No Title

Page 1


A GO-FOR-IT! PUYERS and CA. B. premttutim in usmibtion with the TRE STWENTS UNION

HOUSE

THEY MIGHT BE GIANTS (Toronto show already sold out!)

Saturday, November

3, at Fed Hall

Shakesx,care’s %,

South African artists-’

--

JOHNNY CLEGG & SAVUKA-

--

- -- a-

Ticketsauailubleat the door

Adults $7.00 Students $5.00 -

In

THE MOHAWK

CRISIS

Margaret Horn and Paul Smith will be speaking about the recent events occurring at the Kanawake and Oka Indian Reserves in Quebec this summer. t ’

Focus: Human- Rights Violations

19 at the Bomber!! Receive a very novel “Party Legal” T-shirt (with a libatious purchase) Daily mdvies continue., .“Fright Week” (by request) Free popcorn daily between 5-6 p.m.

Underagef7r .*. Turn

Bring your guests and they won’t pay a cover between 8-10 pm. every Friday and Saturday (non-entertainment nights)

Saturday, October 27, 1990

“Lovers of suds”.. . Tall cans, weird beers, quart beers...&eap beer - The savings continue!

Campus Centre Great Hall - 3:00 p,m. Presented

by the Public

Issues Bmrd,

Fede,ration

of Students

Looking for something fun to do this New Year% Eve?

Thursday, . November 01 - Ssmething special will happen to YOU (after 8 p.m.)

How about a two-night party in Montreal $99 plus tax (avoid the GST now!)

for ~nl)

Come ahd see youi friendiy Travel Cr,mmissioner a$ . soon as possible, up at the Fed Office, Room 238. *** Look for upcoming trips to Daytona and Mexico

.Don’t miss out.

Don’t miss Mike Something (music) and Barry Kennedy (comedy) friday afternoon (Nov. 2)...Free...of course.

St. Paddy’s Day Warm-up toparty’>approacheth.. Friday, November 1’6,this year.

Feeling green? The 3rd annual (a.k.a the 3rd annual”lameexcuse

.


I stance Life Building by Peter Brown Imprint staff

The campaign for the Student Life Referendum on Nor. 21-22 begins next Tuesday, Oct. 30, but some students think that the F&deration executive have already started endorsing the plan. The proposal would increase the current $10.00 Athletic Facility fee by $10 yearly

Vellinga says “vote YES for the SLB”’ increments until 1993 to help finance a $12,00O,OOO expansion to the PI-@cal Activities Complex. This addition would contain an indoor track, activity rooms, squash courts, an athletic injury clinic, and other facilities. A letter in fhis week’s Imprint (“Feds talk trash,” page 8) out&s a number of concerns about President John VelIinga telling students to ‘Vote YES for the Student Life Buildillg!” in the Federation’s student handbook and the Campus Recreation handbook published in September. Vellinga is out of town at a but Vice-President conference, (Finance) Tess Sliwinski was avail‘able to explain the executive’s point of view. “John’s endomement was supported by Km (Speers, VPUA) and myself. It’s the position of the executive,” Sliwinski said. But she did not feel that such a statement constituted campaigning even though the student handbook is an official Federation product. VelIinga’s statement also appeared in the C-Rec. guide, but SIMnski said

that Vellinga supplied the statement to Athletics, the publishers of the guide, at their request. Responding

to critic&n

three weeks given for the

‘The Icefield was just Phase One of the expanding of athletic facilities,‘: explained Sliwinski. “The debt for that project was paid off two terms ago, and the fund now contains $377,000. And we spent about $10,000 of that on the feasibility study.” She said that she can see how students may be concerned, but that this is a Catch-22 situation. “To bring the issue before the students, you need a plan, and that costs money to put together.” . Sliwinski also confirmed a rumour that the executive had commissioned the Federation’s -Board of Communications to produce a video promoting the SLJ3 earlier this month. This is despite the Oct. 30 campaign start date and the Feds’ referendum guideline %t “All major campaign work must be done outside The Federation of Students Office.” “The Video Commission is a service available to all Federation members, not an exclusive executive resource,” she said. ‘The No committee could ask BComm to assist in a video of their own if they wanted.” She did not indicate; however, how this did not constitute campaigning-

that the

CaFpaigr! is

not enough to educate students, Shinski pointed out that normal Federation procedure for referendum allows only ten days between the beginning of a campaign and the vote. ‘The beginning date of the referendum was set by the Chief Returning 0f@er Christopher Burcsik and the Referendum Committee,” she said. ‘They decided to extend it to three weeks because of the importance of this vote. Three weeks should be enough for both sides to make their case.” Sfiwinski admitted that the executive would be working tith the Yes committee, but maintained that this was not a conflict of interest. “Well be giving a slide presentation for the Yes committee, since we know more about the feasibility study (pfepared by Brisbin Brook Beynon Architeqts). But the others members of the cdm&tee will be the ones speaking at the forums and in classes.”

She also made it clear that anyone with concerns about how the referendum is being handled can appeal to the Chief Returning Officer Christopher Burcsik, who can Iimit campaigning for a committee or cancel a committee’s $1,000 budget, making the chairperson(s) financially liable for the costs of the committee’s carnpaign. Sd far, no one has stepped forward to form the No committee. Those wishing to do so must contact the Federation of Students by Monday, Oct. 29 and attend an organizational meeting that day, since that is when mailouts are sent to off-campus students. If the project is approved by students on Nov. 21-22, the ground would be broken in January of 1992, with the projected completion date being the fall of 1993.

‘%Ytou n&d aplan andthat costs

mmey

l

.

,

99

Lb Sliwinski There til be two forums before Nov. 21 where students can hear arguments from both committees; the dates wiil be announced at Tuesday’s press conference. Another point of contention expressed by me student’s letter concerned the money spent on the feasibility study and the fact that the $10 athletic fee, originally intended to pay for the construction of the Columbia Icefield, was still b&g collected.

Referendum: r6Yes99 landslide’ by Pet&hown imprint staff

In the second referendum in a month, UW accounting students resoundingly approved a $75 educa: tion contibution last week. Chief . returning officer Scott Garrett reports that of the 410 students who voted, 344 or 83.9 percent said yes to the fee. 267 of 314 on-campus votes were in favour, .while 77 approved of 96 oficampus votes cast. “The results clearly show that accounting students want this fee,” said Janice Wright of the Yes campaign. ‘Well be able to forge ahead with introducing the fee.” Wright

hopes that the fee can be put on students’ fee statements for the winter 1991 term, but it may take longer. ‘We (the Accounting Student Educational Contribution committee) wiIl k m-g with administration in &e n& future to discuss the fee. There are a lot of administrative details to work out before the fee can actually appear on statements.” The fund created by the ASEC fee will go primarily toward offering two courses that accounting graduates need to be certified by the Ontario Institute of Chartered Accountants. This fund will be overseen by a committee jointly made up of students and hculty.

The 30 percent turnout was down from the first voided referendum in which 51.4 percent of the approximately 1,000 on-campus students cast ballots. Results from the first offcampus vote were not known. .

The first accounting referendum took‘ place on Se@ 26 and 27, and was declared null and void by its chief returning officer Scott Timson on Sept. 28. Timson said that opposition to the referendum had not been anticipated, and so the No campaign was not given enough organizational time. For the second vote, the Federation of Students appointed Scott Carrett, someone with no involvement with the School of Accountancy.

IDoug

I

By George! kninaries

does degrees! .

It’s Doug! UW at last Saturday”s

P&dent and fdl convocatim.

Pm-t

join

other

Photo by. ?oanne Sandrin

Alcohol Awareness Week bYKymm BACCHUS As the Christmas seaSon approaches, we start to make plans about where we want to spend our vacation. who we are g;oin~ to see, and ho& many parties Ge al attend. fib year, party on, &m&j Bemuse 3we can exact that 1.800 , deaths and over 52&O injuries will be caused by impaired drivers in the new year. Doesn’t sound like something YOU would like to face under the mistletoe, does it? Being awake of the consequences of over-consumption of alcohol is a responsibility of us all and, depending on your attitude toward the subject, you may possibly be faced with a sobering situation come this holiday season.

To raise awareness of these issue; the Public Issues Board of the Federa tion of Students is presenting Alcoha Awareness Week starting Monday Oct. 29. Here are some of ~JJE highlights: * Mcday, Oct. - 29: The uncoa relationship between date rape ant drinking. Speaker: Kim Speers, VPUA and OFS WQIJJUI’S CQmh~iQner Tuesday, Oct. 30: Alcohol on UW campus. Speakers: Dave! (manager Bombshelter) Chuck! (manager Fed Hall) w!

(manager

Bar Sefica)

+ open forum: come with your ques tions and comments Wednesday, Oct. 31: Hallowe’el Bash at Fed Hall Fed Hall will remain open for an extri hour without bar service and witi spooky dance tunes! _I Thursday, Nov. 1 & Friday, Nov. 2: Events and speakers in the campus centre,

Correction An article titled “Artsies pay photo fee” in last week’s Impri@ (Oct. 19, 1990) described how the Arts St& dent Union collected a $5 fee from each arts student for booking graduate photos. The article also stated that the contract for grad photos between Jostens (the photographers) and the Engineering Society included a $15 sitting fee per student. This is irworrect.

The $15 fee is not a sitting fee (one that goes to the photographer for the session itself), but a cornposte fee for which the student receives a smaIl poster with the grad photo of everyone in his or her graduating class. This same composite fee exists for

the other faculties on campus, except for Arts. The only department within Arts that has opted for the coinposite fee is Accounting. A handful of nonAccounting students were charged the composite fee by mist&e, and all have received refunds. The article also states that “the Science faculty’s sitting fee ranges from $9 to $17.” In fact, Science has the same $15 composite fee, and no sitting fee. Justens ’ CkW2tmcts with student sucieti~ at UW do not include and

have never any kind Peter Erown News Editor

included

a sitting fee L-III


News

4 Imprint, Friday, October 26, 199q

Chuck responds

Fed Hall debt explained by manager Regarding the cited excessive labour costs, McMullan disclosed that double salary payments werenecessary because of one employee’s maternity leave (with the added cost of hiring someone to temporarily fill her job) and the addition of four coat check workers for every shift.

‘Y. J* HageY mpdnt staff

With the eferendum, +d Hall, the al project, is he September lil meeting,

upcoming Federation the state (and fate) of last major student capia concern for many. At 15th Student’s CounVP of Operations and Furthermore, Fed Hall’s mortgage Gance, Tess Sliwinski, reported on was 20 per cent higher in 1989-90 %d Hall’s approximated $100,000 fis- because of the recession and the zal loss. This was attributed to . terms of the mortgage. It is expected txcessive labour costs and simple to rise to $30,000 this coming year. *management Since then debate lils ensued. Are McMullan and.Fed’s manageLast Friday, Chuck McMullan, Fed ment responsible for the afflictions /Iall’s manager approached Imprint @aging UW’s great night spot? :o “clear the air.” He took the opporMcMullan laments greatly over unity to break down the $100,000 lost attendance, the direct result of &ire into its major component parts slackening attendance (due to comFifty thousand dollars of the Fed petition from recently opened places Xall deficit is the result of a drop in like the Twist, Don Cherry’s, Pat and MT sales from November to April. Mario’s, Gler’s and even the newly WLU Turret). AdditionZlsewhere, $20,000 was spent on renovated naintenance and repairs, such as ally, people are drinking less; 20 per kont doors and kitchen equipment cent less to be exact With 60 per cent ,+&an extra $5000 was needed to of UW freshmen under the age of majority, and the heavy anti-drinking ceep the place clean

and driving campaigns, this is hardly surprising. But McMullan assured Imprint, ‘We’re not going to take this sitting down.” Plans are in the works for a Fed Hall make-over. Such modifications as an upstairs sports bar with an atmosphere more kindred to that of the Bombshelter. This will include the wlrchase of pool tables and ofl dart boards. rearrkgement

Further revamping of the coat check room, bar stools, patio and the reevaluation of current audio-visual equipment. All of this has been proposed to attract a new clientele in tune with Fed’s diversified new atmosphere, which will move toward the promotion of “good times” rather than alcohol-based marketing. Two factors make long-range planring at Fed Hall complex. Fir& anew

LLBO law which removes the “Canteen” liquor license designation under which UW operated means that all campus bars must have the Same admissions policy regarding minors. This means that the University’s must reevaluate its policy for campus bars. Second, the uncertain economic effects of the introduction of the GST renders financial proiecI I tions precarious.

To Your * Health b FACTOIlY FASHION OUTET

FILL UPWITH

FIBRE

e

It is important to have many sources of dietary fibre in your diet. Fibre is important for three basic reasons: 1. It provides bulk without calories. 2. his a constituent of foods which have a high nutrient density (fruits and vegetables). 3. It has certain beneficial actions while it passes through the body. There are two main sources of non-digestible fibre in the human diet. Cellulose and hen&cellulose (fruits and vegetables) and grains in the form of bran. A high-fibre diet is one which is rich in raw vegetables and fruits ;ind in whole grain cereals. A diet which is high in fibre will produce enou& bulk to keep your appetite under control while at the same time keep your caloric intake relatively low. Fibre is beneficial to the human diet because it allows us to increase the amount of food we eat but does not have an equivalent increase in the number of calories consumed. In fXt, many of the most successful weight reduction programs allow, and even encourage the consumption of high-fibre, low calorie foods.

FEATURING THE LATEST IN LADIES, MEN’S 81CHILDREN’S BRAND NAME & DESIGNER FASHIONS FAMOUS LABELS YOU WILL RECOGNIZE IN SILKS, WOOLS, COTTONS & WOOL BLENDS

The Benefita of a High Fibm Diet

One of fib&s greatest benefits is that it aids in stool elimination. Anyone who has ever suffered from constipation knows that by increasing the amount of fibre in the diet will alleviate their problem. One of the properties of fibre is that it traps water inside the gastrointestinal tract thereby softening its conten&.The result is thatthe muscular wall of the intestine works easier and moves the intestinal . contents more rapidly at a lower pressure. Fibre not only traps water, it may also trap other intestinal contents. One such constituent is cholesterol. In certain individuals, a high-fibre diet has been shown to4lower serum cholesterol levels. Increasing the rate at which food moves through the gastrointestinal tract may reduce the risk of cancer of the colon (large intestines). How to Increase the Fibre Content of Your Diet Persons wishing to increase the fibre content of their diet must adhere to three general rules: 1. Do it gradually A person who is accustomed to consuming a diet in which there is very little fibre will often feel bloated and may sometimes experience gastrointestinal discomfort if large amounts of fibre are suddenly introduced. Therefore, institute the necessary changes slowly, over a period of weeks or months. 2. Incorporate any necessary changes into your current diet. This wiil allow you to eat more fibre without radically changing the way you eat. For example, use whole wheat bread instead of white. As the amount of high-fibre containing food increases, the quantity of other foods will gradually decrease by itself. 3. Get the increased fibre from a large variety of foods. This will ensure that you get the maximum amount of the necessary vitamins and minerals. For most people, a high fibre diet offers a way to control appetite, to consume fpwer calories and at the same time take in adequate amounts of needed minerals and vitamins. Start your fill up with fibre - Today!

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. imprint, Friday, October 26, 1990 5

NeWS

Annual Charity Run by John-Paul Doweon special to Imprint The residences of St. Jerome’s and Notre Dame have been hard at work since the start of the term organizing thii year’s 15th annual Charity Run. The run has grown greatly since its -inception many years ago, and cochairpersons Shannon Kelly and Dan Milkovich are hoping this year’s will attract a large turnout from students on the main UW campus. The Central Ontario Developmental Riding Program (CODRP) is the charity that will receive the proceeds from the fund-raising events this year. CODRP coordinator Anne Fielding recently addressed the students from the two residences to express her gratitude: ‘We are very excited about being chosen as this years charity.” CODRP is a non-profit organization that provides therapeutic and recreational ho&back riding for the developmentally handicapped. For many of the participants, horseback riding is the only activity they can take part in due to their physical limitations. The riding program feels fortunate that it can provide this form of recreation to disabled persons as well. “Self-esteem is important for our the program’s newsletter. Increased riders,” Fielding said during her fUndingwould enable the 60 v&naddress to the students. “When they teem at the CODp to expand can ride a horse they feel really good beyond their weekly limit .of 130 about it” riders and deleted their constant The therapeutic benefits of riding a waiting list of 25 to 30 applicants. horse are just as important to the proThere are 30 programs across: gram as recreational enjoyment. The Ontario that serve the disabled from movement of a horse simulates walkschools and various other self-help ing for the rider and the warmth of groups. The CODRP is located in the horse permits muscle stimulation Kitchener and serves Cambridge, without causing spasm. Kitchener, and -Waterloo. The closest Unfortunately, like most programs, other programs are located in Guelph this one requires money. Their finanand London. ces are received from the public The 15th Annual Charity Run will through donations and fund-raising, be holding fund-raising events at St. such as this year’s charity run. Jerome’s College starting with a cofThe program’s operating budget is fee house on 0ct. 28 and ending on $l5Cl,QOO per year, and receives Nov. 4 with the final lap around Ring donations through four programs set Road. The college is proud of its up by CODRP: Adopt-a-Horse, annual traditidn of giving back someSponsor-a-Paddock, Maintain-athing to the community that houses Stall, and Send-a-Friend. The charity us while we study here. We hope that recognizes each financial contributhis year’s run will receive the tion with a plaque, except for the final recognition from the other side of the option, which receives recognition in creek that it deserves.

/-y

*\

The Run itself begins on Nov. 2 at 4:30 pm. Everyone is welcome to come and participate in this first lap of a continuous symbolic run around the road for the entire weekend. There will be a. sign-up list for lap

Here is the schedule of the week’s events, Sunday, October 28 to Sunday, November 4:

sunday, Oct. 28: - Coffee House, 8:3U pm, at Siegfried M&y, - Even

Oct. 29: God had

to rest, so does

Wednesday, Oct. 31: _- Penny Raffle, all day at St. e’s men’s residence

Hammar Time! by~d-pape Hammar vohmeer Waterloo Inc. (WCRI)

Squad

Cooperative is a student

Residences owned and

This term, the .Division Managers at Dag Ha mmarskjold (Hammar) have initiated a program whereby several members have the opportunity to do volunteer work for community service organizations in the K-W area.’ One might ask why we are running such a pro&ram. The university population is sometimes labelled as lacking compassion for the outside commur’uty* We are hoPing that Pm grams such as this will help change this perception within the K-W community. We also wanted to give Harnmar members a chance to pursue individual interests for their bud&g &ores (an htegd pa of coop bving) doing volunteer work, in place of typical chores such as serving food, mopping or acting as management in the orgahtiom A key aspect of fie

program is the individual initiative which must be taken to participate, insuring that only dedicated memhers get involved. There are now 11 Harnmar memhers doing volunteer work for the duration of the fall term. The majority are doing three houn of work per week The organizations involved &,b term ilre be Red Cross Society, A&&& society Amnesty International, Heart and Stroke Foundation, Alzheimer’s Association, U.W. Student’s Office, International WPIRG, Planned Parenthood, Global ~o~nity

Centerf

.

and

Boy

Over the month of September, a handfu1 of Hammar members raised over $580 canvassing for the Arthritis Society. One of our members is workhg for Planned Parenthood as a counselor on issues related to se* u&y, birth control, and pregnancy. Due to the success of this brand new program, we intend to continue running it each fall term. It could also expand into some of the other WCRI Divisions (on Phillip St.) in the future, which would significantly increase the number of members involved. Please contact Andrew at 7254576 or 725-4867 if YOUhave any qu&onS.

- T&id painting all day - Halloween pub at night, St. Jerome’s men’s residence. Friday, Nov. 2: - First Lap, 430 pm at the College doors - All-night movies at Notre DFe women’s residence - Prayer service in the evening at Notre Daqe chapel , Saturday, Nov. 3: - Lasagna Dinner (phone for tickets), 5:OO pm & 6:30 pm at .Notre Dame, women’s residence - Bingo until you drop Sunday, Nov. 4: - Evening mass, 7:OO pm at Siegfried - Reception, following the last lap, at Notre Dame women’s residence - Raffle ticket draw for big prizes

when you apply for . the

.

