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gw: Imprint publishes e&y Friday. The deadline At 7:3Oin CCllO, the&ha? Club imAtesyo; to a’ The Legal Resouee Offiie tiiti be openfrom 92:30 ‘of camp& &vents is 4pm the preceding Tuesday. fireSide dissussion of the principle of unity: “So to &3Opn%Free legal counsellihg-wiabe avai&b in powerfut is the light bf unity that it can env&pe the \ GFriday, &bruqwy ?9. whole earth” (Baha’u’llah). In the A&J office, HH316,, a Poltical !&iew 9 co&et-t oi ba&ue arid 20th century sacred Theie will be a ieieral meeting of the C&b ‘*-‘House will be held..Doughnutdand coff&$,&’ nusic will be held at 8pm at St4 Joseph’s Catholic at 5:30 inCC113.k&!cial presentation will be’made be free. T+opeh house conthties &I Thurs&y, Church, 148 &dison ‘South. The program will by Caroline Oliver, of the Outdoor Art and Scierica Featurethe woild premiere of the Missa Brevis by School. InforEat@ will also be available on the The Political Science Union Meet tire Proi I+&‘wib Canadian:comp&r John Reeves, as, well,%-the Central Canada ;Uni’ ersity Ski Tour in Ottawa on ti held in the Grad Club from 8om to lam. p&e&al political science;sfudents pa&uiariy welc~~* , ’ works of Stravinski; Willan, Schutz and kach. Satu ay, March aJi Sunday, Marc)) 9 at Carlem T&&s are $4.50, $3 for students and seniors. U”ve’rsity. For further information, call Betty 2 -Wed&day; March 8%. Rdzendal at 885-5938. I$ fourth’ impqmptu meeiing of the B\MOC will ‘1 1 . A free :introdtictorv lectuie in Trans&nde~tai take’place at 5prnfinLthe CC pub. Le Cjne-cl& presents Y. Boisset’s “Dupont Meditation will+ hela in Chemistry II r&p 278 %t8 Tiiere ‘will be a.-Polisti Leap Year ‘Party at 8prr\ in Lavoie,” wjth.engiish sltbtitjes, at 8p& ih PAS2083.v pm. For more .ibformatiti call David br- ennon th& Minota H&&z; hail. For $2, a cold buffet +d Club membership or $2 donation at the door. Bourke at 576-2546. \ entel’taintient,ali be included. The Harbingers Theatre Group, who iour . Cinema Grads: ‘Young .iranke&in~-will be There will be a UW DLnce’Workshop Productioi;‘ internationally, will be peeomring intli& Great Hall, screened in the CC Great Hallat 9:36p&>Admission.. / _ f&during- university dancers perfdrming the best’ VNage 2, at 7, 8 and 9pm. Admission is frTe; is free. ., ’ f@m their dance WorkhopS in the’ HuGanities %ponsqred by the Campus Crusade for Christ. The Environmental FiIm j Seried preserits “‘Unit ‘&&atre at &pm. Tickets:ar,e,$2.50(students/seniors: The final Jazz and @ues Record ses& takes , Six: Living hook” and “h*,Mnagemeo\jor, t&W $1150). ; place’at 7pm in the Kitchener Public Library. &ff FutuFi” between 12:3O’andii$@i&‘&$?&O.” ** t \ . FED‘ Flicks: “Hair,? will &is.shown in the Arts Weller presents’ “Tholpnious Monk - Giant of L&ture ,I-&11at 8pm tintil Sunday. Feds:n$l; &hers: Modern Jaqz.” . ’ Watsfic m&i at 7:30 in, tiC5258. The UW Stage Band rehearses a’t 8pm in AL6. ‘.’ will be a Red Cross &Ad Donor Clinic Thk titers Club rents ‘equi&ent to anyone Anyone pla>ng bra&, percuss&, ’ k&t&trds .or There from 2 to 4:30 iii the afternwn &d&to 8:30in thd i&r&ted dli day, every day in,PAC2005. Included saxes ii welcome. Sponso?edby the C&ative%rts evenipg - at thd Grace Lutheran Church, 156 are sleeping bags, backpacks, snowshoes, ,etc.,‘ Board. ( ’ , . ‘Mar&ret jat Louisa). Quo&~.300 don&s. . ’ - :i rental fee? are very reasonable. ‘The Birth Controi Centre is open and has last CUSbinfoarna%on me&n&nd film f&&hi: G&d 01‘rock &nd roll n$ver dies! Every Friday night information on ‘birth ~or)t~ol; uhp_tann pregnancy The term wi$ibe in CC135 at,7:3Qpm.Atl those in&&d in the CC Pub Fez srjrns the tunes of the.ti’s. For counsellingand a resoukce library.%m 7 hteetsa&Tworking overseas with CUSO are enpura#d to i;nore information Oxo.the ,pub:see Tuesddy’s entry. shirts are available.The centre is open from 12pm z ’ .iti attend. Fbr more information call e$. 3144or’ilyop’ There &ill be a Chatriber &&n+Ie rehearsal at j 4pm, Monday to ThurSday In CC206, ext. 3446. by, room 234A South Campus Hail. ‘A / -6pm at Co&-ad Giebei Chapel. If you,play astringed The-Legal Resource Off ice will beopen fro& 11:30 Waterloo Christjan Dis~ussion’Fell&shi$ qr witi it@rument, come out. There igbaroque and to 4:3Qpm.Free legalcounselling will b available in The with Chaplain Reinkes Kooistra meets for felkq&ip classical reerkoire * Q@l as sqme1small’ goup CC217A.. ‘atid. discussion in HH28O. (Supper af _&$rn; . -. .selections. dis’cussion from 730). Topic: “Stewardship: Mtin -. There will befree food on the In{erna$onalFood ’ -, ,, I’ , The Agora‘Teahbuse isc&n from 8pm-tomidnight Day in theTternationai,‘Lounge (room 245A.)-iif and his Worid.” in ‘CCilO. Come and ‘enjoy a relaxing tjme of Modern Languages, Sbnsored by the Frerich, - ’ .At 12:3OpmQnthe Theatre of thgrts theie will bk a \\ conversation; teas, doffee and home bak?d goodies. German, pssian and Span&t Clubs. tree noontime T$nt?ert featut?ng violinist An&Jo ; ib Le$qi R-o&e Office &II be openfrdm li:30 A, fine’ &t Exgbit .+ll ‘b++di<p!ayed in the,,A&l Caka+c&: . * ‘A free Wi& ilid C&e& Party’ will be. hel$ in, HHi74 (the ,f#$ty lounge)“. . ’ , _ ,_ pelax, h&i “a coffee, dough&s and ,friehdb.; conversatipn at {he Gay Cpffeehoutie frFm’8pm to. ,iZam Iv C!@JlU:-?+lfare wetome. , .: ’
Out&s
$2.
I “,how- to ov&&& n@gative< ~@r~s’ and b&kgammon and +ableh&key Ijlayers: I j . . ahplify I p*osi&e .~%i$ori@ ‘till be I’ presen?? , yy -“The Fol informa&n on the Birth Corstioi Centre, ‘see Co+Tijt$“L j:{ ,4t ‘; , :’ .- c Monday’s -etitry;. _)___ . ( T$ Placeti&t. Office will& offer& a Job Seakcd .J%eL&z$&slou& tiffke wiil ieipen fkom 1’1:30 Wai;ksh&p fllbrri llZ@ami;l:iipm t&y, tomorrow to 4:30&n:Free l&a! caur+ling wia be available in ’ -Sq.&dity;.Mzircfi’ 2-. : &d ?‘h&sdai .in-r&&l&?0 ‘05Needle’s’,Hallt.,,EachCC217A. _ .t’ - ; . , s&ion will discu$s.c@fer&t aspects i;f an efiqctive % ASU and E,& spo%or a’ Coffeehous$at 8$1 job . $+rch -$-+uding entin&ing? person4 &ills, ~Time: *1!2:; p&, Pia,,: C&p& Centre Alcove, in the ESS coffee shop;\ESi39. ‘.it&re.$s and work. valtis; cai-reer andocc@ational Caree.q Days fqr Women - Films - “F&&me . i’here will be a general meeting to discuss ‘&e awaiqness; locating job vacak;G; ie9erz$ resume, Like Mow”, “Why .Nirt Technology:‘, !‘Womt?k in, ‘ fl; %’Minaqement’!, ‘$Ji;t ‘Enough”. Sponsored by varch 14-i5+Africa”Week&& programme and the writiqg; and &ng an inteqieti. subsequent’pubiic&& of;9 tou’fiy’ ,9” ‘$= ‘?7?T k’ ‘G.&rent. and %ii?aningful :I;lt;!is ,a-,product of ’ Wo&!&‘s Ir&& Group, Federation bf Students. eqnts in C@llp. All members are strongly aawtsea - . i&&al wo& At 8pm in-the.‘Can&is Centre World ‘,I I, to pttend.‘; ‘L ’ .j - ” Th&day, @t&h 6 L! ’ ,+” R&m there will-be free in sfme tion .aiid prartke ‘,At 8’pm in the ’ Aka;rki’of :the Arts, the $&V presented by tile Comn&ni$ for the &&ib$~~ $iie: 10:30zimr12~m,Piac’e=CC135, C&e& Days 1 1. @jam&r Music Society sptitirs Anfqh’Kuerti’b and ,IX&lopvr$t oj &e Human Beiri~‘: for Wome<n i Seminar - Working Wometi.in’the +rformance &iith the. Stratford’ Ensemble.Tickets’ Thi Waterloo ‘&&&a~ ~FeIIo&hii, wei&& T180s- Audrey Swail ( Women’s,Bureau).-Spo&or+?b are $8;.students~eniors;.$5. ?. , )r~u,@-a &-&ental- prayer breakfast iv CC *Id by the Women’s Interesf%roup, Federa@on of , , Students. \ The Outers Clu-! spo$sdrs> kayaking in- thi ,PA@ : Room fr& Sai‘nto9:15.‘: ~ _ a’ ’ 1. .-I- - J . . . :i p&i from 4 toQpm. , . _., iq& ’ n-&iit +qu&$ ip.Ch&$i&Do&& wi!i%e Ti,me 12-Z pm, Place: CC135, Career Day6 for A /( campus ‘worsl& ‘service .sponsbred by the;%: $GT n b$Chapl<ih~‘ke&e& %%istra at 7prh in. It&.. Women~*miqar, Vatues Clarificatioh Testing, Pat Carter (Conestoga College). / . Wzstedlr?n’ Lflrt-~ &nr& will f& N&-&s Mai}.room _, ’ __--.. 3005. _~held at lO:30am in HH280. ‘. ’ c The CC Ptib,will be open from 12noon to 1am until Tit+e: i-&m, P&e: CC 135,,Career Days for -Wo~ien, Choosing a Career, Lisa Avedan (ConesRiday ahd from 7 pm to lam Saturday. There will be \ From 3 to,5pm ir&ZCllJ fh(e Idamic St@nts College) - Seminar. ;A@sociation holds an Islami!c se&on including: ‘a’ disc jockey .after 9, as well as a one ,dailar cover tdga ---1:. I?. .._P-- -.--I A-- *l. -..-- J-, _^...>c..A. -. ----- ,s _ Time: 3-5pm, Ylace: CC135, Career Days for $ra$er.K For informatidn on the Birth Contl’ol Centre; see Women Seminar, Resuye, - Application, Intro/ M&h $i . Monday’s entry.. I. ,’., ,- ! \AMon&y, 1- I_ co&hued on page: i6 T i-i . : ...V’..
@&I professor 9. Tiessen-hdl&:ari &rtiucfory .&ctu~e~ “Lawrence !and thg. ‘@it&?:f&&~rifig q $$$i~g of Keri ‘Russeli~~.~~~.~~~L~v~* iti the plimanities Theat& at 7p& Fof Tegi& ati$@&ails entact Prof. Martin at 8&5-121,~&: 1121. ’
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.page,a Imprint is the student It is ~JI editoritiy
newspaper
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at the University
ofWat,eploo.
publ&,hedby
independent newspaper Imprint Publications Waterloo, a corporation without share capital, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario. Phone 8861660 or extension 2331 or 2332. Imprint is a member of the Canadian XJniversity Press (CVP), a student press organization of 63 papers across Canada. Imprint is also a member of the Ontario Weekly Newspaper Association (OWIJA). Imprint publishes every Friday during the term. Mail shouldbe addressed to “Imprint, Campus Centre Room 140.” We are typeset on campus with a Camp/Set 510; +paste-up is likewise done on campus. Imprint: ISSN 0706-7380.
Editor Production Manager Business Manager Advertjsing Manager News Editors Science Editor Arts Editors Photo Editor Prose @ Poetry
Liz Wood Jacob Arseneault Sylvia Hanniga,n Diane FLitza M&k D’Gabriel, Marg Sanderson Bernie Roehl Lori Farnham, Jason Mitchell Torn McAnulty ra Nayman
f ,
Let ters International-extortion -not the anqwer The Editor, Few moral neoole can accent the atrocities perpetrated b; Sh’ah Reza Pahlavi. If we are to accept a set of moral standards and an international law, then it cannot be one-sided. If Iranians are going to citk “criminal activities” of the United States and” other countries, they must prepare to live within those ethics. To condemn the Shah for his treatment of political prisoners, while holding foreian natibnals hostage,. is to make a mockery of one’s dwn claims to decency. International law clearly states that regardless of the activities of a foreign national attached to an embassy, the maximum action which can be taken amounts to a verbal reprimand, an expulsion of the individual I
A
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and/or an expulsion of the entire embassy. Taking hostages (and the Americans being held are not prisoners of the state, but are in fact hostages) and keeping them over a prolonged Period of time is an act of torture, and in view of the well-founded laws regarding embassy officals, irrespective of their (possible) covert activities, this action can only be viewed as a deliberate breaking of the very international laws you cite against the United States and Canada. It appears that the Islamic government does not seek justice, but revenge. It does not seek legal trial, but extorts. Any action by any government to rescue real or potential victims of international extortion can only be viewed as peace-keeping under the circumstances. If you find Canada to not be in keeping with your moral standards, and find the Islamic system under the Ayatollah so idyllic, you have my
The IBM. 360 may hasri died this week, but tQe CC 140 lives’on. When Animal and McAnulty ran o,ff to WKkJE’l! their time away, the rnacme was ready and waiting. Card punchers Lawrence hoore, Jane,-‘Ha@ing, Lisa Tripp, Leslie Treseder, Sue Melville and Mary Mitchell clicked away as faithfully as ever (tho’ the fingers plying the keyboards may not, have been so nimble). They walked down the hall to card readers Ira Nayman and Brian Farmer with their unfolded, unspindled and only slightly mutilated data,. Compilers Marg Sanderson, Liz Wood, Jake the An& Lcri Farnham and Jason Mitchell looked over the stuff and, a.f?.era quick binary chuckle, passed it on to the memory unit. Lois Abraham, Celia Geiger, Peter Stratford, Sean Sloan, Glenn St-Germain and Prabakhar Ragdeworked ceaselessly till their cores glowed red-hot with the heat, of their labours. Output, courtesy of Brian Dorion, Steven Schmidt,, LAT, Wojtek ~@nski, Doug Voll and Jackie P-rye was promptly provided. The good old high speed printers, John McFarlaqd and Malcolm Murray, were even more prolific than usual. With 93 errors, 118 warnings and 272 extensions in a four-line program, it’s understandable. Gerbil-wheel generator power was provided by Ed Zurawski, James Allen, Tony Scheier and, believe it or not, &VB. Luckily, Sylvia was around to calm the programmers down after the run. Thanks to OUJ?CUPbuddies at the U of T Varsity,for our cover pit from Rene. Buzz, click, whirr; so goes another week. MJD.
