Canada but the signs do not look pmmisae Economic consequences are akady being felt as foreign investors shy away from a potentially unstable pol.iticaI Situation.

I

Comm’ent

Imprint, Friday, Junel,l%MI

Failure to ratify the Accord will have a profound impact on French-English relations in Canada. Opposition to the Accord is, rightfully or not, perceived by the Quebecois as a symbolic message of intolerance and indifference toward them. Many feel that Quebec has exhausted its options with regards to remaining comfortably within the Canadian federal system. How ironic it is that Mulroney’s “valiant” effort to unify the coun-

tryhasresultedinwhatcouldamounttothe greatest threat to Canadian federation since ihe Quiet Revolution of the 1960%. SowhatwillbedoneifandwhenMeech offi~ydiesonJune231~ewouldbe~e to believe that the premiers are going to sit down and bq$n to formulate a new Accord right away. &td it could be a long time until we have a political environment conducive to a con&itutional amendment that will satisfy QuebecandtherestofCanada. Meanwhile; the election of the Pa@ Quebecois, with their adamant ‘separ&st mandate, becomes an kreasingly *eaI possibility. Only time will tel.! how long Canada can continue to muddle its way through federal crises. What is certain, however, is that these are perilous times for national unity. I& us hope that the most lethal legacy of Brian Mulroney’s reign of error is not the hihue of Meech Lake.

Andy Kach

-GSA 1story notes.

Imprht Ed&orlaWoard

Re: “GSA accused of foul play,” Imprint, May ,18,1990 and GSA Press Release dated May 18,199O.

1. The Past-prqSident of the GSA is Brad . Kuntz, not Brad Kurtz. 2. The minutes to the confidential meeting read that the business manager read that he had become “dissatisfied . . absolutely impossible.” “lazy and uncooperative” was Mr. Craib’s par#phrase. 3. The total amount of the payment to the BusinessManager was $22,000,plus a relocation payment of approximately $2,500, not $4,ooOas origindy stated in the article. l

4.Under RoLwH’S Rulesof Qdm, the primary duties of the President of the Board include to ” preside and maintain order.” In the GSA, the meetings ilie presided upon by the COF porate Secretary. 5. During confidential meeting in question, the Board passeda motion to “waive notice of motion” - to exempt themselves from the GSA by-law which dictated that they schedule the voting on the financial motion for a future meeting and provide written notice to the GSA members. Under Robert> Ruks of &de-, it is stated that ‘I the Constitution and By-laws cannot be suspended, even if by unanimous consent.”

Co-op f.ees are refundable? University of Waterloo. Largest co-op program,‘A,in Qnada. Greatest amount of headachesand problems associatedwith this prc@am. From finding jobs to writing work repoti, nostudent in cq-op has been without his/her share of nightmares from Needles The latest story pertains to those students who are in the Architecture or Engineering programs and involves the over-chaqing of co-opfees. But first, a preliminary explanation of the cwp fee charges and the nature of the aforementioned programs is necessary. Akhough the cwp fee does not even come close to covering the cost of adm.iGtering the program (finding jobs, scheduling interviews, etc.), the total cost to be paid per student is assesd once hi or she enters the co-op pr6gram Instead of charging this sum at the beginning of first year, the total cost is amor* tized over the period of time the student will be in school. In the Architecture and Engineering programs, students are required to pay the co-op fee a total of eight times.

T’heseprograms are set up in such a way Digressions aside, the worrisome aspect of that a student’s academic standing is assessed &%sthatnoeffortismadeonpartofNeedles . at the endiof each term, at which ,time they _ Hall to inf01B1 sturdents of their right to a either pass or fail the term. A problem arises refund. If somebne is eligible for a co-op fee when student has to repeat a term and is refund, then it is looked upon in the sameway chrgeci the CO-opfee again, because by the that CAMS and WPIRG fees are - if you want time they graduate, they will have paid the fee it, you have to come and get it. While most ninetimes whentheyare only required topay studen& are informed that CKMS and it eight times. WPLRG fees are refundable, there is no such information placed in the registration newAfter being directed to numerous different sletter about these special casesof ninth-term authorities in the bureaucracy that is Needles co-op and health insurance refundable fees. wlfoundsomeanswers.Yes,studentswho pay this fee more times than they were sup PeAaps this problem could be remedied if posed to are entitled to a refund, I asked why some type of notice were included with registhe fee was charged in the first place if the student had already payd it the required num- 4 tration materjals, transcripts, or notices to the students in these faculties who are notied her of times. One answer was inevitable: the that they-have to repeat a term. Nah...too simcomputer automatically biIls all co-op plestudents&e c-p fee.Asecond answerwas The important thing to keep in mind that it would take too long to Iookat individual through all this is that we should trust in casesto determine whether or not the corxect Needles Hall - they have proved again and amount of fees had been paid. I am by no again how much they watch out for the means an expert On programming and deinterests of the students who provide them bugging computers, but it seems to me that with their jobs here. some type of check could be included in the program, such as ‘if x=8, then goto --“. Dave Thomson

Imprint Needs Volunteers!

is


FORUM Ya say you want a revolution To the editor, My critics have suggested that I overreactedto the situation at the GSA by talking to the Imprint. They feel that the dirty laundry should be washed internally. I tried to deal with the problems internally and was not successful This letter tries to explain the process by which Imprint became involved. The idea to talk to Imprint camefrom Peter * Ponzo, Chairman of the Ethics Committee. I was referred to Professor Ponzo by Dean of Graduate Studies Gardner, who 1 turned to for advice because the situation was out of control. I had tried to talk to Nelson Joannette about his interference in the responsibiities of the House Liaison Officer three times over three different issues.At the May 1 Executive Meeting I read By-law 4 aloud to the Executive and challenged Mr. Joannette.The Corporate Secretary, whose responsibility is to mediate disputes, did nothing and two days later, Mr. Joannettepresented me with a copy of the drawing for the office expansion and informed me of the Cqmmittee’s decision I never met with the committee, despite Mr. Joannette’sstatement that he held “two official meetings,“one for the committee and one for me, I also had telephone conversationswith the vice president Annie Steinhauer in which I asked for an Executive meeting to deal with Mr. Joannette’s interference and anomet telephone conversation with the corporate SecretaryLmna Woq 2ding for support for Bylaw 4, I spent over an hour talking to Vice Presiient External (and Bylaw Officer) Angie Sauer after the May 1 executive meeting and she continually reassured me that Nelson Joanne was not undermining my position. At the May 7 Board Meeting, I was shouted down or censuredabout five times.As House Liaison Officer and Chairman of the House Committee, it is my responsibiity to advise the Board on, and act as project manager for, all building projects and I cannot be censured during my report, according to Robert’sRules of order. I cannot be shouted down in front of twentyofmypeersoveranissuethatisclearly the responsibility of the office 1held AftertheBoarclmeetingonMay 7andlater in the week, I spoke with Treasurer Dave Clark for a total of three hours. He informed metheplanwaspro~blygoingto gothrough and it was a lost battle. Previous House liaison Ufficer Ping Yan advised me that a decision was made by the previous executive, led by President Brad Kunk, not to cooperate

with me. In fact,there was a discussion about whether there was “anything in the bylaws that could exclude me from office.” The executive’s problem was that “I made them nervous.fl The current executive practicesan ideology of limited discussion and no choice or options considered. For an executive that represents over 1700 people, this concept is absurd. When the bylaws were changed last September, the House Manager position was changed to House Liaison Officer, removing most of the job’s power. The original GSA bylaws provided for a separation of responsibilities and a balance of power between the two divisions. The president would run the GSA, the House Manager would run the bar, and the Treasurer would control funding to both. Joannette’sversion of the bylaws is that the president holds all of the power and no single position is strong enough to challenge him, In fact, Joannette’sposition is in conflict of interest He shouldn’t be both the president of an association with over 1700 members and the House Manager of a bar. The “Office ExpansionPlan” therefore rep resents a direct change in policy direction away from a balanced and fair association.It cuts into house capecity,revenue, profits, and is in direct con&t with the established bylaws. The Imprint article of May 18 is flawed and for that I must take the blame. Peter Brown emphasized different points than -I would have. The removal of the business manager was in itself the catalyst by which the “reconstruction committee,” which went on to adjust the bylaws of the Corporation was formed. This committee excluded the Treasurer and the House Manager from the process ad then eliminated the Manager position With all power concentrated in the presidency by either chan@ng or ignoring bylaws, the system becomes-grossly unfair. Joannettehas now formed a new reconstruction committee with the exp=3s purpose of eliminating the House Iiaison olficer po& tion. He has also agreed to and withdrawn from mediation meet@s and refusesto consider advice from anyone else. Those of you who~el~tIshouldnotwash~eGSAlauIF dry in public should walk a mile in my shoes.

As past President of the Graduate Student AssociationI feel compelled to respond to the allegationsmadeby Gary Craib in’the May 18 edition of Imprint. Mr. Craibk alle gatims of procedural errors and mismanagement are totally without substance+A difkult situation arw lati summer which was dealt with by

the Executive and Board of oirectars according to the GSA Bylaws and University Policy. All notice provisions of GSA Bylaw 1 were ’ fulfilled, and the meeting of July lo,1989 was conducted in full accordwith the Bylaws and Roberts Rules of Order. All expenditures of the Board of Director3 a?e reported in the audited financial statement of the Corporation which was presented at the Annual General Meeting in March. hd Kuntz --pmident GSA

Love is alt you need To the Editm, I am very disappointed to hear that Waterloo is discontintig the ‘alt” news group. News of this has even reached to the west coastof the US (Seattle)where I am on work term I have found quite a few useful and informative articlesposted in the “alt” groups and believe thatthey are worth the small sum it costs to accessthem. In my%iewpthe loss of the “alt “groups indicatesa Iack of concern by Waterloo for the free exchangeof ideasthat, in

To the edi;tor,

Isn’t university great! Here is a place of higher learning where one is supposedly allowed the freedom to exchangeideas with others who may or may not hoki your point of view. Computer and communication technology has enhanced the ability to do this but it seems that some old fashioned ideas are being imposed on a high tech community I refer to the decision by the University administration to stop carrying the “altemative”“alt.” newsgroups on the computer news system.Economic reasonswere cited but this situation stinks of censorship. Instead of openly admitting that they are harming the discusSons on sex, the powers that be have decided to stick their collective heads in the sand,hide under the cloak of budget cutbacks, and axe an entire section of news.