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SIGN UP FOR THE AMERICAN EXPRESS CARD AT

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-


6

Imprint,

Friday,

October

Forum

26, 1990

IMPRINT

Chw photo (and lots o’hmd work) by Jiuznne

Imprint

Minding our own business

is:

Editorial Board Paul Done Editor-in-Chief Assistant E4iitor ......................... Stacey L.obin News Editor ............................... Peter Brown Jenny Croft News Assistant Features Editor Science Editor .......................... Darcy Brewer Sports Editor ............................... Rich Nichol sports Assistant .......................... Peter Dedes Arts Editor John Hymers Arts Assistant’ ............................ Sandy Atwal Photo Editor Joanne Sandrin Photo Assistant ........................... Tammy Lee .............................

............................

Everyone says that it is obvious. Americans and Canadians are fighting in the Gulf just to ensure that our oil supply will remain safe and cheap. Then there are those who compare this war to Vi+ Nam. At that time we were fighting against the intangible evils of Communism. At least this time we have sound business reasons. Or do we? The cost of the American effort in the Gulf is $1.5 billion a month. Should Iraq retain control over oil supplies in the long run, they will . be forced to sell this oil to the world markets in order to obtain food staples which must be imported. This implies that either the U.S. (and us) will continue the trade embargo with Iraq (Tesulting in a trade deficit and increases in fuel prices due to the higher cost of refining domestic resources), or we will agree to resume trade, paying just slightly higher prices for Iraqi controlIed oil. Do these higher costs justify spending $ billions now? Perhaps. One must also examine the benefits of these black scenarios. Admittedly, higher fuel prices are a blow to the economy. However, the recession is decidedly inevitable regard-

less of oil prks. The search for domestic oil and alternate energy sources would be intensified once importing oil became uneconomical. Higher prices will also provide incentive for the average citizen to drive less and generally reduce consumption. Both of these actions have been sqessed for years as absolutely necessary for the protection of the Earth’s environment. The value of this protection is immense, and the cost of delaying such measures due to any success at re-securing traditional oil supplies must be added to the $biIlions in this discussion. The next issue in the Gulf crisis is humanity. Iraq is bad and Kuwait is good. Adually, most of the world is good (by the defiktion that anyone who opposes the actions of Iraq is good). It is the duty of the good to protect its partners from evil. But aren’t we a little too late, a little sloppy, and a little snobby? Many in Kuwait have already suffered. A war in their territory will not help. Similarly, one must agree that many Iraqi are also innocent in the matter. Thus, we see the principal illogic bf war - it results in more death than any gain can justify. Will the parents or lover of a Canadian or American

serviceman killed in battle rejoice at the gas pump in the near future. q e while filling the tank of the hearse? The bottom line is that any death that results because of North American involvement in this affair is a cost that infinitely exceeds the previously mentioned $billions. War is uncivil and inhumane. The civilized world must make every conceivable effort and more to avoid such barbarous behaviour. An extended trade embargo may not have the lightning fast effects of a war, but patience will yield rewards. ‘wind your own business” cannit be chanted against our governments with respect to this crisis. Clearly, the Persian Gulf IS Our business. But even in business terms, the wisest move is confining our actions to passive involvement .only. The impact of a war on the other side of the Earth is never understood until the bodies are shipped back here. I hope that the fear of such an impact entreats us t& spend more to avoid war, than to cause it.

Big Prof sat at the head of the circle. Everyone was quietly staring into their own psychosis when she began the session. “I want everyone to feel comfortable and relaxed. Today well start by going over some of the terms by which you can all achieve your mutual freedom. It’s our ward constitution” Some of the Chronics swayed listlessly at the back of the Day Room. “Every time you do what you’re told you’ll get a gold star beside your name here on this sheet.” Big Prof pointed to a piece of paper with evexyone’s

name one it. “When

you have

received 30 stars you get a general and if you get 40, an honours.” ‘You might be asking yourself what we all have to do to get these rewards. And I will tell you, it is very simple. Just follow the rules and be obedient. You all do want to get better, don’t you?” None of us blinked as Big Prof’s eyes pierced into each of our personal insecurities.

“Now I’ve laid out different ways in which get the rewards, various YOU can requirements. They may seem foolish to you but we, the doctor and I, have determined that we should pick what you should do to get the stars I know it may take some of you three or four years to complete this big a project but’if you try and get ten stars a year. . .“ “But that’s too much!” It was McMurphy. “How can any of these boys really learn anything if they have b rush through that much material at a time?” “Learning is not necessarily the point of the exercise, Mr. McMurphy. You are all here so you can learn to have proper respect for authority. Now, if I may continue, if you wish to change one of these requiremeqts to another you must ask our

permission,

whereupon,

if your

reason

for not taking the requirement or wanting to change is good enough, we will grant you permission to drop.” “But why do you know better? It’s us who knows whether or not we got the stuff to do that much work, not you.” “Mr. McMurphy, if these outbursts continue . . . we know what is best for you, that is why we are in charge. For those of you who

Jon

Hwy

................................

..........................

Staff Productim Mgr. .......... Laurie Tigert-Dumas production Assit ................... .Michal Quigle y General Manager ................ .Vivian Tambeau Business Assistant.. .......... ..Federi ca Nazzani Advertising Manager ............. Arlene Peddie Ad Assistant ......................... Warren Stevens Proof Reader .............................. PhiIlip Chee .............................................................Duff Vormittag

Board of Directors President Trevor Blair Paul Done Vice-President -...+*... .. .. ... . ... .. .Stacey Lobin Se&ary-TIW. Directors at Large .. .. ... .. .. ... . ...Joanne Sandrin ~.....,.,.~.,..........~...~...~.......~..~...........~...~. Dave Thomson staff Liaison . ..*I.*...............*....*.. Derek Weiler l ..*.*

.

. .

. l ~*l***~~**...C**..**~****~

l .*.**.****...*.*.**..***..***.

l

Terry Gauchat

Thirty starsfor a General,forty for Honours “It’s not what you’re taught that does the harm but how you’re taught” - Jerry Farber, The Student As Nigger

..............................

get all the necessary stars, in time you will be ible to take your piace along side -myself and the doctor in administering this institution in one capacity or another. Those of you who don’t try and cooperate with the rest of us will be dually disciplined until you do.”

Imprint is the official student newspaper at the University of Waterloo. It is an editorially independent newspaper published by Imprint Publications, Waterloo, a corporation without share capital. Imprint is a member of the Ontario Community Newspaper Association (OCNA). Imprint publishes every Friday during the Fall and Winter terms. Mail should be addressed to Imprint, Campus Centre, Room 140, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario. N2L 3Gl. Mail can also be sent

via e-mail to imprinpwatmath .WaterIooadu. Imprintreserves the right to screen, edit ani refuse advertising. ISSN 07067380. Subscription rates available upon requkt.

Imprint

Contribution List Trevor Blair, Gaby Bright, Lori Brown, Rike Burkhardt, Claudia Campana, Susan Carruthers, Chris with-no-last-name, Michael Clifton, John-Paul Dowson, Jennifer Epps, Bill Falshaw, Carol Ferguson, Michel-Ann Fraser, Terry Gauchat, Kym Hall, Bernie Herold, Dale Lapham, bnce L&hart, Russ bmas, John Mason, Caia Miller, Andrew rape, Andrew Reeves-Hall, Stefan Schmidt, Karin Schnarr, Harry Shnider, Andrew Stephens, Peter Straub, Jacqui Sustar, Dave Ihomson, Helen Victoros, Derek Weiler, Paul Zimmerman. Conspicuous in their absence were Wim and Bernard and Chris; shame on them.


:. ‘: > . b, _,...,

J. slagged

again

To the editor, As a music co-ordinator and music lover, I feel compelled to voice, my personal opinion regarding J+ Hagey’s reviews, whether he cares about it or not. I am appalled by the insulting tone he takes no matter what band or artist he happens to be reviewing. The main goal of a reviewer is to provide an interesting, informative synopsis of an artist. However, Mr. Hagey seems to believe that a review is merely an opportunity for him to make use of all the slanderous, derogatory adjectives in his vocabulary. I believe that campus radio stations and newspapers should be supportive of local talent. This is not to say that a review cannot include constructive criticism, but the key word is “constructive.” Perhaps J, Hagey should consider another endeavour more suitable to his disposition and leave reviewing to someone with a little more maturity.

Eva RuckiCK&lS Co-Music

Rograxnmer

Grumpy

grad

To the editor, What is it with the staff at the PAC locker room desk anyway? I am a graduate student

El

.._. ,.:.;A:;:: ,...,. L ‘..;_.,, ....i...~.:;:l.t:.‘:.:: ., .jj::. . .;‘:: ,):’: .‘... ,:: ,,._, ..j>.,’.”d.. :‘:“i.,.. :_: ..L.A -- -A;

in the Biology department and I received my undergrad here at UW. My degree involves a cwsu$rvised arrangemint 6here 1 spend most of my time in a research lab in Burlington but I still commtite at least twice a week to Waterloo io T.A. and take courses. Each week I look forward to playing a badminton game at the PAC for many reasons. Besides, if we pay athletic fees, we are entitled to use the facilities on campus. However, I get the impression that the pea,ple working behind the tote desk in the PAC do not feel the same way. The staff can best be described as rude, surly, sullen arid downright unfriendly. What happened this week fidly broke the camel’s back The main gym was being arranged for convocation and there was a fitness class going on in the small gym, so it looked like the badminton game was off, until, during a walk around the gym we noticed that the upper north wing was abandoned and empty, with the bleachers pushed fonivard. There also happened to be two badminton posts sitting right there. Although the ceiling is lower and there are no lines on the floor we were perfectly happy to play there. We we?e bothering no-one; in passing some custodial staff even made an amusing remark as to how we could keep score. However, after only pIaying about twenty minutes, all the lights in the gym were switched off. As diplomatically possible we enquired if there was any way that they might be switched back on, even if drily in the upper wing so we could keep playing. The reply was that we had no business being there in the first place, to remove the posts and return the I-have no problem with the fact that the zwasoccupied I however failto undertand what was w&g with &hat we were doing. We weren’t bothering anyone, we weren’t in anyone’s way and I don’t think it was asking too much. The excuse had something to do with the fact that the floor was too slippery up there and we tiight hurt ourselves. I find this sudden consideration bytie

The forum pages are designed to provide an opportunity for all our readers to present their views on various issues. The opinions expressed in letters, columns, or &her articles on these pages are strictly those of the authors, not Imprint. Send or hand deliver your typed, doubIe-spaced letters to Imprint, CC 140. Imprint is also accessible through e-mail at imprint%vatmath. Be sureio include your phone number with all correspondence. The deadline for submitting letters is 5:00 p.m. Monday. The maximum length for each entry is 400 words, although longer pieces may be accepted at the editor’s discretion. All material is subject to editing.

Lit&k?

staff there anything but believable. Not only was the thoughtless rebuttal bad enough, but the manner in which we were informed left much to be desired in politeness. I am sure that this is not the first time anyone has had a bad experience with these people. Perhaps common courtesy and patience should be specified as prerequisites for working there.

Mark Hewitt Grad. Student

Men raDed. too! --- -

I

n

To the editor,

Please let us hear no more from Cheryl Curran, Women’s Issues Board Commissioner, in the pages of Imprint. LA me try to explain why I say this. In the October 19th issue of Imp&t, an article by Ms. Curran appeared titled, “Sexual Assault.. . Be (A) ware”. In the past, I have had serious objections to the publications of the Women’s Issues Board, both in the Imp+, and in the Campus at large. The concern I have is that their material is so discriminatory. In “Sexual Assault . . . ” for example, Ms. Curran seems to presume that all sexual assault is initiated by men. I have no objection to the distribution of material to protect people from sexual assault, but I do not see the point in specifying different ‘Tips for Men”, and ‘Tips for Women.” This kind of segregation is discriminatory to males, and offensive to me!!! I had the Same objection l&t year ivhen Imprint ran Tother WIB piece abut date-

rape. I attended the paper post-mortem meeting and asked what I thought was a sarcastic question: “Are tiales the only ones who commit date-rape?” I was quite surprised that % many people thought that males were. One bastion of journalistic intelligence even questioned whether or not females could “rape” males under the definition of rape. (Which, I .wilI point out, has no legal definition in Canada.) I do not like to feel ashamed to be male, yet I am when I read these pieces. Because of pieces such as these I feel that the Women’s ISsues Board does as much damage in the fight for sexual equality as it does good. This way of addressing an audience is discriminatory. It discriminates on the basis of sex - I believe that many people calI this “sexism,” and openly speak out against it. But let me return to the thesis of my letter. I have read the Imprint Principles and Guidelines document, and I am given to understand that Imprint does not accept material that discriminates on the basis of race, religion or sex. I am asking Imprint to live up to this self-imposed rule. Until Cheryl Curran and the Women’s Issues Board learn to transcend their sexism, I feel that the Imprint should stop being a mouth-piece for this organ&ion. B.C. HoIm& B.Math, CIass of ‘90

.

Editor’s Nute: Stuti3ics indicate that rapes (or date-rapes) of males make up only abuu@ve per cent of the Iutal number of rapes. While Ihe neglect of any group should be a source fur cuntern, nut publishing WB atiiclm wuuid cunsti&te a grievuus over-reaction. Evevune must jght the battle fur sexual equal@ as they seefi& and we may agree or disame with uthes’ methodr. It hay hn the ~G$.w@ upiniun uf Imprint stqj?hut there itiT wuflh in running KUI un’z&. T

Federation of Students

Student Life Building Referendum

ORGANIZATIONAL

MEETING #2-

DATE:

Monday, October 29, 1990 -

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8 Imprint, Friday, October 26, 1990

Feds talk trash To the editor and the Federation of Students, So the Fed executive has collectively spoken about the proposed “Student Life” building. Hot damn.. 11 In their letter to the editor last week they’re mad as hell at Jon Hagey’s commentary which asks fundamentalquestions about the content and motivesof a November 21/22 referendum for a 12” 21 million dollar megaproject. President Vellinga, VP0F Sliwinski and VPUA Speers accuse Hagey’s journalism of sensationalism, misinforming and “trying to create controversy instead of understanding”. Give me a break. AlI he is doing is asking a few insightful questions. This powerful trio have a lot more explaining to do than one defensive diatribe to the editor. Let me add to Hagey’s list of questions: First, why are alI students presently force to pay a non-refundable $10 fee for the “investigation and sydy of the feasibility of the construction of a Student Life building”? (UW Calendar, sec. 3:8) Have we, the students, ever approved the expenditures for these studies? What were the studies’costs and how much have the executive spent on advertising for the YES campaign? Second, why do two full pages of the widely issued 1990-91 “Student Handbook” and alI 32 pages of Campus Recreation’s Fall 1990 Program, blatantly advertise the merits of this megaproject? VeIlinga et al. state that executive (i.e. YES campaign) “had to exercise great care and discretion until October 30 when talking about the proposal”. What lies! The datebooks and the Campus Recreation Calendar are both widely issued early in September, before the “official campaign” was to have started. YES expenditures clearly have been channelled from our Federation of Students and Athletic Fees for propaganda. In the ads Vellingz exercises no restraint 1and states with rabid giee: “The fee is reasonably small for such a fantastic building . . . this is a solution for now and the future . . . vote YES for the Student Life Suilding!!” (p%O-161) Campus Recreation also feeds misinfonnation to new and returning students in the “Registration Newsletter”, the paper sent in our tuition statements. They inform us to “vote YES” for the Student Life Building, with no identification of what the building(s) might be or might cost students. (p.7) Third, are the “YES” Trio afraid to consult the 20,000 plus students who are going to foot the bill for consultant’s studies and the pro-

Forum posed megaprojed? By student body, I mean more that the Campus Centre crowd who may happen to drift by for an emotional debate. I mean more than including a couple of pages in the Imprint, with less than one month before the 12-21 million dolIar vote takes place. YOU ARE OUR WELL PAID LEADERS: don’t bitch about student apathy if you cannot consult any better than Brian and the Boys, with their top-down Meech process. Be a little more creative when you consult. Do something about informing us when we return form our work terms or holidays, rather than telling us to “vote yes” for an unexplained 12-21 million dollar issue. Fourth, why the urgency to build? Are the plans set in stone? Do not tell me that: “Several studies have been done over the years indicating that students are concerned about the lack of recreational and activity space. ” Do not telI me, vaguely that “The Student Life Building has been an issue for over four years.” An issue to which students and how many? What types of studies were carried out and when? Whom and how many students on and off-campus (work terms) were surveyed? What were the issues they were asked about? Could student opinions have changes or be different from these past “studies?” Tell me this. Fifth, whose costs and whose benefits will result from the $12-21 miIlion expenditure? What realistic alternatives were suggested to improve the “quality of life?” Did you ever talk to our architecture/engineering students about the design, accounting /economics students about the financing? What sort of informed electorate do you expect to have less than one month from now? Tell me seriousIy. Sixth, has anyone estimated the additional student fee increases and capitalization period, linked to the estimated $12-21 million capital cost? When I became an alumni after this December, I do not want to be responsible for giving present and future UW students Fed Hall-like fees, which continue after the year 2000. Clearly executives’ role dealing with finances, tendering consultants, promoting and shucturing the referendum conflicts with their roles as “YES” supporters. The Fed executive should learn from the former government’s cost overruns on Skydome or UW’s own Davis Centre. Perhaps our Federation ought to ask UBC’s student government what happens when you try to ram down an expensive project down the throats of 30,000 students without proper consultation, or a mandate. The4JJK student executives and Phys. Ed. associations have promoted ongoing referenda for the past few years, and have been unable to restrain their support for a glorified athletic centre.

While I have never met Jon Hhgey it s appears that we have informally formgd-the “NO” campaign for the November 21/22 referendum. Not only will I be saying “NO” to one of three costly megaproject proposals, I will be saying “NO” to the consultation process, misappropriation of Federation and Athletic Fees and possible conflict of interest shown by the current executive. David Sadoway ’ 4B Urban and Regional

Phning

Is Student Life worth 21 mil? s-

TO the editor,

J. Hagey did not just become the Features Editor by sitting on his rear, he must have worked for it. And still, people do not give him the respect that he should deserve. J. Hagey’s comment was right tin the spot. It does not matter if he knew of the answers, only that he filled his requirement as a journalist. He has informed the society of questions that need to be asked. In fact, J. Hagey’s comment has invoked J. Vellinga (President), Tess Sliwinski (VPOF) and Kim Speers (VPUA) to reply. In their response to the comment by J. Hagey, they say they have been pondering over other issues, like underfunding, safety, the environment, housing and women’s issues. Did they note the lack of space in science labs, or the lack of equipment or does that fall under the ‘underfunding statement’? What are the background of the issues of safety, the environment, housing and women’s issues? What are the results of earlier studies noting the lack of recreational and activity space? Has J. Hagey said, where are the lineups at the PAC?? Do we redly need everything planed in the Student Life Center? Is life at Waterloo University that degrading to spend 12 million to 21 million dollars? Does the majority of Waterloo students want this new building? Does every student fully understand what the Federation has planned? The Game of Life is played by all, only those small few decide on the fate. Shall we stand behind a President and Vice Presidents that are so shaky, they can not take some harsh, But true, statements from the Imprint? Robert HagIey 1A Physics

Reader reveals the TRUTH! ’ TO the editor,

Imprint has reached an all-time low. Every time I pick it up, I think “this paper is getting increasingly bizarre !” How can you print articles, ads and graphics that offend so many people?! Specifically, I believe that the “Club Dead” ad in your October 12 issue is a complete disgrace. Taking a close look you11 notice that the cut-out pasted into the ad depicts the crucifixion. Little do you realize that in everyone’s eternal life we will have to see Jesus Christ die again, whether we be in heaven or hell. FinaIly, it is because of this great event (Jesus’ death) that we alI have a hope for eternal life which wiI1 be nothing like your ad depicts. I think your ad and the person whose idea it was is both sacrilegious and unfortunately out of touch with the truth. DarrenRoorda 3B GeognPhY

.