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invitation to leave. If, however, you can see the merit in a non-extreme solution, then it would be best not to blindly slander Canada and the United Nations, but’ to accept your host hospitality and help defuse the country’s rising resentment which Westerners feel towards Iran’s actions. e This is not an excuse of American espionage activities, nor a finding of innocence regarding the Shah; it is an emphatic statement that those who wish to judge must live,by that law by which they judge. Terrorism, hostagetaking, extremism, and international namecalling will not be repaid with’justice by the world; Iranians will find themselves steadily more and more isolated. If all illegal actions are to be tried as they should be, the Shah should be tried, the CIA should be tried, and the hostage-takers should be tried. Until that time comes, labelling the Canadian goverri’ment as criminal for a clear act of sanctuary (legal under international law). is just more fuel for the hatred. Canadian’s have long been , known to accept people from around the world; they shall continue to do so. But they are not required to tolerate invective from revenge-seeking foreign national guests. Andrew M. Zador Physics Department
Freeman’s necessary
petition: insurance
because rising fees deny a higher education to a growing segment of the population that they must be opposed. I would hope that in a society as prosperous as ours, a higher education would be denied only to those who cannot pass the exams, not to those who cannot pay the ‘fees. It shall not be an easy task to get the Tories to change these regressive social policies. That is why students should show their opposition to rising tuition fees en masse by signing Freeman’s petition. The most effective solution to these problems, I suspect, is a political one (i.e. kick Davis out of office in the next election) but petitions, protests, and other such measures are short term tools we can and must use to insure that we retain our right to universal accessibility to higher education. Dave Dubinski Chairperson . U of W New Democrats
Slighted student
Coryphaeus; apologizes
The Editor, _ I would like to express my apologies for the error I made in my letter appearing in the February 22 edition of Imprint. I said that Imprint was the original student newspaper. I stand corrected. I failed to confirm my source, who has since been sent to Albania on permanent assignment! Steven McDowell Mathematics 3A
The Editor, I write this letter to give my support to the petition being circulated by Federation PresJustice Slow ident-Elect Neil Freeman. A successful petition will be able to articulate students’ ‘But Existent widespread dissatisfaction with the Conservative Government’s policy of increasing The Editor; I would like to account an incident of sexual tuition fees, and will be a bold start for further . efforts to have this regressive policy changed. harrassment and prejudice against women Rising tuition fees, like rising OHIP rates, that I dealt with on campus. I now know, and I amount to no less than “user-fees,” which want other students and faculty to know, that contradict the principle of universal accesthere is ‘a way of dealing with sexual sibility to such social programs as education harrassment on campus. I hope this letter will and health care. In any system in which you inform and educate the pedplle of this campus must “pay as you go,” the more one has to pay, continued on page 4 the fewer the number of people that can go. It is
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A N D UNDER THE CO tlD CANADA
Friday,
-
Stephenson~tells TORONTO (CUP) - Thirty students occupied the offices of University of Toronto president James Ham Tuesday in a tuition increase protest while Education Minister Bette Stephenson was confronting five hundred angry students on campus. The students planned to occupy the offides until when final Thursday, discussion of a proposed 17.5 per cent fee increase takes place at a subcommittee meeting of the U of T governing council. “Our goal is not to protest against students paying fees but to protest against the university raising its fees without any planning,” said Lawrence Mardon, a student spokesperson. The university is planning to increase its fees by 17.5
Red
360
,
button
office
occupied
Imprint
3 -
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U of T it’s all Ottawa’s percent in most faculties. The provincial <government announced New Year’s Eve that tuition would rise by 7.5 per cent but also gave”the universities the option of increasing their fees by up to an additional ten per cent. Before tuition goes up students want a study done on the effects of an increase on those students already enrolled and on those students who are now planning on a post secondary education. Meanwhile at Convocation Hall, Stephenson was the victim of spirited heckling by students in a question and answer period. Flanked by two signs reading “Tighten your own belt, fat lady,’ and ‘Education is a not a privilege,’ right, Stephenson said it was a ‘useful experience’ to hear students views on educa-
29,198O.
In response to calls for an study, Steaccessibility phenson said one is now underwav but scheduled fee
increases will go ahead before it is completed. At the session the minister was presented with a 2,600
fault name petition calling for an accessibility study to be completed before fees are hiked.
tmlled
crasheg
The end of an era finally came upon us Wednesday afternoon at exactly 3:38 as the IBM 360/75 !$lked and bleeped for the fast time on the UW Campus, The 13-year-old m,achine was turned off forever to make way for,two new IBM 4341 units arriving this August. “We’re not sure what the hell will happen when we pull the EPO (emergency power-off)nobody’s ever done it before,” commented George Hill of Computing Services. However about 400 people gatherered in the gallery above the Red Room, which houses themachinery, along with the 50 staff actually present. Among the guests were Wes Graham, Director of Computing Services when the 360 was originally purchased in 1966 and UW President Burt Matthews, who received the honour of actually pulling the switch. The original machine was installed in March 1967 in what is now, the Physics building. ‘When the Math and Computer building was completed, it was moved to its permanent home. The 360 or,
tion. At one point she offered to leave the stage because of heckling. Stephenson seemed to threaten the continued accessibility of students to a liberal arts education when she spoke of the changing needs of the education system in relation the the general economic picture. “There is no point in ensuring that everyone in a jurisdiction can attend postsecondary education if they cannot’find jobs.” Stephenson claimed the federal government was in large measure responsible for education and s.ocial service underfunding, saying that the provinces were in fact enticed into new cost-sharing programs with the federal government and then left to pay the whole costs.
President’s
February
for last tim-e
iginally cost $4.8 million and was partially funded by the province. Graham credits then-Education Minister Bill Davis with advancing the cause of computer science by his inadvertant action. At the time, it was the government’s policy to provide complete furnishings with any building being newly constructed for a university. The computer was simply taken as part of the furnishings and the contracts were signed before Davis could rescind the order. UW did end up paying the bulk of the price, however. At the time, the UW complex was the largest in Canada and it encouraged universities throughout North America to enter the programme. The 360 was the first installed in Canada and one of the last two to be taken out of service. j The 360, according fo Director Paul Dirkson, was used for everything, from student WIDJETaccounts to preparing the university’cpayroll. Although it&red some problems, it did last twice the average time of the model. One of the problems encounterted was temperature. The 360 is designed to issue a -. I
warning when it becomes warmer than 75O and quits after 78'. But it poured out large amounts of heat, forcing higher energy bills for air conditioning. All that will now be changed with the 370/158 and 3031 units now in place. They are also only about one quarter the size of the 360; the new 4341 units ‘will be about one sixth that size. It will also have a total capacity of 8 megabytes (1 byte can store the value of one character--l megabyte is l,OOO,OOO bytes) in its memory core. The cost forthe rent will be about $30,@0 per month. But due to the pace of advancement in the field, it will probably be replaced in much less time than the 360 took. And so it was, to the Warrior Band’s mournful str&ns of taps, Matthews e-nded the career of one of UW’s “more faithful servants” by pulling the fateful red button for the first and last time. The CSdepartment may already be creating the legend of the “Ghost of the 360". Mark D’Gabriel
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Cifficiating at the “Power-Off” ceremony was (from left to right) UW President Burt I Matthews, Computing Services Director Paul Dirksen and 1967 Computing Services Director Wes Graham, responsible for obtaining UW’s 360. Contrary to all theories, the other computers neither died nor exploded, and clases will continue as‘usual. Photo by ASA
Bette Stephenson will receive a petition when she meets with theOntarioFederation demands about tuition and OSAP.
RTA
signed by over 4,000 UW students this afternoon of Students (OFS) executivetodiscuss students photo by EZ
declared
The controversial Residential Tenancy Act (RTA) was, late last week, intervened in the Supreme Court of Ontario. A panel of judges unanimously postponed all sections of the RTA, with the exception of the rent review portion, on the grounds of the Act’s unconstitutionality. Under the old Landlord Tenant Act (LTA), only a federally appointed judge could ‘make the decision to evict a tenant. Under the proposed RTA, this power would have been put into the hands of Residential Tenancy Commissioners. Since the commissioners would be provincially appointed and, in most cases, would not have been judges, the RTA has been declared unconstitutional. Leslie Robinson, former Board of Directors member for the Mississauga Community Legal Services, represented the interests of tenants’ groups at Queen’sPark during the RTA hearings. In an interview earlier in the year, she provided Imprint with some background to the RTA. j The Residential Tenandy Act (RTA) grew, in part, out of the Residential Tenancy Rent Review Act (RTRRA). The RTRRA was a piece of temporary legislation that had expired and been renewed repeatedly because a permanent Act was taking years longerthanexpectedto prepare. (See Imprint Ott 19, 1979). The Rent Review Act, and the Landlord Tenant Act often didn’t me&. For example, the Rent Review hearings could not deal with repairs or landlord prob‘- le.ms; the County Court could
not deal with rent increases that were illegal under the RTRRA. To help with the formulation of the new Act, preliminary hearings were held in the spring of 1978 to get opinions of large numbers of landlords and tenants. The major complaint at these meetings was the lack of knowledge of the LTA. The green paper and the material from the hearings went to the Ministry of Consumer and Commercial Affairs. Out of this came Bill 163, an Act to Refbrm Law with Respect to Residential Tenancy. Then another committee, made up of Conservatives, Liberals and New Democrat MPPs in an approximate 6:4:4 ratio, very few of which were lawyers, held. hearings about Bill 163. Landlords and tenants presented briefs on the Bill as a whole, and then, on specific section; of the Bill. The fact that time was running short during the hearings was responsible for some of the inadequacies and inconsistencies of the new Act. Many of the briefs dealing with Bill 163 in general were completely disregarded in the section-bysection hearings, even though these had taken a gre’at deal of time to hear. The findings of unconstitutionality are considered to be a victory by the tenants’ associations, says Robinson, since the sfillfunctioning LTA provides many more protections for the tenant than does the RTA, which it is felt leaves too many decisions to the discretion of the Residential Tenancy Commissioner. For example, under the LTA, a judge may not issue
bvalid an eviction order if any of the following is found to be the landlord’s reason for seeking an order: 1) the tenant is trying to organize an association or assert his or her rights 2) the tenant had complained to a government authority about a landlord or a landlord problem 3) the tenant had children. As well, the judge could not issue an eviction order if: 4) the landlord was found to be in breach of his responsibility. In the RTA, this protection is taken away. These restrictions are omitted from the’ Act; the individual Commissioner is asked to make a judgement on the matter. Until new legislatidn is drafted, the Landlord Tenant Act will still function in- the County Court. Only sufficTenancy ient Residential Commissioners have been appointed to oversee the operation of the new RTA rent review legislation. This, the only part of the proposed RTA found acceptable by the Supreme Court, has \been functioning since December of 1979. When asked about the future plans of the successful tenants’ associations,Robinson commented that since the RTA has been found unconstitutional, tenant groups intend to lobby for some changes to the old LTA, which they see as their next step in securing more protective legislation. .“This whole question of constitutionality should have been more fully investigated before the province put two and a half years of wasted effort into the exercise,” she said. Marg Sanderson
_
,iComment
Friday,
I
Gens du pays c’est votre tour de vous , laisser parler d’amour
Francophones ou Bilingues!!-Le Franqais n’est-il pas trop rare dans ce milieu? Pourtant le Canada est une pays multiculture1 bilingue. Si l’esprit CanadienfranGais manque au sud de I’Ontario, peut8tre y peut-on quelquechose. Le “Club France-Quebec” se veut l’occasion de r6unir les 6tudiants Canadiensfran$ais et lest 6tudiants bilingues qui veulent bien pratiquer le franqais et goQter l’esprit gaulois au son de musiques et glou
-Letterscontinued
jrom page 2
about what has been thought in the past to be non-existant procedures. Last fall, I applied for a job with a professor who was working in my field of study. When I gave him a resume package he made several rude remarks and then propositioned me. I reported this to P.A.C.E.R. (The President’s Advisory Committee on Equal Rights fqr Men and Women). I was advised by President Matthews, through P.A.C.E.R., to write a letter to the Dean of the faculty concerned. In this letter I was to include all the relevant details about the professor’s harassing remarks. I later spoke with the Dean, but was quite dissatisfied with what he said. Although the professor had not denied that he propositioned me, the Dean did not think that the professor intended to harass me. Also, the Dean said that he did not feel that the professor was prejudiced against women even though the professor had said, “I don’t usually hire girls.” The D@an a1s.o suggested that I would ruin my . career if I took action against this professor. My ca_reer is not ruine’d! Because the Dean would not take any action, I took the matter to President Matthews. Upon discovering the truth of this incident, President Matthews to the professor which wrote a’ l<tter reprimanded him for his actions against me. A copy of this letter is kept filed for future reference. Although this procedure took over four months, justice was servedI1 to all. The system actually works! Anonymous
dou... v Le Club se concentre sur un but culture1 et mult vi&es: films, revues, soirbes, petits voyages, amuse gueules...se taire n’aide pas la culture. Le Club FrancoQukbec veut rompre ce silence g lusieurs voix. Votre appui est source de x uccirs! wotre prochaine rencontre Mercredi le 12 Mars de 18h30 B 2Oh3O h CC110. nu telephoner Peter Stratford B 884-5276. On est 8 millions - faut se chanter! Peter
Stratford
Imprint meeting Today at 4:~
All staff members are invited
to attend this
meeting. ‘We have some very important
matters to
discuss and we need the input from as many of you as possible.
29,198O.