Without getting too technical, the additional cost of keeping the “alt” groups around is trivial and in fact,dropping them is probably costing more in the increased volume of electronic IIlzLildue to people getting friends from other sites to mail them the discussions. The decision makers may think this is an isolated incident and that it ti be forgotten. Well it won’t. News of this is being spread electronically alI over the globe just as I sent this letter electron.icalIyto Imprint. Many people will read about it and in a lot of casestheir first impression of the University of Waterloo will be that of a school that censuresand tries to cover up that fact. Ajay Jindd 4ASp~oesign Microeaft carp

Seattle, Wa.

The Voice of Treason - Casey tii his bat The outlook was quite brilbant for the Mudville nine that day; The team had rose in ratings, Coke had moved out from LA.; Canescosigned a five mil deal, and Bell tried for the same, A sickly silence fell upon the starving students at the game. Their strugglin%culture had @en into deep despair. The rest Stuck heads in cheap draft cups and leered at young firm breast; They thought if only Caseycould sober up from lying flat, They’d even watch &donna dance ‘round Caseyat his bat But marketing men had tied the game with Profit Margin Gods Turning the sport inside out to put the network at odds; /’ So upon the TV multitude, grim indigestion sat, Ass~~keptthefansfromseeingCaseyathi8bat. - . Owners stuck their snouts further into the filthy trough, As advm hawked lost morals (hides they can slough off); They deigned with pious glory the game for it to go, Then up rose mighty Casey,freshly tanned by Coppertone.

Imagine the,re’s no heaven To the editor,

Back. in the USSR

my mind, defines a university. I did not just come to Waterloo to write exams and get credits. I came for an EDUCA~ON. I feel that this 0bjefXive

is being

threatened

by the readionary and short sighted actionsof Waterloo’sAdministration. I encouragethem to reconsider their actions and position. - Steven J Rayson 4Asm-w Mid CqJ Seattle Wahin@on, USA

Now, Caseywasn’t known for brains or for tact, On the road he’d screwed a few that might r ve been called fat; Women loved that mound of muscles which mde their @es worth Iivin& For all the sexy soap he &.I, it made five mill’ woxth giving. There was lust in Casey’s eyes when he walked up to the plate,

There were bennies in h$ pocket, hrvelveof which he ate; Andwhenhegrippedhisbatandswungittooandfrc(. No ad man could resist such tant&zing product promo. Ten million bleary, reddened eyes,in dire need of Vi Five million snorting noses,to be will with softest kleenex Controlled for pure consump&m by the bureaucrat Noonemadeasound,fe.&ngrepris&fromCasey’sba~ livo pit&m flew by Casey%face, strikes were both they, Rert&dlngCaseyofhislast,wl&hgotah&einpay; Only one more chance,had Casey,to prove his masc&n@, Before that hair appointment and perfume shoot for TV. / A sneer appeared on Casey’slips, Crest teeth clenched in hate, And pounds with cruel violence his mighty bat upon his p&e; And now the pitcher holds his balls, and now he lets them go, And now the air is shattered by the force of Casey’sblow, Oh! Somewhere in the world, fans are thick with mirth, Happy thiht education and ethics come befwre IMP& worth, And somewhere &&en play for fqn and tolerate-eachother, But there is no joy in Mudville - mighty w has: been busted for drugs and book-making ashe wasround@ third, and hassince testedpositive for steroids and is now serving five to ten on manslau&ter charges.So much for an idiotic passion for athletic heroes.


News

8 Imprint, Friday, June I, i990

.Campus

Question???’

ii

HOW

would

you

commit

Better go in disguise.� l

by Dave Thomson

suicide??

I

l

growth in the clearing which verified the structure had not been used for some time. Just when you thought the woods were safe again . . . Thursday night two UW students had the shock of their lives. Out for an innocent walk in the woods, NiaU Sweeney and Christine Chambers stumbIed upon a .wooden cross, rising in front of a luminescent moon. The weathered structure was concealed in a clearing near the Westmount side of campus, sadisticalIy wrapped in wire and prominent arm thongs. Despite rain, there was sufficient light to confirm its dilapidated and vestigial state. On further investigation, Imprint discovered fresh

Ben Marrello 2N Science

%vim in Columbia Lake. Ingrid Mag 3A Electrical Eng.

Exactly who built the cross and what putpose it once served remains a mystery. Rest assured that Imprint willnotquituntilwegettothebottom of this. Presedy, ,several leads are being followed up. Experts on such phenomena have given such far-reaching explanations as it being a sacrificial Druid torture edifice, a secret location for die-hard Ridgid Tool worshipers, a type of primitive signalling device built by early Mennonites in contact with alien Iife forms, or one end of a clothesline.

Strolling on a Samhain afternoon. Photo courtesy of United Druids Local 1302.

+KWs Largest One Day Event

1990 Kitchener-Waterloo

CanadaDay One

for you with 10 toppings One for the &ids with 2 toppings pizza

1 B 1

Come on out and get involved! Sign up at the

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Turnkey Desk


News

Impprint,Friday, June 1,199O $

This LAN Karlsruhe, are investigating the next possible step. Using fibre-optics they Four UW professors, led by Pro- hope to increase both speed and fessor Jon Mark, are working on a band width, allowing more inlormation to be transferred faster.This kind $440,000 joint research project with of product would be of great interest professors from the Universitat to large corporations. During the Karlsruhe in the West German proresearch in connection with a memvince of Baden-Wurttemberg. The ber nation of the future EEC is also a project aims at the creation of a dual ring, optical fibre-based high-speed . smart move for Ontario’s economic future. local area network (LAN). Mark Ontario Premier David Peterson’s hopes that this project will help to objective to make strong Ontario’s secure Ontario’s trade presence in presence as a trade and research Europe. LANs are ties that bind PCs partner in Europe is certainly helped together in a small local complex, by this project. Baden-Wurttemberg Dean of Engineering Bill Lennox mugs behind the wheel of the such as a corporate office where ail is part of a European trade coalition Formula SAE car built by five senior mechanical engineering users have need of much of the same knownas the Four Motors; along with students. The car just returned from a race in Micliigan. information. By networking all the Cahlonia, Spain; Lombardy, Italy; Photo by Peter Brown office’s terminals to one base, and Rhone-Alps, France. When the EEC is finally created, it everyone has accessto the same data. The process is simpler when only will be hard for outsiders to get in data is involved. A multimedia net- their trade pacts, but a friendly past patier should alwavs be welcome. work is more complex. A multimedia tietwork is one that Once again the FacuIty of Arts will appearances by local musicians and include a visit to the Crawfod Lake uses not only data, considered noncomputing Conservation - Area and Indian real-time (or storable) traffic, but also offer its popular “Arts Computer entertainers. uw’s In response to the Experience” (ACE ‘90) day camp this theatre and studio facilities are I Viige, MiIton,cand a daiIy swim real-time traffic, such as voice or utilized by the camp. Prowsal from hdeo. Most personal computers now period (in the Lions pool, Waterloo summer. ACE ‘90 runs Monday ‘through are multimedia systems using sound, Park). D.W.E.: Friday, 8:30 am. to 4:15 pm. daily. Registration forms are available at video, and text. A dual ring LAN \, In its eighth year, the camp offers There are four two-week sessions: all Kitchener and Waterloo ~braries, enablessuch systemsto be connected sessionsfor children agesseven to 12, July 3-l 3; July 16-27; July 30-Aug. 10 the Centre in the Sqtzjre, the Com- up so that real-time and non-realwith the emphasis on learning and Aug. 13-24. Cost is $210 for the munity Information Centre, and in timetrafficcanbetransferredwithout through fun activitim. Campers are first and third sessions,and $225 for jamming up the network room 146, Hagey Hall, on the W exposed to music, the arts,computers the second and fourth sessions.(The ‘Qua1 ring” means, basically, that campus.. In the past,the camp has and drama during mo.ming instruc- first and third sessionsare both a day one ring of the network is designed to filled up tional sessions. ACE also offers a shorter due to statutory holidays.) quickly, io early registr@ion is carry da@ while the other takes care variety of outdoor games,sports and In addition to daily instruction and advised. Further information: (519) of scheduling, thus avoiding jams. ’ workshops, including This approach has been proven feasentertainment, each camp will 885-1211, ext. 2005. ible on a low-speed LAN (2 Megabits Signed, per second) called We&t. S. Ruth Professors Jon Mark, Gordon Agnew, Sujeet Chaudhuri, and James Field, and a number of researchersat P.S. I love the ring. ’ byWmSpeers,VPUA the attention of politicians oti Parlia- a better job of serving your needs West Germany’s Forshungzenti Infofmatik (FZI) at the Universitat SpeciaIto Imprint ment Hill. Using solid research and include the Canadian Programming nation-wide input about the issues, Service, the CFS Students’ Associathe Federation employs a protion Directory, and CFS Net (comThis article is the first of a two-part fessional staff to represent the student puter networking for students’ series that will explain the goals, view to government, opposition and associations). By August lst, all of membership structure, and services bureaucracy. This entails meetings thw services will be made available offered by the Canadian Federation with Ministers, Mp’s, critics, and to fee- ying members of the Federaof Students (CFS). officials as well as the many other tion or Students. An extensive adverOn February lath, 1990, the mem- established groups in Ottawa and lising campaign regarding CFS bers of the University of Waterloo stu- elsewhere. services will take place in July. Keep dent body voted in favour of jo%ng Through CFS services,a non-profit your eyes open! the CFS, which is comprised of over cooperative owned and operated by 400,000 students from across the membe&ip of the Federation, a This article is an extremely brief Canada. The students’ interests and wide range of m are offered.. summary about the natLve of the concerns are represented through Such services are designed to Canadian Federation of Students. If the local students’ associations to improve the quality of student life by you would like more inhmation, which they belong. These local helping to widen the educational please contact Kim speers of curwin associations are the voting members experiences and save money. Dir& Frieson at the Federation of Students’ of the Federation; each has full voting services open to every student office in the Campus Centre (above rights on Federation policy and include Travel Cuts, Students Saver, . Imprint). In the next issue of the operations. They appoint student the Student Wurk Abroad F%gr=, Im~tJwillgiveasu3nmaryofthe delegates to attend general meetings The Canadian Student Traveller, and Annual Canadh Federation of of the Federation and its provincial the ISIC card Support serviceswhich Students’ conference which was held components where new policies me helpyourlocalstudentassuciationdo in Brandan, Manitoba. I-established, operations are reviewed, and activities are planned. As well, the budgets are set and the executive positions are decided upon throtrgh democratic elections. The University of Waterloo is a full member of CFS and students assume individual membershipbypayinganannualfee of four dollars. The basic goal of the CFS is to organize students on a democratic and cooperative basis to advance our own interests in higher education and he interests of our community. Furthermore, CFS is to provide a common framework within which students can communicate, achange information, and share experience, skills and ideas.CFS’sultimate goal is to achieve a system of po&seconclaty NOTE: All photos taken in Davis Centre Roam 3590 educatim which is accessible to all, If you missed your time please see phdtographer in which is of high quality and nationallyplann~,whichrecognizes thie Rooti A.S.A.P.’ the legitimacy of student representation and validity of student rights and whose role in society is clearly dograp x r 6 v: . recognizecl and .appreciated. [r SIGN UP A.S.A.P. DATES FACUIJ’Y of The t3nacbm Fkkration ^ Steve Robinson May 28 - 31 1 Orifice Engineering Students is made up of two com. Cl&de Marcotte ponents - political and services. CFS 1 in front of c 6 D shop is a naticmaI lobbying force for S~UMath June 1 - 6 from May 18 to 23 be&men dentconcernssuchasstudentaid,htiI I ll:QO a.m. - awl D.ID. tioa funding for post-secondary duration, employment, ebeetera . [ KLH society offhe IKi neeiolmv t Jmm7 These are just a few of the my hues that the Federaticm brinp;s TV by Mi&ael Clifton

