1991-92_v14,n29_Imprint

Page 1

Friday, March 6,1992 Vol. 14 no. 29

Second Class Registration Numwr NP6453 Kitchener, Ontario

IMPRINT

a3::*A


.

D’ON’T SPIN’YOUR

WHEELS;

PETER

Editorial

BROWN

lain Anderson, Kentor Augerman, Lori Beck1 stead, Ken Bryson, PhilliF Chee, MichaeI Clifton Jennifer Didio, Ann2 Done, Paul Done, Jennifer Epps, Julia Farquhar, Dave Fisher, Sue Forrest; Barbara Jo Green, Johr Jylanne, 6. Patrick Kear, ney, Stacey Lobin, Rich Nichol, Diane Schuldt, Frank Seglenieks,

Board

Editor-in-Chief . .... .. .... ..... .....Peter Brown Assistant Editor .............. Dave Thomson News Editor ................................... vacant

NeweAsaistant ............................. vacant Rmtwes Editor .................. Sandy Atwal i+zatures A sat. .............................. vacant sdl

Editor .............................. vacant

Spotta Editor ................... Clayton Coulas Spwts Assistant ........................... vacant Arts Editor ........................... Chris Waters ArtsAssistant ....................... Ken Bryson PMo Editor ................. ..Joann e Sandrin Photo Ashtmt ......... .Wim van der Lugt

Staff -. Production Mgr. . ...Laurie Tiger-t-Dumas Production Asst ........................... vacant General Manager ........ ..Vivia n Tambeau hmint is the official - - student newspaDer at We .,..................,.,” Sheri Hendry the-University of Waterloo. It is an edit&& officeclerk our Advettiging Rep. ... ..............Lynne Scott in-dependent newspaper published by heart Ad Assistant .“,,............. .. .. ...George Pun hprint Publications, Waterloo, a corporaProd

Reader

......I.......................... vacant

Board of Directm~ PresidMt.

..*........*a.......*-.*m.... Sandy Atwal

VlCePWkJWtl

. .. .... ....... .... .“Peter Brown . ..... ..Wim van der Lugt Directors at Large .“...- . ..... .Vince Kozma ...*......“.l..........*............”... Joanne Sandrin .... ..m....m*..............**.~*mm........ Dave Thomson Staff Liaison .. ....... ..I.......*-..... Anna Done

Secretary-Ikeas

Australian Folk Singer

“Peter Shaw” Sunday, March 8192 5 to 7 p.m.

would like to extent deepest and mos: felt

thanks

Imprint

to

Forrest, who, throush patienceImpfit dedication to duty, duced last week’s Rag. Best wishes again, thank you.

tion without share capital. is a member of the Ontario Community tireless NewspaperAssociation (OCNA). publishes every Friday during the Fall and Winter termsand every second Friday during the Spring term. Mail should be addressed to Imprint, Campus Centre, Room 140, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario. N2L 3Gl. E-mail should be addressed to imprint at watsehrl .Waterloo-edu. . Our Fax number is 884-7800. ’ Imprint reserves the right to screen, edit and refuse advertising. Imprint ISSN 0706-7380.

Forgrads .

SUE

her

and pro= I WP and

a oathewav,u~, theAppleMicintosh PoGerBook 100 a

ismamed wayaown. 1

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Student Pricing. Even better yet, until March 31, it’s specially priced to fit your pocket. You’ll see the Macintosh PowerBook 100 advertised to the general$ublic for a low $1,799.* But Authorized Apple Canada Cumplls Dealers offer student pricing. To find out how easily you as a student can afford a new Macintosh PowerBook 100. I . See your Apple Canada Campus Dealer today.

No matter where your new career takes you, you can take along the power to be your best with the Apple* Macintosh TH PowerBook’” 100. It’s been Cal& the best designed notebook in the industry. It runs Macintosh software. It runs MS-DOS@ software.” It has a backlit _ supertwist display and 2MB of memory, plus a big 20MB hard disk drive. Yet it weighs a- mere 5.1 pounds, and fits in a briefcase or a knapsack.

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Grebel ground-breaking

Student artists display their wares by Jennifer Didio Imprint staff

Conrad Grebel president Rod Sawatsky pitches a shovelful to kick off construetion of a $1.25 million renovation and expansion at CGC. Photo by Peter Brown

Feds plan bylaw changes by Peter Brown Imprint staff The Federation of Students plans to make its $23.70 student levy a nonrefundable fee at next Thursday, March 12’s annual general meeting. Currently, it is a compulsory but refundable fee, meaning that students must pay it when they register and pay academic fees, but can come to the Federation office for a refund during the first three weeks of classes. This winter, 153 students asked for their Federation refund, out of 11,84 1 full-time undergraduates and at a cost of $3,626, according to a document prepared by Fed general manager Fred Kelly for Vice-President, Operation and Finance Steve Millard. That brings the total refunded for the year May 1, 1491 to April 31, 1992 to $7,915, up from $4,437 last year (when the Fed fee ranged between $19.20 and $22.25). Kelly says that the administrativr~ involved is time-consuming and that many students continue to use services and to benefit from other Fed activities after they obtain refunds. He also says that UW is one of few schools that still has a refundable student association levy.

If the University Board of Governors approves last month’s referendum to pull out of the Ontario Fedel’ation of Students, the $23.70 levy will drop by $1.50. Other changes to bylaws include the creation of an eIections and referenda committee that will search for a chief returning office? for campus-wide undergraduate votes. The Feds are also seeking to empower the students’ council to approve the CR0 instead of the board of directors. Also on the agenda is group of changes to the bylaw governing the Board of Entertainment to reflect the hiring of a full-time special events coordinator, currently Dave McDougall, “When Dave’s job was created last year, there was no real explanation of how he would relate to BEnt,” said President John Leddy. “These changes are meant to reflect what he actually

does.”

Proxy forms for the AGM must be submitted to the Fed office, CC235, by next Wednesday, March 1 I at 4:30 pm. A valid student ID card is necessary to register to vote at the meeting. For more details, see the advetiement on page nine.

As part of Winter Thaw ‘92, an art show and sale were held in the Great Hall of the Campus Centre from Tuesday to Thursday of this week, March 3-5. Forty pieces of art work were contributed by 18 different artists on the UW campus. “The show acted as a medium for students within the university to show and sell their work to the public,” said Dave McDougall, supervisor of the art show, which added some cultural activities to Winter Thaw and represented the quality and calibre of work students can achieve through arts at this university. First prize went to Melissa Doherty’s acrylic “Things are Not As They Seem,” second going to Deana Fusco’s linocut “Venus,” and third prize going to Rochford Svasti Salle’s untitled pencil crayon work. This is the first year that winterfest activities have included an art show, but the reactions of students this week indicate that it will not be the last. Organizers encourage artists to submit works for next year’s show to gain the recognition they deserve and have the chance to receive a prize for their efforts. The Winter Thaw Art Show & Sale was coordinated and run by Monica Hadely and Mamie Thompson, both students at UW. For any information concerning; .the artists or their paintings for sale, please contact Dave McDougall in the Federation of Students office, CC235, 888-4042.

This is the 9st prize wimer, “Things one Not as They Seem” by Melissa Dohmty. Photo by Peter Brown

Journal ‘is reborn by Michael Bryson Imprint staff After a year that saw its name changed, its mandate aitered and its future cast in doubt, Phoenix (formerly 0n li!ro) , the Federation of Students’ annual publication of poetry, arh+vork and short fiction, is scheduled for release next week. The official book launch party, hosted by the Federation of Students in conjunction with the Arts Student Union, will be held at Fed Hall on Tuesday, March IO, 1992, beginning at 7~30 pm. All are welcome. The cost at the door is $2.00, which includes a copy of the publication. The evening consists of readings by the contibutors, followed by a collection of live bands. Playing at the event witi be the Mary Ann Epp Band, a local talent recently praised in the KWRecord; Kate B. and the Beggar; Louis Litwizller; Jack Cooper; and Clint Turcott. The MC for the evening will be Darlene Spencer. The publication, a University of

Waterloo tradition since the early 198Os, ftew into some turbulence late last year when it felI under the scrutinv of the Federation of Studex&s accountants. Because the publication was perennial moneyloser, the Feds asked the editors of the publication, Shirley Moore and Tamara Knezic, to make the publication more accountable to the general student body, and more profitable. The first move Moore and Knezic made was to change the name from online, which had more computer connotations than literary allusions, to Phoenix, a metaphorical title in more ways than one. Other moves followed, though as in the past with online, the editors of Phoenix mainly accepted submissions

of

poetry,

short

fiction

and

artwork. This year, they tried to make the publication appeal to a larger selection of the university community by seeking submissions outside of these areas, like graffiti or snippets of dialogue. As a result, the publication includes creative non-

fiction for the first time this year. Moore and Knezic are also introducing this year a new price for the publication. The publication will be sold this year for $1 per copy. Last year the publication cost $5. Because the cost per copy has been so drastically reduced, the editors are hoping for a larger circulation. “If people don’t buy the book for $1,” says Knezic, “they aren’t going to buy it.” Last year the Creative Arts Board published 300 copies of which 150 were sold. This year Moore and Knezic are hoping to publish 800 copies, some of which may eventually find their way into frosh kits. If there is not a sign&ant increase in interest in the publication by the student body, the publication risks being cmcelled by the Federation vi Students. Assuming that there will be a Phoenix next year, submissions for that publication will be accepted at the Creative Arts Board in the Fed Office in the Campus Centre beginning April 1,1992.


4 imprint;Friday,

Navs

March 6, i992

.

Wome n’s Wek

Intematlonal l

Seminar examines date rape by Jeff Warner Imprint staff

seminar on acquaintance rape as part of International Women’s Week activities.

On Tuesday, March 3 at the Davis Centre, the Federation of Students’ Women’s Issues Board presented a

Presented by Christa Avery and Christopher McLaughlin, it was a highly informative, two-hour session.

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/ males who drink excessively, read , pornographic magazines, and who express the belief that rape can at times be “justified.” There was also a list of “do’s” and “don’&’ to help a woman avoid being raped: avoiding risky situations, having someone always know where you are, staying sober, trusting your instincts, being consistent (both verbally and with ‘body language), and not being afraid to scream or run if a situation is getting dangerous are all important. The post-film discussion featured topics that ranged from mandatory rape education courses to frosh week activities, the legal system and the proposed rape law Bill C-49, and male-female relations. The general consensus was that more education was needed at all levels, from university orientation down to grade school, and that rinore males should be involved in presenting the importance of this topic.

alwaysbe consistent, both verbully . and with bodylanguage I

i I

# I I I I I I

The seminar began with a film, Aguim2 Her will - Gwnps Rqq followed by discussion. The statistics raised were horrifying: of 6,000 students interviewed by MS magazine, one-fourth had either experienced a rape or an attempted rape, half of which occurred on dates. Seventy-five per cent of the men and fifty-five per cent of the women involved were under the influence of drugs or alcohol. Date rape comprises 84 per cent of a11sexual assaults, but only one per cent of those assaults are reported.

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The film showed seemingly endless interviews with women who were the victims of date rape, and interspersed them with interviews of men who had a very misinformed concept of what constituted rape. It also gave clues for women to use in helping to determine if a male is likely to turn into a “date-rapist.”

If you are interested in more information on this topic, please contact the Women’s Issues Board, 8854211, ext. 6305. They also have a copy of Bill C-49 and literature on the subject.

Anyone could potentially be a rapist, but women should be especially careful of highly personable, attractive

Academic freedom to b.e-discussed at W Lb by Robin KaIbfleisch

Imprintstaff

As students, many of us have experienced the disappointment of getting a poor grade on a project which took weeks to prepare. This situation is , especially frustrating when we know that we have been penalized because we have expressed so-called radical or controversial opinions. Although it is dis-

heartening to receive a poor grade, imagine what it would be like to be a student in a country where you could be arrested or even shot for challenging political or social norms.

ticular, the conference will explore the relationship between the repression of academic personnel and the narrowness of the development policies of their governments. In countries where academic freedom does not exist, students and teachers face a wide range of dilemmas. For example, in order to assure their own personal safety scholars may be forced to avoid working an proiects that tackle social problems.

Tomorrow (Saturday, March 7), students and scholars will be meeting at Wilfrid Laurier University to discuss the various ways in which academic freedom is constrained in different parts of the world. In par-

Your university education has opened your mind to many new and challenging ideas. But that’s only the firststep in launching an exciting and rewarding career, because employers look for people with focussed career goals and matching skills. If you are short on specific career skills, Centennial Coliege can help you focus on what you need. As university grads return home to Toronto to pursue careers, an increasing numberarechoosing Centennial. Why? Practical programs. Real work experience. Advanced standing that allows them to complete some programs in less than a year.

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Dean of Students

Off&,


News

Imprint, Friday, March 6, 1992 5

Gwen Jacob speaks up for WOrnen proof of a community standard, whereas the Indecent Exposure Act does. She also is appealing on ,the constitutional grounds that she was discriminated against, since men do not get charged for taking their shirts off under similar circumstances. Before the question and answer session, she addressed the common

by Dave Thomfbon Imprint staff As part of International Women’s Week Gwen Jacob spoke at the Davis Centre last Monday to give her rationale for taking her top off while walking home in July of last year. Jacob was fined $75 and convicted of indecent exposure in January after removing her top last July 19, because it was 33 degrees Celsius and she thought she might be more comfortable with it off. The University of Guelph student began the discussion by recounting the events leading up to her arrest and the numerous court appearances that ensued, making the occasional humourous jab at the inability of most television and newspaper reporters to get the facts of her story correct. After reiterating some of the sexist remarks made by the judge during her trial and remarking on the entrenchment of patriarchal values in the judicial system, she stated the reasons for appealing her conviction.

the right to take one’sshirt of is me that . murt Iegdly can exercise. l

argument

On February 7 to 9, urban planning students from coast to coast met in Canada’s capital to participate in the National University Workshop in the Greenbelt. Sponsored by the National capital Commission (NCC), the workshop provides national perspectives on how to manage. the unique 20,000 hectare “emerald necklace” of green space that surrounds the capital. ‘The workshop is an exciting reallife opportunity for the urban planners of tomorrow to design the capital of tomorrow by preserving one of its most important assets,” says NCC Chairman Jean Pigott. ‘%y coming together in the capital and sharing their expertise and vision, these students will help qmm that we have an environmeritally friendly capital that reflects Canadian values.” Professor Karen Bowles Hammond of the University of Waterloo’s Urban and Regional Planning department attended the workshop along with undergraduate IJRP students. ‘The workshop provided handson experience for students to work under time and financial constraints, to present information in an effective way,” Hammond said. “It also provided the chance to meet students from other universities.” Her role in the workshop was to give lectures, organize field trips and workshops, and supervise the students’ projects. Universities from British Columbia, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec, and Nova Scotia participated in this workshop. Each university team presents a detailed land-use concept for the Greenbelt to their peers and a panel of experts, including Ian McHarg, the renoy ;ned ecological planner and author of the landmark book De@ with Nature. The NCC will use the students’ ideas to develop a long-range plan to make the Greenbelt sustainable and relevant to the future of the capital. The Greenbelt creates a rural landscape in an urban environment by providing sustainable faming ad forestry, recreational opportunities and conservation areas on the capital’s doorstep.

that her cause is trivial and

that her energy would be much better

Jacob believes she been initially charged

should have with Section

174 of the Criminal Code, the Public Nudity Act, which doesn’t require

Ottawa part of National Greenbelt by Jennifer Didio Implint staff

I’ve ever done,“’ and a sense of reclaiming her body from a patriarchal culture that objectifies and exploits it. While answering a question, she elaborated on the idea of reclaimation and the power society attaches to women’s breasts. The way some women dress and use their breasts to

It is administered by the NCC, a federal Crown Corporation with a mandate to safeguard and preserve the capital’s national heritage, to transform the capital into a meeting place for Canadians and to communicate Canada to Canadians through the capital The Greenbelt is 20,000 hectares in size, forming a complete arc around Ottawa and parts of Nepean and Gloucester, 14,000 hectares of which is owned by the NCC, the remainder by other federal agencies. It is as little as eight kilometres from Parliament Hill and ranges in width from two to ten km. The National University Workshop on the Greenbelt plays a critical role in ensuring that the National Capital Greenbelt is sustainable and relevant to the future evolution of Canada’s capital. In September 1990, the National Capital Commission (NCC) launched a major three-year, three-phase review of the Greenbelt. Phase I, which is essentially’ finished, involves amassing detail&l

information on the Greenbelt, including future trends and public opinion, and the elaboration of a new vision of the Greenbelt’s role in the capital’s future. Phase II will elaborate alternate land use concepts for the Greenbelt and lead to the selection of a preferred concept by the summer of 1992. Phase III, to be completed by the summer of 1993, will formulate the strategies and policies to implement the preferred land use plan for the Greenbelt. A team of students from each planning school has been formulating a Greenbelt land use concept since September as part of their university studies. The National University Workshop on the Greenbelt offers the participating planning students valuable experience and university credits while providing the NCC with the alternative visions needed to make the Greenbelt viable and nationally

relevant

into the 21st century.

spent working for a more prominant cause, such as preventing violence against women. She argued that there is a distinct difference between something that is basic and something that is trivial. “The right to wear pink socks is trivial,” she said, but the right to take one’s shirt off is a basic one that men legally can exercise, but women cannot. When she did take her shirt off in public for the first time, she described it as “the most self-empowering thing ,

VILLAGE h

l

attract men is a display of power but, she said, that power is not women’s, Rather, she argued, it is a display of how men control women. The discussion was attended by approximately 70 people, most of whom appeared to support her. To help defray the costs of her upcoming appeal, some people made cash donations or bought T-shirts made by Jacob,. Donations to the Gwen Jacob Defence Fund can be mailed to P. 0. Box 696, Guelph, Ontario, N1I-I 6L3.

ONE

COLUMBIAIAKE TOWNHOUSE # APPLICATIONS e FORTHE ACADEMIC YEAR 1992/93

For further information contact the Housing Office, Village One or phone (519) 884-0544


*

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h

-..