Imprint
4 -
c
-
_L’esprit! frangais vive \ au ClubFranco-Quiibec L
February
Through
An Aardvark’s
Eyes
An Avant Garde Absurdist Phzy , VVith A Dew Ex Machina Ending The story so far: Jimniy Carter has been told by all his top advisors that, because of the hostage taking incident in Iran and the Russian invasion of Afghanistan (which prompted him to boycott the Olympic Games), he will have to stop smiling lest the American people think he’s putting one over on them. Dejected, he has travelled to the distant city of New York in an attem’pt to find solace. .We take up the action on the top of the Statue of Liberty, where Cart,er is pondering his fate. CQrter: (sighs) ‘The world is, indeed, strange. This selfsame smile which won me the last election has nbw become an anethema to the public. I am told by all my most trusted men that I must ‘lose’ the smile, but they don’t really understand that I should smile...1 must smile! Smiling, to me, is as important as...as... but, wait! What is this form which appears before me? (Enter Uncle Sam in bright spot) Who...1 know you, don’t I? (peers at the figure) Uncle Sam: Yes. Carter: You’re...you’re Death, aren’t you? _ Uncle Sam: (recoils as if insulted) Certainly not! Carter: Oh. Sorry. Uncle Sam: I’ve come to give you advice. Carter: I do need it, yes. Will I be able to keep my smile? Uncle Sam: Of course. What’s good for you is good for me. Carter: (resignedly) Go\ ahead. Uncle Sam: All the problems you’ve been having lately obviously stem .from a lack of clear foreign policy. Carter: (dejectedly) I am a failure. Uncle Sam: Oh no. President Nixon had an excellent foreign policy, and we all know what happened to him. Having a weak foreign policy is not criminal in itself, although you’ve compounded the problem by not getting your energy legislation through Congress. You really aren’t doing well, you know. Carter: (dejectedly) I know. (brightening) Do you really think that Foreign policy is the key? (Uncle Sam nods) All right, then...1 shall develop a clearer one. Uncle Sam: My duty is done, then. Carter: But wait! What is that object
. . .
fluttering up there! (points past Uncle Sam’s shoulder) -Uncle Shm: (not looking back) That’s a dove. Carter: A symbol of..%f death, isn’t it? Uncle Sam: (hitting his forehead with his palm) No! The dove is a symbol of peace. Carter: How about a symbol of flight? (Uncle Sam shakes his head) Virginity? Uncle-Sam: No! (under his breath) Klutz! Carter: But, will a strong foreign policy free the hostages in Iran or bring-peace with Russia? Uncle Sam: (thoughtfully) It could, but I doubt it. What it will do is insure you another term in office and a good public opinion. What more could you ask for? Carter: I don’t know...the trends seem to show that I will get re-elected regardless of what happens. And as for public opinion, well, 1‘ve been fighting. it for four years now; no reason to quit now that I’ve gotten used to not having it. (smiles) Uncle Sam: No! Don’t: you’ll blind the audience! Carter: Sorry. (stops) Uncle Sam: I must be going. Carter: Thank you, kindly for your aid, stranger. Uncle Sam: No trouble at all. But, uhh, Jimmy.. . Carter: -Yes? Uncle Sam: If you ever have more problems... Carter: Yes? Uncle Sam: Don’t‘bother me with them! (exits) Carter: Who was that mussed man? (pause) Oh, well. My course is clear: I must return to the Capital and form a foreign policy. I wonder if Washington ever had these problems... (exits; enter a mother and her son) Child: Mom, wasn’t that...? Mother:- Don’t be silly, Alphonse! Come and look at the view. End of Act Two
, In a lengthy presentation,. 1 which included speakers, ~.slides and a film, a pleaforfinancial support. for the *’ reconstruction of Nicaragua was given’to students on ‘,, Tuesday night.*Most -of the * presentation was directed the i. towards explaining ’ history <of Nicaragua. and I_.giving the badkground inzI formation’ o.f the revolution ;*which overthrqw ehe k Somoza ,.dictatorship and I brought the San,dinista govI * - ernment to power,. Michael Czerny, a member of the Inter-Church Cdm:’ mittee for Human- Rightsin Latin America, held the floor for most >of the evening, explaining the Sandinista revolution and the recon.? strumion - efforts. He later ’ acted as a translator for Walter Parros, a member of Solidarity \ the -Nicaraguan . Group, who called for aid in an emotional plea delivered in- Spanish, David Q’Connor, .’ a representative of Q~FAM also explained the work of his organization and asked for financial-support. _ ’ According to Czerny, the _ Somoza family had been in, - control of Nicaragua since 2 the early 1936’s. It’s. direct control over the nation was sometimes masked. by the
use of puppet presidents but earthquake and has been left was -kept in through,the use a city of suburbs without a centre. of the United States. trained and equipped National The economy has been Guard; The fortune of the destroyed, said Czerny, by Somoza:family was founded” the war and the resultant in World War II by expro-_: neglect of agriculture which p ri a ti ng all German is the primary source. of property. Anastasio Somosa, .- income. The flight of Somoza ,\ the recently overthrow‘n die-. from the country with all but tator, increa&d his, fortune $3 million of the. national _ .until he owned over 5O%of-all .funds has left -the country , arable land and controlled the with:a $1.6 billion debt. .th&e majorindustries, coffee, : ’ Although the Sandinista cotton and beef. goverment, headed by a presidkncy of five; is making . Czerny blamed US interventionfor the logevity of the noticeable improvements -in Somoza fa’mily rule, citing US the enconomy andin lowering economic ’ and strategic the 50% unemployment rate interests as the main reasons as well as beginning a masfor support. He said that the sive literacy campaign which American support. for an is hoped to bring literacy to 1 oppocessive regime, while million of the 2.3 million supporting. t he cause af world people, foreign- governments human rights, was _ ‘Tram have been slow in supplying every human point of view-’ finan@‘al aid. _untenable and unviable.” Czerny and Parros were at a loss to explain why interThe need for reconstruction national support:was lagging Czerny said, is .great. The - country has been ravaged by but- suggested that other countries are waiting until an intermitt‘ant civil war . since the beginning crf 1978, the United States positively until Julylof 1979. In efforts to gives its support . to the put down the guerilla army Sandinista government. The know% as.‘ the- Sandinista ’ Marxist tendencies of the National Liberation Front government and the post& revolutionary instability in ’ (FSLN) Somoza b&&bed and the country may also be destroyed many cities. The capital city of Managua is .-deciding factors, they said., still in ruins due to the 1972 Celia G&i&N I
p
“.: Students
1witicourt
case
, -i I.
:’ I Six UW students who were burned out of their ,117 Albert St: home last Feb“. ruary -made an ‘out of court : settlement’Thursday. The owner of theproperty, .Murray and-Ruth Matthews, *’ refused to refund the -stuL dents’ rent for the remainder of February and all of March 1979, which they had paid in advance. The Landlord Ten’ ant Act requires this be done. . The plaintiffs, Peter Rid:‘.gen, Martin Seager, Larry \. Stewart, Peter Toffler, Jerome .Daly and Kevin May+nard, originally filed suit in . County Court last August, as king for a total of-$10!&:40, They were represented by’ Federation of Students lawyer Gary Flaxbard. ., ’ Thefire ’ was discovered last February in the base-
”
, c’ ”
CUP-STAFF d Computer seience. courses at Bishops University . are’,, not unlike pay t elevison + for the right amount of m,oney you can buy any.program. But unlike -pay TV,. .buying ‘computer programs for CS courses is plagiarism and the problem has reached epidemic ,proprotions at. Bishop’s, near. Lennoxville, Quebec;’
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-&*;” the Bishon’s igation student * fhe newspaper, Campus; about 30 p& cent of the student taking ‘an introductory level computer. course are buying all their
;
assignmeqsfs
tint-3
tin~~‘than
50 per cent 1my at least one. sr”, :The assigr im,entssellfor$5 k apietie, or $75 - for set --- ‘a--..--I. ------CT. :j’ cbnt aming all- the assign‘-ments in a I one se@ester 6. I.
,
} ment.. Luckily, . five of ,-the eight students residinginthe house had_ already left ‘for ‘8:30 classes that day. The other ,three were forced to leave, one , only clad in pajamas. Each lost between v $lOO(l and $3000 in personal - belongings, but only one was partially covered by insurance, _
settlement was $657. Flaxbard and the students agreed to the lower amount because the money was made readily available and they didnot wish to push the case further. “We’re just happytoget anything... we might have- (ended up. with nothing,” conceded Ridgen. Ne’ither .Matth&s showed up in court. Daly and-Maynard, on Matthews received many work. terms in Ottawa and compalints from his tenants on Brantfordrespectively, will a number of necessary repairs 1 have to be contadted concernthat werenever made,dfrom a ing the settlement. leaky roof to a faulty oven. He The Housing Office at WLU appeared at the house the day has not listed any of Matthews before the--fire to check the holdings for over a year and a smoke deteotor&‘but neglected, r,epresentative,of the officesaid to.repIace the. batteries in the that. they .“would be ’ very basement detector. Matthews careful about listing any of his ’ alleged that the students w’ould houses” in the future. UWs “steal the batteries’ for their l Housing O’ffice had no comcalculators”.---’ ’ merit. The total amount of thefinal ,, - MarkW&briel~ \
’ course. Buyers and sellers agree that ,the, trade in computer programs goes virtually unchecked, “Ican’t think of any way [a professor) could monitor it,” said-one student. Computer science teacher Charles Carman concurs, but says.he has “better things to, do than play policeman. If -that’s the - way they want to ’ ._ ‘eet their degree.” commented Carman’ ofu the - assignment sales, “that’s up to them”. ) Carman said hehas giv.en a failing grade to work that he was certain was not the student’s own but addedthat no student has ever failed the course on charges of plagiarism. . Students at Bishop’s say there are two reasons for the ‘ high incidence of plagiarism:
,Wome,ds valuek- in\ thq80’s - _. their cam.pus placement to AOSCPNUSSWAP, ~exai~$ned ’ . ”
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-* GntarJo M5S’2E4. Want to find out what your values are? As part of the Federation-sponsored ’ Energy sympasium Career Days for Women, an investigation ./ into women’s changing priorities will I to deal with politics take place in Campus Centre room’.135 How‘ “much does foreign oil I cost this Thursday, March 6 at 12:OO. The examination is called the “Values ’ Canada’in economic, political and en&o& mental terms? \ Could we ‘get a better Clarification’ Test” and stresses selfbargain? A symposium entitled. “The awareness as an aid to making career Politics‘of Energ@& Conservation”, will choices. Since the test is self-scoring; be,,held at UW, Thursday, March 6. .The each woman will be able to figure out her , purpose of the symposium is to co-mpare own evaluation. Dianne Mark Smith, the advantages and costs of national selfchairperson of the Women’s,. Interest reliance in energy with the costs and Group, which & co--sponsoring the event, dangers of continued dependence on believes that this exercise will be of great foreign oil. The public is invited to attend. be,nefit to those graduating or looking for /The symposium is one of a series that a summer job in the near future. “Thosewill be held at universities acr.oss the women for”whom being in a leadership country next month. The national organizers position is important, for example, ! are the Students for Environmental Action should be aware that this is one of their (SEA) and the North American Jewish priorities in order to match their potential to an employer’sneeds,” shesaid. The test ‘- Students’ Network. The local sponsors of the symposium are K-.W Probe and the Waterloo begins at li:OO..and takes-two hours ‘to Jewish Students’ Association.’ complete. Speakers at the ‘symposium wil; be Qther parts of Thursday’s programme Professor #Ken Stollery of UWs Department will begin at lo;39 and include talks by of Economics who will speak on the longAudrey Swail of the Women’s Bureau, term economic advantages of energy conser-Lisa Avedon from Conestoga College, vation: Simcha Jacobovici of the Department. %aree$. Planning and Placement’s Gail of Political Science at the University of Rietz, and UW’s Sunny Sunberg. Topics Toronto ,xwho will speak on the political _will vary from the obstacles and attitudes dangers of dependence on the OPEC nations involved in career planning, and the for oil, and conservation as a way of technicalities of organizing the successful breaking that dependence; and George job search, to-finding those “unadvertised” Burrett of, the Solar Energy Society of jobs and presenting oneself effectively in Canada will speak on energy conservation interviews. r and alternative energy sources. The sym‘Thursday’s ,eve& will be preceded by posium will be moderated by Professor an afternoon of films on Wednesday Keith of the Man-Environment Department. featuring “No Time Like Now:‘, “Why Not The meeting‘begins at 7:3O pm in Arts *Technology ?.“, “Women in Management’* Lecture Hall room 165, and refreshments, and “Ndt’Enough[‘. Screening will begin at served, / . ~ 12 noon, and will continue on until 5:OO. - will’be 2
‘. World travellers take heart Canadian- students interested in holidaying and working abroad have often wondered where to go for information, how to get started, and, infact, just what is available overseas. Thanks to two Canadian-organizations the Association of Student Councils (AOSC), and the National Union of Students (NUS), hundreds of Canadian university and college students have been able to join in holliday‘lwdrk programmes abroad _in different, foreign countries including * Britain, Ireland, Belgium, I Holland and New Zealand. Participants in these programmes must--be a least 18 years of age, and enrolled as full-time students at an accredited university or- college.. To enter the foreign bountry, students must have a valid +$&sport,-about five hundred. dollars \ to’ support themselves until their first payc-heque; and evidence of a return ticket. AOSC is able to arrange aN working - visas required. For the Student Work Abroad Programme (SWAP); in Britain, AOSC has established a Canadian Student Centre in London w.hich. arranges firm interviews with prospective employers and provides information on finding a’place to- live. Participants work in basically . m.. * semi-skilled or’ unsi<i&d jobs such as sales, -assistants, bartenders or secretaries, and in tne catering industry; some have worked-as theatre wardrobe dressers, art -gallery guides, and publication assistants. . Programmes exist as well in Ireland (USIT), New Zealand (NZUSA),Belgium, and Holland. Interestedstudents should contact
the light punishment and ability to cheat with .-im~unit~ and the difficulty involved in passing the courseHere at UW, the-incidence of plagiarism is belived to be low, but there have been cases‘ reported. Last year, there was ,a crisis when a fogrth-year student was discovered tohavecopiedaterm . .” _. prolect lrom anotner comput& prograM ih a similar student failed the course, W as suspended for 2 terms conrse. The Senate is the bodyantd denied graduation. However, Professor J. A. responsible for setting the of the policies, involyed in discipBrzozowskiv ’ -hairman C lining’students caught in this -Computer SC:ience Departsituation. In the’ Case de-- ment has not heard of anv scribed, the Discipline. money changing hand3 H*e feels that there is probably Committee of the Matheplagiarism& matics Eaculty Council made - widesprea!d The - assignments in:, CS mostlythe final decision. penalty was quite stiff: the due to People runningout of
Wkterloo forcasts Canada’s eqqnoxqy ’ . < UW’s department of economics and the Society of Management Accountants will present a public seminar dealing with the Canadian economy over the next twelve months. To be called “WAT. FOR. CANADA-1980,” the seminarwill be held in room 5185 on the fifth floor of theniathemeatics and computer building .from 7:OO to 9:00 pm. “We welcome the general public; especially members of the business community,‘* sa,ys Prof. Eric Kirzner, UW economist and one of the organizep of the seminar. There ~311 be no charge. For the most part,’ one won’t need a particularly strong background in economi‘cs to fgllow the discussion comfortably. . . though there will be a- few comments of a technical-nature. “But we have ,the general public very much in mind in -our- efforts to organize the session,” he said-; Keynote speaker will be Dr. Douglas Peters, vice-president and chief economist with the Toronto-Dominion Bank. Mr. Peters is one of Canada’s most esteemed economic forecasters. He will be discussing “macroeconomic” fore; casting, which has to do with ‘predict\ ing the future of the economyas a whole.’ Robert Kilimnik, economist with Mutual Life of- Canada, will talk about the _relative significance of \a variety of factors affecting the future -including interest rates, employment levels and the recent election results. Dr. James Brox of UW’s .of economics, --- department *will discuss the use of computer models in forecasting, including a model he has on the campus, adapted from a StatsCan v model. The evening will ‘conclude with a question-and-answer session.
time and being under nressure. * It-is “a difficult and timeconsuming task“ to”discover
,-
-
,
’
penalty imposed, but’ Brzozowski noted that any of that person’s subsequent assignments would be suspect.
l
’
h_ ,
centres or writ{ 44 St; George St
. .
department is “rat with this”, they are very upset with it, commented Bryozowski. *With. individ, uarassignme+J* there is not usually SUIcn a severe T-
-‘.