&Arts computer experience

What is the CFS for?

I

PL

.I

I

-

JOSTENS


10 Imprint, Friday, June 1,199O

Feature

Temaaami: -

by Derek Hrynyshyn Imprint staff

Two years ago this week, the Ontario government announced plans to extend logging roads into the heart of the Temagami Wilderness in order to allow logging companies to gain access to some the oldest trees in North America. The red and white pine forest is called “old-growth” b?cause it is composed of trees up to 400 years old, and may be the last such forest in North America, Not much is known about the forest ecosystem in that area, called the Wakimika triangle, nor about how much of it may be there or elsewhere, The trees are highly valued by the forest industry, the only major industry in the area, for the profit and jobs that they bring to the people in the local towns. But they are also valued by the native people who have lived in the region for approximately 6,000 years, and who see the wilderness as sacred and essential to their traditional way of life. Scientists have said that the area should be preserved for study, and there are also others in Ontario who are trying to preserve what they see as valuable for its uniqueness and beauty. This last group is primarily represented by the Temagami Wilderness Society (TWS). Since the decision of May, i988, the TWS has tried to save the Wakimika triangie, and the rest of the Temagami Wilderness, from destruction by the logging companies. Two separate court cases, appeals, numerous injunctions, road blockades and arrests, and angry protests at Queen’s park, with extensive media coverage, eventually had a impact, on the Ontario government’s decision. The Liberal government chose April Brd, the day after Earth Day, to announce a surprising new agreement with the Teme-Augama Anishnabai native band. The agreement will put in place a “stewardship council” in control of 400 square kilometres of the forest. The council is to include an equal number of ‘members of the band and government, and will have a veto over any new timber licenses in four townships, effectively ending any logging there. This decision comes at the end of a long and bitter dispute. The first time the provincial government angered the native people was in 1972, when a resort was planned for part of the area that they had traditionally inhabited. This led to the filing of a land claim in 1973, covering more b 10,000 square kilometres in the area. A land caution was put into effect at that time, but this had little effect on the area for the next 15 years. Then the provincial government decided to goe ahead with plans to

The Fight Goes On

extend the Red Squirrel Road into the Wakimika triangle and allow the logging to proceed. One of the arguments upon which this decision was based was the need to keep the financially troubled Wm. Milne Co, sawmill supplied with timber to prevent the layoff of workers. An Environmental Impact Study had been completed, and was used as justification for the denial -of requests to hold an environmental hearing into the impact of the road and the logging that it would allow, The study, however, was deemed too narrow in scope by one expert hired by the Ministry of Natural Resources, and the authors of the report even refused to attach their names to the report because it failed to investigate the effects of the logging that the road would allow. Despite this, the government was determined to proceed with the road extension, atid the natives. were determined to stop it. A blockade on the road began, and lasted six months until an injunction against it was granted by the courts. The blockade did succeed in getting the court to order the end to the construction of the road, at least until the land claim was settled by the courts. The land claim was dealt with soon

OPP stops EC0

after that, with the Ontario Court of-. Appeal rejecting the natives’ claims. The court held that the natives were bound by the Robinson-Huron treaty of 1850, while the Teme-Augama Anishnabai people say that they were never consulted about the treaty, and no member of their band ever signed it. They decided to appeal that decision to the Supreme Court of Canada, tilio have yet to hear the case. In the meantime, the Temagami Wilderness Society [TWS) has launched a separate court case to have the government’s decision to extend the Red Squirrel road overruled, and to have the impact study thrown out, forcing a new study. But in April of last year, the Ontario Supreme Court refused’to hear the case, and the TWS decided to appeal t,his decision to the Ontario Court of Appeal. By this time, however, the Ontario government had already started cutting and surveying for the extension of the road. The TWS started their own blockade of the road in June when this was discovered, and blockades lasted until November, Police arrested over 300 people, including Ontario NDP leader Bob Rae. Media coverage on the issue

terrorist plot, Gorbechev will livei

.

started to increase as a result of the blockade and the arrests, and protests over the logging started to occur in other parts of Ontario, focused ‘mainly against Premier David Peterson. At one demonstration, Peterson told the media covdring his visit to Cambridge that the proteskrs “came to see you. Take their picture and make them happy”. By the time the recent announcement was made, the Premjer was being followed by protesters carrying a 6-metre chainsaw. Meanwhile, the appeal court refused to’hear the case, and soon after this was announced, the Milne Co. mill reopened, after being bought by the owner of other area mills. Earlier attempts by a worker to arrange financing for the employees to buy the mill and run it as a cooperative business failed because no one was willing to finance such a venture, The government filed for an injunction

against

the

blockade,

but

this

was

refused by the’courts. This was probably the first small victory for those opposed to the logging. A further victory came as’ ,tht governnrent was

orde&d ,to stap construction until the court deeid& an ‘the- .w?iv;es’ own injurtctiuu qijdtit tb8TtmLt iht wa was dsu rtfurrad by tha court. I .- , .

“Clean

living prevails”

When the construction started again, the Teme-Augama took up their own blockade again, this time with help from other native people from as far away as Manitoulin Island. The Ontario Supreme court granted the government an injunction against this blockade, but at the same time, the government recommended a freeze on logging in 585 hectares in the Wakimika area. That freeze remained in effect until this April’s announcement, which should end any logging in all of the highly valued triangle. But that announcement also brought bad news, Outside the four protected townships, more timber licenses have been granted. In fact, the amount of the forest to be cut has increased from 110 to 280 square kilometres, 87 percent of which will be clear cut. It is not clear how much more old growth remains in the rest of the Temagami wilderness area. Estimates of the amount of old growth that is now protected range from 13 to 70 percent. And the effects of the logging going on in the . rest of the area claimed by the TemeAugama Anishnabai is not known, The TWS reports that only 27 percent of the forest that was cut there in’ the last decadi! was replanted, and only 40% of the replanted areas ever grow back enough to be cut again. This shows the non&stainability of current practices, the society says. If the land claim is settled in the natives favour, it may turn out that they get control of a wasteland. The government announcement has also left the workers of the Milne Co. mill unhappy. 73 of them will lose their job, and the economic effects on the small towns in the area may be severe. A demonstration in the town of Temagami was held by some of the employees after the decision to buy the mill was ‘announced. The owner of the mill will get an estimated $5 million. The biggest effects of the deal, howeveqmay come in the future. The media attention was focused primarily on the area to be protected, #and tended to ignore the increase in logging in the surrounding area. Public opinion may stay with the Liberals through the fall, when some analysts are’ predicting an election. The final appeal of the land claim is also scheduled to be heard by the Supreme Court this fall, and the Earth Day announcement may help to soften the p:otests from the non-native population should the Courts decide in the government’s favour. But the native people did airee to accept the deal, and they claim that it is a “firat

stap”.

This

kind

.

wf agrbament

could serve as a precedent in the future, and may lead to protection of more wildernesa areas in the future.

The bitter strpggle between those who wirh to salvetheir jobs, those wishing to preserve the anc$ent t-13, and I thulrt trying. to keep tbair wayof life is not over yet. .. .

-


Canada’s guiding light and champion of science review by F#d Dainton lhk jim appacrredin New Scient& magazineh&n, the weeklyreviewof scienceand technolagy.