-..

I

0

-

The opinion pages are designed for Imprint staff members or feature to present their views on various issues 1 and other articles on The opinions expressed in columns, . comment pieces, these pages are strictly those of the authors, not Imprint. Only articles clearly labelled “editorial” and unsigned represent the majority opinion of the hnprint editorial board. Opinion:

contributors

o.pinion.

ireside chat y Peter Brown

This week’s column is for the sports fans ir \e audience. If you aren’t one, please indulgr le and keep on reading. Sports is in the business of playing with you motions, with highs and lows - teams gc om worst to first and back again, buoying nd then dashing fans’ hopes, Warrior ant thena fans included. This year, we were treated to the bes ?gular season ever in school history for var ity football when the team compiled a 5-i 2cord and finished in second-place in tht NAA West. Then, disaster struck; Wilfric aurier, the team we had battered in wee1 even, returned the favour the following wee1 I knock us out of the playoffs. They advancer I, and won, the Vanier Cup. In hockey, the Warriors led their division fol lost of the season and rose as high as third ir le national rankings before losing to the iuelph Gryphons in the playoffs. Again aurier’s Hawks eliminated Guelph tc dvance to the nationals. But in both cases, the letdowns were ngular and from a successful pinnacle. Thiz inter, however, the men’s basketball tears as taken us along on a tantalizing rollercoas!r ride, fuelled by the hype of preseason hope ‘Id driven on by shimmering moments 01 rilliance. The team’s 7-7 is a telling indication i how this year has gone - it represents the sst and the worst of times. The season’s low point was a home-coun j-point loss to the Western Mustangs in the 4C and its high point came last weekend Jainst the same team, this time in Alumni Hall London. In recent weeks, the poetry of this team’s ‘ogress was made all the more visceral by the ?ws that this is Don McCrae’s 22nd and final mason as head coach of the team. in the last game of the 1991 campaign, we 3re treated to the chest-pounding, heart-inlur-throat thrill of Sean VanKoughnett flying ward the Western Mustangs’ zone like a run-bound Russ CourtnaIl and launching ree-pointers as soon as he entered visual nge of the hoop. In the second half of last weekend’s playoff Ime, as in all occasions when the Warriors Ive struck with force, the excitement doubled Alex Urosevic lent his unique brand of inlur-face trey bomb to the attack againstthe angs. He takes the pass on the baseline, bps, looks for the pass, leans into the defenr to fake the drive, and springs into the air, ling, releasing, and landing to the sound of ?sh 25 feet distant, Victory is sweet but beating Western is pure oxication. in fact, the only thing better than rating Western in the playoffs is doing so ice in one season, as the Warriors did during 5 1966 campaign. The Brock Badgers now occupy the lofty irch owned by Western last season: a tional number-one ranking. They are ,)iath, and if the Warriors can successfully #y David tomorrow, they will head back to ! magical PAC next weekend to participate the Wilson Cup. Even with a loss, the team must be credited those qualities exhibited by all varsity uads - trying their hardest and wanting, Ire than anything, to win. Something

about university

sports makes

lser to the heart than professional or other els. Perhaps it is the smaller size of the comunity or the sense of identification with our ers. Whatever it is, these feelings will follow to St. Catharines tomorrow morning and y with us always.

it

We are all friends of television ’

Entertainment. We have so much of it. Movies to see, bars to go to, and parties to attend. If you have to stay in for the evening,

we’d sleep more. The idea of closer family bonding occurring seems kind of hokey, akhough it might apply in some cases.

there’s 30 some-odd channels to choose from. Or you can walk down to the nearby video store. If you’re too young to go out, there’s still the television, but you’re more likely to fire up the Nintendo than the VCR For the elderly, television appears to be an easy way to burn up time until the birth certificate expires, Whatever your age or background, a regular dose of television is almost unavoidable, if not required. One can learn alphabets, dieting, cooking, positive thinking or the

leisure time? Probably. Time to in your hobbies and interests and therefore 1ikeIy more time to engage in twoway interpersonal communication, without the interference of electronics. I’m not going

good word

of you know

who

through

The result can be tragic, often fatally killing children. There were youths last year who, in an attempt to locate the Ninja Turtles, crawled down a New York sewer and, if I’m not mistaken, drowned. Perhaps the most prolonged, obvious, and well-known instance of trouble with reality distinction is the current trend of American youths solving their problems by killing one another with their parent’s, or their own, firearms The number of hours of television we ,. watch every day is incredible on one hand, yet understandable. It makes sense to get your “news” from the television in quick 20- or 30second segments every night, given the pure increase in not only the amount of “news” generated, but also the increase in the kinds of technology used to disseminate it. What are we to make of our f&cination with soap operas and feel-good comedies like T%e Cosby Show? The function of these shows, E think, are to provide the. majority of us urbanized folk with a sense of community, since actual “communities” are being

by expanding

cities or expanding

into one. On Friday morning. for example, it wouldn’t be unusual to find yourself offering an opinion about lik Shpm’s episode that aired the night before. I suspect this sort of diatribeis nothing new or revelational to most of us, but what are the consequences to our lifestyles and cukure? That is, what would we do each day for several hours, if televisions

to

suggest

we return

to living standards

of

but one has to wonder how the sheer volume of one-way mass communication (radio, television, newspapers) is affecting our interpersonal abilities and our culture. The most familiar example of its affect is pioneers,

building

just a few feet away.

WelI, that’s it. Just some thoughts to fill space. No specific point. Draw your own COPelusions. And enjoy the rest of this issue. Dave Thomson I

this

medium.

engulfed

More

indulge

/

receiving a phone call from someone in an office a hundred feet down the hallway from yours. By phone, fax, electronic mail or other means, answers to our questions and gigabytes of information are available almost instantaneously. For example, the first fax Imprint received on its new fax machine this winter was from athletics, a department in a

didn’t exist? I don’t think

The reasons for the Rag In the past few days, I have been besought with people asking why I chose to caLI the International Women’s Day pull-out section of last week’s Imprint a ‘rag.’ Briefly, Ill explain. I thorobghly accept that words like ‘rag’are often used in a context to denigmte women, and ‘rag’ in particular, to ridicule and reduce a woman’s anger to a mere symptom of her ‘inferior’ biological being. ‘Rag’ has often carried a degrading connotation, but so have the words: woman, wife, feminist, dyke, bitch, cunt and whore. These words are not inherent insuIts. I believe that words, as peo-

ple, change over time. I am not willing to give up language solely because someone chooses to use it against me; I would rather reclaim a word than lose it. I try to use as an analytical framework the context of a situation, dependent of course on my (always) limited awareness of many factors comprising a context. Though words are generally

prefer words

seen as having

to focus primarily

‘objective’

status, I

on the meaning

of

as understood by the speaker, and as intended for its audience. A politica belief of mine is that the less one has a vulnerability to those opposed to ones’ beIiefs, the easier it is to stay focused and direct energy towards affectink change, rather

than constantly being in a defensive position of having to validate. I do not choose to limit myself personally nor politically by those who are opposed to my ideas. From these beliefs and in the spirit of reclaiming, I decided to name the pullout section “International Women’s Day Rag.” Both the content and perspectives of the pullout was unusual for (even a campus) newspaper: PMS, women’s anger, pads, lesbians in academia. Part of empowerment is to (re)claim as a sense of strength what has

traditionally been used to minimalize. I am certainly not the first (self-identified) feminist to reclaim ‘rag’; the Vancouver publication, Diver@: Thu ksbiurt Rug, dedicated

several pages in its first issues to a

similar debate. Their masthead continues to carry the oxford Engksh Dictionury definition of rag: “an extensive display of disorderly conduct, carried on in defiance of authority or discipline.”