Professor Bruce Simpson of CS isn’t quite as worried though. “I. suspect that the vast majority (f--U of W students have too much selfesteem for such stunts”, he ‘L-lem Delleves.~~
,
Classifhd
Friday,
Typing
For sale
Expert typing. Prompt service. Reasonable rates. 744-9393
2nd Time Around - Unique old stuff, clothing, crafts, junk, headshop, furniture, we buy sell and trade small interesting things. Tues.-Sat. 11-5.12 King St. N., Waterloo
Experienced typist with IBM typewriter will type essays, theses, resumes, etc. Prompt, accurate service and reasonable rates. Phone 7432933 evenings. Experienced typist, essays, resumes, theses, etc; No math papers; Reasonable rates; Westmount area; Call 7433342.
Help
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Dumont Press Graphix, a Kitchener worker-owned typesetting shop, seeks three people with skill or aptitude for’ typesetting, sales, bookkeeping and/or process camera. Phone 576-2640.
Housing
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Need a nice place to Jive for the summer? Why not enquire about 523A Sunnydale PI. $367/month - sublet for the summer. Option to take over lease in Sept. Onlypayforgas. Sundeck and skylight, nice features for fun in the summer. Phone 885-3893for full details. M&t be seen. Two students to share modern, furnished homenear university. lncl udes: two bathrooms, three bedrooms, study, garage. $125 each plus utilities. Phone 886-6684 between 7am- 1Oam and 5pm- 12pm. Apartment to sublet May Ti August. One bedroom, large, clean, all utilities- included, laundry facilities provided, free parking, 20minutes walk or 10 minutes by bike to campus. $208 per month li (minus $5 if rentpaidontime). 422 Barrie Place, Apt. 7. Phone 886-9866 (after 6:OO).
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UVV AND WLU
WESSELING ADVANCED AUDIO
Personal Nutrition available.
counselling Phone 744-8817.
Lost Lost: One gold close-linked bracelet on Wed. Feb. 6th between Arts Library and South Campus Hall. Great sentimental value. Reward offered. If found please contact Carol 885-5525.
Found Outside graphy print.
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0 TTAWA (CUP) - Engineerexcellent parody of the bomic ing students’ publications book love story.” ’ on campuses have come The McMaster University under attack from those who engineering paper, The charge that these papers’ Plum bline, was severely content is sexist. criticized last October when it carried a banner headline: At the University of TorRing Smashed onto, thousands of copies .of Prostitution Toike, the engineering news- 30 Nursing Students Arrested. In addition photopaper, were dumped on the desk of president James Ham graph8 of two female stu” dents were taken from a in protest. Andrea Knight, bookstore ad and placed Administrative Students’ around the edges. Council women’s commisMcMaster engineering sioner, told Ham that issue society president Dave Mitincluded a particularly ofges said he received letters fensive item called “Teenage condemning the content of Necrophile “. “It makes a joke the paper. “Due to these of violence against women,” she said. Ham advised complaints, and the many letters to the editor that Knight to take the issue up appeared in the (campus with the engineering society. newspaper) Silhouette, it Toike editor Bob Moult was my decision to limit said staffers did not see distribution of the Plumbline anything wrong with “Teenonly to those students in age Necrophile”. “I can’t deny it depicts violence engineering,” he said. Mitges said it was unagainst women-but it doesn’t this drastic action promote it,” he said. “It is an fortunate
C/zairperson
.
had to be taken but felt it was necessary in the face of rumoured cutbacks in the engineering society’s grant from the McMaster student union. The ongoing battle be-. tween the University of British , Columbia women students’ office and thejengineers had culminated in an open challenge to the UBC administration to force the engineers to sto& their “sexist” actiiities. The engineering undergraduate society publishes an- annual newspaper, the Red Rag, and sponsors an annual Lady Godiva ride, where a naked women parades through the campus on a- horse. Lorette Woolsey, director of the women students’ office, said there has been no significant attempt-to stop the activities her group opposes, although administrators promised to do so a year ago.
co-ordinator
Responsibilities Last Tuesday’s meeting of the Campus Centre Board started to pave the way toward delineation of the ,functions, responsibility and. authority of the Chairperson and the Operations Co-ordinator of the CCB. The Campus Centre Board is responsible for the management and policy making of the Cgmpus Centre, and has the equivalenta status of a university academic department. Their duties have n,ever
discussed
been fully determined, although there was once a written guideline for those of the Chairperson. That guideline had never been formally approved, and has become obsolete since the jab of Operations Co-ordinator became full-time. The purpose of Tuesday’s meeting was to beginprocesses to formally determine a job dbscription for both positions. The first part of the meeting was a discussion forum, open to anyone from the university
public. Although the meeting had been advertised, only one .person not on the Board showed up. Topics discussed included responsibilities, accessibility and functions of these positions. The meeting was followed by an in camera meeting for Board members only, to start formulation of the jobdescriptions. These will continue until the descriptions are approved sometime within the next month. Glenn St-Germain
.\ -THE PASTRY CHEF ?
CUP Briefs Student aid task force in question because of election OTTAWA - The status of the federalprovincial task force on student aid is up in the air because of the Conservative government’s defeat Feb. 18, and student participation in the task force is also now a question mark. . A joint announcement Feb. 15 by the federal secretary of state’s office and the provincial Council of Ministers of Education Canada (CMEC) said that there would not be student representation on the task force. But the victorious Liberal party said before the election that it supported the participation of students on the task force, as did the \ NDP. National Union of Students (NUS) researcher Jeff Parr said Feb. 19 it remains unclear what will happen to the task force or whether the Liberals will keep their promise on student representation. ‘:I learned about the (Feb. 15) decision when I got a call from an Edmonton newspaper asking for NUS’ reaction,” said Parr. NUS had been pressuring the governments for a student representative on the task force and had been assured that it would be kept informed about any task force decisions, he said. “I don’t think it’s a very good sign at all. I’m skeptical about their commitment to student input to the task force,” he said. Parr also said NUS is concerned that student input will be minimal because the task force report is due in the fall of this year, meaning much of its deliberations must be done this summer, without students on campus. The mandate given the task force orders it to: - review existing federal and provincial principles and objectives concerning such public financial assistance with a view to determining those principles and objectives which should underlie the provision of such assistance; - review the adequacy and appropriateness of existing federal and provincial programs of assistance, including such concerns as accessibility to postsecondary education, the financial needs of students, student debt load, and portability and compatibility of the various forms of financial assistance: - formulate alternatives for the continuation, modification or replacement of the existing federal and provi&ial government policies and programs; . - report both to the Clouncil of Ministers of Education, Canada and ,to the Secretary of State by the fall of 1980.
Police suspect McGill robbery an inside job MONTREALSome people joke that you need to rob a bank-to -pai tuition fees these days, but at McGill University Feb. 18 two armed men took the joke one step further when they robbed the administration cashier’s office of $50,000. “It appears’ that the job was committed by people who certainly knew how the building operated, that doesn’t necessarily mean either McGill students or workers were involved,” said Sam Kingdon, director of physical resources at the university. Detective-sergeant Jean-Guy Ladouceur said the thieves took $5,000 in cash and $45,000 in cheques. “They knew where to go, and what to look for and they knew the premises very well,” said Ladouceur.
Maine may outlaw nuclear plants
the pure m&a.
AUGUSTA- [ZNS) - If an anti-nuclear group in Maine is successful, that state could become the first in the United
State; to outlaw all nuclear power generation within its borders. The Maine nuclear referendum committee reports it has collected more tban 47,000 signatures asking the state to hold a special referendum on the question of banning nuclear power. Only 37,000 are needed to bri& the issue to voters. The Maine Yankee Atomic station the only nuclear power generating plant in that state - has been operating since 1972. If the referendum is passed, the Yankee atoimic station would be dismantled and, organizers of the measure say, would be converted to non-atomic energy purposes. Raymond Shadis, one of the organizers of the nuclear referendum, says that this is the first time that an initiative calling for the total prohibition of atomic power has qualified for a referendum. He predicts that the special election will take place in August or September, when the Maine legislature is not meeting, and that the chances are “very good” that the measure will pass.
Windsor negotiations continue, students prepare card campaign WINDSORWhile negotiations continue to ward off a strike by University of Windsor faculty, the students uni,on has organized a card campaign against any walkout. The campaign, called “students concerns regarding education tit Windsor” (SCR’EW) consists of cards addressed to both sides in the contract dispute. “SCREW is a funny word,” said students’ administrative council president Doug Smith, “but in these instances it’s always the students who get screwed. Now we’re going to put the screw to them.” Three thousand cards will be sent. They read: “I, the undersigned, wish to register my concern with the faculty and the administration over the possibility of a strike action which may interfere with my university education. While I realize the root cause of the problem is -provincial underfunding, a strike will only serve to broaden existing differences on campus and create new ones.” Smith described SCREW’s position as neutral. “We’re not taking sides, and we don’t see the faculty and adniinistration as separate. Both are responsible.” The SCREW campaign, which will also consist of buttons, was endorsed by the SAC executive. -
Programme of Occupations and Boycotts at U bf Ottawa .OTTAWA - In the third action at the University of Ottawa since the Conservative provincial government introduced a mandatory 7.5 per cent and an optional up to 10 per cent tuition hike for 1980-81, close to 1,000 U of 0 students boycotted their classes Thursday to protest. Thirty students occupied the registrar’s office for a day on Jan. 22 and on Feb. 6 hundreds of social science students boycotted classes to p&test the fee increases, which they say will further limit accessibility to $ostsecpndary education. Students from the communications and psychology departments boycotted classes Thursday after voting at general meetings to approve the plan. The students pointed out that while tuition is going up a minimum of 7.5 per cent, student aid funding will rise only 4.4 per cent. U of 0 students have vowed to continue protesting the fee hike throughout the spring.
News
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Towers tenants take action
Taking a job with a big computer company can be the first step toward oblivion. As a beginner, it’s easy to get pigeon-holed or lost in the crowd. At Wang, ho.wever, you’ll get a chance to be a stand-out from the start. It’s not that we’re a small
I
company (last year we sold over $400 million worth of word processing and computer equipment). The point is, we think new blood and young ideas are as vital as experience. We also believe in
Friday,
February
minimizing paperwork and bureaucracy, and in giving everybody the chance to see his or her ideas turn into products. In addition, we’ll give you ,plenty of opportunities for advancement in whichever career path you chose
29,198O.
Imprint
8 -
-technical or management. If you’d like to work in a company where your successdependson your own energy, brains and ingenuity, Wang could be {u,;t what you’re looking And vice-versa.
industr without beeohixig :a\ statisYic. photo by TBM Despite the proposed sale of their building, members of the Waterloo Towers Tenants’ Association have decided to proceed as planned with a trial to test the legality of their rent schedule. Last November, several members of the Association retained a portion of their prorated rent (12 months’ rent paid over eight months’ time) in an effort to make I their payments closer to the customary 12 month rental scheme. The Tenants’ Association had its beginnings in a meeting late last October in response to the distribution of a “fact sheet.” About twenty student residents of the University Avenue high rise met to form the Waterloo Tqwers Tenants’ Association. In a letter to the Towers Management, the group stated that certain clauses in the lease were believed to be in contra: vention of the Landlord Tenant Act (LTA) and a proposal outlining possibilities for rectifying the situation was presented. The building manager accepted the letter very calmly and a meeting to discuss the situation with representatives of the owner was arranged. The executive of the Association and two representatives of the UW Federation of Students then met with Mrs. V. P. Klima, property manager of Waterloo Towers on November 2, 1979 to discuss various issues, including leases and prorated rents (see Imprint, November’g, 1979). A letter written by the executive of the Association stated that while the manager had “conceded the possible validity of the Association’s legal argument”, she maintained that the clauses that were quoted from the LTA did not provide for the operation of the building “in an economically feasible manner.” Members of the executive of the Association decided to withhold rent, at least until a satisfactory solution to the situation could be found. Klima stated that she had been advised to have her lawyer send notices to all students withholding rent to pay this rent “immediately.” According to Kriss Eidsvik, who has been in contact with the lawyer for the Association, a notice of motion has been served by Richard Gallant (a member of the executive) acting as an individual, against Veltrusy Enterprises, owner of the Towers building. The owners are being taken to court on three issues: - the right of the landlord to
charge pro-rated rent is questioned. - the right of the tenant to collect interest’ on the prorated portion of the rent in the same manner as that collected on the last months’ rent is under debate. - the claim is being made that the ten dollar security deposit charged by the manager of the building contravenes the LTA Eidsvik noted that the tenants who had been withholding rent earlier in the year are now paying at the regular monthly rate rather than on the pro-rated schedule. The status of the rest of the tenants regarding the rental scheme is not clear at this point. Those involved in this testcase, however, have been faced with, the fact that their building is now in the process of being sold to another owner. They had the choice of waiting until the new owner took over the management of the building, or proceeding to trial against the present owner. After consultation with their lawyer, the decision was made to continue the suit, in order to attempt a solution before the new management began. The matter has not yet come to trial. While three successive dates had been named for a court appearance, each had subsequently been postponed. As of last Wednesday, a fourth trial date had not yet been set. I Marg Sanderson
..:_,.
Makhg the world more productive. @1980
Wang
Laboratories.