able prose of the life and times of a man acknowledged by his compatriots and by foreigners alike as epitomizing the dynamism of CanaE. K R brie andSciencein Canada dian science in its heyday in the by M. Christine King, University of 1950s. The story is fascinating not least Toronto Press, 288 pp. because Steacie’s childhood in that most English of Montreal districts, I remember as if it were yesterday Westmount, was rather lonely, was the morning about 45 years ago, clouded by the death of his father at> when a spiral of cigarette smoke waf- Ypres when he was only 15, and ted through the open door of my received little stimulus from a rather office-cum-labomtory in Cambridge narrow-minded mother. A successful and was foilowed by a m slightly year at the Royal Military College, shorter than ]I who said, ‘7 am Kingston, could not disguise the fact Steacie.” That statement had no that he was not content to be a soldier. significance for me and being preoc- He then transferred to McGill cupied with glass blowing which University where he read chemical could not be interrupted, I waved him engineering .and took a PhD in to a seat. “Do you enjoy doing that?” chemistry. There was little in his he asked. “Yes,” I replied, “and it is a years at McGill to foreshadow the great relief from committees; quite creative period to follow when, soothing.” “I agree; it’s fun,” he said as encouraged by Otto Maass,chairman his firm mouth and jaw relaxed into of the chemistry department at an infectious grin and his eyes twin- McGill, and C. J. Mackenzie, acting kled. So began a life-long friendship, director of the NRC, he left his proterminated only by his untimely fessorship at McGill and moved in 1939 to the NRC at Ottawa. death in 1962. As the tale unfolds we are shown One hot July or August evening the following year we sat sipping an entirely lovable- man, devoted to whiskey’and talking in my room in his family, country and vocation, who the Staff House at Deep River, the inspired and helped many and community for people working at the brought science into the public conatomic energy enterprise at Chalk sciousness in Canada. Much wgs River in Ontario. Among the topics achieved with the minimum of coswe discussed was how the National tive paper work and bureaucracy, Research Council of Canada (NRC), and the maximum use of homespun, of which he was then the vice-’ unmalicious wit and ready smile. His president, could facilitate the two- motto seemed to be: “Find good peoway flow of able post-doctoral ple, show them the problem and supscientistsbetween Canada and coun- port them until they cease to merit tries of Western Europe. He wanted it.” The sociologist and political scienthese postdocs to be able to gain the sameinestimable benefits that he had tist who seek in this volume signs of derived 12 years ‘earlier from a deep philosophical principles which in their view should inform the sojourn in London and Frankfurt As we talked and the light faded interactions of government with the and the glow worms flashed intermit- scientific estatewill look in vain @this tently,‘I began to realize that here was account of Steacies’successful scienSteacie the leadership. a man who, once convinced someth- tific ing should be done, would do it. pragmatist, who thought life and Apart from his shrewd common science were indivisible and fun, sense, I saw that his greatest assets would’ probably have stigmatized were his patent honesty, integrity and their efforts aspretentious non sense. uriseifishness, coupled with a total lack of pomposity. Apatriot,asbefittedthesonofa soldier whom he revered, he saw that -da was backward industrially and overshadowed in manufae by its great southern neighbour. Even .Britain, with i& own urgent economics problems and in its greatly straitelied circumstances following six years of wi, was still able to supply many of the key personnel for the Chalk Ritier project that Canada could not provide. Already Stead saw his role as one of coxItribu~ to Can2uWsprogr= .-byraisiiitsscient&andengineerhg competetIe, through the instrumerit of the NRC. As president of the councilinthelast1Oyeafs0fhis~ he used the NRC to energizes&nti6candtect4o@caIresearrhand development in Canadian universities, government estabM.m=ti andindustry.

Full of honour, he died in office at the age of 62. Fourteen days earlier and aware that death was near, but unselfish as ever, he performed that last of many act of kindness to me and my family by writing a letter full of concern and wise advice for me. Perhaps it was as well that Steacie did not live to see what the future held for the NRC. The report of the Giassco Commission on the organ&an of government, lhich Steacie found hurtful, was but the pxcunsor of many other vm which were to be critical of the NRC; The yeas that followed saw the establishment of the Ministry of Science and Technology with much verbiage but no clout because no money, and culminated in the year of the bicentenary of the French Revolution with what was euphemistically called reorganization but which to the external observer appears to be a dismemberment bf the NRC laboratories. The question arises whether Steacie, with his unique personal qualities, could have done better than his successorsand gone down in history not only as champion but also as satiour of Canadian science. I very much doubt it because, irrespective of their political ideologies, the attitudes of governments to sciencein much of the English-speaking world l-&e undergone a significant change during the 1980s. Accountants and second-rate business school jargon are in the ascendant.Co&, which rise rapidly, and are easily ascertained and comprehensible, now weigh more heavily in the scales than the unquantifiable and unpredictable impacts of science on cultural values and perhaps science will only regain its lost primacy as peoples and government begin to recognize that sound scientific work is the only secure basis for the construction of policies to- ensure the survivai of irreversible without Mankind damage to Planet Earth.

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Science teaching option update by-m Imprintstaff This spring, there are 30 cwp BSc candidates from the faculty uf science attending Queen’s University* The University of Waterloo has a well-established French teaching option in connection with Brock University and a mathematics teaching option through Western, but WV% science teaching option was just approved in December by the fixulty of education at Queen’s. The science teaching option requires that one co-op work term be replaced with a tern-t at Queen’s University for teaching theory, and two industrial work terms be replaced with twf3 teaching work terms but a teaching term must precede the term at Queen’s Students who enter the program by going through teaching work term interviews in their 2B term could graduate as secondary school teachers within the five years of an Honours Co-op BSc. The normal route for teacher training in any subject is eight months at any faculty of education in Ontario after a three- or four-year university baccalaureate degree. With the science teaching option, the Honours Co-op BSc (through WV) and the BEd (through Queen’s) are earned concurrently. Teachers in Ontario must be certified for two teaching subjects, requiring at least ten and six halfcredits in a discipline respectively. According to the arrangement for this science teaching option, the first teachable subject must be biology, chemistry, or physics, and the second biology, chemistry, physics, or mathematics. Placements for each of these disciplines have been made. According to Ruth Parker. of the department of co-operative and car-

eer services, 28 UW students taught on work terms last fall and received reviews. excellent p&ormance About 40 student were registered in the winter tprm * The job-placement procedure for the science teaching option is similar ~F~of the established co-op probut the process is stre&d teaching work term jobs for science, math, and French are advertised in a special Want Ads paper containing about 100 positions. Interviews are limited to one week, followed by ranking and computer selection Placements are confirmed the next week To be eligible for the option, students must be in good standing in a teachable co-op science program. Queen’s has the power to refuse anyone referred by UN. Students will attend their Queen’s term in the winter, bfz@mhg with twentysix in . . ‘arL!LKLZYL teachrng terms are lower than other co-op disciplmes, but are increasing. Currently, there is a shortage of teachersin Ontario in all subjects mainly due’ to lucrative early-retirement benefits, but the shortage is acute the in sciences, mathematics, computer science, and French School boards in Peel, Halton, York, Durham, Barrie, Ottawa, Kingston, Brockville, and all of the Metro Toronto boards are interested in UW student teachers, Credit for the development of this option goesto Ruth Parker at UW and Irwin Talesnick at Queen’s. The option has been’ in development for several years. Further information about the science teaching option is available from Prof. Hugh Morrison in the science undergraduate office (ESC 252, x2063) or Ruth Parker (‘Toronto office; (416) 485-7909).


,In the church of the Poison Idea setting the ceiling alight with his huge fireballs (twice, no less). Of course, it was kind of hard to take his “Straight Edge!” declaration seriously after he had just sucked back beers - in one gulp, and taken a huge drag on a joint which seemed to fill his entire 300 lb bulk, They were so impressed with their first visit to our fair land that they decided they wanted to

Poison Idea The Siboney May m/90 by Paul Done Imprint staff I’m not really sure if there’s a direct correlation between girth and the ability to rock like firebreathing demons from hell, but in my experience, most bands who’ve ever contained really fat guys could rock like the proverbial satan spawn. Leslie West from The Vagrants and Mountain, The Mentors’ I1 Duce, Rob Tyner of the MC& B.T.O.‘s Randy Bachman.. . all guys who looked as though they’d be more interested in raiding - a fridge-

Poison Ideal tubby triumvirate of Pig Champion, Jerry A., and Slayer Hippy are three of the biggest rockin’ dudes you’ll ever see in one of the hardest rockin’ bands on the face of the planet. J’hey brutally mix and match the pinpoint focus of thrash with the more melodic aesthetic of classic heavy metal a la Motorhead or MC5. Pig Champion, is- 45Olbs of firesnorting guitar mayhem

“I’m mad as hell an&I’m

nti

while a slimmed-down Slayer Hippy (about 270 or so, nowadays) drums with such outrageous intensity that he makes his basic drum kit sound like a

They closed out their regular set with the expected nitrousinjected cover of “Kick Out The Jams,” which was curiously introduced with “Brothers and ’ Sisters!” rather than the ‘expec’ted “Motherfuckers!” Encoring, they dragged out their other cover of reknown, the Gophoto by Paul Done Go’s “We Got The Beat” I . . a gonna.take it anymorel” A Jerry A’s metabolism nugget from the days when Beiinda Carlisle was $11 a irockin’ fatty. worth mentioning. double-bass, multi-tracked Blood, fire, violence, loud Lead singer, Jerry A, knows earthshaking monster. There’s _ ea :music from the hardest rockin’ how to provide fine family-type mipie 01 slclnny guys in the entertainment - slashing his ‘;band on Terra Firma - now face open with a sharp object, !that’s enteitainment, I tell ya. band, too, but they’re hardly

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CRUISIN’

hkiaDelMarishleaguewith several biggies in the music world, and holding her own. Mere comparisons to other vocalists, like Siouxsie of the Bknsheesor Carol Pope, or even Sinead O’Connor, do not do this homegrown mama proper justice. While Maria can belt out a tune as strong as Sioux& or growl as sexually dominant as Carol, she &finitely has her own distinct style.

No limit ko the depths you can sink to, no II& to the shelghtr you cm cllmbl . Ifyoujustgottothi!3planetJam talking about National Veht’s lead singer,theonlyfacetofthegruupthat makes it stand out from the generic bar knd scene. The playem are aN

Big sister .is watching you!

WhichThe Cult or Poison Ideaspew SW&~ but slow enough to revel in VO.& with id its sexual f& heavy rock Natkmal Velvet’s is Maria’s asoundw&hsmoders,tiKk ‘demandsandsquealwkisforthis reasonthatthebmdbbestseenina blues,butka@ngbangonmesc tm setting; Otherwise you lose the caline. National Velvet gives a great show real power the knd can deliver.

Dgl m’s ti&~,&y r&r& Purr; m&&d, &t?y deliver to people’ who want to get bad without bkeding. ‘This band is certainly rising and certddy bound to break the elusive m American markets.

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this stuff with a bit of paternal affectim. As for me, I really like sides B and C. The first and fourth consist of weirdo remixes of the dancefloor experiments. Side B is the “quiet” industrial, necxlassical side. C includes material from the Hole period; yel@qg v& over a mutant

l A

swing beat, dense percussive attacks, happy hymns of heresy - classic Foetus. The ultimate verdict: essenGal, but not as good as the “re@ar” albums (as if anything could be). Impossible to describe, futile to criticize, in the strangest way lifeaffirming and inspiring, that’s total Fo&us. .