I accept that 3ume people will continue Co disagree with my choice of words. Upon having received complaints I felt a responsibility to explain my choice of words; please understand, this is not an apotogy,


~~~ ~~ ~ Forum: 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 or other articles on these pages are strictly those of the authors, not Imprint. Send or hand deliver your typed, double-spaced letters to Imprint, Campus Cer,trc 140. Mai1 can also be sent via e-mail to imprint@watservi.Waterloo-edu. Be sure to Include your phone number with all correspondence. The deadline for submitting letters is 5:OO pm Monday. The maximum length for each entry is 400 words, although longer pieces may be accepted at the editor’s discretion. All material -e-

We’ll heed you next time To the editor,

Well, Louise Graham, 2A Civil Engineering (and proud of it), and also a number of people on Imprint staff, as well as several others around campus: You have all had various things to say about the conduct of the recent Fed. election, and the vote on UFS, and I have something to say about your several opinions First off, Louise, it is a GOOD’thing to have opinion in a Newspaper. This idea that a newspaper should report just the facts, and nothing else is absurd, because an opinion involved in even choosing which facts to report, and how to go about reporting them. Anyway it is fairly obvious when something someone states is an opinion: you managed to figure it out, for example. And while it might not be prudent for a National newspaper to assume that it’s readers are reasonably intelligent, I should certainly hope that this a safe assumption for a university paper. And Louise, as to your anger about the suggestion that the Engineering undergrads vote as a bloc (“like sheep”) - well, it is something that has been true at U of W for quite some time now. Whether you think of it as being “like sheep” or “with faculty spirit” is completely a matter of perspective. But in any case there is really nothing wrong with it, and no reason why it shouldn’t happen. And lastly, to all of you: Louise, the Imprint, and everyone else who has got so upset recently about the election: WHY? The Federation of Students is a nothing organization. It represents almost nobody (10 per cent? 12 per cent?) and does very little. I’m sure that the Bombshelter and Fed. Hall, and the variety of other student services could exist quite happily without the Federation executive. That Imprint is upset because such a pathetic, small, and unimportant club didn’t let the paper know what was going on is rather funny, and not at all complementary to the paper.

seems to have spilled over onto our university campus. The situation I am talking about is the civil war taking place in the old (but no longer existent Yugoslavia. As the son of Croatian parents (I myself was not born there), 1 found the latest announcement by Serbian president Slobodan Milosevic that, “the civil war in Croatia is over” to be a bit of a relief. I must say, though, that I was quite annoyed on Thursday, February 27, when I saw the Serbian Chetnik symbol emblazoned on the wall by the stairs leading up to South Campus Hall. I shrugged it off, knowing fuII well what it was, but thinking that this was just an isolated incident. But, I was mistaken. In a stairweIl in the Modem Languages Building some Serbian (or supporter of Serbia) had left another sign of their presence. There was also graffiti in one of the bathrooms in ML, commenting on the sexual orientation of Croation males. I have also learned thaton a stop sign on campus someone had stuck the word “Croatia” under the STOP. I have had my car vandalized twice (stickers put over a Croatian sticker, and a tire slashed); and I’m directly blaming the Serbian students at this university. I have been going to this university for two years now, and have not encountered any “ethnic problems” until Croatia declared its independence Iast June. I did not come to Canada to fight Serbs. I don’t think any Croatian student has any intention of inflicting any harm to any Serbian student, but the Serbians are making it awfully hard for us not to notice them. I guess my point if this: the war is being waged in Croatia. Let’s keep it there, and not bring it here, is that too much to ask? Yugoslavia is DEAD. Croatia has fought for independence, and there’s no force will bring back under Serbo-communist rule. And I think it’s about time some peopte noticed that. Name withheld

Watch out for that freezer burn

wells

P. S.: In the next Fed. election, DONT vote.

I suggest you

OFS doesn’t represent professional students To the editor, Peter Brown has retracted his comments likening engineering students to sheep but he continues to offend with his condescending suggestion that engineering students are . “like-minded” while the Faculty of Arts has “more diversity.” In searching for explanations of why engineering students voted overwhelmingly to withdraw from the Ontario Federation of Students, Brown has overlooked the obvious: the OFS does a poor job of representing engineering students. In fact, it’s not representative of students in any professional program. Mathew EngIander 4N lkglisln/Math

This is a time when much is being made of euthanasia and the right to die. But what of the right to live? Neither the state nor one’s relatives may morally force themselves upon one. Why is self-determination not recognized as the simple moral right that it is?

For euthanasia may be a strategic move. What if your brain is being slowly destroyed by a brain tumour that modem medical technology is helpless to cure. Cryonics should be used. Cryonics is a last-resort measure of freezing critically ill people who may be thought of as “dead” or who are declared legally dead, in hope that they might not be really dead if they, that is, their memories, (and only secondly, their DNA) can be successfully saved until medical technology has advanced to the level at which a whole new body can be grown for them. What good would it do to have pronunciation of legal death forbidden only until after your brain is totally destroyed by the tumour? If you can declare yourself legally dead, ie. invoke euthanasia, you just might be able to give the grim reaper a judo throw. In general, however, you should join a Cryonics organization at an early>’ age as Iife insurance. There are three Cryonics organizations who have frozen many people. They are: The Cryonics Institute in Detroit, contact Robert Ettinger at (313) 548-9549, The American Cryonics Society in San Francisco, contact Jim .Yount at (415) 639-1955, and the Alcor Foundation in bs Angeles, contact Ralph Whelan at (714) 736-l 703 or (800) 367-2228. Alcor now has custody of the longest-frozen patient, a man frozen in 1967.

Leave war in the homeland To the editor, I am writing this letter in an effort to uncover an issue which has been overlooked for the past few months, as I’m afraid that it

James Wkbe BASc, 1987

rrRagy9offensive

International Women’s Week printed in the February 28 Imprint. AZ1 of the pieces were written thoughtfully and courageously. The body of articles has acted as a catalyst, encouraging more informal discussion of gender-related issues that I have ever heard on campus before. As a female in a male dominated faculty, I find the dialogue among my male classmates especially encouraging. I am disappointed, however, at the Imprint staff’s choice of titIe for the pull-out section: “The International Women’s Day Rag.” The word rag has many connotations. By my interpretation, none of them are positive. While it may have seemed fit& printing “Rag Rag Rag” on the front of the section was certainly not a mind-opening introduction for such a sensitive group of issues. Please clarify the intended meaning of your label if I have misinterpreted it.

in last week’s issue of Imprint. I haven’t had such a good Iaugh since.. . well since the last time you pubIished a Women’s Day section. Like many of your readers, I’m not exactly sure what %eterosex.ism’, lesbophobia’, and ‘eco-feminism’are supposed to mean, but I do find these word derivations highly amusing. You will be happy to know that this linguistic creativity is not confined to the Women’s Studies faculty. As a case in point, I, Iike other members of my floor at residence, am proud to be an official ‘cunnilinguy.’ Sadly, I doubt whether any of these words will find their way into the next edition of the QED, but one never knows. As for the problem of those people who unjustly accuse feminists of being lesbians, perhaps you should reread the article entitled ‘An Academadyke.’ It seems to me that you state their case for them After alt what is one

Ann Mauoly 2A sy?3texns Design

to make of the V/omen’s Dance’ listed in the itinerary of events. Now there’s a get-together I really don’t care to hear about.

Engineering

Right-toopression To the editor, It is appropriate that we respond to Chris Reitzel’s letter ‘Stats Misleading’ {Imprint, 28 February). Chris challenged our claim, made in the previous issue of Imprint, that teenage pregnancy in Kitchener-Waterloo decreased from 1976 to 1989 by forty percent. The figures from the Ministry of Health and an independent study by M. Orton and E. Rosen’ blatt for McMaster University (due for press release 11 March) are as follows: in 1976 there were 804 teenage pregnancies, and by 1989 this had been lowered to only 479, down 40.4 percent. In 1976,247 of these women opted for an abortion; in 1989, 163 did, down 34.0 This had resulted primarily from family planning of the sort in which Planned parenthood engages, which includes education about contraception and sexuality. Such programs are “coktructive” in that they empower young women (and men) to control their bodies and their lives. It is irresponsible to claim that Planned Parenthood “strongly advocates kiIling unborn babies”. This vicious lie is typical of Right-to-Life supporters. Planned Pamtthmd prwid~~ cowpkte and unbiased cou?~w~~i~~gthqv udvucatu mthifjg but i~!fomwd choice. Right-to-Life has contributed nothing to reducing the number of abortions in K-W. In fact, they have made our community more dangerous. While denouncing Planned Parenthood, Chris blithely condemns “seriously harming a mother” (ie. a woman). But on 26 may, 1990 a 16-year old woman in Kitchener was “seriously hanned” and hospitalized following a ‘backstreet’ abortion. Had information about safe alternatives been more widely available, this would not have happened. And now that evpv doctor who performed abortions has stopped because of harassment, this tragedy is more Iikely to recur,

This suits’ Right-to-Life just fine. It is disingenuous to defend Right-to-Life while claiming to be “partial to life, motherhood and health.” This organization is a menace: it puts young women in danger; it praised the defeat of the proposed Women’s Health Centre; it supports attacks on pro-choice physicians; and it’s slander at Regional Council - combined with the other smear campaigns (see KW Rmrd, 29 February) - nearly cost Planned Parenthood its provincial funding. The restricted ‘life, motherhood and health” that Right-to-Life advocates for women aims to curtail non-traditional, autonomous lifestyle by denying access to necessary resources, especially abortion services. They are also eager to censor information. Although we do not believe your claim to have “studied” PIanned Parenthood, Chris Reitzel, we do believe that you have the right to do so. Unlike you, however, we believe that every woman in K-W is fit to enjoy this same right, and to judge for herself. Bryan smith Scott Mintz

This guy’s sad

To the editor,

I would like to compliment the authors the articles that appeared in the tribute

to editing.

percent.

by request

To the editor, Justin

is subject

of to

To the editor,

My compliments

.on. your Women’s

Day

section

I think the rest of the stion speaks for itself. I won’t deny that parts of it deal with some pretty important issues, although some of your contributors could perhaps upgrade their English writing skills. Maybe next year you can excerpt the really good stuff and include it as part of a special humour supplement. In any case, I eagerly await the next issue of Imprint, where I shall no doubt be publically castigated for my small contribution to the raging natural-fibre tampon controversy. James Coleman

Freedom opinion

of

To the editor, I am writing in response to Martin Bruin’s letter (“Naked Choice”) from February 28. In his letter, Mr. Bruin attacks the concept that everyone is entitled to their own opinion in as much as there is some higher morality which overrides choice. I’m afraid Mr. Bruin has missed the point entirely about freedom of choice and opinion. It’s not a question of there being an objective truth, but rather one of whose idea of it do we follow. In my opinion, we can’t argue for or against the existence of higher morality because it has no physical form. How do we detect an objective “reality” with only subjective senses? I, like hundreds of mi.IIions of others, do happen to beiieve there is a higher truth - but none of us can prove it exists. We just believe it is there. The big problem and the source of all the debate is that we all believe in different things. Who is to say whose version of reality is right and whose is wrong? You? Me? Many people think that Church leaders and scriptures reveal the objective and m&al truth. But whose church? Even amongst Christians vthere is much dissent - to say nothing of all the other religions in the world. So how, Mr. Bruin, can you say there is some overriding morality that we just have to “sense” and follow? You say anti-abortionists are just in favour of making “good” choices. Whose experience of this objective good are we talking about? For ail we know, the pro-lifers may be right - but the point is that we don’t know. We just believe. In my opinion, we as a society get our laws and “truths” when enough people believe in a thing to force others to follow. Like it or not, higher morality has nothing to do with it. This imperfect

process is exactly why I believe we

must all have the right to hold and express our own opinions - out own imperfect vision of that elusive objective truth. For all anyone knows, society may be wmng and that one dissenting voice may be right; or perhaps it is

the other way around. The point is that no one One way or another, we can only believe - and thatis just not the same thing as knowing. Therefore, we must all have the right to hold and express our own beliefs -

can know.

even

hri

Be&stead.

To forbid

anyan@

to

express; (or even hold) their own opinion is to risk having just such an attitude focussed back on yourseIfsomeday by someone who thinks he or she has a better handle on “objective” reality and morality than you do. Travis Capener 4B Rhetckc and Pr&&mal

Writing


MEDIA

SURFING

by MichaeI Bryson Imprint staff

and maybe I’ll love yOu by Phillip

Chee

Where I iive, there is no blue-box recycIing program, Instead the city has opted for neighbourhti green dumpsters because it’s cheaper. Bloated garbage bins these large, green, plastic containers are; three to a site, scattered on various street corners, like automated banking machines, their single, push-open mouths stuffed with Globe and Mails, 1I-a Btxws, Allo-&h&s; corrugated paperboard, flattened boxes; empty tins and cans that once held tomatoes, kidney beans, syrupy fruit, Thai chili paste, coconut milk; foreign and domestic wine bottles, cheap and dear; and a number of restricted items - plas tic bags, glossy Elle magazines, ang white paper fragments with somebody’s deep but frivolous inner thoughts. And excess recyclables are stacked neatly beside these satisfied eco-green machines giving a false fastidious sheen amid the imprint of the wasteful societyThere is something disturbing in this image. As equally dishzrbiig as the one in which it was reported in a letter to the editor to the Montnwl Gazette, of a woman who walked her dog while driving in her BMW, near Concordia University. No kidding. She drove, stopped, drove slowly, stopped and continued in this manner while her pooch trotted on the sidewalk beside the car. The letter writer was correct in pointing out this blatant exampIe of’let them eat cake” (my hyperbole), damn-the-poor attitude that afflicts the wealthy class. It is comforting to know in thesf depressionary times that the time-honoured practice of flaunting your wedth hasn’t much changed. StiII, it may or

may not have been -20 degrees outside - it was February. I don’t want to argue about the immorality of this act, here, - that’s for you to decide but just to say it was quite tactless. These two images have more in common than I would like to admit. Both seem to be illustrations of the cuItura1 attitude of the “throw away society”. The poor and middleclass can imitate the rich by being environmentally good citizens. The green glutton and the blue boxes attest not to a heightened environmental awareness by ordinary folk. No, I think it reflects the same mindset of that woman walking her dog with her car. It is the outlook of having too much or trying to have too much because you have too little. Granted, there are those who genuinely believe they are doing their duty by participating in the Great Recycling Campaign. Every little bit helps - I do ‘it. But we shouldn’t stop there. I don’t give much stock to those who argue that environmentalisni is an ideological damper on capitalism’s parade toward greater prosperity and a higher standard of limg for society. “Society” is often times an exclusive club. That “Other” we call nature, or resources by the more economically inclined, will run out or be irreparably damaged, no longer able to replenish quickIy enough to meet the demand for ever more and more goods. A broader society unfettered ,by class interests (a tied Marxist cliche, perhaps) that is organized around ecological principles gives many an unpleasant vision of Utopia. But this seems eminently preferable to the corporate oligarchy that is the Utopian dream of the G7 industrialized states.

“If you build it, he will come.” - W.P. Kinsella, Shoeless Joe I wasn’t exactly the president of the Madonna haters fan club, but to this day the only money I’ve spent on the Motor City diva is the eight bucks I forked over to see that luscious and ludicrous rockumentary, Truth or Dare, a rare and insightful (if cliched) look into the chutzpa behind the glamour, Worth seeing, even if you couldn’t care less about Ms. Cicconi’s obsessive personality or her sugar pop tart ballads. Usually, I find myself in tune with Sean Penn’s assessment of the former “Boy Toy” and Mrs. Penn: (on Letterman) “Actudly, Dave, like I was saying earlier about things getting blown out of proportion . . . We’ve never met.” Who cares about Madonna anyway? Certain women, like Camille Paglia (of Sexupl Personae fame)’ in particular, have championed the Material Girl as a .more fully appropriate - and, in fact, the most excellent - fematle role-model ever to have come out of popular culture’s corporate towers, which may very likely be true. This isn’t saying much. Myself, I’ve just borrowed a,friend’s sister’s copy of Wayne’s and Garth’s number one babe’s greatest hits package, “The ImmacuIate Collection.” (As in “the immaculate conception”? Whoa, hold off on the Catholic imagery.) And, to describe a certain conversion experience (devirginization), it ain’t bad, man. That is, “tb be. touched for the very first time.” (WhoaJ Truly. Yeah, Madonna, you made me feel shiny and new.

And though, really, I’m not that kind of boy, this time was different. Special. Exuberant. I mean, hey. Ill be the first one to give the woman credit for staying power, but listening to “HoIiday” ten years after the fact (God, really) , . . I -was right up there on my tippy tms, snapping my fingers, having a grand 01’ time. When,it was first released, we all did our best to ignore it (Viva Zeppelin!). But listening to this CD, a little older and a little wiser, I began to think that even a Marilyn Monroe wanna-be can be a smart cookie, if she wants to be. With songs progressing from “Material Girl” rend “Crazy for You” to “Express Yourself” kd “Justify My L,ove,“Madonna has shown a maturing talent for strong. assertive, albeit danceabIe songs about love, relationships and power. Even early songs like “Borderline” have elements of later declarative lyrics like, “you’ve got to make him express himself/ to show you how he feels/ tell you *at his love is real.” What’s perhaps most interesting about songs like, say, “Borderline” and “Express YourseE” is the shift from the earlier almost helpless wishfulness of “you’re pushing my love” to the dynamic and pedantic “you’ve got to . . .“A sign of the times? Maybe. Madonna a feminist? Sure. So, yeah, Madonna. Party on. You’ve earned my respect. Will you still love me in the morning?

EXTRA, EXTRA . . , Rhetoric is everywhere. On a recent episode of ‘Netvhart” the town is debating whether to cut down a scenic forest to make room for development. Developer: “God has done his part (by making the trees); now it’s time we did ours (and cutthem down).” George claps. Bob scolds him. George: “Boy, that guy can really play with your mind.”

whether-youlike to Suvfthe wavesof Media, aperiencePalant&, or know what the heck &os means,Imprint’s forum pagesarefor you. 140by Pleasesubmit typewvittenor soft copylettersor commentsto CampusCentre, Mondaysat 5p.m. Label it to the attention of the editor.

N

ot all of our fields are on the ground. You could be leading a team of top fight technicians testing state-of-the-art equip-

ment and keeping

installations

at combat

reacIi.t-~~.

If you’re an engineering or science graduate, there are chakigingcar~ open in the Canadian Armed Forces now. And degree subsidy programs are available for tomorrow’s graduates.

We offer many officer positions for men and women in engineering and selected science disciplines in several fields of military employment. Start with