Inc
, Lowell,
MA
01851,
U S A
Wang’s representatives will be on campus on March 11 s 1980. To arran ean interview register with the Placement 8 ffice. If the schedule is full please caii Susan Morse collect at (Sl?) 459-3238 or send her your
A jack rabbit start is OK for jack rabbits m m Bmbut for drivers, it’s a waste of $$$. n
q
Every time you slam down the gas pedal from a standing stop, you burn four times more gasoline than you would if you accelerated smoothly. That’s costing you $$$. And stick to the posted speed limit. ’ Speeding = more gas used = $$$* *Pius
6D Ontario
fines.
Ministry of Transportation and Communications Hon.
James
Snow,
Mrrxster
Harold
Gilbert,
Co-operating
Deputy
Minister
in
resume as soon as possible at Wang Laboratories, inc., One industriai Avenue, Lowell, MA 01851. We are an affirmative action i employer.
1
To Pythia
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Our ears cradle the echo And blood swelling up feeds it Delight shakes. us. . This time must fly banners of triumph. Let beacons crown hilltops. To graceful stark speech come truest answers.
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Induced functions Conceive, quicken and calm us, Deferring to scour tiled pathways To a hall fit to feast in. Steven Schmidt A vast silence lay over the whole world for the space of twenty seconds-though, afterward, no one coulld believe that the time had been so short. Then the darkness of the great opening seemed to move forward, and KareJlan came forth into the sunlight. The boy was sitting on his left arm, the girl was sitting on his right. They were too busy playing with Karellan’s wings to take any notice of the watching multitude. It was a tribute to the Overlord’s psychology, and to their careful years of preperation, that only a few people fainted. Yet there could have been fewer still, anywhere in the world, who did not feel the ancient terror brush for one awful instant against their minds before reason banished it forever. There was no mistake. The leathery wings, the little horns, the barbed tail-all were there. The most terrible of all legends had come to life, out of the unknown past. Yet now it stood smiling, in ebon majesty, with the sunlight gleaming upon its tremendous body, and with a human child resting trustfully on either arm.
Teardrop Twinkle in the eye of fate Tickling the side of my face Trickling a tear down my cheek Dripping silently Salty is the dewdrop The grass dies about my feet ’ Yet the sun will rise as always.
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by Malcolm
Murray,
John
McFarland
and IaN.
All -Have Their Duty-For The The The The
August Dacius K.G. (1058-1108)
wolf bares her teeth dictator raises his fist thinker rubs his temples mother feeds her child
“If care ye all a tale, men ail and hale, To lift your heart when night paints it black: How goode Lord Dacious, whole and courageous, ’ Lifted his sword when strong men feared to attack.”
The girl in the corner begins to peel away her flesh. Her hair lies on the fioor, an eyelash beside the radiator. Body becomes barren, no breasts, no lips.
August Dacious rides tall in his mount, Speaking words of wit to men worlds away. Less they can’t hear, he has the account Sung by his bard who rides in his sway. 1
A snarl, a whine is uttered in pain as She does not struggle in a last fierce She does not shake a fist in desperate She does not go beyond her moan to She is slowly stripped of her outer She feels somehow it’s her destiny.
And where they are going no one will know For Dacious mustn’t say and the bard is sore. And the townsfolk wonder at the Black Hand’s Who takes his biographer with him to war.
An aging soldier raised his sword And it came crashing upon his head. “Friends, he slew many, our dauntless Lord, Before thousands came and cut him dead. But Our For And
let us good there I am
reflect upon the Lord didn’t really are many strong still quite able to Doug Voll
events: lose the fight who shall take up the grievance write.”
B3-d
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Some MartyrdomI
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her tongue melts into the piled skin attempt. defiance.’ a thought. she waits for her return to mother. \
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A hard point of light in the sky, A flickering, a guttering, And like a wind blown candle flame It goes out. Now a new object orbits Sol, A man made object, With men inside. Forever in a cometry orbit, Never to return, To its planet of birth. And like the now dead light, Life within the spark, Flickers, gutters, and Goes out. Brian Dorion
Anonymous
foe
Days are short in silent servitude, Sharing the fear of the Black Hand’s wrath; For he may summon them all to his brood And what if no word is left in the aftermath?
b
Candle
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Graphics
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L. A. T.
Childhood’s End Arthur C. Clarke
c
Brilliance
If only things were bright forever; the sun on brilliant green leaves being tossed and buffeted by the wind. Oh ships upon the waters take me fa r away with YOU To a place of no fears or worries but with one I love to somewhere... Maybe to fly, to float in that&brilliant blue below my feet. . Maybe. I should play the grand piano and in the music become one with harmony and the soul shattering brilliance. Oh winds in my mind, help clear out the cobwebs of doubt that blur my vision And chase the clouds that obscure the brilliance at times in my life, when I do need it so.
Alive for your voice, locked and scanning, From still darkness cherishing Those clearest lips, homesick watching For a shining sense, wisdom’s presence, Aspiring to light, finally ’ Prepared in the promise, We forespeak to you, wanting a subject, Arise, know you.
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We Are Ready Look there my dear. A little to your left. No, no, just where my finger is pointing. Do you see it now? It is on this hill that they are waiting for him. Oh yes, he will come, after all, he --promised he would. ’ The men have been waiting as long as I can remember, as long as my father or my can remember. The entire village is ready, now they can only wait. The hammers, . grandfather the nails, everything has been assembled o,n top of that hill even before the oldest villager was born. The cross, too, has been standing there for what some say is now about two thousand \ years. We are all ready for the Second Coming. Wojtek Kozlinski -
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2:30 a.m. is probably the absolute nadir, or zenith, depending on one’s perspective; sitting in a bar called Knickerbocker’s, somewhere in Buffalo; out near the airport, peering through smokeshot eyes at Jim and John who are on their third _ Budweiser. Somewhere behind me a couple of refugees from the ‘60’s_are,doing passable covers of folk tunes, interrupted regularly by the sound of breaking beer bottles-a sound that never fails to derail one’s train @ thought. We don’t have the faintest idea where we are, and we’ve still got to get a traffic ticket somehow. ’ Mother of God, how did we come to be on this ghastly trek? The Engineering Scavenger Hunt, one of the Engineering Week events, has attained a sen-&legqdary stature. Apocryphal stories abound, one that I heard concerned an attempt to bring back the biggest thing a team could find. Two civil engineers came across a front-end loader on a construction site near Guelph, hot-wired it and began driving it cross-country towards Waterloo. When it became stuck in a farmer’s field, they went back for a bulldozer in an attempt to push it loose. Both machines were totalled, and lists now carry a request not to resort to theft. 5:OO p.m.: The official teams, consisting of four people from a particular class, line up outside tb EngSoc office to receive their official lists. They get one list, with roughly 140 items on it, which must be returned unmarked at 8:06 the next morning together with as many of the items as the team was able to scavenge. The less experienced teams, rush for the Xerox machines, ’ where they quickly discover that, the list is printed in unphotocopiable green ink. All teams eventually congregate at some sort of , headquarters withtheir unofficial assistants, where .they start planning the various out-of-town trips that need to be made, and sending people to purchase various items before the stores close. -
10:00 p.m.: Jim, John and I set out for 5:30 p.m.‘: Walking down a hall in84 I Buffalo in Jim’s V8 monster. Two others come to. an open room. Inside are a dozen are going to Guelph and. Paris; and a guys chittering excitedly.“‘Are you the 4B . Chen Eng team ?” I ask. “No-3B,” they ( ‘carload of people is headed for Toronto, reply, “the 4B’s are in the Graphics Lab.” ’ where they must visit several bars and This is an obvious bit of misdirection, and ’ count the steps leading down or up toeach one. None of us have spent any time in I turn to leave. Behind me comes a voice: Buffalo; we only know how to get to the “Hey, he’s got a Rhino Party buttonl” Half city limits. the team swarms out into the hallway and As I settle down on a mound of hockey surrounds me, and one plucks the-button equipment in the back seat, Jim & John from my sweater. discuss their interviews with employers “Do I get any .compensation for that?” I regarding post-graduation jobs in April. “demand, not really expecting any. A “I’m doing OK,“,says Jim, “I’ve got three - penny is put into my hand and the door offers.” John h as two he must decide closes to the sound of mocking laughter. beyween by the next day. Later, in Knickerbocker’s, he will flip a coin, and lose it somewhere in the murky haze. 12:30 a.m.: the only map of Buffalo we have is-b tiny one in a pamphlet we picked up in Niag.ara Falls, advertising some cultural attraction. We take the first Thruway exit whose name appears on the map and come across the State University campus. In a parking lot, searching for some sort of campus centre, we nearly run over two slightly inebriated students. Jim explains our quest, and asks for directions to Mulligan’s BrickwBar. When they hear we are from Ontario, th,ey offer to take us Evaluating the’loot. most of the way there. I I.-. photos by Animal The bouncer at Mulligan’s take> one, look at us and says “Waterloo?” We nod, surpx%sed, and he says, “You can get a matchbqok from the bar.” Jim goes to fetch 8:00 a.m.: The teams have assembled in ‘one; John looks enviousy at the beerthe same r(oom where I was mugged fourteen hours ago. The doors are locked, .drinkers. “Many teams come by?” I ask the doorman. “Four or five,” he replies. We and EngSoc officials begin totalling up the scores. It does not look good for the 4B obtain directions to the ‘next barAThe Chem Eng team; they have missed nearly Locker Room-and leave reluctantly, for j the place is jumping. fifty items. i:55 a.m.: To get to Uncle Sam’s, we had The 4B Civil team, Shear Force, seems to ha-ve just about everything, though some to take three separate freeways across v _town. Bars are supposed to close at 2 a.m. of their items looked. suspicious; their Eng 6:30 p.m.: At the 4B Chem receipt from a body rub parlour is a &gip ip whatever county we’re in, and the headquarters,’ an apartment at the corner of adding machine tape totalling $lQ@O, doormen- at Uncle Sam’s won’t let us in. of Albert and Bearinger. Jim is sitting in a Jim manages to convince someone to go with “Thanx! Patti.’ on it in cute looping corner marking off items to be garnered in back inside for a matchbox. handwriting. a citywide sweep. Already the .small “This Sam-e sort of-frat gag?” a.customer As he returns, a 2B Civil team drives up. kitchen table-m is . starting “I need a beer,” says John. He has been in Dunkin’ Donuts had asked us about five . . to-fill . . . up with I. items: an Uktobertest hat with yellow - saying -this all night, in ever-increasing i in the morning, and the Engineering image feather, 16 PAC tokens, “The Joy of Sex” tones of anxiety. Across the . street, ’ is’similar to an Animal House stereotype. (courtesy of the.Arts Library). ,[ Knickerbocker’s shows no inclination to . Yet the 48 team sits quietly oq the couch A Ph.D. diploma. is needed, and Jim obey the local liquor laws. “Shall we invite while. other, younger teams scream and knows an affable prof: “We’ll be by soon to the Civvies?” says Jim. “Let ‘em find their -argue with the officials. pick it up,” he says into the telephone. own beer,” says John. And later, in their study room I was to , “There is one more thing-uh, I don’t quite 2:30 a.m.: Scouring the parking lot of a come across a letter by Joe Clark, replying know how to put this...could you show up Super Duper, we- manage to find a cash to a telegram their class had -sent tomorrow morning in a dress and high register ‘receipt. But neither the 7-11 nor expressing concern over Petrocan. The heels?” His- face is beet red. “Well, no, I the Stop’n’Go in the neighbourhood had reply-the original-had been posted on ‘understand, I didn’t really think so...1 had copies *of the February ‘80 Chi: magazine, the wall for at least a month; yet only one to ask, y’know?” . comment was scrawled on it, and it was and the cops at the local precinct wouldn’t 8:45 p.m.: We’ve been to two dominion. issue us a traffic ticket. They are kind not scatological. These students can see stores, trying to find a cash register enough to inform us that if we try to obtain bigger things on the horizon; this is their ‘receipt for over $100. No dice: there’s ,a last, scavenger hunt, and yet there is no one by deliberately breaking the law, they sales promotion in progress, and people would throw us in jail for the night. ., sense of loss,. of defeat. aren’t throwing theirs away. “One team 3 3:45 aAm.: We have driven north in search Jim opens the three American beer we was by here earliec” said a cashier at the purchased from the L.C.B.O. about seven of North Tonawanda and a bowling alley Conestoga Mall. “They bought $131 worth whebe we could pick up a score sheet. o’clock, and passes them around to the of groceries.” After’giving up the search, we pass a place team. They are warm, but no one cares. We’ve rounded up all the Rolling Stones called Manor Lanes whjch appears to be The Genesee and Budweiser are at least albums we could find, stolen an 8-foot open. Unfortunately, it s located in Tonpassable, but the. Schlitz tastes like Canadian flag from a frieJid of a friend,’ awanda itself. With the aid of the patrons, mucilage dissolved in tap water. bought the cheapest train ticket available. i we phone several likely places, but due to Perfect, I think. Just perfect. “We’ve lost a lot of valuable time,” says the liquor laws all places in Niagara Prabhalcar Ragde Jim, “but we just don’t have the manpower County closed at 2. In desperation we take this . year:” This cliass‘ has w&r- two one of Manor .Lanes’ score sheets (no ’ Shear Force won the contest, with 233 previous competitions, and came ,@cond address, but a lot of Buffalo-area ads) and points (the scoring system was not ’ last summer; this time around, Iess than leave. By 6-30 we are back at headreleased). ‘The 4B Chem team Came fifth, , ten people are participating. quarters. with 13,~spaints. F” ’ I( l