A

by J. Michael Ryan Imprint staff

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Thirlwell, AKA. Foetus. The problem is that Foetus is beyond the accepted concepb of “goti” and “bad”. It’s impossible and useless to pevaluate him on any terms other than his own. Foetus’ dominion occupies some netherzone where pop music meets its nemesis, a dark star of industrial beats and atmospherics. The smoke never clears in this hinterland clutch the damp rag of despair over your face or qccumb, to &,e fumes of oppression and alienation. A very sick senseof humour isalso indispensable to your psychic survival kit. The lyrics describe the most repulsive things that people will do to each other and themselves, andieven the music seems somehow offensive. This is what Wings would sound ***t***************t********, * * BE REAIalSTIC. c . t DEMAND 'TIIE IMPOSSIBLE!! t*k**t+********t******t*tttf

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l&e if you gave them Fairlights. It’s hateful ami “tasteless” but Foetus can make the sickest joke sound inexpressably sad. Maybe it sayssomething about my suffering psyche that hearing a h~A&mlianaesthetewai.labout ti idHers, bad reli@on and anal rape makes me feel good. Somehow life doesn’t seem so shitty and pointless when Jimbo’s on the turntable. Come to think of it, life is still just as shitty, but listening to FMus almost guy-y * feel you can do something

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Basically, Sink ignores the albums and collects singles, EPs and a few radio sessions.Half the stuff is otherwise unavailable, the other half is edited versions of not too obscure EPs and singles. It’s easy to get the impression that this is the contractual obligation album that frees him from the clutches of Some Wzarre. Foetus’ releaseshave vp to now all had some

sort of consistent vision, theme, mood, whatever. Sink is just the odds and sods of a vari4 and unusual career - mopping up the slime trail of the creeping fungus that is mirlwell. The packaging isn’t up to the usual standard, the editing of the songs is less than ideal and the track selection itself leaves a lot to be desired but reading the liner notes you can see that Foetus does kind of look back on

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1 It seems the Fall have been with us since the triumph of our glorious forces in the Great Patriotic War. Good thing I’m not allergic to dust or I’d be sneezing up a storm, listening fo these moribound “new-wave” rockers. This LP has been bailed as a return to form for the Fallsters. I guess it does kind of sound like a return to the same style they used about five years, six albums ago, Granted, the last couple of Fall LPs kind of went in circles, but to return to the depths of pub rock accompanied by the rotting corpse of English country/ westem music is to tempt the Furies. Now that isn’t to say that the whole record sucks, there are a couple tracks that break new (sort of) ground. The Coldcut collaboration, “Telephone, and the thoroughly Thing”’ “Popcorn Double depressing Feature” are both pretty cool. Most . Ia-of the . mlrest. is fairly 44bland !- --

incredibly irritating song. I don’t know, lately there’s been so much that I’ve come to question in my life: my lack of direction, mj, total indifference

about the future, the growing distance between myself and the ones I love;’ the viability of the Fall’s continued existence, Is any thing worthwhile anymore?

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RECORD REVIEWS

14 Imprint, Friday, Jtie 1,199O

Takirtg sides on the Cowboy -Junkies The Cowboy Junkies’ success can be attributed in no small part to the old boys club which dominates mainstream North American musical criticism. The field is dominated by tired, spent middle-aged white guys who judge everything they hear against the yardstick defined by the music of their golden youth - those hazy, rose-tinted ’60s. To this boys club of tedium, The Cowboy Junkies are a wet dream - a group which manages to generate that tuned-out mushheadedness without the aid of psychedelics, so unhealthy and unappetizing to the modern granola-headed consumer. Outside of hip-hop and a select few rockin’ bands, intensity is lost musical commodity. The wretche,d, hated Cowboy Junkies are the most vile example of this plague which rots tfie heart df our most emotive art form; Seize the moment! Fight mediocrity! Murder The Cowboy Jun- kies! NOW!

tL by Paul Done imprint staff Cowboy lunkies, how deeply do I hate thee? Let me count the ways. I hate thee with every drop of venom-filled spit which fills my mouth when I listen to this album. I hate thee with every shade of high-blood pressure red that you turn my face. I hate thee for every soul you lull into numbness. I hate thee for the criminal mediocrity which you embody, I damn your empty souls into an interminable pit of fire for your middle-class selfsatisfaction. To steal a phrase used by the late Lester Bangs to describe Tangerine Dream, the Cowboy Junkies sound like “silt seeping along an ocean floor.” To be more specific, listening to the Cowboy Junkies has ari entertainment

value roughly equal to watching fingernails grow, to watching the continental plates slide (in real time]. The Cowboy Junkies seem to me, to be the kind of music which can only be enjoyed by those whole mental metabolism has slowed down to a level roughly

equal to that of the rhino. To sim,ulate this effect, one might down a couple of bottles of Vicks 44, W-h-e-w, b-a-a-a-y-b-e-e w-e-e*r-r-e-e r-r-o-c-c-k-k-i-n-n n-o-wNovocaine, codeine, W- W. Valium.. . these are the tools you must choose to enjoy the Junkies’ snooze.

by Peter Brown Imprint staff The Cowboy Junkies is the kind of band that polarizes music fans everywhere. They are the ultimate l&e or hate band. Sure, they’re slow, low, and (gulp) subtle. But this qui&tycausesmanytofaGightto sleep and other tortured few to advocate violence. of course, ihe Junkies are derivative. Certainly, they have a very that they stick to

like glue. Obviously, they embody a mellow sound that will attract many people who grew up in the ’60s or wish they had. The question is: what is wrong with any of these things? The Junkies’ thesis that nothing is wrong with a little Neil Young hero worship can’t really be defended in a record review, so Iet me take a different tack to explain why I like this band. The Junkies are a band that worships sound. Michael Timmins writes the odd almost-brilliant lyric, but the meaningful content of the words is ahost always secondary to the lulling resonance of the music. The reason that a lot of people don’t like this is that it flies in the face of the basic rock ‘n roll tenet that loud and abrasive sou.nds are the rocker’s raison d’etre, that to be offensive is to succeed.You can’t slam dance to this music, not even if you tied. It would simply drain the adrenaline out of your bloodstream and replace it with natural tranquilizers. This is music that doesn’t demand to be played loud, and that fact pisses off many , people. For other people, it simply sounds “too nice.” But not for me, Which brings me to a review of this album. The Caution Home’ contains more of the same eIements that created the huge successof ?7zeTrin@ SRFsions:thick, smooth, and, yes, haunting vocals from Margo Timmhs, peaceful if unremarkable electric rhythm sfrom brother Michael; brushes and snares from other brother Peter, and deep-heat bassfrom Alan Anton. Oh yeah, and v&iou!3 well-blended swv instruments such as mandolin, harmonica, and accordion. The Caution Himt3 has a few peat IyricaI moments, but that is

see JUNKIES, pg. 16

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Impdnt,Friday,June1,1990 15

New b*ooks: two fists to,t-teaven

byPeaerBmwn rulprintstaff Jane Urquhart is certainly popular these days. Many critics feel that the release of hei latest novel Changing Heaven has verilied her position as what Timothy Findley has &led “a courageous styIist with a unique vision”1 agree that her style is truly to be Iauded, and am pleased that her contemporaries _ choose to do so.

However, Changing Heave strikes me asbeing the work of a stylist only, with no true plot to recommend it. It is a tale of converging time, of a past that accelerates, due to supernatural forces, to meet the present. First of all, it is the story of AM, a fan and scholar of Emily Bronte, who immerses he;sselfi$ the of a

Arianna Ether (yes, Urquhart spares notfiing in &e way of symbolic names), who makes up a balloonist team with her lover Jeremy. The twist is that Arianna and Jeremy lived 80 years ago. Arianna dies in a ballooning accident, and spends most of the book haunting variuus sites into her walking life along with the ghost of, need I reveal 3, Emily Bronte herself. Epiies of both plot lines are sprinkled togtier and converge at the book% climax The problem with the novel, i I mentioned before, is the relative lack of interesting events. I mean, things’ happeq of course, but nothing that isn’t expected and, dare I say it, predictable. What Urquhart has tried to create is a metaphor for her ownartistic writing process,her succinct statement of which is found in the novel’s preface: II She wanfs to write a book

about the wind, about the weather. . . She wants the breath of wind in her words, to hold its invisible body in her arms. She wants the again and again of that revenant, the wind- its evasiveness, its tenacity, its everhsthgTWSS”.

Three Fisted Tales of “Bob” Ed. by Rev Ivan Stang Simon & Schuster 351 Pages

by Paul Done Imprint staff Now I can appreciate a dose of post-modern deconstructionist humour as much as the next ennui-ridden product of our doomed planet, but one Subgenius Bible is enough for me, thanks. the Book of the Subgenius was a humourous satire an the new-age, postmodern, conspiracy-theory >mumbojumbo which gets passed off for truth in so,ne circles. Imptinetrable hyperbole, sublime iconogr’aphy and an incisive sense of what exactly makes the whole new age movement: so hilarious ‘made it quite essential. The same cannot be said for Three-Fisted Tules of Bob, to the Urquhart’s writing style and at last, the title of Changing Heaven. Of course the ghosts of Arianna and Emily are drawn to the simple, thatched cottage of John, where he tells to Ann, over mugs of steaming tea at the fireside, the story of Sinbad of the Skies, a recent balloonist. Of course they are drawn. They must be, or else she can have no reason for introducing them in the first place. The structure of her narrative would prevent such an oversight. Ann and her potential are revealed in the first mention of her in the book,

Supper. Ann flees-fro’m her attachment to Arthur, succeeding only top fmd another man to cling to, in the person of John, the quaint Welshman on the moors. Woven into the story of these two present-day characters is the life of

tionable. But she uses her talents to try to recreate a Gothic romance novel in the Bronte vein. Wuthering Heights is a crucial part of the plot for her primary character, but also inspires

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has failed to write m souncl~ book, Chuq@zgHe~~ven is truly a pleasure to read, but wholly foqettable soon afterward.

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Book of the Subgenius, as cartoon tracts are to the bible. While there is some elliptical resemblance to the definitive original work, the reproductions are simply individual interpretations of it. What is most annoying about the bulk of the book is the selfgratifying, self-referential, winking ‘which passes for writing in most of the stories (a sin

which we, at Imprint can never be accused of). In particular, the Ivan Stang and Paul Mavrides stories (I believe the two are in fact the same person) make up fully 114 of the book, and contribute only one interesting idea - that of the magical “third fist” sprouting out of Bob Dobbs wrist. Don’t waste your money ore this drivel,


16 J&pint, Friday, June1,199O

Arts

Hot Wacks: facts on rare tracks In the fmt case, the artist and record company has reason to compla&fortheywouIdbelc&ngmoney HotWaclssBookMv if I, for example, was selling copies of 492 puga 12-95 _ Pink Floyd albums that I’d made my&. Hot Wacks Press Beyond pirate recordings, the record companies, though still on stable legal ground, aren’t really cone vincing with their “yw’re taking money away from the arlist$ thing. Many fans would like to have access byThmd3kir -’ to live concerts and recordings which hprintetaff they sim ly don’t. Record companies k t; companies interested in 2-w When I first saw the book HOG turning profit, and if possible- huge Woks I thought it might be some sort profit My demand for some live goesbeyondtheir of perverse sex manual, something Roger Waters& which I’d have no interest in at all. budget to satisr me. So I bought a After a few hours of flipping through bool%e. it’spagesIrealizedthatitwasinfacta

ween various types dings. This is handy together. They are: pirate copies (previously available music in packaging that doesn’t mimic the original), bootlegs (a copy of an unreleased recording Iike the The at Fed I-MI), and lastly, counterfeit recordings which are identical copies both in music and cover of a previously available LP.