Captain Flash flips out To the ditor,

now. My favorite band in the world is playing right now, and I’m powerless to do anything about it. I had a tiend come over and warn me that tickets might get sold out. I bought ahead. I got all primed up and ready to go. I dressed specificalIy to dance. I shaved. I showered. I had a few shots of bourbon with my friends and got reaI hyped up for the big event. And away we went. As we walked through the front door of the ‘club’ where my favorite band was playing, they were somewhere between final tunings and actually starting to play. Impeccable timing. Right now, the band is performing some funkadelic seething throbbing harmonic fantazmagorication, live. Right now, the writer of what you are reading is at the terminal of a word processor, livid. Right now. Ten minutes ago, I was walking home Right

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Forum d alone, frustrated. Fifteen minutes ago. I was staring into the faces of my friends, saying, “It’s not the fucking bar you gotta worry about, it’s the fucking band, go in there and dance, ya jerks!” Right now, my friends are in some ‘club’ dancing to a certain tabernacle choir, Right now, I bet at least one of them is pissed off that I am not with them. Maybe they dressed con- , ventionally enough. Twenty minutes ago, I asked some dilapidated trapezoid of a mindless automaton “Do you mean you’re#actually not only going to deny me entrance, BUT you’re not even going to let me have the $‘5 I gave to some fellow human in exchange for seeing my favorite band in the whole world? Even though you now tell me I can’t get such reward for my $5, because I have liquor on my breath?” And the little behemoth smiled, and said yes. Do not see band. Do not get $5 back. Right now, I am at least sure that I’m going to get the neurotic ramblings of a potentially dangerous maniac down, live, without backspaces, into some word processor somewhere with a ‘last saved’ date of ‘right now,’ not exceeding 400 words, in case anyone else ever givs a shit besides my friends who are dancing, smelling of booze, just like me, right now. It’s no wonder guys go into McDonalds with a machine gun and blow dozens of irmocent bystanders into meat. One free shot. 400 Words. Right now.

Peter “Reverend 4N Science

Flash”

Gray

WCRI To the editor,

After reading the brochure from Waterloo Co-op Residence Inc., I decided to live at Dag Hamrnarskjold (WCRI); however I was extremely misconstrued and disappointed. I was vulnerable when I decided to live at Dag Hammar because I had no place of residence

as late as -mid-August. From the moment I received acceptance of accommodation, my parents and I were suspicious about procedures and policies. In order to claim a room, I had to send $1,879 before I had even received notification by mail. Since the cost was three hundred dollars cheaper than all other on-campus residences, I decided to take the chance. My father’s final words before my decision were, “You get what you pay for.” The information from this brochure appeals to many psychological motives: a fun, enjoyable and stress-free environment; a challenging and rewarding experience; and a comfortable place to help each occupant to successfully make the transfer to a productive university education. The brochure describes WCRI as “student-owned,” “co-operative,” and “sociable.“All these adjectives give a person a perception of an enjoyable and relaxing community. In addition, “fags” (work-duties) are described as helping a person to feel responsible. this is supposed to be a challenging and rewarding experience. FinaIly, the social life at co-op sounds so encouraging and gratifying. the new occupant just cannot wait to arrive on site. Based on my understanding and experiences the communication through the brochure does not accurately reflect the type of experience desired. First, there is supposed to be a bike room; there is no room for bikes. Second “student-owned” is referred to as students taking part in the daily operations, functions, decisions, and duties of the residence. I was persuaded to believe thatthis is a benefit. In reality, “student-owned” should be changed to “‘student-conspired.” Ever since being at Dag Hammar, I’ve noticed that if a person does not conform, there are unnecessary consequences. In other words, the person must do everything another person (with special rank) asks, says, or advises. Failure to abide bi these principles will result in a fine and/or eviction Dag Hammar has been more of a student-jail than a studentowned residence. bstly, since cmxpants are given rankings (by vote, which is not mentioned in the brochure), the democracy becomes fascist. This is not a sociable and cooperative atmosphere. In Dag Hammar an occupant is always being reminded to do their jobs properly. There are designated people to ensure that duties are done properly. these designated people are similar to police. In comparison to other residences. WCRI lacks enthusiism and spirit. There is nothing

rewarding and challenging about living at Dag Hammar. From my experiences I feel I have relinquished 25 per cent of my marks for each subject due to “fags” and (work duties), and inconsiderate others. Three hours of an occupant’s leisure time per week must be contributed to building duties. These duties include: washing dishes, vacuuming, mopping, and washing pots. In addition, one hour per week must be spent on floor duties which include: washroom cleanup, kitchen cleanup, and vacuuming. Thus, four hours of a person’s leisure time must be sacrificed per week. As a result, I find myself cleaning public washrooms for four hours on my weekly day off (Friday). In the brochure, it is not mentioned how many hours per week are spent on “fags,” only than an occupant has to do them. Even when I signed the occupancy agreement, this was not revealed. After one week at Dag Hammar. I realised that my father’s judgment was correct. Finally, each Division Manager (building supervisor) claimed that the primary objective is “to make the transfer to a productive university education.” At Dag Hammar, there are two Division Managers. Since week one, I found them both to be unsupportive, biased and untrustworthy persons. Drinking parties always get out of control, and no-one realizes this until something happens. Unfortunately, 1 became a victim. Due to drinking party, and a minor confrontation, I was asked to attend a hearing for the purpose of my eviction. During this hearing, I was asked to tell of the occurrences. Since I prevailed as the sur: vivor (victor) from the confrontation, I became the accused. I was told that the judicial committee will be fair, unbiased, and unknown to myself, witnesses, and both Division Managers. This was not evident to me at my hearing. As a result, I have since been evicted, and I am appealing on the grounds of discrimination and improper policies and procedures. First, in the Owner’s Manual (each occupant is an owner since it is co-op), it states that I) Z%e

is entitled to representation (eg. lawyer, fiend, intepreter etc.); and 4) A verdict must be basedon facts established at the hearing through material evidence and credible witnesses, not hearsay. I was denied both these rights and accused

plan to take (proper) legal action against WCRI. In conclusion, I strongly feel that WCRI has misconstrued many with their persuasive,

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Imprint,

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October

26, 1990

‘propaganda-style’ brochure. Many improvements must be made. These include: reve’&ling how many hours of “fags” must be sacrificed per week; revealing all of an individual’s rights; and revealing the truth about WCRI anti-democratic. These amendments will create more appropriate psychological expectations for each occupant. Albert Edwards 1st Year

Editor5 Nute: Due ta the serious nature of the accusutiuns made in this letter, WC/U have been provided with the opportunity to wspund. Their response fdu

ws.

While Mr. Edwards makes many unjust#ed claims and accusations in his Iett~, I du not fee/ cumpekd to respund to most uf them here, but would certainiy du so at @ngth elsewhere- I would however, like to srpand on one point. Mr. Edwards sqs, “Due to a drinking part)tl and a minur cun#untatiun, I was asked to attend a hearing fur the purpose of my eviction. ” 7lzrS should read ‘2 a party at which Mr. Edwardr was dn’nking, he assaulted some member

and

punched another in theface, knucking out one of his teeth (thkpemon has pressedchaqes with the palice). His division managers (equivalent to a Wage Don) launched an Emergency Eviction Hearing. ” As per our Eviction and Expulsion lW.icy, physical vi&nce against any Co-up member or guest thermf is grounds fur evict& and wpuiSan. Based on this, thefiamework provided by our Judicial Policy was used and Mr. Edwards was called to defend his actions at an Emergency Eviction Hearing. A Judicial Cornmitt= cornptxedaf our peers deemed that he should be evicted as of Nov. 4th, 1990. _ Mr. Edward has the right to appeal the decision as per the conditions stated in our Judicjai R&y, and as ofthis writing has not dune so. James Kukycki President, WRCI

9


10

Imprint,

Friday,

October

Ntis

26, 1990

Youngest PhD

JEkzt hasyour roommate done to oflendyou . lately??

CAMPUS QUESTION by Rike and Dave

.

W’s Youngest PiID From UW News Bureau An 18 year old computer science student, who has “only begun to realize his potential,” is the youngest PhD recipient ever at the University of Waterloo. Tony Lai received his PhD during last Saturday’s convocation and will soon head off for a year of postdoctorate research work for NIT, the telephone company in Japan. He was among 868 students graduating from six faculties during two UWummcation ceremonies. A native of Prince Edward Island, Tony breezed through elementary school, skipped all of high school, and entered university at age 11. When asked how difficult he found the studies for his PhD, Tony said: “I guess it was sort of tough.” “He’s only begun, to realize his potential,” says his supervisor Dr. Derick Wood. “There’s a lot of intellectual development that can go on within him.” In elementary school in CharlotTony was in an intetown, dividualized mathematics program and by the end of grade three, he had complete the course through grade six. He skipped grade four, and while in grade six, finished seventh iri a provincial math competition designed for high school &Ldents. His academic achievements came to the aftention of Prof. Owen Sharkey, a psychologist at the University of Prince Edward Island (where Tony’s father, Chai, is a professor of physics. Sharkey gave him a series of vocabulary and intelligence tests and helped to persuade the university registrar to enroll him on probation for one year. This was after Tony took a university summer course in calculus while in grade six and scored in the 90s.

L

Mine wakes me up with whooping cough. Mine practises Tai-Chi in the nude. Gary 2A History Hal 2A Geography

Drank aII my cold beer. Terri 2A Geography

18 year=oM

PhD

Tony Lai, at work. Photo Courtesy

UW News

Now at the grand age of 18 with a PhD, Tony says he plans to return to North America in 1992 for postdoctorate work after he completes his one-year assignment that begins in January in Tokyo. After that, Tony says, he’s “not sure” what the future . holds or about his eventual goal. His main area of study involves computer data structures - trying to organize information so it can be retrieved and changed quickly.

As a result, Tony entered univer-sity directly from grade six. He achieved straights A’s, completing a double honotirs promam and receiving a bachelor &f sence degree in physics in three years at age 14. Although it was a four-year program, Tony said he “took summer courses to try and speed it up.” Tony first applied to the University of Toronto masters promam but had a

He could be the youngestPhD recipientever problem as a 14 year-old finding suitable accommodation in the big city. When he came calling and was accep ted at UW, university officiaIs assisted him in finding a place to live, he said. He spent four terms in residence at UW’s Resurrection College. While at UW, he raced through the masters program in computer science in just three terms, completing his degree in late 1987 at the age of 15.

His brother, Jim, 22, is also a UW student. Jim, wGo skipped grade 12 in PEI, is studying for his masters degree in computer science. Academic achievement. at such a tender age does have some drawbacks, Tony has found. Since he isn’t yet of legal’drinkin~ age, Tony wiU miss out on one of the rituals of UW PhD recipients - enjoying a complimentary bottle of champagne in the Grad House.

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Imprint,

Friday,

October

26, 1990

Toward solidarity by Helen Victoros and Herold Women’s Centre Co-ordinators

.

Bernie

On November 8, the Women’s Centre, with the support of the Women’s Issues Board, the Graduate Women’s Issues Cbmmittee and the department of Women’s Studies will be holding a coffeehouse at the Grad House in support of Manushi. Manushi is a magazine written for and by the women of India and focuses on both the rural and urban society of India (and sometimes Pakistan). It has been integral in the fight for women’s rights and, more generally, on oppression in these societies. Government has been quite progressive in urban sector of Indian society; many women are employed in all sectors of society and pay equity problems seem to be virtually nonexistent. However, rurally, where 80 per cent of the population lives, it is a different story. For example last year four thousand women were burned because they did not bring enough dowry. These were labelled kitchen accidents and veq little punitive action was taken. AS well, there is no free legal aid for women. Manushi sseks to provide a safe forum for women to speak without fear, raise questions and generate widespread debate. The goals of Manushi are as follows: to bring women’s organizations and activists in touch with one another; to reach women everywhere who want to break out of their passivity and isolation; to encourage systematic collection and dissemination of information about the life situations of women among different communities, castes and classes in different parts of the country, especially women; among rural poor, encourage discussion of strategies for aiding women in their struggle for survival. Manushi contains reporting on women’s lives and work; their struggle for change; analyses of political, economic and social issues; reporting on human rights and minority rights issues and struggles with special emphasis on women’s part in them; interviews, fiction and poetry, etc. Because Manushi is financed solely by individual subscriptions and donations, they lack the resources to purchase their own equipment. The coffeehouse is part of an extensive campaign to raise funds for this nonprofit publication. Please come out and show your support on Novemwill be prober 8th - entertainment vided by local talent and special guests Open Mind who have graciously agreed to perform free of charge. (Information about Munushi provided by Harminder Dhillon Y member of PACER). For more idormation, visit the booth which will be set up in the Campus Centre Great Hall on October 30.

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11


No more xx?

L

New reproductive

by Andrew Reeves-Hail 38 Computer Engineering

specialto Imprint

Rest easy! Sex is not out of vogue . . . yet. The broad subject of “New Reproductive Technologies” (NRT’s for short) is probably not as new to you as you might think It is just being discussed a lot more now than it has been in the past. It is a subject of equal concern to both males and females. We, as future engineers, will be creating the foundation for our entire physical society. The bridges, the computers, the mines, the chemical plants, the cars, and on and on. We will also be joinin@ our fellow human beings in creating the foundation for our continued existence: babies. Especially if you have a date for the semi-formal. Issues concerning New Reproductive Technologies (NRT’s) can be divided into a few categories: Technology, Ethics/L,egal.ities, Economics, Infertility and Women. The number of question marks used in this article reflect the large gap of knowledge that exists in the field of New Reproductive Technologies. The questions are very pertinent to decisions that are being made today. You, one day, will most likely be a parent. Or perhaps a hopeful parent {what if you are infertile?) It is up to you to help form an acceptable answer to these and other questions.

Technology

Many technologies classified as NRT’s are really not all that new. For example ultrasound, fetal heart monitoring and amniocentesis. Most of these technologies were developed for a particular reason and were intended to be used only in high-risk situations. But, as time progressed, thw developments were used on more people in general settings. Today, for example, 80% of women in Canada have at least one ultrasound performed during each pregnancy. Some people might argue that this shift in a technology’s use has also caused a shift in people’s perceptions: a pregnant woman was considered healthy until shown otherwise; now, because some technologies like ultrasound are common place, that same woman is assumed to have a problem until proven to be healthy. Technologies are able to separate the mother. from the fetus. No longer is it assumed that if the mother is healthy, the unborn baby is too. Procedures in use today are able to monitor the fetus’ health independently from that of the mother. Now, society can argue for the “best interests” of a fetus. Where does a mother stand when the “best interests” of her baby are concerned? In the US there have been legal cases where the mother has not been allowed to refuse the treatment of the fetus even though it meant her undergoing surgery. The technologies of today and tomorrow are even more reaching: genetic manipulation of the fetus, sex selection techniques, embryo experimentation and fetal tissue transplants. Work is already under way in the United States to map the chromosomes and decipher the genetic instructions that make up a human being. In vitro fertilization permits genetic screening and manipulation of embryos. A doctor can tell a mother, today, what the sex of her child will be, if it will have certain physical or mental disabilities or be a carrier of a genetic disorder. What are “undesirable” fetal characteristics? Do only “perfect”

babies have the “right”

to be born? Should the sex of a. baby be zhosen by the parents? By relative? Should prenatal genetic testing be allowed? What are its impacts on the fetus? On the mother? Should scientific research be conducted on embryos? What are the implications of genetic engineering and prenatal diagnosis techniques?

egg that enters the fallopian tube and is fertilized. It must then implant itself in a well developed uterine lining and then develop. _ The causes of infertility may not only be physical but perhaps societal as welL How should infertility be viewed? Is it on the rise? Or, is it just being discussed more openly? Can it be “cured” or prevented? Why were NRT’s developed? Were they developed solely for the ose of alleviating infertility? of these Who contra IF the development NRTS?

Ethics and Lqalities

In vitro fertilization and embryo transfer make it possible for a child to have five “parents”: (1) a biological mother (who contributes the WI (2) a uterine mother (who carries the pregnancy) (3) a social mother (who raises the child) (4) a biological father (who contributes the sperm) (5) a social father (who raises the child) For $10,000 you might hire a woman to have your baby. What if she doesn’t want to give you that baby upon its birth? You take her to court The “Baby M” case was such a court challenge. The original court that heard the case awarded custody to the social parents; the surrogate mother was stripped of all parental rights. A year later, another court overturned this decision and granted lihral visitation rights for the surrogate mother. Joint psychological counselling was ordered to be undertaken by both the surrogat& and the parents for the sake of the child they share. This case alone raises q&&ions such as the legality of surrogate contracts. In Canada, there are no laws governing surrogacy! Who has what rights? Do we have a “right” to reproduce? What are the rights of people using NRT’s? Are people adequately informed of their rights and risks? Do ethical issues change when money is involved? What is done with unused sperm, eggs and embvos’in case of the donor’s death? Or divorce? What level of confidentiality must exist between the different pare& and between them and the child?

technologies

WCllllen

Pugwash Conference on New Reproductive by Andrew Reeves-Hall 3B computer Enweering

A woman was kept func@oning by artificial means for 61 days after her death to permit the fetus to reach maturity$he was treated as a reproductive machine. This is an extreme example of how. human reproduction has, come to resemble an industrial complex with seeming little regard for the woman. The mother. To what extent do the various NRT’s create conditions which exploit women. What are the long-term physical, psychological and emotional effects on women by NRT’s? Picking up on the point made earlier about Third World women, we must ask ourselves to wh& extent the sock-economic and ethnic status of women affect their access to NRT procedures. Are women of certam ethnic backgrounds exploited for others? Are some refused the use of NRT’s?

Technologies

A forum for discussion of the questions raised in the accompanying article “No More Sex?” will be held th e weekend of November 3 and 4 here on UW campus. It is open to anyone from any faculty. The host for the conference will be the Waterloo chapter of the Canadian Student Pugwash organization. The weekend will be filled with workshop sessions in which a group of people will talk openly, hely, and as individuals, about various aspects of New Reproductive Technologies (NRT’S). A submission for the Royal Commission on NRT will be prepared from the discussions. The Government of Canada established the Royal Commission in October 1989 to examine the medical and scientific developments as well as their social, ethical, heahh, legal and economic implications. Currently, the Royal Commission is travelkg across Canada to hear opinions of groups, organizations and individuals. On November 2, they will be in bndon. Itis hoped they will attend this Pugwash Conference. If you would like to be involved as a participant and/or to help with the organizing please leave a message in the Pugwash mailbox in the Orifice or call Andrew at 725-5870. c --

Economics

The case of Baby M also m&s the issue of making money from NRT’s. The $10,000 paid to the surrogate mother was only a part of the total fee paid by the social parents. A further $15,000 was paid to the lawyers and agencies who made the arrangements. Obviously not every couple will be able to afford such prices. Some agencies have proposed that women from Third World Countries should be ’ imported to make surrogacy available to more people (the assumption being that these women can be paid less). Should this be allowed? What if your parents told you that you had been “bought”? How would you feel? How . would you feel if you knew your mum had sold a child? (your brother or sister. . . ?) (th&

is bejiore they &come brats and tempiyuu to uffer to pay peclple to get them out of your hair!). Also, who funds research into NRT’s? Who owns the technology? Who is paid for the use of NRT’s? Should ova and semen be sold? For profit? Is emphasis being taken away from other health care areas?

Infertility

Attention introverted Science and Engineering yahoos! There has been “one” A - new Science writer this term Is this a manifestation of illiteracy?

Write for IMPRINT or forever hold your peace. l

The National Centre for Health Statistics in the United States found that one in twelve couples were Infertile. A couple is usually considered infertile if a pregnancy does not result from intercourse (with no birth control) after trying for a year -or perhaps two. For pregnancy: (1) a male must produce a sufficient amount of normal, healthy sperm. He must also be able to ejaculate them. (2) both the male and female must have intercourse that results in sperm reaching the f&opian tube at just the right time for conception to occur. (3) a female must produce a normal, healthy

l

l

Darcy Brewer Science Editur


Imprint, Friday, October 26, 1990 13

Science Solar Aquatics

by Phillip Chee Imprint staff

Are living machines a possible solution to help us alleviate the environmental burden that human activities generate? Dr. John Todd, a sev-called “ecological designer”, believes so. Todd’is the director of the Centre for the Protection and Restoration of Waters, in Cape Cod, M’assachusetts. Hi solution to water pollution $oblems and toxic waste disposal are tackled with ecologicaI knowledge. This past May, Harwich, Massachusetts opened an unusual sewage treatment plant developed by Todd and his colIeagues. Unusual because it does not t&e the familiar mechanical devices of the present, machines that contribute pollution while they work. The Harwich Solar Aquatics Septage Treat;’ ment Facility resembles a large greenhouse fiUed with large, translucent, cylindrical tanks full of algae, snails, fish, and plants all floating in the highly toxic waste of septic tanks calIed “septage.”

salt marsh; periods of drying and wetting. During half the day, the marsh is dried and then the other half it is made wet in a cycle of aerobic and anaerobic purification. A divers* flora including umbrella plants, eucalyptus, s&pus, and bulrushes occupying different depths and having different functions form a polyculturaI mix. This mix may remove organic carcinogens by physical break-up or trap heavy metals in roots and stems of trees. The trees can then be replanted for landscaping and the water plants composted and everything is continually recycled. Interestingly, the system is testing the use of plants cailed hyperaccumulators, in an attempt to mine specific metals for re-use as ore grade: silver, mercury, cadmium, and lead for exampte.