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reggae piece evoking images of 1984. X All&i all, a medium strength first effort from ,I_ AU sill&s aside, t4his debut - --~_ set -_ bv -~. T.b.‘s ’ the immediacy ofearlier classics like an Australian group wit$ a variety of musical.,, ; (via Bondon) Steve and Co. ‘is an energetic “1977” and “London’s Burning,” thismaterial styles. Nothing to write home abqut. If you like’ collection of quirky, eccentric, slightly. untakes a while to-sink ‘in. What is apparent on them, or.’ are just curious about more ‘predictable pop tunes that neatlyinfuses some first listening is the wonderful .match of band . *Australian music, ‘try the Sports, or Flash and originality into standard p.op&k practices;, t& pan.,, 1 ’ ; __ 1’ ’ ‘and producer, in contrast to the horrible sound i B4iike’s vocals are what r&lIy make this 1 on the first album and the equally disasterous ’ Liking this record will dep3nd on just how record work. Hii voice falls somewhere within -muddle Sandy Pearlman made of Give ‘Em much you like the v%rious styles mimicced by the Elvis Costello-Graham VParker-Robert Enodhh Rope. The sound is sloppy where it theband, and whether vou can take the l&ad .--Gordon triangle, and his greatest stre * is W’ needstobe, tight elsewhere, and throughout it , -singer)- ; IJltrav&/Roxy Music/Fabulous ’ his ability to quickly vary both the vol g and all one gets the impression that the band is Poodles affected vocals. You might be better ‘pitch of his” singing, making for,delightfully thoroughly-enjoying themselves. . off to try the originals, but the choice is yours. unpredictable changes in direction. Blimke ,’ : There may not be a punk band in the world Brian Farmwraps his voice around the songs;gettir& into under a recording contract (though Stiff Little the nooks and crannies; one second he% quiet,. Fingers comes close) but punk itself is not . pouting and almost rela$+, the next ,he’s de+; it’s been transmuted, integrated properbouncing’ with hyperactivltyl. This is aural _ ly into a hundr&d different styles, strengthened gymnastics at‘its best. , a * ’ by the addition of musical backbone and aimed The -Reason’s playing is competent; they in the right,direction. The Clash have proven rock when they should, cruise when they need their ability to make real music, more to, and.always allow Blimke to shine.’ Angus immediate than most of the rubbish being MacKay’s guitar could have been mied louder .$.-(Epic) passed-off as New Wave. “Revolution Tack; z ,” d to provide a little more bite, but -otherwise the . (side 4Y band a) says it best: /.’ Most record previewers’ are so- grateful at band sounds fine. being. allowed t,o express an opinion in -print One of the joys of this record is in the Iyrics Everybody smash up your seats ad robk.to that they really do& care <if people listen to ’ (damn university types, they’re. so &lever!). . ’ 1 them; they praise or slag someone’s latest. ~ this bra@ Few beat! When Blimke gets frantic, it’s &r&times J ’ Prab$akar, Ragde effort and never give it another thought. But difficult to catch all the words, but here and once in a while a record come alongithat they here you can pick up.a nifty line or t@o: “I get really care about, one that they want people to where I want/But never on time,“inTSubway,“’ purchase. Since30 many people tune out “inbassist Doug Rustori’s answer to the TTC% depth” record reviews after the first para- ‘Leave the &ar at home’ camp&n; ‘This crazy graph, they’ve got to proselytize right at the j feeling that’s in my heart/Some callit Garbage, beginning. So here go-es: buy thisalbum. It’s a some call itart.” in “I Got This Feelin& “Don’t I double, with nineteen rrjgrvellous-sbngs’on it, in I Stew5 Blimke and the+bbon - . I ,wanna sound ‘like just ’ another, ~i&&l.” and the band has bust& its boots to m&e sure “‘Cztn’t Say I’m Sorry.‘? No&ir&.th shatteryou canget it for around $9.00 locally. Besides. a. ing or profound~butdefinitely good ’ , If $3evek .BlGke;..w&s* to: give h’is musical I ‘. for a’&nile . being a great buy, it also happens to be one of ’ or two. . c ’ I ,;: .&h&i aid this fine.$bum a big push, the first the catchiest, most heartfelt servings of . Steve Blimke and’ the F&son have just ’ -I tlimg he j should ‘do is change hisname. How’. rock’n%oll that I’ve heard in a long time. ’ reasofi to be proud of this; while there a& no :,’ ‘.,many Steves can you name that ‘hold can ‘, Thii album is-going to surprise a lot of tunes that really jump out and grab you by the, history? Qr even a d*e @\ I * itr).iytan: -people; you see, the Clash used to play l ‘lobes, there{ are no dogs either, and the-entire ’ ~ ,_* prominent plce in modern inusic? (Stevie something called punk rock. *Their first (selffirst aside is v&y’ good:, Now if Steveyd ,only II’ ‘. Nicl& don’t ~count).* Even the guys in high titled) album, released in 1977, was recorded . \’ school.,were ~&OS. And what is a bliqke? I change his name..... over ‘three weekends with their sound man ” ‘B&ik& &d;e.,&> 7 1 ; ;’ .,‘ I acting as producer. It’s a gritty, brillian? , portrayal of a sandblasted society, a concept t ‘album without even trying, and it’s been n M-sex ’ ,. 3” . ,’ c , showing..’ up on critics’ ten-best-ever lists. .i -, ’ Graffiti Crimes I ,? 3, recently. : Yet even as ‘“White Riot” was _ *e . xw (, 11climbii the *British charts, the band .were i * Mi-sex is another energetic Australian New. - I _ II . expanding past the .musical restri&ons of, _ Wave assembly emmigrating across the exotic ’ I : punk while retaining the allimportant at- , seas to our promised land to seek fame and titudes. Througkthe.long s&ies.of sin@ that _..fortune; -, . -.comprised% Ithe %ne+nd&halfth” album, tind + Theband’s name was coinedfrom the song.. on Giue ‘em @oq$ Rope, th@yr@.@d to%e s of the saw- nqme- on the first album by 3 pilnned &jwti Fo,,‘shy ~t&~&&~&; .&$o~ng ,.; England’s Ultravox, and, as expected, the’ cdiverse sty&s andprodtietiontechniques. group mimics their -music to some degree. ’ But ‘it’s ;unlikeb that anyone’ anticipated this They have extrapolated 1from the Ultravox. < +drastic a -ir+their- direction. They’ve . 1 - basis in much the same fashion, and, with the . ’ Thefirst thing you s& on the ad for Hero at -’ ’ as well. Ritter as Nicholls is,. a determined. young actor <who sees potential,tor good in ‘.’ hmported Mfcky Gallagher from Ian single “Computer Games,” ‘in the Same s. ’ Large is that John (Three’s Company) Ritter.is -.: “D&j/ & humanity, and uses his own ii? the Captain ockheads, signed on an direction as Gary Numan, another current the star, -and he’s wearing a totally ridiculous Avenger @mie. . unidentifi section (.my ,guess is ‘the English .New Wave type who’ is becqming, superhero outfit. The hero: Captain Avenger. ’ Anne.Archer as-the n+ghbor across the hall former brass conting$nt from Graham Parker popular over here. p Acomedy take-off’of Superman, right? Wrong. + is a perfect counterpoint to Ritter as he at first & ’ the ’ Rumour), resurrected Guy Stevens The music is energetic, fast moving and John Ritter is Steve Nicholls, an unemfrom” the nether regions he dropped into after, trip to “pick her up,” and shelater winds up 1 predictable commercial rock, combining elecployed actor who gets a job doing a promo for-a nursing his gunshot wound,. and, wondering /his work with Mott themHoop& md gonein .third-rate .’superhero flick called “Captain ’ tronjc synthesizer melodies, disco rhythms, search of their musical roots. ‘The quest is what is going on inside NichoIl$ head. Bert and heavy rock guitar which allcomplement t4$e Avenger”, by standing out >in,front of the i lmost kbreathtakingly -.audacious, and the Convy is delightfully, underhanded as. the‘ interesting lyrics. (Great stuff, the& A&&es. theatre in the , red-white-blue-&nd-gold cos&.P result- if true .ro/ck’n’rolf fresh and spontan mayor’s PR man in New York who sees’ tume signing autographs. Hets one of sixty-two -Better than Hot Wombat Soup or Waltzing . ‘+ous. Borrowing i#&ences whecrever they can ‘*I Matilda). doing ~9, tind it’s just a job...until Ritter uses _ potentia4 in, the Captain Avenger,craze to help I ’ reelect the mayor,,- i s w&3=, ska, jazz, The single, “‘Computer Games,” (which is’ . the‘costume and his athletic ability late at night ’ . e a type of music that getting some airplay locally) is 9 must for-all the : store on therobbery tiay home from work to stop a groc&y .’ The.movie i& a statement of the potential@ .I ,good ,,in . humanity; and Ritter’s excellent d ,more persuasive than . Computer Science hacks; who ca really dig done before. 1 I ’ b their. teeth in and relate to this o J . %raffiti Far from being a campy, slick superhero >x performapcf: gives it depth as hetrieb to make ‘. , Space. : cZonsiderations .cpreclude - going ’ The release .of the C&rgs,” the title track,. will motivate YOW schtic, Nero at Large is a. realistic, sensitive _ use of his .own$oodness. movie beautifuI4y coincides with reports from . through all thesongs,, but several stand out: . bathroom, wall scribbling to plan a European ’ mov8 on what it is to be a hero: to. “put lthe title tune, a driving, hypnotic recitation of ‘~ tour. fight back’ everything on the line for’ the other guy,” as .: . NYC t&t people are&@nning.to against the lowlife criminals, mugger& and decdiy and disaster; :‘Hateful,” an uptempo ; “‘fnside You” echoes Flash’and the Pan Capt. AvengerRitter puts it during a speech It ) phks. The technical crew of the movie is a ‘rocker whosebeat ii in ironic contra& to the vo~ls, but has a cliihed disco-rock beat. also pxplores a, few of the hardships of being a ‘Lyrics, whkh,‘deal with. drw- addiction; and Again the lyrics are for the hack&:“‘Destruct‘ihero: be4ievabiity (who can take seridusly a ,, , group of unknown% and the.,-moFe is a “‘The ‘C&cl Cheaj,” a lyric+1 od6 the equal of Ipwbu@t one (Co fancy sj%cial effecjs h&e to ions inside you/Computer ;whizz kids/With ;guy’with candy-&i& shorts?) andon-therjob, / ’ , take on@‘s mind off the lackof plotlikq&rsorne anythitlg / @z. Jam’s done lately, given a four inch_ thitik classes.” l ‘haz,a;rds. (For the lie pf me, I can’t figure out othel;~ r?lovj;es, jusf3 &an fun and good beautiful’wail~f-sound treatment by producer , ~5 ‘T+ lyoici ‘in general reflect thb group’s j how Batman never get& shot...). L b Steve-w, Notable 1 &o is ‘The Guns Qf Which:0T &oestoshow you, you ’ philosophy that our 4ifestyles are stagtiting 3 John Ritter is an excellent comedian@ and a ’ .&ing,too.) J Brixton,” bass@‘- ’ Sim&o$s - first stab z$ . -from, atiomation; ‘1I industrial4za@on,, and per; ‘,* ’ capable -comic actor *(as showii Ih w,&‘s :.. d&t ne@ flashy sets @ a big&&$$zt to $m out a qualit&Pfilm.: . ’ ‘. 1, ‘.+l: . ;.~mpo&im and vcdk;+o, hecan%s$g, but t ]I .- haps universiv &o&g. .(f ,wonder if they Company and Afnericxrthon), but iq Hero at it’s a proper sort of voice. for tha szng;-& taut ‘. visited ‘U of I&Ponce plpan’ a time?) __, Glenpd.~t~fi Lbrge he shows that he can do ser+s.ac&g , :1 ‘ ‘:’ ’ -
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Tickets on sale now at the ’ Federation of Students Office, *Campus Centre 9 Rm. 235 \
ARTS WEEK
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Marvel Comics has, for a number of months, advertised that it would be putting our a full colour comic masazine called Epic. This new magazine would give some of the most famous writers and graphic artists in the industry the opportunity to do “adult” stories, stories which would not be found in normal comics. . -Z$c Illustraled recently hit-the stands. It is an outstanding example of what the comics industry could be doing. The cover painting, by Frank Frazetta, is extremely impressive. The opening story, of the Silver Surfer when he was the herald of Galactus, was fascinating; written by Stan Lee and drawn by John Buscema and Rudy Nebres, The Answer shows some of the potential of the Silver Surfer character.
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Thirteen - Lord
Marvel-mm
writing;
The magazine has a wide variety of stories which appeal to the reader on any of a large number of levels: some are humourous, some are thought-provoking, some are whimsical. Most of the stories, for one reason or another, are memorable; not bad for a collection of this size. Lullaby Of Bedlam is probably my favourite selection. Written and drawn by Ray Rue, the story centers dround a man who is thrust into the dream (or, rather, nightmare) of his sister in an attempt to bring her back to .reality. Lullaby of ‘Bedlam is a strange mixture of science fiction, fantasy, psychology and horror, made all the more effective by brilliant artwork, the best of&e issue (with the po?sible exception of the cover). The ending was, perhaps, unworthy of the rest of the story, but that’s a minor complaint. Another memorable part of the magazine were the first three segments of Metamorphosis Odyssey by James Starlin. Starlin is famous for his work in four-colour comics, and does well (although why he is confined td the black and white part of the magazine is beyond me). I look forward to seeing it continue, in colour, in the next issue. Also of note are Home Spun, a beautifully rendered story by Wendi Pini, Fantasies, three stories by E&pean artist Mirko Ilic, and Topaz, by Carl Potts. It must be pointed out, ’ -once again, however, that there aren’t any really bad stories. For the first issue, instead of letters, Archie . Goodwin, editorial director of Epic Illustrated, solicited opinions from people like Ray Bradbury, George Pal and Neal Adams as to the feasability of the magazine. The most interesting comment came from Ian Summers, author of The Fantastic Art of the Brothers Hildebrandt and editor of Tomorrow and Beyond.
years after of the Flies
Imagine’s novel which looks inside the soul of humanity and portrays it as it is: wanting. A novel which reflects that part of us which we rarely acknowledge, a novel which makes visible the darkness of our souls. Just such a novel was recently published. The book is called Darkness Visible. It is the first effort from William Golding (the author of Lord of the Flies) in over thirteen years. It is brilliant. . The story revolves around Matty, a child who walks through a raging fire in London during an air raid in World War II. How did he . get into the fire? How did he survive? Whose child is he? These questions are never answered (well, never satisfactorily answered, although there are indications...), but, in the final analysis, they are unimportant. Golding has other areas to explore. Matty does survive, although half of his race is irreparably scarved by the experience. He goes on to meet Sebastian Pedigree (whom some consider the nastiest man in the world) Toni and Sophy, twins who grow up from naive innocence to adult cruelty and, if his journal is to be believed, a number of ‘spirits’ claiming to be dieties. Thus the ambiguities begin: are Matty’s visions really taking place or are they merely the creation of a sadly warped mind? .The reader must judge according to his own beliefs, although the ending, to be more than just a series of clever coincidences, does point strongly to one of the options. Why detail the lives of Sophy and Toni, whom Mat,ty only meets for a very brief period, if Matty’s delusions are the primary point tq the story? Why, for that matter, detail Matty’s early life if most of the important events take place late in it? Golding must constantly be questioned. Consider the question of the scar on half of Matty’s face: it is exceedingly ugly (so much so that Matty hides it as best he can) compared to the other half. The analogy to the essentially ‘good’ and ‘evil’ parts of human nature is inescapable. And yet, this is not the only possible metaphor. Only two acts stand dut in Matty’s life as having any significance: his ‘betrayal’ of Pedigree to the authority,of the boy’s school in which he worked and his salvation of a young, potentially important, person. The former act, which he tries throughout the rest of his life to gordet, is reflectid in the scarred half of his face while the latter act is symbolized by the other half,
idea
Whereas Lord of the Flies is a timeless story, Darkness Visible is firmly entrenched in the 1970’s. Sophy and Toni, who are supposed to represent ‘typical’ young adults (in viewpoibt, if not in actual experiences - a point which is debatable) weave what might, in another time, have been called a lurid chain of events culminating in the attempted kidnapping of the son of a diplomat. This is one terrorist act which has only become popular in the past decade., Golding writes his tale exceedingly well. When, approximately two hundred pages into it, I realized where the story was heading, I was surprised, and impressed. On the simplest level of plot, the story moves fairly well and rarely fails to keep up reader interest. And, of course, for those who are interested, there is so much more. I would be much surprised if Darkness Visible fails to become required reading in some course at UW. Ira Naywan
February
29,198O.