, the number of actual records is pretty amazing. The main appeal of Hot Wacksis its abiliv to titiIate. Anyone with an enthusiastic interest in music is likely to start drooling at the description of “lost” albums, tracks and demos. How about U2’s 24 minute version of “Pride”? Or maybe a 70 LP plexiglass case of live Zeppelin material?

Ur perhaps the most recent, notorious bootleg: Prince’s ‘Mack album”, an entire unreleased LP completed after S&z 0’ 71re Emas. Imprint received the press releasefor the “black album” in 1987 only to learn later that i& release had been delayed due to the successof a single from S&z O’fhe Z%zes,Prince, being the prolific guy he is, had Luvw ready to go, so his company WEA opted to shelve the “black album” indefinitely. lt all looks very good and exciting

on paper. However, for all practical purposes these products don’t exist Hot Wad3 is some sort of audiophile’s book of lore, for sitting around the fireplace with, for dreaming and speaking of secret product, unofficial history. To be fair, it must be said that for every lost gem like the “black album”, there is an ocean of product of considerably less intere& and quality. Apart from tit&&ion, Wacks might offer reIiabIe reference information. Because the recordings come from suspect sources, sound quality is sometimes (usually?) quite poor compared to commercial products. Hot Wucks’ biggest shortcoming seems to be in its “rating” of sound

quality. From this book you’d conclude that Ex(ceIIent) recordings are the rule as opposed to the exception. Very few items are rated Good or VeryGoodandIcouldonIyfinda small hanclful of Poor items, My experience with boots is limited,butwbenIsawalistingofone I actually owned or had heard, I compared the Ricks rating with my own and we generaIIy disagreed; poor and good recordings were Iisted as excellent Apart from this wide margin of error in sound quality, the tome is impressive in size and a blueprint for a utopian record store. For all their flaws I love bootlegs and always wiIl. They represent a form of consumer liberationbootleggers playing the modern-day role of Robin Hood, “stealing” from the multinationals, giving to the fans. Hooray! or not? These products exist, or do they? Maybe someone made the bulk of this book up, pulling the descriptions out of the same vague realm in which the records seem to reside. Does the existence of Hot FVL&ks represent a victory of some sort? As they say, they do not selI the records, nor know where you could go to fmd them (well, they probably have some ideas). With copyright laws as they are, recording companies remain victorious in that they have ensured that bootlegs and bootleggers will remain, as they have in the past, largely supressed and sadly, disorganized. Despite all my lamenting over the state of boots, I’m glad I’ve a copy of Hot Wucks,and wilI$ontinue to buy subsequent editions. For every hobby there is a degree of f&aticaI fantasizing that goes on- a lost stamp, coin, ballcard, comic. For all the (unconsummated?) pleasure Hof Wach offers, you’d wonder whether its title’s double-entendre is in- tentimal.

JUNKIES downplayed by the fact that one of these moments wasn’t written by a bandmember: a cover of Neil Young’s “Powderfinger”. But Michael Timtnins’ work is still to be lauded, such as in the album’s current hit, “Sun Comes Up, It’s Tuesday Morning”: Maybe tonight it’s a movie with plenty of room for elbows and knees, a bag of popcorn to myself, bIack and

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Thurs June ‘I-Sat June 9 g 20% off all compact discs Q

ALL bicycles’will be recycled and donated to Big Brothers/Big Sisters of Kitchener-Watmloo

160 UNIVERSITV AVE. W. WATERLOO SAT 9-b _ MON - FRI 9-9 Beside McGinnis Landing 886-0711 ’

white with a strong female lead and if , I don’t Iike it, no debate, I’ll leave.” Like most of the Cowboy Junkies‘ stuff, this lyric deals with romantic hurt of a certain kind.

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SALE!.

SALE STARTS MON. JUNE 4th

from pg. 14

.

g- THOUSANDS OF TITLES IN STOCK! Q

. 146 King St. West Kitchener

i1

743-8315

i

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Warrfors

the cmics

Silencina -

-

_

UW ruggers turned a 6th .place prediction minutes to give the wtiors

Warrior

Rugby

by Peter Brown and Rich Nichoi Imprint staff

.

into a pennant

a 9-8

edge in points with 15 minutes remaining. The te-&ious tackling of Hogg. Michael Fischer, and Jim Gloss sfonewalled any offensive attack by the Mustangs. Fischer intercepted a Western pass and ran down the sideline for a co&er try. Wilton missed an almost impossible convert. leaving the final score,13-8,Waterloo.

Queen’s had the first place acclaimation with this latest win The Golden Gaels showed their remarhble depth in the junior varsity game by anr&iIating Waterloo, 36-Q. ’

In mntinuati~n of the summer seks on VW vanity team di’ati @m i?ut searon,this weekImprint Spcirt8kboks buck on the success of the mgby wumm. This ispm two uf Sbf2a&U~ which will coversome of the most success&lteamsin Watdw athMw@otball, nigby, Athena cross-courury, in the lineup) combined with the perWarrior basketball, hockey, and sistence of Steve Slater, Waterloo put Warrior volleytWll. on an intense perfo rmance against the larger Yeomen squad in North

Waterloowm supposedto have a

mediocre season in 1989.

e Mustang forwards ran well, but their backs could not

ball-carrier. The the Mustangs added another unconverted try before the break, giving them an 8-0 bulge. . “Relax. You’re too tense,” said Warrior head coach Brian Quistberg to his troops at halftime. Fifteen minutes into the second half, Waterloo begandictating the pace as the momentum swung in their favor. Damn W&on scored on three penalty kicks over a span of ten

ihe junior varsity Warriors 17-O in game two.

Ye

pummelled

Meanwhile, the junior varsity Warriors smoked their York counterparts, 17-O.

Opening action took on a hurried and sloppy pattern as both teams squandered their respective scoring

try in Waterloo’s

pennal

.

WLoZeturZrZp tZ??Z W%. quicker passes to the winged, the home side didn’t take long to capitalize once a@n. Waterloo overlapped perfectly after a strum and suddenly the ball was in the hands of Fischer. Me outran one defender and dodged another Gryphon to score the try, which extended Waterloo’s lead to 70

-winning

l

victory

over I I-,,:.

their York counterparts Imprint file photo

opportunities. But the Warriors soon turned their efforts into some topnotch rucking, mauling and running. Waterloo broke the ice for the first time in 1989 on an amazing 45 metre penalty kick by Wilton. The score remained 3-Ofor m at halftime.

Scott Webb ran in for 1 e opening

in 1989

Guelph answered back with a drive to the Warrior tryline but had to settle for ati easy three-point penalty kick. And that was the only time the boys from the royal city registered anything on the score sheet. Later ti the half, Fischer scored again, and Closs and Keir each added a try to put the game out of reach, 19-3. The Warriors’ record now stood at 3-O and their next clash would be against the only other undefeated team in Division One, Queen’s.

It was a typical display by the Warriors once again. They started the p.me slow and took control by halftime. TheMustangs scored on the third of three questionable penalty kicks awarded to them in the early going, to take a 3-O lead, Wilton answered back with a kick for Watdoo to knot the game at 3-3 at halftime. Well known in the OUAA as a second half team, the Warriors consistently won their rucks in the final 40 minutes, forcing Western to leave more players outside. UW countered with a textbook kicking game and forced the London crew to chasethe ball backwards. Waterloo’s only try developed on a quick ruck deep in the Mustangs’ zone. Before Western could react,the forwards passed the baU out to the backs and Keir moved well to one side to score; Waterloo 7, Western 3. Wilton clinched the victory by booting two more penalty kicks for a 13-3 final. Western pressured l@e in the game,but the backsand the rest of the Waterloo side played a defensive gem. The Warriors now sported a 4-l record, equal to that of OUAA division leaders, Queen’s, UW’s junior varsity ruggers showed increased improvement in the second game despite losing 203.

The Marauders took control early in the half, but Waterloo recovered. Finally, ‘25 minutes into the battle, Waterloo struck first blood. While threatening in the McMaster end, the Warriors forced a penalty which Wilton kicked for post, and they were on the board, 3-O: Homefield advantage just added to After a M&laster kickoff, a Warrior the overpowering strength of the controlled ruck developed and Slater highly touted Queen’s squad. The tossed the ball out to the wingers. Golden Gaels pressured Waterloo’s Eventually the ball got to Fischer who fullback and wingers right from the bolted down the sideline in patented start, spearheaded by national team fashion and kicked the ball ahead fullback Dave Lougheed. The (almost to the tryline) when he ran Warriors dismailentrance included an out of room A juggling act by sup inability to field high kicks well. Still, port&e Warriors brought the ball to Waterloo tamed their opponents to the line where Slater dropped for the try. Wilton made the conversion to only a 9-6 lead at halftime. In a second half scoringfest, give Waterloo a 9-Olead to the half. Early in the second frame, Wilton Queen’s chalked up two tries and added two more kicks. The damage made a miraculous penalty kick from could have been worse, since the offi- the very left side of the field to widen cial called back two Golden Gaels’ the Warriors’ lead, 12-O. Soon tries. The second ruling formed into Waterloo started making mental misan unusual score for Waterloo. After takes, allowing the Marauders to the disallowed- try, some of the make a penalty kick of their own. FifQueens’ players argued persistently teen minutes into the half, the with the official, who in turn assessed Warrior defence fell apart. Marauder a ten yard penalty against them. Further dispute by the stubborn continued on page 18 Gaels gave the referee reason to