In his speech

at the plant’s opening day, he said, “this p@icular sludge is extremely cdncentrated. It’s some 30 to 100 times more concentrated. It’s very, very difficult to treat. This material alstihas in it, because of our bad household practices, a number of heavy . metals and toxic materials which are in them. selves carcinogens. So the idea here is, without the use of hazardous chemicals in the treatment process, to purify these compounds, to try and break up these carcinogens that get into our water, using organisms that have this capability, and to try and shunt out of the water stream metals, using organisms which have this particular talent. And so inside this building are probably over 1,000 species of different kinds of organisms, each of which are working in a constellation to accomplish a task that no single one or small group of organisms could ever do, and that’s the reason why it’s &led ecological engineering. Ecological engineering is really bringing together organisms from the wild and putting them into a new, contained environment to do s&me of the work for society. In the case here, the work is purifying the wastes. So, in a sense, what ecological engineering and solar aquatics really is, is miniaturizing in a high light environment the processes that take place naturally in lakes and streams,. and doing so under controlled conditions so that we can in fact effect something in a matter of days, say ten days here, that would normally take months in the wild.” This is the second prototype now in use. The first one is an 11 metres by,40 metres greenhouse structure capable of treating 150 homes in Providence, Rhode Island. In essence, this facility is an engineered marsh, doing the same work as traditional secondary

plants alljbizting in the highly toxic wuste treatment plants without the use of toxic chemicals and excessive demands on energy. What you get is a group of ginger, fSowers, watercress, fish, snails, clams and herbs and spices taking raw industrial sewage and pumping out pure water. It is divided into three treatment areas, each performing a different task First, the raw sewage is’ treated by a tank of algae, using various organic components as a food source. Their numbers are controlled by snails. Microscopic floating plants use the organic material left by this process. Bacteria, which are also consumed by the snails, continue to treat the substrate and a complex food chain is built up. As the year passes through various seasons, spring water hyacinths are replaced by orchid-like flowers, floating in soapy foam from the treatment of household waste. ‘The contradiction between the treating of waste and the aesthetic is one that we find very interesting and somewhat ironic,” Todd says. Second, a system of eight marshes running in parallel imitates the dynamics of a natural

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“I can see the same kind of knowledge being used to produce foods without any environmental degradation, perhaps let’s’ say environmental enhancement. I can see the same kind of living machines to produce fuels for our automobiles, I can see these same types of living machines to regulate our climates, both heating and cooling and air purifications. So in areas of waste, food, fuel and even architecture, one can begin to see the concept of living machines which are contained in gossamer-like environments, with light penetrating everywhere, to function as the work horses. In a sense, for the first time in the history of technology we’re able to acti.AIy miniaturize the process of production and recycling.” In 1976, Todd, a Canadian by birth) convinced the Trudeau government to fund the result of this research, a bioshelter, a building that regulated its own climate and produced its own food and recycled its own waste. The Prince Edward Island Ark was built in Cape Spry, Prince Edward Island and was an experinrental success. Unfortunately, the government was not foresighted enough to continue its funding. Todd however, is optimistic. He believes that once the Gaian idea of the earth being alive gets into the consciousness of people, ecological economies will be possible. It will be easier to believe and live in a system where you feel you belong in. Without it, ecological disaster will destroy everything.

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Todd says the facility treats a 120 acre area to advanced wastewater standards that current technology only does to secondary standards. Since the septage is 30 to 100 times more concentrated and harder to treat than sewage, it isslightly more cost effective than , anything else on the market. He also says that no comparisons have been made yet in relation to cost with other fa;cilities,.but he Suspects that the solar aquatics can be built for advanced wastewater treatment for the same price as ordinary secondary treatment plants. The solar aquatics facility is the end result of a lifetime of research by Tcxld on how different organisnis can work together into the concept of a living machine, an ecologically engineered technology. One of the questions that was posed by this research included how could one produce food fbr a small group of people using limited space and renewable energy sources and ecological cycles. Some novel answers followed. Ponds in greenhouses, able to use radiant energy rather than fossil fuefs. Ancient Chinese polyculture ideas and Mayan aquaculture were combined with modem ecology. Predator-prey relationships were studied to avoid the use of pesticides that would kill the fish that were being used. The realization that nature uses pulses to provide energy movement led to the study of tidal marshes and mangroves.

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>y John Mason mprint

.character

Swe@ng

leaving only the coffin, carr&d h&h, as a position marker for the mourners. Squeezed into the middle of all this, I was prepared for the jostling I took, but not for the sharp tuggings on my pants leg. I looked down to find a baboon with a toothy, lippy grin fixed on me. He danced, he rolled over, he even imitated the staggering walk of a drunk, and when I gave his keeper $ coin, the animal thrust out his right hand. By then the swell of life all around had subsided as tens watched the baboon and me. It seemed a pity Of people,

staff

Three UW students attended the Yuuth 3uilding the Future conference in July MW at the American Univebty in Ibiro, Cairn, Egypt. l%efoliowing is the bird article in the seria w&ten fur Jnplint.

I The wind, hot and gritty desert gusts, tumbled across this largest of African cities. The patched sails of the old feluccas on the Nile beat out a tattoo of whiplash ruffles. A withering dryness chewed on the soil until, like brown talc, the dust rose in whirls. AS I paused to gaze at the pyramids of &a, rising on the mists across the river, Cairo, I reflected, may be a thousand years old yet compared with those colossuses, Eg;mt’s capital is a newcomer to the Nile. When Herodutus, the venerable “father of history”, visited Giza’s Pyramids four and a half centuries before Christ, they had already stood 2JlOO years and more. Yet, the age-old history of this leading city in the Arab world is a catdogua of suffkrings borne of good grace: the bloodletting repression of mad militarists who came and conquered; the arrogance of European proclaimed colonialists, who Cairenes second-class citizens in their own city; and flood and fire, and plague and hunger. Yet, despite all challenges to its survival, Cairo has retained the strength of character by which greatness of

A city of extreme contrasts, keys work alongside trucks

one is continually

’ Built 150 years ago within SaIadin’s Citadel, the Alabasto Mosque, with its pencil style minarets, is just one of hundreds mosques in Cairo. Photo by John Mason

struck

by modernity

and tradition

- camels

and buses. cities is judged. Character. The streets throb with it. “Hey, Ishow you something nice for 1 pound, huh? Never mind, I do it for 50 piasters.” He was at my side, an aged man, dark and stooped. “Fifty, that’s all, just 50 piasters.” All right, 1 said, show me something nice, whereupon he retrieved a fencing sword from beneath his galabia and let it slide, quickly and with little effort, down his throat. Then, dropping to one knee, he raised his face toward the heavens and spread his arms wide in vaudevillian triumph. This encounter occurred in an old quarter of Cairo, on a narrow winding street darkened by the shadows of ancient buildings. It was there that I first came to feel the full press of the city’s vitality, It began in early morning with the appearance on the street of a teen-age boy riding a bicycle while balancing a tray the size of a surfboard on his head. (I would see him again later that day, still pedalling only this time with loaves of unleavened bread stacked at least two feet high on the tray.) Then, as window after window became filled with light, I heard muted noises, like those of a parade band still three blocks away. Soon, however, it was all cymbals and brass as metal roll-down doors clanged open and buglethroated vendors went to work. By mid-morning the street was clogged. Cars and trucks and donkey carts pried through the crowds, brushing arms and legs. Men and women carrying incredible cargoes on their heads dodged and darted, seeking the openings needed to keep moving lest the weights of their burdens start to settle like hardening concrete. A funeral procession appeared and was quickly engulfed by the mass

and don-

to spend such a wealth of attention on something no more lasting than a handshake with an old and scruffy ape. More than anything else, Cairo’s streets and the life on them reflect the diversity of the city’s origins. There is medieval Cairo, and a European Cairo, a Cairo of Arabian Nights ribaldry, and a Cairo of polo and silver-service teas. The city is a collage of influences brought to bear by a succession of foreign conquerors, but it is from the East that the dominant lifestyle is drawn. In fact, Cairo is dominated, overshadowed, by the power of her past. Cairo, as it exists today, had its beginning in AD. 969. Un an August day of that year a conquering general named Jawhar, who soldiered for the Fatamid dynasty of Tunisia, had his troops rope off a site northeast of

*continued to

Photo by John Mason

This

child,

stoking

a pottery

kiln

in Old

Cairo,

page

is One

of

thousand$ofchiMrenasyoungastiveandsixtorlcedby~~ to start

working. Photo by Jahn Mason


bY J* WFY

Imprintstaff

In the nineties human sexuality and those who endeavour to explore it have been deet some heavy cards, the Mapplethorpe trial for example. But they have been vindicated as well. The two publiiations herein discussed deal with sex, and its various incarnations, and are refreshing in a world that thinks a certain other publication’s forum section is the beail and end-all to contemporary erotic literature. L&do is a quarterly journal which looks similar to those you find in the Dana Porter, but its a little different on the inside. First off, its fun. T?~JournaZ of Sac and Sensibiiity, published in Chicago by journalists Marianna Beck and Jack Hafferkamp, contains essays, short fiction, poetry and pictorials all dealing with some aspect of sex. It was produced to fill the growing egghead lust for “intelligent” erdtic material. And that it does. But let one of the stories speak and see if it can get your home fires cooking: (excerpt from Anne Rampling’s (one of Anne Rice’s pseudonyms) novel in the works Exit lo Eden. The narrator, EIliott, has been tied up by his Iover and she has a surprise for him... ) About six feet away she stuud just luoking at me, one hand out on the drexxr, her hairfallen duwn around her face, partMy covering her breasts. She looked mu& and fragile, her cheeks beating with a deep flush, and the same flush on her breasts and throat. I cuuldn t catch my breath. If I had ever been teaxd to this point before, I’d blutted it out.

theme. Not only is the journal a high approval from L@VUS~Z by Elvira quality production, but also the conPearson: (Dora is relating her story to tent measures u to it. Denny about a room she built for her Not to be over Pooked are ten ladies ’ husband’s sexual fulfillment.., ) from California who go under the Dora ‘sface was radiant as she desmoniker of The Kensington bdies’ cribed other details of the roam: Erotica Society, whose first anthol“When 1 hadfinished it down to the ogy, Ladies Own Erotica, of their own last detail, I bruught Dan up tusee it. I short fiction, poetry and recipes is had turned on the musicsu that it would bound to please. First brought be praying when we walked into the together by a passion for food, “For room. I cuuld tell @urn his face he many of us cooking had always been approved. He Iuuked at everything a safe expression of our erotic selves,” intently while I stood quietly watching these women fourid that the current him. He turned to meJinally and said I fare in the erotic literary world (one want it M be uursfirst. ’ that extends from Henry Miller to “He hqan to undress me ve1y tenNancy Friday) did not appeal to derly while I simpiy stuud there. ?%en I them. The result is a fine example of writing that explores different ’ undressed him. We stuud there, naked, and just looked al each utherfur what regions of our sexuality without com\seemed like a long time. He enveloped promising explicitness because it me with his eyes, feasting on my body as might not be thought of as “ladyIfmtti un his He staredfixedly at my like.” breasts. This is a excerpt&bmitted for your

“We stood there, not touching, nut speaking. I b&an ta tremble and thought fur a second I would come to orgasm. Finally, he pulled me toward him and cam’ed me to the bed. He reachedfor one uf the oils and began to nrb m-v budy with its slippery scent, sluwly, sensuously, letting his hand linger on my breasts and between my legs. He stroked and carmed me like

The book is filled with stories like this that not only turn you on, but make you laugh (the parody in &lo I/irtuosu is stinging and the Address to a Penis Owner is the most comprehensive expression of femaIe feelings

He reachedfur one of the oils and began tu rub ’ l

l

l

thatfura lung time - it seemed an eternity, and, to my surpnse,~ I staHed tu uy. ” She paused a second. 77ien he muved into me, ve?y very slowly, and simply waited there, quite still as he bz@& hk head in my n&c and did exquisire things with his tongue and mouth. I felt mysey lusing cuntrul and struggling to hold un tu the moment. I knew if I muved even slightly, this deli-

cious agony would end. “...

about men and their organs I have ever read; every penis owner should read it) and let you learn about the full range of emotions experienced in human sexuality. The tidies’ have another book Lauk Homeward Erotica which is also quite delectable. These two publications are exam, pks of not only what women can con tribute to the realm of tie erotic, then also demonstrate that there art publications which don’t insult YOUI mind but stimulate it. If you consider yourself an intellectual, or at leas1 someone who has outgrown adolescent attitudes toward sex, then check these tracts o&They may be hard ta locate at first, but the quest is justly rewarded.

FOGEL CONTEST= Not enough’ responses, next week!

{keep

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sheikwked moist and jiwgile... Original It think I hate her. And yet out uf the cumer of my eye I was eating her up, her pink thighs, the arches of herfeet in the while satin, spike- heeled slippen, the way her breasts welled under her cuttun iace, even the way she wiped her mouth with the back of her hand. She’d picked up something from the dresser: It looked at J;st glance like a pair ufjesh-colored, leather clad- hums. I opened my eyes to see@ clearly. It was a dildu in thefown of twu+penisesjuined at the bme with a sir@@ xrutum, so damned lve/ike the cocks seemed tu be moving of their own volition as she squeezed the SUJ massive scrotum the way a child would squeeze a nabber toy, She brought it cluser, holding it up in both ham& like it wets a sur~ uf ufleting. It was mameluusly well dejned, both tucks oiled and gleaming, each with cart$.dly delineated tips. Fur all I knew there was sume fluid in the big scrotal sac that wuuld come through the tiny openings in both of the cocks whm, she gave them the right twist. “‘Ever been fucked by a woman, Elhtt?‘l.. The articles range from descriptive travelogues on the sexual lives of other lands, to stimulating and provocative pictorials of various photographers who deal in the erotic

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Features

16 Imprint, Friday, October 26, 1990

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n

Cairo

what was then the capital of Egypt, El Fustat. The ropes were strung in a square, about 1200 yards on each side, and on them were attached many bells. At the auspieious moment when the planets were properly aligned in the sky, the bells would be rung as a signal for workmen to start turning the sod for this new seat of government and military power. Less than a miIe tothe west the Nile flowed past, running high, as the

ropes, it had set off the S&MI - and just when the planet Mars was

mother of Egypt began to nourish the delta with an embrace of silty flooding. Pressing down from the east were the Muqattam Hills, honey coloured in the sunlight and rising high enough to Iook out on the Great Pyramids in the desert, Ah, what a prize Jawhar had plucked for his caliph. The bells rang and the workers dug into the earth with their mattocks. However, this was premature, as the astronomers were stilI making their calculations. A raven was responsible. Coming to perch on one of the

LOOKS

LIKE

SOUNDS

rising.

Clearly, this we no time for seizing on good luck and fortune, not with Mars blieved to be raining down a curse of black forebodings. Too late to turn back the devils of the ill omen, it was decided to appease them by naming the place El Qahira (The Victorious) after El Qahir (Mars). So goes the legend. True? Probably not, But for Cairenes to assign the history of their city’s birth to anything less dramatic would be at odds with their bent for the fanciful. Here, even

THIS,

LIKE

In Coptic Cairo the narrow visitor back in time.

THIS.

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long dhmed by blackout precautions during the wars with Israel, flash with multi-coloured neon. New tourist buses haul pale platoons of foreign invaders toward Giza’s marvels or the leather and gold bazaars of Khan el-Khalili. Merchants and dragomen, busier than ever, rub their hands and raise their prices. Contemplating the staggering fullness of life in this shuddering metropolis I finished my thimbleful of thick, black brew at the strategic Fishawi’s coffeehouse, across from the centuries-old Al-Azhar Mosque, and pressed through the throng to* decipher the Arabic numerals on the buses. Not finding a bus with the desirable scrawls I flagged an etipty cab. In Cairo a taxi ride is an adventure, a nightmare and a total frustration. ” Wen-Nabi,” my driver pleads “By the Prophet” - and leans on his horn for emphasis. A cyclist balancing a hundred loaves of bread on a tray on. his head eases left, and we squeak between him and a ten-ton Mercedes diesel truck slung with steel pipe. The scream of horns is deafening. We jerk to -a stop inches from a hearse, a road-worn black Ford

Fiats, creaking pushcarts, red buses jammed with commuters who cling stubbornly to any makeshift handle in their attempt to squirm through the seething masses already hanging from the vehicle, past Soviet motorcycles, a horse-drawn wagon heavy with limestone, and now and then a herd of sheep. From sidewalks clogged by spilling shop stalls, noisy coffeehouses, and hawkers of combs and ball-points, pedestrians overflow into the street - laughing school children, old men in long flowing galabias, women in black shawls, office workers oblivious to the perils. Through it all my driver never flinches. His honk, weave, and banter get me back to the university off Tahrir Square on time - not that timing is ever too important in Egypt. My every protestation is answered with a smiling response: ” Malish” - “Never mind” or “Don’t worry.” Africa’s largest city and one of the world’s most crowded, with estimates of 15-20 million inhabitants, Cairo struggles to make room for thousands of newcomers each day - a result of a high birthrate and migration from rural areas. Housing costs are sky high; as many as 10 people sometimes occupy a single room in the poorest districts. Some are forced to live on rooftops; others find a wretched home in one of the city’s cemeteries. How I wondered can all these people live in this madive urban centre? Svre there is character but what about some .peace and quiet, don’t the residents of this city ever crave solitude and serenity? I climbed to the Citadel, a 12th century fortress built by Saladin on the eastern edge of the city, just below the Muqattam HiIls. From there Cairo spreads out across the Nile to the Great Pyramids, faintly visible through the heavily polluted air. Hundreds of mosques thrust their thin, ornate minarets into the sky, over rooftops crowed with people hanging out laundry or cooking meals in the open air above the hubbub of the metropolis. Maybe in a mosque I would find solitude. Returning through the teeming streets, I entered the mosque of Muayyad Shaykh, an island of coolness and peace. High walls decorated

hmck decorated

with calligraphy

mosques, green parks on the island of Gezira, the slums of Bulaq, the shanties erected among the necropolis of the “City of the Dead”, the sprawling bazaar of Khan el Khalili, thg book stalls along Ezbekia - beats with the incomprehensible pulse of 15-20 miIlion inhabitants. Widows along Suliman rasha are stocked with the finest luxuries: Japanese stereos, Italian shoes, French automobiles. Fashionably dressed shoppers eagerly crowd the stores. The s,kyline around Tahrir Square,

tionhas mademanymarvelsmanageable,amongthem Sony’s

alleys

Photo by John Mason

simple conversation is frilled with the embroidery of emotion, Two--friends meet on the street and the greeting becomes a playlet of action and dialogue: embraces, kisses, the laying on of benedictions, clinical reports on their current ailments, and finally an adjournment to the nearest hfe for coffee. No matter how the name was derived, Cairo’s streets seethe with life. The ‘city itself broad boulevards and tail apartment blocks, medieval alleys &ding past domed

Smallis not onlybig but smart. Themagic of miniaturiza-

and

with

silvered

angels.

Its driver condemns our fathers to a fiery hereafter, but my man disarms him with a polite ” Sabah en-nur Morning of light!” ” Sabah el-full’ -Morning of fragrance,” he replies weakly, and backs slightly to let us by. We plunge down Port Said Street, past shiny new

enclosed

a spacious

courtyard. A fountain softly gurgled, while little groups of men prayed quietly in the shade of leafy trees. After an hour of serenity there, I felt able once again to face the chaos outside. Even in solitude Cairo, the city of 1000 minarets, has plenty of character. ’


Dourban

Tabernacle

F~dwution

Brow-n (who is also on some of the Phantom’ tracks reviewed this week) carved into his

,Choir

Hall

of Jimmy Smith, letting the ham slowly, then chopping into a so: verve and arroence. .T.. 1 II c band $ays>t. Last Friday night was fab, the bared was into it, the crowd was into it, I was into it, even Fed staff was into it. What, you

were t-grit, uvely ana ngnt on tl their capacity of rhythm section. mixed with jazz/r&B accents prc .,

firancF;

G;itarists Chris Miller and Andrew White whined out sensational but smooth riffs of pure au&essential rock and roll. This,

&an,

dri$ingpleasure.”