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and a secure future. The Canadian Armed Forces.It’s a serious job. This is a serious offer. Check us out.


Notice is hereby given of the

Annual 9. Meeting of Ithe Federation of Stwknts University of Waterloo, a corporation under the laws of the Province of Ontario to be held on Thursday, March 12,1992 at 890 p.m. in the Great Hall of the Campus Centre. The agenda for this meeting is as follows: 1.

Appointment of the Board of Directors.

2.

CXTicer’s Report 1991-92.

3.

Motion pursuant to By-Law 1, Article 4: “Be it resolved that the Federation of Students Fee be increase by 95 cents per student effective September 1, 1992.”

4.

Tabled from the Novcmbcr 26.1991 me&i%

5.

M&on

to de&e By-law 9, International Students Board.

Motion to amend By-Law 1, Article III, A concerning Voting Membership as follows: _.il . . . i “~~~~~~~r’itig~‘r~~jl’il~4~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~iiP~~~~~~~~~:~~~iiIAn ijn.ii;Giy _...Gi. .*aierioo;

“*dergraduate . ..$.;

. consci. e.,. nce,

.r;;..‘~;;i~;i.‘...f

., .,.

student

of

the

8.

., ._ ., ,.,._. .

does not wish to be a member of the Corporation may signify this in writing to the Board of Directors and shall cease to ,be,.member ,_,_.,_ ., . of the,, Corporation upon receipt of this notice by the Board of Directors. T&$~~ h~~e~~~~::.g,~~~~~~fundah!r:

Motion to amend By-Law 1, Article XII, D and E concerning Referenda as follows: ” The Brrnrcl $ttid&@Z$Z%ttt@ shall appoint a returning officer to conduct the .,.,.,. .:. .,...,..,._.,.,., .......:...., referendum. The question to be decided, with the exact wording, shall be published in an issue of a recognized newspaper with widespread circulation on the campus of the University of Waterloo and@ placed on all Corporation bulletin boards, not later than six (6) days -before the opening of the polls. If the notice cannot be published for any reason by the newspaper, it shall be brought to the attention of the members by other means deemed advisable by the Board of Directors.

D. E.

6.

Motion to amend By-Law 1, Article tV, A concerning Collection of Dues as follows:

, P

“The Corporation shah cndeavour to enter into agreement with the Corporation of the University of Waterloo, in order that a student activity fee may be collected by the University from each undergraduate student, both full and part-time, at the time of registration each academic term’, and thaI these kes may be awarded to the Corporation on a fee-per-student basis at the beginning of each 9.

7.

Motion to amend By-Law I, Article VII, J concerning Students’ Council Standing Comrnittecs as follows:

Motion to amend By-Law 6, concerning the Board of Entertainment.

I. A. B.

PURPOSE AND FUNCTION asskt ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ all major social activities of the members of the Toe ::.::.:::,+: ::::.:>_: ,:::_........::.:;.:.:...:.:.: :ii‘7.‘.. Federation of Students.

To

&&j&

* . . . .._.:. . .\>. .:. :: ::. :. . .

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~a~ i. .:c~,i:.:.:...:I.:c...:...;. . .*:,*. A’...

basis such asT%t”not Events.

..

. . .,

.I ,....1.... . . . . . :.!.:<.x<<<

. .<$

h 2:. . . . . . ,I. . . . . 5.. . -.-:

events

on

an

ann”al

,. i..... ._.

limited to) Orientation, Homecommg, Wmter Carnrval, and Summer Outdoor

9

I .. II. B.

El

MEMBERSHtP

D.

The following shall be non-voting members of the Board: the Federation’s Director of Programming; 9 iii) @v) + !V)

ii)

the President and Vice-Prcsidcnts of the Fcdcration of Students, ex-officio; the Special Events Co-ordinator; and such members as the Board may, from time to time, see fit to appoint to the Board.

IV.

.

A.

Orientation Commission

.

Travel Commission Mcmbcrship

to the Commission.

COMMISSIONS

ii)

Duties and Functions To assist’ and. help to <oordinate the programmes of all organizations condkting rIIrientat& ktivities in the Fall term. TO pFevidtraj&t iti ihG.,provisititi’ of a campus wide programme for the 2) oricntatirxr of frash and returning undergraduate students. Membership 1)

10.

Adjournment.

to the Commissjnn. B.

Homecoming Commission ii)

THE AGENDA FOR THIS MEETING IS IUZSTRR7ED WHICH PROPER NOTICE HAS BEEN GIVEN.

Membership Ihe1 1)

. John Lddy Presidcat * * * * * * - * * * * * * * * * * - t * * * * - - ~ * * * * * * * * * - - - * * - - - - - * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ~ * * * ~ * * * * * * * * * * “ * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * “ *

REMEMBER!!

PROXY FORMS ARE AVAT-LJIBLE TN THE FEDERATION OF STUDENTS OFFICE IN THE CAMPUS CEN?WZ ROOM 235. THIZSE MUST BE RETURNED BY WEIXES~AY, MARCH 11 AT 43-OP.M.

l

ALL THOSE ATTENDING, PLEASE YOUR STUDENT ID CARD.

Winterfest Commission

1)

Mcmbcrship the ; 9-1:

drdiniitir:

. .

.

I

Eveots;Co-

to the Commission.

3

f

l to the Commission.

ii)

ITEMS OF BUSINESS, FOR

. 1

d ~“.‘...‘... @pats cw&aat&, 8-j :. :.....;.,:;,y~&$!j$&~, a Student Alumni Association representative; @I an Alumni Affairs representative; an Athletic Department representative; a-rid

C*

TO THE ABQVE

MAKE

SUM

YOU

HAVE


Forum

10 Imprint, Friday, March 6, 1992

FEMINIST FRAMEWORKS to happen, so here is a quick questionnaire determine whether this is happening you.

lhisisthefirstinstallmentofanew~ly feminist CO)umn to be run in Imprint, The column is Mended to tse a w&3 for kminists within the student body of within faculty and as such should be somewhat representatiw of the dMty of opinions about the wmen’s mowment and different feminist schools of thought. This mek, Lori kckstmd explores pke dis m’s and men’s crepanclesbe~ productsandwvices.Cotumnsintheneti fewwekswMeatweit7enon-existenceof abortion services in Kitchew-Waterloo, Roberta 0ondar, and gender-specific humour, among other subjects.

to to

Question 1: Are you female? Scoring: If you answered “yes” to question 1, then ves, you are being ripped off. tt seems that a woman pays more for several basic goods and services than men do. In other words, it costs a woman more simply to exist in this society. Don’t get me wrong; I am in no way asserting that men don’t get ripped off (anyone who is a consumer has certainly been ripped off more than once}, nor am I saying that men don’t spend a great deal of money during their lifetime. What I am asserting is that women often pay more for the feminine version of a product than a man pays for the masculines version of that same product. Furthermore, this type of sexual discrimination is blatant - all I had to do to find proof was to take a tip to the local mall. At the drugstore I discovered many examples of pricediscrimination according to the gender of the consumer. Take, for example,

Discriminating prices by Lori Beckstead Money is a primary concern for most people, especially for us students who, in general, don’t have any to spare. Getting ripped off is the last thing a person on a tight budget wants

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by Phillip Chee I&print staff

You will look far and wi

There was a book published in Great Britain just after the First World War called “The ICrisis of Democracy” and that cry has been raised often in the past 90 years in the face of rising socialist and pacifist ideals. Typically, this rhetorica label has been used as a pretext to bash any opposition to State aggression and repression in the so-called democratic countries. For example, near the end of the US invasion of Vietnam, this refrain was heard chiding the chorus of student, counterculture anti-war demonstrations that had soured middle America’s support for the military offensive. Paradoxically, there is a crisis of democracy if one steps outside of the conventional use of this epithet. As I see it, most industrialize4 nations do not actually have democratic forms of governance adjoined to their political institutions. By that I mean a face-to-face, participatory democracy. And the use of this term “a crisis of democracy” by those who would justify state power to quash dissent obscures ~this very real problem. There is not a more effective argument than to suggest that in our complex, global village, the Greek face-to-face democracy is inadequate to meet the needs of modern people. You might even add that this is the best possible arrangement that we have come up with to face the challenge of maintaining order and the rule of law among inherently selfish andcompetitive individuals. Although I’m no political scientist - no “secular priesthood”. for this independent writer who values his own thoughts, small though they may be - some familiarity with our contemporary social institutions must be addressed. By doing so, we may then be in a position to guard ourselves against the public relations (read: propaganda) verbiage that infects so much of our political discourse from those in positions of power and authority. First, let us address and hopefully agree upon the concept of democracy. Conventional wisdom offers at least four interpretations or meanings, though it could be expanded to embrace many more: 1) government by the people - a form of government in which supreme power is rested in the peopie and exercised directly by them or by their elected agents under a free electoral system; 2) a state having such a form of government; 3) political or social equality; democratic spirit; 4) the common people with respect to their political power. The word “democracy” is derived from the Greek citwnkrd~, or popular government. What I will try to show in a very sketchy portrait is how the “official history,” the democratic rhetoric we are given does not correspond to the “real history” of democracy in practice, a history that is certainly real for its victims. Constituents,

voters,

taxpayers

or serfs?

The first meaning does not exist in the West. In the three traditional levels of government in most industrialized countries municipal, provincial or state, and federal all are based on some form of representation either parliamentary or republican or some hybrid of the two. Although this may sound absurd to some, the feature that links a Western democratic country and a communist country is the fact that both have capitalistic economic systems: the former is corporate and the later is Statemanagerial. Do not believe the trite phrase that the end of the Cold War was a triumph fur capitalism. Think of it more as restructuring. Noam Chomsky’s &&ting Dumocrtlcv (Versa, 1991), his scathing critique of Bush’s New World Order, throws some interesting historical light on the ideological construct that was the Cold War.

Switzerland and less im$& oversee ati Most jurisdictions

construed as democracy here. a “professional system of social coerMurray Bookchin writes (Remaking %cieg, Bla& Rose Books, 1989) lsBookchin argues that states are not necessarily tools for exploitation used by a ruling class but some “were the ‘ruling class’.” They existed as “extended households” of monarchies and families, where the whole of society was the state itself, such as the Ptolemaic family in ancient Egypt. (For a more complete discussion of the emergence of hierarchies and states, see Bookchin’s The Ecology of Freedom, and Urbanization Without Cities, both 1991 publications from Black Rose Books.) In fact, the rise of the state and more recently the nation-state (as two separate phenomena, the former be epitomized by

The 1982 Canadian constitutional repatriation and the Meech Lake Accord are two obvious examples. The Canada-US Free Trade Agreement is another. The underlying assumption here is that because most people do not know what is good for them, then a small coterie of self-appointed experts who 1 * *a . . snould m .. have a clear bx3ion orClnow society function I are entitled to hash out the logistics of such a monumental task. The abolition of professional privilege, if you ask me, is long overdue. The United

SWW of America

Now let us turn to the se&&meaning of democracy. By definition, a state is a &I government as distinguished from individuals or the church or whatever religious authority holds sway over a society. After arguing against the first instance above, it follows that a democratic state is not democratic, by definition. Sounds a bit Orwellian but I assure you it isn’t. Look at it this way: The modern state is the collective apparatus of representatives and its bureaucratic support system - the peopIe, or civil servants, whom we face when we pick up our welfare cheque. The state also holds a monopoly on legal violence, vested in the military and the police. You will find little that

imperial Rome and the latter by the US), spelled the end of freedom of democracy in the industrialized countries. George Woodcock, Canada’s most perceptive social critic, calls the Canadian parliamentary system fiveyear fascism (Canadiun Forum, December 1990). His argument is that Canadians only get a taste of political freedom on election day and that leadership has been degraded to nothing more than “the cult of the leader” as it entrenches a corporate oligarchy in Ottawa. American author Bertram Gross labels his own country’s state of affairs friendly fascism (Ftiendlv Fascism, South End Press, 1982). The “democratic” corporate capitalist state can no Ionger exercise violence against its own people, as what the state capitalists of China did during the student protests in Tiananmen Square in 1989, but must resort to subtle though control. In practice, this has been achieved by the culture industry known as Hollywood andJ&qeyland in the West. ‘War,

whslt is it &ad

for? It’3 good for bud-

negs.“ Let us illustrate friendly fascism at work, or having so much fun as the rap group Consolidated puts it. Many Third World countries created governments along the western political model after gaining independence.

(Some had to first await the fall of domestic dictatorships, as was often the case.) It was the only way for these countries to quaIify for the massive development aid and relief that was to be had ever since the Truman administration committed the US to Third World deveIopment - a major part of its global economic strategy of securing markets for US capital. And of course these countries were free to develop their own forms of democracy so long as US corporate interests were protected. When some of the governments became overly “nationalistic” ie. advocating domestic control over their economies, greater citizen participation in political affairs, and popular movements for social reform they ran into troubIe with Uncle Sam. Overnight they became state regimes, “Communists”, and/or Soviet-sponsored dictatorships among many colourful invective adjectives found in the editorial rhetoric of The Nau York Times and K%e Washington Post. Never mind that these governments, or the new, popularly elected ones, were implementing democratic reforms, US business risked losing profitable markets and cheap resources; ergo, they must be undermined. This is what happened to So&h Vietnam on a morbidly massive scale during the 1960s and to Nicaragua during the 1980s of the Reagan administration, But wasn’t the task of Kennedy’s and later Johnson’s administration to protect the South Vietnamese from the Soviet-backed, Communist north? “Don’t let Viekain fall.” And weren’t the Sandinistas a bunch of totalitarian anti-democrats? Well, the US invasion of Vietnam was quite complex tind this is not the space for a @uonoIogical history. However, let me put it this way. Doesn’t it seem absurd that if you want to save a country from Commuriism you would carpet-bomb them bck to the Stone ‘Age? It happened. Not to mention the secret bombing of Cambodia and Laos iri’a spurious attempt to flush out the Viet Gong. Only a cynic would venture to say that Western European and Japanese capitalism needed a new market; recdnstruction would be a logical outcome of this naked aggression. A more educative example would be the covert, economic war waged by the US on Nicaragua (as a result of the YYietnam Syndrome”). This was a proxy war between the two superpowers, it has often been suggested. This argument falls flat when you consider that the US, via the Contras, was fighting the Nicaraguan government, the Sandinistas, who were put in place by a popular insurrection that toppled the US-friendly Somoza regime in 1979. A popular insurrection, I may add, that echoed the democratic spirit of 1776. Therefore, the role of the Soviet Union is irrelevant to our discussion here. The real reason for the US-backed campaign against Nicaragua was the Sandinista government’s social reforms that improved the general welfare of the peasant population and the poor workers. The Sandinistas removed institutional barriers to agrarian, any educational, and economic refornis. Such popular movements that the US government and its media lap dogs besmirched as Communist aggression against US security were actually democratic processes. In the eyes of US strategic planners, the development of popular movements within Nicaragua threatened the interests of US busi- i ness. While the Sandinistas were not saints, in comparison to the governments in El Salvador. and Guatemala, they never indulged in the brutality of the statesponsored death squads in the latter two countries. The Sandinistas did not murder their opponents. Meanwhile, the majority of ordinary working people in the US weren’t even paying attention That is because the US government

%ontinued

tb page 12m


Features

12 Imprint, Friday, March 6, 1992

Government ‘of tl$t? people )mnt’d. from page 110 fits the model, indeed is the paradigm, of the “state-corporate nexus” that protects the power, interests, and privilege of an elite class of industrialists, lawyers, and politicians by hiding reality from its own citizens, with the help of the mainstream media. (See Noam Chomsky’s N4cessury Illusions - l%oug/zt Cont.& in Lkmocm~ic Societies, Anansi, 1991, for further discussion.) No such situation exists to this extent in Canada at the moment, but Mr. Muhoney is trying his damnedest to imitate it. Witness corporate Canada’s behaviour (with me Globe and Mails editors as cheerleaders) in regards to the Free Trade Argument and the 1988 federal election. Would you or I have the financial wherewithal to influence the electorate? Or what about the recently completed constitutional conferences? The government randomly chose citizens to attend 1 one of the five conferences, yet can we honestly believe they were representative of the vast differences in opinions that make up our society. Democracy

Today

Sadly, our third meaning of democracy has no existential reality in our world. Social equality, I think, necessitates the absence of a class system, at least as a precondition. Class structures still abound in every corner of the , world while political equality is difficult to manifest in our current parliamentary and party system. But this class system is not -necessarily an economic one. Indeed, -throughout history, the will to dominate has -emerged prior to the economic system of modem capitalism. This will to dominate may “still linger even after economic equality has ! been reached. 1 The interests of capital and power l invariably sets the political agenda. Not since the last depression in the 1930s has the voice iof the poor and workers been heard ‘meaningfully. And since that time, popular f movements, unions, cooperatives, and many rforrns of voluntary citizens’ organizations 1

have effectively been marginalized and silenced. The Reform Party is not a popular, grassroots movement as its leader and acolytes may claim They reflect the pyramidal power structures of the party system so well they don’t need a mirror to tailor the business suit of a parliamentarian to fit them. It is reaction in disguise. Trotsky betrayed the Russian workers and I’m afraid that Preston Manning will do the same to

Canadians. Is the picture beginning to fill in? If we do have a crisis of democracy in our midst, how should we remedy it? Current political institutions are a systematic mess. Mere parliamentary reforms are not enough. Indeed, as reported by i?!te Globe and Mail, MI% in Ottawa have already dismissed the recently released proposals of a royal commission on parliamentary reform and election spending.

And contrary to Marx, the state will not wither away when the workers form the state. Nor will our indifference and apathy hurry it along either. Such a stance only strengthens its hold on all areas of life, Political reform till have to involve the broader issues of ensuring economic democracy as well as political democracy. T,his will certainly mean a reevaluation of market ‘values and the dominance of capitalism as modes of producing the things of everyday life - food, clothing, shelter, energy. There are other ways of doing things. Fundamentally, democracy is the political power of the common people. The adjective “common” merits some comment because we can make a small distinction without it. In a perfect world, or as close to Utopia as possible (which is not what I’d wish for, because that is too limiting), democracy would be the political power just the people, equal and free. But because of the prevalence of classes - castes, according to Paul Fussell’s satiric formulation (Class, Ballantine, 1983) - to veil the latter conception of democracy over our present conditions obscures the social inequality that exists qua our present conditions. But the fourth meaning of democracy can provide the basis for a true democratic praxis. Every issue - equality, freedom, and social justice - must weave itself into the democratic fabric. Recovering the best thoughts of socialist and anarchist dissent has now become an urgent project. This at a time when the left has lost much credibility. And although their many internal contradictions must be faced with and resolved, popular movements such an.feminism and environmentalism can help concerned women and men sustain a comprehensive critique of the status quo. To dismiss them outright is myopic at best and fatal at worst They have already created a shift in people’s values. They are not bandwagons. In the next article, I will try to expand from this premise in an exclusive interview with the l!?th-century Russian anarchist Mikhail Bakunin.