Imprint
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“I think what you’re doing,” he writes, “is going after a lot’of the Heavy Metal audience, and, I hope, in the right tasteful vein.” A comparison between Heavy Metal and Epic Illustrated is, unfortunately, unavoidable. Heavy Metal, which began a couple of years ago as an attempt to create an adult illustrated fantasy magazine (along the lines of Metal _ Hurlant from France), was and is very successful. As Summers commented, Epic IIIustrated is an attempt to cash in on the market which Heauy Metal establikhed. With one difference: Epic ZlIustrated is superior. Heavy Metal has been criticised for its tasteless, at times almost pornographic
content. This is a situation which it tried, recently to change. Epic Z//ustrated, thanks to som? tight editing, does not appear to have this problem. Another knock against Heavy Metal was that it did not showcase many American writers or artists, that it relied too heavily on European talent. Because Marvel comics publishes Epic Illustrated, they do not have this problem; in fact, if anything, Epic has too many American entries. All in all, Epic Illustrated is an excellent comic magazine, an example of the best that comics can be. Ira Nayman
Romeo and Juliet a National success The National Ballet’s rich and polished production of Romeo and Juliet, one of the company’s best-known works, delighted a very enthusiastic audience at the O’Keefe Centre last week. Romeo and Juliet is among the most theatrical of the ballets in the classic repertoire, pt least in John Cranko’s version. The emphasis is on large, stylized crowd scenes, with many dramatic non-dancing roles (parents, the friar, Juliet’s nurse, the Duke of ‘Verona, and others), and on mime and acting rather than pure dance technique. There are> .few really spectacular moments in the choreography: everything works either to [advance the story or to amuse, as in some comic movements in the street scenes. The most memorable aspect of the ballet was the almost-flawless crowd scenes. Jurgen $Rose’s exquisite costumes added an element of the fantastic, particularly in the street scenes, where green, red, yellow and orange tones flashed and harmonized as in a painting. Nobles, citizens, carnival revellers in fluorescent pink and yellow (looking like something *out of Fellini’s Cassanoua) and three sexy, pouty gypsies frolicked in a dazzling scene ‘which, like a three-ring circus, was too much for the viewer to take in all at once. The ball scene where Romeo and Juliet meet was outstanding too. The many guests all wore gleaming black and gold costumes, which had an almost\ geometric beauty in conjunction with the stately movements of the group dances. .Oddly enough, the scenes featuring the unhappy lovers alone, although sometimes very pretty, were less satisfying. Mary Jago as Juliet seemed too reserved, too old for a fourteen year old girl. She was touching in the ball scene where, dancing with the man her parents have chosen for her, she looks
longingly at Romeo across the room, almost forgetting the steps of the dance. In the scene where she drinks the sleeping potion, Jago’s Juliet attains a sort of .tragic grandeur in her hesitations and in the final victory of her ‘confidence in the good friar who gave her the potion. But in the love scenes, particularly the balcony scene and the morning scene after her marriage, Jago did not manage to convey any sense of joy. The fear of danger was there, but not the exhilaration which should accompany it and contrast with it. Jago’s Juliet was a rather lackluster, well-brought up little girl, a bit out of her depth, trying hard but always looking back over her shoulder to see if someone was watching. After Jago’s finely polished creation of the mother in Anne Ditchburn’s ballet Mad Shadows, the lack of subtlety shown here was a disappointment. Frank Augustyn fared better 9s Romeo, though he had little chance to show off what he can do technically. ’ Much of the richness of the ballet lay in the strength of performances of the smaller roles. While almost all the dancers did well, Tomas Schramek as Mercutio, Clinton Rothwell as Tybatt and Victoria Betram as the proud, icy Lady Capulet deserve special mention. Cynthia Lucas, Amalia Schelhorn and Gizella Witkowsky as the gypsies shone in the street scenes, their antics a frivolous counterpoint to the serious events. Many playwrights, composers and choreographers have been inspired by the story of Romeo and Juliet, so much so that there are over twenty danced versions alone. The National’s production compared favourably in spots, despite a couple of major.problems, with the filmed version starring Nureyev and Margot Fonteyn, and Zefferilli’s beautiful dramatic film. Lori Farnham
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Where can you see a Chinese dance, a Sailor’s Hornpipe and characters=from West- \ &de So+? Well you could approach the Chinese < Student Association, Fergus Highhnd Games and Natalie Wood. There is, however, an easier, less expensive waysto manage this feat.’ The Dance Students are performing the aforementioned, ‘dances. this last day of February - Friday n*ht - at Humanities Theatre at 8:OO p.m, ($1.50/$2.50) “Dance Student Workshop Production” is the official title - and it umbrellas anything that could, be * ’ classifiid as dance. Like a Romantic Ballet? 1 : * We’ve got it. How about a sexy jazz duet? A couple of experimental _works, some Let’s f ; Make Fun of Ourselves danca or “Dance is. a Serious Business” -, something will suit your ,_, r fancy. A lively. and unusual evening can be i yours. But be forewarqed. It is a workshop : ’ -production. The technical ability of the dancers va&s widely. The costumes are generally austere (due to financial restraint). Some ‘of these ‘, ’ pieces are’“works in progress.” Others aren’t . ,-polished.l:Many are first attempts by birthing chorqgraphers. The idea is.to;give students an I \ opportunity. to work for a production, be it as a’ / ’ . choreographer-, dancer, “techie”, publicity i person, costumer L or whatever. Nowhere else but a university setting can this be done to -. the extent the Dance Department _has -L accomplished. An additional, benefit is to ,teenage members of Carousel bance Schbol (which operates in collaboration with the Dance Department) who are in$olved in the ‘1 production end of the show as well as pcrforming;Also included in the production is a I ‘number of works by faculty members. Partly , this is because of necessity - there are asmall number of student choreographers, - and _ partly because the professors, just want to ‘choreograph!
Well, perhaps now- you are a little ‘scared off because it 7is _ not your well-oiled, &k prafessional show. Don’t be. If you can “expand your horizons” a little and attend with the expectation of an entertaining experience, you’ll be just. fine. +. ‘Chris Bauman J 1 . .. , I \ , . 1 .
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This iFriday night (Feb. 29) the Dance L Student Workshop Production istaking place in the Humanities Theatre.(see preview). Well maybe you are-busy tonight and you will miss it [sigh) But! You have a second chance. Some works from this production will be shown once again at the Campus Centre next Frida! afternoon (March 7). It will be at twelve o’clocl to be exact, in the Great Hall. Certainly yo,u-wil view weird and wonderful things never before seen in the old CC. It is sponsored by the I! Campus Centre Board and organized by the turnkeys. What a way to spend your luncf hour. Sure beats the T.V. game shows! \’
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free throws over the regular Western Mustangs Waterloo Warrior%. - and forward Ron Hall (6’5”) don’t score much but are schedule, 34 more‘than any If they can find a way to j The Warriors enter -the ’ sound defensively and help other player. He cashed 85% beat MC-Master today, this is playoffs with a great deal of <Dundas on the iboards. The .of h’is attempts, 22 of 24 in the tournament’s dark horse. momentum‘. After a‘wretched bench iqweak. Guelph needs one game against Laurier. _The Mustangs scored victexhibition qeason (5 wins, 12 ,I;tissesI and- a , -4 start in ~ big efforst from Mike Hyrb, &t the, key to the Marories over each of the divMark Scott, and others. Fail- _ auders’ fortunes lies 1 with ision’s top three teams;. nothey @aigue -competition, ing that, the ptarters must colourful point guard. Phil body played Windsor more have reeled off<seven straight. a gifted playstay out of foul trouble; this is Tamburino, eff ecti.vely. wins,. lookin progressively .a problem for Smith especial; maker who tends to try to do a Guards Dan Berry (19.5 . stronger white doing so. ly. too much too soon. Tamppg) and Rob Niro (14.3 ppg) Waterloo actually got back -’ With a demanding three burino ‘can be brilliant and -run an effective f.ast break /on the track in their fourth.“* games ahead of them, ?he incompetent on the same -while 6’6” centre ‘Ross Hurd, ‘loss; 88-77, to Western-JanGryphons will be patient ‘play but if he plays under an excellent rookie, minds uary -261 .In that game, 6r6” offensively and are likely to control, he can penetrate welf the defensive store. Hurd was forward- Brian Ray ~emerged play a lot of ione defence. If andfeedshootersDubois, Jim: ninth in points (15.8 ppg) and from a bevy. Of back-Uris to their three guns are hot Hoyle and John Kulik for second .in rebounds (117) I, _~&ati&t~ .+I.de+, *Haw seize a ’ starting, position. they re a definite threat to medium range jump shots. over thecourse ofthe season. ,capture thetourney . Since then, Ray has averaged I’ .,The “Hawks are small: I * Niro is the The major ‘problem for Statistically,, 175 points and 8.3 rebounds duick, _ but also, young- and :a ’ coach Tollestrup is size, or West’s best free throw shobt’ . _lave per game and has played-his rather, the ,lack of it. The er (86.8%). Francis Moccio ‘way onto the .West’s second Mckaster Maraudem IO!@ plays well jinside given his six leading rebounder’ is 6’5” team.‘-Also ‘starting ack.’ ‘alt-star rookie Nick Mugosa who Foote zero stature. John MC: In the first round, the Fitz; that game was point guard matched .averaged less than five per Neit, a_6’6” forward finished Marauders are Clayt Ninham; who has mgtr ‘7. basketball .I gerald averages 19 po ints against Western, a team they game. He’ll, play’though be- the season strotigty.. The * ured into a poised perform,@ “Sli00tfxlt”commences at I and 6 reboundsper game bench is adequate i but, ,’ as ‘, . cause. X6’8”: Casey~;Kalvaitis-s’ ’ beat twice this year: during the win streak. the PAC this afternoon at 5-: can,.pour- in bushels of I ForwardlMark: Dubois, the _ lacks mobility. N ’ _ with+&oMaster, experience is . - The - arrival of Ray and all seven ’ team’s *‘will ‘ kets ,when he’s tiot. He ! w-h could get notabundant. . Ninham ended coach MC.- division scoring champion at .’ The Marauders participate in, . a th&e day,.‘ leads the league hoopby the fi&round but will get ’ Western Crae’s two month‘ quest for a 21.8 ppg., is usually seven gam.e, secon*$eason in slam dunks. during pre-’ killed on the/boards ttierestable lineup. Centre Rick bound and he gets fouled...a ” for the oneberth available in game warmup. after. Kurtz tends to panic but lot. Dubois attempted ,‘I05 the CIAIJ national champion.fbul-pro&Larry Labaj. : ** I I jumps much higher than \ ship in Calgary. The format LbBut .,if-‘the ,Ha,wks, are, tr most 6’3’: players. The other :has been in vegue in many ” v&II; they musfget big@ yKJ\\ 1 ’ two slots are occupied by US university conferences for .. from. a asupportin Warrior Basketball SGtistic’s: / cast 01 / <. i Ysuperb veterans Doug Vance years ati a gimmiok t&‘&in+‘ Morfis,’ ‘&$jn ‘S&d,: 1 OUAA- Reg&r Season’Schedule (unofficial) ‘and Seymour Hadwen. ’ @ate interest, attendance, ‘:::,Flqk, ,Chris Heaver, and : If the .Warriors cannot find _ Player . Games FG FGA FG% :’ FT FTA “FPh tiB PTS PPG.:and dollars for the school&? ’ ~+mm;~ 1. - _ ,; : ’ .Doua Vance 174 51.7. ’ 32. 41 78.1 86’ 212 17.7 12 SO any other offensive openings, _ :basketl$all ’ programs. To 1be , LackYof size hurts’L& Brian Ray 12 72 “lj8 $6.3 72.0 79 162 13;s they’ll give the ball to Vance, rd $air, the system gives teams ‘-more than, any. team in Sevmour Hadwen 61 137 44s 1 82.9 43 151 12.6 . 12.’ who’fl Launch the division’s ‘beset” by, problems such as division ‘exoept; perhaps;. Rich Kurtz 12 40 78 51.3 ‘41 .74.6 ‘78 121 lb.1 most aesthetic long range - Clayt Ninham ’ 12 , 34 ;: e37.4 16 $@ries. another ‘chance to go ’ Master,; A victory today i 64.0 ’ 2-7 84 7.0 =jump shot. He‘ll convert more Scott Kina _. 12 15 68.2 12 ’ 20 . 60.0 22 42 3.5 %i: it.’_Presumat@+ the cream ;Guelph would bhn upti \a -3ohn Freind 11 1’4 43 A’32.6 5 7 71.4 q7 33 3.0 I than half of them regardless wIl rise to the top: Phil Jarr&t . . 12 ‘11“ 17 ~64.7 1’ 3 33.3 8 ’ 23 1.9 of distance.,.He also averages mora -tt‘lan’syven r&bun& ’ Dave. Burns _ Steve Garrett per game. . Tim Harrold The team !eder on the floor Leon P&more is Hadwen who; in his fifth lah Macd%ald 6 ’ 6 seas.on, will be making. his final appearance in frontof commodity every coach in the 3 5 pm.: M&aster vs. Western the home crowd. In pressure division ‘would. love to have, b;7 pm.: Lauriervs. Guelph _ situations, he’ll do most of ,I:9 pm.: Brock vs. Waterloo i except-Dr. Paul Thomas who the ball hahdling,. His scoring, has one in 6’7” Stan Korosec. totals do” not reflect the. -! Second rOu& Saturday ’ Korosec in his second opportuciritiOs his playmaking T 6.15 ‘pm.: Windsor,.iv:s; Mcwas the West’s top rebounder creates for other .players. \A , ’ ‘Master ‘or Western with 126 and the team’s Waterloo plays excellent 8:15 pm.: Laurier or Guelph leading scorer (17.8 ppg), defence (opponents scored vs. Brock or Waterloo/ while shooting better than last 60% from the field. He: is 63 ppg in the Warriors’ Third Rot&d, Sunday seven games) and must con-a supported by.6’8” Jim Molytinue to do so ~to win the rloon: Consolation game bewho averaged , 11.5 neux, Shootout. They also need. tween Saturday’s losers )- -’ Doints and 8.5 rebounds per some help-from the bench to 2 (pm.: Championship game, game:’ survive the three game grind. between Saturday’s winners , The Windsor ‘guards are Forward Scott King and rook? Ticket p&es: $3 per day or Sg small but veteran Vince Lanie PhiLaarrett have done-well for the tournament dry is unlikely to panic under jn spot situations but the re;. _ oressure. The following scouting Land-v, Phil Herpivotal backup-could be-Leon Ports Were composed in the /I‘man(Jtz, and Briik Hogan are _. ‘Passmore who has made a middle of the night by a streak shooters and will gun remarkable recovery from an mush-mid and bear no’ relaway from outside , while early season knee-operation. ation to reality. All statistics Korosec, Molyneux, Jack Then there’s the, home quo!@ We ~u~official, but j Baird, and John RitGhie crash court advantag&; it helped close, the &ensive. board. ‘MolyWaterloo to its /otily national neux, 8aird, and Ritchie all’ championship and it wont shoot 50% from th,e field:, The, hurt in the Shootout. Br6ck-Badgers ’ No Westerr is more grate playoff forfr G&h Gryphons -Badgers, whc Guelph rocketed out of the ic s3nmotnr starting blocks in mid-season form and won their ftrst six gpmes before’ M&laster upset them and the rest of the division caught up withthem. The well-disciplined *Gry( playing very,wel!;- went down The- defending champions phtihs boast three.of the best with an injury and the have the ,most potent offence in the WestTom He@pand, Badgers werybiown out five L and,the deepest bench in the ‘Mike Sesto comprise one of I consecutive times. They findivision. With a bye in the the best guard tandems in-the ally posted their only win over first round, they should be country. Heslip shot 51% weII rested when things get , Laurier to close the season. from the field while averag. Toiling: in, obs,curity are’s ing ;15.7 ppg. t Sesto (21’.3 fine pair of forwards, 6’6” ~rer~~h~~p~~“,‘,“~~ {:kr’ I ppg) lost the league scoring Bod Blasko and ,6’4” Terry title on the final night of the Rigg. Blasko had the third .!$~r~u~~~{ &a; c~~~i~~~ I---* -,:-a *-*al (231) and the season and is an 85% free throw.shooter. Powerful 6’6” margin of 46 points, they sixth’ best rebound/,ng total Rick Qundas aver(95) in the’ West. Rigg,, was,.. would be prohibitive favour- \ , forward aged. 15.3 pointsand 9.,6 it&. number four on the board per game. These If the Lancers hav.e an ’ rebounds (106) and averaged 15 ppg (from ;op left; cloirkwis& Rich Ku>tz, Do&g Vance, Steve ‘clar&tt &nd Seytiour’ three prayers make Guelph a achilles heel, it is Korosec’s . That’s it. +. Hadwen wiJl be pla yirzg In their final games, as Warrio& in the PAC this wee&+ strong contender but aftertendency to get into foul If Brock winsthe Shootouti photos. by-Jgcob Arseneauyt trouble; He. fouled -out. of five\ that, the quality drops. \ ,, expect the Second Coming Centre Peter Smith (6’8”) games in twelve a;tte.mpts.. . -next-week. ’ _1
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March 6 to 9 and March
continued
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For information on the Birth Monday’s entry.