18 Imprint, Friday, June 1,1990

Sports

Campus Recreation

A golf cowse with no green fees Campus Ret Fridmy

by Susan. Lehane Imprint staff

Saturday a NE3 receri 9-2

El

Bronze Cr0SS

ull lla CPR Heart Saver 6130 - 9:30

l-

I

rectrt 5!30-7 u[d

CRAX: Msetlng

Pool stdl Treining

5:30 Vl

@eat

hall

ml CPR Heart Scmx 5:30 - 9 :30

Fitness hstmctors Workshop

CPR Basic Rescuer 6 - 9

CR July Calendar Dates due

5:30-T

m zm Basic Captains Rescuer 6-9 Plq@f Meetings Icr Wykay p1*p11

mrbinf

4 :I5

B*skarball4:4 $10 Pitch 5:30

GRADUATING STUDENTS _. START YOUR CAREER OFF RIGHT

Just north of campus, camouflaged by the playing fields, Columbia Lake, and the baseball diamonds, nestled amongst beautiful trees and fields lies the University of Waterloo’s infamous Golf and Country Club. The club boasts 18holes of exciting golf spread over rolling hills and plush grass (that is 18 holes if you do the existing nine twice). There are a variety of hazards throughout the course to challenge your playing capabilities: strategically located trees, and partners that cheat The course will give you a great aerobic workout (if you run), and offers a beautiful clubhouse to relax in after your game. The clubhouse is immaculate,circa2OOl,andgreat~ was taken by the architects to give it a very “outdoor-ish” atmosphere. It boasts three levels of fine clii: lying on the grass, 4% on your bike, or standing. The lunch menu is very diverse, offering you a buffet of whatever you brought with you from home or the option of trading with your golf partner. Drinks a= cheap, free if you bring your own glass. A thirst quenchingmixtureof”laH20etdirt” is served to you through a very unk que, complex network of green hose. This state of the art dispenser also conveniently doubles as a golf ball washer fcir pre-game prep. There are washrooms available for those who need them, they too are convenient,, even portable, but CDed. But seriously, even if it isn’t Glenn Abbey and we probably won’t win our bid to host a 1991 PGA tour event, it’s close to campus, a peat course to improve your short iron

Top 5 choke btist’s , lo&g streaks

H

I. Boston Bmins (1943-1990)

2. Duke Blue Devils bask&all (1982-1990)

il ’

-

3. Denver Bmcos (1966-1990)

565 Bada PI., Waterloo

(Northfield

746-l 666 1

off Weber)

4. westem Mustangs twketball (19874990) 5. Laurier Golden Hawks ho&y (1988-1990)

USAN Large P izza only $12.99 FOUR COKES FREE DELIVERY

+3 ITEMS

l

ONLY

borrow clubs from the PAC equipment centre,.all you have to do is surrender yourID card Score cards are available in the Campus Ret office at the front desk Players must sltpply itheir own balls, and are expected to iplay with common etiquette: ;ind courtesy at all times. So plit down your b@s, stretch your legs, grab ‘your golf clubs, and go for a game of golf, on me!

1989 rugby recap continued

from page 17

Erik JKampe took full advantage, dancing through for the major. The convert was no good, but Mac was catching up, 12-7. M&laster’s increased roughness coupled with the official’s ignorance, frustrated the Wtiors. Then the highlight of UW% game arrived. Ralph Engel passed to Belgrave, who in turn lobbed the ball to Cohoon, running down the sideline. He went through untouched - Waterloo 16 McMaster 7. Another defensive breakdown enabled the Maraud&s to make a v&nt comeback effort to score a try, xbut they ended up on the short end of a 1643 final The victory guaranteed the Warriors homefield advantage in the OUfM semi&yils.

Guelph, winless on the &son and headed for demotion to Division Two, had nothing to lose and put on a stellar performance. The Warriors got a qui& start, taking the ball deep into Gryphon territory. Two possession changes later, Waterloo’s Scott Webb burst through for an unconverted *,4-O Waterloo. Mental errors caused Guelph to commit an offside infraction, which Wilton turned into a penalty kick to widen the Warriors lead to seven. Well into the half, the Warriors slowed their tadcling efforts, opening the gate for Guelph’s first major* Add the conversion and the score was 7-6 Waterloo. The tempo picked up, but neither side capitalized before the break Veteran Warrior Toon vowed to keep wind in his team’s sails in the second segment. Five minutes into it, he received the ball from a teammate, faked a run to the outside and suddqly turned directly upfield tith shouldersdown. Swivelling forward,

Toon threw back to the sprinting Rod Duncan who broke the tryline for four more UW points. With the convert, the score favored the visitors, 136. The Warriors put a stranglehold on the win with a free kick by Wilton. The final - Waterloo 16, Guelph 6. Our junior varsity Warriors beat their Gryphon counte* as well, 8-O. News from Kingston gave word that Western had upset the defending champion Queen’s Golden Gaels 9-6 to give Waterloo the division pennant and homefield advantage throughout the playofs, with their 6-l record.

The Warriors got a taste of theti own post-season medicine. In 1988, Waterloo made OUAA rugby history by becoming the first Division Two champion to beat the nvision One pennant holder in the playoffs. Theyke still tlie first, but not the onlyTxuier upset the powerful black and gold, 10-9 to advance to the provincial fmals (which they later lost to Queen’s). A late kick called wide and a lastminute one metre strum that went nowhere were too much for WV. The disaster started early when injuries took Toon and later Engel, flairing up Waterloo’s season long problem of lack of depth. Wingers Fischer and Keir, back Belgrave, and eight-man Slater all had outstanding games. Darren Wilton, responsible for 58 pointsin the regular season,provided all of the Warriors’ scoring on three penalty kicks. But it was Laurier, playing like a team possessed,that tackled everything and won most of the key lineouts and mauls. Their enthusiasm carried over into the seconds game, as they dumped the undermanned Warrior jvs 14-4. warriors did Overall, the extremely well. Pre-&son preclictions pegged a sixth place finish for Waterloo in the OUAk Second place is nothing to shake a stick at,\

FRANCES 33 IJniversity

SALAD

Waterloo, Ontario

Ave. E.

VEAL STEAK SAUSAGE MEATBALL COLD CUTS Sweet - Medium

-

$2.00

1 MONDAY

NIGHTS

shots, and best of alI it’s free. Yesfree. The UW golf course is for the enjoy‘merit of eligible UW students and members. The nine hole practice course has been set up to improve your game. It is located north of CoIumbia fields, behind the ’ ‘%toric Brubcher House. If you didn’t have room in your car on moving day for your desk, bike and golf clubs, you can

$3.25 $3 30 $3.15 $3.15 $3.15. Hut

\

-

1 ) ; II 1

Olives

PANZEROTT Extra Items

EAT-IN

l

LASAGNA SPAGHEllt GNOCCHI, RAVIOLI

DRIVE-THRU

k

PIZZA SLICES - $1.95 14 INCH PIZZA m$6.49

$4.99 $3.54 $3.75 $3.75

Moxxaretla Cheese and our famous Pizza Sauce Extra Iterns: S -75 each Ingredients: Pepperoni. mushrooms, green peppers, salami. INCLUDES:

-

Soup

$1 50

$343 $ .4U

oniona,

olhcs,

pineapple

l TAKE=OUT

bmxm,

anchovies,

tomatoes.

hot peppers, sausage, ham.


Classified CALENDAR

-

SUNDAY

Imprint, Friday, June I, 1990 19

ONGOiNG

--Sat. luna 2 - KPL’s giant used

Jazz Choir - The WW Jazz Choir Laymen’s Evangelicel Fellowship evening service. Sunday, 700 pm. at 163 University Ave. MI., Apt. 321 (MSA}. All are welcome. For more information, call 884-5712.

FASS Writers Meeting - Those crazy writers are at it again, and they want YOU! Help write the show that millions have raved about. 7:30 p.m. MC5158. Everyone welcome.

meets every Tuesday at 1O:OO p.m. in Siegfried Hall. New members are always welcome. For more information contact David Fisher at 884-6505. see I you thereli

“Come and be a part of the Caribbean Students Association (CSA) every Tuesday at 5:30 p.m. in CCt35. A nymber of interesting, events are scheduled for this term. See you therel”

EVERY WEDNESDAY EVERY TUESDAY

House of Debates meets

in Physics 313 at 5130 p.m. New members will. be welcomed ecstatically. Come out and argue with usl RIDE WANTED

Triathletes - Are you travellingwto the Guelph Triathlon, June 24. Do you have room for an extra person and bike? If so, call Al 725-3416. To Cambridge nights. Leaving

Wednesday

Campus 9:30 p.m. or later. Will share gas. Call John 621-8314 (Cambridge) between 9 p.m. and It p.m.

Experienced typist will type anything. Reasonable rates. Fast efficient service. Westmount-Erb area. Call 886-7153. Fast, professional word processing by University Grad (English). Grammar, spelling, corrections available. Laser printer. Suzanne, 886-3857. 3~ years experience: 95 d.s.p. typewritten; $1.25 d.s.p. Word Processor. Erb and Westmount area. Call 743-3342, Professional Word Processing by experienced secretary. Letter quality print, spell check. On campus pickup, delivery. Call Sharon 656-3387. Word Processing. Fast, accurate, dependable. Letter quality. Competitive rates. Same day service often available. Call Betty, 886-6361. HOUSING AVAILABLE 2 Rooms at 338 l-ester, June to August. 8130./month. New renovations, parking, laundry, utilities included. Raymond 7483m May’ - August 1980 room for sublet, Hazel Street. Furnished including bed, desk, sink, cupboards, parking. Share washroom and kitchen. Private, quiet, $ negotiable. Call Debbie collect (6 13) 727-9469. New apartments - 6 bedroom, 2 baths, 2 kitchens, laundry, parking and spacious. Sept. lst, $1,5OO./month. 40 Euclid Ave. 747- 1271. / Sept, lat - first class 2 bedroom apartment, self-contained and very large, completely furnished with excellent furniture, very quiet and clean, balconies, intercom security system, on bus route. 8240. to $320. each, depends on number of students. Utilities included, laundry facilities, parking, walking distance to both universities. 344 Regina N. behind MacDonalds on Columbia. Phone 885-0843 anytime.

FASS Writers Meetings - Come be a part of the crew who write that crazy yearly show. Everyone welcome (we mean it I). 7:30 p.m. MC 5158.

9:OO a.m.