“the groove” and Barthes, “the But what does that mean to

---__ A es-&e band that makes even the squarest a fun-

The Bourbon Tabernacle Choir is electrifying and buzzing with energy. The lead vocalist Dave Well sweat pure boogie onto

This

uayrlrlr

my

I Photo by J. Hagey

Toronto

based

band

fused

many

wav. knd w&t&an! I will o&nlv admit that rnione small weavkness in an; mu&c is a good Hammond organ sound, so when Chris

BTC are a rare band to find on today’s music scene, and when you Iearnthat they are young, and Canadian it blows your proverbial mind. Playing all original material, and

t&plant.

BTC-has

got heart,

ire weeks. Till then. keer, votir anYdyou eyes open fir the&unds bon, you won’t be sad you did.

groove

.. i. . : j::;f;;,::.,.‘,;.; : ,,:‘+I. ‘:.., ..-;:.: : 1 x IL

and

ears peeled of thi Bour-

Ilk

31

Photo by J. Hagey

Crazy - Fat Ethel II

It’s Halloween again. Time to name the ,, cariest, best made, critically acclaimed horror novies that will keep you trembling well into November, right? Wrong. I don’t know about IOU but I’m tired of the standard yearly recap If classic horror movies Iike 7%~ Shining, Fy‘ho, and Hallowwn (all of which are great by he way) that newspapers seem to spew out his time of year. So instead of telling you what lorror movies to watch if you want to be icared, I’m going to tell what not-so-classic, lot-so-scary, not-so-high-budgeted horror licks to watch if you want a good laugh. .. Uthough being obscure, most of these horror movies can be found in

pathetic yet hilarious nature of these films that makes them , the best of

IIT. The movie starts off with aA obese woman in a home full of deranged people. The movie ends with an obese woman in a home full of dead deranged people. In between big ole Ethel kills people who stand in the way of her, {and you guessed it, food. The often stupid, often hilarious methods that she uses to dispose of her victims are what makes this short, 60 minute filr6 fun to watch. (An es~eciallv

Typical high school massacre about a kid named Marty was disfigured by his clan mates and seeks revenge (can’t he take a joke?)

yarn 1


18 Imprint, Friday, October 26, 1990

Il%e Bellv of an Architect

Arts/Film

La dolce vita, English style! tagonist has brought his wife LOU&J Over from Chicago, and @though they seem to be getting along fine when we first see them, as soon as they hit Rome they begin to feel the seven-year itch. Kraklite (everyone, even his wife, calls. him by his last name) is obsessive about the project at hand and the unrecqnized figure it celeb,&es, but even more destructively, he is obsessed with his large stomach, which has suddenly begun to pain him. He begins to suspect that his wife is poisoning his food. Meanwhile, Caspasian, a young, thin, Italian architect involved in the exhibition, sets his sights on the comely buisa. Brian Dennehy gives a tour drforce performance as Kraklite. ‘He is by turns lucid, boorish, paranoid, analytical, lost, bear-like; you name it. He fills the screen, even in long shot, (even when the point is his powerlessness) and the movie is unmistakably about him, his mind and his belly; the warring factions of civilization and animalistic urges. The rest of the cast has evidently been directed so that they will all sound cold, detached, uniformly foreign. Even Louisa, played by Chloe Webb (a guest star in the original China Beach episodes) loses her American rhythms early and adopts the floaty vocal patterns of Caspasian (Lambert Wilson). The fib itself has a special rhythm; Kraklite and Louisa “enter Italy” bumping and grinding on a speeding train, but in Rome their life becomes a decadent wade through molasses. Although the scenes are short, the pace established by Greenaway and editor John Wilson is smooth, patient, inexora bie. Underscoring the modern tale is a sense of centuries, maintained through. ‘the CaSUal conversations of the exhibition workers about the pitifully human attributes of Rome’s vanished, onceglorious figures. Kraklite’s The hostility of colleagues toward him and the subject of their show is part of the lupine atmosphere of the film. A wolf comes up to the group of genteel artists and art patrons and tries to steal from their picnic; later, it laps up Kmklite’s vomit. The reference recalls the legend of the origin of Rome, the wolf who suckled Romulus and Remus, and this, combined with the omnipresence of ancient ruins, equates the decline and fall of Stourley Kraklite

Stepbystep,ooohbaby... with the decay from within of the Roman Empire, itself a paradox of refinement and barbarism. Kraklite feeds off of Boullee by scnhiing details of his life, creating his own architectural models to commemorate him, and by recruiting him as an imaginary correspondent. Later, Kraklite Sees that Caspasian’s sister, a photographer, has been spying on him, his wife, and Caspasian in the

explanation that the togas are just towels - yqu probably would have accepted them as togas. Reality doesn’t count for too much; Louisa doesn’t look as pregnant as she’s supposed to be, Kraklite doesn’t bleed Dreaminess is the order of the day, and you don’t trouble yourself about whether with questions Kraklite is a paranoid schizophrenic, whether he’s being gadighbi, or

V& alla spiaggia most private moments, devouring them with her camera in the same kind of gluttonous way. Art becomes a carnivorous activity at times. Greenaway shows us very mixed feelings about art; about its purpose, ethics, and ultimate life-span. At the same time, Kraklite’s obsessivecompulsive behaviour is couched in lovely music by Wirn Wertens and Glenn Branca and stirring visuals by cinematographer Sacha Viemy. The film breathes cla&ical art and architecture; when men appear in Roman togas, you scarcely need the

whether he is inducing physical illness in himself through his men@ state; you just sit back and let yourself be hypnotized. Greenaway certainly knows how to make a film, how to write it and direct it so that it all ties together at some perfect level of your mind that lies below the conscious.

The Belly of an Arch&u never becomes ponderous or hard to swallow. Take Greenaway and Dennehy, sprinkle liberally with a healthy dose of humour and stir well. This film is a feast to be savoured.

I

wont’d.

from

page

179

at a reunion he plans on April Fools Day five years later. The characters are so dumb they can’t see that something’s amiss when the school is boarded up and dark, Soon you11 find yourself cheering Marty on as he murders his classmates one by one &ith such ridiculous methods as electrocution in a brass bed and and a pip ing hot acid bath. Asking yourself questions like why would anybddy take a bath at a class reunion in an abandoned school with a crazed killer around is what makes this movie fun to watch though not the least bit scary. Cannibal

Hookers

many Oscars. This fairly recent release while filmed somewhat professionally contains many obvious, low-budget sequences, the best one being replacing a girl with a mannequin just before impact with a Mack truck. The wig and head fly off and nobody’s fooled for a second. Originality is prevalent at times with the ridic+ous methods that Angela, certainly not your average camp counselor, uses to do in her peers. Running someone over with a lavower tops the list while watching her kill someone with a stick is a riot. As well, the way below average I.Q. of every character makes this movie amusing if not in the least bit frightening. Mountaintop

Motel

Gore-Met,

Zombie

Chef From Hell

This film has to the most pathetic of the bunch. It has nothing going for it except a funny name, a really cheap cover {with eye balls that look like marbles), bad filming (it looks like it’s done on a camcorder), bad editing and bad effects (mannequin limbs and ketchup), bad acting, bad acting and more bad acting. But what makes thii movie so bad is what makes it the best of the worst. When I first watched this movie (and I use that term loosely) with my friends we laughed harder than we had at any comedy in years.

Massacre

Need I say more?

Sleepaway

Camp III

. I liked part I, I’ve never heard of Part II and part III is a farce. I quite seriously hope the director wasn’t taking a serious approach to this movie which probably won’t tin

I don’t know about you, but I think that any movie where a hotel manager tries killing guests by releasing cockroaches and rats into their rooms has something going for it. I saw this movie a long time ago so I don’t remember what, but I know I laughed a lot meaning it must be bad (in a good way of course.)

So now you know what to watch (or not to watch, depending on your view) this Halloween if you want a good

laughs If how-ever,

on the rare

chance you want to see something actually scary, stick with the &ssic Haliowem, which still does something to me after some 137 screenings. Have a demented Halloween and Ill see you in the horror (or should I say comedy) section.


Arts/Fib

Imprint,

Friday,

October

26, 1990

19

You cant stup this

Hardware: A Visual Onslaught ,h ’ Hardware LXmted by Richard

Stan.-,

by John Doe

Thumbs up and fuck anyone who says different. The ad says “You -can’t stop prog-m ss. If 1vJr XT-- Liln -_I you -_-_- sirop -a--- nuruwuf~, IT--L..--,,l*,rl,,-

4 A-.Clc---r~IlEIlue5s new mm mum Millimeter Films. It assaults you with the intensity of a sawbW- tue 011 -- 1ulI L” #.-,,A *,-1:-A c-1,. L^ AL ~~CCU C~Y~IICU 1~11lly CO rile cranium. Go see it NOW.

which had its origins bands l&e

off with its “Welcome to the Z 1st Lentury. Guess what’s become the planet’s most endangered species? Luckily I was wrong, as was tll.e critic in Premier or wherever who panned the fihn, whining about l-L&ware borrowjng from too many other films. Hardware, The-_ -Road warrior, %minatord__ all -depict _ I a war e, which doesn’t odd* to a doomredly..&. .. _._, *-

Apparently, the stupid Canadian ratings board would have slapped an X-rating on Hardware due to the violent nature of the film. This would have resulted in ‘yotirs truly having to search for a seat in an “adult” theater to see a sci-fi horror movie. Or the film simply would have been unavailable. By cutting 3-4 seconds, Hardware became “acceptable” as an R-rated film. The same sort of idiocy has happened with WildAt Heart and several other films lately. How much of a difference can three seconds make? These 3-4 seconds seem to have been cut out of the gore scenes, rather than the love making scenes. Specifically, a scene where the Mark-

e

Mark-13 getsNC-1 7

in the ’70s

mechanical sounds they f These dap#. Industrial become & excellent alte

out

t0

be

parts

.from

from almost any mg the power supply

ob, ass is forced t songs with

healthy dose of “don’t trust the government” and “don’t let the government have too much power” thrown in.

between

As the film opens, we are treated to a Road WamkAike guy trudging through a Road Watior-like wasteland until he finds the remains of a robot buried in the sand. This Roud tiwiorness, combined with the cheesy main title lettering had me worried that Hurdwure would be a real waste of my seven bucks, which could be better spent at Phil’s later in the weekend. The newspaper ad didn’t help much either, making

an

source, in Jill’s

T’b Mad+13 puts itself hck tc@wr ir-~ a fun special effects sequence. All Hell breaks loose shortly after McDermott slips out to answer an urgent call from a scrap technology dealer concerning the Mark-l 3. The robot tears up Jill’s bed .-. .- - ---. I---*_~-I--I

and then decides

to hum ner N-I wnar

turns out to be some intense claustrophobic ever witnessed.

13 is dragging the corpse of a previously killed man across the apartment, where it stops and appIies its chainsaw appendage to one of the corpse’s legs. Rather than seeing the .expected chainsaw-tearing-int* thigh scene, we catch a quick shot of a leg with a bloody tear in it, presumably the end of the original shot. How the HelI can this be considered grounds for making a film X-rated? We already know the guy’s dead . . .

of the most scenes I’ve

Interesting surprises along the way include: Ministry’s touching love ballad “Stigmata” played while a GWAR video graces Jill’s TV, a voyeur&c and bloated neighbour who comes to hit on Jill after he sees her boyfriend leave, an amazingly tense scene when Mark-13 corners Jill in the kitchen, and some wild gore

Indystrial toast splattered across the screen. A mutual friend of Jill and McDermott tries to help, but is so high on acid he can barely get dressed. Tonnes of the expected social com-

mentary litter the screen at every opportunity. “Don’t let technology get out of hand”, %ave the environment”, and “make love not war”seem to be the big three though, with a

Hardware is the best sci-fi movie I’ve seen in ages, beating even Total Recall, which was great. The! soundtrack is amazing, featuring the likes of Ministry, Public Image Limited, and Iggy Pop, as well as cool insmmental some really music.


1 Imprint I Friday, October 26, 1990 ?0

Arts

Hir, H~wmninas m- w-

This week’s Hip Happenings shall be short on the verbiage usually associated with it. Just the facts, as it were. Starting with tonight, Oct. 26, Funk Inc rock Federation hall for a one night engagement. As tickets are only $4.00 ($5.00 if non-Fed) and as Club Fed is a hopping place, arrive early. The big cheese for this evening is the appearance of rockabiI.ly legend Robert Gordon, and guitar-slinging sidekick Chris Spedding at MaryhiII’s Commercial Tavern. T&e it from one who knows, Robert rocks!

AlsO on Oct. 26: Windsor Dukes at Pop the Gator; 13 En@% in Toronto’s Rivoli; and Mike Something at the Bombshelter.

IMl?RINT on CKMWM . .m.

Derek Vv.

1I:30 p.m. - 2:00 a.m.

THURSDAYS .’ Fid

.m.

New Revolutions

6:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m.

“Your only newsprint alternative”

u-

de-fantastic, Deee-Lite doing in the T. of 0. Footage of their indicate that they are well capin your pants, whoops, I mean

Also on Sunday night, Los Lobes rumble into the Concert Hall (Yonge St., Toronto) with New Orleans legends the Dirty Dozen Brass Band, who have played with everyone from Elvis Costello to avant-jazzman Lester Bowie. IBS Lobes’ newest LP Neighbourhmd is a masterpiece, as should be their concert. On Halloween, check out CKWR’s multi-medti event at Ruby’s in Waterloo. This is a benefit for said radio station (which just happens to be the first community radio station in Canada.) They have promised to use $160,000.00 worth of equipment at this fete, and this includes two live bands, video, and spectacular lighting. There is only a $5.00 entry fee, with tix ?vailable at Dr. Disk, CKWR, RPM Records, and at the door.

The -Bard’s Greatest Hits

MONDAYS Dav’ @ii

Then the next night (Oct. 27) the engineers are presenting Out of this Came thatat the Bombshelter. Again, the price is right: a mere $4.00. And don’t forget the Bomber’s quarts of beer for only $3.05. ’

-

Oct. 28 sees de-groovey, their disco thing at RI?M. New Music Seminar concert able of putting the groove heart.

You may have seen the audition posters a month or so ago. You may have seen. the poster advertisimg the event itself. You may have wondered if this was the latest collection release from K-tel. You may have even planned on attending. You may have wondered just what exactly was going on. Allow me to enlighten you! Shakespeare’s Greatest Hits is a presentations of excerpts from many of the Bard’s plays; ‘Zove’s Labour’s Lost,” ‘Measure for Measure,” “As you Like It,” and ‘MacBeth” to name but a few. The show itself is being presented in a university flavored opn concept, very different from the “traditioaal” Shakespeare. , What is very important for those of us involved in the~gmduction @that it is being presented for the sole benefit of Anselma House. An&ma House is a shelter for abused wives and their children. The University itself as well as the Kitchener-Waterloo community has one of the-lest levels of sexuaI assault, physical abuse and suicide attempts in titario. Awareness that such situations exist is half a

Dine & Dance Bar 28 King St. N. .Waterloo

Waterloo’s Newest Bar . l Great Food - Very Cheap! l All You Can Eat Buffet l Open until 3 a.m. Friday and Saturday l Free Natcho Bar 10 p.m. - 12 p.m. nightly . Shuffleboard, Hockey, Football l Dance, Dance, Dance! l Party, Party, Party!

battle won. To become aware is to helpsolve the problem before it can be created. Shakespeare’s Greatest Hits is being presented for your enjoyment. We may make you laugh, we may make you think, we may even change you_ mind set about Shakespeare.

MOSt Of all we want you to enjoy yourselves. After alI isn’t that what theatre is all about? Shakespeare’s Greatest Hits is being presented November 1st to 3rd beginning at 8:00 pm in the Environmental Studies Courtyard. Tickets are available at the door and are $5.00 for students and $7.00 for others.

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1


music that our dear Mr. Brown would

Choir’s Brown)

kening

bY J= WPY

Imprintstaff

words 1 worth Books&, 100 King Street South Waterloo. Ontario N2.I lP5

fQ34+3OOK(2665) SW -fIhders Welcome W.O. MITCHELL Reads Nov. 5

One of the changes to the songs made for recording was the addition of a Hammond Or&n (three of which supplied by the Bourbon Tabernacle

own key shmoozer, Chris on four of the cuts which is a

effect.

Makes

for

great

and their various grooves. They are, however, a great live band and can

only be fully enjoyed in their natural habitat, alongside cheap draft and

cheesy bar maids. All I can say is buy this and then see them in the flesh.


22

Imprint,

Friday,

October

I .

26, 1990

Scary Planet, illustrate a JBC caught in an important cross-roads. The Conspiracy is now setting about recording albums, not singles. They have been doing this for a while, but met with little success until recently. Cult exhibits this clearly: it is an integral whole, full of pieces supporting each other. bY J* mFY rmprint staff

by John Hymers Imprint staff

Imagine if you will a Canada in the future. Free trade is twisted into a bizikre deal creating a situation in which Quebec trades Rene Simard for Michael Bolton. Due to the strict province, language laws in la belle Bolton must now compose, play and sing in French. You need not imagine it, this nightmare exists for your aural horror. It’s called Motion, and it should rightly have sickness after the title.

Sometimes incongruous efforts pass themselves off as brilliant: tentative works of art that succeed’ in imparting a message and meaning as wonderfully as the music itself sounds. Sometimes. But sometimes scatter-brained projects are simply revealed as such. Cult of theBizsement contains both such traits. Call it a very fIawed masterpiece.

Now what J., you might say, is so vile about this album? Is it that not only are all the lyrics in French but the liner notes too? No, I think French is a swell lingo. Then is it the tiger’ ripofflexcuse for a front cover? No, I think a return to futurist/modernist technique in albums is necessary to the rebirth of the Canadian recording mdustrv. Then is it the blatant imitac ing of- an American who badly imitates white guys from the sixties whd imitated black soul dudes? Yes, yes, a thousand times yes! Add to this the fact that you don’t even notice the lyrics are being sung in another language and you get nineties answer to Myzak, via Montreal. The only really good thing about this band is they don’t come from Toronto, and the producer’s nickname is Baz. But, if titles like, “Sur quai des reves”, “Y’a quelqu’un lahaut,” or ‘“Tant besoin d’aimer” get your knickers in a knot then try these guys out. You could do worse. You could leave your first born alone with me for a couple of hours. HA, ha, ha, ha, bee, ha, hee, ha. . . I-IL . HA!

Its flaws lay not in the direction of Fishcotque, which presented a few good songs within the showcase of utter boredom. Nay, Cult’s short comings stem from an ambition that the Jazz Butcher Conspiracy (JBC) have neglected since Sex and Travel: the idea of the album as an organic unit. In short, the JBC have ventured near the concept-album again. Not epic in

But 1 can’t help but feel that the approach that they took ‘this time leaves me a little disappointed. I can’t quite figure out why. Perhaps Pat took a little too much pop out of his sound. His thematic approach lacks a little variety, and it thus lacks spontaneity. And therein lies the flaws of an otherwise fine LP.

scope, but thematic in execution. And as such, the songs themselves are more grand and intense than anything that: had come before, with some of Pat Fish’s strongest song writing to date. ‘Panic in Room 109”

exhibits Fish in frantic “She’s On Drugs”; Death” finds the band most wonderfulVelvet

records over & over again, until they were worn right doti to a dull hiss. For a while I found solace in the span: kin’ new Jane’s Addiction platter, but still there was a void somewhere deep inside of me.

deeply emotional, and they rock bells besides. For the twenty-odd minutes of The Beautifil, I was on an emotionaI roller-coaster ride that I hoped never would end. &it&t and vocalist Jonathan Half Lacey, bassist Perry Bottke, and drummer Frank Ferrer are all consummate musicians. Half key could show Eric Clapton a thing or two, while Ferrer is the only drummer I’ve ever heard who’s knocked Keith Moon from the top of my list. Perhaps every thirty years, an artist comes along who singlehandedly determines the face of future pop, music. The last one I can think of was klvis, the great one. And now, I have seen the future of rock ‘n’ roll, and it is beautiful. .