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Athenas

Warriors Track and Field

Warrior Basketball

Three, records fall

Into the Badger -den by Paul Done Imprint staff As Yogi Berra would have said, “It’s &ja vu all over again.” Like last year, the Waterloo Warriors playoff road runs through Brock University in St. Catharines, home of the number-one team in the nation. Saturday’s game (2pm) should be much different from last year, when it was a match-up between the underachieving Badgers and the inexperienced Warriors, each team sporting an identical 6-8 record. The Badgers went 12-3 this year to finish first, while the Warriors’ 7-7 fifthplace finish is more representative of inconsistency than mediocrity. For the first 20 minutes of their OUAA West quarter-final match against the Western Mustangs, the Waterloo Warriors looked like they were set for a third successive double-digit loss to the Purple Satan, and an early exit from the playoffs. Things didn’t turn out that way instead, a 24-6 run in the first six minutes of the second half set the stage for the Warriors’ 97-89 win in overtime. -’ Waterloo was sparked by Sean VanKoughnett’s offensive fireworks, pouring in twelve points in less than four minutes. Referring to VanKoughnett’s performance after the game, running-mate Alex Urosevic said “Sean just went bananas.” The second element in the Warriors’ surge wastougher defence; coach McCrae removed all the adjustments from the Warriors’ defence and told them to “get out there and challenge people, play it straight up and break down their patterns.”

It worked. In the 25 minutes of the second half and the overtime period, Waterloo held Western to a total of 40 points. In particular, Urosevic who’s defence has occasionally consisted of little more than an ‘Ole’and a wave of the cape - played in the face of his man, and grabbed six rebounds, *

uvercume ‘Stiulgs \

in uvertime most off the defensive glass. How much of the Warriors’ surge was accounted for the gunslingers? Urosevic and VanKoughnett poured in 42 of the 60 point Waterloo scored after half-time. Qverall,.they tallied 58 of Waterloo’s 97 points, with Alex getting 32 and Sean 26. The Warriors also got what CHCH-TV announcer Wes Hicks would call “‘paint performance” with 15 points each from Pat Telford and Chris Moore. Telford made a living at the free throw line, canning 9-of-13. * Rob Baird had perhaps the best game of his career. Though the things he provided the team couldn’t be measured on the score sheet, he had six assists and zero turnovers in 36 minutes, while providing stability at the point guard position throughout. That was t.heQ, BrQck is now. The Badgers have. improyed since the Warriors beat them lOl.-98 in overtime earlier this season in the PAC. Led by first-team OUAA All-

Stars Gord Wood and Brian Bleich (known as ‘the meatheads’), Brock has a potent inside/outside attack. While Wood and Bleich pound the glass, Alan MacDougall and Dave Picton snipe from the outside. Point guard Picton is the key to the Badgers offence: he breaks pressure, gets the ball into the big men, and hits enough of his no-arc three-pointers to keep defences honest. Having been named a second team OUAA West All-Star, he will also likely get the nod as OUAA West Rookie of the Year over Guelph’s Rich Weslowski. The fifth starter is swingman Rob Demott who handles the tough defensive assignments. It was Demott who was burned by VanKoughnett for 40 points in last year’s playoff game. In order for Waterloo to win they11 have to do several things: 1) Play 40 minutes at both ends. It’s one of the dumbest sporting cliches around, but it’s one that the Warriors have proven time and time again this year. They beat Western with 20 solid minutes. Beating Brock will take a full game’s effort. 2) Keep Telford, Hopkins, and Moore out of foul trouble. In order to minimize the damage that Wood and Bleich do inside, the Warriors will need their best post players in the game. 3) Get Mike Duarte back. Duarte, Waterloo’s defensive sparkplug, missed the last.two games against Western with an ankle sprain. He can put the pressure on Picton and interfere with Brock’s offensive flow. Duarte’s murderous doubleteaming can also slow Wood and Bleich. 4) Find MacDougall. U of T transfer MacDougall is a deadly standstill three-point shooter, and is an complement to the Badgers’ post game. Whether in a zone or man-to-man defence, the Warrigrs must not lose MacDougall on the floor, or they11 get burned again and

again. 5) Get Sean into the fI;w early on. In his big games last year, Sean got the ball early and often. Once in his groqve, VanKoughnett creates opportunities for the entire team, and will draw double-teams to allow Urosevic more shooting room, The second half of the Western game demonstrated the way in which the whole team feeds off his confidence. 6) Defensive boards. Wood has been one of the leading rebounders in the country for three straight years and Bleich is no slouch himself. Every black jersey will have to rebound like a fool in order to take away the putbacks, easy hoops, and foul trouble which stem from offensive rebounds. The pot of gold awaiting the Warriors, should they upset the Badgers, is sizeable indeed. This year, the OUAA will be holding a final-four tournament to determine-the winner of the Wilson Cup as OUAA Men’s Basketball Champions. The touma-

ment,

which

will

also determine

berths in the CIAU finals in Halifax, is to be held in the warm confines of be

PAC. The Warriors

are one tough win away from playing at home with a CIAU berth as the prize. That would be a storybook ending to Don McCrae’s

ilkdrious

tenure

as coach

of the men% basketball team. Since the game is not on TV this

DuWe

seems

to be healing

up quite

week, there’s no excuse for Warrior

nicely. Photo by CD. Codas

fans to sit on their keesters. It’s time to hit the road in force. If you’re going to the game, wear black and make noise.

Jane! Taite

hurdles

toward

breakinq

her own

record. l Imprint file photo

by Simon Foote Imprint

dominated the personal bests list setting 18 of the 21 personal bests attained and that hard work had

sports

Last Friday night, the Waterloo track and field team jogged into

Toronto

and came back with 21 personal bests and 5 CIAU qualifying standards. Gerald Kirk and Simon Foote led the way by both breaking the 60-metre varsity record of 7.08

seconds with times of 7.01 and 7.02 respectively. In the women’s 6Om, Melissa Hulford broke the varsity record with an impressive clocking of 8.00 seconds. Rounding out the record breakers, Jane Taite broke her &n varsitj record in the 60 m hurdles with a clocking of 9.17 seconds. With their times, Kirk, Foote, and Taite all qualif@d for the CIAU championships in Winnipeg this weekend. In the relays, both the men’s and 4-by-ZOO-metre teams ran personal bests and national qualify-, ing times. The men’s team of Kirk; Foote, Pat Kirkham, and Steve Walker finished second in 1:31.9, ranking them fourth in Ontario and seventh in Canada. Meanwhile, the women’s team of Taite, Hulford, Tiffany Kanitz, and Marina Jones finished first in 1:45.75, placing them second in Ontario and fifth in Canada. In the 4-by-400m relay, the men finished second in 3:29. In the distance events, Jason Gregoire ran a personal best of 4:03.1 and Linda Hachey ran 5:21.6 in 1,50Om, while Dave Hill ran the 1,OOOm in 2:40.59 and T. J. McKenzie ran a personal best in the 600m of 1:26.76. In the 300m, Kregg Fordyce ran a personal best of 37.86, Yuri Quintana 38.66, Kirk 38.66, Kirkham 36.33, Walker 36.81, and Andrew Glendinning 38.46. While in the women’s,

brought upon this well deserved

suc-

cess. The 21 personal bests bring the teams total to 55 for the year so far, and the team now has 10 qualifiers for the CIAU championships in Winnipeg next weekend. “This was an outstanding competition,” said McFarlane. ‘With tie limited facilities at UW, I was worried about peak petiormances coming late. Well, worrying is over. OUAN QWIAAs are this weekend - ye should be ready.” Throughout the year, the Water1 b track team has been training with a new block and great changes

women’s

Hulford

ran 42.63, Jones 42.43, Kanitz

43.75, and Sue Cadarette

45.66.

In the men’s 60m hurdles, both Shawn Schultz and Brent Forrest ran perso@ &sts of 9.34 and 8.81 respectively. And in the men’s 6Om, W&er ran a personal

best of 7.14 seconds

com-

pleting a Waterloo three-way sweep in the final, while Glendinning ran a 7.72. In the women’s 6Ofi, both Jones and &I& ran personal bests of 8.12

and 8.15 respectively while Cadarette ran 0.32. In the held events, Jeff Miller (pole vault),

Karl Zabjek (high jump), and Julie Jackson (long jump) alI competed well. After the meet, coach Brent McFarlane was very pleased with the results stating that the sprinters

ness. The acceleration phase (15 achieved before any athlete not us this block” Waterloo

is currently

the

The 60m final at the Toronto meet la@ Friday was a prime example. The seman final included three sprintee from Waterloo: Gerald Kirk, Simc+

Foote, and Steve Walker. Of the+ three, both Kirk and Foote used t$ Moye

block.

The three sprinters led a Water& three-way sweep of the final, but co$ troversy marred the race. Two of tk runners never finished the ra& because by the time they came out dr the blocks, the Waterloo runne& were already two strides ahead df them. Thinking that one of thi3 Waterloo runners must have falsestarted,

the two runners

stopped.

1

But after much debate, it ti revealed that if anyone had fals+ started, it was a runner in purple i)r Iane six (the Iane furthest away fro& the UW contingent), so the ra* results stood and both Kirk and Foote had used the Moye block to break thvarsity record. Record-breakers Ja2 Taite and Melissa Hulford also useg the block, as did’a number of athlet& I who set personal bests. 11 CIAU

RANKINGS

Men’s 4 X 2OOm reiay team 7th 4 Women’s 4 X ZUUm relay teafn 5th T Gerald Kirk - 6Om 6th

Simon Foote - 60m 8th - 6OOm 9th Jane Taite -6Om hurdles 8th Jeff Miller - pole vault 9th Karl Zabjek - high jump 9th

Pat Kirkham

,


14 Imprint, Friday, March 6, 1992

***********************************

OUAA West

!And the winner//* * z J.D. Prenty, come on down to Imprint to 31: zclaim your wonderful CIAU Hockey 3: .I 31: playoff -prize. 2% g Prenty, a brown eyed; brown haired % z third year science student will be taking i =3phis lovely and talented girlfriend Lesley ; g to see some exciting CIAU Hockey: 3 Semi-Final action. x g Prenty attended one Warrior hockey: E game this year. It was when the Guelph $ = Gryphons were in town and beat UW.g i The Barrie native can be found many! * nights in the Shelter watching hisz = * favourite cartoon, the Simpsons. His; z favourite colour is green and I have: 3: nothing further toadd. Have fun 3.0. and: ii46Lesley! ii * ***********************************

ALL UGLY TEAM Gord “Cookie Monster” Wood Tim “Zombie Flesh” Mau Brian “Jethro” Bleich Glen “Chrome Dome” Tone Rich Weepy” Wesolowski Coach: Tim “Exxon” Darling

ALL PRETTY BOY TEAM Shawn “Surf’s Up” Till John “Daddy’s Boy” Vermeeren Chris”Richie Cunningham” Livi ngstone Chris “Baby Face” O’Roarke Dave “The Weasel” Picton Coach: “Hit The Weights” Phillips

WITI poppa’ Mau Mau

C.ampus Recreation by Barbara Jo Green Imprint sports

Women’s

Hope that your week was reflective

&f&r&

SERVICE

‘Tour

FOR ALL

cam home

ACURA

away

from

of the spring weather we had in the past few days. The week got off to a great start on Sunday with Dance for Heart, The fitness instructors were excellent in their organization and spirit of the entire event. The theme throughout the fund-raiser was “All the World bves Fitness.” Seventyfive participants took part and raised approximately $3,500 for the Heart and Stroke Foundation. Thanks to all those who were involved.

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Volleyball

The women’s competitive volleyball league is quickly coming to an end for this term. Beginning March 10. the women will be competing for I.

foundation top spots in the first round of playoff action. In league A, thiz Volley Vixens ana the Spikers are presently tied with one win and two ties each. In leawe 8, the Bodie Glove team has thus far been undefeated and hope to continue their winning streak, Come watch

the

exciting

action

starting

this Tuesday.

and being narrowed down to a mere ten playoff teams. The B division consolation finalists were Nicole Metcalf and Sheri Varley fighting for the position for consolation champ. After a good match, Varley car& out vietorious. On Sunday, the remaining playoffs began. The division A finals saw Brian Andersop and Mike. Lockhard battling out a match to determine who would be the overall winner. Anderson earned this title by winning three out of five matches. In the B division, Edson Casticho played a match against Ben Benoit to heiermine the division champ and Edson overcame the ultimate challenge and won. Benoit was the runner-up in the division as a result of defe&ng Kevin Lyons three out of five games.

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Saturday, March 7,1992

L‘I’

Bus fickets: $4.00 r&m (game ticket availableat door students $3.00). ?ckets are available at the Fed Office. Busleavesat 11145 a.m* from Math & Computer Building loading dock Returnsfrom Brock4115 p.m. TICKETS AREGOING FAST!!

TOMORROW: Saturday, Mar. 7 Dart Tournament ALL DAY IN big prizes!

URDAV NDTE POLAR PLUNGE!! Lunch served daily - Great food - Student prices!

CheckIt Out!! ~ungnzfuhzfions VIP WINNERS! Kelly Moote, Donna Kieffer, Kerry VanSickle

mx

Upstage Productiois and

The Creative Arts Board THE FEDERATION

OF STUDENTS

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STUDENT

UNION

presents.

. .

PHOENIX MAGAZINE BOOK LAUNC,H PARTY PHOENIX

LIVE MUSIC A drama of passibn and power.

ignoranceand efforts againstpbople who are ‘different’. March 11 to 14, the Theatreof the Arts will be transformedinto the grim world of the 1930’s

PHEONIX HAS RISEN LAUNCH THE PARTY Tuesday March lOth, 1992 7:30pm

FED HALL Live Readings, Live Music ,’ ONLY $2.00


16

imprint, Friday, March 6, 1992

sports

t

CFL Draft shucker

Warrior tailback inches short of the pros by Rich Nichol

Imprintsport8 There is one man at the University of Waterloo who is the epitome of a world-class athlete. He has spent endtess hours, day after day, year after year, pushing himself beyond all limitations and expectations toward one main goal, to one day make it to the Canadian Football League. However, it seems bitterly cruel, even discriminatory, that one of the greatest players ever to grace the gridirons of Canadian college football will be denied a chance to play in its pro ranks because of his height. Surprisingly, Warrior super-star

running back Tom Chartier was not chosen in the 1992 Canadian Football League Entry Draft held in Hamilton,. Ontario last Saturday. Scouts speculated that despite his tremendous talents, the S’Y’, 190-pound Ottawa native is simply too short to play in the CFL “I think the CFL made a terrible mistake,” said UW skipper Dave ‘Tdfy” Knight. “They base their draft picks solely on measurables. But there are two factors about Tom which he is the best at: one is his toughness, the other is his balance. He has the best balance of any player I have *ever coached. In a one-day CFL recruitment camp, you can’t measure things like that.”

Three other CIAU running backs were picked: Lome King of Toronto, Chris Wilson (Bishop’s), and Craig Kittleson (Calgary). But with alI due respect, the only thing which makes these three players superior to Chartier is about three inches of height Their rushing stats are virtualfy equal. Chartier has played four years at Waterloo. He was a first-team AllCanadian in 1990, a second-team AllCanadian in 1991, an OUAA all-star in the past two seasons, and is the alltime leading rusher in UW history. In 1990 he became only the fourth player in the OUAA to rush for over 1,000 yards in a season, collecting 1,031 yards, and repeated the feat this past season with 1,052 yards. The accolades are endless. Despite his lack of height, Chartier sure makes up for it with his speed and strength. At the Warriors’ training camp last fall, he ran a Q.&second 40-yard dash and bench-pressed 225

the CFL is

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pounds for ten repetitions and a maximum of 440 pounds once. Those figures were the highest of any player on the team. It is amazing the number of potential super-stars who’s dreams of a pro career are snuffed out because of height. Yet, there are many shorter players who defy the odds and prove the scouts wrong. Toronto Argos running back Mike “Pinball” Clemens is three inches shorter than Chartier. The NFL also has its share of pintsized powerhouse running backs. Bany Sanders of the Detroit tions is only 5’8” and 200 pounds. Others only slightly higher are: Thurman Thomas - Buffdo Bills (S’lO”, 198 pounds), James Brooks - Cincinnati Bengals (5’10”, 182 pounds), and Earnest Byner - Washington Redskins (5’lU”, 215 pounds). .

The CFL message;

managers he% good

haven’t been getting enough for the pros.

Granted, Chartier is no Barry Sanders, but he sure made an indelible mark on Canadian college football. And, to ignore this tremendous athlete the chance to try out for the

Sweaters

v-necks, -crew necks & cardigans

March llth,

12th and 13th

UW GiftShopA’

South Campus Hall

clear

Photo by C.D. Coulas

CFL, is almost insane. Then again, this will probably fuel enough anger from Chartier to annihilate a few more college football records for Waterloo this fall.

Life Project by Diane Schuldt Everyone wants to have the perfect body. Pick up a magazine or flip to any TV c6mmercial and no doubt some model with the ideal body weight, hei@, and measurements will be smiling back at you. The stigma of lwking perfect is alive and well but now, at a body esteem and image workshop, the entire issue of looking and feeling good about yourself, regardless of body size and form, will be discussed

100% Cotton

Chartier’s

on March 11, in MC 4045 from 12 noon to 1 pm. The wo&hop will provide a unique opportunity to take a look at how image is shaped by the influences of the extemaj environment and how image can vary from culture to culture. The issue of body image is nothing new. This workshop will take a historical perspective on the age-old tyranny women have experienced. The presentation will include VCR clips, a discussion and various exercises. Hope to see you there!


Imprint,friday, March 6, 1992 17

sports

Athletes

Varsity Scoreboard

of the Week

TH E RESULTS BASKETBALL

Ottaua - St. Laurence Semis 72 Concordla 99 Blshop’s 83 Ottawa 61 Carleton Vest Dlvlslcn Quarb?r Final 89 OT Waterloo 97 Western 73 Lakehead HCHaSteK 75 68 Guelph 1oc Laurler 99 WllldSM 72 crock Central Section Semi Finals Laurent ian 99 York 91 Toronto 82 Queen’s 70

February 28 29

I

29

t!arch

1

FIHALS

(Best of Three) February 27

JANE TAITE Athena Track and Field Jane Taite is the University of Naterloo’s female athlete of the week, lue to her outstanding performance It the University of Toronto last Neekend. Taite is a third-year kinesiology stublent who captains the Athena team. she qualified for CIAU competition n two events: the 6Om hurdles, with a Frsonal-best time of 9.17, and the 43y-200m relay, also with a personal best time run with Tiffany Kanitz, Melissa Hulford and Marina Jones. Taite also ran a persona1 best time in the 6Om race of 8.22. The entire track and field team will prepare for the upcoming OWIAA/ OUAA Championship this weekend in Windsor. Honourable Mention GERALD KIFtK Track and Field Honourable mention goes to Gerlld Kirk, a first-year math student PJho qualified for CIAU competition n both the 60m and the 4-by-200m

Torontc Guelph Laurler WTR VSTR Laurler

29

SEAN VANKOUGHNETT Warrior Basketball

March

Sean VarKoughnett, a 6’7” 18511= Bluevale guard formerly of Collegiate, is the University oj Waterloo’s male athlete of the week This second-year economics studenl is being honoured for the Second time this season. VanKoughnett exploded for 12 points in a 24-6 run by the Warriors tc erase a 12 point half-time deficit in tht quarter final game .against the Wes, tern Mustangs on Saturday. This se the stage for the thrilling 97-89 over, time victory for the Warriors as Van, Koughnett teamed up with Ale] Urosevic’for a total of 58 points and II rebounds. VanKoughnett, a first team OUAP all-star, and the third-leading score in the league, helped set the stage fo a semi-final battle at Brock this Satur day at 2 pm, the winner to advance tc the Wilson Cup held at UW thl following weekend. relay at the University of Toronto. Kirk’s 60m time of 7.01 set a UW record.

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Mii Rogers in-the neighbourhood GamdRogem with Doug

Emmanuel

Long

United Church, February

Waterloo

29,1!992

by Julia Farquhar

qxcial

to Imprint

Emmanuel United Church, (or E MANUEL United Church, as the sign outside would have had me believe), a beautiful old building situated in the very heart of Uptown Waterloo, seemed at first an unlikely venue for the likes of Garnet Rogers and fiddletoting sidekick Doug Long. At least that’s what I thought, as I glanced around at the curious, semicircular sanctuary, marvelling at its gorgeous carved woodwork and flipping through a hymnbook just for fun. I couldn’t have been more wrong. Rarely have I participated in (yes, I copied the lyrics of “Northwest Passage” as best I could from the people sitting close by who already knew the words) as intimate and enjoyable an evening of music. Garnet, in trademark fine form (tie if you’re a sucker for huly corny comedy), quickly put the congregation at ease by quoting Woody AIlen, drawing our collective attention to his “virility-enhancing machiie” (read: guitar synthesizer), and generally poking fun at his accompanist, Doug Lon& “a lovely man.” ln spite of their feigned derision of one another, Rogers and Long shared an enviable, easy-going yet intense stage presence. Watching one another intently, they created musical magic. Note that a collaborative album is currently in the works. In spite of their constant stream of silly banter between songs, Rogers and Long created a da&, dangerous mood. (They described the first segment of the show as simply “depressing,” the second as “truly suicidal”) The anguishing “Last of the Working Stetsons,” a lament for the “good old