Creative, knowledgeable seamstress needed for- casual part-time work in vintage clothing store. Affirmative action for women and women of colour, Apply in writing: Surrender Dorothy, King and Bridgeport, Waterloo.

hoovy,

vintage

sales clerk

wanted for weekend work in vintage clothing store. Affirmative action for women and women of colour. Apply in writing: Surrender Dorothy, King and Bridgeport, Waterloo. SERVICES

Will do 1lght moving with a small truck. 1blso garbage removal. Reasona Die rates. Call Jeff 8842831, Gary’s Moving - man w/small cube van and appliance cart available weeknights, weekends 830./hr. in Kitchener-Waterloo; out-of-town ’ extra - Garv 746I

7160. Translation

Services - call Chantal 884-1970 ext. 2398 or 885-l 211 ext. 2249. (EnglishFrench). Two men with ‘h ton to do light moving or garbage removal. Also have machines to do office cleaning 820.00 per hour. Phone 7494437, K.A.R. Cycle Repairs - Serving U of W for 3 years. 5 min. from campus. Repairs tol all makes, models. Call for appointment. 746-5978. FOR 8ALE Depecha Mode - If anyone has any extra tickets for their June 22 concert in T,O., or know anyone that does, give Craig a call at 5769376. %wnhouss For Sale - Cedarbrae/Glenforest area Condo/ Townhouse for sale. Close to 2 bedroom and University. finished rec. room and or extra bedroom. Suitable as starter home or as rental property. Asking price 8 108,900. For further information call 7467558. Open house June 3,1 - 4 p.m.. Call for address. 1982 Honda Moped - PA 50, ’ excellent condition; reasonable ‘price. Located on campus. 8B41176.

want to earn extra money in their spare time on Wednesday evenings or Thursday mornings delivering the Waterloo Chronicle in areas around the University.

Piglet - I like the way you curl your tail. My birthday, by the way, is a scant 3 days away. (Wear a ribbon).

Chinese Christian

Fellowship meetings every Friday at 7100 p.m. at WLU Seminary. Bldg., Rm. 201. Contact Mike Liu .at 7474065 for rides.

- Waterloo Science Fiction Club is active this summer. Meetings 6:30 p.m. Wed. New members welcome. For details of planned events see WATSFIC board in clubs room (CC138). Movement meets to discuss issues of injustice. The SCM is an ecumenical group that challenges people to live out their faith in action. For more information call Sheri at 741-0892 or Garth at

Do you think you have a drinking probfem? Perhaps Alcoholics Anonymous can help. Weekly meetings open to the public held in the Health & Safety Building Meeting Room (ask receptionist) on Fridays at 12:30 p.m. or call 742-6183.

Join the Warriors Band! Practie .every Thursday at 5:30 in the PAC, room 2012 (Blue North). New and old members welcome. We can provide instruments. .

Bagels!! The Waterfoo Jewish Students Association /Hillel presents a weekly Bagel Brunch every Thursday from 11:30 a.m. to 1:3.0 p.m. i,nthe Campus Centre - Check with Turnkeys for the room number- .

The

Student

Christians

884-7130.

Help with research - I am a University of Guelph graduate student who would greatly appreciate assistance from females aged 18-25 concerned about becoming fat or gaining weight, who feels overcome by a need to eat uncontrollably and comFjelled to engage in excessive exercise, dieting, vomiting or laxative use, Participants will fill out a 1 hour confidential questionnaire on family functioning. If willing, contact Kathleen after 600 p.m. at 576-

7765. -

$20.00 Cash - Students in first or second year between 18 and 25 years old are invited to participate in a Cariovascular Reactivity study. No Exercising Required1 Call ,Barb or John at 885-1211 ext.WB& For a Good Time - call Rhythm Rob’s Disc Jockey Services cdllect (416) 546-5538. Member Canadian Disc Jockey Association. Very ,reasonable rates. The Toronto Art Therapy Institute and the Institute for Arts and Human Development at the Lesley College Graduate School in Cambridge Mass. have completed arrangements for a cooperative program of studies leading to a masters degree inthe expressive arts therapies.

?tUdents _end_-9reduefes -of f@

Toronto Art Therapy Institute 2 year diploma program, areeligible at apply to the Lesley College Masters degree program in the Expressive Art Therapies where their graduate lev@ training at the Toronto Art Therapy Institute will be given credit as part of the Lesley Masters program. To complete their Masters spend two degree, students summers at Lesley College for 2 five week periods. If you would Iike to receive further information about this joint effort, please contact our office and a staff person will be pleased to talk to you. 216 St. Clair West Avenue, Tel.: 924-6221.

Cardiovascular Reactivity study - all students who have participated, please call Barb at 885-1211 ext. 6780 A.S.A.P. to arrange your second or third retest session.

i 3 Wood - throwing distance from 9th tee on golf course. Identify manufacturer for return. X4048 Paul.

\

.

--CLASSIFIED

FOUND

We’re looking for people who

Tues.

Science Fiction Fans i WATSFIC

CLASSIFIED

CLASSIFIED Please call 886-2830, to 5:oO p.m.

EVERY FRIDAY

EVERY THURSDAY

book sale - 9 a.m. Adult and children’s hardcover and paperback books, magazines, sourid recordings and more. KPL Main.

ANN&JNCEMENTS Housing: Homeshare - Waterloo Region offers a safe, fully screened introduction service to people interested in shared accommodation., Homeshare is a program sponsored by the Social Planning Councit, Region f Waterloo, and the Ministry of Housing. For details call 5789894.

The Social Justice A&ion Group meets regularly throughout the term to co-ordinate educational events and civil disobedience actions ranging from speakers and leafletting to blockades. Past actions have included the Dis ARMX campaign, NATO out of Nitassinan actions and on-going solidarity with the Innu, Christmas Anti-War Toys action, and a continual-,focus on nonviolent resistance to militarism. For details call 884-3465.

Tutors wanted for Spring term to teach English as a second language I or Remedial English, Contact Paul Beam, Dept. of English or send e-mail message on CMS to PDBEAM %tWATDCS. U. of Waterloo, each listing your name, hours of contact and references in teaching time, Concerned about the food you eat? WPIRG is offering guided tours of the supermarket, May 21 to June 9. If you or your group would like to increase your shopping awareness, call Dianne or Colleen at WPIRG, 884-9020. Maximum of 7 people per tour.

Health and Safety Dept. Summer Houra - 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. Monday to Friday during the months of May, June, July and r August.

The Off-Carapur Houring offide ‘which is located on the roof of the Village I Complex will remain open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday to Friday during the months of.June, July and August. To assist students seeking accommodation on weekends the office will be open from 1000 a.m. to 3:OO p.m. on Saturdays, June 23 to August 25, 1990, inclusive. When the office is closd accommodation lists may be obtained either from the Turnkey Desk, at Campus Centre or from the Security office. UPCOWN6 EVENTS T~PH. Muy 8l- The Barracudas from England. 8:OO p.m. Bombshelter Stage ,with guests Gordy Gordo and the G-Men.

lune

b - Continuing

Education: Family Law & Social Work - 7 p.m.. Instructor: John Zinkan,n, Renison College, University of Waterloo examines ‘confidentiality betW88n social worker and client.’ KPL Stanley Park Branch. Wed. lane 6 - &bit meeting at 7100 p.m. in MC301 2,3rd floor of the Math & Computer Building. Phone 579-3695 for details. Wed. June 6 - Kitchener Blood Donor Clinic, Mennonite Brethren Church, 19 Ottawa St. N., I:30 p.m. until 800 p.m.

Thurs. June 7 - Mike Something, 12 - 4:00 p.m. Bombshelter Patio (free).

Tburs.

June 7 - The Dead Milkmen with guests Boot Sauce, 8:OO p.m. Bombshelter Stage. June 8, 9, 10 - Summerfeat Weekend, Village Green. Sat. June 9 - Scuba Open Water Checkout is next weekend! If you took the Scuba course in the Fall, call Chris at x3814 or 888-6931 for car pool, equipment rental, and accommodation info.

Sun. June 10 - at 7:30 p.m. the Action Network for Overseas Aid is sponsoring a letter-wri ti ng coffeehouse at the Great Hall in Conrad Greble College, U of W. The foreign aid budget isseriously threatened. Join us for some music and express your c(jncern. For more information contact Dianne Heise at 578-8457. Sun. June 10 - Pop Series. Free afternoon concert sponsor&by The Mutual Group. Mutual Music, two hour concert of popular tunes in the Bandshell at Waterloo Park. Rain date Sun. June 17 at 200 p.m. For more i nfor-mation contact Rachel Smith-Spencer 7454711. Tues. June 12 - Continuing, Education: Family Law & Social Law - 7 p.m. Instructor: John Zinkann, Renison College, University of Waterloo continues with the topic: confidentiality between social worker and client. KPL Stanley Park Branch.

wed. June 13 - Atari user group, KWEST, 16-bit (ST) meeting at 7:OOp+m. in MC2009,2nd floor of the Math & Computer Building. Phone 579-3695 for details. Visitors welcome.

Tues. June 19 - Kitchener Public Library presents ‘Starting and Managing Your Own Small. Business’, 7:15 p.m. .Register at the Information Centre or by calling 743-0271, ext. 2341235. KPL Main. Wed. luns 13 -Region of Waterloo Citizens’ Advisory Committee on the Environment - 6:30 p.m. Members of the public and community organizations are encouraged to present briefs and/or make short presentations to this committee. lntereated individuals and groups are requested to notify the Department of PJanning and Development at 885-9535. For information contact Bill Townsend at 884-1345 or Lindsay Dorney at 885-t 211 ext.

2880.

.

Thurs. June 14 - V-Spy V-Spy (From Australia} also Appearing Basic English, 8:00 p.m. Bombshelter Pub.


“~~3ilU~II, OK,so we exaggerateda lit&but, . : ,,:.

:.’

:.Lwe

-have

so,d

hundreds and we are going to sell hundreds more. Because DTK 1260s are easy to.pusiL They’re performing,so % well most are sold by & referral. Our customers are getting a lot out of these 286s, 12 Mhz, 0 wait states with 1 Mb of ram. VGAgraphics built in leads desktop publishers and cad users to ask for it by name. lts price leads everyone else to do the same. Weknowthesesystems very well, Weusethem in our.ggn offices, and we use ,,f&@&i& our own homes, So : ,i_.: :.: : sweaf ah&t offerif:;. Q@$an’Jt .,I-::...:.,:_..... . ;

everything in the case.

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