Then I happened

to run acr& this (0, thy joys of being a record weasel!) When that metallic guitar and those hoarse, shouted vocals seized control of my eardrums, Iknew I was onto something big. Something the likes of which I had never quite heard before. The Beautiful are mining the Same vein as other originals like the ones I mentioned, but there’s something fresh here. The five songs on this

keen slab o’ vinyl. by lance

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The Beyootifull are to modem music what Jesus Christ was to the disciples: a saviour. This wonderful record entered my life at just the right time. I had played my Mudgarden and Soundhoney

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Imprint, Friday, October 26, 1990 23

by Sandy Atvval Imprint

3ta.H Some people will hate it because it consists of almost exclusively a synthesized drum beat, sampling and some pretty simple lyrics. On the other hand, it has a beat you can dance to and the lyrics are easy to that’s, just remember. ‘Course bullshit, it’s shittymusic and although I’m not sure what soul is, I know this music doesn’t have any. The funniest thing about this album is the song ‘“Take it Slow” which samples Be1 Biv Devoe’s “Poison”. The funny thing

The name of the band is Technotronic, and the accent is definitely on the TECHNO. This album is a collection of the singles released by this technofunk band, remixed for all those who didn’t get enough the first time around. This kind of mdsic is pretty weird because people who like it and people who don’t will often be talking about the same aspects of the’music.

then higher. Frightened by the miracle, the boys scatter like flies in danger. A blur, they dissipate back into the night.

* occurrence: the fountain’s alien compassion issues forth a burst, powerful and sustained, elevating the soggy corpses first ten feet, then twenty,

One of the highlights gjy-#g$&#&gl$?~ M*

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Smoke”, a ridicule of TV evang&sts who worship the almighty dollar more than their god, Check out tkse lyrics;

BeIieve in me - send us money/Died un the cross and that ain ‘lfinnyL%ving your soul by taking yuur monq/Fka mund shit, bea tzvund honqq%olry Smoke, Holy Smoke/Plenty bad pwachers for the devil to stoke

by Rich Nichol hprint staff

No h7yerfor

of No Prayer

for the Dying is it’s first sinele “Holy

‘.

f$QJ,?#@~@~~:.~

the Dying marks the

ninth album for one of the world’s most influential heavy metal rock bands, Iron Maiden. iron Maiden fizzled in the latter half of the eighties, but rebound back to the old style with this gem. The new release is no Number of the Beat (1982), but it is a great improvement over its predecessor, Seventh Son of a Seventh Son (1988). This time ‘round, the 10 tracks were not overtampered with or drowned in lavish arrangements, just a solid flow of Maiden mastery. The new album features the guitar wizardry of new Maiden member Janick hers, and is produced once again by Martin Bin&, who guarantees Iron Maiden’s patented forceful and aggressive souid. “We got together in January to start writing intending to go into Battery studios in London to record in midApril,“said bass guitarist and premier s&g writer Steve Harris in a recent interview. “But everyone was so fired up not having played together in so long and everything came together so quickly and brilliantly with Janick, we were ready to start in February.”

about the song is that it’s a love song a Ia “Have You Seen Her,” only it’s a him, and it sucks, The sampling is completely devoid of any originality. Three or four samples are used in almost every song, so literally, the only way you can tell the songs apart is from the breaks between the songs. So do I hate this music, yes. However, if your life is ont the line, and you have to find some music that you can dance to, I guess this’ll do.

Bring your daughter to the slaughter The most captivating track on the album in my opinion is “Bring Your Daughter.. . To The Slaughter”. This hard-driving track h& some of the most controversial Maiden lyrics ever written, which; are 1sure \tosend the right-wing fen&&s to th&r gun closets. Other beauties on the album are “Mother Russia,““Tailgunner,““Fates Warning” and “Run Silent, Run Deep.” The tracks which fail to deliver the goods are “No Prayer for the’ Dying,” “Public Enema Number One,” and “Hooks In You.” A North American tour to promote the album is planned for May of 1991, which follows a grueling ‘sweep through 54 arena co&erts gl7 Eurdpean countries. With 25 million albums sold worldwide, spawning countless gold and platinum discs, Iron Maiden is sure to please their legions’of fans once again.

140 UNIVERSII’YAVE.W. WATUUOO

by Trevor Blair Imprint staff

Armed with only their wallcman howl out of the headsets, hey northern sub&ban night. Pound, pound, pounding earphones burst brain floodgates; an ominous aural landscam meshes with the blurred scenery’ of the bull&trains. FueI&l by the comic, distorted soundtrack of 88’s ‘Domino Dancing the anthem for Summer Of Youth riots and general hormone pandemonium, the group storms the multi-leveled fortress of middle-class sensibility: the &tons Centre. Weaving through a crowd of the snugly dressed, they flow up one escalator, round comer, up another. Upward and onward. Pursuing an inevitable conclusion, they converge upon an elderly couple seated near the railing. Hundreds of hands grasp their jackets, arms, legs and up and over they go, plummeting toward the world-famous fountain and floor. Heads exploding against basin rim, the otherwise cushioned bodies float in the reddening pooL Before the screams and security a curious

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.R Warriors

Athenas

Mental breakdown ,in l%e Battle of Waterloo

Laurier eliminate+ Warriors from playoffs, 2,8-g The Stats

Warrior

Football The rookie pivot Bennet completed eight of 20 passes for 73 yards, and Kubas went 19 for 34, collecting 323 yards passing. Wilmore was the top receiver for Waterloo, while teammate Craig McLennan collected 24 yards on three catches. Chartier led the ground attack for the Warriors with his aforementioned 77 yards, and fullback Orville Beckford carried 10 times for 50 yards. Stephan Ptaszek and Ralph Spoltore were the top receivers for the Golden Hawks with 124 and 87 yards respectively. Cecchini rushed for 70 yards on 15 carries. Waterloo freshman Mike Raynard kicked 11 punts for 410 yards, an average of 37.2 yards. Defensively, outside linebacker knoit Drouin had two sacks and received the Ray Owens Memorial Award as Waterloo’s game Mw? &has was the award recipient for the Golden Hawks.) Fourth-year cornerback Paul Meikle lessened the damage done to the Warriors by blocking a field goal and knocking down a possible touchdown passin the endzone in the first half,

by Rich Nichol

imprintstaff

The UW football Warriors were eliminated from the playoffs on Saturday as they lost “The Battle of Waterloo” to the Wilfrid Laurier Golden Hawks, 28-9, before a packed house at Seagram Stadium. Waterloo’s record dropped to 2-4, sixth in the eight-team OUAA conference, while the Golden Hawks still have a chance at post-season play with one game left. In other OUAA action on the weekend, Toronto whipped Windsor 40-2, Western dumped Guelph 35-3, and York won the Futility Bowl by losing to McMaster 25-4. Western (6-O), Toronto (5-l), and Windsor (4-2) have all made the playoffs. The Golden, Hawks (3-3) could grab the fourth and final playoff berth if they beat Guelph (also 3-3) Waterloo (2-4), this Saturday. McMaster (l-5), and York (O-6) cannot catch the leaders. “We were extremely disappointed,” said Warrior head coach Dave “Tuffy” Knight regarding the loss. “I thought we played one of our worst games of the season. The problem was that we didn’t enter the game in the right frame of mind. We reverted back to animal instinct and forgot things that were taught in day one.” The Warriors could not penetrate a much stronger Laurier defensive line and the Golden Hawks kept to a fairly successful passing game. WLU had 16 first downs compared to a measly three by Waterloo. Laurier collected 441 yards of net offence, 367 of that on the pass. Unfortunately, the Warriors accumulated a total of only 176 offensive yards: 125 on the ground and 73 in the air. Early in the game, third-year running back Tom Chartier passed former Warrior Dick Aldridge to become the all-time leading rusher in the UW record books. Chartier, the

Waterbo hatfback Craig Mclennan help of receiver Kent Willmore. top rubher in the country after Week ‘5, collected 77 yards on 17 carries in the game. He needs 153 yards rush:-- m - nis 1-z- last T--L game __-^ tu I^. reiiul _^^- t ult: AL, l,uuu 1 m-m mg yard plateau for this season. The Golden Hawks opened up the scoring with a 17”yard field goal by Rick Guenther at 0:13 of the first quarter. Five minutes later, Waterloo place kicker Peter Tchir duplicated the feat from 32 yards out, to knot the game at three apiece. Then Laurier took control. Freshman pivot Bill Kubas threw an 18yard touchdown pass to sophomore Brent Stucke and then taiIback Andy Cecchini scored another major on a Z-yard run. Guenther made both converts to put the Golden Hawks ahead, 17-3, at the half.

The Next Game

(19) tights off Golden Hawk cornerback Tim Bisci (i6) with the Photo by Russ Comas Waterloo finally put the ball in the endzone at 7:02 of the third quarter, when southpaw quarterback ‘Steve Bennet completed a 10 yard pass to sprawling wide receiver Kent Wilmore. Bennet tried for the 2-point convert but the throw was incomplete. Wilmore made some fine catches in the game, collecting 38 yards on four receptions. But the Warrior touchdown was not enough, as Laurier began to run away with it. Guenther grabbed a 2% yard field goal and a single on a missed attempt. Golden Hawk heab coach Rich Newbrough substituted backup quarterback Chris Janzen in the final minute of play and the move-proved to be more than just playing time afid

The Warriors round out their 1990 gridiron schedule this Saturday against the Toronto Varsity Blues with a kickoff time of 2pm at Seagram Stadium.

experience for Janzen. He threw a 39yard touchdown pass to Cecchini to put the game away, 28-9.

Warrior Players of the Game vs West&\ Defence Offence Each player

receives

Mike Lane Steve Bennet

a dinner

for two at McGinnis

Landing

Toonaits with Athlete OTtne week HOnours I

1

UW fin’ishes disappointing Warrior

Rug by

by Sian J&gs

SW to Imprint

The Warrior rugby team won their inal game of the Season last Saturday, peating the lowly Laurier Golden iawks, 6-4. Waterloo finishes with a 3-4 record, good for fourth place in he six-team Division I. First place McMaster (6- 1) will host Xvision II champ Guelph tomollrow n one OUAA semi-final match-up, NhiIe Western (5-2) will welcome &een’s (4-2-l) in the other game+ Vext Saturday will see the OUAA final game. Showing the significance bf the Waterloo - Laurier game, the referee did not show up. So, Warrior assistant roach Glenn Harper had to step into a big pair of shoes and officiate the natch. This placed him in a tough msition.

In the first half, the LJW forwards rucked well and provided good position and possession of the ball. The backs ran effectively against a less skilIed Iaurier back-line. Waterloo forwards dominated the strums, anchored by the front row of Dave Stone, Drew Davidson, and Paul Avbar. The Warriors opened the scoring

season with a flourish

with a try from a ruck on the onemetre line. Waterloo pushed Zaurier off the ball and quick@ passed it out to the backs. Cent@ Mike Barrow was hit, placing the bll on the ground, and Marc Cohn quickly scooped it artd passed to a supporting Peter Keir, who touched the ball near the right goalpost for the Warriors’ only major score. Paul Toon provided the con-

version. In the second frame, the frustrated Laurier forwards tupned to the unsportsmanlike conduct tif stepping on pesple in rucks. This was largely unsuccessful in intimidating the Waterloo players. Peter Keir, a five-year

veteran,

left

I’

l

UWRFC past, present and future.

Photo by Peter Brown

the game after a collision with teammate Toon opened a large cut on his forehead. Waterloo then showed some inexperience when a fumbled ball was chased by Laurier, and a Waterloo player interfered with the Laurier back. A penalty try was awarded. The convert was missed, and the score remained 6-4. Waterloo had another scoring chance when Keith Peck, supporting a Waterloo break, engineered by second-row players Doug Milbum -and Anthony Beattie, danced gracefully up the sidelines and dived into the endzone. Unfortunately, he fumbled the ball as he crossed the he. The game marked the departure of number-eight Paul Toon, fullback Peter Keir, and utility forward Dave Stone. A large crop of talented rookies and wily veterans will help Waterloo in a successful campaign next year. Iaurier is winless on the season and will trade places with Division II winner Guelph next season


-

Sports

Imprint,

Friday,

October

26, 1990

25

Cagers drop exhibition opener 89-83 . Warrior Basketball by Rich Nichol Imprint staff

You never know what to expect from any newly formed team going into it’s first pre-season game. Waterloo’s basketball Warriors made their 1990-91 exhibition debut last Sunday with a disappointing 8983 loss at the hands of the Toronto Varsity Biues last Sunday afternoon at the PAC. The contest was fast paced, despite the fact that both teams milked, the clock down to under ten seconds with every possession- But it was also a sloppy game as both sides combined for over 100 turnovers. “We were a little rusty. It was a typical pre-season opener,” said Warrior head coach Don McCrae. “We got caught in phases where they ran away from us. The score may have flattered us, as we didn’t play that well. There are still a lot of questions which we have to answer before the season starts.” “On the positive side, we had a good performance from Jason Poag and a great start for our rookie Sean VanKoughnett with 27 points,” said McCrae. Toronto jumped out to a quick ZO11 lead in the first eight minutes, spearheaded by the dominance of team leader Rob Wilson in the paint. The Warriors kept pace with U of T to the half, behind 48-38. The Blues widened the gap midway through the second half, but a late rally by Waterloo made the score more respectable for the host squad. UW went 3-for-13 from threepoint range, shot a forgivable 41 per-

paratively, Toronto canned 53 percent from the hardwood and 60 percent at the gift box. Wilson, a possible All-Canadian nominee, led all scorers with 31 points. VanKoughnett paced the &tack for the Warriors with 27 points (including three treys) and seven rebounds, and logged an exhausting 33 minutes on the court Other Warriors in the double digits were quick-footed sophomore guard Mike Duarte with 14 points and spidery third-year player Jason Poag with 12 points. The black and gold are on the road for the next two weeks. They participate in the Winnipeg Invitational Tournament this weekend with York, Lakehead, and the host squad Winnipeg. On Friday, -November 2, Waterloo plays York with a tip-off time of 8 pm in North York. The Warriors’ next home games will be when they host the prestigious Naismith Classic Basketball Toumament homecoming weekend,

November 9-11. As was mentioned last week, the eight participating teams are Winnipeg, Guelpb, Laurier, cent from the field, and tossed in 64 percent at the free-throw line. Com-

Waterloo, Laurentian, Bishop’s, Dalhousie, and the defending champion St. Francis Xavier. We wilI

Bike racing

WARRIOR B-BALL Don’t forget the Naismith Classic NOV. 9-11 Here at the PAC

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always

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Imagine yourself crashing over hills, down stairs, and around obstacles on your mountain bike. s Keep imagining, but place yourself inside Fed Hall, crashing over ramps, down stairs, off the stage, and around and over obstacles. Now stop imagining and enter the Indoor Mountain Bike IdY Challenge. Yes, that’s right, an indoor course of destruction to challenge Waterloo’s best mountain bike riders. This event is the first ever of its kind and you can take part The grand prize available to be

won is an 18 speed &an&i Birage for Waterloo’s fastest rider. Prizes will also be awarded to the male and female second place finishers, and even the rider with the besi costume. But don’t think you have to ride tc win, you can even win one of the great door prizes provided by Molson’s and Riordan’s, for jusi cheering on your friends. So enter b) going to Fed Hall anytime between 11:30 and 4:OO or call 888-4090 for more details. The contest is to be held on Wednesday, November 14 at 800. Once again, imagine what a wild contesi this is going to be, who would have ever thought? ’ ’ ’

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26 Imprint, Friday, October 26, 1990

Foutih in the ten team round robin

.

Playoff dreams

Two out of three ain’t bad On Sunday, October 21, the Athenas played Trent and McGill. The team needed to win these games to obtain a favourable cross-over for the final tournament held October

Field Hockey by carol Ferguson Imprint staff

24-28.

This weekend in league play, the ithenas were scheduled to face the jowerful University of Toronto Var;ity Blues. The Toronto team fielded a lineup itacked with members of the junior mtional and provincial teams. The inal score is not important. Suffice it :o say that the Athenas lost (7-nil buttkicking by the Blues - sports ed.), and :ount the game as a _ learning experience.

In the first game versus McGill, a goal by Annette Koehler gave Waterloo the lead. McGill r&hated with their own goal to even the score. The second half saw a goal from Janet McPherson, and the Athenas led again Strong play for the remainder of the game left the final score at 2-l in favour of the Athenas. The team continued to play with vigour in game two. The initial goal, off a penalty comer was by Koehler. Soon afterwards, McPherson reacted quickly on a cross and basebaIled the

ball into the net. This happened so fast, McpPherson’s own teammates were unable to tell how the ball ended up on the back board. Waterloo shutdown Trent 2-O and finished fourth in the ten team round-robin competition. So, the Athenas, much to their relief were able to report their successes to absent Coach McCrae. Although many adjustments were made with positional play due to injury and absence, the team was able to adapt. Thanks to substitute coaches L&a Bauer and Sharon Creehnan for their support. The Athenas depart on Thursday for Ottawa so they can begin final play on Friday against the Queen’s Golden Gaels in the OWIAA Championships.

Rowing by Hany Shnider Imprint staff

The Western Invitational Regatta, burth on the OUAA/ OWIAA circuit snot one of the better attended races. ‘t is usually held on a cold, windy day In Far-&awe Lake. Racing distance is ess ,&in the re@&ion 2OOOm, and 1oating starts are employed, putting ame crews at a disadvantage. This regatta also conflicts with the dead of the Charles in Boston, so the xtter crews do not alwhys attend. I’his year, the conditions were better, s the day was sunny and calm. Most LJW crews were able to improve their standing in relation to some of their opponents, ending a most interesting week of training. The Heavy 4 was first to race, and was given instructions to correct its course by the sta$er as he was calling he race. This meant that all of the Ither crews were able to get off the starting line, and most had gone 3Om pefore UW took a stroke. The Warriors did not give up, hough, as they rowed their most ntensive race of the season. The two

I

In other races, the men’s Double was able to continue to make up ground on their Trent counterparts. Losing by only 4 seconds, the crew pushed Trent to the maximum. This crew has been one of the more pleasant surprises, as neither rowed before this September. The Lightweight 4 had starting problems, as well, colliding with Erindale. The crew was able to recover, and pulled hard, but came in 6th one length behind Trent. The women’s Four put in a much better race than last week, but still finished at the back of the pack. _ With no one else to race the women’s Double, the boat was given

COlf&iihClAL

TAVERN PRESENTS

Soccer

by Claudia Campana Imprint staff

Amidst the final vestiges of the late Indian -summer, the soccer Athenas visited Hamilton on Wednesday, October 37, and hosted the Wilfred I-aurier Golden Hawks on Saturday, October 20 at the Columbia fields. The euphoria experienced after the previous weekend’s win over Western and tie with Guelph was absent as Waterloo suffered a frustrating 2-nil loss to the Mac Marauder squad, despite playing a strong

I

a he&d start on the Lightweight women’s 4 race. At the finish line, they were still able to hold off 2 of the 4 crews entered. UW participated in one more race. The coaches were able to secure an 8 from Western, which allowed for both men’s sweep crews to race as one. It was fun because few of the guys have raced 8’s seriously, and three never rowed one before. After about 30 minutes of practice, UW took its place beside 7 0th~ boats that were much more diperienced racing this type of shell, only the U of T and Western Varsity lightweight crews were faster as the ultimate throwtogether boat dominated over Trent, RMC, Mac, Western #2, and Erindale. It was the surprise of the regatta, and a great experience for all in the boat. Tomorrow, October 27, marks the championship regatta, to be held at Henley Island, St. Catherines. All of the sculling events should be finals only, with UW looking to figure prominently in all of them. The sweep races will much more difficult, but UW should still qual@ at least one crew into the finals. It will be a fine end to a season that has seen Waterloo become more competitive with the established rowing schools.

%Athena Tennis byKarinSchnarr ImpkIt staff

The Waterloo Athenas played their final tournament of the season last Saturday, beating Laurier 5-4, while losing to Toronto 9-O. Top-seed Shanika de Alwis contributed 2 points to the team by winning her singles match *against the Hawks. She then &mbmed with Manju Sekhri to beat Laurier in doubles as well. Other singles win-. ners were Sekhri and Kate Afkhamie who easily defeated their opponents from WLU. The doubles team of Afkhamie and Jennifer Patriquin pooled their talents to win a doubles match and the decisive point &ing Waterloo the victory in team competition. Strong performances were given by Renee Kasta, Angie Lee, Karin Schnarr and Cindy Au-Yeung despite coming up short. The Tennis Athenas would like to say good-bye to Shanika de Alwis. Shanika has been a dedicated member of the team for the past four year, occupying the number one position this year. She has provided encouragement and was a role model

1 COME IN AND JOIN US FOR TRIVIA

UNIVERSITY

The Waterloo Athenas travel to St Catherines to face the Brock Badgers on Saturday, October 27 and ta Windsor on October 28 as they close out the regular season.