Garnet

Rogers

“1 never

met a fiddle

phyer

that

I did rwt like?’ Photo by

Peter8rowri

da@ in Calgary,” painted a grim picture of hoping for rain that “just,might arrive this year”and brought tears to “ry eyes, as did the dirge-like. “The Joy of Living” and ‘Willy Short,” a tribute to an AIDS victim who asked of Navsweek readers: “From time to time, mention my name.” In fact, Garnet’s happier tunes, including “Small Victories”, a beautifully-crafted tale of a mare raced past her time, and ‘The Stars in Their Crown”, are tearjerkers ai he infuses them both with energy and passion.

folk for concert-goers in need of refreshment (and ,a fresh wad of Kleenex)) Being a bit of a Rogers family neophyte, I had heard only a few of the songs before and could only guess at the titles of most of the songs featured in the second half of the program. Not that I consider that a disadvantage. Rather, as a relatively uninitiated Garnet Rogers fan, 1 was able to savour every word and lyrical image, rather than waiting to sing along with my favourite songs.

Crown” for the second year in a row (although this year’s version tias drawn out almost endlessly, as Garnet and Doug competed to see who could get the audience’s last giggle), comparisons to Stephen Fearing reared their ugly heads for a second year in a row. My companion (who shall remain nameless, for fear of being held in public derision) and I shared the Same argument iigain, ending once more in an unconvinc+ unsati$ying draw. Our conclusion: like Stephen Fearing, Garnet

(I11 tell ya - I needed that intermission, with the tea, Rice Krispies and brownies squares, thoughtfully provided by the ch$h

Just as Garnet told the same silly story about his wife Gail as in introduction to the wonderful, heartwarming “The Stars in Their

Rogers is intense, imaginative, and intimate. Both artists face haunting or disturbing images and themes headon, both are musically masterful, and

both command their listeners’utmost attention and respect. It would be as impossible for me to leave Stan Rogers out of this review as it appears to be for Garnet to leave him out of one of his sets. Garnet, who embarked on a solo career only after Stan’s death in the early l%Os, seems to feel an obligation to pay homage to Stan in front of each and every audience he entertains. Not that that’s a bad thing. Stan was one of the finest folk musicians this country has ever seen. The point here is that Garnet deserves credit as a wonderful musician in his own right, and not he exhibits an simply because uncanny musical resemblance to Stan. Similarly, by featuring songs from his folkie peers, Garnet Rogers is also doin& his partto make Bobby Watt, Mary Chapin -Carpenter, and John Jennings household names. Garnet Rogers and Doug Long deserved every second of an emotional ovation they received after their encore, a heartrending rendition of Stan’s “Northwest Passage.” Before I go, there is a moral to this story. Julia learned that E MANUEL is a cosy venue indeed, save for its harder-than-concrete pews. (Ever squirmed through church for THREE HOURS?) ,Promoter Mary Joy Aitken deserves thanks and.credit for her continued and continuing efforts to bring some of North America’s finest folk musicians to the area, as do the ticket-sellers, browniebakers, and tea-steepe,rs who made the evening one Birkenstock-clad fan’s dream come true. This’magical series continues into May; look forw?rd to Judy Small on Friday March 13 and Connie Kaidor on March 27 (both at E MANUEL), Two Nice Girls and Bourne and Macleod at the Commercial’ Tavern, on March 28 and April 25, respectively, and the fabulous Ferron on May 5. (Stay tuned to Imprint arts for more details.) I can’t wait.

A Gangster’s Fairvtale

Edward

II

Xheutre uf the Arts March

11 to 14,1992

by Stacey Lobin Imprint staff The University of Waterloo’s Upstage Productions, in association with the Creative Arts Board of the Federation of Students, is presenting Christopher Marlowe’s Erhuard 11, next week (Wednesday, March 11 to Saturday, March 14) at UW’s Theat-re of the Arts. Upstage Productions is in its tenth year on campus. Edward II is the story of King Edward II’s of England’s erratic reign, from 1308 to 1327, during which he showed ill judgment in choosing “favourites,” angered his court, abdicated his crown, and eventually got himself murdered. That, of came, is just the mere bones of an intricate and bloodthirsty play; Bdward, a hind-sighted and foolish

leader, is constantly under attack from his noble court, his favourite/ lover Caveston, his wife Isabella, and even his brother, Edmond - the many subplots and sudden twists and turns in narrative give the play an exciting flavour of intrigue and espionage.

Intigue and espionage are further enhanced by period costume, namely 1930s gangster gear, with Edward II as a Mafia don and his nobles as sleazy henchmen. Anita Kilgour,the play’s producer, explained that “although we didn’t want to change the nature of the text, we did want in some way to update the look of the Play - and decided on a Mafia motif.” Also, the play features some interesting cross-casting: ‘We also have some women playing male roles, but they’re playing them as women. So you will see the young Ptice Edward as a Princess, and the Bishop of Coventry as a woman,

Ronald Green (Wward II, right) and Lake Sibley (Giaveston) SW in Upstage productims’; Edward II, March-Ti-14 in the Theatre of the Arts.

among others.‘* The cast features a group of wellchosen and creative actors. Ronald Green is a formidable and imposing

Edward II, complete tith flowing bead and booming voice; he is well able to hold centre stage as a strong and furious king.

Lise Fortin is an expressive and versatile Queen Isabella, full of wifely concern one moment and evil treachery the next. Newcomer Marie Anzovino is hilarious as Lady Margaret de Glare, a shrill, ultra feminine, over-the-top niece of Edward, who is betrothed to Edward’s little pet, Gaveston. “I’m reaIly happy with the way the actors have developed their characters,” director Joe Vamell said. “Some have never acted before in university and they’re finding great ways to express the range of emotions and impressions that the characters require. I think we’re,going to be able to turn out a very good product.” Edwurd /I is playing at the Theatre of the Arts in the Modern Languages building. Tickets are $5 for &de>ts and seniors, and $7 for others; tickets are available at the Humanities boxOffice, in Hagey Hall. Try it - it’s cheaper than a movie and good for you, too.


Arts

c

Imprint, Friday, March 6, 1992 19

1

Fl#LL SWING FuII Swing

Humanities Tkatre* March

14 and March

15,1992

by MycheIIe Themann Imprint staff The University of Waterloo’s dance department has been in Full Sting preparing for their largest performance of the year. This concert gives the students the opportunity to exhibit their talents as choreographers as well as dancers.

The performance includes a variety of dance styles from traditional classical ballet, to thought-provoking dynamic, modern technique. In addition to the students’ abilities, the faculty has also contributed to the program. One member of the faculty who is featured, Judy Miller, will be dishumourous Pwng a choreography set to a tango theme in a modem dance style.

Another notabIe inclusion to this program is, faculty member and director of the performance, Susan Cash’s premier of a new work entitled “Okay.”

on sale at the Humanities Box office at $7.00 for adults and $5.00 for students.

The event promises!0 be truely enjoyable and an energetic evening for all. Don’t miss the Dance Department’s annual student and faculty recital at the Humanities Theatre March. 14 at 8 pm and March 15 at 2130 pm. Tickets are

Photos by

CD. Coulas

L

Lose my breath Bloody Valentine

My

opmt

HuusfJ. Timntu

Monday,

March 9,1992

by Dave F&her

Imprint

staff

This coming Monday’s My Bloody Valentine show presents itself as one of the most eagerly anticipated shows in recent memory. In having exceeded stagering expectations with their astounding song-cycle Lu~Y+.s.Y,fans and critics alike can scarcely conceal their verve and wonderment as to how the band will pull the material off live. Regardless, if advance notice is worth anything, the performance should be remarkable.

Released

late last fall, Lu~&.ss

is

undoubtedly one of the finest albums to come out of Britain in years. For awhile, however, critics focused more on the Valentines’ apparent predilection for interminable procrastination - by comparison, the Stone Roses looked prolific - than the obvious influence they had transfixed upon the development of many young bands which the British press, for better or worse, have derisively dubbed “shoe-gazers.” Rumoured to have

Given their own high standards and precedence then, ~~G&.Ks eclipses all doubt, imitation and reason. A great/ deal of the album’s endearing charm lies in it’s baffling paradoxes it is simple yet complex, personal yet remote, ambiently gloomy yet uplifting. It’s intimacy won’t be found in the James Taylor confessional sense, (the lyrics defy audible comprehension), but rather in an aural sensuousness which washes over the listener. As has been developing with the Valentines, Kevin Shields’ earlier harsher vocals have been supplemented and synthesized SO as io harmonize almost imperceptibly with the gorgeous, ethereal, blissinducing

Butcher.

intonations

of

Bilinda

Contrary to the conventional logic of loading the top of the album with hooks, LO~&XS has a rather inauspicious outset of songs which establish varied moods but might challenge

Nevertheless, as the songs lead seamlessly into each other, the album really kicks into gear with the EnAsh “when you sleep” and keeps getting stronger. The Valentines’ charac-

to sire, with Cave some

listeners patience. “to here when”, e%rfier released unconvincingIy on the Twwtdu EP, plays unremittingly with background tape speeds and works far better here. knows

teristic style of grinding low bass and rhythm, attacking guitars, and lush

harmonies drive the up tempo “i only said”and the breathtakingly beautiful melody

of the subtle

“sometimes.”

Doe”wop

harmonies embrace “what you want”, employing an improbable melody of flute and voice over crisp backbeat and grunge guitar, segues magnificently with a Frippertronic loop into L0~~ek.s’ denouement and hopefuily - apparent single, the lascivious “soon”, (the genesis of which can be found on Andrew Wown

a wish”;

Weatherall’s re-mix of their Glider EP). With it’s sonic guitar breaks and distorted fuzz, it’s a great companion piece to Tnw7olo’s ‘%oney power”. 1 Whether any of this baliance can translate to live performance remains to be seen. Nevertheless, until Monday, blathering devotees are salivai-

ing.

OPENLATE 7 DAYSA W2SEK!

spent a year in the studio merely laying down bass tracks, (and at an unheard of independent cost of halfa-million dollars), doubters began speculating that Creation may have had a musical HHOWI 1sGute on their hands that was going to sink the label. Despite these profligacies, however,

l

. LOV&.XS stands as a contemporary masterpiece. Aldngside the Jesus and Mary Chain’s @vchu~u~r&, the Valentines 1988 debut release Lwt ‘t Ayhiug remains a watershed for the British independent scene in the latter half of that decade. Chapterhouse, Lush, Slowdive, and Ride, amongst many, have all been profoundly aroused by the raw innovation and deceptive simplicity

on

both

this

and

[sandwich and a medium) medium soda aho rmehe( pda and reMv@ the 1 the second faotlong sub ( of i s8cond 6” submarine [of equal or lesser value) for (equal or lesser value) for I 1 .99u.

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follow-up El3 F~ahe Wirh Yiur Kis (1988) and Twrnob (1991). Like Sonic Youth, the Valentines have long displayed an uncanny adroitness for creating beautiful noise.

1

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20

Imprint,

Friday,

March

6, 1992

,

Singing and dancing tonight The Boyfriend 7114Humanities lIeme

dimted by he1 Gmbq March nrnning until

cal production of Sandy Wilson’s 7%e Boy@nd, and yes, I felt good. At least I wasn’t handing out those recycled (over by every bicycle on campus, because what do you think everyone did with them once they we& raPed for the “Smartfood” anb “Big R&l”) “Bag of Goodies.” If you were planning to see the play either tonight or tomorrow, you might want to leave your politically correct, feminist scruples in the aforementioned sac-a-main. The drama department has, in the past, exercised both its facilities and expertise in offering students ati OPportunity to explore the world of theatre from both sides of the stage. We have seen the challenge of a cro&+

7

by B. Patrick Keamey Imprint staff

I don’t think I’ve felt this giddy since I was twelve, rushing home to pint “T-Birds”on the back of my well worn GWG jean jacket. I had just seen Grease and I felt good. Anyone wondering who that idiot was in the Campus Centre last Wednesday, ineptly lumbering around the furniture warbling “I could be happy/ although I could be failing.. .” - well, I had just caught UW’s mu&

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casted Turning of he Shrew; Romeo andJuliet entered the perilous world of the Mafioso and students all over campus had a taste of th@something with Hold Me. As a vehicle of experimentation, 73e Boyfierzd is no exception, nor is it a voyage at the expense of the audience. In the ‘9Os, a musical of this kind could not succeed on strong acting alone. In The Buy$iend, Joel Greenberg has managed to create something highly memorable. Everything from setting to dialogue is highly stylized, almost to the point of being parodic of itself. Masterful costume design, complementary lighting and visually stunning sets magically jettison the Humanitie,s Theatre back in time to the Jazz Age. When the orchestra (can you believe it, a real live orchestra, with a pit and everything!!) commenced the overture, I shuddered with embarrassment feeling totally underdressed for the occasion. During both intermissions, I desperately sought anonymity by shielding my face

i.

Jocularity! Jocularity!‘P6’

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a copy of Brideshectd Revisited. The creation of the period piece is

behind

siaff

I+?~~& is a bawdy, intelligent, and graceful documentary from the National Film Board’s Studio D. Filmmaker Gail Singer has interviewed a number of female comics and interwoven their comments with clips from their performances, in a quest to uncover what life is like for women in comedy. Featured comedians include established celebrities Whoopi Goldberg and Phyllis DiIler, up-andcoming talents Sandra Shamas, Ellen

DeGeneres, and Paula Poundstone, and off-beat, marginal artists like the Clicheties, a trio which pokes fun at pop tunes and images by lipsynching to them in various costumes. ‘7-Iumour can be a very dangerous sword,” explains one interview subject. When a woman starts telling the truth about her experience, it can be “like saying the Emperoi has no clothes.” Singer’s film is subversive in the sense that it gives women in stand-up a chance to speak their minds, both on-stage and off. The movie points out that while men have a habit-of interrupting women in conversation. (as has been shown in studies), when the woman has the

mike and is doing a stand-up routine, the maIes in the audience are forced to listen.

“Stand-up ‘comedy is a very aggressive thing,” says one participant. A few women comics prefer not to think about their gender, yet others can’t help sensing the hostility in an audience when they first step out. Some sav that the men in the crowd “look at ;ou twice, once to see your tits, and once to see what you can do,”

IUHPiTWE ,OUNDED UP ++

and they have onIy two cbncems: “1) Could I sleep with her, and 2) Is their masculinity going to be threatened.”

Royal Robbins Woolric h r Hyannisport Alpine Joe &‘?, C-,iorophylie & .:

“KELL

Helly Hansen

0 *

+ Snooker

SPRING I’RMEW

-A*.*

--

--

language. It is noted

in the fiim that comedians tend to be very angry - they _,_,_ want to talk about their lives and locate universal experiences, and the emotion underlying their mirth* making observations is often rage. And yet, Wismm~ks isn’t a battle cry. As Shamas remarks, one must “surrender to create the e&t of laughter. And when we surrender to one another, we empower each other.” Singer’s documentary is about that empowerment.

Y’S”

1 l

BILLIARD ROOM Q I Ufiortsbnr . l

E G Hi-Tech f Thor-Lo

-4 .’ l .=.-.’

So it’s a feminist worl$ with a lot of serious discussiqn about show business, society, and sexism. At the same time, J4Gvack.r makes you laugh so hard you fall out of your seat. Clips ticlude Kim Wavans, In Livim C&w regular; Deboiah Tweaker:’ E$ly I)..‘. * /1 Dronte-Impersonator; ten .aJeweli,. . a comedian who uses her cerebral palsy in her humour; and Joy Behar, a tough-talking Brooklyner. Shamas, whose one-woman shows Mt) &t,friendls Back artd Thm~s Gowta %P Laundry and T/X> cvcle Curtthu.\ have secured her a strong following, almost steals the picture away with her routines on Always maxi-pads and Vogue cover modeIs. However, the highlight of the picture is Lotus Weinstock’s hilarious parody of how to attract a man through body

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faithful on all fronts, including performance style. Campy dance routines, exaggerated stage movements, combined with rude make-up supplement the acting method that fmds the performers delivering their lines directly to the audience. Excellent choreo$;raphy and impeccable timing k each scene crisp and alive. V ii3 ’ y, although everyone had surprisingly talented voices, certain numbers were marred by weak projection. The orchestra must be cammended however, for constantly remaining understated never guilty of scene stealing. To bother highlighting certain performances would require a reproduction of the entire cast list. A strong sense of teamwork and commitment on behalf of all involved in 7%e Boyfriend is evident in the confidence and genuine enjoyment being exuded from the proscenium stage. My only disappointment in the production rests at the snack bar. Forgive me but I expected champagne and strawberries, not Coke and Fritos.

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about Steve Perry and Omelets; however, every&i&g else on the compilation doesn’t striy very far from

the rock, funk, blues and folk mainstream. The first two bands, ROMY and the Law-and Fooisbus, play a fu&y rock

a-5 by Frank Segienieks Imprint 8taff From the title of this compilation you can probably guess that it is a collection of artists from Wilfrid

Iaurier

University

who have formed

style reminiscent of Bootsauce and in fact its hard to distinguish between them after only a couple of listenings, but the songs are good. The Rising Sons don’t stray much off of this style except that their sound has more of a blues influence, but again they have some quality songs. The fmt side ends off with an a cappella song by Free Time called ‘Turn the Jukebox On,” which just didn’t

a Musicians Union in order to promote musicians who go to that univer-

turn me on, I think it would be more at home on a John MeIIencamp

sity. When I first heard about it I was hoping that local band War Wagon

album, and although I am sure a lot of people would like this song, it just

would be on it as at least one member

does attend WLU, but upon listening to the album I realized that their type of music wouldn? really fit on th@ compilation as most of it straight-up,. traditional (read mainstream) rock

and roll. I am not saying this is bad in fact, I quite enjoy this album. However, since the bands were local, I was hoping for a few lyrics about KW or at least Canada, but I guess that would be asking for too much. The only band which would really fit in the alternative classification would be Mud and their great song

didn’t turn my The second CFNY Modern winner Pray for

crank. side starts off with Music Search award

Rain doing two se& tions called “Desire Control” and “Frantic.” I liked both of the songs,

St+,

again they have a funky kind of but when the second song came on I asked a friend of mine if this sounded like Sinead O’Connor and he said, “you mean this isn’t Sinead O’Connor? Matthew

Osborne, a folk performer who performs with an acoustic

guitar, has the next two songs which are my favourites on the album, a love

by Kenton Augerman Imprint staff The latest in the seemingly endIess line of English bands to capitalize on

the

song called ‘who

then things end off on a bad notewith

Can Do You Right”

and an instrumental

called “lowkowA typical garage band mowshun.” called Mud follows with the song that has the best lyrics on the c0mp$ation which talk about Steve Perry being a drug dealer, and what they are gomg to put into their omelet. I am not saying that the lyrics are brilliant or any-

thing

just

funny.

These

last two

artists also make for a nice change for

as their musical style is from the others. The album ends of with Fair Game, more straight up rock and roll for the

the-song