duction, Gail Reitz (U of W). Time: 5-6pm, Place: CC135, Care& Days for Women Seminar, Women and the Workplace, Sunny Sunberg, (U of W). Show Biz ‘80, KW Musical Productions in a nostalgic musical revue with costuming, choreography and music from world wars I and II, will be presented at 8:15pm in the Humanities Theatre
to 15. Tickets are $6. Control
Centre,
From 4:30to 7pm in the HH Undergrad Lounge the Waterloo Christian Fellowship holds its weekly supper meetingson a specific topic of social concern to be announced on posters on campus.
see
Resource Qffice willbe open from lo:30 to 4:30pm. Free legal counselling will be available in CC217A. dynamic speaker and-join us for lunch. The Pakistan Students’ Association presents “Pakistan, Afghanistan and the Super Powers” with Professor K.B. Sayeed (Queen’s) and Professor Ashok Kafur (UW) at 7pm in AL113.
The Legal
In co-operation with the Federation of Students, the Arts Students’ Union presents a pub featuring Saga at the Waterloo Motor Inn at 8pm. Feds: $2.50;Arts: $1. A iuncheoti with Simcha Jackovici, a political scientist and immediate past chairman of Network who will speak on North American jewry and assimilation,will be held from 11:30to 3:OOinCC113. Everyone is welcome to come and listen to this
Sheet Music,Xaching Instt uments,
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: i-38-A
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King
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Information
Meeting
wed. March 5th at R30 PM ~ Room 110, Campus Centre CM cm dtcwn~tivo... CWS0 @ 234 A; Sou’th Campus
- SKATEEXCHANGE CLOSED MONDAY’S 98 KING N WATERLOO (Just bidgepout
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-
Films Wed.
Mar.5
Seminars. Thurs.
A11 the Piddes you can eat. . .
Mar.
6
Women in the 80’s _ 1290 ” 5:oo Audrey Swail-( Women’s Bureau) “No Time Like Now” 12:OO - 2:OO; Values Clarification Testing “Why Not Technology” Pat Carter-(Conestoga CoHege} “Women in Management” 2:00 - 3:OO; Choosing a Career “Not Enough” Lisa Avedon-(Conestoga College) 3:00 - 5:OO; Resume, Application, Introduction Campus Centre Alcdve Gail Reitz-(U of W ) i 5:00 - 6:OO; Women and the Workplace Sunny Sunberg - (U of W) Gampus \Centre room 135 10:30 - 12:OO; Working
Friday,
hl
Cross-,country The Warriors Nordic ski team came away from Laurentian University this weekend, very pleased with their best ever team performance at the university championships. While not setiously chal-
lenging ttie powerhouse Guelph and Laurentian teams which are in a class by themselves, Waterloo finished comfortably ahead of their three arch rivals - Queen’s, Ottawa and Carleton. ’ Peter Piercy led the team
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Weztiriors third
skiers with a tenth place finish-in the fifteen km event (only one non-Guelph or Laurentian skier beat him to the finish line). Right behind Peter, in eleventh place, was Bruce Mohr, still hot from his race the previous weekend, and
Bruce Mohr (no. 7 1) is in second place’ as the racers begin the first leg of the men’s relay last Saturday at Laurentian. The skiers begin in their own lanes and then must race for the one track that leads out of the stadium. Waterloo’s men’s te,am finished in third place over-all for their. best ever finish in the Ontario university championships. Photo by Jacob’ Arseneault
dramatictili~ Peter Laurich in twelfth. Ian Lowe-Wylde, in his first year of serious competition, finished very strong in 17th position while Kevin Jones and Toni Scheier skied to respective 21st and 27th position finishes ‘in the 58 man field. The top four individual times and fastest relay time are used to decide the team placings and the Warriors entered the relay with,a solid third place standing. Waterloo were shut out of a bronze *medal in the relay by Laurentia.n’s second team and by Carleton’s Jeff Wastenays, one of Canada’s top juniors, who skied a tremendous relay leg for his team. Nonetheless, while not showing quite the talent of the qowerful Laurentian 6 man team, Waterloo showed its depth with a 5th place A team and a 7th place B team finish, in the 3x5km, 18 team relay field. Members of the A relay team were Bruce Mohr, Peter Laurich and Peter Piercy. The B team which beat 5 other school’s A teams, were Ian Lowe-,Wylde, Toni Scheier and Kevin Jones. With the team only losing one skier to graduation this year, they are confident that, ,when the OUAAs re-convene next year in Sudbury, Waterloo will be fighting it out with Guelph and Laurentian for first place. w Men’s ‘: -’ I:F&fl S&.&figs x , .a (Combined top 4 individual added to relay time) Laurentian Guelph Waterloo. Carleton Ottawa Queen’s Toronto
Imprint
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192:il 192:50 206:54 210:32 213:20 ‘220:45 234:i 8
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improve 235:57 257:05 300:18
At the OWlAAfinals held in conjunction with the OUAAs, Waterloo’s-team put forward a respectable performance, for their first offical championship appearance. Elaine McCrae was Waterloo’s top Athena with a 16th place finish in the 7.5km race, with Sue Budge and Carol Hutchinson finishing in a tie for 23rd place. Helen Brochu finished in 34th despite twisting a knee half-way round the course. ’ With the top 3 .jndividual skiers’ times bein”g totalled, Waterloo was in sixth position going into the relay. l Elaine McCrae skied an excellent lead leg for the relay
\.
team, coming through in third place, not far behind the leaders from Guelph and Carleton. But despite the efforts of Sue Budge, who has improved tremendously z over this season, ,and Carol Hutchinson, Waterloo finished the relay, sixth out of 10 teams, to maintain their overall sixth’place finish. It was a good performance fsr the young and steadily improving team. Women’s Final Standings 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Guelph Carleton Ottawa Queen’s Toronto Waterloo Western
138:19 138:26 142:32 142:46 150:25 154.13 163:02
times
St3orts Athletes
29,198O.
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1 2 3 4 5 6 7
February
Week
Sylvia Qunpuu Alpine Skiing Sylvia Ounpuu, a 20 year old, second year Kin student, has finished in the top ten of every race she h,as entered this year. She is part of a very consistent women’s alpine ski team which is currently in second place in the Ontario league with only one race remaining. Ounpuu, in races last week, linished sixth in the giant slalom and ninth in the slaiom. Ounpuu is one of ‘the reasons that the Athena skiers haye qualified for the CanAm races to be held in Lake ‘Placed in two weeks time.
weekends cross-country championships/ in Sudbury. McCrea was the top UW female skier, finishing 16th over all, and also fed the relay team to a sixth place finish. Photo by Jacob Arseneault
Briefs
.
.
Athena Figure Skating
In addition to her competitive skiing, Ounpuu is also The University of Waterloo a member of the varsity.field Figure Skating Club sent four hockey team. ’ , 1 members to compete in the varsity competition held at Brian Ray ’’ the University of .Toronto this - . Basketball year. It was the first time that the University of Waterloo Brian Ray is a 6’6” forward has been represented as a playing in his second.year on collected intercollegiate the basketball team. team. His .play in the fast four Mary, Cook skated an exweeks has been the single cellent performance-placing most important factor in the third in both ladies interWarrior basketball turn around mediate dance and junior in which they won 7 straight interpretive events. Great to clhch second place in the efforts were also repreOUAA west. During this time sented by Tamara -Allison he averaged 20 points per who placed fourth in Sr. game and nine rebounds to ladies and .Gina Gincauskas, move into eighth place in the who placed 4th in senior league scoring race with 14.6 interpretive and 5th in senior per game average. ’ ladies dance. Gina also placed This competitive success has established him as a 5th in similar pairs with Kathy, Cranston. :
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Squash
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yet another championship managed to avoid the clutches of the athletes of the -University of Waterloo when the highly rated Athena squash team finished insecond place, behind Queen’s, in the OWIAA squash championships held‘last weekend in the PAC. This. marks the second year in a row that the Athenas have been runners up in squash.
3
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on page
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King N., Watertoo _.
(at University) c
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The York Yeomen volleyball team will be travelling out to Saskatchewan to participate in the CIAU championships next week. The Waterloo Warriors volleyball team will be pre; paring for their final examinations. York edged the Warriors in the OUAA championships held in the PAC last weekend. The scores were 15- 13, 14- 16, 915, 15-7 and 15-l 0. “They were better than us,” said coach 1Jim Fairlie. “The better team won today’s match, there’s no doubt about that. “York played very well to beat us. We played as well as we could today. It just wasn’t enough. But we gave them quite a scare.”
Sportk
Briefs
continued from page 17 Actually, the Athenas finished in a tie for first place but the championship was awarded to Queen’s by virtue of their 3-2. victory over Waterloo during the competition. Both teams finished-the competition with 10 points. Two of Waterloo’s competitors were undefeated in the tournament. Third seeded Wendy Price and fourth seeded Alice Roddey won all five of their games.
Badminton
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Volleyball
but .
finals
29,198O.
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in.iitle
fight
Waterloo advanced to the final by easily defeating Queen’s on Friday night. The scores of that match were 15-7, 2-15, 15-6 and 15-l 0. York advanced on the strength of a dramatic comeback against Western. Western took the first two games 13-15 and 13-15. York stormed back to take the next three each by the score of 15-5. Queen’s defeated Western in the consolation final three to two. The final match was watched by one of the largest crowds ever to watch a volleyball game at Waterloo. About 1,000 fans took advantage of the free admission and the promise of exciting competition.
games,
games
swimming on the Feburary Windsor. showed
finals were held 15th and 16th of at the University of The Waterloo team great improvement
~~~)$fi.t-r~~r
eighth
place
In the tea’m event, Julie Bramm, Darcel Moore, Carol Hutchison, Gail Lawlor, Joyce Peart, Laurie Fraser, Karen Wilson and Nancy Cameron got Waterloo their only points in the meet with their sixth place finish. Since it was, for many of the girls, their first time in such a competition, it was a ;very commendable
Dave Stocks (no. 10) delivers a spike against Don Shilton, Bill Stanger, and John Kervin.
York in last Saturday’s York won the match,
final. Also in the picture to take the OUAA title. =“-
performance.
_Unseeded Keith Priestman of the University of Waterloo In the solo event, Carol won the men’s singles title of Hutchison placed 1 lth (withthe Strathgowan International out her nose plugs) and Julie badminton tournament held Bramm was 13th. *last weekend in Toronto. In the duet competition, Priestman defeated, in all, Darcel Moore and Helen Macfive competitors, including the Donald were 12th. These girls number one and number two swam well but drew an seeds to capture the title. priestman won three mat- \ unfortunate early start. In the figures competition, ches before meeting number Julie Bramm was 18th in the two seed Jamie McKay, who Senior division. In the Novice he defeated 15-2, 18-l 6. In the final, Priestman met CategOrYt Carol HUtChiSOn was 9th, Darcel Moore was 23 year old Pat Tryon of 15th and Joyce Peart was Toronto, a former US junior 26th. chamption. Priestman won the opening game 15-3, before The Waterloo team is now losing 16-l 7 in the second. practicing for their annual In the fina! game Priestman water show to be held Friday trailed 10-5 before rallying to March 14th at 4:30 and tie the.score at 13. He took the Sunday March 16th at 12:30 decision in extra points, 18-16. in the PAC pool. We invite you to come and See what the Synchronized varsity and recreational swimSwimming mers have been working on The OWIAA synch ronized and what Svnchro is all about.
Open the door tb a piofkssional management, 4 career. . . Meet US -
F&wary
’
Waterloo ,
,Friday,
a& learn how!
Student Affairs Office, Faculty of Administrative studies, York University, 4700 Keele Street, Downsview, Ontario M3J 2R6 Telephone (416) 667-2532
L/
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are (from left to right) Pete Zagar, Photo by EZ
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Knack
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