1Tennisgoals No more love

2 live erejus leading boats, University of Toronto and Queen’s, were well out of reach, but it was with 300m to go that UW was able to slash into the distance between it and Western to one length and closing quickly. Not even the pleading of the Western Coxswain and supporters on the shore could stop the Warrior onslaught, as UW powered toward the finish line, finally gaining a 2m lead to finish 4th. The looks on the oarsmen’s faces said it all: happy exhaustion for ,uW; total dejection for Western. It was the first ‘time UW beat the--Mustangs in a collegiate race.

Athena

second half. With pByoff hopes in danger 01 becoming dreams, the Athenas prepared to face off against the formidable Laurier team on Saturday. UW trailed the Hawks at the end 01 the first half by two. Though the fina; forty-five minutes produced an excellent goal by right winger, Catherine Hollifield from a pass by Anita Toogood, the Laurier squad demonstrated their superiority by winning the game by a convincing score of 5-1.

& SPORTS

SHOPS

PlA2.A

TRIVIA!

‘II, 7259310

for the rest of the team. We are all going to miss you Shanika, and we wish you all the best for the future. A large thank you must be extended to Sandy Macnovik. Sandy did a great job coaching the team, encouraging everyone to strive for their personal best. The sweat shirts ‘wereadmired by all she designed of the other teams. Don’t worry Sandy, we’ll clean up next year. As the majority of the team will be returning next year, you can be sure they will be training hard all winter to stay in shape for next season, Thanks to all the team for coming out - ‘Jen, Kate, Shanika, Renee, Karin, Cindy, Angie and Manju. Jenf remember your camera for the party and see you all on the courts next year.

/

Hockey season

\

by Rich Nichol Imprint staff The Waterloo hockey Warriors began their 1990-91 season on a positive note with a- 3-l win over the Toronto Varsity Blues in Smogville. Waterloo took the early lead with two gods in the first period. The first goal came at 9% on a shot by center Tony Crisp, assisted by John Williams and Rod Thacker. Then, just 32 seconds before the first break, fourthyear center Clark Day capitalized on a setup by rookie teammates Ken Feddema and Jeff Ballantyne. Neither team could score in the fast-paced second period, which featured the stonewall goaltending of rookie Steve Udvari. Five minutes into the third period, Jan-tie Maki drained one, assisted by freshman defencemen Kevin Falesy and Ballantyne, to widen the gap to 3-0. Finally, with 5:19 left in the game, Toronto broke Udvari’s shutout to make the final score a respectable 31. “Steve Udvari had thenumber 1 on his shirt tonight and for a while we thought it was Mike Bishop,” joked Warrior head coach Don McKee after the game. ‘Performances like that will cause us tb forget about our gr&at AlICanadian goaltender.” The shots on goal in the game were 46-25 in Waterloo’s favor.


Imprint,

spo?tv

Friday, October 26, 1990 27

NBA West season ~rmiew

Western conference chavi9p is anyone’s guess #

Pro sports

Report

by Rich Nichol Imprint staff

This is the second half of a two-part feature, previewing the 1990-91 NBA basketball season. This week predictions are made on the standings in the Western Conference.

1. Sarl Antonio spurs The Spurs could be a dynasty in the making. Sophomore centre David Robinson is quite possibly the best all-round player in the NBA West. In his rookie year, Robinson (7’1”

duct Wayne Schintzius, and the acquisition of veteran swingman Paul Prissey from Milwaukee, to .form a powerhouse capable of a Western championship.

the strongest of the Midwest teams, with Roland0 Blackman and Derek Harper. DalIas made major trades in the off-season to g+ Denver star Lafayette Lever,, & R&ln&y.McCray 0 q&p* Ty+led ‘:g~f’pol~ts, 4.5 assists, a,P~~~~~d. ,@ steals per gam~.;..~~~~~~~d~g of Sam ,:iil;_:::, $.+$.ik hG.m Q@$ $+@#@mard Alex English cou&d::~@h& an otherwise poor off&&The potential loss of Roy ‘“Snow Nose” Tarpley and/or James “Ailing Knees” Donaldson would kill the Mavericks’ inside scoring power. 4. Houston Rockets If any franchise in the NBA can be considered a one-man team, it’s

joined by rookie Dave Jamerson Ohio at the guard positions. 5. Minneeota

fro:

Timbenvolves

some youth in former

all-time

scoring

Louisiana

State

leader Alex English.

7. Orlando Magic They can say “Hocus POLVS” all they want, but it won’t put any magic into Orlando’s game (the Magic went 38-64 last season). The feature of this team is not the players; it’s the legions of fans, ~&&$3$$$~ :&&, severe dedication @nd l&.&&. :T& much weight is pla&d on’the &oulders of Terry Catledge to orchestrate the offence and Jerry Reynolds to run the back court. The incredible shooting range of Dennis Scott should help ripple the twine some more.

JohIBOn riming the show, the Lakers will be at 6r near the top for a few more years yet. FormerYugoslavian star Vlade Divac will become the starting center in this, his second season in the N&%&m Perkins has been brougl$:ov= fi$n Dallas to help out f&&:&&j c-fo;t;ina Tar :&“’‘y$$.,:,$:::. .::;.:yf;F.::”5;. 5’ Heels te~~~~~~~~~y and ... .:: A.C. Gr.&n:at t$e’f&wa$&&&&itions. But Byron SC& must .t&& on more of a leadership role’10 &ke some of the pressure off fellow vd Johnson. Lok for some surpr&s from 36-year old rookie coach Mike Dunleavy, who replaces Pat Riley.

West, 8.9 rebounds per game, 181 total blocked shots; Jeff Hornacek 117 steals. Together they form thl strongest starting five offence in the Pacific Division. Unfortunately, the! choke at money time.

3. Phoenix sllns The Suns are one of the most well-

assists biggest where season

1. PortIand Trail Bbrs In the off-season, PortLand dealt Byron Irvin, a 1991 fht round draft pick, and a 1992 second round draft pick to Sacrmeg ..& Fetum for the cohesive D&f$fsB gYg& He til add Bii

shooting taking some of the pressure off the big men. But rebounding and depth are the team’s main problems. 6. Golden State Wmiors Boastihg one of the best backcourts

I

certainly give San Antonio a close run for the Midwest pennant. But a weak transition game could be a concern for Utah in the mighty West. 3, Ihllas Mavericks In the back court, the Mavericks

are

last year in the NCAA. Tht concern lies in the pivot spo Michael Cage was called to las to temporarily fill the hole.

5. Los Ang&s clippers The Clippers are on the up-and-uF with one of the best forward units ir

2.utahJazz Utah now features a full front court scoring attack with the one-two punch of Teff Malone at the perimeter 1

4. Seattle Supersonics Newly crowned head coach KC Jones will have to work with a ver] young and ,,:: &&~enced team which fea& *i && tzt*enk o veteran & ).$&~E~Moting *(

Pacific year. 6.DenverNuggets Trading top scorer Lafayette Lever to Dallas may end up being a mistake, but the transaction gave the Nuggets

Division

pennant

winning

2. Los Angeles Lakers Basketball’s 80’s dynasty is slowly sliping into a denouement. However, with league MVP Ervin ‘Magic” game.

1

NBA- action in K-W

7. Sacramento Sacramento

.

Kings dealt two of their first

1 by Peter Deck Imprintstaff

_

reeled off eight straight before the Rockets were forced to take a time OUf.

.

The Indiana Pacers’ three game preseason pilgrimage to Canada ended with a 139-l 21 victory over the Houston Rockets. Kitchener Memorial Auditorium was barely a third full as huge admission prices chased away fans. The empty seats, uneducated fans and taped enthusiasm boosters reinforced insipid first quarter play by both squads. There were no defensive struggles as both teams relied heavily upon transition offense up and down the University of Toronto Varsity Blues hardwood installed over the ice. There were the requisite slam crams by of course Akeem Olajuwon and monster meat, James CaldwelI (6w, 266 lbs.). With ten minutes to go in the half, the Pacers led by Detlef Schrempf had knotted the game at 40-all Indiana and Houston ran the court, exchanging baskets, till the Pacers applied full court pressure with 6:45 gone in the frame. The Pacers’ Reggie Miller was fouled just before the buzzer by Sleepy Floyd. Miller missed the conversion to bring Indiana within one. At the half, the Rockets led 71-69. LasalIe Thompson put Indiana into the lead at the 2:32 mark of the third quarter, 77-75. Chuck Person began to take control of the Pacers’ offense knotting the game at 86. Indiana opened the fourth quarter leading 100-98 and began to apply defensive pressure as Olajuwon was sitting on the bench. The Pacers

With five minutes to play in the game, Houston was held to six points, and Indiana built their insurmountable lead to 124-104. The teams traded transition bas-

kets to close out the game. With perhaps a $10 adm& Memorial Auditorium would have been filled and merited the NBA hoopla. Instead, at $25 - $31, the frozen seats betrayed a promoter interested in short term snacking on scarce entertainment dollars.

ple prosIject

Duane Causwell.

1

Adrian Caldwell drains me for w

R&f*.

Photo by Rich Nichol

Detroit

over San Antonio

in six

TheEnglish Societywould lik to thank the following sponsorsfor helping make the “Take Aim For Literucy Dart Townament” a success!!

I

Costumes Wigs sales and rentals ~ l Hats, Bald Caps l Make-up l Coloured hair sprays (washable) l Special effect - blood capsules + Witch, animal and clown noses l Beards and mustaches l

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HMV Apple II Sub Shack Encore Jamieson’s Coca-Cola Dr. Disc _ j Little Ceasar’s Huethizr Hotel Reuben & Wang’s Wild Duck Cafe East Side Mario’s . Pal’s Galerie Belberry St. Bar & Grill The Campus Shop Dufferin Games Room Store Campus Centre Record Shop


28 ‘Imprint, Friday, October 26, 1990

sports

*

Running obstacles Waterloo. The meet was the last one before the OUAA championship which is this Saturday, October 27. at Queen’s University. by Dale Lapham Bechtel Park provided a little something for everyone: grass, gravel roads, pavement, forest trails, leaves, and mud. The course was wellThis past weekend, Waterloo commarshalled and the forest trails were peted in the Wilfrid Laurier responsibly raked clear of the someInvitational Cross-country Meet , times treacherous red, orange, and. which was held at Bechtel Park in yellow of fall. Meet organizers even

Cross

altered the course to provide the runners with more mud and hills. The Athenas and Warriors both took 6th place in the team competitions. Individually, Marci Aitken (17:26 for 4.4km) was the top Athena finishing in 7th in the interuniversity competition. Other Athenas figuring in the team scoring were Kelly McHale, 1lth; Margaret Barnes, 23rd; Fiona Griffiths, 25th; and Magic Navaleza, 30th. Daralyn Bates, Lisa Whiting and Louise Touqnard also gave strong performances for the Athenas. Bob Hooper of U of T led the men’s competition from start to finish, the forum for yet another Strong performance by rookie Tom Rand who finished 16th (28:51 for 8.2km). Other Warriors competing were David Thompson, 16th; Paul Sudlow, Zlst; Scott McDonald, 28th; Dave Frake, 31st; Scott Nichol, and Darryl Bush. The Laurier nieet was the final marker in the selection process for the team to compete at the OUAA championsl-+p this weekend. The Warrior team representatives will be Tom Rand, Mark Ferguson, Jeff Barrett, Dave Thompson, Paul sudlow, Willie Bassin, Brian Hagemeier,. and Scott McDonald. The Athenas are Jill Francis, Marci Aitken, Kelly McHale, Margaret Barnes, Fiona Griffiths, Magic Navaleza, Nancy Calder, and Daralyn Bates. The mostly rookie men’s team will be hard pressed to crack the top five teams in the competitive OUAA. The Athenas took the bronze medal at the C.I.A.U.‘s last year, with Frticis achieving All-Canadian status for her seventh place finish. Waterloo’s women will need strong performances from everyone if they are to repeat their achievement

Country

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October 27

1. 2.

3. 4. 5, 6. 7. II,

9, 10.

LauriPr

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T 7 A 0 1’2 59 0 172 54 0 !!I7 108 0 II? 101 0 13,7 123 G 31 126 0 61 143 0 4;. 197

at

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October

17 Waterloo

at

Brock

1:UO pm

Ttfint

-

Cuelph

67

Vwen’s

!?

fictcber

Saskatchewan Huskies Bishop’s Gaiters Mount Allison &unties Cancordia Stinger5 WINDSCRLANCERs UBC Thunderbirds

Game

27 A

Came I3

Tren’: westerl;

; it;

1

Se!zi Finals Cuelph at HcMaster 1:OO Pm Queen’s at

ret

playoffs,

Ck&&er 28: Flag football championships, COL SABC, 1 - 5pm On Saturday, November 10, Campus Ret will be actively involved, for the first time ever, with HOMECOMING! In attempt to make current students aw&e and involved with Homecoming it was dtided to incorporate ti event conducive to the extensive C-R population. A somewhat thickwit triathlon will take place on North Campus from 12:30 - 5pm. So get involved with some complacent indulgence and display your dynamic skills in running, goIf, and obstacle relays. There are plenty of prizes to be won! Synergistic teams of 6 are required ’ for registration. For more information, contact Christine Frizzell at 7470409.

October 29: Mens and women’s squash singles tourney entry, PAC receptionist, lpm

October 30: Third CRAC Quad lounge, 4:45 pm

Soccer

bv Peter Straub &l i’aulZimrn-

ISWk!S.

at 4pm on court nine. Good luck! For more information, contact your tournament co-ordinator, Sue Crack

&tuber 27: Fiag football COL 5ABC, 9a1n - 5pm

Warrior

Two weeks ago, the Warriors soccer squad was left unsatisfied after their l-all draw with the perennial powerhouse and defending Wet division champion, Iaurier Golden

Brown staff

meeting,

O&her 31: Happy Haflowe’en! squash meeting, PAC 1001, +3Opm

W

This pat Saturday, the team’ humiliated their cross town rivals in tfrerema& by a%1 ma%in. In recent outin&s, Waterloo has usually surren-

dered the first goal. A&n& Laurier however, Dan Rogozynski put an end to the trend by blasting a shot past a helpless Laurier keeper from close range. Second vear striker Scott Gardner put the &me away a few minutes later with his second goal of the year, capitalizing on a Hawk defensive blunder. The Warriors then coasted in the second half, using a tight defensive strategy, WLU finally spoiled the shutout with two minutes remaining by notching a single marker. Sundav afternoon. the Waterloo Warriors’pIayed host to the University of Western Ontario Mustangs.

UW Athletesbf PAUL T&N

- Warrior

Rugby

JANET

MCPHERhN

The team was hoping to build on its stunning victory from the previous day. As a result, the players came out flying with veteran mid6ielder Nazti Sacooi dazzling the crowd with a brilliant individual effort. Sacoor danced his way past a number of stunned defenders before pushing the ball by the keeper. Unfortunately, defensive lapses in the final ten minutes allowed the twice. The visitors to score heartbreaking 2-1 defeat resulted in the Warriors narrowly missing postseason play. The Waterloo Warriors close at the season when they play he Bro& Badgers on Saturday, October 27.

the Week 1 - Field Hoc-

hey

. TheUWAthleticsDepa&ment has selected Paul Twn as the Warrior The UW Athletic Department is AthIete of the Week, He is a fourth pleased to announce the selection of Janet McPherson as the Athena year kinesiology student of the Week In Iast Toon was selected for his outstand’ Athlete in& all-round play in last weekend’s weekend’s tournameht action, the 6-4 win over Laurier. He has been Athenas t?k two auf of three games. They defeated McGill 2-l and beat selected as an OUAA allstar on two occasions and would appear to be TEnt 2-O. Their Ioss was 7-O to headed for a third year of all-star Toronto. Of the four gc& scored by recognition with his exceptional the Athens, McPhemon scored efforts. three of them.

McPherson is a cocaptiin of the field hockey team. She plays an -9 forward position creating many =orhg opportunities for both her teammates and herself. McPherson is a third-year recreation student.

Forget the Rest Call the Best!

The Men’s Baseball tournament rescheduled for last weekend, was cancelled once again due to the flooded fields at Waterloo Park. Waterloo’s infamous rain storms prevailed once again to’ forestall Campus Ret’s ever most popular Baseball tourney. Unfortunately, the tournament has been completely cancelled until next year. Blame it on the rain!

Once more weekend @go until the finaIists are established. Watch this Sunday, October 28 at Waterloo Tennis Club for some exhilarathg tennis action. Finalists will be displayed (with clothing sports ed) in next week’s Imprint. To alL tennis players: check the toumam ent board downstairs in the PAC for game times. Note: game X14 will be played

Soccer

2:ou pm 2:OO pm

Campus by Ld rlnprlnt

Warrior

12 10

WESTERNMUSTANGS Saint Hary’s Huskies ‘Calgary Dinosaurs

Campus Ret

Rugby

160 University’ Ave. Waterloo

30 minutes or l/2 Price

tennis

AL GRADUATE

RATES!

LARGE PIZZA DEAL! 1 Item $6.75 Pick-up Onill Not valid

with

any other

offer.


30

Ir&int,

Friday,

October

Classifieds

26, 1990

I CLASS!FIED

CLASSIFIED

CLASSIFIED

spelling, corrections available. Laser plint&r. Susanne, 886-3857. .

andy 1000 EX IBM XT compatible, monchrome monitor, 5 l/4” floppy drive. 400.00, Dave: 725-525 1.

Fast, professional word processing’ by Needing renovations done around the experienced secretary, Letter quality print. house or the apartment? Large or smatl Spellcheck. On-campus pickup, delivery. jobs? D & D Renovations can help you with Call Sharon 656-3387. > all types of carpentry problems. Reasonable rates. Call 6:00 a.m. to 8:30 a.m. or , Fast, r&&lc quality word processing serI i vice: cett& quality at competitive rates. Call after 6:00 p.m. at 746-2763. Betty 886-636 1. Suprise Someone - rent a life-size Greeting Card (sign) for birthdays, parties or practical jokes. Create your own message. 7475717. P#R$0NAUC

lecbmi~ Typewriter Smith Corona SX500, Dictionary, 1 Page Memory. Never sed. $300.00 o. b.o. 570-406 1 Joanne. bifty’s 00% IEW: 299., 149.,

Pine Furniture Clearance Outlet, solid pine, handmade, .seconds. bookcases $39., 5 piece dinette wardrobes $249., jam-cupboards harvest tables $249., 669-5048 - 9 .m. to 5 p.m.

Xl Lne-for these unreal prices on the best licycle racing equipment you can buy. iverything listed is in prime condition for erious cycling sessionsand showing your ?albus riding buddies. Such as 1 pair bxcellent condition used wheels, Wolber rT 20 rims, 36H/DT, 14gu. with Campy ?ecord Hubs $175., 1 brand new pair navic SSC Paris-Roubaix rims (the best), I6h/DT 14gu. with Campy Record Hubs i350., 1 pair excellent condition used wheels, Ambrosio Metamophasis Synrlesis Durex rims, 36h/DT l$gu. with Campy C-Record Hubs$250., All rimsare ubutar. 1 pair great condition TacxSpeedIraker single fan rollers $100. 1 1990 lpecialized Stumpjumper, a store demo like that never had an owner, only $675!! with warrantee! 1 nearly new (only 2000 ,m) new style 6-speed Shimano Dura-Ace jruppo complete (call for specs.}, $500. &k for Al, 888-0834, and don’t miss ,ut!

HELP WAmD

AvAi’

Great Music, Super Sound call Rhvthm Rob’s Disc Jock&y Seruces, collect (416) 546-5538. Member Canadian Disc Jockey Association. Very Reasonable Rates. What am I going to do? How can I be sure I am pregnant? Can t continue in school? Where can I obtain good medical care? Call Birthright. 579-3990.

$l,OOO/month part-time - Environmental business expanding in this area. Looking for people having the desire to own their own business, Call Marc, 7250249.

online says:“Reading was something Jay knew about only from books, yet he was quite anxious to experience it for himself.” (Stephen Book) Now accepting poetry, prose, artwork - CC235

Business 0ppotity - Entrepreneurs, work smarter not harder, start your own Multi-Level Marketing btisiness with all natural skin, body and various other herbal products, No investment and minimal risk, so why not find out more ; call Wayne or

iC,

Reform Party: If you are interested in organizing a Reform Party Club on campus call Russell - 888-0506.

Rob at 888-0600.

car for sale - $500. as is. Tough and sturdy ‘79 Chevette. Call Donna 8863387 for more details.

MOUSIND

.

^Campus Reps - individuals or student organization needed to promote our Spring Break Packages on campus. FREE trips plus commission. Call Campus Marketing. l-800-423-5264.

:OINIIOCIO~ 64C - 1571 Disk Drive, great ;ondition, hardly used. Call 74 l-5296 and rsk for Trevor.