of Deception” which sounds like the band Heart, ie. glam rock, and represents to mq everythmany bands could come out of one university and produce as good an album as they have done. I noticed that WIU Stude&s Unionhave sup ported the release of this album; this

the listener

seems like a good idea.1 wonder

quite different

could do the same here at Waterloo - maybe it should have been some-

first song ‘Tehnks

in My pocket,” but

one’s election elections?

by Dave Thomson

Imprintstaff

Rock and Bowl takes place on Saturday nightsfrom 1O:OOp.m. to 12 midnight and includes rock music, low lighting, weekly prizes, etc.

The name of this band, and the album, (in case you didn’t already get it) become significantly more humourous once you find out that, with one exception

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already beginning to suspect that this band was employing attentiongetting techniques as best they could,

in the recent

in order to rise above the throngs of unrecognized bands. Musically, any comparison to Sonic Youth is likely in part a result of ‘Kim Gordon co-producing the album (with Don Fleming). Courtney, the lead singer, has a powerful voice (surpassing Kim’s, in my opinion) that meshes well with the distorted guitars and general “grunge” sound that the band produces. Lyrically, part of it has a feminist tone, and another part of it appears to be disjointed psycho-babble, of which sense is not to be made. She also swears occasionally, resulting in the standard parental advisory label l being slapped on it. All in all, Prprry on fhe hide is a notable album that should soon manage to separate itself from the thousands of other indistinguishable efforts that flood the record stores each week.

Their self-titled debut is trippy and atmo$pheric, with an emphasis on creating afeeling rather than making any bold lyrical statements. Several songs are about “taking a ride to the stars” and are composed of simple phrases such as: “She plays electric guitar/ She drops the bombs on your heart” (“She Drops Bombs”) and “Ah, la, la, la, la, follow me” (“Ocean Wide“). While this is not exactly genius, it does work, largely due to the hypnotic voice of lead singer Colin Gregory. For the most part, Gregory’s voice comes across as an instrument,

equal

in stature

to Jim

walk

away, don’t

brilliance

of

let me be.” The

this

track

is

nearly

matched by the two single and video releases, “Godlike” and ‘Planet Love,” which are every bit as good as The Stone Roses’ “She Bangs the Drums” and The Charlatans’ Only One I Know.”

“The

While The Dylans pose no serious threat to The Stone Roses or to LiverMilltown p0Oi’S Brothers as innovators, they have, in one fell swoop,surpassed bands like The Charlatans and Northside in the Mancunian gene pool.

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guitar, Quentin Jennings’ keyboards, Andy Cook’s drums, and Garry Jones’ bass, not as the axis on which the rest of the band revolves. The exception is “Mary Quant in Blue,” the cassette’s best song which finds Gregory pleading: ‘Ilon’t cut me down, don’t set me free/ Don’t

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the hit single category if they get that big. Other titles on this N-track CD include “Good Sister/Bad Sister,” “Loaded,” and “Star Belly,” which rips off the opening bars from Neil Young’s “Cinnamon Girl.” This sort of thing isn’t new by any stretch of the imagination, so I was

t

platform

if we

sound”

by The Stone Roses are The a five-piece outfit from Shef-

of the

proper artistic name - weird painting of a nude woman on the back The search for lyrics brought me to a montage of pictures of nudity and leather, with a combination of typewritten and handwritten lyrics pasted or scrawled in around the artwork. Wrong! Hole grabs you by the, uh, ear from the moment you press play, starting off with “Teenage Whore” which, as is standard for the first track

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Imprint, Friday, March 6, 1992 23 as a bz+nd who’ve been influenced by The Wonder Stuff, whom they’ve opened for and whom they thank in , the liner notes. Twenty-one year-old vocalist/ guitarist Laurence “Loz” Hardy frequently sounds identical to Miles Hunt, and traces of The Stuffies’ cheekiness can be found in ‘?&ally Scrape

According to the British music press, one of the hottest acts on the current scene is Kingmaker, a trio from Hull who are named after one of their own songs, “Little Miss Kingmaker.” Their three El’s “Celebrated Working Man,““Idiots at the Wheel,” and “The Two Headed Ep” - were much heralded and earned them the title of Ned’s Atomic Dustbin’s and Carter the Unstoppable Sex Machine’s “younger, swotty half-brother.” A Ned’sKarter comparison isn’t valid, however, as proven by their debut LP, Eat Youneif who/r. It’s far _. 1 .I T/G I more accurate to aescnDe lungmaKer

-

by Frank Seglenieks Imprint staff Well, how much can I say about a recording which has four tracks and clocks in at a grand total of eight minutes? Hopefully enough to satisfy the arts editor. The songs on the album are good enough, but there just isn’t the shetr volume for, me to justify people buying it. So my 3.5 rating is on quality of product and not a r&e&on of monetary worth. The first two songs on this CD single are from the forthcoming album by They Might Be Giants to be called Apollu 18, and thus the CD pac-

and

“Free-

Velveteen Rabbi John Andrew is 27, and he’s been compared to Topper Headon of The Clash because he’s the band’s elder statesman, their stabilizing force) and a tightness and sense of direction that’s unusual in a debut release. Hopefully, it won’t be long until Eat Yourself Whole is released domestically so that North American audiences can benefit from the promises Hardy makes on “High as a Kite” and “Two Headed Yellow Bellied Hole Digger”: “I’m gonna take you higher;” “Soon she’II be inspired,”

-_ ~~

Hardy claims &;most of his lyrics “are fairly colourful and twisted, so DeoBle can have their own interbret&ions.” This certainly holils true on “Loveless”: “Christine/ Why are vou so keen?/ So voung? So &an? brapped in Velveieen?/u Eyes wide, my best friend died/ It’s time for me to fly/ Goodbye.” And “Hard TimesH offers more of the same: “I heard about a girl, Central Park in New York/ She was

bubbly album Their second, appeared a year later and proved them to possess more worthwhile, musical material. Although tamer than L$e:y Tot Good, 1989’s Hew Today. Tomorrow, Next Week! sufficiently built upon the band’s appeal to warrant mention. After a three-year limbo_ session, _ __ the Sugarcubes are now back with

What can we say of Iceland? Being basically ignorant of most places and events outside of our Euro-American sphere, the most we can be expected to know about Iceland is that it isn’t really all that icy, that Reagah and Gorbachev once met for a summit there, there is an all-woman political party hoIding a fair amount of seats in their parliament, and, of course, it is the land from which the Sugarcubes hail. The Sugarcubes first came on the North American scene in 1988 with the release of their first album, L$J~Y 7i,0 Gi&. Led by singers Bjork (femme) and Einar Orn (hotime), the band made a sizable impression upon us with their animated, rhythmpowered pop - not to mention Bjork’s mammoth singing voice.

Sky”

wheeling.” What sets Kingmaker apart from their Stqurbridge counterparts is a hungrier, more straightforward rock sound that makes no use of the “traditional” instruments played by Martin “Fiddly” Bell. Moreover, Hardv’s lvrics are often ambiaous, while

by Kenton Augerman Imprint staff .

by Ken Bryson Imprint staff

the

beaten with steel bars, stones and then raped/ Said the gang of youths She’s nothing’/. . . three quarters of her blood escaped/ These aie Hard Times.“ Kingmaker display a surprising amount of instrumental competency considering their youth (like Hardy, bassist Myles Howell is 2 1. Drummer

Jov -

-

*

kaging has some neat NASA photos. The first song “The Statue Got Me High” is the best one on the single. It doesn’t quite measure up to the quality of “Don’t Let’s Start” or “Birdhouse in Your Soul,” but it is bet-. ter than most of their songs. The song itself is about a statue taking over someone’s life and is better than most music out today. While the second song “She’s Actual Size” would be more the quality of a typical TMBG offering, and as such it is hard to pin down any great meaning to it. The last two songs are from a demo tape TMBG made in 1985 and I am glad to see they have improved since that time. “I’m Def” is a minute long and,sounds like an experiment they did when they first got a drum machtie. The last song “Which Describes How You’re Feeling” is again typical TMBG and again is typically unfathomable. So ovqralI, quality material, but would I recommend paying $12 for this thing? No way - wait a few months for the full-length album. If it is like their others, there will be 15-20 songs on it. At least that’s what I am going to do.

Stick Aruund For Joy. To be completely objective about this album, I would have to say “more of the same.” But that, in itself, is not a bad thing. Although obviously the most produced of their albums, Slicli Around I;or JOY is more defined than Here Tuday . . : and, as such, is truer to the sound of L@J:v Too A original m tiood.

A

The tunes on Stick Around Fur Joy are crisp and refreshing. The opening track “Gold” and the zealous “Walkabout” leave us eager for more. Inciting us to enthusiasm, the Sugarcubes are a small fix of kinetic energy, kind of like a cube of.. . what. . . sugar? The only problems I have with this new album lie with the vocalists. Simply put, I can’t hear enough of Bjork, but still wish Einar would learn to sing. The only fault in Bjork is that production has fettered her usually visceral voice and consequently the

As I have some extra space, I would just like to correct a wrong which I inflicted upon Prince, when filling out my top-10 list at the end of last year. On that list, I neglected to put on it Prince’s latest album Diarnond~ arld R~rl.s. After listening to the album for the last couple of months I found it to be a really good album and as such should have been included in my list, 1 regret any hardship this omission may have caused.

album features no track which match either “Birthday” from Lift+ Too Good, or even “Regina” from Here Today. . m. As for Einar, sure his broken rap is part of their sound, and maybe it does nicely juxtapose with Bjork’s flowing (strong as the NiIe) vocals, but he should be the fettered one. A little melodiousness would help much. AlI that aside, Stick Around For Jov pleases me well. The Sugarcubes have offered u’p an admirable. selection of tasty pop morsels. And the masses have been appeased.

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Arts

24 Imprint, Friday, March 6, 1992 Although not widely known or understood, the Damned were funnier, less fashionable and moie chaotic than the Pistols or the Clash (which doesn’t really say much) and this only begins to describe them. The

Hmmm . . . a Damned tribute album. What?! How did this ever come to be? Then again, in these days of compilations, come-backs, boxsets and tributes, this could actually be expected as inevitable. Actually, it’s quite fitting for the first tribute album for a punk band (if I’m not mistaken) to be dedicated to the Damned. This only adds to the complicated history of the group who were the first British punk group to issue a single (“New Rose”), the first to tour America, first to break up,first to reform and break up and reform

best description I can offer is that the Damned were a messy, chaotic, uncool, occasionally invincible bunch of fun loving assholes who screamed sang crashed through, and even composed, some great tunes. this album only However, occasionally resurrects the,. spirit these songs originally had. This isn’t to imply that they should have been reproduced verbatim, in fact the best offerings on this album have reinterpreted the songs while still retaining the reason why they were written in the first place. The album cover echoes the Damned’s first album Damned Damned Damned and shows some of the artists enjoying some cake off each other’s faces. All the bands come from northwest America, specifically Seat-

tle, the majority

of which

I’ve never

heard of, but they all seem to have a

fast raunchy

sound that probably

lies

a few notches below most garage rock. Being a bit of a Damned freak it was hard not to expect more. Most of the covers are performed adll;luately, but there’s nothing distinctive about them. I’m probably biased, but most of the songs are delivered by soft fuzzy guitars instead of the harder crunchy guitars that there should be. Also missing is the heavy, chugging bass and the ever-dominant drums. The best cover on this album is “Neat Neat Neat” by The Accused who have run the song through the trash mill. It’s fun and it sounds great. Skin Yard’s “Machine Gun Etiquette” isn’t bad either with some demented vocals that help make the song. Con-

tinuing hard and fast with honourable mentions are Freak’s Anti-Pope (helped along with some samples), the Fastback’s “Hit or Miss” sung as a demented duet, Mudhoney’s “Stab Your Back,” and Flop’s “Disco Man” which contains some funny lyrical improvisation. Two tracks that receive some major rethinking are Love Battery’s “I Just Can’t be Happy Today” and Hammerbox’s “New Rose.” “Just Can’t be Happy” has the original’s droning organ replaced by swiShy swashy guitars. “New Rose” has the chorus played fast and the verses rather laid back (so laid back that it wouldn’t be a far reach to have turned it into a reggae version). The heinous inclusion is the Posies’ cover of “Smash it Up.” I’m sure the The very rare exceptions

such as

Sgt. Pepper knew Mv Father or I’m Your FUII succeed only because the bands doing the covers are big enough not

to be picked on. It’s rarely because the song has undergone an original treatment.

Wonder Stuff could bash tha) one out better and it would still sound like shit. Why did they bother? It’s nice that they took the time to remember the Damned but this album will have a narrow appeal (strictly for fans of these bands and perhaps Damned freaks). For those who are adventurous enough to go beyond the Pistols, Ramones, or Clash, I would highly recommend Damned Damned Damned, Mtxhine Gun Ehpew, The Black Album, or TheLight~rth~End ofthe Turtdcompibtion to get you started.

1 can’t help but shed a tear when I see how slowly the Damned’s albums sell in record stores, so give a damn and ask Vince at Dr. Disc for those albums. “New Rose” from the Damned’s first album is treated pretty fairly by Hammerbox (no lack of stupid names here). Mudhoney plow through a pretty good version of “Stab Your Back” and the Accused, I must admit, do rock through “Neat Neat Neat.”

MONDAY- WlJRDAk 11-6PM

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This did actually have a chance of being okay. Last year’s Seattle compi&ion, the alMisS Hard to Believe had some pretty funny stuff on it. The songs were popular enough thatthe ’ listener. could laugh. UnfQrtunately, . this one is only sometimes interesting, mostly boring and occasionally

off bntd Sonic y&&

or Nirvana .1

All in all, crap because of its length. If the best four or five songs had been released as an EP, it would have done a lot more for the Seattle scene and the Damned. As it is, some Seattle purists will probably pick it up, and probably allDamned fans but other

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Imprint, Friday, March 6, f992

Arts

25

Tibet’s trials and tribulations TV Ontario’s

Human

A Song Tuesday,

for Tibet

March

10,lO

Edge pm

by Michael H. Clifton Imprint staff “A void, a dark emptiness, was before all time. From within this nothingness came a wind, gentle and quiet, . . . After many, many years the wind became thick and heavy, forming Do@ Gym-am, a great double thunderbolt in the form of a cross. From the thunderbolt came clouds, one upon the other, growing thick and heavy Iike the thunderbolt and the wind. Then, from the clouds, came the great rain, each drop as big across as a wagon wheel, each drop enough to cause a flood. For countless years the great rain fell, and when it stopped falling it had created Gjxztso, the primeval ocean.” (Norbu and Tumbull’s Tihel, Simon and Schuster, 1968: p. 19, “The l-egend of the Beginning.“) This gentle and picturesque ancient story of the beginning of the earth tells another tale to modern hearers. Metaphorically, it seems to tell the tale of Tibet’s suffering, the suffering of her peaceful people under the crushing storm of Chinese tyranny and oppression, which like a great ocean has washed them from their homes and washed their homes from the land. The story of Tibetan suffering is told without metaphor and without shame, on TVO’s Humart Edge- A Surrg.for Tihut, Tuesday, March 10, at 10 pm. Thubten Samdup was nine years old when he last saw his occupied homeland. Of the 12 families that fled Chinese oppression, his was one of three to survive the trek. Once secure in India, Samdup joined with 15 other refugee children to create the Tibetan Institute of Performing Arts, aimed at preserving the music and dance of their culture, symbols of the

heart and soul of their ret&ion of peace, gentle co-existence, and “a philosophy aimed at developing a clear and unclouded mind.” Now his home in Toronto is headquarters for the Canadian Tibet Committee and he: is teaching the Tibetan songs to “the first generation born in exile.” The program follows the activities and travels of Samdup and another Canadian Tibetan, Dicki Chhoyang, whose parents left Tibet in 1959 with the exiled Dalai Lama. As they interview members of their own families, and other friends and survivors of Chinese brutality, the simple power of Tibetan peace becomes evident. Chhoyang’s father is interviewed at the beginning and the end of the film, signifying the rhythmic cycle of life and truth. He recollects with a mixture of regret and, it seems, astonishment, “we were so caught up in our own lives that we lost our country. We were simple, religious people, minding our own business.”

At the end he admits, “I believe in the law of karma, and truth and justice will prevail. . . . As more countries learn of our tragedy, they will have compassion.” Chhoyang’s father’s faith in human nature comes from the testimony of the Dalai Lama, recipient of the 1989 Nobel Peace Prize, regarding the fundamental truths according to Tibetan Buddhism: “Suppression by force may work in the short term, but in the long run it cannot last. It is contrary to human nature. . . . In human society, truth, genuine love, and compassion are priceless, and they will ultimately prevail.” To date, however, the only evidence that this faith has any validity is the incredible patience and inner strength of most Tibetans. Other countries, by and large, have not responded positively to the Dalai Lama’s requests for moral aid, despite his status as a Nobel laureate and head of the previous Tibetan state.

The main criticism the film raises is the “cold shoulder” Canada’s governmentgave the DalaiLamaduring his first and so far only official visit in 1989. Relegated to a back-room meeting in Ottawa, the Dalai Lama was granted no VIP status, and never got to meet the Prime Minister. The few MPs that did attend his speech were gracious and grateful, but because the House of Commons bells were ringing, most never even thought of attending. Accommodations, food, and security for the Dahi Lama’s visit were entirely provided by the Canadian Tibetan community, since the government refused to pay attention to the visit, in order, it seems, not to offend China and lose its massive market. For some Tibetans in exile, the attitude of most of the world’s governments to the Tibetan struggle means that the Tibetans themselves must be taking the wrong approach to their situation. Contrary to the Dalai Lama’s call for non-violence and faith in the ultimate goodness of human beings and human society, some Tibetans think there needs to be more action. “Essentially, we have missed the point,” says Lhasang Tsering, of the Tibetan Youth Conference. “Gov-

l

emrnents do not base their foreign policy on truth and history; they base their policy on the basis of selfinterest. We are trying to sell a commodity for which their is no market. Nobody wants to buy truth.” Sadly, this pessimistic reproach may be as true as we would like to believe the Dalai Lama’s simple hope is. It is with a hope like the Dalai Lama’s that A Song for Tibet has been produced. In a simple, unobtrusive manner the Tibetan struggle and suffering is portrayed with honesty and human emotion. It is not an overbearing plea for support, but a beautifully photographed, sensitively written, reflective interpretation of the needs and nature of a unique and oppressed culture, an exemplary subset of the world’s population who believe that history and truth will prevail, and the compassion of humanity will eventually be manifest. In the words of Thubten Jigme Norbu, elder brother of the Dalai Iarna, “There are many things in the future that are hidden from us, . . . Yet at least we believe that there is a future, in Tibet, and . . . we know that the uItimate end - enlightenment, release from all ignorance and suffering - is bliss.. . . This makes all sufferkg bearable.” (7X&, p. 351.)

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26

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Arts/Classi’eds

March 6, 1992

You don’t speak for me My introduction to the A~s~u$~~ women’s movement came in a &ok’ of fetitist graffiti, quickly followed

Judy SmaII’ began I@ the late ’70s to help fund her masters

Caii For Demonstration

degree in psychology. Touring soon captured her full-time - she hit the road and released four albums over seven years. 1987 began a performance hiatus for Small, who chose to return to academia to finish her law degree. Considered an Australian foIk legend, Small identifies as “an ordinary white, middle-class woman living in the 1990s and I write from that experience - . . the issues are the same everywhere: abortion, gun contr01, Central America, the nuclearuranium issues, racism . , . it teaches US that we’re the &me all over the world, and that means we can fight

these causes together around the world.” Small% concerts are usually studded with originals like ‘You Don’t Speak For Me,” a protest of rightwing extremists who claim to speak for the “silent majority.” Discovering that a new McDonald’s opens somewhere in the world every 17 hours inspired Small to write “Golden Arches,“ which combines lyrics , depicting culturally-assimilated-uniformed-youth-staff with a Sousa-like march. In H~fm$w?t’s liner notes Small writes “at least conquering by ham1buser is less immediately fatal than 9’:

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the military equivalent!” “When the Party’s Over” states that “forty thousand years is not a bicentenary”; a protest song about Australia celebrating the 200th anniversary of sending reluctant emigrants to colonize a land inhabited for 40,000 years: “In just two hundred years a people torn apart / Drowning in a culture that despised them from the start.“Sure to be included is the “IT’D Song” about a wonderful new birth control device for men. Small will be in Waterloo next Friday - I’ll bet her audience will if not downright leave Erinning smirking. -

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l?alestinians have the ri At to live! Israel listen to UN suggestions - STt! P SETTLEMENTS

Date: April 3,1992 Time: 3:Kl p,m, PlaceiQueen’s Park Toronto Raise your voice in defence of the FUestinian rights against injustices.

Palestinians haqe the right tu life!

Bachelor apartment - renovated, laundry, parking, near Waterloo Town Square. $395./month. Call Mark 745-7806. Wiido light moving with asmail truck. Also rubbish hauled away. Reasonable rates. Call Jeff 884-2831.

Needing

~ov&ians done around the house or the apartment? Large or small jobs? D & D Renovations can help you with all types of carpentry problems. Reasonable rates. Call 6:00 a.m. to 830 a.m. or after 6:00 p.m. at 746-2763, LSAT, GMAT, GRE - two places to call for help: 1. Dial-A-Prayer 2. Stanley H. Kaplan Educa?ional Centre. Classes forming now for June exams. I-5 19-438-0142. Tax &turn Processing - by experienced student. Basic - $20., fast and efficient. Phone GIL 866-7469 or 570-4728.

Experience wk $1 .OO dsp typewritten, $1.25 word processed. Erb & Westmount area. Call 743-3342. Fast, professianal word processing by University Grad (English). Grammar, spelling, corrections available, Macintosh computer, laser printer. Suzanne 8863857. Experienced Typist$1 .OO doublespaced page - fast, efficient service, reasonable rates. Westmount-Erb area. Phone 886-7 153.

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Tree plan- pay 9$-l 1r$per seedling. Camp cost $18.00-$20.00. Start date: May 1, 1992. Quest Reforestation Inc. (705) 741-4704. Eun $10~$15 /hour. Busy window cleaning company needs managers for full-time summer employment. Must have car. Call 746-3994.

Apartment for rent (May 92-May 93) 3 bedroom - close to UW/WLU, $945./per month including atl utilities, washer/dryer included. Call (416) 502-0960. Close, dean cheap - 3 bedroom 2 level Phillip Street apartment for summer sublet. Semi-furnished. Call 725-9542 after 4. 2 or 3 rooms available. Clean house, large kitchen, central air conditioning. Close to UW - $225./each/neg. Call 746-4484. housing: $195./month. Less than 5 minute away from UW.. Student coop apartments on Phillip St. (4 rooms avaiiable in 4 bedroom apartment) Utilities included, livingroom and kitchen completely furnished. Ask for Jim or Steve. Phone: 746-6729.

Summer

PmmoNALs Julie J - please don’t wafk away. I love you. cows Give two years of yourself, change a lifetime for a child. Join the Pro-ACT Foster Care Program. People needed to provide full time care and independent living preparation for youth age 16- 18. Also needed, families to provide short term, assessment care for children age 4- 15. Extensive training, professional development and a daily rate of $25. provided. Call Sharon Tait at Family and Children’s Sewices, 576 0540. Submissions now being accepted for “Intellectual Graffiti” dare to challenge, offend, and explore through essays, art, poems, opinions, etc. focus this month “Abortion is not a right it is MURDER”. Anonymity accepted direct to Intellectual Graffiti, 366 Hazel Street. Waterloo. N2L 3P4. Adoption - private - mature couple wanting to adopt an infant. Happy, lively home. Secure, loving relationship. Supportive family and friends. Home study completed. Call (416) 607-35 13 antiime.

The Torod Art Therapy Institute and the Institute for Arts and Human Development at the Lesley College Graduate School in Cambridge Mass. have completed arrangements for a co-operative program of studies leading to a masters degree in expressive arts therapies. Students and graduates of the Toronto Art Therapy Institute 2 year diploma program, are eligible to apply to the Lesley College Masters degree program in the Expressive Art Therapies where their graduate-level training at the Toronto Art Therapy Institute will be given credit as part of the Lesley Masters program. To complete their Masters degree, students spend two summers at Lesley College for 2 five week periods. If you would like to receive further information about this joint effort, please contact our office and a staff person will be pleased to talk to you. 216 St. Clair Ave., West. Tel.: (416)924-6221, Adoption - a wonderful choice. Happily married, professional couple could offer your baby a life filled with love, laughter, security, exciting opportunities and quality education. Call collect (416) 482-6279. Home study approved.

TRAVLL

are welcome! LJW J-g Club meets from 4 to 7 p.m., Red Activity area of the PAC. Beginners welcome! For more info contact Sean 7255577 or sdfinura at descartes. Lilymen’s Evangelical Fellowship Sunday evening service. 7:00 p.m. at 163 University Ave., W., Apt. 321. (MSA, west court) 411welcome!

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Recycling on campus 5ach society should be represented, 4-5 3.m. Room 135 for Feb. 24 ; March 9 and March 23 CC1 38.

I’he Men’s Action Workgroup meets at 7:OO p.m. in the Campus Centre. For info clease contact WPIRG at 884-9020.

.

Bike Muskoh - Friday/Saturday/Sunday starting April. Your breathgiving vacation. Love that bike bus! Perseverance, Box 237 1, Gravenhurst, Ont. POC 1GO.

Esperanta Club Lunch. Come experience the international language in action. 12:oO p.m. to 1:00 p.m. in the Modern Languages cafeteria.

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NCAA Regional Tournament. Greensboro, N-C. Thursday, March 19Saturday, March 2 1. 6 games in 2 days. Good seats still available! Tickets $69.00, transportation and accomodation available on request. Call 745-6006 ASAP. FDUWD Man’s gold watch found outside DC Library January 31/92. Call to identify, Richard 893-8940.

Len Sharp EL-5050 Graphing Calculator. Desperately needed for classes this term. REWARD. Call Roland 746-3879.

Iaymen’s Evangelical Fellowship Bible Study. 7:30 p.m. in DC 1304. All are welcome! Career Resource Certtre - evening hours open until 7 p.m. from Jan. 15 to April 1. GLLOW meets in room 104 of the Modern Languages building, 9-l 1 p.m. Gay & Lesbian Liberation of Waterloo promotea healthy attitudes towards sexuality. Come out and meet new friends! MSG (Muslim Study Group) - Brown bag forum from 1230 to I:30 p.m., CC 135. All

&ha? Faith Information Meetings - you are invited to attend discussions on issues such as peace, spiritual solution to the economic crisis and equality of women and men. Phone 884-5907 or visit the Centre at 2-91 King St., N.

Intecnatid socialists meet at 7:30 pm. in CC135 to discuss the theory and practice of socialism. For more info call 7471646. Free Esperanto classes - come learn the international language. Beginners at 7 to 830. intermediate 8:45 to 1000 p.m. in M.C4044. Textsavailable at UW Bookstore. Call Dan at 885-6584 for more info. Student Christian Movement meets at 4:OOto5:3OinCCllO. Weafeanecumenical group who concentrate on relating faitt to social justice issues. New member: always welcome! Information: 725-7993 Heather or Bruce.

There will be “Salat-ul-Juma” (Friday Prayer) organized by MUSLIPI, STUDENTS ASSOCIATION from I:30 tc 230 p.m. in CC135 All Muslims arc welcome! Baha’i Faith Information meetings - you are invited to attend informal dr:cussion: on issues such as peace and harmony o science and religion. CC 138 at 7:3C p.m. Alcoholi+x Anonymous weekly meeting: at 12:30 p.m. in Health and Safety Build, ing, meeting room, or call 742-6383.


and further information are available from the Secretariat, extension 6125.

Tl~e Student Volunteer Centre is located in CC206. Information on the following (and other) volunteer opportunities can be obtained by calling Ext. 2051 or dropping by the office. Regular office hours: Mom day, Wednesday & Friday 12:OO to 1:iIO and Tuesday & Thursday 9:00 to 11:OO. ht~~~timal Students Office seeks volunteers to assist international students with conversational English. If you are interested in tutoring, contact Sheryl at ext. 2814. Looking lor good resume experience? How about volunteering at the Sexuality Resource Centre. If interested call Joan at 12 11, ext. 2306 or leave a messag’e at the Fed Office.

885

Summer camp Counsellors required week of Sunday, August 2 to Friday, August 7, 1992. Contact Andrew at Scout Headquarters (Kitchener) at 742-8325. Also looking for a Program Administrator from May to August. K-W Friendship Group for Seniors need volunteers to befriend seniors on a one-toone basis, two-three hours weekly. Call 742-6502 for more info. liooking for individuals to set up a public relations campaign to promote awareness of the Global Community Centre (third world issues) within the community. Contact Marco at 746-4090. Assist track and field coach with SpOz activities for mentally handicapped peapie, Practices are every Saturday evening 7:3O to 9:30 p.m. &YOU the daughter of a woman who had breast cancer during your teen years? lf SO and you are willing to be interviewed please call Ann at 7255859. -c Interested in volunteering In a developing country? Canadian Crossroads International is recruiting now for placements in 1993. Information night is March 11 at 7:30 p.m., Campus Centre. room 1 IO. For more (nfo call Kilmeny 743-8654. TheUW Cancer Groupwill meet In CC135 March 16th at 530 p.m. Any new members are welcome to brainstorm with us regarding possible upcoming events. Volunteer for our April fundraiser! -Students needed to research and gather Information from large local corporations that have Uniled Way campaigns. March/ April project. Call Jane Fleming at 74% 1801.

Leisure buddy volunteers required - a man 1r-1his 50’s who is in the early stages of Alrheimer’s would like a volunteer to walk with him and to provide assistance with transportation to and from his home. A man in his earty 40’s who is visually impaired would like a volunteer to accompany him during walks once or twice a week. Please call Lee Lovo at 74 I-2228for more info and other opportunities with Kitchener Parks & Rec.

AWWOUNCEMLNTS Canada Scholarship cheques for the Winter 1992 term are now available for all first year students in their second term and all upper-year Co-op students, The cheques can be picked up in the Student Awards Office which is temporarily located in the B.F. Goodrich Building at i95 Columbia St. W. (across from Fastbreaks).. All cheques must be picked up by March 20, 1992. Students are reminded to bring proper identification with them when picking up their cheques. Computer Science Club presents the ACM Programming Contest Meeting #I. A discussion of previous contests and related programming techniques. Be prepared! 79 p.m., DC1302.

Nominations are requested for the following seats on the University Senate, to be filled by by-election. At least three (3) nom rnators are required in each case. Two (2) full-time graduate student representatives to Senate (term May 1, 1992 to April 30, 1994). Nominations should be senl to the Chief Returning Officer, Secretariat, Needles Hall, room 3060, no later than 3 p.m., Friday, March 6, 1992. An election will follow if necessary. Nomination forms

K-W Canadian Federation of University Women - Used Book Sale in April - TO DONATE 6OOKS please call 576-8645, 746-5649,0842924.

sessions) Wednesday, March 1 1 - 11:30 to 12:30 p.m. ; Tuesday, March 17 - 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. ; Monday, March 23 - 12:30 to 1:30 p.m.

C&~CFXResource Centre - Saturday Hours check out information on careers, employers, work/study and educational opportunities. NH 1115 - March 7. Himalayas: Field Study Program - July 1OAug. 20. Learning about human ecology and developments and trekking at 816,000 feet. You may earn up t0 3 l/2 credits. $4,950. Apply before March 14 to Prof. S. Kumar, Village II or telephone 7466946. Gallery Art Exhibitions 1992 - on display from Feb. 6 to Mar. 29. “Art Alive Lecture Series” begin Jan. 21 to May 19. Call 579-5860 for more info.

Sunday, March 22 - 8:00 p.m. at St. John’s Lutheran Church in Waterloo,a choral concert presenting UW Chamber Choir and Conrad Grebel Chapel Choir. Friday, March 27 - 8:00 p.m. at UW Humanities Theatre, UW Concert Band and UW Stage Band. Tickets available from Eleanor Dueck in the Music Office, Conrad Grebel 885 0220, ext. 226 or at the door.

Complete the Myers-Briggs Type indicator and discover boy your personal strengths relate to your preferred ways of working. Monday, March 9 - 2:30 to 3:3O ; Wednesday, March 18 - 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. Register at Counselling Services, NH 2080,

It has been necessary to change a number of meeting dates in respect of the Engineering Faculty Council and the Assembly. The revised schedule is as follows: Monihly meeting of Council, old date Mar. 16 to March 23 and Apr. 13 changed to April 20. All meetings will be held at 3:30 pm in CPH 3385. Spring Travel course to the Middle East April 24 to May 15. Study the religion and culture of Egypt and Greece. Fee of $2500.00 includes return airfare from Toronto. accommodations, and much more. For more info call Prof. Daniel Sahas at ext. 3565 immediately. -

Spring Fling - the 2nd Annual AHS SemiFormal &set for Saturday, March 2 1,1992. Ruby’s Waterloo Inn. Tickets: $35./couple. $20./single. See your class rep for more info. See you there! Thea&sports-Is hilarious comedy invented on the spot by performers, based on audience suggestions. Judges score each scene, and are bombarded by audience with “boo-bricks.” See Upcoming Events for detalk.

Noon hour concerts - 12:30 p.m. - all are FREE and take place in the Chapel. Wednesday, Mar. 11 - “New MUSIC of Carol Ann Weaver”. Wednesday, Mar. 18 - “Meridian Chamber Ensemble”. Spring Concert Schedule Saturday, March 21 - “University Choir & Orchestral . EnsemUniversity ble”.Humanities Theatre at 8:OO p.m.. uw.

UW school of Architecture - 1992 - lectures will be held in ES2, room 286 (The Green Room) at 8100 p.m, For further info contact Ryszard Sliwka (885-I 211, ext. 3079.) Thursday, April 9 .- Michael Rotondi: Architect.

wishes to express wishes and regards to UW and WLU students for the upcoming term. Our club is seeking new members of Ukrainian descent or if you just want to know more about our heritage everyone is welcome to attend. Bring your friends and if more info is needed call Roman Sirskyj (President/‘92 Term) after 6 at 884-0774.

effective: Sept. 3 Monday to Thursday 9:30 - 900 Friday 9:30 - 5:3O Saturday 9:OO - 5:30 Sunday 1;OO - 5:00

Kitchener - Waterloo

Com~lling !&TV&S will be offering the following workshops in the Winter 1992 term: Assertion Training, Bulimia Group, Exam Anxiety Management, Reading & Study Skills, Stress Management Through Relaxation Training, Time Management & Procrastination, What To Do When You’re Down and Blue (Oepressidn Management). Register: Councelling Services, NH 2080, ext. 2655.

UCTURI SRRIMS

USC HOURS

Upcoming Events - * Hike this weekend see Notice Board l Cycling Extraveganza followed by party, Saturday, Mar. 28 l next club meeting March 9 at 5:30 CC138a.m Kayaking every Sunday - PAC pool 4 to 6 p.m. l Whitewater Ratting on Ottawa River, weekend starting May 18th. News - Equipment room is open for equipment hire and memberships: Monday and Thursday 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. and Friday 11:OO a.m. to 12 noon. For details on above events, see our notice board outside the Equipment room, PAC, Blue South, room 2010. (Tel.: 8884828}.

ARRISCRA-

UW LIBRARY CAMPUS #VENTS

Take time out to attend an 18 minute video on PSYCLIT, the computerized index in CD-ROM format. Meet at the Information Desk in the Dana Porter Arts Libarary at the following times: Monday, March 9 at 10130 a.m. ; Wednesday, March 11 at 2:OO p.m. ; Monday, March 16 at 11100 a.m. ; Thursday, March 19 at 1I:00 a.m. ; Tuesday, March 24 at 2:OO p.m. ; Thursday, April 2 at lo:30 a.m.

We Recycle I

Holds Notices - unti! recently, patrons requesting that a library book be recalled or searched had to check with the User Services Department to determine when the book was available. In response topatron requests, User Services staff are now mailing notices to advise them that books held for them are available.

Page 2 is donated by IMPRINT

DEADLINE

for Classifieds and Campus Happenings is Mondays at 5:OO p.m. CC, room 140

LUpcoming Events

I%& Books - can be rolled up and used for firewood, taken home for out-of-town reference or can be recycled. Leave by your white paper recycling box. Phone books will only be picked up unti) Tuesday, March 10, 1992.

UW Philosophy Colloquium Prof. Larry Powers, Wayne State University “Socrates: The Enemy of Philosophy”. H H 334 at 3:30 p.m.

Baseball Writers’ Bursary - open to college or university students, $500.00 qward. 500 to 1,000 words submitted by June 1.1992. Mail entries to: Baseball Writers’ Bursary. c/o Larry Millson, 796 Crawford St.. Toronto, Ont., M6G 3K3.

the Campus magazines. .$& bargains!

The Holocaust and Jewish Studies Committee invitesthe academic community toa lecture to be given by Gabriel Ben-Dor, Rector of Haifa University, Israel, on Judaism, Islam and Modernity. Needles Hall, room 3001 at 8:OO p.m.

A controversial masterpiece for adult audiences, “The Shunning” - by Manitoba Playwright Patrick Friesen at the Water Street Theatre, 255 King St., W., Kilchener, Beginning Feb, 28 until March 21 at 8:00 p.m. For tickets and info cat1 571-0928.

The Sexual@ Resource Centre - is a trainedstudent volunteer service that offers information. supporl and referrals to those in need. This service is FREE. Call 88512 11, ext. 2306 or leasve a message at ext. 4042. The SRC is located in room 1540A, Campus Centre, UW.

Centre. Texts, novels and Come and get your

WaKhaedw,~lI.

TX Cercle francais vous invite d une soiree jeux de soci& suivi d'un vins et fromage. 2oh au Staff room 8 St. Paul’s College.

Greek Students: please attend a General Body Meeting in the Campus Centre, room 135 at 530 p.m. New members are always welcome!

ScienceGrad Ball! - March 14, Valhalla Inn, last day to buy tickets. 11:30 to 1:30 Sci. C & D. $40./ticket. For more information, contact Marie 725-3065 or ext. 6637.

Pugwash meeting: everyone is invited to share their opinions regarding the ethical use of science and technology. Hagey Hall, room 378. For more details call Daryl 888-094 1.

Atari user group, KWEST, general meeting, at 7:OO p.m. in MC2009, 2nd floor of the Math & Computer Building. Phone 579-3695 for details. Visitors welcome.

An exhibition

St. Paul’s College presents its 20th Annual

- of works by fourth year Honours students of the University of Waterloo Fine Arts Department - March 26 to May 3, 1992. You are invited to meet the artists at a reception on March 26 at 8100 p.m. Cash bar provided. Rotary Gallery, 101 King St., N., Kitchener, 579-5860.

Black Forest Coffee house Mar. 6 and 7th. Featuring over 24 bands with old favourites and new talent. Come on out! Doors open at 7130 p.m. and tickets available at the door. Located at MacKirdy Hall in St. Pau 1’s.

EXAM ANXIETY

MANAQLMCNT

Drama IIept.‘s production of “The Boy+ riend” Sandy Wilson’s valentine to 20’s musica/ comedies, will run Mar. 3-7 in the Humanities Theatre. Reservations and further info available at the Humanities Theatre Box Office, 885-4280.

.

A skills training workshop for those who feel that they don’t live up to their potential in examinations because of anxiety. (3 SeSSiOnS) Begtns Tuesday, March 10. 1230 to 2:30 p.m. Register at Counselling Services, NH 2080. INTlREST

.

Theatresports Game hilarious improvisational comedy. Wing 404 Centre on Dutton Drive (near Albert & Weber) $5.00 at door, $4.00 for members or groups. 8:OO p.m. Call 747-8765 for more info. h(dty,Muchl3 (w) Student Association presents a winter bash at Ruby’s. Other Greek Student Associations across Ontario attending. Ouzo shots - the works - don’t

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TWd#&MUCblO GLLOW Discussion Group - 7:30 p.m., ES2, room 173# Topic: “As We Grow Older-fssues For Us All” All bisexuals, gays, lesbians, ottiers welcome. Details:

ASSESSMENT

Complete the Strong Interest Inventory and find out how your interests relate to specific vocational opportunities. (2

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6844569. -.Student ..bd” Alumni I _-_- Association’s 3rd Annual

Baha’~llah’s Global Vision - Baha’is believe that humanity is now coming Of age and will attain a peaceful global society. There will be a talk about Baha’u’llah’s life and His positive outlook on the future of humanity, 7:30 p.m. at the Adult Recrea185 King Street, S., -, tion Centre, k ! Waterloo.


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