Myke: If you leave me for a brutish, hairy, sub-intetligept man, I’m going to jump off M & C when you’re waiking by and land in a broken, bloody mess at your feet. Love S. -

Fii Skatera required for Ice Shows in Ontario. Contact Rhapsody On Ice, Box 42, Brantford, Ont., N3T 5M3 or call (519) 449-5200. Minimum age 18.

Dean Irvine - Happy 6irthday one-eye. Here’s to a new year of burrow owis, eppysue, and special times. Love Cabage.

Spring Bxeak 1991 - individual or student organization needed to promote Spring Breaktrip. Earn money, free trips and valuable work experience. Call now! InterCampus Programs: l-800-327-601 3.

!

Winter Rooms available. 2 large rooms 20 ninutes from campus. Share kitchen/ bathroom. Fully furnished. Call Andrew 7253850 or Joan/Don 886-2053.

Reform Party speaks at the Kitchener Holiday Inn November 21 at 7130 p.m.

Words for Money. Quality word processing and graphics. Postscript Laser Printer. Free pickup and delivery. $2.50 per page. 742-43 15.

Gary’s Moving - residential, small or large .jobs, in town or out-of-town, students 15% off. 746-7 160.

Hot Tub Par&s - now you can rent for your big event. We deliver and set up. No plumbing required. “For something completely different” call Splash Spa Rentals l-421 -0958.

part-time positions available working with developmentally-challenged adults. Weekerids - $8.41 /hour, Contact Greg &chard - Elmira Association for C0mmunity Living. 669-3205.

Reform

Party:

Pad Winter subtet. Huge, fully furnished, self-contained basement apartment. Ideal bachelor pad or for a couple. tncludes waterbed, private entrance,

Vice-President

CLASSIFIED

CLASSIFIED

of

HOUSINO

WAMD

4 Becbwm townhouse or house wanted for Jan.-Apr. ‘91 to sublet by four females (non-smokers). Call Rebecca or Tammy at (416) 348-0701. 1 ;-ys :: .A:. w- ,! ”_ Ring on campus, perhaps Bombshelter. Wide silver ring with raised Sanskrit/ Tibetan characters, GREAT sentimental value. Andrew 725-3850.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Jewish students Shalom (Reform) Phone: 746-4332

invited to Temple for High Holidays. ; 743-0401.

Friends is a schqol volunteer program where a child is paired with a volunteer, a one-to-one establishing relationship to build the child’s selfesteem and confidence. Urgent need: male and female volunteers. Call 7424380. University Noonhour m speakers are invited from the University of Waterloo and Wilfrid Laurier University to give lectures at the Kitchener Public Library - Main Branch. October 29 - Life Under Jordan’s Sun: Ancient People and Places. Prof. Michele Daviau WLU, Dept. of Religion and Culture. port and Sherry Exhibition opens at the Seagram Museum Oct. 2,1990 to January 31, 1991. For further information contact Lynne Paquetie at 885- 1857.

the

Come and be a part of the Caribbean Student Association (CSA) every other Thursday starting Oct. 11 in CC1 35. Lots of interesting events are scheduled for this term. See you there! Nominations

are requested for the seat on the Universiv Senate, to filled by by-election. At least five nominators are required for each nomination. ” One full-time undergraduate student in Mathematics (term to April 30, 1991).” Nomination forms and further information are available from the Secretariat at ext. 6125. following

Tom York Memorial Writing Award submissions presently being accepted. Consider submitting short prose fiction to this years competition. Deadline for entries 22nd of November, 1990. Send to Dr. Pauline Greenhill - St. Paul’s College or Dr. Paul Tiessen, English Dept. W.L.U. For more information contact Dr. Pauline Greenhill at 885 1460. 25th Anniversary of Counselling Services. Half day celebration is planned for afternoon of Friday, Dec. 7. A panel chaired by Robin Banks will respond to Koop’s paper entitled “Lashing Back into the Future: Counselling on Campus for 25 Years” Reception to follow. Further details tc be announced shortly. * I ‘War Games” - on display in the Public Gatlery of the University’s Museum & Archive of Games, 5url Matthews Wall (phone 888-4424), from Oct. 5 through Dec. 15, 1990. II is an exhibition of popular commercial war games and related paraphernalia from the Museum’s permanent collection. The Gallery is open to the public on Mondays and Wednesdays from 10 a.m. until 6 p.m. and on Sun-

Awesome

fridge, couch & more! Price negotiable. Call Mark or Jenn 747-9248.

EVRRY MONDAY

shower,

Winter Sublet: 1 bedroom in 3 bedroom house, excellent location, $3OO/month inclusive. Call Michal 888-4048 or 746-

&p&dTrpistwiHtakecareofallyour

typing

needa

Fast efficient service. area. Phqne 886-7 153.

Westmount-Erb

5733. Co-Op Students! 3 rooms for sublet, Jan. April. Negotiablti; fun. 725-5474.

Sylvia

RVRRY

Nadasdy-MiQhm

(519)

fI

741-l

107

lVRRY

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

TUBSDAY HV8RY THURSDAY

176 Allen tiaterloo,

10%

&

St. E. (at Web@ Ontario N2J 1 J8

Student

Discount

I

.

II’

P.O.E.T.S. Pub 8:30 - 1:00 a.m., CPH ’ 1337. Musicians bring your instruments. Jzz Choir - come out and join the fun frOmI 2:45 - 3:45 at Siegfried Hall (near St. Everyone is welcome - licensed. Jeromes College).. No auditions. For Career ~eaource Centre is open until 7 more info call Chev, 746-5236. ; p.m. Make use of extended hours to and Womyn’s Group - this term rather than research employers, careers academic opportunities. See you there! Thursday meetings we will have Monday night drop-in in the GLOW office. See Women’s Centre holds meetings at 7 “Mondays” for details. p.m. in room 217 at the Women’sCentre. All are welcome! WATSFIC -the Waterloo Science Fiction m Club, is holding meetings at 6:30. Come out and meet other fans of Science Fic* tion, Fantasy, Comics, Wargames, or RVRRY WgDNlSDAY Role-playing games. Check in the Clubs Room (CC21 5) for further details. GLLOW (Gay and Lesbian Liberation of

P El El

Waterloo)

coffeehouses

are

held on

alternate Wednesdays in the stereo room of the Campus Centre, with special events every other Wednesday. Call%84GLOW for information.

Rminist

Discussion

Courteous

e

Bagels! The Waterloo Jewish Students Association/Hillel presents a weekly

Bagel

Brunch

every

Thursday

from

11:30 am. to 1:30 pm. in the Campus Centre - Check with Turnkeys for the room number.

C&w Christian Fellowship meetings every Friday at 7:00 pm. at WL-U sem inary building, room 201. Contact Mike Liu at 747-4065 for rides. Writers’ Workshop: 2-4 p.m. in Psych. Lounge (PAS Bullding).‘ Poetry, short stories, scripts, novels, etc. Bring pencils, copies, and an open, critical mind.

Looking

9 . I!!

for a friendly

to

-

have both intellectual discussions and fun? Join our weekly study sessions at 7:30 p.m., Campus Centre room 1 IO. Association for Baha’i Studies. All welcome!

Iw

EVHRY

environment

*

El0

8UI1DAY I

Lay’s

Evangelicill Fellowship evening service. 7:00 pm. at 1’63 University Ave. W. (MSA), &pt 321. All are welcome. For more information, call 884-5712.

w

m

Group. Meets every

i Wednesday from 7:OO to 9:ClO pm. at Global Community Centre in W&erloo. * Topic and group vary weekly so that all - women are welcome anytime. For more information ext. 3457 or 578-3456, R I

- =wt

l RIDAY

‘loin the Warriors Band! hmday at 530 pm. in 2012 (Blue North). New hers welcome. we instruments.

Practice every the PAC, room and old mem-

can

provide

FASS Writers Meetings - those crazy writersareatitagain,andtheywantYOU. l Help write the shows that millions have il raved about. 7:30 p.m. MC 5158. Everyone welcome.


Classifieds CLASSIFIED

CLASSIFIED

days from 2 p.m. until 6 p.m. Admission is free. Tutors wanted for Fall & Winter Term to teach English as a second language or Remedial English. Contact Cheryl Kennday, Dept. of Engish.

CLASSIFIED

activities are invited to apply for these awards. Application, including resume and two letters of reference, Should be submitted by November 30, 1990 to Dr. Neil Widmeyer, Applied Health Sciences, BMH. Special applications are available at the

Student Awards

Off ice.

The !?d.al Justice Action Groupmeets regularly throughout the term to coordinate educational events and civil disobedience actions ranging from speakers and leafletting to blockades. Past a&ions have included the Dis ARMX campaign, NATO out of N ssinan actions and ongoing solidarity P,with the Innu, Christmas Anti-War Toys ‘action, and a continual focus on non-violent resistance to militarism. For details, call 884-3465 Planned parenthood Waterloo Region is looking for mature, caring women and men to volunteer with our agency as counsellers. We are a commuinity-based prochoice agency whose focus is on family planning and sexuality issues. Call 7439360. K-W Newcomers - is a new womens social group to meet other new comers, Call 7471658 - first Wed. of month at rink in park.

UPCOMING

7020 - 70:00-l 7:3O - Knowing Yourself/Occupations, Resume Writing ; 7 2:00- 7:30 - Interview Skills I ; 2:00-4:00 - Resume/ACClS Checks (come anytime during the two-hour

period). Career m Centre - Sat. hours Employer files/d irectories and career planning/job search materials to help you when preparing job applications. Sat. Nov. 10, 77:30-3:30, NH7 715.

PMEI Contest - let the world see your artistic talent. Design the FASS 1997 poster and become famous! Entry forms and details on FASS bulletin bard in CC and in FASS off ice, HH777A. w -& a safe, fully screened introduction service to people in&rested irl shared accommodation, Homeshare is a program sponsored by the Sociil Planning Council, Region of Waterloo, and the Ministry of Housing, foF details call 5789894.

Imprint,

Ad&w RQJGUIM - inquire in Career Services, NHlOOl, 1115.

CALL l@uo Sign-up sheets and workshop preparationhandoutsavailable inCareer !3ervices, NH 1001, the week prior to workshop. CIasses held in NWO20. pknning for a CLueer (1 hour) - the foundation upon which all job search activities are based. Dates: Tues. Oct. 30, 72:3O-7:30,; Tues. Nov. 6,10:3077:3O.

C.~WHS R~SOUW Cede - Open Oct. 27 & Nov. 70, 7 7:30-3:30. Ask about evening hours. E&y-levelOfficer

Exams,Oct. 20.

& F%weign Service

Cana&CareerWeek,-“starttofinish” Oct. 29-Nov. 2 ; Hospitality Careers, Oct. 30, 3:30-4:30, NH7020 ; Environmental Careers, Nov. 7,6:007:00 p.m., NH7020 ;“Shadow for a Day” Draw, Nov. 2.

Fdd8&OdObUPI Gd HJ1 Concert Series - WLU at 8:oO p.m. A renowned singer from our area Daniel Lichti, Baritone sings Schubert,

Information p.m. at Manushi, ing with cuisine Manushi. Women’s

Day - 7 7:OO a.m. to 2:OO

Campus Centre. India and India’s only magazine dealwomen’s issues. Indian for sale. All proceeds to Sponsored by The Centre.

-,-a1 Blood Donor Clinic - Campus Centre WI0 a.m. to 4100 p.m. Donars are asked to eat lxfore donating. Halloween hty at WLU for children of KW. The Student Union will be hosting a party with treats, munchies, activities and supenMbn provided. Fun goes from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. at the Turret. For more information call WLU Students’ Union at 8841360 and ask for Tyler Leatherland.

-4-1

Friday,

October

26, 1990

EVENTS Amnesty Intenratiorul Group 9 meeting at the Kitchener Public tibrary’s Ebyroom. Guest speaker: Arun Achyuthan, a Ph.D. student from Calcuttaon theSikh terrorism and disappearances in India. New members at 7:oO p.m. Meeting at 7:30 p.m. Everyone welcome. For mare info please call 884- 1850 or 893- 7449.

Chh Chma - screenings in Uw’s Easl Campus Hall, # 1219 at 7:ClOp.m. “Border Town” (Bian Cheng)

Wend0 - a woman’s self defense course is being offered by the Woman’s Issues Board. $35.00 for both sessions. For registration and info call Tammy, ext. 6305.

20th An&maq of UW Canadian Studies Program. Publicsession 3:oO p.m. - 5: 15 MacKirdy Hall St. Paul’s United College. For more details call 865- 1460.

Job Search (7 hour) - a look at creative and traditional methods of finding jobs. Dates: Thurs. Nov. 8,3:30-430 ; Wed. Nov. 28, 7 7:30-72:30. Summer Jobs (7 hour) - how to discover the array of summer jobs available. Dates: Tues. Nov. 20,

77:30-72:30. Remthing Employers (7 hour) how to locate information about employers. Dates: Wed. Oct. 3 I, 72:30- 1:30.

A HORMONAL HAYRIDE TO ‘HELL

InformationalInterviews/Networkhg (7 hour) - finding out about jobs to make career decisions/d iscovering job openings. Dates: Tues. Nov. 6, 7 1:30-12:30.

%&&~~ho wish to improve their study skills can take advantage of individual counselling and workshops in the following topics: a) study skills in the classroom, such as notetaking, effective listening, and class preparation; b) effective study techniques, including time management, textbook reading, and concentration and; c) effective exam-writing skills (4 sessions). You GUI register at the reception desk in Counselling Services, Needles Hall, room 2080 or call extension 2655.

cla!38e!a are

Wednesday,

Oct. 31-9:30

to 11:30 a.m.

Students who procrastinate and have trouble organizing their studies may be interested in this two-hour, 4 session works hop. CUSS be@ns Monday, Oct. 29 - 9:30 to 7 7:30 a.m. SCHOLARWUP WoTIC8S

Canada

Scholarship

Resume Writing (7 hour) - techniques for writing an effective resume. Dates: Mon. Nov. 5, 7 7:30-l 2:3O ; V&d. Nov. 7, 6:00-7:00 p.m. Resume Critiquing (7 hour) - bring your own resume for analysis by the group. Dates: Mon. Nov. 12, 7 7:3072:30, Letter Writing (7 hour) - an important key for getting your job. Dates: Mon. Nov. 5, 72:30-I:30 ; Wed. Nov. 7, 7:00-8:00 p.m.

Interview Skills I (7 hour) - tips on how to prepare effectively for a job interview. Dates: Mon. Nov. 5, 3:304:30 ; Tues. Nov. 73, 72:30-I :30. Interview Ski.& II (7 hour) -“Handson” session where you can practice’ answering questions usually asked in interviews. Dates: Mon. Nov. 5,4:305:30 ; Tues. Nov. 73, 7 :30-2:30. Intenriew Skills Ul(7 hour) - practice selling your skills. Dates: Wed. Nov. 7, 3:30-4:30.

AmertingYourselfintheJob Renewals:

students eligible for renewals of Canada Scholarships are advised that the cheques are now available. A list of eligible students is posted in the Student Awards Office and cheques may also be picked up there. Ap@idion forms and further information please contact the Student Awards Office, 2nd floor, Needles Hall.

lMkeMoserMemorialB~~deserving third and fourth year students who have financial need, an examplaty academic record, and who have achieved a high level of accomplishment in extra-curricular

Inter-

view (2 7 /2 hours) - expressing yourself more successfully and overcoming personal difficulties. Dates: Wed. Nov. 74, 3:30-6:00, NH3007.

cc

140 - LIFE IN THE FAST LANE

Fhparing for the Job Search T “Hands-on” workshop for graduating students. Sat. Oct. 27 - 70:30-72:30 - determining your interests and strengths ; 12:30- I:00 - bring lunch ; 1 @I-2:45 researching occupations in the Career Resource Centre ; 3:00-5:00 -se!ling your qualifications in a resume and interview. Graduate 1 Newspaper Fri. Nov. 2. Saturday

- distributed

Sessions - Sat. Nov. 70 -NH

31

N!!!


This is an advertisement

Will be promoting PC3 during two-day visit to Campus Centre

PM.TOVISITuw (PC) WATERLOO) In a surprise move, the local PM (PC FACTORY Manag&) has announced that PC FACTORY will set up shop in the Campus Centre for two whole days. “That’s right,” the unidentified PM said loday, “Thursday, November 1, and Friday, November 2 we’re going to bring in a complete range of computers, computer systems, and peripherals. We’re coming right into the heart of the action at the Campus Centre.” “We’ll have desktop systems,

PC challengesclaim

FREE

SEX

AS HOAX. (PC) WATERLOO. Recent claims made in various PC FACTORY ADS (including this one) have been challenged by local anonymous authorities. “These people are making outrageous claims about offering ‘free sex’ when they are doing nothing of the sort”, said an unidentified spokesperson for Advertising Overview, a local truth in advertising watchdog. “What they are really offering is a free condom to people who come to their display at the Campus Centre,” said the source, “and that’s a completely different thing.” , But an unidentified PC FACTORY spokesperson disputes this. According to him/her, “I am willing to stand behind these ads. Condoms have a pretty clear connection with sex. And they are free. That’s good enough for me.” Interviews conducted this week with UW students tended to support the PC FACTORY view. 56% of students expressed “general agreement” with the claim that giving away free condoms amounts in a round-about-way to “free sex”. 28% thought this was nonsense. 24% were undecided. Polls of this sort are accurate to within plus or minus 5%, 19 times out of 20. When asked for his/her opinion on the matter, an unidentified ’ philosophy grad student said, “It seems to me we have a logical problem here. Beyond that I have no commnt.” ’

This arficle has absolutely Prime Minisier of Canada.

“Any student thinking of buying a cmputer should seriously consider . waiting for-this even% Ir laptops, monitors, modems, printers the whole business. They’ll be up and rufining and students can stop by and check out how we can best meet their needs.” “In fact we’re suggesting that any students thinking of buying a computer system should seriously consider waiting for this event. There will be spkcial prices, special systems, and lots of give-aways associated with this event. Our staff will be there with expert advice, and we’ll even have financing information available.”

nothing

to do with

this

unidentified

Lots of freebies...

2 Dayemt wi// feafirredisplays,give-aways Fme Food/Dr~nks

Free Computer

We’ll have lots of coffee and donuts for those who stop by.

Fill out a ballot and you could win a free computer system.

Free Money

FREELAS VEMS TRIP

With the prices and special deals we’ll be offering it’s just like giving money away. Jn fact, check out the coupons below for tremendous deals with purchases.

You could win’a trip to the COMDEX Show in Las Vegas. The world’s biggest computer show and exhibition. Come in for more details. This is the chance of.a lifetime for computer nuts.

Free Sex

I

Free Condoms. We’re supporters of safe, healthy, sex..

Mysterious Aliens Centre next week

free

may

visit

I

Campus

Unconfirmedreports of alien landings have been trickiipg in to PC headquarters all week. We repeat, these are unconfirmed, and may turn out to be complete nonsense. However, we think aliens might me among us. Be aware.

.I..rrr-rrrr...............“.......................~ I I I

II s8

~“......................~....................~~....~

With every purchase over $1000 at PC Factory

5m I

II I

i

i

~r..rrr.r.ll.rr.llr............-..............~....~

With every, purchase over $2500 at PC Factory -

iI

l

I I I

cIaI I IIII I I8

I

$50

VALUE

FREE MODEM

i ; II1I IPI0I

Validation coupan

must be validated

$200

at PC Factory November 1,2,

display, 1990

UW Carrtpus

II

Centre

I I ;

; . . . . . . . . . . . ..“........~........“...~.~...........~

f

Validation

II

II

coupon must be validated at PC Factory I 0 November 1,Z 1. L . . . . . ..~....................“...............~..~..

display, 1990

UW Campus

I I I

Cen& ;

i

II

I I I

Validation

coupon

must be validated

’ K-W’S 2nd most respected

OPERATING

HOURS:

name in computer hardware

Ave. W., (Unive.rsity Shops Plaza Fax. 747-0932 Tel. 746-4565

10 AM - 6 PM MON

- THURS

lOAM-8PMFRI

I

at PC Factory November 1,2.

; . . . . ’. . . ..“.................~~....~................

PC FACTORY 170 University

I1I II

With every purchase over $100 at PC Factory

$5 VALUE i II:iaI IiII FREE BOX OF DISKS ;ILII

VALUE

FREE PRINTER

l

iI

II) Waterloo WAM-4PMSAT

display, 1990

VW Campus

: I I

Cantre i

,


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